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Page 08 • $unhq 'Gtimu-$antiml

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, W.V

Timely answers about. retirement planning
By MARK SMITH
Advest, lac.
GALLIPOLIS - My income level
exempts me from being able to deduct
·~~~~~~~individual retire;;
ment account
(IRA) from my
taxes Are IRAs
still a good investm en t for
me?
IRAs arc
an e&lt;cellent
way to save for
rctirementEvcn
though many individuals like yourself cannot currently take an IRA lax
deduction, these retirement savi ngs
plans arc still attractive for their tax deferred compounding fc.1ture.
Late on April 5, the Hou se of
Representatives passed H.R . 1215.
the Contract with America Tax Relief
Act of 1995. The House Ways and
Means Commi ttee approved th e
measure March 14. and at the time of
this writing, no further detai ls were
available.
This bill includes the American
Dream Savings accounts (ADS accoun ts) whtch would replace presentlaw nondeductible IRAs. Contributions to an ADS account. w hi~R would
be nondeductible, would be in addition to contnbutions made to a deductible IRA undcrpresent -law rules.

Qualified distributions from an ADS
account would not be included in
taxable income.
The maximum annual contribution that could be made to an ADS
account would be the lesser of $2,000
or the individual's compensation for
the year. and $4,000 for married
couples that have at least $4,000 in
combined annual compensation. The
bill also would permit deductible IRA
contributions of up to $2,000 to be
made for each spouse.
Meanwhile, why not talk with
your financial adviser now to find out
how IRAs fit into your retire ment
plans?
I am being laid off from work at
the end of this month What is th e best
strategy for investing the lump sum
distribution I' ll receive from my
employer' s retirement plan?
Since money in retirement savings plans is earmarked for retirement, it ts granted certain tax advantages .by the IRS. However, tf the
money is taken ou t prior to age 59 1/
2, spec ific tax ramifications result.
Consequently, it is wise to review all
yo ur options before making a decision about whattodowitha lump sum
distribution from a retirement plan.
Your employer is required by the
IRS to provtde you with a written
notice staitng the amount of money

available, your different alternatives
and lh\lir lax consequences. Since tlle
decision to be made can tremendously
impact your financial future, you must
carefully read tlle infonnation providedand unde~landit fully. Seeking
the assislaoce of an investment professional can help.
Ba,ically there arc two things
you can do regarding your lump sum
distribution. You may ask fora check.
However if you receive cash for the
distribution, the IRS requires your
employer to wilhhold 20% of the
amount as pan of your income tax
due on the money. In addition, a 10%
early withdrawal penalty may apply.
Your second choice is to roll
your lump sum directly to an IRA
Rollover account and not pay any
taxes umil you withdraw lhe money
at retirement
Unfonunately, about 70% of
people receiving lump sum distributions do not roll them over to an IRA
account. By not putting aside lhis
money for their future, !hey not only
lose a large ponion of lhe money
available to them , but they are reducing their chances for a financially
secure retirement and !~sing out· on
an opponunity to accumulate fund s
tax-deferred - which expe.ns agree
is the best way to save for retiremen t
Jf there is a possibility you may

work for another employer someday
that offers a similar retirement savings plan, you may want 10 keep your
regular IRA and your Rollover IRA
separa te. That way, you preserve your
ability to roll your distribution (your
Rollover IRA) into a new company
plan at a later date.
Any non-cash assets that are pan
of the distribution can be put directly
into an IRA Rollover account For
example, if you receive shares of
your employer's stock, you don 't
have to sell them in order to put litem
into an IRA Rollover.
Since the rules and regulations
governing retirement plans are complex and can frequently change, you
shou ld always discuss the situation
wilh experienced investment and tax
professionals. Your tax adviser can
explain the latest IRS regulations
regarding lump sum distributiQns and
the tax inferences of your choices. Just
as imponant. however, is seeking the
assistance of an experienced retirement planning professional , someone
who is trained specifically in evaluating lhc curreht alternatives, who can
assess your unique situation, and suggest ways to minimize taxes while
maximizing return.
• ·
Mark Smith is a financial adviser with Ad vest, Inc. in its Gallipolis ollice. ·

Ravenswood to host 6th annual Herb Fest Sept. 30
start that "to do" list of home
ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY - The River Val- improvements needing to be
ley Herbalists' Sixth Annual Herb accomplished this falL Sian off by
Fest is being beld Sept 30 at the writing down the list, whether its
Ravenswood (W.Va.) Riverfront painting the house, weather proofing the windows/doors, new gutter
Park frQm 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
installation/repair,
landscaping the
This festival provides entenainyard
,
cleaning
out
the garage,
ment both in ed•cational demonweatberseal
the
driveway,
new
strations and sales of herbal and
roof,
lawn
weed
cootrol
or
the
muleverlasting products. Stay the entire
day to see bow to weave baskets, titude of other items needing to be
listen to a bistory of native plants, done.
Adjacent to the list leave spaces
bow to use herbs ln the home, cre.ating a herb Christmas tree and for the estimated amount of time to
accomplish
the
project,
much more.
Special guest speaker Myra Hale materials/equipment needed, outwill discuss her farm - La Paix of-pocket cost, and skiUs required.
Farm starting at 10 a.m. Plan to You will probably discover like the
spend a few bours strolling through rest of us that lbe list is too long,
the vendors as you listen to dul- too expensive and too time-concimer music played by Sharon suming to complete all this year.
Yencba. lbis event is sponsored by Prioritize the list according to your
tbe River Valley Herbalists, a current situation . Planning will
group of 40 members living in save you both time and money.
Several calls this week have
Meigs County and Jackson County,
been
on the homeowners lawns.·
W.Va. For more information, call
Large
white grubs (1-2 inches in
Debbie Young. chairperson at
length)
have been appearing near
(304) 273-2254.
. the Soil surface. Both Japanese and
Fall to do list
Homeowner, now is the time to June beeOe grubs have been identi-

fied.
It's too late to get maximum
control using many pesticides due
to the maturity of the grub. Chemical control is best in early August.
The large brown areas in lhe yard
wbere the grubs bave fed need to
be reseeded immediately. For information on bow to control grubs,
please ask for our Home Yard &amp;
Garden sheet #2500.
This is a preferred time to control broadleaf weeds in the lawn.
As the weeds are storing reserves
for winter, the flow of plant substances are to.the root system, thus
herbicides used now have a greater
success to kill both the leaves and

PASSES STATE EXAM •
Holly Ann Pope, oflhe Ohio
State University College of
Pharmacy, recently compleled
a five-year college curriculum
and passed tho exam of the
Ohio Stale Board of Pharmacy.
She is now licensed to practke
pharmacy In Ohio. Miss Pope
was awarded .her license during
the annual licensure ceremony
on Wednesday, Sept. 13, In
Columbus. The event was sponsored by the Ohio Pharmacists
Association. She Is lhe doughier
or Jeff and Carole Pope of Gallipolis and is currently
employed by Revco Drug Store
in the Spring Valley locallon,
Gallipolis.

. HOLLY ANN POPE

root system. You need to identify
the weeds in question, before you
allempt any control measures.
Many stores have idenlilication
books to assist or bring a weed
sample into my office. Many times.
just raising the mowing height of
the grass and correct fertilizer
application will prevent the
encroachment of weeds in tbe
lawn. Remember to follow directions on the. bag or bottle label. For
further information as to what
chemical to use ask for Home Yard
&amp; Garden fa'!,l sheet #4001.
(Hal Kneen is the agricultural
.extension agent for Meig!l County.)

Browns
wallop
Chiefs

Insects prepare
for cold weather

3,000 jobs or 8.5 percent of its
global work force because of weak
financial resulrs and the impact of
the recession in Mexico. an important market for the company's
array of soaps and 'toothpaste.
In Between; Users of the Nasda&lt;J Stock Market, the computerized bo•rse under Justice l1,· panment investigation for p ' ' ' ihle
piice fiXing. An independe p:111el
found that Nasdaq needs m&lt;m: public oversight and it recommended
some structural ch~nges . But the
panel didn't address the price:fixing issue and its recommendauons
won'l necessarily be adopted.
TICKER:
Forbes Inc. publishing magnate
Malcolm S. Forbes Jr. declared he
will run for the Republican presidential nomination as _a champion
of lower taxes ... l980s corporate
raider Carl lcahn took steps to
accumulate a sL'lke in RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp., already
renowned as the subject of the

Crude oil and .unleaded gasoline
futures feU in a technical sell-off on
the New York Mercantile
Exchange. Traders noted rumors of
increasing impons slaned lhe slide,
although !here was no independent
confinnation.
Gasoline futures pore have fall en in two previous sessions _amid
active selling by refiner Amerada
Hess, which has raised· fears of
abundant supplies. The upcoming
sale of up to 38 million barrels of

stbckpiled government crude also
overhang the futures, said Pete
Boyce, president of the Califomia
Independent Petroleum Association.
November light, sweet.crude fell
31 cents to $17.25 a barrel; October heating oil fell 0.58 cent to
48 .09 cents a gallon; October
unleaded gasoline feU 1.38 cents to
53.49 cents a gallon; October naturnl gas rose 3 cents to $1.644 cents
a gallon.

UMW looks to recapture previous
status as annual convention opens .

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Associaled Press Wriler
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - With an eye toward the future , United
Mine Workers President Richard Trumka wants his union to relive the
past, when its members were known as the "shock troops" of American
labor.
The union, one of the country's oldes~ provided the ideas, the money
and much of the sweat that established many other unions, including the
United Steelworkers, the Rubber Workers, and the Chemical Workers.
At its' 51st constitutional convention, which began today in Miami
Beach, Fla., about 800 union delegates will be trying to refocus "on
-growth and growing," Trumka said.
"We want to establish ftrmly that all members of the UMW are and
must be organizers ... so we can get through the year 2000 and beyond as
a growing, vibrant organization that can be a force for social change in
our country," he said.
With mining jobs disappearing and mines increasingly nonunion,_the
UMW will be looking outside the industry for its growth.
. "The Mine Workers have al;vays stood for social change and you're
going to see us become more active in our communities. beyond our work
places," Trumka said.
"We will be trying to bring collective bargaining 10 people who need
i~ whether they work in nursing homes, data processing centc~. universities, for the government or wherever," he ~id.
The UMW, whose 400,000 members once dominated the coal industry, now represents about a third of the country's working mi_ners witll
about 75,000 active members, which includes those recently ·laid off.
Cou.nting retirees, the union puts its membership at 200,000.
. As technology improves, overnll mining employment is dropping as
well, from about 233,000 nationwide in 1980 to about I00,000 today.
And that means there aren't as many miners to be organized, Trumka
· said.
Trumka wants the union to put more money into organizing.
_ UMW members now pay 2.5 percent of their wages, an avernge of
about $22 a week, into a fund to linance pay and health benefits for striking worke~.
The strike fund now stands at $75 millior.; and the administration is
proposing to reduce the assessment to 1.5 percent. When the fund hits
$100 million. the assessment would fall to 1 percent. Trumka says.
Trumka's administration will ask delegates to set aside $1 million a
year of that money for a new organizing fund. The plan being proposed to..
the convention would use it a~ "matching funds" for local unions' organizing.
·
"If a local union will bring som~of its mnk-and-filers out of the mines
&lt;o help us organize for a week, we 'II match them for a second week,"
Trumka sald. "That will allow us to devote 15.000 (man-)day~; per year,
. Jr over 100,000 days by the end of the century, to organizing."

ed into three LAA ' s or voting
areas. All three LAA's will have an
election in 1995. The LAA's in
Gallia County are: LAA-1 :
Cheshire-Morgan, Huntington,
Raccoon, and Springfield Townships; LAA-2: Addison, Gallipolis'
Green, Clay, end Perry Townships;
LAA-3 : Guyan, Harrison, Ohio ,
and Greenfield-Walnut Townships.
Boundaries of LAA's, boundary
maps and the number of farms
within each LAA are available to
the public at the Gallia Farm Service Agency in the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.
Other election events will be
announced as they occ•r. Panicipation is open to all eligible farmers
reg:u-dtess f!f .race. color, religion,
natwnal ongm.- age, sex, marital
slatus, or disability.
·
Lisa Meadows is the County
Executive Director of the Gallia•
Farm Service Agency.

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Prices at gasoline pumps dropped
' a third of a cent in the pa't two
weeks to continue a three-month .
decline, according to a survey of
10,000 stations.
The overall average price of
gasoline, taxes included, was
119.80 cents a gallon on Friday
- a drop of 0.31 cents since
Sept. 8, the Lundberg Sut.vey
said.
"This is the smallest overall
decline nationally since prices
peaked out back on June 9," but
more drops could be in store, analyst Trilby Lundberg said Sunday.
"Most of the market is still
headed down due to slightly
lower crude oil prices,·' she said.
The average price or self-serVice -grades of gasoline were: regular unleaded; 113.0 cents a gallon; mid-grade unleaded, 123.10
cents; premium unleaded, 131.40
cents, and leaded, 112.28 cents.

--- ~
'
/

~

....

ODOT finds more
than half of state
highways are OK

Approximately four dozen
youngsters parllclpated In the
annual Hunllng-and Fishing
Day observance held at the
Meigs County lzaak Walton
Farm near Chester Saturday.
Boys and girls witnessed
domonstrallons In many outdoor activities including hunt·
lng and firearm safety, canoeIng, fiy fishing, archery, shotshell reloading and shooling.
Above, little lrapper Daniel
Buckley, 5, demonstrates how
to set a leg-hold trap for fur
bearers with assistance from
trapping lnslructor John Hel·
zer. At right, C.J. Eslep, a firsttime shooler, pracllcos .22-caliber riDe marksmanship under
tbe watchful eye or Don Smllh.
(Sentinel photos by Jim Free•
man)

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
Associated Press Writer
WASHING1DN - Contrary to
the conventional Nisdom, "angry .
- white males" aren't iJJc only fans
.of political talk radio, according to
a new survey of lalk radio statioos
released Sunday.
The TALK DAILY nationwide
poll of more than 3.000 people who
said they listened to a program the
day before or on the day they were
questioned found that women make
up a surprising 40 percent of the
audience.
Meanwhile, the stereotypical
angry male Republican comprised .
-- a meager 22 percent of the listening
public, according to the new daily
digest of some of the m~ion's leading politicall.itlk radio shows.
The survey also found that most
listeners are not Republican and
that 90 percent are registered to
vote. They also are more likely
than the general public to have
graduated college and to have high er incomes.

And nine prognuns claim more
than 60 percent uf the listening
audience.
"So much of the conventional
wisdom has been that the audience is angry, Republican men and the
audience is actually more diverse
than that," said Bill Adams, who is
starting the daily fax repons on ~11k
radio next month.
_
The telephone survey of 3,035
adults, conducted in July and
August by Adams' public opinion
research finn in Arlington, Va .. has
an error margin of plus or minus 2
percenlage points. It did not break
_out the race of those called.
.
"Dozens of these (hosts) claim
to be on everywhere and have huge
aud1ences, but we wanted t~ see
who had a large enough nanonal
audience for us to track ." Athuns
said.
··
According to TALK DAILY.
the top nine political talk radio
hosts are: Rush Limbaugh; convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gurd()n Liddy ; Bob Grant and Tom

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Leykis (tied) ; Michael Jackson ,
Ken Hamblin, Chuck 1-!:l(dcr, IranContra figure Oliver North and
Michael Reagan (also tied).
The IOth host was impossible to
identify, Adams said, because tl1e
rest of the audience is split runong
dozens of local and regional programs.
Of th'e top nine, Leykis and
Jackson are considered liberals; the
rest are conservative. Exc~p for
Grant of New York Citx_mtd ackson of Los Angeles, all &lt;ll- e programs are syndicated nationally
each weekday.
TALK DAILY will track these
nine shows plus the JcmJin g

pro ~

grams in Seattle, Dalla s and
Atlanta. For the next few month s, it
will also monitor talk shows in Des
Moines, Iowa, and Manchester,
N.H .. because of the upcoming
1996 presidential caucuses and primaries in those two slates.
The rcpons will pay close attention to coverage of the presidential
campaigns and issues. President

PUCq slates public hearings
.on phone service competition

·we've got you covered!" Irs not a phrase you want to hear when you're at a bank. But
then again. neither is "l'ni sorry. your check has been returned."
·

· • pt. pleasant 675-1121

By JOHN CHALFANT
As.•ociuled Press ,Wrller
COLUMBUS - Motorist~ who
hit potholes may disagree, bu,t the
Ohio Department of Tmnspon:uion
told a legislative cnmmillee th:tt
highway pavement statewide is
generally in good shape.
An agency rating system of
highway surfaces showed 57.5 percent were good or very good.
Another 23 .92 percent were rated
fair; 14.75 percent fair to poor;
3.71 percent poor; and 0. 12 pcrcem
very poor.
Those figures and an array of
others were presented last week to
a special House-Senate committee
created to siudy the state's highway
and other public works needs.
Gordon Proctor. ODOT administrator for planning and environmental services, said even a pave·
mcnt that carried a fair rating wn-•
not 'noticeably bad.
.. You drive over a fair pave·
men!. you'd think it was good,'-'
Proctor said in an interview.
"The thing~ that make it fair
you can't see. There are.,things
under the roadway the motori ~t
would never know. If we went nut
and fixed a fair pavemelll you'd be.
asking me, 'What in the heck ·arc
you doing?" ' he said, ·
ODOT evaluates the multilane
freeway system annually and the ,
two-lane system every two years.
The agency said l11ree criteria were
used to rate pavements:
• A visual survc y of problems
such as rulling, cracking or potholes.
• A laser·scnsored measurement
_ o'f pavement roughness or riding
comfon.
• An evaluation of pavement
friction using equipment tlml meaClinton and members of Congress, sures skids ahd stopping distmtccs.
Adams said.
ODOT's overall pavoment conSubscribers will receive their dition rating for t11e .multilane sysfirst overnight fax repons on Oct tem wa~ 76 points out of a possible'
3.
100.
Proctor said the department
Among the poll's other findings:
• Tilrce-fourths of the talk radio S(ll'nds 80 percent o( its available'
money to maintain and preserve:wdiencc is younger than age 60.
• Republicans comprise just 38 existing roads. and 20 percenrror
new construction .
percent of t11e audience.
But he told the commillce that
• Nine of 10 political talk mdio
listeners arc registered to vote, ODOT intentionally was funding
compared with six of 10 Ameri- pavement s at minimum level s
cans.
instead of maximum in urdcr to
free money for major new con • Listeners tend to be bener edu- struction.
cated, with 39 percent holding col- ·
u A person cnuld make Lhc case
lege degree s, compared with 2 I that we should be pulling more
percent of Americans ovcmll .
money into our bridges anu pave• In terms of annual family ments hut we're saying we also
income, 30 percent of listeners
have major new construction needs
e xceed, the $60,000 mark, while
that we cannot ·ignore," Proctor
just 20 percent of the geneml pubsaid.
lic have similar Incomes.
A departrnelll analysis of con,
• Two-thirds of listeners say talk
gestion
on interstate highways
radio is a very or moderately
24
percent of the system in
placed
imponam source of political inforthe
worst
category'
for crqwding.
mation and ideas.

Poll: talk_radio not just for angry white males

I

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A Mulllmedla Inc. Newspaper

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Now Available At Peoples Bank.

~

MHS QUEEN CANDIDATES- The homecoming queen for Meigs High School will be
announced in pre-game ceremonies at the
, Meigs-Alexander game Friday night at Bob
Roberts Field. The candidates are, rrom left,
front, Suzanna Henderson, daughler of Sandy

and Steve Henderson; Heather J(night, daughter
of VIncent and Susan J&lt;night; and Candice
Walker, daughter of Rod and Dianne Walker;
back, Amber Bennelt, daughter of Sam Bennett
and Donnie Bennett, and Lori Rus.-.11, daughter
of Jeffrey and Pamela Russell. (Sentinel photo)

COLUMDUS (AI') - State
utilities regulators arc expected -to
lay down th e ground rul es thi s
week for the coming competition
for local phone customers.
The recommendation s will be
subject to a series of public hearings, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said in a wrillen order
issued last week.
"This propo sal ende avors to
balance all the competing interests
in establishing the framework
under which local exchange com·
petition will take pl ' CC in Ohio."
the PUCO said.
The PUCO also scheduled a
series of 10 public forum s 10 let
consumers know hov. the debate
over local telephone cumpctilion is
shaping up. Chairman Craig Gla7~r
has emphasized tllat 01e forum s are
not required by law, but the commission felt it important to keep
consumers. abreast of the rapidly
changing puhlic policy toward tele phone service.

PUCO spokesman Dick Kim mins saitl the commission cxpecls
to wmp up the entire process hy the
end of the year.
That doesn't me a n consumers
will be able to sw itch phone companies after New Year's Day, however. Most of lhe companie·s planning to enter the market predict it
will be well into 1996 before they
start signing up cuswmers.
So far, four companies - Time
Warner Communi ca tions , MFS
Intclenet , MCI Me tro A cccs~
Transmission and ICG Access Services - have applied to compete
for local customers with
Ameritcch, Cincinnati Dell and
oU1er companies. All but ICG ha ve
already proven to the PUCO that
they have the managerial, technical
and finan cial wherewithal to ctilcr
the market.
The iss ues still be reso lv ed
include:
• How newcomers connect their
equipment with that of ex isting
I

•

lower 70s.

r--

Areas set for FSA
committee elections

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High In

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 35 cenls

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 25, 1995

Overdraft Protection

Soybean prices.~~ntlnuoo_ ~rom o-1

Low tonight In 40s, partly
cloudy. Tuesday, partly sun ny.

Seize the day ---.........Enjoying the great outdoors-- Good
roads?

we·ve Got You Covered I

biggest takeover fight of all
lime .. . Business We ek magazine
parent McGraw-Hill Cos. was
dealt a surprising setback in a First
Amendment fight to publish sealed
documents concerning a legal
brawl between Bankers Trust
New York Corp. and Procter &amp;
Gamble Co.
COMING UP:
MONDAY: Treasury Department holds T-bill auction. National
Association of Realtors repons preowned home sales for August. ·
TUESDAY : Federal Reserve
Open Market Commiuee m,eets,
Conference Board repons September consumer confidence index.
WEDNESDAY: Commerce
Depanment releases durable goods
fogures for August.
THURSDAY: Labor Department releases weekly jobless
claims.
FRIDAY: . Commerce Department relea.&lt;es second-{juaner gross
dome.,lic product, new homes sales
for August.

3-6-8-11-35-41
Kicker:

Vol . 46, NO. 104
Copyrlght1995

Majpr U. S. business...
Continued from D-1

3565
Super Lotto:
475604

WASHINGTON (AP) - With the l;leginning of autumn just
days away, many insects are preparing to dig in for the winter and survive the freezing weather that's ahead.
Scientists don' t know exactly bow they do i~ but they know that
many insects- including the pesky fruit fly and the common bouse
fly - produce specific proteins that protect them when the mercury
dips below freezing.
Agricultural Research Servioe scientists have identifted. several
of the proteins produced by the tiny insect known as the " no-seeem,'' which transmits bluetongue virus.
Bluetongue disease causes about $120 million in annual losses to
domestic livestock producers. Allempts to bait transmission of the
disease are h:unpered by the ability of the insect carrying the virus
to survive the winter, researchers sald.
"The quantity of proteins the insects produce is proportional to
the severity and dumtion of the cold," Richard A N•namaker, an
entomologist at an ARS laboratory in Laramie, Wyo., said in the
September issue of USDA' s Agricultural Research tnagazine.
The no-see-em, known scientifically as Culicoides variipennis
sonoret~sis, prod•ces the protective proteins during a process of
acclimation called cold-hardening.

By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS • On August 22,
1995, the Gallia County Fann ServiCe Agency Committee reviewed
and determined !be local administrative area (LAA) boundaries for
the FSA county committee elections to be held between November
24 and December 4.
This is one of the lirst steps in
the. election process, In compliance
with changes required by the Federal Insurance Reform and Depanment of Agriculture Reorganizatioo
Act of 1994, the county FSA committee set these boundaries. FSA,
an agency of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture - formerly named
ASCS, administers farm commodity, crop insurance. and conservation programs for farmers and
makes farm ownership an~ operating loans.
Elections will be beld to elect
representative direc~y to the county committee. The county is divid-

Pick 3:
012
Pick 4:

Sports, Page 4

Gas prices post
slight decline

,.

Ohio Lottery

Sunday, September 24, 1995

companies. and at what cost.
• Whether companies -will be
required to serve rural areas of the
state.
• If customers will be able to
keep their telephone numbers ir
they switch companies.

Subscription rate
increase set Oct. 1
Due primarily to ·gigantic newsprint increases totalin g over 50 perce nt dunng the past year, home delivery price of the POM EROY DAILy·
SENTINEUSUNDA ¥TIMES-SENTINEL will be adjusted by 25 cents
per week effective Oct. I .
_The new price will be $2 per week.
wtth youth carriers and .motor route
d~i ve rs ~ecei ving a si~nificant portion
ol the on crease. wh1ch is only the
second in over four years.

While mail subscription rates will
ri ~e proportionately, · sin gle-copy
pnces- 35 ce nts dally and $1 Sunday
·remain un~.:han ged.
'

••

�Monday, September 25, 1995

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

.MUlTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pubh~her

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General Manager

LETTERS Of OPINIO'

m

"c lcomc n ey •hould be less than 300

words long All lett ers arc .,uhJ..:'ll to cdnmg .md mu st be s1gned wllh name.
address and telephone num bt: r No un .. •gncd lctlcrs l.l.tll be pubhshcd Leiters

should be 1n good

t a~ l c

,tddrc"t.J ng_

1 ~c:.ue~

not pcr-;onahucs

Legalize drugs? Abuse
czar
says:
No
way
•

Page2
Monday, September 25, 1995

OHIO Weather

"

pen if Congress ytelds to "extremIS! pressure" and hanns chtldren
Just mmutes before htgh-fives
were exchanged m Panella's West

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
Wmg offtce, Sen Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass , condemned the
Senate - and by extenswn tbe
Chnton admmtstration - accusmg
tl of "comm111ing legislauve chtld
abuse '' The Senate measure.
whtch sull must be reconctled wtlh
a far harsher House verston passed
m March, sets a cap of five years
for welfare benefits and cuts spend·
mg by more than $65 btllton over
seven years
The admmtstration's two·
pronged strategy ts to pass welfare
reform and patnt as extremtsts
House Rcpubltcans who tned 10
scutlle tt by addmg more stringent
requirements. Wb1le dtsmayed by
tile direcuon of lhe House, !he laC·
ttctan in Paneua seems to have a

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writ•r
COLUMBUS - Most people mtght not see a stmtlanty between drug
abuse and tile Edsel But Lucctlle Flemmg made the connecuon
Flemmg bas been dtrector of the Ohto Department of Alcohol and
Drug Add1cuon Servtces smce us creauon in 1989
She offered the now-defunct car model as an example 10 explain why
she opposed suggesuons that occastonally surface for a legaltzaUon program 10 rertace the nauon' s costly war on drugs.
'
"I don t lhmk anyone w~o 1s pushtng that answer has truly looked at
what happened m U1e countnes that have tned 11 It's uller chaos, tremen·
dous increase m the homeless populauon, tremendous mcrease m dtsease,
all of the thmgs !hat £" wtlh 11," Flcmmg srud tn an tnlervtew
Sbe ackoowledged !hat consumptton of alcohol - once the target of
nauonal prohtbtllon - has dechned
!;;:;~~~~~
But Flemmg satd a reductton m alcohol use after legahzauon was not f
an argument for legaltzallon of drugs.
"I thmk we are much bener oft if we focus on lhe demand, whtch tS
.
· what prevenuon efforts, treatment efforu do, " she srud
:
"Remember the Edset? Why do you lhtnk the parkmg lots and the
: htghways of lhts country aren't full of Edse!s? There wa.' plenty of sup•ply, !here was no demand," Flemmg satd
Flemmg JOtned some nonprofit groups last week to outhne a program
' tnlended to diSCOurage alcohol and drug use among young people
Substance abuse opponents Cited lhe Untverstly of Mtchtgan's Mom·
tonng !he Future Survey as evtdence of a growmg altttude among youlh
!hat use of alcohol and drugs wa.' acceptable
-In 1994, 45 6 percent of 12th gmders reponed usmg an tllegal drug
at least once, up from 42 9 percenlm 1993
-Between 1991 and 1994, manJuana use by 81h graders more !han
doubled m all calegones: yearly, monlhly, daily Thtneen percent of 81h
graders used martjuana ~I least once m 1994
- In 1991, 79 percent of 12th graders satd they associated regular
man1uana use wtlh a great health nsk In 1994. sentors who thought manjuana use wa.' nsky dropped 10 65 percent
Flemmg remams opltmiSUC even m the face of such numbers
"Nobody srud 11 was gmng to be easy," she satd
"We're dealmg wuh a dtfferenr set of young people and we bave to
start over And we're dealing wtlh !he fact !hat lhe manjuana. for exam·
pie ts maybe 20 t1mes stronger than when lhe ktds in lhe 1960s used it
In November 1994, the voters of
And I had teen-agers Oten, so I know what I'm talkmg abou~" Flemmg Oregon approved Measure 16 (51
said
to 49 percent) h was the f1rs1 She based her opltmtsm on a number of small tndtcamrs. ,mcludmg and only- law tn the Untted
attempts to persuade local drug and alcohol boards to work ' wtlh chtl- States thai allowed phystctans to
dren's servtces agenc•es. Such agreements can provtde treatment for par- asstst paltents to comm1t smc1de.
ents so !hat chtldren do not wmd up m foster care
Among the gutdehnes were that the
Former Gov Rtchard Celeste htred Flemmg when the Cab111c1-level patten! have ''an mcurable and
agency was created. and Gov George Vomovtch kept her on when he ureverstble dtsease" thai w1ll,
took offtce 111 1991 Flemmg prcvmusly headed drug and alcohol pro- "wtthm reasonable medtcal judggrams in Pennsylvanta
ment, produce death wtlhm stx
months"
Around the country, advocates
of "dealh wtlh dtgmty" -!he new
maltenable nghl to be helped to
comm11
sutc1de - reJOICed at llhe
By The Associated fires.•
Today ts Monday. Sept 25. tile 26&amp;th day of 1995 There are 97 days prospect that other ~lates would
soon follow Oregon. Elevctf states
left m lhe year
began to constder physlctan-ass!Sl·
Today's H1ghltght m Htstory·
Jaws, but the momentum has
ed
· On Sept 25, 1493, Chnstopher Columbus set sat! from Cadtz, Spam,
slowed
constderably
w1tb a flotilla of 17 shtps on his second voyage to lhe Western HemlThe
pnmary
reason has been !he
~phere
deetston
of
Federal
DtStrtcl Judge
On lhts date:
Hogan
to
declare
Measure
Mtchael
• In 1513. Spamsh explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa crossed lhe lslhmus
16
unconsltiUIJOnal
(Lee
v
state of
or Panama 10 reach lhe Pactfic Ocean
Oregon
)
In
addtllon
to
lhe
consuIn 1789, the ftrst US. Congress. meeltng m New York, adopted 12
grounds,
the
JUdge
also
lultonal
amendments to tile Consutuuon and sent !hem 10 lhe stales for ratifica·
that
the
law
focused
on
the
fact
uon Ten of !he amendments became the Btll of Rtghts.
permtls
a
doctor
to
provtde
a
In 1890, Mormon prestdenl Wtlford Woodruff tssued a mamt'esto forwtth
a
lethal
prcscnpuon.
paltent
Plally renouncmg lhe prqcltce of polygamy
1
In I904, a New Yor~ Ctly pohcc officer ordered a female automobtle but 11 absolves the doctor from
passenger on FifUt Avenue to slop smokmg a ctgareUe A male compan· bemg present at the sulctde tlself
- "!he most cnucal time, that of
100 was arrested and later fined $2 for abusmg the officer
• • In 1919, Prestdenl Wtlson collapsed afler a speech m l'ueblo, Colo .. dealh " Nonelheless, 111 !he Netherlands - where phystctans have
• aunng a nauonal speakmg tour tn support of the Treaty of Versailles.
: • In 1957. w1U1 300 US Army troops s~1ndmg guard, ntne black chil· been permttted to dlfectly eutha·
:dn:n who bad been forced to wtthdraw trom Central Htgh School U1 Little ntze pauents for more !han 10 years
·Rock. Ark, because of unruly whtte crowds were escorled 10 cia~
: • In 1978, 144 people were k•llcd when a Pactfic Soulhwest Airlmes
; ~oeing 727 and a Cessna pnvate plane coll1ded over San Otego, Cal1f

•

sense that the admm1s1ratton has too Imperious (Donald Regan
finally found what may be House under Ronald Reagan), and some
have grown unpenal (Jobn Sununu
Speaker Newt Gmgnch'sJugular
" You've had a b11l on th~ under George Bush) Asked about
House stde that began wtth recom- the warping dangers of ,the job,
mendatiOns to put ktds m orphan- Panetta offered some lheones.
ages and throw teenage mothers
out on the streeL" Panetta told us
"Number one, you can be blind·
dunng an mtervtew follow111g the ed by the power that ts here.
vote "If you really want lhc story because 11's next to the prestdenm thtS, tt's !hat moderate Repubh· cy," srud Panetta "That can tohtb·
cans finally came mto play here"
tl people preuy qUtckly but power
Desptte 16 months tn the ts something that then plays mto
bunker, Panetta shows no stgns of ego, !hat then bastcally consumes
bunker mentality He remruns well- you That's JUSt lhe nature of work
grounded and good-humored He here The second problem tS that
often manages to ftnd a comtc !here ts always lhe lemptauon not
aspect to the darkest sttuatwns. to serve lhe prestdent but basically
mam pulate th.e pres1dent .. You
mcludmg h1s gnndmg schedule
can
show otllers how powerful~you
"When I worked uver Otere (as
Clmton's ftrst budget director) I are by how you can mantpulaae the
srud I don't have tune to go 10 lhe pres1dent "
balhroom. Here I don't get ume to
eat. So it doesn't make any differ·
On otller 1ssues facing tile While
ence ·•
House, Panetta told us·
The JOb of chtef of staff, like lhe
- Prestdem Chnton "suppot1ed
prestdency itself, has been a tragtc the dec1sion" by the Jusu,ce
one for many of Panetta· s prede- Dcpartmenr to recommend publtcacessors Some have become mtox•- uon of the Unabomber's 35,000cated with lhc power (H R. Halde- word arucle by The Washmgton
man under R1chard Ntxon), albers Post and The New York Ttmes
Htgh-level Whtte House disc~­
stons began. as Panetta put tl, 'las
far back, frankly, as wben the
Unabomber was threatcmng '\o
blow up Los Angeles and San
Franctsco."
Panella satd the White House
dtscussed publication and "ibe
feehng was the risks, while Urere
are nsks involved here - it was
much better to nsk on the basts of
safety."
- If Coltn Powell "were really
bemg stratght with the American
people" he would have offered a
much harsher assessment of what
atls the Repubhcan Party m h1s
book Panetta also satd !hat Powell's behefs are actually "more m
ltne" wtth the Democrauc Party

IToledo I 58" I

••

Nat Hentoff
of these practtttoners of eulhanasta
are becommg queasy at bemg Ute
tmmedtale agents ol death
The final burden, therefore - as
m Oregon's Measure 16 - wtll be
enltrely on the Dutcl1 pauent, left
all alone He or she, tf very stck or
dtstraughl, can sptllthe medtcme or
fall asleep before takmg all ol 11
and wake up unable to move Or
!he patten! suddenly may want to
avoid gomg through tile final exit
but doesn't know how to slop once
!he patton has been taken
As for lhe consututtonal issue in
phystctan-assistcd sutctde, Judge
Hogan ruled tbatlhe Oregon slatute
vtolates "equal protecuon of the
laws " Most Oregon ctttzens. he
pointed ou~ can be protected from
domg lhemselves in by lhe laws of
!he s~11e that requ1re. for example.
psychtatric evaluauon for those
found to be a danger to lhemselves
If they arc found to be sutctdal
because they arc chntcally
depressed, for mstance. that condluon can he treated.
Dut people seekmg phystctan·

Today in history

·.•
•

"

• IColumbus 170' I

''

Showers

fee

•
••

..·.•
••.•
.•
•

•• •
•
•

•
•
•

\Cl0$1\'({'f,. '(OI) CONI!t\l.IOUS\..Y

'\Ot.t&gt; \"'0

~~ Y'OUR

V~6E.IAe\..E.S, \"'0 C.LEP.,N
'(OU ~OON\, IO GO

,-o

'\o ~ED, E.TCEI€~A&lt;:
"'(oiJ tteet&gt; A."'
A't't'Ofl tolE'( ...

I

country
The psychologtcal suuation is
not nearly so predtctable Norlh·
western Universtty Professor David

Ben Wattenberg
G~tmann. a developmental psy·
chologtst and a 70-year-old who
sttll JOgs regularly, ts the author of
an acclatmed book about agmg •
"Reclatmed Powers" (Baste
Books) Gutmann's cross-cultural
research leads htm to beheve !hat
agmg can be, and often ts, a pro·
cess of heallhy and tntnnstc
growlh
In most tradtttonal non-modem
soctebes, Gutmann says, the elderly gam a new psychologtcal free·
dom, compensaung for lhe physical
eroswn that comes with age .
Unshackled from !he daily sense of
emergency that goes along wuh
rearmg chtldren, the aged often
find new fulfillment. Older women
tend to become more aulhontauve
and powerful, often prestdtng over
a famtly matnarchy Older men
tend to become softer, wiser and
more understanding They are the
shamans, htgh priests and tenders
of the culture, often revered for
their wisdom.
Moreover, Gutmann pomts out,

the elderly- by defimuon- are
survtvors Dependent types dte off
early . Somehow the aged have
managed to keep body and mmd
workmg.
In modern soctelles, new
medtctnes and treatmt;nls keep peo·
pie alive longer and tn beuer
health Alas. says Gutmann, these
modern soctettes typtcally don't
use the polenttal resources of the
elderly as productively as do the
more tradtttonal socteues Mobthly
erodes matnarchy It's even
tougher on elderly men; there ts not
much or a market for shamans or
culture-tenders these days Selfesteem is peddled to teen-agers, but
•gnored for semors, who may need
1t more
We may speculate: Is there,
potenttally, a useful confluence
between what's bappenmg m gov·
ernment and what's happentng
demographtcally and psychologl·
call y? Perhaps As the government
dtminishes some of tts care-gtving
funcuons, wouldn't 11 be nice ir
more of tile elderly came back mto
play through the pnvate and volun·
tary sectors? Lord knows, we are a
soc1ety !hat needs teachers, mentors, matriarchs and tenders of the
tradiuonal culture
Meanwhtle, we Depresston

Sunny Pt Cloudy
~

Cloudy

1995 AccuWaathaf Inc

. Thickening clouds slated
.to be on decrease tonight
By The Associated Press
Clouds wtll commue 1o develop
and lhicken over the stme today II
few showers may ~~so pop up from
ume to ume but ramf.lil tot:lis arc
expected to be very hght
lltghs today wtll top out m the
60s across the slate
A few ltght showers may lmgcr
mto the evenmg but otherwtse
clouds wtll be on the decrease
' tomgh~ evenrually becom111g party
,cloudy across the Slate Lows wtll
dtp to t11e low to tntd-40s pet haps"
J:ew degrees warmer Ill Jru sou UlCin
,counties
A btl more sunshme wtll be
around on Tuesday :~though some
clouds wtll suck around Tcmpera(ures wtll conttnuc to moderate
wJih htghs expected to he 111 the
,llpper 60s to lower 70s
The record htgh temperature fnr
U1is date at the Columbus wcmhco
'stauon was 93 111 1900 The 1ecorcl

low was 33 111 1967
Sunset today wtll be a1 7 24
p m Sunnsc on Tuesday wtll he a1
7 23 am
Weather fm ccast:

Tomght Clou&lt;ly southeast wtUl
a chance of showers carl y Tl1 e11
parttal clear111g Partly cloudy else·
where Lows from lhe upper 40s
north to the upper 40s extreme
south
Tuesday t&gt;anly smmy Htghs
Irom 01e upper 60s northeast 10 the
lower 70s south
Tuesday tnght A clwncc ol
showers northeast Dry elsewhere
Lows 45 10 50
Extended fnrecasl:
Wednesddy Dry Htghs 65 10
70
Thursday Dty Lows 45. to 50
a11d lughs m Ute uppct 60s to mt&lt;l
70s
Fnday Dry Low&gt; ,truund 50
and htghs m I he 70s

·.w eekend wrecks /fi/110
NORWALK ,- Carl E
Mortensen, 68, of Mtla!l, dnver m
a two-car acctdem on Oh10 61 m
Huron County
DEFIANCE - Jack Chnsty,
78, of Archbold, dn vcr of a c&gt;tr hn
by a tram at a cross111g on a
Wtllt,uns County ro.td
WILLARD - l:ued L Grtrdcner, 21, ot Wtllrud Ytckte J Ztckefoosc, 41 , of Bellevue, rmd Ju&lt;ly R
Pnesl, 22, of Columbus, p.L"cngers
m a two car acciUent on Oh10 9 m
lluron County
FRIDAY
ASHTIIBULII - Tyn.t R Lee,
19, olllndover, dower and passen
ger Meli ssa A CJ1urch, 22, ol
McKean, Pa, m a two·c.tr acudcnt
on an Ashtabula County road

ments were heard before the federal Second Cucuit Coun of Appeals
m a suit attemptmg to strike down
a New York state law !hat forbids
phystCians from asststing sutcide.
Argumg for Compassion m
Dymg, a Seattle culhanasta groll)i,
Kathryn Stsk Tucker satd !hat tbe
Fourteenth Amendment prohtblts
the government from denytng per"
sonal liberty Without due process
As reporled m The New York
Ttmes, she noted !hat "Just as !lie
Supreme Coun had set a hmtt on
when a woman has the nght (the
personal hbeny) to an abonion;"
lhe appeals court could hmtl phystCtan-asststed sutctde "to the very
..
last stages of a person's hfe"
Judge Mtilon Pollack asked ber
"Aren't you ascnbmg 10 the docto•
the pnv1leges of !he execultoner.1
All tllat doctors are cerufied to o~
ts to treat They are not certtfied tp,
asstst to kill " So, too, satd Htp·,
pocmtes

,,

Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the,
Bill of Right..
(For Information on how te
communicate electronically with•
this columnist and others, coQ&gt;.,
tact America Online by calling 1,o
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

.

br btes take 11 one day at a time:,
leammg tile game The olher day t~
a fast-food restaurant, I Slepped Ul!
to tbe cash regtSter and pomted 10 a
s1gn offenng a senior discount:

"You don't look hke a senior,' !
growled lhe young man at tbe re~·
tster "But I am I Just turned 62, !
I satd. "I'll let you get away with tl
lhts ltme," he barked, knocking d
half dollar off lhe check. It was lC
double vtctory, I got my discouu
and I balanced out some or the!
Urnes I was of(ered a semor dts-:
count before .1 wa.' ehgtble
)
The last ume I had been carded1
was as a teen-ager seekmg a drinki
m a college !Own. It feels betler
look too young at 62 than 11 dtd at;
18 It bathed me in self-esteem, a•
warm glow !hat lasted unttl I came:
home to read a letter from tile:
Soctal Secuttly Admmistratwn:
mformmg me tbat I was now ehgl· )
ble for reurement.
:
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fe!.- •
low at the American Enterprise :
Institute, is the host or the weekly :
public television program,·
"Think Tank."
;
(For information on how 1o :
communicate electronically with l
this columnist and others, con .. !
dil:t ll.merlca Online by calling 1· :
~
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

to:

Vtrgtl H Roush, 83, of Pomeroy, dted Saturday, Sept. 23, 1995 at
Holzer Medtcal Center
Born May 14, 1912 m Chester, son of the late Henry Curtts and Jenme
Heaton Roush, he rettred m 1977 from the Ohto Deparunent of Trans·
portallon's survey crew and was a 1930 graduate of Chesler High School
He ts survtved by two sons and daughters-m-law, Larry and Shirley
Roush of Wmler Haven, Aa, and Don and Dtane Roush of Pomeroy, a
daughter and son-m-law, Mary Jo and Dave Bamnger of Coolville; five
grandchtldren and etght great-grandchtldren, a stsler and brother-in· law,
Mabel and Denzel Goeglem of Pomeroy, a brother-m-law, Btll MaUack of
Pomeroy, and a stster-m-law, Mtldred Mallack of Mtddleporl
lie was preceded m death by hts wtfe of 60 years, Belly J Matlack
Roush; an infant brother. Raymond Roush; and three ststers, Bemtce
McCullough. Gladys Vmlet attd Elste Spence
Sorvtces wtll be held II am Wedoesday 111 the Fisher Funeral Home,
Mtddleport, wtlh the Rev Sharon Hausman offictaung Bunal wtll follow
m Chester Cemetery Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6 9 p m
Tuesday

Francis E. Welch

WVA

••

Havmg Just turned 62, ehgtble
now for semor dtscounts, I stand
before you as a leadmg tndtcator
What IS happentng now to us
DepressiOn babtes wtll be happen·
mg soon to lhe baby boomers h is
ttme to lhmk about agmg m Amenca. governmenlally and psychologtcally. separately and togelher
The Republican Congress 1s
wrestlmg w11h Medtcare, trym~ to
"decrease tile rate of mcrease · tn
spendmg. Prestdent Cltnton ts
pledged to the same goal. but
would do it more slowly All the
players are driven by the same
facts People are hvmg longer
There are 80 mtlhon boomers comit\g to seniorhood and they haven't
had enough children to keep the
soctal benefits pyramtd game gomg
at quite the same rate. Medtcal
costs are rismg There ts a federal
deficu
So we wtll end up wuh some·
what htgher premiums, somewhat
lesser bcnefus or somewhat more
efftcient heallh care -- probably
alllhrec It won't be a dtsaster. In a
few years, !here wtll also have to
be an adjustment m Soctal Secumy
benefits. That won't be a ca1aclysm
e11her. Other soc1al benefit pro·
grams will be curtrulcd. Again, no
tragedy America IS still a very ncb

PA

IND

Senior discounts, not discounted seniors .

Berry's World

•

IMansfoeld 166' f•

Would hippocrates assist a suicide?
asststed suictde under Measure 16
dtd not have those protccuons
"There lli no reqUirement," satd
Judge Hogan, "that they he cvalu·
ated by a mental heallh spectaltst "
Funhermore, under thts law, "con·
teary to lhe phystctans' 'reasonable
standards of care' for other
pauents, !here 1s no bar to a physi·
ctan acung negligently "
Measure 16. so celebrated by
many. "dealh wilh dignity" lobby·
ISIS, "provtdes the means," said
the Judge, "to commtt su1cide to
people who may be competent,
mcompetent, unduly influence&lt;l.
and/or abused at the time of
dealh."
Hogan emphasized a statement
by Nmlh Circuit Coun of Appeals
Judge John Noonan who, m March
of Ibis year, had upheld lhe law m
Washington state that decrees
asststed sutctde unconstitutwnal
Noonan wrote. "In 205 years of
our existence, no constjlulwnal
nght to atd in ktlling oneself has
ever been assencd and upheld by a
court of final JUnsdtction Unless
the federal judiciary 1s 10 be a noatmg constituuon. a federal court
should not mvent a constttutmnal
nght unknown to the past and anutheucal to defense of human hfe
that has been a chtef responsibthly
of our consututional government.' ·
Meanwhile. in September, argu-

Virgil H. Roush

MICH

- The stumbltng start suffered
by the Cltnton admintstration m
1993 was partly the result of the
preStdent' s personal transltton from
bemg governor. Panetta said Cltnton IS "still tn tranSIUOn but more
than ever understands lhe role of
the presidency "
Jack Anderson and Mich11el
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

-!here 1s now a move among doctors toward assisted Sutcide ratlter
than having the doctor actually
admmtster !he fmal potion. Some

--Area Deaths--

Tuesday, Sept. 26
Accu Weather• forecast for dayttme cond1 ttons and htgh

Panetta avoids usual chief of staff pitfalls
WASHINGTON - Dunng tile
final countdown leadmg up to Sen·
ate passage of an overhaul of tile
welfare syslem, lhe office of While
House Chtef of S1aff Leon Panella
resembled Cape Canaveral before a
btg launch
Panella and sentor slaffers, ues
loosened and shtrtsleeves rolled up,
were glued 10 a TV monttor showmg !he live vote Concern slowly
gave way to celebrauon. When lhe
87-12 vtciOry was announced.
Panella exchanged exuberant htgh·
fives wtlh ?tdes Fmally !here was
a legtslauve lifl-off
To some extent, the vote may
have signaled a re-launchmg of lhe
Cltnton prestdcncy An exclled
Cltnton, who ran as a "New
Democrat" pledgmg to "em! wei·
fare as we know 11." promplly
called Panella from Flonda to swap
no1es and congratulauons
Dut tn a speech !hat day, Cltnton
tllustrated lhe difficult fl1gh1 palh
he's navtgating wllhm hts own
party when he tssued a warmng
!hat welfare must be a "btparusan
effon" to "prmoote work " Yet he
emphastzed that tl could not hap-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Francts Eugene Welch, 78, &lt;!ted Fnday, Sept 22, 1995 111 San Antomo.
Texas.
A former restdent of Metgs County, he was born Feb 22, 1918. a son
of the late Emerson and Mahala Welch of Snowvtlle He was a sergeant m
!he US Anny durmg World War II, havmg spent 55 months m Gennany
and Ireland
He ts surv1ved by Ius wtle, Jo Wtlltes Welch, a son and daughtcr-mlaw, a daughter and son-m-law mtd four gmndchtldren
Nso survtvmg are two ststers, Anna Gnffith of Pomeroy, and Hazel
Mtckolas of Curuce
He was preceded m deaU1 by live brothers &gt;md three ststers
Scrvtccs wtll be held l,t1er 111 San Anlumo

Leslie 'Les' Williamson
Leslie "Les': Wdltamson, 71, ot Potnl Pleasant, W Va , dted Saturday,
Sept. 23 , 1995 m Pleasant Valley Hospttalm followmg a lengthy Illness
Born July 26, 1924 m Selh, W Va , son of lhe late Ervm and Edna
Meeks Wtlhamson, he was U1e owner of Les Wtlltamson Jewelers m
Point Pleasan~ and a lonner member of lhe Ltons Club and Loyal Order
of the Moose, Pomt Pleasant
He was a member of the Mason County Area Chamber of Commerce,
and a decoraled dtsabled World War II veteran who served m the US
Navy Coast Guard He w,ts a 1941 graduale ol Shennan Htgh School tn
Seth and a 1950 graduate of Ole ReSJco School of Watch Maktng as a ccrUfied horologt sl
He was also preceded m death by two brothers, Harry and Eart
SurviVIng are Ius wtle, Rosa Lee Dameron Wtlltamson of Pomt Plea'anl, a son, Shane L Wtlhrunson of Pomt Pleasant, two brolhers, Cun
Wtlhamson ol Teays Valley, W Va, and Hasque Wtlhamson of Seth, a
stster, Ltlly Woodrum of Columbus, and two granddaughters
Servtce wtll be held I p m Tuesday m the Wtlcoxen Funeral Home,
Pomt Pleasant, wtth U1e Rev Jrunes Lewts and Rev Odell Bush offictatmg Buna! wtll be m the Ktrkland Memonal Gardens, Pomt Pleasant
Fnends may call at 01e funeral home from 6·9 tomght

Marriage maintenance
· A "•narnage mallltenam.:e"
workshop wtll be held Fnd.ty, 7
p.m al Ash Street Freewtll llapllst
Church m Mtddleport The evenmg
wtll conclude wtlh a renewal of
mamage vows and a dmner provtd
ell, by lhe church For reservaltons,
crlll 992-7410
Legion Auxiliary meeting
Drew Webster Amencan Leg10n
Ladtes Auxthary Post 39 wtll mecl
Tuesday, 2 p m at the LegiOn Hall

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·960)
Pubh~hed

every afternoon Monday Jhrough

Fnda} Ill Court St Pomeroy Ohto by the
Oh10 Y.,~!Jey Pubh~hmg Com p:my!Muh ~rned1a

Inc

Pomeroy OhiO 45?69 Ph ?92 2156

St:co nd cl!15s postage prud 01 Pomeroy Ohm
' Membtr 1l1e A~!&gt;OCIOted Pre~~ and the Oh•o
Newsp;~per As~oc1 tllmn

POSTMASTER Send address correct 10M to
The Da1ly Sentinel l I I Court St Pomeroy
Oh10 45769

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Uy Carrlr:r or Motor Roolr
One Week

S 1 75

One Momh

$7 60

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$91 00

SINGLE COPY PRICE
]5

Oruly ....... ..:...... ..

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Subscnbcrs not desmng to pay the earner m.1y
remn 1n adYance dtrect to The O:uly Sentmcl
on a three ~1x or 12 month bo~ts Credtl wtll hi=
gt\len earner each week

No subscnpt10n by m11l pcrmllted 10 m:as
where home earner ~en'ke

ll

ovatlnble

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnsldC' Me1p County

13 Week~
Week.!
S2 WecU

2~

S23 92
S47 06
S92 ~6

Ratts Outside Mrip Cnunly

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeb

S2S 61
$49 66
$96 20

Applicaltons acc.pted
Appltcaltons lor U1e new parent
mentor to he htred hy the Metgs
County Board of Educalton wtll he
accepted through Fnday. John
Rctbel, Metgs County supcnnlendenl, announced today
The board approved the postUon
for a menror 10 work wt~l parenls
of chtldren wtth dtsabtltues The
JOb descnpuon ts avmlahle at the
Metgs Coumy Educauon.~ Scrvtcc
Center, Pomeroy. or lutlher tnlormauon may be obtamed !rom
Rcthcl or Carol Drcwcr, 992· '8R'

Umts of the Metgs County
Emergency Med•cal Servtce
recorded 25 calls for assistance
Saturday and Sunday, mcludmg
four transfer calls Umls respond·
mg mcluded:
CHESTER
6·32 am Saturday, volunleer
ftre department to Rt&lt;lgecrest
Manor, smoke odor~~ Daryll Wells
restdence
MIDDLEPORT
12 54 p m Saturclay, New
Haven, W Va, Ahce Ktrhy, Plea.&lt;ant Valley Hospttal;
7 57 p m Saturday, South Second Avenue, Dorothy Roush, treated at lhe scene;
11:14 am Sunday, Ash Street.
John Htte, Veterans Memonal Hns ptL11
OLIVETWP.
2 43 am Sunday, State Route
6&amp;1, Sherne Randolph, VMH,
12 53 p m Sunday, Slate Route
124, Hope Decker, St Joseph's
7:30 p m. Sunday, Moulll Ohve
Road, Joseph Danae, treated at the
scene
POMEROY
1.13 am Sunday. Pearl Street
Patncta llmdy, Holzer Medtcal
Cenrer;
2 12 p m Sunday, Laurel Chit
Road, Jerry Morgan, VMH,
11.01 p m Sunday. US 33
Clarence Gnfftth Pleasant Valley
llosptlal

COLUMBUS (AP) -

lndtana-

Ohw dtrecl hog pnces at selecte&lt;l

buymg pomts Monday by lhe U S
Depanmenl of Agncullure Markel
News·
Barrows and gtlls. steady to 50
cents lower, demand moderate

Blood Pressure clinic
Hamson vtlle Semor Ctltzens
wtll hold a blood pressure clmtc at
the commumty butldtng. 10 to
II 30 a m Tuesday The meeung
wtlllullow

Court
news
•

I/8Am Etc Power
35
Akzo .........
. 611 118
Ashland Oil
..33 Ill
AT&amp;T .....
............63 112
Bank One..
... JS 3/4
Bob E•ans ...................... t7 J/4
Cham pion lnd .
.
..
l3
Charming Shop ................ 4 7/8
City Hold lng ..
. 26 114
Federnl Mogul ...
.. ... 20 J/8
Goodyear T&amp;R
.39
K-mart. ......
.. 14 t/8
Lands End
16 1/4
Unoltcd Inc .......
18 1/4
Multimedia Inc
43 1/2
People's ... ..
23 3/4
Ohio Valley Rank. .
...36
One Valley....
32 718
Rockwell .
46 3/8
Robbtns &amp; Myers
27 J/4
Royal Dutch .
.. ... 123 118
Shoney's Inc
12 1/8
Star Bank .
. ...SJ
Wendy lnl'l ..
22 t/4
Worthington lnd
19112

-·-·-

Stock reports arc the tO.JO a.m
quotes provided by Advc s t uf

Gallipolis

Deputy crashes party, 5 cited
Five people were cued afler&gt;11 Me1gs County Sheriffs Depart·
ment depoty, respondmg to a complrun~ crashed a pany on Whtte's;
Htll Road near Rutland Friday around II 48 p m
Ctted on charges of underage consumplton were Bndget D :
Counctl, 18, Rulland, Roger L. Roush, 20, Pomeroy; Mtchael II :
Lee 19 I Cltflon &gt; W Va, ChnsiOpher A Brown, 19, Pomeroy, and'I
Carl B Hetl, 19, Mtddleporl
1
Juvemles at the party were turned over to thetr parents, accordmg :
to a shenffs department repon
1
t

Woman cited in crash
A Reedsvtlle woman was ctled followmg a one-car crash on
State Route 248m Ohve Township early Sunday
Sherry L Randolph, 25, was C.'l,ll:iound at a htgh rate of speed
when her car went off ~1e ldl s1de of !he road, commg to rest on us
stde, accordmg to a Metgs County Shenffs Deparunent repon
She was transported by the Oltve Township squad of the Metgs
County EmergeJlCY Medtcal Servtce to Vetemns Memonal Hospttal
where she was treated and released for mmor tn)urtes A passenger,
Wtlltam S Drunty. 31, also of Reedsvtlle. was nolmJured, accordtng to the repon
The 1986 Ford Escort Randolph was dnvmg sustamed heavy
damage, the report stated
She was cued on charges of dnv111g under !he mtluence, expired
operator's ltccnse, cxptrcd plates. fic1111ous plates and no msurance,
the report indtcated

1•
•

•
:
·

Youth burned in traffic mishap
A Pomeroy-area youtl1 w,t&lt; treated for m111or tn)Unes followmg a
one-car mctdelll on New Ltma Road near Happy Hollow Road
around 7 45 p m Sdturtlay
Joshua C Howard, 16 "''L' dnvmg a 1977 Chevrolet Chevetle
thai sustnned heavy, dtsahltng d.unage, accordmg to a Metgs County Shentrs Deparunent report
He was transported by U1c Rullantl squad of !he Mctgs County
Emergency Medtcal Servtce to Holzer Medtcal Center. where he
was treatc&lt;l for a bum to the fool and release&lt;!, accordmg to a hospi·
tal spokeswoman
The mcuJent remrnns umJer mvestag.1t10n

Hit/skip accident probed
A Coolvtlle woman reportedly susl:uned mmnr mJunes followmg a btl/skip acctdent near Pomeroy Saturday evenmg
Com Wolfe, 68, was a pa"enger 111 a car &lt;lnven by Mtchael E
Wolle, 42, Ree!)svtlle Wolfe was deltvenug newspapers on
Pomeroy Ptke when a velucle tell l~e road and struck hts truck, a
1989 Datsun. head -o n, accnrtlmg to .1 shertl r s deparonent repon
The mher vehtd~ then lett lhc scene. 01e report slated

Both sides to tie together
their cases for O.J. jurors

Brentwood condomnuum as her
LOS ANGELES (AP) Remember them, prosecutors wtll two chtldren slcptmstdc
It ts a case wtth no eycw11ness
tell JUrors
Remember Ntcole and Ron - a and no murder weapon The evtRACINE
slender blonde Ill a black halter dcnce ts ctrcumstanuat. and the
8 13 p m Sunday, Suue Route dress. a handsome young man tn way Jurors sec 11 ts key to whe01er
124, Yennonl Markms, VMI-1
Jeans and a tatlored slmt - and the ~ley can COnVICt
RUTLAND
Whtle openmg st,ucmems were
vwlcnce v1s11ed upon them
7 51 p.m Saturday, volunteer Remember !he nver of blood
road .maps showmg where both
fire deparllnenl attd squad to New
For prosecutors, the challenge ol cases mtended to go, the final arguLtma Road, motor-velucle acct- final arguments 111 Ihe 0 J Strop- ments offer a review ol the journey
denr, Joshua Howard, HMC
son murder tnal begms Tuesday completed and an unerpretatton of
SYRACUSE
wtth resunectmg lhe vtchms whose what was proven Some toptcs lik~­
10 04 am Saturday, Pomeroy memory
has laded 1n and out ly to be addressed by boU1 stdes.
Nursmg and Rehabthtllltnn Center. Uuoughout the trtal
• Phystcal ev1dence A bloody
Edna Cannel, VMH,
For defense auomeys, summa- glove. bloody socks, hatr and fibers
4:02 p m Saturd.ty, Droadway lion offers the chance 10 turn and a trail ol blood drops hnkmg
Stree~ Lois Moore, HMC
Jurors' eyes m another tltrecuon- the crunc scene and Sunpson',,
TUPPERS PLAINS
toward lhe rac1sm, hes and frrune· esuue are the focus of the prosec45:17 a.m Saturday, volunteer up allegatiOns that consutute the uon case The htgh-tech sctence of
fire deparunent and squad to Stale heart of tile defense
DNA analysis w:L' cructalm pruntI
Route 68 I, hay bale tire on Robert
Yes, remember the vtcums, the mg a ptcturc of S11npson's blooj)
Keaton property, Coo!Vtlle and &lt;lefense wtll say 0 J Sunpson type and that of the vtcltms mmChester VFDs a&gt;Stsled,
remembers, too lie gneves for the gled on key pteces of evtdenc~
11:05 am Saturday, Eden molher of hts two young chtldren, What does 11 mean? Defense '"
Rtdge Road, Mtke Smnh. St
and he dtd not ktll her
lawyers wtll say 11 means nothmg
Joseph's HosptL11,
'
Defense a11orney Johnnte because the evtdcnce was so badly
9 24 p.m Saturday, Stale Route Cochran Jr ts hkely to return to Ute contarnmalcd or purposely tamte~
7, Ltz Dryanl, St Joseph's Hosptl.tl,
theme~ of hts openmg statement .
10 tmpltcate Sunpson IIW .tll lest
8 15 p m S.tlurday, E&lt;~stern dcltvered ctghl long months ago
results are useless
t!tgh School, Joseph Cratg, trealed Stmpson was fr,uned, set up. vtcat the scene,
Umlzed. And he wtll seek to con• Tunehne. The prosecutton has
12.06 am Sunday , volunleet
vmce Jurors that the evtdencc ts sci out a very spectfic mmute-byfire deparunent and squad to State such a mess 11 woul&lt;l be a crune to mmutc accoutlt of how Stmpson
Roule 681, hay bale tire on Robert
could have had the ume to commtt
convtct Sunpson
Keaton property , ~
"John me Cochr,m wtll be over two murders, rush back to hts
12 H am Sunday, Stale Route
the top." predtclcd Loyola Umver- estate two mtles away, sltp tnside
124, J R Blackwell treated at the
S11y law professor Luune Leven - and get ready to meet a lunousme
scene,
son "He wtll be wuvmg the llag wruung to take htm to tile atrport
7 38 p m Sunday, State Rou1e
and speakmg from the mnunt ·:
The defense says the llmeltne
681. Tara Smtih, St Joseph's Hns
She satd he'll &lt;~lso offer Jurors makes no sense and cites a series ot
pt~11
"a smorgasbord of doubt s tn wtlncsse? who were near lhc conchoose I rom "
domtnmm al Ute hour tn question
Stmpson ts charged wtlh the and saw noth1ng am1ss
\
June 12, 1994, slaymgs of Ius txwtfe Ntcole Brown Snnpson and
US 1·3, 230-260 lbs . country her fnend Ronald Gol&lt;lman They
pomts 46 50-47 50, few 48 00- were slushed to death outSide her
48 25; plants 47 -0-48 75
US 2-3. 230-260 lbs , country
potniS 41.50-46 50
Sows 50 cents to I 00 lugher
Appltcauons lorn new parent
US 1-3 300-500 lbs 3100- mentor to be htrc&lt;l hy the Metgs
36 00. 500-650 lbs 3S 00-38 50
County Do.tr&lt;l nl Educ.ttton wtll be
Boars 30 00-32 00
accepted through Wcclnesd.ly, Sept
Esumated recetpts 34,000
27 ~~he tl.lt c w.ts lll.JL:CUf:lt c Ill car
Prices rrom The Producers her mformauon thai appeared 111
Livestock Association:
fhe Dmly Sentmel
Caltle: uneven. I 00 lower 10
The board approvetlthc pOSt liOn
2 00 htgher
·
for a mentor to work wtth p.uems
Slaughter steers Chotec 59 00- of chtldren w11h dtsabthues The
66 10, select 55 00-62 00
JOb descnpuon ts av.ulahle at the
Slaughter betters: chotec S8 00- Metgs County Educ.utonal Scrvtce
65 50, select 50 00-61 00
Ccmcr, Pomeroy, or tunhcr 111forCows I 00 10 4 00 lower, all mauon may be obtlltned lrom
cows 41 00 and down
Supenntendcnt John Rethcl or
Bulls uneven. steady- stronger Carol Brewer at 992-3R8:l
to 5 00 lower, all bulls 46 75 and
down
Veal calves uneven, lower to
2() 00 htgher; ehotce 175 00 and
down

.

Today's livestock report

Trash pickup date changed
Tmsh ptck up m Racme wtll he
Wednesday tllSiead of ruesclay due
10 truck repatr

Stocks

Local News in Brief:

Squads record 25 cal~s

Hospt~11,

Herbrest slated
Rtver Valley Herhaltsls wtll be
Holdmg the stxlh annual Herbfest
on Sept 30 from 10 am to 5 pm
at the Ravenswood (W Va) Rtverfront •Park For mforma110n call
Demse /\mold at992-7573

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

The follow111g cases were
resolved We&lt;lnesLI&lt;~y 111 the Mctgs
County Court ol Judge Patnck H
O'Bnen
Ftned were Claud Randolph,
Rccdsvtllc, cnmmal m!Schtel.
costs, 10 days J3tl """Pended 10
three days wtth credtl gtven for
ttme served, two years probatwn.
resttammg order JssucU, restltulwn,
forfctture of ftrearm ,
Joseph W LeMaster Long DOl10m, dome~ttc vtolcncc. costs. 30
days Jatl suspended 10 lhree day s
two years probalton, restratntng
order tssu ed , John II Spencer
Racme, seat bell, $25 plus costs

Correction

THE IRS COULD GET OVER
HALF OF YOUR MONEY!

---Hospital news-VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admtSstons -Dwayne
Edwards, Rulland , Don Collms,
Pomeroy
Saturday dtscharges - Wtlham
O'Donnell, Pomeroy
Sunday admtsstons- none
Sunday discharges - none
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 22 - Rtchard
Wtlltams, Logan Alltson, Luther
Cochran, Mrs. Bnan Sallee and
son 1 Mrs Roben Barkdoll and son,
Ben1amm Knox, Dons Harper,

Cynthia LIVIngston, Mrs Bruce
Damron and son. Detdra Reed,
Mrs Jan Kostiv&lt;ll and son. Karen
Helmtck
Discharges Sept. 23 - Dons
Eddmger, Ernest Handley. Ernest
Mttchell, BenJamm Forshey
Discharge.&lt; Sept. 24 - Andrew
Shang, Valene Shull. Patnc1a
Oberholzer, Ella Jenkms. Raymond
Adams, Earl Depue
Birth - Mr and Mrs Dwayne
Porgey, daugh1er. Rio Grande
(Published with permission)

If you are an early retiree or are otherwiSe gettmg a lump-sum
dislnbubon from your employer, the IRS could take over half if
the transactiOn IS not handled correctly Help from a qualtfted tax
and investment profess1onaltS recommended For more
I information or to schedule a free consulta tiOn call

Karl Kehler III, CPA
Ph: (614) 992-7270
Investment and Tax Consultant
Representattve of H.D Vest Fmanetal Servtces
Securttt.es offered through II D Yest ln ve.,tmen.t Securttu:.J, Inc.
Advuory servtces offenng tlarougla liD Ve.st Advl3ory Servtces. In c
433 E La• Colma• lllvd, Sre 300. lrvtng , TX 75039
Member: SIPC Plu (214) 556-1651

�'-'!onday, September 25, 1995

~;Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Page4

:~--------------------------------------------------------------------------~----------------M_o_nd~a~y~·~S~e~pt~e~m~be~r~25~·~1~9~95~

~Browns hand Chiefs 35-17 setback

.-.

'

: Jiy CHUCK MELVIN

$17 m1lhon contract
The Browns added two qmck
toochdowns on defense JUst 19 seconds apart late m the fourth qu.trler Gerald D1xon stepped 111 lront
of Steve Bono's pass and returned
11 18 yards for a score wllh 4 4S
left and Mtke Cald\\ cll duplicated
that With a 24 yard HIICrcepllOil
return before the Clevel.md St,tdl
urn crowd had ttme to catch 1ts
breath
Kansas C11y (1 I ) was trymg to
go 4 0 for the 11rst tune 111 lranch.se
h1story Schottcnhc1mer dropped to
0 2-1 m three tnps hack to Cleve
land smce he lelt to coach the
Ch1efs 111 1989
Testaverde became one ol 10
acttve passers to surpass 20 000
career yards passmg complcttng
21 of 35 for 204 yards Without an
111tercept1on lie entered the g.une
as the AFC' s top-ranked passer
and through tour games he now

:-: CLEVELAND (AP) In
• another IJme, under Other ClfCUffi·
: ::;tances, Many Schottenheuner
: would have been proud nl E.mtest
: llyner Not on Sunday
Schottenhe1mer was on the
; Q}lposlle s1dehne when B yner ran
Ior one touchdown and caught a
. short pass for another as the Cleve
: land Browns handed the Kansas
• Glty Ch1efs thm 11rst loss. 35-17
: · Hyner spun seven yards up the
: mtddle for a touchdown on Cleve·
land's second dnve of the game
then caught a three-yard pass from
· Vmny Testaverde for the clmchmg
- score w1th 10 mmutes to play
· Testaverde also threw a tour
yard sconng pass to Andre RIS(nl 111
the thlfd quarter- RISon's l~rst
toochdown recepllon 111 four games
w1th the Browns (3-1) who made
bunlhe h1ghest-pa1d rece1ver m the
NH.. by s1gnmg hun to a live-year

.&gt;

has thrown for c1ght tou•hdowm stcr Slaughter w1lh 14 seconds 10
w1th only one mtcrcepuon
play
The 33-ycar-old Dyncr has been
Bono, who had been picked off
used mostly m thtrd·down snuauons smce returnmg to the Drowns only once 111 the prevwus three
from Washmgton last ye:u But he games, was 29 of 49 for 272 yards
was much more versaule d1an that Cash caught e1ght passes for Ill
Sunday catchmg seven passes fn1 yards
It was Schottenheamer who first
59 yards and rushmg mne 11mes ln1
gave Byner a chance to make 11 m
38 yards
The Cluefs, meantime were the NFL after Cleveland drafted
stung by the loss of M.trcus Allen h1m m the lOth round m 1984 The
on thetr first otfenstve pl.ty of the next year -,$chotlenheuner's first
game Allen was cut over the left full season as the Browns' head
eye on a three-yard rush, and he coach - Byner rushed for 1,002
watched the rest of the grune from yards, the ftrst of h1s three career
1,000-yard seasons
the bench. h1s eye badly swollen
But Hyner was also the culpnt
Ltn Elltott ktcked a 25-yard
11e ld goal late m the second 4Uar· 111 one of the btggest dtsappomt·
ter pullmg Kansas Cuy to 7 - ~ at ments of Schottenhe1mer's career
the half. and Dono d1few a 38-y&lt;trd I hs fumble at the goal hne stopped
touchdown pass 10 Kenh Cas h th.tt Cleveland's last-gasp dnve for a
closed 11 to 21-10 mtdway d1rough tymg touchdown Ill a loss to Den·
the fourth quarter Bono .tdded a ver m the AFC Champ10nsh1p
three-yard touchdown pass to Web- Game after the 1987 season

cess
Chan&lt;11er threw a career-h1gh
four touchdowns passes 111 the first
half and carne up one mcomplet10n
shy of'3Il NH.. record Sund.ty "-'he
led the Houston 01lers to a 38 28
VICtory over the Cmcmna11 Ben
gals

Chandler playmg with ,t Sllfl
left shoulder that SJdehned htm last
week, completed 23 ol 26 tor ~52
yards as he d~rected the Otlers (2-2)
to the1r b1gges1 offenSive d.ty smcc
thea devastating 41 '18 playoll lo»
to Buffalo 1n 1992
He was ahead ol Vmny Teslaverde's mark ol 91 '1 percen t (21
of 23) - the league record - until
h1s last throw was broken up He
ftn1shed .11 88 4 pc1ccnt , winch
won· t land htm m the top three all
ume Ken Anderson and Lynn
Dtckey also completed hetler thru1

90 percent m a game
The Bengals (2 2) helped Ch.tn·
dler tmmeasurably as they repe.uedly blew coverages and g.tve up
400 yards m total ollense tor the
second consecuttve week
Chandler, an etghth year pro
was s1gned as a free agent lrom !he

Rams to case rhe

trnnsltJon

!rom

the run-and-shoot to the era ol
Steve McNrur, the 01lers top dntft
ptck
Chandler may never h.tve ru1 era
of h1s own, but he had quite a day
He had to know 11 was hiS day

CELEBRATE TOUCHDOWN - Cleveland wtde receiver Andre
R1son (rtghl) celebrates his four-yard louchdown catch wilh teammale M1chael Jackson m the third &lt;JUarter of Sunday's AFC game
against the vL&lt;iting Kansas City Chiefs, who lost 35-17. (AP)
Jefftres hve mmutes I.uer
Rodney 1 homas crune out ot a
cluster of Uuee' 01Iers receavers .md
found hunsell uncovered on an
e1ght-yard touchdown pass that

Shane Leach who had a 32 yard
run an U1e lin ve
Me1gs threatened late m the
game dnvmg to the McClam 31yard hne on Ruush's 37 y.1rd run,
but Roush was hurt on the pl.ty
Me1gs fumbled two play Iotter and
McClam ran out U1e dod.;:

Roush led Me1gs w&amp;lh 14 can1es
lor 79 yards Leach addcu five lor
43 yards

Agrunst Warren, tlte M,tr.tuders
Jumped out on top 24 0 at Ute halt
and coasted to the w1n Roush
scored on run s of 52, 51, and 24
yards and added .t 5'1-yard mterceptiOn return Metgs h,td lour
touchdowns called b.tck by penalties
Roush had 10 carnes lor 183
yards to lead Metgs all commg 111
the f~rst half Leach o~dded seven

carnes for 56 yards and caught a
pass from Aaron Yanlnwagcn tor
20 yards
Metgs mtercepted four passes
one each by Roush, Zach Mc.ulows, Yanlnwagen and John Hill
Jnnmy Yeauger and Leach also had
good games on defense lor Me1gs
The Lillie Marauders' next
game w1ll be Thursday agamst Gal
hpohs at Mtddleport at 5 ~0 p m

pushed 11 to 21-7 m1dway through
the second quarter and Sanders ran
past Dnm agam lor a 46-y.ml
touchdown pass wtlh I 12 lelt 111
the half

Ohio H.S. scores
I remnnl St lo~~ph 48 Fmtona St
WrnUehn il
Gtlntour 28 CJe Ea..~t Tech 14
M1nford 44 FrJn li:hn Furnace Green

Saturday•s ou:tlon
Akrun Budlld 3] Akrun Krnn11 re 0
Akron flreJ~Inne 7 Akron Garftd•l6
Boardman 20 Yuu Mm n~y 14
Carey 20 Ttflln Calvrrl 0
Chardon NO CL 17 Gart1eld Ill~

Meigs eighth-graders defeat Warren to push mark to 1-1
The Metgs eighth-grade tootball
1eam IS off to a 1-1 start on U1e season The LIUie Marauders dropped
a 14·6 contest to Greenfield
McClam and then bhtzed Warren
Local32·8
Greenfield Jumped out to a 14 0
lead al the half agamst the Marauders The Marauders scored on thetr
first possessiOn ol U1e U1trd penod
on a five yard run by Justm Roush
Thai touchdown was set up by

''

P:ltlua )4 Cle Catholic 14
Purtsmouth Nmre Dame 43 Marto n
Calh 14
Ro:edsvtlle Eastern 14 Buffalo
(W Va) 1'\Jtnnm I!
SaiLSbur&amp; (Pa) KtNki Prep Jl Hudson
Wr"tern Reserv~ 6
Sltadys1de 22 Wheeling (W Va.) Cen
lr.ll 14
Shut.er Hts 31 Cie Re1ghU 1
Souttungton 1 We1rfon {W Va)
Madonna 6
Toronto 16 P1ttJ;burgh Allegheny M
W Ltbc.!rty Salem 20 Mt'cha mcsburg

TnnttyO

C1n MoeliH 27 Ene

(P.J

l Couitedr:.t!

20

Ctn Purcell Mart an I ~ C•n Mc.:N1
o;:hola.~ ~

Cle Bent:dtc.:ttne IS Cun tonCuth 12
Cle St Jgnattwo 33 Tol St John~ 29
Cononon Vul Jli Bellatre St Juhn ~ 7
Day Dunbar 37 f.'ol Watten;on I 5
Day Meoduwdnle 3(i Lun~~lcr 14
Day Paltt:rson 46 Day Wh1te 12
Duval W Va 22 Ou!.uprake 6
E Cleveland Shaw 27 Cle East 12
Elyna 31 lor.llD SnuUlvtew 0
Fmdlay 21 Sy!vtvua Nonltvtew 1
F1Nher Cath 29 L1ck1DK ll ts 2

"

Wheeltng (W Va) l tns ly
Sh;ubcnvllleCath 18
Yr u W1lson 8 You Rayen 6

21

Scoreboard
,
Houston I St l...tlut~ 0 1l 0)
Coi&lt;)I"Oldo J San FranCIS\:&lt;! I
Lus 1\n~~~~s ft San D1e~(1 2

Baseball

Major leagues

1onlght's games
Mnn!Jt!al (Ruder 1 1j Jl II M1da (Our
httl4-l2) 705pm
CINCINNATI ( P rtu~al 1U 10) at
New Ymt.: o~r n ~laUst'n fl 21 14() p rtl
St l ou1s (Btnl's o I) at C/Hcago
(Casttllui0-J(J) 8 0Spm
P1ttd1urgh (Wh1le I 2) at lluuston
(Reynolds 10 II) IS05 p !1L
Colorar!n (Sw 1fl H 2) at Los Anj!rles
(R Ma!11nez 16 ?) 10 05 p m
San Du~gn ( WJI]IJRL~ 1 9) at San I ran
cu;co(MuJIKtllond5 II) 1005 pm

AMERICAN LFAGUF.
E&lt;l~lnn D1vislnn

• I.um

l!: L

W.

SS

S')IJ

New York

112
74

6~

• Ballnuorc
; Ottro11

M
5!1

73

!10

512
475
4'J[I

17
"74 5

';(;

~1

403

27

x Doston

Toronto

!ill
1,1

Ctntral Dtvlslon
x CLEVELM'D

95

4J

l1KII

500
4(,1

26
JO 5

464

31
41 5

09

1

Kansas Cit~
Chu:Oli!O

fi9

•

h4

•

I

MllWDUkee

64

13
74

'n

K4

• ' Mmuesota

•

Wr~lrrn

•
~.

Sentlle

: • Cahforruu
• • Texas

JK7

Tm.-sday"s gaml!s
Montreal

75 63

543
"i29
507

2
5

4~ 6

II

6~

6K

• • Oakland
67 71
·: x-clmched dtYmon lith:

DH Basta n 5 Turunto 0 Tan nlv 8
80510n 6
OH New Yurt "i ~In 11 2 Ntw Yorl.:
3 Dctrmt I
Texa.~ 5 Cahf••ml:ll
Cl EVELAND 1 Kansa.~ Cuy 1
Oucago 14 Mmn~:~ tu 4
8altm10rc ') MIIWilUk~e 3
Seattle 7 U;~klnnd 0
Sund~y·s

AL leaders

scores

Toronto 2 Bo!ilon I
Mmneaow 4 cturn~n 3
Iktrol18 New Y• rk J
Milwaukee 5 Bnltunure I
K.an.'&gt;;li C1t y 4 ClEVELAND 2
Cahfnm1a 5 Tua.~ 0
Seatlle 9 Oakh111d 8

Tonight's gan1cs
Detra•t (SCldowd.:y. 2 I) ut Boston
(l-lnru:on 14 5) 1 05 r m
Chu:a(I.O (Den~ ~ I)) a.t Mmnr!&gt;Oia
(Roberuion I Ol 8 05 r rn

Tuesday's gamu
C;~llforn•a (Doslm:
(Bene~~ 6 1 ) 135prn

7 (,)at Stattlt'

Detrott (N1tkowsl.:t l JJ at 81uton
(ZSmtth7 8) 705pm
Balttmore (Mu!&lt;Sina 17 9) a1 Toronto
(Henlr:tralO 12) 7 35 p m
ClEVELAND (Nagy 15 5) at Mtn
neaoto (Trombley 3 I) il 05 r nt
New York (llttchctH:k 9· Ill) at Mil
woukee (Karl 5 6) 8 05 p 111
CluCallO (I ernantltZ II 8) al Kan'o.~
City (Gordon 12 10) 8 O!i p m
Ouldand (S iotUemyre 14 (o) at Texas
(Gr05s8 15) X05pm

NATIONAL LEAGUE

.," " ...

ElL~I ....n

•

l!: L

• ' I.um

Atloaota
Ptuladtlptua

l

64
63

Flonda
Monttl."al
.New YOfl.:

1

DIYI!tllun

61

.•a-ClNCINNATI

71
71
74
7l

• Houston
: Chtcago
St Lou•a
Pittsbure,h

82
72

461
4&lt;0
4l6

!ill
20
23
l4

24l

fn',

Ct'ntrul DIYI

•

w.
(,]3

10

'i'W

S26

to

496
431

14
22

"
,."' ••77 ""' ,.,
60

K2

Wulrrn Dll'hi&lt;loo

Colorado
Los Anr-elei

San Dielln

74 63
74 64
6li 12
6.S 7,

San Frano!~tO
t-chnched d!Vll lO D lith~

540
536

5

418

8S

474

9

SDiurday's scor~
aucago 8 PlttsbLUilh ~
San Franc1sco 2 Coloratlo 0
Ronda 4 New York l
Montreal S Allanta 2
Huu5ton 7 St Lmll5 3

Ph•ladelphta3 CJNCINNATI2 (13)
Los Anaeles 4 San D1egu 2

Sunday's scores
Atlanta .S Montre:.14 (10)

Aonda 4, New Ycrk 3
CJNaNNA116 A11lndelphu1 4
ctucajlo 3 P•n.sburgh 2(10)

~I Flnml~

Ptll~bur~h (Neagle I J 7) at Hnus ton
(Swindell II 9) II 05 f' m
C lor.Jdo (Sall\'"rhag~:n 6..6) at Lus An
~elr~ (Candmll 1 13) 10 05 f' m
San Dn:t~o { A.~hby II 10} at S;~ n Fran
ct~lo(S Valdez4 4) 1005 f' m.

Saturday's scores

-.

131

7) al Phlladelphw
(Quanllt llll 10) 7 15 p m
CINCINNATI [S1111ky 12 4) ill N.:w
Yort.: [f~lgl etler I 1) 7 40 p n
'
Sl LtJUts (MN~on 11) 01 Cluca~o
(Trach~rl 6-13) H 05 (I til

Dlt'llilon

1J
70

{ Fas~ero J 1

(BunK..~ 26) 7 05 p 111
All~nta (Sn ultz II

C.

BATTING E Marhnez Srattle 1~5
Salmon Ca ltfotnta 335 Knoblauch
M1nn~!&lt;&gt;(Jlll 335 Bo~s New York J27
Surht rc Milwaukee 321 Murray
CLEVI LAND 318 B:.erga C LEVE
LAND 317
RUNS E M :ut1n~z Seattle I 16
Pllll hps Cahfom1a tl6 Etlmonds Calt
for nt a 11 5 Delle CLEVELAND 112
Salmon Caltfornta 106 John Valenttn
Boston 104 Brad~ Anderson Ba.lhmore
!OJ
RBI Vaughn Bo~lon 123 Belle
CLEVELAND ll 9 Buhner Seattle,ll6
E Marhnti: Sealtle I I I 1lmmM 011ca
~~:o 108 T Marltnez Snule 105 M
Ram1ru CLEVELAND 10 4 R
Pal111e1ro Baltmmre 104
HITS L Johnson Ctucago 177
Kn(1bl~uch Mmnesota 173 E Manmez
Seattle 113 Salmon Cahfornta 17 1
But:rBa CLEVELAND 169 N1xon
Texas 16~ 8 Wi ll1a1ns New York, 167
R Palme1ro Ba\tunore 167
DOUBLES E Martm~ Seallle 51
Belle CLEVELA.l'llD 50 Pu-=kett Mm
nunt 3 311 Jr hn V3lentm Boston JS T
Murtmez Seallle 33 Sulmon Cahfornta
\2 Knobl::.uch M1nne~ota J2 Brady An
dersun B;.~llunore 32 C R'l'ken Baltl
more 12
TRJPLES Lofton ClEVELAND 12
L lolmson Chtcn~o 12 Brady Ander
son Balt•more 10 D Wdhams New
York 9 Knoblauch M1nne~01a 8 R
Alomar Toronto 7 II a~e lied W!Ul 6
HOME RUNS Belle CLEVELAND
46 TI10mas Ch1cago 39 R P.olmeuo
Bult1mor~ 39 Vaughn Boston 38 Buh
ner Seattle J7 McGwtre Oak land ]6
Salmon Cahfornla 34 Gaetll Kansas
C1ty J4
STOLEN BASES T Goodwtn
Kan.~Wl C1ty 48 UJOon CLEVELAND
47 Nt•on Tna~ 46 Knoblauch Mm
nesota 41 Colem:~n Seattle 4 I L John
son Clncago 38 Javter Ont.:lund 34
PITCHING (14 dem10ns) R John
son Seattle 16 2 IIS9 2 56 Nan
CLEVELAND 15·5 750 4 22 Han10n
Boston 14 S 737 4 06 Wakerleld
Boston J(i...6 1121 2 86 Lanplon Cah
forn1a 15 6 714 4 12 Uerahuer
CLEVELAND 15 6 714 4 04 Stottle
myre Oakland 14-6 700 417
STRIKEOliTS R Johnson Seallle,
275 StoUlemyre Oakland 192. Cone
New York 186 Finley Cahfor01a 192
Aprter Kan!Oal C1t~ 119 J McDowdl
New York !57 A Fernandoel Ch1cago

147

Lark1n CINCINNATI 11~ Grace
Clucagn 315 Castilla Colorado 311
Sc~ut Montreal 311
RUNS B•g~ o llmJ.~ton 114 F1nley
San D1ego 102 Bonds Sa n FranCISCO
100 Bu:hette Colorado 96 Larkm
CINCINNATI 94, McRae 011caeo 89
Mnn d~!&gt;i Lo~ Anjtele., HH R Sanders
CINCINNATI 88 Grace Clu~aBo 88 L
Walker Colorado MK
RBI B1chet1e Colorado 122 Sosa
Chu:ago 11'5 K:u-rM l....o5 Angeles 102
G;~la rraga CuluratJu 102 Bond!&gt; San
Fran c1sco 98 Comne Flouda !:17 R
Saml~n; CINC INNATI 96
HI rs 8Jchettr Co lora do I HH T
Gwynn S:m Otego 1!8 GrJce Chlcaso
164 M-=Rae Clucago 163 Ftnley Sao
Otego 16J Karros Los Anjele.s 158
Ca.~hlla. Coloradu 156
DOUBLES Grace Chtcago 4~
McRae Ow::agu 37 B1cheue Colorado
37 R Santlers CINCINNATI J6 LDnk
fo rd St Luuts 35 Duo~ CINCINNATI
32 Cordem Montreal 32 Castilla Col
urado J2 G tl t.e~ St Louts 32 Morand&amp;
111 Ph ladclplua., 32
TRIPLES Butler Lm; Ange1t's 9 E
Ynun~ Colorado 8 Gonzalez Ouca~o
~ D Samh;rs S:.~n Francrsco 8 Ftnley
San Dltf!!O K Vera.~ Fl ortila 7 K Ah
b( t1 Flonda 7 MlRae Chtcagu 7
Bonds San Franc1sco 7
IIOME RUNS Btchellt Co lorado J8
Sus:~ Clnc~o J6 Ca.~llllll Colorado ]2
L W01lker Colorado 32 Ptazza, Los An
~drli 31 Bonds San Fr:utc1~0 ]I Kar
ro~ Los An~telrs 30 Galarra11a Col
orntJo JO
SIOLEN BASES Ver;l.!; FlontJa 56
L~rkm CINCINNATI 45 DeShtelds
Los Angele~&gt; 38 E Y oun~ . CnlorDdo 35
R Sa nders CINCINNATI 35 Ftnley
San D1ego 35 D l.ew1s CINCINNAn
l2

PITCHING II 4 decrston~) G Mad
dux Atlanta I !I 2 900 I 68 Smiley
CINCINNATI 12 4 750 J 34 Glavme
Atlanta 16 6 727 2 87 Schourd:.
CJNONNATI 17 1 7011 3 17 Navllrl'o
Cl11cago 14 ( 100 3 23 R Martinez
Ll1s An~eles 16 7 696 3 12 Nomo Lo10
An~dr.s 12 6 667 2 60
STRIKEOlfTS Nomo lns An~elu
:0.25 S unllz Atlanta 184 G Matltlul
Al l anta 117 Reynf ld~ llnu~l n n 169
P J Martmez Mt1nlreal 167 I auero
Montre&lt;£1 157 Schourek CINCINNATI
ll4
SAVES Myers Oncago 36 1 Henke
Sl Louts 34 Beet San Franctsco 32
Slorurnb Plulad~lplua, )I Todd Worrell
Los Angeles 30 ROJU Montreal 29
H o fhn;~n San Otego 27 J Brantle~

CINONNATl 27

Football

NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Euttrn IMvitlon

:W...

Mtanu ...............
Buffalo
lndtanapolls
Ne"N England
NY Jets

CINCJNNATI
llooston
Pittsburah
Jacksonv.Jile

3
1
I
1
I

0 0100 95 27
I 0 667 51 4S
2 0 333 62 68
2 0 333 23 62
3 0 2.50 68 102
47

2 2 0 SOO 97 100
2 2 0 SOO 12 19
2 2 o SOO 91 104

0 4 0

~

We.tern Dlvhlon
Ka~W~~ Ctty
3 I 0 750
Oakland
J I 0 750
San Dtt'go
3 I 0 750
Denver
2 2 0 SOO
Seattle
I 2 0 333

44

94
102
6S
87
44

8.5

79

55

S4
86
69

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

32 Montgomery Kansas C11 y
31 Attu1\ua Boston ll Weueland New
York 29 Eckersley Oakl:~nd 29

Arizona
N Y G1ants

BAITING T Gwynn San 01cjo
J6S P1azza. Lm Angeles 3S2 Btchelle
Colorado 342 D Bell Houston, 334

:!!: L I .&amp;1. fE fA

Central Dlvltlon
CLEVELAND J I 0 750 8S

Itam

NL leaders

B11y

22050047l9
0 J 0 000 47 63

Detrml

E

llrnr~ 32 D:.mW«m (I
Ferrum J 5 Cltllksll•n Soulhcrn (
Flunda A~M 24 Tcm rs.~c~ Sl 7
Ronda. St 4f• Ctn l Flu~ Ia 14
Furman 55 VMI 24
9rorgw Sou!J1crn J~ Tn Otniiii'IIKII:la

9

St Lotus 34 Oucaao 28
N Y G1aots 45 New Orleans 29
Tampa Bay 14 Washmgton 6
M10nesota 44 P1ltsburgh 24
Atl311ta I 3 N Y Jeta 3
San Dteao l7 Denver 6
Houston 38 ClNCINNATI 28
CLEVELAND 35 KunWi Ctly 17
Dallas 34 Arizona 20
Oakland 48 Ptuladdpt11a 11
Green Bay 24 Jacksonvllle 14
Open date Buffalo Caroltna lnd1
unapohs Ml3mt New England Seattle

10

Tonight's game
San Francl&amp;&lt;.:u at Dctrntl 9 p m

AP Top 25 college poll
Here are the Top 2.5 tesnu: tO the AuoCttlled Press college football poll whh
fust place Yates 111 parentheses cutrent
records as of hut Saturda~ total potnts
based on 25 pomts for a first place t'Oie
throu&amp;h one potnt (or a 25th place vote
al!lllast weeKs final rankmg
L•l
I f'londa St (42)

J!:,J.

4-0-0
2 Nebraska (18)
4-0-0
J f'londa (2)
3-0-0
4 Colorado.c···············4-0-0
5 Southern Cal
3-0-0
6 Penn St
)...0-0
1 mno ST
J...O-O
8 Mlcht(lan
4-0-0
9 Texas A&amp;M
2 1-0
10 Oklahoma
3-0..0
4-1-D
II V,u-gin1a
12 Tennes~n
3-1-0
13 Auburn
2 1-0
14 LSU
3-1-0
15 NolleDame
J..l-0
16 Kansa5 St
J..0-0
17 Maryland
4-0-0
I~ Washmglon
2 l.Q
19 Oregon
J-1-0
20 Alabama
2 1-0
21 Tuas
2 1-0
22 Stanford
J..O I
23 Arkansas
3-1 0
24 Texas Tech,
I 1-0
25 Kansas
4-0-0

Nc t-ra.~ko

Howard?) Ark P1ne Ulutr7

l

I 498
l 399
1315
l 293
1 247
1 220
1 123
I 012
9S7
929
851

2
4

810

70S
623
601
4S3
396
379
339
328
264
240
146

7

5
6
8

9

Suulhwcsl

Midwest

E

,

Mtd11~1.1n

1/obli~

27

11 Ohm 111

llhnu 1 ~

St

(t

llltnOt!l 7 r:.u.~ t C:~nil nu \)
Jndwn ~ 27 Sou hrrn M ~s

41J P.Jclltc 1

Alcorn St 21 hxa.~ St ulh~rn Ill
1\rKan~a.~ "77 Memph1~ 'J(I
Ok.bl Ull!;! 51 North T~ xa.~ I (J
Sam ll ous tc n St 24 re~a~ A&amp;M
Km~vtlle 23
St~phcn F 1\ustm 11 H~ntlcfSI." n St 6
T;u-letun St 44 Pnmte V1tW 6
Tuisn 4~ E Tcll!lt:li..~ ec St 111

Ball St 10 W M1dng:lll 0
Crnl Mi dll j!:ln 2, o, wlinl! Grt'~n l fi
Dayton 211 W1~ Plattrvtll~ 7
lJrJke 17 A.umra 7
E 11111101~ 9 sw Ml~NOUrt :-it 7

&amp; .l!'ttk

1..5211 •

Kentu cky J'i Sr ulh C;~n ttna JO
L.."iU52 R1ce?
Liberty 41 Dcl::~wa.re St 14
LoUISiana T~dl 28 Arkan.~:.&gt; St 25
Marylond 41 Duke 211
McNeeseSt 3 1 Y ou n~ luwn St l
M ss•~s•ppt I~ Gd.,.g1a Ht
M&lt;r~an St 38 Oteyn~:y 7
Murr::.y St 34 Muldlt: Tenn a
NW UJutst~na 45 E T ex~~ St 17
SE M !!.~Oun 311 l\1.1~11n P~ ny 21
S1•ulhern 45 Jlamplun Un ~ 22
Tenn Mntlm 49 Mnrthrad S1 24
Tennes~te 'i2 M1ssl ~ tpp Sl lA
1 ~xa..~ Omsh~n ]( V tllllerto1l l ~
1lmrn.1~ Me tt! ](i f:v&lt;Jll~vtlle 14
Troy St 2H Al11b11m 1St 10
V1r~1n ta 22 Cirm~un 1
VII]!IPlJ rrch ll Mt:111l1 7
W1 Carolma 31 Cl!atk! 14
W Kenludy 32 Alt Dunu nj,!h 1111 I H

II

Nortltwcstrrn 30 /m Force 6
Notre Dame 55 1 e:ta..~ 27
S llh1wt~ 48 N1dmlls Si 20
Volpar:ll!ifl 47 Kalmn azno JY
Wt!&gt; Slevens Pt J7 Built'!' ll
W1smnsm 4":1 Suuthrro Mell1 0

J~ ck...~on St 47 M1s.~ Vull~~ S! 7
Jaclo:t OY! IIt:: Sl 21 N Car lt na A&amp; f

soores

1

Itam

2:\ CIOliDnJII !(.
M1chtgan St 35 Pufllu~ 15 lit'
M ssnurt 31 NE lnu1sta ua 22
N Jilt )Ill~ 2~ sw [.(1UtSt&lt;Jil3 24
Mtllllll Oh

Enu ry &amp;.

Wntern Dlt"l•lon
St Louts
4001009965
San Franctsco
J 0 0 I 00 93 3S
Atlanta ..... ....... .. 3 I 0 750 13 88
Cru'oltna
030000398l
New Orlea111i
o 4 o ooo as 113
Sundlily'~

Kemud:~'JI Tcnnes~t'eTI!'chJ

2(,

lnll1ilna S1 30 W llhn t~ 11
Iowa St 57 UN! V 30
Kan~a..~ 20 lluu~tnn I 3
K:.n.~a.~ St n Akrr n 0

Far West
Arizona Sl 20 On:11oh St II
CSlJ Ch1co 2 1 Sacrumt:nlu St 21 t1e
Cahf1 rnta 40 San JuSt" St 7
Coloratlo 29 Te~a.~ A&amp;M 21
Hawau42 Tex;u; El Pas• 21
ld;~hn St 411 S Utah 14
Mun t:~ n~ 54 Bu1sr St 211
Muntnna St 4S SW Texa.~ St ,4
N Anzuna (,II CS Norlltlllll(t 7
N~w Mexn:u 3G Nrw Mt •let St 'J4
Portland St 14 E Washtn]!lun (l
San Dtq~o 2K Ca l LuU Jer&lt;~n 21
Suuthern Cal 11 Ar1zona 10
S t;~n ft rd ')II Ore]!r n 21
Toledu 49 Nevada 15 •
Utah 2~ Fre.~no Sl 21
Wa.~lunglrtn 21 Army 11
Wa.&lt;thm~t o n S! 24 UClA 15
Wc!&gt;t'r St SJ C;~l Puly SUl 43
Wyo nun~ 45 Ot.: l;.~ hnm~ Sl 25

3
10
II
IS
14
21

19
24
22
12
23
13

118

Others rectl\'lnll vot,ll Northwestern
60 Washtn(llon St .57 Colorado St .52
UCLA 45 Illmota 40 Iowa 26 Mtaml
(Fla.) 17 Anzona 15 Georgt815 Miu11
stppt 13 Baylor 12 V1rgtn1a Tech 10
MIAMI (OHIO) 4 Syracuse 3 W1scon-.o
3 Mtchtgan St 2 TOlEDO 2

Dallas

Eutnn Dlvltlon
~ l. I l&lt;l. fE
4 0 0 I 00 123

Philadelphia
Wa.~tungtort

1 3 0
I J 0
I J 0
I 3 0

250
250
250
:zjO

fA

SK

66 109
68 98
75 1U
12 79

Central Di'•l•lon
3 I 0 7l0 79 61
2 2 0 soo 108 81
220l009ll8

NCAA Division I scores

South

Buylor 14 N Ca~olm~ St 0
Catawba 21 Wofford 20
Cent Sl Oh10 16 Or.Jirilltng St 14

By DOUG FERf:llSON
ROCHESTER , N Y (AP) Forget the steady fatrway play of
Tom Lehman, the scrambling of
Seve Ballesteros the aces by
Costantmo Rocca and Howard
Clark, even the memorable ch1p-m
by Corey Pavm
The Ryder Cup comes down to
pull,, usually the ones that d01a't
fall
It was Bernhard L1nger' s fourfoot m1ss on the 18th that returned
the cup to the Umted States m !991
~nd Rocca's blown three-tooter on
the 17th at The Belfry m 1993 that
helped the Amencans keep 11
- On Sunday, they returned the
favor - and the cup
"We had some guys that dtdn't
dnve 11 as straight a' they nonnally
dnve 11 And we had some guys
who d1dn't putt· a' well as they nor·
mally putt on good, fast greens,"
US captam Lanny Wadkms s:ud
CurtiS Strange, Wadkms' con·
: trovers1al wtld-card selecuon,
: missed three makeable pulls I in a
final three-hole collapse UJ:tt gave
N1ck Faldo a 1-up VICtory and
keyed Europe's 14 1/2-13 112 VIC·
tory
The v1ctory gave Europe the
Cup for U1e hrst tune smce 1989 II
won m 1985 by upsetting !he
. Amencans m smgles play by the
lillllle 7 112 4 1/2 score tl dtll Sun·
· tlay Europe won II agam m 1987

0

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protection allhe lowest possible cost
Your Independent Agents SeNing Metgs County Stnce 1868

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
t 11 Second Sl

Pomeroy
992·3381

Representtng The OhiO Casualfy Group at Insurance Compames

and kept the Cup w1th a lie m 1989
before losmg the next two
The Unned States lead s the
senes 23·6 wtth two ties But smce
the '85 VICtOry by Europe, IllS 3·2·
I m favor or Europe
" I d1dn'1 f1n1&lt;h very well,"
Strange sa1d
He wasn't alone There was
Orad Faxon, m1ssmg a five-foot par
putt on the 18th that would have
halved h1s match wnh Dav1d G1l·
ford
Peter Jacobsen had control ot
h1s match all day unttl he blew a
s1x-foot par putt on No 16 that
gave Clark a 1-up lead, wh1ch he
held by domg what the Amencans
couldn't- makmg a shon pull for
par on 18
"When you get that close
to
not do n, n's heartbreakmg," Jay
Haas satd "We had our chances"
So d1d Uae Europeans and they
made the most of them on ru1 Otdc
H11l course Umt had had been set up
like one used for U1e U S Open, a
tournamenl a European ha'n · t won
m 25 years
'
When Strange m1ssed a 12-foot
par putt on 17, Faldo rolled m Ius.
e1ght-foo1er to even the match
When Haas, needmg to wm the
18th, left h1s 125-yard thlfd shot so
short of the pm that 11 spun back
mto the rough, Ph1hp Walton btl
hiS Uurd shot, a d1tficult cb1p out of

'

heavy rough, w1thin e1ght feet
Walton halved tbe hole and
gave Europe the final potnlll needed. the flmshmg touch to an
Improbable comeback
"We needed a good performance out of the whole team, and
we got 11," captam Bernard Gallacher sa1d "It was always gomg
to be a close match, and I'm glad
1r's my tum 10 wm ••
Europe had won the final round
or smgles matches JUSt three umes
m the prev1aus 30 Ryder Cup
matches, and the Unned States
seemed well on thetr way when
Lehman, playmg lhe ftrsl match
agamst Ballesteros, h1t every green
After h1s approach at No 7.
Lehman pomted h1s 1ron overhead
at a passmg Concorde and pretend·
ed 10 blow 11 out of the sky. By the
ume the SIXth match had fimshed
nme holes. Lehman had a 4 and 3
wm over Ballesteros, and Amen·
cans were leadmg three of f1ve
matches
It wasn't long, however, lhat
mouths began to get dry, legs
became weary and the cheers got a
httle stronger
"It's very tense out here now,"
Europe's Cohn Montgomene sa1d
after h1s 3 and I wm over Ben
Crenshaw
"The pressure m these thmgs
doesn't get eas1er to handle," srud
Mark James. a 4 and 3 wmner over

Reds beat Phils 6-4 in Cincinnati's
last regular-season home game
PIIILADELPHIA (AP)- On
Fan Apprecaatton Day the l.ms
applauded a fonner Plulltc
Manana Duncan, traded to
Cmcmnat1 Aug 8, Jut a Ulfee-run
homer ami drove 111 four runs a'i the
Reds beat Ph!ladelphta 6-4
Duncan was cheered loudly
when mtroduced, and drew more
cheers after hJS home run off Den·
ms Spnnger (0-2) put !he Reds
ahead 5-0 111 the s1xth
"It's the first tune I ever laced
htm and he has a mt,ty knuckleb.tll
I only had one Jut, but 11 wa.' a htg
one," Dunc,m sanJ "ll was a
knuckleball that bmke nght on my
bat··
Reds starter Dav1d Wells (6 4)
allowed JUSt three htts .md ,, run 111
etght mmngs He held Ute Plulhes
huless unul Tom Marsh IOOPJ'd a
ground-rule double wtdl one out 111
U1e seventh
"It was kind of a bloop htl, but
,the guy dtd htS fOb he got hts hat

on lhe ball," Wells smd
One out later. Charhe Hayes
smgled home Marsh
About hts double wh1ch broke
up the no-huter. Marsh smd, "You
thmk about tl before you go up tn
the plate, but not wh1le you're battmg Then you're only concentratmg on get!Jng the pucher "
In the etghth mnmg wttb the
Reds leadmg 5· 1, Wells advanced
runners to second ru1d third wuh ,,
hunt Wells, who spent hts enure
career m the AL bet ore JOmmg U1e
Reds 1S 4-for-27 ( 148) a' a Iutter
"It was the first sacnlice ol my
hfe," Wells sa1d "1lus ts the first
year I've swung the bat smce h1gh
school m 1982 "
Wells, who was 10-~ tor Detroit
before bemg traded on 1uly '1 I,
matched h1s career-htgh wtlh 16
v1ctones
The Reds scored two runs. one
unearned, m tjle fourth

A smgle by Ron Gant ru1d oneout walks to Hal Morns and Benito
Sanuago loaded d1e bases Duncan
had an RBI forccout, ru1d ,, throwmg error by Phlihes second base·
man Kevm Jordan allowed ,modJcr
run to score
Doubles by Regg1e S.mders and
Moms scored the llnal Cmcmnatl
run m the mnth
The Phllhes talhed thelf on ly
run off Wells m the seve nih on
Charlie Hayes' RBI stog ie . and
scored tbetr final three runs m the
nmth off reliever I lector C:trra,co
Mark Whiten, and Gene Schall had
RBI smgles and pmch htller Jun
Etsenretch a sacnftce fly before
Jeff Brantley rettred the Stde lor hiS
27th save
"Sprmger baltled tough hut he
had some control problems (seven
walks) " Plulltes man.tger Jtm
Fregos• srud "He got a knuckleball
up to Duncan that d1dn't do any·
thmg"

~ Royals

beat Indians 4-2 to stay
=in scramble for AL wild-card spot

g,uncs left

East
Bethllny W Va 30 St Franctl Po 12
Brown 31 Rhode bland 28
C W Pos1 40 Cent ConnectiCUt St 0
Con!X\:Ilcut 26 Buffalo 2S
Cornell28 1-lolv Crossl9
DartmnuU! 34 Fflrtlham 14
Dd;~ware 41 Doslon Unt., 29
Duque.~nt: 1) Georgetown 0 C 1
Gannon 20 C3DtstU.'&gt; 12
Harvard 2X Col~att 8
Jomes Mad1son 2K V1lhmova 27 (01')
Lehtgh 21 Yale 10
Ma.~achU!iietr.s 21 Northea~~td'"n 19
Monmout11 N J 47 St Juhn ' N '( 0
Oh10 St 54 Pnt.~bur,tl 14
P..o~ce 29 Jona 22
Penn 21S Lafaytne 8
Penn St 59 Rutgm 34
Prmceton 20 Bu cknell :\
St Marys Cal 14 C()lurnl&gt;ta 14
St ~ler s 2S S1ena 19
S)Tacuse 27 Mmnesota 17
Wagner 23 Tow\&lt;JO St IS
Wake Forest 30 Navy 7
West V•r~ttnta 4.5 Kent6
Will tam &amp; M:iry 39 New Hamp~~lnre 0

Jason Sbeets' 55-yard return of
around the 11 00 mark m the second 1 The B1sons drove ms1de the
fumble recovery for a touchdown, quarter Bnan Bowen was stopped Eagle 12-yard hne, but Eastern held
.and hiS one-yard touchdown plunge on the lwo pt conversion attempt, Buffalo out of the end zone A gre.11
on the ground, were the h1ghhghts and Eastern cut lhe lead to 8-6
defensive stop on a sweep play
of a flawless overall performance
In the second half, I he Iarse ended the dnve
Saturday n1ght , as the Eastern crowd on hand Witnessed a temfie
Bnan Bowen sealed the victory,
Eagles defeated lhe Buffalo-Pumarn fimsh to a temfic game
p1ckmg off Adam J1v1den's pass
B1sons 14-8
Both teams managed to put w11h less than 2 00 to play
Buffalo, the IOth-rrutked team 111 together bnef shots at long dnves
"Our lnds rose to the occaSton
West Vtrgmm Class A football, only to be held on great defensive We had to wm th1s week It's kmd
opened up the sconng on tts fast play
of a tummg pomt A lot of people
dnve of the evenmg The B1sons . One of the defenstve h1ghhgbts expec1ed us to lose tomght, alter
drove downfteld 1n nme plays, of the mght was a 1rue gem tor the droppmg 1wo strmght," stated a
cappmg the dnve off w1th a one- Eag les
happy Eastern coach Casey Coffey
yard touchdown run by runnmg
After forcmg a fumble, Sheets
Sheets led lhe Eagles m rushmg
back Kevm Parsons Parsons added ptcked up the loose ball at the w1th 15 cames for 71 yards Mtcah
the two-pomt conversiOn, and Buffalo 45-yard lme, racmg 55 Otto added 13 cames for 46 y.trd&lt;
Duffalo held the early 8-0 lead
yards to the end zone for the Trav1s Curus added three carne&lt; for
Both defenses held each oth er touchdown
The
1wo-pomt 24 yards
well m the ensumg offenSive senes'. convers1on run by Sheets was good,
Bnan Bowen was 5·9 passmg for
but Eastern managed lo estabhsh a and Eastern led 14-8
63 yards
long scormg dnve toward the end oj
Buffalo threatened three tunes
Enc H1ll was Eastern's top
the 11rst quarter
dunng the remamder of the contest, rece1ver w1lh three catches for 53
Jason Stieets fmtshed the dnve w1th the b1ggest threat commg wtlh yards
wllh a one yard touchdown run 7 00 to go
Defensively. Eastern was led by

By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY Mo (AP) The week started wllh the Kansas
C11y Royals on the verge ol movmg
mto flfst place 111 the wtld card
race ll ended w1U1 them ltghtmg to
keep from lalhng out of the chase
1 he Royals scored 16 runs to
beat Mumesota m lhe first game of
a doubleheader Monday mght, and
they beat the Cleveland Jndmns 4-2
Sunday
But m between, they lost sax
strrugh~ four to Mmncsola, two to
Cleveland, and are nnw 4 1/2
g.unes behmd New York with SIX

18

1

SAVES Mesa ClEVELAND •s
Lee Smtih Cahforma 34 R Hernandez

ChtCJ~o

Tam~a

~Eastern beats
Buffalo-Putnam
14-8
a

Otto· s I 5 1ackles S heels' 13 and
Steve Durst' s II Enc H1ll added
1wo b1g sacks. that helped lhe
Eagles snuff out two Buffalo dmes
Eastern, now 2-2 on the year.
1ravels to Elizabeth, W Va Fnday
n1ght to lake on the Wlfl County
T1gers
Ouar!er 1l!l.i!h
Buffalo-Putnrun
8 0 0 0= K
Eastern ... ........ .
0 6 8 0 = 14
lieam sta~l.Stl"cs
l

Department
B£
First downs
10
Total yards
242
Rushmg yards
158
Passmg yards
84
..
Comp -att
3-12
Interceptions thrown
I
Punung-avg
2-31
Penalues-yds .
1-5
Fumbles-lost .
I I

E

9
204
141
63
5-9

0

5-36
1-5
2-2

European crew captures Ryder Cup
I

when he took the snap from center
fell down, gol up and lhrew a 19
yard pass to Haywood Jefhres that
set up h1s fourth touchdown P"-"
Perhaps the only one who will
remember the game as v1v1dly a'
Chandler IS cornerback Mtke Bnm
beaten tor three ot the touchdowns
Chns Sanders ran past Bnm to
take an 111-stnde 58 yard touch
down pass on the 01lers' second
possessiOn Bnm startmg for U1e
first tune th1s season after recovermg from a sore back also got be.u
for a 23-yard touchdown pass to

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

For the first time since 1989,

Oilers post 38-28 win over Bengals
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Clms
Chandler completed a pass alter
fallmg down He completed one
wh1le gettmg pulled down He
completed all of the easy ones tno,
and nearly set a record m the pro-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

"It's hard to explam We don't
know what happened · satd Ke1th
Lockhart who had .t two-run home
run agamst the lndtans on Sund,\y
'We'd been gcllmg a lot ol clutch
h1ts Then we dtdn't get any clulch
hw; w1th men on l)ase ll1at's what
happens"
"We 'II never g1v~ up hope un!JI
we're mathemattcally ehmmated "
smd \(evm App1er (15-9) who shut
o ut the lnd1an s on three hils
through 7 2/3 mmngs on Sund.ty
'Granted. we know our chances
are ex tremely mmute "
After Iosmg thctr fast etght 10
the powerful lnd1 ans tlte Royals
dtscovered the best way to wm IS to
play them on Albert Belle's day
off
It also helps to keep Kenny
Lofton off base, whtch App1er and
Jeff Montgomery d1d Sunday wh1le

breakmg an e1ght-game losmg
streak to the lnd1ans and a stx-'
g.une skid altogether. thetr longest
smce 1992
Belle, the maJor league home
ron leader who hlltwo on Saturd.ty
mght, was gtven a day of rest as the
Indians begm poslltOnmg them
selves for lhe playoffs
• 'When you lake Belle out ol
the hneup and keep Lofton ofl
base, you're gomg to Will a few
games from those guys," sa1d
Montgomery, who got the last four
outs "Dut unfortunmely. you're
only gomg 10 get U1at break about
once a month "
"I told our guys Umt Cleveland
IS not as good as we are makmg
them and we are nm as bad as we
are playmg," Royals manager Boh
Boone srud
The Royals were one out awa)
from hand1ng the Indtans thetr
fourth shutout loss of the year
when Drtan Gtles hll a two-out

home run off Montgomery
Cleveland manager Mtke Hargrove IS busy thmking ahead to the
playoffs
"We talked about 11 and thought
11 would be a good day l&lt;p get
(Belle) some rest," scud Harg(ove
"Today we JUSt ran 111to good
pnchmg Appter U1rew h.s bre.dcmg
ball when he was hehmd m the
count and hiS fa"hall when he wa'
ahead We never could adjust to
that ••

Hargrove srud he's going to stan
playlllg more regulars the final s1x
games of the season, wh1ch mclude
a weekend homestand agamst
Kansas Cny
"We're pretty much gomg to
start gomg at n strong and heavy
agam I've been restmg guys for
the last week or week and a half,"
Hargrove satd "Mostly, n's JUSt a
matter of lcmng guys play They
haven'llel down yet I assume they
won· t, the closer we get "

------Sports b r i e f s - - - - - Tennis
MOSCOW (AP) - Magdalena
Maleeva overcame a slow start m a
rare mornmg fmal to defeat Rus
s1a's Yelena Makarova 6-4, 6-2,
and Will the mdoor Moscow Lad1es
Open for the second strrughl year
Base hall
ATLANTA (AP) - Pttcher
Carlos Perez of the Montreal Expos
remamed m pohce custody, more

than 24 hours alter bemg arrested
on charges· of rape and aggravated
sodomy
Perez, 24, was bemg held at the
Atlan~1 C1ty Jail, accused of rapmg
a 20-year old woman he mel for a
bhnd date at a bar He wa' arrested
at the team hotel Saturday mornmg
A prehmmary heanng was
scheduled for today At that ltme,
Perez w1tl seek to be treed on bond

left Maggert ol U1e Umted Stales
It was on No 17 when Faldo
nouced that shouts of "Come on,
Ntck," sounded urgent
"I sensed Uta! our match 1mght
be a tunung poml," Faldo s:ud "I
knew. obvmusly, m the back of my
mmd what tt meant I d1dn' t really
want anybody to tell me how
1mpor1Hnt 11

was ••

So he dtd what JUst about everyone else wa' domg - he pulled hts
.1pproach mto the hunker
"lie· d1dn't h1t grea t shots,"
W.tdkms smd of Faldo "lie got up
and down when he needed 10 and
made a couple of pulls I thmk the
pressure was lelhng on everyone
nut there.,

Ftve of the 12 matches reached
the 18th holes and Europeans won
four of U10se
"What I felt happened was tlmt
we had a strong desue to Will U11s
trophy hack, and we JUSt kept at
11," Gatlacber scud "I don 1 reatly
thmk there was any chokmg Our
destre over thai last hole was very.
ve1y strong ,md U1e players were
very delermmed to Willi! back"
Gatlacher who had been harshly
cntiC!Zed by tonncr Europe:u1 captrun rony l.tcklm before Ute Ryder
Cup sa1d he wouldn 'I return as
captrun m 1997 m Spatn That duly
probably w1ll go 10 Ballesteros
W.tdkms sa1d he would be captam 1f he was asked, bul after
watchmg h1s team fall to come up
with key shots, after watchmg a
wild European celebratiOn on lhe
18th green, he had a better allemaIJve
"I'd rather come back as a player~·

PREPARING TO GIVE lhe rootbatl to either fullback Micah O!to
(25) or wingback Trnvls Curtis (42) Is Eastern quarterback Brian

Bowen, who steps away rrom center during Saturday night's home
game againsl the Buffalo-Putnam Bisohs, whom the Eagles dereatcd
14·8.

ORDC &amp; Amtrak agree
to demo runs to Ohio
baseball playoff games:
By JOHN CHALFANT
COLUMBUS. Oh10 (APl- Atl
aboard' A 250-seat passenger tmm
w11l run from Columbus Ill Cleve·
land and Cmcumall for the firSt
round of baseball playoffs IICXI
month Dut a ucket to a g.lflle I fhat
IS another matter
The Oh1o Ra1l IJcvclopmcnt
Commtsston sau.l 11 had rc.1chcd an
agreemem wllh Amtrak for Llcmun ·

slrallon runs nf n lut hn tr,am to
comctde wllh Cleveland lnd1,ms
and Cmcmna11 Reds pl.tyoll games
Chauman J:une&lt; Bells satd the
lr.un would run from Columhus to

Cleveland on Oct ~ and 4. and
arnve at Cleveland's Lakcfrnut
Stat1on two hours hctorc g~une
tune
Passengers wh\1 h.td tickets fm
the Ind~aus game would ho .trd
buses for a nde from the station to
Jacobs F1cld
On Oct 5, the tmho tram would
remam m Columbus lor puhl1 c
tours
Then nn Oct 6 the trmu would
run from Columbus 10 Cmcmn,ttl
Other tnps would occur Oct 7 .md
8 1f the Nauoual League pl.tyoll s
contmued
The COmffiiSSIOII has cnntr.tCICd
w1th the nonprofit CutCIIHMil R.ulroad Club to m.trket the lrtps
mcludmg exclustvc nghts w sell
souvenirs on board .tlong wtth
lood and bever11ges th.11 Include

beer and poss1bly wmc e&lt;Ktlcrs
Betts saul the comn11sswn

expected to recover S&lt;Jme 11 nm -all
of the cost of spousonug the
Amtrak demonstration At mo9l
the proJeCt would cos! no more
than $30 000 m state wx money
"'I he Oh10 Ra1l Dcvelnpmct1t
Cmmmssmn looks uron th1s a!ii ~~~
demonstration pt OJCCI loa ne w IC6b
nology m rrul r.tsscngt!r scrv1ce As
a result we're more liMn wallmg-lo
underwnLc any excess costs .. ~'
Dt:lls sa1d at •' news conference
'Th1s way smcc we h.tve.a
chance to recover .u l~.ast p.trt,ol
those costs, we II he abl~ ~
demonstrate thts equtpmcnt lor
substanhally less mnney !han ~ e
•
would otllerw&amp;se, .. hc saa d
Round trip fare for c,Ich rat! nde
alone $79
"The ntdcpcndent conlr,tt~m
h.ts some .trr,mgemcnts th.tl they
currently thmk w1ll m,tkc 11 po~"
hie lor !hem to p1ov1de t1cket'' Ill
the games It depends upon th~11
ava1l.tbthty, ' Bctt&lt; s,u~
A rat! tnp 10 Clcve l,md would
take about U1rec hours Add anot11er
30 mmutes for the tnp w Cmcion.tu The tunetable w,1s lengthened
because of rrullre1ght scheuules on
ltnes normally reserved lor tjltll
purpose, not p.tsscngcr sc1 v1cc ::
Lmd.t Rose ol the CmcnH•ll•
Rrulmad Club sa~d dtc group wo)ll(l
try to ohta111 g,Hne ttckets lo g~1
along with the mtl tr1p
.
"We're lookmg mto thnt. We'¢
certamly hopelul Utat thmgs work
out that way and we'll gtve It our
best sho~" Rose srud
:

Send Us' lloo:r

Favorite Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a

HOLIDlJll
COOKB'OOK
Included in the cookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County residents, at no charge.
The recipes will be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bread/Grains
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
• Soups and ~andwiches
Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:
Holiday Cookbook
clo The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Porrwroy, Oh 45769

Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.
Deadline for all recipes
is October 20, 1995

I

,

•
•
•
•

�..

,

By The Bend

.Monday, September 25,

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, September 25,

ByEdPetenon
Sod•l Security
Manager In Athens
How much do you know about
Social Security? Would you like to
learn more? After all, you're probably paying several thousand dollars
each year in Social Security taxes.
To help you learn what you're
buying, we've launched a nationwide, multimedia public service
campaign explaining how the
Social Security program provides
protection for workers of all ages
and their fam ilies. The campaign

includes TV, radio, and print ads
that highlight the availability of
disability and survivors benefits.
The ads offer a free booklet, Basic
Facts about Social Security: you
can order a copy by calling Social
Security at1800-77-1213.
Sometimes it's hard for me to
believe lhat Social Security can be
so little understood-and misunderstood. After all, it's been around
for 60 years and is such a vital pan
of American life. But research indicates that many people think of
Social Security as a retirement pro-

gram and don't know much about
lhe disabi~ty and survivors pans of
the program . We hope this campaign will change that.
In addition to informing people
about disability and survivors'
insurance, we want people to know
that Social Security alone will not
provide a comfonable retirement.
People need to be planning how to
supplement their Social Security
with private pensions, savings and
other invesanents. To help you do
tha~ you can get a Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement that tells you what you can

~

••
•

expect from Social Securi ty, _You .
can get the form to request a state- •
mel),t by calling us at 1-800-7721213; lhis service is available 24 ,
hours a day. Internet users can get
lhe form from the Social Security
Administration Internet server. The '
address is: http://www.ssa.gov.
'
Our campaign theme, "For the
times that count, count on Social
Security," helps reinforce lhe idea
lhat you can count on Social Security-when you retire ... or if you
become disabled ... and yo u can
count on it helping your family if
you should die.

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additionsremodelingroofing - siding •
plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick

614-992-5183

UCINE
GUN ClUB
, TUP SHOOT

Counsel feels reaction is typical of·AMA

:
FIVE GENERA TJONS -A five-gen.ration family was among
:those attendin~ the Lola Barh.r family reunion held at Forked
~ Run State Park recently. Pictured with Mrs. Barber, front, are
from the left, her grea t -~rea t -~ randdaught~r, Ashton Maron, held
b)' Mrs. Barber's grt.'at~~nm cldaughter, Angie Miles, with the hon1
•oree's grandson, Ruhert Miles, and her daughter, Kate Miles.
••
•

Five generations of
f3arber family on hand
tor annual reunion

his wife, Bcryle; Peg Buckley and
hc·r hushatld George; and Kate

Miles. Also attending were a son·

in-law James Rowles , 17 .,g rand children , 29 great g rarrd&lt;&gt;~ildren ,

....

' ''

palienL ·

A
nn
Landers
·,.,.,, L.csAno6=:;:~~::':..','!"

fmgers at lawyers when there tue
medical mistakes? The plalnliiis'

.. It was a tough summer for many friends Saturday. Cards will
Rlllph "Barney" Shain of Antiqui--- -reach her at P. 0 . Box 547, Racine.
cy.:
Ohio45771.
. ·Barney became ill on July 16,
was taken to Veterans Memorial
In a recent column, I mentioned
lklspital and then to the Holzer lhat Marvin and Clara Krider had
Medical Center. From there he was entertained with a party at their
s~ lit on to Riverside Hospital in
home in Syracuse to welcome
Columbus where test s disclosed Clara's sister, Margaret Maxine .
tlfat heart bypass surgery was in Bcalmcar to the Syracuse commuorder. Barney underwent a triple nity.
bypass on July 20 and was conSomehow a part of lhe informalli\Qd to lhe Columbus hospital for tion disappeared from the column.
12 days before coming home.
You know me ; I believe in the
, :.pnce . home, complicalions adage: "If at first you don't sucdeveloped and Barney was taken to ceed".
thC: Holzer Medical Center where
So I'll try again. Mrs. Bea~near
Ouid was drained from one of his was a former resident of Meigs
ll@gS. T ime marches on anti Bar·
County but had been making her
ney is beginning to feel consider- home in Baltimore. Md. , for a
number of years. Then she carne to
ably bcncr.
Syracuse and made her home with
You will recall U~at every year Mr. and Mrs . Krider for fiv e
afound Thanksgivin g tim e, those
monlhs and apparently liked being
nic.e firemen au xiliary members in back on home grounds so s he
Sy!llcuse take care of providing a returned to Baltimore, took care of
b6untiful Thanksgiving dinner for business matters and had her furni- .
the shut-ins, people who are ill and ture and other belongings moved to
·f*l.Ple who are alone. .
Meigs County.
'Looking ahead to this year, lhc
· She has since been renting
group reports it needs a· decent properly in Middleport but recellli)'
electric stove to help with all that purchased a home in. Syracuse and
cQ'oking which must be done . If will now be Iivin~ there. She was
yOU have such a stove with a rea~ officially welcomed to Syracuse by
sonable price tog, please call Edna lhe Kriders' as well as her daughJ.lunnell who is heading the move ter, Peggy Freeman and children,
to secure lhe much needed stove.
Michael and Kim, and Alta Dill of
Reedsville, who were also on hand
Garnet Ervine of Racine- and for lhe party.
she's loved by so many-will be
mprking her 941h birthday Satur·
Do you think Judge Ito will be
aay, Sept. 30. Garnet has been ill writing a hook? That's what we do
ami was confined to the St. Joserh now. Maybe it's true--maybe lhcre
H~spi t a l in Parkersburg, W. Va.,
is at least one book in each of us.
for·'a spell. She's out, doin' bener When will I be reading yours? Do
and undoubtedly will hear from keep smiling.

.....

Dinner planned Nov. 19
treasurer's repon.
It was noted lhat Pat Moore had
donated a doll to be used in a fund
raiser at the parish potluck Christmas pany Dec. 10. Rev. Fr. Walter
Hein z spoke to the group about
October being respect life month
and vocational awareness month.
A Mary Knoll priest will be
coming to the church to speak on
what all Mary .Knoll does this
weekend . Dorothy Shaffer took
home the uaveling Madonna,

·

"Coronary heart disease seems
to finally be a~hieving visibility a•
a serious women's health issue,"
according to Sandy lannarelli, president of the Meigs County Division
of the American Heart Association.
She said that contrary to pupular
opinion, hean disea&lt;e is not strictly
a man's disease .. It is very much a
woman's dise;1se as well. Coronary
bean disease is lhe leading cause of
dealh among women in the United
States. This year alone it will claim
over 235,000 women's lives, she

should be around 200 or preferably
less.
"If each one of us called our
doctors every time we e•perienced
chest pain, the phone lines would
probably become clogged,"
lannarelli said. "But lhe very specific pain known as angina is the
most common first symptom of
coronary heart disease in women.
That pain should signal an alen."
Arrgina is the most common
first symptom of coronary · heart
disease in women, hut that is not
said.
true for men. This is especially true
Iannarelli said lhat according to for African-American women, who
the National Center on Health develop angina at twice lhe rate of
Statistics, one in seven women, white women. Angina has five
ages 45 to 64, has some form of aspects that should be warranted:
cardiovascular disease, and the
-It is generally felt directly
ratio climbs to one in lhrec at age beneath your breastbone, and often
65 and older.
· spreads out to your left ann or neck
"Traditionally, public education Angina is a squeezing, pressing
of women in this area has consisted sensation, not a sharp pain, that
of lltking care of a male loved one does not become worse
suffering from cardiovascular dis- wiUt breathing. Many patients do
ease. Women need to become their not describe angina as true pain,
own health advocates where bean more of as a pressure or huning.
disease is concerned," said
-It "is usually caused by anylannarelli. "With September being lhing that increases the work of the
Women's Heallh Month in Ohio, I heart whether il is physical exertion
feel it's an appropriate tim e to or emotional duress . It is often
speak out about heart disease and worse after eating, in cold weather,
women."
or early morning hours.
And the AHA agrees . Women
-Episodes of angina last only
need to know their gender specific . two to three. minutes, and rarely
symptoms, how to recognize lhem more than five . The discomfort
and what to do about them. Women most often disappears completely
also need to know what questions between episodes.
to ask their heaiU1 care profession- Angina is generally relieved
als and their family's heart history.· simply by ceasing the activity that
Jannarelli says a doctor's office causes it.
visit is a good place to start a-ses.'"Heart disease is somelhing no
ing a woman's risk for cardiovas- woman can afford to overlook,"
cular disease.
lannarelli said. " By seeing their
To prepare for your office visit, health professional; knowing their
you should know the answers to the family heart health history, asking
following questions and volunteer questions and knowing the risk faclhis information to your hea1U1 pro- tors more lives can continue to be
fessional:
saved."
% Do you smoke? How much''
The American Heart Associa)-low long have you smoked?
tion spent more than $230 million
% Has anyone in your family during the fiscal year 1993-94 on
died of heart disease? At what age·&gt; research support, public and pro% Do you . ever experience fessional education, and communishortness of breath? If so, after ty programs. it is lhe largest volunhow much .physical exertion and tary health organization fighting
how long does it last?
heart disease and stroke, which
% 1)0 you ever feel pressure or annually kill more than 925,000
pain in your chest? Where exactly'' Americans, concluded lannarelli.
How long does the pain last? Does
it continue even when you li e Manhattan minuit
down?
NEW YORK (AP)- The man
%Do e.perience bouts of nau - who bought Manhattan island from
sea that seem to be unrelated to the Indians for $24 in 1626 - one
your diet?
of the great real estate deals of all
She said that women need to time- was later fired by his bossmake sure their doctor checks their es at the West India Company.
cholesterol level by taking a blood \ Peter Minuit (1580-1638), direcsample for laboratory analysis and . tor general of ll)e Dutch colony of
that they get some report of the New Netherland, bought the island
results. She said total cholesterol lhat became New York City for the
price of 60 guilders in beads and

_,..;::-----Community calendar·

-tri-nkets_._. - - -

~ The

Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
noll-profit groups wishing lo
announce meellng and special
ev-ents. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items

are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specinc number of days.
MONDAY
RU1LAND - Rutland Garden
Club, home of Pauline Atkins, 7:30

p .m. Morrday. Program by Harrisonville 4-H Club.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission,
7:30p.m. Monday at the Veterans
Service Office, Mulberry Avenue,
. .
.

. .
Spe&lt;:ialtsts at 1-800-776-2378.. .
2. Always.get I second opiDion
~f~ agreeing 10 II!' ope~OIL If
still m doubl, get a third llpiDIOIL
3. Ask your doctor how oftell and
~rccen.dyheorsheltasperfooned
thts spec1fic procedure. Ask bow
often that procedure is done ll your
particular hospital. The more
common the procedure, the more
ex~enced will be the team tbat is,
working on you. .
-4. Before agreeing 10 .an. y
~_.
ak
,..-urc, m. e sure the ph)'IICIIIII

·
ASSOCIATION FOR RBSPON-;
SIDLE MEDICINE, TAMPA, FLA.

Every
· Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.

DEARTHEOOORE~ABBJTI':l

have been accused of bemg Slrollgly
biased in favor of the medical
professi~n, an~ I welcome ,lh'!
opportunitYIOpnnlaleUt:rthalgJves
1

more balanced pic:~.

Everyone
Welcome

:

I would, however, challenge yow:.
swement that the plalnlilfs' lawyeJs
lawyers work at no ch8JKe while
·~ at no charge.• If they .win diD'
the lawyers for the doctors are
swt,lheycolleclaheftyconungeuc;y
making millions defending them
fee, which is often ~third of,...,
for asuo-nomical fees. If doctors
~
would admit their mistakes instead
SCUlemenL
~
of hiring high-priced attorneys ~plalnslhc,nsksandbenelitstoyou
OemoflheDay:YoucanrelyonJ::
wbo drag out lawsuits for years, tn layman .• terms so you will mbbil's foot if you want 10, but~
justice would be served at 1 much undcrsland It thoroughly. Avoid all remember, It didn't work for lhi·
lower COSL
·
unnecessary S";Q!CfY· Relnembcr, a rabbiL
:·
It's lime the AMA got behind 1 surgeon doesn I make any money
What's the tnJJh aboUl pot, coaUnl;
al
h 'tal uaiity unless be or~- operates.
.
LSD, PCP. crad:, speed a4
:;~f!:~on"::O::".:OOU1 what The .~talio~ for ~ponStble downers? 'The Lowdown on Dol&lt;~
they tue getting. We would all benefu Medi~uJC 1s fightmg for Improved has II{HO-the-rnbuiJe informtJJion ~:
from the safer lreatrnenl and reduced teach1.ng meth.ods, more accura!e drugs. Setul a ~lf-addtessed, lontj
cost In the meantime, hen: an: some n:porung of mtstakes, better pubhc business-size e11velope altd a eire~.
suggestions for readers who want Ill IICCCSS 10 Information and llr'OIIga' or money order for $3.75 (this
stay out of harm's way:
~eguardJ 10 prevent errors. The illcllldts postage twllrturdlillg) toi·
1. Ask if your doctor is board- nghltoknoweanbeamatteroflife Lowdowll,cloAMI.oiukrs,P.O.Box'
cer1ified.Oieckhisorhercn:denlials and dealb. •• THEODORE 11562,Chicago,/11. 60611-()562.(111.
with the American Board of Medical BABBm, COUNSEL FOR nm C4114d4, ~tul $4.55.)
.
·:

AHA advises women of
heart attack risk, symptoms
.'

by Bob Hoeflich

·:;;.covered dish d;.;ner to be held
in"tbe church basement following
the" Nov. 19 confirmation was
pllmned when the Catholic
Women's Club of Sacred Heart
Church met recently.
;Mass for the living and deceased
women preceded the meeting .
Cetelia Lisle lead the women in
group prayer and the pledge to the
fl ag. Alice freeman gave the secretary's report. Roxie Marcinko
no)ed that she bad sent out 30
c~d&lt; , and Phyllis Hackett gave the

Dear Ami Laoden: You rec:eiltly
printed 1 response from Dt James
Todd of the American Medical
Association in regard 10 medical
malpractice. PCrbaps Dt 1bdd &amp;hould
read the AMA's own journal which
says the number of deaihs by
hospital-caused mistakes may be
equivalcnuo "dwejumbo-jetcrashes
every two days. •
ThissamcJoumaloflhcAmcrican
.Medical Association article quotes
another statistic that Is even more
-•--m·g...........:nnw"'-aruc'le,64
........ ........._ u"'
percentofcanliacam:stsataleaehing
hospital were preventable. In
tlddilion, another study of Clrors in a
hospital intenSive-care unit showed
an average of I.7 errors pet day per

Acronling 10 a Harvard Medical
School study, negligent bospilal
treatment JdUs an estlmalcd 180,000
Americans each year and injures
and one great-greal grandchild .
hwidreds of thousands more. Yet Dr.
Recognition of a five ge neration Todd's main concern Is thai the
family took place atlhe gathering.
Also attending the picnic were malpractice aystem Is maldng things
friends of the family, Carol Barber, toughcrfordoclln. This reaction is
Connie and Warren Connolly, Eve- lypicaloflhcAMA
When will docton stop pointing
lyn Hein , Lori Katona, Arriana
Chlcki, John Kron, Sandy Miles,
Bob Maron, David Hess, Leslie
Parker, Sharon Miles, Don Ludwick, Terry Covert, Debbie Barber,
and Tom Zipan.

·seat
of the Bend ...
.
''

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

199j

How much do you know about Social Security?

~wife, Belly; Rom~d Barber and

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page~

.•

Five of Lo la Barbers cluluren
'attended
'
. at Forked
a rccem rcu111on
ktm Stmc Park .
They were Wilben Barber and
his wife. Glad ys: Kcnnelh Barher

1995

Pomeroy.
TUESDAY
RACJNE - The Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
Tuesday, at Star Mill Park, 6:30
p.m .. New members are welcome.

RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- For Paul
Reiser, his hit sitcom " Mad About
You" needs more spice. So does
that mean he'll become Mad About
Someone Else?
"I look forward to making it a
little edgier and getting litem at
least on lhe brink of ... I hate the
word 'affair,' but the brink of
something: a dalliance or a temptation thereof," Reiser said in the
Sept. 30 TV Guide.
"Everyone goes through that in
some_form, and I've never really
seen •t done on TV realistically,"
he said.
·
Reiser also said his character.
Paul, and the Helen Hunt's character, Jamie, are unprepared for parenlhood despite pregnancy rumors.
"It's something lhey've talked
about," he said, Hand they're both

STO·A·WAY
~ STORAGE
304-882-2996

Comparabl!' Pric~~&amp;
&amp; Sizes ....,, mo.
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
ATIORNEY DISCIPUNE

He said men have a harder time
being friend s after a relationship
ends because Uteir egos are so frag• ·
ile.
Hamilton, 56, and Stewart, 48,
are co-hosts ·or ''The George &amp;
Alana Show."
·
Stewart doesn't share his vi~w.
but agreed that male-female friend , .
ships are "very difficult ," because,
she said, women like emotinnal '
involvement.
Stewart said women's egos arc
easily damaged, too , like when
''old guys go out with these 20year-old biml)os because U1cy dnn ' t
want to be threatened . They like
their young, hbt bodies."
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) _ Will ·•
tourists Oock to see a pre-Civil War
era home on Beale Street? The
Elvis Presley estate is banking on
·
IL Rock 'n' roll fans still flock to
\}raceland, and Elvis Presley Enterprises has plans to turn lhe HuntPhelan home into another tourist
niecca.
Civil. War adversaries Ulysses
S. Grant and Jefferson Davis holh "
slept at the houSe, though cert.~inly
not at the same time.
:·
The Presley estate has joined ,.
.with Hunt-Phelan heir Bill Day to
manage the home, which will be
open for limited tours ne.t month.
Plans call for .a full restoration
by March 1996. The pre-Civil War
home once was the center of a
250,000-acre plantation.
Jack Soden, chief executive offi- " '
cer of Presley Enterprises, said lhe' .
move doesn't signal a new direc- .
lion into the non-Elvis business.
·
" But it's toL1IIy unlike anything ·-.
we have ever done or e.pect to·
do," Soden said.

.. On August 23, 1995, D.
Michael Mullen, Attorney

Reglstrallon No. 0007345,
was Indefinitely ouopendod

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

• New Homes

•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
614 992-2753

COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643

Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays ·
Beginning
Sept. 17 917111 n

$3.99 per min.

must be 18 yrs.
Required Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

Howard L. Wrilesel
ROOFING

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair·SefVIce
New Radiators &amp;
Recores Available

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning .
· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

C!JI/ for Low Prices

742-3212
Turn on Depot St. In
Rutland 1.2 miles.
811011 mo.

5116194 TFN

SERVICE

110\\ \lUI

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
', Room Additions
Slillng, Roofing, Patios
I
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
Call Wayne Nell 9924405

E\C.\\ .\TII\(;

4113195

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

Chris
Scherfel

Saturday, October 7th, at
10:00 The Home National

Misc. Jobs. ·

~ank

will offer fo.r sale at
;1ubllc auction on th~ Bank

all Items from the sale at

any time.

(9)25,29,(10) 1, 4, 6, Sic
Public Notice
Tho City of Point Pleasant
is accepting bids for the

painting

and/or

maintenance of the Sand

tlill water tank, Inside and

out. This steel tank haa a
capacity of 300,000 gallons
and Is 43' tall and 35' In
diameter. The original plans

. and drawings ol tho tank
may be seen al the City
Building between the hours
of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Airangement to see the

675-t191 or 675-3500.
· All bids must be sealed.

FLOWER SHOP

ARE YOUR
· READY FOR
ROMANCE
1-900-255- 151 5
Ext. 900
2.99 pe r min. Must

CAREER &amp;
EDUCATION
COUNSELING
This Wednesday 7-8 pm.
Meigs Co. Library
"
Main St., Pomeroy
No fees, Walk-in Call
1-614-753-3531, ext. 307
fGr other appl.
Helping you find lhe right path
to a better future.

clearly marked "WATER
TANK", and received at the
City Building, 400 VIand

be 18 yrs. o r older
To uch -tone
phone req uired
Serv-U

(619) 645 -8434

Street, Point Pleasant, WV

25550, no later than 4:00
p.m. on Monday, October
30, 1995.
The City reserves the
right to accept or reject all

blda.
Russell V. Holland, Mayor
Marilyn L. McDaniel, City
Clerk
City Ql Point Pleasant, WV
(9) 18, 25, 2tc
Public Notice
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District
Owner

39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedsville, Ohio 45772

Public Notice
Public Notice
Separate sealed BIDS for Plains.
Copies of the CONTRACT
the construction of STATE
ROUTE 124 WATER MAIN DOCUMENTS
and
Rt;LOCATION PROJECT will SPECIFICATIONS may be
be received by the Tuppers . obtained at the Office of
Plains-Chester Water Dial. TRIPLETT ENGINEERING
at the District Office 39561 SERVICES CO. located at
Bar 30 Road Reedsville, 110 Mechanic Street,
Ohio until 2:00 p.m. Local Pomeroy, Ohio upon
Time on Oc1ober 17, 1995 payment of $40.00 for each
and then at said Office

publicly opened and read
aloud.
The
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS may be

examined at the Water
District whose main office
Is located on State Route 7,
3 miles south of Tuppers

set , which

refunded.

will not be

(9) 25 (tO) 9 2 IC

Dlrctors

Lawsuit claims daughter was taken
from her home to prevent abortion
.

106 Buuernut-Ave. Pomeroy, OH
(614) 992~54.

(800) 433-6203

.

. LINCOLN, Ncb. (AP) - A
couple claims in a federal lawsuit
that local authorities took their
daughter from their home in an
early morning raid last year to pre-

RIVERBEND ARTS
COUNCIL

vent her from having an abot1ion.

•.·

.
I

'"

Connie and Carl Scoll tiled the
action Friday against a prosecutor,
police, a doctor and Ute family of
their daughter's former boyfriend.
The Scotts said th e boyfriend's
family attacked them and u deputy
handed out anti-abortion literature
before taking their 15 -year-old
daughter away last Sept. 29.
·
A prosecutor then interrogated
her without a lawyer and got a
judge' s order re leasing .her frot'l
foster care only on the ~ondition
she promised not to have lhe second-trimester abortion, the lawsuit
said.

The couple sai d they were
forced leave town after the
boyfriend's family posted niers

lhroughout Blair, population 6,BOO.
describing the Scans as ·'murder·
ers.''
The Scott's attorney, Jeanelle
Kleveland, said Saturday that the
girl, who was 23 week~ pregnant at
lhe time, eventually gave birth in
December and is raising lhc baby
and living with her family in Iowa.
"She was court-ordered not to
have an abortion," Ms. Kleveland
said Saturday. "The only way she
could be returned to her family wa&lt;
by abiding by that order."
The American Civil Liberties
Union agreed to sponsor the lawsuit after the Scou .family asked
them for help Ia~t year.
"This poor family was trying to
do what we want them to do- talk
among themselves about whether
to have an abortion - and they got
harassed," said Andre Collins.
interim director of th e ACLU's
Nebraska chapter.

·.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting
• Interior &amp; Exterior

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

Under

N~bra ska

law, the st ate

Pomeroy, Ohio
112/'111'1

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

The Scali girl , wltose twnc h;c'
not bee n released, had made an
appoinUnent for an abortion after
her parents had her examined hy a
doctor who said abortion was still
an option, Ms. Klevelalld said .
The · la wsui t, which seeks
unspecified monetlu-y and punitive
damages, names Washington
County Attorney John Samson :
local police and sherifrs nt"nc i;~ s.
Dr. K.C. Dagby and doctor's a"istant James Jordan as well as the
form er boyfriend and his parent,.
Kathy and John Tul I. ·
Mrs. Tull said she was trying to
protect her unborn grandchild and
her son, who was 16m the time.

138 N. 2nd, Middleport ·
(Acrou from JollniiCIIl't VIdeo)

15n LARGE
PEPPERONI

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

Only

mo.

s6.99

992-6344

614-742-2193
e/12/1

.

Dine-In or Carry-Out.

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

Take the pain out of
painting. Lei us do It lor
you. Very reasonable.

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message .
After 6 p.m. •
614-985-4180

(Lime Stone low Rates)

·wiCKS
HAULING

.. ... . ......

Call your date now

1-900-255 -1515

Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs .
Touch -tone
phone required
Serv-U

(619) 645 -8434

. ..
· -··

::~

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

LIVE GIRLSI CALL NOW!
· 1-900-378-2500 En. 832S. - ,
I

$3.99 /Min. Must Be 18 Vra
Serv-U (619) 645-8434.

30 Announcements
E•leen"s Personal Care lor elderly. ·
We spectahze 11'1 Alz he•mers tare
giVIng. 304· 762-2S44.

Meet1ng ot concerned parents ol •
Roosevelt Elementar~ at Flatrock '
Fire Dept (AI 2}, Tuesday 91261'95 ; .
7pm. Any parent, ouard1an, •
grandparon\, IJIC. Lars be there ro '
help our ch•ldlunlll
'

40

G lveaway

1yr old male dog, hall Heeler, hBit
Husky. Has shots. 304-882-25118.
2 Angora Nanny Goats, 61 4-361 ·
~

7008.

'2 Kllten s, I Cat Anytt me, 61&lt;4 ."
.!1411 -00?1

3 Mon t h Old t&lt;men . 6H -2.,.S•
0909 Alter 5 P.M. ,
'

949-2512

Che~per Rates

$20.00/HR ·

ALFALFA

FOR SALE
BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

949-2512

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(6t4) 949-2018 FAX
(6t4) 594-2008 NIGHT

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m. ~3: 30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows. Blown
Insulation~ Storm
Ooora,

.

''
'&lt;.

Medium Bulf &amp; WhiH) 5 1/2 Ucinth
Old Male Pu~. 614-446-4479. . •
P•ano , l~r st come. ltrsf sorv8;
needs some work. 304-675-3663. ,'
To A Go od Home: Beau11tu) Long!
Ha•red Go lden Tabby Cat , ,ftu..
367- 7490.
' '

To good home - lu ll blooded Bfu.
Healer. 6t4-742·2192 ·

Lost and Found · '

Foun d: dog. white Wlblack spotJ,
bob·tailed, Kmgsbury area 814 992-3553.
. •
Lost. small !)jack fem ale dog. · nO" ~
tall , lame front leg, Chase f";1d .
area. reward, 6141·698-2806.
·

lOBI 6 Mul&amp;d Alp1ne N8nf\y ·
Goats White And Brown In Vicin.
tl y AI Lllt! e Kyger Raad And
Moor e Hill, 614 · 367 -1008, 614-

WELDING &amp; FABRICATlON
HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

-

Ma,je Australian Shepherd pu~~
to good home, 6 14-992-2508 ahat
6pm.

60

RACINE HYDRA ULIC REPAIR
&amp; MA CHINE SHOP, INC.

HAY

Estab. Over 25 Years

Personals

005

0539

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
&amp; monthly rental rates.
Reunions Parties

Ext. 7969
'2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Requ ired.
SeiV·U (619) 645·8434

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

614-992-3470

MODERN SANITATION

1-900-255-8585

DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS

3 Monlh Old Pupp1es, &amp;H-381 -

AND MIXED

can' t restri ct abortion s until the

fetus becomes viab le, and that mu' t
be determined hy a doctor, M.&lt;.
Kleveland said .

Bill Slack
992•2269

9~2-62 1 5

The Engineer 's estimate

lor the Project Is $33,336.00.
September 23, 1995
lSI Herold H. Blackston
Pres. TP-tWD Board of

PIZZA • ARCADE:

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

Light HauUng,

Public Notice

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2131

THE REC ROOM

,,,.,..

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Public Notice

tank may be made by
calling Public Works

.u

Se rvices.

Home Sites, Land
Clea ring, Septic
Systems &amp; Oriveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

(9)18, 20, 25; 3TC

The Terms of the sale are
cash. Home National Bank
reserves the right to bid at
the sale or to .remove any or

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

Hulldozing, Backhoe,

For Free Estimates

9/14195 2 mo.. pd.

'I

Joe N. SIIY"•

W2211 mil.

NEFF REMODELING

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORE!!!
. .
1·900-884·9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Happy Ad

Wasn't he " pur!y"
But yott ought to see
him,
Now that he's
thirty
Love,
Laura, Mallory
&amp; Seth

Reasonable Rates

71'"'"

addlllonal

Parking lot the following:
1992 Nissan Pickup Serial
-1N6SD1 t S6NC313673
1992 Goo Storm
Hatchback Serial •
#J81 RF4365N7527006
t987 Ford Ranger Pickup
Serial
'
#1FTBR10A5HUA78663
1978 Jeep CJ583 Serial
#J8F83AH144301

Umestone &amp; Grave~
Septlt Syst8111s,
Trailer &amp; Haese Sites.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTIOI'( .
•New Homes
··
• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE !:STIMATES'
985-4473

State Rt. 33

Mullen' (1995), 73 Ohio St.

3d 295 , for
Information.

.........

REASONABU .RATES

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

2500 Ext. 6557

Tony's Portable
Welding

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Talk to beautiful
GIRLS! 1-900-378-

Imperial Tire
Service

P.O. Box 587

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Live 24 Hours/Day

Touch-lone Phone

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

J.D. Drilling Company

For Free estimate call 949-2512

( No Sunday Calls)

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4081
Week Day 8:00.5:00
Open Saturday
9:00.3:00

RACINE GUN
ClUB
GUN.SHOOT

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Custom 8uildlilg &amp; Remodeling

Supreme Court'a opinion In
D~aclplinary Counsel v.

not ready."

We are now located at the
Old Western Auto Store
49 N. 2nd Ave.
Jitterburg/Swing Middleport Lessons
Start Sept. 28, 7:00
Call 992-2622 to register

Complete
Detailing

from the pracllce of law In

"Say Love With
.Flowers From!"

Has A New Location

DAYS
CAR WASH

state of Ohio. See the

Director Dan Rodgers al

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - George
Hamilton and his ex-wife Alana
Stewart are chummy enough to
work togelher. But he insisL&lt; men
and women can't be just friei1ds.
"I've never gone out with a
woman I didn't want to go to bed
wilh," Hamilton said in the Sept.
30 issue of:rv Guide.

'

Mason, W.V.
304-773·5533 .
- September SpecialWith the purchase of
a set of struts or
shocks get FREE
installation.

Names in the news
NEW YORK (AP) - Former
President Reagan's struggle with
Alzheimer's disea'\C has drawn his
family closer - including onceestranged daughter Patti Davis,
~ewsweek magazine reports.
Reagan, 84, disclosed last
November that he has Alzheimer's,
an incurable degenerative brain disorder.
"I think any illness ... brings
things into focus and · should
reshufOe your priorities," former
'first lady Nancy Reagan said in lhe
Oct. 2 issue.
Mrs. Reagan said in the past ·
year she has reconciled wilh Davis,
who has written hooks criticizing
her parents and posed nude in Playhoy.
·
For her part, Davis said tire
change actually began befure her
father's illness was disclosed.
"He would write me notes,"
she said. "He was trying to say Ill
me, 'I'm 82, I'm 83 . I'm not going ·
to be here much longer. And I love
you and we love you. "·

8/4/ltn

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
Starting Sept. 17
I p .m .
Factory Choke
guns only.
Will shoo! throu gh
March '96

~torm

· Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates
1/19111n

367 -9389

70

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

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

9/811 mo

..

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid ..;: ~
Advan&lt;e. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.n\,· ·

the da~ before the ad is to run•
Sunday edit1011 - 2:00 p.m. Fn~i
Monday edition · 10 :00 a.m. Sat:

·

•~

urday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

•

All Yard Sales Must Be Patd In
Advanc e. Deadlme: 1:OOpm the
day beiQre the ad IS to run, Sun ••
day ednlon. t ·oopm Friday, Mol)-·
day ed111cn ! O:OOa.m. Saturday.
·'

80

3·D ARCHERY
SHOOT

Yard Sale

PubliC Sale
· and Auction

. .

R1ck Pearson Auction Company
lull 11me auct1oneer. compleAt . •
auctiOn
ser·v•te
licensed ·
#1'66: 0t11o &amp; West VlrQtnta, 30-4 · "

773 -57850r 304-773-5447

90

· ' •·

Wanled to Buy

Approx . BOO robacco llakfs • 1·
304·675·6269 or 304 -675-2669 · ' .
.
"' '

.

Cloan La!&amp; Mode l Cars Ot
Trucks , 1981 Modtll Or New., ·
Sm11h Bu 1ck Pon11ac , 1900 East:
ern Avenue, Gatl1polls.

D~cora led

stonew-are, wall te14'· ·.

phones, old lamps, old thermome·
ters, old clocks, an11que furniture.
R1vonne Anllques Russ Moo;e,
owner 61.11 ·992 -2526. We bYt
estates

o·s

Au to Pans. Buying 181- • •
vage veh•c les. Seil1ng pans. 304-

J &amp;

77:J.5033

�•

..

.P.age 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 25, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Monday, September 25, 1995
AL'L EYOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1
5
8
:12
13

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEA ITIE BLVD.® by Bmce Beattie

.,.3_50_L_ot_s_&amp;_A_c_r_e...:ag::..e_:'i 490

...

: bta

rube rad tos made before
101' some models.
• A)so old rad1o tubes pans amph
: !'ers JUkeboxes old cra nk tele·
pt1ones old reco rd players , a n ~
1$46 big money

Scentc Valley Apple Grove,
bea uti ful 2ac lots pubhc wa1er
Clyde Bowen Jr, 304 576-2336

• Jml&lt;O of e lectroniC S made before

·. ~a•a

Phone

304 882 2220

41 0 Houses lor Renl

J•P.

Pr~ce s

Pa1d Old US Co1ns

2 BedroamOnSR 141 1 M1leOut
Of Galltpohs $350 /Mo Pl us De
pos l! 614-446 6566

S il Ver Gold 0 1amonds AU Ol d

CoUect1bles Paperwe tgh!s Etc
M T S C om Shop 15 1 Seco nd
: ~w!nue Galt1oo~s 6 14 445 284 2

Newly Remode led Small 4 Room
C ottage No Pets Porter Area
6 14 388-11 00

Used furniture antt qu es one
ptete o r C"m plete estates Osby
Martm 614 992 744 1

N1ce rwo hou se Pome roy Room s

Wa nted To Buy Junk Autos With

recenlly repa•nted new wmdows,
Sfl n10r CIIIZen di SCOun t call 6 14
992 2304

Ot Wtt hout Moto rs Call larry
Ltvely 6 14 388 9303

"ftlli! Ct1E'Il'5!0 IN

11-1 e; IAAP 15 4ol'le-.
~t'-6 M'J',f BE LMEI\Tr"''i

App li ances
ReconditiOned
Washers, Dryers Aa nQes, Refn .
grate r s 90 Day Guarantee !
French Cny May!ag, 614 446
7795

oN t\IO'It- 1&gt;1 er
A&lt;t~IN.

~aK, so your theraprst wants you to listen more to
your 'rnner chrld
but why do f have to be rnvolved? ..

Adm lni Sira!lve Secretary

Full

T1m e Posl!lon lmmedlale Open
mg Fo r S ell 0 1r ected lnd 1v1dual
Possess1ng S11.111s In ..Jnu,thand '
Speed Wnt1ng Typ ng PC L11e ra·
q Wnh Spreadsh eet Word Pro
CEt5S ing Software Knowledge Pr1
Or Execu11ve Secretary Expen ·
ence An Asset Send Resume To
Holzer Clin1c Human Reso urces,

c G II 11 OH
90 J ac k son P1.,e
a rpo s
45631

AID ASSOC IAT KJN
FOR LUTHERANS
Is Looktng For A Career Mtnded
lndtvtdual To "Provtdc Fmanc tal
Ser. vtces And Fra ternal Beneltts•
In The Galltpclts Areo Start1ng
Inc ome Up To $26K Compte1e
Tram m g And Full Bene fit Pack
agd Send Resume To AAL8111
T moerlodge Tra il O a ~ t o n OH
45458 Or Ca lJ 513 433 770 6
(Collect)
I Shtr l ey

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn S8 $15/Hr At Work Home
D1scoun1sl No Inventory Or Door
Door lnd /Rep 1 000 742 4 738
Avon Earn S8 $15 1Hr No Door
TO Door Full 1Part Tm1e 1 800
736·0 168 lnd Rep

t~~=~:;~~~;:;;===tp:::;::::::;;~
110

Help Wanted

WEST

720 Tl'ucks lor Sale

Pan t1me dt1 vers need ed 10
Han soon cars to and from auc
lio ns ca ll 614 99 2 2606 between
11 am 3p m Must be at le a sr 25

years old

POSTAL JOBS
STart $1 2 08/hr For e.am and ap
plica tiOn 1nfo call 2 19 769 830 1
e•t WV548 9am 9pm Sun Fn
Seen c H1lls Nursmg C enter 31 1
Buckr1dge R oa d B1dw ell OH
&lt;1561 4 I s Now Ta ~m g Aop i1c a
!Ions For Nurses A des Clas s To
Starr Oc t 16 1995
Ta rgete d C nse Ma nager Part
lime tempor ary pos1t on SA m hu
ma n serv•ces field Know edged or
serv1ces ava 1lable 1n Mason lrn
co in or Wayne Co At least l~r
e•p enence 1n related rreld L1
ce ns ed or lice nsable m soc tal
work Apply a t SCAC 540 5th
A11 e
Hunting ton WV 25701
De adime Ocr 6 EOE

AVON Sal e s $6 $15/Hr No
Door To Door Ma11 Oraer Pr o
gram Bonuses 1 800 827 4640
1nd Isis lr ep

WANTED Mechan ic engme ro
build 1n g all tv pes assembly of
moTors Call 304 372 8633 Hrs 8

AVON EARN $$$ a t ho me al
work All areas 304 882 264 5 1
BOO 992 6356 INDIAEP

180

CARP~NTER S HELPER

Mu st
Ha\le ~JIImmum 2 Yrs Expenenc e
Truck And Tools Requ1rea Call
614 446 4514 Mon Fn 8 AM
To 5 P,M
Driver With Class A COL wanred
We haul WIThin a 7 10 8 sta re area
No Northeast loaos Homet1me
pa1d vacat1o n &amp; holidays Cal l 1
800 598 6790
Easy Wo r k I Exce llent Payl As
semble ProduCts At Home Call
Toll Free 1 800 46 7 55 6 6 E xt

313
Wanted Full T1me Truck Dr 1ver
COL Class A L1ce n se Needed
GallipoliS Reduc 110n Co R10
Grande OH 614 245 5514
HEALTH RECOVERY

SERVICES INC
HELP WANTED
PREVETION SPECIALIST Ft 9
5 Same Vanable Hours Ouald1
cationS Bachelors Degree In Ed
ucat1on Or Related F1eld Plus 3
Years Wsrk Expenence O; Com
mensurp~e Ex per ence Cend ed
Preven11cn Spec1ai1Sl Prelerred
Or Ehg1ble For Entry Into Cer1111
ca1 10n Process Ellpenence In
Work1ng W1th Youth Schools
And Commun1ty And Excellent
Presentation And Orgam.la t1onal
Sk rlls Requ~red Exper~ence W th
Teen lnstrlute And B A BE S
Preferred Excellent Fnnge f1ac k

age
Send Resume An Lener By Sep
tember 29 1995 To Heal th Re
cover Serv1ces, Inc P 0 Box
724 Athens. Oh10 45701 E E 0
Employer
Needed full t1me or pan 11me
house cleaner, Middleport area
Call 614 992 5042 between
10am·6pm

No Expenence Necessarrt $500
To SQOO Weekly tPotent1al Pro
cess1ng Mortgage Relunds Own
Hours, Call (909) 715 2300 Ext
782, (24 Hours)
Openmg Soont New Steak &amp; Sea
lood Restaurant rn town Now h1r
mg for all snrrts wa1tresses wall
ers, bartenders cooks d sh
washers delrverr persons etc
Fotward resumes to At 1 Box
839, PI Pleasant WV 25550 al
304 675-7481
Owner Operators Needed Top
percentage pa1d hauling w11h n a
7 to 8 state area No Northeast
loads Call1 800 59S.6790
Pan T1me Expenenced Word
Processor /Transcrrptron1st Must
Be Knowledgable &amp; Word Perlect
Feb1ble Hours Send Resume To
CLA 358, r,to Gall1poi1S Darty Tflb,
une 825 Third Avenue Galllpolrs
OH 45631
PLANNER I Ohro Valley Reg1onal
Development Comm1sS10n Seek
1ng Entry level Reg1onal Planner
To Assrsl Staff Wnh Research
Act1V1t1es Related To Commumty
Oeve!opmenl Blo~k Grant Con
1racu $17 500-$21 000 +Bene
Ius
Requ1red E~penence Research
StatiStiCS Use 01 Personal Com
pulers, Word Processrng And
Spreadsheel Software Preferred
Exp,nence Bachelor's Or Asso ·
c1are s Degree In Busmess Plan.
n 1ng Adm.n1strauon Or Sactal
Servu:es Grants Wrulng M1n1
mum or One· Year Of Work Or In
temshrp Prevrous Work W1th Lo
cal Level Government Off1crals
Submll Co\le r Lener, Resu me
And Refe rences For Rece 1pt By
5 00 PM Oct 6 1995 To Execu
hV&amp; Ortec!or. QVADC 740 Sec
ond Street Room 102 Pons mouth OH 45662 4088

"AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER"

5

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Serv1c e Complete tr ee
care 20 ~ rs exp 8. msu red tr ee
e stima res 6 ! 4 44 1 1191 or 1
BOO SD 8 888 7
Do You Need A Brea k From
House Wo rk? Wo ul d You L1ke To
Co me Ho me From Work And Re
Ia ~ Call P&amp;J s Clea nmg 614 388
Ge ne ral Ma1ntenance Pamtmg,
Yard Work W1ndows Washed
Gu n ers Cleaned Light H&lt;1UI1ng
Commer1cal Res1den t al Steve
£t4 446 8861
Georg e s Portable Sawm111 don t
naul your lags to the mill JUS! call
304 6 75 1957
Home C1eamng, General De
ta led W1ndow Cteanmg , lnstde 1
Outstde (last Chance Before
Wmwr ) 614 2561370, Marsha
M1chae1 Thacket &amp; Kevm Bled
see B&amp;B Enterpflse blown rnsu
la110n Free es11ma1e on ho U'se,
614 742·2503
M1scel\aneous Home W1ndows
Oll1ce Cleaned As~ For Anne
Al so S1o01e For Sale 614 446
1358
Pro fess1onal Tree Ser111ce Com·
plete Tree Care Bu cket Truck
Serv1ce 50 Ft Reach Stump Removal, Ffee E st1matesr In·
su rance, 24 Hr Emergency Serv
1ce Cal l And Sa11e l No Tree Tao
Btg Or Too Small I Sidwell Ohto
614 388 9643 614 367 7010
Rub &amp; Scrub Clea nmg Serv1ce
dusting mopprng Windows and
more Complete servrce or touch
ups Referenc es on request call
Terry ar 614 992 4232 or 614
992 4451
Su n Valley Nursery S~hool
Ch 1ldcare M F Gam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Dur1ng
Summer 3 Days por Week Mm1
mum 614 446 3657
W1ll Do lnter1or Exter1or Pa1n11ng
Reasonable Rates Expeuenced
Relerences For Free Esumates
Call614 245 5755
W1ll tak.e ca1e ot elderly Have ref
erences 304 895 3234

FINANCIAL
21 o

Business
Opportunity

~ LUMBEn

COSTS UP?~ Steel
bU1 Id1ngs as tow as S3 00 sq foot
Buy lac tory duect lrom Na110nal
Manufacturer as authoriZed deal
er Wil l trarn Some Markets ta~
en 303 759 3200 ext 2200

!NOTICEI
OH 10 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re c ommends thai you do bu s1
ness w1th people you know and
NOT 10 send money through the
ma ll unt I you have 1nvest1gated
the ofler1ng
Excellent Reta il Space Avat!able
Lalayetle Mal~. 513 922 0294
Local VendlnQ Bu s1ness Far
Sale I Be Yo u r Own Bossi Earn
B1g SSS Call Today I 1 800 350
8363
Vend1ng LAZY MAN S DREAM
Few Hours • BIG S W1ll Sell
Cheap 1·000·820 4353

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes lor Sale

------------1

Home for sale by owner 3BA
Ranch 2 44acres masonry f1re
place new carpet throughout, ex
tra o ur bu1ldmgs, $58
304
895 3376

ooo

In M1ddlepor1
2 3 b&amp;droom
house two ltvmg rooms, k1tchen,
lau ndry room and bath Sttuated
on 100x200 corner lot, also has
ut lilt1es hookup lor trailer, call
614 992 6465

thiS newspaper IS SUbJect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes It Illegal
ro advertise Many preference,
11 m1tallon or dlscrlmrnatlon
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
ong1n, or any lnlentlon to
make any such preference,
hm1tal10n or discrimination"
Th1s newspaper wrll not
knowtingly accept
advertrsements for real estate
whtch Is In \lrolat!an of the law
Our readers are hereby
tntormed !hat all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basts

310 Homes lor Sale

$250/Mo Plus Depos11 &amp; Utrl1 t1es
Skidmore Road 614 446 4426
N1ce ~ Bedroom CA, H1ghway
160, 4 Miles N Holzer $325JMo
Secuuty Deposit P;eference 614
446-6189 614 446 6865
Two Bedroof'l'l S250JMo Plus UUI·
11res Oepos11 References Re
qwed At 218 After 6 PM 614
983·4607

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
n1shed and unlurmshed secumy
depos1t requ1red no pets 614
992 2218
1 Bedroom J=;urmshed ApartmenT
Ou1et Clean Centra l Heat Air
Pnvate Parkmg Ma1ntenance
Free. 614 446 2602

~

3 Bedrooms State Rowe 141 10
M1les Out Gall1polis 24x32 Ga
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace,
In Ground Pool New Satellite
D1sh Gallra Coumy Local School
D1strct. 614 379-2410
4bedroom, 2 1t2bath, large fam1ly
room on 1acre, 1m1 beh'"d Hart·
ford 304 88.2 3326
Leon ,

wv

(close 10 St At 62 10 _

ward Charleston) N1ce 3Dedroom
h0r11e basement 9acres Need
offer Call Somerville Realty 304
675 3030

cT_h'-..
,-"-'bed
-"-,•--m
• ~h-o_m_e~,n-co_u_n_u_,·. I
Whites Hill Rd

Rutland one bath,

1n ground pool 614 992 5067
Wanted to rent· protessronal lam
1ly would l1ke to lease tour bed
room home 1n Me1gs County, cal l
614 gg2 7272 or 614 992 6503

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
12x65 Concord 3 Bedrooms Gas
Heal, New Carpet Excellent Con
d111on $7,950 614-446 0175
14• 70 8r1stol LaDonha 2 Bed
rooms I 112 Baths New Water
Heater Deck Blocks Underpm
n 1ng Ready To Be Movedl Only
$4 800 6t4-379 9125
l4x70 Noms 2 bedroom 614
687 3226
14:.;70 trailer well ma1nta1ned
304·002·3739
1968 PMC Br1cemeyer 12x60
304·372-3400

1 Bedroom New E xrra N ce AH
Condmoncd Near Holzer s $2591
Mo + Ut ht1es Deposrt Reqwed
614 446-2957
1bedroom furn1shed clean n1ce
s1ngle occupancy No pets No
HUD References &amp; depos1t 304
675 2651
2 Bedroom Apartment In Down
town Gallipohs Central A1r K1tct1
en Appl1ances All Rooms Oar ·
peted 4 00IMo
tii iii&amp;S Nat In
eluded 614 886 7174

s

u

2 Bedroom Apartment Trash
Water, Sewage Paid $2951MO t

1 4hp Economy Garden tractor w /

2Rooms Plus Bath Lafayette
Mall No K 1chen1 All Ut1h!les pa1d
S175 00 Month DepO!IIf Requited
614 446 7733
4 Rooms S. Bath Un turn1shed No
Pets Water Pa1d 91 Ceda r
Srree! Gallipolis 614 388 1100
661 t664 Thrrd Galltpalrs 2 Bed
rooms New Appliances Carpet
SJDOIMo 1 Month Depas1t No
Pets 614 245 9595
Furn1shed Elf1C1ency $235 tl.to
Util1t1es Paid 920 Fourth Avenue
Gallipohs 614 446 4416 Alter 7

1974 Academy 12x55 2bedroom
1bath electriC new lurnace wmcf.
ow ac 304 3 72 3400

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

1993 Clarton 14x70 3bedrooms
all elee1r1c heat pump w/d range
tr1dge dishwasher m1 crowave
sktr!lng 3:J4 675 5129
2acres 1984 Sprrngbraok. mobile
home 3ml Rt 2 N on At 62 304
675·6986
L1m11ed Oflerl 1996 doublew1de
30r 20ath S1695 down $2591
month Free del1very &amp; setup
On ly at Oakwood Homes Nitro
304 755 5885

wv

L1m1ted OHert New t4x80 No pay
ments alter 4yrs Only make 2
payments s. move n 304 755
5566
New 1996 14x70 1ncludes skrrt
1ng steps bl ocks one year
homeowners msurance and s111
month!; FREE lot rent Only $1025
down and $207 17 per rronll"' Call
1 80().837·3238
New 1996 Doublew1desl DIS·
counts up to $5 000 mclud1ng free
heat pump, delrvery and more 1800 251 5070 ext 11
New Bank Repos On(y 4 left 304·
755 7191
P r 1ce Bustert New 14x70 2 or
3br Only $995 down $1951month
Free de l1 very S. setup Only at
Oakwood Homes N1tro WV 304 ·
755 5685

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Charola1s lake Beautiful 2 25
Acre Lot Ou1et Oes1ratJie Nergh
borhood Restuct&amp;d $24 500 304
273-0136,304 273 2940
Four lots near Racme approx 1
112 actes each startmg at $5000
call614 949 2025

OWN YOUR OWN
LAKE
And Acreage Excellen t For
Bu1ld1rtg Campsttes Etc Appr 10
Acre Spring Fed Stocked Lake
W 1th Island 3 Bedrooms 2 H2
Bath Mobile Home Wtth Add On
From Gall1polrs
10
Mrles
$125 000 , 614 388-8678

Sto11e Freezer, Washer Dryer,
Refngerator, TV, VCR 614 256
t238 •
SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

62
Oli;~e St , Gal lipolis New &amp; Used
!u r n1ture, heaters, Western &amp;
Work bOots 614 446 3159
Tr1~le dresser wt lighted hutch
Southwestern style couch love
seat &amp; cha1r , sw1vel rocker, Broy
h1ll club cha1r 4 ptece p1ne liv1ng
room su11e double dresser end
tables Bqston rock.er all m e~
cellent cond1ton 614 985 35g5

VI RA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Quality Household Purn1ture And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Carryt RENT2 OWN
And Layaway Also Ava1lable
Free Delivery Wtth1n 25 M1les

530

Antiques

1953 M38A1 m1111ary Jeep
$ 10 000 1n new parts new from
ground up best alter 614 843
5285
Buy or sell R1ver1ne Ant1ques
1124 E Ma1n Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
600 pm ,614 992 2526

turn 1n g plow cult rva tors , snow/
garden blade $2800 304 675
2217

K1ng wood burn1ng furnace. good
cond , used only a lew years 304
675 1714

Two

Maple dtnmg room set $300 An
t1 que cupDoard $90 Ant1que
pump organ $250 Zenith 25~ col
or TV $75 Starrmaster $75 304·
675 1272 aller 9pm

O'scount farm tractor parts for
Massey, Ford, IH &amp; others
Stder s E;qu1pment Co Hender·
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1·800 277 3917

Nordtc Track Walk ht Classtc wnh
arm movement. wor~ aut comput
er (tells speed, calor1es llme d1s
ta nce and putse) Used very lillie,
call6t4 992 5181 after Spm

InternatiOnal 756 D1ese l Tractor
$4 995 964 01esel PS L1ve PTO
S3 995 Sears 12 HP Lawn Trac·
lor $295 Cas e Law n Tractor
$295 614 286 6522

Pamt Plus Now In New LocatiOn I
511 Burdene St across from Bel
lemeade UM Church 304 675
4084
Refngerators, Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Recand1t oned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
w.n Del1ver 614 669 6441
Seplrc Tank Jet Aerat1on Motors
New &amp; Rebuilt /Installed Call
Johns John 614 446 4782
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upr1ght, Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson Ohra 1 800 537 9528
TrampolineS 150 Needs New Pad
Swmg Set $25, Needs New Seats
614 446 2109
Vartous Pamtmgs For Sale Well
Known Artists (Surreal) Vanous
S1zes Vanous Pnces 614 4462183

AC camb1ne wl corn head &amp; table
grav11y beds Also straw tor
sale 304 675 6086

JD 450 C Dozer ROP Wrench 6
Way 614 446 8044 Plus 1 BOO
Senes Road Tracker 1976 Low
M1laQe

New 6 pull type brush hog, $650,

3 pt hrtch pota to plows, $75 614
843·5216

630

Livestock

1 112 VIO Jacob Sheep Ram
W1th 4 Hotns $50 6 Month Old
Billy Goat M1xed Alp1ne $35 614
367 7008
6 Month Old Bull CallieS S mmen
tal IRed Angus Cross Breedtng
G1llesp1e SA 588, 614 446 3969
7 p1gs for safe $1 Sea 304 6 75
6490
Black Polled S1mmental Bull 8
Month Old E•cellent Bloodl1ne
Call After 5 00 614 256 6402

PM

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Tw1n R1vers Tower now accepung
appl1cat10ns lor 1br HUD subs1d
1zed apt for elderly and hand•·
capped EOH 304 675-6679

450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms lor rent . week or month
Starung at $120.mo Gallla Hotel
614·446 9580
Sleep1ng rooms wtth cooking
Also trarler space on nver All
hook · UPS Call after 2 00 p m .
304-773-5651. Mason WV

Tra1ler lot 1n Middleport 614 992
3194
lot on Braod Run Rd New
Ha01911 S60Jmo 304 773 5881

470 Wanted to Rent
Wanted House Far Rent 2, 3
Bedrooms, Galt1pohs V1ctn1ty Be
1ng Translerred 2 Adu lts 1 Ch1ld
:Jl4 273-2038

WHILE I WAS
OUT OF
TOWN
LOWEEZ.Y?

1990 Dodge Ram Van B·250
72 000 M rles $6 000 Can Be
Seen AI Gallipolis Darly Tribune
825 Th1rd Avenue Gallrpol1s
OhiO
1992 Ford E~plorer XL 4x4
4door 5spd $11 000 304 882

3499
1994 Astro Van, loaded S21 BOO
Will sell lor loan payoff 614·992
5119

740

SQuare bales $1 $2 Round bales
$15ea 304 675-3960

TRANSPORTATION

28 First-rate
(2 wds •
29 eatches
31 Acts
34 Cut
35 Rapped
•
37 Type of s\orlt
38 Smalllslalld
40 Violin's
ancestor ..
41 Pop Into tlta

710 Autos lor Sale

Atlanta 65,000 btu gas stove,
used two months, $600, 614-742
2192 ' I

summer

PEANUTS
WHEN THE CATCI-IER COMES
OliT TO THE MOUND FOR A
CON~ERENCE, IT'S USUALL'f
A DRAMATIC MOMENT ..

get·together

Bedroom Su1te, Llvrng Room SuIte Tools Coffee Tables. Lamps:
Etc Call After 5 PM 61 446

was an New

them
The openong event os I he Grand
Natoonal Teams, for wh1ch teams quah
fy from events held across the nation

0130
Brown Sola &amp; Tan Recliner For
Sale Good Cond1t1on Sofa $50,
Recltner $25 OBO 614 "4462183

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Caravelh, Gary Cohler, Steve Garner,
Jerry Goldfeon. Jack Oest and Larry

•J

Robbms
Garner and Robbons generated
swmg on thos deal from the final

F I M Z U.

a

In the gaven auct10n , Garner was

Glastron run a Oout, 85 hp Mercury outboard runs sweet tarT·
dem axle tra1 ler askmg $1200
614 992 2001

BORN LOSER
'I

ACTUN.LY. IF I AAI&gt; &amp;£N
ASAl.Ji.a.l, I'D ~lAVE.
:'&gt;WOII\ [)(Mt-.ISWEM\
r--...1 TO ~wt-.~1

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

South Assummg hos hearts were run ·
nmg, Garner JUmped to three no trump
And nght he was, havong none top tncks
for plus 400
At the other table. Robbons East.
opened four spades ThiS made ot hard
lor Las Vegas to play on three no
trump South\ wmnmg act1on 1s to dou
ble lour spades and collect a 200-pomt
penalty But understandably he over
called five he~rts After two passes,
East doubled to show short hearts and
I good
defense
West. Goldle1n. led his songleton
spade and declarer had to lose lour
tncks eother one spade, two doamonds
and one club, or one spade, one heart
and two diamonds That was another
300 to Chocago lor a net plus of 700, or
12 mlernallonal matchpomts

FOR SALE - Adler Roya l 210 C
Cop1er $550, Recond1110ned
New Drum And Developer 614
446 4514, Mon Fr~ 8 AM TO 5

PM

Fulfy self·contarned 10 112ft Cav
a!cade truck camper, exc cond

Alp1ne CD Player, 2 12• MTX
Road Thunder Pros In Hatchback
Box Rockford Fosgate Punch 40
Amplrlter MTX Thunder 280 Am
plll1er 614· 446· 8778 After 6 30

PM

Healthmasrer 750 Dual Acton Ex·
erc1se B1cyc le Just ltke Nawl
Hardly Ever Used! $80 614 247
2032 Evemngs Or Leave Mes-

sage
H1 Ellec:rency L P. Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU
$1 250 ln!talled, 1·800 287·6308,
614 446 6308, Duct Systems And
A1r Cond1t10ners Free Ea.mates.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repatred New &amp; Rebutlt In Stock
Call Ron Evans. 1·800 537 9528
K1ng s1ze waterbed W1cker cha~r
304 675 5873

wnE GOT A

TOW

Of

)

NEW f'\E11BE~ 1 WERE
GOING TO PRINT A
i\OOK Of SOME Of OUI'.
FUNNIE~T CARTOON5 1

Home
Improvements

STRIKE ASLOW N 1l£ WUI ON

HGH l'fOC£5 SHOP TI-E ClASSfiEOS.

'IJ!i.tl, 1'1~ ~llOTfAAW 1
Wllll'S ooR TllM·1LIM
FEeLING NOW?

DRYWAlL
Hang, lrn1sh reparr
Ce1hngs textured, plaster repaiJ
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 years
expenence

Musical
Instruments

Bach trumpet, used very little ex
cellent cond 111on pa1d $400 new
sell $325 call 614 985 4489

1989 Chevy Cors rca Nrce Car
Bundy Cla11net. Very Good Con- Loaded $3 400 OBO 1986 Ford
dl!lon Newly Re Padded S200 Escort Auto $1 200 OBO, 614
44 1 0584
614·446· 2109
Selmer flute good concJillon 304
675 2307

1989 Mustang LX Excellent Con
dlt1on $5 500 614-446· 2056

:T-ru_m_pe_1-:Ba:-c"Ch-:T::R:-::30C"O:-u",-.-d-v".-,,·l

1991 Geo Storm low m1les, Sspd
30 4 675-2735

Lrttle, New $645 Sel l For $200
614 245-5870

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment

you can see what really Ires beneath the

ASTRO·GRAPH

Ron s TV Serv1ce, spec1ahz1ng rn
Zenith also serv1ctng mos1 othet
brands House calls, 1 800 7tH
0015 wv 304 576-2398
1989 Bu1ck 2 Door TType , 1989
GMC Full S1ze P1ck·Up 1988 Be
reua 1982 J;:scort Cook. Motors
614·446 0103

,991 Panuac Fueb1rd T Tops
Loaded 61 4 446 3568, 614 3 79

9209
1992 Plymou th Sundance 4 Door
Auto 70,000 Mrles $5 ooo OBO
6 14 256-1539 614·256 1233
1994 Chevrolet Caval1er, A1r Au
tomatiC, AM / FM Ste reo, An!•
Lock Brakes, 5 000 Miles, Excel·
lent Condlllonl $6,995. 614 379-

Equ1pmen1 Trai ler 7 112 W1de 1
Foot Long W11h Loadrng Ramps
~$1~,1-00~·~6-14_&lt;_4~6~25=2~8_______ 1_~_6_7~--------------

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

romance? The Astra Graph Matchmaker
can help you understand what to do to

sur1ace
ARIES (March 21·Aprll t9. Avo1d bemg .

make the relahonshlp war~ Matl $2 75 to
Matchmaker c/o thts newspaper, P 0

an tsolat1onrst today and depnv1ng others

Box 1758 Murray H tll StatiOn , New York
NY 10150
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22. Ma1ntam

wtlh fnends wrll cheer them up and bnghl

h tgh hopes and persrstency today

competitive develops today rn your
career don' t be 1nttmrdaled Lady Luck

ol your compamonsh1p Involvements
en your day as well
TAURUS (April 20-May 20. II somelh1ng

Raofmg and guuers commerc1al
and res1dent1al, m1nor reparrs 35
years experrence, B&amp;B Fl;OOF
lNG 614 992 5041

approval

front

820

SAGinARIUS (Nov 23·Dec. 21) Dare
to dream today and don I be alratd ,.to

G~MINI (May 21·June 20• G1ve ere·
dence to anythtng crealtve you concetve
today Even tf the 1deas cant be used

Events mrght not start out too well but
they should end up wtth your stamp of

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

thmk btg Fortunate currents are sltrnng

Freeman s Heating And Cooling
lns!alla\IOn And Servtce EPA
Certtfred Residential Commercral
614256 1611
'

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
lAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps Arr Cond1t1onrng If
You Don t Call Us We Both Losel
Free Est1mates 1 800·287·6308,
614-446 6308 wv 002945
Res1dentral or commerc1a1 W1nng,
new serv1ce ot rep a rs Masrer Lr
ce n sed electr1c1an Fl;tdenour
Etectr1cal WV000306 304 6751786
'

HNUEXW.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'I d be rnsulted 11 a ptclure I was m didn't get an Xrattng Don't forget. dear I rnvented censorsh1p ' - Mae West

£\

TNAT DAILY d_ ~ -Q
\J~ I'QU
- - - - - - 14ho4 by

,uum

O four
Rearrange let1trs of
scrambled words
ro

low

WOIO
lAM I

Ihe
be·

form four words

I INOSIV
!

1

2

I I 1 I

I u r 1J r I
0

R

~

The young
came home
from her date cryong "Remem·

8

PRINT NUMBERED lEITERS
IN THESE SQUARES
UNSOAMSLE L{TIERS TO
G£1 ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

C&amp;C General Home Mam
tenence Pamtlng, vmyt stdrng
carpentry doors WindOws baths
mobile home reparr and more For
tree eslrmate call Chel, 614 992
6323

570

RIXUJFXWE

by ldl •ng rn the m•n•ng words
L_.J.L-...J.L-...1..-...1..-..l.._J_ yoi.J develop
!rom step No 3 below

add111ons. remodelrng, roofmq.
Sldtng ptumb1ng, etc Insured, call
B1ll OrrK;k 614 992 5183

Three Rat Te(ner Pups 1
And 2 Females 614 446 1432

Wl

chuck II•

B 11 Omck s Home lmprovemenls

2758

P NV H U

EIXNE

5

Camper for sale, 20 Atuma Ltle,
good condllton $2200 nag 614
992 2773 alter 5pm, or weekends

Earl's Home Mamtenance, vmyl
s1d1ng roolmg e:~~tenor pamtmg,
power washmg Free Estrmates
614 992 4451 or614 992-4232

UENW

UNA

DMUE

J

......_.__.__, _, _. "'
, . - - - - - - - - - , are temporary but memones go

Appliance Parts And Servrce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
penence Al l Work Guarantee~
Fronoh City Maytag 614-446.
7795

F1rewood For Sale $40 P1ck Up
Del vered $30 P1ck Up, 614·37g

(NECNWEN

CJHX

If--:,/....::.....,./:,--T/-"-r/-1f
_ _I ~~~ ~7~:·~~~~h~~~~~~e~~:
_. :.FirG;"'R"'jr1-'1Ej-::7-H,,_E_,,---ll 0. ~:m-p;.;,- ··"•
ouo;~d
~

1977 Ford 460 24rl camper
crurse 2 atrs 4kw onan, top earn
er cassette rad1o 4 awnmgs Will
accept small standa rd transmts
s1on cat on trade 304 675·3035

Uncondmonal lifetime guarantee
local references furmshed Call
(614) 446 0870 Or (6 14) 237
0488 Rogers Wate rproohng Es
tabltshed 1975

Exerc1se Mach1ne $125 614
388 8293

J

NZXWEU

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFNG

Electnc Wheelchairs /Scooters.
Now !Used, Scooter /Wheelcharr
l 1lts StarrWay Elevators, Lilt
Cha1rs, Bowman s Homecare.
614 446·7283

E I XNE

S U T E G

SERVICES

Omette Se1 4 Cha~rs, $100 614245-5986

by luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryplograiM are created I rom quotai!Of'IS by famous prtCple pasllllnd present
Eacflletter In the clpt\er Blanda lor anolher Todly'J clue V ~~qU~Ais W

year 1t won agam. defeatmg Las Vegas
185 114 The wonners were Gerald

304 773 5829

Concrete &amp; PlastiC SeptiC Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterp11sea, Jackson, OH
1 8()().537·952a

CELEBRITY CIPHER

The team rrom Ch1cago always seems
to be m contentiOn for the totle. and th1s

6095

810

vo,.negut
45 Mata48 Bring to r'ul~
47 Boac, e.g
49 Repent

week's columns wtll feature sax of

BEETHOVEN HAD A BLUE
COAT WITH METAL BUTTONS
THAT HE LIKED VERI( MUCI-1

1987 Cobra F1sh &amp; Sk1 Boat 150
HP Ou tboard Motor, Depth Find·
er Butt! tn CB &amp; AM IFM Stereo,
Lots 01 Extras I $6 000 814 - 25~·

AKC Boston Ierner puppres 2
girls 2 boys while collars ready
to go call 614 992 3752 or 614
992 3965

42 Single
quantity
43 Dimwit
44 Author-

Orleans Over the tO-day penod. there
were many good bods and plays Th1s

614 446 1778

Babybed dressmg table carseat,
stroller swrng X&gt;4 675-4548

oven

Every year the Ameroc~n Contract
Bndge League organozes three North
Amerocan Champoonshops, commonly
known as Natwnals Thas year lhc

Chr~sler Motor Trarler Included

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Pass

By Phollip Alder

1988 Harley Oav1dson Softa I
Custom 30K M1les Excellent Con·
d1!1on, $12,800 OBO Will Take 4·
Wheeler As Part Trade 614 446
0821 614 446 6651

1977 Mark Twa1n 16Ft 120 HP

Pas&amp;

2•

Way down in
New Orleans

Motorcycles

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Pass

1451

Campground Membersh1p, Camp
From Coast To Coast US tCana
da $4 00 Per N1ght API Allthated
Pd $3,600, Sacral1ce $425. 1-800
236 0328

Three bedroo m apartment wash
er/ dryer hookup b1g k1tchen lrv
1ng room Th1rd Street Rac1ne
$295/mo plus Utilities. $100 de
poSI~ 614 247 4292

ROCKY CHAIR!!

1985 Plymouth Voyager Van, 2 6
pw ps arr trlt crwse, delay
w1per, pdl auto am fm cassene
facto ry 11n1, pb 4 new 11res 304
773 5936

790

3 Ton Lennox Heat Pump &amp; Elec
tnc Furnace $375, Whirlpool
Washmg Mach1ne $60 614 446·

Furn1shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Dawnsta~rs Utilities Furnished,
Clean No Pets Refer~nce De
pos11 ReQU ired 614 446-1 519

One bedroom furn i Shed apart
ment m Middleport very clean
614 4116 3091 614 992 2178 or
614 992 5304

&lt;

Opemng lead

4c~l .

1994 Chevy p1c~ up factory cdr
alum1num wheels 304 675 2359
from 7 9pm

25~ Sylvan1a super !let TV, 24
push button remote contro l, chan·
nel programm1ng, on screen
graph tcs dtsplay, auto sleep
11mer, exc cond $300 Sauder
TVJVCR c:art w/3 shelves, glass
lront door, exc cond $75 304·
882 2094

CaloriC almond, electriC stove,
sell cleanrng Queen s1ze water
bed wlnew heater &amp; mattress
304 ·675 7858

Oakwood Apartment , 1 BE&gt;droom
Eff1C1ency Located Berween Galli
pol1s &amp; Holzer Hospital Rent Plus
UI11111E!S, No PE&gt;IS 614 446 2055
After 6 PM

PULL UP A

New gas tanks , one ton true~
wheels, radiators, floor mats etc
D &amp; R Auto Rtpley WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dnve
Jrom $226 to $291 Walk to shop
f&amp; movies Call 614 4413 2568
Equal Hous1ng Opponun11y

Grac 1ous h"01ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apanments at V•llage Manor and
R1vers1de Apartments 1n M1ddle
port Fro m S23 2 $355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal HouSing Opper
tun111es

730 vans &amp; 4·WDs

760

s

1972 Concord 12x65, 2bedroom
1bath gas stove &amp; furnace, trp
out unn 1n lrvmg room 304-;172
34()0
I

1980 Governor 14x65 2bed room
1bath el ectr~c, ac 3l4 372 3400

Now open Oualrty Furn11ure Plus
SR 7 Tuppers Pla1ns Several op
11ons or hnanc1ng avarlable laya
ways and mater cred1t cards 6 14
667 7388

K1ng Wood &amp; Coal S!ove Oty
Spl11 Oak F1tewoad 2 Years Old,
614 446- 1759

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths Vrow Of
Park &amp; R1ver K1tchen, W11h Stove
Rel11gerator, 15 Court Street, Gal
lipolis 4 751Mo-+- Depos 1r Refer
ence No Pets, a14 44 6-4926

2bedroom ut1ht1es ncluded lur
nrshed 304 773 9009

allowance
II Island
19 Energy
20Miabehavir\'
22 Prevalent"
23 Ice mass
24 Actor - .NHa
25 Art deco ;
llluot..tor. • •
...
....,.,....,.,,...,
28
Actrass .; •
..
Deborah-'- •
27 TV's talklog.
horae
(2 wds .•
do wrth

7 Not many
8 Where
Topeka is
9 Fruity
beverages
10 Weloht

Pass
DbI
3 NT

DID YOU KEEP AN EYE
ON MY MAN LUKEY

Depo~ut 614 446 2481

2bdrm apts total electnc ap
phances furn1shed laundry room
fac1llt1es close to school n town
App lr cat1ons av&lt;ulable at V1llage
Green Apts #119 01 call 6t4 992
3711 EOH

5 3

SOUTH
lA J
9AKQ972

BARNEY

Alter 5 PM 614 446 3838

No Pels

.. s

Wipe nard
CitizenSlay
Yorkshire river
Goddeoa of
earth
Mist Kelt of
the comics
And so on
(abbr.)
bealgner
Chrlallan -

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer North
South
West North

1972 12x65 2 Bedrooms Clean
M1n From Holzer 1Ox 16 Storage
Bu1ld1ng No Pets DepO Si t Call

2 Bedrooms 1 Bath

1Q J 9 4

• Q7

1158

2 Bedrooms On Larne Lot S300f
•
Mo -+- Depos11 U!lli t1es 1001 Ad
Olson Pike Roao 614 367 7750

•·
oAK 3

49
50
51
52
53

emperor
54
18 Shirt parte
2Q Resource
55
21 -'In Tin
22 long Inlet
56
23 Sunfish
•
26 Rolallve
30 Titled mala
DOWN
31 Skillful
1 Cushions
32 Fish aggs
2 Chemical
33 Dull routine
compound
34 Irritated
3 Actress35 Midwestern
Adams
collage
4 Verballm
36 Collector (of
5 Cow'a stomach
facts, etc.)
38 S.A. mountain 6 -out: makea

lA K 10

2 Bedroom Mob1lt! Home On Bob
McCorm1ck Road Gallipolis 614
446-9669
All reC~I estate 8dver1rsmg In

• 8 6 4 2

910864

Answer 10 Previous Puule

gernlah
48 Small o•

Roman

EAST
•KQ 107643

15

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Tuesday Sepl 26 1995
usual tn the year ahead to enhance

and mov1ng tn a drrectton thai could make

rmmed1ately , put

them down on paper fOf

your WIShes reahlles

future reference

•

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22·Jan 19) Your
matenal prospects look hopeful tod'ilY

CANCER (June 21·July 22• Someone
w1th whom you have tender lovmg bonds
mtghl prove a benefrcral channel todaY to

espectally 1f you re 1nvolved rn an

You mtght have more opportumt1es than

your

arrangement wtth a person who was
recently lucky for you

matenal worth Do not hesttate to ask for

AQUARIUS (Jan 20·Feb t9) Wear

the type of remuneratron your contrtbu

earplugs and blinders today to sh•e td
yourself from nega11ve rnput It your out

!tons warrant

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23.You have a took 1s posth\le and opltmrsttc remarkable
spectal quahty today that will be evrdent

achievements are tndtcaled

to others

PISCES (Feb. 20.Morch 20. It iSn't likely

wherever you go It comes from
smcertly and ts not a patchwork of pre
tenses Trytng to patch

up a broken

wtll do all she can to help keep you out

you II be deceived by appearances today
Your tnstlncts for detecl!on are sharp and

'

bnng somethmg

meantngful

.nto your life

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22. You could be for·
tunate today tn a partnershtp 1f you work
rn close cOnJunction w11h another for a

common cause
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl 22. Cond1110ns
havrng a direct aHect upon your earnrngs
are favorable 'oday Scout the hekj for a
channel to 1mmed1ately enhance your
tncome

Jagged· Honey- Youth· Filthy - TEETH
Overheard while com1ng out of a popular ntght club .
"Have you ever notoced that loosetongues can lead to
loose TEETH?"

�.

Monday, September 25, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Lions
upset
49ers

~More than 200 people
~on hand for 1DOth

8nniversary of church
Dot Lance was presented a pol·
ted flower for her birlhday and rec·
og ni ze d for her wor k wi th the
youlh.
Ada Bissell, a member of the
church fo r nearly 70 years. was
prese nt ed a pl aqu e. Twe nty -fiv e
fa mily me mber s w e r ~ prese nt
including her four chiltlrcn and two
sisters.
Fifteen diffcreott churches were
repre sente d along with pas tors
from several churches.
Bulletins conlaining a brief his·
tory of the ch urd• and blue rihhons
imprinted with the church name.
IOO th anniv ersa ry. and Psalm
·va.
100:4 were give n to eac h faonil y
:: Recognition was giv en to th e
Piice. family, Eloise Cnnn oll y, present. The Sunday afte moon pro·
gram concluded with lhe nearl y 80
:Dorolhy Pence, Ethel Carson, Mil·
-4red Bissell, Bill Price, and Charles in anendance singing " When We
Price, four daughters and two sons All Get to Heaven ." Marilyn
of lhe late Charlie &lt;Uld Je ssie PtiL'C. Robinson of th e Alfred Unil ed
"Fourtee n other fam ily member&gt; Melhodisl Church wa' pianisl.

More than 200 persons allemk:&lt;.l
tbc lOOth at)lli'(elsary of the Long
tlouom Unlt.!;l!)Methodist Church
"hich began on Sept 8 and cmnin·
Bed over the weekend.
• The Rev. Norman Butler, speak·
t;r for th e F riday ni ght se rvice
·re11ccted on lhe fi ~S t 100 years and
(ootinue&lt;.l the next nigh! wilh com·
'&amp;Jiems on the "Tbe ne xl 100 years.;·
e. . Singers were former pastor. the
B.e v. Ric hard T homas, a nd his
'w ife, Bonnie of Cridersville; f red
·Atkins. Stockport; the Prayer and
·f aith Singers, Ripley, W. Va.; and
~isciples in Song, Parkersburg, W.

l

j!

~J

RECOGNIZED • Ada Dis·
sell, a member of the Long Bot•
lorn United Methodist Church
for nearly 70 years, was given
special recognition at the IOOih
anniversary of the church. She
was presented a plaque in
recognition

or her long

mem·

CHECKS FOR EMS • These representa·
lives of area EMS S&lt;(Uads were pre,, enled checks
by Post ??26 VFW Commander Joe Young,
back right, and tbe Auxiliary president Juanita
Little, standing· next to Young, at a presentation
ceremony held recently at the Mason post home.
Accepting the checks for their respective EMS

Camping in the cool zones
RESTON. Va. (AP) - More
and more RV campers are ·taking a
trip on lhe cool side.
A seasonal survey found 92 per·
cent of. RV owners will use their
equipment this fall and winter as
much or more than they did last
year, according to lhe Recreational
Vehicle Industry Association .

units were left to right, front, Marcia Elliott,
Rutland; Bn Cummings, Radne; Eleanor

By ANICK JESDANUN

Weaver, New Haven, Mickey Young, Mason;

WASHINGTON- Fanner John Whitaker won't he eligible for Medi·
care for anoOter 27 years. but he's conccmcd ahout Republican proposals
ro slow the program's growth .
·
The county-run hospital in his rural Iowa town reli es on Medicare pay·
ments for much or ils revenue , and Whitaker fears a local tax increase
would be needed to keep Lhe hospital running if ICderal payments were

and bask, John Harrah, Mason; Bill Lambert,
Pomeroy, Don Slivers, Middleport; and Mary
Pickens, Syracuse.

Associated Pres.'iii Writer

CUI.

Ray Stuempne, a retired Social Security manllger, voiced similar con·
cems in rural Pennsylvania, where som~ people already travel more lhan
50 miles to the nearest hospiml.
Some private hospitals may close and docltlrs may nee, he said, mak·
ing access to health L"lll"C even more diflicuit for all rural residents across
lhe country - not just for the senior citizens already facing changes i~

Board examines
future spending
~uring meeting

FOOTBALL PROGRAM BENEFITS •
David Gaul, Meigs Junior High School prlncl·
pal, center, accepts a check for $500 from Post

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 11MXJ BRAND
NEW CHEVROLETS, OLDSMOBILES, PONTJACS, BUJCKS,·
GEOS AND CUSTOM VANS.
.All will be sold at substantial discounts!

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 CONVERSION VAN DEALER HAS AN
INVENTORY OF OVER 300 BRAND NEW CHEVROLET
CONVERSION VANS.

Plus $500 to $2IMXI cash back or 1.9% APR financing
available (lease UP. to 24 months) on selected modelS
on approved credit. Tenns availalJie up to 84 months!

Selection
Wheel Drives and G-20's, ·
both available with raised roofs or low tops. Prices
range from $17,488 to $36,988.

?'.126 VFW Commander joe Young and Auxil·
iary president, Juanita Little, for the junior high
football program.

includef~-J

'•

Certified used car buyers will be on hand to give highest trade-in value for your automobile. Please bring
your title, regiStration card, and payment book if
applicable.
·
NO SALES PERMITTED TO DEALERS. This clearance is
for retail customers only. Prices apply to available
units only. No ordering permitted at these prices.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Sron·
The Meigs Local Schm1l District has purchased six new buses
this school year to replace aging
buses in 1he district's lleel.
Superintendent Bill Buckley
said lhe purchase is p&lt;trl of a live·
year program that will replace
each bus in the current hus llecl
when finished.
The buses were purchased
wilh funds generated from the 5·
mill permanent improvement
levy approved in 1994.
Four of the buses have been
delivered to the district and are
expecled to replace the oldest
buses on n:gular mutes U1i s week,
according to bus supervisor Paul
McElroy.
The six Intemmionalffhomasbuses earned a procc tag nf
$52,180.15 each.
Olher purchases made with the
funds generated by lhc levy have
been for textbooks. Language arts
books for grades K-12 were pur··
chas.ed during lhe spring, at a cost
of $190,000, according to Duck·
ley.
"We're gelling ready to pur·
chase soci:\1 studies books for the
K-12 students. The school hoard

AKRON (AP)- Gov. George
Voinovich said Ohio will study a
congressional bill that would cut
environmental granL' to states once
it advances to a House-Senate com·
mit lee 10 resolve yifferences.
Voinovich said Monday that
Ohio Environmental Pr'o tection
Agency Director Donald Schregar·
dus and the state's Washington
omce wen: watching dcvelppments
in Congress.
. along, but .. . when it finally gets

ISave $6400 I ,.

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senior person means no access for a. y?un~t!r pers~m ."

.

Republicans are seeking $27G btllton m Medt carc savm gs over seven
years. A House pmpos;d would accomplish thm thr~JU ghcos t C?ritrol~ on
doclors and hospitals, Ingber prcmmms lor scmor CIUzens and mccntaves
for lhe elderly to seck cheaper alternatives such as managed-care pro-

g~~e

Medicare cuts would come on top of $182 billion in prognun
reductions being sought for Me&lt;.limid. the fedcrai·SUII C lt ealth care pro·
gram for lhe poor, elderly ;md di sabl ed.
.
On. average. hospitals across lh~ country - rural and urban alike depend on Medicare and Medi caid reimbursements for half Uleir opera!·
ing revenue. For a h:mdful, Lhc reimbursements make up 90 percent or

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Monday - Saturda11: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6

more of revenues.
. •Critics of th e Republican proposal sa y th e cut s would hav~ mure
tmpact on rural communit ies because if one hospital had to close, the next
closest one would he scores of miles away ratl1er than a few blocks.
Rural communities al so tent! to h~ve a higher share of cltlerly re sidents, who consume a large chunk ol U1e Medicaid dollars and virtually
all of Medicare spencling.
. " If these ruts .go through , lms of small, rural hospitals will close,"
saod House Mm~lflly Leader Rtchard Gephardt , D-Mo. "How would you
liken tl your cluld woke up mk in the middle of the night , and instead &lt;if
dnvmg 20 to 30 tmles, you have to drive 60 to 80 miles'!"
Republicans maintain rural Ameri ca would not he left in the cold
although dcUtils of their pmposal still haven't been announced .
'
Rep. William Clinger, R-Pa .. said some of the pain inflicted on rural
hospitals would he alleviated hy GOP e1Tot1s tn reduce burdensome federal regulations.

Middleport Council
focuses attention
on village eyesores
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Swff
The message sent by m~mbers
of Middleport Village Council at
Monday's regular meeting was

Robinson. brought a complaiot
council from a resident who
lives along U1e former Conrail rail·
road tracks along the river.
Horton said the former tra&lt;.'k
"clean up."
.
right of way has been used as a
Several residents have voiced walking and bike trail for lhe pa•t
diffen:nl concems and complaints scveml years. The resident in the
10 council and the mayor about
area voiced concerns about motor
property conditions.
vehicles parking o,t U1c trail behind
Councilwoman Beth Slivers an area of brush and overgrowlh in
asked lhill something be·done about the evenings . Rohinsen asked
a dumpster located near the Mid· council 10 contact village crews to
dleport aparunenL,.
see if they could trim back
BUSES PURCHASED..:... The Mcig&lt; Local School&lt; District has purchased six new lnternatlon·
The dump.ster docs not have a clear the brush and trees from
fenoe around it, amJ is nn eyesore right of way .
al!fltomas buses for the I ?95-96 school year to replace aging buses in the di&lt;trict's nee!. Superln·
in the downtown area. The-council
tendent Bill Buckley said the bus purcl1ases are part of a five-year program thai will totally
Gihnon: noted Otal he
had previously agreed to ask the tacted by Druce Wolfe
replace the 25 bu., es in the current hus fleet when completed. (Sentinel photo)
property owner 10 take measures lcl successful electric
correct
the prohlcm, hut nn action
'
· win ~ et up a priority li st for
August Wolfe ,was d~!~~~~,~~
cooling systems Ill he lixed, and
book.rutd bus replacement.
has
been
taken to date.
the turnout of area rc
spending of the levy fut\ds, which
we plrn1 to do that with sorn ~ of
Duckley said lhnt levy money
Councilmnn Nick Robinson has 1en~1tive!y asked the village 10
includes lhe bus purchn.ses, honk
Ihis money ."
will be used for building rerairs
suggested that a fence he placed designate Aug . 10, 1996 as lhe date
replacement, and also building
The levy generates $1 13.000 a
over lhe next few years.
around Ute dumpster. Council Pres- for a sewnd such parade.
.
repairs to th~ schnols in U1c dis·
year, with a tot;J.I dollar :unoulll
"When th e levy was on the
ident Bob Gilmore said the dump·
On
the
note
of
lhe
elecbic
lig~l
.
trict," Buckley said.
of $565 ,000 over l11c fivc -ye:tr
ballot, we stnled ·thal it w&lt;ts for
sl~r docs sit on private property,
parade,
Councilman
Jim
Clatwor·
The building rep,tirs that have
period of lhe hond.
books, buses, and huilclin gs ."
and that council needs to talk to the thy &lt;L'ked that hener arrangements
been made recently, particularly
The Me ig s Local [loaru of
Duckley said. "The bom·d mcm ·
property owner.
be made with village police and lh.e
ai'Harrisohville Elememary. have
Education will discuss th e spend·
bers have commiued lh etn sclvcs
Stivers
also
noted
a
trash
prub·
villag
e street department about
been paid for by money previousing of levy-generated funds at
toward spendin'g Lhe 1 levy monic~
lcm
at the former Friendly T&lt;Jvem. street closings and traflic control at
ly allocated from the gcn~ral
tonight's regular theeling, sci for
in that fashion. We hav e roofs
Several trash bags arc sening on next year's event.
fund. This has allowed lhe districi
7 m RuUru1Li flementary.
that need replaced. heating and
lhc second lloor balcony, and have
Gilmore added that no on~ .:
to spend inore on current text·
been for scveml years, ac.:ording to expected the parade to draw as .
Slivers. Gilmore said council musl large a turnout as it did, and the vi!·
consult with the property owner !age ;md Wolfe will take lhal into.
before taking action.
account when planning for the
Steve Dunfee notcu complaints 1996 parade.
he has receivcU frum resiUcnls ,
Gilmore also asked members of .
director for administration .
concerning care of abandoned council In turn in !heir rccommeninto conference (commiuee) the agency's capital budge!.
A version of Ute hill pending in property in the village . Gilmore datiuns hlf location of 2,000 linear·
there'll be a lot more auention
Ohio EPA officials siicssed lhal
given to' the impact,'' Vninovich lhe cuts arc separate from lhe oper· lhe Senate makes smaller cuts, but and Mayor Dewey Honnn said tl1e
lect of sidewalk 10 he constructed,
saitl.
· ·
abng budget - the money for day· would still trim U1c capital hudgct village ca.n't step in immediately with state grant money.
by about 20 percent
EnvirorunentaJ activha~ saiU lite · to-day business.
on those situations. and that th~.:
In olhcr council action:
The House bill will have to he re sidems need to work the prohlem
bill moving Utrough the Rcpuhli·
• Horton said that repairs are .
But the federal money is lever·
can-controlled Congress may gut . ,aged by lhe state intn a much larger reconciled with the Senate version. out among themsclvc .'i.
almul In begin on lhe village swim- ·
Dunfee al., o ilddrc, scu problems ming pool, with money collected ·
environmental prolection. Propo- pool, lhen loaned to communities. Also undecided is the 4uest ion of
whel~er
the
EPA
can
spread
the
concerning
the village ' s care or from donations ard gmn!s.
nents said lhe measure cuts unnec· If the cuts go through, the stale
cuts
over
opcmting
gnuu
.
.
a.o.
;
well.
Riverview
Cemetery.
Complaints
cssary environmental regulalion.s.
may have 10 scale back sull.s!&lt;ullial ·
• Noted Umt $3,521.00 was col· ·
a move strongly opposed hy the have been received concerning lected in lines during lhe monlh of
The bill before the House would ly the amount it can loan nut overgrowlh of trees on lhc proper·
cut $46 .5 million from federal from about $200 million a year w states, Scoles said .
August,
Even
so
,
environmental
group
~
ty . Council discussed having vii· .
funding for Ohio in lhc budget year closer to $50 million a year , said
• Approved lhe paying of the
beginning Sunday - nearly half of Steve Scoles, Ohio EPA deputy are already up in arms, the Akron lage crews do wmcthing ahout the village's bills.
Beacon Journal reponed Monday .
problems.
(Continued ~n Page J)

Newspapers Ne\:v~g~Jni .
,S .
handle hike pnc;~,S
the price
sharply
·
in newsprint

GOP takes
hits at UMW
convention

NEW YORK (AP) - In the
fast-moving world of news, it's
often said that today' s newspaper is
tomorrow's birdcage liner. If so,
Tweety ha.~ never had it so good.
Newsprint, the, gray stock on
which reporle!S, editors and illus·
trators chronicle the day's events.
has become more expensive than
ever before. A price increase that
took affect on Sept. I has put
newsprint at an all-time high even when adjusted for lhe .effects
of in Dation.
Prices have nearly doubled in
the past two years, forcing publish·
ers to devise a range of money·s:tv·
ing responses .
.
The newspaper industry's strug·
gle is similar to Ule travails of olher
indusbies beholden to U1e up-ru•d·
down prices of raw materials .
When steel prices rise , it ' s more
expensive to make cars . When
semiconductor prices soar, comput·
er make!S get squeezed.
Fortunately for publishers and
other commodity purchasers.
there's always the nip side: Rising
prices eventually fall.
"It's just a normal part of our

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AI')At the opening day of the 5 I st
United Mine Workers convention.
speaker after speaker sounded the
same theme: The greatest threat
faced by working people today is
the Republican-led Congress . .

.·
As

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Budget cuts may spell trouble for state EPA

"We've been lighting little skirmishes here ami there as we move

• AM'FMCassette

premiums at\d benetits und er.~hc GOP phm.
" This affects ewryhody, satd Stuemplle, a health advocacy volun·
teer with Ute Amcrkru• Association of Retire&lt;.! Persons. " No access for a

Meigs Local improves bus fleet

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2 Sections, 12 Pagea 35 cents

Pomeroy-ll/liddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 26, 1995

Medicare overhaul vexes rural hospitals

The Stewart-Johnson Post 9926,
Veterans of Foreign Wais, and its
Auxiliary of Mason, W. Va. have
given additional checks of $500
eacb 10 several Bend area organiza·
tions.
The latest to be remembered
with funding are the Meigs Junior
High football progrrun, emergency
squads from Rutland, Racine. New
Haven, Mason, Pomeroy, Middle·
pori, and Syracuse; and the Syra·
cuse Thanksgiving project where
dinners are served lo senior cili ·
zens, lhe needy and Lhe lonely.

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Low tonight In 40s, partly
cloudy . Wc dnl!sday, partl y
sunny. High In the 70s.

'

Vol. 46, NO. 105
Copyrlght1995

"'

~'

VFW Post
9926 presents
$500 checks to
organizations

DINNER FUNDING • Fnr the -past several years, Edna Hun·
pictured right: and several other area people, have combined
their efforts to provide Thanksgiving dinners for the elderly, those
• alone, and the needy. Thty wtre presented a check by Stewart·
• john Post ?'.126, VFW and il' Auxiliary lo help with the exptnse.
Here Juanita Lillie; Auxiliary president, gives 1he check to Mrs.
• Runnel.

Pick 3:
174
Pick 4:
6656
Buckeye 5:
7-20-22-32-33

Sports, Page 6

bership:

ne~

Ohio Lottery

-:\-. 4;.:

· · ··:'* -

-:

..• '

Rep. John Lewi s, D-Ga .. an
activlsl in the civil rights move·

.....

Source UBS Secun11es Inc

r

API Wrn J. Cas1e11o

business," says William Metzfield,
president of Ganneu .Supply Corp.,
U1e purchasing subsidiary of Gan·
nell Co., Ule nation 's largest new s·
paper company.
· "It' s cyclical, it has its ups and
downs," Metzfield say s. "Last
time, it probably went down more
than most times, and now i!'_s prob·
ably gone up higher than historic
trends . Commoditie s le vel out,
whclher it's oil or ga~olinc . "

ment of the 1960s, told union
members that GOP leaders in
Congress " want to tum back the
clock."
"I stood up lo George Wallrrce
in Alabama, I stood up to the Klan
... and I am cenainly not going to
run and hide from Newt Gingrich.
and you must not run and hide
eilher,' ' Lewis said. rcfening to lhc
House speaker from Georgia.
" The sad trud1 is tha t too many
working peorle all across America
did not get out and vole in 1994,"
he said.
He urged the miners to "get nul
and register voters like we never
have before. and get out the vote
like we never have before ."

'Tu es. Tags, Tdle Fees extra Rebate iOOiudOO 1n sale price OII'IBW WlhiCie ~stoc whllle applicable. On approved 17001. Not respor1Sible lot 'YilOIIraptucal errors

I

I

LEVEE REPAIRS- Volunteer workers
offered a helping hand Monday making repairs
to the Pomeroy levee. Dana Aldridgt of Min·
w~lded new slain less st~el hoal
tie-clowns while .Jim O~vis, al~u or Miner.liville,

ersvillet ahnvet

ln.C~:talled

new oak humpers

alnn~

the riverfront.

The repairs will likely be appreciated by stern·
wheeler captains who should he arri•ing soon
for the Big Btnd Slernwheel Ftstival which
takes place on Oct. 5-7.

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