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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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Vttg/nla's II~
Olds, l'llntlac, Bult:k, Geo
and CUstom vao Dealer.

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

ISave $6500 I

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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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10

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.

�Tuesday, September 26, 1995

·commenta
The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long All letters are subJeCI to edumg and must be sagned wath name
address and telephone number No unsagned letlers will be published le[ters
should be m good lastc addressang assues nor personah11es

Grass ley vs judiciary
By RICHARD C'\RELL.I
Associated Press Wrtler
WASHINGTON - Sharp budget-cuumg axes are bemg wtelded on
Capttol Hllllhese days, bul scme federal JUdges say Sen. Charles Grassley's effort to trim court spendmg 1s like punmg a cham saw to a sapbng
"We like Sena10r Grassley. nonnally," C~rcwt Judge Gtlbert Memu
says wtlh a rueful smile before cnuclZing lhe Iowa Republican's mvesugauon of how federal coons spend lllXpayer dollars

Washington Today:
Grassley. chamnan of the Senate's subcommntec on federal court
shook up lhe JUdtctal establishment last May by commiss10nmg
a General Accounung Oflice audn of U S court opcrauons
Although the GAO's lindmgs contamed m a 106-page report are fa~rly
mnocuous. Grassley seems to tlimk 11 bolsters h1s clrum thai federal
JUdges are oot as ughllisled w1th thetr own budgets as lhe umes requtre.
Some suspect Grassley's conl-ems are pohucally mouvaled.
"We're talkmg about peanuts," Kennll Hall, a JUdiCial admmiSlration
expert at Oh10 Stale Umverslly, told the newspaper Legal Tlrnes when
Grassley flllil scughtthe GAO report ''These stnke me as h1ghly pohucal
chmces," Hall s•ud
But Grassley becomes QUite amm,lled when d1scussmg how much
JUdges spend of taxpayers' money to travel to JUdiCial meetings at
"expenstve resort hotels for what could be perceived as a pmd vacauon"
In August, JUdges from the nme Western states compnsmg the 9th US
JudiCial CucUII gathered 111 MaUl, Hawau, lor !herr annual crrcuu meeung.
1be senator says he plans to mtroduce leg•slat•on alfRed at curbmg the
use of fancy resorts tor JUdiCial conferences
Memt~ who 1s charrman of the pohcy-makmg execuuve comm•l!ee of
the US Jud•cml Conference, calls Gra•sley's cnuc•sm of JUdiCial travel
mvahd ''The Inial for the enllre Jud•cmry 1s less !han a m1lhon dollars a

For two years, nght-wmg
Republicans have been rubbmg
the1r bands and chortling among
themselves 10 anliCipatiOn that
Cohn Powell would be the heavy
h1Uer that would carry them back to
the Wh11e House for only the second June m 64 years
Eisenhower? Hell , Ike was a
mugwump who played too much
golf N1xon? He was a moderate,
for heaven's sake, and not only
that, he rubbed elbows Wtlh the
Cbmese communiSts Reagan was
the only true-blue conservauve to
be elected smce Hoover
They wanted another real one,
and all the better tf 11 was a black
guy, to demonstrate that bootslraps
are neat thm~s to pull yourselt up
by and to prove thai lhe nghtiSn' t
raCISt
Now tl tums out thai Cohn Powen has not been praCIICIO£ hiS hit·
ung He's been workmg on hiS

ptlcbmg, and he's got a beauuful.
sneaky curve ball that has them
swmgmg 10 the d1rt
I love 11

Joseph Spear
The 58-year-old tanner nauonal
secunty ch•ef and charrman of the
Jomt Chiefs of Staff IS off on a 20day, 23-cuy tour to promote h1s
new autobwgraphy, "My Amencan Journey" He w11l also, he
says, be takmg lhe public' s pulse to
see whether a run for the pres idency would be fea.&lt;~ble
Unul the book was published,
Powell kept hts political fcehngs 10
h1mself Then he started talkmg to Time magazme, 10 the New
York T•mes. to the Washmgton
Post. to ABC's Barbara Walters. to
NBC's Tom Brokaw And guess
wha~ folks?
We've got a genome, g•lded

polished-and-waxed, four-star m•d·
dle-of-lhe roader on our hands A
man of hwnble ongm and stubbom
delenninat•on. a hvmg exrunple ol
the Amencan Dream realized A
man who leans toward t11e "sens•·
ble center." A lonhnght, pnnct·
pled, pohucal and moral force who
beheves pretty much as two-lh~rds
of all Amencans believe.
HalleluJah I was begmmng to
thmk !hat moderates. and espcctal·
ly moderate Republicans, were
gomg to have to be hsted as an
exunct spectes to ensure their surVIval
Powe11 says he believes m bl\1anced budgets and lower taxes
Most of us would agree Powell
says he believes the government
should not be telling a woman whm
to do wuh her body Most of us
feel the same way Powell says
there's nothmg wrong with laws
that lieep guns out of the hands of

)i

~OOOHGurrr••

overstgh~

year''

The Admtmstraiive Office has figured out - and IS enlhustasucally
111akmg public -that the $1 mdhon spent for JUdges' tnps represents less
than one-lhtrt.eth of I percent of the federal JUdtcmry's total budget of
nearly $3 bilhon
Another ofGrassley's 1deas IS lhe posSible merger of the Federal Judi·
eta! Center, whtch coordmales educatiOn and research for the federal
courts, mto lhe larger Admm1strau ve Ollice of the U S Courts, the nfin·
IJleiD~nt arm Of the JUdiCial branch
report found "hule actual duphca11on of act•v•l•es or serS&lt;'Ud the two agenc1es appear 10 have ''overlappmg funchons ''
ex1s1ence of overlappmg tuncuons does not necessanly equate to
ication of effort m the delivery of sefVIces," lhe report s31d- a
Grassley has not yet acknowledged
GAO's report conlinns .. -lhat there 1s overlap between the funcof !be Federal Jud•c•al Center and !fie Admmtstrauve Office," he
, Said. "In these lean budgetary umes. I beheve overlap many context war:: (811ts lOUgh scrutiny ·'
-:. 1be Federal Judtctal Center, wtth an annual budgel of $19 million, IS
: · ilot wtlhout liS unportant fnends. Tesufymg before Congress earher thiS
:'year, SUJlreme Court Jusuce :~nlhony Kennedy called the 11 "the crown
-;jewel of !be federal Jud•cwy .
: · : Memtt calls Grassley's lljerger suggesuon "m•sgmded," saymg that
·· ''the courts need to mruntmn rl:search 3lld educatton, even m lean umes "
: : The enure Judtcml Conference went on record lhts week m favor of
, : tewmng the two agenc1cs' "separate msutut10nal status and respec11ve
· · m1ssions.' ·
: : Grassley more recently has votced concems over posstble JUdiCial
: overs1affing m the n.1110n · s cap1U1l - an tssue that could 1mpenl one of
: -~stdent Clinton's nommauons to an lmport.'IO!Jud•c~11 posl
·. Grassley's subcommlllee plans 10 s1udy whether the 12-Judge US C~r­
cmt Court of Appeals for !be Dtstnct of Columbta couldn't do the same
•work wilh fewer JUdges.
: Such a concluSion could doom Clinton's nommauon of Jusuce Depart·
·ment offictal Memck Garland to a vacancy created almost a year ago
:when the appellate court's ch1el Judge, Abner Mikva, reured 10 become
•Whue House counsel
· Mtkva's place on the bench IS sull vacant as he prepares for a second
:reurement-thiS ume from the Wh11e House later th1s tall
: EDITOR'S NOTE - Rtchard Cur•lli covers the Supreme Co~
:and legal affa1rs for The Assoctat•d Press.

:Today in history
:By The AssOi:laled Press
I
: Today IS Tuesday, Sept 26, lhe 269tb day of 1995 There are% days
· left in lhe year
• Today's Highhghl m Htstory·
On Sept 26, 1789, Thomas Jefferson was appointed Amenca's first
· secretary of state, John Jay the fii'SI chtef JUSUCe of !be United States·
·Samuel Osgood the flllit posbnastc:r-general; and Edmund Jenn10gs
dolph tbe flfSt anomey general
On !his date:
In 1777, Bnush b'oops occupted Philadelphia dunng !be Amencan
Revoluuon
In I 892, John Philip Sousa and hiS newly formed band performed publicly for the fii'St ume, at the Stillman Mustc Hall in Plrunfield, N J
In !9!4,1he Federal Trade Coourusston was established
In 1950, Umted Nations troops 10 lhe Korean Confltct recaptured lhe
Sbulb Korean capttal of Seoul from lhe North Koreans
. In 1957, !be mustcal "West S•de Story" opened on Broadway
; In 1960. the fii'SI of four televtsed debates beiWeen prestdenual candirlaleS Richard M Nixon and John F Kennedy took place 10 Chtcago.
In 1980, !be Cuban government abruptly closed Mane I Harlxlr endmg
die :•freedom flotilla" boatltft of Cuban refugees !bat began tbe prevtous
Apnl.
In 1986, William H Rehnqutsl was sworn 10 as lhe 16th chief jusuce
of die United Stales, whtle Antonm Scalta Jomed !be Supreme Court as Its
103rd member
In 1991, four men and four women began a two-year silly inside a
sealed-off slnJCture 10 Oracle, Ariz, caJied Biosphere 2. a project mtc:nded to develop teclmology for future space colomes
In 1993: tbe eight occupants of Biosphere 2 emerged, ending thetr twoyear expenmenl
Ten yean ago: Humcane Glona approached lhe North Carolina shore
prompting more !ban 150,000 Atlanttc Coast res1den1S to nee. Amenc~
officials confumed the defecuon of Sovtet KGB offtctal Vltaly
YurehenlW. Yurchenlco later redefccled back to lhe Sovtet Umon, claimmg be had been lcidnapped
Five years ago: The Motion Picture Assoc.atmn of America announced
i,t bad created a new rating, NC!7, destgned to bar movtegoers under lhe
age of 17 from certrun fihns w•lhoutlhe commercial sugma of !be old X
a tin g.

Ran:

•

this colummst and others, con ..

tact America Online by calling 1·
8011·827-6364, &lt;XL 8317.)

Andie MacDowell meets the psycho vampire
I don't usually read so-ca11ed
"women's magazmes '' Really I

don't I have, however, spent many
hours of my hfe glancmg al theu
covers wh1le standmg m the
express lane at my local grocery
store, cradling my pathettc lillie
purchases I've spent more 11me
readmg women's magazme covers

than prose by James Joyce That's
probably lrODIC
The bnef sntppets ol cover
prose offer tantahzmg glunpses ol
the women I unagme readmg these
magazmes They're obsesstvely
wetgh1-consc10us ("Ten Steps to a
Slimmer Youl''), 1he1r sex life
could use Improvement (' S1x
Foolproof T1ps for Boudolf Fife·
works!"), and they're not happy
wtth lhe1r JObs ("A Surefire Anudote to Chrome Overload'")
Throw m a "Perlect Hmr Can
Be Yours'", a couple "Hot Pteces
for Fall I", and dozens of "New
L•fe for Old Ltpsuck '" type fea·
tures, and the p1cture IS complete a
woman who 1s constanlly and com·
pulstvely rearrangmg the meager
(but tasteful) fumuure m her stud1o
apartment, who has more closet
orgamzers than she ha' closets. and
IS always pulling up llqs on he1
fndge with little magnets shaped
hke kltly ems She looks ,, lot hkc
Amlle MacDowell (or would, 11

she'd lose a couple pounds and do
somethmg about that h:ur)
Oh, I lhoughl I was so smart
makmg snap JUdgments nl women

/an Shoales
I've never~net, based only on bold
phrases seen m supermarkets Last
week that changed A rndgazme
called For Women first caught my
eye, probably 1\ecause the wom.-m
on the cover looked like And1e
MacDowell (or would 11 she'd do
somelhmg about that nose)
Caressmg my yogurt, Mex1can
beer and green scruhh1es, I noted
the usual chtpper teasers "Set
Your Dody Clock lor Success,"
"Be Immune lo He.~rt DISea,e"when I suddenly spoiled thiS
"How to Spot a Psycho Vampue "
Watt a mmute I IIJOughl, !here's
somethmg"'-'irong w!lh thiS p1cture
When d•d psycho vmnp1res become
a problem 10 today's young work·
mg woman? I was really out of the
loop I thought she was spendmg
her free June debatmg whether 11
was appropnate to accept ,, dmner
offer lrom the boss, mulling over
footwear, or we•glung her lood to
gauge 1ts fal potential
Dut all the lime IIHS plea,mgly

plwnp And•e MacDowelllookalike
was hauntmg the alleys of t11e eny.
a wooden stake m one hand, a hsl
from For Women Ftm m lite other.
Iookmg to send another psycho
vamprre back to the unholy undead
hell from whence he came ThiS
sounded hke my kmd of woman'
To make a Jon g story short, I
bought the damn magazme Boy,
was I d1sappom1ed Frrst of all, For
Women F~rst IS geared toward marned women What lhe hell do I
care tf tbelf husbands are ready for
the new !hem? What ts 1t to me tf
they find thett dream vacatiOn or
not? Sure, n's great !hal these cando career women can find lhe ttme
m a busy week to put themselves
first 10 speCial hllle ways, but that
doesn't put any meat on my table,
now does n?
And who were these alleged
psycho vamp1res? Accordmg to For
Women Firs~ !bey turned out to be
nothmg more than selftsh people
who borrow your car and don't
thank you, The Suffering Complruner, The Unwanted Best Fnend
- these are the psycho vamptres of
modern women· s magazmes
I don't deny that these are problems, but tf there are mdeed mentally unbalanced and Immortal
langed predators outlbere m suburbm, I don't see women's magazmes

olfenng any helpful seven-poml
suggesuons as to how to deal wtlh
them
Today's workmg women seem
so otherwiSe cautious and orgamzed, not to menuon burstmg wtth
sell-esteem, shouldn't they atleasl
COIISlder the pOSSibihly lhal the
undead walk among us? Shouldn!j
they forget lbe1r h:ur and dtets and
careers for one second, and save
the world?
For the future, until thiS lhreatiS
past, I sugges1 art1cles like "Pound
a Stake lor Fum Muscle Tone!"
"Lose Wetght Through F•end
Deslruct•on!" "S•x Ways to Snuff
Nosferatu and Look Fahuloust"
Take my advtce, there's nothmg
hke savmg the world 10 gel you
buff and m shape Look at Lmda
Hamtllon m "Termmalor 11 "
There's a career gal who has 11 all
(To receive a complimentary
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
Jan Shoales 1s a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Aswcialion.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling J.
800-827-6364, •xt. 8317.)

Too many pounds or too much hype?
All my hfe, people have told me preachmg the VIrtues ol eaung
I'm Ibm. I'm neither proud nor healthy food, remmdmg my d.etmg
ashamed of lhiS fact, u's JUS! how 11 pals !hat food 1s a good thmg, that
is "How can you eat !hat and stay the body needs II m order to funcso skmny?" an acquamtancc w11l
ask 10 the tee cream store "So
Sara Eckel
THAT'S how you stay so slim," a
co-worker w1ll say 11 salad IS my uon, that wuhoutll you'll d1e
lunch chmcc I've never courted
And now II turns out I was com·
such comments, but I've rece1ved pletely wrong Worse, I've been
!hem, all my hfe
hurhng my fncnds headfirstloward
So It was With great alarm thai I death Food IS the enemy, JUS! hke
read m the New York Ttmes all the beauty magaztnes satd
recently !bat I'm not thm at all
Those skuush guls from htgh
Actually, I'm overwe1ght I'm 5 school, the ones who pndC&lt;! themfeet 5 mches and wetgh 125 selves on eaung nothmg hut leuuce
pounds That's tubsv11le, accordmg leaves and Melba 10ast weren't
the Tlrnes report on a study pub· crazy alter all We thought lhey
llshed m the New England Journal had eatmg dtsorders , but u turns
of Medtcme The Tunes and many out !hey were health nuts
other newspapers say U1o1l women
DIStressed by all the miSlnlorwho are my height mcur a 20 per- mallon I'd been spreadmg amongst
cent htgher nsk of early death 1f my lnends, I called Elizabeth
!bey we1gh more th311 119 pounds
H•ser, a registered d1el1Uan and
What's more, lhe health JOurnal- nutntwn ed1tor al Ealmg Well
ISIS report, 11 turns out that you can magazme Hiser too was surpnsed
never be too lhm Dr T1m Byers, by the lindmgs At 5 feel 6 mches
professor of preventative med1cme and 120 pounds, Htser had hved
at the UmvefSity of Colorado, told her whole hfe bellevmg herself
!be T1mes !bat lhts and a related thm "I've always been low on the
study "diSpel !be myth !bat bemg we1ghl ch!rrls and now I'm bemg
too lhm ts harmful."
told I'm JUSt borderline I really
Well, don't I feel the fool For have a hard ume behevmg that,"
all lhese years I've been beggmg she sa1d
my fnends not to deny themselves
Actually, t11e study, whtch came
nounshment 10 the pursuit of a out of the Harvard Med1cal School,
supermodel figure I've been ldocs have some value "The

researchers are correct m saymg
that we shouldn't hberahze our
weight ranges and say 11's OK to
keep g:umng we1ght," says H1ser.
"but the problem •s th1s gets mtc:rpreted by every woman who reads
th1s m the newspaper, and !hey try
to apply 1t to themselves "
That, says HISer, •s a miStake
Stalis(tcs do not always bo1l down
to health advtce, and the Harvard
study has senous omiSsions thai
dtmmtsh liS relevance to the average woman For example, the study
does not account for !be effecl• of
body I rame or exerciSe Largeboned women w11l s1mply not be
able to gel themselves down lo the
"•deal" we1gh1S unless !hey starve
themselves or take up smokmg
And exerctse, whtch we all know
makes people healthter, alsc makes
people heavter, because muscle
wetghs more !ban fat
Frances Berg, ed11or of the
Healthy We1gh1 Joumal, pomts out
that although th1s parttcular study
got a lot of med•a anenuon, 1t ts
JUst one of many repons published
each year on the effect of we1gh1. A
1994 Unned Natwns report on
world slarvauon, for example,
found that wetghts slightly lower
than lhe tdeal we~ghts m the Harvard study had detnmenllll health
effects, compromismg lhe subjects'
phystcal effccuveness, as well as

I

•

waclcos and convtcted cnmmals
Most of us would s1gn on to that
Powell says he supports a
moment of Silence to begm the day
m pubhc schools, but he IS opposed
to organized prayer. Most of us
concur. Powell says he beheves 10
afflfiOauve actton laws I perscnaiJy thmk their tune has passed, and I
suspect many of you do, too We
.can allow htm one m1stake
But !be nght wmg Oh, my, the
nght wmg The folks who thmk
governmem ought 10 stay oul of
everylhmg except school prayer,
and abortion, and free marlceiS, and
tax breaks for squadnlllonaues.
The lolks who beheve you am' I
llvmg •f you run't polarizing How
hurt and resemful they are that
Cohn Powell lets hts head be ruled
by common sense
Ph1l Grarrun "I thmk hiS VIews
m some way reflect more lhe vtews
of lhe DemocratiC Party than the
Republican Purty "
Jesse Helms Powell's nommaIIOn "would be a mistake, because
thank 11 would spbtthe party "
Ant1-aboruon activiSt Patnck
Mahoney Pro-hfers are plannmg to
uget Ill hJS face .,
Colummst Tony Snow "Many
hard-core conservative wh11es
would g1ve therr eyeteeth to find a
,plack politiCian they could support
because of hiS heart,and not hiS
skin In return, he ha• lold them Jo
drop dead"
My pro-Powell words should
not be mterpreted as an endorsemen! I refuse lo gel on thai bandwagon I thmlc Powell IS a man of
greal mtelhgence and courage, but
I am equally certam lhe book on
h1s poht•cal beliefs and human
fmbles 1s far from complete, so I'm
Wllbholdmg Judgment for a while
I am elaled, however, !hal Cohn
Powell may g1ve pollltcal moderates the cour.age lu come out of
thelf cubbyholes
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer fur Newspaper Enterpri._e
A"sociatmn.
(For mformatlon on how to
communicate electronically with

Wednl!'iday, Sept. 27
Accu-Weather• forecast for dayumc condn1ons and h1gh 1empcra1ures

•

thetr abthfy to )"tthsl3nd Illness and
stress
Actually, the symptoms of star·
vallon - listlessness, self-absorpIIOII, fat1gue, apathy, anxtousncss,
restlessness - are somelhmg Berg
sees m a lot of women "They
mtghl nol have eatmg diSorders,"
says Berg, "but a lot of women are
undemounshmg themselves
"People a.•k. 'Where are all the
young women m the women's
movement?' Where are they?
They're d1eUng "
So there are my cho1ces I can
sperJ the rest ot my hfe subs1sung
on grapefruit and cattage cheese. m
lhe hopes of av01dmg the fate of a
rather small percentage of the Harvard study subJeCts (fewer than
four out of 1,000 dted each year).
Or I can contmue eatmg ample
meals and keep my spunk Judg10g
from some of the leuers my colwnn
has recc•ved, I'm sure there are
many readers who would be glad to
see me lose' some steam To !hem I
say, pass lhe s1rlom
Sarah Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on how to
communicate electromcally wllh
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Onhne by calling 180'0-827·6364, exL 8317.)

IToledo I 73' I
Youngstown

IND

• IColumbus !75' I

Meigs announcements

~

Fund-raiser planned
A yard and bake sale will be
held Oc1 7 from 8 to 4 p m at the
Harnsonvtlle Presbytenan Church
The sale IS sponsored by the Lend
A Hand class

~VA

Showers Tstorms Rdtn

Flumes

Snow

Ice

United Fund klckolf
A kickoff breakfast for the Umt·
ed Fund of Me1gs Counly has been
sel for 7 30 am on Oc1 5 al the
Metgs County Semor C111zens Cenler, Mulberry Heights. l&gt;!&gt;meroy

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
0 1995 AccuWoalhor Inc

V.a Assocr818d PtttSS Gr!!ph!CSN81

Warming trend on its way
By The Assoctal•d l'••ss
A wannmg trend Wtll contmuc
m Oh10 on Wednesday, w1th the
mercury approaclnng RO degrees m
lite south No rain IS 111 Sight bel nrc
Sunday or Monday, the Natlml.ll
Weather Serv1ce sa1d
Partly sunny ~ktcs are predtcted
for Wednesday Wllh htghs r;utgmg
from the low 70s 111 the north to
upper 70s to- the south Lows
tomght will be 111 the upper 40s 10
near 50
The record-htgh temperature for
tins date at l11e Columhus weather
station was 92 degrees 111 I 900
wh1le the record low wo1s 11 111

1

1940 Sunset tomght w11l be .11 7 21
p m and sunnsc Wednesd.1y .11
7 24 am
Weather ror4!cast:
Tomght Panly cludy wuh ,,
low lrom lhe mtd 40s to the lower
50s
Wednesday P.lflly 'unny
lh ghs m lhe 70s
Extended f(11·ecast·

Thursday Dry Lows 111 the
upper 40s and lower 'iOs lllghs 111
the 70s
Fnday and Saturdo~y Dt y
Lows 111 the luwer 10 m1d 'iOs
Ihghs m lhe 70s

Weary O.J. jurors brace
for closing arguments
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press W1·it•r
LOS ANGELES - Detenmned
to finish the 0 J S1mpsou Jnal
before !be 1r1al limshes all the Jury
the JUdge has set 11-hour clays lor
auomeys to make thclf lasl pleas
for COOVICilOn Of HC4UJU,l1

Today's clostng .ugumenls,
whtch begm wllh lhc prosecution
summation. come ,1 year to the day
JUrors fust came tu court lor thl'
sla:rt ol Jury selecllon
And even 111 t.Jus Ctto,;e, whtch ha.o,;
often seemed propelleu hy hot ollf,
lhe maralhon hours will ~'Ike a IIlii
on everybody, parllcularly the
weary, sequestered JUrors, who
may not fully apprec1ate t11e OI.!IO·
ry overload ahead
"To make the JUrors ,1hsnrh
more than stx or seven hours ol
argument a day " very wuntcrpro
ducuve," smd Southwestellt IJmverSity law prolessor Robert Pugs·
ley "Anybody who h.IS ever been
m a teachmg slluallllll knows that
there'S a cert.1111 absorpllon C.lpaCl·
ty, and beyond thai you're exceed·
mg the pomt ot uunuushtng
returns''
What's more, the Judge demed
one Side the use ol vtcleot.lpc
Judge Lance Ito ISsued a ruhng
Monday harnng dclense anomeys
from usmg v1dcotapccl Ul.tl te'u
mony dunng closmg argumcms
Both stdes had been g1 ollllccl
permtss1nn last week 10 usc sud•
tapes dunng tinal summ.t11ons But
Ito s:ud Slrnpson's auomeys trulecl
to meet the court's .~ready extencl
ed deadhne Monday lor submuung
a hst of v1demape transcnpls lm
revtew.
.
"Permtsston to ptescnt v1dco
Jape excerpts IS wuhdldWII ancl
rescmded," Ito wrote
"It's a non-1ssuc • rcspondetl
defense anomey Johnn1e Cochr,Jn
Jr "AI lhts po1111 you know I m
not womcd abou1 ru1ytl\mg
The summauons arc the onl)
tlfne auomeys are ·~lowed 10 m.Ikc
mferenccs ami suggest thcones lu

The Daily Sentinel

the Jury In open111g st.llemenb
attomeys could only say wb,u the)
believed the evidence would show
Stmpson, 48, has pleadC&lt;! mnocent io the June 12. 1994, kmle
murders ot ex-wtle Ntcolc Drown
S•mpson.~5. and her lnend Ronald
Goldman, 25
Proseculor Marc•~ Clark
prom1sed a two t1.1y summ,\IHln
under the shorler hours Mmt legal
analysts expect her prcsentallllll to
run on the long Side, w11h much
detail, re-educalmg JUr&lt;&gt;rs abnut
DNA and fiber mMiym .u1d locusmg on the so-called "mnunl.llll ot
ev1dence"
. The defense •~ expected to press
Its rosh·IO·JUdgment theme tellmg ~
JUrors that overzealous "1u1h01llle'
overlooked exoneraung cvtdcnce.
botched the packagmg ,Utcl tesung
of ev•~ence lhey dtd en1lcc1 .mcl
ouu 1gh1 planted some evidence to
nab a b•g b'Ophy m Slrnpson
When the defense ftmshes 11s
summation, the prosecutmn. as
always, gets the last word m wtth a.
rebuttal argumenl

Stocks

uf1ernoon Monday through
Fnday Ill Court St Pomeroy Oh•o by the

Mtmber The As~ocu1ted Pres~ and dJC Oh10
News~per A~soc•auon

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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Homecoming announced
Homecommg w•ll be held at the
Hemlock Grove Church of Chnst
Sunday The Wallace Dros ot
flunungton w•ll prov1de specwl
muste at the 2 p m progrmn A dm·
ncr wtll be held at 12 10 p m
Classes offered
Reg•strauun tor classes at the
R1verbend Arts CounCil are bcmg
accepted by N.mcy C.•lc, 992-5438
ThiS fall classes will be oflered m
dance. mslrumental and halon,
bcgmmng an, and T,u Clu Pracuces for the cmmnumty chOir will
resume m October and B •g Bend
Commumly D311d p1 ,,cuces Will be
announced later
Free Clotlung Day

I/8Am Ele Power.
.35 5/8
Akzo
59 7/8
Ashland 011
33 3/8
AT&amp;T .................................... 641/4
Bank One ...
36 114
Bob Evans
t7 5/8
Champion Ind.
ll3/4
Charming Shop
4 13116
City Holding..
. 26 1/4
Federal Mogul
19 718
Goodyear T&amp; R
... .38 3/4
K-mart
IS
Lands End ...
..16
Limited Inc..... ..
. 18 3/4
Multimedia Inc
... -iJ 318
People's .......... • .. .....

Stock reports are the 10 30 a m
quotes provided by Ad'Vest u

Gallipolis

The followmg peuuons for dis·
solutiOns of marnage were f1led
recently m the ofllce of Meigs
CounlY Clerk ol Courts Larry
Spencer E Darlene Tllhs and Jerry
L T1llls, Sept 25. Mary Wolfe and
Mtchael Wolfe. Sept 21

'

,._, ob\O river •••, to

ell

this

"eck · s meetmg
That v1ew w,,. , sucngtlu:ue&lt;.l by
Fed Chrurman Alnn (Jrt:eno.;p.m's

comments lnst f'nclay hcl01c lhe
Senate Bankntg Comm ittee, 1\1
which he presented ll \Cry upbeal
assessment o l th e eco nom y':,
prospects, lorecastmg lhal ~rnwQ1
wa.~ strengthenmg wh1lc mlllllnn
ary prcsstJres were t.kduung
:
Wh1lc UlCre w,\s uc.lf utnvc rs~l
agreement thai no r lie n.:tluCIH'Ml
was m store thiS week, .malyst'
were spht on wh,Umtght 11.1ppcn ~~
lite Fed s last two meel!ngs of the
year, on Nov 15 and De&lt; 19
:
Some cconOJmst!&lt;i s~ud more rate
reductions were ptJsSihlc cspcewiJy tf growth 111 eommg weeks f.~C&lt;
short of expect.uwns Further mte
cuts now would menu

.L

!:itrong6r

economy 111 1996, some!lung tb.Tt
would be apprecwied by a prcSI ·
dent runntng lor rc-cleclwn next
ye&gt;rr An.~ysts notecl 11t,11 PieSid.inl
Chnton must dectdc hy ncxl tv!a(ch
\\hcther to 1cappom1 Grccn,p.m

Columbta parcels,
Deed, Mary Ellen Andrew ttl
Lawrence Dnan and Jayne Ann
Collins, Ohve,
Deed, M,1ry Ellen Andrew Ill
M•chael Lee .md Angel:• Mane
Btssell, Oh ve,
Deed, Robert ru1d EtL1 M.te ~llll
to Scon and Cns1r1 llluwer lhL'IIIC
lots.
Certllicate, Jenme S I arowsky
deceased. 1"' l.utya Camcr,
LebilliOII lot,
Certificate, Gertru&lt;lc Smllh
Mttchell to Unlled Methodist
Church, Pomeroy,
Deed, James R ,ml.l Donn11 J
Grueser to Roger L M.1nley S1
Trus~ Middleport parcels
Deed, Edwm G and S,1bra J
Ash to Edwm Bn.u1 Ash Sutton
12 37 acres,
Deed, Archie E and June I&gt; I ce
to R1chard 0 31td Lmd" L rncnd
Syracuse parcels,
Deed, Barbaro~ 1md J.unes J Presum 10 Ronald Rlldue Chester
parcel;
Deed, Darrell R m•d Lmda K
Nelsen to Larry D and Retha M
G1bbs

Eastern Board
slates meeti~g
The Eastem Local School DIS
tncl will hold l11e trrst 111 a commumly meetmgs 10mght, to dtscuss
the proposals for the new hmldmg
levy The diSCUSSIOn SeSSIOn Will be
held at 6 30 p m • 10 the htgh
school cafetc:na
1be architectural finn represent·
mg lhe dtstnct will be on hand to
d•scuss proposals and answer quesuons The board encourages mput
from concerned community Clll·
zens
Any c1111zen mteresied 10
cxprcssmg t.heu upuuons or havmg
lheu ques11ons' on the hutldmg pro
posals answered should llllend llus
meeung
~

··\
~o.P

3-ll'

~ &lt;\'·
•

~,;J.• 3.0

\

\'~e

...~;

1e"'

I 00 h1gher.
SI.IUghter steers chmce 61 0066 00, select 55 00-62 85
Sl.lughtcr llctfcrs· cho~ec 60 0064 3~ selecl 37 00-61 00
Cows uneven 2 00 lowe( to
I 00 lughe1 all cows 42 SO ,md
down

Bulls uneven 5 00 lower til
sltonger, all bulls 53 00 und dow1\
Veal calves stc.tdy to Ingber.
'
chmce 190 00 ,111cl clown
Sheep and l.unbs ste.1dy to
stronger, c.:hou.: ~.: wools 77 5080 50, Lhmce clips 76 50-80 00,
fee!lcr J.unhs R7 50 .md down, agfd
;
sheep 30 50 atld tlown

.

Water outage
set Wednesday

Customers of the Tuppers
Pl;uns-Chester Water DISinCI reSid·
mg on Chester "I ownshtp Road
1
633, Daum AddlllOII, wtll be With·
oul waler Wednesday from 1•3
pm
The district asks 11131 afterward
• Conc.lucteLI d U1m.l rcruhng on all wa1er used for hum.m consumpthe vtli.Jgc hackllow on.hn,mcc, ;mtl uon be b01led for three m•nutes
adopted the ord tnm1cc
unul further noUl'C
• Horton noted that the VJII.1ge IS
The reason for ll•e shut down ts
walhng on a leiter I rom U1e federal to relocate a poruon tll the dtstnct's
governmelll declarmg the marma as CXIStlllg (me, cU.:COrt.JIIlg l)onaJd (:
surplus
Poole d1stru.:t llltUI ,Igcr
• Clerk Ten Hockman rCptlrlcU
that the village pollee have been
taken out ot the state public
hnployces ret1rcment system, and
hcen transferred tnto the st.llq
poltce .llld luehghters pensiOn
lund
• DIScussed c.~rc ol trees 111 the
v1llagc by the contr.1c1e~ hrm.
froptc.tl Sc.IS Plalll C.~rc. and the
firms contract wuh the v1llage
Council wtll mee1 m regular scsswn on Monday. Oct 9 at 7 30
p m m counCil chmnhcrs

Hosoital news
VE'IERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admtss1ons -

none

Monday dJSchafge' - M.1rt1n
Woodard, Pomeroy
HOLZER MEDICAL 'tEN I EK
Discharges Sept 25
Nicholas Messer, Donna Hughes,
Deily Whue, Lc&lt;tnnid McCany
Nellie Conger, Mrs Dwayne
Forgey and daughter. Cryst,ll
McBurney. Tammy M.tples Elna
/\lien, Belly Souders
Births - Mr and Mrs Tyrone
Sommerv•llc, son, Poull Ple.,sant,
W Va, Mr and Mrs Wllll.lfn Zuspan, son, Mason. W v,,
(l'uhllsh•d with p.rntl.,lon)

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy·MIIon Bridge
992·2588

We Give Mature.
Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
OWners Special
Savings.
Our sta11sttcs show that mature d11 •
vers and home owners have fewer and
less costly losses than olhe• age
groups So 1I's only fatr to charoe you •
less lor yoUJ msurance Insure you'
home and ca1 w1th us and save ever••
more w1lh ou1 spectal multi policy ·
dtscounts

VINTON
Gallla County Display Y1rd
'155 Main St
388·8603

.

1\1, •a l'',,, .,

C. 'ert, lt't a.,,,.4- ,,
o,,le

l/e '•

'",/;

"1£

ll'on
·•e?

"Marriafle a,." ..,,,,,.
'tf(l,,,.,, · .:;.
Maintenance"
'''P .,

Friday, Sept. 29- 7:00 p,m.
Ash St. FreewiP Baptist Church
MIDDLEPORT, OH

....... . ..24

Ohio Valley Bank
.36
One Valley . ......
.32 718
Rockwell . , .
............ ,46 1/2
Robbins &amp; Myen
.29 1/2
Royal Dutch .................,. ..... 122 t/2
Shoney'slnc
10 314
Star Bank ...
52518
Wendy lnl'l .
21 J/4
Worthington lnd
"1/8

-·-·-

Dissolutions filed

behef 3111ong an.tlysl&lt; 1hm the central hank would not nat raws

Today's livestock report

Land transfers recorded

. EMS runs
MeigS

(USPS 213-'1110)

Oh10 Valley Pubhshmg Compony/MulmnedJo
Inc Pomti'O)' Oh1o 4S769 Ph 992 11.5(i
Second class postage ptud at Pomeroy Oh1o

Reunion set
Descendanls of lite late Wtlh.un
Jacob Hannum and Juha E Halsey
Hannum w11l hold a reumon at the
Long Bouom Conununny Butldmg
Sunday There w11l be a potluck
dumer at I p m

The followmg- land transfers
were recortjed recently mthe office
of Metgs County Recorder Emmagene Harn11ton
Deed, Deatr•ce and Francis W
Flanagan to Juhe L Mcintyre.
Ohve;
Deed, Julie L Mcintyre to
Wtlllam D and Slmley J
Humphrey, Ohve.
R1gh1 of way, Jack and Shetla
Jordan to Columbus Southern
Power. Colwnbm,
R1gh1 of way, M,rrlha Kay .md
Charles Wheeler lo CSP Sc1piU
Rtghl of way. Thomas A and
Lora J McDamcl to CSP,
Columbm, 5 5 acres
R1ght of way Denver L W:un
cr. Karen R and Eugene 1 nplell 10
CSP, Columbm,
Right of way , Krlene and Darrell Krauner to CSP, Sahshury,
Rtght ol way, Charles D and
Brenda K )elfers to Ohm P&lt;Jwer
Company, S.tllsbury,
Right of way, Guy D and Ruhy
Umts of the Me1gs Count~ Hysell to OPC, Rull31ld,
Emergency Med1cal Servtce
Rtght ot way, M.1ry F and
recorded nme calls for asststance, Rtchard D Wh1te, Kunberly D
mcludmg two b'ansfer calls Umts Holliday to OPC, Salem,
respondmg mcluded
Deed, Bonme S Pmffill Bomuc
MIDDLEPORT
S Brewer to Terry .md Donme S
I 4 I p m , Overbrook Nursmg Brewer, Lebanon parcel
Cenler, Neva Ihle, Veterans M~mo·
Deed, Emma Jane McClintock
nal trospual;
,
Emma Jane and lloward Cectl
II 59 p m, South Second Robmson to Joyce Rom me,
Avenue, Demck Luca.,, VMII
Racme,
r
Deed, Robert J Lawrence 10
RACINE
7 40 a m , Stale Route- 338. Warren D and Comuc L Gregory
\ Lebanon, 7 6430 acres,
Gladys Hutton, VMH;
2:41pm, Carpemer R&lt;md, Ebz- '' Deed, Robert Eugene and
abeth Carpenter. Jackson General M1chelle R Facemyer to Jerry E
Hospital
Sr and Barbara J Fncsncr, Ohvc,
RUTLAND
, 4 2574 acres,
Deed, R1chard B m1d Sherry L
8 05 p m , Me1gs Mme 2, Duane
Molhhan, O'Biencss Memonal Payne 10 Dnan M .md Dolly R
Hospital,
Warden, Sullon p.lfccls,
10·28 p m, Me•g~ M111e 31,
Afftdavll, Norma CurtiS
John Wnght, Holzer Med1cal Cen- deceased. to Jewell CuniS,
ter
Deed, Deed, Ellsworth J and
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ann F Holden to Roger Ke1th and
9.58 p m , Rambow Ridge Shclba Jean W McDan1el
Monmd Good. VMH

P~bhshed every

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Reserve's solitary cut m
mterest ra1es may be all the rehcl
borrowers are gomg to gel, many
economtsts are s~'UtiOg to beheve
These analysts pomt to a
rebound m home and auto sales. a
drop m unemployment and s•gns of
life 10 the coun1ry' s beleaguered
manufactunng sec tor as ev1dence
thai tile long economic expanSIOn
has regmncd us tooung and IS not
111 need ol further uucres1 rate
reducuons
"The Fed 1s pamng uself on 1he
back
r:tther soltdly nght now," smd
Free clolhmg day w•ll be held at
Dav1d
Wy ss econ01n1 st at DRI
lhe Salvallon Army, Pomeroy, on
McGraw
Htll Inc m I cx mgton,
Thursday from 10 am unt1lnoun
Mass
"The
et:onomv ~~ dmng bel
All area residents 111 nc-ecl ol dolh·
ter
than
expected
and lh.u means
mg are welcome to attend
!hey don ' l have to cut r. 11cs ·
Members ol the f'cclcral
Neutzllng reunion s.t
Reserve's
Open M.~rket Commll
The annual Neutzhng reut11un
tee,
composed
ol Fed hoarcl mem w11l be held Sunday from noon at 4
bers
and
reg1onal
b,mk preSidents,
p m atlhe Slar M1ll Park, Racme
were
mcctmg
tod,ly
behmd dosed
Those auendmg are lo L'lke a cov
doors
to
dcc1dc
whether
to make
ered diSh lnlorm.IIItlll may be '
any ch.. mgcs 111 m1en.•s1 rates
obtamed by calhng 992-60~2
fhere w.1s an almost umv c rs.~l
Gun shoot plann•d
The Racme Fife De partmcllt
wtll have gun shoots &lt;HU11ng Oct 7
COLUMD US (AI') - lndi,UUI·
m the Bashan b01ldmg 12-gaugc
factory choke only
Oh10 dtrccl hog pmcs a1 selected
buymg pomls I uesdo~y by the US
Department ot Agncullure Mlrrkel
Bean dinner set
News
The St Paul MethodiSt Church
Barrows and g•lls mostly 50
at Tuppers Plams w1ll hold a bean
cents
lower, dem.md moderate
soup and sandw1ch super at the
US,
1-3, 230-260 lhs country
church Saturd,•y Scrvmg w11l be
pomts
46
00-4 7 25, Icw 4 7 50,
from 4:30 to 6 30 p m
planL• 46 75-48 50
US 2-3, 230-260 lhs 'country
To perform
pomts
41 00-46 00
Mary and Roger (;llmore WJII
Sows
steady
perform at the Mctg s Count)
US
1·3
300 -500 lbs 31 00
Courthouse atmxm I nday ,t, a p.lrl
36
00,
500-650
Ills 35 00-38 'iO
of the observance ol lite 30th
few
over
650
lbs
39 00
anmversary of !be Oh1o i\ris Cuuu
Boars.
30
00-33
00
ell
Esumated receipts 34,000
Prlc&lt;S from The !'rod uctr&gt;
Dance scheduled
Livestock
Assodulion
A rounU ant.! s4u.lfe dtlncc w1ll
Canle
uneven, I 00 lower to
be held al lhe Tuppers Plams VFW
Saturday at 8 p m Smoky Mountam Dnllers wtll prov•cled the
muSic and Jay B Wilson will be he
called. Door pnzcs will be award - Middl~port Council
ed Refres!JmenL~ w1ll he sold
(Continued from Puge I)
• Approved a resoluuon scckmg
nc~..:cssary lax lev1es lor next year

Dorothy Jean Clark, 67, of ScotiSdale, Anz . fonnerly of Pomeroy
dted Thursday, Sept 21. 1995 m Glendale, Ariz
Bom Nov 28. 1927 at Mmgo JunctiOn she was a housew1fe 1be famtly moved to Arizona from Pomeroy about 30 years ago
Sbe ts surv~ved by three sons, Raben A Emler of Mesa, Anz. John E
Emler of Vtsal1er, Cahf. and Mark Clark of Glendale, Ariz , one daughter, Susan Marx of Lancaster, Calif, five ststers, Anne Grygo of Toronto,
Mary Farbank and Kathenne Oleksy, both of Mmgo Juncuon, and Soph1a
Sabot and Margare1 DICesare, both of Smtthfield, and 10 grandchildren
Private serv•ces were held Memunal contnbuuons may be made to the
Hospice of !be Valley, 1510 E Flower, Pboemx, Ariz 85014

•

•

more interest rate cuts·

Dorothy J. Clark

MICH

IMansf1eld 173' I•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area Death-- Experts not expecting

OHIO Weather

Powell disappoints the right wing
.

111 Court Street

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Page2
Tuesday, September 26, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

You're Invited to hear Pastor Leslie Hayman
present a light-hearted message on the serious
concerns affecting today's marriages.

204 9{ 2ruf., :Muftfkport, O:Jl

992-405510-5 :Mon. tfuu Sat.

The evening will conclude with a renewal of
marriage vows and dinner provided by the
church.
For reservations call992-7410.

RR~GAN

-w.~!!~ce s;,•..,;,.p.
'
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

'

p

�Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 26, 1995

Tuesday, SepteWiber 26, 1995

called in the sixlh inning because
of rain. San Diego defeated San
Fqncisco 7-4 and Mnntreal
downed Florida 9-0.
Eric Karros hit a two-run homer
in the sixth inning tu put the
Dodgers ahead 4-3 in the opener of
a three-game series. Karros· J 1st
home run came after Mike Piazza
reached on a grounder that Weiss
bobbled.
''That certainly wa~n·c a characteristic game for Walt Weiss. But
those lhings happen," Karros said.
Weiss began Lhe game wilh just
12 errors. He was lhe shortstop for
the Oakland Athletics team.&lt;· that
went to the World Series from
1988-90.
The game drew only 41 ,9R4
fans, about 14.000 short of a sell-

NL roundup

FORCE AT SECOND • Cincinnati's second baseman Brei
!toone, lert, jumps cl&lt;ar or New York's Rico Brogna after rorcing
him out at second base for the lop half of a double play In Monday
ni~tht's NL game at Shea Sllldium In New York. The Mets won, 2l, in a rain-shortened ~arne protested by the Reds. (AP)

Weiss. a steady fielder and one
of the few Colorado players with
any big-game experience, made
tllree errors as lhe Rockies lost in
Los Angeles 4-3. The Dodgers
moved one-half gmne ahead of
Colorai.lo for the NL West lead.
''It's a tough infield and there
are some tricky hops out U1ere, but
you've got to adjust tn the dillerent
inlields," Weiss sa ill. "The inlicld
here has hard dirt ant! the hall usually gets to you soaking wet after it
goes through that grass.'·
The Houston Astros , mean while. moved Within one gcune of
Colorado in the wild-card race with
a 10-5 win over Pittsburgh.
In other NL games, New York

out.

Cubs 7, Cardinal., U
In stead of becoming the rirst
Cubs pitcher to throw a no-hitter in
23 years, Castillo becrune Lhe lifth
pitcher in the majors Ibis season to
lose a no-hitter in the last inning.
Castillo (11-10) struck out a
career,high 13 and walked two.
Gilkey's liner fell several feet awuy
from right fielder Sammy Sosu.
who dived into the gap.
Milt Pappas pitched the last nohitter for the Cubs - and the last
one at Wrigley Field hy anyone on Sept. 2, 1972, against San
Diego.
Rrunon Martinez of Los Angeles
pitched the only no-hitter this year,
beating Florida 7-0 on July 14.

beat Cincinnati 2·1 in a game

OSU game 'a big
one for the Irish'

1

Rio strikers top Malone 3-2

conditions, announced his team
was playing the game under
protest.
The game was halted, and called
off after a wait of one hour, 24

The Universily of Rio Grande's soccer team defeated Malone 32 Saturday to extend its winning streak to four 'games.
. The Redmen got on the board lirst witll Jacek Wroblewski's goal
wtth 7:28 left m tile first half. That was the first goal of tile season
for W':llblewski, whose ankle injury has prevenll:d him from seeing
extenstve acbon.
Malon~'s D~ll Hershey tied tile game at 1-1 wilh a goal wilh
3:44 left m tile hrst half before giving his club a 2-1 lead with a
goal 43 seconds into the second half.
Rio tied Lhe game on defender Sion Chamberlain's head-shot
goal before Josh Mauer's game-winning boot a minute later.
The Redmen (7-1-1 overall &amp; 3-0 in lhe Mid-Ohio Conference)
will host Otterbein Saturday at 2 p.m.

minutes.

Rookie Ja&lt;on lsringbausen (9-2)
won his. sevemh slraigbt decision.
He is one short of New York's
record for consecutive victories
held by Tom Seaver and David
Cone.
Pudres 7, Giants 4
Five-time NL batting champion
Tony Gwynn raise&lt;l his leagueleading average to .367 as San
Diego won at San Francisco.
Gwynn went 3-for-5 an&lt;l stayed
ahead of Mike Piazza, batting .353.
Gwynn had a two-run double.
Ken Caminiti hit his 25tll homer
of the season for the Padres and
IOOth of his career. Matt Williams
bit his 21st homer for the Giants.
Expo.&lt;9, Marlins 0
In lront of just 16,230 fans, the
smallest l'fOwd ever to see Florida
play at Joe Robbie Stadium, Wil
Cordero hit two home runs for

Wenger &amp; Hynes among top 1_0
Tbe University of Rio Grande's cross countzy teams saw two of
Lherr runners - Scott Wenger and Ann-Marie Hynes - earn second-place honors at Saturday's NCAA Division 1 meet on the Ohio
University campus.
Wenger took ~cond wilh a i5: 10 finish on the eight-kilometer
course. Behmd hun were teammates Mark Bennett (12Lh in 26:23),
Mark Tremayne (19Lh in 27:36), Bart Goble (22nd in 27:46), Brian
Lutz (24tll in 28:03), Jeremy Cline (26tll in 28:33), Brett Baker
(28th in 28:42), Joel Williamson (32nd in 31 :28) and John Guerrero
(33rd in 31:44).
Hynes! one of three Red women to rim that day (injuries acco~nt­
ed for lhts turnout) completed the five-kilometer course in 18:10.
Behind her were freshman Stacey· Wenger (22nd iri 19:40) and
April Nickoli (30th in 20: 19).
The Rio Grande. teams will host a meet Saturd;ly at 9:45 a_m.
Later on the agenda, the 251h annual Rio Grande Invitational is set
for Oct 7 on the URG .campus.

MontreaL

The Expos moved into a tie with
the Marlins for the LhinJ place in
the NL E.'l,(.
Cordero, who earlier this month
went 109plate appearanCes wilhout
an RBI, hit a two-run homer during
a five·run first inning and a solo
shot in the second.
Kirk Rueter (4-3) and Gil Heredia combined on a three-hitter.

·URG bows to Walsh.&amp; Malone

The University of Rio Grande's volleyball team fell to 7-13
overall and 1-3 in the Mid-Ohio Conference after losing weekend
matches 10 Walsh and Malone.
On Friday, Walsh won 15-4, 15-6, 15-5. On Saturday, Malone
won 15-11, 15-8, 15-9.
·
"We knew coming into the season that it would be a rough year,"
said Redwomen head coach Patsy Fields. "We're a very young ball
club, but we're learning with every grune. We've played 20 straight
matches on the road, and.1 think Lhat's worn us down a~ well."
The Redwomen will travel to Mt. Vernon to play Mt. Vernon
Nazarene today at 7 p.m. They will return home to face Tiffin Friday at 7 p.m. and host Findlay Satur&lt;lay at 2p.m.

Tigers top Red Sox; Twins topple White Sox,
BOSTON (AP)- Letdowns arc
common after a team· clinches a
division title. The Boston Red Sox
are going through one now.
Since winning lhe AL East tide
last Wednesday, tile Red Sox have
dropped three of four, the latest a
· 7-4 loss to Detroit on Monday
night. In Lhe only od1er AL game,
Minnesota beat Chicago 6-l,
Is this spate of losses a bad
omen for Boston?
"These guys don't even d~serve
to hear tllose words in this ol'lice,"
manager Kevin Kennedy saiu.
"!' ve played different guys for a
number of reasmls. These guys
have busted their butt&lt; all year long
to get in Ibis position."
One person he didn't want to

play was si:neduleu starter Erik
Hanson, who was ~rntched prior to
the game due to tightness in his
foreann.
Hanson (14-5), the second winningcst pitcher on the staff, has had
soreness in his elbow since early
July, forcing him to almost entirely
abandon his curveball. This time.
however, Kennedy and Hanson
said the tightness had nothing to do
with his elbow.
"I wasn't .going to let him see
how it was on the mound,"
Kennedy said. ''He will get anod1er
start. I feel pretty confident it's
nothing serious."
Hanson, signed by the Red Sox
on April II as a tllird st:rrtcr behind
Roger Clemens and Aaron Sele,

weeks.
But Holtz wns back at Saturday's game against Texas. callipg
plays from the press box, and he
plans to do the same at Ohio Swte.
When aske&lt;l if he pushed his recovery because of the Ohio State
returning to Ohio Stmc, lhm this is
grune. HolfZ said no.
just ru101her g;unc for ihe' lrish. But
"But there's no tioubt this is a
with the grune between the No. 7 big grune." he added.
Ouckeyes and No. 15 Irish only a
The hype over this gmnc ha.•
few r.lays away, Holtz ramc clean.
been building for months. It's been
'1llat g:unc mew1s a lol to mL' 60 years since the Irish upset Ohio
.:oming from the state of Ohio,"
State 18-13 in "The Grunc nf the
lloltz admined Mond:1y.
Century," and the Buckeyes are
llol1z grcw ~ ur in Ohio anti
still holding a grudge.
played football at Kent State. He
Holtz rememllers when he founo
'
spent one year (1968) as a11 assis- out his college t:oach played on the
tant at Ohio State untler Woody
1935 Buckeyes terun.
Hayes before getting his lirst bead
"I went to his oJ'Iice :Uld 1 said.
coaching job at William &amp; Mary.
'Coach, they tell me you were tile
The Buckeyes went I0-0 anJ starting end on that great team.'
NEW YORK (AP) - The house. '
won dle ruuinnal ch:unpionship tlu:
And he got so mad he won't even
motller
of Mike Tyson's 5-year-old
Kimberly Scarbomugh, 27, said
• year Holtz was there. 1l1cy won the . talk about it," Holtz Sllid. "Now .
daughter
says
the
lighter
held
her
in
papers filed Friday in state
Rose Bowl by defeating Southern that was like 40 years later. An&lt;l he
her
will
when
she
met
him
Supreme
Court in Manhattan that
against
Cal, wl1ich was led hy OJ. Simp- was still upset about that foothull
to
discuss
his
promise
to
buy
her
a
she
met
with
Tyson on Sept. 8 in
game."
·
son.
Holtz also was asked to applr
The feelings haven· t lessened on
for the Ohio State joh when Hayes. eilh-er side. Holtz has a file over··
AP High School Football Ratings
was tired in 1978.
flowing wil.h newspaper m1iclcs on
"So many memories from the the gmne, as well as lellers from
COlUMBUS (AP) - Huw a st:.ile
St. Mary 21'i. Ill. Brllevut' n IY, Bryan
11 20 (1ie), Minrrv01, llhricJu1vi llt' Cl~y­
ranc:lvf spurt~ writm unll brnadcWlten
first da9 there," Holtz said. fans. T-shirts touting the game
mon115 .
ratea Ohio hiLLh scho11l fo(J\ball team~ in
"Deing on a great staff ami being have been on sale at both schools·
the n~:und of eiflllll weekly 199.5 1\'IJUI;u-DIVISION I \I
&amp;~011 polls for Tiu: A.~soci~led Pres.s. by
I. Gt'rmanluwri V:JIIey V1t!W (2fl) 4-11 J42
part of Ohio State. working for bookstores since last spring, ano
2,0rrvillt'(II)4-0
•
~Ill
OHSAA division~. w i ~l won•lusl rccurd
Woody Hayes and being in your tickets wore next-to-impossible to
aad total ()\lints (iir:;t-pta~e votes in part'A·
l.Vt'rl0Dilk.~(~14oll
'11fT
'
4, Yollrllt,S. llrsulim.• OJ 4-U
2711
home state was just :l very. ve!ry get
~ICK'II):
S. Btdlairc (314-CI
176
OIVISION I
special thing."
The Irish will be able to leel that
ti, lronlnn (I) 4-0
U.l
I, Cleve . St. ll!ll:!hus I ~2) 4·0
40S
There was a time when Hol17 hostility the minute tlley step into
2. Wetiwrvill~ Sou!lr (2) 4-0
304
1, Akwn Munch~l\'f 4-fl
124
J, C.n. C!Mram (I) 4-U
291
I, Cin. Wyorninl,! J-1
107
di&lt;ln' t know if he' J be at dtc g:unc . Ohio Stadium, Holtz said.
(tie) Younv:;. B(,:~ri.lm:m t4) 4·0
291
9, Younes. Muuney J-1
tJ::!
After Holtz had emergency spitial
5. Kelln-1n~ FatrnM•nt ( I) 4-0
lf•9
10, Gn&lt;¥.1en . lndi:m Vall . ( 114.0 KIJ
Holtz said it will be a lot like
6, Cin. Elder II l 4-11
HiS
. Otlltr.~ ret't-L.vintt I:! ur lllllrt' flUIIils· II.
coni surgery two weeks ago, doc- 1989, when No. I Notre Dame
7. Tnl. St. John's 3-l
137
N~wilrk L1l'k1n~ Vallry 46. 12. Clrvt.
tors told him he'd be out three traveled to No.7 Miruni.
8, Ma.~iSillon Wa.~hint-ttun l-1
IJII
Ben~li~:tine 311 . 13, Ca~lali~ Margarrna
SOUTH BEND, Ind . (AP) Finally, U1e truUl is oul. The Ohio
State game is espcdally big for
Nntre Drune coach Lou Holtz.
Holtz has been saying &lt;~I season
that he hasn't had time to think
abo ut what it' s going to be like

Pedro Martinez of Montreal, David
Cone, Jhen with Toronto, Mike
Morgan of St. Louis and Paul Wagner of Pittsburgh all lost no-hitters
in Lhe linal inning.
Castillo pitched 6 1-3 perfect
innings in a win over San Francisco
on June 15. In 1990, as a minor leaguer for the Cubs, he pitched a
seven-inning no-hitter for DoubleA Charlotte.
Astros !O,i'irates 5
A crowd of only 11,142 at Lhe
Astrodome saw Houston hold on
after nearly blowing a six-run lead.
Dave Magadan hit a two-run
single in Lhe lirst inning and singled again in tile third as tile Astros
took a 6-0 edge. Pittsburgh came
back in the liflh witll live straight
singles off Shane Reynolds, scoring five times . .
Doug Brocail (6-3) relieved
Reynolds and stopped Lhe flood of
hits, sending the Pirates to their
fourth straightlO-&lt;s.
MeL&lt; 2, Reds I
A wet night and a wild pitch
upset the NL Central champions .at
SheaStadimn. ·
'
The score was tied at I when
Jose Vizcaino scored on a wild
pitch by Tim Pugh in the bottom of
the sixth. Cincinnati assistant manager Ray Knight was ejected after
Lhe play tor arguing about the bad
weatller.
Reds manager Davey Johnson,
who had been complaining to plate
umpire Bob Davidson about the

figures to be an important p~t· of said. "It was an ugly gwnc from
Boston's ro41tion in the postseason the sl'\Ct and tlley just weren't able -~
- along with Clemens and Tim to overcome the runs we scored
. Wakefield. In his last kw starts, early."
Hanson mixed in some curveballs,
Man Murray (0-1) took the Joss
attempting to see how his elbow for Boston while Greg Gohr (1-0l.
would respond.
the third of four Detroit pitchers.
"If we weren't in ·the playnffs, I worked I 1-3 innings of relief to
would have certainly gone out gain the win.
Lhere," Hanson said. "It's nnthipg Twin&lt; 6, While Sox 1
serious. I can pitch .. They just
At Minneapolis, Rich Robertson
didn't want me 10 for obvious rea- survived a bases-loaded. none-out
sons."
jain in the frrst ru1d pitchc&lt;l the lirs1
The Tigers took -advantage of complete grune or his tnajor leagu~
three errol'S by Boston and scored career.
six runs in the third. The key'hit
Robertson (2-0) struck nut six
was Travis Fryman's second gram! and walked two for his second win
sl~ against Boston this ~:tson.
. in two starts since being recalled
. There were a lot o! mtstake&gt; ·,'frem Salt Lake two weeks ago_
tomght by both clubs: · Fryman

Jr. Hi Defenders win pair
The Junior High Defen&lt;lm volleyball team captured two victories at Cheshire Kyger to extend tlleir winning streak to ten matches
and raise their record to I0-2 overalL In the first match against
Cheshue Defenders rebound to win 15-4 and Lhen cruised to a tllird
game victory of 15-5. Abby Meyn paced the Defenders with 8 serving points (6 aces) along with Courtney Gooch's 8 points (5 aces).
They were supported by Miranda Simmons - 6, Lizzy Howard - 4,
April Agustin -4, and Laura Pollard - 3.
The second match featured OVCS versus Bidwell Porter. Wilh
Lhe score tied at 10 in Ute lirst game, tile Defenders ran into a wall
and could not convert serves into points as the Pirates ran off 5
straight to win 15-10. Onl-e again the Defenders bounced back in
. game two to win a close I S-13 decision ru1d rolled to an early 10-3
lead in game Lhree. The Pirates made a valiant come back before
OVCS closed the door at 15-11. Simmons fueled the fire with 8
serving points (4 aces) followed by Gooch - 7 (4 aces), Pollard - 7,
Amanda Petrie- 5, Agustin - 5, and Meyn- 3.
The Junior High Defenders play next Tuesday, Oct 10 as they
host Hannan Trace and SouUtwestem.

Allegation against Tyson not true, lawyer says

St. Ignatius still tops in
Division I; Ironton, Jackson
move up in weekly ratings

9, Cin. St. Xavier 3-1
711
10, W. 0\~:t&gt;ltr Lalw1a 4-0
5ti
Otllt'r~ rrctivinK 12 or rnure roints.: II ,
Lakewood S 1. 12. Daytnn Mtadowdple
35. I 3, Troy 2?· 14 (tie), Bruru;wick, Can·
ton MrKinley :n 16. D:lyloo D.lnhar 20.
17, Piqua 19. Ht , Mansn~lll Madi.Oj()n \7.
19. Euclid lllO. Llmtll.'lln 12.
DrviSION 0
. 1, Chardnn ( 12) 4-0
322
2. Cuy. Fall~ W01!str Jt'~ott (t\]4·11
Jll
3, Celina (5) 4-0
2~41
4 , Sleubt:nvill~ (J) 4-11

COLUMBUS (AI') - Call it close second in Division ll. Clyde.
tile St. Ignatius Bounce.
Hamilton Badin and Hillsboro
Cleveland St. l~natius' s domi- remained 1-2-3 in Division 111. ·
natiun in Division I nf the Associ- Germantown Valley View anti the
atcd Press state football poll is sn next three teams in Division IV
complete lllat team~ losing to the were the same, Cincinnati
Wildcats don't losl'! that much Mariemont again led Amanda·
ground.
Clearcreek In Division V and St.
At least it would secin th;u way Henry remained No. I in Division
after glancing at the scwnd of eight VI.
weekly AP polls reka.&lt;ed Tuesday.
Tile top nine teruns in Division
St. Ignatius, winner of five of 11 "!ere unchanged except for a
the last six AP titles and six of swi,tch of positioqs bel ween new
seven playoff titles. backc&lt;l up ils No.3 Celina ru1&lt;1 No.4 Steubenville.
No. I ranking in the first poll by
1The biggest gainers or the poll
were Colerain in Division I and
beating Toledo St. J&lt;lllll's D-29.
Three other teams in the big- 1 0ak Harbor in Division lll, both up
schonl top 10 also lost . But while , four slots, while Westerville SouUL
St. John's dropped only one spot, Youngstown. Boardman and Kellerfrom sixth to seventh, it actually ing Fairmont (all Division 1) .
gained 15 point&lt; in lhe b;~loting .
Akron Coventry (Ill), Ironton (IV)
No.2 Cincinnati St. Xavier was and Marion Pleasant (V) each
beaten by No.7 Cincinnati Colerain climbed three positions.
and fell seven sputs, third-rankc&lt;l
Clyde was the only leader to
Massillon Washingtmlost 21-20 to expand its advantage, from 50 tn
Mansfield Senior •md dropped live 52 points over Badin. St. Ignatius'
rungs.andNo.IOPiquawas&lt;lcfeat- lead dropped from 114 to 101
ed in two overtimcs by Clayto11 points, Chardon's from 14 to 1 t
Norlhmont 20-17 anti did a freell~l points over Walsh Jesuit, Valley
to 17th.
View's from 46 to 24 ppints.
While there were wholesale M:rriemont's fmm 69 to 45 and St .
cl•1nges in Division I, the tnp spots Henry's lead shrrutk from 1)3 points
were the same in the other five to 86 over the new No.2.
divisions: Chardon was first and Mogadore.
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit a

Powers, Harris honored by NCC
CLEVELAND (AP) - Wittenberg tailback Aaron Powers and
Eartham strong safety DuJuan Harris have heen selected the players
of tbe week in the North Coast
Conference.
Powers, a junior from New Bremen, rushed 26 times for 172 yards
and two touchdowns in a 31-17
victory over Allegheny: He scored

on a 63-yard run on the game's
second play and also scored on an
8-yard run.
·
Harris, a senior from Olivette,
Mo., bad six tackles and an interception in a 7-3 victory over Case
Reserve. He also deflected a pa~s
in the end zone on a fourth-andgoal play from lhe Earlham I.

31 1,4. Sprink!.fidd Kt!nlon RiJre 29.
1$, Purililnuulh Wc11l 27. 1(,, Bdl~rouk

(I)

20. 11, Milan Edison 19.
UIVISJON V,

I, Cin. Marit"mr:• nl (l2) 4-11
37S
2. Arnanda -OemTt-elt (Ill 4-0
BO
3, Lorain Clt"'.:.rvi.,..w (I) 4-lf
2411
4, Carey (3} 4-0
237
S, CDiurub1ana Crr~h•11:w 4-0
217
6, Manun Plt'~IH 4·0
ISS
7, L•slx&gt;n Andl·r~•n (:?14-U
149
II, Wdlsville (I) J-1
[()(,
IJ, Sleuhrnvlr Calh Cenl. ( I } 3-1
1():1
I 0, Sullattrt•t•k GaraWOI't' 4-CI
(o4
0\ho:r~ f&lt;"Ct'IVilll(l2 ur murt' pu•lllli: I I,
Wor:•\J.o.litlll Munrut• Ccnl . (2) ~J . 12 , Lu . co.~villc Vullt'y (I) 41 . I 3. Cl&gt;ltlwaler 21 ,
14 (tie), Ehrrnrt W•~•dn~~o•re. Nt·w IJintlun
Ill . 16 (111'), Cu~l Gn.1vll' Datw~un•
Bryunl, Delkmce Tinnru. Ddplu~~ Jdfrr·
sun 17. 19, Smilhville 16. 20, New Miliamora~ Fruntier 14 . 21. Rock:y River
LuUl~:r::~n West (I) 13 22 (tie), Bainbridv,e
Paint Valley, Glousler Trimble 12.

::!4!1
22.~

'·Akron Buchtel4-{1
6, Cols. DeSalt's 4-0

203
17;ii

7.0u~linSciotu((•l4-fl

II, Uniontnwp Lakt' 4-11
9, Bell~fnntainc 12)4-()

142
1~1

10, Jau·klon (II 4·D
!11
Others receivin~ 12 ur IIIOfli!' pnims : II .
Winter~ville Indian Crl•t:k (I) 41. 12 (lie).
Amhent Slet'll.', Ww~hlnalun Courl
llouM Ml~~.mi Tun l'- 14 (lit), Bowlin¥ Grt'en, Cnl!&lt;i. W~~~~on 17. lA, M:.Kii·
1on 14. 17, A!.::rnn Springril·ltll3. Ill,

DIVISION VI

Solon 12 .

OlV ISION Ill
1, Clyde (2J) 4-0

I, St. Henry (32) 4•0
2. Mogadore (I) 4-0
3, Danville (1) 4-0
4. Cin. Counlry Day {1) 4·0

376

2. Hilmi liOn n..~.hn {II) 4-0
3, ~liltsboro (3) 4-0
4 , Umdun (4 ) 4-CJ
S, Akron C'I&gt;Vrnlry 4-0

404

311
2.57
246
5, Pur111111oulh Notrt Damt (2) t-1 111
6, l..clwcllville (2) •o
167
1, Norwoali Sl. Paul (1) 4-0
134
II. New Wa.,h. Bucltc!ye Ctnl. 4-0
124
9, Coiumb~.a Grov• 4-0
\04
10. McDonald 3-1
55
DtMI'll rectivina 12 or rmrerintJ: II,
OuJ:~ Hardi11-Narthern 29 . 1 • Newo.ri
CaU'I. 2.5. JJ. Covinaton 24. 14 (lie). N.
l.xwisbura Triad (1), Richmond Ht.. 23.
16 (fle), Beallsville, Minster 22. 18 ,
Edgerton 20. 19, New Bremen lB. 20, N.
Bal!tmore 1121, DeOrnffRivmide 12 . .

324
294
2:l4
i H4

6,(la~llartlur(ll4 -0

Dl
1 , Mt'nlnr lo'lkr Cal h. i I ) 3-1
121)
I, Comtun Ct'l'll C:llh. ~ - I
tl4
9, Avon Lake 4-fl
S!l
I O,lRI;~wOift' Olt'rnan~y 4-0
S7
Olhel'l' rel·e ivllltl. 12 ur mun: puinl~ : II,
Alliilllce Marl in t~.Lun (I J 3l 12 (lir). 8t'loi1 We.~t Branch (1). Twinshurtt.Cham·
bt-rl in 32 . 14, fho~t'lhan.J 3 I . l S, l11arUon
Nmre Duri'II!·CA~Iht:dral Lalin 30. H•.
Hamilton Ru~&gt;S 2\.1. 17. Abon St. Vincenl-

&gt;~--=~'~6

-~

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CLEVELAND (AP) - Muskingum tailback Josh Perkins and
Hiram linebacker Eric Johnson
have been selected the players of
tile week in the Ohio Conference.
Perkins, a sophomore from
Caldwell, rushed for 142 yards on
21 carries in a 31-11 victory over
Capital. He .also scored a touc·h-

•
'

./).«tins htl&lt;l.

•

•

: ;s:re.

Phone 992-4484

g'~

Rondy J-1.

Mgr.
Rllph Fowtor,llochllntc

.• »K

together a rematch of game I
against Southern Slate _Freshman
Kerrie Rainey led a 12 hit auack by
going 3-for-4, as tlley held on for a
12-to-8 victory.
The championship game was
against Mid-Ohio Conference
opponent Malone College. Senior
H-eather Brining and Sophomore
Missy Sisson led a 17 hit performance by going .3-for-3 respective- ·
ly and totaling live runs batted in.

While, Fresbman pitcher Brenda ·
Brady gave up three hils as Rio
Grande defeated Malone College
14-to-0.
The Redwomen had an overall
baning average of .3~8. led by
Heather Bnnmg who hn an aston;
isbing .700.
The Redwomen travel to
Pikeville, Kentucky on Saturday ·
September 30 for lhe Pikeville Col~
lege Tournament.
-

Brown's Rison feels great after win over Chiefs
CLEVELAND (AP) - What
would have been a bad day for
Andre Rison· in Atlanta turned out
10 be a breaklbrougb game for him
in Cleveland.
Rison, who was little more than
a high-priced decoy in his first
three games with the Browns,
caught four passes and scored his
ftrSt Cleveland 1ouchdown in Sunday's 35-17 victory over the
Kansas City Chiefs.
.
''In Atlanta. four catches for 35
yards, I might have been mad,"
Rison said. "Four eatcbes here, 35
yanls, a touchdown and a win over
K.C.- I feel great."
The Browns, hoping to liven up
an offense Lhat has ranked no higher than 16Lh in tile league in Bill
Belichick's four seasons as coach,
·tured Rison to town during Lhe offseason by giving him a five-year,
$17 million contract lhat made him

the highest paid receiver in the

NFL.
But until Sunday, Lhey had litOe
to show for their money. Rison
went imo Lhe game with live catches for 47 yards.
Still, he insisted be wasn't
annoyed that Vinny Testaverde
couldn't seem to lind him. Rison, a
four-time Pro Bowl receiver, tends
to attract a lot of attention from
defenses, and the Browns have
spent Lhe last two years convincing
Teslaverde not to tllrow high-risk
passes into crowds.
Against Kansas City, the
Browns appeared to be intent on
making Rison earn his keep. The
third play of the game was a ISyard reception thai equaled his
longest of the year; three plays
later. Testaverde found him for a
10-yard completion on third-and-5.

Eve_n so, Belichick said Monday
tllat Rison emerged more by accident than by design. There was no
concerted effon to get him lhe ball,
Lhe coach said.
"Not really. In fact, on a couple
of those plays, he was really an
outlet receiver, and it just worked
out that way," Belichick said. "On
one that he caught on lhe sideline;
he was probably lhe tllird choice."
Rison's play wasn't entirely
reflected in his statistics . In the
third quarter, be drew a 29-yard
pa~ interference penalty on Dale
Carter Lhat set up a 4-yanl touchdown reception, his first ID of the
year.
He scored 60 times in his previous stx NFL seasons wilh Atlama
and Indianapolis.
"Two weeks ago. Andre had a
great week of practice, but we
weren't able to get him Lhe ball in

· the Houston game," Testaverde

said. "This past week he made up
his mind to go out and have another
good, solid week. and he gave me
confidence in him.
"To tell you lhe truth, 1 wasn't worried about it I know if we can
get him lhe ball, he is a great talen~
and be is going to do some greac
things with it. I just have to go
through my reads as the plays are
called, and if it happens to be his
number that gets called, tllen he's
going to get the baiL"
For his pan, Rison seems content to blend in with the rest of
Cleveland's receiving corps. He
still ranks fourth on the team in
receptions.
"I'm pulling so much for the
othe~. gurs. and Utey're pulling for
me , Rtson satd . "!just go to
work.''

Gov. Voinovich declares Cincinnati Reds Day
COLUMBUS (AP) - Move
over, Cbief Wahoo. It's the Reds

- ~.----Sports

day at bat.

Gov.

George

Voinovich

briefs----

major league baseball's players of
BASEBALL
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Kevin Lhe week.
Left-bander Johnsnn was 2-0
McOatchy, backed by some of the
city's most influential business- with a 0.59 earned run average last
men, neared an agreement to buy week while pitching the M:rrincrs
the Pittsburgh Pirates during a into firstpface in the AL West. He
four-hour meeting with tlie current . also struck out 25 batters in 16 1-J
innings to earn AL player honors
owners.
Pirates chairman· Vincent Santi for tile third time this scuson.
Siteflicld won NL hmmrs by hitsaid the owners arc "very optimistic we can get this done" and ting .471 with three hnmers 1md lfJ
have instructed him to reach a deal RDls.
with McClatchy.
FOOTBALL
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) NEW YORK (AP) - Seaitlc
Mariners pitcher' Randy Johnson Deion Sanders underwent success·
and outfielder Gary Sheffield of tlte ful surgery on his left ankle, the
Florida Marlins were chosen as Dallas Cowboys said.

..
••
_,
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AND

declared Monday "Cincinnati Reds
Day" in Ohio to honor baseball's
oldest team for clinching the
National League Central Division
title early Friday.
"Today, I join all Ohioans in
congratulating Lhe Cincinnati Reds
on capturing their division tide and
for a great season," Voinovich said
in a news release.
Voinovich paid a similar tribute
to the Cleveland Indians on Sept.
II, leading some Reds' fans to
accuse the fQrmer Cleveland mayor
of favoritism.
But Voinovich spokeswoman
Kathie Fleck said Voinovich was
simply waiting for the Reds to win
their division.
The Indians were lhe frrst team
to win a division this year, running
away from the rest of lhe American
Lea.gue Central.

Flags representing both teams
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captured first place in their divisions earlier in the summer.

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Freshman pitcher Lori Philpot
gave up two runs in game 2 to
defeat Walsh 12-to-2. The Redwomen complied 13 hits led by
Freshman Michelle Ulmer who was
3-for-4.
Freshman Shellie Weiner and
Sophomore Bobbi McGhee were
both 2-for-3, as the Redwomen
took their Lhird straight victory with
a 8-to-7 Win over Malone College_
The semi-final game brought

AC7

as lechnotogy

•

.''
'

The University of Rio Grande
softball team won the Second
Annual Rio Grande Fall Classic
Saturday. The Redwomen won tbe
IOumament with a record of 5-0.
The first game was against tbe
Soutllem Slate Community College
Lady Patriots. Rio Grande was led
10 a 8-to-7 victory by a fine performance at tile plate by Sophomore,
destgnated hitter, Roxanne Sagle,
who was 2-for-3 with two runs
scored.

PUBliC

down and moved into a tie for the ::
OAC lead in rushing (109.7 yards ; ~
per game) as lhe Muskies moved to •
3-0 for the first time in four years.
•
Johnson, a . junior from '
Jamestown, N.Y., had 12 tackles ·•
including one for a loss and broke
up a pass in. a 24-0 victory over ..
Heidelberg. It was Hiram's first
shutout in the OAC since 1966.
·;

• COMPLETE

808 W. Main St. Pomeroy, OH 45769
v. mile Down River from Pomeroy Bridge

,.. •• ,Auto SaiH Inc. 08A

Sept. 15 from Tyson's lawyer, :•
Rohen Hirth, asking that the check
be returned.
·
Scarborough said that &lt;tfter she ··.•
arrived at King's house, Tyson, the ;,~
father of her daughter Michael •
Lorna "Mickey" Tyson, "detained'•
and imprisoned" her to 1&lt;1rcc her to . ~
sign documents she had 'never seen. ·~
The papers apparently were ':;
intended to get her to waive or ·•
renegotiate rights she got under ;.:
prior agreements with the former .;
heavyweight chrunp, accor&lt;ling to :~
the court papers.
· :,:
Scarborough said she tried to ~
leave and Tyson told her, "No nne ;.,
is going anywhere until we get this :~
... straight." After about 20 min- ' ~
uJes, she said, Tywn unlocked the : ~
doors and told her tl) get out.
·•

Perkins, Johnson OAC honorees

-.

'

au,

Lhe Manhattan townhouse of bo•ing promoter Don King, Tyson Wf"
to give her the $450,000 balance
for a $550,000 house he had agreed
to buy for her in New Jersey,. she
said.
'
Tyson's attorney, Robert Hirth,
said Scarborough's allegations
ahout being held arc "absolutely
untrue. It never happened." He
added: "The allegation that he
agreed to buy Ms. Scarborough a
house is utter nonsense.·· ·
Tyson, 29, spent almost three
years in ..prison in Indiana for the
Tape of beauty contestant Desiree
Washington.
A $100,000 check dated Sept. 1
and said to be the down payment
for the bouse was tiled with the
lawsuit, along with a letter dated

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Area sports briefs___, Redwomen win softball tourney with 5-0 mark

Cub hurler just misses no-hit, no-run effort
By BEN WALKER
AP Bastball Wrlltr
Frank Castillo pitched a game
he ' ll remember forever. Wall
Weiss played a game he'd like to
forget.
Castillo came within one strike
of a no-hitter, losing it on Beman!
Gilkey's triple ·wilh two outs in Lhe
ninth inning. Castillo tinished with
a one-hitter Monday night as the
Chicago Cubs beat St. Louis 7-0.
, "I was telling myself, 'Don ' t
get too excited, stay focused,"·
Castillo said. "I ligured 1had him
2-2 and I'll make the llest pitch of
the game. When 1 threw it, I was
trying to throw it through a wall.
and got it up."

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Noon- 6

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard
Nadon~~.!

(Gi vens Hi), 2:M p m.
Decroit (UfTIIl-1) Ill Boaloa (F.ahel·
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PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -The when the 49ers· defense stacked up
Detroit Lions, winless entering the to stop Sanders, completed 28 of
game and some fans calling for 42 for 291 yards and one touch·
coach Wayne Fontes· dismissal. down. Mitchell also ran for one .
delivered the biggest jolt of the Sanders was held to 24 yards on 17
carries.
NA.. season Monday night .
Mitchell "s 20-yard touchdow"
They beat the Super Bowl
·champion San Francisco 49crs 27 · pass .to Moore, followed by
24 when Doug Brien missed a 40· Mitchell's pass to P~rriJmm for the
yard field goal as time expired, the 2·point conversion. gave Detroit a
ball bouncing off the right upright.
24-17 lead with I 0:41 left in the
In sending San Francisco to its fourth quarter. But the Lions used
first loss of the season, Jason Han- their third and final timeout juSI
son kicked the winning 32-yard before Ute conversion .
field goal with 1:12 remaining and
But the 49ers, with Young hit·
the Lions prevailed, a•toundingly, ling 4 of 5 for 72 yards. including a
without a big game from Barry 32-yard toss to Rice, tied it 24-24
Sanders.
on a 26-yard touchdown toss from
The Lions began the winning Young to John Taylor with 5:53
drive on their 26 with no timeou" . remaining.
left. Scott Mitchell hit Herman
Fontes has been the target for
Moore for 12 yards, Brett Perriman frustrated fans. and Monday night's
for 22 and Aubrey Manhews fur . upset could not have been a more
· 11. That moved the Lions to the welcome tonic.
49ers· 16.
The Lions loolced like a carbon
Mitchell's sneak on third-and- I copy of the 49ers: using quick,
was shon by inches. But instead of short passes to keep the offense
going for the field goal. with 2:46 moving; keeping Sanders busy
remaining, Fontes signaled mostly as a decoy. Detroit tight
Mitchell tp go for it again. This ends, who bad only three catches
time he ' slid off right guard Davi&lt;l between them during the first three
Lutz for 2 yards.
•
games. had six in the first half
The Lions ( 1-3) then ran alone.
Sanders into the line three times,
After Brien missed a 47-yard
· each for no gain, ami Hanson c;une field goal attempt, Mitchell hit 7 of
on for the winner.
I 0 pas.es for 56 yards, four of
Before the go-ahead field goal. them to tight ends, to set up Hanthe 49ers had used their last time- son"s 30-yard field goal with 2:26
out. But with the game clock run- len in ·the tirst quarter. It was the
ning, the Lions snapped the ball for first time the 49ers had been scored
Hanson's kick with more than 10 upon in the first quarter this season.
seconds left on the play clock. giv·
Chris Spielman picked off
ing the 49ers a&lt;lditional precious Young"s pass intended for Brent
seconds 10 move dnwnfield fnr Jones ahd the Lions made it 10-0
their last drive.
on Mitchell";; !-yard snealc early in
Then Steve Young. who has the second quarter.
directed so many winning drive!The 49ers answered with
for the 49ers. took his tum. Out of Brien's 23-yard field goal to make
timeouts, he marched the 49ers 0· it 10-3, but Hanson matched il with
I) from their own 20 to the Lions' a 38-yarder for a 13-3 lead.
22to set up Brien's try.
Young took the 49ers 85 yards
Young completed 27 of 44 pa"- in seven plays, completing 4 of 5
es for 349 yards and two touch·· for 81 yards, including two to Rice
downs, with one interception. Jerry for 58 yards. Nate Singleton"s
Rice had II catches for 181 yards. tough catch while being tackled by
It was Rice'·s 51st 100-yard grune. Robert Massey enabled the 49ers to
breaking Don Maynard's NFL close the gap to 13-10 at halftime.
record.
Mitchell. taking up lhe slack

Ann
Landers
"t995, lo$ AngMt
Tltnfll Syn.:Sieate tnd

Crmcra SyndiCI'Ie"

~IONS WIN • San Francisco's Doug Brien (4), lert, ·walks off
the field at the end or lhe game as Detroit linebackcer Tracy Hay· •
worth (99) reacts to their 27·24 upset win over the derendlng Super
Bowl champions Munday night In Pontiac, Mich. Brien's field goal
attempt bounced oJl" ihe right upright as time expired, giving the ..
Lions their first NFL win ufthe year. (AP)

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T-..lld•)''• GIUinto~t

Callruuia (Bo~kic 7-6) 1111 SeaRle
(Btne. 6-1}, 3:35p.m

Deuolt (Niltowsl.:i 1-3) .11 Bollon
(Z.Smilh 7-1), 7:0.5 p.m.
Bollimore (MuuinA17·9) at Tornt.o
{Htntpn 10-12), 7:3S p;m
Clevelllltd (Naay 15·.5) Ill Minnesota
(Trombley 3-1), 8:05p.m
.
Nt'W Yort (Hitchcock 9-10) at Mil·
WllUkee (Karl S-6), 8:05p.m.
Chi~o (Fcmantltz 11-8) a1 Kan.141
City (Gordon 12-10), 8:05f.m.
·
Oatlanll (Stottltmyre 4-6) at Tr1ru
(Ore.~ 8·15), I:OS p.m

w........, •• c ...,••

New Yort (Cone 11·1) al Milwautee

VANCOl!VER
GRIZZLIESSiy:aed Bry-.mt Rrevt"~. ~;enter . tu a Uu-tcYCSJt contr:rt .
FOOTBALL
N~~ollooal Fmothull Leltfi.UII'
ARIZONA CARDINALS-Cioimrtl
Lanoe Brown. dt"ftnMivr b::.ck, on waiver~
from tht Pill stluryh Str:l'letli. WuJVt'ltl
Chr~ Muumalanlla. defellliiYe l:k'kle .
CHICAGO Dt!ARS -Wai n'tl Mike
Faulk.eu.on . rullt'oad;. . Activwtrd Sttve
Stenstrom, ~u:~nrrhl:tclr:. frum the prndke
1quOO. IIOCKE\'
N•llon11llltK'kfy L...uallf
NIIL-Susr~:nlll'tt ·or yun MlU'Ctmtent ,
Edmunlun 0Lil'r~ d rt'r11~crnan, for five
JW'llt$ wiUwut pay a.~ u result or a k.nttintt.
incidt"nt attains! the Winnirrlt J~ts on
St•rt. It!.

ANAHEIM MIGIITY DUCKS-.\5-

aian«l Jnhn Lillt"y, Dol~id S:..ccu and Mik.e
Manrlut. ltn wint~~ : Jnson M:nhull, tle·
fenlit'nmn : Byrua Pt'n~tur;k, vualie: nnd
Stan Pr()Dgrr antl Jarmd Sl.;::.lr.k. &lt;.~nlel'li .
lo Baltimore of IJit' AHL.

COLORADO AV ALANCHE-A~t·
ai)Jned Jr:m-FraUCIIil Lat'ol'\e.
lo Cnrnwall uf U1e MIL.

~nulteni.lrr,

NEW JERSEY DEVIlS - As~ittn..:d
Brad Bornblll'i.lir, dt'Cen.'l'ruom; S~:1Jtt fltol·

ltrin, lc(t win~: ontl Sttve Su\liv-.m. ern·
ter, to Alt:&gt;any of tht A,HL.
NEW YORK ISlANDERS -As·
siynrd ~rd; Arrn~trtmtt iJnd 1\ntlrl.'a.~ Johllllliiii.Jn. crnters: [},.m Plnnt~: . n}!hl wtnr~:
Ju11on Strudwid;, tlrfrnst'm~n: :.~nd Eric
· Fichautl. l£nlllil'. 111 Wun:tllt~r nt' Ilk' A.lll.
.11nd Mkuh Atvw.utf. ccn11:r: ltu.:un Hener.
defenseman; and hmit" Mclt'OnliD,
aoolie.wlltuli ul. tJt~ IIIL
PITTSDltRGii PENGl!JNS-Rr·
Jewell Ev~cny Ou\'ytluv, Jdl win~. Mliw,ned PlnliJ1P" Dl:'kuu¥ille and l':.ltrick
Lalinlt', ~t~alit"s: Alt'Xci Kti¥chrnk••V and
Ser)Jci Vuronu¥. tl~{c-n~emen: anti Olt¥
Belov, centt"r, to Clevrl:anl.luf tho: Jill,..
AuiyDI!tl Grt'l! Antlru11uk. lk:ftnaeman, tu
~trnltuf Ute

OIL.

ST . lOUIS BLL!ES - Rca"~illnetl
P.o~lric~ Turtlif. l't'ntt'f, 11nd Otri~lt·r 01~ ·
~on . dt'ft'nsrmun, to Worcester 11f lht
AHL, untJ Stt'vr Stuiu~ . tlcfen~emun . tn
(Jrori.3 of Ult' JilL.

WASIIINGHJN CAPITALS-As•i&amp;ned P:ltrick Duileau, Brian Slar;ry .
Aletonclt-r 1\lureY nnd Yannu:k Jt'Jn. 1k·
{ewoen~~:o. to Ptlflland ut' Ull! AJIL.

Innovative clas.sn)(Un i11structi&lt;m
and technology in lhc classroom
were the topics of spcakers at 1hc
recent luncheon meeting or 1l1c
Meigs County Chap1cr or Retired
teachen; held atlrinily Chun:hc
Joyce Ann Ritchie. elemenl;u·y
teacher in the Southern Local
School District , talked ahout the
"Venture Capilal" progrrun which
she implemente&lt;l last year.
She presente&lt;.l to the gwup
objeclives, .approaches and new
ways of assessing student performance as a part of the program.
Ritchie said that educators involved
are committed to attempting fresh
approaches and active explormions
of ~undamental change in teaching

GLAMOUR PHOTOGRAPHY
IS COMING TO ...

MANE IMAGE
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3

12-16
Pose
Selection!

cious and ordered a number of
additional tellll. I thank God for my
wife's insistence because those tesiS
n:vealed cancer iD my left kidne)t
The urologist bustled me into the
hospital and removed the cancerous
kidney. That was five years ago.
There bas been no sign of cancer

since.
Ally wife who wants 10 keep her
bllSband around should harass him
until he gives in and gelll dtallcSt. I
would 1101 be ben: roday if my wife

hadn't been such a nag.- THANK·
PUL IN ORLANOO
DEAR ORLANDO: You also had
an eJ.Ce11ait doctiX Your leUa" makes
a SIIOng case for a complete &amp;Mual
physical. Thanks for saving several

NOW ONLY

Session Includes: Make-Up Artistry, Wardrobe Changes

m.uJ learning , assc:.. smcnt. govt:rnance, organization amJ prnfcs~i(m­
al development to insure that ··conditions of learning are right."
The goal is that improvement in
sludent learning· will be realized,
she said. This is one program being
utilize&lt;.! to help meet tl1e year 2000
National Educational Goals .
Rilchie stated that Southern Local
will receive $25,000 each year for
up Ill five years and her district was
the only one in the county to
receive the grant.
Nancy Larkins, Eastern High
math instructor, spoke on technology in education today . She began
by asking retired teachers to compare a classroom during their early

however, amazed at the munbcr of lreathless!y Slarted to discuss the idea
people who w'"* to disagree with as ill had just awakened with it. Ho
me. Thanks for a poignantn:joindet ·got the point. From then on, [
DearAnnLIIDders:SevcmlleCJcn received no more calls at home.
in your column have mentioned
bosses who intrude on. their
employees' lives, calling them
evenings and weekends. I once bad a
similar problem and solved it

discreetly.
I worked for a small electronics
company, and the president was a
brilliant man who would often get
idt.as in the middle of the night and
call me to review them. Those calls
became extremely annoying.
One day, I had an idea I knew
would intrigue him, but I saved it.At
3 a.m., I called him at home and

items in the community and are
responsible for expenses of the
husil) t:!SS.

Gifts of appreciation were presented to the two guest speakers.
Eil ee n Buck gave devotionals
before the luncheon se'lved by
members of U1e church.
During the business meeting
open health care enrollment made
available by the State Teachers
Retirement System was discussed.
Retired teachers will be given the
option of changing their health care
provider for the year 1996. An
update on STRS Board expansion
legislalion was rtviewcd.

Nellie Parker reported thai four
hooks have heen purchased by the

Meigs County Chapter and placed
in U1e county library in memory of
deceased members, Thelma Dill,
Carl Brannon. Mary Hysell, Betty
Roush, Helen Smith, Nan Moore,
Anna Hilldore and Mary ChapmM.
The recent deaU1 of Betty Hutchin,
SOl) wa.'\ noled.
Appointed to the ,nominating
commitlee were M:Jp{Jta Miller.
Martha Greenaway and &gt;Nellie
Pm'ker.
·
Members attendi-ng .were
Dorothy Woodard. Abbie Stratton.
Pauline Myers. Grat-e Weber, Jean
Alkire, Miller, Rachel ~pwnie,
Helen Williams. Farie Kennedy,
Eileen .Buck. Parker, Greenaway.
Kate Jarrell. Elma Loucks. Helen

118 Main St.

DELICIOUS

• SpiUFree Glass Shelves
• Gallon Deep Adjustable Door Bins
• Full Freezer Shelf

LB. box

2/SJOO

46oz.
Limit 2

$ugar

Jumbo Spread

$ 29

5# bag

' Glass Shelves
• Gallon Door Bins

Congress is so strange. Somebody gets up to speak and says
nothing. Nobody listens .. Then
everybody disagrees.

Limit 4

COCA COLA

KAHN'S

Products

Weiners·

***
Some pepple are fired wilh
enthusiasm. Others are dis·
charged very quietly.

WRS22WRC

***

r-------------------------------------------------------------------------------,
:
Bring this coupon when you come see the White-Westinghouse line of
:
appliances. Well send you a 35rnm camera and a roll of film just for looking.

:

!

: You must PRII\Yf legibly in order to qualify.
Camera &amp; Film '25.90 retail value.
,_,_1 I I I I I I I I I I I I 1.,,,.,_1 I I II I I I I I I I I ·---1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
:
1
u.,l I I I I I I I I I I 1.... w v.l I I ( I I I "'"""',_,( UJ.J) Ll.J.J- 1 I I I I
:
I
I
: .,,.,...,•-1 I I I I I I I I I I ""'"""I I I I I I I 'k&lt;l~•-"
.... .,....W/W
1

!

Please send $3 .00 shipping and handling to: White-Westinghouse CAmera off~r, PO Rm 3604-S$, Strongsville, Ohio 44i36.
JOOd lmm May I until Seplernbc1 30. tm whi~ su.,p;.:~ 1..1: _,I low A.lrl.....ek.o lor drliwry Thl' N:.l'lifbll' may 001

br: ""prud\Kl'd, traded 01' &lt;JIIinwo.: mkl,

""* acootnplny
ywr rc-qveJt. Not rt3p(lf~St bk fOf btc . IC*
mOOittt'lcd 11\llll Mute be 'ol'ilhdlted Wtth dc11cT
locatu1 ~nd dealer '!ANN~ Limit onr
nmers I"" NL~M, ~ rx otpnlli.Moon If you do 1'101 retttVe \'(ll.lr Cllmer:t~ "'-tc a.l1tT ft toe"Cb, plcut" Clllllnl-~72-«&gt;4~ f.,.- -ounce
l'lllmt

Of

Lb.

MIKE SELLS

SWEET SUE

Potato Chips

Chicken Broth

4.5 oz.

c

Limit 4

GROUND
Lb.

Chuck

99

4

I

:
I
I

I

L-------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
Dream Dl:':al S:n·in~ ~nd Offer ~pplicJ o~ IY. tQ selected mcrchandisc,,mduding all appliallCt':s shown he~ pl~s many other'!!.
Rccei'¥1: up to $1000 m U.S. Savm!l! Bonds for muluplc purchases. For full dc?tls a!)()l)t lhc !_)ream Deal ~t;__your Wh1tc -Wcsunghouse dealer.
~m IR:al Savings Bont1 O ffer runs through Deccml:ocr ] I, 1995. Spcctal Pnces and Free Carner.~ Offer ends Scprcmbcr JO, 1995.

MASON FURNITURE CO.
773·5592

c

c

•••

2ND STREET

c

• Crushed Ice &amp; Water Dispenser in Don.-

2 liter

I

3# tub

Limit 1 please

It's always the best policy to tell
lhe truth. Unless, of course,
you're an eKceptionally good liar.

•lid

25 oz.

$599

***

Offer

Fried Chicken
$1.99
PAR KAY

22 cu. ft. Side-By-Side Refrigerator

• 2 Full Width Glass Shelves
• Gallon Door Storage
• Full Freezer Shelf

BANQUET

GREAT LAKES GRANULATED.

Z'

22 cu. ft. Top-Mount Refrigerator

/

SNOW FLOSS

00

10#

,,

I
I

Maag. Ruth Stearns and Maxine:
Whitehead .
·.
Next meeting will be al the·
Trinity Church Saturday. Oct. 21.:
Senator Jrut L1mg will be the guest:
speaker. Retired teachers in thecounty arc
to attend. ;

Spt&lt;i1l Priet

WRTISRNC

I

otwllopttWlaclrecl:orii'IIHleyOifier
foT $5.25 (litis illcludes pollllge lllld
llandling) 10: Gems, clohul LaN/es,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicllgo,/11. 606ll.
0562. (Ill CIVIIIda, ullll $6.25.)

Tomato Juice

White Potatoes
c

l8 cu. ft. Top-Mount Refrigerator

:

clipped years ago yeUow willt age?.
For a copy of lrer most /rrqlli!lll/y:
nquested pomu tWl eSS&lt;JYS, sellll11.
ulf-6ddressed, lo111, biiSilleu-•w·

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1995

MANE IMAGE

us #1

:

. - SUDBUR.Y, MASS.
DEAR SUDBURY: Mcssagcnellt
indirectly arc often much mol"(
powerful. Thanks for a perfect·
example.
Is thai AM l..alukrs collUM yo•

Limited Appointments- Call Early

Masterblend Coffee
$599
34.5 oz.

Our lrlend says he usually tries
to take one day at a time, but
lately several days have
attacked him at once.

Rt. 124, Rnt.l, Ol 742·2211

education with a classroom or
today. Today students have access
to televisions. compuiers. word
processors, and video cameras for
usc in I heir learning.
She mentioned that plans are
heing made to initiale internet TV
in Eastl!rn classrcxHns in the near
future which will enable students to
interact with students in other
schools. not only in this country,
but as far away a&lt; Russia. Students
will :~so h:lve access to libraries :~1
over the world, she said.
Under the guidance of Larkiris
computer students of Eastern High
School have set up an entrepreneur
class in. which t~ey operate their
own print shop. They sell printed

MAXWELL HOUSE

Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture a====---'

Rutland Furniture

iDrmst your column that )X*d this
quution: If you had IOchoose, would
you rather be blind or deaf'1
I loll my hearing at age 13, but my
mother said I had 10 finish b)gh
school regardless, and I did. Yean
later, I became a hearing audiologist
near an Indian reservation.
One day, the chief of the Klamath
Indians entered my office accompanied by a beautiful Indian woman.
The chief needed to have his bearing
aid repaired. I supplied him with a
temporary aid so we could visit while
I was repairing his instrument.
He said he was grateful that I could
help him and then asked that same

question, "Wouud you llllbe£ be blind
or deaf?" I replied, "Without
question, fd rather be deaf. 1 love
seeing lhe sunseu, the rainbows and
the waterfalls."
He replied, "I would Dl1her be blind
•• in fact, I am blind." I was
astonished. He continued.- "Did you
see the beautiful woman who came
in with me? I knOw llhe is beautiful,
but what means more to me than
anything in the world is to heat her
say that llhe loves me."
I then UDderstood what it meat1t 10
be able to hear. •• CORVALLIS,
ORE.
tlo
DEAR CORVALLIS: I Stiu say, if
I bad to make a choice, I would1111her
have my eyes than my ears. I was,

Call For Appointment 992-3233

By
Dave

II WAIEIIOUSIS

roday.

Dear Ana LIIDden: I n:ad with

No Rain Checks
Will Be Issued

'9.95

Fun For All Ages!

The Ligbf
Toacl)

7 SHOWROOMS

li~

Session Fee '19. 99

COLUMBUS (AP) - A fisher· I
man from outside Ohio caught a
fish stocked out of state but still
bas set a record for largest brown
uout caught in state waters. · ,
Timothy L Byrne's catch of a
14.65-pound brown trout has been
certified as a state-record catch by
the Outdoor Writers of Ohio, the
sanctioning body for stale records.
Byrne is from Brooklyn, Mich.
His record trout bore a metal lag
identifying it as a fish released near
Dunkirk. N.Y., by the New York
Department of Environmental Con·
servation .
Byrne caught the fish July 15 in
the central basin of Lake Erie.
The previous record brown trout
weighed 14.22 pounds and \\las
taken in Lake Erie on Feb . 15,
1987. by Ron Vitz of Solon .

Batch, Dues MAC players of the week
TOLEDO (AP) - Eastern game. His 412 yards also broke the
Michigan quarterback Charlie school mark by 67 yards. His
BalCh and Toledo outside lineback· touchdown passes covered 25, 59
er Cmig Dues ba ve been selected and6yards.
Dues, a junior from Uniontown,
the playem of the week in lhe Mid·
intercepted
a pass and returned it
American Conference.
·eight
yards
for a touchdown in a
Batch. a junior from Homestead,
49·35
victory
over Nevada He also
Pa., completed 28-of-40 passes for
recovered
a
fwnhle
on Toledo's 5·
412 yards and three touchdowns in
a 31-20 victory over Ohio U.· The yard line to stop a drive and had
28 completions tied the school eight tackles. The Rocket defense
record and was the most ever by an forced six turnovers and had seven
EMU quarterback in a conference laekles for a loss.

Dear Au LaDden: Bcanse the
PSA teat saved my life in a
roundabout way, I believe my Slllry
is wcxth printing.
In 1990, my wife star1ed harassing
me to get a prostate exam. I had no
symptoms of any kind, but she
insisted, saying the prostate is the
most common site Cot cancer in men.
To get her olf my back, I went to a
tu0logist and had a PSA test dolle.
The doctor saw 10111elhing suspi·

Record·trout caught

A good carpenter is one who can
keep a straight face while
repairing a do-it-yourself project:

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Retired teachers hear program on innovative classroom instruction

FALL 'h PRI(;E SPE(;(AI..

·

lroct.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Testimony of how a wife's harassing
saved
husband's life ·~
.
..

Winless Lions
upset 49ers 27-24

SE.AITLE Sl! PF.RSONICS-S1~nnl
Sherell Funl, .t'urwartl.lu :IIJII'ee-yt•ar t•un-

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(Rapp 13·7);7:0S rutt.

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l'11111llon~~ol B;&amp;.&lt;jkll'lhall A!l!$oo:l1111iun

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NEW YORK YANKEES-Acquiml
Rict Honeycun. pitl·her. from the O.:.k·
land Athletic~ fur c:.h. Ocsi~nlllttl Jdf
P1111enun. pitrher, fnr :l.'l.!~ittnrn~nt .

WHnud~~oy'• Glllllll's
St. Luui~ (WatM•n

Mt~utte;d (C . I\:r~z

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san Die~oo . .. ...m 72
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Faoc.oll

Tuesday, September 26, 1995

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 27, 1995 ONLY

MASON, WV
•

�· Page 8

• The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, September 26, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 26, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page-9

Dairy Barn announces fall art classes for children, adufts
. : : A variety of ins activities for
: : botb cbildren and adults are being
: · l&gt;lfered Ibis fall at the Dairy Barn
· : Cultural Ans Center in Athens in
conjunction witb The Illustrator's
Art exhibition to be featured Sept.
29 tbrougb Nov. 5.
The Illustrator's An exhibition
features six internationally known
illustrators of children's books.
Sylvia and Kenneth Marantz of
Columbus will give a short lecture
and lead a discussion Saturday

from I 0:30 am. to noon. They will
compare the original art work to
the children's books featured in tbe
exhibition. Kenneth Marantz bas
been an art teacher and professor of
Art Education for 45 years at New
York State, University of Chicago
ami as chair and professor in the
Art Education Department at The
Ohio State University. Sylvia
Marantz has been involved with
books, children, and libraries for
more than 40 years. The

lecture/discussion is free with paid
admission to the exhibition. . .
The Saturday morning workshops will continue in October for
chiluren in grades kindergarten
through six. lnlltructors Elizabeth
Foley and Mark Tomzac will lead
children in hands·on activities
including clay, printmaking, and
illustrations. Classes will be held
the four Saturday mornings in
October from 10 to II :30 a.m. in

the Ann Howland Arts Education ages 12 through adult. Miller will
demonstrate how to make four to
Center in the Dairy Bam.
The Dairy Barn will also spon- six different types of books. Miller
sor two book-making workshops is a gniduate of The Ohio State
with 1oyce Miller on Saturday, University and has taught bookNov. 4. The morning session will binding since 1985.
Throughout October, the Dairy
be 10 a.m. to noon for children
ages eight to 12."Miller will show . Barn and the Athens Public Library
children how to sti tch a book and will sponsor storytelling sessions.
make an accordion folded book. The Dairy Barn will have storyThe afternoon session will be from telling hours on Wednesdays at 4
1:30 to 4:30p.m., and is geared for p.m., Fridays at I p.m., and Satur-

-Society scrapbook- --Revival sin
.

LAUREL CLIFF NEWS
Recent guests at the home of
· Mrs. Ann Ma&lt;h were Sharline, Pat.
· Kelly, and Samantha Johnson of
Reynoldsburg; Burdell mtu Beverly
Brafford of Columbus: Chuck
Mash, Dawn and Loren Swick and
Michelle, all of Reynold sburg :
Christie, Billy, and Vmtessa Crane:
Susie, Wayne, and Jesse Pullins:
Dwight Cullums; Bert Ma.&lt; h. and
Mike Lightfoot .
Mr. and Mrs. Kengil Scranton,
Darbie, Arimas, &lt;~lld Joruon. or
Columbus, were wecken&lt;.l guests of
Mr . an&lt;.! Mrs . Jes Gilmore and
attended the Dorst reunion. Darhic
and Arimas stayed for a longer visit
with their grandparents.
Mrs. Sandy Gilmore spent the
weekend visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Gi~nore .
Mr. ruul Mrs. Emest Van lnwa·
gen spent an evening visiting with
Mrs. CliiTord Jacobs.
Mr. and Mts. Paul Marr and Mr.
and Mrs. Emest Van Inwagen spent
Sunday in Parkersburg, W.Va.
WALKER ANNIVERSARY
Michael and Sandra Walker or
Rutland will celebrate their 25th
wedding anniversary Monday.
· . Mr. and Mrs. Walker were mar.
. ·ried on Oct. 2, 1970 at tlte Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church, with the
: Rev. Leland Haley officiating at
: the weding cerem.ony.

Sports Connect

Mr. and Mrs. David Leach of
Marietta announce the birtb of a
son, Jaron David, Aug. 15 . He
· weighed 6 pounds, 7 oul!ces and
measured 20 inches long.
Mr. and Mrs . Leach have a
daughter, Shaina Dawn, four.
Maternal grandparents are ~­
artd Mrs. Don Roush of Columbus.
and paternal grandparents are Mr.
artd Mrs. James Farley of Marieua,
artd David Leach of Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Fife artd Walter Roush of Middleport, and the

·

annual reunion at th~.: SyracusL:

The Messenge•·s of
Mt. Union Baptist
Church of Cari"'ntor revival services Wednesday through Sunday,
6:30 p.m. each evening. The church L&lt; located on County Road 10,
Carpenter Hill Road. Rev. Mike Thompson will be the evangelist
and tl1e pastor, .1"" N. Sayre, invites the public.

.

Municipal Park .
The Rev. Paul Voss ha&lt;.l prayer
preceding the dinner.
Attending were Amy, Jessamyn,
and Shauna Reynolds; Junior Peteery, Kenneth Mowery, John and
Donna Wilson, Jim and Donna
Crump, Paul, Bev, Andrea, Timo·
thy and Andrew Voss: David,
Brian, and Bmn&lt;.lon Ke:m1s; Rllon,
da and Sarah Felly; Thomas,
.

By LYNN ELBER
AP Television Writ or
LOS ANGELES (AI'&gt;- Telc·
vision is taking heat l!&gt;r being vio·
lent, sexist, oversexed and more,
with the medium's collective
knuckles soundly rapped by all
manner of critical Miss Manners.
Go to it, we say. a• shmneless as
anyone in jumping in on the latest
socio-psycho-poli 1ical ctiquelte

-~

JARONLEACH
paternal great-grandparents is
Mamie Stephenson, Pomeroy.

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
. Starting Sept. 17
1 p.m.
Factory Choke
guns only.
Will shoot through
March '96

Sheryl. Joshua Abby, an&lt;.! Jacob
Wilson; Ephriam mtd Kathy Henl·
man, Walt an&lt;.! Betty Wilson:
Joshua and Jonath:m Rohcrts;' Abi ·
gail and Roy Johnson, and Ed and
Mary Voss.
Cards were signe&lt;.l for Ethel
Hysell in Ashley, mt&lt;.l Leonard and
Anna Wilson in St. Augustine, Fla.
Officers elected were Donna
Crump, Rhonda Fetty, an &lt;.I Kathy
Herdman. Next year's reunion will
be held on Sept. 21 nt U1e park.

•

craze.

But what about the smaller

annoyances television visits on

viewers? Call us petly. call us

~Community
The Community Cal•ndar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wi.&lt;hing to
announce m~eting and spedal
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers or any. type. Items
are printed as space permit• and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific nu1nber of days.
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Orgrutization will meet
Tuesday, at Star Mill Park, 6:30
p.m. New members are welcome .

Weaver marks
pirthday
. Michelle Anne Weaver, daughter of Patty Weaver, Midulepnrt,
and the late Man Weawr. was hun·
ored recenlly on her scvenUt hirlh·
day with a party at McDon:~d's .
· Happy meals, c:tkc and icc
·cream were servcil.
· Altending were her mother,
Teresa Cremeans, Nikki and
Z1chary Whitlatch, Paula lmu .larft,d Hall, Trunmy, Jessica and .lillian Lyons. Tammy an&lt;.! Brittany
Cremeans, Steven Hudson, Melia,
Cassi and Donnie Wh:m, JoDcth
and Katie Rodehaver, Casey Winter, Eric Van Meter, Erinne
Kennedy, and David Poole.
· Sending gifts were Barham and
Robert Smith, Jodie :Utd Dale Lilly,
Sue, Abe and Ki&lt;.l Gruescr, Dill an&lt;.!
Betsy Weaver, Shirley Smith, Joel
Lynch, Brad Young and Gertrud
Kaltenb:tch.

News policy
· In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily TribuM and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date or tbe
event
All club meetings and otber
oews articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
)le submitted within 42 days of the

oa:urence.

AU material submitted for publication is subject to editting.
'

SMITH'S
CONSTRUaiON
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
•New Homes

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

POMEROY - Drew Webster
American Legion Ladies Auxiliary
Post 39 meeting Tuesday. 2 p.m. at
the Legion Hall.
RUTLAND - Meigs Local
Board of Education regul:u· meet·
ing Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Rutl:utd Elementary School.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Wildoowd Gar·
den Club. Wednesday. 7:30 p.m..
home of Belly Millman .
RACINE - Reo Oush Church
of Christ, Dashan Rna&lt;.!, gospel

fire drills or 5 o'clock get people
moving like thai.
-Exclusive reports that aren't.
"Tonight, only on 'Entertainment
Tonight!' "Tonight, only on
Extra!" That's the siren song from
these dueling inside-Hollywood
shows.
But U1e "exclusives" are &lt;.lupli·
Cales. such as interviews wilh
Sharon Stone hyping her latest
film. Maybe t.he exclusive part wa&lt;
getting to sec Stone's glmnorous
movie wardrobe up 'close (lurunm.
no lingerie shots). Maybe it was the

lame banter bet~ccn Stone an&lt;.! moniker, like those hestowed on
crew members.
Lucky Luciano, Bugsy Siegel and
Granted, entertainment sconps Dutch Schultz?
aren't on a par with, say, WashingNot the news media, certainly,
ton revelations about politicians even when the honoree seems borand the women they grope. But derline. Take Craig "Tony The
c'mon, even gossip addicts have Animal" Fiato, a mob infBrmant
standards: no real &lt;.lirt, no unreal who got to kick up his heels in the
hype.
O.J. Simpson trial chorus line.
Send both shows 10 a 12-stcp
It's a grim portent, especially
-with
1996 an election year. Swanns
~~~~~:~;t r~~:. - an&lt;.! to uig ur, ·
of Clinton, Dole rutd other political
-Nicknames for those who relatives could chitter the sitcom
haven't earneu them. Who can lrutdscape.
resist a gangster's colorful

calendar-

meeting, Wednesay luhrough Sunday, 7 p.m. with Sunday services at
10 a.m. and 6 p.m .
ThURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Preceptor
Beta Beta meeting Thursday, 7
p.m. at the Oho River Dear Co. in
Middleport.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club meeting Thursday ,
7:30p.m. at home nf Ruth Ann
Balderson. Program hy Delore'
Frank with slides of Englan&lt;.lllip.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of roreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at post horne. Dues are &lt;.lue.
RACINE - Racine American
legion Auxiliary meeting Thurs·
day, 7 p.m. at p&lt;JSt home.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Marriage
maintenance workshop rriday. 7
p.m. at Ash Street rrcewill Baptist
Church in Mi&lt;.ldlcport. Evening tn
conclude with renewal of m:UTiage
vows and dinner provide&lt;.! by the
church. For reservations. call 992·
7410.

Send Us llour

Recipe

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publiShing a

tiOLIDCJll
COOKBOOK
Included in the cookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County resUlents, at no charge.
The recipes will be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bre(ld/Grains
• Ca~es!Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry ·
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
•Soups and Sandwiches
· Bring your recipe uUo our office or s_e nd it to:
Holiday Cookbook
~lo The Daily Sentine.
.
111 Court Street, Pomeroy,Oh 45769
Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.
'

Deadline for all recipes
is October 20~ 1995

Bulldozing, Backhoe,

1·900·378-1800
Ext. 3140

~rvices.

DAYS

Live 24 Hours/Day

CAR WISH

Talk to beautiful
GIRLS! 1-900-378-

Complete
Detailing

2500

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

Bill Orrick's

Howard L Writesel

Home
Improvements
Additions·
remodeling·
roofing • siding •
plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick

ROOFING

and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

~

~
~
~
~
~

Everyone
Welcome .a/4/ltn

Interior &amp;
Exterior

614-985-4180

~
~
~
~

Conservation Commission
will cause an election of
eupervlsor of the .M.Igs Soil
and Water Conservation
Dlslrlct to be held In
accordance with Chapler

STO-A-WAY
STORAGE
304-882·2996
Comparabl!! Prices
&amp; Sizes 11111 mo.

Buy, Sell or Trade

Classlfieds

Nominees. are Mary Powell

Public Notice

the time of election. One
Supervisor is lo be elected.
You may vote at the annual

secured
from
the
conservation district office.
19) 26; (10) 10; 2TC

Senate to AIDS artist:
No coffins allowed
By JILL LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Mary
Fisher doesn't think or her art as
controversial. But the idea of a corfin in the Capitol com.plcx, even a
gilded replica surrounded by
poignant sculpture and collages,
was toomuch for the Senate.
''Me.llsages,'' Fisher's collection

of works on AIDS, ore ned Monday
in a union headquaners al the foot
of Capitol Hill after senators
rescinded their offer of spac-e in the
rotunda of the Russell Senate
Office Building.
·
"I can un&lt;.lersL1nd why it might
be powerful," said risher, a moth·
er infected with the AIDS virus,
Still, she said, "I can' 1 understand
what tltey're afraid nf .... There's
:anger in here and there's sadness,
:but there's a lot ofjoy as well." .
Fisher, 47, attracte&lt;.l national
:notice with a moving sreech to the
·1992 Republican convention. Her
.father, Max, is a Michig:UJ industri ·
:alist, premier GOP fund-raiser and
·honorary finance chairmmt of Sen:ate Majority Lea&lt;.ler Dnb Dole·s
:presidential campaign.
Plans for the eK!tibit fell apart
.Friday when Fisher refused to set
up the 26-piece cnllcctinn without

the coffin. Sen. Edward Kennedy.
D-Mass .. one of three senators who
had sponsored the display. helped
Fisher find space at the nearby
United Brotherhood of Carpenter&gt;
and Joiners of America hea&lt;.lquar·
ters.
Fisher contracted the AIDS .
virus from her late hush:tnd. ·A
small blonde woman iti black, a red
commemorati vc A IDS ribbon
pinne&lt;.l to her shoulder, she wan·
dered around the exhibit Monday

explaining her work to a strerun or
joumalists drawn hy t11c conlrover~

sy.
The casket is Ute drmnatic centerpiece pf the show, painted with
dark stars and la&lt;.len with a huge
p.1J1Cr-sculpted bouquet. Fisher has
gilded the border hclow U1e lid an&lt;.!
wriuen, "Lei us unile in life ral11er

than death, believing Utat AIDS i'
our enemy. Life is measured hy it"&gt;

depth, not by its len gUt."
Many of Fisher's pieces are col·
!age panels featuring headlines
ahout AIDS, excerpts from her
speeches, and photogr.tphs ·of her
two sons, aged 7 an&lt;.! 5.
The exhibit also features woo&lt;.len p.ulpits covered with words .
paintings and pholo~raphs'. .

Associated Press Wril•r
LAS VEGAS' (AP) - When a
much-hyped movie nhout their pru·
fession opened here l:t'l week, half ·
a dozen leggy showgirls tlocked in
to see how they were portrayed.
They laughed haru - hut critici1.ed
harder.
"I am totally appalled an&lt;.!
embarrassed," said Melissa Griffus, one of the city's leauing showgirls who went to see Ute NC-17rated movie "Showgirls."
· "I hope to God people don' 1
take the movie for the truth."

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

lnsufers· Ex·perienced

Call Wayne Neff 992-.
4405

For Free Eat/mates :
4113195

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION ·

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 .Hrs.
We dig .basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call

Umestone &amp; Gravel,.
Septic Systems, ·
Trailer &amp; House Silas.

Reasonable Rates ·
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING

949·2512
.,,.,

614-742·2138

Imperial nre
Service
~

(Spec:lllze In driveway
~preadlng)

Mason, W.V.
304-773-5533

-September Special-

limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

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

614·992·3470
ARE YOUR
READY FOR
ROMANCE
J -900-255 -1515
Ext. 900
2.99 per min. Must
be 18 yrs. or older

Tony's Portable .
Welding
Slick/MIG Aluminum ·
Complete Radiator
Repair Service ·
New Radiators a
Recore&amp; Available
· Call for Low Prices : .

Touch-tone
ph one required
Serv-U

742-3212

Turn on Depot St. tn :
Rutland t.2 miles. : ·

(6 J 9) 645-8434

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEIYICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

1!11011 m• '

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned a portable toilets rented.
wet&gt;klv &amp; monthly rental rates.

:1

•• ;

: •••• ,

•

:.

: . •·

••

:

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!
1-900-255-8585

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

Ext 7969
'2 99 per min.
Must be 16 yrs.
Touch·tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645·6434

· WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

HYDUUliC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

ALFALFA

Call your date now

AND MIXED

HAY
FOR SALE

Alfred Zeigler, son or Willi:un
and Nancy Zeigler of Sumner
Road, Pomeroy, ohservc&lt;.l his HIU1
BAILED
birthday with a pari at his hnmc.
Auending besi&lt;.les his parents
YOUR NEED
and sisters were Michael Long.
Eric Galey, Joey Richard s, Char·
lene rutd Sheila Zeigler. A1iri.a.:.;.;Zc;;;·i_- .._;;;;:;:: -:::o=:;;=;;=~
gler, Joe Bonecuuer, and his g. ..
,..
grandmother, Ruby 7..ciger.
'S WATER

TO

949-25

showgirl after lap' d:mcing nude on
a hotel entertainment di~ccH&gt;r .
But real·life Las Vegas show·
girls say the depiction of Malone' s
career is so unrealistic it's laugh·
able.
"I've known a 101 more girls
who go from the prouuction shows
to stripping than the other way
around, because they can make a
lot more money stripping," said
vetemn sh.owgirl Lom Ch:unberlin.
Showgirls are paid arounu $600 a
week while strippers can make as
much as $3,000 a week, she said.

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Rooting, Palloa
Reasonable

HAULING

1121lfn

Zeigler
celebrates
birthday

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

Re~.alr

WICKS

Pomeroy, .Ohio '

ALFRED ZEIGLEH

Complete Auto Body

(Lime Stone Low Rates)

RIFINING INC.
"Our life is quite different fr~m
what was portrayed," said Lucy
Boling, a showgirl in the Folies
Bergere stage show. "They gave
our profession a Hollywood pdr·
trayal to make the movie s:tlable."
The focus of Griffus' an&lt;.! Bol·
ing's criticism is Nomi Malone, a
fictional dancer in the ,movie,
which opened Friday in theaters
nationwide.
Malone, portrayed by actress
Elizabeth Berkley, hitchhikes tn
Las Vegas, signs on as a stripper at
the CheeL'lh lounge, an actual club,
then wins a spot as a Las Vegas

Sto~

R.IA80NABLI RATES

992·6215

Showgirls: Movie doesn't show it like it is
By ROBERT MACY

One

P.O. Box 587

Taka the pain out of
painting. Let us do II for
~ou. Very r-onable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave.
message.
After&amp; p.m.

Lump &amp; ~
Stoker Coal ~
Stale Rt. 124
Wellsthon, Ohio
Pone

W14ffl :&gt; mo pd

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

5715.19 of the Ohio Revised and John Rice.
Code.
.
Nominations will be meeting or on an absentee
Nancy Parker Campbell accepted from lhe floor al baUot which may be
Meigs County Auditor

Serv·U (619) 645·8434
2/111m11fM

I0121ff41ttn

~ 614·384·6212 /.~
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

March, 1996. All comptalniS 1515 of the Ohio Revised
flied with tho County' Cod' at Easlern High
Auditor wilt be heard by the School on Tuesday. October
Board of Revision In the 17, 1995 at 7:15 p.m.

(9) 26, 27, 28, 29;
(10) 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6;.1DTC

( No Sunday Calls)

992·~269

~~ BRAMHIINC. ~~

ELECTION LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Ohio Soli and Water

manner provided by Section

614-992-7643

5116194 TFN

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

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MOREll!
1·900-884-9204
· Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required

COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Bill Slack

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

Section 5715.19 of the Ohio
Revised Code. These

Complaint• against the
valuations, as established
lor lax ye1r 1995, must be
made In eccordance with

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped

$3.99 per min .

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Reference: 5715.17
of Revision has completed
its work of equalization. The
tax returns for tax year 1995
have been revlsed and the
valuations completed and
are open for public
inspection In the oflice of
the Meigs County Auditor,
Second Floor, Courthouse,
:Second Street, Pomeroy,

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

TREE TRI-ING
AND REMOVAL

Ext. 6557

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

Public Notice

complaints must be filed on
which will be
furnished by the County
Auditor and must be filed In
the County Auditor's Office
on or before the 31st day of

SAWMILL

W1:11'1 mo.

Public Notice

Ohio Revised Code

BISSJLL BUILDERS, INC.

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny a Peggy
Brickle•
614-742-2193

~,,,, / ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

The Meigs County Board forms

H&amp;H
Portable
Bandsaw Mill

Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Fill Dirt

Public Notice

Ohio 45'769.

ravori~e

Scoreslll Spreads!! I

614·992·5183

CAREER&amp;
EDUCATION
COUNSELING
This Wednesday 7-8 pm.
Meigs Co. Library
Main .St., PGmeroy
No fees. Walk-in Call
1·614-753-3531, ext. 307
·for oth~r appt.
Helping you find the right path ·

..

supertlcial, but who's d1e watchdog on newcomers like " The Mon·
for the fingernails·tin-the-black· roes."
Filrne&lt;.l In portentous (OK. preboard stuff?
tentious)
slow motion. the actors
While research funds are pend·
march
down
a corridor, preferably
ing, our able staff has prepared a
one
of
power.
Titey are dctwnineu.
preliminary report on problems that
are
driven,
they are in drill·
they·
may, in their own small way, con·
team
synch.
tribute to national depravity. Or at
· But where arc these people
least initability.
going?
And why'! Did someone
Like these tiny trespasses:
just
yell
"Fresh·brewed cappucci-The sbouldcr-to-shuulder
no
in
the
lunchroom'" Or maybe
striding cast shot. You've seen it in
''Bowling•league
sign·ups!''
the credits of "ER," "Chicago
AI.
other
workplaces,
acconling
Hope" and. like a virus .•naking its
to
our
reSeprch
team,
nnly
food ,
way through a defenseless throng.

\TI\C

tm/lmo.

Unscientific but true: TV is guilty. of producing shows With annoying bad habits
.

E\C \\

$2.99/mlnute
18 or older
Touch-tone phone
required
Serv-u (619) 654 8434

Wilson f.amily reunites
· Descendants of John anti Mag ·
gie Wilson recently hchl their

110\\ \Jill

IIHL·NIA·NFL

Leach birth
announced

The couple has one &lt;laughter,
Mrs. David E. (Stephanie) Roush
of Hurricru1e, W.Va. and a grand·
son, Scott Allen Roush.
Mr. Walker is employed by
American Electric Power's Philip
Sporn Plant, New Haven, W.Va.
Mrs . Walker is employed as a
teacher with the Meigs Local
School District.
SENIOR SAINTS
A trip to the Church of God
campgrounds on Sept. 30 for the
Southem Ohio Adult Day at Morrow was planned when the Senior
Saints of the Rutland Church of
God met recently at the church.
Jackie Preece conducted the
meeting which opened with prayer
by Bob Eads. It was noted lhal the
cost of the camp outing will be $3
each and those attending are to take
a dessert or salad. Birthday cards
were signed for several and a film
was shown.
It was noted that Chester and
Geraldine Se~ton are back from
vacation in Canada. Refreshments
were served to Mrs. Preeoe', Eads,
Chester Se~ton, Homer Preece,
Ernest Lambert, Bob Herdman,
Louella King, Katherine Weaver,
lcycle Herdman, Birdie M. Hysell,
Mary Lambert, Gregory Scars, Nellie Hatfield, Alice Kitchen, Mary
Romines, Tanuny Scars and Geral·
din'e Sexton.

days at II a.m . Sessions at the
Dairy Barn are free with paid
admission to The Illustrator's Art.
The library will host free storytelling hours on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at4:30 p.m.
Pre-registration for all workshops and classes is required. Payment is necessary upon registra· .
lion. For more information, residents call the Dairy Bam at 5924981.

Eotab. over 25 Yearo
Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Installation
2-

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT 992-2772
Office Hours: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 o.m. -3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doora,Storm
Window., Garages.
Free Eatlmabla
11191\tn

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
Cheaper Bales

Touch-tone
phone required
Serv -U
(619) 645 -8434

.

'

949-2512

I

1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.

ROBERT BISSEL'-:
· CONSTRUCTIO~ :
•New Homes
•Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

THE REC ROOM.
PIZZA • ARCADE.
138 N. 2nd, Middleport
(Acrosstrom Johnsqn'a Video)

15n LARGE

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

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M .
Sundays
Beginning
Sept.

17

W7/lfn

3·D ARCHERY
SHOOT
Forked Ryn
Sportsman's Club
Every Sunday
Startlnf\
September llnlr'
8:30am to
11:30 am
$7 sign up, children
9 &amp; under $4.
50% pay back.
Children must be
accompanied by adult.
llllt mo

.

PEPPERONI
Only $6.99
992-6344
Dine-In or Carry-out
912211 md. '

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

LIYE GIRLS! CALL NOW'
1·900·378·2500 E•t 8325.
S3 99 tM1n . Must Bo 18 Vrs
Sorv U (619) 645-61134

30 Announcements .
E1leen's Personal Care lor elderiJ
We BPGC1aliz:e 1n Al1hf:Hmers ca1e

QIVIOQ

304· 762·25-14

40

Giveaway

11mo old puppy, m1xed , female ,
wh1le wlbrown, ro be111 llomo on)y,

good wrc hlldren Allo tmo old
cahco ~1nen . 304 -675-4650.
1yr old male "dog, hall Hoeler. half
Husky. Has shots 304-882·25-18.

2 Angora Nanny Goats. 6 14 367
1008.
3 Mcmlh Old Pupp1es. 614 367,

0539
K111en~ . gray &amp; wh110 , to good

homos

onl~.

304 895 3703

•

Med1um Buff &amp; While 5 112 M"ornh
Old Male Puppy. 614-446 4479
To A Good Home B&amp;a ut1lul Lo ng•
Ha1red Golden Tabby Car. 614 ·
381-1.~0 .

'

To good home- full bl ooded Blue.
Healer. 614· 742,2192
•

�Page 1o• The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 26, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 26, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Resort ol New
Mexico
, 5 Mulberry cloth
l 9 Unctooe (poet.)
12 Over·
abundance
13 Bankrupt
14 Bridge of San
Luis 15 - Wonderful Lifo
16 Loavo - Beaver
17 Gosh!
18 Gre..y
20 Shlp"a rope
22 Finnish flro~
name
24 Long lime

PHILLIP
ALDER

~

f~~nd

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce BeaUle

dog whtte Wl b!ack spots ,
b9b-ta1led , K1ngsbury area 614
~3553

Tt~uler lol on Braod Run Ad, New

Four lots near Racme- approx 1
112 acres each, starbng at SSOOO,
ca.H 614-949 2025.

'-a~t 6 Mued Alp1n.&amp; Nanny
.GoitS Whtte And Brown In V1cm
~tV .At l1tl!e Kyger Roaa Ana
'Mpore H1ll 614 367 1008. 614·

OWN YOUR OWN

LAt&lt;E
And Ac reage E•cellent For
Bu1ld1ng, Campsites Etc Appr 10
A cre Sprtng Fed Stocked lal\e

'361·9389

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Scen1c Valley Apple G1ove
beautiful 2ac lots, publiC wafer
Clyde Bowen Jr. :xl4 576·2336

Ar_.t

Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d In
A.dfance DEADliNE 2 00 p m
the day befo,e !he ad 1s 10 run
Sunday ed1t1on . 2 00 p m F r1day
Monday ed1110n - 10 00 am Sal·
urdi:ly

2 Bedroom On SR 141 , 1 M•~ Out
01 Gall1pohs $350/ ~o Plus De·
posit 614·446 6566
Mason. lar!iJe 3bedroom w 11h car
port, some appliances mcluded
304·675·7783

IC ooa m

11me auchoneer,
auct1on
st:HW'ICe
L•cen
~t66..0h•o &amp; West V~rgm 1a 304
773· 57850r 304-773-5447

Mode l

Cars

Help Wanted

PLANNER I·Oh o Valley Reg•onal
Oevelopmem Comm•ss•on See~

•ng Emry level Reg10na1 Planner
To Ass1st Stall W1th Research
ActP.HIIes Re lated To Commun•ty
Development Btocll. Grant Con
tracts $17,500 -S21 ,000 ·Bene

Wanted to Buy
late

Or

hts

Trucks, 1987 Models Or Newer
Sm1th Bu1ck Pont•ac 1 1900 East·
ern A11enue. Gallipolis
Decorated stoneware wa ll telo

Req wed Exper•ence Research
StatiStiCS, Use 01 Personal Com
pulers Word Processrng And
Sprea dsheet Sottware Preferred

phones, old lamps, old lhermome

Expenence Bachelor 5 Or Asso

ters, old clocks , an11que lurn1ture
R~er~ne Anl1qu es . Russ Moor e,
OWI)Cr 614 992 2526 We

_••_1•_1_••----,-------- l

J &amp; D's Auto Parts Buy1ng sal ·
vage v,eh1cles Selllf'lg parts 304·
713·5033

c 1ate's Degree In Bus 1ness Plann Ing Adm In IS 1r al 10n 0 r s OC IB1
Sen1 1ces. Grants Wnt1ng, M1n1·
r'T"lJm 01 One· Year 01 Work Or In
ternsh1p, Prev1ous Work W11h lo·
cal -level GovernmenT OIIICials

I

-;;;;-;;o;;--;:;;;;;-;;;;;d,~;Jc;:;; Su bm 11 Co lie r Len e r, A e s ume

Old 1u t&gt;e radtos made
19!16 , b1g money lor some models
Aiso old rad10 lubes, pans, amph
l1ers. tu~et&gt;ores old crank lele
phOnes. old record players . anv
ktnd ol &amp;lectromcs made before
1946
Phone 304-882 2220
(Chuck)

And Aele rence s For Rece1p1 By
5 00 P:M Oct 6, 1995 To Erecu t1ve Dr1ector, OVRDC, 740 Sec·
and Slreel Room 102. Ports·
mouih, OH 45662 4068

"AN EOUAL OPPOAfUNITY
EMPLOYER"

Top Pr1ces Pa1d Old US Co1 ns.
Silver Go ld, 01arnonds, All Old
Col lecnbles, Paperwe1ghts E1c
M T S Co1n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Ga llipo liS 61 4· 446·2842

Slart $12 08/hr For eM am and applic atiOn 1nfo caiJ 219 · 769 -8301
eM! WV 548, 9am-9pm, Sun-Ffl

Used lurn1ture an!IQues one
p1ece or comple1e estares Osby
Marttn, 614 992· 74~ 1

Scentc Htlls Nucsmg Center. 311
Buckr1dge Road. Bidwell OH
45614 Is Now TaJ1 r"'Q Applica tiOns For Nurses A1des Class, To
S!&lt;HI Oct 16, 1995

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Wtth
Or Without Moto rs Call larry
L1vely 614-388·9303

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

Adm1ms!fa t1 Ye Secretary
Full
T1me PoS1110n Immediate Openmg For Seii ·Direc!ed IndiVIdual
Pos5essmg Skills In Shonhand 1
Speed Wr1 tm g Typmg, PC L1tera·
,. .. W1th Sprea dsheet Word Pro·
~ssl ng Software Knowledge Pr1
Execuuve Secrelary Erp er1
]nee An Assel Send Resume To
,olzer Chn1c, Human Resources,
qo Jackson Ptke. Gallipolis OH
45631
AID

ASSOCIAT~

FOR LUTHERANS

ts Lock 1ng For A Career Mmded
IndiVIdual To "Pro111de Fmanc1al
Serv1ces And Fraternal Bene l1ts~
In The· Gall1pohs Area Starting
Income Up To $26K Complete
lra1n1ng And" Full Benel1t Pack
age Send Resume To AA L 8111
l1mberlodge Tra il Dayton OH
45458 Or Call 513 433·7706
[Collect)

POSTAL JOBS

WANTED M echantc. engme rebulldmg all lypes assemb l y ol
motors Call 304·372·8633 Hrs 8-

5

180

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Serv1ce Complete tree
care, 20yr5 exp &amp; msured , tree
est1mates 61-4 - 441·1191 or 1800·506-B8l! 7
Do You N ee d A Break From
Hou se Work? Wou ld You l1~e To
Co me Home From Work And Re ·
lax Call P&amp;J s Clean1ng 614 388

8 19 31614 ~66-8269
Gener al Uamtenance Pa1nt1ng,
Yard Wo r ~ W1ndows Washed
Gun ers Cl ean ed L1ght Haulmg,
Comme r1cal . Re s1 den t1al Steve·
6t4 446 8861
Georges Port(l ble Sawm1ll. don't
haul your logs to the m11! JUSt call
30 4·675-1957
Ho me Cleanmg, General De
ta1led W1ndow Cleamng Inside 1
Outs1de, (la st C hance Before
Winter) 614-256 1370, Marsna
f.t1chael Thacker &amp; Kevtn Bled soe B&amp;B Enlerpnse- blown ms u·
lahon Free est1mate on house.

' - - - ' - - - - - - - - - 1 6~4·742·2503
AVO N

I Al l Areas

Appliances
Recond1t1oned
Washers . Dryers Ranges , Relfl
graters 90 Day Guaran1ee1
French C1ty M aytag 614-446-

I Sh1rle~

Sp:._e_a_".:.·_30_&lt;_6_7_5_1_42_9_____
AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn $6 $15 /Hr At Wor~ Home
DISCOunJsl No lnv!!n tor y Or Door
Door lnd tRep 1·800 742-4738

----------Mt scellaneous. Hom e Wtndows,
1 Olhce Cleaned A sk For Anne.
Al so Stove For Sale 6 I 4 446

!358

Prof essional Tree Sarv1CO Com
plate lr ee Care Bucker Truck
Avon Earn SB · $15 /Hr No Door Serv1ce · 50 Ft Reach, Stump ReTo Door Fu lltPart T1me t 800
moval, Free Est1matesb- In ·
_73_e_O_I_6_6_1nd_R_eo______ su ranc e 24 Hr Emergency Serv
1
AV O N Sales $8 $ 1 5/ Hr No 1ce -Call And Savel No Tree Too
Doo r To DoOr Mall o 1aer Pro
B1g Or Too Small! 81dwell, Oh10
gram Bonuses 1 800 827 4640 614 -388-9643 61 4-367 7010
1nd Isis /rep
AVON EAR N $$$ at home at
work All areas 904 882 264 S 1
800 992 6356 INDIREP

CARPE NTER'S HELPER · Must
Have M1n1mum 2 Yrs Expenence
Truck And Tools ReqUired Call
614-446 4514 Ma n Fr1 8 AM
To 5 :'M
Dom1no's P1zza of Pomeroy no w
h1r1ng dnvers. 614·992-21211
Onver With Class A COL wanted
We haul w11h1n a 7 to 8 state area
No Northeast loads Homet1me,
pa1d vaca1 10n, &amp; holidays Call 1
800·598 6790

Rut&gt; &amp; Scrub Cleanmg Servtce
dus11ng, mopp1n g, wmdows and
more Complete serv1ce or touchups References on. request , call
Terry nt 614 992 4232 or 614
992 4451
Sun Valley Nu rser y School
Ch1 ldcare M· F Gam 5 30pm Ages
~ K Yo ung SchOol Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Weell Mlnl·
mum614-446 3657
Will do babys1ttmg m my home.
reasonable rates flex1Die hours,
close to school 304 675-278-4
W1ll ta ke cartt ol elderly Have rei
erences 304-895·3234

Easy Work! Ex ce!len r Part As·
semble Products AI Home Call
Toll Free 1· 800 -467 · 5566 Ext

313
Needed lu ll ttme or part t1me
house cleaner, Middleport area
Call 614-992 -5042 between
10am-6 pm
No Erper~ence Necessary' $500
To $9 00 Weekly / Potenual Pro·
cess1ng Mor lgage Relunds , Own
Hours, Call !909) 715-2300. Ext
782. (24 Hours)
Openmg Soon l New Stea~ &amp; Sea
food Restau ran t m town Now twmg lo r all shills wa1 tresse s wall·
ers, bartenders coo ks, dish
wasne rs del 1very persons, etc
Fo rward resumes to Rt 1 Bo r
839. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550 or
304·6 75· 7481
Owner Oper a"fo rs Needed Top
percentage pa1d hauling w1thm a
7 to 8 state area No Northeast
loads can 1·800..598·679A
Paft-ttme drtlie rs needed to
transport cars ro and from auc
t1ons. call 614 992 2806 berween
1 1a m - Jpm Must be at least 25
years old
Pa r t T1me Erpenenced Word
Processor ! Transcnpt1on1st Mu st
Be Knowledgable &amp; Wo rd Perlect
Felx1ble Hours, Send Resume To
CLA 358, Clo Gall1pohs Da11y Tr~b
une, 825 Th1rd Avenue. Galhpol•s.
OH 45tl31

FINANCIAL
21

o

Business
Opportunity

~l UMBER COS 1 S UP?~ Steel
bwtd1ngs as low as $3 00 sq tool
Buy factory d1rec 1 from National
Manufacturer as author1zed dealer Will tra 1n Some Markets tak ·
en 303 759 3200 e11 2200

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedrooms, State Route 141, 10
M tles Out Gallipolis. 24x32 Garage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace,
In Ground Pool, New Satell1te
01sh. Galha County loca1 SchOol
D•striCI, 614-379-2410
38 acres house, 2 bedrooms ,
bmh gas well furnace, good huntIng, 52155 Sr. 248, 614-985-4243
4bedroom 2 1t2b ath , large lam1ty
room on 1acre, tmi behmd Hart·
ford 304 882-3326
In Mlddleporl· 2·3 bedroom
hOuse, two hvmg rooms, ki tc hen ,
laundry room and bath Sttuated
on 100•200 corner lot. also has
util111es, hookup lor tra11e r, call
614· 992·6465
leon , WV (close to St Rt 62 to·
ward Charleston) N1ce lbedroom
home, basement 9ac:res Need
offer Call Somerv11te Realty 304
675 3030
Three bedroom home tn country,
Whiles HIU Rd , Rul18.nd, one balh,
1n ground pool, 614-992 5067
Wanted to rent - professtonallam·
1ly wou ld like to tease lour bed·
room home 1n Ue1g!l County, call
614 992-7272 or 614·992 6503

OVER LOOKING RIVER, 642
F1rst Avenue, Gallipolis, L111 . Om
2 -Bedrooms, S3751Mo Rei 6111
446·1 540

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Bedroom Tratler Ctos&amp; To
Downtown Gall1pOI1s &amp; Grocery
Refer&amp;nce &amp; Depos1t, 614 -4 46 -

This newspaper will not
knowllngty accept
advertisements for real estate ·
wl11cl'lls In violation ot the law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised tn tl11s newspaper
are ava ilable on an equal
opportun1ty basis

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12•65 Concord 3 Bedrooms, Gas
Heal, New Carpet, E•cellen1 Con·
d1t10n, $7,950, 614·446·0H5
1 4X70 Br1stol LaOon11a, 2 Bed·

rooms, 1 112 Baths, New Wa1er
Healer, Deck , Blocks. Underptnnmg Ready To Be Mo11edl Only
$4,800 614-379-9125
14x70 Noms 2 bedroom, 61-4
661 322fi
14x 70 tra1ler, well mamlatned
304 882 3739
196 8 PMC Br1cemeyer 12r60
304·372-31100
1972 Concord 12x65, 2bedroom,
1bath, gas sto11e &amp; fUrnace , Up
out uM 1n l1vmg room 3011 372-

3400

1974 Academy 12•55, 2bedroom,
1bath, electnc, new furnace wtndow ac 304 -372-31100
1960 Governor 14r65. 2bedroom,
1bath. electr1c:, ac 304-372·3400
1993 Clayton 14•10 3bedrooms,
all electnc. heat pump, wid, range,
h 1dge, di shwas her , m•crowa11e,
s~ur11ng JOII -675-5129
2acres 1984 Spr1ngbrook mobile
home 3mt Rt 2 N on Rr 62 304·
675·6986
L1m1ted Olferl 19g5 doublew1de,
3br, 2ba!h, S16Q5 down. $259!
month Free de l1very &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
304-755·5885

wv

L1m1ted Olferl New 14M80 No paymems alter 4yrs Only mek.e 2
payments &amp; move m 3011 755

5566

turnmg plow cu1t1vators , snow/
garden blade, $2800 304 6752217

2 Bedrooms. 1 Ba th, No Pels.
$250tMo Plus Depos1t &amp; Ut11it1es
Slue!'tnore Road, 614-446 4426
'

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., GallipoliS New &amp; Used
lurn1t1.ire, heaters. Western &amp;
Work bo01s 614 446·3159

l&lt;mg Wood Coal Stove W1th
Blower, Plast iC Truck Tool Bar ,
Corner Cabinet Wuh Countertop,
614·2459179

Equ1pment Trailer 7 112 Wtde 18
Foot long Wtth loadmg Ramps ,
$1,100, 614-446-2528

1990 Dodge Ram Van B- 250,
72 ,000 Miles, $6 ,000, Can Be
Seen AI Gallipolis Dall y Tr1bune
825 Th1 rd Avenue . Gall 1pol1s
Oh10

AC combtne w1corn head &amp; table
Two grav11y beds Also straw for
sale :xl4-675-5086

1994 Astra Van, loaded, $2 1, 600,
will sell lor loan payoll 614 992
5119

D1scount fatm tractor parts to r
Massey. Ford IH . &amp; oth ers
S1der's Equtpmem Co, Hender ·
son; WV 304-675 7421 or 1 800
277-3917

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Two Bedroom. $250/Mo Plus Utll
1t1es, Depos l! References Re ·
qUif&amp;d At 218, After fl PM 6111 ·
983·4607

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmems, lurI"!IShed and unfurntshed secunty
deposit requ1red, no pets, 614·
992 2218

t Bedroom Furntshed Apartment
Ou tet. Clean. Central Heal, A1r,
Pnvate Park 1ng , Maintenance
Free 5 14- 446 . 2602
1 Bedroom New. Extra N1c e A1r
Cond1t1oned. Near Holzer's S259t
Mo • Utlllt 1es, Oepo s•t ReQuired ,
5 14 446 _29 57
2 Bedroom A par tmem In Down town Gallipolis, Cen tral A1r, Kitch
en Appliances, All Rooms Car ·

u,,,,,., Nol 1n.

peled $400IMo
eluded 614 686 11"

2 Bedroom Apa rtmenl , Trash,
Water, Sewage Pr td, $29M..to +
DepoSit, 614-446-2481
2 Bedroo ms 2 Baths, V tew 01
Park &amp; Rrver, K1tchen, W1th Stb11e,
Relrtgerator, 15 Cour1 Srreet Gal lipolis, $475/Mo + Depps1t, Reier
ence, No Pets, 614-446-11926
2bdrm apts, Ictal electnc, ap·
pltances furmshed , laundry room
fac:illltes, ctase to school 1n town
Appllca110ns avatlable at Village
Green Apts #49 or call 614·992 ·
3711 EOH
2bedroom. uulmes mc:luded, tur·
fliShed 3)4 773--9009
2Aooms Plus Bath, lafayeue
Mall No K1tchen1 All Ut11i!1eS pa1d
$175 00 Month Depos11 Required
~14

446 7733

661 f664 Th1rd Gallipolis, 2 Bed
rooms New Appliances , Carpet,
$300/Mo 1 Uonth DepOS i t, No
Pets, 614 245·9595
Furn1shed Elflctency $235t Mo
U!dtlles Pa1d, 920 Fourth Avenue,
Gallipolis 614 446-11416 Aller 7

PM
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Onve
from $226 10 $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov•es Call 614 · 446 -25 68
Equal Ho'us1ng Opportunity
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath.
DownstairS U!IIHtes FurniShed ,
Clean No Pets Reference , De
poS1l ReQUi ted, 614-446-1519
Grac1ous I1V1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllaoe Manor and
R1vers1de Apartme nts 1n Middle port From S232-$355 Call 6 14·
992 5064 Equal HouSing Opporlunlhes
Oakwood Apartment, 1 Bedroom
Elhc1ency, localed Between Galh·
polls S. Holzer Hosp11al, Rent Plus
U!lll tte s No Pels 6111·446·2055
Alter 6 PM
Pt .P leasant, lur n1shed elhency,
Ul1ht1es pa1d park1ng Depos11 re·
qwed 304 675 7783

Tw1n R1vers Tower now accept1ng
apphcatton s lor 1br HUD subs1d
•zed apt lor elderly and handl·
capped EOH 304-6 75-6679

304-

UnfurniShed 2 B'E!droom, Ca rper(
S10ve, Refr igerator. DIShwasher,
$2751Mo $275 Deposit, 614 446·
3888, 614·446 4491

B&gt;g $$$ Call Today! 1·600·350
6363

Prtce Buster! Nt'w ,4x70 2 or
3br. Only S995 down, $195imomh
Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nnro WV 304·

Th ree bedroom apartment wash
er/ dryer hOOI\up b1g k1tcl1en. llv
tng room, Th1rd Slreet, Rac 1ne.
S2951mo plus ullllttes $100 de·
poSit, 6111-241 ·4292

450

755-5865

Vendmg lAZY MAN'S OREA~,
Few Hours • BIG S W i l l Sell
Cheap. 1·800-820-4353

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes lor Sale
2bedroom, tbath, home tn Hen derson 75•11311 lot Ntce starter
ho'Tie or rental 304-675·11298

Two Bedroom One Bath On A 7/8
Acre Lot Wllh Two Bu•ldtngs
Carport, 30 Mtles Outstde Ga1·
nesv tlle. At Haw111orne, Fla 1·

904 481 ·3379.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Furnished
Rooms

Roo ms for rem week or month
Start1ng at $120tmo Galha Hotel
614 -4 46·9580
Sleep1ng rooms Wit h cookmg
Also tra tler space on nver All
hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m
304·173· 5651, Mason WV

Charolals lake. Beauttlul 2 25
Acre lot, Outel, Desirable Neighborhood , Restncted $24,500, 304-

Trailer lol m Middleport, 614 -992·

273-0136, 304-273·2940.

3194

460 Space for Rent

Tnple dresser w111ghted huic:h
Southwestern style couch, love
seat &amp; chatr , SW111el rocker, Broy·
h1ll club cM1r 4 p1ece ptne llvmg
room SU i te. double dresser end
tables, Boston roc~er, all m e• ·
celtent cond1t1on, 614·985·3595

VI AA FURNITURE
614·446-3158
Quality Household Furn1ture And
Appllan~:es Great Deals On
Cash And Carry I RENT-2-0WN
And layaway Also Available
Free Delivery Wnhln 25 M1les.

530

Antiques

t 953 M38A t mtlltary Jeep,
$10,000 1n new parts, new from
ground up, best oller, 614 ·8113
5285

I C::::.C--'----- - - - -

Buy or sell A•venne Ant1ques
1124 E Ma1n Street, on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
to 6 00 p m, Sunday 1 00 to
P m 614 -992 2526

540

Miscellaneous ,
Merchandise

16 Ft Ut1hty Tra1ter , 1995, Tan·
dem Axle , Wtth Bralles On 1
Arle, $1 ,000 080 6 t4·4116-7127
1995 Ranc h Kmg R1dmg lawn
Mower With Matchtng Wagon
$700 1970 Chevy Nova S1 000.
614 367 1901
25" Sylvan~&amp; super set TV, 24
push buuon remote control. chan
nel programming on screen
gr a ph1cs d1splay auto sleep
t1mer, exc cond $300 Sauder.
TvrliCR cart wl3 snel11es, glass
front door, erC cond $75 304882-20911
3 Ton lennor Heat Pump &amp; ElectriC furnace $375, Whirlpool
Wash1ng Mach1ne $60 614 · 446·
1451
.

675-4006

NordiC Track Walk-l1t Class1c wfth
arm movement, work out computer (reus speed, calone!l, time, distance and pulse) Used very llltle
call614-992-5181 alter Spm
Old Glassware, Some Fenton
Glass, 614-245-5773
Pa1nt Plus Now In New Locatton l
511 Burdene St, across from Beltemeade UM Church 304-675·
4084
Queen S1ze Waterbed /Soltd
Wood Frame, Headboard, U1rror
Cabme!s, U1rror. linear, Wave tess Mattress $225, 814 · -446 ·

0727
Refrigerators, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers , All Recondt11oned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
·
Wtll Oeb11er. 614-669-6441
Upnght, Aof'l Evans Enterpnses,
Jackson, Ohio, 1·800·537-9528

SUNOUEST WOlFF TANNING
BEDS
Commercial - Home umts from
S 199 Buy factory duect and

SAVE &gt; Call TODAY for NEW

FREE color catalog, 1· 800--4629197
Trampoline StSO Needs New Pad,
Swlflg Set $25. Needs New Seam,
614-446·2109
Wanted 1nlorma110n of Robert,
SA . Jr, Adams Family Buned 1n
Adams Cemetery Mason C11y S.
Adams, 5930 Sycamore, Bartlen,
TN 3813-4

550

Building
Supplies

Block br1ck. sewer p1pes,' wmd·
ows, lintels, ere Claude Wtnters,
R10 Grande, OH Call 614 245
5121
Melal Rool•ng &amp; S1d1ng Go Tert1le
Fabflc For Driveways &amp; Etc Ty·
par For House Cover Or Tempo.
rar y Storage Cover, AltiZer Farm
Supply, 614-245·5193

560

Groom Shop ·Pet Groomtng Fea turmg Hydro Bath Juhe Webb
Caii614-1148-02J1

Babybed, dressmg table, carseat,
stroller. swmg 304-6 75·4548

5 Cockatiels,

236 0326
Cemetary tots, Greenbonom WV.
4 lots. $600 for all :xl4 516·2380
Concre1e &amp; P1as11c Septtc Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson, OH
1-800·537·9528
Dmene Set, 4 Cha~rs, $ 100, 614 ·

245·5966
01sney area, Sday/4 hotel mgl1ts,
use any 11me Pa1d $310, sell
$100 304-343-9455
Elecmo Wheelchairs ; Scooters,
New !Used. Scooter I Wheelcha~r
l ilts, Stairway Elevators, l1lt
Chans , Bowman's Homeca re,
614-446·7283

Pets for Sale

2758
FOR SALE - Adler Royal 210 C
Copier • S550, Reconditioned New Drum And Developer 614 ·
-446-4514, Mon Frt, 8 AM TO 5

PM

Alp i ne CD Player, 2·12~ MTX
Road Thunder Pros In Hatchback
Bo•. Rocl\ford Fosgate Punch 40
Amplifier, MTX Thund&amp;r 280 Amplifier. 614·-446-8778 Alter 6:30

PM.

Heatthmaster 750 Dual Acton E~ ·
Btc ycle, Just l1ke Newt
Ever Usedl $60, 814 -247Eventngs Or leave Mes sage.
Hell furnace, 150,000BTU, good
cond, $125 304 675-6436

F

AKC beaut1tul Chow Chow puppies· black. blue and whtte, $200/
ea, 614·992-7574

0 1
1:39
:-'-33:..:.
'_""·000:.::..:
·2~7 3-:..:.93::29;:;;._ __
1o lyrs ol age Reg blac&lt; angus 790
Campers &amp;

Reg black angus bulls 7months

bred heilars and yearling he1lers

304 s75-2098

large Square Bales Of M1red
Hay S1 25/Each, 614-2 45· 5445

1974 Mustang II , V-6, auto. one
owner ret1 tled, good conJ1 1t1on,
askmg S1200, must sell 6 111 -992·
5401

AKC Reg Datmat1an pup~tes,
Swks aid, shots &amp; wormed
S150ea. 304-675-2532

1978 Nova 4 Door, Runs Good,
Many New Parts S950. 614 11461995

AKC regtstered ijeagle pupp1es,
6 1/2 weeks, ~,troven hunting
bloodlines, greal looks too, $50
eacl'l 61"'·862.,..302.

19811 Ford Crown V1ctcna, good
condition. $1795, 614·992·6154

304·67S.2!1e3.
German Shepherd Pure Wh 1te
AKC Born 8117195, $375. 614 ·
286·8753, 614-SZJ-8985
Three Rat Temer Pups, 1 Male
And 2 Femalos. 814·446-1432

570

Musical
Instruments

Bach ttumpel, used very hUh~. e•
cel!ent COnditiOn, pa1d S400 new
sell S32S, call 6 14-985-4489
Bundy Ctannet, Very Good Con duion, Newly Re-Padded . S200,
6 14-446-2109
Selmer Hute, good condition 304-

67S.Zl07.

s

1985 Cutlass Supreme. 307 HO
Auto, Loaded S2,900 · 1989 Cutlass Cala1s 2 5 Aulo Atr PS PB
PO $3,900, 6,4 300..:0575
,
.

I reoli&lt;od. •• and I have lots of trumps ••

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

II

$1 ,600 304·675·2725

Z·24.

1986 Ford Mustang 70 ,000
Mtles. 1986 Ford Escort , Both
Good Shape! 6111 -256-1761

ON

~ SPIL.£.H&gt; r,OTtl
MY STOlt~ f:11SC.O\JNT
. CL.IPPING FO~

M11es

1988 Ford Taurus, stat1on wagon,

BORN LOSER
~

YCJJ KNO+J Tlii&gt;IT N'-ITIOOC WP...TGI
Cf" ~Df'p..,'s YaJ 6/&gt;-!1( /olE. FeR
Bli'"JI\DP...Y 7

,

1alwa~vs thought that only once they are
they really assimilate the basics
Michael Berkowitz is picking up the
1~arne qu•ckly at the tender age of 8.
:::;~~ it has somethmg to do with his

I

"'y

'

PM Z N

M

XJAXWN .

JUst say no." -

~

-,1,---C,L_Ir-V-r--fl~~,'
4 I I
•I
1. • .
I

I

16 I

61G NATE!

t)O IT'

•.knn H1k'• Urtoonlllfl Cl~j:, ~nd get
yoor atOOil c.~1100mrr;~ ho~t~ W!loot
5ttld 'J3 cl'eck lor J'!"Ufll 1M l\ll!diiiiiJ to

1/

"

c/o NEA
200 M.1d1150n Avenut
Naw York, NY 10016
[)oftMSI!Ijic.r.JI MJU'IJWr.ller:i~-tll~~ lno:
,.,.,..ed'silx~

STAI&lt;£ ABLOWN Tl-£ Will ON
1-tGH PRIC£5. SHOP M CI.ASSIFIEDS.

I TUESDAY
feAR 1:. 11'/il:

l"Ll ~~~E. TO QIJIT tf,V o06
Ill CO~IC~ I tviEi\N, LOOK"
~~OuNQ. CA~~S A~

Ftm.l) '11111-\ CUT~N~£S!

ASTRO-GRAPH

Wednesday . Sept. 27, 1995
You could beg1n to rece1ve the type of
lucky breaks tn the year ah.ead that
seemed to go to others rather than to you
tn the past

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231 Th1s 1s a good

you 've been hoping tor have exlraordt·

sure to state your zodtac stgn

nary chances of becom1ng reahtle s Don t

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) An Impor tant matter that has been difficult to con-

TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) In order to

clude can be successtully wrapped up

tf

you keep your eye on your Objet·

y1eld to doubts 1n any form .
achieve objechves today you must go all
out Do not use half measures when full

skills as a salesperson could be very

Be the pusher no1 the
draggmg your feet
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 201 Spec&gt;al

1mpresstve todt~~Y . However, be certatn
that whal you're promoting would benef1t

knowledge you possess has greater
vatue than you realize Thts mtght

ttve Stay focused

force IS reqUired .

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Your

one

mar-

everyone concerned

become evident to you today tf you

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 18) Today

ket what you have to offer

you m1ghl have more opportuntttes than

CANCER (June 21.July 22) You m1ght

usual to strengthen your matenal POSI ·
IIon . Do not treat this day w1th mdiHer-

reap some untque benefitS today from an

ence

arrangement m whtch your prlf'11B'Y goal
1s to hetp another further hts or her

"QUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18) Endea·

expectations

vors

or per·

LEO (July 23· Aug . 22) People w111

sonally d1rect have sohd chances for success today You mustn 't hesttate to toot

respond to your tdeas and suggesttans
more readity today 1f your presentahon IS
spnnlded w1th humor Use sm11esmansh1p

or enterprises you conce1ve

your own horn
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Be alert for

Heat Pumps, Atr Condtlloning 11
You Don't Call Us We Both Lo;e l
Free Est1mates, 1-800 -287-6308
614-446-6308,
002945
•

day to w1ne and dtne someone you owe

1989 Chevy Co rstca Ntce Car
Loaded. S3.400, OBO: 1986 Ford
Escort Auto $1 ,200, OBO. 6111
44t ·0584

Res1dent1a l or commercial w 1 nn~.
new serv1ce or repa1r1 Masrer U·
censed eleclnctan . Rtdenour
EleCtriCal. WV000306, 30-4 -675-

a deal
self to a birthday g1h. Send for your Aslro·
togelher
Graph predict1ons for the year ahead by
ma•hng $2 and SASE to ASiro-Graph, c/o 'tRIES (March 21·Aprll 191 You are now

SOCially . When you rectprocate, make 1t a
memorable expenence l1bra, treat your-

.n a bnef cycle 1n whiCh several lhmgs

P 0 Box 1758 Murray
Hill StatiOn, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10150 Make

thiS newspaper,

today

an arrangement today where you c ould
earn

a commtss10n or denve

O

Complete the chuckle quoted
~V f1ll1ng 1n the mtnmg words
you develop from step No 3 below

lETTERS TO

spectal ben-

efitS from helpmg others w1re

when selling or promoting
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Th1s can be a
very rewarding day lor you 11 you"re pre·
pared to eam whf.t you want. Your grattft·
cat1on

will be proportionate to the effort

you ••pend

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

V1sion - Juror - Guest - Heifer - FOREVER

B1g ~te'a C.Wrtooning CluP

9160~5~

An elderly aunl was very
cnt1cal Granny says lhat those
who appreciate the value of
constructive cnt1c1sm most are
usually those who • - ••

Be a cartoon1st just l1ke

'(OU

t.ET

1989 Bwek 2 Door T-Typa , 1989
GMC Full S1ze Ptck- Up, 1988 Be·
retta , 1982 Escorl, Cook Motors,
614-446·0103

wv

DJ

0 K M L

E QL U L

5

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

COMFORT ASSURED 0£ALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

R P N L

AD

CXQPMNK
GVURXF.
I
PREVIOUS SOLUTION· "I treat agents like I treat drugs I
(Atlanta Hawks president) Stan Kaslen.

1 _.J.-...L._.J__J
1.-.J.-..L.

ING, 61H92·5041

or whole car 304 675 -4108 or 1-:~:"::'~:-:"~==-=--

304· 773-5064

YD XJ Y

r~-U-S-T=--1--D-P-......,,

Aoolmg and gutters- commercia l
and res1dent1SI, mtnor repa1rs. 35
years expenence, B&amp;B ROOF -

Electrical and
Refrigeration

GXUQVA

l-.....L-.1--L-.1-~ "'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL' '

E::'::::::-::::::;.::.-:-:--:----

VJKNAA

AU L

When should children learn to play

DRYWALL

$2600, 614·992·3194
840
1966 Plymoih Aehance lor par1s

APDYKW

GOCNWL

I bridge' As early as posSible, but I had

Hang f1n1sh, repa1r.
Ce11tngs !ertured, plaster repa1r.
Call Tom 3011 67511186 20 years
erpen ::-nce

Freeman' s Heatmg And Cooling.
Installation And Serv1te EPA
Cef'llfled Resident•al, Commercial
614 -256 1611

JOSDWL

The declarer took 11 in good spml.
' "''v"'" that she would never forget the

COuPON/

C&amp;C General Home Maln tenence- Pamhng , v1ny l Si ding,
carpentr~. doors. w1ndows, baths,
mob1le nome repatr and more For
lree est1mate call Chat, 614 ·992·
6323

820

by Luis Campos
Cetebrtly C~r ~ntml .,. ~rntfillrom qUOIII\101'11 by lamoua ~ . pat •nd presenl
Eactlletter In the cipher standi lor another Todly s due 0 •all P

a moment later.

YOU#l POUPON

B1ll Ornck's Home lmproliemems add1t1ons remodel1 ng, roofmg.
S1d1ng, plumbing , etc Insured, call
Blll 0mck,614-992-5183

------

CELEBRITY CIPHER

for spades, Michael, after ruffing. led
back a spade. The defense continued
with a spade ruff, d1amond ruff, spade
ruff That was the first SIX tncks and
they should have collected a seventh
With the spade king, but .a wheel fell off

Tl'ttJrf ~ SOuP ON

Home
lmprl)vements

Ear l's I lome Mauitenance. v1nyl
Sldtng, roofing . e•ter1or pa1nhng,
power wasl1mg , Free Es!lmales,
6111 992-41151 or 614 -992-4232

56 Mao - tung

reading th1s as a sult·preference signal

MUSTA").

!:7;::7:::9 ::5 --:--:----,----~-

1986 Pont1ac 6000 Runs Good
$900, 614·446-6689
1988 Shadow 11Q ,OOO
$1.200. 614-256-1233

ruffing the first trick, M1chael
1maginat1vely switched to the club
jq11een. Lisa overlook with the king and
returned the diamond tO Correctly

L.AST N16tiT

Appt1ance Pans And Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E•·
per1ence Atl Wo rk Guaranteed,
French Clly Maytag, 614 -446·

1766

•

FAITH,HOPE AND CHARIT'L

TAKe

810

algn

49 Adam"o
grancloon
51- lVII
52 Small bottle
53 S.llor'o
patron Hint

though they have attended several na·
tionals, the one in New Orl ea ns last
summer was the first m which they had
played Over the f1rst weekend , they
lccJmpeted m side games ":'lh their

60~61lT TWO POUNDS OF

t:.;!d•.)
....

. .
pe--•r
38 Port olo
lortreoo
41 Wlllrlpoolo
44 Anlmol
4S Commend to
RoVIf
47 Ripped
4SProphetlc

and Dav1d Berkowttz , of Old

••1 don't have any d1amonds," Michael

675 1987
Cav al1er

31 Jacob"ollrol
wHo
32 Con-ning

The opponents crUJsed tnto four

1985 Mome Carlo 350, 4-0arrel.

Chevy

Pass

neans. L•sa, West. led the d1amond jack
the dummy was tabled Michael
started laughing
"'Why are you laugtung'''" asked the

ere body, runs good $1 200 3041986

Pass

On th1s deal, M1chael showed his in·

S1tage Bagger for lease 100 150· 1---~;;.;;~;;:-::~:_:__
200ft t&gt;ags available 304 273
BASEMENT
•215
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1110na1 111e11me guarantee
Square bales $1-$2 Round bales Loca l references lurmshed Call
(614) 446 0810 Or (614) 237 ·
$1Sea 3011-675-3960
0488 Rogers Waterproofi ng Es·
tabhshed 1975
TRANSPORTATION

AKC Reg Oalma!tan pupptes ,
sl1ots &amp; wormed S200 304·675 5553

B1rds Iguanas, Tara ntulas, m1ce
F tsh Tank &amp; Pet Sl'lop. 2413
Jackson Ave Pom t Pleasant ,

1

CAME

JUST

FROM THERE ..

SERVICES

Prem1um 18% altalfa hay, 2nd cut
$80tton Moroan s Farm 304- ·
937 2018 Sepr only

1972 VW Bug Blue, Star R1ms
EMce llen1 Cond1110n, $2,800. 614·
256·1421

Pass

29=1

Uke parents,
like children

304 773-5629

86 Toyota Ce1 1 c~. red, 170 ,000
miles rebuilt at100,000, 5 speed,

4 'I

Fully self contamed 10 11211 Cav·
alcade truck camper, e•c cond

Hay &amp; Grain

Autos lor Sale

Pass

Camper lor sale, 20' Aluma Llle,
good conditiOn, $2200 neg , 614
992·27iJ alter 5pm , or weekends.

Two registered Angus bu lls. 22211 months old, also. 8 yearling
registered Angus bulls pnced to
sate, 614-742-3}33

710

2 'I

1977 Ford 460 2411 camper,
crwse. 2 a1rs llkw onan, top earn·
er, casseue rad1o, 4 awn1ngs Will
accept sma ll standard transm1s
S1on car on Jrade 304·6 75-3035

319 2932

640

Pass

10Eq1181
11 Looked ot
19 Creve
21 Hindu
myotlca
23 Stair f*l
25 Think nothing
26 Vnnl"oboW
27 Aloe ol woter

Motor Homes

Reg1stered Ouarler Horse Yearly
F1lly Out Of May B Doc - lncenttve
Fund Should Make Excellent Ev
enr , Or Cow Horse $1 ,SOD. 6111 ·

~KG Reg Black lab pu~s shots
&amp; wormed 304-675-63 59 or 304-

AKC Registered Rottw&amp;ller puppieS, born 8/5/95 S300 had f~rst
shots, AKC lemal e (mother),
three years old, good With ch1ld ·
ren, $150: 614· 742·38)2

New gas tanks, one ton truck
wheels, fadta!Ors, llaorma ts. ere
D &amp; R Auto, Ripley, WV 304-372

7 ~IQS lor sale, $15ea 3011 ·675 6490

· 4 c~l, $2995, ,614·Q92 2258 or
614·992·6314
1972ChevelleSS 614 .985 . 4306

675·6577

I

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

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

Glllespoe, SA &gt;00. 614-446· 3~9

AKC Boston 1erner pupptes , 2
gtrls, 2 boys. white collars, ready
to go, call 614·992-3752 or 614·

992·3965

KNOW TI-IERE'S A
STOREFRONT CllURCil A6011T
FOUR SLOCK5 FROM llERE?

DID 'I'OU

I:c..:.::=:..::::::.c.______

tal !Red Angus, Cross Breed1ng,

Arr~nger

are champu;ms in the makmg And al-

Livestock

1994 Chevy ptc:k -up facrory cast
alummum wheels 3011 · 675 235§ '
from 7-9pm

1•

Ltsa

_009:--5---------

e Month Old Bull Calves S1mmen-

Pocket breed
Uzard

Tappan, N J ., have won several nat1onal
bridge champ10nsh1ps. They have two
children. Dana, 10, and Michael. 8, who

M
17 hole gram drtll With lertlliZ · 1
er and grass seed boxes 614 · •949.2574
Glastron run a bout , 85 hp Met·
cu ry outboard , runs sweet , tan.
I
dem arle tra1ler askmQ' $1200 .
614-992-2001
1 1f 2 Y10 Jacob Sheep Ram

630

Wrttor

By Phillip Alde r

Chrysler Mo10r Tra tler Included
lmerna11ona1 756 01ese1 Trac tor ,_e..,•_•·-4..,46_·_,_F_7_c6____--'--S4,995. 964 Otesel PS. L1ve PTO, 1SS,QQS, Sears 12 HP lawn Trac- 1987 Cobra F1sh &amp; Slit Boat, 150
tf)'r, $2g5, Case Lawn Tractor HP Outboard Motor, Depth Ftnd·
er Bu1ltln CB &amp; AM IFM Stereo,
$295,614-286-6522
lots 01 Ertrast $6 ,000 . 6111 256 -

814·388-8714

AKC Regtslered Cocker Spantel
Puppl81, $150, 6 14-379·27 28
F1rewood For Sate : $40 Ptck· Up
Delivered, S30 PICk-Up, 61.·379·

1-:-:=.,..,.-,..----.,.--..:.,
1977 Mar II Twam, 16 Ft 120 HP

Wnh • Horns sso , 6 Momh Old 760
B•l~ Goa• -Moxed Alp•ne $35, 614
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon 367-7006

Atlanta 65 000 btu gas stove,
used two mon ths, $600. 614-742 ·
2192

Campground Membersl11 p, Camp
From Coast To Coast U S !C ana.
da $11 00 Per N1ght RPI Alllil!lted
Pd S3 600, Sacral1ce $1125, 1 {K)Q.

,,.,, alurronum "ms, ~"'· $4800
614-992 2335
1;;.;.:.::::::;,.:;;:::::.;..
______
730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs
1-::=-::---,..------

610 Farm Equipment
14hp Economy Garden tractor w1

7 P1ece L1vmg Room Sal / Sofa. 2
Cha1rs Onoman Collee Table, 2
EM Tables, Excellent Condtllon,
$200, 614 446·2 451 Aller 6 Or
6 14-4116 3547

Calonc. almond. electnc stove,
sell -clean 1nQ Queen SIZ&amp; water
bed w 1new heater &amp; manress
304-675-7858

1990 Ford Ranger XlT 2 9 lure 6
cyl .. 5 speed a~r, bedl 1ner new

word a
Prefix lor cycle

34

1987 Fo rd II WO New 302 En
gtne, New Pa1nt, &amp; T1res 76,000
M1les, 614 245 9061

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Repatred. New &amp; Rebutll In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528

l&lt;mg wood burn1ng lurnace, !iJOOd
cond , used only a lew years 304675- 1714

New 1996 Do ubl ewtdest 0 1!1
counts up to $5,000 mclud1ng free
heat pu mp, delivery and more 1
800·251·5070 8MI11

local Vending Busmess For
Sale I Be Yo ur Own Bossi Earn

Wanted to buy good used !lute,
614-992-2633 after 6 pm

5
&amp;
7
a
9

lead: • J

t983 Sconsdale Che11y 314ton
truck, .Cspd standard w1pos 1tive
ltaCIIOn, 350 ing1ne, 4 barrel, less
than 39.000 actual m1tes, no rust,
topper, 1 -owner Pr~ ce d on m specllon 304·675-4082

Slove Freezer , Washer, Dryer,
Re fngera!or, TV, VCR. 614 -256·
1238

re commends that you do buSI ness Wi th people you know. and
NOT to send money through the
ma1l unul you have 1nvest1gate d
the oMe11ng
Excellent Reta11 Space •Avatlable,
Lafay&amp;ne Mall, 513 922·0294

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Trumpet Bac h TR-300 Used Very
ltttle, New S645, Sell For $200.
614-245-5870

2 Bedroom Mobile Ho me No
Pets, $225tf.tonth , S 100 Depos11
614 ·446·3617

OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO

New Bank Repos Only 4 lett.
755 1191

Comple1e home lurn1sh1 ngs
Hours Mon -Sa t, 9 5 614· 4116·
3' m1les oul Bula11 ~ll e P1ke

1--------'----'--'---.

WHAT DID
YOU FERGIT,

2984

2 Bedroom In Porter Area De
PQSII &amp; Utilities, 614·388-9162

N1ce 2 Bedroom, CA . Htghway
160, 4 M1les N Holzer. $3251Mo.
Secunry Depos1t, Reference. fl14·
446·6189, 614·446·6865

GO RIGHT BY
HENHOUSE II

Ford Ranger p·cllup 2 3 II
, 6B,OOOm 1, $1,200 or
4 wheeler 304 576

Musical
Instruments

K1ng wood &amp; coal stove wlb!ower
S200 El Camtno topper SSO 304·

New 1996 14x70, 1ncludes skirt·
mg . steps, blocks. one ~ear
homeowners msurance and stx
months FREE fol rent Only St025
down and $207 17 per month Call
1·600-837·3238

INQTICEI

LAYNE·S FURNITURE

H1 ·Eflec1ency l P. Or Natural Gas
92% Furnace• 100,000 BTU
$1 250 Installed, 1·800-287-6308,
614 448 -6308, Duct Systems And
A1r Corxj1t10ners. Free EsDmates

570

Now open Qual ity Furr'lllure Plus,
SA 7, Tuppers Pla1ns Several options ol ftnancmg avatlable, laya·
ways and ma1or cred11 cards, 614667 7388
.

1158

AN' YOU
CALEB'S

PAW?
Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 WNkllndwelcomlng
abbr.
2 Utah okl reoort
3 Remove from
office
4 Exprnoln

28 Assumed
manner
30 -monster
33 Monks
35 Winners "
rewards
37 Antlsaptlc

Vulnerable· East· West
Dealer: West
South
West Norlh East
Pass l t
Pass

uck, Good
Trade Fo r
614· 446 45111

540

DOWN

25 Make a choice

.. s

BARNEY

APPLIANCES

I

440

All real EISiale advertiSH'IQ In
tl1ts newspaper Is subject to
lhe Federal Fa1r Housing Act
of 1968 wtllch makes It Illegal
to advertise "any preference ,
llm1tattoo or dlscr1mlnatlon
based on race, color, religion,
seJt fam1llal &amp;talus or national
or1gln, or any Intention to
1
make any such preference,
limitation or dlscr1mlnaUon •

USED

I&lt;€TIR£MWT iiJCOI.-It. ...

1314-992· 5986 alter 5pm

Broyhill blue couch w1mau11e flow
ers, 1 deliver locally $100 304·

Wash er!!, dryers, refngerators,
ranges Sllaggs Appltances, 76
Vme Street, Call 614 446 7398 ,
1·800-499-3499

.. . . .
.6 3
•JID542
t ···
•Kt0973 2
•AQ8 54
SOUTH
•Q 7 5 2
•A K 9 4
• K 9 8 3

90 Sunb1rd SE, standard. piS, aJc,

7195

N1ce r-'~o neuse Pomeroy Rooms
recemly repatnted , new Windows,
semor Clhzen d1scount. call 614
992· ?3011

Afi/b E!fGifJ/JI~

lO (.L'()RR'-1' Af!:I:JJT TI-t~

mags, spo tler. tmt, 80k, $4 , 200,

4 Room Small Conaoe. On Corner

1 10

~£

•A Q 7 6
•J
EAST
AKJI D63
•J82

Ford Mustang , V6 , 5spd,
green t5,800ml, CD
, am lm cassene, ~ower
seat. pi, pw, crutse ac, anti·
lock brake system , rear spo1ler.
St6.oooneg :J:J4·882·2094

Household
Goods

Vmy l In Stock $5 00 Vd
Patterns 01 K1tc:hen Car
Slack Over 35 Pauerns
Stoc:k Mollohan Ca rpets
74411

EEK&amp;MEEK

Plymouth Sundance 4 Door,
70 000 Mdes. $5 ,000, OBO,
1539.5111-256-1233

MERCHANDISE

614·388-1~00

aA 9 8 4
•Q 10 7 5

1992 Ford Tempo V 6 , loaded.
23,0 00 M1les Ask'"g #5 ,350,
4·256·,252, 614 256-1738.

ent or lea se
toca11on
store room 1600 sq ft . Pomt
Pleasant, opposite the post otltce
Call 304 675-5733

01 554 &amp; 8u lav1lle P1ke, No Pets

Public Sale
and Auction

~·~~~;.?,A~u~c~l&gt;of;n~~~~
~
l~ll

Clean

1991 Geo Storm, low fl"'jles, 5sp&lt;l.
3011 675-2735

f.,.....:,___:.:_:..:;.::.::___

410 Houses lor Rent

Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Ac:lvance Oeadlrne 1 OOpm the
before the ad IS 10 run Sun·
, Moned1!10n· 1 OOpm

x

742·2357

For Lease

510

411

9u

1989 NJssan Samra. 4 ely . .c sp •
good work car , $1000 abo 614·

Wanted House For Rent, 2. ·3
Bedrooms, GallipoliS V1C1n.ty, Be·
1ng Transferred 2 Adults 1 Child
304-273· 2038
'

RENTALS

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

80

470 Wanted to Rent

W&gt;lh Island 3 Bedrooms. 2 112 490

Bath ~oo de Home W11h Add On
10 U tles
From Gall 1poi 1S
S125000,61-4·388-8878

1989 Mustang LX Ercellent Conamen, S5.500, 614 ·446-2056

Haven. $60/mo 304·773 5881.

38 Plooo In
another choir
39 - the night ...
40 Organ r,lpe
42 Greek otter
43 l.liW dea.
45 un-.fing
47 Waa lolly
50 Courage
54 Medical aulflx
55 Single pert
57 Dog"o waggor
58 Clorlc"o title
59 Ballerlno'o
otrong polnto
60 Stuff
61 Compe.. pt.
62 AbotriCI being
63 Circle olllght

The young lady came home from her date cry~ng "Remember dear,"' the mom told her love sick daughter,
"moments are temporary but memones go on FOREVER"

SEPTEMBER 261

�Tuesday, September 26, 1995

Ohio Lottery

Rockies,
Mariners
triumph

Pick 3:

641
Pick 4:
4319
Buckeye 5:
3-23-28-34-36

Sports, Page 4

With Factory Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
Less Than Factory
· lnvoi.ce on Most

I
•

Vol. 46, NO. 106

Copyright1995

Low tonight In 40s, nto~ tl y
dear . Thursd ay, sunn y. 1-tl gh
nea r 8U.

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 tents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 27, 199&amp;

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

.

Arts week· bein

Models.

Meigs board discusses
ways to use levy money

observed

By JIM FREEMAN
board mcmhcrs consiUI!red " wish
Sentinel News Staff
li sts" compiled by di strict princiThe Meigs Local Board of Edu· pals . Most prin cipal s said lheir
cation, meeting in regular session buildings need hlinds :md copying
Tuesday night at Rutland Elemen· machin es, according to Buckley,
tary School, di scussed ways to wilh lhe exception of the high
spend funds ge nerated from its school where students' lockers
1994 permane nt improvements need new locki ng mcchmtisms.
levy.
In addition, some buildings need
When voters approved the 5- roof repairs.
milllevy in May of 1994, the boanl . Board members agreed 10 consaid it would be used 10 purchase sider the lists and then priorilize
buses, books and to make improve- requested repairs.
.
ments to buildings.
According 10 the di slrict , lhe
So far, the hoard lms purchased levy gene rates $ lll000 a ye ar.
six new buses wilh lh e goal or with a total dollar amounl of
replacing tlte district's bus llcct by $565,000 over the five year period
purchasing live buses a year for the of the bond .
next four years . In additiYn, the
Board memb e r John Hood
board has boughl new language addressed the board on his conarts books.
cems over home schooling.
"We need to ... purchase social
Hood said ht&gt; rcceruly talked to
studies textbooks a"i soon a."i possi· some rhlll.lrcn on tile street and
ble," said district supcrinlendcnt asked th em why lhcy wcren't"in
Bill Buckley. "Afler that we need school lo which they responded
10 purchase sciepce lcxlhooks."
U1cy were being schnoh:tl at home.
At Tuesday night's meeting,
·•There is more lo teaching thnn

•

•

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just lessons," sttid li &lt;xld. "The kid$
are taken out of reality."
"I really feel sorry for Ute kids;:
he added.
Buckley said Ohio h.:Ls very lib;
era! rules tow:ud home schooling:
Parents are required to have only a
high school diploma or general
equivalency diploma and to notify
Ute county superirllcndent of lhCi(
intent to home school .
"Some do a good job;" he said. .
Buckley said lhc schools lose
money when parents lake theio
children out of U•e schools.
"A lot of people in Meigs Coun'
ty are going to home schooling," ho
added.
·
11
lf parents H~e having second
doubts (about hom e schooling);
bnng lhe kids hack lo school.':
Hood commented.
In addition, board members dis;
cussed not letting seniors partici;
pate in the graduation ceremony
unless they have all their courses

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Continued on page 3

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Mason board tables four -..
'

Trucl~

Fall Used Car &amp;
BLO~ -O.JT

1995 FORD F150 4X2 .
Long bed, 300 Cu ln., 6 cyl, auto,
air cond, PS, P~ . 1iH, cruise,
AM/FM cass
Low Miles

6 cyl, auto, air, AM/FM Cass, TiH,
Cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL, Loaded

1995 FORD F150 4X4

ShM bed, 300 Cu. ln., 6 cyl,
alf cond, PS, PB, AMIFM cass
Much More.

$14,949

, Auto, Ale, TiH, Cruise, PS, PB,
, POL, Pwr Seat, leather etc .

$17,949

1994 GMC1500

1991 CADILLAC BROUGHAM
1

A proclumaliun d~signating ·
the w~ek marking thre~
decades of huilding Ohio
through the arts in parlnd'shlp
with local ag~ nci~s and · artisl~
has been signed by the Meigs
County Commissione.rs.
.
The Ohio Arls Council con·
tributes significantly with per·
sonnel and fu.nding In the
Rherbend Arls Council which
offers a variety ul' programs
gl!ared to a1·t awareness
through exhihits and instruc·

S A LE

1994 BUICK PARK AVE

1992 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Arts Week Is being celebrated lhls week by the Riverbend
Arts Council In observance of
the Ohio Arl.&lt; Council's 311th
anniversary.

4.31, auto, air
PS, PB, AM}FM cass. bed liner
M01e.,
·
' .

, auto, NC, AMIFM cass, tiH,
cnuse. PS, PB, PW, POL, leather ,
low miles.

4x4, short bed,

LEASE ONE OF THESE VEHICLES
HERE'S. HOW IT WORKS!!
95
14,949 MERCURY
MYSTIQUE
-9,284*

cond ,

'

$16,949

"'

tion.
Arts in Education pro·

grams, Appalachian Children's
Theator, and the Rig Dend

1994 ,(\;EO TRACKER

I ~:~~~~~· 4 cyl, 5 spd, Power steer,
11
brakes, AMIFM stereo.

the local projects partially
funded throu~h the Ohio Arls
Council.
Top photo • Jan&lt;! Howard
and Fred Hoffman, commis·
sioners, sign the proclamation
as Mary Wise, left, Riverhend
Council pn':."iident, and .Jean~tte
Thoritas, vice pn~sichnt, look
on.
Relnw • As a .iiipedal feature
of the week, Rnge1· and Mary
Gilmore will present 0111 Arts
Council anniversary program
of Appalachian music nn the
M&lt;igs County Courthouse .step.s
at noon Friday,

VEHICLE PRICE
(Caprtalized Cost)

GUARANTEED FUTURE VALUE
(Lease End Residual)

1993 LINCOLN MARK VIII

YOU PAY ON
(Lease Depreciation)

1993 MAZDA MX3

Cruise, PS, PB, PW,- POL Much
more

1994 CHRYSLER LEBARON LE
V.fJ. auto .. air cond .. AMIFM ster·
eo, PS, PB, PW, POL, M, cruise,
AMIFM cass. More

5

1
THUNDERBIRD

cyl, auto, A/C , ti~. cruise, PS, PB.
PW, POL, Pwr seat, AMIFM cass.
More

$12,849

1992 CHEV LUMINA EURO
dr, 6 cyt, auto, air con.d.. PS, PB.
POL, tin, cruise, AMIFM cass
Much More

11,449

VEHICLE PRICE
(Capi181ized Cost)
GUARANTEED FUTURE VALU E
(Lease End Residual)

You

''

1993 FORD MUSTANG

PAVON

(Lease Depreciation)

5.0 L V-8 5 spd, Air Cond, PS, PB,
PW, POL, Tilt, Cruise, Cass,
Sunroof.
I

$11,449

VEHICLE PRICE
(Caprtalized Cost)

$5,665**
13,949
*
•7 414
'

PW, POL, Pwr seat, tih, cruise

GUARANTEED FUTURE VALUE
(Lease End Residual)

AMIFM cass
Sharp!

·

You

PAVON

6 cyl, auto, A/C,
PS, PB, PW,
POL, tih, cruise,
AM/FM cass.
More

1120730

10 949 .93 MUSTANG

. CONVERTIBLE
LX

-6,555*

1992 DODGE SPlRIT ES
4 dr, V6, auto, air cond, PS. PB

#20981

94 FORD
TAURUS

$6,535**
'

\

4 cyl. , 5 spd., NC, AM/FM Cass, Cruise, PS, PB, PW,
POL, More
·
·

1994 FORD F150 XLT
Long Bed, 6 cyl, 5 spd, PS, PB,
PW, POL, TiH, Cruise, AMIFM
Cass, Low Miles.

1993 CHEV. G20 '/• TON

1993 CHEV G20 '/.TON

cass, More.

tih, cruise, PS,
PB, PW, POL

$4,394**

6 cyl, auto, air cond, PS, PB,

AMIFM cass.
More.

By TOM HUNTER
Senllnel News Staff
Public discussion of a proposed
$8.75 million building project in
the Eastern Local School District
continued Tuesday night, with the
school boanl recei.ving more input
and ideas on the project proposals.
About 50 residents, 1eachers,
and students from the distr.icl
attended last night's special meeting, at Eastem High School.
Architect Dave Zeller of Marr,
Knapp &amp; Cmwlif of New Philadelphia, one of U•e fmns working with
the district on the project, was present to explain the proposal revisions and to field questions from
the audience.
Zeller statetl tltat since tlte Sept .
12 board meeling , cost cutting
measures have been taken to trim
the projected budgets for each
building proposal.
Some of the proposed cuts
included:
• Cutting the idea of using ceiling fans in each room.
• No major overhaul of th e
existing high school locker rooms.
• No paving work on the exist·
ing high school parking lot.
These cuts saved around
$200,000.
.
According io Zeller, these ways
of cutting cost~ on the project were
only ideas from his firm , as a
means of culling the proposals

$16,949
1992 FORD F1 . XLT
Flareside 4x4 . V·B, auto,
AMIFM cass, t-S, PB, PW,
tih, cruise, More

$1 4 ,949
1993 DODGE CARAVAN

•

auto, NC. tilt, cruise, cass, PS,
PB, PW, POL, T.. V VCR More.

$14,449
Conversion van, auto, A/C. PS,
PB, PW, POL, tih, cruise, AMIFM

Eastern board receives more
input on proposed building project

'Ttara" Conversion, r8.ised roof,

$14,949

4 cyl, auto, A/C,

#946921
(Lease Depreciation)
*Lease End Residual value (Purchase Option Price) is based on 15,000 miles per year
lor 2 ears ~Plus taxes, lease char s, State Taxes. &amp; Ucense, Due allnce bon

'I

1995 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE

tilt. cruise, all
power

,

V-8, Auto, NC, AM/FM Cass, Till, Cruise, All Power Etc.

V-6 5spd, Air, AM}FM Cass, Tilt,

4 cyl, auto, A/C,

1989 FORD E150
Conversion, raised roof, V-8,

NC, rear NC,

~S.

PB, PW, POL,
tiH, cruise, Loaded, Clean

down. They can a lways be added
back into the pmjec t.
Revtset.l ligures tor lhe propos-

als being di scussed by the bOard
are as follows:
· Option I: Construct new K-6
elemcnlary; repair/upgrnde exisling
high ~chool ; additions to exisliftg
high school. Proposed cost
trimmed hy $445,000. to $R .6 million.
· Option 2: Construct new 7-12
High School ; repair/upgrnde exi st·
ing high school; convert exi sting

high school lo K-6 . Prn[Klsed cost
trimmed by $450,000, lo $9 .7 mil lion.

· Oplion 3: Construct new K-8
building wilh a .new high school
gym at that site; rcp:,ir/upgrade
existing high school. Pro[Klsed"cost
trimmed by $849,000, to $9.16 million.
• Option 3A : Construct new K-8
building with multi -purpose cafeteria area; repair/upgrade existing
high school. Proposed cos t
trimmed by $448,000, to $8.7 mil lion.
lncludetl in Ute se costs cst immes
are all cosls relative 10 construc tion, including furnishings, land,
site development, and building
material~ .

The board has not L1lked about a
proposed localion for the school.
According to board president Ray
Karr, that decision will be made

before lhe levy is nhK'cd on the hal lot in March, 1996.
"The most imponant thing now
is to set an agenda for an educational program for the district.
We'll then present that program to
the state for their approval," added
Karr.
From the response of those
auending the meeting, the most
popular proposals are Options I, 3,
and 3A.
After Karr asked for a show of
hands on the proposals, options 3
and 3A look to be the more realistic possibilities for the project.
After having questions answered
on the building plan, the main concern of those in auendancc was the
millage for the building assistance
levy that is neetled for the project.
The curren l"cstimate on the levy
millage is at 4.4 mills. That figure
is not cast in stone, as valuation
will be judgetl again in December,
when the final amount of millage is
set. According to Karr, the board
has been told by the county and
state officials that the millage fig ure should not change much, if any
at all .
"The board would like to stay
within the $8.75 million dollar budget set by the state. If we go over
that amount, the stale said that they
are willing to work with us, but
they will not go very far over that

Continued on page 3

consolidation proposals
By Michele Carl•r
and Mindy Kearns
OVP News Staff
In a three-two decision, the
Mason County Bonrd ol' Education
voted Tuesday evening to table
four items concerning the proposed
consolidated Mason County High
School. All of these recommenda·
lions were made by Superintendenl
Michael Whalen cmitingent. upon
receiving School Building Authority (SBA) money.
Tabled were recpmmendations
to set a lentlttive school closing
schedule, the selting of public hear-

ings for school closure, to begin

negotiations with an architect Jinn
and advertising for hid proposals
for a construction mannger al the
proposed facility .
Board vice president Paul
Doeffinger made the motion to
table any action on the new school
until Kanawha County Circuit
Judge Paul Zakaib renders a deci-

sion in a case thai c'oncerncU
Mason Counly cili zen s filetl
agains t the bonrd over th e new
school plmt.
Board member David Morgan
seconded the motion. which al so ·

President Clinton vows
to protect coal· miners

Community Band are umong

than 10,000 mi.

·'

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) As President Clinlnn ple~geu his
support for iss ues imporlanl to
working peopl e , leaders of the
United Mine Workers IOid their
members to judge polilicians hy
their acts, no I hy Iheir words.
' 'The ind uslrial ngc brought
child lahor, swealshops mtd compa·
ny towns, mtd tltat's why we buill
strong unions ," C linlon said ,
addressing delcg:uc.s 10 the UMW
converttion by salellilc hookup ·
from the While House.
' 'Th e unions built the middle
dass, and the middle ci:Lss huill the
Am.erican dream ," the prcs idenl

"We have 10 oc furward-tltink ·
ing enough to work fi&gt;r what's right
even if it' s not popular," CliniOu
said.
He tlccricd llic GOP hudget pro- ·
pnsal now l&gt; c in g Jcha ted in
Congress.
.
" Do we wan! to lei t.:orpqrations
... loot their r cnsion funds legally"&gt;
Those :u·e the choices in tltal hud gel ,: ' CliniOn said.
Ciint&lt;m al so stti&lt;l' he would fight
" any bill 10 c41 or ~u1" Ute Mine
Safety and Health 1\Jrnini".stration
and said he would fighl to preserve
retire&lt;] miners' hcailh hcncfils, both
of which m·e the suhject of Rerub-

said, ncknowl cd gin g lhat today
theie are "extrannlinary new pres·
sures on working fX:!oplc ...

Ji can bills now in Congress.
·"I undcrstamJ what's at stake,"
Clinron saitl.
,
1

received an affirrnalive vote frmn
board member Mary Beth Carlisle.
Board president !larry Siders and
member Donna Thompson voted
against Ute mlllion. Siders said the

«?ontlnued on paga 3

Rutland woman
killed in 'wreck
on U.S. 35
A Rull:md wumun was kill•d
in a nne-cur cra."ih TuestJay on

U.S. 35 al the .Jacksun-lluss
cnunty line, the Ju.:k"'inn l,ust of
lhe Stale Hl~hway l'ulrul
reported.
Marjorie Rank.&lt;, 64, Salem ·
Slreel, was pronounced dead ul:
the scene by Dr. Carl Greevtr,
Jacksun County cm·uner, the·
patrol said.
Troopers said ·flanks wus
easlhound al 5:25 p.m. near ·
Trlppie's Restaurant when her .

•

carwenlollthe1· i~htsideoflhe

road and struck a Iurge culvt!rl,
severely damagin~ the car.
The nason llanks' cur lefl
the road •·em:~in .&lt; unknown,
said troupers, who •·eported
that the victim was nul wearing
a surety hell al I he lime nf I he
crash. The palmi was ass'-'ted
al the sc•ne hy the Klchmnndale Volunteer Fire De pari·
menl.
The hudy was h1t~r rtdeas~d
to the Mayhew Funtral Homt.
.Jacksun.

••

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Water line replacem1ent project

-. ~

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Work cuntinut!d this week on a Pomeroy

a $211,11110 granl in .June In replace an SO-year-

water line replacement project wllh workers
from lhe Blll Enyart and Sons Construction
Company of South Puinl shown here lnslalllng a
new line along Main Street. The village received

old water line ln~tw~~n the Rinrside FtN)d Murt
Marathon Stutiun and Rutt~rnut Avenue . The
project also indudt:s Legiun Tnr:.u:e.

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