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Page DB • ,S.unllnll iiiimrs-,Sentirul

Scientists try to transfer
rootworm resistance to corn
WASHINGTON (AP) - Agriculture Department scientists have
found that eastern gamagrass is
resistant to rootworm from its
seedliq.g stage to maturity. Now
they want to fmd a way to transfer
this resistance to com.
A major benefit of rootwormrcsistant corn would be a sharp
reduction in pesticide use - more
crop land is treated with insecticides for com rootworms than for
any other insect pest, USDA's
Agricultural Research Service says.
" Tbis resenrcb is being done in
an effort to reduce the' overall use
of agricultural chemicals and
improve water quality in the Com
Belt," says an article in the August
issue of the ARS publication Agricultural Research.
The scientists. entomologists
and }eneticists at the ARS Plant
Oen~ tics Research Unit located at
the Un iversity of Missouri in
Columbia knew when they began
that eastern garnagrass - a forage
grass common in the Midwest was resistant to rootworm at maturity.
"But to protect com all the way
from seedling stage through flowering, we needed to fmd rootworm

Value of U.S. wine exports sets new record

resistance in gamagrass seedlings,"
said Bruce E. Hibbard, an ARS
entomologist.
They infected 50-day-Qld garnagrass and com seedlings with western corn rootworm eggs . They
found that three rootworm larvae
surviyed on 20 gamagrass
seedlings. while the com seedlings
had one larva per plant.
Convinced now that garnagrass
seedlings carry the resistance, they
are turning tbeir attention to transferring that resistance through
genetics into com germplasm.
If they succeed, their work
could be used by private breeders
to develop commercial hybrids,
ARS said.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Gov ernment scientists are using tbis
summer's outbreak in the Southwest of the viral disease vesicular
stomatitis as a research opportuni ..
ty.
" The more we learn about
vesicular stomatitis now, the better
we will' be prepared to handle simi ..
lar outbreaks in tbe future," said
Donald W. Luchsinger, deputy
administrator for veterinary services in USDA's Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.

Stock market closes
on high note Friday
NEW YORK (AP) - Stocks
ended moderately higher, paced by
technology shares, as tbe earnings
outlook brightened and bonds and
·the dollar firmed.
The Dow Jones industrials
ended higher, but not before cutting
a gain of more than 20 points to
under 7.
Advancing issues led decliners
by about 9 to 8 on the New York
Stock Exchange. Volume was
moderately heavy at oveer 250 million shares. Broad market indexes
were higher.
Stocks got their biggest lift from
the volatile technology sector,
which has led tbe market botb up
and down over the past several
weeks. Today, Merrill Lynch &amp;
Co. raised its near-term rating on
microchip maker Intel to "buy"
from "above average." That sent
Intel's stock sharply higher and
pulled other computer-related
stocks along witb i~ traders said.
Stocks also rose after Dow
industrials component Alcoa said
its third-quarter earnings rose to
S1.27 per share from 39 cents a
year ago. Alcoa's stock rose more
tban a point and pushed other deep
cyclical stocks, which tend to
&lt;espond sharply to changes in eco.:_
.:mnic outlook, higher as well.
"This is the first major corporation to report" tbird quarter earn-

Sunday, October 8, 199~ :

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

ings, said Larry Wachtel, a stock
analyst-at Prudential Securities.
"So maybe tbe cyclical earnings
are going to be OK."
Another big industrial stock that
rose was Unisys. The company said
it would break itself into tbree parts
- information services, global
suppon services and computer systems - echoing a strategy recently
espoused by AT&amp;T tbat was well
received by stock analysts.
Meanwhile, the Labor Department said businesses added
121,000 payroll jobs in September,
less than analysts expected. Tbe
unemployment rate slayed
unchanged al 5.6 percent.
Economists said those figures
indicated that the economy was
growing at a slow but steady pace,
and thai inflation is not a problem.
Bonds initially ignored tbe positive
aspects of the jobs report and sent
bond prices down for technical reasons.
But bonds rallied at mid-morning, after Columbia University's
Center for International Business
Cycle Research said its leadin~
inflation index declined to 106.2 in
September from 106.5 in August
and bas falleJ) 6.5 percent since tbe
. beginning of tbe year. Economists
sai&lt;t that Is a clear sign that inflation is under control.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The · About 92 percent of the wine provalue of U.S. wine exports surged duced in the United States comes
15 percent in the 1995 markl!!lng from Calif001ia.
year to a record $209.7 million,
Shipments of U.S. wine totaled
although volume was slightly lower 1.33 million hectoliters in the marthan last year, the Agriculture keting year ended July 31, down
Department reports.
from 1.34 million hectoliters tbe
U.S. wine exports have risen in previous year. A hectoliter equals
value each year since the 1984-85 about 26.4 gallons.
The largest markets for U.S.
marketing year. partly because of
inflation but also tbe result of pro- wine exports are Canada, tbe Unitducers shifting toward higher quali- ed Kingdom and Japan, which
ty varieties, which i:ost more.
together account for 62 percent of
As Americans' wine consump- total value and 57 percent of total
tion has fallen over the past decade, volume.
producers have cut production.
Emerging markets for U.S. wine
However, growers have increased are Switzerland, Australia, Thaitbe acreage devoted to "quality" land, Taiwan, Singapore, Brazil
wine grapes by half, while reducing and Soutb Korea.
the area planted to "ordinary"
Imported wine, valued at a
grapes by about a third, USDA record $1.07 billion in the marketexport officials said.
ing year tbat ended July 31, comes
Quality wines include chardon- mainly from Europe, Chile and
nay, cabernet sauvignon, mer lot, Australia.
pinot noire, syrab (shirez) and sangiovese.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
The United States is the fourth- Agriculture Department is allowing
largest wine-producing country, the importation of several fruits and
behind Italy, France and Spain. vegetables that previously were

prohibited because of the risk they
would bring fruit flies and other
·pests.
·
Ambng the produce tbat will be
allowed: basil from Ecuador and El
Salvador, chives and dill from
Israel, pak cboi from Jamaica.
radishes from the Netherlands and
oca from New Zealand.
All still will be subject to
inspection, and possibly disinfection, when they reach port in tbe
United States, USDA said.
Otber ·produce will be allowed
entry after satisfying special
requirements .to prevent introduction of insect pests. In tbis category
are papaya from Belize. cantaloupe
from Brazil, litchi and Ya pears
from China, lettuce from Israel, and
apricots, nectarines, peaches and
plums from Zimbabwe.
The rule was published in the
Sept. 29 Federal Register.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
coalition of wheat growers is urging Agriculture Secretary Dan
Glickman to continue a karnal bunt

'

quarantine, wbicb is dire.cted Jt
Mexico where tbe fungus IS COin•
mon.
Tbe Agriculture Department ·ts
considering allowmg wheat tm~
from "kama! bunt-free zones" in
Mexico. But tbe National Associa·
tion of Wheat Growers and 20
national, state and regional wheat
organizations say more time Is
needed to determine wbeth~r
inspection procedures will be adequate. ·
Kamal bunt has not been found
in the United Stat,es or Canadll ·
The fungus is spread by see4
and soil. No known wheat varieties
are resistant to it, and chemic~!
seed treatments cannot be relied
upon, the groups said in a letter tb
Gliclcman.
WA'SHINGTON (AP) - Loans
by the Commodity Credit Corp. in
October carry a 5 518 percent interest rate, down from September's 5
3/4 percent. Tbe rate reflects the
rate charged CCC by tire U.S. Treasury, tbe corporation said.
·

KEEDYSVILLE, Md. (AP) -

tbis tree, we're losing most of the

One of the best ways to identify the- wars.''
ailanthus tree is to crumple one of
It was imported from China,
its leaves. If an offensive odor inadvertently it turns out, more
overtakes you, then it's an ailan- than 200 years ago when scientists
thus.
were sending seeds to each other
And the "stink tree " as it's from different parts of tbe world.
called, is pcn;istent: It's duficult to Ailanthus seeds bad been thought
to be from a different kind of tree,
kil~ can grow an inch a day and bas
firmly rooted itself in the mid- Pannill said.
Atlantic region and some parts of
Only in recent years has the
ailanthus (pronounced a-LAN-thes)
the West.
The tree "is a pretty bad prob- become so pervasive that it's more
lem and it's getting worse. It takes than just an annoyance to farmers,
over and out-competes native trees homeowners and tbose responsible
that are valuable resources," said for maintaining vegetation along
Philip D. Pannill, a regional roads and utility lines.
forester for the Maryland DepartAlso known by ibe unlikei Jia
ment of Natural Resources. "We're moniker "tree of heaven," the '
not only losing the battle against ailanthus bas become a problem in

California and Arizona and there
are spotty problems in the Midwest
and Mississippi River Valley, PanDill said.
Last month, 80 people crowded
into the Western Maryland
Research and Education Center
here for an ailanthus control workshop. The program was so popular
that some people bad to be turned
away.
State, federal and private
foresters came to find out bow to
. keep ailanthus in check. Farmers
expressed frustration over ailanthus
growing in their pastures and
fields. Representatives of The
Nature Conservancy wanted to find
out what to do with ailantbus trees
that are threatening endangered

Pick 3:
320
Pick 4:
2429
Super Lotto:
4-6-8-18-26-35
Kicker:

Sports, Page 4

944273

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 114
Copyright 1995

Judge 'Chili' Bean

License to 'loot or
deficit-chopping tool?
companies to withdraw surplus
funds in their "defined-benefit"
pension plans as long as they left
25 percent more than needed to
meet current liabilities. Definedbenefit programs pay a specific
benefit upon retirement
The withdrawn money, wbicb
could be used for any purpose. ·
would ~ taxed at the normal corporate "l'ncome tax rate until next
July, wben a 6.5 percent excise tax
would be added.
_The proposal would replace current law that imposes a 50 percent
excise tax on most witbdrawals. It
, was adopted in 1990 to stem a rash
of pension plan reversions during
the 1980s.
1
Pfoponents of tbe measure say it
' won t endanger pension plans.
"No pension is being put a1
risk," argues Lynn Dudley of the
Association of Private Pension &amp;
Welfare Plans. "None of the pension dollars set aside are ,being
used.

.,
At 425,000 and counting, United Health Care of Ohio' has the largest membership of any HMO in the
state. And while it may be impossible to talk with each of them, if you could, you would find they are
a very content group. In fact, results of an independent survey on customer satisfaction indicate
United Health Care's members are more satisfied than any other HMO fili~d
membership in Ohio. And they're happy with the things that matter most.
Like quality of medical care, and access to hospitals, physiCians and
wellness programs. To learn more about United Health Care, just cail a
neighbor. Chances are, they're members, or they know someone who is. ..__ _ _ __....,.

of Ohio..

1!1

Opening Doors 10 Better Health .~
3650 OLENTANGY RIVER ROAD, COLUMBUS, OHIO 43214-3459 • 614-442·72~7 • 800-328·8835

RETURN TO YESTERYEAR - The Lester Manuel famUy
carried out the ''Days Gone Bye'' theme of the Sternwheel Festival
parade with the couple and their children In period attire riding In
an old time farm wagon pulled by a team of.horses.

Cl 1995 Uttiftd HealthCare Corporation

See puzzle on page 02
•

'
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--

.

...

...

.

.

-

·-· -

.

·- -

DEP engineer who complained
about mill permit out of job
A woman who answered th e
phone at the Office of Air Quality
last week said Alaeddini no longer
works tbere. Division spokesman
Brian Farkas would not comment
on Alaeddhti' s departure.
"This is a personnel matter and
the division doesn't have any commen~" Farkas said.
Alaeddini could not be reached
for comment Sunday because his
borne phone was out of service.
Alaeddini took over work on the
permit this year after the engineer

WhiteHouse
is cautious
about Social
Security cuts

Pension·plan
withdrawals:

1996 cost-of-living adjustment.
Tbe Commerce Department will ·
announce retail sales figures for
September.

~Personnel matter'

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)A state Division of Environmental
Protection engineer who complained about a permit for a proposed Mason County pulp mill no
longer works there, and the agency
is not commenting on the matter.
Mansour Alaeddini publicly
complained in August about how
the agency handled the air pollution
permit for the proposed $1 billion
Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc . mill
beside lbe Ohio Rive~ at Apple
Grove.

WASHINGTON (AP) - So
your pension plan bas !"Ore assets
than it n~ds to provide the benefits
promised. Should your employer
be permitted to withdraw the surplus and usc it for new office com·
poters, or even a new limousine for
tbe boss7
Republicans on Capitol Hill
hope legislation allowing companies to make such discretionary
withdrawals will help cut the
deficit by raising $9.5 billion in
corporate taxes.
But pension-rights groups, organized l~bor and retired workers say
such withdrawals would threaten
the reurement security of 13 million Americans - 11 million
workers and 2 million retirees in
22,000 pension funds.
"It's a license to loot," says
Karen Ferguson, director of the
Pension Rights Center in Washington.
·
·
The legislation would permit

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia tnc. Newspaper j

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 9, 1995

Eighteen teams competed in the annual Big Bend Sternwheel
Feslival chill cookoff contest Saturday. Judge 'Chili' Bean, a.ka.
Sherman Mills, proprietor of the Yellow Dog Saloon (complete
l ith ·six shooter an4 dancing girls), prepares his brew. Bean's
stand was judged most original. Other winners Included, In order:
Individual - Jeff Davis, Margaret Eskew and Crystal Richmond
and Lisa and Mitch Meadows; &lt;:OI'porate - Forked Run Sports:
man's Club, Teaford Reality and Middleport-Pomeroy Lions.

growtb will break up the impact of
falling rain, plus reduce the velocity of any flowing surface water.
A cover crop will use nutrients
left over from t.!le previous crop.
Many crops such as tobacco usually has a high rate of nitrogen
applied. Tbis nitroge1J may not be
totally used by the time the crop is
harvested. The cover crop will utilize this left over nitrogen for
growtb, tbus keeping the nitrogen
from being lost by leaching
through the soil profile.
'
This helps eliminate the nitrogen from getting into the ground
water.
The Gallia S&amp; WCD bas no till
drills available for rent tbat can be
used for tbe seeding of cover crops.
For further infonnation call 4468687.

Low tonight In 40s, clear.
Tuesday, Sunny. Highs In the
mid 70s.

•

plants at some of their sites.
The ailanthus looks like a wainut or sumac tree. It doesn't stink
when it's left undisturbed, \)ut
when its leaves are crushed, watch
out
Yank it out of the ground and
another tree will grow from root
fragments left behind. The root system of a parent tree can stretch 50
feet from its trunk, and young trees
can sprout anywhere along this system.
·
Cut the tree down and it will
grow back. It takes two or three
years of mowing down the young
trees weekly during the growing
season to do them in.
About tbe only thing that upsets
the tree is shade.

The Autumn of discontent...
Continued from D-1
September Consumer Price Index.
This is the one that really matters
for Social Security recipients, as it
will he the basis for tbe January

Eastern tops
Southern in
TVC contest

Foreign 1Stink tree' causing problems across Mid-Atlantic

Cover crops pay
By BUZ MU.LS,
Gallia Soil·and Water
District Technician
GALLIPOLIS - Many landowners look only at the cost of seed
when thinking about using cover
crops.
Instead of just looking at seed
cost look at all the ways a cover
crop can make or save you money.
The small grains wheat and rye
can have multiple purposes as
cover crops. They can accomplish
erosion entry use left over nitrogen
build organic maner and be used as
a feed source the following spring.
Crops such as tobacco. corn
silage and many vegetables leave
very little residue on the soil surface for protection against winter
time erosion . A cover crop will
help hold the soil particles together
with its root system . The top

..Ohio Lottery

fl

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
Clinton administration could accept
smaller cost-of-living increases for
Social Security recipients, but not
merely as an expediem way to balance the budget, While House
Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said
Sunday.
Panetta said economists, and not
politicians, should determine
whether the current formula for
adjusting government benefits for
inflation is overly generous to
recipients and needs to be changed.
The Consumer Price Index, the
standard for measuring inflation,
should not become "a grab-bag in
order to try to ftll a need in terms
of the budget," Panetta said on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
Panetta's cautious approach to
rethinking changes in Social Security benefits drew a quick reproach
from Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., who said the administration was being intimidated by
senior citizens groups.
"They're scared of what the
American Association of Retired
Persons will say," Moynihan said
later on NDC.
Moynihan, the senior Democrat
on the Senate Finance Committee,
has said that by reducing tbe CPI
by a full percentage point, the government could sa"e $634 billion
over tbe next decade tbrougb lower
benefit payments, smaller interest
payments on the federal debt and
higher taxes. Most of tbe savings
would come from Social Security.
Many economists say tbe CPI,
now rising at sometbing under 3
percentage points a year, overstates
the actual inflation rate.
Moynihan pointed out tbat one
of the administration's top
economists, Alice Rivlin of the
Office of Management and Budget
last year concluded that the CPI
formula should be adjusted to bring
it closer to reality.

Nunn won't
seek reelection
ATLANTA (AP)- Georgia Sen. Sam Nunn, tbe most
prominent of a dwindling
breed of Southern Democrats
and the Senate's foremost
authority on defense issues,
announced today be will not
seek re-election In 1996.
"I know In my heart It Is
lime to foDow a new course,"
Nunnsaid.
Nunn's decision not to seek
a fifth term dealt Democrats
another blow In their hopes or
recapturing control of tbe
Senate next year. He Is the
eighth Senate Democrat to
announce retirement plall!l in
1!1!16, compared to only one
Republican. ·
As Georgia's dominant
political figure for tbe past
decade, Nunn would have
been a prohibitive favorite for
re-election. But Democrats
11ow face an uphill battle In
retaining hb seat In a state
that bas Toted onrwbelmllli!IY
Republican In tbe past two
congresslolilll elections.

who was handling it resigned to go
mto prtvate work. In August, he
criticized Dale Farley, head of the
Office of Air Quality, for not
putting a draft version of the permit
out for public comment.
At the time, Alaeddini said
agency administrators had ordered
him not to talk to reporters about
tbe issue, but agency officials said
it was his decision not to speak
with the news media.
The Division of Environmental
Protection is refusing to make pub- ·

lie certain documents dealing witb
the pulp mill' s permits . The
Charleston Gazette has gone to
court seeking the release of those
documents.
,
Gov. Gaston Caperton bas
backed the mill, saying the project
would generate jobs. Environmentalists have argued that the mill
would further pollute the river with
dioxin, a by-product of the bleaching process.
Dioxin bas been linked to birth ·
defects and other healtb hazards.

,

'
ENTERTAINING- Singing for the Big
Bend-Stern wheel Festival goers In Pomeroy Saturday arternoon were these men from the
French City Chapter of the Society for the
Preservation and Encouragement or Barbershop

Quartet Singing in America. The group, spon·
sored by The Farmers Bank, was one or several
featured at the sixth annual fe stival hellll!n
Pomeroy.

Clinton urged to take more
visible role in race debate.
WASHINGTON (AP)
Blacks and conservatives are urging President Clinton to take a
more visible role in dealing witb
racial tension spawned by tbe 0 J.
Simpson murder lrial.
They suggested that Clinton
would have an opportuniry to
frame the debate next wee~. courtesy of a Washington march organized by Nation of Islam leader
Louis Farrakhan as a call to pen;onal responsibility for black men.
Farrakhan, in an appearance
Sunday oit ABC's "This Week
with David Brinkley," said Clinton
should back the Oct. 16 march to
communicate to black Americans
that he supports black self-help.
"What intelligent person would not
want to embrace that kind of

idea?" Farrakban asked.
Last week, the president said be
Clinton, however, would prefer hoped the nation would not use the
to address race in the context of Simpson verdict as a reason to
federal budget priorities, White deepen the racial divide. But be
House chief of staff Leon Panetta stopped short of taking leading
said.
role in the national dialogue.
"If we paSs a budget that gets
In an appearance on tbe Brinkrid of affirmative action, that cuts I cy show, Harvard University prointo the very programs that help to fe ssor Cornel West said misconeducate children ... that's the worst ceptions between the races, along
thing we can do in terms of divid- with the hostility and bitterness of
ing the races in this country." the post-Simpson debate, cannot go
Panetta said Sunday in an appear- unchecked by U.S. leaders.
ance on NBC's "Meet the Press."
"We are in very, very deep
Clinton has been virtually silent trouble," V,:est said. "One of the
about America's simmering racial ways of trymg to come to terms
tension, even as debate grew hotter wtth tbts ts acknowll!ltgmg th~ fact
and louder after the acqutttal of _.that ~re are certaill"aosurd dllllCnSimpson in the knife slayings0 f hi. / sions fu being black in Aou~rica,
ex-wife and one of ber friends.
and therefore white fellow CtUzens
ought not to be in denial."

a

__ J

.

.

Legislature reviewing pension health care
COLUMBUS (AP) - A joint giving dfscounts to employers but
legislative committee wants to not passing the savings to subknow whether tbousands of public scribers.
pension fund retirees overpaid for
Last week, lawmakers inquired
health care.
about bow Blue Cross' discount
The alleged overpayments are arrangements affected four of the
.,,based on a secret agreement state's five pension funds: the State
between the funds and Blue Cross Teachers Retirement System, the
and Blue Shield of Ohio, The IJOblic Employees Retirement Sys(Cieveland) Plain Dealer reported,.....'li!m, the Police and Firemen's DisSaturday.
""'
ability and Pension Fund and the
The retirees may have paid a Highway Patrol Retirement Syslarger part of medical bills while tern.
the pension funds got a price break,
Blue Cross officials said tbeir
the newspaper said.
marketing practices are legal.
"I tbink we've got a problem
"We didn't receive any profit
here," said Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, on this in any shape or form ...
R-Hillsboro, co-chairman of the doing it in the ·fasbion that. Blue
committee.
Cross does results in a slight savCouns and regulators previously ings to the retirement funds," teslicriticized Blue Cross' practice of fied Blue Cross lobbyist Joe Gib-

bans. Gibbons said Blue Cross
plans to change the structure of its
discount arrangements next year.
Pension officials said tlley knew
about the discount arrangement but
were prevented in their contract
witb Blue Cross from disclosing it
to retirees .·
Lawmakers asked for an
a&lt;;counting of the possible overpayments.
Lawmakers are upset because
retirees' policies require a patient
to pay 20 percent of the bill. But ·'
because a patient's co-payment is'
based on the higher charge, not the
discounted rate, the patient could
paying more tban 20 percent without knowing it, the newspaper
reported.

Board may replace roll c~ll with voice vores
COLUMBUS (AP)--: The State
Board of Education is expected this
week to consider a resolution that
would eliminate roll call votes
except for the selection of a president or vice president.
The newly expanded board
might replace roD Call votes with
voice tallies, a proposal leading to
some debate about member
. accountability. {lov. George
Volnovicb bas appointed eight
members to the board to go along
with 11 elected ones.
The votes now are used for all

board. mauers. Supporters of
replacing them say the votes are
c.umbersome and usually unnecessary. Opponents argue that such
records allow the public to evaluate
the performance of members.
"I do believe .you should have
to say 'yes' or 'no' because the
public has a right to know bow you
vote," said Marie Pfeiffer, an
elected board member from
Columbus.
Pfeiffer said she does not object
to using voice tallies for such mat-

I

ters as accepting reports or
adjourning .meetings.
.
Board President Virginia Purdy,
of West Union, said sbe supports
the resolution. She said at least 40
roll call votes were taken at the
board's September meeting.
Purdy, who is an elected member, said she will seek an amend·
ment tbat would require a roD .call
if three or more members ask for
one.
Before December 1994, the
bo.ard d,.!!.~Cd voice tallies,. ?u.!~Y
_sat .

..

�Monday, October 9, 1995

Commentary
The Daily.Sentinel

'

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

'.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPI NION are we lco me. They should be less than 300
words long. All leiters are subjec t to editing and must be signed with name,
address and te lephone number. No unsigned letlcrs wi.fl be publi shed. U:tle.-.
should be in good taste. addressing tssues. not personalities.

Officials still cracking
down on marijuna
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
TOLEDO- Tomas Salazar says law enforcement officials waste tax: payers' money by cracking down on_marijuana.
: · "The police should spend more ume trymg to sol_ve m~rs an~. stop. ping gang violence than arresting people for smoking .~Juana. S31~
Salazar, president of the Sandusty County chapter of the Nauonal Organ•·
· zation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
.
.
But Sandusky County Sheriff David Gangwer says he wtll conunue
am:sting people wbo smolce and sell marijuana.
The debate over whether to legalize marijuana and prosecute those
: wbo use tbe drug continues, even though other drugs il! recent years : most notably aack cocaine - bave attracted more attenuon.
· Last montb, undercover law enforcement officers in Sandusky C~unty
infiltrated a three-day marijuana festival which Salazar's group organized.
The fifth annual festival at a Hefena farm attraCted more than 2.500
· people. The festival is the local NORML chapter's largest fund-raiser.
· Eacb participant is urg1116.to donate $20 to NORML, which supports the
legalization of marijuana.
.
Gangwer said information collected at the fesuval coul~ be used to ftle
charges, but be would not discuss what charg_es were bemg constdered.
.
: He called the festival an affront to the commumty.
. salazai accused Gangwer of targeting bis group for its beliefs and VlQlating its right to ~mble .
.
. .
.
ln July, a Williams County grand Jury mdtctcd a man who Satd be uses
marijuana to ease aches and pains.
Todd McConnict, 24, of Pawtucket, R.I., and his girlfriend, Natalie
Byrd, were stopped near Bryan because a State Highway Patrol trooper
:_ said the curtains in McCormict' s van obstructed bts VIew.
The couple was am:sted after the trooper found 31 pounds of marijuana and a small amount of hashish inside the van.
·
· McCO.tnick claims ~o have a prescription _for tbe _illegal drug from a
Dutch physician. He Satd be bas smoked manJuana smce was a 12 years
old to quell the pain from a rare childhood cancer and subsequent surgeries.
.
..
r
I
McCormick is involved in an attempt to legaltze manJ~ana .or ~p .e
with AIDS and cancer. He is a member of Help End ManJuana Prnbibltion and the NORML.
.
·
· At the time of his arrest, McCormick said be was on his way from San
Diego to Rhode Island to start a Comwsion Club, which provides mari- .
juana free to anyone with a serio~s disease.
.
Williams County Prosecutor William Bisb said whether McConruck
planned to usc the marijuana for medicinal purposes makes no difference
m the case.
_
Marijuana is a drug made from the dried leaves and flowering tops of
the hemp plant. The effects vary from person to person. In most cases, the
high consists of a dreamy, relaxed state.
Long term effects of marijuana use are not completely _known. It bas
been used as a medicine and intoxicant for thousands of years. In the
Uniied States, state and local laws bave prohibited marijuana use since the
ear~!~.
.
..
''dan
Lucas County Prosecutor Anthony Pizza called manJuana.. a
gerous substance." He said his of-fice bas seen an mcrease m manJUana cases
~ supports efforts to stop people from growing, selling and smoking tbe
drug.
..
.
"More teen-agers are using marijuana than ever be'.ore. ManJuana
IS a
gateway drug to higher drug use," Pizza said. "Law enforcement
sbouldn 't ignore it. It's not a product that can be vouched for."

Today in historY
By The Associated Prus
Today is Monday, Oct 9, the 282nd day of 1995. There arc 83 days
left in the year. This is' the Columbus Day holiday, as well as Thanksgiving Day in Canada
Today's Highlight in History:
. ·
On Oct 9, 1888", the public was ftrst admitted to the Washington Monument
On this date:
.
'
.
In 1635, religious dissident Roger Wilhams was ban1sbed from the
Massachusetts Bay Colony.
In 1701, the Collegiate School of Connecticut - later Yale University
- was cbartered in New Haven.
In 1776, a group of Spanish missionaries settled in present-day San

ftancisco.

..

·

In 1919, the Cincinnati Reds won the World Series, five games _to
three. defeating the Chicago White Sox 10.5 at Comiskey Park. (The VICtory turned hollow amid cbarges eight of the White Sox bad thrown the
Series in what became known as the "Black Sox" scandal.)

Berry's World

•

•

Pomeroy ' Middleport, Ohio

-Area Deaths--

Page2
Monday, October 9, 1995

•·

-.

D.ole~Gramm .campaign skirmish is a joke _
WASHINGTON - Sbmg by a
series of setbacks, the presidential
campaign of Sen. Robert Dole, RKan., sought to recapture momentum last week among New Hampshire voters by shifting the debate
.with Sen. Pbil Gramm from taxes
to biS Tex.as twang.
It might bave worked bad
Dole's cbief hatchet-man in New
Hampshire, Rep . Bill Zeliff, RN.H ., not spoken witb a forked
tongue. The resulung flap IS a poor
parody of a political_debate, but it
~ay be only a prevtew of a long,
stlly campatgn season.
Gramm bas long m~ self-deprecaung remarks about h1s southern
accent- a fact that few knew better than Zeliff. Yet Zeliff feigned
the moral outrage of someone who
b d. · t itnessed a swastika
a JUS_ w
.
spray-pamted on the stde of a New
Harnpsbire church wben Gramm
. JO
. ke d~n.~g
. ~ recen t
bts
repe
appe ~ on CNN s lnstde Pol··
tUc~;
.
.
We dtd a focus group m New

·
·
.
1
·
b 1 Pb 1·1
Hampsbtre to begm to focus on clear for a ong ume I a
issues and see wbal people thought Gramm doesn't understand Ne_w
when they beard my accent," Hampshire ...• Just in case be su~l
Gramm quipped. "People in New doesn't understand, let me spell II
out in plain English: In New
By Jack Anderson Hampshire we're pr~~d of our
roots an~ our tradtuo~s.
and
_Just m case Zehff ba~ a bad
memory, let us spell outm plato
Michael Binstein English bow be once. felt about
Gramm and his accent jokes, based
HamPsllire talk funny and thencfore on a handwritten letter Zeliff sent
they think I talk fu!Uly." .The Dole bim on Oct 28, 1991. Zeliff ga~e
campaign ftred off a press release Gramm rave reviews for ~IS
with this screaming headline:
appearance ~~ a New Hampshue
''ZELIFF SLAMS GRAMM ~ven_t at. wbtcb Gramm told an
ON INSULT TO NH CITI- tdenucaiJoke. Zeliffnot only failed
ZENS .. .Demands 'Immediate to take umbrage but be sent along a
Texas-Size Apology' for Comment gift, almost offered to throw a
about NH Accents. Zeliff Reaction parade in Gramm's honor and
Available Via Radio Actuality Sys- groveled for bis help at a fund-raistem."
·
.
w b · ed
of the let
er. e o tam a copy
Dole ' s press release quotes ter, which reads:
Zeliff, who is New Hampshire state
·'I very much enjoyed being
. you and (Sen.) Bob Sm•'th (R.
cbamnan
of b.ts prest.denu.al cam- wtth
paign, as branding Gramm's · N H) on Columbus Day and I
~
" · It 1
c·u·
· ··
•
.
remar.. as an msu 0 every 1 - really look forward to gettmg to
zen of the Granite State ....lt's been know you better. Although you

DIDN'T HE GET

THE MESSA6E

U1'92?

may not talk"like a Yankee, you
b
our values and you were
s are ceived across the board
~e~l~e been a big belp to'me and
I 0 ~be delighted to bave your
.wou
ort at an upcoming
~:c :!~Pevent... I am sending
· a small jug of NH maple
a1ong _ reat over i,c cream as
syrup egtraditional ~- "
we~~ooey letter was pe!Uled by
rtician who last week
the ~~ ~:amm under Dole's
anac bee sc in New Hampshire
?.arne s ~I candidates of prove~
cb~~~r demonstrated leadership
and real conservative convictions ..
That's why New Hampshire is
. B b Dole We may sound
~acking ~b·l G - but here in
~nnyJo ;hire our Uaditions are
ewl b~p ner"
no aug mg ma ·
Zeliff refused to commen~ but a
k
man said be bas no reroispo. eswof th ner to Gramm
o e 1e was revealing
. bis
1ecuon
"(Gramm)
b
. ·
nd attempu·ng
10
onest opmmn a
rationalize bis fourth-place standing in recent New Hampshire surveys," Dole press secretary Nelson
Warfield wrote in a statement to us.
"Clearly, be owes the people of
New Hampshire an apology, and
we bope every New Hampshire
\ioter demands it.''
Maybe New Hampshire voters
will also demand tbat Dole explain
some of his jokes over the years, if
candidates are now going to spend
more time defending their jokes
than ·their records. For example,
wbat did Dole mean a decade ago
when be told an audience that Jack
Kemp - wbo is now beading up a
tax overhaul commission for Dole
- wanted tax reform legislation so
be could get a business deduction ·
for bair spray?
. Or, since Dole is sidling up to
·. supply-side economists so be can
inherit the tax -culling mantle of
Ronald Reagan, maybe be can
explain another of his old jokes:
The good news is that a busload of
supply-side economists plunged off
a cliff and tilled everyone on
board. Tbe bad news is tbat three
, seats on the bus were empty.
That's almost as funny as Bill
Zeliff complaining about Pbil
Gramm'saccenl
·
Jack Anderson and Mlchlal
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

MI CH.

•
PA
!Mansfield 174 '

on the inconveniences - including
surveillance - inflicted on tbe visiting women by the government
Nor did these paladins of
women's rights spend mucb time
on the subjugation of women in
Cbina while they were there. About
a half million female infants are
tbrow11 out of their homes eacb
year - abandoned, placed in
orphanages or killed. This is a
country where females can be discarded with impunity.
There is a New York-based
organization called Human Rights
in China - composed of Chinese
scholars and scientists - tbat gathers information from families tllere
on wbat actually happens to its
members.
.
One of tbese witnesses tells or
bow the state - implementing its
policy that there can be only one
cbild per family - invaded her
body when she was more than eight
months pregnant:
" I was beld down on the operating table . One doctor injected

through my belly into my uterus those of other prisoners repolted to
formaldehyde liquid .... Forty-eight have been tortured or otherwise illhours later... I gave birth to a live treated in detention."
'boy. He bad heartbeats, there was
But the Clinton administratjon,
noise in bis throat. He bad a big despite tbe horrifying state of
bead and lovely legs and arms .... human rights in Cbina, is trying
But the doctors immediately killed bard to "normalize" relations .with
him while I watched belplessly. tbat state. After all, profitable,
They then took bim out to be increased trade is at stake.
thrown away."
But, it is Said, as Cbina becomes
At the formal opening of the · more of a consumer society, a
World Conference on Women in dem~d for individual rights will
Beijing, the government produced not be far behind. Or is it more
a choral group singing Beethoven's like Iy that consumer rights will be
"Ode to Joy." And Jiang Zemin, asked for and given - wbile prispresident of China. said with prac- ons and graves remaiJ) full of disticed sincerity that "full and equal senters and female infants.
As we do more and more busiparticipation by women is indis. pensable to the fulfilhnent of the ness with China, the screams of the
two _major tasks facing the present imprisoned will not be beard
world - namely peace apd devel- beyond tbe gulag. It would be
opment" He then - to tm&gt;ve tbe interesting to know what Colin
depth of bis commitmenl.tQ this Powell thinks of this way of dealgoal - told the delegates of "an ing with Cbina We already know
old Chinese saying - women bold the president's disinclination to be
up balf the siry."
.
rude to the government of China
Until tbe sky falls on tbem .
Nat Hentoff Is -a nationally
Phuntsog Yangki, a Tibetan nun, is renowned authority 41n the First
reported by Amnesty International Amendment and the rest of the
as having died "in a prison hospital Bill of Rights.
in Lhasa. ... Sbe was one of several
(For Information on how to
nuns beaten at Drapcbi Prison in ·communicate electronically with
February after singing nationalist this columnist and otbers, conso~gs . No independent investigatact America Online by caWng 1tion was conducted into ber case or 800-8l7-6364, ext 8317.)

•

C011gressional Republicans and
a few agreeable Democrats are polishing up an old idea for reducing
the defteit.
· They want to trim the government's official inflation index. In
effect this would slow the growth
of government pensions and Social
Security benefits, and increase
taxes.
To many, especially senior citizens, it may sound lite a terrible
deal. As someone who is himself
rapidly approaching the vintage
years, I say take it Given the current political climate and the scant
likelihood it will change, it's probably as good an offer as we're
going to get for a long time to
come.
The inflation gauge, known as·
'/IC Consumer Price Ind.ex, bas
lieen the basis for annual 'cost-ofliving increases in public salaries
and pensions and Social Security
payments since the 1970s. It bas
been used, to adjust tax brackets
and exemptions since the 1980s. It
is calculated every month b)' statisticians at the Department of L;tbor
who take a look at the cost of a
fued "basket" of goods and sec~
vices and calculate bow much the
price of the basket bas increased.
This figure 311tomaticl11y bmwnes
the COLA for the coming year.
A lot of expertS believe tbe CPI

Showers
v,a ASSOCUil9 d Press Grff{JhiCSNet

Today's weather forecast
Southeast Ohio
Today .. . Areas of fog or low
clouds Ibis moming ... Otherwise
sunny. High in the lower 70s. Light
wind.
Tonigbt ..Oear. Low in the mid
and upper 40s. Near calm wind.
Tuesday ... Mostly sunny. High
in the mid 70s.

•

Extended forecast:
Today ... Areas of fog or low
clouds this morning ... Otberwise
sunny. High in the lower 70s. Light
wind.
Tonight...Ciear. Low in the mid
and upper 40s. Near calm wind.
Tuesday ... Moslly sunny. High
in the mid 70s.

TQday's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP)- Indiana. Ohio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Monday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
·News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to
1.00 lower; demand light to moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 44.00-45.50, few 46.00;
plants 44.75-46.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 39.00-44.00.
Sows: steady.
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 32.00-

Two charged in captain's assault

Belly Jane hnboden Bland, 71, of Lincoln HiU, Pomeroy, died Oct 7,
1995 at University Hospital in Columbus.
.
Born May I, 1924 in Mason, W.Va, sbe was tbe daughter of Walter
Laudermilt and Letha Smith. Sbe was a housewife and homemaker, and
attended the Syracuse Cburcb of the Nazarene.
Sbe is survived by her husband, Jim Bland of Pomeroy; five sons:
Calvin (Linda) of Racine, Joe (Mary) of Minersville, Milce of Pomeroy,
Rick and Jobn of Columbus; three daughters: Judy (Frank) Krautter and
Nancy (Rick) Arnold of Pomeroy, and Earline Ebersbacb of MinersviUe;
three brothers: Walter (Mabel) Laudermilt of Youngstown, Jim (Jenny)
Laudermilt of Wheeling, and Eugene Laudennilt of Middleport; two sis·
ters: Maxine (Virgil) Lee of Pomeroy, and Emogene Wilson of Darwin;
seven grandchildren,. five step-grandchildren, three great_step-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Calvin Imboden; a
.son, J\lbn hnboden; one grandson, one granddaughter, three brothers, and
one sister.
Services will be Wednesday, I p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home.
J?omeroy, with the 'Rev. Paul Voss officiating. Burial will follow at
Gilmore €eznwry.
·
Calling hours will be observed Tuesday from 2-4.and 7-9 p.m. at the
funeral home.

Pomeroy Police bave cbarged two Middleport men in connection
with the Saturday morning assault of a sternwbeel caplain.
Michael Burns and Bronson Laudennilt have been charged with
the assault of David E. Schlosser of Pleasant City, captain of the
Old Glory, according to Powroy Police chief Jerry Rough/.
According 10 police reports, Schlosser was near the corner of
Main and Lynn streets Saturday around 1:30 a.m ., when he was
jumped by two subj ects. Schlosser was treated and released from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Burns and Laudermilt will appear in Pomeroy court Monday
mght.

37 .00; 500-650 lbs. 37.00-42.00.
Boars: 32.00-34.00
Estimated receipts 34,000.
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Cattle: steady to 3.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 58.0065.60; select 50.00-62.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 55.0064.50; select 30.75-60.00.
Cows : uneven, 2.50 lower to
2.00 higher; all cows 45.00 and
down.
·
Bulls: uneven, 3.00 lower to
2.00 higher; all bulls 45.00 and
down ,

Funeral arrangements for Mrs. Joseph (Caryl) Cook, who died Oct. 4,
1995 in Brooklyn, Conn., have been made by the family through Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
Burial will be Friday, 10 a.m., at Beech Grove Cemetery.
A memorial service will take place Saturday afternoon. 2 p.m., at
Pomeroy Baptist Church. Following the service, a reception will be held
in the church's fellowship room, hosted by the women of Pomeroy Bap·
list Church.
Additional survivors to Mrs. Cook are her only sister, Mrs. Frederica
Faris of Lincoln Heights.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to Pierce Memorial Bap·
list Home, Box 326, Brooklyn, Cf 06234.

Frederick Whaley
Frederick Otis "Babe" Whaley, 77 of Palm Harbor, Fla. and Albany,
died Sunday, Oct 8 at Riverside Hospiial, Columbus.
Born Mar. 28, 1918 in Darwin, he was the son of the late Delmar Ouis
and Edith Dixon Whaley.
He was a 1935 graduate of Scipio High School, and the International
Correspondence School. He was a registered surveyor with the State of
Ohio, and a 32 year retired employee of Columbus Southern Ohio Electric
Co., serving in the Athens, Chillicothe, and Columbus offices. He was
also a member of the Chillicothe Masonic Lodge.
He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Alice Gilkey Whaley; a son,
Terry of Palm Harbor, Fla.; four grandchildren; one great granddaughter,
one sister, Margaret Kostival of Athens; one sister-in-law, Kiuy Whaley
of Chillicothe.
He was preceded in death by 2 brother, Harold Dale Whaley, and an
infant sister.
Services will be Wednesday, I p.m., at Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home
in Albany, with the Rev. Edward Jones officiating. Burial will follow at
Wells CcQletery in Pagetown.
Calling hours will be held Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeralbome.

Three Friday accidents probed
Pomeroy Police investigated three Friday accidents, issuing no
citations in the separate incidents, according to police chief Jerry
Rought.
At 12:16 p.m., Bill E. Spaun, 47, of Pomeroy was making a right
turn into the Farmers Bank parking lot from W. Second Street,
when Billy L. Lloyd, 50, of Letart . W.Va. struck Spaun while back·
ing out of a parking space.
Spaun's 1988 Ford Truck and Lloyd's 1985 Chevy Truck both
received light damage.
At 3:53p.m. Robert M. llyscll, 68, of Syracuse was backing out
of parking space on Second Street when be struck a fire hydrant.
Hysell 's 1995 Olds Della 88 received light damage.
At 4:20p.m. Joe T. Wallace, 66. of Pt. Pleasant, W.Va. was ·
making a right tum at the base of the Pomeroy Mason bridge, when ·
he stopped and was struck from behind by William Carswell, 61, of
Pomeroy.
·
Wallace's 1984 Ford Truck received light damage. Carswell ' s · ·
1985 Chevy Truck rccei ved moderate damage to front.

One cited in Pomeroy accident
Pomeroy police cited one person in a Saturday evening accident,
according 10 Police Chief Jerry Rought.
The accident occurred at 6:04p.m. on East Main S1.
Vidor, C. Young, 42, of Pomeroy, was slopped to make a left ·
tum in bi~l977 Ford Truck when be was struck from behind by
Steve T. Neese, 37, of Racine.
Damage to Young's truck was light Neese's 1993 Chevy Truck ·
received moderate damage to the front end.
Neese was cited for failure to assure clear distance.

Saturday crash leaves two injured

··

Two people were injured in a two-car cra.ih at the inter~ cc tion o( ·
state routes 7 and 681 Saturday in Tuppers Plains, the Gallia·Mci gs
Post of the State Highway Patrol reponed.
.
Drivers Anne P. Burnworth, 44, Marietta, and Deborah A. Eich- ·
horn, 41, Tuppers Plains, were each transported to area hospitals
with minor visible injuries by the Mei gs EMS. Burnworth was treated at Marietta Memorial Hospital, and Eichhorn at Camden-Clark' :
llospital. Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
Troopers said Eichhorn was eastbound on 681 at 9:50p.m. when .
she pulled from the stop sign at the intersection, turned left onto 7 ·
and collided with Burnworth's southbound car.
.
.
Damage was severe to the Burnworth car and moderate to Eicb- ·
hom's car. Eichhorn was cited for failure to yield.
..

Meigs County Court
Meigs
announcements
Meigs EMS logs 16 calls
cases resolved
·

Akzo ....................................... .S9 3/8

Ashland OU ............................Jon/8
AT&amp;T .....................................63 Ill
Bank One................................37 114
Bob Evans ...............................18 1/8
Borg-Warner......................... .31 1/8
Champion Ind ........................Zl114
Charming Shop ......................l 9/16
City Holdlng .......................... .Z5/J/8
Federal Mogul ........................18 7/8
Gannelt ............. , .....................53 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .38 Ill
K-mart .................................... ll518
Lands End ............................. 14 7/8

Limited Inc............................ .zo 114

Multimedia hie......................43 7/8
Ohio VaHey Bank .........................36
One Valley ..............................323/4
People's ................................. .221/4
RockweU ................................45 1/8
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. .32 11l

Royal Dutch/Shell ............... ll4 7/8
Shoney's Inc .................... .............10
Star Bank ..............................,54 3/4
Wendy lnl'l. ....................... ....211/l
Worthington Iod ....................IB 118

-·-·-

report. are tbe 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest o
Slock

i

I

Local briefs------.

Betty Bland

Caryl Cook

Am Elc Power ....................... .36 3/4

overestimates the actual increase in on the committee, liberal Senator that COLAs help pull the inflation
the cost of living. Wben prices Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-NI Y.. wagon, and I am more certilin of it
climb, many of us adjust by buying they concluded that massive sav- now than ever.
discounted merchandise. The CPI ings would accrue from lowering
- The pain of a I percent cut in·
the inflation index and compound- COLAs will be minimal and the:
ing the interest saved on dellt pay- public relations benefits will be·
Joseph Spear
ments.
enormous. Seniors are constantly :
does not account for this. The qualWrote Moynihan in the Wasb-· berated by younger generations for
ity of some products ~ computers, ington Post: "U we wenc to do no being greedy, for taking more rrom:
TV sets - constantly improves, more than to declare that hence- the system than they put in. With ·
but their ]Kices remain fairly stable. forth tbe cost of living adjustment tbe reduction in COLAs, the :
The CPI does not account for this.
will be CPI minus one percentage oompb would go out of their argu- :
In congressional testimony last point, we would save $634 billion ments.
January, Fe.teral Reserve Board O'{er the next 10 years."
Federal retirees are fortunate to :
Cb11.irman Alan Greenspan said
It's going to happen, and gov- · bave any tind of COLA. Ninety :
some of bis econom'ists bad con- emment pensioners and senior citi- percent of private pensioners bave
cluded tbat the CPI inflates infla- zens migbt even reap some benefit none. Their benefits are bumped ·
tion by 0.5 to l.S percent a year. If from it. To wit:
only wben their former employers ·
COLAs were pegged at I percent
- It could very well save the feel like bumping them, and.most
less than CPI, be said, the savings Social Security system, wbicb, of the bumps are a fraction of the
and increased tax revenues would without major reconstruction or a CPI.
trim the deficit by $150 billion in change in the COLA calculation,
Trimming COLAs is a fair deal. :
five years.
will be bankrupt in 30 years. per- We should take il
'
Congressional Budget Office baps less. Without a. reduction in
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated :
Director Robert Reiyhancr subse- CPI, Social Security wiU not sur- writer for Newspaper Enterprise :
quently put the difference belMeD vive.
~atio~
CPI and actual inflation at some-It will put tbe .brake on infla(For Information on llow to ;
where between '0.2 and 0.8 perceot. tiou, the great diluter of pensions - communicate electronlcaUy willa '
If COLAs were set al balf a pen:e~~t and ftxed incomes and tbe senior tllb colunmlst and others, c:on- :
less than CPL be said. the golan- citizen's worst enemy. I ·have tact America Online hy calliDa 1- l
ment would save $64 billion in five believed for nearly three decades 800-827-6364, ext 8317.)
years, $100 billion in seven years.
In June, tbe Sen11.te Finance
Today's Birthdays: f(llller U.S. Senator Gonion Humphrey, R-N.H., :
Committee appointed a commis- is ~S. SingerJacks!lo Browne is 46. Football player Mike Singletary is 37. t
sion of five nationally prominent
Thought for Today: ''The first half of.our lives is ruined by our parcots I
CCODOmisiS to study the problem. and tbe secood half by our cbildlen." - Clarence Darrow American ~
According 10 the ranking Democrat attorney (1857-1938).
'
·

Young stown

W VA

Stocks

Cutting COLAs will reduce inflation

I•

• IColumt&gt;usl 76'

A country of fear and horror_ _ _ _ __
With the World Conference on
Women over, the press pays as little attention to the Chinese government's terrorism against its people
as it did before. And wben will
Hillary Clinton, Bella Abzug and
the other influential women of the
world speak of women in China
doing forced labor for acts of polil·
ical conscience?
Or, as Amnesty International
noted in its June 199~ report on
Women in China, wbo will try to
belp women ''raped and sexually
abused in custody, hideously tortured with a range of specially
designed implements?"
How many Americans, for tbat
matter, know or care that tbousands·
of Chinese are executed every year,
many for political "crimes." And
- as in the time of Robespierre deatb sentenres in China, says
Amnesty International, "are often
decided in advance of the trial or
by 'adjudication committees'
wbose decision is seldom challenged by the courts...
The prosecutors don't like any_
loose ends so - as in Stalin's
courts - confessions are frequen~
even if they have to be extracted by
torture.
During the huge concentration
of reporters and cameras for the

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

Gallipolis.

2:11 a.m. Sunday, volunteer ftre
deparunen·ts to state routes 7 and
554, auto fire, Correna Hufft~an;
3:24 a.m. Sunday, Soutll Sev' enth Avenue, Mary Lyons, Holzer
Medical Center.
POMEROY
I :29 a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
· levee, David E. Schlosser, YMH;
6:17 a.m. Sunday, Lincoln
Heights, Ryan Powell, treated at
the scene;
4:47 p.m. Sunday, Peach Fork
Road, Ruby Marshall, YMH.
· RACINE
11:11 p.m. Saturday, Mile Hill
Road, Belly Kaiser, VMH;
4:50 p.m. Sunday, Bald Knob'
Stiversville Road, Jobn Berry,
VMI'l;
7:20 p.m. Sunday, Third Street,
Marion Snyder, YMH.
RUTLAND
3,:07 a.m. Saturday, Crouser
Road, Daniel Shane, treated at the

Sorority to meet
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet
Thursday at Grace Episcopal
Cburcb parish bouse.

AA to meet
Pomeroy Group of Alcoholics
Anonymous will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Sacred Hean Catholic

Church on Mulberry Avenue.

Revival starts tomorrow
Revival services will begin at
the Rutland Nazarene Church
Tuesday and continue through Sat·
urday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 6:30
p.m. The Rev. Jesse Tipton will be
the speaker. The Rev. Sam Basye,
Jr., pastor, invites the publtc.

scene;
9:08 p.m. Saturday, yolunteer
ftrc departmcnt .and squad, Happy
Hollow Road, gas line rupture;
4:31 p.m. Sunday, Happy Hollow Road, Kathy Yancey, HMC.
SYRACUSE
WITH THE FRINGE ON TOP- Jack Kane or WCHS-TV, a
3:02 p.m. Sunday, Clark Road,
Wendy Kempa, VMH pending · former resident or Meigs County, returned to emcee the Sternwheel Festivals queen's contest Saturday. In the parade he rode In
transfer to Obio State University
a surrey pulled by 11, pair of horses driven by Chuck Whittington.
Hospital via MedFligbt helicopter.
TUPPERS PLAINS
9:55 a.m. Saturday, squad and
volunteer ft.re department to state
routes 7 and 681, motor-vehicle
accident, Anne Burnsworth, Mari·
etta Memorial Hospital, Debbie
Eichhorn, Camden-Clark Memorial
LONDON (AP) -Two inmates
Kim Turner, 3!1, of Swanton,
Hospital, Syracuse squad assisted.
wbo escaped from a dose-security and Donald Saffell, 31, of Apple
state prison were suspects in a rob- Creek, were identified as the men
bery at a northern Kentucky restau- who held up a Bob Evans restauran~ Kentucky police said:
rant in F1orence, Ky., at about 5:30
p.m. Sunday, Florence police said.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
One man, armed with a band·
-Hospital news
SATURDAY
gun,
took an undetermined amount
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Admissions: None
Discharges Oct. 6 - Jenna Bur- of money from the restaurant. He
Discharges: Betty Goodall, Mid·
dette, Lorena Wooten, Herman fled with another man in a car that
dleport
Wood, Vergie Leonard, Penny Wil- bad been stolen from a bouse in
son, Mrs. Randy Oliver and daugh- South Vienna earlier Sunday,
SUNDAY
ter, Steven Cochran, Roselle Nor- police said.
Admissions: None
No one was injured.
man, Leonard McCarty, Joanne
Discharges: None
A restaurant manager noted the
Jennings, Mrs. Max Ours and
license
numbers of the car as tbe
daughter, Shelby Hemby, Travis
men
fled,
police said.
Davis, Mrs. John Leport and
Turner and Saffell escaped from
daughter, Mrs. Brian Stover and
Madison Correctional Institution in
son.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Todd this central Ohio city Friday nigh~
Hamilton, son, Cheshire; Mr. .and prison officials !&gt;llid.
Mrs. Michael McFadden, son, Vinton.
Discharges Oct. 7 - Mr. and
Mrs. Todd Hamilton and son, Jobn "Say Love With
Williams, Danielle Callihan, .Flowers From!"
William Slone, A. Lorrain
Gilliland, Maxi Camden, Charlene ·
Masters.
Discharges Oct 8 - Julia Butler, Penny Cox. Mrs. Robert Dickens and daughter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Robert ,'
Dickens, daughter, Middleport; Mr. · 106 B,uttemutAvc. Pomeroy, OH
· and Mrs. Terry Hamilton, son, Gal(614) 992-6454.
lipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Straub,
daughter, Patriot.
(800) 433-6203
(PubUsbed wltb permission)

Bob Evans restaurant
robbed in Kentucky

Hospital news

The· Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-%0)
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Friday. I l l C0ur1 Sl.. r omcroy. OhiO, by lhe

Ohio Wiley P~h l i ~ hing Co mpnny/Multimedia
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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13 Wcek~ ............................................. .... $27.30

26 Week! .................................................$53.82
52 Week! ................... .. .... ... ........ ......... $10556
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13 Week.&lt; ...........................................•..... $29.25
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.'

-··

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PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

..

Tbc following people were fmcd
Wednesday in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Pi!uick H. O'Brien:
Fined were: Charles Arnoll,
COolville, expired tags, $30 plus
costs; Brenda M. Aucreman, Baltimore, Ohio, speed, $30 plus costs;
Sonja G. Street, Rav enswood,
W.Va ., speed, $30 plus costs;
Joseph R. Wilson, Pomeroy, speed,
$30 plus costs; Larry M. Wright,
Langsville, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Rick L. McChristian, Shade,
littering, $25 plus costs;
Scou E. Peterson, Rutland, driving under the influence, $750 plus
costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10
days, one year operator's license
suspension, two years probation,
90-day vehicle immobilization;
failure to control, $20 plus cOsts;
Sherry L. Randolph, Reedsville,
DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, 90-day
OL suspension, one year probation,
jail and $250 of the fine suspended
upon completion of residential
treatment program; expired OL,
$75 plus costs, three days jail suspended;
Charles E. McGrath, Rutland,
DUI, $750 plus costs, lO days jail
suspended to 10 days, one year OL
suspension, two years probation,
90-day vehicle immobilization ;
driving under suspension, $150
plus costs, 30 days jail suspended
to I 0 days concurrent, two years
probation; Bryan S. Jordan , Mid·
dleport, DUI, $500 plus costs, 10
days jail suspended to three days,
one year probation, 90-day OL suspension, jail and $250 of the fme
suspende.d upon completion of residential treatment program;
Lisa Gilbert, Vinton, passing
bad checks, $25 plus costs, restitution; Ronald D. Rummer, Vienna,
W.Va., drug parapbermilia, $50
plus costs; possession, $25 plus
costs; Lela M. Bums, Middleport,
domestic violence, $50 plus costs,
three years probation, restraining
order issued, 30 days jail suspended to time served;
Michael W. Clark, Rutland,
DUI, $750 plus costs, 30 days jail

suspended to 10 days, one year OL
suspension, two years probatiQn.
90-day vehicle immobili zatiod ;
driving under financial responsibility action suspension, $100 plus
costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10
days concurrent with DUI, two
years probation ; expired plat~s.
costs only; defective exbaus~ costs
only; fleeing , costs, two years prqbation, 30 days jail suspended to '0
days concurrent;
'
Ronnie M. Pickens, Racine,
domestic violence, costs, restrajning order issued, two years probation, 30 days jail suspended to ftvc
days ; Jan S. Holter, Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus costs; Thomas C.
Anderson, Baroda, Micb., spee'q,
$30 plus costs; Tina M. Slater,
Dexter, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Betty Gihnore, Middleport, spec~.
$30 plus costs; Terry W. Pooler,
Long Bottom, scat belt, $25 phis
costs; Kenneth W. Hickman, Long
Bottom, speed, $30 plus costs; stat
bel~ $25 plus costs;
.
. Lewis W. Harper Jr., Pomeroy, ·
excessive window tint, $20 plus
costs; Jeffrey N. Durs~ Reedsville,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Randy
Armes, Long Bottom, seat bel~ $25
plus costs; Jo Ellen Roush, Syracuse, speed, $30 plus costs; Matt R.
Reeping, Sylvania, assured clear
distance, $20 plus costs; Daniel A.
Will, Mt. View, Calif., speed, $30
plus costs; Karl B. Dcnais, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., speed, $30 plus
costs; James E. Harmon Jr., Dcxt.e,r,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Melinda
K. McDonald, Rutland, seat belt,
$25 plus costs;
Raben L. Denney, Gallipolis,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Harold
Peuit, Racine, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Delbert L. Roush, Long Bottom, seat belt, $25 plus costs ·
David Hughes, Albany, speed, $30
plus costs; Cbuck McCloud, Middleport, seat belt, SIS plus costs;
James ·P. McCloud, Middlepon,
seat bel~ $25 plus costs; Jeffrey J.
!Carr Jr., Middleport, failure to control, $20 plus costs; Shannon L.
Morarity, Racine, speed, $30 plus
costs; Lester L. Stewart, Middleport, seat bel~ $25 plus costs.

SPEND YOUR GOLDEN YEARS
IN THE GREEN!
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while setting aside money for your retirement y~ars . For
more information or to schedule a free consultation call:

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Investment and Tax Consultant

Ph: (614) 992-7270
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Securities offtrtd through H. D. Vt.ft Investment Securities, Inc .
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�+

•

Sports

The Daily

Senti.q~l
Monday, October 9, 1995

·Eastern defeats. Southern 32-6 to arrive at .500 mark
,,

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
For one quaner illiloked like tbe
battle of the cemury, however, the
two mid-terms revealed yet another
impressive victory in tbe Easterndominated
Eas tern -Sou th ern
football series.
_
Behind three ) a son Sheets
touchdowns and three tbird-perio&lt;l
scrambles, tbe Eastern Eagles broke
open a close 12-0 halftime score and
blitzed to a 32-6 Tri-Valley
Conference win over !he Tornadoes
Sarurday night at Roger Lee Adams
Memorial Field.
Eastern coach Casey Coffey said,
"Before tbe game I said 'I felt tbis
team would come together,' and
that's e•actly what I thought
happened tonight. The first quarter
we didn't play like we were capable,
but tbe second and third periods I
though we played good strong
Eastern football. The tbinl quarter
was ours. The kids came out -ready
to play, and tbat's tbe bouom line.
We were ready."
Southern coach Mike Kloes
said,"! tbought Eastern played very,
very well in tbe second half. If we
could have gotten some early
breaks, I felt that it would have
helped _in the long run . We shot
ourselves in the foot too many
times. Eastern took advantage of our
mistakes, gained some momentum
and played their game tbe rest of !he
way. That was tbe difference in !he
game. I felt ou-r kids were ready. but
once Eastern broke loose , we
couldn't stop them."
The official stats revealed total
dominalion and even more
impressively, most of the damage
was done in two periods: !he second
and third periods. Eastern racked up
512 total yards, 308 on the ground
and 204 in !he air.
Senior Jason Sheets got a pickme-up game, ru shing 22 times for
'190 yards and three touchdowns.

Pagel, Nick Smith and Ja son
Brian Bowen, the EHS signal caller, was · a possible torn medial.
At the 2:02 mark, senior Mike looking forward to ne•t year.
scrambled six times for 26 yards, collateral ligament. A few plays Smitb snagged a Bowen pass of 20
"Next. week we're going to have Writesel.
Soutbem's receivers were Pagel
senior Micah Otto rdll 12 times for later, lineman Billy Francis went yards and raced into the end zone to step it up again,'' Coffey sa1d.
73 yards, Travis Curtis was 1-7 and down wilh a similar inju-ry, but was for a 32-0 score before the extra- "We've got Federal at home and (1-7), Harmon (1-30) and McKelvey
Mike Smith was 2-12.
·
suffering only stiffness on Sunday. point attempt failed.
lhey're a good, solid football team. (2-17).
Bowen was successful on II of Coffey said. "It looks like Billy wiU
Eastern played most of its second We can'l get inside !he yard line and Quarter llllllli
23 passes for 204 yards, while Steve be okay. We can only hope the best string the fourth quarter and had not score. The kids will have to p1ck Eastern ...... .. ..........0 12 20 0 = 32
Soutbern ................ O 0 0 6 = 6
Durst !brew one (to Bowen) for 30 for Chris."
sophomore Steve Durst at it up a notch for homecoming."
yards. Travis Curtis was tbe primary ·The loss was somewhat the quarterback.
Kloes concluded, "We'll move
target wi!h six catches for 86 yards, reverse of bittersweet for Soutbern;
Southern scored in the final on from here and pick up the pieces. Team statistics
Durst 2-29, Sheets 2-43 and Smith perhaps just plain bitter as Eastern round when Jesse Maynard scored We're just going to have to be more
1-20. Micah Otto caught another.
rang the Soulhern victory bell after from fl ve yards out on an option consistent and correct ou-r mistakes Department
•
E Sm!..
Jamie Evans led Southern with tbe game, !hen won a footrace to tbe play, but !he extras failed, and !he as we go. We've got a good chance First downs .................... 14
6
37 yards on nine carries, Mike Ash locker room with a Tornado score stood at 32-6.
104
.for a good season, but !he kids have Total yards ................... 512
was 6-8. Brian Pagel 1-7 and Jay contingent in bot pursuit.
Coffey concluded, "I felt to get back up and put four quarters Yards rushing ............. .308
50
McKelvey 1-4.
Southern's defense was bending, Southern played very bard. They together like tbey played !he rust."
54
Yards passing .............. 204
Jesse Maynard was 3-11 passing but not breaking in !he first quaner; were ready to play and bad great
3-11
Micah Otto led Ea~tern tacklers Comp.-att-. ................ 12-24
for 54 yards as Eastern· s defense a real credit to the improvement enthusiasm. This game bad a great with 10. Soulhern was led by Pork Interceptions thrown .......0
I \
limited !he Tornadoes to just 104 net they have shown from the beginning atmosphere and the rivalry was Dill's 12, Mike Ash's 10, Nick Fumbles-lost ....................O
1-1
'yards. Southern's rushing game was of the year. Finally, however, the great. This was a great experience Smith 4, s.ix by Evans and John Punts .......................... 2-36
4-28
somewhat better, but Maynard was dike broke and the water poured for me to be a part of. We're Harmon as well as four by Maynard, -Perualtie:; .................... .3-35
5-40
caught numerous times bel1ind !he through. Jason Sheets rode the first
line of scrimm age for sacs thus wave. a five -yard run at the 9:50
culling into !he numbers.
mark in the first period. The twoThe game started out like point conversion run failed, and
wildfire . Many hard hits were the Eastern settled for a 6-0 lead.
norm and mistakes cost bolh clubs
Later at the I: 50 mark Sheets
early. Southern had a bad snap on a again bit the end zone from seven
punt, that gave Eastern good field yards out. The two-point conversion
position, tben had a bro~en play !hat run again failed and !he score stood
mo st like coast them an earlier 12-0. Eastern almost got a break
score. Eastern dominated Soutbem right before the half on Southern's
inlhe first quarter, but was not yet next possession, as Southern
int e their rylhym and the frame appeared to fumble. Wally
ended 0-0.
Rockhold jumped on the ball for
Co!Tey replied when asked if be . Eastern, but the play had already
was wonied about the lack of points been blown dead. The score stood
on the board in the first period 12-0 at !he half.
"There was no doubt of what w~
Eastern came out eating up b~ge
going to happen. It was just a matter chunks of yardage_ m the tbtrd
of time. It took a while to get rid of frame. The culmmaung play c~e
the cobwebs. We ware moving t!Je on a Bowen to Sheets pass play of
ball, we just didn't gel it into !he 35-yards Straight down ~e m1ddle
end zone. We just made too many of !he field. The extra-pomt attempt
early mistakes."
failed, and EHS led 18-0. .
.
At the 6:35 mark, Trav1s Cur~:Js
The win was. bitlersweet for
Eastern, as premier tackle Chris snagged a 15-yard. Bowen pass m
SWEEP PLAY - Eastern running b~k Jason night's Hocking Division football game in Racine.
Bailey went down in the ftrst quaner !he flat,before Curus brought home Sheets (26) Dnds bls sweep play In serious'-Q'ouble Despite this, Sheets scored three touchdowns to
with a severe knee injury . X-rays Eastern s rtrst extras on another pass from Southern defender Joe Kirby (far let!) and help the Eagles post a 32-6 victory and collect
were taken Satu-rday night, but !he for a 26-0 tally.
some of the latter's teammates during Saturday their third straight win in the 33-year-old series.
results were not available until
today. Early lndications were that it By beating the Bengals 19·16,

Because of Sanders' running,

Lions tally 38-20
win over Browns
6:4lleft in !he rust quarter.
By HARRY ATKINS
"That's not a bad football team,
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -Scott
no
matter what their record says,''
Mitchell's imp111Jhd passing got
Testaverd·e
said. "We saw Ihe
Barry Sanders into Detroit's game
films,
and
!hey
played pretty_well
plan, and the results were electrifyin
all
!heir
games.
They just had
ing.
·
Sanders rushed for 157 yards some bad breaks before San Franand three touchdowns Sunday, cisco.
"Unfortunately, on top of
including a 7~- yard dash in the
everytbing
else, we bad to ~lay
Lions' 38-20 victory over the
tbem
coming
off a short week.'
slumping Cleveland Browns.
The
Lions
defense also was a
"I !hink everyone is at a place
factor.
Detroit
churned out ~29
where they are satisfied with our
yards,
while
tbe
Lions held Cleve$Cherne now," Sanders said. " I
think you're seeing a team that's land to 255 yards, 59 on the
coming together. We have balance ground.
In our auack now."
"We got behind early and we
It was the most touchdowns for
had
to do a lot of passing to uy to
Sanders since Nov. 24, 1991 , when
get
back
into the game," Belie hick
be scored four at Minnesota.
said.
"That
really gave us a probSanders, who also scored from II
lem,
especially
with Andre out."
and two yards, now bas gone over
Rison
limped
out of the Silver100 yards 43 times during his NFL
dome,
but
did
not
need crutches.
career.
Testaverde
threw
a 17-yard
Mitchell kept Cleveland off-baltouchdown
pass
to
Michael
Jackance, completing 24 of 38 passes
son
in
the
tbird
quarter,
closing
the
for 273 yards and two touchdowns
gap
to
31-10.
Rookie
Eric
Zeier
with on~ interception as tbe Lions
(2-3) continued their comeback replaced Testaverde for one play of
from an 0-3 start. Hennan Moore that drive and completed his ftrst
NFL pass, a four-yarder to Brian
caught nine for -125 yards.
Mitchell entered the game Kinchen.
Keenan' McCardell failed to
ranked seventh in the NFC with an
bold
a sure touchdown pass from
86.6 rating. But be began billing
Testaverde
in the fust quaner. The
his stride two weeks ago, completBrowns
settled
for Mall Stover's
ing a career-best 28 of 42 for 291
22-yard
field
goal
on that drive.
yards and one touchdown in a 27Stover
kicked
a
38-yarder
in the
24 Monday night upset of !he San
fourth
quarter.
Francisco 49ers.
Zeier retu-rned with 3:44 left in
''Our game plan was to take
the
game and the Lions leading 38wbat they gave us and we di~,'_'
13.
His one-yard toss to Walter
Mitchell said. "It's a guessmg
Reeves
with 32 seconds remaining
game. We had a 'go after them'
was
Zeier'
s first pro touchdown
type of game plan. We thought that
pass.
we could put some points on the
The dazzling Sanders won his
board and just keep it simple.''
second
NFL rushing title in 1994
It was the second loss in a week
wilh
1,883
yards, !he fou-rth-highest
for the Browns (3-3), who were
total
in
NFL
history. But he bad
coming off a Monday night defeat
been
held
to
just
314 yards lbrough
to the Buffalo Bills. It also was the
Detroit's
first
four
games this seamost points given up this season by
son.
the Browns, who had been allowMitchell completed all three of
ing -13.8 points per game, four!h in
his passes for 53 yards on the
tbeNA...
"That was an outstilllding per- Lions' first possession, including
formance by Detroit," Browns tosses of 40 and 17 yards to Moore.
coach Bill Belichick said. 'They Sanders scampered around left end
totally outplayed us in every area from II yards to score on the ftflh
of tbe game. Still, we need to play of the 74-yard drive.
Sanders later slipped through
regroup, because we have ~ lot betleft tackle, then kicked it into overter football team than that:
Sanders already bad 129 yards drive. getting a nice downfield
and two touchdowns by halftime,. block from Moore on !he 75-yard
and the Lions bad a commanding scamper. It was the longest touchdown run and second-longest run
24-3Iead.
Mitchell had touchdOwn tosse~ overall of his career.
"When Barry gets into tbe secof 14 and 28 yards, both to Bret[
ondary,
he's bard to bring down~
Perriman wbo finished with six
begin
with,''
Mitchell said. "On
· catebes for 78 yards. Jason Hanson
top
of
that.
OlJI'
receivers are great
added a 56-yard field goal for
blockers.
Yoil'
l
saw
that today."
Deuoit. a team record.
scored
11n a two-yard
Sanders
Vinny Tesiaverde completed 16
in
the
third
quarter, five
sweep
of 30 for 154 yards and one touchplays
after
the
Lions
recovered
down for Cleveland (3-3,). llis
Earnest
Hunter's
fumble,
giving
numbers might have been better,
·
Detroita31-31ead.
but Cleveland r•ceivers dropped
Hanson's field goal broke !be
several well-.olfown passes. The
Lions'
mark of 54 yards shared by
Browns also played most of the
Glenn
Presnell (1934) and Eddie
IBIDC withOUt Andre ~ISOn, WhO
Murray
(1983):
went out wilb a knee m)ury wtth

Monday, October !t 1995

In AL first-round playoff ac,tion,

Mariners top Yankees 6-5 in 11 frames
]lyJIMCOUR
SEATTLE (AP)- Even Lou
Piniella is in a quan&lt;lary over
who's left on the Seattle Mariners
pitching staff to get the Cleveland
Indians out.
After Sunday night's thrilling 65, 11-inning Mariners' victory over
tbe New York Yankees, Piniella
said be needed some time to decide
his rotation for Seattle's American
League Championship Series
against !he Indians .
"You can tell me one and you
might be closer to the right one
!han I am right now," Piniella told
a reporter.
The Mariners beat the Yankees
3-2 in their first playoff series to
earn !he right to face the Indians,
but they paid a stiff price. Their
pitching staff is spent and the
Mariners will have only one day's
rest between series.
" All I know is I can't pitch
tomorrow,'' Randy Johnson said.
Piniclla brought his ace out of
!he bullpen on one day's rest in the
finale against the Yankees after
Tony Fernandez doubled and
Randy Velarde walked to lead off
tbe ninlh against Nonn Charlton.
Johnson !bought be' d pitch one
inning. Instead, he pitched three
innings and made 40 pitches after
pitching seven innings and making
116 pitches in Friday night's 7-4
Scanle victory.

By MARY FOSTER
GRAMBLING, La. (AP)- Just
hours after Grambling coach Eddie
Robinson made college football
history by winning his 4001h game,
he was doing what be's been doing
for 55 years - taking care of his
responsibilities.
This lime, responsibility meant
going to Disney World to film a

It had been just the opposite for
Tatnpa Bay. which ranked 28th
among 30 teams in total offense.
The Bucs needed a last-minute
interception to hold ofT Washington
14-6 two weeks ago, the(} forced
fou-r turnovers inside !heir own 35
to frustrate Carolina 20-13 last
week.
Oilier, who completed 12 of 26
passes for 185 yards, was benched
after failing to move the offense in
tbe tbird quarter. Weldon finished
up, bitting three of seven for 35 yards and taking advantage of
Blake's mistakes to produce two
four!h -quarter field goals.
"The defense is far more
responsible for ou-r record than the .
offense," Bucs tight end Jackie :
Harris said.
·
I
"Everyone likes to win by 20 I
points, buf ffie way this league is
shaping up, you get it anyway youcan get it. Our defense kept us in
the ballgame, just like every
week.''
Husted's.33-yard field goal with
3:32 left erased tbe 16-13 lead the
Bengals took on Blake's 10-yard ,
touchdown pass to David Dunn. l _
His game-Mnn~t kick _!35 set up

EDDIE ROBINSON

commercial instead of going to
church. Still ahead is a planned
induction into the Blue-Gray Hall
of Fame al Binningham, Ala., on
Tuesday, and the numerous hours
of work getting his team ready for
what he hopes will be win No. 401 .
Shouldering responsibility and
bar(! work are what got Robinson
where he is.
"I'm here today because my
daddy had the fastest belt in the
country," Robinson said•wilh a
laugh. "He believed in teaching
right from wrong and in you living
up to what was right."
Grambling beat Mississippi Valley 42-6 Saturday for Robinson's
400th win, triggering calls from
President Bill Clinton, Gov. Edwin
Edwards and celebrations that lasted long into !he night. ·
"To me, he's been much more
than a coach," said Doug
Williams, one of more than 200 of
Robinson's players to go on to the
NFL. "He's been instrumental in
helping black men succeed."
Robinson grew up admiring !he
white football players at LSU. In
high school during the 1930s, he
.worked on the sidelines at the
school and in !he cafeteria serving
line during the summers,

Green Bay........
Mia.ne~ota .........

Detroit...
Atlanll ...
Sl. Louis .......
San Francisco ...
Carolina .....
NcwOrleam ....

American League
Saturda)"1 .con

Seatlle t 1;New YorkS

National League
Saturday'• score
Atlantil 10, Colorado 4, Atlanta wins

series 3-l

American League
championship series
Tuud ay
ClEVELAND at Seanle, 1:07 p.m.

3 2 0 .600 103 9S
3 2 0 .600 Ill lOS
2 3 0 .400 114 I 07
4
4
4
0
0

I
I
I
5
5

Saturday

AP Top 25 college poll

Seaule at CLEVELAND, 7:07p.m.

National League
championship series
Tunday
Atlallla (Glnine 16-7) at ClNClN·
NATI (Schourek 18-7), 8:07p.m.

Wtdnuday
Atlanta at CINCINNATI. &amp;:07 p.m.

NFL standings
AMERICAN_CONFERENCE
Eastern Dh·IWon

.ll' L I I'lL !a 114

4 I 0 .800
4 1 o .800
lndiillapolil .. . 3 2 0 .600
New Enaland .. . I 4 0 .100
I 5 0 .167
N.Y. Jets ..... .
Burfalo .... .

Miami .... ..

Central
CLEVELAND. l
Pittsburah·..... .... 3
CINCINNATI. 2
Houston ............ 2
Jacbcnville...
2

DIYitlon
) 0 .500
1 o .500
4 0 .333
4 0 .333
4 0 .333

Wc•lch DlviNon
Oakland .... ..... l I 0 .133
Kan&amp;u City. ..... 4 l 0 .800
San Dieao ......... 3 2 0 .600
Deaver ............ 3 ) o .lOO
Seattle... .
2 Y 0 .400

109 74
145 n
110 110
4l 119
88 178

124
138
136
IDS
II

107
140
14l
119
117

Ill 79
Ill 82
II &amp;S
134 116
ll Ill

'
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

1. Floridlll St. (40} ..... .S.0-0
1. Neb""lca (16) ........5-0-0
3. Florida (2) ......·...... S.O·O
'4. DIDO ST (4) ....... 5-0-0
S. Soulhen Cal... ..... .S.0-0
6. Tenneo~CC .............l·I·O
1. Auburn ....... ..... .4-1-0
a. Kansaa St..
..S-0-0
9. Colorado ...... ........ .S+O
10. Kaooas ........... ...S:0-0
11 . Michipo ....... .....5·1·0
1~ . Alabama ........... ..4-1·0
13. Oklahoma ...........4-1 -0
14. Northwe5terD .... ..4-1-0
IS Oreaon . . .....4·1·0
16 Swford.... . .. . .4·0-1
17. Notre Oame .......... 4-2-0
18. Texu ....................4-1-Q
19. Virginia ...... ...... S-2-0
20. Peon St. ............... 3-2-0
21. WiKonsia .............2-1·1
22. TelW A~--- ...... 2·2·0
23.Jowa .... .................. 4-0..0
24. wu~~;oaroo ......... l-2·0
2S. Tnaa Tech .. ........ 2·2-0

Isa
.ll' L I I'lL ~ ~
Oallu................ l I 0 .Ill ll

Holzer Clinic
Hm for

Pbiladelphia...... 3 l 0 .500 127 159

Your Health ... Here (or Your Ufetime.

N.Y. Oiaots ....... 2 4 0 .333 101 H9
Wuhinatoa ...... 2 4 o .333 UJ U9
Arizo.. ............. I 5 0 .167 90 160

Cenb'aJ DI"Aoa

1

Gal (814) 44H381 ... _(814) 288 8417

From October 91hrough October 20 Holzer CHnlc II

IIIII and

hotn tor

T""1'" Bay ....... 4 2 0 .667

16

II

ClUcaao ............ 3 2 0 .600 139 101

1,521
1,400
1.406

Ccnf'.

~~lLS

\~EIG!l_~~,

•' '

~

\ RYAN RAMSBURG

.

...

\

•

I

•

RUSTY STEWART

Ryan Ramsburg and Rusty Stewart are members of the 1!1!15
Meigs Marauder football team. Ramsburg is a 5-foot-9, 160-pourid
freshman fullback. Stewart is a 5-foot-9, 195-pound freshman tackle.

Martin captures UAW-GM
Quality 500 checkered flag
By JOE MACENKA
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - Dale
Earnhardt keeps finding way s to
sustain his title quest, and Mark
Martin keeps finding ways to make
up for one !hat got away.
While Earnhardt was cutting a
large ch unk from Jeff Gordon's
points lead, Martin overtook Terry
Labonte wilh four laps left in the
UAW-GM Quality 500 and went
on to win Sunday's race at Charlone Motor Speedway.
"
It was the second Winston Cup
victory in as many weeks for Martin, who at !he midway point of !he
season was in contention for bis
first points championship. But consecut,ive finishes of 28tb, 35th and
lith dropped Martin from second
to flflh in !he standings, and he has
been unable to get higher !han !bird
since then.
Martin's 18th career victory and fourth of 1995 left him in fourtb
place in the annual driver standings. With three races remaining on
Ibis year's schedule, he is out of !he
title chase for all practical purposes, 383 points-behind Gordon.
"It hurts really bad when
you've done your very best and
you have to .race that it's not
enough," Martin said. "But winning is what it's all about. I'll be
honest with you. If I could win five
races a year for !he ne•t I 0 years,
I'll be alright wilh bow the points
f II."

~ Right now, the points aren't
falling in Gordon's favor as the 24year-old seeks to win his rtrst season driving title at !he expense of
tbe 44-ycar-old Earnhardt, who is
gunning for championship No. 8.
Gordon came to Charlotte's 1.5-

mile, high-banked trioval with a
302-point advanlage over Earnhardt, but by 01e lime he lcrt it was
down to 205. A broken gear sen t
him behind the wall for 14 laps,
and he wound up 30th.
Now, Gordon's championship,
which just a few &lt;.lays ago secm~&lt;.l
like a give n, is 110 longer anylhing
close to t11al.
.
"lbis is whal makes a charnpi·
onship-caliber team," Gordon said.
"The big guy upstairs isn't going
to give it to us. We are going \O
have to work for the title. We are
going to have 10 run hard and wo~k
hard !he last tbree races." · '
:
While Gordon was redu ced io
being an also-ran, Earnhardt put
a memorable charge. A poor quali:
fying effort relegated him to the
very last spot on !he 43-car starting
grid, but he needed just 29 laps 1.(\
work his way onto Charlolle:s
leader board, which lists the top
five cars.
Earnhardt led once for two lajls
and he wound up second, abo~i
eight car-lenglhs behind Martin. •
"We don't wish any bad lud&lt;
on anybody," Earnhardt said, "but
luck is going to play a big part iq
who wins the championship. Ttit:
breaks have to go our way and we
have to win.''
Gordon's streak of consecutive
top-10 finishes ended at 14; Earjlhardt's grew to seven.
·'
"His racing luck bad to get hilit
sooner or later,'' Earnhardt said;
"We still have a big deficit to
overcome, but we aren't about to
give up, either."
The Ford Thunderbird of pole'
sitter Ricky Rudd appeared to be
the class of the field.

qn

Toledo ............ 2 0 0 1.00
Miami ...
.... 2. I 0 .667

0
0
0
0
0
0

E. Mich .......... 3 0 0 1.00

1,321
1,187
1,171
1.044
1,017
895
809
76S
151
682
663
565
SOB
490
482
447
liS
360
199
103
II

Cued.

Isa

0
0
0
0

WllcoOIID ........ I 0
Mlchltao .......... l I
llliaoil .............. 1 1

Pu!Wo ..............O I

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
t

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
.500
.500

.2SO

4
5
4
3
2
'
3

0
0
0
0
I
0
2 0

2 2 I

2 I .167

I 4 1

Midwest
Ciocinuati 13, East Carolina 10
Drake 23. Evwville 6
lndiaaa SL 16, SW Miaouri St 9
ICan5u St. 30, Miuol.ri 0
N. Dliaoil62, UNLV 14
N. lowt 17, E. llliooil7
Oklltloma 39, IGwaSt. 26
S.lllinoill4, Oliooil St II
SE Ml11ollri 33, Tenaeuee Tech 12
Va.lp.-aiso 44, Butler 42

Southwest

s.....,.,.-MAc

Art.-Pime Bluff 36, Tex• Southern 22

BowliDii Grtca at Ball St.
Toledo at Miami
W. Michipo at OIUO
Sallll'daJ-1101-CCIRI'ererKt
Atroo at Virainia Tech
Cent. Michiaao at Yow:~ptowo SL
E. Michiaao 11 Syraaae

NCAA Division I scores
East
Boston Colleae 17, PittlbWJh 0
BuiTalo St. 31. Canisiut 0
CohnOOia 24, Ptoo 14
Coimecticul14, Villanovall
Coutll 21, Harvard 27
Darln'&lt;&gt;uth 14, LaraJ&lt;U&lt; 1
Delaware 34, YoullJilOWD St. U
Duqueaae 42, St. Pete~' a 13
Fonlhom 34, Co1.... 14
Oea(ldDWll, D.C. 41, St. ldla'a, N.Y.

IS

1
0
0
I
I
I

I 4 0
I l I

Tbb week'• olate

9
12
22
I

.»! L I l&lt;l. ll: L I

NorthwQIIcrD ... 2
OIHOST......... I
Iowa ... ............. .1
Minac.ota ........ l

l 0 .2SO
I I .2l0

Non-nnrutnce •1'S. Carolina n. Kent 14

~

O.erall

.667
.500
.333
.3 33

0

MAC action
E. Michiaan 34. Ceot Michiaaa 24
Miami 21, Bowlioa GreenO.
Toledo 17,8111 St.14
w. MichiPJ7, Alroo 3

2

Big Ten standings

0
0
0
0

1
0
2
3
l
3
3

Saturday's scores

3
5
· 5
10
11
13
4
24
7
16
14
lS
17
19

I
1
2
2

4
5
4
3
3
3
2

ll
Ioaali,MWt 14
Ulliah 30, BucbeU ll

Mlioei9,Buffato6
Moamouth,NJ. 3,,M.,.,......14
New Harnoolllro 32,M•acbl•'"'' 29
PriiiCdolt 21, Browo 19

RPts9,Sieao0
Syncue31,TOQI(et4
·
TOWIOD St ~. Celf. ColllliDCticut St.
10
.
V~palaTedii4,Na&gt;yO
Wqa~r31,St. Praodl, I'll.

Yak28,HotyQoa 17
So•tb

l1

At&amp;-Billlllqlllm :u, woaonl

Mou.nt St. Jotcph 20, Defiance 14
S. Carolina 71, Keotl4
Walsh 34, Undenwood 16

Oblo Athletic Conferen~

Hinm 42. Capil&gt;ll9
Joha Carroll 44, Heidelber8 21
MoUIIt Uaion 41, Mlliiclta 37
Mutkingum 17, Baldwio· Wallace 0
Ohio Nor\hern 42, Ottetbeia 13

Ohio u_s. scores
Saturday's action

Mid-States Football Assoc.

Akron E. 19, Akron N. 6
AkroD F"lfestoDe 3S, Akron Cen -Howet

Tiffin 22, Urbana 9

Mld'!,F•t Intercollegiate
Hillsdale 1:8. Aihland 7

Non-conference action
Blurrton JS, Oberlin26
Cenual St. 62, Knoxville II
Cincionali 13, E. Cwollna 10
Delaware 34, You.nptowo St. 13
Fi ndlay 49, Iowa Wetleyan 14
MaloDe 70. Tri ·Sta!e 7

0

AW'Ora I0, l..u.heran w. 6
Bellaire J9,Steubenville Cath. 14
Bellaire St. Joha'1 IS, Welrton
(W.Va.) Madonoa6
.
Canton McKinley 13. Canton caUJ. 7
(OT)

Cle. CoUiowood 34, ae. Eut 6
Cle. Glenville 22. Oe. Uncoln-Weat 0
Cle. Uaivcnlty ll, Piltlburab Allep
oy 12
Oa • Duobor 20, Erie (Pa. Catholic ll

North Caroliu 22, Viraiaia 17
Rlchmood 16, North"""'o 23 (2 &lt;1I)
S. C.Oiina St. 31, Moraan SL 19
South C.-oliaa n, Keat 14
Southern Miu. 2S, LouiJville 21
Tenneuee St 4S, Morehead St 14
Troy St 20, NE~i1iaoa 10
W. Kentucky 17, Jacbon•ille St. IS
Wastlineton &amp; Lee 19. Dlvidloo 13
William A Mary 23, Rhode Island 14

O.erall

.»! L I

I

I ,)116

Newberry 3S, Qurl""'o Soutltcro I 0
Norfolk St. 35, Bethune-Coobnan 33

:W L I l£1.

fum

"""

Olbcr• rcetl•lna YOICII Baylor 80,
Arkansu 79, Syracwe S2, ~U 40, lllioois 37 Maryland 32, Waahiastoo 5L 30.
UCLA 'z1, Nonh Carolina II, TO~
9, Arizona 4, Su Oie&amp;o St. I. VlfiiDII
Tech I.

Eutera Dl•bioa

Appalacbia.o St. 41, Furrran 28
Auburn 48, Miuiuippi St. 20
Cent. Aorida41, Samford 14
E. Teoneuee St 21, Citadel 13
Florida 28, LSU 10
Florida A&amp;:M 20,N. Caroliu A&amp;T 3
FloridaSC. 41, Miami 11
Geugia 19, Otmson 17
Geusia Southern 42, W. Carolina 0
Georaia Tech 37, Duke 21
Gramblins SL 42 , Miil.·Valley St. 6 .
Hampton Univ. Sl, Delaware St. 21
Howard 21, Alcorn SL 17
James Madiloa 38, Bo_lton Ulliv. 31
Marsllalll6, VM121
MarylaDd 9, Wake Forest 6
Middle Tenn. 43, Awtio Peay 0
Millillippi 20, Tulane 17
Mwny Sl 33, Teo.a.-Martio 9
NW Louilianal4, Nicboll1SL 14

2 2 I
3 2 0 (
2 3 0

MAC standings

~&amp;.!!WI

Ium

Football

the difference.

Brown of the Cleveland Browns.
"You may out-coach me, but
nobody can outwork me," Robinson said.
During the week before tbe Mississippi Valley game, Robinson
worried that all the demands o( his
celebrity were disrupting his job. ·
"All this attention was taking
too much time away from my
work," Robinson said. "I was
putting too much work on my
assistants. I was away from the
practice field a lot, spending a lot
of time with (the media)."
But be also used the event to
further !he themes his players know
him for - hard work and education.
"You have a chance to be pan
ot~ Grambling legacy," Robinson to1iljis team in his pre-game
speech. ' I want every young man
playing in the game today to graduate. Now let's go play."
Now, Robinson hopes things
will settle down and be can get
back to work.
- "Coach (Bear) Bryant said
when be set the record for career
wins that he couldn't wait to get
back to tbe practice field," Robinson said of !he late Alabama coach.
"That's just bow I feel now."

SaiW'day·Bia Ten
lodiana at Iowa
Michigan Sl atlllinoit
Northwestera at Mionesota
OHJO ST. at Wisconsin
Peoo St. at Purdue

Here are lhe Top lS teams in tlle Auociated Preu coll ege rootball poll, with
fiut·placc &gt;~ote. in pareDtheiel, current
record&amp; as of last Salurday, total pc~inll
based on 2S pc~ints rcr a first place vote
through one point for a 2Sih place vote,
and last week's final ranking:

Friday

CINCINNATI at Atlanta, 1:07 p.m.
Saturday
CINCINNATI at A!lanLa, 7:07p.m.

Call for an appointment today. Being early can make

For the fourth time in seven
days, !be Seattle Mariners refused
to let their season end.
The Mariners, who had to su-r.vive a one-game playoff last Monday against California, overcome
tbe wild-Clll'd Yankees and became
just !he fourth team in baseball history to come back from an 0-2
deficit in a best-of-five series.
"I don't have !he words to say
bow disappointed I am for my
players," Yankees manager Buck
Showalter said. "But I'm very
proud of the way they played
today."
Griffey bad a playoff-record
fifth homer Io· begin an eighthinning rally that tied tbe score 4-4.
Showalter chose 10 use McDowell rather than John Wetteland. who
was New York· s closer all season
but struggled in this series against
Seattle.
The Mariners were 4-5 against
'cleveland, including 2-2 in the
Kingdome, this season. But they'll
be huge underdogs against !he Indians, wbo swept a three-game series
from Boston.
"Those hundred wins tbey have
on tbe board is somewhat disconcerting to start with," Piniella said.
"They've got an excellent ball club
and they're rested. We've got ou-r
hands fulL"

llliooi• 17, IDdiaoa 10
low• 21, Michipn St. 7
Minocsou 39, Purdue 31
Northwutero 19, Michlaan 13
DIDO ST. 28, Peoo SL 1l

Ball St.. ........... 2
W. M;ch ........... 2
Bowlini, GreeD I
C.Micb ............ l
Alaoo .
...1
DIDO .............0
Xeot ............... ..o

San Diego at Kana• City, 9 p.m.

Seattle at ClEVELAND. &amp;:07 p.m.

you schedule a mammography exam, our staff will show
you techniques for self-examinations as well as answer
any questions you may have.

fast.''

This week '• slate

Tonigh1's game

Friday

And, that's how Holzer Clinic can help you. When

Meet the Marauders 1

said. "I've never seen bim run so

Saturday's smres

Tampa Bay 19. ONCINNA'n 16
Buffalo 29, N.Y . Jets 10
Jacksonville 20, Pittsburgh 16
Dallas 34, Greco Bay 24
Philadelphia 37, Washinfon 34 (OT)
Olicugo 31, Carolina 27
Minnesota 23. Hou&amp;ton 11 (00
Detroit ll, CLEVELAND 20
Indianapolis 27, Miami 24 (OT)
Oakland 34. Seattle 14
N.Y. Giants 27, Arizona 21 (OT)
Denver 37, New England 3
Open date: Atlanu, New· Orlean~ , St.
Louis, San Francisco

ClEVELAND at Seaule. &amp;:07 p.m.

fum

Michiaan SL ....0 I J .lSO
Penn St. ............o 2 0 .000
lndiana .............o 2 0 .000

0 .100 !Ol 105
0 .800117 86
0 .800 ll1 68
0.000 79 136
0 .000 9&amp; 118

Wednrlday

That's why it's important for you to learn
how to do mol!thly self examinations and to have yearly
mammography tests.

During Robinson's tenure, the
country has bad I 0 presidents,
tbree wars and a civil rights revolution.
Robinson, who bas bad one job
and one wife all that time, nher
has missed one of tbe 560 games
his teams have played.
He still visits the players' donn
at 6:30 every morning to wake up
his players, oversees every practice
including !he laps players run afterwards, and calls all the offensive
plays from 'the sidelines during
games, shuttling them in with
defensive linemen in a system
based on that used by th_e late Paul

Sunday's scores

Sunday'a•core
Seatlle 6, New York .5 (II); Seallle
wins 5eries 3-2

I out of 9 women will
face breast cancer during their lifetime?
The good news is that if discovered early,
over 94% of all breast cancer can be cured'.

pen.''

Well em Dlvbton

Major league
playoff glance
·

Especially when it
comes to early
detection of
breast cancer

In those segregated days, his
dream of being pan of such a football program seemed unlikely.
That changed at the tiny black
school in norlh Louisiana where he
became coach in I 941.
The rust college coach to reach
!he 400 victory mark, Robinson's
teams have lost 145 games and tied
15. He has bad only five losing seasons.
"I wish I could divide this up
and give a piece of it to every player and every coach who was part of
i~ "Robinson said. "So many people worked hard to make it hap-

I

Scoreboard
Baseball

team .''

RBI single to Randy Velarde in the
top of the lith for a S-4 Yankees'
lead and it looked like it was all
over for the Mariners.
Facing Jack McDowell, the
Yankees' Friday night starter making his first major-league relief
appearance, the Mariners lived up
to their new motto, "Refuse To
Lose.''
Joey Cora bunted up the rustbase line and evaded Don Mattingly's tag to get the rally started.
Then Ken Griffey Jr. singled to
center to send Cora to third.
Edgar Martinez, who drove in a
playoff-record seven runs with a
pair of homers Sarurday night. doubled to left. Symbolically, the
biggest victory in the Seattle
Mariners' 19-year history ended
with Griffey, the team's biggest
name, sliding safely home.
"This was a phenomenal series,
just great baseball every day,"
Piniella said. "Every game was up
and down. It's just a shame that
there had to be a losing team.''
After Griffey scored the winning run, he was mobbed by his
teammates. The Kingdome crowd
of 57,411 loudly cheered its
approval.
"1 was thinking score all the
way," Griffey said . "If I get
thrown out at the plate, we still
have a man in scoring position."
"When I saw him round second,
I knew he had a chance," Martinez

Grambling State gives Robinson 400th win

Shula said.
by Tony Stargell, who forced behind Dan Marino. . ,
The Bucs have been in fir st
Blake's fumble that Charles Dimry
Allbaugh his touchdown pass to
recovered at the Tampa Bay 44.
Dunn put the Bengals in control place after six games two times in
It was a disappointing finish for with just uQder to minutes to go, !he past - 1-979 at 5-l and 198 I at
Blake, who also fumbled on the his turnovers down the stretch 4-2 (tied with Minnesota). Both
play after Husted gave the Bucs !he placed too much pressure on the times, Tampa Bay went on to win
!he division title.
lead, killing any chance !he Ben- defense.
"As you write you-r ugly headgals bad to rally in the closing secAfter throwing just one interonds of his first game since signing ception against II touchdown pass- lines, just don't misprint that's 4a four-year, $12.4 million contract es in his first five games. Blake dash-2,'' Bucs coach Sam Wyche
extension.
was intercepted three times and lost said. shrugging off questions about
"Don't say nothing to me about two fumbles while completing 16 winning for the third straight week
despite a sputtering offense.
money," he said. "Just ask me of 31 attempts for 210 yards.
about football. Don't mention
Three of Blake's mistakes led to
"I can see the expressions on
money to me. I'm here to play foot- Husted field goals. James Joseph's some of your faces that that was
ball. That's all I'm going to say."
fumble stopped a promising Ben- not good enough. There was a time
The fourth-year pro entered tbe gals' drive at the Bucs' 30 in !he I could remember fans, and some
game leading the league in touch, second quarter.
, of you, saying to me: 'Just win, just
"We gave 'em enough shots at do it somehow .... Maybe it's a sign
down passes-to-interceptions ratio.
He also led the AFC in passing it, and they fmally took enough to !hat we've moved to another level'
yardage, and was second in the win," Cincinnati coach David - now that you expect us to win
conference in passing efficiency
big."

Early Detection Can Save Your Life.

So it won't be Johnson in Game
I of the best-of-seven series against
Cleveland Tuesday night. And it
won· t be Andy Benes, who started
Sunday night's game and made III
pitches in going 6 2/3 innings.
So the best guess is Piniella will
go with Tim Belcher, a tO-game
winner who was kept in the bullpen
in the Yankees series, in the Cleveland opener and then come back
with Chris Bosio, anolher 10-game
winner, in Game 2 Wednesday
night in !he Kingdome. The series
tben switches back to Cleveland for
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
games.
Piniella did say he probably will
use Johnson Friday night. Benes
then would go Saturday night.
. "We'd all like a little more rest.
but you never know bow many
opportunities you'll have to get teo
!he World Series,'' B'enes said.
The euphoria over !he Yankees'
series victory may be sbortlived
because the Mariners must go up
against baseball' s best offensive
team in the Indians. But the
Mariners weren't finished celebmiing after beating New York for !he
ninlh time in lO borne games Ibis
season.
"It's been a great ride so far,"
Jay Buhner said. "Bigger and better things are on the way."
It was that kind of giddy win.
A laboring Johnson gave up an

By beating Mississippi Valley State 42-6,

Bucs lead NFC Central ·by half a game
By FRED GOODALL
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Call
them fortunate, opportunistic or
even lucky. Just don't forget to
mention the Tampa Bay Buccaneers arc also in rtrst place.
The Cincinnati Bengals arc the
latest victims in a three-game winning streak that's carried the NFVs
losingest franchise of the pasl
decade to the top of !he NFC Central.
The Bucs improved to 4-2 with
Sunday's 19-16 victory over the
slumping Ben gals (2-4}, the club's
best start since 1990 when Tampa
Bay also won four of its ftrst six
before losing six straigbt eil route
to a 6-10 rmisb.
Chicago, Green Bay and Minnesota all have 3-2 records and trail
the division pacesetters by one-half
game. It's ·the latest point in a season the Bucs have been in first
since 1981, thelast time the team
won a division title.
"It's something that everybody
shou ld get used to," linebacker
Hardy Nickerson said. "When we
talk about 'A New Day in Tampa
Bay,' this is it right here."
Michael Husted kicked four
field goals, including a game-winning 53-yarder with 29 seconds ·
left, and the Bucs defense forced
six turnovers - five by Bengals
quanerback Jeff Blake.
The loss was tbe fou-rth straight
for Cincinnati, which got its best
effort of the season from a defense
that held !he Bucs to 299 yards and
sacked quarterbacks Tre.nt Dilfer
and Casey Weldon seven times.
The Bengals' big-play offense
sputtered, !hough, and Blake's last
lhree mistakes - two fumbles and
an interception - ruined any
chance the team had of pulling !he
gameoui.
''It was strange,". Cincinnati
linebacker Ricardo McDonald said.
"Coming into !he game it was !he
offense that was leading our

_The Daily Sentinel •, Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

n

La.ngltoa 41, Prairie View 12
SW Loul.oi..,.l3, Arbooao SL 9
SW Two St 43, CS NortMdao 14
Sltfhta F.AwtiD 38, Sam Howton St.
Tono....,49,Attaoau31
Teua37,Rice 13
Teua Chriltia.D 31, HoUlton 21
TeuaTecb 14, ToxuA.tM 1
Tulia 3S, Wyomiaa6

Far Wesl
AI&lt; Poroe ,6, r ....a Poao 46

::sw

Cal
Col

ONE
LESS
THING
FOR YOU
TO
JuGGLE
You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don't need to add this worry
to your list.

s.

3l, U1al! 20
SL 59, Utah SLI7

Fr0100 SL l1, Now Med&lt;e&gt; 34
llolltta ,5, Slcrlmoo!D SL ll
ldallo 51.14, H. Wl&gt;lhiqtoa 7
K...aa 40, Colorado 14
MoDIIDI 49,
SL 21
MootauSL 16,1dabol3
N. Arivooa 32, Bolle SL.13

W-

Ne....._S6,NonbTewl4
Now MOIIco SL 48, Louldaoa Tech 13
No.. Dome 29, Wllblqtoo11
Orqoa 4S, Plcillc 7
Su lllqo 21' A2llla Plcillc 0
Su Dl... SL 24, U1al! 2t
Soutbonl CIIU, Calllcnlal6
SIW'onl 30, AIW&gt;aa St. :U
W......... SL40,0rqoaSt 14

Other Ohio
college scores

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen. Just do this one thing,
and leave the juggling act to us.
Your Independent Agents
Serving Meigs County Since 1868

DOWNING CHILDS MULUII
MUSSER INSUUNCE
111 Second St..

Pomeroy

992-3381

North c-t Atbletlc Collf.
l[oa:ro• 33, c.. a...... 1 -

o

Atab.,. 27,N. Clrolila St. It

CbloW-20.-0

WlllaUorJ u. w-o

WHERE

EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR

POLICY

�Page 6 e The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 9, 1995

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

- Monday, October 9, 1995

Community calendar
The Community Calendar Is
as a free service to
non·prorlt groups wishing to
announce meeting and spedal
events. The cale!ldar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund · raisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
c~nnot be guaranteed to run a
specinc number ot days.
publl~hed

MONDAY.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Elementary Boosters, Monday, at 7:30 p.m. Carnival plans
will be finalized .
ROC!&lt; SPRINGS - DAY
meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at Rock
Springs Grange Hall at fair
grounds.

'.
'.
I .

RACINE - Racine Board ol
Public Mfairs, I 0 a.m. Monday at
the annex .

I
I .

.'
I

..

RACINE - Racine Village
Council, special meeting, 7 p.m .

'' .

MR. AND MRS. KENNETH E. RYAN

Taylor-Ryan
Amy Jo Taylor became the bride
of Kenneth E. Ryan in a July 15
we ddin g ceremony at Brown
Chapel on the Musltingum College
campus in New Concord.
The bride is the daughter of Don
and Mary Taylor, Coolville, and
the granddaughter of the !ale Merrill and Barbara May Taylor of
pomeroy. The bridegroom is Lbe
·: son of William and Lucy Ryan of
· Grove Cily, Pa.
:: The 4:30p.m service w~ con: ducted by the Rev. Jeffrey Burd·
· iall. Nuptial music was presented
~y Jim O'Brien of Gallipolis and
· chadwick String Quartet of
· Colwnbus. A reception was held in
· the alrium of the Muskingum Col : lege Sports Complex.
· : Escorted 10 lbe lbe al!ar by bcr
: falher, tbc bride wore a floor length
jowri of silk shantung wilh an open
. $birred neckline and cap sleeves.
· Tbe filled bodice featured a basque
, waistline over a ballroom skirt. Her
: bouquet was a cascade of
' Casablanca lilies, white belladonna
: delphinium, white snapdragons,
: Athena roses and lialian ruscus.
·
Honor allendant was Cassandra
· Brozak of Stewart, and bridesmaid
was Carolyn Baumbaugb of Yer. .milion. They wore rose linen tea -

lengU1 dresses with puffed sleeves
and front and back pleat detailing.
They carried bouquets of pink
stargazer lilies. snapdragons and
jacaranda roses . Jen Montgomery
of Lakewood and Any Sigman of
Coolville greeled guests and served
as guest book and program atten·
dants.
Ron Ryan of Grove City, Pa.
served as his brotber's best man.
Groomsman was Jim Taylor of
Aviano Air Force Base in Italy,
brother of lbe bride. The groom's
brothers se rved as ushers. Dan
Ryan of Pasadena, Calif.; Dr.
Charles Ryan of Pori Jefferson,
N.Y., Keith Ryan of Grove City,
Pa., aJld Paul Ryan of Columbus.
The bride is a 1990 graduale of
Federal Hocking High School and
a senior majoring in music education at the University of Rio
Grande. The bridegroom gradualed
from Grove City High School in
1987.Heisa 1992cumlaudegraduate of Ohio Wesleyan University
with a bachelor' s degree in music
education. He is Lbe instrumental
music director for Trimble Local
School Dislrict.
Following a honeymoon !rip to
Price Edward Island , Canada, the
are making their home in

Reports on their 4-H projects
were given by members of the Har·
risonville Club when they met with
the Rutland Garden Club recently
at lhe home of Pauline Atkins.
The members talked about their
awards at the Meigs County Fair,
and their honors at the Ohio State
Fair. In the group were Cheryl Jewell, Christie and Kenda Brown, and
Cindy and Mark Bratton. Mrs.
Atkins is assistant leader of the 4-H
Club.
The II members of the club
were joined by three guests, Mrs.
Faye Cottrill, Mrs. Debbie Brown,
and Mrs. Sharon Jewell for the
meeting hosted by Mrs. Pauline
Atkins and Mrs. Stella Atkins.
Margaret Weber gave on ilrticle
on moonflowers. She called them a
twilight blooming vine of beauty
and· fragrance. The bud, she said.
unfolds before your eyes into a
pure white Trumpet shaped blossom with petals flaring outward
forming a flat four to six inches
wide saucer. She described the lex·
ture as delicale like silk with heart·
shaped leaves three to eight inches
across. Betty Lowery had a leaf to
.
display.
The moonflower is a fast-growing tender perennial with lush
foliage, it was noted . Mrs. Weber
gave instructions on handling the
hard seed which has 10 be broken
or soaked in warm water until it•
doubles in size before being planted. She said the seed should be
sown U4 inch deep and a foot apan
in full sun and warm soil, and
waler regularly .
It was reported lbat there are
three ways of wintering geraniums.
They need to be brought indoors
before the first. The program leader
explained bow to dig up geraniums
and prepare them for drying in bun. dies in a cook, dark, moist area for
winler.
To over winter plants in the
pots, they must be moved to a hold·
ing area such as a porch for a couple of weeks before being brought
indoors and placed in a warm
sunny window. Taking cuttings to
be placed in a rooting medium was
also discussed.
For devotions, Pauline Atkins
read "Autumn Glory" frqm Ideals.
Stell a Atkins read "He Who Sees
the Sparrow." The creed and collect were repealed and roll call was
answered by members with the
name of a colored leaf.
It was announced that the

POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antique Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
at Meigs High School Library.

Harrisonville news
A•,,-

-~-h

'

AWARD PRESENTED - Postal carrier John Hood, left, was
recently presented the Cal Ripken Jr. "Going the Distance" award
for continuous senice. Presenting the award to Hood is officer-In·
charge L.A. Smith berger.

Postal carrier Hood honored
-lor commitment to his job
John Hood, a letter carrier for
the Middleport Post Of(ice. has
been recogn ized with the Cal Rip·
ken Jr. "Going the Distance".award
for achieving a milestone of accumulating 2, 116 hours of sick leave.
The award, and similar presentations at other area postal facilities,
are recognizing postal employees
for lbeir oommiunent to their jobs.
The award coincided Baltimore
Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken Jr.'s
surpa ssi ng of th e major league
baseball record of 2,130 consecu·
tivc games played.
.
"The Middleport Post Office 1S
proud of John for his achieving this
• longevily milestone . John has gone
ihe distance through sickness and
personal selback s, to provide service to his customers," a release
from the postal service stUed.
John' s postal care~r began in
Aprill974. He is currently a member of the Meigs Local School
Board, the Middleport Board of
Public Affairs, an 11 -year member
of the Gold Wing Road Riders
Association, nine-year member of
the Siloam Lodge 456 of Cheshire,
member of lbe VFW Slewan-Johnson Post 9926, member of the
American Legion Drew-Webster
Post 39, and a trustee on the board

of the Middleport First Baptist
Church .
Hood is also a Sergeant First
Class in lbc Army National Guard
Reserves. He has twelve years of
guard service. and rece ntly completed a 15 -day annual training
exe rcise in Kaisers-Lautem, Germany .
John resides in Middleport wilh
hi s wife Crystal, and son Tyson
Lee.

Birthday note~
Meghan Danielle Leslie, daugh·
1er of Brenda Leslie of Middleport
and Mark Leslie of Lusby, Md.,
celebrated her eighth birthday Sept.
30 with a party at McDonald:s
Atlending were her mother and
sister, Caitlin, Jul!y and Kayla
McCarthy, Cindy Capehart, Anna
Hartenbach, . Laura and Sarah
Hollen, Samantha Cole, Linda
Haley, Larissa Beebe, Stephanie
See, and Chris Blank.
Sending gifts were her fatber,
grandparents, Sam and Martha Fry,
Becki, David, Michael and Adam
Ball, Brenda and Dale Rose ,
Amber Bing, and Bob and Peggy
Lewis.

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Foley and
children visited several days with
her sister, Barbara Dill in Melvindale, Mich.
Ann Williams, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Williams and Ann's sister,
Arvena of Michigan, spent several
days here visi-ting with former
neighbors in the Hanisonville COJD·
munity. They were bouseguests of
Nadine Hudson of Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole of
Homer Hill Road were the recent
guests of lriends in North Carolina
They are hosts to an exchange student from lhe Ukraine who is
enrolled at Meigs High School.
Ernest Mitchell wbo recently
bad quadruple bypass surgery at
Riverside Hospital in Columbus, is
recuperating at home. He appreciated the remembrances of friends,
neighbors and churches.
Gary and Linda Haynes and
children of Columbus were recent
guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Donohue.
Mr. and Mrs. David Napper,
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley,
Roberta Young i!nd Bonnie Arnold
attended the fifth birthday party for
Emily Stanley, daughter of Steve
and Julie Stan ley at their home in
Norwieb. · "1&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Stobart of
Florida, Ray and Ellen Donohue,
North Carolina, and Ruth Giiiiian,
Florida, visiJed the Raymond
Dooobue family and the Lee family
and all attended the Donohue
reunionatLetart, W.Va.

SMITH'
S
'
CONSTRUOION

..

POMEROY - Bedford Township trustees, Monday, 7 p.m at
town ball.

"'

• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• RemodeJing
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
614 992·2753

'·

POINT PLEASANT - LaLeche
League, Monday, 7 p .m. at tbe
Presbyterian Church, Point Pleasant.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - · Narcotics
Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
basement. No fee. only requirement
is desire to stop using. Alcohol is a
drug.

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOnCE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bldo will be
received by Salem
Township Truslees, Meigs
Co'unly on the sale of 1·
1977 Ford 133 Slyleslde
Pickup.
·
For inspecllon and

quesllon "or levying a lax, In
exceos of lhe len mill
llmllallon, lor lhe benelll of
Columbia Township for the
purpose of Fire pro lee lion.
Sold lax being:'
A renewal ol an exlsllng
1a1 of 1 mill at a rate nol
exceeding 1 {one) mills lor
each one dollar of
valuallon, which amounts to
ten cenlo ($0.10) lor each
one hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live (5) years.
The Polio lor said
Election will open at 6:30

Public Notice
Resf~.lutlon of the Village
Council of lhe Village ol
Pomeroy, Ohio, passed on
the 151h day of May, 1995
thoro will be oubmllled lo a
vole of the people of sold
subdivision at a General
Elecllon to be held In 1he
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio, at
lhe regular places of vollng
therein, on lhe 7lh day of
November, . 1995, the
quesllon of levying a lax, in
ncoss of lhe len mill
limllallon, lor the benefll ol
Pomeroy )lllloge for lhe

o'clock A.M. and remain

purpose

l{'l.formatlon

Contact:

of

Public Notice
cenls ($0.20) for each one
hundred dollara of
voluallon, lor live (5) years.
The Polls lor said Elecllon
will open al 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open unlll
7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day,
Daled Sepl. 11, 1995
By order ollhe
Board of Elections, of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Henry l. Hunter, Chalrm;n
Rlla D. Smllh, Dlreck&gt;r
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30; 4TC

Computer
repair/Service, Setups,
Installations,
Upgrades.
Will write programs
and databases.
Kevin 614-541-1630
Local most area. ,
9/28195-!mo

•Deer scents

oCiothlng and much more
JOE'S
SPORTING GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL HALL
I
Anllquily, Oh.
614·94 9-2906 1111!il1 mo
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~

~~
~

·•~

I

BRAMHIINC. ~~

Lump &amp; ,~
Stoker Coal ~

~

124
Wellston, Ohio

~

Phone

Slole Rl.

expenses.

Said tax being:'
A renewal of in e1lstlng
lax of 3 mills al a rate nol
••ceedlng 3 (three) mills lor
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounlo lo thlrly
cents ($0.30) lor each one
hundred dollars of
valuation, lor llve (5) years:
The Polls lo1 saljt
Elecllon will open al 6::io
o'clock A.M. and remaih
open unlll 7:30 o'clock P.M.
of said day.
Dated Sepl. 11, 1995
. By order of the
Board of Elecllona, of
Meigs Counly, Ohio.
Henry L Hunter, Chairman
Rll~ D. Smith, Direct~
{10) 9, 16, 23, 30; 4TC
;

I

~

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
eNewHomes
·. •Garages
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
.. FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473
•'
7!22194

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

......,mo

1-900-255-8585
'2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645-8434
DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.
Eslab. Over 25 Years
Sales, Service, Parts .
&amp; Installation
304-882·2996

DAYS
CARWASB

Shrubs Shaped
I

Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

I

·~---------------------------,
Find the llest lluys in the

;,· Sentinel Classifieds

992·2156

"

.:.":"'
You Don't Hove To Loolc f'ilr

In Memory

CALL OUR OFFICE AT

In Loving
Memory of
Glenn Hensler

·I ·•

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

Doug Crites

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville, OH 45772

614/667-6825

6~5-B~n

HAUliNG &amp;
EXCAVATION
Um8stone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
Reasonable Ralo&gt;
Joe

N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

Up-To-Date
Soap Results
(ALL NOWlff
1-900-3 78-1800
· Ext. 633S
$2.g9 p•r nin. Must ba 18
yn. Touch•ton• phone req.
s·.... u (6f9J s~s-s~H

Live 24 Hours/Day
Talk to beautiful
GIRLS! 1:900-378·

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please cai!IC,.iro.~ ofl at 992-4472 or 1-800-606-3313
to set u our free water anal sis. 10/!Wn

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites •
Reunions &amp; Parties

:

-... ; =····· . -..

· ··= .• :.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985·3418

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

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

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

COMMERCIAL and HESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

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

614-992-7643

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio .

( No Sunday Calls)

10121194/tfn ·

2/12/92/Un

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
12 Guage
Factory Choke Only

Bashan Building
9127!95 tlo

~;,

Alluring Scents
n fN orth Second Avenue
Middleport, Oh1o 45760
992-4548

.~

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special

:Fresh - Sif( :J[owers

(jift 'Basfcets for a{[ occasions
Shiff-it-'Ba{foorrs Jiot 5lir 'Ba{fons
Singing :Je!Pgrams
:free Loca{ tfdivery
Saris action guaranteea
J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

Spec1al oiler oncl udes:
t. Clean molar
2. Grease roller bearmgs

5 Clean &amp; c11ock Io tter &lt;ystrr1

3. Clean &amp; check agr tator

7 Check electrical sys torn

4. Clean

all mov1ng parts B Replace IIIIer loag
All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368 W. Main St .. Ripley, WV

949·2512

HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HI.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Eleclrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exlerior
Painting
Also Concrele Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

'""'"

Check with us for details.
WHERE
S EHVICF IS
EVERYTH•NG

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
Have 4 years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen
at 614-843-5327
or 614-949-2632
after 10-10-95

ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE
i-900-255- 1515
Ext. 1064
2.99 per min. Must
be 18 yrs. or olOer

Required Serv-U

Touch-tone phone
required . Serv-U

(619) 645-8434

(619) 645-8434

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
{614) 949-20tB FAX
(614) 594·2008 NIGHT

I.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512

REASONABU: RAfiS

304-372-6144

When your boat needs serviced •••
Come See The Boat Professionals!

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR
650-1234

6 Check belts

One ye.:.u 'NJ.rrzmty cr1 work perlormc:i
Valid on all natronally .1dvertrsprl hrcmds
We service most makes &amp; models.

Companidnship
1-900-25 S-1S1S
Ext. 8S8J
(619)

Di-drilmted by

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

Cheaper Rates

. $} .99 per rnih. Must N 18
. yrs. Touch· tone phone req.

~

Water
1.Jf- Treatment
~ Equipment
&gt;

The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in a tree. no obligation. comprehensive water

614·992-3470

ROMALVCE

Touch-tone Phone

=
-

;=j II llllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll r.

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

-

..

WICKS
HAULING

'

Mercrurset

Volvo

Pm1.1

OMC

MARINE
SERVICES
Karr 51. Just off Rr. 124, SyrtKUse, OH
Phone 992-6S20 Hrs. M·S 8:00·6:00
Howard L. Writesel

Sports Connect

ROOFING

NHL·NBA·NFL
Scores!!! Spreads!!!
1·900·378-1800

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

B/3/lfn

Ext. 3140
$2.99/minute
18 or older
Touch-tone phone
required
Serv·U {619) 654·8434

5/ 15/94 TFN

912611 mo.

Call your date now

t -900-255-1515
1471
Ext.
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch - tone
phone r equire d
Serv-U

(619) 645-8434

RACINE
GUN ClUB
TRAP SHOOT
E
very
Wednesday Nite
5:30 p.m.
Everyone
Welcome

Meet Your
Special
Someone
Today!!
Call the dateline

S2.991min. 18+
Touch-Tone
Required.Serv·U
619 645-8434

Remodeling

Room Additions
Siding Roofing Patios
•
•
Reasonable
Insurers· Experienced
Call Wayne Nell 992·
4405
For Free Estimates

8/4/lln

Forked Run

Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
Starting Sept. 17

I p .m .
Factory Ch 0 k e
guns only.

Wi 11 s hoot

through

March '96

304-882-2996
Comparable Prices·
&amp; Sizes 111811 mo.

1-900-255-1515
Ext. 9789

';:::=======- ::===-===~ r-----~~
.ony s por able
NEFF REMODE
. Ll NG
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Balh

STO-t\-WAY
STORAGE

T

1

f

We lding

S~ic
IG Aluminum
m e R8 dl 8 tor
Repair Service

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005
Personals
LIVE GIRLS• CAl l NOW•
1-!100-378-2500 E" 8325
$3.99/Min. Mu st Be 18 Vrs

~rv-u 1619)645·8434
Papa Sea• on .... ,h o/ Mama
Bear . WWM, 54, l inanc1all y se ·
cu" '" seaoch ol swF lonancoally
secure or work1ng . Age not a lac.

New F!adiators &amp;
Recore!~ Available

lo• Send picMe &amp; phone nunt&gt;c,
to 80)' G· 7, %P1 Pleasa nt Reg·
oSiel, 200 Maon So' PI Pleasanr·.
wv 25550

742·3212
Turn on Depot Sl. in
Rutland 1.2 miles.

REDUCE sale and"'" woon Go:
Sese oa~eos """ E·VAP dou1euc
Available Fruth Pllarrnacy. Mu1.
depo•L

p ·
Cs/1 for Low nces

· tL'I0/1 mo.

4/13.195

992·2155

FREE SENIORS
OCTOBER DANCE
(55 and over) with George
Hall at the Hammond organ.
MOOSE LODGE 6·10 •

&lt;

0

{Lime Slone Low Rates)

Commercial and Residential
Driveways, Patios, Slabs, Parking.lois, Curbs &amp; Gutters
Sidewalks. Porches. Tear-out and Replacement

DATES

Accidents/
Violations

'.

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additionsremodelingroofing • siding •
plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick
614-992-5183 ..

•

Abiding Concrete Construction

RA_CINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Easy Payment
Auto Insurance

..·-

Sept. 17 9/7/ltn

••••••

All Ohio

Dear Dad •
You are not
forgotten,
Though on earth
you are no more.
Still in memory
you are with us
As you always
were before.
Sadly missed by
· your family._

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

992-3H38

must be 18 yrs.

BULLETIN BOARD
1600 column Inch weekdays
1 00
8 column Inch Sunday

:

Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Seplic
Syslems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone;
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

2500 Ext. 6557
$3.99 per min.

Get Your Message Across
. With A Daily Sentinel

To Spy the Best Buys In~

110\Y.\IW

HOROSCOPE

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·4081
Week Day 8:00..5:00
Open Saturday
9:0().3:00

RACINE GUN
ClUB
GUN SHOOT

:7

1
156
To pl~~~,~~d a,~,~~"~ ,!h!~:~

3/241..

DAILY

Complete
Detailing

Light Hauling, ,

"

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

Sin-v·U

Ext. 7969

. TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

'

the Classlfleds.

Every Sunday

:

and Removed

With the purchase of
a set of struts or
shocksget FREE
installation.

Services.

,,'

-

- September Special-

Sportsman's Club

~ • Complete

"

Mason, W.V.
304·773·5533

Bulldozing, Backhoe,

Yoa Can Find
~
Y()ur Special
~
~ .Som~one Now!!!
I

614·384·6212 ~

Service

Forked Run

,~

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~

Imperial Tire

E\C\\.-\TI!\(;

•Deer calls

I

912211 mo.

SHOOT

•Bows •Arrows

~

992·6344
Dine-In or Carry-Out

you. Very reasonable.

3·D ARCHERY

ALLVOURBOW
HUNTING NEEDS.

I

s6.99

Interior &amp;
Exterior
Take the pain out of
pointing. Lei us do i1 for

Call
614-949-2512

ITTEITION
BOWBUNftRS

...

Only

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

Computer Service

~
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION:
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
!
Revised Code, Secllono,
3501.11(G), 5705.19, 5705.25
Nollce Is hereby given
thai In pursuance of ; a
Resolution of lhe Village
Council of lhe VIllage of
Raclna, Ohio, paued on 1he
191h day of June, 1995 lhere''
will ba submllled 1o a vote
of lhe people of said
subdivision al a General
Election lo be held In the
Village of Racine, Ohio, a1
the regular places of voiiOg
lhereln, on lhe 71h day of
November, 1995, the
quesllon of levying a 1a1, In
e•qess of the len mill
llmllallon, lor lhe bonelll of
Racine Village lor lhe
purpose of currenl

9114195 2 mo. pd

Betzing's

current

open unlll 7:30 o'clock P.M. · expenses.
of sold day.
Said lax being:'
.
Doled Sepl. 11, 1995
A replacement of a Ia• of
By o1dor ollho 1 mill 11 a rale no I
Fire House, Located on SR
Board of Elections, of exceeding 1o (one) mills lor
Salem Township Trustees
Meigs Counly, Ohio, each one dollar of valuation,
reserves the right to accept
Henry L Hunler, Chairman which amounts lo len cenls
or reject any and or all bids.
Rita D. Smith, Diroclor ($0.10) lor each one
Salem Township Trustees
hundred dollars of
Meigs County (10)9, 16,23,30i4TC
valuation, lor live (5) years.
26239 legion Road
The Polls lor sold Elecllon
Langsville, Ohio 45740
Public Notice
will open al 6:30 o'clock
(10) 6, 8, 9; 3TC
A.M. and remain open until
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Melgo Metropolitan 7:30 o'clock P.M. ol said
Public Notice
Housing Authority, localed day.
at
39350 Union Avenue, Daled Sepl. 11: 1995
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
By.order of lhe
Pomeroy, Ohio, will no
BIDS
Board
of
Elecllons, ol
longer
accept
applications
Tuppers Plaino-&lt;:heoler
Meigs Counly, Ohio.
lor Secllon 8 Rental
Water District
Henry L Hunter, Chairman
Assistance effective
Owner
,
Rlla D. Smith, Director
October 31, 1995
3956~ Bar 30 Road
(10)
9,
16, 23, 30; 4TC
(10)
2,
9,
16
3TC
Reedsville, Ohlo 45772 ,
Separate sealed BIDS tor
Public Notice
the construcllon of STATE
Public Notice
ROUTE 124 WATER MAIN
NOTICE OF ELECnON
PUBLIC NOTICE
RELOCATION PROJECT will
To Calvin Woolen and
be received by the Tuppers ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
Michael Woolen, addresses
OF THE TEN MILL
Plains-Chester Water Dill.
LIMITATION
unknown, you ere hereby
at 1he Dlalrlct Office 39561
Revised Code, Sec lion a
nollflod lhat Bessie Turley's
Bar 30 Road Reedsville,
Ohio unlll 2:00 p.m. Local 3501.11(G), 5705.19, 5705.25 Last Will and Teslamenl was
Notice ls ho1eby given admllled to probale by lhe
nme on Oclober 17, 1995
and lhen at sold Office lhal In pursuance of a Meigs Counly Probale Court
publicly opened and read Resolution ol lhe Board of localed al Courl and
Townohlp Truoleeo ol the Second SIS., Pomeroy, OH,
aloud.
The
CONTRACT . Townahlp of Suuon Racine, Case No. 28894. This nolice
DOCUMENTS may be Ohio, peosed on the 3rd day Ia given 1o persons who
examined at the Water of July, 1995 there will be w"Ould be enlllled lo Inherit
Dlstrlcl whose maln office aubmlUed lo a vole ol lhe nom lho daeendenl had lhe
Is located on Slate Route 7, people of aald oubdlvlslon decendenl died Intestate.
3 miles soulh of Tuppers al a General Elecllon lo be An appllcallon has been
held In tho T9wnohlp of filed asking lo relieve the
Plains.
Copies of the CONTRACT Suuon Ohio, at the regular eslale from admlnlstrallon,
DOCUMENTS
and placea of voUng therein, on Any acllon to conlesl lhe
SPECIRCATIONS may be the 7th day of November, valldlly ollhe Will musl be
obtained al the Office ol 1995, the queallon of filed wllh tho Meigs County
TRIPLETT ENGINEERING levying a tu, In exceaa ol Probale Court within one {1)
SERVICES CO. localed al tho ten mill llmllallon, lor month from lhe last
110 Mechanic Street, tho baneflt of Sulton publication of this notice.
Pomeroy, Ohio upon Townahlp lor lhe purpooe of (10) 9, 16; 2TC
payment of $40.00 lor each Maintaining and operallng
set, which will not be cemeteries.
Public Notice
Said ta• belng:'
refunded.
A renewal of an ••lollng
NOTICE OF ELECTION
The Engineer's estimate
lor 1he Projeclla $33,336.00. In of 0.5 mlllo at • rate not ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL
September 23, 1995 exceeding 0.5 mlllo lor each
LIMITATION
IS/ Harold H. Blacoton one dolhir of valuation,
which
amounla
lo
live
cents
Revised
Code, Sectlono
Pres. TP-&lt;:WD Board of
Dlrctore ($0 .05) lor each one 3501.11{G), 5705.19,5705.25
hundred dollala of
Nollce Ia hereby given
(9) 25 {lO) 9 2 tc
valuallon, lor live (5) yeore. that In pursUance of a
The Polio lor uld Resolullon of the VIllage
Public Notice
Election will open a1 6:30 Council of lhe Village of
_N_O_TI_C_E_O_F_;.E;.LE;;,C;.:n:,.ON
o'clock A.M. and remain Pomeroy, Ohlo, passed on
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS open unlll7:30 o'clock P.M. lhe 151h day of May, 1995
of sold day,
lhere will be oubmllled to a
THE TE N MIll
OF LIMITATION
Deled Sept 11•, 1995
vole of the people of said
. . Revloed Code, Secllono
By order of lho oubdlvlolon al a General
3501.11(G), 5705.19, 5705.25
Board of ElecUono, of Etecllon lo be h1&gt;ld In lhe
N0 II 1 h b 1
Melga Counly, Ohio. VIllage of Pomeroy, Ohio, al
' ere Y gofvena Henry L Hunter, Chairman 1he
regular places of voting
thai Ince purouance
Resolullon ot lho Board of
Rile D. Smllh, Director therein, on lhe 71h day of
True lees oft he Townohlp of _&lt;•_o_)_9,:-1-6,~2:-3-,30-;•_r_c___ November, 1995, tho
queollon of levying a tax, In
Columbia, Albany, Ohlo,
Public Notice
e1ceoo of the len mlll
paued on the 5th dey of
Juna, 1995 lhere will be ---...,..--.;.;..-- llmlladon, lor the benefll of
Pomeroy Village for lhe
aubmllled lo a vole of lhe
NOnCE OF ELECTION
people of aald oubdtvlalon ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS purpoae of lire protecllon.
Sald 111 being :'
a1 a Generel Elecdon lo be
OF THE TEN MILL
A renewal of an exlallng
held In the Townthlp of
LIMITATION
111 of 2 milia al a rate nol
Columbia Ohio, al the
Revlaed Code, Section•
togular placeo of Yllling 3501.11{G), 5705.19,5705.25 ••ceedlng 2 (two) mlllo lor
therein, on the 7th day of
Nollce le hereby given eoch one dollar of valuation,
November, 1995, the thai In purouanca of a which amounlo to lwonly

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORElli
1·900-884-9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-lone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645-6434

1119Jtfn

'Seven' hangs on as No. 1

15n LARGE ·
PEPPERONI

Ct/1211 mo.

· Free Estimates

regional board meeting will be belt.
at Chester, Oct. 14, noon . The
Meigs County clubs will met on
Oct. 16 at the Museum, 7:30 p.m.
The fall regional meeting will he
.LOS ANGELES (AP) -The homicide lhriller Seven held onto lbe top
held at Rio Grande on Oct. 2,8.
spot
at the box office for the third suaight weekend despite top 10 debuts
Luncheon reservations are to he
by
Assassins,
Dead Presidents, To Die For and How to Malre an Amerisent to Betty Wells, Radcliffe by
can
Quilt.
.
Oct. 21.
Seven
brought
in
an
estimated
$10.5
million,
industry
sources
sa1d
Plans were made to place a seaSunday.
.
.
sonable arrangement in the ExtendAssassins,
slarring
Sylvester
Stallone
and
Antomo
Banderas
as
duelmg
ed Care Facility at Veterans
bit men, did the best of the newcomers wilb about $9.4 mlihon, good
Memorial Hospital. Pauline Atkins
enough
for second place. Dead Presidents, To Die For and How to Mala
displayed an attractive dried ·
an
American
Quilt rounded out the top live.
arrangements and one of her last
The
top
10
according to preliminary estimates:
gladioli.
I.
Seven,
S
10.5
million.
The traveling prize was won by
2.
Assassins,
$9.4
million.
Faye Cottrill. Betty Lowery and
3.
Dead
Presidents,
$7.8 million.
Pauline Atkins placed flowers at
4.
To
Die
For,
$6.5
million.
churches recently, and Marjorie
5. How to Make an American Quilt. $6 million.
Rice weeded the garden at the
6.
The' Big Green, $4 million.
Masonic Temple. For roll call in
Devil
in a Blue Dress, $3 .llnillion.
7.
October members are to provide
8.
Halloween:
The Curse of Michael Myers, $2.4 million.
tulip bulbs to be plante_d in the
9.
To
Wong
Foo,
Thanks For Everything! Julie Newmar, $1.8 million.
mini-park. Mrs. Neva N1cbolson
10.
Showgirls,
$1.78
million.
·
wiii bost the next meeting.

138 N. 2nd, Middleport
{Ac1oss from Johnson's Video)

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614·742·2193

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00a.m. -3:30p.m .
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.

MEIGS
AINS ..:_ The award-winning Meigs
High School Marching Band perrormed ror a large crowd at the
Sternwheel Festival Friday. Tbe band, under the direction or
Toney Dingess, is once again heading to the Stat.. Marching Band
Finals in Columbus.

PIZZA • ARCADE

SAWMILL
Portable
Handsaw Mill

J&amp;L INSULATION
••

THE REC ROOM

H&amp;H

, Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

POMEROY - Special meeting
Monday 7:30p.m. of the Meigs
County Agricultural Society at the
secretary's office.

Trustee Stanley Huuon or
Clerk Bonnie Scou al Salem
Township Trusleeo 26239
legion Rood, langsville,
Ohio 45741.
Sealed bid will be
received no later than 6:00
p.m. Oclober, 31, 1995. Bids
will be opened October 31,
1995 allhe Salem Township

The Daily Sentinel e Page

Bu5 in e55 service 5

Monday at tbc fue annex.

Harrisonville 4-H club
meets -with gardeners

I

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

·.

B&amp;B ROOnNG and
CONS7RUC710N
(614) 992·5041
Residential • Commercial • Industrial
ONE CALL DOES JT ALL
•Pressure
•Plumbing
•Tile
Cleaning
•Carpentry
-carpet
•Drywall
•Roofing
•Painting
•Gutters
•Cablneta
•Masonry
•Electrical
•Siding
•Decks
We Have Emergency Services .
7 Days A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all work guaranteed.
"Fall Spec:lals" Leaves cleaned up and hauled
away. Most yards $49.00
Gutters cleaned and screened,
most 1 story homes, $49.00.
OHIO- WEST VIRGINIA - KENTUCKY 101!51! mo.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

Coun try gentleman , age 57. look mg lor SWF 45 -55, lor 1r ave l1ng.

companionship, and country liV ·
mg Send picture, phone nO., ·,Q
PO Bo~ 180. Pt Pleasant, WV

Solid Vinyl
Replacement
· Windows
We have the
best window

25550.

Eileen's Personal Care lor elderly
We spectallze In A lz heimers care

·gJYmg. 304-76 2·2544.
Wonder World's Famtly Day Care
now enrolling Children ages 2· 12
Mon-Fri from 7:30am -5.30pm. Nu tn tio us meals &amp; snacks atonQ
Wtth Circle ume. art . &amp; other fun
lille d activi tieS. Have 10yr s el·
perience in th.e ch1ld care f1eld
non-smoker, &amp; have pl en ty of pa ~
lienee &amp; TLC lor all ch ildren . 11 Interested please leave a message
81304·773-5831 after Spm _ ·
.

40

Giveaway

1 electric cook stove . tw o 10
speed bicycles. needs some · re:

pair, 614-742-2532.

'

�.

, Monday, October 9, 1995

'

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 9, 1995

ALLEYOOP

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

1

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
42 Old 11ge
43 Memorial
1 type of year
mound
5 Actor - Voight 45 &amp;earucllle
8 ChMra
47 Grooved
12 Center of
49 Alligator'• kin

Answer to Previous Puzzle

ACROSS

PHILLIPALDER

ahltld

I

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright
I • puppy
1 1 mos Old ShO tS
spayed m1xed breed wh1191brown
to good home 304 675-4650

Excellent Cond1t10n 197 1 12x65
Elcona Mcb1le Home W 1th 4x8
Sl1de Out AJC , New Gas Heater,
Water Heater Ca r pet Wa she r
Dryer Included 614 245 1216
After S PM

BEagle M1•ed Hou se Dog Gooo
Ware n Dog 1o Cou ntry Ho me
6H 388 8655 S un Th&lt;.~f S

Kj tr ens

4

long M rea II. 2

s r1or t

na11ed 304 6 75 6Sr1

"

M1(ed Pups 6 14 3 79 - 7836
l o Goo d Hom e

4 Cr~ y

Ver y ptavl ul blac lo.

1o..

60

L1mrted O!ferr 1996 do uOieWIOe
3tH 2bath $1695 Clown $ 2591
mont h Free de ll ... c r y &amp; setu p
Only at Oakwood Home s N 11ro

t&gt;lac ~

70

, d1d n t rea lly wtn I JUSt

GallipOliS
&amp; VICinity

...,----,---,~----,---,-;:-;::-::-;::
Al L Yare Sa les Must Be PalO In
Aavance DEADLINE 200 p m
!he dav be fore ihe ad s IO ru n
Sunda ~ ed lti Oil 2 00 ~ Ill rr &lt;Fly
Monda, ec t on 10 00 a 'l1 S&lt;ll
urOa)

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity
Ad'ance Dead lr ne 1 COpr11 rne
oa~ belore the ad 15 to run

Sur

da ~

ed 110n 1 OOpm r r l.lay M on
day ed1110n 1r 'JDd m Saruraar

Gamge sale Oct 9 tO 9? 1 m11e
eas t of Rac 1ne on Sr 12l\ Ern1e
8 1ng s eleC I ''' ryp evo te r gall
cl ubs car sea l l1!11 e tyk es toy s
baby l1 !1 le boys &amp; wo men s.
clolhes coals swea1ers wans &amp;
mr sc r1ems

Pl.

Pleasant
&amp; VICinity

Garage Sa le 2 1 ;? mr o ul Red
mond Rrdge Rd Rarn or shrne
Do nnre Sergent resr denc e Sat
Oct 7 Jn 1nru S a! Oc t 1~ n' An
1 Ques gun s a rro w s kri1ves
we ght b ench &amp; we ghl s many
0\Mr miSC ltePlS 304 6 75 1564

Public Sale
and AuctiOA

Rrck Pea r son AuCllon Company
llJ II 1rme auct ronee r comp lete
aucllon
serv 1ce
L1censed
11 66 Oh1o R. West V1rgrn1a 304
773 5785 01 304 773 5-1-17

90

Wanted to Buy

Cl ean Lale M ode l Ca rs Or
Tr ucks 1987 Mode ls Or Newer
Sm rtn 8 \JI Ck Po ntrac 1900 Ea st
ern Aven\Je Ga llroOIIS
Decorated Sloneware wa ll te le
phones old lamps old thermome
1er~ old cl Ocks an11que lurn11 ure
R verrne An trques Russ Moore
OWr'!€1 6 1 4 992 2526 We bu y
es ta1es

J &amp; 0 s Auto Pans Buylllg sal
vage vehrcles Sell ng pJns 304

773 5033

.,;:,.;,

Top P r~ ces P&lt;w1 Ola US Corns
S lver Go ld 0 1amonds All Old
Collect b es Paper we ght s Etc
M T S Corn Shop 151 Seconcl
Avenue Gall rpol s 6 111 446 2842
Usea turn ture an l roue s one
p ec e or complete est ates Os b)
Manrn 6 14 992 744 1
Wan ted To Buy Jun lo. Auto s With
O r Wd hO \J I Mo tors C all LaHy
Lvel y U1~ 368 9303

we

Woul&lt;l L1ke ro P\Jrcnase
Sm;1 ll Trasr Routes In Galha Ana
Surround ng Count es AB &amp; R
Servu;e 614 368 9686

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

r==========1iiiiiiiiiiiiii1
110

Help Wanted

!\V ON FARN $$$at hOme at
worll o\11 area s 304 882 2645 t
800 :192 63 56 IN DIREP
B.rbysTter In My home E1enrngs
2PM l rii 1130PM 614446
767 2 BelorE- 2 PM

Help Wanted
1 614 n r., q • 73

Af1 Ouroa trent cnenHC&lt;I I IJepend
ency Age 11 cy Is See k ng A
CCDC LISW L SW Or O ther
Oud l i! ec Per son To ProvtCle AI
co ho i And Other D1ug Counsel
1ng Know ledge And Exper ence
ReQu ired Bac helor s Degree Mrn
tmum Mas lei S Prelerred Sene
~es um e 8~ Ocro!&gt;N 18 I 995 To
FACTS 1770 J&lt;:~ c ks on Prlle Brd
we ll OH 456 111 EOE MrF:H
Ear f1 $1000s w ee~ty stul fmg en
ve opes a t nome Be your boss
Starr now No e~p fr ee supples
mto no ool gat1on Send SASE
lo Presltge Unil #L P 0 Box
195609
W nter Sprrngs
F!
327 19
Easy Wo1k ' E• cellent Pay ' As
semble Prod ucts AI Home Call
Toll Free 1 80 0 467 5566 Ext

313
Exper1enced Trav el Ag en t Pe r
sons Wr th Pos ttvo Att rtude And
E~cellent Wo rl&lt;. Eth cs Abrl ly To
App ly Sales &amp; Serv rce Tecnn
nrQu£&gt;s Telep none &amp; Com puter
Sk tll s Are Des red Must Be Able
To W01k Well Wnh Ct1en1s One
On One Send Resume To CL A
360 Galli pols Daily Tr1bu ne 825
l h1rd Avenue Gall poi1S Ohro
l5tl31
Help needed lor dee r processtng
Cra wf ord s Grocc, y 304 675

5404
local GarOage Co Needs Dnver
W1th COL s For Part ttme Or Full
lrmePostr on61~3889686

GALLIA COU NTY Just E a~t 0
Slale Rt # 7 30 M nutes Sou n Or
Ga llr po lr s ?5 Wooa ea Acres
Overlook rng The Oh 0 H•ver
$21 000 On ly $2 000 Do wn And
$251 09 Per Mo ntl'1 1:) Ycil •s
10% lr.terecr
SC IOT O COUNT Y L .. ccl sv li e
Area 5 Wooaea Acres Go o a
FOI H\J nl rng $4 000 Ow" l' r
na ncrn g O nl y $500 Oo .,. n And
$88 87 l"e r Monrn t. '~il •S &lt;OG.
Inter es t
We Grve 10°o D sco~ 1 f o Cilsn
And All 10 Year Co'1trrlC IS li ave
A 4 Year Bal loon

9S

McArmu r Police Depanmenr Now
Hrrrng Rese rve Pol rce O fl1c ers
Oualf1cat 011 Is T 11e Oh a Peace
Otl rcers Triln ng Counsel Ac
cept ng Ap~lt C.Hions A1 McArlhur
Po lr ce Oep;Himenl 1211 W M&lt;~ r n
S!leet McAr!hur Oh•o 45651
Need S L ad r ~s To Sale Av on

610446 3358
Nrgrt Manage r At The Blue
Fou nta n Moret 151 Upper n rver
Road Ga 111pol rs Applicat ion AI
Fronl Desk

210

0 1 H D11vers Neede&lt;l 1 Year
Var t1ab l ~ Doubles Endorsemenl
To Fil l Openr ngs On Teen Runs
He me Eve ry W.eeken o Free
He a t hcare To Or1ver Aller 30
Day s 1 800 )362 5685
Par,t 1•m e necept ron rst E xperr
ef"lc e Req.Y.!.! ed M&lt;W Resume 10
4, Cou rt Sl Gattrp:OOs OH
Part trme tax preparers needed
lor bus y ta~.ol!rce Pomeroy loca
1or, We wil l 1 a1n Send resume
10 The Da lv Sen ttnel PO Box
? 9 13 Pomeroy Ohro 45 769

POS fAL JOBS
San $ 12 081hr For exam ~ d ap
v• ca •ron rniQ... call 219 769
01
t l l VIV 548 9am 9pm Sun Fn

l he Mergs Local Scnool D1
l reAsur or s OHr ce IS ace 11n9
a pp l cat ons lor secret a ry until
Octc Oer 1~ 1995 An Assocrate
Degree .n account1ng rs prelerred
Resum es may be sent to Me1gs
l ocal School Drstr rcl Treasurers
0111ce 320 E Mam Slreet P 0
Bol 2 72 Pomeroy Ohro

180

Wanted To Do

24 Hour Care For Elderly Gentle
r;nan In My Home 614 441 0000

LUMBER COSTS UP?M Steel
burldmgsaslowas$300sqfoot
B u ~ !a ct ory d~recl from Na11onal
ManlJiaclurer as authomed deal
er Wrll trarn Some Markets tak
en 303 759 3200 ex! 2200
!NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO
recommends thai you do IJus r·
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money thro\Jgh the
rna I unt1l you have 1nvest1gated
tt'leolleflng
Craft Bu s1ness !or sale Ma1n
Street PI Pleasant WV 304 675
7580 alter 5pm

E•cellent

Ge ne-ra l Help Neeoeo trter vre w
Now Be r n ~ AccPpl tHl On Frrs1
Come Frrst Serve Ba s1s Grow1ng
Company Neeas 30 People To F r!l
1mmed1ate Full T me Posr t on s
Openrngs In 0 :.; • Se1 Up 0 splai
And Merchana s '19 Dep.;rt n1€""~1S
No E•per en ce Nec e ssa ry 1\ s
We Wil l Prov r1 e Tra non g 1 na t
Can Lead To Ver y Secur e ros r
trans Wrth H gn Sl an rng lncomp
Apol cants M\JSI Oe Nea t In Ao
pe ar anc e
8 Ye ars Ola A.,c
Ready To Sra• 1 W or ~o, On Vl eo
nesaav
C&lt;J II For lntcrv ew
Monoay 9 A M 5 PM
614 ol.41 1975

AID ASSOCIATION
FOR LU THERAN S
IS Loo111ng For A Caree r Mmdeo
!ndrvrdual To " Prov rde Frnanctal
Serv rces And Fraternal 8eflef r1s·
In The Gati 1DOI1S Area Srart rny
Income Up To $26K Complete
Tra1 nrng And Full Beneltt Pack
age Sefl d Resume fo AAL 8111
l!mbertodge f ra il Dayton OH

d5d58 D' Ca ll 513 433 7706
(C oHee!)
AVO N 1 All Ar ea s
Spears 304 6751429

1

Shr rl ey

AVON HOLIDAY SALES
Ear n $8 S15fHr at Work Home
0 scountst No tnvenlory or Door
0001 lndi Aep 1 800 742 4738

Relr~il Space Ava1 1a01e,

Latayeue Mall 513 922 0294

230

Professional
Services

Lawn Ove r seed1ng How to 1m
pro ve yo ur lawn w1th 1htcker
9row1h belter co lor and greater
res rs tance to drsease and
drought Call T &amp; T lawn Serv1ce
lor 1nforma110n and free es11
males 304 6 7~ 1 792

All real estate advertrs1ng In
th1s newspaper Is subJect to
the Federal Fa~r Housrng Act
ol 1968 whiCh makes tt tllegat
to advertrse ~any prelerence
11mttat10n or drscnmtnalton
based on race color ret•glon.
sex !amrllal status or national
or1gn , or any Intention to
make any such preference,
t1mttatron or dtscnmtnatlon M
This newspaper witi.((Ot
know11ngly accept
advertisements for real estate·
which Is In vtolatton of the law
Our readers are hereby
tnlonned that an dwelllngs
advertised rn thts newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

REAL ESTATE
31 0 Homes for Sale
30edroom 2bath LA eat rn k1tch
en lm1shed basement w!FR, Utility
delached garage 2carpons , 3
level tots near town New carpel
tnrougho ut new HICA 304 675

5364
3bedrooms ( 1 Mas ter) 2balhs
Oasement screened m porch /
bree zeway !amlly room, double
garage 12 54acres 304 675
4575

5 Rooms Bath Basement Decks
Pool 1 11t0 M1les From Gallipolis
At 141 614 446 1026
6 Room House For Sale On Land
Con tract Apply At Mollohan Car
pels St AI 7 N Gallrpohs Oh10
9 room house 4 br newly remo
deled k1tchen 8 bath new carpel
rng &amp; vrnyl on large corner lot
$28000 6149926173alter5

61d 992 2015
In letart Falls Oh10 1 112 story
lhree bedroom 6l4 949 3420
Three bedroom home 1n country,
Wh11es H1ll Rd Rutland one balh
rn ground pool 614 992 5067

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

19 70 Mode l Mob1le Home 12t65
2 Bedrooms Stove &amp; Refr~gerator,

$3500 614 446 8323
1973 2bedroom 12x65 K~rkwoodJ
$6 000 or uade lor Harley Dav1d
son motorcycle 86 up 304 675

Houseclean rng
614 ll4 \ 0870

19 77 12r65 Federal 3br 304
675 1954 alter 5pm

Ruo &amp; Scrub Clean1ng Serv1ce·
&lt;lustrno mopp1ng wmdows and
more Complete serv1ce or touch
ups References on reques1, call
Terry at 614 992 4232 or 614 ·
992 4451
S\Jn ' valley Nur sery School
Ch ldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Dur~ng
Summer 3 Days per Week M1nt
mum6 14 446 3657
W1ll Do 1n1enor, Extenor Patntlng,
Reasonable Rates E.xpenenced
References For Free Estimates,
Call 614 245-5755
Will take care of elderly tn my
home t5 years expeflence 304 ·

882 263d

450

Scen1c Valley Apple Grove
beau11ful 2ac lots public wa t er
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

1980 W•ndsor 14x70 2 Bed
rooms 1 Balh large Kilchen
Large Llv1ng Room Relr1gerator
Stove Washer Dryer Wall An
Condrt1oner 10~ t2 Ulll ty Burtd1ng
Excellent Cond1110n $10 500 614

RENTALS

Sleep1ng tOoms wrth cook1ng
A lso lrar ler space on nver All
nook ups Call al1er 2 00 p m ,

410 Houses for Rent

304 773-5651 Mason WV

2 Bedroom House $350/Mo 1 11
2 M1les Out 141, 6t4-446-6566

460 Space for Rent

2 Bedroom Basement, Gallrpolrs
Crty limits, $395rMonrh Depostt
&amp; References No Pets 614 446
0796 Leave Message

Mo1J1Ie Home lol For Rent Just

011 At 588 On t-JcCorm1ck Road
$1261Mo Wa ter Pa1d 614 446
4491,6 144463888

2 Bedrooms, Anached Garage ,
$395/Mo Reference &amp; Deposrt
No Pels 614 446 1358

Mobtl e Home Lor For Rent $1001
Mo Send Response &amp; Reference
To CLA 361 cro Galhpol1s Do::uty
Tnbune 825 Th1rd Avenue Galli
polls OH 4563t

2bedroam, Sm1n !rom school grc
eery, &amp; hosptal 304 675 8872

MoiJrle Ho me Soace In Centenary
$100tMo For Sate 1993 Toyota
Camry Excel lent Cond 1t1on 6 14
446 t6t0

47 112 Spruce Street 3 Bedrooms
W1th Carport $3451Mo .. 1 Mo
Security Deposit 1 Yea r Lease
TQpe Furn1ture 614 446-0690
Between 10 5 Only

51

2 Bedrooms On Upper Route 7
614 446

2515
er Vtew AC 614 44t - 0161

875-6986

I

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURN ilURE 62
Olrve S1 Gallipolrs New &amp; Use&lt;$
lurnrture heaters We stern &amp;
Work IJoOIS 614 446 3159

Two Bedroom $250/Mo Ptus Ulll
r1res Oepos1t Referen ces Ae
qu~red At 218 Alt er 6 PM 614
983 4607

VIRA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
0lJal1ty Hou sehold FurMure And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Carry I RENT 2 OWN
And Layaway Also Ava1lable
Free Delivery W1th1n 25 M11es

Two bedroom 2 m1les out New
luna Rd . Rutland $250/n''IO 614
742 2B03

Whirlpool Washer $95 Match1ng
Dryer $95 Whrrlpool Washe r
Newer Model $t50, Whirlpool
Washer S205 1 Year Warranty
Fro sl Free Relrrgerator $150
Frosl Free Relrrgerator $t55,
Ha r11es1 Gold Electrrc Range 30
Inch $95 Etec1nc ~ange fng1
da~re $95 Woodburner Good
Condrtron, $150 Portable Washer
Whirlpool $95 Portable Dr~e r
Whirlpool $95 Skag gs Appl1anc
es 76 Vme Streer Gallipolis 614
446 7396 1 600 49g 3499

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nrsh9d and unlurmshed securrty
depos rt requ rred no pets 614

992 2218
1 Bedr oom Furn•shed Apartment
Ouret Clean Centra! H eal Alf
Prrvate Parkmg Matntenance
Free 614 446 2602
I bedroom unlurnrshed utilrt res
pard $260 tmo Oepos rt &amp; refer
ences Ideal lor conslr uC\Ion
worker 614 446 2200

520

Sporting
' Goods

2 Bedroom Apartmen l Tra sh
Water, Sewage Patd $295rMo +
Depos1t, 614 446 2481

B ea r Super Stn ke..X LR 60 80
lbs Sight Ou1ver Rest Like New

2 Bedroom Ups tarrs Apartment

New Hully X Fac1or 20" boys srn
gle speed b1cycte Still 1n box
Great blrmoay or ChriStmas pres
em $80 value sell lor $50 614

992 5d02

2 bdrm apts Ictal electrrc ap
phances lurmst'led laundry room
!aclht1es close ro school rn town
Apphcatrons ava1la1Jie at V1tlage
Green Apts #49 or ca tl 614 992

530

540

--,--,----..,,..----·1

2Rooms Plus 8a1h lafayene
Mall No Kuchenl All Utrlltres patd
$175 00 Month DePOSI! Reqwred
614 446 7733

Brookside Apartments Washer
Dryer Hook up, 1 Bedroom ,
Equ1pped Wllh Relnge ra tor &amp;
Stove $257/Mo + DePO Si t 614·

446 2959

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

20 Ton Hydraulic Press $250,
A~r, Ttre Changer $250, 4 HP
Sears Atr Compressor $200, 61~ 3888803Aher5P.M

1

20ga l tong frs h tank, florescent
hood cabtnet stand Roll away
bed wlmanress 304 675 1780 at
tor 6pm
40 gallon hOI water Mater, made
by A 0 Sm11h one year old, $40,
enterta 1nment center, $40, 614·
992 3:&gt;85
40 OOOBTU propane gas Warm
mormng heater can be sw1tched
to natural gas l1ke new, $400
614·992 5596
5 Pc D1nene Set Exceflent Con
dl\lont$50, 61,. 446-~
55 gallon ftsh tank, all accesso rres and stand tncluded. s 15o.

614-247 2851

985 4489
W\Jrhtzer Sp1net P1ano, Excellent
Cond1t10n, $950 ,6 14 446-4347

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment

Co1.1ch Loveseat &amp; Chair For
Sale. Good Cond111cn 1 $225, 614
446- 1763 Afler 6 PM
Ea rly Amerrcan Bassett sofa
sleeper IJrown and gold color Wllh
wood tr~m excellent condrtron,
wrtn two end tables, $125, lour
15- hve lug turbine alumrnum
11ms , $120 Call 614 949 2490 at
ter3 pm
Elec tflc Wheelc1'1arrs tSc oolers
New IUs(!d, Scooter I Wheelcha11
Lrlts Slarrway Elevalors, L1lt
Cna lfs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283
Exercrse Machrne $125

614

Fodder Shocks And lndtan Corn
For Sale 614 245 5887
F\Jel Oil F1.1rnace Wtth Duct
Work 275 Gallons Tank 1314
446- 9867
Good used Luxatre electrrc tur
nace 49 200btu's 1 Skw s a1r
condi\IOnmg can be added to unl!
tor ce ntral a1r $300 30.t:~ 675
St81 alter 5pm
H1 Elfec1ency l P Or Na1ura1 Gas

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa11ed New &amp; Rebutlt In Stock

Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

Krng Stle waterbed lour drawer s
under 11 $75, 6 14 992 6792 or

614 992 3255

PAW I!

194 7 John Deere A New T 1res
Excell Condtllon 1950 Jonn
Deere A Complelly Rebu1ld Wa
ter!oo Ar ea 614 643 2300 or
614 643 2916 Alter 4 30
D1scount !arm 1ractor parts lor
Massey Ford IH , 8. orhers
Stder's Equ1pment Co Hender
son, WV 304 675 7421 or 1 600

277 3917

New Idea 706 0 Dresel UNI Sys
tem Power Un 1 W1th Comb1ne &amp;
Grarn Table Good Cond1110n New
Idea 2 Row Corn Prcker In Good
Condnron Also Have J D Co1n
Planter, Ferttllzer Sprea&lt;ler &amp; 300
Gallon Sprayer 614 245 5515
Wam ed Small M 1lk Cooler Tank
Under t50 Gallons Mll st Be tn
Good Condt110n 614 965 1g 22
6 14 965 1266

630

Livestock

1976 CJS V 8 F1bergl ass Body
$3 500 614 446 6958

-----:------,----

Aeg1s tered 3 Year Old l1mous1n
8utl $500 Cow 1CaU Parrs 614

367- 7760
640

Hay

&amp; Grain

Square bales $1 $2 Round bales
$t5ea 304 675 3960

Today 1s Columbus Day m the Umted
States and 1'hanksg1ving Day m
Canada But for br1dge players much
more tmportant IS the start of the
World Bndge Championships m
Bet)ing The four teams from the U S
and two from Canada are expected to
contend for medals in the Bermuda
Bowl and Venice Cup &lt;the latter event
bemg restncted to women)
l wtll be surpnsed if the Netherlands
successfully defends tiS Bennuda Bowl
title l thmk one of the two U S teams
will be Vlctonous
In the Vemce Cup, again the U S
teams wtll stArt as the favontes, along
wtth Chma, France and Gennany
France won the European Women's
Championship by the proverbial parsec Benedicte Cnllller took advantage
of a defensive shp in l&lt;xlay's deal
West led her singleton trump ace, often a good move But then she d1dn 'I
know what to do !Some Easts would
have played the heart two as a SUit
preference s1gnal to steer West away
from spades 1 Here, a d1amond swttch
beats the contract, but West, no doubt
mRuenced by East's ratse, swttched to
a spade Cromer overtook dummy's 10
w1th her queen to lead a club toward
the dummy
West did well, playmg the queen, but
Cromer knew the odds. She won with
dummy's ace. drew East's rema1mng
trumps ending rn hand and led a club to
dummy's mne Now declarer had a discard for one diamond and lost only
three tncks one heart, one diamond
and one club
East's ra1se wtth no spade honor is
tactical but dangerous - bidder be-

PEANUTS

1988 Ford Co nversron Van,
Good Ccndrl on, PS AC, CC T111
Wheel V 8 Eng1ne, AMI FM Ra
do &amp; Tape Ded 6f4 446-6896

PEOPLE ALWA'1'5 WONDER
Wf.lAT TI-lE CATCf.lER SA'1'5
TO Tf.lE PITCJ.lER WI-lEN
l-IE 60E5 OUT TO TI-lE MOUND

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 000 M1 les S6 000 Can Be
Seen At Gall1pohs Oa1ly Tr~IJune
825 Th1rd Avenue Ga11tpolls
Onro

ANOTI-IER SEASON
N TI-lE DRAIN .

c;::;::,
1

1995 Jeep Wra ngler R10 Grande
Ed hgt11 gotd hard lop blk lfll top
&amp; more 4cyl auto 2 1 74 7mt ask
mg St5 500 304 675 3129

740

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Motorcycles

1990 lour whee ler Suz\Jkl LT80
$1300 614 247 2851

\Ol&gt;AY

1991 220 Yamana Blaster. good
cond 1t1on tgQ1 RT 100 Yamaha
good shape new trres 614 742
2159
1995 Honea 300 4 wo Etcellent
Cond1t1on 614 367 7Q27 Anyt1me

I~

(OI,..V,418VJ'

•1.
l
\

l&gt;AY

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

..-oci. q-1

I .

•

BORN LOSER

Ne w gas tanks one ton truck
wheels, rad1a1CHS, lloor mats, etc
D &amp; A Auto , R1pley WV 304 372·
3933 0' 1 800 273 9329

790

Mov 1e Sale 950 Video Movtes
N ewer Releases ClaSSICS, D1s
ne~ &amp; Adui 1S 614 367- 0612
Anytrme
N ew recliner used couch &amp; lull
s1ze bed , $200 for all 304 675
5318
NOrdrc Track sk1 type lrke new
$ 100,614 949-2367

TRANSPORTATION
710

Autos for Sale

75 Olds Delta 68, new !Ires, runs

good. $650. 61d 992 4515

1965 Mustang $2,500 1978 Che
vy 1/2 Ton 4114 $4 000 6 14 388

,...HOW HUI&lt;\IUI\Tit&lt;\0 1C:£1Tit&lt;\0 1\ "'I
TIC.K€.1 FOR Wt-!6 100 ~ I

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

I Wf&gt;..Sf-1 I
' Wt-.16 TMT SLOW,
• ~17

Blij

YOU t'IAY ALSO KNOW
TllAT ITALY IS THE
HOME OF 5011E Of
THE WO~ll&gt;5 C.~EAT­
f..ST AI\T MA5TERrPIECES ~ r vf! GOT
SOME SLIDES To
SHOW yoU

$350 61'!,379-2820

S1arned Glass M1rro r, Med1c1ne
Cabrnet, Ca!e Doors Lad1es
Coats, Jackets Hand Outlted
OUII! Books 614 446 3375
S ta rnod Glass Mtrror Medtc1ne
Cabmet Ca!e Doors, Lad1es
Coats, Jackets Hand Outlted
0UIIt, Books, 614 446·3375

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upr~ght , Ron Evans Enterpnses

Jackson. 011o 1800 537 9528
550

Building
Supplies

Block bnck, sewer ptpes wrnd ·
ows lintels. etc Claude W1nters
Rto Grande, OH Call 614 245
5121
Metal Aoctmg &amp; S1d1ng Geo Tex
tile Fa bflc For Onveways &amp; Etc
Typar For House Cover Or Tem
porary Storage Cover AIIIZ er
Farm Supply 61-4 245-5193

560

Pets for Sale

tur~ng Hyd'o Bath
Call6144460231

Juhe Webb

1986 Delta 88 Brougham 2 Door
Full Power Lea th er Excellent
Condrllon Catt Aher 6 614 441
1199

198 7 Caval 1er conver 11ble, looks
&amp; runs good Bcyt 134 OOOm1
$3 400 OBO 304 675 2287 alter

lpm

t988 Plymouth Relrance lor parts
or whole car 304 675 4108 or
304 773 5064
1989 Ca11at1er 2 Doo r look s &amp;
Orrves Ltke New 1990 Olds Della
88 2 Doo r Cook Moto r s 614
446...0103
1g89 Plymouth Accla1m Auto A1r
Tilt Crurse , AM IF M Cassene
59,000 Mrles A skrng $3 300

614 256 63d0 614 256 1539
19g1 Cadtllac El Dorado Tour~ng
Coupe Full Equipped Eacellent
Cond11 1on , Poced To Sell t 6t4
446 6189 614 446 6865
1991
Speed
sene,
SS550

1539

Dodge Daytona 2 5 5
T1h CrlJISe AM FM Cas
A1r 46,000 Miles Ask1ng
614 256 6340 or 256

1991 GEO p,.zm auto am 11m
24 10t actual m1les one owne,

ve'y good cond•1•on 614 949
2 German Shepherd Pups Full
Blooded Males, 13 weeks Old
614·4464110

2 male Hrmala~ans, 1 Seal Pomt,
1 Blue Pomt, $100ea 304·6 75 ·
7260

263l

1----------1991 Plymoutn Accla1m 4 Door
A.r AutomatiC Tilt Crutse Af.A1
FM Slereo Great Ccndllron
$5 500 f':'legotlable 614 357 ...
725t

AKC beaul!lu l Chow Chew pup
ptes black, blue and w1'11te, $200/
ea, 614·992 7574

1992 Chrysler 5ih Avenue Grey
Wrth Dark Grey Plush lmer~or,
PW PO Mtnt ConditiOn 79 000
Mtles Call Alter 5 PM 614 446
AKC Mtntature Pmschers Shots, 6754
Ta1ts Docked, Dew Claws Re- 1 - - - : : - - - - - - - - -moved, 614·379-2896 Susan
1992 Plymouth Sundance, 4 Door,

AKC Regtstered Cocker Spantel
Pupptes,$150,614379-2728
CFA Ragtstered mate Htmalayan

kitten Call304 675-7169 any11111&lt;1

70.00 mtles $5.000 OBO 614
256 15.'39 614 256 1233

•
1990 Plymouth Sundance 2 Door,

Au10. 76.000 M1les. $3 200 OBO.
614 256-1539 61d 256 1233

Cocker Spamel pupptes for sate,

no paper, 814-992 2839

1993 Eagl&amp; V rs1on TSI 40 000

Mtles Loaded1 $1 1 000 OBO
$45
Eacn, Rod &amp; Blues. 1 Tnree Year 814 256-1618, 614·256 1252

Full Blooded Healtr Pups,

Old Blue Healer SSO, 61~-370-

Both Almond Whtrlpool Aefrtgerator &amp; Brown Oven $300 5et, 614·

2836

3!18-8991

Stamese Kmens, 7 Weeks CFA

Regralorod $100. 614-448·4283

19&amp;3 Ford M\Jstang, 4 ely, auto
lots ol opuons dnver s srde atr

bag 25.000 m11es vgc. $8.000
6 14 992 4111 even1ngs

Home
lmprovem~nts

YS R C U

HPNPCJGOSCT ,

USEOSX

GPX

IXTGRBT?

P 0

I'

ZTCXM

P

BSXOSC

wo•D
IAMI

0

Rearrange le!ters of Jhe
four scrambled words be·
low to form four words

I

GLEDOR

I

AMCIG

I

_E,...N-rC_E-r;-l-r""11of,
J

.

The highly regarded Professor
to graduating class "An educahon makes you d1scover
your own • - • - - - - - -1

I I' I
•

.

•

I

NEKODY
•

•

L--1....-'-..L-..__..__.

NATE

1979 Olds Cutlass Body In Good
SBOO 1983 Yamaha 80

R e lng erarors, Stoves Washers
And Dryers All J1econdti10ned
And Gaurantecd' $100 A.nd Up
W1ll Dehver 614 669 6441

ZKNT

KXEZPBTUTG

I

9109

1980 Camara $800 Couch And
ChaH $100 Au s tr al1an Saddle

p

TRXTLKI

1---r.:-,7-.:~6 ~~'lr::9 -~r-1 ()

1986 Sunt1ght Pop Up Truck
Camper Sleeps 4 Furnace S1nk,
Good Cond1t10n, $2 500 6t4·245

......J

Celebrity Crpher cryptograms are created h om quotaiiOfl$ by famous WOPie pasl and presanl
Eactlletter 1n lhe Cipher stands lor anolher Today s clulf 8 equa/5 M

•

25 Ft Dr~ve Camper Good Con
d111on For Sale Or Trade 814
256 6574

610

8 Chrletmaa
9 Serve as the
Ideal example
of

Army bases
Tate of woe
Bullfight cheer
Russian no

by Luis Campos

~

304 882 3343

.:.........:._________ 1Shape

Good Cond111on $400 , 6t4 245
2939

Buayaa--

· CELEBRITY CIPHER

,

SERVICES

Now open Dave s Swap Shop
Tuesday Wedne sday Frtday
Sa1urday 1 6 Tools, guns and
1oys

Craving
Flightless btrdo

ware'

19 74 29 Fr M das 5t h Wheel
Camper Good Cond r!lon Ask1ng
$4 000 61.tl 446 4941

8642

1
2
3
4
5
6
7

By Phillip Alder

256 1311

1994 Aslro Vun loaded 22,000
mrtes will sell lor loan pavol! 614
99:? S1tQ

DOWN

The big
one begins

1987 Ford F 150 4X4 XLT Larrat
Long Wheel Base R unntng
Boards, FriJergla~s Topper Bed
hner 97 000 Mile s $6 500 6t4

Budget Tran sm1ss tons . Used &amp;
Rebutlt All Types Accesstble To
Over 10 000 l"ransmtsston, Also
Parts C lu tches &amp; Pressure
Plates 614 379 2935

Bull. $750 18 Monrn Old Ang"'

TH' CATSUP ! !

RIGHT NOW!!

new pump new InJeCtors 2tone
pamt $8 000 304 675 1487 from
12 t2

3 Horse$ 1 Quarter Horse 2
Tennessee Walker s 6t4 446

614 985 4375

FETCH

19 79 4x4 Blazer $1 200 614

760

Due to health problems, qu1!1Jng
dalfy busrness, 27 head Hols1e1n
cattle, ser~ous r nQu~res please'

MAWH

I'LL

379- 2720 AFTER 6 PM
1967 F250 Fo'd d•eser. 12 ooom1 .

20 Head Of Holstem Darry Callie
For Sale 614 446-2 514

41 10

NIP TH~T
IN TH' BUD

TATER'S

EATIN'
SAND I!

19 77 4211 Terry camper $3,700
K1ng wood and coa l heatmg
stove 614 949 2973

:6..:00~p;;:m~6;;:14:..;::99:;2;.;2:;5::;26:;;..____ 1 Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Fea

2 bedroom llJrnrshed
carpet
thro\Jghout washer/ dryer tnct\Jd
ed 2car garage, no pets depos11
requlfed 304 675 2884

Beech St Mrddleport 1 &amp; 2bed
rooms , utrlt!les patd Oepos1t &amp;
relereoces ll4 882·2566

Antiques

Buy or sell Atveune AntrQu&amp;s
t1 24 E Matn Stree1 on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am 1o600pm,Sundayt00to

3711 EDH

ES TATES 52 We stwood Dnve
from S22f3 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614 446 2568
Equal Hous1ng Qpponunny

1 800 537 9528

Musical
Instruments

Bach trumpet. used very I11IIC e~
cellenr condt!lon $350 call 614

Co ncrete &amp; Ptast1c Sepuc Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Emerpnses, Jackson, OH

$250 614 446 4279

$3251Mo U1r!1tres lnclutled Refer
ences Requrred lnqutre AI 300
Fourth Avenue Gall1pohs 6 14
446-3437

BEAUTIFUL APARTM ENTS AT
BUDGET PRIC ES AT JACKSON

2acres 1984 Spr~ngbrook mobtle
home 3mt At 2 N on Rt 62 304

Complete home furn1s nmgs
Ho urs Man Sa t 9 5 614 446
0322 3 miles Oltl Bul av tie P1ke
Free Del1very

N tce Late Model 2 Bedroom 4
Mtles Nonh 01 Holzer On 160,
614 446 6189 614 446 6865

1986 Holly Park 1.4x72 2 Bed
rooms, Large Bath WI D New
S~1r tmg , Excellent Condl!lon Par
!tally Furnrshed By Appomunent

Complete Gym Set $1 200 Value
$400 Washer Runs Good $100
Body By Ja~e Worko\Jt $50 614
446 8737

Duct Syslems And A1r Cond1t1on
ers Free Eslrma.tes

LAYNES FURNITURE

614 379-2720 AFTER 6 PM

PM

Cam per Top W1th Sliding &amp; Roll
Out W1ndows $125 Ntce Heavy
Couch Good Cond1hon $50 614
366 9943

Carpel &amp; V nyl In S1ock $5 00 Vd
&amp; Up 60 Patterns 01 K1tct'len Car
pe t In Stock Over 35 Patt e rns
V1nyt In Stock Mollohan Carpets
6 14 446 7444

1 800 499 3499

3 Bedroom Ho use Trailer For
Rent In Ato Grande Relerences
Reou1red $275/Mo • Oepos1 t

6365

570

92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU 1
800 287 6308. 614 446 6308

Washers dryers relr1gera1o r s
ranges Skaggs A ppl1ances 76
V1ne S1ree1 , Call 6t4 446 7398

2bedroom , w/centra l alf wl!h ntce
prrvate 101 Galhpohs Ferry area
no pets 304 675-1 226

Furnrshed Eflrc1ency $235 1Mo
UtrltHes Patd 920 Fo\J rJh Aven\Je
Galh potrs 614 446 44 16 Atter 7

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

7795

GOOD USE D APPLIANCES

21&gt;edroom 1 112baths total etec
tnc no pets Reterences req\Jired
Sandh11l Road 304 675 3834

1985 Venture mob rle home
14x70, three bedroom deluxe
model, 614 992 7175 or 614·992

buyer• 304-675-5129

Household
Goods

Appltances
Recond itione d
Washers Dryers Ranges Re f"
graters 90 Day Guarantee'
French C1ty Maytag , 614 446

2 Bedrooms On M1ll Creek Road ,
$225/Mo $ t OO Deposit Req u ~red
614 441 0968

682·6667

1993 Clayton 14x70, 3bedrooms
all eleclriC heat pump wid range,
lrrdge, dishwasher, mtcrowave ,
sktrllng $2,600 down take over
payments at $206/mo to qualified

o

88" sola, l1ke new srngle cush1on.
tufted back rose co lor Anna El
liS 614 992 2363

2 Bedroom In Porter A rea De
pos1t &amp; Ut~1tres, 614 388 9162

440

540

388 8293
MERCHANDISE

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 Rooms &amp; Bath UpslatrS Water
Pa1d No Pets 91 Ceda r Street
Gallipolis 61 4 388 1100

614 367 0424

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms lor rent week or month
Siartrng al $120tmo Gatha Hole!
614 446 9580

2 Tra1ler s For Rent Beautdul R1v

6102

ProfessiOna l Tree Servtce Com
ple1e Tree Care Bucket Truck
Servrce 50 Ft Reach Stump Re·
Free E st1mates! In
rnoval
surance 24 Hr Emergency ServICe Call And Savel No Tree Too
B1g Or Too Smal11 Brdwell, Ohto
61 4 388 9643 614 367 701 0

Tw1n Rrvers Tower now accepting
applrcarrons for 1br HUD subsrd
12ed apt lor elderly and hand •
capped EOH 304 675-6679

Four lo ts near Racrne approx 1
112 acres each, sta rtrng at $5000
call 6 14 949 2025

$2751MO "' Ul!l 1!1es

t-===========1~~==~=~~===1

'com apa,ment 'n Pomecoy 614
11
992 75

643 2916

Geo rges Porlable Sawm1ll don t
hau l yolJf log s ro the mil l JUS! catt
304 675 957
Hou rl y Rates

One
apartment
125
Cole bedroom
Sl M1ddlepo
r1 lhree bed

~~&gt;K873

&amp;

c.,_

54
56 Architect S&amp;lrlnen
57 Produced
56 Frothy brew
59 Future LL.Bs.'
exam
60 Equal
61 Incorrect (pref.)
62 Taka a chance

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer West
South
West North East
1•
Obi
2•
3•
3•
4Y
Allpass
Opening lead: • A

BARNEY

Vans &amp; 4·WDs

1948 Wiltys Jeep C J 3A $2000
hrm Sonny 6t4 992 34t1

2566

Coumy
Charolars lake 8eautdul 2 25
Acre Let 0\Jiel Desirable Nelgn
IJorhood Res tncJed $24 500 304
2730136 3042732940

420

730

New haven 11Jr lurnrsned apt
depo srt &amp; re terence s 304 882

Camp
S•re 11 38Complelely
A"e s 24 x24
Blbck Basement
F1n

to

SOUTH
•A Q 6
YQI0765
• 6 5 2
"' 5 4

1992 Ford F 150 XL T 26 000 :
M1les Frberglass Topper Excel - ~
lent Condllron $12 500 614 446 "
4484
.,

&amp; Acreage

Rodn ey 3 Bedroom s Gas Heat.
Centra l A11 , S3501Mo Depos 11.
Re!erence Call Alter 4 00 614

AC f NOW

General Mamtenance Pa rnung
Yard Wo rk Wmdows Washed
G u11 ers Cleaned L1ght Hautrng
Comme r1ca l Res rdent1al Steve
6 14 446 8861

Business
Opportunity

No t~perrence Necessary I $500
To $900 Week ly 1Poten11 a t Pro
cessrng Mor1gage Refunds Own
Ho urs Ca ll !909) 715 2300 Ext
782 (24 HOUI S)

OVER 1500 ACRE S FOri SALf

350 Lots

1shed Good Hunhng S 13 000 Ed
Brown 614 388 9973 Mergs

Counselor !ThcrrlptSI

All Yard Sa les M usl B e Pa1d In

so

enJoy makmg people jealous'"

~~oQ

1990 Chevy Silverado hiQh m1 1es
lots of optrons good cond1tron
$5 700 61-4 992 4111 eventngs
:

N Th rrd Av e Mrddlcporl 1bed
room 1\Jinlshed Oepos rt &amp; refer
ences. 304 882 2566

$5500.614 386·9686. 9 5

Yard Sale

1986 Pe1erbrlt tr\Jck 425 Rebuilt
CAT eng 15 Speed 40 rears arr
suspens1on etc no hood call
614 742 3129 evenngs or woe
kends

Moaern 1 BeaJoom Apanmem
614 446 0390

Two ? Bedroom 1972 Mob1le
Homes, 12x50 &amp; 12~60 $3500 S.

124 P 1re Grove los! 10 1195
$25 reward 614 949 2745

P:XJR FtOPlE" ARt.
REALL'f BE"I~G
:\H~fTED ~IE DAY.S ...

a

In Po n Pl easant 3 Bedrooms
U nturn1 she&lt;l Apanment Mus!
Have Reference &amp; Depos1t 614
446 0041

755 5885

YK J 9 3
t K 9 73
II&gt;AJ92
WEST
EAST
.s 3 2
• K.J 9 7 5 4
YA
•a 4 2
t A J 8
• Q 10 4

EEK&amp;MEEK

1980 l nter natro nal Ton &amp; 112
D\Jmp Tru ck t xcellen! Aufl nrng
Conamon 9 Ft Snow Ptow
Sal t
Bol 614 36 7-0612 Anytune

t\Jniii~S

Prrce Bustert New 14x70 2 or
3br Only $995 down, $195Jrrcnth
Free delivery &amp; set up On ly al
Oakwood Homes Nitro WV 304
l os t black ca l1co ,.. ,c ,n ry ol SR

1979 Fo,d 4WD $1500 OBO

Grac1ous hv1ng 1 and 2 t&gt;edroom
a par rmen 1s at V1t1age Ma nor and
R r..,ers rde Apa rtments n Mrd dle
port From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5064 Eoual Hou s1ng Oppor

t0·9 95

.1 OT

614 949 2510

7pm

1800- 63 7 3238

Lost and Found

NORTH

720 Trucks for Sale

Furnrst1ed Ellrclef)Cy 607 Second
Gallipolis sna re Bath $ 195/Ut lt
t1es Pard 6 14 446 44t6 Alter

New 1996 t4x70 nclu de s sk rrt
1ng slaps blocks one yea t
homeowners rnsurance and st x
months FREE. lot rent Only $1025
down ancl $207 17 per month Call

nnns 2ma le

?fema le Atso mo tller cat
3016753817

a

Furn rsned 2 Roo m s
Bath
Dow ns1a1rs Utllltres Furnished
Clean No Pets Reler ence De
posil Reqwed 614 446 1519

wv 304 755 5885

&amp; Wh11e

Kmens 6 14 3 79 .?55?

1995 Ponttac Gran Pr~x SE red, I
loaded ere cond , lew rTIItes ask :
1ng payolf 304 675 4066
..,

wua aheep

53

13 Actor Ron 14 - - anna
15 Takes to court
16 Dekota Indian
17 City In Peru
18 - fly
20 Seeeew
22 Ornamental
pattern
24 Shop
25 Write haetlly
28 Own (Seot )
29 Actor
Alaotalr30 No
32 Consenting
36 Bullfighter
38 StniJ"r - Plnzo
39 Cook's utenell
40 Repent

A
V

Comple1e the chuckle quoted
by l 1lhng 1n the mru.ng words

you deve lop from

step No 3

below

I' 1 I' I' Is I' I' I' I' I

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTfRS
•

.,. UNSCRAMBLE FORI
V ANSWER
•

2

IIIII I III

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Prayer. Vault· Heron · Mortal - LATER

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1tronal li letrme guaramee
Locat references turntshed Call

STRI&lt;£ ABLOWN 11-£ VIM ON
HGH PRICES SHOP 71-£ CLASSI'EDS.

,..

(6141 4d6 0870 o, (6141 237
0488 ~oger s Waterprcof1ng Es·
rabhshed 1 97~

Old t1mer to another "I don't do all that needs to be
done 1 m1ght not find anythmg to do when I look for something to do LATER "

ROBOTMAN

App l•ance Parts And Serv rce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E•
perrence All Work Guaranteed, ' ,
French Cny Mayta9 614 446
7795
••
Bill Onrck s Hom e Improvements
aSdrl10ns remodel1ng roohng
std1ng plumbing e1c Insured call
B1ll Omck 6 1~ 992 5183
C&amp;C General Home Ma1n ;. ..
tenence Pa1ntmg 111nyt sr dmg
carpentry doors Windows, baths,
moiJrle home repa~r and more For
tree esttmare call Chet. 614 gg2

6323
DRYWALL
Hang f1n1s1'1, reparr
Ce1hngs textured plaster repalf
Call Tom 304 675 4 t86 20 years
expenence

ASTRO·GRAl'H

Earl's Home Marntenance, vtnyl
s1d1ng, roofing exterror patnttng,
power washrng Free Estimates,
614 992 4451
Ron's TV Serv1ce, specialiZing rn
Zentth also servrctng most other
brands House calls, 1-800 797

0015. wv 304 576 2398

Raotmg and gu11ers- commercial
and res1denttal , mrnor repatrs 35
years experrence, 8&amp;9 ROOF -

lNG. 814·992 5041

620

Plumbing
Heating

4:

&amp;

Freeman's Healing And Cooltng
Ins talla tion And Servtte EPA
Cer!lfted Restdenttal, Commercl81

614 256-1611

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSUREO DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERP.RISES
Hear Pumps, Atr Condl110nrng, 11
You Don 1 Call Us We Both losal
Free Esttm~tes, 1·800-287·8308,

614·446·6308

wv 002945

I
Tpesday.~.

..
.'

.

Restdenttal o r commerctal wtrtn~,
new serviCe or repa~rs Master Lt·
censed electncran Rr«ktnolu ... \

10.1995

In the year ahead, you could have more
anrae11ve 11nahclal p~ than you've
had lor a long, long tune. Constantly look
lor ways to add to your resources.
LIBRA (Sept. ~ 23) Notltlng Is ltke·
ly to be too good lor those you love
loday You can lind a way to help wrth
lhe1r needs and wants, botlt emotooally
and materially Trying to patch up a broken romance? The Astro-Graph Malch·
maker can help you understand what to

do lo make lhe relahonsh1p work Ma1l
$2 75 10 Matchmaker , c/o lh1s news·
paper. P 0 Box 175B, Murray ,HiJI
Stal1on, New York NY 10150
t./
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) You wrll be
very charrsmahc loday and persons wtll
feel mclrned to follow yo't{ lead Even
lhose already on a lrxed. !Purse m1ghl
swrtch to yours
SAGilTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Today
you 11 be humble and rnoffens1ve rn srlua·
uons where assertiveness 1sn't neces
sary, bul rf someone ~uddenly swttches
lhe rules on you, theyd beHer watch out
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) An
opportun11y you've been overlookmg
m1ght suddenly become obv1ous loday
You can lulfrll your exRt&gt;ctattons rf your
approach Is pragmatic.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Your
obJectives and goals have a better
ch11nce of bemg fulfilled Ieday 11 you
reveal your des1res only to assoc1ates
who undersland your mot1ves Explarn
things to others laler.
PISCES (Feb. 20-...rch. 20) A lnend of
yours who has been rather lucky lately IS
using methods and tactiCs thai you can
adapt to frl your needs. Study thrs per-

son's procedures and tmrtate them
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Workrng
hard tn someone else's mterest today

could eventually provrde you wtth unexpected rewards Do your best and lei ctr·
cumstances take care of themselves
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Exercrsrng
· tact and lhoughHulness won't drlule your
strength today In facl, rt could actually
mcrease rt Havrng power and talking
sofUy wrll g1ve you real clout
GEMINI (May 21-Ju,ne 20) The very per·
' sons you try to serve today m1ght turn
around and tend you a much-needed
hand to accompliSh somethrng SlgnWrcant
. CANCER (June 21-July 22) For the best
: resulls today, promote your ideas with a
Ha~. Follow your nstrncts and be colorlul.
but not overly Hamboyanl
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The s1xth sense
wrth wh1ch you're blessed can be successfully ulthzed today when dealing tn
money maHers, espec1ally when negot181·
· 1ng or barga1nlng are key elements.
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sepl. 22) Tennporcaril)r I
set aside some of your senous maHers
anll let your hair down a bit today II Will
' do you a wor1d of good 10 get mvolved in
: fun actrvtties.

EleCIIICal. WV000308. 304-675
178S

.
,

•'I

•

�I
'

Incident tells reader
honesty is still alive
Dear AD8 Landen: That letter
from "Upright or Uptight in L.A. •
saddenerl me. She was dislllrbed that
her friends bragged about taking
advamage of ~ made by ~etail
clerks. It made me think of an
incident I will never f01gel ·
1stopped at aCOIIvenience swre on
my way home from work and
purdlascd several items that added up
10 $4.80. I gave the busy cashier a
$20 bill. Before she could make
change, her manager yelled for her
10 come to the storage room. She
excused herself and was gone for
several minutes. When she returned,
she gave rile 20 cents change.
.
·.I said, "Miss, I gave you a $20 b.dl.
You owe me S15. • She angrtly
insisted that I had given her $5 and
suggested I speak 10 the managet I
could teU by the look in her eye that
she thoUght she was right
I told her, "I don't want to gel you
in trouble. Just give me my receipt"
She did. I wrote my home phone
nwnber on it and said, "Be careful
when you COUll! your cash tonight
You may discover you're $15 ovet If
you need this money enough 10 steal
it, keep it as a gift from me.
Olherwise, give me a caU."
That evening, the phone rang. She
was in acars and asked for directions
to my house so she ~d brin~ me
the $15. I insisled on ptcking It up

Monday, October 9, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

the next day. When I wentiO the siOJC,
she apologized profusely. I said,
"Neither of us should be SOli): We
should be celebrating. We both know
that yeslerday each of us met at least
one honest person. • •• JOE IN
CHATIANOOGA
DEAR JOE: I love letters like
yours. They cenainly restore one's
faith in mankind. 'fhank. you, thank
you.
·
Dear Ann Landers: One more
warning about toothpicks. A
household employee of ours kept a
toolhpick in her mouth much of the
time, and she would often chew on it
and sometimes would swallow the
pieces. She became iU with a rather
m)!slerious stomach problem and had
10 quit work.
·
The problem turned out to be
several large abdominal abscesses
caused by pieces of IOOthpicks she
had swallowed over the years. They
had punctured her intestines in
several places. After many surgeries
and weeks of being criticaUy ill, she
was dischalged from the hospital It
took: months before she regained her
health and was able 10 retwn to wort.
My advice is kick the toothpick
habit and use dental floss. It's a lot
less dangerous and better for the
gums.·· E.H., GREENSBORO, N.C.
DEAR E.H.: Thanks for a leUer
that is sure to increase the sale of

'
Ann
Umders
•1995, loa Angtles
nmn SynOicate .-11:1
Creators

Syndicate~

denial floss.
Dear Ann Landers: You recentlv
printed a poem entitled "Unsolved
Mysteries of Anatomy," author
Wlknown. I am sending you a copy
of my father's origina{, hand-written
poem with the title "Where?"
My father, WiUiam M. Dunkle,
wrote the.poem as a class project at
the Country Day School for Boys in
Newton, Mass., in 1916. He was IS
at the time. Although he never
published his poem, it keeps JKWing
up, and I wanted 10 set the record
straight •• Wll.LIAM M. DUNKLE

Exploring the philosophy behind
how monthly SS payouts are made
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager
in Athens
Wby Social Security? It's one of
the basic questions about the Social
Security program, but it seldom
gets asked -or answered.
In order to understand the
nation's Sbcial S.ecurity program,
people must fust understand what
Social Security was intended to do
- and why it is different from pri·
vate insurance or investment plans.
Most people know that Social
Security partially replaces lost
earnings if a worker retires, dies or
becomes disabled. The program
includes payments to the family
members of retired and disabled
workers, and the survivors of
deeeased workers.
But how many people know the
philosophy behind the way actual
Social Security payments are deter·
mined? Is it simply a matter of the
worker who pays the most in gets
the most out? Or is it a matter of
making sure that everybody who
pays in gets at least enough to help
them get by?

JR.
DEAR JR.: Thank you for leuing
us know the true author of that poem,
which has been floating around for a
good many years. If your father wrote
it at the age of IS, he must have been
extremely precocious.
Gem or the Day: A lady is a woman
who makes a man warit to behave like
a gentleman.
Do you have questioiiS abolll sex,
bill no one to talk to? AM Latukrs'
booklet, "Sex and the Teen-Ager. • is
frank and to the poinl. Send a self·
addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money mrkr
for $3.75 (this includes postage and
ha s little effect on the risk of
luwlling) to: Teens, cloAM Latukrs, By ED BLONZ, Ph.D.
botulism. This is because ClostridiDEAR
DR.
BLONZ:
In
one
ol
P.O.Box JJ562, Chicago, II/. 60611·
um botulinum reproduces by giving
your
articles
you
mention
that
0562. (In CIJIItlda, «lid $4.55.)
honey can contain minute amounts off spores, and it's the spores that
of botulism and should not be produce the deadly botulism toxin.
The risk from honey stems from
given to children younger than I
the
fact that trace amounts of the
year old. I recall reading an article
botulism
spores have been found in
that told bow 2,000-year-old honey
makes it prudent to read - and was recovered from an Egyptian honey samples. (One sampling of
· heed - the label instructions for tomb. The reason given for its honey in the Washington, D.C.,
safe use.
"survival" was that honey is so area found a small number of
• Ease of use: This is especially dense that no bacteria could sur· botulism spores in two out of 100
imponant for people whose hands vive in it.
samples.)
ate limited in strength or dexterity.
The small number of spores in
I also recall reading an article
Finding the right glue for the job saying that the reason this sweeten· honey does not represent a health
is a lo.t easier if you have a selec· er should not be given to young hazard to the general population.
tion at hand. And given the modest children is that it is so thick they Infants under the age of I are at
amounts of glue needed to do most could have trouble swallowing. risk because their immature digeshousehold jobs, assembling a use- There was no mention of any toxin. tive systems do not produce the
ful glue kit isn't an expensive exer- How would you respond to the digestive acids needed to keep the
botulism spores in check. Without
cise.
above statements?- B.F., Seattle
For bonding a 11 sons of small
DEAR B.F.: All of the infonna· sufficient acid the spores can grow
items - especially those with awk- tion you have is accurate, but some and dev elop into a threat to the
ward, hard-to-clamp breaks further explanation is needed to infant's health.
your kit should include a super belp put it in perspective.
The final statement concerning
glue. A tiny tube or vial costs about
honey's
thickness and potential
Botulism is an often-fatal food
$2 . Most super glues are fairly poisoning caused by eating foods dangers in swallowing might be
secure on me!al and very strong on that contain a toxin from \he bacte- said about any thick or large piece
plastic. The best super glue tested ria, Clostridium botulinum. of food that is fed to an infant.
- Duro Wood &amp; Leather, $2 .30 Although honey can resist the
DEAR DR. BLONZ: When
for a 3-gram tube - was also very growth of most bacteria. this ability potato chips or other foods made
on wood.

• Water resistance: gaug es
which glues might best withstand
washing and weathering.
• Filling gaps: for jobs w~ere the
fit between surfaces is loose, you
want a glue that fills gaps and
doesn't shrink.
·
• Seuing speed: how quickly the
glue bonds. which often depends
on the job at band.
• TL"Tle to cure: Many glues that
claim to set in minutes or even sec·
onds warn that it may take up to a
day for the bond to reach full
strength.
• Cost: No one type of glue is
markedly more costly to use.
• Finished appearance: Before
using a glue. it may be useful to
·know how it will look: once it's dry.
• Health precautions : Many
glues contain potentially dangerous
ingredients such as solvents. That

Pick 3:

692
Pick 4:

4114
Buckeye 5:

Sports, Page 4

4-10-17-18-36

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 115
Copyright 1995

terms "cholesterol-free" and "not
harmful" are not synonymous. The
only real way potato chips could
cause direct "harm" would be if
they were eaten after they bad
spOiled.
'Send questions to: "On Nutri·
lion," Ed Blonz, c/o Newspaper
Enterprise Association, 200
Madison Ave., New York, NY
10016. For e-mail, address
inquiries to: blonzbooked.net.

The 199S homecoming queen at Eastern High School will be .
announced during halftime festivities or the Eastern-Federal Hocking game Friday night. The senior queen candidates are, from left,
Jessica Karr, daughter of Roger and Susie Karr; Crystal mmer·
field, daughter of Tom and Carolyn Summerfield; and Ni ole Nelson, daughter of Gary and Diana Nelson.

Parties slug it ou
over-Medicare cuts

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Trading insults and overheated rhetoric,
Democrats and Republicans on theHouse Ways and Means Commit·
tee bickered into the early hours
today over whether $270 billion
can be saved from Medicare with·
out slashing care for America's
elderly and disabled.
The GOP majority was poised
to push its plan for major changes
in Medicare through both Ways
and Means and the House Com·
merce commiuees by Wednesday
nigbt, despite Democrats' attempts
to make the Republicans rethink
their approach.
The Ways and Means panel

spent the Columbus Da~ holiday
holed up in its grand beaf!ng room,
_working past mtdmght as
Democrats hectored Republicans
about where the $270 btlhon m
savings would come from.
"You're extremists," said Rep.
Sander Le-:in, D-Mich . .':You're
bitting hospt!als and phys~etans and
in tum that's going to burt Medt·
care recipients."
.
Rep. Jim MeCrery, R-La., chtd·
ed the Democrats that the "puny"
$89 billion in savings the~ have
suggested would do nothmg to
keep Mcdtcare a~oat when baby
boomers stan retmng ~ years.

checking on il 20 years from now ," Park on the Middleport riverfront.
By TOM HUNTER
lage Aparunents manager concern·
stated Childs.
Sentinel News Staff
In Qther mauers of discussion by ing moving a dumpster on the
Council President Bob Gilmore council:
Middl eport Council members
property. The manager said that be
stated
that according to Meigs
discusse d the lack of action on
· The Mayors report was would speak with owner about the
replacement of the Hobson Bridge County engineer Bob Eason, there approved, with a balance of problem.
during their regular meeting Mon. was federal money avai lable to $4,44950.
• Bob Gilmore asked if the
· Resident David Boyd asked garbage bids had been advertised.
day night in Middleport Village build new bridges if that would be
more feasible than trying to repair council to consider a new sidewalk Mayor Horton said they had, and
chambers.
Councilman Mick Childs the bridge.
at his property on North Second they would be opened at tile next
After discussing the issue, coun- Avenue. Boyd's sidewalk was dug meeting.
addressed council on the idea of
drafting a leuer to the Ohio Ehvi· . cil agreed that drafting a letter to , up for water line a few years back
· Gilmore asked that the new
ronmcntal Protection Agency, con· the EPA, seeking emergency fund· and replaced with gravel, creating a waste contract start at the first of
ccrning lead paint falling off the ing through that agency for the pro· water problem during storms.
the year. Councilman Nick Robinexisting bridge into Leading Creek, jcu.
· Set Trick or Treat for Thurs- son thought the contract should
Councilman Nick Robinson day, Oct. 26, ~rom 6-7 p.m.
and the possibility of receiving
stan as soon as the bid is accepted.
emergency funding for a new requested that council draft letters
- Mayor Horton said !hat several Council tabled the issue till next
to Eason and th e ·coumy commis· complaints have been iss ued by meeting.
bridge.
The bridge is in need of repairs, sioners, asking wbat the status is on residents concerning fences sepa• Robinson said that council
and the Meigs County Commission the bridge project.
rating property. He asked council may want to look at different
In other business, Mayor Honon to discuss possible ordinances to options in the strucrure of the waste
has been asked to look at the bridge
contracts.
·
and make the needed repairs.
informed council that the Middle· eliminate the prol!&gt;lems
In a July council meeting, pon Community Association has
Dunfee
•
Councilman
Steve
· Mayor Horton stated that the
Mayor Dewey Horton learned that scheduled a day of "Music in the plans for the pool were sent to the reported several complaints about
painting the Hobson bfidge will Park" for Sunday, Oct. 15. This state for approval around the first village property to council.
Middleport Council will meet
cost as mucll as building a new event will feature a lot of the enter· of October.
tainment from the postponed River
bridge .
· Councilwoman Beth Stivers next in regular session on Monday
"The commissioners keep say- Festival. and act as a sort of substi· stated that !he nre department will Oct. 26. at 7:30p.m .. in the village
ing they're going to check on paint· tute for the festival. The event will help flush out village storm drains. council chambers.
- Stivers also spoke to the Viiing the bridge. They could be happen rain or shine at Dave Diles

Aid to children born on welfare divides lawmakers
taken away, and others say children
should not be punished for the sins
of their parents.
A symbol in the fight. against
out-of-wedlock births, the question
of a national "family cap" divides
House and Senate negotiators who
will soon begin compromising on a
fmal welfare bill.
"The major issue is going to
come down to illegitimacy," says
Rep. Jim Talent. R-Mo., a member
of the House-Senate conference
committee.
"It is eroding American families

WASHINGTON (AP)- It's
one of l)le most emotional ques·
tions facing lawmakers: Should
ga.vemmeot refuse .to support chit· .
dren born while their families are
on welfare?
Supporters say yes, arguing that
it's time society sent a message that
it is wrong for single mothers to
have more babies when they cannot
afford the children they already
have.
But some opponents worry that
women on welfare will have abor·
lions if their children's benefits a r~

COLUMBUS (AP) - Some
lawmakers want to r,everse a pen·
sion cut of up to 50 percent affect·
ing 115,000 former teachers covered by the $27 billion State Teach·
ers Retirement System.
. "I've bad calls from several
women that were sobbing, they
were scared . .. 'How did we get
into this? How did this happen?'"
said Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, R. Hillsboro. He co-chairs the joint
committee on state pension funds.
Last year the teacher pension
system changed how benefits of
some members are calculatcd.

ISave $6400 I
· Extended Chass•s
• Dnver S1de A1r Bag
• Anii-Loc&lt; Brakes
• Au Cond1t1on
• Automabc Overdnve
• V•sta Bay Wmdows

• Power Steermg

• Power Wmdows
• Power Locks
• Trlt Sleenng
• Cru•se Control
• AIWFM Cassette
• Capta•n Cha1rs
• Sola/Bed

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G·20 314 TON
LONG WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN

Talent and other conservatives
pusllcd a family cap and a ban on
cash assistance to unwed teen-age
mothers through the House, which
passed a sweeping welfare bill in
March.
·

ALL ABOARD • Pomeroy Elementary School students were
treated to cruises aboard the sternwbeeler Jewel City Monday.
Boat owner and captain Harry Batten of Kenova kept tbe boat
over until Monday following the Big Bend Sternwbeel Festival ·
because student cruises were canceled Thursday, due to Inclement
weather. Batten, left, watches on as youngsters file aboard.

COLUMBUS - American Electric Power Co. bas selected a
new management team to pursue energy investment and development projects worldwide.
Don M. Clements Jr. on Monday was appointed president of
ihe nonutility groups: AEP Energ'y Services Inc., AEP
Resources Inc., AEP Resources International Ltd. and AEP
Investments Inc.
The Columbus-based utility historically bas received nearly
all of its revenue from the production, tl'llnsrrdsslon and distribution of electricity throughout a seven-state area.
Clemeuts said the subsidiaries will pursue three primary ·
markets:
- Electric co·generatlon and steam projects for Industrial
clients within and outside the AEP service territory;
- Investments in major domestic and foreign power gener·
aling plants;
- Engineering, llesign, 'Procurement and consulting services
for Installation of electric power facilities, sucb as substations,
transmission lines and distribution lines.
AEP could invest $10 million to $50 mUIIon In each of sevel'lll
large coal-powered ,plants around the world, Clements said.
"Several projects are under consideration in China and
India," he said. The company hopes that the first projects wiD
begin near the end of 11195.
Clements, who joined AEP last year, succeeds Gerald P. Maloney as president of the subsidiaries. Maloney, AEP executive
vice president and chief financial officer, was elected vice chairman of each subsidiary.
. Locally, AEP operates the Gavin Power Plant in Cheshire,
and Mountaineer and Spron plants in West Virginia.

Sabotage may have caused Amtrak derailment

350 V-8 POWER

• lnd1rect Lighting
• Prem•um WOOd Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Aluminum Running
Boards
· Loaded!

• Dn\11!1 Srde Ar Bag
• Anli·Lock Brakes
• Air Cond•tion
• 350 V-8 Power
• Automatic Overdrive
• Vista Bay Wmdows
• Power Steering
• Power Brakes

• Power Brakes

• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• Till Sleerng
• Cruise Control
• AMIFM Cassette
• 4 Capta1n Chairs
• Sofa/Bed

•lnd~reclllghhng

• Prer1'ium Wood Pkg.
• Full Convers1on
• Alum•num Running Boards
·Loaded!

No Doc Fees. Delro'e'OO'

·Taxes, TiiQS, Tille fees e•tra. Rebate rouded irl saleptte 0!

it.'.

But an alliance of moderate
Republicans and Democrats kept
both provisions out of the Senate's
overhaul of the.nation's anti-poverty programs in September.
Now, Senate conservatives are
promising to vote against the final
compromise legislation if it fails 10
include a family cap, while Presi·
'dent Clinton is warning that bowing to such "extremist pressure"
could kill welfare refonn.
· Eviden-ce of the family cap's
widening popularity can be found
around the country.

!Save $61001

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN
.,

Many were people who quit teach·
ing befote retirement age. •
Pension fund officials said they ·
could not afford to pay the same
benefits because of lower invest·
ment returns, a longer life
expectancy, and lower salary
increa~es to teachers who pay into
the pension fund.
The pension fund executive
director, Herbert Dyer, said the
fund would try to comply with lawmakers wanting the cuts reversed.
But it could cost $500 million, be
said.

and communities around the coun·
try, and the people ·want il
addressed," Talent said. "The con·
ference will come down to whether
we're going to address !he issue in
a real way in this bill, or whether
we're going to talc:e a pass on it,
and I dpn't want to take a pass on

AEP appoints new team to
pursue w_orldwide investments

Lawmakers want teacher
pension .cuts reversed

WIST VIRGINIA'S lARGEST CUSTOM VAN DIALER!

Section , 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Council seeks emergency
funds for bridge project

"freed."
It also imponant to note that the

The largetst Inventory Of Chevrolets, Oldsmobiles, Pontiacs, Buicks, Geos, And Conversion vans In Tom Peden History Has To Go!
Hurry While Selection Is Good! When They're Gone•..They're Gone!

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 10, 1995

with grea~e are labeled ch~lesterol­
free. are they actually free of
cholesterol and not harmful? D.B., Tomab, Wis.
DEAR D.B.: For all practical
purposes, a product labeled
"cholesterol-free" will contain no
cholesterol. But having a choles·
terol-free statement on snack food
is a bit misleading. Like all vegeta..
bles, potatoes do not contain
cholesterol. So unless they previously were fried in a cholesterolcontaining fat, such as lard, the
chips never contained any choles·
terol from which to have been

If You're Planning On Buying ANew Automobile This Year, Do It Now!

Low tonlghl In 40s, partly
cloudy. Wednesday, sunny. _
Highs ln lhe mid 711s.

•

Honey still subject to botulism

Home workshop should carry many glues
By THE EDITORS
OF CONSUMER REPORTS
Despite the deluge of glues on
store shelves - Consumer Reports
found hundreds. of at least 16 different types - there's still no product that can handle every assembly
project or unexpected repair. The
well-equipped home workshop
requires a selection of good glues.
This report concentrates on five
glue type s that will strengthen a
home-adhesive arsenal: cyanoacrylate, the so·eal lcd "super glue";
epoxy, that two-part mix -it-yourself adhesive; wood glue; plast1c
cement; and contact cement.
Here are some of the key differ·
cnces:
• Streng th: You can' t reliably
pick a glue by type; within some
type s, testers found wide glue-toglue differences in strength.

Ohio
Lottery
•

Chiefs edge
Chargers iit
·overtime

Since its beginning, Social "social adequacy" goal, the Social
Security bas been expected to meet Security benefit fonnula is weighted in favor of workers with low
30
both "social adequacy" and "indi· average earnings who have less
vidual equity" goals for American opportunity to save during their
workers. Individual equity means working years. Their benefits repthat the contributor gets benefits resent a greater percentage of their
directly related to the amount of his average earnings than benefits of
or her contributions. Social adequa· higher-salaried workers.
cy means that program benefits
For example, Social Security
provide a certain standard of living retirement benefits replace about
60 percent of a low-wage earner's
for aU contributors.
Our Social Security system is a preretirement income, about 42
little of both. On the one band, percent for an average wage earner,
there is a clear link between a 'and 26 percent for a high wageworker's contributions to ' the sys- earner.
tem and to what be or slie will
Of course, all wage earners are
receive in benefit payments. Lower supposed to plan for their retirewage earners receive less, higher ment and to supplement their
wage canlers receive more.
Social Security benefits with penFor example, a low-wage earner sion. savings and investment
may receive a monthly Social income. That is what Social SecuriSecurity retirement benefit of about ty bas called a "three-legged stool''
$520 per month; a high wage earn- approach to assuring a comfortable
er may receive a monthly benefit of retirement. It is a philosophy Social
about $1,200 a month.
Security bas advocated for 60 years
On the other band, Social Secu- to assure a stable and diversified
rity is designed to help provide a source of income in retirement suf•
minimum "floor of protection" for fident to meet your personal needs
all workers. Partly because of its and lifestyle.
~

I
'

new '4ehi::le listed where aQPiiCatlle. On IIIJC)IOY9d end

~responsible lOr~

TRAIN WRECKAGE • Cars of Amtrak's Sunset Limited
train lie on their side In a creek bed after deraiUng SO mltes south·
west of Phoenix near Hyder, Ariz., Monday. The train, bound for
Los Angeles from Miami, wa~ carrying 248 passengers and 20
crew members wben It del'lllled around 1 a.J!L (AP)

erron.

.,

HYDER, Ariz. (AP) - Sabo·
Twenty· nine .of the spikes that
laged tracks and a note from "Sons bold the rail to the wooden ·
or Gestapo" brought a swarm of crossties on a 19-foot section of
federal agents to an isolated patch track had been removed, according ··
of desert wbere a train derailed off to a source familiar with the inves·
a 30-foot high bridge, killing one tigation who spoke on Condition of ·
anonymity.
person and injuring at least· 78.
"Someone obviously intended
FBI.agents, special evidence
teams and Justice Department to drop the train off the trestle into
investigators joined safety agencies the ravine," Downs told -a Wash· .
at the scene within hours of Mon- ington news COIIference.
The sabotage would have taken
day's wreck, which left four cars
from Amtrak's Sunset Limited about I 0 minutes for someone with
lying in a dry stream bed 55 miles · a basic knowledge or railways, be
southwest of Phoenix.
said.
A note or notes found outside
Saboteurs removed a 3-foot, ISpound steel bar that holds sections the train referred to the federal
of rail together, and bridged the gap sieges at Waco, Texas, and Ruby
with a wire to disable an electronic · Ridge, Idaho - raUying points for
system designed to warn train anti-government extremists crews of breaks in tbe track, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe
Amtrak President Thomas M. Arpaio said. He refused 10 detail
Downs said
the contents of the note, but said it

..

was signed "Sons ofGeslapo."
The FBI refused any comment
on the note, and Arpaio, a former
agent of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, stopped
talking to reporters about it after a
private briefmg with FBI and other
federal officials.
"'Only cowards would set something like this up to inflict the max·
imuin damage, to !till as many people as pOisible," said Gov. Fife
Symington, who toured tb:e site.
A train employee said he passed
on to deputies an anti-government
note that a passenger gave him, but
it was unclear if that was the same
note ArpaiQ described.
An electronic database search of
U.S. newspapers found no mendon
of "Sons of Gestapo," nor did a
search of about six months' worth
of Internet discussion groups and
IJ

World Wide Web pages.
.
Klanwatch, an organization that
tracks hate groups as part of the
Southern Poverty Law Center ·in
Montgomery, Ala, has never heard
of "Sons of Gestapo," said Joe
Roy, Klanwatch director.
He said it could be some kind of
local group, or "this could be Fred
the farmer wbo' s mad at AmtraJj
for cutting across his land."
"It very well could be some dis·
gruntled individual who's trying Ui
blame it on the militias,'' Roy said.
EDITOR'S NOTI;; Associated
Press Writer Michael J, Sniffen
In Washll)glon contributed to
this report. ·
People who .WIIIIt to lind out It
their relatives were aboard the
train can call Amtrak at (800)
523-9101.
'
'l

'I

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