<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="22616" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/22616?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T20:24:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="61078">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/bbc7abf0dc3df049441be3072af35161.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5cbf9c0e9a6ecc613c43e33b39ec5fa9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="71202">
                  <text>.

•

-

:Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 25, 1995

· An~ native recently w&lt;L&lt; pm· moted to !be rank of Rear Awmral
: upper'Half.ln this cap•city. Arthur
· Clark will act as Navy's direct[)( nf
· fleet maintenance on the staff of
: Commander in Chief of the U.S.
· Atlantic fleet.
· For the last three and a llalf
years, ba.&lt; been the director of fleet
·maintenance for the U.S. Atlantic
fleet
. "The Navy has a good stmy tu
·. tell," Clark said . " It 's a gnntl
·career. They helped me get st:utetl
· in something worth while. It can
· enable you to make a good cnntri.
: bution to your nation."
Clark wa.&lt; born in Gallipolis and
.auended high school in Middleport.
His previous tour was as the
· commander of the Puget Sound
:Nayal Shipyard. In tha! position, he

1

commanded one of tht N•vy's
He is a graduate of Virginia
largest nuclear capahle sh•pyartb Polytechtuc lnsutute wtth a hacllewith more than 12,000 employees.
lor's. degree in mechanical engi·
His duties included two succes- necnng, naval architeCture ami
sive combat tours in Vietnam, a marine engineering. He earned"'
tour as repair superintenuent at master's degree in industrial man Naval Ship Repair Facility in agcmem l)·om George Washingtnn
Guam, an ""ignment '"force en!,4· University.
•
neer on the staff oi Comm3n~er
His Navy uecormions . include ,
Naval Surface Force 111 the P:lc!ltc, the Legton of Mertfr the Bronze
three tours in U1e Naval Sea Sys- Star, the Meritorious Service
terns Command headquarters, and Medal and the Navy C'ommendatwo tours -at the N01lolk Naval liOn Medal. He also .holds four
Shipyard where he served a.&lt; plan- Vtelllamese nhbons mdudmg the
ning officer and then productiOn Vtem:un Gallamry Cross wttlt Palm
officer.
.
and Honor Me~al Ftrst Class.
Clark was one ot the last tn
He ts marned to Kun Nguyen
leave Vietn;un !nllowmg the ce&lt;L&lt;e Clark. They have one daughter ,
fire . He served as advisor tn the Kimberly.
.
Vietnamese. N :1vy at C~un Ran.l! ... Clark's parenls were . ce~nck
Bay and advtsnr to the VtellHUJ.lesc and Mary l~obart Clark ot Mtdulemilitary in the second corp;; regton. port.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are primed as space penn its
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - H:tr·
risonville OES, Chapter 255, Past
Matrons, picnic, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m
at the home of Jim and Donna Nel·
son. Meat and beverage fumished.
RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Booster.:, cleanup
day, Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the school.
Parents of athletes urged to help.

•
ARTHUR CLARK

:vitamin.may prevent9isease in .ara_oJ high-.tech medicine __
n

l'AUL RAERURN
Ed't
Ayp Sc'
tence
'nr Maine (AP) _
. BAR
HARBOR
'I th
f1
'
.·ern d~
era
o_
R'\e~~
surgery,
~·mbnp~t·
1agno~as anu m·p•netlc
r·un
;

'·'

'o

·

· '.

scann_e rs, n cnm;no~ ~unmlnls.
·~ssummg
1U prehvcnt·
mg some ao fcenrra
n·1turer~,e
s most
ea rl·
'.b~ak'mg anu·' ueau
.• ' ·'I y :u·1merus.
·
'
A researcher reponed M ~ nH.lay
·mar deficiencies in folic ;.u.:itl f(iultl

·trigger 30 percent to 40 perrelll of
·the lens of thousand~ or heart
:anacks ·and strok~.:s ~urtcrL'tl hv
·Americanmencaclt yc;u
·
· The revelation _ which might
:Save the country unto/LI sufll'ring
'and billions ol dollars in medical
'costs- follows th e Lh~cowry in
·rhe past few ycar:-. that Llict-.. n t:il in
folic acid can prevent ur hi )f) per·

cent of all hit11t dclcct.s. ·
'
''I'm a bdievcr in folic acid. 1
.
guess you cnul&lt;l say 1' m rcltgious" saiU the rcscnrcher Dr
Jud 'tt·h· H;t,ll
• · '., tt' r•'l"s
..... .. ," 'll't"·W·.,,,er.
• .::- '
forLhevit:unin
Folic ·tcitl·i~ found in ''recn
leat'y
ve•.'et·thle
~ -..ut·lt 'Is
hru",·,cls
'
o ~
_, ·
•·
·· ·
sprouL'
'Pin·tch
·tnd
lcllucc
·
•· ' . ' .
· ;u td in
many fruits. induJmg app 1e!\ ruu1
oranges. It also is availahk- in mos1
common multiple vit:unin supple·
ments anU some hreaklast cereals.
Hall, a gcnet1dst al t.hc Univc~~
sity of British Columhia. told
researchers antl.l.locwrs at tile .Jack~
son ~:Jhorator.y in I3ar ,II.c_,t·hor that
studtcs puhltshcd tim year h:\d
vastly expand~U 1hc wk• of Joht.·
acit.J in preventing Jise:t"c.
Ye1 the word ha~ failed w reach

No Rain Checks
Will Be Issued

many dtKII&gt;f&gt; and the ruhlic
remams woctully tgnorant ol the
" I'tngs.. JJ.,,· II s.nt
... I .
new ttn&lt;
.
In a survey cond uc1cd Ill June
t·nr the . March of Dimt!s Birth
DefcctsFclUfH_I:tlitlll . tlnly IS per·
CCIH of. women oft:hihJhcaring age
were aware of
lhe Cl''ovcrnment's
.
recommentla(lon
4()() · th•t tl1cy
· s consume
of f llic
al. 1east_
m1rrogram :
_ &lt;~
nc1d dmly _w prc~·r:nt spma h1hda
and otl1er btrth deJects.
.
.11 ts c1_-unal that all ~omen ol
dultlhcanng a~c take;: th1s prct.:au~
tion , Hall _sa td , hccau.se nt"~
~omen rcr~11c they arc pH!gn:.u~t 11
IS ~~"" ; .Illy too late In prevent hHth
detects .
.
.
Th_c !lCW ~vu.lcncc .'\ugge~t1ng
I hat folic :u:td ca1~ prevent hean
auack:ooo anti strokes 1~ evt:n il:s~ well

known , Hall said.
.
.
,
Stud1es done mostly wllh men
. , ·t lh'll
tmmedtsugges
. ' men ·should
.· ..
. .. ·
ately begm to hoost tlll:u tn!IL .JcH.l
level s, even he fore more1 cnndu·1S
sives tmlie sare .tlnnt:.llal saK .. tl
f·ar the .•audit:~ on folic adtl allll
he~rt Jisca:-.e have hecn •do\w just
on men
Dr. Jaroh Scihllh, autllm of a
pr.tpcr published 111 lhl' New 1 : 11~ *
laud .lottnl;11 ol ML.:dtctnt.: in l;chru·
arv that linke-d fuJi~ al:id dcricicn ci~s It) rm incn:a~cu ri:-.k of strokes.

was more consCrvativc than l·hall.
es,imnting thai folic ''t:id deficicn·
cies might be resp&lt;!nsible for 15

percent

10

attacks anti

20 percent of heart

BEDFORD - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire. Department
Committee. Tuesday. 7 p.m . Bed fordtown hRll.
·
~
RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization meeting Tuesday, 6:30 p.m . at Star Mill Park .
New members welcome.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens, blond
pressure clinic, 10 a.m . to II :30
a.m. Tuesday at the townhouse .
Diana Coates, Meigs County Council of Aging, will be uoing the
medical checks , followed by
potluck rutd meeting.
RUTLAND- Special meeting.
RuUood Fire Departtncnt Auxiliary.
Tuesday, 6 p.m. lire house to complete phms for block party. ·

stroke.~;,.

ONE DAY SALE

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Wildwood-Garden Club, 7:30p.m. Wednesday,
home of Evelyn Hollon. Roll call is
a flower lo dry.

MIKE SELLS

Potato Chips

Chuck Roast

c

4 1/2. 5 oz.

lb.

PQMEROY

Thursday, 7
Catholic Church on Mulberry
Avenue.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Public Library B~ard meeting, I
p.m . Thursday at the Pomeroy
facility .
FRIDAY
ANTIQUITY - Faith Fellowship Crusade for Christ Songfest
Friday, 7:30p.m.
SATURDAY
ANTIQUITY - Revival ai
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ tltrnugh Aug. 4, 7:30 p.m.
nightly.

Net Cost

$1.89 less 55¢ coupon

,

28

oz.

b

$134

JIFFY CORN

GREAT LAKES GRANULATED ·

STARKIST

•

'

Sugar
$ 29

5# bag

gal.

Ice Cream
$
59
5 qt. pail

$

8.5 oz.

HEAD

MEADOW GOLD

MUFFIN MIX
I

$
2°/o Milk
$ 69

Double Cheese Pizzas

Chunk Tuna
$
6.5 oz.

MAXWELL HOUSE ·

KITCHEN PRIDE

Master Blend Coffee

Bacon

34.5

01.

$ 49

$299

61b.

'

RC COLA, DIET RITE, KICK
CITRUS, A &amp; WROOT BEER,
SUNKIST ORANGE
24 pk. 12 01 cans .

'Lows tonight In 70s. l'artly
cloudy. Thursday, partly sunny.

14-15-16-17-29

Vol. 46, NO. 62
Copyright 1995

Pot!lffilY Grnup

Anonymou~ meeting
p.m. at Sacr~d Heart

of Alcoholics

VALLEY 'BELL~

CHEF BOY R DEE

Buckeye 5:

Page4

POMEROY- Free c)othing
day at the Salvation Anny on Butternut Avenue Thursday. 10-12
p.m.

LETTUCE

c

253
Pick 4:
5918
High

near 90.

THURSDAY
BRADBURY - Meigs County
Church of Christ Women 's Fellowship meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m:
at Bradbury Church or Christ. Zion
Church will have devotions.

Prices In Effect While
Quantities Last

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Pick 3:

POMEROY- Living in the
Solution group of Narcotiq
Anonymous meeting Wednesday, 7
p.m . at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church on Mulberry Avenue.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1995 ONLY
•

Padres
hand Reds
4-2Ioss

Community calendar

:Area native promoted in Navy:

Ohio Lottery

$4''

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 26, 1995 ONLY
'

.

2 Sections, 12 Pageo 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 26, 1995

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Meigs -Local ~Board -OKs no-gang--policy
By JIM FREEMAN
ty to occu( on district property or are educational in nature.
Sentinel News Staff
while students are under tbe ausOther policy revisions concern
The Meigs Local Board of Edu- pices of tbe board."
encouraging parent involvement in
cation, meeting in regular· session
However, student groups may Title I programs, unrequested .
Tuesday evening, adopted changes be recognized as authorized sch!Xll leaves of absence, criminal history
in board policies including a policy organizations i.f they are approved rerord checks and drug testing for
barring gang activity on district by school administration, spon- CDL license holders.
property.
sored by school-approved personBoard President Larry Rupe
~ policy barring gang activity nel, composed of members of !be
commented the policies are similar ·
concerns student groups and states c.urrent student body, hold the · to tbose
in existence.
" ... tbe board shall not tolerate any majority of their meelings at school
In
matters, the board
type of gang or gang-related activi- and have established aims which hired
Price and Carson

Crow as junior high school cheerleader advisor and junior high
school football coach, respectively,
after it was·detennined no certified,
qualified person applied for either
position.
The board also approved renewal of a service contract for the high
school sewage treatment plant. with
E.C. Babben Inc. of Canal Winchester for a cost of $75 every oUter
month.

Wright may
seek third term
on Ohio Court
COLUMBUS (AP)- When
Justice Craig Wright won re-elec·
tion to !be Ohio Supreme Court in
1990, be told a reporter be bad no
intention of running again. Now be
may change his ntind.
Wright is considering another
campaign, despite a turbulent sec·
ond tenn in which his temper led to
a 1991 scuffle that left fellow
Republican Justice Andrew Douglas wilb cracked ribs.
Wright also was the target of a
court investigation into allegations
of misconduct that included use of
a racial slur a decade earlier, and
his role in cases that involved businesses in which he owned stock.
A report on the investigation
found no basis for disciplinary
action against him.
Wright, who bad not been
expecled to seek a third tenn, said
Monday that
.
..
those problems were behind him
as be considered a request from
Ohio Republican Party Chairman
--Robert Bennett to run again.
Still, Wright knows the past cair
resurface in a political campaign.
"The mauer with Justice Dou- ·
glas, I think they can legitimately
point to personality problems
berween us. But you know, !bat's
been - bow long ago? - five
years ago. That's a long time ago,'·
. Wright said.
As for the other matters, he said
they would not figure into his decision.
"I got cleared of all that stuff
from top to bottom. The business
about the conflicts fiad no basis in
fact,'' Wright said in an interview.
He recalled his 1990 statement
about not running again, a decision
be bad reaffirmed six or eight
months ago.
"Bennett started working on
me. He's going to do, apparenUy,
some extensive pomng in the next
three or four weeks. He's already
done some polling . It does look
good," Wright said.

Cons~mer

-

COMMEMORATIVE MAP· Area businesses and individuals can showca&lt;e their husl. ness in a Meigs County commemorative map,
1 said

Mitzie Myers of Hometown Publications.
All proceeds will he returned to the Meigs Coon·
ty Tourism Dep•rtment, Myers said. Area landwill
.marks,. such as school&lt; and the courthouse,
.

he included at· no cn.lilt, she added. t•oint l,leas-

ant, W.Va~ and ,Gallipolis have already depicted
their area and impowtont event.&lt;. Di.splayin~ a
'sample map from left are l'ntty l'icken.s, Myers,
Mei!}&lt; County Tourism Director Kat·in Johnson,
Judy Williams and Rev. Rol&lt;tnd Wildman. (Sen·
tinel photo hy George Ahate)

Truck thief gets two-year jail term
'
The second of two men who
Should be be convicted on tbe
stole a truck, in April and led
charges in Pennsylvania, the
authorities on 'a high-speed
sentence for auto theft will run
chase was sentenced to two ·· concurrent with any imprisonyears in prison Monday.
ment handed down in that state,
Hugh J. Hawkey of GreensCain said.
burg, Penn., pleaded guilty to
If his Pennsylvania incarceraauto !heft, a tbird degree felony,
tion is less than two years,
in the Gallia County Common
Hawkey would return to Orient
Plea.~ Court of Judge Joseph L.
to complete ibe remainder of his
Cain.
sentence.
Hawkey is wanted in PennHawkey and William
sylvania on unrelated charges
George, also of Greensburg,
and the court will approve extrabroke into Bostic Motor Sales,
dition if the state requests it,
1010 First Ave., Gallipolis, took
Cain said in his court entry.
lhe keys to a 1992 Toyota pickIn the meantime. Hawkey
up truck and drove off with !be
will begin serving his sentence
vehiCle.
at the Orient Correction Facility. :

The pair allegedly stoppe~ at
a Cheshire ·gas station before
crossing into Meigs County.
In Middleport, a police officer began a high-speed chase
which ·ended in Langsville when
the truck ran off the road ami
ovenumed. Two Meigs sheriff's
cruisers were also involved in
the pursuit.
Hawkey pleaded guilty to
auto theft last month and was
sentenced by Cain to two years
in prison. In Meigs County,
Hawkey was sentenced to 18
months in prison after pleading
guilty to fleeing and eluding.
The prison terms arc being
served concurretttly.

lease. or rental agreement. Horton
said. The property owner will be
responsible for properties during
land-lease contracts, he added.
Arnold Johnson, who will
enforce· this ordinance. said the $12
a year fee for eacll unit will nm be
collected until Jan . IS, 1996.
"We're still getting the list of
the apartment owners." Horton
said.
A rental unit is considered an
apartment, not just the structure.
CurrenUy, the village has aboul440
rental units, said Councilwoman
Beth Stivers, who helped draft the
new rules.
Johnson inspects areas including: foundation, floors, walls, ceilings, roofs, windows, doors)..Stairs,
porches, plumbing fixtures ~d
pipes, electrical systems, heating,
extermination , rubbish stora~e.
garbage disposal, llot water tank
and smoke detectors.

The doors must lock securely,
Johnson said.
Any property with tour or more
units, the landlord must provide a
ctumpster, Johnson said. With less
than four units, the tenant must pay
for trash service.
Johnson said he usually grants
60 days to make repairs. But in
more serious infractions, he may
allow just 3Q 'days.
Landl.orus can appeal tile dedsions if they disagree with John ' .
son's inspection demands . he
added.
If tenants lmve complaints about
their property they s~ould leave a
message at the village offices for
Johnson. Landlords do not have to
be contacted before Johnson enters
their property, as long as tenants
have requested an inspection. John son said.
Property values will rise when
the village's buildings aie beller

·maintained. he. added.
"We're trying to bring the rcnwl
properties up to safe and sanitary
conditions," Johnson said.
Tbe village can impose no more
than a $100 tine for property owners and occupants who do not comply with the ordi~ances, he added.
The ordinance is a revised ver~
sion of an ordinance that was proposed hlst fall. After objections
from landlords, the new rules were
halted until it was adopted last
month.
This revised ordinance' dropped
the cost of the inspection from $25
to $12, limiting the inspection to
once a year not evcty time a tenant
moves out.
The new ordinance also will not
require screens, storm doors and
lighting of public. halls . For
specifics on the new ordinance, a
copy of the rules can pick.ed up at
the village offices.

Contracts lor limd pro&lt;lucts and
equipment operation supplie' for
the I '195-96 school year were
awarded by the Southern Local
Board of Education at its Monday
meeting at the high schml.
Bids accepted were from Heiners llakery for bread: Michael's ke
Cream ror ice cream products;
Snouffer Fire &amp; Safety fnr fire
extinguishers anu supplies; Dest
Office Supply for maintenance ol
husiness offitc education etJuip·
mcn1; Warehouse Tire for hus lire.'
ami tubes: Ashland Oil for furl anti
oil ; Burlilc Oil for &lt;llllilwac anti
other similar 'SUpplies: anu
Broughton Inc. for milk products .
Otltn commcts will be awarded
iater, Treasurer Dennie Hill said.
Approv:1l w:1s given lo an earlier
proposed high sdwol anJ junior
high school grm.ling nolicy using
numhers ill.'\ICatl of l~.:ttcrs . Also
aprcovctl w:ts t.hc high sl..'hool' ;nul
. jupim high School h:lllllhooh . ·
· Alic~ Williams w:ts hired a .. ;
hcm.l cook at Southern lligl1 School
to Jill lhc vacancy crettrcc.J hy the
rcsi"gnntion of Alma .John son . 1\lsn

hired was Daniel Rifllc for ~-1/2
hnur." a d:ty as &lt;tssi:-.t:llll hus

weather nornialization plan.
company should have also refundThe plan, designed to even out
ed !be .extra charges, estiinated by
the utility's revenue, resulted in
Columbia to have averaged $6.26
higher gas bills during warmerper customer over the five-month
trial period.
.
than-normal weather and lower
· Columbia Gas bas about 1 milbills when the wealber was colder
than avefl!£C.
lion customers in Ohio.
The plan drew complaints
"We want to find out exactly
statewide from customers whose
wbat the justification was for not
bills went up during the unseason- . refunding !be money," said Kurt
ably mild winter, and Columbia
Waltzer, Cilizen Action's Ohio
eventually dropped it.
. director.
Citizen Action argot&lt;~ tbat !be
Waltzer also accused the PUCO,

which approved the Cohmibia plan
as part of its !llOSt recent rate
increase request", and the Consumers' Counsel of holding discussions of the plan in secret. The
Consumers' Counsel is a state
agency tbat is supposed to represent customers in utility rate cases.
The reason why !be utility is not
refunding the money Is that the
weather normalization plan was
part of the entire rate increase
package; be said.

mechanic in adtlilion In his duties
as tnmsponatinn supervi.'\{Jr.
The hoard approved mcmhcr·

ship in the Coalilinn nf Rural and
App:~achian Schools fnr the l 1J'J59ti school year :u a cost of $250.
Plans were made for a meeting
wilh Radn~.: Villag~ nll"icials 10 di ...;~

cu .'~ ." lhL:

old

l~al'inc

Ekmcnlary

Sehoul huildi11~ . whkh has hrcn

wl&lt;lto Racine fur

$1 .
The hoanl mailllain~.'ll lh~

nght
usc certain pans of the building
for srnragc spare :m\.1/or nllice.". At
01 July 11 mrcting , thl." ho:rrt.l &lt;Uitl
coundl mcmhers will go through
to

the huilding lo determine ust.: :mtl

also tlisposilion of items whkh :ul~

still there.
Pulling tile mandated (iAI'
((icwcrnmenl&lt;tl 1\ct:ounring Pror.:t:s~)

rrograru iruo plate was di:-..

cussed, atHI till' hoard hired Trim~
hk &amp; t\~sucwtc;.. to · a~ sis f in the
lll'a~ urt.: r ' ~

{Jffkc .
Thl: next n:gular JllL·ct in~ was
set for Aug. 21. AIIL'IHlin~ were
Susie Gruc~er. l,ere Thmen. Don
Smith, C.T Chnptilan and Marty
M{lrarity, hoard mt:mbcrs; S11pcrin·
tendent .l:une., Ray l.awrcncc: and
11 ill .

Smith apolog'izes
to ex-husband
during court break ·
UNION, S.C .J.AP) - Susan
Smith whispered, ''I'm so sorry,
David," after her ·ex-husband tear·
fully described bow distraught be
was after bearing that she had
drowned tbeir two sons.
David Smith did not respond to
the apology his ex-wife offered
Tuesday as she was led from lhe
courtroom during a break in the
·
penalty phase of her trial.
"All my hopes, all my dreams.
everything that I had planned for
the rest of my life, it ended that
day,_" Smith told a jury that must
decide whether Ms . Smith will be
executed.
"I didn't know what to do. ll .
hurt. Everything I•had planned on,
my. life wilh lhe kids, was gone,"
he said as he began to cty.
The prosecntion was exf1&lt;1cled to
finish its ca.se today. Unless all 12
jurors vote for execution, Ms.
Smith will receive a life sentence. ·
If they decide on death, Ms. Smith
would have her cboice of the elec·
lric chair or lethal injection.
Three · jurors wept during
Smith's emotional testimony, Several times, Ms. Smith leaned over
the defense table and cried as her
e~·husband spoke about tlte day he
learned his sons were murdered.
Smith, who turns 25 on Thursday, said be believed 1tis then-

wife's story that a carjacker had
alxlucted the hoys. After a nine-day
nationwide search, Ms. Smith confessed Nov. 3 to rolling her otr into .
a lake with 3-ycar-old Michael and
14-month-old Alex strapped into
their car seats.
Defense attorney David Bruck
calleu Smitlt's testimony "the most
heartbreaking thing I ever heard in
a courtroom."
·
"But I don't know that the conclusion the jury would draw from
!hal is thM .Susan should be put in
the electric chair." Bruck said outside court.
The Smiths divorced in May,
but Smith told jurors the marriage
was rocky even before their second
child was born . Once, when he
came home late from work and his
wife threatened to return to her
mother, he told her she should
leave right lhen.
"Shamefully, I did grab Susan
by tier arms and just more or less
dragged her out of the bed and out
to the front porch. Didn't throw her
down o~ anything, just let her down
on !be porch," he said.
After Smith testified , the jury
watched two videotaped re-enactments of lhe crime. ln~cstigators
rolled a car hke Ms. Stluth' s into
John D. Long lake. where she
Continued on page 3

ARC
clears another hurdle
.
.
.

group wants Columbia.Gas records .

COLUMBUS (AP) - A consumer group asked stale regulators
lo release information regarding a
decision not to require Columbia
Gas to refund money collected last
winter under an abandoned plan to
even out utility bills.
Citizen Action cited the state's
-open records law in letters sent
Tuesday to the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio and the Ohio
. Consumers' Counsel asking for tbe
infonnation regarding Columbia's

Capital Conference in November;
- Met in executive session to
discuss personnel.
Present were Rupe, Vice-president Randy Humphreys, board
members Roger Abbot~ Scott Walton and John Hood, and Treasurer
Jane Fry. Ailininistrative assistant
Wendy Halar served as actinR .
superintendent for Bil) Buckley
who is on vacation.

,Southern Board
awards contracts

Middleport officials refine building cod~ rules
By GEORGE ABATE
·Sentinel News Staff
Middleport Village officials
clarified its recently-passed building code ' ordinance at this week's
council meeting.
Council defined who will be
responsible for' insect and rodent
extermination and what constitutes
a "rental unit". Middleport Mayor
Dewey Hort9n said.
The owners of rental property
must rid Ute property of infestation ·
when the owners tlo not maintain
the dwelling in a "reasonable
insect-proof condition" . Whenever
two or more units arc infested, the
owners will be responsible for
extenninarion.
Otherwise, the occupants mu st
pay for fumigation of their propertv, the new definition stated.
· Also, a rental unit will include
land installment contracts. oral tenancy. tenancy at will. and writt~n

In other business, Ute board:
- Agreed to consider for adoption a transportation handbook prepared by lransportation director
Paul McElroy and to give consideration to adopting changes in board
policies concerning vocational programs and rcmoval/e~pulsion of
students;
- Made plans to attend the
Ohio School Board Association's

1

WASHINGTON. (AP) - The embattled Appalathian
Regional Commission has cleared a hurdle In the U.S. Senate.
The Energy and Water Development Subcommittee on Toes' ·
day approved a measure that Includes $182 miUion for the agency next year. Tbatls $40 ntilllo11 more than the U.S. House pro·
posed, said U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky~ a member of the
·
panel.
.
."There are still many ohslacles.to. o~ercome, but lnday's ~ole
is a wonderful first step," said McConnell, who authored an
amendment to save the ARC from elimination.
McConnell said the b~l now goes to the full Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday.
The agency provides funding for roads and other projects In
13 states, Including parts of Ohin. Its current funding level is
$282 million.

..

�Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less 1han 300
words long Allletlers are subject to edhmg and must be stgned With name.
addn:ss and lelephone number. No unSigned leuers w•ll be pubhshed Leuers
should be m godd taste, addressmg i SSue~ . not person&lt;lht1es

_.,- '

Page2
Wednesday, July 26, 1995

J..---=-------------------..------..1
.Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

UNITED NATIONS - Ameri· Bosman Musltms Wi th th e 1t1e ~ ns ed Na tmns' tm at hou" m Bosma
can diplomats have shared wuh at to defend themselves
a re ncar Beh uu.l dn se tl doors,
least two other nauons on the Secu·
Cnngress mn.~ leaders nnw fear however, they' ve hecn dl'cus.mg
nty Council mtelhgence about a that 1t the llmted States doesn' t hft ways !hat the .1dmunsi1 .11Hm could
steady supply of arms and money
turn thiS ' ullc11 qu.1gnnre mto a
d1plomauc v"tory
gomg from Iran to the Bosman
Mushms - m Vtnlauon the U.N
First, the UnH ed Stales would
arms embargo
covertly ask Saud• Arah.an ofl1·
But so tar the IJmted States h:L'
cmls 10 double or tnpk d1c1r tinannot flied a lormal protest " We
cml support tell the Bnsm,m Musdon't want to complrun loudly yet.
hms All the S.1uchs wnuld w.mt "
but we felt (the mtelhgence) was
a" ura11ce th.\1 th e llnHcd St.lles
Important enough to sh,lfe w1th the the arm s embargo smn. lrnn Will . would prnv1de dlplnm .lll c ,mel
French ~nd the Bnush " a top otli- have undu e mllu ence m the new pohuc.u cover m world cnp11 .~ s 1f 11
cml at O•e ll S mJSslon told us last and future !lJJJ;lmF ___ •
•· ~explmledmthCir lace
week
•
l1
mi!!l li ge nce reports note
The Saud1 money would d1en he
The new mlorm.l\wn puts the that other Mu slim c ountn es _
used to bu y .1rm s 111 Polant.l th ~
Clnllon admmiStratnm m a llmd
such as Tmkey, M.uay" .1,md Pak- &lt;::zech Rcpuhhc anJ P"" 'hly _otl1cr
On one hanc.l, 11 sull consu.lers Iran isL'Ul _ are a.l ~o supplymg arms to Ew.;tem European countttes llmse
to be h1ghly dangerous and 1rre- the Bosnwns Yet lr.1n seems to new uemoLI&lt;IC:Ie' .1rc not only
- sponstble_- bent OJLilr:mdms the ~ -ha"e_llll&lt;en the leo~d •1nd has Sl,uvmg tnr the c.ISh , hilt 1l1ey've
Mushm enclave&lt; m Eastern Europe become mosl dever-.11 ,kutfng Ole -goM11ns·ohu'ms ready 10 &lt;ell
wath Its own ty~ of extreme Islam- u N rum~.; t.:mh.p J.!O Od ~ nLh 1\:: rWh.n m.tkt:s the pl1111 "o mu tgu lC law But olfictals als.n know that
sum Gull st.lh.: s sm.:h ,1.., S.tulll Ar.t - mg 1s that the Bosnl.lll Muslims
the Bosman Serhs are the aggres- bm have been helpmg the elloll by prefer Wars.ll!' P.1ct weaponry sor~ m the war, and thar lhe lnma- iumhng some nt the .ums pun.: h.L"\- wath whtch they trameU tor years
an~~. are dmng what Congress wants es
·
when Yugoslavw w.ls Commumst
Amenca to do umlalemlly hi! lhe
Several key otiiCidls 111 the Amencan-madc arms II also
arms emllargo and supply the Ameman miSsHin bd1eve the Umt · takes Amenca out ol !he v1sible

s

f&gt;

170N'T MENilON l'll'lOMATIC ~EC06Nii10N
Of VIET NAil.\ TO A.\11111 MA.Ri't\A. ')~e'S ~TILL.

,EALIN&lt;:a

WIT!-~

THE

NO~ At-t~

.;ouT!-\ •

Federal law -entorc~mem madnnery went ternhly awry m both mc1·
dents Suhsequ~m Justice Dcp.utmenl and Tn:asury p10bcs clearly haven't
federal .1gents hl;lll ur brnke the

Jaw
Too much susprcwn, even paranm.t lmgcr" th10uglwut the land -

tymg these cases lor mstance w the horror 111 Oklahomd Cny It the FBI
and the Bureau ol Alcohol, Tobacco and J!~rearms are 111 lunctum w11h
Widespread publiC suppon. d1ey must he perce1ved as willing Ill acknowl·
edge miStakes and take step' lo prevent them m the tuture Seen m lhat
hght, Pmts' ouster seems nt,lfdy recognn10n ot FBI m:cnuntah1hty

Clinton's cnmmilment tn

th~

lederal

&lt;illmnauv~

acuon pro·

prn·~nnwltn¥e ~i¥t!il ttj fjj{:jfl€1ill'i the 4lmmumtlllft' wttb:: whn;ll.t.il iMnc..:K 1tl ~ , ~
fhat 1s why h1s ,mnouncem~nt ot a top~to-hnttmn revtt:W ot.ntfirmtttJve

m:t10n ~ V1L:e President Gore will lead the ch.trgc- 1s hoth ttmely and

pohi!CtllJy

l1Cl:C~~.u-y

There' s no pmnt m pretcndmg th.11 there IS .1 level pl.tymg lleld m
workplaces and mst1tu11ons of h1gher learrnng across t..hc l:OUnU'y. Ne11hcr
" 01ere any use m pretendmg that we are a colm-hhnd anJ gender-blmil
nat1ou

Yes, progress h.IS heen lnclde Sllll.."e the dark days or segregation. hut
there's st1ll much to be done
Now Jsn't the lime to tlo o\W,ty With cl kdcr.ll prngr.un th.tt IS workmg

The Columbus Dispatch, July 22
Talk· ahout an untumled m.llld.llc. Who do you thmk would pay the
cost of proposed lcg1slatum that .ums to tum tclt::v1s1nn manul.tcturcrs m1d
a pcmel ol censors 11110 hahy s11tcrs for Lh1s n.llmn's duh..ln:n1
An mnem.lmt:nt tn the t~o::le,mrununu.:ahnns h1il thnt passed U1e Senate
recently would Ioree the makers of TV sets to mclude w101 each one a

,

· .
'
.,
:.

..

h1gh-tech dcv1ce capahlc nf rCl:Civmg s1gnals th.1t mdude ratmgs of the
sexual. Vlolcnt .md other l.amtent nt telev1sum pnlgr.uns..._lhnt ccmld he considered unsuu.thle lor dult.lren Parents would he .thlc to usc a remntecontiOI mechamsm to prevent the TV set hom sltowmg progr.uns With
spec1l1C 1.agnaJs
·
It won't he long unlll hnght. enterpnsOI£ youn~ster~ lmd Mom .md
Dad's remote and figure out huw to ove.tTH.le the p.tn:nt~ ' l:OIIlnumr..ls
Then every ku.J 111 the netghOnrlinot.J Will know too Amlthc p.u cnts Will ·
hnve 10 screen TV progr.trns the nltl ~ tashumL!c..l wo~y w1th the nn- nl~
swrli.:h
The ovast m:qonly ol Amc11U111s who do not havl' young a..:IHidrcn
shouldn't h:-tvc to p:1y lor 01 he Jnomvenlem:L::d hy pH1thJ~.:ts mcc~nt only tu
control the teleVJIOIOll Vlewmg ol ,1lr.1l!HHI nlthe popul.tllllll

Berryls Worl'd

~uestl:ulures

Bosma have caU'\I.:!d mnmle at the

Unlled N,uums

1&lt;1

Today's weather forecast

plummet -JUS!

South-Central Ohio
Tomght. .Parlly cloudy and
huoud With scattered evemng thunderstorms. Low in the lower 70s.
Ligbt southwest winds. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Thursday .. Partly sunny and
bum1d. A 30 percent cbance of
mamly afternoon thunderstorms.

tion The "ethuH: cleansmg" ot
SrehrenH:a and Zep.t 1s hornble
ev1dence ot I I N Impotence m d1e

war
Wh.ucvc1 the ulwn.IIC solution
1s 11 won't he to the likmg ot Secretary Genc1al lloutros Bourros Ghah Ju worc..ls ,uuJ hocJy ldnguage,
he has l!Jst.in~.:ed hunselt from the
umlllcl 111 IClL'III monU1s Tins, 111
turn, 11.1~ t.: tUsed .1 gJC.tl Ue.tl ol
unl!.l~c .unong top olllt:I.lls 111
lhargc ot pl.mnmg If N pnhcy 111
the regum

LOS ANGELES (AP) - One
day, a defense expert in the. OJ.
Simpson trial testifies there was a
crime lab preservative m blood·
stams at the murder scene and a
sock at Simpson's bouse, suggest·
ing a police frame-up
Tbe next day, another defense
expm-t asserts there wasn't any
chemical preservative in the blood,
debunkmg the defense's cructal
frame-up theory
Wbat' s a Juror to thmk?
"It's a very strange phe·
nomenon to see the defense put on
two witnesses who in successwn
1mpeach eacb other," Southwestern Un1versily law professor
Robert Pugsley srud "I have to
believe that Ibis confusmg to the

Sar.qevo, when he told the
cmhnt!led people there he could
name 10 pl,KCIO 111 the world that
we1e worse nil th.m they were
Even he woulcJ not c..I.U'e tn make
the ~rune strttcrnent ahout Srehremt:.J ant.! Zcp.1 today
.lat.:k Amlersnn anti Michael
Rinsft'in au~ wrift'n• fur United
I• eatur ~ Symlk.att:, Inc

Clinton sets stage for later collisions'-----:-_

re.;ently approved me.tsures r.:cmcelmg key Clinton inmauves - the

nat10nal serv1cc corps and the
Goals 2000 educatmn reform and cut school-to-work apprentice,
ship program&lt; lly 22 percent
The Ltllnr-HIIS-Educ.IIICIII
panel also cllmlnHtct.l summer

youth employment ptogr.tms
retiUCCtl

di~(OCfiiCd

WOfkCr

oiSSIS-

IaJlCe by 31 percent, ru1d cut H~ad
Stan by 4 percent
The VA· I IUD &lt;ubcommlltee cut
the Environmental ProtectiOn
Agency budget by 33 percent
below last year·s level, and a tlurd
subcommmce even voted to tenmnate the While House's Counc1l of
Econom1c AdviSers
While Republicans provocatively Sluck It to Chntnn's pet programs, Clinton wa&lt; dchvcnng lour
exlended h&lt;Hml~es outhnmg the
phllnsophlcal dtflerences hetwcen
h1mscll and the &lt;lOP and c,11lmg
fot ''mort! conversmmn .tntl less

combat"
He sounded more COI)Cihatory
lhan he needed to be toward the

Republicans, perhaps demonstrat·
mg forbear,mce as lhe GOP piles
up ammumtum he lttn tire hal:k

At l:L&gt;!,

111

two ot the speeches,

Morton Kondracke
Clunnn hgurctl out how to m.1ke
news 111 d hroatl pohly spcc&lt;.:h ~o

that wh.11 he w:1s saym~ l.mtl~\1 on
the lront page lll'te.~&lt;l ol hemg
huned
In Nashville, l1e endorsed the
''v-Chlp"

til

I'\' SCh 10 ,lllllW par-

etlt'\ In s~.:rccn oul sex ami VIOlence
anti. 10 rut,ll Vrrguun, he

announced th.!l the Educ.111on
Departmem would diSlllbute docu·
ments makmg 1t dcctr th.lt pnv.uc
prayer " not oxcluded hom puhhc
schools
.
The lwo speeches wcr~ part of
what Whtte House press secretary
M1ke McCurry c:ills Cllnton·s
".ldmg and y.Udung" str.tkgy l.tking CX.t:'lLIIIVC .IL:l!Oil IO thd.Jll,l·
tll.t hts plulosnJrlhllc!ll umnMI!tllls

The Willie llouse s:1ys th,l!
01

.1CIIn£

rtllt.l y,lk:kmg"

IS ,1 Ut,;C\,;S·

sary suhstltutc•ior proposmg legiS·
lallon, Since the Republtc.tn

poSillon Clmton as a ccntnst, p:lft
ot the "tnangulauon" strategy of
hiS key p&lt;lhllcal aclviSer. D1ck Morns
A1des say that "tnangulauon"
ts m1sundcrston&lt;.l as an atlempl to

hudgel ICCOilUh.ltlOII h11J Or tlcht
ccilmg cxleuswn hill tlus tall,
wh1ch would ·shul down the gov-

~ury."

The calling Of back,,to-back COD·
flicung witnesses Jlllonday and
Tuesday was due partly to legal
necessity - the ex pen who did the
tests bad to testify so the otber
expert could rebut bis findings and partly to the defense's willingness to accept a lot of pam for a lit·
tie gain.
The agony was to continue this
afternoon with more cross-exam!·
nation of FBI scientist Roger

emmcnl
The J&lt;JiJO c.unp.ngn could well
Ue~..:ply lt.lcologJc.II .md h1t1cr,
wllh C'l1ntou ch.lr.tctcllzlllg the
ClOP .ts nght-wmg "cxlrclll!IOts"
11110 the GUP .111cmptmg In poltrc~y
hun as .1 tng-govcrnment "hh2f:
he

pu1 Chnton at equal distance from
the GOP and the Democrats m
Congress Ac:tually. they say, 1t's
dCSI&amp;!!,ec.l to clear nuddle ground
between ·the GOP's "no' govcrn- .!I •.
mell! ' aRp\oach .md tire h•g-govDut wiHlc Clinton IS m lh~ procmmcnl ' 'old Dcmoual" philoso- _. cess ot mncui.Jtmg h1mseiJ c~gmnsl
phy
that charactem.!lwn, tile GOP IS
CltniOn so l.tr &lt;.:ho~rd..::lenzcs sctlmg 1lst:ll up lor the "cxucm(,0p lt.IC.ts &lt;IS 110 WOI SC th;m "dlf- tst" ttlg hy 10l.tshmg socMI mHJ edufcrelll•" from h1s n\A:n .mtl portr:1y~ t.:&lt;ltton progr.uns even as It protects
Rcpuhhcan:-; gently, o~s ",1 group
Ihal hdlt'vcs 0111 pwhlcms .trt: pllm,mly pclsnn,tl ~uuJ l:Uitur,\1 an~

1ho1t 11 evcryhocly would JUst
strmghtcn up ,md lly nghr. thmgs
would be hunky·clnry" By conua,t , Chlllon s,ly&lt; that he believes
111 "md1 Vldu.ll responSibllll y and
common Hl:iiOn."

Allth1s sound&lt; t:un~. bur 11 contams the secUs of llreworks t.lown
1he 10ad E:lfly &lt;hots were !laded
recently by Wh•te House Ch1et ol
Statt Leon l'anetl,l. who said Clm-

ton v.oult.l veto "huge, unacceptahle cuts" m socHll programs, and
thmg he sends up
Anotl1er example ol ..... md y ' Hcmo.;c Appwpnat10n10 Chmrman
Will come when Clinton unvctb Boh I lvmg,ton R·l c1 • who shot
new guttlcl!n !J l'i lor .lllrrm.III'-'t: h 1ck rhar Clmton "w11l have to
acuon and .tppeah lor lht.: LOlllltl y ,1cccp1" (;OP culs smcc that's what
to redetltc.1te 1tscll to rac1al h.u mo- vote•" m I1JIJ4 s.t1c.J tltcy wanted
The st ,tgc 1x sell or all-out pohuny
All the speeches are ileSigned to c.li w:u tare 'vetoes ot . tpprnpw:tlmns h1lls and even .1 veto ot the

Congress 1s llkd) to 1gnore .my-

government prognuns thai serve us
t.:onsllluenciCs - agnculrurc, graz111g, mm1ng - anti proposes tax
cuts skewetl m.tsstvcly toward
upper-llll'&lt;nne Amcnc,tns
r h~ l.1k10t Cfallup Poll suggest~
th.ti puhla:: .tttlludl:s .111.: hc.ldlllg

( lullon ' s w.1y In
(~

pt:IU:'Ill Ol

lkrcmb~r.

VOICIS

..

WASHINGTON (AP)- State
elections off•c•als are askmg
Congress to make the Six-month·
old "motor voter" law more fraud·
proof.
At a hearing Tuesday, Ohio Sec·
rewy of State Robert Taft said he
was womed about a requlfement
that states save lists of iMctive vot·
ers unul two fedeial elecuons have
passed
Taft sa1d that m tbe past be
would have dropped those names
from the rolls if they had not voted
in four years or responded to a
mailed notice

.,

GOP huclgct-cuttmg propos:lls
went "too tar" Thnt numher IS
now up to 41 pcrlent
II Clinton :~so l.uche&lt; ontn GOP
11.11 t.1x prop&lt;JSals d1,11 woulc.l h.md
tlw nchc101 I pt:'fl:t'U1 ol J\menc.llls
,111 avel.tgc ol S111. '00 ,, yc.lf while
r.11101Ug I&lt;IXl:s Jm th1..: mtJt.lle class,
l1e C&gt;lll turn the t.tbles on the
~ Rcpullhc:ans and say u's 01ey who
are pracucmg

''cla.~s

wrufare"

(Morton Kondracke Is execu.
tive editor of Roll Call, the news·
paper of Capitol Hill.)

The Daily Sentinel

Quality and rarity trump quantity______
Wl&amp;,i-

WORK
Fo~

8LOOD

.

~~~ ~
C 1995 by NfA. Inc

.

DEAR BRUCE. J have cnunl·
less old cmns and some dollar hills
I would hke to know how to lind
who would be mterested m buymg
them, as I would he happy to sell
- at the nght pnce - E.B.,
Onaga, Kan
DEAR E B : In relauvely small
communiues, n's very Jl&lt;""ble !1•11
you would not tinc.l an outlet But m
the ma(or c1t1es there are always
com and stnmp dealers who aru
inter'ested m accumulawrfis (a
quantny ol uncataloged coms, as
opposed to a collecnon)
The lacl that the cmns nrc old
dues not necessanly make them
valu.1bk; conc.lllion and rarny are
the two key factors Ill be cnnsic.lered II Ciluld be that lhe coms you
have are old, hut have hnle.~alue to
collectors
Contact one or two of the larger
dealers 111 a good-siZed City,
explain wbaLyou have (they may
want some ldnd of .,written mventory) If they have any mterest. they
Will contact you You can then
bring the coins 111 personally, or it

you prefer. send Ihem· 111 to ho~ve
1 he second 1s, please Lry to keep
them appraiSed The denier will ynu[ klt~r, k gthk oiiiO ill lei It IS
then make an oiler Then you can . unpossthle, 111 m.my l:.tiO es, to edit

make a decas10n

~L'i

to whclhcl you

Bruce Williams
WISh to proceed or lnok elsewhere
DEAR READERS I have .1
couple of requests I hope you ' ll
conSider. I have jusL spent several
hours gmng thmugh your letter&lt;
trying 10 select those lor pul&gt;hca·
tton I run gmtclul rhm ynu write
and am apprccl.l!lvc ol the 11 ust
that you exp1 C$s and the kinJ
thoughts

111

the letters down 1t1 .my rcspet.:!.ttlle
stze, nol to mentum that 11 takes a
l:nnsHicrahle amount ol tunc to sort
through them Ymu letter h.1s a
much heth~l shot :lt hemg .mswcretl
m thts LOlumn 11 11 1s h11el .mtl ea'iy
to reatl Thanks ve1 y much tor your
unt.lerst.Hldlnri

{Send yilur cp~estluns tn:
Sma1·t Money, 1'.0. lln• 503,

Pubhshed every af1errnoan Monday through
Fnday Ill Coon St Pomeroy Ohao by the
OhiO Valley Pubh!h1ng CompnnyfMultun~ din
Inc Pomeroy OhiO 45769 Ph 992 2156
Second class postage pwd at Pomeroy Oh1o

m fulun columns. Owing tn tht

As~oc:iation.

•
(For information on hnw to

communicat• declrnnically wit~
this cnlummst and others, f!lll·
tact Ameri&lt;a Online hy calling 1·
StHI-827-6364, ext. 8317.) '

Today in history

your lener.,. But thc1c

are two areas wh1ch I would hke to
call to your auentmn
On~. lor ptly s,1kC, please do not
enclo&gt;e stamped envelopes In
most cases, volume s1mply does
not penmt me to correspond w1th
you mdiVIdually. and I am embar·
ra.o;sed by the numher of stamps we
rece1ve We do contnllute them tn
charily, but nonetheleS&lt;, we prefer
not In rece1ve them

(USPS liJ·%0)

Ell..-s, fL J46HII, Quest inn' nf
g~neral mterest will he answtred
vnlume nf rn.ul, pcrsnmtl rt'plit&lt;ii
t.:annot he pr nvultcl.)
nruc.:e Willmms IS a synchc~tted
wr1ter fur N~wsrmpcr Ente1·prb:e

By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, July 26, the 207th day of 1995. There are I5R
days lefl rn thl: yJ:ar.
Today's H1ghhgbt m History:
F•fty years ago, on July 26, 1945, Wmstou Churchill res1gned as
Bntrun's prime mmister after h•s Conservatives were soundly defeated by
the Labor Party (Clement Alliee became the new prime minister.)
On thiS date:
In 1775. BenJamin Frankhn became Poshnaster-General
In 1788. New York became the lith state to raufy the U.S. Constltu·
lion.

Martz, who 1old jurors Tuesday
that he found only vague signs of
wbat could be the preservative. He
tested blood on a sock found at the
foot of Simpson's bed and on a
gate near the bod1es of Simpson's
ex-w1fe and ber friend.
Martz contradicted Monday's
wimess, Fredric Rieders, a toxtcol·
ogist who reviewed Martz's data
and concluded !bat the preserva·
uve, EDTA, was present &lt;in the
eVIdence.
•
Wb1Ie the contradiction posed
problems for the defense, there was
one bright spot: The judge handed
the defense a rare legal victory
when he allowed evidence of an
experiment on glove shrinkage.
Judge Lance Ito ruled that
defense expert Herbert MacDonell
. may discuss an experiment t~at
found leather gloves don't sbnnk
that much when they gc.t wet After
Simpson tried on the evidence
gloves and told jurors they didn't
f1t, prosecutors said they sbrank
from bemg soaked m blood
MacDonell could lake the stand
late today.
Simpson·s lawyers say be was
home alone dunng the June 12,
1994, knife murders

Taft seeks to
fine-tune Ohio's
motor-voter law

JUst

thought that

H1gh around 90.
Extended roN&lt;ast
Fnday ... A chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. Lows in the m1d
and upper 60s. Higbs upper 80s to
lower 90s.
·
.
Saturday and Sunday ... A cbance
of thunderstorms. Lows 70 to 7 5.
Higbs 90 to 95.

Defense experts
contradict each other
in Simpson testimony

to

Even as President Clinton dehv·
ers conc1hatnry sermons, the
Republican Congre" " prov1dmg
bim with matenal lor later exploSIOns of nghteous md1gnaunn durmg a p&lt;lsSible shutdown of the led·
eral government th1s tall and a nrroarmg 19% carnpmgn
As Clinton spnke &lt;1hout lilldmg
"common grountl," two House
appropnauons suhcmnmittees

S11111y PL Cloudy Cloudy
C 1995 Accu Weather, ~c

Via ASSOCiatsd Press GrtJphicsNel

m

Du1 UIHh Th~ JoweiOI po1111 tm
Boutrns-Cihah ount: tlunng a v1s1t

Certmnly p.u 1 of the crmse 1s the perverse ms1stence ol ::uJolesc~nls on
trrtlaung therr elder.-;, who m th1s case are the vangurtrtl ot the "Thank
you tor not smokmg or else" generalwn

Pre&lt;~dent

Ice

Wmltl countues like Rwaml.t ,ul{.l

crunflmgn"

"gnun rcmrunsa.lnm , hul he Ulrrcdly [)Crcerves that pwhh::ms pl ..1gumg the

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A fanner town police officer

Boutms-Ghal1 once dendmgly

uadcmHrk hackmg cough
· Ctgarette smokmg among teenagers 1s on the nse , w1tJ1 Lhe rnnst dramatic mt:rea10e among Htll - ~rrltlers, ll- .md 14-year-nlds
It •myboc.ly should know bc!ler, these k1ds should, g1ven the runount ol
OlCdtCa} llliOrmHIHm ciViiJJahiC 311tl the pel VH\IVCIICSS Of ,U1tl-smnk111g

The Vind1catnr nl Ynun~sfu\\11 1 .July 21

Ex-officer sentenced on charge

called 1t the ''nch m,m's war,"
unplymg It w,ts .t Eowpean ohses
sum th.tt 101ole .lltentwn and
tcsouu.:cs flwm conllicis 111 Th11U

The Co&lt;hocton Trihune, .luly 21
Wllh the first geueratmn reared ent•rely m !he mmputer .1ge, 01e word
"'hacker" may take on H new meanmg, 11 w11l stam.J tor thai generatiOn's

No one seems ccrt,un why Llus tumarnund m teenage smokmg Perhaps
cJgarerte!;l. arc too ~w•tly avmlahlc to ku..ls Perhaps snc1ety hns taken 11 too
much tor grantl'tl that the hazards or smnkmg are w1dely known
Nobody evn c~ccuscU teens uf hemg the hcst JUdges ot thetr own hesr
uHere.,.ts Wh,llever 11 t&lt;lkcs ltl reverse th1s tn:ntl 1s wor\h dnmg That's
wh.ll mlulls .1rc lor

IND

dratllng

MeanwiHlc, the

Two-car crash leaves one injured

A Middleport woman was ta1cen to Veterans Memaial Hosp1tal
by the Meigs EMS Tuesday with minor injuries followmg a two-car
crash oo Cowny Road 5 {Bradbury), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol said.
Sandra K. Hanning, 45, 39285 Brndbury Road, was Jreated and
releasW, a bospitil spokesperson said.
Troopen said HaMing was westbound, one-tenth of a 011Ie west
of State Route 7, at 4 p.m. when another westbound car driven tty
Cindy L Hayes, 30, 32593 Hilltop Road, Dexter, attempted to pass
Hanrung. Hayes' car collided with the Hanning vcbicle, accordmg
to the crash report.
Hayes' continued on from tbe crash, b'OOpers S31d
Damage was moderate to HaMing' s car and slight to the Hayes
vehicle. Hayes was cited for driving under the influence, no operator's hcense and IDlprOper passing. ..

lAtCH

weeks hetorc lhe mtcrnattonal
body's ~Oth .mmvcrsary celebra-

1J1e Iauer ca~e
sugge~t

Accu-Weather" forecast for daytime cond•uons and high

equaunn, allowmg the admimstrn·
lion tn keep peace wllh us European allies, who don't want the
embargo hl!ed No Pentagon
approval or knowledge of the operatwn " needed. ru1d no third country wnh Amencan arm s needs to
st!l vc as .1 condUit
" ThiS may he p• c 111 the sky HI
tht s poull to put to gclht!r such a
deal , but 11 'eems to us th.u 11 m1ght
work.· · one ol the diplomats wid
us I lc added that I I S Amh•L"•Idllr
M:u.lckme Alhn ght wa10 " hcstde
hcrselr · trytng to ligurc nut a legullnme way tn help Ole beleagu~red
Bosm:m Mushms
Wuhm the Clmtnn admuustra·
uon, Alhnght has been one of the
most vocal cr111cs otthe status quo,
which she regards as a guarantee
that the Scrbwn aggressiOn w11l
con)mue. Yet our sources say that
so lnr she h.ls nnt Signed oft on
any cable .nllh&lt;HIZI!lg the kmd nl
coverr opcratmn her underhngs arc

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

r----Local briefs---. Moist air, heat

OHIO Weather

·Plan would arm Bosnians via Saudi cash

By The A&lt;.•nclated Pr•&lt;.&lt;
ExcerpL&lt; ol Oh10 edllnnal&lt; nt nauonal and starew•de Interest
Sprmgfield News.Sun, July 20
There sho~ld be no quest1on about the ncccss11y for Congress 10 sur
the ashes of the Branch Dav1d1an compound ouL&lt;~de Waco, Texas, and
refocus attent1on on the bloody confrontation m Ruby R1dge, Idaho The
JUSUiicauon for the heanngs "all the more compellmg now that the FBI's
No. 2 man. Lllrry Pous, bas been removed hecause of hiS Involvement m

resolved n.1ggrng 4ucsllons thai

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 27

By Jack Anderson
d
an
Mt'chae/ Bt'nstet'n

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Wednesday, July 26, 1995

'

Member· T11e Auoc:uued Prt;u and the Oh1o
Newspaper Assoctauon
POSTMAST,BR: Send n~u co~cUOnJ 10
The Druly Sllmnel Il l Coun St Pomeroy
Ohto4S769
SUBSCRIPTION RATF.S

Br Carrier or Motor Roult

w.....

One&gt;
One Month

""".,.. . . . ...it 'IS

$7 60

$91 00

One Y~nt
, SINGLE COPY PRICE
Druly ,.., .......................................... .

Subscribers not des1nng to pay the earner may
rcm11 10 aclvpnce dn·ect to The Dtuly Sentinel
on a thrrt:,ltJ. or 12 momh bast~ Credn wtll be
given catTier each week
No Jub~ cnptron by mrul ~rl'l\ltlt:d tn
where home earner set'\'ice 1~ avwinble

nrea~

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Imide Melp County
13 Weeks
26 Weelu
52 Weetu
Ratts OuiJide

Melp C011n1y

$23 92
$47 06
$92 S6

l3Weeb
26 Wccb

$2561
$49 66

S2W..b

$9620

Now be must maintain an inventory ripe for explmtauon, be said
"I run concerned that there is an
invitation to someone to use those
names 10 an absentee voting
fraud,'' Taft testified
The new law ''severely restnets
our ab!llly to keep our voter rolls
accurate and up to date and, therefore, our ability to prevent fraud,"
he !Old the House Overs•ght Com·
m1ttee
Taft gave tbe comm•ttee his
w1sh hst for fme-tumng the law,
which reqUires stales to reg1ster
voters through motor veb1cle and
welfare offices
Request No.1 was to giVe elec·
uons oflic1als d•scounted mrul ser·

vice

Taft said Congress mtended the
states to get fust class serv1ce at
thud-class rates, and "to date the
Postal Serv1ce bas not compiled
w•th congressiOnal intent "
The actual law makes no menlion of d•scounted lirst·class mrul
serv1ce but does say that elecuon·
related mrulings should qualify for
the same rates as non-profit organ•· .
zauons
Postal Serv1ce spokesman Roy
Betts smd that means thud-cla~s
bulle rates, not specially priced
first-class rates.
Taft's request IS based on "a
misunderstandmg of the law,"
Betts sa1d ,
He sa1d states bad asked con·
gress10nal bill·writers for balf-pnce
first-class postage , wb1cb would
have .. cost the Postal Serv1ce $10
mtllion a year "and would have
been unprecedented," Betts said.
"We would have essentially
absorbed the loss and probably
passed on the cost to regular-rate
postal customers.''
After the bearmg, Taft repeated
b1s concerns in 11. meeting w1th an
atde to President Clmton.

was sentenced m Mason County Circwt Court to 30 days in Jail for
having sex with a 16-year-old family friend
Mark L. WilllaiDS, 30, an officer su•ce 1988, resigned May 30,
the same day be ple3(,!ed guilty to felony first-degree sexual abuse
by a custodian.
.
Williams told Ctremt Judge 0 C Spauldmg that the girl was at
bis bouse In November 1993 wruting to go deer bunting w•tb hiDl
wb.en they l;:San flirting, kissmg and fondling eaeb other He srud they never
intercourse.
"I"m sorry," Williams said Tuesday.
.
,
Williams also was sentenced to three years' probation and 450
bours of community service.

Man seeks $100,000 in damages
A Racme man is seeking $100,000 in drunages for m)uries he
received wben two trucks collided Aug. 10, 1993, at the Gavm
Power Plant in Cbeshire.
Randy L Phillips. 44192 Forest Run Road, IS SUing Marc Work·
man of Cheshire and Workman's employer, Shurtleff and Andrews
Corporation!Cf Cmporalion System of Cleveland.
Phillips, wbo was worlting as a security guard at the plant, claiDls
the defendants were negligent wb~m a pickup uuck drive by Work·
man and owned by S&amp;A Corp. collided with his truck, causing sen·
ous injuries which bave left him unable 'to worlc.
The suit was filed recently m the Ga!Iia County Colnmon Pleas
Court ofJudge Joseph L Cain.

Volunteers needf!,d for state fair
Volunteers are needed to man the county's state frur booth, said
Karin Jobnson, county rourism direcror.
The county needs 68 people to travel to Columbus to sll at tbe
Me1gs County booth, Johnson Sllld. Volunteers get free state fair
passes and free parking.
Call 992-4544 to reserve a spot, she added

Fede_ral agent on stand
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
federal agent wbo negotiated a·
cease-fire with David Koresb after
the Waco nud failed choked back
tears today as he described watch·
ing fellow agents come under
imense fire from tbe cult com·
pou!kl.
"They were tbrowmg everything at us," Alcohol, Tobacco and

Fueann agent Jim Cavanaugh tesli·
fled. "Their guns sounded like
nons and our guns sounded hke
pop guns . Nobody was gomg to
get us out "
Cavanaugh described for two
House subcommittees bow be
negotiated w1th Koresh for three
hours on the morning of Feb 28,
1993

drowned the boys Oct 25
The Jurors sat transfixed dunng
the second v1deo, recorded by a
camera placed mside the vehicle to
sbQw the view the boys bad As the
car slowly sank, water poured in
under the dashboard, finally overcoming the last air pocket.
Smith's book about the murders
was scheduled to go on sale Fnday,
but by Tuesday many stores
already bad cop1es on display
In "Beyond All Reason - My
Life With Susan Smuh," Smith
wrote that he first felt sorry for her,
but later decided that he could only

have a full hfe agam tf she were
imprisoned for life.
"I don't want to see Susan die
But if It bappens, so be it," be
wrote.
Tbal apparently contradicts h1s
past statements that he wanted h1s
ex-wife to be executed He w:)S not
asked about that Tuesday.
Defense lawyers had been
expected to gnll Sm•th about lakmg a $20,000 advance for the
book, as well as abuse allegations
But they decided not to quesllon
him.

c:m·

SmJth. ~~nllnued trom page 1

Brinkley, husband splitting up
NEW YORK (AP) - Seven
months after their marriage and
seven weeks after the birth of their
son, Christie Brinkley and her busband are splitting up.
"After much thou~bt and consideration, I bave dec1ded to separate from my husband," she srud in
~ one-hne statement •ssued today
by a publicist.
The pubhc1st, Fran Curtis,
would not provide any other
details.
The 42-year-old supqmodel and
Richard Taubman, 46, a miU10naue
real estate developer, were married
Dec 22, eight months after SID'ViV·
mg a helicopter crash during a Colorado sk1 tr1p They exchanged

Couples issued
marriage licences
The followmg couples were
issued mamage licenses recently in
the Me1gs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
William Hannon, 29, Syracuse,
and Janelle Darlene Williams, 22,
Racine; Ashley Joseph Bishop, 73,
Middleport, and Marguerite Tig·
nor, 70, Tuppers Plams; Timothy
James Triplett, 2i, Portland, and
Amy Elizabeth Cam!)bcll, 24,
Racine.

brew more storms
By Tbe Associated Press
Dense fog shrouded much ot
Oh10 early this morning, w1th v•si·
b1liUes of less than a 011le in some
areas, the National Weather Service Said
The mo1st a1r combined with
afternoon healing w11l continue to
spawn scattered thunderstorms
though the weekend, forecasters
sa1d Some of the storms could
bring locally heavy rainfall

Two men face charges
\'wo area men face charges following tbe smash-and grab type
burglary of a Pomeroy business
Tuesday
Holly F Mullins, 29, of 272-tn
Second St, ~meroy , and "lbomas
Swan, 36 , were arrested by
depuues of the Me1gs County Sher·
1ff s Department
The two allegedly smashed out
a wmdow at Your Ne~gbborhood
Lender, a Second Street pawnshop,
and stole items from the store,
accordmg to Meigs County Sheriff
Jrunes M. Soulsby.
Tlie sheriff's department
rece1ved a call around 2 45 a.m.
that a window was broken out of
the store, accordmg to Sheriff
Jrunes M Soulsby
After the alann sounded, neigh·
bors descnbed two men wbo ran
and fled in a car on Mechanic
S1reet as a dark green Plymouth

Monday
Units of the Me1gs County
Emergency Med1cal Service
recorded 15 calls for assistance
a.l.onday and Tuesday Units
respondmg mcluded.
MIDDLEPORT
II 44 a m Monday , OverbrooK
Nursmg Center, Charles McElroy,
Pleasant Valley Hosp1W ,
4:57 p Q1 Monday, South Third
Avenue, Teresa Alderson, Oh10
State Umvemty Hosp•tal v1a Med·
Flight
RACINE
9:49 am. Monda¥, State Route
124, Everett Homer, treated at the

. . .... !9 314
,
........2l 314
Charmlq Shop ............................ .5
City Holding ......... ..................16
Federal Mogul ..............................l1

Goodyear T &amp;R .... . ........43 7/8
K -mart ......................................... , 16
Landi End............. . . . ....... .ts 114
Llmlled Inc........... .... ................21
Multimedia Inc...................42 114
People'• ..................................12 114
Ohio Valley Bank ........................35
One Valley ............... ,......... .30 Ill
Rockwell ..............................46 Ill
RobbiM &amp; Myen ..................26 Ill

Royal Dutch..................... 126 3/8
Sboney'o Inc . ........ ..................12
Star Bank ................... . .......49 114
Wendy lat'I. ......................18 J/4
WorthiDgton Ind ............... 21 Ill

5:38 p m Monday, State Route'
124, Rose N1day , Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital
SYRACUSE
6 02 p m Monday, Eagle R1dgc
Road, Jack Devore, PVH
Tuesday
linus respondmg Tuesday
mcluded'
MIDDLEI'ORT
12:24 p m., Bmley Run Road,
Mary Roush, Holzer Medu~al Center;

4:09 p m , Bradbury Road, San·
dra Hannmg, Veterans Memorial
Hosp1tal;
8:32pm , Mason, W Va. Juan•·
scene,
ta Clark, VMH
6:24 p m. Monday, State Route
POMEROY
124, Roy Enc Tedford, Cb1ldren's
1:30 p m , Pleasant R1dge,
Hospital vm MedFiight,
M1chael Lee, VMH
8:03 p m. Monday, Bashan
R)'EDSVILLE
Road, Betty Friend, treated at the
9.48 p n:\, state Route 681,
scene
Craig Boso, SL Joseph's Hospital
REEDSVILLE
SYRACUSE
6:21 p m, volunteer fire depart·
ment to SIXth Stree~ downed tree
VETERANS MEMORIAL
TUI'PERS PLAINS
Tuesday lldmiss10ns - none
2 42 p.m , Allen Slrect. Roy
Tuesday discharges - H1Ida Chnsty. Pleasant Valley Hospl!al
Grueser, ~meroy
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
July 25 discharges · Mary
Sm11b, Ryan Clonch, Jayla Fenell,
Avery Searles, Rolland Searles,
'
1\tl'l ttl\t 1\ \II I 01 lltJ\(,\
Jessica Perdue, Garnett Marcum,
Jamce New, Ruth Hall, Sheri
Kerns, Jeremy Woods and Edna
Logan.
July 25 birth • Mr and Mrs
Richard Donobew, a daughter, of
Evans, W.Va.
Printed with permission.

Hospital news

IMPERIAL

WALLPAPER
SALE OF THE YEAR

!~% ·+ slOo/o Off
•CURRENT PATTERNS
•NEW PATTERNS

For Every Room In
Your Home ... Includlng
Your Music Room

Stocks
Bob Evano...........
Champion Ind....

Duster. Pomeroy Pohce Ch1el Jerry
Rought S3..1d.
Depuues JIID Heater and Danny
Leonard were southbound on S~1te
Route 7, observed the veh1cle driv mg northbound 'near Bradbury
Road and stopped ll near Stpte
Rou~ 124, S01,1lsby Said
MuOms atld Swan were apprehendea and Mutins was trealed tor cuts allegedly su~tained 111 U1e burglary, Soulsby sa1d Items stolen
from the business were tound m 01c
car, he added
The two were to be arra•gned on
charges of breaking and entenng,
accordmg to Ass1stant Prosecutor
Chns Tenoglta. In add1Uon, Swru1
was charged With driving under ll•e
mfluence.
Mullins is be1ng held m the
Meigs County Ja1I wh1le Swan •s
bemg held 111 the Middleport Jrul

Squads answer 15 calls

vows on Telluride Mountain, about
live miles from the crash Site
Theil' son, Jack Par1s Bnnldey
Taubman, was born June 2.
Bnnkley IS divorced from ber
fmt husband, pUlllO man B1Uy Joel.
She bas a 9-year-old daughter,
Alexa, from that marnage.

Am Ele Power ........................34 S/8
Akzo ......................................67 J/8
Ashland OU ........................ .34 114
AT&amp;T .................................52 1/8
Bank One............ ... .. ............31

Ohioans should get a hnc l
respite from the smrmy cond111on'
tonight, tbe NWS sa1d But the
weather pattern will repeat nsclf on
ThurSday as temperatures approach
90degrees
The record-high temperature for
lh1s date at the Columbus weatbcr
station was 102 degrees m 19:14
while the record low was 50 111
1946

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH ON
QAAFIILD AVE., PARKERSBURG

~~~~a.~.~~~~·---s.umu
ln
IUt.r.oea

1

ttrn•

•n1 ...,...

OIJS"'D ln •u.TAWOILO"

GIFT CERTlRCATES AVAILAIU!I

MON.·FRI. 9·8:30
SAT. 9·5:30, SUN. 12·5

428·1065

Your Kids Are
Worth-It
Enrollment for Rejoicing Life
Christian School Kindergarten
through grade six is now open.
We use traditional methods. (Not a
'ACE program}.~Our high aua1l£t'Y.
re«ldting program is based on
phon.et«:s. at the primary level.
References available upon rPil'II.P!&lt;t'
For a high quality education
combined with the teaching of
good moral valU-es, call992-n:&lt;;4~
and receive further
information.

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel

•

CINCJNNA 'Il ll\l'l - Mayhc
all the ~an Dkgo Padre~ ne~d 1~1
turn around their sca.-.on is a few
. I~nre grun6 a!!:iim:t the Ci ncinnnti
Reds.
T he Pcu.Jn.:s on Tue1\day C(implet etl a two-g:nnt' sweep of lhe
Reds which ;;ave them ..;ix vil.:lorics
in eig iH g:unc~ :l).!:li n~l Cinrin n:l.li
till~ ... c ; t~on . Stt'VI..' hn!t.:y ~ron.:d
three run:-.. Wh!h.: Trn·nr r.fo11111all
s till ed :1 l:tll' r:tlly a-. San D1!.!~0
Won 4-2 .

The ll'&lt;un' play Olll' nwrc timc:
S~pt. 14 in Cincinnati. Certai nl y
(he Pallrc~ wish there were a few
more m~tings, right ? .
~ ''I'~ UOI J;O illg IO .. say th:lt: ..
Padres manager Bmcc 13ochy smd.
" That 's a !!Ood hallduh over lhcre.
That's lhe la ~l thing l't.J want 10
do."
The PadrC's know their mlvanlagc i n the 't: ri c ... IT ... ult ~ larg ~: ly
from good forlunc They umght the
ReU s during the ~t::l~o n - opt'ning
s l·u mp 111 wl111.:h ( ' iuunnati won
Olll'C in llillt' t' :t!II C:-. ;11 HI "'urvivcd .
Ja1 c ~ca rt.• .-. dur1n~ holll !!illlll'.'\ ul

!heir ~wccr at 1~1\ 'LTirout StmH um .
"You really lwvc to pl ay th ~se
gnys a full nine innings hecause if
you give th em a hrcak , IJH.:y seem
to' take full advantage of it. " f-inley
S.1id.
· Tht..' PadrL'S ;u·e at a ptlint at
whi t: h it '~ tin11.: tn cithcr hR·:1k out
cH: I heir nil or I :til o ut or l.'OIIIL' III ion
San llh:~o wa-. .10-2 1J and I In
gaml.'~ olH : ,, lir.-.t pbn: 111 tlu.: Nl.
W-c:-.1 h eadin~ mlo Jul v. Thc Padre~
wl' nt into th~'lt t wo-~; unr :-.c ril::-. in
Ciuci ntwl i in an X- 14 "' lump thai

](11h

50 Lb. Bag

NEW CROP
STEAL ATTEMPT FOILED - The Cincinnati Reds'.. Darren
Lewis '(r!ght) Is tagged ,out by San Diego second sacker Jody Reed
after Lewis' foiled steal attempt in the ftftb Inning· of Tuesday's
Natiooal League game In Cincinnati, where the Padres won 4-2. (AP)
ou t and fiui sh

:t

10-K San Diego

VIC II)fy .

I! wa., Jlotlman's

Tne.,day .
A lt e r L'Sl'&lt;~ p ing thl' e ighlh -innin g
thrcal, Hoffman gave up a solo
hom er to Boone, his 12th, before
111 111

Rambo
Apples

5 Lb. Basket

Virginia
Freestone

wi th save., in 141 L'Uib L'l'Uiivc oul ing .'i ~ a sl rL·ak that c ntl cd with
two blown .'1;1\'l.'S in three dnys. He
pre se rved three more victories .
before aJ iuwin_:.! t.:i!!hl camed ruus
in 3 11.1 i n u ill}.!:-. in hi~ lll'XI lhrl'c
appC;t.r.:IBCL':-.. rl'~l tllin g in lwo lo~~­
e s.

~'mith opened the lllth hy strik ·
ing out .I im T IHHOl' and M:mny
Ramir~z. who hot h Unuhlctl oil him

the ni ght tx.·fon· .
Paul s·orrt•nto. lhL' Indians' las1
gasp, fullow r. .· d wit h a sin~ lc ;md
tried 10 str~tl'll it into a tlouhk.
That woul1l h:11·c pnt the ty ing run

in scoring posi tion for Dave Winfield . Bnt cen ter fi c ltler Jim
Edmon&lt;Js chased the Jiall down in
the g:tp and made a )(10- deg rcc tum
~ft1rl.' throwin)2 to :-.~.:l'ond haseman
D;lmion 1-:a.- .ky o n th L' ily to c n&lt;l

lhC ~;UllC.

.

·•Jimmy was going tn w~u·tl ll'll
fidJ andt i Jwa~·~ 11~1! f!·nc~ . .wlli~,h . is
a tou~h pl:ty , l: aslcy s:ud . li e
h~1J to wh~d arounJ :u1LI pUI something 011 it. Dut I looked al Jimmy
and th c· n I lo11ked at l'au l, and I
knew tha t :til we ne ede d was a
1hrow anywht..·rc in th e vici ui1 y.
AnJ he p111 it ri~hl on the ha~ . "
An\.!e l:-. ruokie (!arret Amlcrsmt
hclp,:&lt;l ,c ud ( lrd I k rs hi sL'I' (7·.1) to
hi s quickc . . t shower in four sea.o.;.on.'l
with a ru n-se oring singk anti hi s
eigllth .IJOI1lt,.' run . The ~ inglc put
Cali fo.'r nia aliL'ilcl .4 ~ ·~ nnd dHl SCll
the ri :; ht · h : ~n&lt;kr after 2 ·1n innings.
ll crs hi se r ~ who hou ght 71l liCk·
cts for lamil y HllJ friends, threw
only 60 pitche.s in hi's first SoutlJCm
C:tlifnrni: 1 appc:tr&lt;tnrc silK'!! hreak ·
ing lit's with the Dodgers after 12

Ma,ior leagues

S.m I lll'k!•' · .

SJII

Fr.oiKI~&lt;••

r\MEIHCi\N LEi\I;UE
L

:11:

!l'i

011~11111 ...

'\(,

Q,ll4iiiiL•rt•

4n

4U·

~1111

J\'l'W Yt •rt ..

!Ill

40

. ~1111

J')clrPil ..
T ur.,uru ...

"'

4J

.l .'

H

au.

~

4

45
r, I
IU

4IJ

~(Ill

1ji

4.'

.4(•9

17

45

4 .' il

'

&gt;l. f •''

l o~o•

~J

71.1

-II
\7

' &lt;:111

"ill(t

Jl

..&amp;74

l ' l lll':J~ IP

q

~ .,

&lt;011

22.~

:vll lllk.'l..l•l. l ...

1•J

~1

.1 .~11

~II . ~

!\i dW :)U l t'l'
K ;oll.~,t!&gt;( 'i ll'

~

..... .A 'I

l't•X:I." ...... .. .... JJ
4\
S.:"alllt· ...
1\.)
O ukl:mcl .......

Jl

. ~1)11

4ll
41

~ 1 :?

5011

4."

.4f·4

7

'

II

&lt;llir:tl,llll'l , [3 .. ~11111 .1

T••rt1rttt1 ;\

f);~tl i!IIUfl' J, Tt• .\ :1~ '
~l'W \'11(1.; li ' K ~·H~;t.~ ('it v I
. Sl·alll\o 1! . Mt)W;lllln: f,

'

J.:Oihlc...,

(Torr~s .1·5). 4:115 p.m

l)._l\. 7 · 11 .~

·

(I. JI a4 I ,.,.rr&lt;&gt;ll (Wdb

p.tp._

(' hin.J!IJ' ((·c.rn,•'l•l"'' .1. (,) lll 8u~l•11\
(SH1UH ~.(, ]. 7 ·o~ · f' . ll1 .

\of inlll'~" ' u [Trumhl n
(llt'lll~l'll (,.~q, 1 :.1 .~ j'\.11(

l ·.li) ul

Tl'x:•s ( f(•wbl'ourv 7· 4) ;,1
(Mn~w

5·.1). 7·lS

r.m.

Turoilll"

Mt11Ut'~" ' " 1lbr.r1~

0 · 1 1 al Turunt11
( Jlur4:u lt • ~ - ll J, I~ .1 ~ P Ill
(1(1r:t~l' (J.lll!h~llo l ·lll.il ULI~lLIII (SUJ1 ·
paHP·~I I O'pm
O. tl l.llltl (Sto•tlk iiJY~'" l'i · I) ..11 l k tuul
ifkr~frimrJ:~- 1 . 1~ 1- ' ruu
.

Y ur li. IP&lt;"IIIIlt' ~.(,)atKan.~:~' (II )'
j(~ UI'o 1~'7.U 7-7 ). 2:.15 r Ill.
Tt•7;:! .~ (P:tll \ i~ 5·(•1 ;II B:1 1!1)11nrt'
(Rruwn .'i·f1J. 7· ~:'i
('; 1lil'1•nna (B. Andt' r~"" 4·JI ill Mil·
w:1ut.:ct' (Spart~ (,.~) .
['I .
CLHVELANf&gt; ( O!,!c a .'i · ~ l ar Seo~t41 l'

r.m..

M:tl.S (II.

tfk ld wrfl·~l. 10 : 11~

r m.

Allj.'t'lt·~

NEW YORK YANKEES :

Si~nt"ol

Sill':! Mror~u1.. l•t1 4ftdclt•r . an1l u~~ •JJ,n ~d
liun 111 Otii'Hilla ut lhc N~:w Ynrlc- Pt·nn
l x.lj!Ut·

'
N'atiun:~IIA""OI~ut'
C' I NCI~NI\TI REPS: Si~n ~d Frank
Vu&gt;l.l, p itdltr. h• .1 ll!ll~rr·il-a~,:ul' Clllj1 rat:l

with huh unurut i~ uf tlw 1\lll~i~· an A .~suc1·
ah11n .
NEW YORK METS : R~cull~d C' ~ rl
E w r&lt;•ll , uulllt'i&lt; kr , lr"m Nnrf••ll:: uf 4ht'
lll!t•rnolilllml Li!II~Ut• . Sllnt Rick~ tltt'ru .
tmlli~ltk:r.ltl N111'l11lk .

Fnnthall
N:~ lillll ll l Fnnfhalllu~u,.

Jl F l u r u i &lt;.J

Al&lt;li',O:'i'A l"j\Rn!NALS· W ;uvt'tl
l )arvl Orowtl Jlld Kt• \'lll !l td.:~ . r unnin~
h(J,·i:~ : Will !J.IVIII~"n. •llt t'ns illl' lint'man:

il l M11hlrr ;ll

ll 1•r:•&lt;"&lt;' M ~&gt;rrl~ . linrt&gt;&gt;~&gt;: J..t"r : (i:Jhri~l
(JI:UIIIHI . r1&lt;'h'll.\11'&lt;: lill ell\: 111 : llhtl Tntltl

( Pl•rN X-~) . I .1) p 111
t' Ll lonn l;o ( F rl'~llllln ' ··~) ut lh •o~orun

h •IIIN'II , 41JU!1ntoud;,
ATLANTA FA tC'ONS: Agret'd tu

Sl

LrPiil ~

:!·.:' )

{1.11· 1\.sutl ~ -~)1

( l!;n ,"lplt~ll (,-,1). ~ . \~ p .111 "
&lt;'I\'C .IXN/\Ti i kt•t1 1 IHi l al

'i~n Fran-.

t'l\\'1' (\\' i iM• II .l.4), l J~ J' 1..1
i\l l.m L• IM•·n · ~rr 4· "'l : 11 l..t1 ~ An t• rk ~
1U .t11b n . t ~o IH ''" l' 111

tl-rms witll H.onakl Oa ll!l&gt;. IIC"ft:nsive t1uck.
on a rhrt't'·Vt"ur conlr:)d.

Rl'!l't~Ked

Anulo

Vai(ai, o!Tt.'Ttsilll.! lirwm;m.

C.REEN BAY PA.f'K ERS· Signl!l l Ed
Huwant. runtn

..

C 1l~

~ouncs

!'\t•w

l.t"

* O,.ICI *

AS OF JULY 24'" WE
WILL NO LONGER BE
:' OPEN ON SUNDA,S·
::J CrediiTerms
::J Lay·A·Ways

lladte IJiaeli

0lJ lJ

122North
Second Ave,
Mlddlepon, Ohio

~ D~E~LE~op (614)~2825

.

cou ld give track anll field a ll!:cdcd

ll1e 3-mclc r at the n::~tional inlloor
"1 always come to a meet with a
goa l set in mind," said Thel in. a
gradu"tc ul llriglt:un Young lln1·
vers ily. " ll aving had a bally. I
wa nt ed to come h"ck and show
myself "gai n to pro l'c tl!ill I could
C(liJlC hack and win .''
The lill 's tutal hmkc the record
of 5.17 .12 .se t in I'JX7 hy We ndy

boot-·!.
" J just n :II··OUI do 11111 U!ldl'l' stand ·why the national governing
bo&lt;Jics do no t have their best ath·
letes here, " he said at a breakfast
where he received the Robert J.
Kane Award from th e U .S.
Olympic Comntittee.
The festival, he said, offers alb.Jetes iq all sport.\ a chance to get~
feel.fo r what they will experience

Lucern.

at an Olympics.

Championships th is year.

TI1e Kane Award honors an alblete who had success at U1e festival
and the Olympics, and who embOd.. iell the spirit of Kane, the late
USOC president and Olympic Fe~fi ch.l.
: tivnl founder. Previous winners arC
USOC ot'ficiab ha n .: am mtlll L'l'd Evelyn Ashford and Loug;mis.

Tucstby .started with li1ur·timc
Olympic disc us champion AI Ocrt·
'Cr Jol1hyi ng to ha ve th e festiva l
con tinuc, the way it is, aud tonk a
few ,shnt.s at the sport ol track am!~

HOMEGROWN

Half Runner

sac

•

MKT.

sars Palace today at a news con ference in New York City. Tyson's
manager, John Horne, upstaged
them a day earlier by saying Tyson
wou ld 11gbt just down the Strip at
the MOM Grand hotel-casino on
the same night.
The Tyson announcement set up
what could be a heavyweight battle.
between competing fights·. promoter&lt; and cable television outlets.
"Mike Tyson bas his dales; they

can move their dates," Horne said.
"Bowe-Holyl1eld is' a good attraction , but rigbt now the biggest
attraction is what Mike Tyson

does ."

·

Howe's manager, Rock Newman , 'however, said lh¢re was no
comparison between the two lights.
" They're attempting to serve
the people dog biscuits," Newman
'said. "We're serving filet mignon
on Nov. 4.:·

CANTON, Ohio (AP) -The
bust of OJ. Siinpson has been bolt- ·
ed to its pedestal at the Pro Football Hall of Fame to prevent anotller theft, hall officials said.
The 35-pound, two-foot-tall
bronze hus~ which was stolen from
the ball Sunday, was back in place
Tuesday. All 180 busts of members
at the hall were to be ·bolted down,
said Pete Elliott, the hall's president.•
Simpson, on trial in the slayings
of his former wife Nicole Brown
Simpson and he r fri e nd Ronald
Goldman, was inducted into the
hall in 1985.
The Simpson bust disappeared

Sunday even ing. Potice said a man
apparently dumped it into a black
duffel bag and walked out through
an emergency door while a woman
served as lookout.
The alam1 that normal Iy would
have sounded was not working
. beca use of co nstruction , hall
spokesman ·Don Sntith said.
"We thought all the bust&lt; were
very secure," Smith said. "They
cou ld lie gotten out, but it would
have been difficult. We now have
gone the extra step, and it would be
a big project now to get a bust out
of here."
~'To my knowledge, no other
·bust bas ever been tampered with,"

Elliott said. " People like to rub
their beads and things, but nothing
like this has ever happened."
Two highway workers found the
Simpson bust Monday morning
along Iriterslatc 77 near Cleveland,
about.50 miles north of the hall.
Tbe suspect was described as a
white man in his 30s, with blond
hair U1at was spiky on top and long
in the back.
This week marks the hall' s
annual festival , which will end Sat·
urday with this year's induction
ceremony and the first game for the
National . Footba ll League's two
neweSt franchises. the Jacksonville
Jaguars and the Carolina Panthers.

Newman charged promoter Don
King and Home wiU1 trying to bluff
their way into the date, with no
opponent and no assurance that
1 yson will win his Aug. 19 fight
against Peter McNeeley.
"Thjs is another pimp, hustler
move by&gt;the King-Horne camp,"
Newman said. "On one hand !bey
want you to spend $50 to watch on
pay·per-view and $1,500 in person
tosee Tyson fight what is reported
to he a competitive match against
M c Nee l ey. On the o th e r band,
they 're telling you the ou tcome is
already decided."
Horne, speaking by conference
call, said ever since Tyson' s Aug.
19 fight with McNeeley was
arranged, it was his intent to 11ght
again Nov. 4.
.
Horne refus e d to identify
Tyson's opponent , but possibilities
include former champion Michael .
Dokes and Lou Savarese.
"Mike Tyson's role is already
laid out. All he has to do is follow
i~" Horne said. "The only person
that can alte r anythi ng is Peter
McNeeley. \ '
.
Marc Ramer, executive director
of the Nevada State Athletic Commission, said be received a request
for the &lt;lite from Newman on July
14, and two days later received a
request from King for the same

date . Ratner said U1c commission 's
policy wo uld be to allow both

Bowe.
"Bowe-llolyfield is old news,"
fights lu go on.
Home sl\id. "Who cares who wins
Caesars World execu tive Rich ·Or loses? It's not even for anytl1ing.
Rose said the Bowe-Holylield fight The people arc eager, hungry to see
would go on as schedukd. It will Mike Tyson."
be televised on ·TVKO , Time
Ty son signed a six-fight con ·
Warner' s pay·per-view ann.
. tract with •th e MOM Grand a nd
, "We've gol a great fight, we're Showtirne Event Television for his
excited and we' re ready to present series Of C(1mCback bOUts Shorl)y
it to the pubUc, " Rose said.
after being released from prison in
It will be the third 11ghl between Marcl1.
Bowc and Holyfield , whose two
Home claimed SET reserved the
previous title fights we re major Nov . 4 date earlier U1is year with
pay·pcr-view attractions.
panJCr·vicw distributors and made
But unlik e the first two tille ils int enti ons known months ago
fight.\, this bout would be for tile U1at Tyson would fight on that day.
lightly regarded WOO titic held hy

.

Reds lose. ~;u_n_tin_u_,e&lt;l_f_ro_m_P_a8_c_4)------~
The y' re a w r).• :-.t:ary ll;dk'!ub lin a

l:inln· :1~ :1111

p i tr h 111~ .-.la lt ...
Tilt• P: tlii'L'~ srmctl

-. po~t ~ lll ~ th1..,

who h:1:-. s tn 1~~k(l

111

tlt ll lL' &lt;I t! l'l'al jnl1
L·luh ·· fltll·h y :-.aid .
'' il L· · ... 1 11 41kt ll ~ II ' ~ U ll)!fl l 1111\V. .
lie '.-. doill1! ewry il111i ~ ··
"f: lllk y

l!m;c l"llltS 111
six in11ing ." olf 'J' im ·P ugll () - ;).
ht.-. Ia:-.~ three

:-. tar h . Th e I"IJ:.' hl · hllrtd cr ha .-.
~11! mwtl 13 Hill'&gt; ;uHI 2.' flit ... 111 hi.-.
b st 1-l innill~ " ·
l:i1 11l'y. h:1t tin;;! .. n2 m 2'J game:-.
in the 1\:atloll :-.p111. ~ 111gl o,; d lwit.:t.:
o! J' i'u ~ h ;lltd :-.l'O I't.:(l I w ice. :tll tl
Eddh..• William:-. hit hi .-: nin th ll om~r
1'(11' a 1- 1 lca&lt;l. (iwvnlllli td ;m ROJ
sin!!k in th l: :-.~VL'illh thai .sl'orcll

h ;t ...

Pu ;.! h kll

Il L' h : ~t l hL'l.'ll s lmvl~

pil'knl ar.tl't .

" They lull you to .... tcrp." Puglt
s: li tl . · 'T h ~v don ' t h: tvt.: the hi~
ll&lt;l llll'.'~ in t ll~ir lineup. hut you look
up aud thl'y·vc gut th ~.: hi g hit s ;111d
th~y'n.: .. rori ll ;.! ntlls. They' rt: a lui
ltm:;lu.: r ll l:Hllh~.:y get t:n:dit&gt;fm ."

----

"""""""'.......~.........

NOLID(jll

.~pt'n:.i l n."'~is!Mt ,

Ralltm n r ~

N~·w Ynrk (Rtlll"r&lt;.J l-:?1 ut Km1 ~a,.;
(.lal'Uitl\"ll·lll,li:O,\ p ll!.

Thur!'dav's

•:"'I' "'

f ",. l,r,,.ln t J.il'llll "' ' ~·!I·' ' II.•U.\ Iillt

S'1lbl'&gt;ur~h (!:rid .~ 2.:~) :~4 Pltll:.ull'iptn a

{'[ .t-:VEI.A.NII.(Mun•n•·7. 'l·lf) ul (. ':til ·
; llarkt';.' -'·f•l. 4 : 0~ [1.111
\filw m• kt't' t(iiv ~ns 1·:!) ;H 'St'alllt:
( Ro:vt·~

' "' ·'1'1' J . / ,, J

IMUIIUI.ll.tl), 1 · 11~ [l. l!l.
S : 1n [Jit'~ll ( 01~ilnl&gt;lll
(Ci:mhwr .1·~-1. · I .l5 p 111.

[11r!11: t

()aJ..I:m•l

l'.or•
11 .' ~ ·~l .11 ]'llil.ttlt•lplll.i ! Ft•flht!Hkl 1· 1
.u1rl ~~) l.ndrrll ){.(, ). ~ ~~~ p II\
~- ~ II I lit'!!" (,\,li h l' ( •. ~ ) .11 FlLI (Id.t

Thursdnv 's J!U Oll'S

( ·alih•rmu I• . i ·t.EV 1 ~ 1 .,\ l\"1l ;'I
Tndav ·~

(Fo" ·

/V.,Io\,., f.J •I. IO 1~ r 111
( ' fSt .l \ ' \ ,\'1 1 ( Sr h••urt•ll !l· 4) ur Su11
1-r.lltl lh&lt;' j l..,•tkr 4· 1&gt;). Ill l.' pIll

Oalo:tuti,t 1

\ttn lfl·..... ,1u7.

L&lt;&gt;UI~

1·111 ,md

d\tk \ I ll) /( I I~ pI ll
1\ t liiiii.J I1\ '•T\' ~ · ~lul

Tm.osdav"s scurcs

~ l h'tri1i! (,,

t n 7·1 •1- ~ ~np ut .

111! P111'hurl"h (\Vaj,! ll\'(

w.. ~... rn lll v l ~l• m
('.ill lmiii &lt;L

:-.1

'~• · !ilrt' J! {l l .. nr~ 'i-71 ,11 ( ' hiGJ~"

•

Pla ~· &lt;'ci [)av e
firs t t&gt;usl·rwm. 1111 rltt.'lr uchve ru.~·

~~·t lk.~ 1 ~nai~o~ l Chri.~ Oc • nnL·I~. fi r.;t hu.~l.!­
lliJn. l"r ,..~~ll!lll llt'n t .

Hl;u.:"

;~

seven th &lt;1n thu 1-mcter and 10th on

wiU be publishing a

uf

CLEVELAND 11\'DIANS: Naltltti 'Ducl

\•·" ' Y••rl..: ( l l.un~ K I I :?-71
n )~l'l • rnc 11 •.\ J. 1 l~ r m

j &lt;J

R cl\.il!!SI~o• r

IHlSTON IH\Il SOX :

TncLt~'s ~ames

I(,

Ooruwski, pitdwr , !rum

ll11llin .~.

All~t• l t•~ I I

vals nnd believes they serve au

import:ull roll· for all athletes , w1d

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

iht' \ni HII &lt;.JIIt&gt;lliii ( 1'3~Ut•

Crnlr;.~ll)i\· l~inn ·

f'LEVEI.h!\1l . 57

1\nll'rlt'llll IA• ;.~Jtur
OALTIM CIRt; ORIOLES: PlaC"ed 0 t"n
Mdlon;~ld. p ih· ll~r. ""!Ill' l :'i· duy dl~­
'-'h k ol 11~1 . rdru: ICII~· ''' July 20. Rc~·alll'ol

\ ll. oul., l , l'•n ~hllrl!h 11111,
l'l ul. loklp\ ll ,\ 7. t ·,, l.,r:ul" (,I II IJ
-;, I """ lt . r-.;,.w Y.. rl 7 11 11
llo • II~IH(I

na.o;chull

q

!'~'\:tires

llllly

about S l/2 monllis. She fini shed

Send Us lloo:r
.favorite Recipe

.

7.5

'i:o11 P •q.'•• 4 c·r:\:n'\~1\TI ~
I l.. n tl.• ·• S •.n l · r,111 • 1~r• • I
1 ·1m .11.'• • r•. \II • 111rt'.ll ~

!ill

l!lJ.

. ~:'i~

..'l(d

dl

l 'nl•sda\•'s

t:01 ~t rrn ftj,· i ~ l u n

fi;aw

.

1(,

.J l

has been bnck on the hoard

they Will IIlli l1old an Ol ympi c Fcs·
tival in 1997 . 'J'h c next fc sti\':t l i'
sdwllulcd filf 1'199, hnt is likel y to
be retooled .
Ocrter compctCd in four fc s ti ~

" There's no sense of sadn.ess .

Transactions

.M,

551.76 poinL,. She pre·
viously had won a silver medal in
the one-meter.
T helin. 23 , gave hirth ei g ht
monlhs ago to a ~on, Tanner, antl

You just have to dc:ll with re.1lity, "
the I 'JXX Cy Y nung winner said.

\\'l·~ l l"r ll llh· l ~iun

1 . "~ A11!!.&lt;'k~

'

LB.

I val·record

se:tSOII S.

Scoreboard
Baseball

$

Peaches .·249

Beans

be in'the bunt to make that team in Larry Nicholson of Tyler, Texas,
Atlanta ."
20-8.
McRae set an American record
Heavyweight Lamon Brewster
in the 167 1/2-pound clas s with a of Los Angeles lost 29·20 to
clean and jerk of 391 114. The pre- Davarryl Will iamson of Phoenix
vious mark was 385 3/4.
after having a six·point lead headMclbe 11 0"'1 holds tl1e Americ:u1 ing into 11nal round.
records in' all three categories of
Also, Pedro Pena ( 106) of Los
three weight c lasses - 141 , 154 Angeles lo s t 22-16 to Albert
1/4 and 167 1/2. U.S. Weight lifting Guardado of Topeka, and Arnulfo
ofticiaJs said McRae is believed to Bravo (I 12) of Souti1 Lake Tahoe,
be the first American to accomplish Nev .. lost 18· 11 to Eric Morel of
the feat.
Madison, Wis.
The !Iack-and·l1eld lineup was
In men 's platform diving, David
s treng thened late Tue sday when
Pich ler of Fort Landenlale, Fla .,
triple jumper Mike Conley sail) he finished with 698 .97, nearly
would co mp ete . li e joins Carl becoming the on ly person other
Lewis, Dan O'Brien, Dave Johnson U1an Greg Louganis to break 700.
an&lt;l Quincy Watts, among others.
Louganis held the previous festival
Five 1995 U.S. boxing champi- record, 680.91, sc1 in 1983.
ons were in gold medal matches,
" I knew I w;:Lo.; Uoing real well ,
hut three went out losett. The win-. but I had no idea what my score
ners were Carlos Navarro of Los was," PicOicr said.
Angeles, who won 31-9 over Jorge
Vanessa Thelin of Prnvo, Uurl1,
M!Jnoz of El Paso, Texas, at 119 became the first diving dnuble
pounds, and 132-potind n~ance · medali st when she won ti1c three'
Cauthen of Phi(adelphia, who beal meter springboard titie with a festi·

Simpson bust bolted to pedestal ' at Pro Football Hall of Fame extiibit

Basket

" In fant :L'Y :111d wishful thinking at
one time. everynnc thnught that I
would be hom a Dodger and die' a
Dodger. But ver.y few stories are
written that w~y nowadays in the
game,. and I'm .iusl another exrun·
pic."
. .
H e rshis ~r was L:hargcll w11h live
runs. five hits 'and four walks aml
cJic..l nnt s trike o ul a ha ll cr. He
hatlu't left a ~.: unl' this earl y since
pitching one innin g against HnUs·
tLi n .at Dodger Stadium on Aug . 16,
Jl)l) 1·. the year he retm;n ed from
reCOilSirm.:tiv~ shot!h.lcr surgery.
. C huck Finley (CJ -7) e nd e d
C leveland 's seven-game winning •
streak despi1e allowing four run s,
eight hits and tour walks in ~ 1/3
innings.

Hyde was an alternate on the
1988 weightlifting team and then
dropped out of serious competition
in 1992, after losing at the Olympic
Trials and then injuring his back.
li e returned at the U.S . Cbampi·
onships in April.
lie got off to a quick start Tues·
day in the 182 3/4-pound class. He
eq ualed the Americ an record of
308 1/2 pounds on his farst snatch
lift, then broke it twice wit h his
next two l.ifts - farst going to 319
1/2 pounds, thel(l30 1/2.
He needed to lift 380 1/4 in the
clean and jerk to gain a Spot on the
world championship rerun, and he
did that amount exactly o n his U1ird
lift.
"Winning tonight felt awesome.
The best thing was havin g everyone out here supponing me," Hyde
said.
"Nothing h~s changed. I'm still
looking to improve ·a little bit witi1
each co mpcti.\ ion . If I "keep lr
toge ther and keep impru vi ng, I' II

By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (1\P) - Nov. 4
could he a heavyweight day on the
Las Vegas Strip.
Mike Tyson says he'll fight
again Nov. 4, the same day Evander Holyfield and Riddick Bowe
are scheduled to meet in a rubber
match of their heavyweight fight
series.
Promoters planned to announce
the Bowe -Holyfield fight at Cae-

$299

linishing otT the Red., ,
"They're definitely scary."
Hoffman said. " I ~nt razzed a little
hit atHlut coming in last nighl :uuJ
getting onl y one oul for a save.
(See REDS on Page S)

.

Tyson says he will fight when Bowe and Holyfield enter rin~f

Green
Peppers

Ori:tn \VIIhauh t 2-7l. a n. : h~wr

prohahly wonhl h&lt;t Vl' hec u gone
way hdnn: I got h L"r~ "
.Sm1 th . 1X. hrokc hi s own major.
leag ue n ·c·urd earlier thi s seaso n

s1 oo

Large Size

Angels gain 6-5 victory over Indians
· ANI\IIIOIM . Cali!'. ll\ 1') - Cal·
ifornia 1\ngcb f:m s. w)w have
patiently waited .14 ye ars for the
team's first (lellil:tllt, Wl'fe star1i ng
to get impatient wiU1 Lee Smith .
After t!iving up a ·game-winnin g
gJ:.1Md s lam to 1\lhcrt Delle in th~
ninrh in ning at Clev\.!lan d Jas l
week . Sm ith a llowed two l Oth·
inning run." in Mo1Hiay n i~ ht' :-. lc)...;s
tO'Ihe lntlian "'.
TucMiav ni!.!lu . wi t h 42.-HiX
wntcllin~ llie J\1~ Cc111ral ancJ West
leaders do hattie, Smith was lu,&lt;tily
l)oned '" he made his c ustnm~ ry
S&gt;lnw walk l'r11111 th e kl't · fichl ·
tmllpe n. l3m IlL' gm lh\: fnns hack
qn hi s sid~.:. pitchinJ:! a st:nrclcss
ninth tt1r his 23n.l savt' .in a 6-5 vic' tbry over the Indians. '
.
· "The fans tlon 't hother me.''
ia'id Smith . whose thr~e hlown
~1ves this season all hnvc come nn
thC road "W hen 1 ~o out !hen.\ all
fscc is thc~ah: hL·r's knees . I' m not
thinkin g ahoul whal so meo ne
thinks of ml' . II' Ihal wa . . Ihe r:1~c . I

Lbs.

sa.94

:-.a,·c:-. .

fon:t:d int o the rotaiHllt hcl..'au . . ~,.· of
Sl'ott S:llldL'r:-;' d ho w ll' tHJin il b,
made Ill s lir:-.1 ~ lafl in mort' tha11 ;1
ye.a r and ;tll mwd four llib amJ ttnc
n,m over li ve innings Tucsdrty.
Doug llorhtler pitched into th ~
ei~hth~ k aving with runners on tlrst
and third an d two out .. Hoffman
came ori anc..l walked Reggie
Sarider.s to load th ~ hase s. then
slrud: out Tauhen . . rc in the game's
pivotal momc111 .
Tauhen se~ s in~l cd off Hoffman
wil11 two out in the 111nlh Monda ~
niJ:.'hl to (:ornpletc a th rcc-nm rally .
hut ll11l'lm;m gill 13oune to grounc..l

3

New Potatoes
lOUt. Bag $1.87

ELklic · r;lli i X' II'~L'L' ~ant .
Doth t' :tlllL':-. in tht· .-.era.:~ wen t
down to thl' L'lld . wit h lloll1n ; m
pitchin ~ out u! lruuhk twice lo ~L' I
his 1)th ;utd

DENVER (AP) - American
weightlifting records just aren't
safe at !be U.S. Olympic Festival.
On Tuesday night, Jim llyde of
Longmont, Colo., and Tim McRae
of Daytona Beach, Fla ., broke
American records on ti1eir way to
gold medals. Their performances
followed !be two American records
broken the night before by Robin
Byrd-Goad of Sumner, Wash.
The big performances by Hyde
and McRae capped a busy night
that saw festival records fall in diving, three U.S . boxing champions
lose and track and field draw
another big name.
Competition was sc hed uled to
cout inue today in B sport.\, including the start of basketball, and the
.gold medal games in baseball and
softball . Those playing outdoors
figured to be challenged by temperature s that were expeGted to
approach 100. ·

This Week's Specials
New Crop
Red or White
Sweet
Potatoes

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~

Hyde and McRae break records en route to gold medals
BfOWEN CANFlELD

had tlro pprd illl' lll X 112 ~ames
behind Color;tdo.
· 'Thi:-. :-. cnt.·, wa .. htg h~t.:ausc
w· c ' ll . f; Uknl't~ht-;utd·a·ha l f hehind
and we didn 't w:int f(1 get more
th an th:tt. " Tony&lt; iwynn :-~;lid . &lt;~ To
t:lkc lhe~l' IWt J ~ ; unt ~'~ w;as impor·
tanl lnr u. . 1\l'.t to ~L't our confidcn&lt;:c h:J,·k.
"\Vc ' n.: ;tt the -.t ; I ~ L' now w hl.'n~
we ncn l :1 h1 \.! 11111 It ;tlmo't ~ct:-. to
lhL' p&lt;lllll \i 1\l'tl' ynu :-,;ay. 'OK. wc
necJ to wu1 :o.L'\ '1.. :11 or l' l~hl in ;1 n•w
hcrt.' to !!l'l h.u.:k into thi " thin g.' 1
fcl'·l t hal :-~ wll~fL' we i\JC ." ·
The RL,ds 'ti ll lcatl the NL Ccn·
tr;:tl corniNI:thlv . The: P:tllres are
the only tl':lllt to. ~ivc them lits thi.11
se:L..;on - no o ~ hl'l' l t.:am h&lt;L" more
liHin ·!an: \7i(IOI'Il'." o t ~;Uhs l Ule Red~ .
' 'I'm {!lad,,,,,: only ~c.t them onc
more illlll' . · · ( '1ttdnna1 a t:aldll'r

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

At the U.S. Olympic Festival,

Page4
Wednesday, July 26, 1995

Padres top Reds
4-2 to win series
By ,JOE KA \'

Wednesday, July_26, 1995

\.:J" c.J

. Mon ..frt. 8-7

aK IPUG

Sun. Cloud

s.t.&amp;-5 .

(OO~l)OOK
Included in the ~ookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County residents, at no charge.
The recipes will be categorized as follows:
• Appeiners/Beverages • Bread/Grains
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
•Soups and Sandwiches

ISave $6800 I

!Save $55001

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY.314 TON LONG
WHEELBASE RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN

· BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY ASTIIO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN
• E•lended Chass1s
• Driver Side Air Bag
·Anti-Lock Bmkes
• A1r Coodmon
• Automatic Overdrive
• V•sla Bay Windows

• f ,.,::r Wmdows
• F v~ Locks
• T· lee' ,g

·PIS, PIB

· Sola/Bed

• C , se Control
• AMIFM.Cassette
• Captain Chatrs

COlOR TV/FIIIfiiGI.ASS RUIIIIIIIG IOARIIS

. lndlfect ughllllg

• tong Wheelbase

• Ra1sed Aoor

• Prem1um Wood PKg.
·Full Cor1ver51on •
• Alumtnum Running
Boards
•loadet!

·Color T.V.
• Onver Side Air Bag
• An!t·locl: Brakes
• A1r Condl[Jon

• Automahc: Ollerdrrve
• Vista Bay Windows

·PIS, P/B
• Powet Wmdows
• Power LOCks

• Indirect ltghl1ng
• Premtum WOOd Pkg.
• Full Con¥eiS4on
• Ftbefglass Runntng Boaros

• Trlt Steermg
• C1u1se Control
• AM!F~ Cassette
• 4 Capta1n Cha1rs

• Alummum Wheels

·LoadOO!
NO 0oc filM Dr!INSI!d '

. Sola/Bed

Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:
· , Holiday Cookbouk
c/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh 48969
Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.

Deadline
for all recipes
.
is October 20,-1'995

USI Pnc:e

Famory Rebate .

. .$10,219
l.llJ

list Prte .....
FactGry Rebtne

GW.C i s1Time Buyer

Tom Peden ~

Alowance To

S.IO Poce

Oi.olfierH!"Y"'
.. • 1500
Tom Pedefl Oecou1t ... • $631

B11A111 NEW '95
• 16 Valve Power

,'

• OrNer Srde-Alrbag

• Rear AnHock Brakgs.,._
• Power Steenng

• Power Brakes
• Custom Cloth tntenor
• Well Equipped'

$13.599
· I !lXXI

"""''" .. .

l.rsl Pr~ie
Factory Re~le
Tom Pedefl DISCOYii

.116m

Tom Peden DecOOli ' ·52.001

. $1,211

Sale Price

$11,388 ~~~~$1~!88
POlmAC
GIIAIII AM

• Power Brakes

· Dover S,je A1~ilg
• Power Door Lock~
• 4 Wheel AnHocl&lt; Brakes •AWfMSiereo
• Power S1eenng
· Steel !il&gt;fted Tires

• A11 Condil10n

• Styled Wheels

·AutomatiC

• Well Equ!IPOd!

• Dual A11bags
•PaW.r Steenng

• Power"Brakes
• Power Ooo1 Locks
• AM/FMSiereo
• T 1 ~ Steerr ng
.

'

Si\lfl Pnce

$17,688

• Deoy Wipers
• Custom Clolh lnten:ll
• S!~ed Wheels

NEW '95 BUICK LESABRE

•loaded'

I

1Save •2011 1

• A1r Co.-diiOn

, Power Steefrq

·Automat.:
· Dual Arbags

•Power Brakes

• 4 w~ Ani-Lock

•Power WnOOws
• AINFM Sleroo

Bralfes

TOU FREE 1·800·822·0411 • 312·2844
344·5941• 422·0756

'

$21,309
· $1.500
· $.2,1 21

• P~J&gt;Vet [)oo.' LOCkS

• T111S!eetm!j

·Custom Cloth tmenor
. · S~IedW~s
·Well Ei!Jipped'
~

0ox: FMlll De!M:roo

INoon • 6 pm
'

�\

•
Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 26, 1995

Woman shouldn?t have to play mother to sister's child
and the father of the baby is nowhere
to be found.
Lily has decided 10 keep the baby
and continue to live with us until she
finishes school in four or five years.
Ann, I have a 4-year-old son and
am looking forward to having him
start school. I do not wam another
and I recendy purchased a
. My child in my home. My sister's
21-ycar-old sister, "Lily," asked if she irresponsibility should not. have to
could rent a room so she could go to mess up my life. ·
_
college. 'we agreed that she would
If I ask Lily to move out, my
pay us $200 a month, which would family would consider me a terrible
include meals and utilities.
person. If she stays, I will be raising
Since then, Lily has made no another child, something I am nm
attempt to go 10 college, and her rent prepaned to do. I want to give Li Iy a
bas never been on time or in the full hand, but I'm not sure how to do it .
amount She just told me she is two Please give me some help.-- A MOM
months' pregnant She is not married, AGAIN IN TAMPA

Ann
Landers

DEAR TAMPA: Has Lily applied
to a college? Urge her to do so. and
suggest that she apply for a student
loan as well-· one !hat will cover her
tuition and living expenses. Then
help her find an aparlment, and move
her out. ·
..
Where are your parents? Are they
able to help? Every elfort should be
made to locate the father of Lily's
child. He is legally responsible to pay
support and should not be let olf the
hook .
I agree that you should not allow
your sister to mess up your life. Don't
weaken and let her stay with you, no
matter what. Insist that she take
responsibility for herself. It's about
time.

Vaughansifavelon
American·Queen
A Middleport couple traveled on
the maiden voyage (lf the largest
steamboat in the country, "The
American Queen." ·
Middleport's Ruhy and Dick
Vaughan told the M iddlep&lt;&gt;rl·
Pomeroy Rotary Cluh ahnul their
t(avels at the Rotary "s rnee1ing
Monday night at th e Heath
Methodist Church .
· The vessel IIM1k 17 days to travel from Pittsburgh , Pa .. tn New

Orleans, La., Mrs. Vaughan said. A
number of humorous incidents hap•
pened along the slow-paced trip
since speeds ranged from e1ght to

11 miles per hour.
., Each day was fully scheduled.
With continental hreakfasl.l\ served
beginning at 6 a.m. ami fmKI wa!\
served all day until a moonlight
huffel at II p.m.
At each pori nl' c;dl. pil&lt;&gt;cngc"
teamed ahoutthc pori and lhc ncarby siteS: Mrs. Vaughan said .
Pomeroy, Middleport and
Racine should make signs to wei·
come passengers. she said. A
Meigs County lnwn C&lt;lUid some
&lt;lay he a pori of call.
·

Dear Ann Landers: I beg you to
print this leuer in your column for the
benefit of all mothers and children
who have birthday parties in their
homes.
·
·
Unless everyone in the class is
invited to the party, please 'JlUt the
invitations in the mail. There is
nothing more humiliating for a child
of any age than to watch party
invitations being handed out in slass

However, I cannot understand why a
teacher would permit this to happen.
Surely teachers must be aware of the
hurl feelings of children who are left
out.
Thank you for calling attention to
a situation that could save a lot of
unhappiness.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a 15-yearold guy who has taken sall;ophone
lessons for six years, and I'm good at
it. The trouble is, we have too many
and not receive one.
Ann. you would be amazed at how sax players in the school band and
often this happens. If you can spare the director switched me 10 drums.
even a handful of kids from being
Mom won't let me practice at home
hurt by printing this leuer, you will. because she says it gives her a
have performed a valuable service. headache. Will you please help me?
--NO NAME, NO CITY PLEASE •• ARNIE IN CIDCAGO
DEAR ARNIE: Practice in the
DEAR N.N.N.C.: Here's the lener.

dinner.

I

I

$6.25.)

A~sociated

lli s Uatl!.!ht~..:l lound that •
•·ym.- ky ," hut.Sav;lt!l' didn't mind .
"rorttutatl'ly . nty wife was not
hothen:tl hv it eit her. otherwise we
would ILtV~ ill'l'll sil'l'pitt J.! in anulh er room or tryint' lo ,:!~I out of a

r•r·es."' \\

Despite a hri~k hnn:-.ing markcl, 1hc
well-h11ill lo~ t.:ah111 in ru~tk
Columhia Coun1y funk twn'ycar..; 10
sell al SI~).IHlO - S)4.000 l,;s,
lhan lite uri~i11al ;hkin).! prict..: .
Many potl' lllial h1Jycrs were
scarcll aw:ty hy the l1ouse's p&lt;L'\1 a."
the silc of one pt" upstare New
York'S mosl notoriou s lfiulliplc
murdcr:-o . \Vyky Ci;tles was convict_etl of conspiracy :1fll'r his fat.hcr.

brother. cousin ami fatht!r's •girlfriend Wl'fl' gunned down inside in
De&lt;:ernhcr I'!Xf&gt;.
Owners of tllller homes with
normions p;lsls m;ty no longer have
In st:fllc for a disun1ntcU pricl'.

Gov. (icor~L· Pa1;1k1 1s l'xpct:tcd 10

• MAIOEN VOY Af;f-- Ruhy and Dick Vaughan of Middleport
pnse with fht' captain nr the Amt'rirun Queen at a captain's recep ..
tiun. Tht' Vaugh'a n's recently trnveled ''" the maiden voyage or the .
Am~rit.:an {}Ut't'll frmn Piltshur~h, Pa~~t. tn New Orllmns, La~

Drug, alcohol conference held ·for social workers
. Mpre than 230 prevention spe- Gallia/Jackson/Meigs and WashciaJists, counselors, social workers
ington County )17 Bonn.Js .
and educators from Ohio, West
"Prevention smuegies arc often
Virginia and Kentucky came geared toward urhM am.J suhurhtUI
together in Athens over the week· seuings, hut rurnl ~treas ot our
end for "Overcoming Bt~rriers:
states have specictl m:etls mu.J we
Rural Alcohol and Other Drug are here lo nddre.o.; ."i them.'' saki Ken
Abuse Prevention Conference.".
Pickering , ExeL:ulive Director of
.
This conference , the first to HRS.
focus solely on the problem of rural
The 40 workshops presenled at
substance abuse, was .&lt;pnnsorec.l by the conference all had a rural focus .
Health Recovery Services (l'IRS) . They ranged from "Surtln' the PreHRS. is a mulli-tounty substance venlion Internet," a look at how
-abuse lre'atmenl, prevenlion and rur~l agencies cuuhJ at.:cess the
education agency with sites in - information superhil!hway for pre~
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Vinton vention informntion, · td "Country
and Washington counties.
Kids," an ex:uninntion of the
The program was funded resiliency and adaptahility of
. through a major conf~tre.ncc grant Appalachian teens.
from the Federal Center for SuhThe ahilily ofprimary care
stance Abuse Prevention. lhe Ohio · physicians to ade'4uately confront,
Department of Alcohol and Dru~ the issue of alcohnlism and drug
Atldiction Services and the abuse hy using prevemative straleAthens/Hocking/Vinton ,

Forget to savt: some ofyow favorite Ann Landus coiUJMS? "Nuggets
and Doozies" is the anJWer. Send a
self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or ml)nty order for $525 (this includes postage
and ·handling) to: Nuggets, cloA.nn
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
1/1. 60611-0562. (In Canada. send

a hcdroom .

CIIATII/\M. N.Y. (AI')

Gan;wootl Industries in Pai'ker~­
hurg, W.Va.

Rotary ~resident Lloyd Blackwood led the meeting and the
Heath Methodist ladies served the

music room at school. And P.S.:
Give serious consideration to
switching to the piccolo. Piccolo
players are in short supply, and they
do not cause headaches.
Confidential to Still Bleeding in
Liule Rock: Bind up your wounds,
and go on from here. Time wounds
all heels, and he'll get his, honey.

By DA Vm HAUliER
1 riter

gi~~

wa.o.; addressed by Dr. Barham

Ross-Lee, Dean of the Ohio University of Osteopathic Medicine.
"Because primary care physi·
cians are on the front lines of
healthcare ami treaDllent. they must
have the necessary tools :md skills
to be able In practice preventive
healthcare and to he nhlc 10 spot
alcohol prohlems. hcfut-o they
bt.!come alcnholism .and alcohol
depc11LICilCC.·· she said.
Dr. Ross-Lee nl!i.n called fur

ty," said one a11endee.
Working together was a theme
and a primary purpose of the ( lvercotrling Barriers Conference. Those
who auended learned what others
were doing. imparted some knowl·
edge of their own, and had rhe
chance 10 address the issues rhnr
make mral areas in our· three 'slatt:s
unique.

primary care physician anc.l the
.il!-i

whciiH.·r a IIHink·r. ~uit"idc. naluntl

tleath Of f'..'IOilV OLTIIITt'd ill il home.
Real l' ,..;!;(te agt·nt!' are not
rcquin.:d hy law lo reveal these
things. Out Httny hrokers !Cd they
musi act·ounl for a houst"'s historv

deci'SiOil allowm~ &lt;1 man to hrcak his
conrmct In hu·v a house he hdicved
was inhahitcJ hy poltc.:rgei:-.ts. sai&lt;l
Dou Sava~1.:. Johhvi"st fm the New
York ~1;111.: 1\:-.... oci;;tion ol Rl'dllor ...
:-lava~l.' lound out ... IX llltll)lh ....
aflcr huvin!.! hi ..; IH."W IHH!Il' th;1t it
hall an ~\:riC p;1st . ( 'la..;smatcs told
bcCHliS!;: Of

;j

1()4)1

his 14-ycar-old

St;lll.' L'OUrl

dau~lllcr

111:11 the

previous m·rup;mt dil'd in lhc room
Savage nnd his wHc were using ~1s

( icnr~L' l.cc

alway s told l,P~tollll'I'S what hap pencd at thl' ( i; ttcs hoiiSI,.' . ftt!Ufing
it was the houmahk thin~ to do iu'
a small town where IIH.'Y wouhl
find IIIII : uayw;l~ . An oltkr courk
lrorn New lr'ork City hought the
hmnc i11 11JS'J.
· 'Thnc were 111any people who
would not at the time ronsitlcr it,"

Lee said .
Some n·al L'~l:ttl' a!!l'llt:-. contend
it sllnnld hl' a huyL·r·.., "rL· .... pou!-.ihility
to ask lJLil' S lU H t~ if llltpka~; mt lli:.. to ·
ries htllher them. hu1 oppot.tCIIts of
tJt e hilf hl'lil'VL" it ShOUld he tlfl tO
Ihe sellct
·

WANTED
SERVICE TECHNICIAN
NEEDED
REFRIGERATOR, AJC
A MUST

Only Qua(ified Call

KEN'S APPLIANCE
985-3561

POMEROY

THE 1995

gre.rtter communication hctween the
community support network

sign kgisbtion that v.·onld exempt
n!·at estate ~~~cnts I nun disl'losing

controtrl." hL' ""id
R~:ll l'~1:•t ~· il~l·nt

a

way to efkcl "systemic change."
Her call for networking between
lhe two often at-odds groups of
professionals drew npplause. from
the audience.
"We really need
In wnrk together. Not for our sakes.
hut "" the people in the communi-

tion of the urganiZillion's ."Oth

anniversary.
: Of the 4,1irJO attendees, more
r.l!llll 1,900 were selected to pm1ici-

.

presenltd a .meUal after tompcling

in U1e joh interview event . Sl1e and
her home economics teacher at

SHALYN SEARLS
RVHS, Connie Bradbury, were recognizec.J for lheir achievcme111s :n
the recent meeting of the Gallia
County Local Board of &amp;lucalion.

ell;
Soflhall toss: nursery class Lynzee Tucker, Clayton Findley
:md Michelle Alley; primary ci;L"
- Zack lmhnden and Mallory Hill:
junior class - Bmmly Lane, Becky ·
Alley and Nicki Tucker:
Tu£ nf war: ·Junior diL"S -lc:un "
consisting of Heatll Brilllmrt, Nicki
Tucker. Claymn Findley, Lynzee
Tucker, Breit Wolfe, Lacy Tucker.
Mallory Hill and Michelle Alley;
adults - le."Ull consisting nf Mitch
Bahel, John Powell, Jerry Powell,
Heath Brillhart and Virgil Collins .

nitn .. prut'il )41"UUfJ.'i wish in~ tu
aitnounce mcl"tin~ and special
event.li. The t'nl~fitbr is ntit
desiAnrd tn p1· umut~ .'dlle.'\ m·
fund •·otiSt'fS ul' an}' t~ pe. llt'm."'
ate prinlt'd Ol.'i span• pnmit.'i ami
cotnnul ht' J,ttl:ll'~tntt't'd In run 01
spedfic nttlnht'r of chtp•.

r•OMI ·: IHIY - l.iv111~ in ll1c
Solution ~roup ol Nan.: nti~..·s
A.mmyn1cHIS rnL'l'tin!! Wcth!csday .. 7
p.m. at

S:~nc:tl

II cari ( alllllltc

Church on Mulhcrry ;\wnuc.

TIHIItSDA Y
llRADiliiRY - Mci~s County
Church of Christ Women 's l·"cllow. ship ITIL'l'tin~ Thursda.Y ~. 7:_30 Jl:lll.
al Dradhury (.'hnn.:h ol ( hnsl. Zum

Church will have devotions.
WEilNESilA Y
f'OMEROY - Wildwood liarden"Ciuh, 7:.10 p.m. Wednesday ,
home of Evelyn llnllnn . Roll call''
a nowcr ro dry.

POMEIHlY -Free clothing
day at the Salvation Army on llulternlll Avcnu,· Thursday, 111-12

i'OMI 'RoY -

l'omcn1y &lt;Omup

Thursday. 7 p.m. al Sancd llcan
Catholic ('hurdl on Mulhcrry
Mci~s

County

SATUIUJAY
ANl'H)lii'I' Y - Revival at
Faith Fcllowshir Crns:tdc for
Christ throu~h Aug. 4. 7:W p.m.
nightly .

P.A. Denn cru1se

•

said. "But the government says go
ahead and give adult doses of pesticides to your child."
The groups tested eight different
foods bought in Philadelphia. Denver and San Francisco: applesauce.
green beans, peaches, pears, garden
vegetables or peas-and-carrot s.
plums, squa'h and sweet pouuoes.
the report said.
Multiple pesticides were found
in all of the fruits and lwo of the
vegetahles tested, the report said .
The fruits contained more pesti cides and at higher levels than vegetables. though all of tlle detected
levels were within federal standards, according to the report .

Community
•

announced

serv1ce

Don Lrunhcrtnnd Leroy )\auters
were presented plaques in recogni tion of their community ~e.rvice.
when the Burlinghmn C':unp 72:10.
Motlem WtNillmen of Amenca held
its annual picnic recently .
The more than 50 auending

Kevh1 . and Kelly Milam
mmounce !he Otrlh of their second
clilld, a son, Dylan Keith. horn ar
the HolZer Medical Center June 16.
He weighed nine pounds. one
ounce and was 22 inches long. 1l1e
couple have a daughter . Kay_lee
Lynn.
Matcmnl grandparent~ are Carl
and Jackie Vanover of Racine. and
Ray :md Jackie Ginther of Porll;md.
DYLAN MILAM
Pqternal gran&lt;.lparenls arc Louise .
and Bill Soulshy of Pomeroy and Thoma&lt;, Pnmemy, and Wilma SeeRudy Fraley, Cheshire. Greal- '"'"'· Barlow. Ella Quillen nf Syra- .
c·usc is· a grem-greal grandmlJt.her.
~ grandmothers are are Ruth

enjoyed nn aflemncm of ,listening In

string music rrescnted by Chuck
an!.l Michael Williams. Roher!

White, Larry Jones, and Mr. ami
Mrs. Sh:1w. Rnsnlie Story :md her
cmnmlllee hosted the pknic . Mil ~

•

t.lret.l

Zi~gler

Di~mond ring t~rns up in

pet dog's dr9pp1ngs ·
GRASS VALLEY, Calif. {AP)
-Once Sbeni and Tim O'Connor
realized what bad gotten into their
dog, they couldn' 1 wait to get it
back out
Heath, a 5-month-old golden
retri,ever, swallowed a $7,500 diamond riilg as the O'Connors were
getting ready to leave for a trip to
Las Vegas.
When they realized later what

ject on endangered lowland gorillas.
The zoo announced Tuesday on the anniversary of the 1978 binb
of first test-tube baby Louise
Brown - that it has successfully
implanted an embryo fertilized outside the womb into a gorilla. The
baby is due in December.
The gorilla mother - Mata
Hari, also known as Rosie - lives
at the Cincinnati Zoo. The father,
Masuba. resides al the Henry Door-

-:~ailing proble_m

.

,....,...._

#

TEA FOR REENACfORS -Sarah Fi&lt;her,
standing, proprietor of the Victorian Parlor,
hosted an afternoon tea for the Civil War reenactors when they disembarked from the P.A.
De.nny during the 55·mlle crolise up the Ohio
River to old Portland for the B•.ttle of Buffington Island reenactment. With Oower basket•,
ribbons, and table decor, Fisher turned the stage

on Pomeroy's parking lot into a tea room and
served cookies and punch In the ladles and gen•
llemen in period costuming. Enjoying the
refreshments here are from the left seated, Bar· ·
bara Kemper of Gallipolis, Sally Gloeckner of
Racine, and Rebecca McCarty, Hunlinglnn, at
the table. (Photo !ly Charlene Hoeflich)

Scientists at Cincinnati Zoo await birth of first test~tube gorilla
By TERRY KINNEY
Ass!)Ciated Press Writer
.,CINCINNATI (AP)- Seventeen years after the fttst human was
born through in viiro fertilization.
scientists are awaiting the birth of
the first test-tube gorilla.
"A lot of times, research goes
from animals to humans. In this
case ... il came from humans to animals,'' said Betsy Dresser, who is
leading ,the Cincinnati ZoQ's pro-

sur~cry.

Hot

.

happened, they called the kennel
where the puppy was staying and
asked workers to - pretty please
- screen the droppings.
"We've had people ask us to
cbeck for worms, but never for a 4karat ring," said Empire Kennels .
CD'manager Pat DeNardo.
Employee Leah Owens was
given the messy ta&lt;k.

was unahlc tn a11en1l

due to recent hcm·t

ly Zoo in Omaha.
"This is a very significant milestone, •• said Ed Maruska, executive

director of the Cincinnati Zoo.
"With some vision, I can see this
application being utilized increasingly in the mountain gorilla population, as wele'
Fewer than 5,000 lowland gorillas are estimated to remain in equa-

torial Africa. About 325 are in
North American zoos and about
800 are in captivity worldwi&lt;le.

of 'hammer' pipes

, Under Dresser, the Cincinnati

Zoo pioneered the transfer of tiger
embryos in 1981. Since then, il'has
worked with elands, bongos. exotic
cats and other animals, prompting
.
the attempt with gorillas.
Tbe zoo's research team, which
included human fertility experts,
began the project last year, first by
charting the female gorilla's menstrual cycle and then rernoving a
dozen eggs.
The eggs were fertilized by the
male gorilla's sperm in a glass
dish. 'Three embryos were placed in

tlle female gorilla and ultra~ound
tests earlier tllis month confinned
the pregnancy .
Mark Rosenthal, curaror of
mammat's at the Lincoln Park Zoo
in Chicago, said if such experiments continue lo succeed, they
open up options to all zoological
parks that deal with endangered
species.
. In addition to breeding animals
over distances, he said, ,in vitro fertilization can be used with animals
that don't breed because of social
problems.

Special

Fans

• Box
• Pedestal
Oscilrati

PICKENS
HARDWARE
I

MASON, V. VA• .·
304·773·5583

•

owmru1
eanout
..

•

~

?.•

•

I

St-:~'·1
-

9

•

I

,.

.

.

..
.

~
~

Now one does .. .lntroducing the NEW Check Imaging Service

&amp;om Peoples Bank.

Free yourself from the everyday hassles of check sorting and
storage-your monthly checks get pre-sorted and you receive a
photographic image "of your statements and records to store every
month. Less clutter. Less filing. It's that easy. Come in and we'll start
you off witll a free personal binder right away. Imagine that.

.

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is ·coming
August 11, 1995.
Advertising Deadline Is
'
August 4, 1995.
.

AVeiiiiL'.

POMLRtlY -

already oonsiders infants and children when setting overall pesticide
standards, they noted.
Patrick Farrell , a Beech-Nut
spokesman . said the company's
pesticide standards are I 0 limes
stricter than the EPA's. " It's very
much a non-issue as far as we're
concerned," he said.
But Richard Wiles, the Environmental Working Group researcher
who wrote the repon. said the goverrunent needs to test pesticides on
infant - instead of adult - animals to better gauge a child's reaction to the substances.
"No parent will give an adult
dose of Tylenol ro !.heir c.ltild," he

•

Milam birth

Re UnI' n

of 1\lt:oholirs /\nwlymons meeting

Puhlk Lihrary Onard nH.:~:ting. I
p .rn . Thur .. lby. a t the Pomeroy
facilit y .

The groups acknowledged that New -York City. "I think baby food
the detected levels fell "well is very safe, but we bave to do betbelow" federal limits, but said the ter than we're doing. •'
food "still contains residues of
The National Academy of Scipesticides at. levels that have not ences concluded in 1993 tbat chilbeen shown to be safe for infants." dren are more sensitive ro pesticide
They also warned that any con- residue on fruits and vegetables
gressional action to repeal long. than adults. But it also said their
standing pesticide safety standards diets should be high in these two
could allow even greater amounts food groups because the health
of harmful substances into the ·benefits outweigh any potential
nation's sup pi y of raw and pro- risks from the pesticides.
cessed foods.
The environmental groups
"I don't think we should have a called for a separate set of pesticide
food panic," said Dr. Philip Lan- standards for infants and young
drigan, professor of pediatrics at ~hildren, but the food industry said
Mount Sinai Medical Center in that was not necessary. The Environmental Protection Agency

rite

...;_---Community calendar---: Th~ &lt;.:mnmunity Caltndar i~
piahlish~d a~ n fr~e ~~rvice tn

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

-News policy-

Church of God posts field day winners
and Clayton Findley; primary class
held iL~ annual field day on July H - Mallory Hill and Bren Wolfe;
a! the church with winners posted junior class - Becky Alley,
in several different types of compe- Brandy Lane and Nicki Tu&lt;:ker;
adult - Zane Beegle, Tim Baker
tition.
· Winners were as follows. in and Heath Brillhart; ·
50'yard marble carry: nursery
order:
class - Lynzee Tucker. Clayton
: 50-yard dash: nursery class Lynzee Tuckcr,.(~hclsie lmhotlCn Findley and Michelle Alley; prima·
aA&lt;I Clayton Findley; primary class ry class - Mallnry Hill: JUninr
- . Mallory Hill and Brell Wolfe; class - Heath 'Brillhart and Lacy
junior class- Brandi Lane, Becky Tucker; adult womeu - .Tunic
Alley aiKI Jerri Hill;
Maynard, Connie Chev;~ier '"'"Jill
Knopp; adult men - Brad May: 100-yanl da&lt;h: nursery cla&lt;s Cbelsie Imboden, Lynzee Tucker nard, .Zane Beegle and Jerry Pow-

Tuesday, adding that the company
monirors food production from soil
to processing.
"There ' s no need for alarm "
said Heinz's Deb Magness. "Baby
food is a very safe, healthy camponent of an infant's diet"
·
Residues of 16 pesticides were
found in .eight varieties of food
made by the three companies,
including possible carcinogens,
neurotoxins and others that may
disrupt the hormone system; the
Environmental Worlcing GroiiJl and
the National Campaign for Peslicide Policy Reform said in a report
Tuesday.

DEAR AL: Somewhere in your suggestions? - JYSELE JONES,
house, tlle packing in a faucet(s) Lafayette, La.
bas loosened. The "water hamDEAR JYSELE: Use 1/3 rubmer" effect occurs when the water bing alcohol to 2/3 water. You'll .
· in your pipes comes back up to avoid the "crystal-like crust"· by
pressure after you have run the placing · the ice pack bag inside a
second self-sealing bag.
water or flushed the toilet.
As the water reaches full presSTIJMPED: We've bad a numsure, it ''hammer.s'' against the· ber of requests from readers asking
packing, causing the pipes to - ·for a· source of tops for their salt
shake. A faucet with double ban·- and pepper shakers. We used to
dies is more likely to develop Ibis refer people to a company in Conproblem than a single-handled necticut that custom-made them,
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
faucet/tap unit
but they seem to have gone out of
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
We assume since your house is business. Can anyone help us find a
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: We
new that your bathroom sink replacement?
have lived in our newly cons1111cted
are of the former kind and,
FEEDBACK: For Paul Ingram
faucets
house for four years. Witllin the
you
are
lucky,
you
may
ftnd
the
of
Vicksburg,
Miss., who was lookif
past two months we have develculprit right there.
ing for a metal multiple-drawer Illoped a "water hammer" in our
On the other hand, if you aren't ing cabinet for storing his 3-112half-bath. When the water is shut lucky, the loosely packed faucet inch floppy disks, F.C. of PrC:=t~
off or the toilet tank gets full, we might be anywhere in the bouse, . Ariz., writes that they are available
bear the water pipes shake in the making the problem that much from Global Computer Supplies.•
walls. Should we be concerned harder lo pinpoint (when you run 2318 East Del Amo Blvd .. Dept.
and, if so, wbat can we do about it? the water in any part of the bouse; 61, Compton, CA 90220 . Their
- AL,SCHROECK, Baton Rouge, the water pressure wi h decrease Customer Service number is 1-800La.
sliglttly in all your pipes).
227-1246.
Now ror the solution. Unless .
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
you are very handy and know bow P.O. Box 240, Hardand, VT 05048.
to re -pack whichever 'faucet (or Questions of general interest will
faucets) are to blame, we recom- appear in the column. Due 10 the
In an effort to provide our read- mend you call a plumber. The volume of mail, personal replies
ership with current news, the Gal· repair of the "hanuner" isn't very cannot be provided. ·
/ipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily urgent, but !.he noise is probably
Sentinel will not accept weddings annoying enough so that you'll
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
after 60 days from the date of the want to have it done sooner rather Nash .. Cummings are co .. nuthors
event.
than later.
of "~sk Anne &amp; Nan" (WhetAll club meetings and other
)) EAR ANNE AND NAN: • stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
news articles in the society section What are the proportions of alcohol Two Prize Problem-Solvers
must be submitted within 30 days to water used in the making of an Share Their Secrets" (Banta~)­
of occurrence. All birthdays must ia; pack that you can keep on hand To 01iler, &lt;alll-800-888-1220.
be submitted within 42 days of the in the freezer for emergency situaoccurence.
tions? I've misplaced my recipe.
Copyright1995 NEWSPAPER
All maierial submitted for publi.,
Also, I had s'ome problem with a ENtERPRISE ASSN.
cation Is subject to editt.ing.
(For information on how lo
little leakage along !.he top of
self-seal plastic storage bag while. communicate electronically with
my last ice pack was in the freezer. this ' cOlumnist and others, conQ
A crystal-like crust formed along tact Ameri&lt;a Online by calling I·
the outside
of the "zipper." Any 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.

'

The Mt. Moriah Church of Goo

By DARLENE SUPERVU..LE
Associated Press Writer
WASiflNGTON {AP)'- Baby
r~ makers say their products are
safe despite environmentalists'
claims that pesticide residues in
them could be hazardous to chi!dren.
.
Spokesmen for the Gerber,
Heinz and Beech-Nut companies
said they have strict procedures for
ensuring that the smallest possible
amounts of pesticide residues make
their way into this important food
source for babies.
• 'All Gerber baby foods 'are
safe," spokesman Van Hindes said

ASK ANNE • NAN

RVHS students competes
at national FHA convention
· Sh~lyn Searls of Bidwell partici· pate in II categories: applied techpaled in STAR (Students Taking . nolngy , ch:trter scrvil:e rrnjcct ,
Action with Recognition) competi- chapter showcase, entrepreneurtion at the 1995 national leadership s~ip, focus nn chilcJren, food serJl!eeting of Future Homemakers of vice, illuslratcJ talk. interpersonal
America (FHA/HERO) in Wash- corpmunications. jnh interview,
.
ington, D.C .• on July 9-13.
parlimnenlary proc~dur~ and skills
'Throughout the week, memhcrs, for lite.
advisors, alumni ami guests culmi·
.Searls, a sophomore at River
nhted a year celebrating "50 Years Valley High Schml .•md U1e daugh··
L-eading the Way - Families, 1 ter of Terry and Mary Searls,
Careers, Cnmmunilics" il) recogni- received a ~old .111m aw:u·U ami WIL"'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Environmental groups contend ·pesticides are common in baby food

New York bil·l would
keep· houses'~ eiark
secrets hidden

· The Della Queen Ste:unhoal Co.
built the sister ships the Mississippi
Queen and the Americ:tn Queen.
Both ships offe! three to 16-nighl
c ruis~;s. Mrs. Vaugh;m saitl .
The Great Repuhlic - later
renamed the Grand Republic was the largest ~lcamhoal until
In3 at 335 feel long and .I I feet
wide.
But. the Mi&gt;Sissippi Queen wa'
built in 1973 .and measured 3H2
feet long and 70 feet wide. The
American Queen ex1e11ds 418 feel
and 81J feet wide .
· The huildcrs of 1l1e Americ:m.
Queen wp11 hac~ in ftistnry lti '
tle sign lhis Vt!s~d .
The Rotary's guests included
Mark Circle. grandson of Chuck
Blakeslee, and Carl Russell. who
formerly lived in Racine . Russell is
thl.! human re so un.:e~ director at

Wednesday, July 26, 1995

1

CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD IN
THIS YEAR'S EDITION

-

-992-2155

37HISS

p.lll

..

~_...._

··-

Ntltorrrilk
75H9S5'

NtwMio.
7~1101 7

nw Pb.lru roo ~
7'17 4H7

S76-71Z}

'

�•

__""!,

Page

8 • The Daily Sentinel.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.
.•

Wednesday, July 26, 1995

Wednesday, July 26, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

.•

•
•

NBC reruns

Ohio University
,
College of Osteopathic Medicine

..

•

...
....
...

top weekly

Family
Medicine .

"

•·

WEll'

ratings ·

By SCOTT WR.LIAMS
AP Televlskln Wrller
John C Wolf, D .O.
NEW YORK (AP) - Reruns of
Associate Professor
NBC's hottest series edged origilU!I
of Family Medicine ·
editions of ABC 's •' PrimeTime
Live" and "20120" news magazines to bring the peacock netwodr.
rules which every gun owner a victory in the weekly Nielsen ratshould follow:
ings.
-NEVER store a loaded gun.
"Friends," "Seinfeld" and
The only time a weapon should be "ER" _ the core of NBC's Thursloaded is when it is in your direct day night lineup- finished 1-2-3
personal conuol (in your bands or for the week of . July 17-23 .
your bolster) and you are ready to " PrimeTime Live" and "20120"
use it
·
finished sixth and seventh, respec- . NEYER point a gun at a per· lively.
son or anything else you don't
NBC won with an 8.5 rating, 16
. intend to shoot.
share, less than half a ratings point
-NEVER assume !bat a gun is ahead of ABC's 8.1 rating, ·1 6
· unloaded.
·
share. CBS was a close third, with
- NEVER discharge a weapon J!!l8 orating 15. sill®
unless you kiiow llie bu1let will be
TheFo~· Broadcasting -Co. :
safely stopped (do!J't sboot into th" . which programs only 15 of the 22
air or off into that open lield). . ·
prime-lime hours, earned a 5.2 rat.:... ALWAYS store your rifles, mg, 10 share.
shotguns and handguns separately
The perform.ance of .Holly·
from !beir ammunition, preferably wood's low-rated "emerging" netwith each under separate lock and workS wilted in the summer beat.
key. This makes it very unlikely Warner Bros.' The WB network
· that your children or an inuuder earned a 1.5 rating, 3 share, and
. could get both gun AND ammuni- Paramount's UPN had a 2.3 rating,
lion together as a lethal combina- 4 share.
lion.
One ratings point represents
It is also a good idea .to ptore 9~4,000 households, or 1 percent
· firearms in a condition which · of the nation's 95 .4 million TV
makes them inoperable. For homes.estimated by Nielsen Media
instance, remove the bolt from Researi:b. Share is the percentage
rifles or take the barrel off .shot• of sets hlned to a specific network .
guns. Tbts way, even if the children ·in a given time period.
manage to find the key to the gun
ABC's "World News Tonight
cabinet, they won't be .able to fue with Peter Jennings" held onto Its
the weapon.
.
_
loclc as network TV's highest-rated
If your husband IS followmg newscast with an 18.2 r~ting, .18
these rules, then you are over-react- share. Tom Brokaw's •'NBC
ing. The ,chance ot a fuearm-relat· Nightly News'· was second, with a
ed accident around your bouse is · 6. 7 rating, 15 share; and "CBS
very slim. Instead of tragedy, you Evening News" with Dan Rather
may discover that the shotgun had a 6.4 rating, 14 share.
becomes a source of family•cen- · · The ABC newscast has won 150
tered activity. Shooting sports such of the past 151 weeks.
as uap, s·keet and sporting clays
The Top 10 shows, their netcan provide much pleasure for. all works and ratings:
of'the family. In fact, the NatiolU!I
"Friends," NBC, 16.7; "Sein·
Safety Council ranks bunting and feld,' ' NBC, 15.8; "ER,'' NBC,
other shooting sports as among .the 14.0; ''Grace Under Fire,'' ABC,
safest of all sports.
12.2; "Roseanne " ABC 12.1·
''Family Medicine" Is a weekly "PrimeTime Liv~." ABC: !1.9;
column. To submit questions, "20120," 11.8; "NBC Monday
write to Jobn C. Wolf, D.O., Night Movie: A Matter of Justice,
Ohio University College of Osteo- Part 2,'' NBC, 11.5; "Murder, She
patbic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Wrote,'.• CBS, 11. 3; "Home
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Improvement," ABC, 11.1. ·

'

2UTER

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

(

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY,JULY 29, 1995

.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: Are there
any new findings regarding panic
disorder? It travels in my family
and all of us have been on various
medications and !berapies.
DEAR READER: Panic disorder is a disabling and poorly understood condition, 1113rl&lt;ed by uncontrollable periods of incapacitating
anxiety that bear little or no .relalion to external circumstances; The
affliction nsually responds to psychological counseling, in cot\jnnc. lion with the judicious use of anti• anxiety prescription drugs, 1such as
. Xanax and Ativan. There are no
: new clues regarding th; 'cause of
· panic disorder.
. · To give you more information, I
: am sending you a·free copy of my
. Health Report ''Mental and Erno: tiona! llhiess." Other .readers who
· would like a copy should send $2
plus a long, self-addressed,
: stamped envelope to P.O. Box
· 2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
. sure to mention the title:. .
DEAR DR : GOT.T: I have a
· friend who constantly uses nasal
: sprays, yet be seems to have
: numerous bouts with colds. Is there
· a cause and effect in this practice?
: What are the drawbac~ to constant
• : use of this type of inhaler?
'·' - : DEAR READER: Nasal
: inhalers (such as Neo-Synephrine)

that are purchased without a prescription and used as decongestants
are marvelous for the acute relief of
nasal shiftiness. cau$ed by colds or
allergies.
.
However, they have one serious
drawback: rebound. When used
regularly for more than a few days,
they may actually aggravate nasal
congestion. Therefore, most physictans recommend nasal sprays for
bri~f periods only,
Your friend may be over-using
these products (thereby causing
congestion), or he may be relying
on them mappropnately. For exam- ·
pie, if be has allergic rhinitis (from
pollen or dust), he might find that
oral anti-histamines (such as Actifed) are more suitable. Also, if he
bas Chronic sinus infection antibi. otics would be more approprlate.
. I don't believe that his inhalers
are making him more susceptible tq
colds, but thev .could certainly be
worsening hi&lt;. symptoms.
There are prescription nasal
sprays (such as Van~nase AQ)
that contain cortisone and do not
cause rebound. These, too, are
exuemely useful for nasal stufflness, espc;cially !be congestion that
accompanies allergic reactions.
Your friend's doctor may wish :to
· prescribe these products.
· . DEAR DR GOIT: My38-yearold husband has puffy, droopy eye-

32

iill

... tM- ))

HAULING &amp;
--EXCAVATION'·

· lltllestane &amp; Gr,Ye~
Septic Systems, Traler &amp;.
Hause• Sites•
Reasonable Rates

Joe N. Sane ·••

SAYRE TRUCKING
.614-742-2138

oz.

•

•Sepllc Tanka

•Plumbing
•Water Lines - etc.
-concrete Work
oQfavel Hauling
•WeldinWFabrtcatlon
tertlfled
Llcenaed111onded
25 Yewa Exparlance

.
LB
99(
Chuck •••••••••••••••••••••••

CAB CO. INC.
I~·-Owners~flobert
Barton

&amp;

Harry Clark
• 992-9949 . 992-6471

Mon - Fri 8 a .m. · 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Su.n. by appt. only
. Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.

'

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.00

Having Problems,
need answers to
tough questions
. tall&lt; Iive to a
Personal Psychic
Now!
1-900-825-3800
Ext4274
$3.99/Min 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

---- ~ ···

f'REE
ESTIMATES

· .· . $

· . .. .

NEW LISTING- Cozy Country Living· Pine Grove Road· 2
bedroom home silting on 2.5+ acres of levelland. Has a bam
&amp; some fencing for a pony or cowl Small 1 room house with
attached sheds for a gat-a-way and storage. Rear enclosed
porch. Great Starter Home or a peaceful retirement home.
ASKING $45,500.00

•

31b. bowl

.

!;JirE!CJcleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

1

ARMOUR TREET
LUNCH
MEAT
oz.

·79c

Located· at 909 Mossman Circle In Point
Pleaaant W. V. Witch for signa. Millie De1He'ae I
has sold her home and will be selling the
'
• LETART-' Manuel Ad. 1+ acre vacant lot perlect for building . following:
Ethan
Allen
Dinette
Sel,
2
Jlll.
hutch, 2 pc. LF!. suite,
or mobile home site. TPC water available. ASKING $3,500 .
coffee table &amp; end tables, Sylvania 25" TV, 4 pc. water
fall B.A. suite, antique dresser, metal bed, dinette set,
POMEROY· Have you ever wanted to own a Mini FArm with

.

COME ON IN AND SEE OUR SELECTION OF.PROPERTY
AND HOMES. ALSO CHECK WtTtt US ABOUT HOW
EASY IT IS TO LIST YOUR HOME. NOW IS THE TIME TO
BUY OR SELLit WE'RE THE COMPANY TO GET, TO
.
HELPYOUII
HENRY E. CLELAND JR ...................................... 992·2259
TRACY L. BRtNAGER.;.......................................949-2439
SHERRI L. HART..................................................742·2357
KATHY M. CLELAND........................................... 992-6191

.

OFFICE....................................................;;,,......... 992-2259

JOY DISH
DETERGENT ·
220Z.

(

WHITNEY PINK
SALMON

14.-75 oz• .

$129
COTTON ELL- BATHROOM·
TISSUE

TIDE ·ULTRA
DETERGENT
'
98-1100Z.

.&gt;

4PK

89c

couPotr6ooo,

ROSEDALE PEACHES .
OR PEARS ··
290Z

79c

FOR STRIPLE
COUPONS. MAX.

soc·

Cattle family touts
· · environmental farming

GOOD ONLY
THUR. 7·27

( .

,__

-~.

I

Mason, WV

18 yrs. plus
Procall602-954-7420

s
NEFF REMODELING

•

SERVICE
Houae Repair &amp;
Rem.,.tlng
· Kitchen 6 l'jillh
Remodeling_
Room Addition•
Siding,.Roofing, ·Patios
Reaaonllbta
lnaurea - Experienced
Call Wayne Nefl992-4405
For Free Eatimetes

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Speci!llizing in Custom
, . Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
. 992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800-848·007
DARWIN. OHIO

.

'

4/1:W5 I

Lonely? Find Him
or Her We Have
their Name and
Telephone
Number Call Now
1-900-388-0200
Ext 8152 $2.99
per Min ·
must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

Using the Cltmifieds
Is as Easy as ...

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

-- RbBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Mason, WV. - Phone 773-5785 or 773-5447
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON #66 .·
Auctioneer: Kevin Meadows #1191
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH 1.0.
Not responsible for accidents
or lose of property
Licensed and bonded In Ohio,
&amp; Weal VIrginia #66

c~~ ~t:YF~/'1

-

•
Has Part T1me
•

•

Positions A,railable
.For CNA's.
ALL 3 SHIFTS

Contact Jan Elias, ADON
At 333 Page $t.
Middleport, Ohio
992-6472

Get Your Message Across ·
With ADally Sentinel
BULLETIN BOARD

*600 column inch wttkilays
*8" column Inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE IT 992·2155
BULLETII
2:00 PM DA~

--~-- .. -~:
DUU"t

PUBLICATION!

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

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
.. when you need a car rentcil.
We Hare Cars and Vansl
Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.
. OH. 45631

.
'

• Garages.

.MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, O.HIO

. Taka the patn out of · · • Complete
· painting. Let ua do 11 for · • Remodeling
you. Very reasonable,
Free Estimates
Stop &amp; Compare
Before 6 p.m. leave
FREE ESTIMATES
meuage.
·
After 6 p.m.
985-4473
814-985-4180 ........ '

1 _800 _486 _1
Bus. (614) 446-9971

Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
· Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

• New Homes

:. 1 : e ~

=••• =•

I

:. ~ : . • :

:t

·

992-3954
Emergenc y Phone 985 ·3418

7/22194

NEW HOME

H&amp;H SAWMILL

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Waiting for owner
Sedvdedo•2waodetl

fort able
Bondsaw Mill

New 11omee • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL

aaes (mort availalllt)

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

3 BR/2 BA, TUppM'S Pl.

.

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eanlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2_168

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

ByDEBRIECHMANN
Associated Press Wrller
.
SHARPSBURG, Md. (AP) - Bill and Mary Poffenberger won't let their cattle drink from sueams and
springs that drain into. the Potpmae River in western
Maryland. It's not good for the Chesapeake Bay in eastern Maryland.
Instead of eradicating the thorny multiflora weed that
can pverrun pastures, the Poffenbergers manage it in.
hedge rows that provide sbelter for their cattle, wildlife
and birds, such as the rare loggerhead shrike.
.
And they have turned farm fields into pastures plant• · - ·ed with grasses that prevent runoff and erosion and
: allows them to graze their 235 cattle year-round. ·
''ln.terms of the environmental aspecL•, they are on
··
the cutting edge," ·said Scott Barao, extension livestock
specialist at the University of Maryland at College Park.
·. "Just the work they are doing with their .cattle :water
system to keep the cattle out of t.bC sueams is a tremendous benefit."
· .
The Poffenbergers are among seven regional winners
of this year's National Cattlemen'~ .t.ssoeiati!m·Envi· ·
ronmental Stewardship Award. One of .!be seven will be
selected for the national award in January.
The·other regional winners are: G.W. Jones &amp; Sons
Fartn, Huntsville, Ala.; David Willinms f'111111, Villisca, .
Iowa; Heritage Beef Cattle Co., Wheeler, Tex~s; Sitz ·
Angus Ranch, Harrison, Mont. ; Babbitt Ranches,
Flagstaff, Ariz.; and Mortenson Family Land Limited
Partnership, Pierre, S.D. . ·
·
The cattle on the Poffenbergers' 200 a~res, and 440
. other acres they manage, used to drink water from two
-springs and a well. Rain would wash !be manure and
·muck the cows created at the water stations into waterways destined for the Chesapeake Bay across the state.
The runoff, filled with exua nutrients, helped create
algae blooms that choked off oxygen to aquatic life in
the bay.
With financial help from a federal soil conservation
program,- the Poffenbergers set up a system of drilled
: weDs, pipes and troughs so they could .provide water at
: , nine sites wbere the catlle graze..
""'"'
·
This way, the cattle don't have to walk very far to
get water, and their manure ends up being dispersed throughout tbe land wbere it acts as a natural fertilizer
for tbe grasses grown to feed them .
·
"Do you smell manure?" Bill Poffenberger, 61, asks
: . bis visitor. "You're amongst235 head of cattle and you ;
don't smell cattle. We graze our cattle 365 days a year.
They neyeJ go into a barn.'' -·· , . ~·.
·The couple used to grow corn, wheat; ~. barley
and soybeans - some for tbeir cattle and the rest as a
cash crop. But in 1990, they became convinced that
. they couldn't make money on crops planted on the
:billy, rocky land.

&gt;

St.

Wllltr, heat pump, lteavlly
Sears cold spot refrigerator, Tappen microwave,
Insulated- Must seal
Maytag wringer washer, tubs, old doll, blue fiddle .
. 12 ml frCIII P1111eroy,
botlle, figurines, vases, Amber &amp; Clear B.R. lamps;
· ligurine lamps, Kraut cutter, apple peeler, Interstate old
17 tti. from AIHns
radio player combo., old metal airplane, blue &amp; while
. '59,000
quill, embroided 'quill &amp; pillow shams, sheets, llnne~s.
614-992-2713
dolies, pocket knifes, Bear Wallow School house
palnled by E. Donnam, baseball cards· Lou Brock,
Harmon Kilebrew, Don Baylor, Literature of America
Book, pots, pans, Christmas Decoration, gun rack,
fans, toaster oven, wooden ironing board, drapes,
insulator, old copper lea kettle, jars, stone jars, lawn
ALFALFA
.chaoiir s, yard tools several hand tools, vise, grinder,
come a long, t6 ft. exl. ladder, wheel barrow, 3.51awn
AND MIXED
mower like new &amp; more .
HAY
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
·FoR SALE

-

FRI. 7·28

t

SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1995
10:00 A.M.

SYRACUSE- Great Ptacell Nice Locationll Tl1is horne sits on
a nice quiet street. Has 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. large llvl~g
room, equipped kitchen, dining room. Refrigerator &amp; range
less than 1 yr. old. Also there's a sidwasher. Utility room with
newer washer &amp; dryer. Front porch, side dack,.jlpprox. 3/4
acre tot with lots of flowers, trees and soma fencing. Call for
. . your appt.
· ASKING $55,000

(

59

BLIC
AUCTION

OFFICE 992·2259

320Z.

SHEDDS.

CONSTRUCTION

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

a nice 1 112 story home? Wail hera it islt 6.67+ acres of
groufid-'partlalty fenced, nice garden area and a great yard.
Home has 3 bedrooms. nice large living room, bath. utility
room, kftchen and dining room. Close to town yet alit~ extra
of Country·LMng. All this can be yours for $39,900.00 ·

1OB

. .

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELII';JG .
•SIDING
•ROOFING
· .-PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614} 992·2753

P
OUN
HAMBURGER
SLICES .

Ph n3-9173 FAX n3-5861

614-992-2834

Custom Building &amp;Remodeling

(

o,

-

. COMMUNITY

Real Estate General ·

KRAFT
BARBEQUE ·
SAUCE
18 oz.

Unisex Someone special in your area
is seeking that dream mate to share a
life full of love, romance, happiness
and all the pleasures of life.
1-900-776-3005 Ext. 9387
$2.99 per minute .

.,

•.

PETER
GOTT, M.D.

· Knighl, a 1993 Meigs Hi~h · the. satellite communications sysScbool graduate, will earn cred1ts terns and wideband communicatoward an associate degree in tions course at Keesler Air Force
applied sciences !brough !be com- Base in Biloxi, Miss.
munity college. ·
. .Wise learned how to operate,
install, test, adjust and maintain
:w.va.
· After a six·week basic training ChadJ. Wise
fixed and uansportable satelliteAir Force Airman Chad J. Wise, · wideband com1ilunications. equipat Lackland Air Force Base in San
·
Antonio, Texas, he will be trained son of John and Pam Wise of ment.
Wise graduated in 1992 from
in ground radio conununications.
Racine, recently gtaduated from
Southern High School.

-- ----

Vallous American Wheels M Sala

Authorized AGA Distributor
Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Steel .
· Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
Aluminum/Stainless
No Job toO large or too smalll
Oxygen Acetylene co, ·
Helium all sizes Medical Grade
Propane Trimix Ultra Mix Mig Welders

'ftiiCBIIO

GROUND

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

Christopher L. Knight
Christopher L. Knight, spn of
· Mr. and Mrs. Vincent E. Knight Sr.
' 'Of Pomeroy, recently enlisted Witb
· .tbe U.S. Air Force at Parkershurg,

formerly Poor Boy Tires
Dual Elchaust tap in's
Glasspack ................ $109.95
Dual Exhaust lilp in's
Turbo's .....................$119.95
Alignment Front end ... $19.95
Alignment four wheel .$34.95
Rotation &amp; Compulor Bal. lour
wheel ......................... $t9.95

(

DR;GOTT

---:-----Military news-----

Imperial Tire
. Service

Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, BloWn
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows,·Garagi!!S.
Free Estimates

:._

..

12

lids. This seems to 'have developed
over the last several years. What do
you recommend?
DEAR READER: Puffy eyelids
(wbicb may droop liecause they are
heavy) can be caused by a variety
of conditions, ranging from fluid
retention (due to heart or kidney
disease) ki obesity and suess. Your
husband should liave a thorough
examination, blood tests and X·
rays by his family physif=ian.
.Once a diagnosis is established,
the doctor can prescribe appropri-·
. ate therapy .. Remember also that
heredity may play a role in bow ·
your husband appears; if his father
or mother has puffy eyelids, he
may develop them, too, as he ages.
Copyright 1!1!15 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For lnformalion on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and ,others, contact America OnUne by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Installing, fnc.

We will ins.trui..carpet~
- · - ·ano floor coverings. .
Give us a call at
614-992-3379 '
. Jg\'ears Experience.
Hours
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

GATORADE

'

::-counseling could help panic disorder

Buzz's Car:pet ·

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

.

''

317 North 2nd
Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
Moo-Sat.
9am-5pm

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS
CUBE

Putting on the ritz requires less glitz
By CAROLYN THOMPSON
" But don't get too comfortable: them.''
Tbe dress code had inspired
Wearers of jeans, T-sbirts, shorts or
Associated Press Writer
some embarrassing moments.
BOSTON (AP)- Maybe it was · sneakers still won't get a table.
In 1993, a sweater-wearing
. the change in weather. Maybe it
The Ritz-Carlton's new policy,
-was the change in :ashion.
which .took effect Monday, foi- Mayor Raymond Flynn was told he.
The folkS at Boston's Ritz-Carl: - low.ed a survey of guests and could not enter wi!b a business delton
are loosening tbeir ties, allow- staffers, and a look at· tbe fashion egation from Galway, Ireland: The
'
maitre d' was praised for enforcing
·• · mg gentlemen guests to go without scene.
·
theirs.
The survey found that while the code.
· · The hotel !bat not too long ago people under 40 and in their 50s
The 68-)'ear-old Ritz-Carlton is
· showed a tieless mayor the door and 60s favored a stricter dress . one of many businesses recogniz· ..says it is bowing to the wishes of code, 40-something boomers fiked ing !bat there is a more casual feel
·· its customers -especially the big- informality, Laurie Uerz, Ritz- afoot.
Carlton public. relations director,
;· spending baby-boomers.
Coqiorate giants Ford and IBM
earlier this year relaxed their but; :- Diners sliD are required to "put said Tuesooy.
. on tbe Ritz" at !be hotel's Dining
Not surprising, said Scott toned-down dress cocles. And
Room and The Roof lounge, but Omelianuk, fashion writer for GQ Chrysler, Motorola, American .
. the sUict jacket-and-tie dress code magazine.
.
Express, PepsiCo, Chase Manbat·
. bas been relaxed in the Cafe, the
''They were the first group to tan and tbousands of others have all
)lar and the second-floor lounge. wear jeans to school," be said. · instituted "casual days," according
. Ties and jackets are now "recom- ''This is just one more step for to this month's issue ofGQ. '
.. · mended," not required.

cJ&amp;t

-

"

Country Naturals
INSULAtioNlf
&amp;
.MIDDLEPORT
539 BRYAN PLACE
I
G'ft
I S
992-2772 .
· Office Hours: Uon ...frl i
8:00 a.m.-3:34&gt; p.m.
Accessories
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

Monday thru Sunday

.....,....,..,......,.,..,.,...,...,...,,........,.._....,--.IJ'

~:,""~~~

..,.
Question: My husband wants to
get a shotgun for deer bunting. I'm
concern~ about having guns in the
· bouse, especially because we have
children. Can you help me convince him that guns are dangerous
and shouldn't be allowed in the
home?
Answer: There is no question
-. that firearms can be dangerous, and
• they !1fe particularly dangerous in
the bands· of an unuained user.
: Children are fascinated by IJllything
; that they are not supposed to have
7
.....:- mcelire31ms-.:::and are;-lhere: fore, drawn to them . So you do
: -·have good reason for concern.
. :' Most households contain many
: · 'potentially lethal things: chemical
: . 'drain openers, laundry detergent,
• · gasoline for the lawn mqwer,
;. kitchen knives, etc. The safe uti·
· . lization of these beneficial items
· · requires some planning and educalion.
As a gun owner myself, I know
the use of fuearms is no different.
When operated and stored proper·
ly, firearms pose no threat to your
children's health. In fact, injury
. from bouse hold chemicals and
lawn mowers are considerably
. more common than iojnries related
· . to firearms -assuming that you
: don't live in a gang-controlled area.
: . Instruction in ftreann safety is a
'· prerequisite for obtaining a hunting
: · license in many states, including
: .Ohio. Tbe department of natural
resources in your state can direct
you to an approved safety course. I
T
suggest thatyou, your husband and
any older children take such a
course before your husband purchases the shotgun.
Firearms are no!bing more than
a piece of '"achinery. Because you
are going to have a ftrearm in your
home, you should have sufficient
understanding about its operation
so that you will be comfortable
. . around it. You see, ftrearms are no
: :: more inherently evil than your
:- refrigerator.
·
Le.t me .take a moment and
review some basic firearm safety

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

511&amp;'9o4 TFN

949-2512
TREE TRI-ING
AND REMOVAL
R &amp; C Excava,ling
Septics, Land'
Clearing, Ponds, ·
Homesites, ·
Foolers,
Driveways.
Licensed &amp;
Bonded
Free Estimates

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Mise; Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

One Step Complete Auto Body Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
• Free Estimates .
Insurance WQrk Welcome
.-:..--~ ";
- ~~

I •

.

..._..,

f
- '
_:,:.;..

~ -~ ~

-"77

State~- 33

~~

Darwin, Ohio

110\\ \IW

992-5591

1:\C \\ \TI\(,
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, S~ptic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addltlona

of'!!!W Garage~~
oEiectrleal &amp; Pluri!blng ·
•Roofing
oJnterl!!f &amp; ·Exterior
Palntlrig
·.
AIIO Conerete Work
(FREE ESTIMATESJ
V.C. YOUNG Ill
8112-6215

Pomaroy, Ohio

1112mn ,

(lllllestone Low Rates)

... WICKS
'HAULING
(Specialize In

drivewat apreedlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

--

.

ALL·BRITE
CLEANING SERVICES
Tile Floor Strip,

MANLEY'S
H9MEIMPROVEMENT
Rooflng, Siding, Concrete,
RooJTI Additions, Etc.

Wax, &amp; Maintenance.
carpet·Cieanlng,
Complete Facility
Cleanh1g, Periodic
or one time
Free Estimates
Call 992·7272 or
1-81J0.9!KH272

P,O. Box 220,
Bidwell, OH 45614

(6 ~ 4) 388-9865

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Persona Is

Live Girlal Catl Now 1-900·656 ·
2,00 Ext. 3582, $3.99 Per Mln.
Must Be 18, Prpcall Co. 602·954 -

7420.

�Wednesday, July 26, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page"11

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword• Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

420 Mobile Homes
for Rani

BEATTIE_BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, AddaVIlle School District , 61-4·387-

f----...:..:.:..:.::.____

0632

3br., all elecuic, Gallipolis Ferry,
$250/mo ptua utilities. 304-6754066

:ilo

Giveaway
-.,~=-::;:.;~:..._Mtmature 3 Year Old Nan ny
:Goa~ Good Pot. 614-379-2879.
: 2 story kame house, to

Furntshed Trailer, Oepo111 Requ~red , No Pets, St Rr 7 South
Can After 7 P.M. 61&lt;4· 256-130-4
'

riNIBY
, for rTIIIterials. must remoWt au de• bria. 30+67&amp;-2509 after 8pm
8 Month Okt Bnnany Span iel To
Good Horne,15,4-446-8059
Elfaullful Abandoned Cat Needs

HOme In Courtry, 81-4-379-94-47.

440

Fat rabbit, appro• 6rno&amp; old
.•

Free To

Good . Home . Part

Siamese Female Cat, tSt,.· -446-

9555.

60

Lost and Found

Ldat: Dachahund 'Red With some
B~ck left Hlne leg ,Shaved
, A.nVinton,
draw RQad. 325.
4160
61
388-98
14
·
.
Found
W&amp;lch, Upper
_ or_ C•1l'
Park, Gallipolll.
,._ End
61 446 1471
L
Ju
oat
ly 6th Grey Ttget·Strtped
cat, Chelhir•·RL 554 A.tea. Famil ft..L
4 • •••9703
y,. r"TNf'!e .u
1....-.xxr
Loal 2 Smail Dogs, Black W1th
White, Area
Hannan Trace

~-

01

A n d S ugar C reek, Raward, On
Return 814 256 6870 Cl'lild's Pet
•
·
•
loat· 7!201'95 Small 10 Kt Gold
filigree Ring SOmewhere On Secand Avenue Wh1le Walking·, Call

814·446·94S4After3. Rewardll

Loat: At S trip M1ne Area, 111•
White Male Maltesa Small DQg,
Reward
7249. I 614-367-0409, 614 446-

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

All Yard Salea Must Be Patd In
Advant:e. DEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day Defore the ad ts to run

Sunday sdltion • 2:00 p m. Fnday
Monday edition - 10:00 a.m. Satufday

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity
7/ 25/95 thru 7 Harrtson Sm11h,
31205 Ptne Grove, Ractne, OH
Relrtgtrator, freezer, sewtng ma-

ctune, mise

All Yard Sales Must Be Patd In
Advanc;:e. Deadlme 1.00pm the
day before the ad 11 to run, Sun-

day edmon- 1:OOpm Frtday, Mon-

day ecMon 10·00a.m. Saturday.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Rtck Pearson Auct1on Company,
full lime auctioneer, complete
aucuon
service.
L1censed
166,0hio &amp; West V~rg1n1a, 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-544 7

90

Wanted to Buy

Clean Lata Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1887 Models Or Newer,
Smith Butck Ponttac, 1900 East·

"For the last time, I don't want to be 1n a rodeo
Maybe you should try go1ng back to cattle ranch ~gr

1

J &amp; D's Auto Parts and Salvage,
buytng wrecks, Junk auto$ I
trucks, Aiso, parts lor sale. 304-

773-5343 or 773-5033

Top Prices Paid Old US. Coma.
Sliver, Gold, Dtamonds, AI! Old
Collecttbles, Paperwelghta, Etc
M .T S. Co1n Shop, 151 Second
-·Gallipolis. 614-446-2842.
Wanted to buy· anttque and uaed
furntrure, no ttem too large or too
small. Will buy one p4ece or complete estatas, Oaby Martm, 614·
992·7441

110

Help Wanted

Seamstress needed. 304· 882·

37n

Social Serv~c:a Supervtsor 10 136
b d WVDHHR LTC F
R
1
e
ac11ty
eUSW and 2 years
ence tn heallhcare selling, or
SSW and 5 years healthcare exper~ence; WV 50Ctal- work II·
cense Liberal beneltt!l Contact

qu~re5

e~eper1

Lawrence Moore, Program D1rec tor. Lak1n Hospital, 1 Bateman Ctr eta, Lak1n, WV 25287, M·F, 8-4,
304-675-0860 ext 55 Lakin HosPltal ts an EEO Employer.

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
AVON SELLS ITSELF
Average $8·$15/Hr At Work-

Home
Dl&amp;Caunm I No Inventory!
Terntory OptiOnal lndlrep.
1-800-742-4738
AVON EARN S$S at home -at
work . All areas 304·882·2645. 1·
800-992-6356. 1NDIREP
Beaut1ci•n wa_nted, full br pari·
time. With clientele ~4-67~3040
Dependable non -smoker needed
1D ~re ~r 2 small children. Leave
name &amp;. number at 304-675-4363
between noon-9pm
Exper~enced Bartender, Waiter &amp;.
Waltresa For Immediate PoSition,
For Newly Opened Italian AeslaUranl .., Gall! polls..
" GOOD RATE OF PAY "
Please Contact 614 ·446-3085 Or
614·446-2279 Late Evemngs Or
304.fJ15-5045 Daynme

Hardware Cleric If'! Galhpohs, E~t­
perlance Helpful, Sind Resume
To : 8011: CLA 355, cto Gallipolis
Dally_Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,
GaQipOIII, 0H 45831.
Local Company Needs OTR Dnvers. Wnh 2 Years E~epenence
Must Be 25 Years Old W111'1 Good
MVR. Tractor• Are late Ltodel
Conventionall Weekly Pay And
Health lnturance A.vatlable, 1·
800-&lt;137·876&lt;.
LOcal Phyatcian·s ot11ce nee~s
LPN or medical ass1s1anr 10 f1ll in
tor vacauon, illness, etc. Posllton
could become full ttme. Send resume 10 BoJC G·26, %Pr Pleasant
Regltter, 200 Matn St, Pt Pleasan~ WV ;15550

GA1''

~989 Caravan Good Condition
High M11oage, $4,500, 814-446:
2509 Aher 4

Ram Van 8 ·250,
I
SS,OOO, Can Be
At GallipOliS Dally Tr ibune
825 Third Avenue, Galhpoh$

SWAIN
A.UCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gall 1poiis. New &amp; used
furn 1ture, heaters, Western &amp;

ry, WV 304 _675-3668

2 Bedroom~ Q20 Four1h Avonuo,
Galhpolls, S2951Mo. U1iltt1es Paid,
614-'"'""' ••10 Ahet 7 P.M.

$&lt;00; ZTR Dixon ri&lt;l•ng lawnroower, 614 -992·5291

2bdrm

1000'$ Of fOOtball &amp; baseball
d P1
car 1
us many c::omplete sets
and aub sell. 004-675-2479.

~--

1
1 1 111 61
· ap 8•• 0
ecu c, •P·
pliances furnished, lau'ndry room
faclhllea, dose IO achool tn town.
Appllcallons available 81 V•lla•e
•
Green Apts. 149 or caH !114-992.. 711 E
· OH.

c ertt 1le d d ay

care provtder Will
ba.IJ¥s!t 1n my home on Hysell Run
Ad , Pomeroy Newborn to age 6,

General Mamtenance, Pamtlng,
Yard -work Windows Washed
Gutters Cleaned light Hauling,
Commer~cal, Residential, Steve
614 44&amp;8861
George1 Portable Sawmtll, don't
hkul your logs to the mill just call
:ri4-67&gt; 1QS7
lawn Care And Landscapmg Any
Stze, Edge Trtmm1ng, Brush And
Tree Removal, Free E&amp;tlmatesl
614·367-7887
Professtonal Tree Serv1ce, Complete Tree Care, Bucket Truck
ServiCe · 50 Ft Reach, Stump Removal, Free Esttmatul In ·
suranc:e, 24 Hr Emergency Serv
tc::e ·Call And Savel No Tree Too
Blg Or Too Small I 614-388-9643,
614·367-7010
Rehable b.abysmer available Mon-

Business
Opponunlty

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bust ness wlth people ·you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mail unl/1 you have 1nvesttgated
tha offering
Local ladies Health Club With
Establtahed Cuatomefl. Grear Investment For Th111 A.rea. Interested Buyers Only, 614- 446-3401,
614·245-5903 Aher 8 PM.

REAL ESTATE
31 0 Homes for Sale
2bedroom, with basement, close
ro schools. S1&lt;t,SOO Call 304 &amp;75-6621.

3 Bedroom House Wllh 1 Acre
Land, On LII'\COin Pike, e 1f2 lUes
From Centenary, $24,000, 814-

446-j)()SO
3 Bedrooms, 2 Bathe, Heat Pump,
Gas Furnace, 1 Acre, Garage.
Addison Area, $62,000, 614-367-

7267
3 Bedrooms, Bath &amp; 112. Llving
Room, Family Room, Fmtahed
Basement, CA, In-Ground Pool,
614-446·4895, Please Leave
Message

560

Ouple111 apt. build1ng 1 good Investment. For tnformation 304-675-

4680
New home 1n Mason, leur BR. 2 11
2 baths. master euite wltl'l whirl
pool rub, lamtly room, two car ga
rage, nice lot, $139,000, 304·7735001
Newer log home- one and 112
story bn full hmahed basement,
one n1ce!y landscaped acre, two
kttchens, 2 112 baths, whirlpool
tub. skylight wtndow, full front
porch, heat pump, satelbte eyatem
and much more, price S69,500,
614-742-2853 lcr an appotntmenl

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1972 Community 14~~:65 $2,500,
614-446-2528.
1972 Mob1le Home 112 Acre
land, Located In V1nton, $15,000,
e14-446-0785.

S250tMo S100 Deposn, 94 Lo cust, Gal~polis, 614-446-1340.
Furnished Effteiency 701 Fourth
Avenu.e, Gallipolis, $200/Uo Utilit1es Paid, Share Bath. 614·446·
4416, After 7 P.M.
Apartment &amp; trailer, utlllttes paid
S275Jmo plus $50 clepos1t o~
oacll304-675-4e80.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Weatwood Drive
tram $226 to $291 . Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614·446-2568 .
Equal Housing Oppott.Jnll)'

2 Ton Central
Air UM $300, Arter
5 00 61 4- 446-8251

3 Ton Cenral A1r Cond1ttoner
Package, System Or SPill System
$1 ,250 Installed, 5 Vr Warranty
Ali Parts 1-800-287-6308, 6t4 446-6Xl8.
4 Inch Pump, 6 Cyltnder Engme,
350 Galion Per Mtnute, 500 Foot
Collapsible Pipe, $750, 614- 258·
6036.
Baby bed, stroller, car seat,
SWtng, walloir 304-675-4548.

BooiB By Rod W1ng Chippewa -40
To -50 Degrees, H. H. Brown
Guaranteed, Lowest Pnces, The
Shoe Cafe, 61 ..--448-4222.
Boys lw11 Siz:e 28 -30, 28 -32,
Good Condition, S3 Eacl'l, 614·

388-8293

Counuy S1de Apartments, large
2 Bodroomo, 1 Ba1h. Water, Sowage, Garbage Included, WID
Hook-Up, $360/Uo, Deposit Aequ1red, 513-922..{)294

::=-==--:-----,---

Furnished Apartment, 939 Sec
ond, Galhpohs, 1 Bedroom, $2851
Mo Ulilnies Patd 614-446·4416
After 7 ~M.

Concrete &amp; Plasdc 5eptlc Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson, OH

Canopf bedroom HI. couch, and
sewtng mactine. Call belore 10am
ot after 5pm. 304-875-484e.

~1·.:600::.;·53::7:_:·9::52::8:.·---,---­

Gractous llvmg 1 ancl 2 bedroom Couch &amp; Chair $35, Full S1z:e
apanmenta at Vtllage Manor and Mattress $10; Fuel Oil Stove $50,
Rtvers!de ApartmeniS In Mtddle· ,Fuel 01 Tank $25, 614-379-2435
pori From $232-1355 . Call 614·
992-5859 Equal Houstng Opper· Electric Wheelchairs, Electri'
turvtles
Scootms, New/Us:ed Scooter Ltfts
Stairway 'Elevators, Lilt Chairs:
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartm"nt
Bowman's Homec:are 514-446 614-446.0390.
• n83.
Ntce 2bedroom apartment, wtd
hookup Re-ferences. Oepos1t No
pets 304-675-5162
One bedroom apartment 1n Utd·
dleport. trasl'l &amp; water pa1d, you
pay electric I gas, S160tmo. plus
StOO deposit, call 614-992-780 6
between 8am-9pm

=
----Familyroom suite, good cond,
3:J4-882-2191.
Good Used G1rle Clothes Stzes
Two, Three, Interested Call 614446·4351 Eaf1y AM Ot Late P.M
Full Stze Couctl, Good Condmon,
Call Afler 5 P.U 614-44~7650

Pig$, 50 &amp; 60 lba $25
•14 ~· ••15
u ""'-vu

Groom Shop -Pet Groomtng FeaI
H d B h J I W bb
unng Y ro at . u 1e e
~-11
61'"" "231 .

._
2

~t-'l"fU-v
F
~
emale vhows
Wee~s

~

640

R

AKv egisOld, 614-446-

King woodburner, two loads of
ltrewood; 20 cu ft. trosHree
.&amp;Jprlght lroozer; ~14-949-3302

Beauttlul Rolhng Land, 9 M!les
From Jackson 3 From Oak H1/l 5
Acres, St2,000; 16 AcrOa,
$25,000, ~Acres, $60,000, 614·
574-11 \4, 614-574-5356.
Four lots near Ractne- appro11:. 1
112 acres eact'l. starbng at $5000,
call61~949-202!i

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lots, public waler,
Clyde Bawon Jr., 3o4-576-2336

450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms for rent - week or month
120/mo Gallla Hotel

510

Household
Goods

Antique pump organ $500 D1n1ng
room lable I chatr&amp; S300. Couch
$50 Roclc1ng chair S75. 304·0751272.
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Relrlgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cny Maytag, 614-446-

7795.

41 o Houses for Rent

Furnished 2bedroom email
house, $225tmo, partial utihlles
paid. 30'-675-651:!,
Pomeroy· .o4 bedroom, gas heat.
msulated, WID. Hud approvad,
reference reqUired, 814·i02·6888
all&gt;r6pm.

AKC Reglllered Short Ha1red
Pomter Puppies, Call Aftet " P.M
814-245-5897.
AKC Scottish Terrier puppies,
small non-shedding f1ra1 shot,
wormed, $250, now taking deposits, can Pick up August 6, Athena
614-592·1625
AKC Registered Coc.ker Spaniel
Puppy, Malo, Bull &amp; While,
Wormed, Vaccmated, Champion
Bloodline, 0 0 B 312195, $200,
614-379-2728

Aelrtgerators, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
~nd Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
Will Deliver. 614·669-6441
SAM SOMERVILLE S ARMY
SURPlUS by Sandyville Post Office, noon-6pm Fn -Sun Collect&amp;·
bles, small 1nd1v1~ua1 equipment
304-273-5655
'
Septic Tank.Jet Aeration Motors,
Ne'l( &amp; Rebuilt /Installed, Call
Jol"n!oJohn 614-446-4782.

CountQ' Furntture·Furnlture tor
Every Room 6mt , Rt 2 North, Pt.
Pleasant 304-675-6820
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wasl'lers, dryers, relrtgeratora
ranges Skaggs Appliances,
Vtni, Street, Call 614· 446 -7398
1-800-499-3499,
I

16

Datmarlon Puppies, 5 Males $75
Each, 614··245-5739
If FLIES. FLEAS, TICKS, Or
'1-IOT SPOTs· Are A Problem For
You, Ask J D NORTH PRODUCE
614-446·1933 About HAP'PY
JACK KENNEl DIP. Concentrated To Save 'mu Money I
Martaaze Puppies Far Sale FullBlooded Can Be Reg1stefeci $100
A P10&lt;0, 814-37""2720.
Poodle puppte! toy &amp; tea cups,
A.KC, shots ..!. warmed, Coolvtlle,
614-667-3404 .
Prolessional Dog Grooming Vm·
ton &amp; Rto Grande A.rea, 20 Years
Exper~ence For Appomtment,
614-245-5054.

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Silver Queen corn, S2fdoz. 304 675--5050 after 4pm
Sweet com, green beans and tomatoes Wholeule and rei'Jtl,
614 -742-2086, Bill Stewart, Buckeye Farms Sweet Corn.
Wanted· picked Dlackbernes, call
614·992-61!95

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~

1975 Pontiac Catalina, With Air
Cond1t1omng, In Very Good ConditiOn! $1,000, 61.· 379 -2720 Af·
TER6 P.M

s·

Discount !arm tractor parts for
t.dassey, Ford, IH, &amp; others
Sider's Equtpmant Co , Henderson, WV 304-675-7421 or 1-800277·3917.
JO 450 C Dozer ROP Wrench 6
W8'f, 614-446-0044

Treadmill Vtt·A-Masler Caiofle
Counter Pulse Rate, Justable
Speed, Just- Hetgh~ Lil&lt;o New,
$250 080, 614-258-00!15.

.14 Year Old Child Broke Regl!l·
tared AOHA Mare, Shown In 4· H

Livestock

81 .. ·446-3689.

1977 Car Hauler Perfect Cab,
Frame, Motor, Body Hauls {2)
77,000 Miles. OW, At.diFM Cassette, 614·388-9062

heifers, 7mos
I logether 304-997·
Jersey Hetfer With Call 1 Farm
Equlpnwnt, 614·245-0610.
Ptga 10 Weeks Old, 614 -2459249
Twelve Reg. Angus Cow&amp; - Nine
WI Calvea, Two To Calve In July
• $1,000 Each, $10,000 For AIL
One Si~eteen Month Reg . Angus
Bul $950. Elgh1 800 Lb. Reg Hodera, $650.00 Eaeh. Gary Barnard
• 304-966-1449

I GOT TO STOP THAT
GRINNIN' WHEN
. WINNIN' !I

I SEE YOU WON##

1982 Trans Am A~r, PW, Tilt &amp;
Tops, $1,650, 614-441 -lSOt

760

1

NO, f COULDN'T AFFORD
T14AT.. COULD I 6LI'r'
JUST ONE WORM'?

NeW gas tanks, one ton truck
wheels, rad1atrlrs, Hoar mats, etc
D &amp; A A.uto, , Ai~l ey WV 304 :l723933 or 1-800-273-9329

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1989 Grand Am. 4dr, auto, ac ,
am fm cassette, 78K, very good
cond!tton, $4,900 OBO 304 -882 ·

2529
1991 Sunbird convertible, $6,900
304-675-5318 even1ngs

1993 Dodge Datona ES, loaded
54,000 M1les, 18,000 Left or)
War Askmg $10,500, 614·388 6743

HOW ABOUT IF
I RENT ONE?

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

-..·I

f~Arl~ Af¥P ffl#t.fT

~I(;N

1993 Ford Probe GT loaded
$8,500, 1986 Ford Escort S9oo:
614·446-6958
1993 Geo Tractor LSI 4114
31,600 Mtlas, 5 Speed, Atr, Cas:
sette, $10,500, 614-446 - t811
leave Message

••

~ S'~t: THAT
,..-,&lt;n...\1!-/ wOfl'

•

O~De~

FAT

A6AJ/II.

Db I.

Redbl.

agency

astronaut

27 Aclor Perry

Pass

Pa ss

teature.a _ · ~--- .

Pass
Pass

lead: • 2

fied scientifically into three major categories - those that don't work, those
that break down and those that gel
lost"
In bridge, the inanimate objects are
the cards There are finesses thai don't
work, some lrump f1t s break down

C.OIFfEU~S

ot

,.

t&gt;ISTI_N,TIOrl .

BORN LOSER
I TCX)(LJP EXE:.RC.I~ING .. ~

l

~ 1-----fll

1975 28ft camper exc cond. self
conta1ned ac. 304-675 7937

J;

L-.-__j! t=~~~=j

1978 Starcrah 28 Ft. Camper Ful
ly Self-Contained Full Awnmg
Tub Wlll'l Shower, AC, Excellent
Cand!l!on, Ready To Camp Aller
5. 614-367 7671

A JUNIOR WOODC.iiUC.K
INDUSTRIOUS.
KIND, HELPFUl, GENE!IDJS,
15

WElL· READ, loYAL,

-

1993 Camper Inn Brook 30Ft
614 446-4465.

If West had had a d1amond to lead
against four spades, the defenders
would have cashed the first four tncks
The 7-0 split kept the contract aliv~ and
South look full advantage of his good
fortune
Alter winning the first trick w1th the
spade eight, declarer led his heart

THRIFTY MODEST,
SRA\IE. DETERMINED,
HONEST, HUMBLE.

T

THOUG~T

VOU SAU:&gt; THI5
WA5 501NC:.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
Celabnty Ctpher cryptogram~ are creatiiKI fr om quotatiOns by lamous people pa!l&amp;nd pres 1
EACh leHer n1 lhe c ipher stand!; lor ano1hel roasy-s CIUf'
&amp;quill$ J
eo

x

avvJ

'M C

T Z C T A .Z

a KNM

POFMFPFNB
YMMZBTM

M C

SKSSAZN.

614·

1973 International 314 Ton 345
Engme, 69,000 Mtles, $2,500,
Looks &amp; Runs Good , 614 -446 -

1985 Ntssan Kingcab, .o4x4, load ed. $4,000 ltrm 304-675-7747

BYNCV

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lltertme guarantee
Local references furnished Call
(614) 446· 0870 Or (614) 23704~8 Rogers Waterproofing Established 1975
Appliance Parts And Servtee. All
Name Brands Over 25 Years EJC.
pertence A.il Work Guarameed
French Ctty Maytag , 614 -446,
7795

C&amp; C

General Home t.datn tenence - Patnttng, vmyl Siding,
carpentry, doors w1ndows, baths,
mobile home repair and more For
free estimate call Chet, 614 -992

1988 Ford F150 lull size truck
4spd ~tth overdrtve, 4 new t~res:
bed ltner, no rust, 56,000m 1 •
$6,500
304-675-5719 alter
8323
4.30pm

1989 Dodge Dakota PU 7g 000
t.diles, S Speed, Anb Lock B~kes,
Bedllner, AM ! FM Cassette,
Goodyear Rangier Tires 235x15
Ntce, Clean Aslctng . $4,1'oo,
614-448-9780. .

Ron's TV Serv1ce, spec1al!z1ng m
Zenith also serv1cmg most other
brands House calls, 1·800-7970015, wv 304-576 2398

oeo:·

1989 GMC 112ton, 350 Ve, auto
overdnve. cru1se, a1r, 1111, am -fm
cassette, new tires, brakes, ex haust, asktng $10 000 304·675-

.

1990 GMC, a1r, ps, pb, 5spd, loW
m1leage. 304-895--3441 .
•
1993 Chevy 112 ton WT 1ruck
w1th topper, 5 speed, rear poslltve
tractiOn, good condnion, call 614 949-2681 .
For Sale Or Trade . 1986 Ntssan
Pick-Up, " Cylindar, 5 Speed, AMI
FM Cas&amp;ene, Topper, Bed Cover
CB, New Tnet &amp; Whee ls, VerY
Oapendable, $2,800, 614· 2566867

730 Vans &amp; 4-Wos
1979 4 Wheel Drive Blazer, Good
Condition, Body Fa1r, $1,200, 61-4~
379-2720, AFTER 6 ~M

Roofmg and gutters - commerc tal
and res1dentlal, mmor repairs 35
years e111penence, 614·992·504 t.

820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Freeman's H,atl!'tg And Cooling
Installation And Service . EPA
Certified Restdenttal, Cortmer~ial.
614-256-1611

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps, A1r Conditionmg If
You Don't' Call Us We Both Lola!
Free Estimates, 1·800-287-6308,
002945
614-446-6308,

wv

Restdenttal or commerctal Wifing,
repa~rs . Master L1
censed e1ectnc1an , Ridenour
Electr1cal, WV000306, 304-6 751766.

new servtce or

.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Graph Malchmaker mstantly reveals J
wh1Ch stgns are romantically per1ect tor ,
you Matl $2 75 to Matchmaker, cJo this
newspaper, P 0 Box 4465 New Vorl&lt; ,
NY 10163
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) Two loyal
Jnends m~ghl share lhlngs w11h you 1oday
that they wouldn't tell others The value of
the~r gestures may startle you
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) II your expec·
latiOns are a bit htgher than usual today,
your feeltngs could be JUStified You are
tn a oycle where your aspirations can be .

ued alltances tnt ac t today . Parlners;hi&lt;d
arrangemen~

could produ ce Incredible

advantages
PISCES (Feb. 2o-~arch 20) More oo&lt;&gt;&gt;r-~
tunlt tes than usual exist al th1s lime m
your chOsen field Watch what's
I
mg because these CJrcumstances could
produce ongomg rewards
ARIES (March 21 - Aprll 19) Keep
chanr1els open tdday to frtends who 1
far away Good news may try to breaK
lhrough from ~n unexpe c ted , diStant
source
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) Nega11ve
realized .
hnanctal
trendS could lose some of thetr
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Financial·
sUng
today
lf you've been subjected to
conditions could b&amp; especJally benefiCial 1
.
I
the
down
stde
, you m1ght now have a
for you today . The ftde wlll run in your t
Thursday, July 27. 1995
chance
to
make
a positive turn
favor
GEMINI
(May
21-June
20) Your warm
If you begm makmg prepara11ons now, SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Blls
sense
of
humor
and
your
thoughtful, genyou may ftnd a way to v1sit a dtstant ctest1· and pteces that haven't yet meshed
erous
nature
are
pnmary
mgredtel'ltS lor
1oge1ner may fall 1nlo place loday Good
natiOr:l that you 've long des1red to see
your success today . K indness shown to
thmgs
cou
ld
come
to
you
from
several
The opportun1ty to do tht s will present
others will come back to you
different d1rect1ons all at once
t~seH 1n the year ahead
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Nommal
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Jon
.
19)
UUhze
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Ventures or ,
opportunitieS , skillfully managed,
I
enterprtses you onginate or personally you,. nat1ve tntelltgence m a JOint venture
yteld substantial returns 10 your capable
today
You
can
ethically
arnve
at
a
solu·
d~tect could have unbeatable luck today.
hands today Much can be made from Itt·
Put your Mtdas touch to work tn as many t1on that c ould prbduce benehts for ali
lie
areas as possible. Know where to look AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) Do everything
w1thtn
your
power
to
keep
your
val·
\
for romance and you'll f1nd it The Aslro·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL" •

f

v

SOCRV.

authors could not endure being wrong!" -

'::~:~;~'
0

Albert Camus

S@ \\.4.llA -lG t. tr s• ::::

141114 ~y CLAY a: PO~N - - - - - -

R110rrange letteu of the
four Krambled words below to form four warda

MU L S C Y

II I I
I-FT"""R..,IO""•_P.,.._
·o.,....--ll;,' .

b I like whal a columnist sa1d
a out ret1remen1· " Retirement
'--~......1'---'----'---',..
g1ves you ten t1mes as much
r--I_N__
_l_A_M_E----., husband and only half as much

I_

l

I

_

_
1

s

I

I

_..

I

I

Q ~~~plolo

1ko ckuckle quoled

.
•
.
.
•
, .
by Mltng 1n the mtu•no words
.____._ _.__ _.__.___.'---' you deV~~tlop from step No J below .

e
f)

- '

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
IHE SE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

I

I I

I

An old t1mer celebraled h•s birthday He was overheard tell1ng a fnend,"We may be getting older but
are always lhe same age INSIDE •
we

Home
Improvements

1988 Ford Ranoer wltopper, 4 cyt,
5 ap, 76,0QO mtles, excellent condttlon, am-fm cassette. great gas
m1leage, call614 7-42-2357.

y

N C Y T

MYMMCC
XCLV

AFWZ

Defme ~ Cross -Arena - Weev1l- INSIDE

SERVICES

DRYWALL
Hang, l1n1sh, repatr
Ce111ngs te11tured , plash.r repatr.
Ca ll Tom 304·675-41 86 20 years
expenence.

z·z a

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

11267
1985 Clievy S-10 Plcit.·Up, 4 Cylthder, 4 Speed, $1,400 614·2566598.

N

TO BE FUN

INvENTIVE. NEI'\T.

24 Ft Layton Camper Sleeps 6
W1th Atr Condittonmg. Awmng, &amp;
Bathroom, Good Condtt!On
$3,995, 614-379·2139
'

810

UOYBYMFP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "How many cnmes commtlted merely because their

West went m wtlh the ace and returned
his remainmg trump . Declarer won m

28 Uncle
29 Aciran
Luplno
30 Baseball
32 More bad·. ·
lempered :
34 Have a meal .
38 Haallh reoort
40 Delroll
42 Amorous look
43 Hair Jlyte
44 Woodwind ·
lnttrument · ·
45 Ploooad
46 Annopollo •
grad
47 Light tan
48 Pelt
50 Type ot
loHuce
51 Hill dweller ·
53 Use your
eyes

'

1994 red VW Jena GL, $13,700
or take over lease $281 per
mon111. 304·882-3772

grandson
22 Trickle '
23 Emerald lole
25 - d'oeuvre•

20 Bounce
(stonea on
water)
21 Adam' s

13 Poasesa
17 All rlgh1, 10 on

3.

the dummy. cashed the heart king for a
diamond
discard and ruffed a heart in
•
hand
II bolh opponents had followed, South
I ccmld have eslabhshed a long heart m
the dummy. Now a different tack was
needed. Declarer ruffed a club in the
dummy, ruffed a heart in hand, ruffed a
club in the dummy and led dummy's
last heart However, instead'of ~;~fling,
South discarded a diamond
West won the trick, but was forced to
. r-a-IL'11b FIMDOOT .E:l&lt;E.Rei:&gt;IN£i lead a club into South 's ace-queen
tenace ThiS gave declarer 10 tricks
mE::&gt;M£
two top spades, the heart king, two
HU~YI
, heart ruffs in hand, two club ruffs m lhe
dummy, a long trump m dummy and
the,ace-queen of clubs.

f~~l&gt;

1972 Harvest motorhome, 19ft.
360 Dodge engme, $4500 080
:)]4-675--4631

t!an, $2,200 304-67~2949

37 Soviet news

--+-+--+-+--+~-1

an SOS redouble for rescue

New T~res New Awntng. New Aelrtg, New Water System, $3 000.
614-367 5034

1990 Vtkmg pop-up, sleeps 6 ac

Island
10 Flrat-ro1e (2
wda.)
12 Blood plgmon1

Imitate

'

arer

~:;ellent Mechantcal GQ[\d!ton, AC,

2 burner stove, stnk, good c:ondt-

9 Nomen- -

-T-,r'"I!I.-'I!!"'""I'I'PI"''1 26 Do as -- -

are lost for want of an entry. However,
sionally a bad break works well for

17.19;:7::::0-;C~h::a::m-p-,o-n-;M-;-o-;to-r..,.::.:._--=­

1987 C8dtllac SeYtlle, leath9f, rnaroon, all power opl!Ons &amp;IICellent
condiDon, 614 992 3270

•

Harshest
Gumo
Cool unl1
Small antelope
--atlck

•J 3 2
•A Q 7 6 4

agamst a bad spltl, a nd a few wmncrs

Chevy S-1 0 or Ford Ranger truck
topper, short wheel base, $75
080 304-675-1575.

1986 Dodge 600, $1,500, Must
Seel614-388-9032. After 4 PM

t 9 86 PI y mo u th A elt ant S tau on
Wagon, $950. 614·24~151
'

'&lt;ES, 51~ .. 1M 601N6 FISHIN6
50 I NEED SOME 6AIT ..

Budget Transm!S!IIons, Used &amp;
Rebuilt, All Types, Accessible To
Over 10,000 Transmission, Also
Par ts, Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates, 614-379-2935.

1985 Bu1ck LaSabre, L1mued Edtlion, runs good, loQks good
Phone Xl4·675-5106 arter 5pm

4
5
6
7
8

.4

er West's Ill-adVIsed double, North

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

3 Verne hero

Russell Baker, who may be seen mtroducmg "Ma s terptece Theatre ,"
"lnammate Objects are classi-

OtOfS

305 Chevy engme, complete,
S250 1978 Chevy duly truck bed
$250 1980 Datsun truck bed
$150. 304-576-2586

1983 LTD Crown Vtctorta 63,000
Miles, E~ecellent lnsu:le &amp; Out
$1,800, Sertous Calls Only 614·
44e-0213.
•

1986 Olds Calais Runs &amp; Looks
Good. $2,000, Call Aller 5 P.M
614-446 1543

t &amp;M

Motor Ghde Ill trolling motor wtth
foot control and bow mount, $250.
614·992-3537 or 614-992-7008

T-

1 Aclreoo Hagen
2 Hold In chock

By Phillip Alder

9~9-2672.

1980 Z28, good condtnon, $2,000.
304-675·1238

DOWN

The bad break
:was good

1992 Sea Nymph boat Wtlt'l tra1ler,
75 t'f) Johnson eng1ne wlm lots of
extras, take over payments. 614 -

1978 Olds Royale, 76+ actual
mtles, m1nd condltton, $3.200
304-662·3406

5332.

'

GLORY BE, PAW ! !

1992 Kawasaki X-2 650 1e1 skt,
very clean &amp; fast. $3,500 abo,
614-992-7258

610 Farm Equipment

brush hog, $300, 614 -742·
3062

BARNEy-

H

1974 Glastron--15 Fl. 85 HP
$1,000, 1977 Uarquts 17 Ft. 115
HP $2,000 080, 814-256·6315

Answer to P,.vloua Puzzle

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
Soulh
Wesl North East

for Sale

71 o Autos for Sale

15 Storage chest
16 -- VIncent
Peale
18 Skeleton part
19 New (prof.)
20 Agnut22 Poor grade
24 Asian chief
26 --do France
29 lYpe ot COHee
31 Marsupial
J3 Measler

39 Yes
40 Aug. hra.
41 For (Sp.)

•A K J 8

!I

15ft Glasstron, 70hp Mercury
motor, $800 new work, $1400
614·441 -1171 after 5pm

•s8

SOUTH

3362
-----------

OS S

TRANSPORTATION

314 ton

273 New Holland Baler, Square
Baler, 614-256-1411

KJIOS 3 2

I GIT
HALF

750 B

Ml"ed61hay, square bales, S1 per
bale, 4-985-3891 .

11 Malara, e .g.
13 Golden oherry
14 Actreoo

36

•J9

tAKQ9854

83 S1lvar Wmg Class1c 500 , full
dress. looks lt~e 2500, cal l alter
5pm 6' 66
' ,4. 7.0132

720 ltucks lor Sale

630

Refrigerator White, Whtrlpool
Frost Free, 1125: Side By Stele
Coppertone $195, Refrigerator Whirlpool Gas Waaher JOtyer
Norge Almond $225; Admiral Tapan Gas Range, 7 Foot Cabl~
Small 1 Bedroom House Naar K- Freezer S150; Kenmore White
Marl, S300 Plu&amp; Gat &amp; Electric:, Side By Side Ice And Water In ,..~Sink Top, 814-&lt;4e.0181.
10 Bircl'l lane, House Ia Open, 1 Door $475; Ltaytag Wringer
Build lng
Mlghr Be In The Back Yard, 614· Washer $150; Desmoer Washer 550
.... 1822.
Supplies
ltke New $205, 1 Year Warranty·
Unfumlahed 2 bedroom house, Kenmore Dryer $95; Whlrlpooi Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
Washer $95, Skaggs Appliances.
nic:e I clean. no lnalde pels, ref·
, lintels, ale:. Claude Winters,
7.6
V1ne Street, Gallipolis, 614~ ·
erencea required, $200 deposit,
I Grande, OH Call6t4-245 44e-7398, 1-800-499-34119.
$275 • momn ram, 61+1192-30110.
5121.

Hay &amp; Grain

Large Round Bales Of Hav $15 oo
AB
'
ale, Delivered W1thm F11teen
MllesOfGalllpo11s,61•·44" 1o52

1993 Eagle V1s1on TSI Loaded,
Green &amp; Grey, 39,000 Mtles,
$1~.200, 614-256-1618, 614·2561252

Super-siZe waterbed, good COndl~
tton, 100 304·675-5621.

Wanted to buy"'- two good used
motorcycle helmets, 61-4·9825053 aftet 5pm.

1085

Prod

Golf ocoreo

Water bird
Lapot up
54 Church ofllcers
55 Unearthly
56 Moot unusual
57 Noroe poem

$5 Boa or adder

.. 4 3

1993 KX125, elfc cond. FMF
p1pe Silencer, s2.200 304 -862·

w•~

I0 7 6

EAST

""VIer onda 200 Call Arter 7
P." 6
22
"'
14-446-24

1984 Ponbac Bonnev1lle LE . 304
675-6669

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright Ron Evans Enterpnses,
Jac~son, OhiO, 1·800-537·9528.

s

each.

Choc;dlate, AKC Registered Cho·
c:olate lab Puppies, o Weeks
Old, 2Lo11. 614-446-7395.

July Sale Spectals 5030 Ford
62hp 4wd, 811:8, syncho trana, 2
pump hyd. $22,900 3930 Ford
2wd 45 hp 8x2 trans, ' doUble
valve, S15,500 650 New Holland
15001 round baler string or net
wrap bale command demonstrator
$15,900 . 472 NH Haybine, stub
guards $7,950 254 NH Rake &amp;
'fadder c:ombinatton $3,800. 816
NH Forage wagon 3 Benter wtth
612 tandem-axle 12ton gear
12.5LII:15 tires $8,400 Model 30
Forage Blower 1,000 rpm, $2, 700
weathered Keeter's Service Cen·
ter R12 St R1 87 304-695-3674

Stll:y Four 2 -10 -14 Yellow ~plar
Floor Jomts, 1988 Ford Escort
Excellent Condibon, 1984 PontiaC
Sunb1rd, 1985 Red Convertable
Reltant; 1983 Dodge Ptck-Up ,2
Ton 4 Speed, Call Aher 8:00 614·
~6-3228, AM For Frank.

oo

t983 Mercury Grand Marquts
Good CondtllOn, $1 000 OBO 61 ~388· 1613 After 6 PM

5536
One Tosh1bia Color 20' T.V New,
Never Taken Out 01 CBtton, S"59
Will Take 1300, Old Fashion
PorchGitder, 614-367-7401.

1984 Honda 750, shalt drtven
6,9oom, • ex1ra clean. 304 6 75

Baby Rabbit• For Sale, Netherland Dwarfs, Dutch, M1n Rex, Full
Blooded Aabbtts, 614·388-8577.

Mega Fle~t wetght machtne. Pnme
Fit ski machme. Call 304-675·

Small Pieces 01 New C.rpol; 614379-2720, AFTER 6 P.M

RENTALS

2 Bedrooms Near NGHS, Sto'te,
Relngerator Furnished, Very Nice
$325/Mo. P1ut Depoail &amp; References, 61"·388-9686.

AKC Ragiatet'ed Golden Retriever
pupp!tl, light blonde, bur males,
one female, $150, cash onlyl814992-71151 .

While English Setter Puppies, a
Weeks Old, Pt.trebred, No Papers.
614-446.0106,614 -256 -1951.

1994 Fleetwood, 1411:76, 2br.,
many e~etras, pay-of! only,
$22,800, must be moved 304·
773-5051

1990 Cavalier 14x80, partially lur-

mshed, new carpet,"'l'leat puf11», all

3354

ceptmg appficattons for elderly &amp;
cl1sabthbes, one bedroom all electrtc, 614·992-3055, Stonewood
Apartments, Middleport Ohto
EOH
'
'

electnc, underpmnmg, 8x10 outb.uldtng, $16,000 304-576-2910.

1977 New Yorker 1411:70, well
mamratned. 304-882·3166

B~hlte, $150.304-937-2733.

Two 7 Week Old Bnttany Span '"''· $50 Each, 614-256-QII«l

Good GE refngerator, Whirlpool
chest fraeHJ, both work fine, only
Twm AIYers Tower, now accepting S200. :Jl4-67~ 7395
applicatiOns for 1br HUD subS!d· HeaVY solid maple table w/6
tzed apt tor elderly and handl·
capped EOH 304•675-66 79
cha~rs, 1 1/2yrs old, l1lce new,
-:-:'-'-c--:-----=--=.::..--1 $750 304-662·3173.
Wedge Apartments 1 &amp; 2br , no
JET
AERATION UOTOAS
pets 506 Burdette Street. 304·
Repa~red, New &amp; R&amp;OOtlt In Stock
675-2072 aher 5pm
Call Ron Evana, 1-800·537·9528.

1974 12x65 mobile home, 3 bedroom, bath, new windows. needs
repatts. $2,000, 614-742·2357

AKC CDdcer Spaniel pups, cham·
pion blood lines, Buff, Black,

~S-Io-n-ow_:oo~d_:A:.::pa_;r.:.lm_o_n_l_s-n-ow-.-,-_1 Glass Bathtub

Enclosures, Fuel
Tank For Boat, Car Cover, Enter·
tatnmem Center, £abinet Aad10 &amp;
Record Player, 614-256-6255.

-----------

L lvestock

Pels for Sale

25· color console TV $100 t9•
~r TV $75. 304-875-410&amp;

I

~"ltfInt.
1~ IJt'NEA

t~~=;:===::===-r::::==:=;==;:====l12261eavemessage.

2Rooms Plus Bath; Lafayene
Mall No Kitchen! All Udltbes patd
$175 00 Month. Oepo111 Reqwed
614-446-7733

jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj

1995 Clayton 3 Bedrooms, 2 Full ,
Baths, laundry Room, CA, $500, Sleeptng rDoms with cooking.
Wtll do all types masonary work, Ta~e Over Payments, &amp;14-448- Also trailer space on rtver. A.ll
bnck, block, stone Free estl -.. 8863 Of Leave Message.
hook-ups Call after 2:00 p m ,
mates. 304-773-6021
304-773-5651, MasonW\1
New 1998 14~~:70, tncludes skirt·
W111 'Qo lntertor, Extertot Patnbng-, 1ng, steps, blocks, one year 460 Space for Rent
ReasOnable Rares , Elr:p•u~nced, home-owner&amp; tnauranGe and !II•
References, For Free Estimates, months FREE lot renl Only $1025
BuSiness Space 960 Sq Ft NewCall614-245-5755.
down and $207 17 pe.- rronlt1. Call ly Remodeled, Excellenr locanon
1·600-637-3236.
Ample Parking 614·256-6336 Ar:
W11J !Ill With elderly 1n their home
terBPM
'
Expenenc:ed. Call aher 6pm 304- 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
67!H857.
MERCHANDISE
55 Acres Of Land W1th 28x32
Butldtno On Clay Chapel Road, 1FINANCIAL
800-287-6308, 614-446-6308

210

0

AKC German Sho~herds 181
1
Shots
Worrned
eady July
31at. 014-44-7117.
.AKC Re-glaterecl Basset Hound
Puppies, 5 Weeks Old, 614·446·

1t, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Ace Tree Serv1ce. Complete tree
care, 20yrs. exp &amp; msured, free
estimates 614·441-1191 or 1·
800-508-Mal
.

7. ,_(.

18: Coldspot Relrtgerator, $125;
30 Electnc: J.lotpoint Range S65;
2 Swivel Chalrs $20 Each AU
GoodConditiOn,614-388-1803'

s

~

t

M.otorcycles

1973 Harley Oav tdson Super glide, older bike redone, verv dependable, looks great, $7500 f~rm,
614·992-3796.
-:----;--------~
1977 Yamaha 400, Very Good
Cond tttonl $900, 614· 379·2720
AFTER 6 P.M

t-Ao~._.

Back of Cll~on, near pond, 2bed·
room, w,ater, -gas, electric, full lbedroofn, turnlahed, utilities Inbasement
1 s,ooo 304 . 882 _ eluded Relerenc:es &amp; deposit re.• Carol
qulred 3)4-'773-000D.
3348
2bedroom, unfurmshed, parttal
uulltles, convenient 10 PVH $2851
mo $2~dep0slt 304-675-5786

All real estate adVenlslng In
ttus newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 whtch makes It Illegal
to advenlsa "any preference,
limitatiOn or discrimination
based on race, coiOf, religion,
Bone11m Package lr&lt;:hl\'OS.
sex familial status or nallonal
Rarses Based On Per:lormance
in1entlon to
Paicl Vacations
1.a.-11nako anv !lucn preference,
Hoe.lth Benefits
limitation or dlscnmlnatlon •
401 K Rebremem And Profit Shar·
tng Plan
This newspaper will not
Send Replies To P.O. Box 769,
know11ngly accop1
GallipoliS, 0H 45631 .
advertisements lor real estate
which Is tn VIOfatiOn of the law.
Wanted- someone to do mmor
Our readers are hereby
remodeling on two houses, ffifl)Or
1ntormed tl'lat all dwellings
remodeling on one house Pay by
advertised In this newspaper
pb or hour II interes1ed send refare available on an equal
erence !I and qualifications cto
opportunity basis.
The Da1ly Stnbnel, P.O Box 729-

180 wanted To Do

740

tered, 9
886 1.

3bedroom Ranch, 2 acres 304_
_
675 1272

•Qt0976
•K 7 6 3 2

. . ..

1993 Ntssan Ouest Mmt Van E•cellent Cond1t10n, $16,500, 614379-2879

te,OOOBTU and 10,000BTU Wind·
ow alr conditioners. Also
8 oooBTU
81
'
casement type ' condttloner,$200.30..4-675-4331.

Local Pnvate Fleet In Need Of
E 11:per1enced Truck t.dechantc
Some Aefngera"l!on Expet~ence
Haplul COL A EI.\LS.
50 ·52 Hours Per Week@ $10 00
Per Hour

Wanted · sa'tnl-!ruck drtver wnh
good COLI~"''"· 614-992-3220

Merchandise
;-;:~::-:--:'-:-:~;.;,;:.;.:.:.___

'8t Da1sun 510 s1o11onwagon,

EEK&amp;MEEK

7-26-95

..

1990 Ford Bron«:o II loaded
$7,000 : 1983 Chevrolet $5,000 :
814-446-6958.

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenta, fur·
nlshed and unfurnlehed, aecurity 530
Antiques
deposit required, no pets, 814·
,Buy or sell. Riveune Ant1'\ues,
992·2218.
1124 E. Main StrNt, on RL124
1 Be~room Near Holzer'a Air Pomero~ Hours: M T W. 10 oci
Condinonad, Super Nice, S2591 a.m to 6 00 p m., Sunday 1 ·oo to
Mo .• Utilities, Depallt Required, 6:00pm. 614·992-2528
No Flats, 814-448-2957.

540 Miscellaneous

- .. .

01110

Air ~ondit1oner, Washer, Dryir,
Relrtgerator, Microwave, Color

3 Roorm Furniahad, Util!des Paid,

WouJd hke 10 buy- two good used
motorcycle helmets, 614-99~·
5053 after Spm.

Spears. 304-675-1429.

3-4bedroom, 2 full bath, LR. DR,
custom-bu il l kttc:hen, lull ,basement, mce lot, R1 2 Gall1pa111 Fer-

TRUCK MECHANIC

Sun Valley Nursery School
Ch!ldcare M-F 6am-5·30pm Agef
2-K, Young School Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mmt
mum 614--446·3657

Help Wanted

310 . Homes for Sale

Man or couple to care for 91 year
old man every other week , 614 985-3956 or 6t4-949-~

Fn 304-675-5053

110

Y•uF&lt;-

LAYNE'S FURNrTURE
Complete home turni shtngs.
Hours · Moo -Sat, 9-5. 614·446·
0322, 3 miles out Bulavilie Pike
Free Dehwry.

1 Vaaes
5 Ideal place

Anouk-

19~7 F· 150 4x" New 302 Engine.
Pamt And Tires, E•cellent Cond t·
bon, 614·245-9061

MA"( ~" e.~1"tNC,

T.V., 614·258·1238.

f----------.. . ----------1 --':-::..:.---_::_:.::______ !

wanted To Buy· Junk Autos Wnh
Or Without Motors Call Larry
Uvo~ 614-:l8B·9303

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Apanments
for Rent

2 Bedroom Apartment, T'ash,
Wa10r, Sewage.
Pa1d, $295rMo..
Oepostt,
614-446-2481

=Mn~~~~·~Gru-=h~po~i=s~.,--.,----I:6~14~-M~~.:353~7------------0ecorated stoneware. wa ll talephonal, old Ia~. old rhermometers, old clocks, antique lurntture
Rtverlne An11ques Russ Moore,
owner. 614-992-2526 We buy
estates

y.. v

Ntce 2 Bedrooms. 4 M11es North __
Wo_rk_boo~::"::6:-1~4_-4_;46-.:..;:3.::15:.:9.:.._ _
1
From Holzer On 180, S285JMo.,
Vf'RA FURNITURE
Security Depostt, 8H-446-6189,
. 814-~-3158
6&amp;4.4&lt;46-6865.
Quality Houtehold Fumiwre And
Travel Trailer lot For Rent, On
A.ppl~. Great Deals On
Route 7 AI Addison , OH, 614·
CashAndCarryiRENT-2-0WN
And laYBW&amp;Y Alto Avatlabfe
446-0175
Free Delivery Wilhin 25 Miles.

gt\M

Bl'S-148&lt;1

jiV!PirNU&gt;
.CL.o~~ "10

43
46
49
52

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="376">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9748">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="71204">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="71203">
              <text>July 26, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
