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I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunday, July 30, 199~

It's time to think faU seedings of
.
grasses, l.egumes and small grains ;:
..
...
-

BUZMILLS,
District Technician
GALLIPOLIS • It's Gallia
County Fair time, it's lhe first of
Augus~ and it's lime to lhink summer and fall seedings of grasses,
legumes, and small grains.-With the
past wet spring and the weather
turning hot and dry in the _early
summer we do not know wbat our
crops may yield this fall. If lhe crop

'\

~

GRAND OPENING CEREMONIES • Top Drawers, Etc.,
located in the Spring Valley Pla:r.a on jackson Pike, held its grand
opening with a fihbon culling ceremony. Left to right are Whitney
Hastwell, Ali Gills, Kate Gills, employees; Linda Gills, owner;
Hannah Hastwell, manager; Jl,,arlanne Campheii,__Gallia County
Chamber or Commerce pr"'ident and Molly Gills and Sara Walk·
er, employees.

The Hearing -Center
opens new office in
downtown Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - Mel Mock. a
board certified hearing instrUincm

specialisl. lut"' opeilecJ

:1

new office

in Ute Business anU Professional
Buikling, 414 Scc&lt;md

Av~nuc, Ga l ~

lipnlis_
Mock opened his n~w hu.•dncss.
The . Henring Ct!ntcr, nut of his

home on () _ L White Roatl last
March Due It) an increa~e in husi·
ness, anti in onJer to heuer , ervc
the hearing llt&gt;CtlS of the inca. he
moved his racilitie~ lo downtown

Gallipolis,
A new additio11 to the Hearing
Center's services i.-. the "MiLI:Ls
System." A revolutionary process
that rcmuvl!s Oust, dirt , wax anc..l
mOisture from a hL!aring;niLI in ju~t
5 minutes, lcaviug the it iLl smmdl ug
cleart:r ami crisper .

Mock is liccn,cd hy the State or
Ohio as a ht!itring aid dealer. In Ulc
last year he has al.-;o rc(dvetl his
board c.:~rtifi~ation in heari11g
instrument sciciH.:I!s omJ has more
than flO crellil hours of continuing
education in tlJc hcm·ing health care
fiehl

Value line

By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - When tobacco
growers market more tobacco than
their farm quota they "!ill be sub·
ject to marketing quOill penalties_
A [kml.lty of $ L38 per pound
for hurley tobacco will he asse"ed
when hurler tol&gt;acru prmlu.:er_:;
markel more than 103% of their
effective farm markering quor:1.
This penalty also applies to tobacco

. in\'esunent. it"s not a good !'.tratcgy.
In order to manage il properly. it

water Conservation District Stop hy and say hello.
Lisa Meadow_, is th• County
Ex•cutive Diroctor or th• Gullia
Cnnso,Jidat•d Jo'prm Sorvlc•
Agency. For additional informa·
lion on th~ prugr3ms adminis·
t.e r.d hy-CFSA, eoll 44ti-8686.

Gallta County that date is Octohei:·
5_ For cover crop use onln whelll
can be sown earlier than the Octt:r
her 5 date. Wheat and rye have suecess'fully been sown throush much
of the month of November howev"
er weather conditions must' be good
so the small grain crop can b~
established before Winters
'The Gallia Soil and Water Conservalion District has notill drill'S
from 5' fo 10' widlhs available toi
rent for all lhese types of seedings;
Currently the district has a 6.5' Ty&lt;
dnlllhat will be sold by auction at
10:00 A.M. August 12, 1995 at the
C H_McKenzie Agriculture Center
Minimwn bid is S3.500 For further
infonnation on fall sccdings, rent. ing lhe no-till drills. or lhe no-till
drill to be auctioned, contact tlt~·.
Gallia SWCD at Ill Jackson Pike
or call446-8687_

Stock report

which i!-i marketed on a marketing

By Associated Press
On Friday, lhe NYSE composite
index fell 0.75 10 301.38, up 471
.(Qr the week: The Standard &amp;
Poor's 500-stock index fell 2.29 to
562,93, up 9.31 for lhe week.
The Nasdaq composite index
fell 5.38 to 1,005,28 but climbed
43.51 for the week.
markeling qun1as.
The
American
Stock
It's fair time - The Gallia Exch-ange· s market' value index
County Consolidated Fann Service rose 0.49 to 522_07, breaking its
Agency will share a booth at the previous record bigh for the third
Gallia County Junior Fair' willt the - day in a row a'nd up 7 _52 for -the
Gallia County Natural Resources week_
ami Conservation Service antl 1hc
The Wilshire Associates Equi ty
Gallia County Soil and
Index. which is lhe market value of
NYSE, Ame-rican. and Nasdaq
Firm now associated
issues, ended the week at $5.45 tril·
with Tri-Steel Structures
lion, off $69.41 billion from the
previous week,
POMEROY - Danks Construelion Co_ of Pomeroy will join wilh
Tri-Steel Structures of Dexton,
Texas , the largesl tlcsigncr and
manufacturer of steel frame hous·
ing, said Larry W_ Banks. cnmp:my
president Tile energy-eflicient, 'steel rr:unc
"Lifetime Home" will provide an
MEL MOCK
affonJable option for home buyers,
Banks said,
The Hearing Center will cclc·
The stee l huilc.Jings r~4uir1! ncar·
brale a grand opening in it's new ly no t!Xteri,Jr maintenance.
location .July 31 through August 5,
B:mks Cnnstruclion, 124 W.
from '! "- m_ to 5 p_m, daily_ A Main St., has he~n serving South·
ctmlc.~t will he ht'lt.l It) givt: away a
ea" Ohio since 19Xo_
free ,hearing a.iLI.
Local l~bor and local supplier_,
of materials arc w.;cd wht:n Jltl .. si·
ble, D:mks added_
card for a farm otl1er tllan tlte tann
where the tobacco wa&lt; produced.
Marketing quota penaltie s arc
assessctt iu the rate of 75% of the
average market price for that kind
of tobacco in the proceeding marketing year. These penalties apply
to every kind of tobacco subject to

See Puzzle on Page 02

H07
DEALS
on

PRE-OWNED WHEELS

Lake!'. a ve"ry sop hi sticated and hi£h·

· •People can use Ote contract a'
a hedging vehicle." Skihinsky said.
"but for the averace investor with
a quarter-million or $500.000

fescue can all he seeded lhen and
he ready for harvest next spring.
Small grams can provide feed in
lhe spring or early summer. Barley
can he sown for gram or forage _ It
should be sown from lhc middle oC
September until _the early part of
October_ Harvest m May for forage
or wall until June and combme for
grain which ever suits your needs_
Rye and wheat make excellent
cover crops for winter. They also
can be utilized as a feed source in
lhe spnng as pasture or harvested
for hay or silage. If feed IS abundant next spring. wheat can be harvested for grain and sold or fed
wilh some restrictions to livestock_
Rye can be sown from lhe first of
September through lhe latter part of
October.
.
Wheat should be sown anytime
after the Hessian Fly-sale date. For

·Marketing penalty
rate announced

mini.;.o_nt~in~ue~df~ro~m.,...
,D-~1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

egy- very carefully,

y1elds are lower than expected, we
will pro~ably need some early feed
next spnng for our 1tves10ck. Now
is the time 1~ be planning what can
he planted !Ius late summer and fall
to be harvested next spring.
The Au.gust to middle _of
September ume frame IS an excellent ttme to ·sow legumes and grasses_ Alfalfa and clover plus grasses
such as orchardgrass, timothy,
bromegrass, and endophyte-free

ly disCiplined indiVIdu c~ . · '
Most people with that level of
~oph i~ t ication

ha\'c more money to
ill \'l'S t. "For· an undercapiralizcd
in\" cs lor , il's fine.' ' sa id Barrett

LeWald, senior market analyst at
Ute Lind-Waldock &amp; Co. commodi·
ty brokerage.• also in

Chica~o.

·'The, problem with the Mini
Value Line is _lhat you can't make a
lot of money ."

Over 15 Used To Choose ,From)

95 JEEP CHEROKEE
2 Or. 5 spd, 4x4, Air,
C/0, 1 owner

516.995
94 NISSAN QUEST
GXE, V6, Auto, All power,

loaded one ownet

5

21

NEYl£.1995
NISSAN.200 SX SE

Rog Cob, 5 opd, Air,

94 JEEP WRANGLER

Like New

Sport Cover Sharp

CUMtte, Chrome Pkg.

5

10,595

$12,995

513.995

93 NISSAN QUEST

Loaded Black Emerald
SE, Auto, Full power

XE with dual air, Full
• power, 1 owner

23. 9::.=9=:5::::r+-:-:~$1~7~.9:;.:9;:::5::..._+-~~~'"'"""

4 cyl, 2x4, 5 spd,

. Cassene

5

Red, 5 !pd with air,
Nice one owner

92 NISSAN SENTRA

92 PONTIAC LEMAN$'

4 OrE, 5 spd, Cassano,
Local one DWnar

Air, Cassette

510,595

5

91 PEUGEOT 405 DL, Red, Auto, Air,

One owner nice car

$5 995

sa,795

91 MERCURY CAPRI

SE, AulD, Full Power,

Sunroof. Spoiler, 1 owner

Convenlble, Auto, Full
power, Low mileage

11 995

57,995

5

Auto, Air, CasseHe 1

Cassette,Local one owner

91 NISSAN MAXIMA

WHite, 2 Or. 5 spd,
5

5

3 995

91 NISSAN TRUCK
4x4

with 5 spd, Air,
Topper

91 NISSAN
SE. 4 Dr, Auto, Air,
one is loaded

S15,995
89 PEUGEOT 505
7 Pass Wagon
Low Miles

12,999

5

i

*5,995

89

NEW 1995

GXE,
, Air, CasHHe,
1 owner, Affordable ·

NISSAN SENTRA GXE

5

air, cassette, tilt. cruise. power
windows &amp; locks_

•

2x4 Truc;:k. va. Auto,
Air, Local 1 owner

94 NISSAN PATHFINDER

air. cassette, till, cruise,,
power windows &amp; locks.

$12,999

94 FORD F150 XL

' Low mites

5

93 NISSAN TRUCK

TAYLOR MOTORS'
UNBELIEVABLE NISSAN
SALES EVENT

85

89 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
Auto, 2 Or.• Casso1s

$5,995 .

..
NEW 1995 NISSAN
KING CAB V6 4X4

87 ISUZU TROOPER

2 Or, 5 apd, Cauene,
Low mileage, Affordable

'6,995

air, cassette, tilt, cruise, bed
liner, auto, hubs, more

8,995

89 ISUZU IMPULSE
Turbo, Aldo, Air. Sunroot,
low mileage, Sharp

'5.995
87

6000

The nicest In town
Low miles, one owner

5

4,995

4 Dr, 5 spd, Air,
An affordable spon utility

995
85 LINCOLN MK VII
Bronze, Leather
This one is loaded

. 55,995

$16,999
'

NEW 1995
NISSAN ALTIMA GXE

88 HYUNOAI 40R

118 NISSAN 200 SX

$995

87 SUBARU 4X4

86 DODGE RAM TRK

air, cassette, tilt, cruise, p.:&gt;wer
windows &amp; locks_

$1,695

_$1,695

$1,495

85 NISSAN
SENTRA40R

85 DODGE 600 4DR

85 TOYOTA VAN

84~t951ES

NEW 1995
NISSAN QUEST
rear air, cassette, cruise, tilt,
power windows &amp; locks.

$18,999
SALE ENDS 7-31-95 IN STOCK UNITS ONLY

$1 ~395

$1,895

84 VW RABBIT

83 NISSAN SENTRA

83 CHEVY 5-10TRK

$1,595

~1,695

$1,495

$2;595

84MAZOAGLC

·$995

Ohio Lottery

Dodgers
nip faltering
Reds 5-4

Pick 3:

598,
Pick 4:

0479
Super Lotto:
4-22-28-36-41-44

Page4

Kicker:

739750

Vol. 46, NO. 65
Copyrlght1995

The firm seeking a permit to
build an infectious waste incinerator in Coolville bas filed an appeal
with the Obio Environmental
Board of Review.
Atto-r neys for Don Wallace,
president of Environmental Services Inc. in Marietta, filed tbe
appeal July 20. The appea_l is a
reaction to lhe June 27 adop!ton of
the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency's amended rules for
obtaining a permit to install an
infectious waste incinerator.
Wallace's attorneys claim the
amended rules, which were .slated
to go into effect Sunday, are
"unreasonably broadn and "unlaw·
fully apply new siting restrictions
to applications pending prior to _the
effe.clive date of the underlymg
statute (March 30),"
Ohio House Bill 98, which man,
dates the siting restrictions, gives
lhe EPA the authority to implement
lhe new rules. Wallace's attorneys
argue in the appeal that the new
rules should be limited 10 applica·
tions filed after March 30, 1995.
Environmental Services applied for
a permit in May 1993.
The new siting restrictions provide that an incinerator unit, as
well as all waste handling areas, be
located at least 300 feet from the
facility's properly line, and I ,000

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 eents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 3-1, 1995

Coolville in.cinerator
backers file appeal
feet from any bouse, school. prison, of Concerned Citizens of the
or jail in existence at the time the Coolville Area, the group lhat ha•
permit application is submitted.
fought installation of the incineraaccording to Ohio ~PA Dire'ctor tor (or about. two years, said that
Donald Scbregardus.
today she plans to file a motion on
Environmental Services attorbehalf of the group to participate in
neys argue that since an access
lhe bearing_
road leading into the facility would
"If we don't do tbis .we lose lhe
necessarily be located within 300 ·- chance to infarm lhe board of our
feet of the property line, "the only concerns.'' she said. "We won't
way in which wastes could be drop the ball on this issue, we'll
delivered to lhe facility would be just keep on going."
by helicopter since any mode of
This issue bas divided this
ground transportation would vio- southeast Athens County commulate the distance restriction in lhe nity for the last two years.
proposed rule." _ A group of residents sought to
The attorneys also are asking block construction on lhe former
!hat lhe Ohio EPA modify its defi- Best Pbo10 plant site because of
nition of a "waste handling area" beallh and environmental reasons.
According to the amended rules,
Karen Thorne, who beads Conwaste handling areas are "all areas cerned Citizens of the Coolville
wilhin a facility where infectious Area, opposed the project during
wastes are managed, including, but meetings and by contacting stale
not limited to ... areas where infec- legisl~ton; . .
tious wastes are tr411sported, stored,
lmided or unloaded."
Other residents, incr'uding
Environmental Services bas Mayor Howard Russell, supported
requested that any reference to the project which lhey hope will
areas in which infectious wastes bring jobs and tax revenue to this
are transporied be eliminated.
town.
A preliminary bearing in which
In January, the EPA rejected
Environmental Serv1ces and OhiO plans for the incinerator because of
EPA attorneys will discuss the problems with the plan's waste
appeal is scheduled for Aug. 24 at water treatment plant and storm
the board's office in Columbus.
EPA
water
management,
Dorothy Rader, co-chairwoman spokesman Rob Berger said.

.

.

Governors face variedwelfare reform .ideas
BURLINGTON , Vt. (AP)- requirements, ordering a rewrite Qf
Opening a showdown with Presi- food 'stamp rules so that welfare
dent Clinton on welfare reform, recipients who refuse to take jobs
Bob Dole today promised gover· cannot gel more food stamps when
nors the Republican Congress their welfare benefits are cut.
Clinton's proposal would still
would give them almost unlimited
leave
much of the program authori·
powers to set benefits and reqmre
ty
in
Washington's bands, somerecipients to work_
thing
Dole
cast as unacceptable as
In a speech to the National Governors' Association. Dole ouUined Republicans cariy out !heir plans to
a new Senate GOP welfare initia- sbif! power bade to the states.
"I believe America's historical
tive be said would convert Aid to
Families wilh Dependent Children, detour into bureaucnicy and cenchild care and job training pro- tralization is over," said Dole, the
grams into bloek grants adminis- Senate majority leader and the
tered by states with minimal regu· early front-runner for the RepubliCONFERENCE lation from Washington, The pro- can presidential nomination_
Chairman Louis Gerstner
posal also allows states to receive
In his prepared remarks, Dole addressed the National Gover·
food stamp funds through a block
mocked Clinton's suggestion that nors Association meeting Sunday
grant if they prefer.
giving
states 'too much power over in Burlington,Vt. (AP)
Clinton was addressing the governors a few hours alter Dole, and welfare, Medicaid and other social
bringing along a new welfare ini- programs migllt lead to a "race to
tiative of his own. Like Dole, Clin- lhe bottom" as states slashed bene- hasn't worked."
1 After hearing from Clinton and
ton was promising governors more fits and services.
Dole.
the governors ' planned to
"Which states does be believe·
leeway to experimen~ wilh reforms,
whelher they could resolve
explore
and as a symbol of h1s comnulment cannot. be trusted with welfare,
their
own
partisan differences on
· granting four more states waivers _ education and protecting their peothe
issue
and
make recommendaple?" Dole asl&lt;ed. "The truth is
from federal welfare rules.
tions
of
their
own
to shape lhe welClinton also was moving to put only our states can be trusted with
fare
debate.
more teeth in state welfare-10-wor~ lhese things . Federal control just

Harness racing tradition keeps
running at r,lleigs County Fai-r
with many local horses competing
By GEORGE ABATE
train a horse," Spencer said.
for purses ranging from $10 to
Sentinel News Start
This year. Roger and his daughTbe Spencer family bas been _- tcr, Debbie. will race in 12 to 15 $100.
In 1899. a smalllO-year-old boy
synonymous wilh Meigs County fairs across southeast Ohio_
from Racine climbed into the sulky
horse harness racing for the past"He treats them like his cbilcentlll)'.
dren," Dobbie Spencer said. "They to commence a driving career that
would span 59 years. Harry WFor the past 40 years, Roger all have their own personalities."
drove one of his father's
Spencer
Spencer bas been racing at the
Most people with ' standard
horses
that
day and later would
Meigs County Fair.
breeds are decent people, Debbie
drive for Leroy Eichinger and Sid-.
"It kind of gelS in your system," Spencer said.
Spencer said. "Most times you
"They're like ·family," she said, ney Spencer. both of.Uomcroy,
John Batey,- also a small boy
don't make any money, some.':tiDes "They'll do almost anything for
from
Racine, was a lover of horses
you lose money and some umes . you."
and
began
wor!&lt; as a stable band
you make money.",
During the last 15 years·,
for
C.E.
Baker.
In 1900, he moyed
Featuring harness racing, tbe Spencer bas bad a number of sue·
nearer
to
Pomeroy
and trained race
132nd- Meigs· CQ!Inty Fair will be ~essful racers.
, --horses
at
Rock
Springs
for 66
held betWeen Aug, 14-19.
In 1981, Klng's Ex won several
t
lh
fairs
including
Athens.
Meigs
ana
·
years_
Currently, P,wnerI tramers a e
As a trainer, John developed lhe
Rock Springs Fairgrounds mclude ..Monroe,
locally
famous pacer Lady Miller,
Brooks 'Sayre. Syracuse; William
In 1983, Mr_ Browntown won
Roush, West Columbia, W_Va.; more beats than any horse as a 2· owned by l-M. Spencer of Racine
Phillip and April Swatzel, year-old, by winning 18 or 22 lUid driven to win at lhe Ohio State
Pomeroy; Ralpb Calvert, Pomeroy; races. In 1991, Finale Jacque won Fair. The most famous horse John
Roger _and Debbie Spencer, 16.of 21 races , finished second Batey broke, trained and raced in
three times.dand third place twice. - 1949 and 1950 was Sarah
Pomeroy_. _
Napoleon.
·
Ten horses are boarlled and Spencer sat ,
The Spencer name - from J_M_
trained at the county fairgrounds,
Harness racing was introduced
Spencer in the 1800s to Roger and
Spencer said,
' to the fair more lhan a century ago,
The harness 'racing sport bas not and bas attracted lhousands to view Don Spencer in recent years - bas
changed significantly in the last 50 horses speeding around lhe trac_lc,
been notable.
The late Sidney Spencer was the
years. Spencer said. But, today's acc6rding to theMetgs County HISlocal favorite for many years.
horses arc faster.
tory Book, Vot I.
"You have _to have patience to
In 1885, the races were held
(Continued on PaR• 3)

Low toalghiiD 60s. Part Iy
cloudy. Tueoday, partly sunny.
High In 90s.

--Preparing for fair- Making

money
Voinovich starts
to get backing
for Senate run ...
CLEVELAND (AI')- Gov_
George Voinovich has not officially declared his candidacy for the
U.S. Senate in 1998. but he has
-started what is a vital M~p in any
eandidacy - raising money.
Voinovich s:tid !his montll that
he was considering selling up a an
exploratory committee for a possi}
ble race in 1998 and he ha• now
decided to take anotlter step toward
that goal.
"I've docided to raise money."
Voinovich said in an interview
with The Plain Dealer at the
National Governors' Association in
Burlington, VL, over lhe weekend.
Voinovich has not declared his
I
candidacy, hut he told the newspa·
per .for a s-tory· today that be
_ "wouldn't raise money for fun."
: 'But I decioed, with Janet, to
get out and start early so lhat we
can spread it out ov~r a long 'period
of time," he sitid, referring to his
wife_ "We also lhink it's good to
clear !he air, to let people know
Preparations continue for tbe 132nd Meigs County Fair, slat·
what I've got in mind."
ed for Aug. 14-19. Above, Jennifer Brlckles, left, helps Shirley
Why did he come out so early
Cogar ready demonstration booths ror judging. Cogar Is the
when the election and the end of
Girl Scout service administrator for the county. (Sentinel photo
his second tcnn arc still more than
by George Abate)
·
three years away?
It's aboui money. Voinovicb
said.
"It's a long haul," he said,
"I've been lhrougb that before. and
it's -an enorm.ous effort to raise
money for a Senate campaign, lbe
imponant lhing is to start early."
Political analysts see olher reaWASHINGTON (AP) - Amer- April required by a 1993 law fol- sons besides having to raise about
icans' personal income rose 0.4 lowed by smaller payments in May $10 million for the campaign.
percent in June, rebounding moder- explained the increase in disposAI Tucbfarber. bead of the lnsti·
ately from its ftrst decline in more able income in the latter month tute for Policy Research at lhe Unilhan year.
despite tlie overall drop in pay.
versity of Cincinnati, and 'Larry
The Commerce Department also
Spending in May proved to be Sabato, a government professor at
reported today that spending even stronger lhan previously esti· llle University of Vi~ginia, agreed
increased a weaker-than-expected mated, as the figure was revised on two major benefits of the early
0_2 percent last month after upward from 0.7 percent to 0.9 per· announcement.
advancing 0_9 percent in May. The cent
"By coming _out early, and this
jump in May was lhe biggest since
is very early for a 1998 race,"
Consumer spending represents Tuchfarber said, "Voinovich is
spending 'rose I percent last
two-ihirds
of the nation's eoonomic sending a message to (Senate
August
activity_
Analysts
sai'd its strength Majority Leader) Dob Dole thatThe inoome gain in lune was led
in
May
was
due
in
part to sharp he's available for national office."
by rising private wages and salaries
as
businesses
offered
discounts
in all major sectors of lhe econoVoinovich was lhe first gover·
to
help
reduce
inventories,
but nor to endorse llle Kansas Repoblisales
my.
The government reported Friday predicted it might falter if income can for president and is heading
!hat lhe economy barely advanced gains contlnued to he weak.
Dole's Ohio campaign,
The combination of incomes
in lhe second quarter of 1995, turn"It also clears the Republican
and spending meant that Ameri· field for him and encourages (Sen.
ing in' its weakest performance in
nearly four years. Gross domestic cans' savings rate remained at 4.1 John) Glenn to retire/' Sabato bid.
percent in June_ Prior to May, th~ ")\ longtime senator will retire
product grew at an anemic 0.5 persavings
mtc had not been lhat low ralhcr than go lhrough the agony of
' cent annual rate in the spring.
since November when it also was a difficult race alter a long political
Analysts anticipate lhe economy 4, I percent
career.''
' Income was just over $6 trillionalready is beginning to regain
Glenn, D-Ohio, has said he may
momentum and will grow at a in June and spending edged up to run for a fiflh 1enn.
moderate pace in lhe second half of $4,86 trillion_ Income declined 0.2
''I'm not trying to frighten peopercent in May, lhe first drop since pleat all," Voinovich said. ''I'm
lhe year.
The Commerce Department said a 0,6 percent dip in January 1994.
· Pri vale wages and salaries just trying to he realistic about
today that disposable income rose
just 03 percehJ in June on top of a increased at a $19.6 llillion annual what it takes to put together a rea0,8 percent gain the previous rate in June compared to a $23 bil- ' sonable sum of money to put
together a successful Senate cammonth, Higher tax payments in lion decline in May.
paign_"

'

I

Personal income
·posts 0.4o/o increase

HARNESS
- Area harness racers I
continue to run through their paces before the
Meigs County Fair. Brooks Sayre, left, drires
the filly Noble Choice. At right. Debbie Spencer
~nd H.R.'s Not Yet, a 2-year•old colt trotter,

•

speed around the traeR. The hone raced Saturday at Piketon and wiU compete this Wednesday
in Athens, Spenc~r said. (Sentinel photo by
George Ahate)

•

�___.,__

Monday, July 31,.1995 ·

Commentary

Page2

•

Pomeroy •

OHIO Weather

Monday, July 31, 1995

Alexander does an about-face on the DOE

111 Court-Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

....

WASHINGTON- There's ooe
sure·fl!e way to make Republican
presidential hopeful Lamar Alexander Jose his temper. Just ask him it
he's a moderate.
"I don't like the word 'moderate,··· Alexander protested during a
recem mterv1ew with us. "! never
hked 1t. I was an activist conservauve govcmor, and I have a 'moderate' tem.rerament because I supported c1vil ngbts. Reporters who
sometimes didn · t know much about
my record stuck me with that

stigmatized as a moderate.
Alexander's metamorphosiS
from moderate to activist conservative is based on some combination

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

of expediency and evolution. His
new role-model is Senate ~ajority
Leader Raben Dole, who baJ:ks like
word ••
a well-trained seal every time the
"Moderate" is less a word than Christian Coalition issues an order.
a
scarlet
letter among the right- Alexander bas joined the act, flfSt
LETTERS OF OPINION arc welcome They should h&lt; less than 300
wingers
who rule the GOP. adding his hallelujah when Dole
words long Alllcncrs are subj ect to ed1tmg and mu st be ~ ~~ nei.J wllh name,
Alexander wants to dispel lingering attacked Hollywood, and then try·
address and telephone number Nn uns1gned leuers will he published. Letters
should be '" good 1as1e. addressmg 1ssues. no t pcrsonaht1es
impressiOns that be· s a moderate, ing to one-up him.
which explains why he bristles
But ms legacy as cducatioo sec·
when the word is broached retary during the Bush administrathough that wasn't always the case .. tion would not sell well to Chris·
Back m 1979, Alexander endorsed tian Coalition honchos Ralph Reed
...former Tennessee Sen. Howard and Pat Robertson, who have
Baker for preiHCient, arguing that declared holy war on the departh1s menlor has a ''moderate, sensi- ment. As Tennessee governor, Uni·
ble approach that appeals to mde- versity of Tennessee president, and
pendent voters in the South and a member of the Bush cabinet,
By JOHN CHALFANT
elsewhere." Baker's cand1dacy Alexander established a record that
Associated Press Writer
was a bust m part because be was in a bygone era be might have
COLUMBUS (AP)- Imagine you were an employer who wanted to
hire a top manager, but no applicant met the reqmrements. Would you
change the qualifications? For one state agency, the answer was yes.
A,n Ohio Department of Admmistrauve Services rule that takes effect
Aug. 6 will revise standards reqUired for directors of county human ser·
TliaNK
vices departments.
MR. PReSiDeNT.
Most appoinunents of county daectors are subject to deparunent ~;.,;;;
~ND NoW, WiTrl
review to ensure applicants meet minimum reqmrements.
.
Spokeswoman Gretchen I lull said the agency received appoinunents
THe. DeMoCRaT$'
· from several counties that it was unable to approve.
ReS.FbN$e ...
"We began thinking that perhaps we ought to be looking more closely
at those minimum qualifications to assure they were meeting today 's
needs," Hull said in an interview.
·
Sbe said talks with county human services adminiStrators and county
commissioners showed support for applicants w1th long· term managerial
or administrauvc experience. but not necessarily m human services matters.
"In other words, the technical expertise is already there. What is need. ed today is good management experience,'' Hull saJd.
The department said minimum requirements for county directors pre vi·
ously included:
.
. - An undergraduate degree in social work or certain related areas, or
;two years expencnee working in a human serv1ces organization.
· - Six-hundred hours training in federal and stale laws, rules and pro:cedurcs governing welfare operations, or 18 months experience working
·in a 'l'elfare agency.
: Under tile new rule, qualifications will include:
. -An undergraduate degree or five years as a supcrvisorladmimstrator
·in a human serv1ccs organizauon; or 10 years in any administrative or
:mariagerial pos!Uon that mcludcd oversight responsibilities for budget and
:personnel.
Sharon Downs, administrator of the department's Office of Personnel
:Services, said a public hcanng on the new rule, contained in a package of
:other regulalion changes, was held June 30 in Columbus.
· The bearing was advcrtisC&lt;! in six major newspapers. No one testified.
: Then the rule went to the Legislature's Joint Committee on Agency
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
(;eneral ~anager

LEHEW
Controller

~ARGARET

State chang~s~ sland~rds
~ -for welfare ·t11rectors
,

called a "moderate, sensible
approach." He has always advocat·
ed more local and parental control
of educauoo decisions and dollars,
as does his successor at DOE,
Richard Riley. But he also showed
the indepeodence as education secretary to blast "bureaucratic. inertia-filled" local school systems.
Alexander never called for the
elimination of DOE when he was
in charge. He qevcr stirred crowds
with the kind of mflammatory
rhetoric that he has employed as a
candidate. "Our purpose is literally
to liberate parents and communi tics," be stated earlier this year.
"The tederal government today is
in the W!!)' of what needs to be
done ... , The (OOE) bas become the
centeJ:piece of a smothering overbead."
N. educatioo secretary in 1992,
however, Alexander was pointing
the fmger in a dif{erent direction .
"Th9 biggest obstacle to change
(is) communities not reaDy accepting the need for higher standards,"
be said. " Most people say, 'the
schools w~ good enough for me,
they must be good enough for my

You,

~u~~~e~::e~~:~~~gr.;:.v~nimum qualifications. Requirements

B

•
k
h
e aware to ,nav1gate mar et c anges

lncrease for agencJCs based on the numb!:r of cascloads they handle.
Some investors think today's
· "We bad three different locations where they bad people they wanted stock: market resembles that of
but they didn't have the human services background. They felt they had
excellent managenal or adm1mstrative back: grounds. They felt that was
1987. Others disagree. Whatever
'
ded
th de
.. Do
the case, those concerned about
10d ·d al
531'd
the type of lVI u nee
to run e partment,
wos
•
. bumps in the Dow Jones Industrial
:. "After we ran into that with three different counties, it became obvious Average ought to assess thea own
io us that the needs of the counties were different than they used to be,"
goals before making any invest)We srud.
"c,.~.--=~ ""-=~G L~~·-·rucnt changes - just lilce the pros
.
do
Watching the Dow take a tum,
ble during the third week in July
.. I I
and technology stocks fall out of
bed for a few mgbts has had an
:ny The Associated Press
effect
stock funds. For example,
: Today" Monday . .July 11. U1c 212th &lt;L\y ol. 199S There arc 153 days amongonthe
largest funds, total
·left m the year
return on Fidelity's Magellan Fund
: Today's H1ghhghl 111 I hslory:
.
: Fifty years ago, on July 1 I. 1945. Ptc!"c Laval~ prem1er olthe pro-Naz1 was down 4.93 percent for the two·Vichy government. sUI rendered 111 U S auUwntws Ill Auslna. he was day penod ending July 19; tbe
Vanguard Index 500 Portfolio was
:tumed over tn France. wluch later tned :uttl executed hun
down
2 08 percent; and Twentieth
On thiS date· ~
Century's
tlltra Fund was down
· 1n 1556, St. Jgnaous of Loyola, founder ol the Soc1ety of Jesus - the
6
49
percent,
accordmg to L1pper
Jesuit order of Catholic pncsts and broU1crs - died m Rome
Analytical
Semces.
· In 1777, the MarquiS de Lafa~ll1;,_aJ.U.yoar- "ld~ren~h nobleman,
Wb1le those numbers may look
:was made a major-genernl in the Americ:m Conlmcntal Army
dire
within a 48-hour time frame,
: In 1875, the J7UJ preSJdenl'pf the lhuted States. Andrew Johnson. died
they
don't really repr,!!sent the
·m Carter Station, Tcnn , at age (16
funds'
performances. Tbeir-¥ear-toIn 1919. Germany's Wcunar Constitulmn was .ttloptcu
date
total
returns, through July 19,
. In 194M. PresHient Truman helped dcdlc.ltc New Y\&gt;rk lnlefl.'"llonal
arc:
Fidelity's
Magellan up, 29 40
'Airport (Inter John F. Kennedy llllern.Jlton.tl /\n p&lt;Htl .11 ldlcwthl I 1cld
percent;
Vanguard's
Index 500
In 1951, Sen Rohcrt /\ .'Tall ~ ·t Ohm. known '" .. Mr Rcpuhhcau ...
Portfolio,
up
21.60
percent;
and
died m New Y01 k al age 6:1
Twentieth
Century's
Ultra,
up
In 1964, the Amenc:ut space pmhc R,mgcr 7 tr.msmitted pictures ol U1c
24
21
percent.
moon's surf nee.
·
''Some funds have had a magIn 1972, Dcmm.:raltc VICc-prc,..;Jdenllal ~.uu.hd .t lc Thom;1s. E~1gleton
nificenl
year thus far,'' says A
withdrew trom U1c ucket with GCorgc Mc(rovcm lol\owmg lhscln~ures
.
Michael
Lipper,
president of LipEagleton hall once unUcr,.~one--~yciHatru.: llCdlmcul
Jn 1989, a pro-lraman group 111 J.channn tcleaseu a gnsly Vllleotape
purportedly showmg the hangcll huc..ly ot 1\nu.:ru.:.m hostj1gt! W1lh ;un R.
Higgms. a day after his kidnappers threatened tn k1ll hun •

·- rod ay

.In

h .I story

-

per Analytical Services. "My fe:lr
.
th
. il
IS
at peop1e w1 11 sec a sun· arity
between 1987 and today and say
that the lesson that came out of

Dian Vi •

"ch

UJOVI

1987 was that they should be a
buyer on days lilce (July 19). The
risk IS that the strategy that worked
the last lime should not be neeessarily followed the next time.''
L1pper suggests that fund
investQrS take time to focus on their
own personal financial needs
before making any investment
strategy changes.
"If they are close to needing the
money (they've invested into
funds), maybe it should be time to
start retreating. Byt if they are
focusing on a 10· to 20-year time
horizon. I don't think that they
should distu&lt;b long-term sound
posiuons.''
Lou Harvey. president of Dalbar
Financial Services, a mutual fund
publishing and research company,
said it's counterproductive to sell
in down markets.
••Jt just defies history because
history says the market is going to
come back," says Harvey. "And it
the market is not going to come
back. I don't think the thing you
should be worrying about is the

-------

,

value of your stock.''
telephone, in your television, ini
f
•
b'l ·
b
From a port olio manager s your automo 1 e, m your was cr
point of view, a couple of bad days and dryer. Basically if it plugs in,;
on Wall Street isn't reason to there IS likely to be a semiconduc-·
pani'f Even 1f the funds you're tor in there," be said. •
managmg have more than balf their
Even though he is optimisticl
assets mvested in technology about the future, Fogle reminds ,
stocks.
investors that mutual fund invest"If you look at a time period of ing is a long-term proposition.
'
longer than two days, our portfolios
"We're not focusmg on one, ;
are still up for the month of July," week results. And I think it is
says Glenn Fogle, co-manager of important to pomt out that mutual,
the Twentieth Century Giftrust and funds are a product and not all .
the Ultra Fund.
mutual funds are appropriate for
"Our discipline doesn't change everybody," Fogle said. "Our
because the market bas a few bad product is an invesunent vehicle:
days. What we do is buy compa- for people who bave a five- or tOmes with accelerating rates of earn- year outlook So, because we are
ings growth. And the reason that not trying to satisfy customers who
we're in technology is not because have a 30-day time horizon, we
we made a top-down decision to try don't make mvesunents based on·
to be a technology fund; we looked that.' '
.
at earnings growth for all compaDian Vujovicb ls the author of
nies in America and said there is "Straight Talk About ~utual
nothing that compares with tech- Funds" and "Stralgbt Talk'
nology."
Ahout Investing For Your Retire-·
What you'll fmd in bOth Giftrust ment," hoth of which are pub·
and the Ultra Fund are a lot of lished by ~cGraw Hill. Send
semiconductor and software stocks. questions to her In care of this
One of the teasons Fogle remains newspaper.
·
bullish on technology stocks is '
(For information on how to,
because the .semiconductor market communicate electronlcally wllb
alone is a $40 billion industry that this columniSt and others, con·
for the third year in a row has been tact America Online by calling 1-'
growing at over 30 percent
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
"Semiconductors are in your

Death delayed in Massachusetts

•

I

Berris .Worrd

Q 1995 by NEA. Inc

"Und chust how much lopg~r Jdll de! b.uildmll
be WRAPPED ?''

•

Massachusetts Gov. William
Weld is considered too moderate
- indeed someumes too liberal to be considered for the vice presidenllal place on the Republican
ticke,t. lie is pro-choice; be bas
been well-received by gay rights activists; and be IS a supporter of
afflrmative action.
On one isshe, however, Weld is
in agreement w1th conservative
members of his party. He is very
much for the death penally . In
June, he introduced a bill in the
legislature that called for lethal
injection for people convicted of
premeditated rust-degree murder.
This ultimate crime - as reported
by Frank Phillips in the Boston
Globe - had to involve "any of
12 aggravating circumstances."
Among them: "killing a police
officer or corrections officer, murder for hire, murder in connection
with rape or drug trafficking, and
munler with torture or extreme
atrocity."
Shortly before the vote, there
bad been a horrifying murder in the
town of Avon. Mass. There was
also a ceremony at the State House
honoring four police officers who
had been killed.
The govefllor's bill passed the
Senate 2-2-to-18. But despite the
murder in Avon and-'tbe revivified

memories of the four slain police
officers, the House - by an 83-to73 vote - turned down capital
punishment.

sachuseus attorney general FranciS
Bcllorti, who was fumly against the
death penalty. But his son voted for
it.
A first-term representative,
Nat Hen toft
Thomas McGee Jr., a fanner prose.
,
cutor and a Democrat. broke with
·The :reitgeist in the nauon, how- -his father (also named Thomas)
ever, is for keeping the death who is a former speaker of the
chambers busier. And Congress is House and greaUy favored capital
acceleraung executions by so dras- punishment. During the debate this
t1cally limiting habeas corpus year, the son said in his maiden
appeals that the fanner Great Writ speech:
is now wntten in nearly invisible • "Though' It may satisfy our
mk.
·~" more primitive, base instincts ...
One of the reasons the Mas- from the tilpe a condi:mned prisonsachuseus House is marching in the er is led from his cell to the chamopposite direction has to do with ber where his life will be taken,
the'Jitrong views of House Speaker capital punishm~nt dehtonanizcs all
Charles F. Flaherty, a Democrat:
who are involved, from the guards
"You will not sec a death penal- who have to strap the defendant
ty as long as I am here and I intend into the.chair or on the table, to t11e
to be here for a very long time."
doctor who must pronounce the
Lt Gov . Paul Cellucci · is
piisonerdead.
.
enraged: "It's difficult to under"This is something our society
stand ,how the House of Represen- sboul&lt;;l not embrace at this stage in
tatives can be so out of touch with our development."
the people of this stare (who) want
"The vote," Frank Phllllps
to express their outrnge at the dead- reported in the Boston Globe,
ly violence that is escalating -and ''came after five emotional hours
the only way is to put this on the of debate, including numerous ref·
books."
erences to the killing in Avon of an
Some members of the same elderly mao, allegedly by three 18·
family bad difficulty understanding and 20-year-old men who comone another. Michael Bellotti is the pared themielves to the movie
soQ of longtime former Mas- 'Natural Born Killers."'

There has not been an execution.
in Massachusetts since 1949,:
although a death penalty was on the!
books. That law was later declared •
unconstitutional by the Supreme:
Judicial Court; but in 1982, the vat- :
ers approved an amendment to the :
state constitution
'
. that gave employ-•
.
ment once agam to state execuuon- •
ers. Two years later, the Supreme :
Judicial Court again thwarted the !
lust of the people for fmal justice. :
Gov. Weld tried last year to per- •
suade the legislature to liSten to the:
people. At a hearing then before ;
the House-Senate committee on:
criminal justice, he was confronted •
by Bobby Leaster, who had been ;
conv1cted of murder and had been :
in prison for 18 years before evi- i
dcnce of his innocence mandated :
•
his release.
The chainnan of that committee, :
Joseph Mcintyre, a Democrat, said :
to Gov. Weld: "Do you have any- :
thing to say to Bobby Leaster?" •
The governor, clearly uncomfo£!· :
able, could think. of, nothing to say.
In the next election, the governor's I
men targeted Mcintyre's seat, but :
be prevailed
•

.

IToledo I 90" I

1
••

Nat Hentoff Is • nationally •
renowned authority on the First :
Amendment and the rest of th•~
DIU of Rights.
\

-------

IMansfield 190' I•

Q- -~

~ ~TQdcty's li\lestock report

COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- plants 46.50-48.25.
Ohio duect hog prices at selected
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. country
buying points Monday by the U.S. pomts 40.00-45 .00.
Department of Agriculture ~arket
Sows: 1.00 to 2.00 higher.
News:
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 28.00Barrows and gilts': steady to 30.00; 500-650 lbs. 30,00-32.00.
weak; demand moderate.
Boars: 26.00-28.50
U.S . 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
Estimated receipts 3~.000.
points 45 00-47.00, few 47 .25;

Don't look for much relief
from the heat this week
By The Associated Pr-ess
Temperatures across Ohio will
be a few degrees cooler l;iter in the
week, but highs still will hover
around 90 Wednesday through Friday, forecasters said.
Highs on Tuesday are likely to
be around 95 in much of the state,
the National Weather Service.
Not much rain is in the forecast.
There's a slight chance of a shower
on two in northern Ohio on Tuesday and elsewhere Wednesday and
Fnday, but wetting will be spotty
·and won't do much to relieve the
heat.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 degrees in 1954
while the record low was 47 in

1967. Sunset tonight will be at 8:47
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:30
a.m.

Weather forecast:
Tooight. .. Mifstly clear. Lows
from the mid 60s to around 70.
Tuesday ... Partly sunny and con·
tioued bot. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms north and west.
Highs from the upper 80s to mid
90s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday ... A chance of thunderstorms. Lows around 70. Highs
85 to 90.
Thursday ...Dry. Lows around 70
and highs around 90.
Friday ... A chance of thunderstorms. Lows around 70 and highs
near90.

Meigs announcements
Group to meet
The Middleport Community
Association will bold Its regular
meeting at 5·15 p.m Tuesday at
Peoples Bank.
Reunion announced
The 60th annual Parker reuniOn
will be held at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School Sunday. There
w1ll be basket dlllner at 12:30 p.m.

The following land transfers
Deed, Ellsworth 0 . and Gladys
were recorded recently in the offiCe L. Ed wards to Emmett R. and
of Meigs C01mty Recorder Emma- Dorothy Edwards, Salisbury, 10
geoe Hamilton:
8/100 aaes;
Deed, Donald E. and Betty J.
Deed, Pamela Hartenbacb,
Buchanan to Omega JVS, Olive Pamela Imboden, Stcpben Harteoparcels;
bach to Buddy Rentals, Pomeroy
Deed, Leona Myers to Uoyd R. parcels;
Myers Mary E Pugh Richard E.
Deed, Edwin Stanley Cozart,
Myer~ and B.ruce 'o. Myers, deceased, t~ Uni.ted States Postal
Orange parcels·
ServiCe, Racme village;
Right of V:ay, Ernest E. and ' · Deed, Fred W. Crow !~I ~n_d
Judy Rowena Spencer to Roberta Cathy Crow to Robert and Vqtma
M. Thaxton, Racine;
Marshall, Pomeroy parcel;
, Right of way, Judy Rowena and
Deed. Raben and Virginia ~arEmest E. Spencer to Gerald G. and shall to Jeanene Baldwin, Pomeroy
ShirleyJean Simpson, Racine;
parcel;
.
.
Deed Eullis E. and Fannie F.
Deed, Patrick L. and Juhe A.
Baldwin' to Bobby Junior and Carl Lawson to Karen and Tony Collins,
Douglas Lyons, Letart, 5.25 acres;
Columbia;
Right of way, Robert L. and
Deed, Clyde J. and Vicky
Sandra G. Barrett to Leading Creek Gillilan to Victor J. and ~icbelle
Conservancy District, Salem;
L. GiiUian, Olive, 1.241 acres;
Deed Evelyn and Floyd WycinDeed, Peoples Bankins and
ski to E~elyo M., Floyd and Ronald Trust to Larry J. Marshall, Olive,
A. ~ycinski, Rutland parcels;
one acre;

Units of tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
14 calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday, including three transfer
calls. Units responding included:
COLUMBIA TWP.
9:50p.m. Saturday, auto fJre on
Holley Road, Jay Uribe, owner.
~JDDLEPORT

12:23 a.m. Sunday, Cole Stree~
Martha Chambers, Holzer Medical
Center;
3:13 p.m. Sunday, ~ason,
W.Va, John Luikhart, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
6:24 p.m. Sunday, General
Hartmger Park, Bernadine
Mitchell, Veterans ~emonal Hospital.

Weekend wrecks kill six

Pubh ~ he d

every afternoon, Monday through
Ill Co un St , Pomeroy Oh 1o by the
Oh1o Vall ey f'ubl t~ h• ng Company/Muh1mcdtn
lrie Pomeroy Ohio &lt;J~769 Ph 99:!. 2156
Second cln~s po5t&gt;~gc: pwd ut Pomeroy. Ohto
fir~&lt;by.

M(mbrr: The A ~!«X lllted Pre~s nnd the Ohao

New-;paper Aswcaadon

·

POSTMASTER· Send addreu correcuons 10
The Da1ly Senunel. Il l Coun St , Pomeroy,
Ohto457M'

Ollt Yenr
Dmly

"

j II

7'

$7 60

. •

$91 00

PO~ROY

7:19. a.m. Saturday, volunteer
fire department and squad to
Spring Avenue, tree fire, no
mjunes reported.
RACINE
I :40 p.m Saturday, volunteer

Swartz, 50, of Hilliard, driver in a
one-vehicle accident oo a Franklin
County road.
SATURDAY
Al)A - Jobn A. Ferrante, 43,
of Ada, driver of a motorcycle tbal
crashed on a Hardi,o County road.
ASHTABULA
Allan
Schultz, 20, of Warren, driver in a
one car-accident on an Ashtabula
County road.

VETERANS ~~ORIAL
Saturday admiSSions - Mildred
Smith, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - none.
Sunday discharges - Gladys
Parfit~ Middleport.
HOLZER ~EDICAL CENTER
Discharges July 28 - Daryl
Shoemaker, Teresa Wood, Darlene
Wrigh~ Mrs. John Fink and daughter, Jerry Slone, Melissa Holley,
Ethel Ewing, Mary Young, Ada
Rickard
Birth - ~r . and Mrs. Ray-

Am Ele Power ........................34 318
Akzo ........................................65 314
Ashland OU ............................34 1/4
AT&amp;T .... .................................53 1111
BIUik One, ...............................JIJ/4
~ EvaiUI ............................... I9 1/4
Cli,IIIDplon Ind ........................13 314
Charming Shop ..............................S
Qlty Holdlng .................................l6
Federal Mogut ........................lO 314
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................41314
K-mart .................................... 15 7111
Land8 End .............................. 15 1111
Limited Inc.............................10 Ill
Multimedia Inc......................41 1/4
People's ................................. .11 1/4
Ohio VaUey BIUik .........................35
One Valley :.............................30 Ill
RockweU ......................,........ .45 5111
RobbiiUI &amp; Myen .................. .l6 Ill

Royal Dutcb •••.. .~ ................... ll6 318
Sboney'• Inc ........................... lll/11
Star Bank .............................. .50 314
Wendy lnt'l........................... .18 5111
Worthington lad ..............:.... .ll 511

-·-·-

BATTERIES

Stock reports are lite 10:30 a.m.

quotu

prov~ded

by Adn1t ol
-

GalUpolls.

de~mng

to pny the cilll1er m:ay
remll m adv:ancc d1rect to The Owl)' Scntlnel
on a thrtt. m. or 12 month basts Credn w1 ll be
g~ven earner each week
Subscribers oat

No ~ub~cnp u o n by ma1 l pernuned 1n area!
where home earner ~en-tee •~ avwlable

rue department and squad to junction of s·tate routes 124 and 338,
motor-vehicle accident, Delores
and Mildred Amos refused treatn'lenl;
2:47 p.m. Saturday, East Letart
Road, Drew Fischer, CamdenClark Memorial Hospital;
.
3:47 p.m. Sunday, State Route
338, Teresa Miller, treated at the
scene;
5:50p.m. Sunday, volunteer fll1l
department and squad to State
Route 124, two-car motor-vehicle
accident, Ruth A. and B1ll Hill,
HMC;

RUTLAND
2:29 p.m. Saturday, Salem
Stree~ Burl Wbire, HMC.
-- ·"
SYRACUSE
2:09 p m. Saturday, State Route
338, Charles Young, Jackson General Hospital;
4:59pm. Sunday, State Route
124, Fred Alshire. VMH.

mood Andrews, son. Long Bortom.
Discharges July Z!l - Masci
Hatcher, Enna Rime, Connie Stapleton, Elizabeth Hunt.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Wamer, son, Racine; Mr. and Mrs .
Allen White, son, Gallipolis.
Discharges July 30 - Traci
Massie, Mrs Raymond Andrews
and son, Mrs. Allen White and son,
Mrs . Michael Warner and son,

"Say Love With
flowers From!"

I.

-

PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy. OH

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203
•

Food distribution set Aug. 8
Buner, rice, macaroni. com flakes and tater crisp snacks will be
distnbuted by Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency to people
w1th valid food commodity .cards on Tuesday, Aug. 8 at the following locauons:
Meigs County - Meigs County Fairgrounds, Tuppers Plains
F1te Stauon, Pagev1lle Town Hall and the Racine Fire Station Distribution will begin around 9:30 a.m. and last until noon or until the
supply 1s exhausted.
Gallia County- Gallia County Fairgrounds, Gallco in Cheshire,
Mount Cannel BapUst Church in Bidwell and the Crown City Fire
Station. Distnbution will begin about noon and last until 2:30 p.m.
or until the supply is exhausted.
Those picking up eommoditics-for-others"lllust-bring-11 stgnedI)Ote from tile person in additiooto thea commodity food card. They
must bring a bag or container for the commodities.

Hearing set in Crisp case
The founder of the Leading Oeek Conservancy District has been
ordered to appear to a September bearing. according to Meigs
County Common Pleas Court records.
Jack Crisp, 64, of Ashland, Ky., was sentenced to serve 18
months in jail for five misdemeanor &lt;Xlunts of receiving improper
compensation in February 1994.
The status hearing is set for 9 a.m. Sept. 29 m the common pleas
cowtroom.
"Defense counsel shall bring with hun all of defendant's medical
records dating back from his original sentencmg," visiting Morgan
County Judge Dan Favreau wrote.
In a letter dated June 30, the Meigs County Commissioners
asked Favreau to not place Oisp in the Meigs County Jail due to the
costs and the potential for a lawsuit and jrul closure.

Two jailed on domestic charges
Two Racine-area men were arrested over the weekend by ~eigs
County sherifrs deputies on charges of domestic violence.
John W. Davis Jr., 32, State Route 338, is accused of assaulting
his girlfriend, while Michael P. Salser, 38, Manuel Road, is accused
of assaulting his wife, according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The two are being held in the Meigs County Jail.

Men charged with DUI
Meigs County sherifrs deputies cited two men on charges of .
driving under the influence.
Paul A. Miller. 33, of Laurel Sl!eet, Middleport, was arrested
Friday at 10:16 p.m. on Salem SU1!Ct in Rutland. If found gmlty, 11
wiD be his fifth offense, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby .
Steve A. Rowe, 39, Murraysville, W.Va., was arrested Saturday
at 2:37am near the junction of state routes 7 and 124 in Salisbury
Township.

Falling tree prompts outage

-

~tree

lhlting on power lines in Pomeroy left app~xunat.ely 160
Ohio Power customers without serv1ce Saturday mornmg.
Trees falling from a hillside on Spring Avenue severed three
power lines serving the Spring Avenue, Laurel Chff ~oad area,
which 'includes the ~PO radio transmitter and the Pam1da department store, said Ron McDade, area CS P/Ohio Power manager
Power was restored around 2:30p.m., he saJ\1.
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department responded to the scene
with one truck, six firefighters and ooe squad. The road was closed
wh11e power company employees worked to restore power.

Harness
•
rac1ng
(Continued from Page I)
In 1946, Spencer gained fame
w1th h1s pacer Peter S. Direct, who
in 1954 won 19 races and earned
the award of Ohio's leading pacer.
In the next two years, be won 21
races and ended his racing career
w1th 53 w1ns in 98 beats of racing.
The horse held track records at
McConnelsville, Proctorville and
Rock Sprmgs.
During the late 1960s and early
'70s, Spencer, a fanner Pomeroy
mayor. owned horses in association
with Jacob Wemberger of Gallipolis and his brother, Roger Spencer.

'

warner Cox.

1' lftb - Mr. and Mrs . Kevin
Wi• . &lt;laughter, Jackson.
1 •bUshed with permission)

SHOCKS

TIRES

FREE Tire Rotation
With This Ad

SINGLE COrY PRICE
• .. .... .. .. 35 Cem~

.

Two people were taken to Holzer ~edical Center by the Me~gs
EMS followmg a two-car crash Sunday on State Route 124 in
Racine, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Billy C. Hill Sr., 63, and Ruth A. Hill, 63, both of Elm Street,
Racine, were each treated and released for contusions, a hospital
.
spokesperson said
Troopers said Billy H1U was westbound m a car m wb1cb Ruth
Hill was a passenger at 5:45 p.m. when be slowed to tum into a Jri·
vatc driveway. A westbound pickup truck driven by James C. Rilcr,
17, 31135 Lovett Road, Portland. was unable to stop in time and
suuck the rear of Billy Hill's ear.
Damage was moderate to both vehicles and Riter was cited for
assured clear distance.

1

- -· Hospital news------

. Stocks

J

Grange to meet
Star Grange 778 and Star Jumor
Grange 878 will meet Saturday, 8
p m at the ball located on County
Road I north of Salem Center.
Officers will be elected and plans
will be fmalized for the Me1gs
County fair booth.

EMS units record 14 calls

,

The Daily Sentinel

vided.

Bible school
PERI meeting set
The Reedsville Fellowship
Tb~ PERI -group will meet at J. Church of the Nazarene Bible
p.m. Thursday at the Meigs County ' School will be held Aug. 7·11 from
Senior Citizens Center. Speakers 6 to 8:30p.m
and lunch starts at noon.
AAtomeet
Garden club picnic
The Pomeroy group of AlcoThe Chester Garden Club will holics Anonymous will meet
bold a family picnic and auction at Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Sacred
6:30 p.m. Wednesday at Kathryn Heart Church, Mulberry Avenue,
~ora's home. Mea~ beverage pro- Pomeroy.

Meigs land transfers posted·

By The Assoelated Press
Three of the six people killed in
weekend traffic accidents in Ohio
were motorcycle riders, the State
Highway Patrol said today.
The patrol counted fatalities
from 6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
Thedead:
'
SUNDAY
.
LISBON --. Motorcyclisl
Arthur J. Murphy, 33, of John·
stown, Pa., and his passenger,
Teresa
Rearick,
33,
of
Youngstown, in a headon collision
with a car on Ohio 170 in
Columbiana County.
ASHTABULA- Jason E. Rennel, 18, of Conneaut, driver in a
one-car accident on Ohio 193 in
Ashtalmla County.
HILLIARD Robert C.

Two injured in crash on 124

Robert 0 . Tewksbary, Pearl Street, Middleport, died Monday, July 31,
1995 at Riverside Hospital, Columbus.
The Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy will handle the arrangements.

l-·----~§~~p?.,.~,.~Gr~a~ph~&lt;es~N~o~t~::~t:.:i:::..:~:z:Cl~,:9 ;5~!o&lt;c:~u·~W:aa::.,:.,~.'"'
ke- -

One Month

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Ohio

Robert 0. Tewksbary

WVA

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
B)' Carrier or Molor Routf
One Wttk .

Middl~port,

Sylvia Roach, 52, of Gallipolis, died Suoday, July 30, 199S at Holzer
Medical Center.
She bad been an ~mployee of Scenic Hill Nursing Center in Gallipolis.
Born Dec. 25, 1942 in Evan~&gt;, W.Va., she was a daughter of the late
Freda Rollins DeVault, and Ashable DeVault of Point Pleasant.
In addition to her mother, she was also preceded in death by a daugh·
ter, Sandra Roach.
Surviving in addition to her f!ll!ler are her husband, Fred L. Roach;
three daughters, Helen Barker of Pomeroy, Christina Sexton of Gallipolis,
and Betty DeVault of St. Cloud, Fla.; two sons, Fred Barker of Boliver,
Tenn., and Michael Roach of Gallipolis; five s1sters, Edith Stanley and
Sharon Stanley, both of Point Pleasant, W.Va., Linda Hammond of
Shauck, Garnett Lamm of San Angelo, Texas, and Shirley Rollins of
West Jefferson; two brothers, N.bable DeVault Jr. of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
and Elmus DeVault of Columbus; and e1ght grandchildren and a great·
grandchild.
•
Services will be I I a.m. Wednesday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant, with Louis A. Hussell officiating. Burial will be m
the Pine Street Cemetery, Gallipolis Friends may call at the funeral home
on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m.

•

This is but one of many examples of where, lh~ candidate's
rhetoric doesn t fit the cabmet
member's record . Although
Alexander now condemns DOE's
"smothering overhead," aS education secretary he smothered the
department With largess, just three
years before Republicans sought to
dismantle many of the same programs. The last budget Alexander
proposed for DOE, fiscal year
1993, is an illustration of bow far
be's come since trying to redeem
George Bush's promise 10 be the
"education president."
Alexander's budget sought a 10
percent increase for DOE - or
double what the Clinton admlmstration sought for fiscal year 1994.
It included a $600 million increase
in Head Start, which Alexander
then bragged was "the largest
funding increase in Head Start history."
.·
"In summary, our 1993 dollar
request reflects the steady growth
of federal resources for education
under President Bush's administration," Alexander stated in a 1992
press release. "While total spending on educauon in America will
·grow an esumated 25 percent since
1989, the department's budget will
grow 41 percent during that same
four years if the President's 1993
budget is approved.''
.
Alexander's budget for the previous year would also have been
dead on arrival m today's Republi'.
can-controlled Congress. Baclc
then, the candidate wbo now wants
to kill his old deparunent sought
additional federal dollars for disad··
vantaged populations - a notion,
that wouldn't stand a chance m
today's GOP.
Abolishing the DOE may be ooc,
of Alexander's campaign themes,
but he eoncedes he never discussed·
the issue with formei' Presidcn~
· Bush. "We were dealing with thesituation we had," says Alexander.
The subject also never came up
during Alexander's meeting witiJo
Riley during the transition in
December 1992. In fac~ Alexander
told Riley that both men were in'
agreement _''on 85 percent of the•
issues we face," according to1
sources present at the meeting.
Jack Anderson and ~ichaer
Binstein are writers for United'
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
•

.-

Sylvia Roach

MICH

children.'"

-

--Area Deaths-- Local News in Brief:

Tuesday, Aug. 1
Accu· Weather" forecast for daytime condtuons And htgh temperatures

The Daily Sentinel

-

'

Is your coverage co mplete? AvOid tnsurance gaps lhal
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111 Second St

·

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992·3361
Representmg The Ohro Casuarty Group of rnsurance Companres

�•
•

Sports

·The Daily Sentinel
PaQe4
Monday, July 31, 1995

.,

Dodgers get 5-4
victory over Reds
By JOHN NADEL
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Todd
Wom:ll gOI lbe final tbrec OUIS as
the Los Angeles Dodaers woo ,the
rubber same of a lbn:e·aame series
apinst lbe CiociDnali Reds. But be
was in DO mood to celebrate after.
ward
Hideo Nomo retwned to bis All·
Sw form with eight outstanding
innings and Worrell wobbled
through the ninth Sunday as the
Dodgers held off the Rilds 5·4
before a crowd of 53,058 - the
firth Dodger Stadium sellout this

season.

The win was the ninth in I:&lt;
games for the Dodgers, who moved
within three games or first-place
Colorado in tbe NL West. The
Dodgers and Rockies-begin a lbn:e·
,game series· aLCoors Field on
Tuesday.
Two days after having ·the
&lt;:racked fingernail on his middle
finger repaired by a manicurist,
Nomo allowed fl ve hits and one
run and struck out II before being
relieved by Worrell to start the
ninth. Worrell allowed a lbn:e·run
homer by Hal Morris with nobody
out before retiring lhe side.
Worrell, who brou'ght a 2-0
record, a 1.26 ERA and 18 saves
into the game, entered in a non-

J

save situation, leaving him upsel
"I don't think I should have
been ill the game, but I don't make
those decisions," be said. "I just ·
don't think 1hat was my SpOI. I go
in aDd pitch' because be (Dodgers
manager Tom l.a.lorda) told me to
pitch. I can't tell him no. It doesn't
make any diffaeoce what I think.''
When asked if be was upset,
Worrell said, " Nope ." But. be
added, "As much as pitching the
ninth inning is my job, pitclling the
ninth inning is my job when we're
abead three runs or less. We have
KARROS SCORES- The Los Angeles Dodgers' Erie Karros {13)
four or five other arms down there
gets by Clncirutatl catcher Eddie Taubensee to scon after coming In '
(in the bullpen)."
on Todd Hollandsworth's sacriDce Oy In the second Inning ot Sun.
Lasorda said the move wasn't , day's National League game In Los Angeles, when the Dodgers won
one be wanted to make.
5-4. (AP)
·
''The pitching coach (Dave
Wallace) came up to me and said
Nomo walked none for the sec- rell . "I just tried to lie selective,
the.. nail was- bothering bim•·--Ond time-tb~and-fanned 10 stay off his forkball111111-uy-UJgepi
(Nomo),'~ Lasorda said. "He was
or more for the seventh time, rais· fastball to bil"
concerned ·that the nail might get ing his NL-leading strikeout total
Dodger catcher Mike Piazza hit
worse and be' d miss his next to 150. He threw 97 pitches, (:!} Cor Tim Pugh's second pitch of lbe
start."
strikes.
sixth inning into the left f~eld seats
Nomo (8-2) 'was coming off the
"I'm satisfied with my pitch," for bis 17th homer of the season to
sbortest appearance of bis big- _ Nomo said through the interpreter. snap a 1-1 lie. After Eric Karros
league career, a four-inning outing "I could throw with a good tempo, walked, Raul Mondesi bit bis 15th
at Houston last Tuesday. He and a good rhythm."
homer to knock Pugh (5-4) out of
allowed three runs in that game
"He's got good stuff,'' said the game.
before leaving be&lt;:ause of the CiaCk Reds shortstop Barry Larkin, who
Piazza singled in the Dodgers'
in his fingernail that was repaired flied out tbrec times against Nomo final run in the seventh off reliever
with several layers of acrylic bond- before Ieadiog off the ninth with a Dave Burba, a run the Dodgers
ing.
ground-rule double against Wor· would ultimately need to win.

)
'

I

.
'

'

Moatrell II , a:ilondo 4

-

--

s..-

l! L 1!11.

Floridl 3, St l.oolJ I

Iii

· -...................... 38 .551
Baltirnate ...............o ,42 .506
New Y&lt;&gt;&lt;L ........... o 4l .506
.f1

.460

Toroa&amp;o .. - .............. 37 .g

.43S

C.Oirollllftoloo
CLEVIlLAND ..... .. 59 2l5 .694
.. 1toua Cty ........... 41 4l .494

(AIIIby 6-S), 4'0l p.m.

(Hoary 6-7), 4'll p.m.

17
11 ..5
22.l

-

.:149

29.l

Wellen.,...._

.621
..506

10

.461

14

.494

11

S..Urday•a acor•

Torvato 11, OUJ.aod 11

a.a.&gt;7,BIItllnolo4
N&lt;wY..t4,M-2
Califcnia 4, Mi,..w.;: 0

• •

TOO.y'o&amp;amoo

4.5
1..5
10..5

.411
.429

33
TeUI .....................44 43
Sau.lc ........... .........143 44
OKiaDd .................41 ...

Colorado (ReJDOIO l-3)

It

hloatru.l.

I

INDUCTED- Former Philadelphia PbUIIes Riehle Ashburn
(left) IUid Mike Schmidt bold lbelr plaques shortly after their
Inductions Into the Baseball Hall of Fame Sunday In
Coopentown, N.Y. (AP)

Schmidt &amp; Ashburn
among inductees
into Baseball HOF

TuOIIdloy'o gameo
Florida (0Ndaer 4-4) at Moatrnl
{Poftz 9-2), 7:3l p.m.
N.., Y'"t (ll.-.lldt 2-7) ot CINCINNATI (-10-l), Dl p.m.
Olicaro (Na&gt;tarro 1-4) at Pittlbu.r&amp;h
(Ericb 2-3), 7,3l p.m
Pb.llldclphia (Feruaadcz J-1) at Atlull {Avay 4-6), 7:40 p..m.
Houatoa (llamptoa 6--3) If. St. Loull
(l.::boa 2·l0),1:3S p.m.
Ia Allld.. (Valda 7-6) .. Cok&gt;ma
{Tho~a 2-1 ), 9:0S p.m.
Su Fraaci&amp;co {Leiter 5-6) at San
Die,o (Di.lturu 2· 3), 10:05 p.RL

_..,l,CU!VELAND3

AL leaders

Suaday'aKOrea
Baltlmln •• Cllicqo J
a..tlaDd II, Toronto 3
Callfontla I, Mllwlllbo 3
~City 3,1lom&gt;il 2

C. Davl1, Caliroraia, .341; 0' Leary,
Bo&amp;toll, .331; -Thomu, Cbleaao, .329;

Cl£VEI-'ND l . - 2
Tu• 7. Bolloa 6
NewYoti7.- 4

,)26.

BATilNO: E. M.-tira, Seattle,l.3.59;

Baeraa, CLEVELAND •. 3:Z9; Thome,
CLEVEL~ •. 326; NHhriDI, Botton,

ToaJcht'opmoo
Toroalo (Heat1e11 7-1) at Biltlifiott
6-3), 7'3l p.m.

- ta.... City (Jeoomt 0-0} M Cblcqo
""er 4--1}. 1:05 p.IIL

(flei

Tusday'opmoo
Mi.-. (T..,..U 6'11) ot CLEVELAND (O..,Ol-3), 7,QS p.m.
.
BOitoll (Smith 5..6) II Detroil (Weill
' 10-)). 7,QSp.m. .
Toroato (Hurtado 3.0) M BaiUQIOI'e

P·"'

{ltowll H), 7'Jl
Milwaabe (Ql~e• 2-2)
f'dldlo ~), Hl'p.m.

.11

N'ew York

~

Cily (Oublcu 7-1) 11. Chieaao
(RJ- 1-0).I,Ol p.m.

te.ua (Piivllk S~ a

o..tllllld (SiaU]e-

myrc 9· 3), IO:OS p.m.

Seattle (lobiiiOI II ·I) II Callron.Ja
(,._...H), IO,Q.! p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

r.....ot.w-.

X..
-

l! L 1!11.

................. .l4 l2 .621
fhl: : r i t ............ 7 •1 .S34
No
................0 44 .494
florida ................... Jl 49 .417
New York ....... ...... 34 S2 .395

.

.

Iii
I

ll .S
II
20

cG.tr.i otorWo.

' CINCIHNATI ........S3 Jl ' .624
: .................so J6 .lll

• ~ ............... 43 ...
. Pll..,..... ............... J6 ..
• SL Loull .......... :..... 37 ll

COQ!'ERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) - Mike Schmidt promoted Pete
Rose. ~hie · Ashburn presented bis case for ~e fonner players.
Leon Day's widow pushed for the Negro Leaguers . .
Induction day at the Hall of Fame rurned into more than the usual
string of traditional thank-you acceptance speeches Sunday. Instead,
It became a chance for tbe newest members to speak about
platforms.
Schmidt wanted to talk about Rose, whom he called "the greatest
hitter ever." Wearing a No. 14 lapel pin to honor Rose, Schmidt
remembered that bis grandmother used to tailor his _base hal~
uniforms in the style of ber hero, a young second baseman for the
Cincinnati Reds.
·"I join ber and millions of baseball fans around the world in
hoping someday soon, someday very soon, Pete Rose will be
standing right here," Schmidt said.
'
.
Ashburn joined Schmidt on the podium, while family members
represented Day, a star in tbe Negro Leagues, tum-of-the-century
pitcher Vic Willis and key NL founder William Hulberl
Schmidt's references to Rose drew large ovations from the'
crowd, estimated at 25,000-28,000, making it the largest ever for the
Ceq!monies. Most of the fans were from Philadelphia, many of them
having come up on the 200 tour buses that made tbe 4 112-bour trek.
"We want Pete! We want Pete!" they frequently chanted during
the two-hour ceremonies.
Those fans recalled Rose's time in Pbiladelpbia, when be helped
lead the Pbillies in 1980 to their only World Series championship.
They also know tbere_'s a possibility they'll never see baseball s.

Bubner bit bis 17th ·homer, all
off right-banders, to make it 2-1 in
the second.
Ramirez's 24th homer In tbe
ftftb pushed Oeveland's lead to 41.
Blowers bit bis lOth homer in
the seventh, and Paul Sorrento
capped the scoring with hls I 6th
homer in the eighth off reliever Bill
Risley.
Tbe win capped a successful
road trip for the Indians wbo lead
the AL Central by I 7 games and
have the best recvrd in all of boseball (59-26).
.
"We're pretty haPPY with tbe 84 road trip," Scxrcnto said. "Hope'
fully we can go home and really
stan rolling again."
"I'm happy any time we can
come out to the West Coast and go
8-4," Hargrove said. "Tbe way we
lost some of the games was disappointing, but overall it was a good

Broncos edge Niners 9-7; Cowboys defeat Bills 21-15
By The Associated Press

The NFL· s exhibition season is
officially underway.
And could you ask for a better
opening-day s5enario than the
defending Super Bowl champions
losing to their fonner coach?
Tbat' s whilt happened when the
Denver Broncos beat the SaiJ Francisco 49ers 9· 7 in one of three
games Saturday.
"Because I know their personnel, I could anticipate some of the
calls," said Denver coach Mike
Shanahan, wbo· helped the 49ers
win lbe Super Bowl last year as
offensive coordinator. "A couple
of times when they audibled. we
knew what they were going to do
because the terminology we use is
tbe same."
The weekend also included the
Hall of Fame Game in Canton .
Ohio, with Carolina beating Jacksonville 20-14 in a battle between
the NFL's two newest expansion
franchises and Dallas' 21-IS victo-r-)HW~r-Buffalo in_a matc~up of
two old Super Bowladversanes.
Denver's John Elway and San
Francisco's Steve Young played
only sparingly. It was Elway's
backup, Hugh Millen, who had
most of the work. completing 16 of
20 passes for 139 yards. Millen
engineered two long drives for
Denver and Jason Elam kicked
three field goals as the Broncos
outgained the 49ers 355·175.
Elvis Grbae, who followed
Young, accounted for the game's
· only touchdown when he tossed a
24-yard pass to Chris Thomas late
in the first quarter. But Grbac, who
completed .14 of 20 for 111 yards,
threw a costly interception early in
the fourth period.
.
Shanahan didn't show a trace of
: senlimenta,lily after facing his for·
· mer team.
: "Mentally, it really wasn't
: tough because I've ha:d a chance to
· go over this game · for several
: months," Shanahan said.
Cowboys 21, BOis IS
At Irving, Texas, the Cowboys'
: Shennan Williams scored on runs
: of three 'and tWo yards and carried
· 15 times for 41' yards as backups
spent a lot of time on tbe field for
both Dallas and Buffalo.
"Shennan is a tough kid. He's
going to help us," Dallas coach
Barry Switzer said.
Tbe game was a typical exbibi·
tion opener - Dallas' frrst team
offense played only one series and
. Buffalo coach Marv Levy said~

"We played everyone on the roster
of 80, so we did not have high
expectations for Ibis game."
The outcome was the same
between the teams as in their last
two Super Bowl matchups, in the
1992 and 1993 seasons.
In training camp developments:
Ollen
Bruce Matthews, an All-Pro
center- guard for Houston, has
agreed to a four-year, $10.3 million
contract and is expected to sign
today or Tuesday.
•
Matthews, who has been to
seven consecutive Pro Bowls, now
bas a chance to break Mike Mun·
cbak' s team record of nine. "I'm glad it's over because I'm
ready to get back to work,'' be
said. " I'm excited about the sea·
son. I wanted to star in Houston all
along. This means should be able
to finish my career with the Oil·
ers.''
If Matthews plays out his contract, be will have spent 16 years
with the Oilers, tying fonner defensive end Elvin Bethea's team
record. Matthews. who rums 34 in
August. has played 174 games s~d in Oilers history to Bethea's
210.
Chal'!!len
San Diego's Natrone Means
doesn't seem any closer to making
a deal after bis holdout reached
eight days Sunday and $32,000 in
fines. Means and the Chargers
remained about $10 million apart.
Means, wbo was expected to
repon to ·training camp along· with
tbe team's veteran players o.n July
23. is being flqed $4,000 for each
day he fails to repon.
Tbe Pro Bowl running back,
wbo set a Chargers single-season
rushing record with 1,350 yards
last season, is seeking a five-year

contract worth $16.6 million, as
well as a $3 million signing bonus.
Tbe Chargers, who bave offered.
Means a four-year deal worth $6.2
million and an $800,000 signing
bonus, have repeatedly said they

Raymer. the Redskins' second·
round draft pick out of Wisconsin.
had two screws inserted in the
lower pan of his )fft fibula. He will
spend four to slit. weeks in a cast
and face six weeks of rebabilita·

lion.
The injury occurred when ll!am-·
matt! and guard Vernice Smith
tripped and fell on Raymer's ankle
during . a scrimmage Sa turday
agains&lt; tbe Pittsburgh Steelcrs.

Kruk ends baseball career after single

--Sports briefs-Golf
WOODBRIDGE, Onwio (AP)
- Nick Faldo, who hasn't played
competitive golf in Canada since
tbe 1989 Canadian Open. won
$110,000 in the final nine boles of
the Skins Game.
Combined with tbe $50,000 be
won Saturday, Faldo pocketed
$160,000 and was the overall winner of the four-mao, $360,000
evenl
Ben Crenshaw earned $50,000
Sunday and finished with $110,000
for the weekend, while Fred Couples won $50,000 Sunday and
· $40,000 Saturday

are not open to further negotiations
and their offer is finaL
Redsklns
Cory Raymer underwent
surgery Sunday for a broken ankle
and will be out 10 to 12 weeks.

By DAVID GINSBURG
B,ALTIMORE {AP) - John
Krulc;s scraggly beard and swollen
gut were good for a few laughs on
more than one comedy show. His
retirement, however, was all first
class.
.Kruk, 34, quit baseball Sunday
after getting a first-inning single
for tbe Chicago White So~ in their
game against the Balul"ore On·
oles. There was absolutely no fan·
fare ; in fact, the announceme~t
wasn't made until after Chicago s
·
8-3 loss.
"The desire to compete at Ibis
level is gone. When that happens.
it's time to go,'' Kruk said in a
statement that was released follow·
ing the game ..
By the time the statement was
distributed to lhe media, Krul:: was
long gone. He began clearing out
bis locker shortly after being
stranded at third in the top of the
first, and Frank Thomas took bis
place at designated bitter in the
third inning.
·
It was not a rash decision. Kru1c
made up his mind Friday and
shared the news with his teammates Saturday, telling .tbem lie
would retire after his 'neilt base bit.
"He wanted to Lalk to every body and make sure nobody
thought be was a quitter," Chicago
shortstop Ozzie Guillen said. "He
just wanted to make sure everybody undersLands he can't play
anymore.''
Kruk missed the first six games
of the 1994 season with Philadelphia after undergoing surgery for
the removal of a cancerous tesbclc
in M3rcb: Later that season, he was
placed on tbe disabled list after
· undergoing arthroscopic surgery on
bis right knee in May.
Kruk was baUling aching knees
all season, and that was a factor In
bis decision to retire.
"He was complaining every
night about his knees. He can't
hardly even w!llk," Guillen said.
"He wasn't playing the game the
way be wanted. He obviously bas a
lot of respect for tbe game and his

wouldn't have gotten a bit today,
fans .
"He wanted to give 100 per- . he would have waited until he got a
cent, but he couldn't,'' Guillen hit ' '
Kruk eventually got bold of the
added. "That's wby be went borne.
He no want to play the game he baseball and no doubt packed it in
the equipment bag be took &lt;o the
love the way be was playing."
White Sox manager Terry Bev· airport.
Kruk:'s rotund appearance was a
ington said, ''He got to the point
where he felt, healthwise, he was running gag on Sa!urday Night
starting to break down . You saw Live, and Krulc's name made more
him bobbling after h~ got tbe bi_t. than one appearance on Da9id LelHe was just at the poml where bts tennan's Top 10 List. But be also
carried a potent bat, as evidenced
leg just can't take it anymore."
Kruk was eager to make bis last by his impressive career numllers.
In bis tO-year career with San
at-bat one to remember.
Diego,
Philadelphia and Chicago,
"Yeah. be wanted to 8,~ . out
with a hit," Bevington said. If be Krulc hit .300 with I 00 homers and

592 RBis. Signed with the While
Sox as a free agent May 12, he batted .308 with two homers and 23
RBis in 49 games.
, Kruk was selected 10 play in
three AU-Star games, and will long
be remcm~ for futilely flailing
at three pitches from Randy Johnson in the 1993 contest in Balti more. During the at- ba~ he humorously acknowledged that be was
overmatched by Johnson's speed
and controL
Bul Kruk was 2-for-5 in &lt;wo
All-Star appearances and hit .348
in the 1993 World Series with
Philadelphia.

Hall of Fame inductees ... (ContinuedfromPage4)
.
'

career bits leader in the Hall.
"It's great we see eye-to-eye on
something, isn't it, Pbiladelpbia?"
Schmidt said.
·
Schmidt, who played with Rose
for five years and credits him with
spurring bim on to becoming
perhaps the greate.~ all-around third
baseman ever, twice mentioned him
during his 20-minute speech. While
the fans cheered, · there was
absolutely no reaction· from the 30
returning Hall of Famers who sat
stone silent around Schmidl
Before Schmidt was introduced,
Johnny Bench was beard by at least
two photographers in front of him to
mutter "you can have him" when
the crowd chanted fo(Rose.
Rose and Bench, former
teammates in lhe Big Red Machine
days of the 1970s, bad a falling out
after Ros.e. r.an into gambling
problems that led' to bim_ 1being
banned from baseball, thereby
making bim ineligible for election to
the Hall.
·
Rose, by the way, was in
Cooperstown on Friday and
Saturday. He left about 24 hours
beforetbeceremonies,sayinghedid
not want to distract from the
attentionSchrnidtdeserVed.
Schmidt, whose 548 boine runs
for Pbiladelpbia rank seventh in
major league history, also bad words
ror presen!-daY players and leaders.

.

"I
considered
playing
"Can we put that to rest &lt;oday?"
professional baseball a privilege," he said.
be said. "It's my feeling too many
While Schmidt remained
players today are taking that composed. Ashburn often had to
privilege for granted.·' ·
clear his throat. He dabbed his eyes
That remark drew another when he introduced his 91-year-old
ovation, as did bis insistence that the mother, Genevieve.
gaine bire a commissioner, sign a
Ashburn, a career .3 08 bitter,
labor agreement and pay more l!lCDlioned several players be
attention to those who support the thought bad credentials worthy of
sporl
Cooperstown. including Nellie Fox,
"If we make the fans No. I, they Ron Santo, Vada Pinson and Rusty
wiD come," he said.
Staub.
Schmidt also said it was time he
"There were some beautiful
ended his often-contentious . ballplayers out there," he said.
relationship with Philadelphia fans.
Ashburn, vou:d in by the Veterans
Despite being an 11-time All-Star, Commiuec in March, said he knew
three-time NL MVP, IO.time Gold what h meant 10 wait a long time to
Glove winner and the man who led be elected. admining he didn't
the Phillies to their only World exactly get-into tbe Hall "with
Series championship, Schmidt often blazing.trumpets.':
was booed by the hometown fans.
Day. who pitched, played second
Schmidt admitted he brought base and outfield, died six days afte&lt;
some of that on himself with a cool being elected in March. I lis widow,
demeanor, often seen by fans as an Geraldine, said they talked about
aloof attitude. Even so, there were their hope that there would be
no boos for him Sunday, although additions to the current tisl or 12
Ashburn, a .popular Phillies Negro Leaguers in the lin II.
announcer for more than 30 years,
"I pray-'that one day it will be
may have gotten more cheers.
made rigllt.'' she said.
"lflbadtodoitalloveragain,
Bob Wolff, in hi s 50th
I'd do it in Philadelphia," Schmidt consecutive year of .announcing, was
said. "The only thing I'd change presented with the Ford C. Fri ck
would be me. I would be less award for excellence in base ball
sensitive, more outgoing and more broadcas_ting.
appreciative or what you expected
frtm me.''

(See INDUCI'EES on Page S)

Torres (3-7) gave up five bits
and four nms in five i1111ings.

.494
.429
.420

'Wtller•DforW..
- . C&lt;*ndo ................41 39 .5$2
1a A.o.... ...........4S 42 .l17
~.. ~ .............40 4tl ...!
IsM Ptac:lloo ........39 ... .«1

l.S
11
16.l
17.l

3

H

9

RUNS: Pttillipl, Califoc:Dia, IS; Ed.moodl, CoiiC&lt;nla. 12; E. Milt'- Selltie, 69; Salmon, Catifo11111, 61; CU.rti1,
Ddroll. 54;
Chkqo, " ' Bliily
Aodonoa,811timore,54.
Ul: Edmoad1, Calitouia, 11;
V...tu., Bootoo, 7S; T.l\lttll-. .73; )1, Romlru. CLEVELAND, 72;
SDOW, Califoruia, 70; ThotnM, Cllicaao.
69; E . - Seoale. 67.
llllll'
a..EVEUND, 116; E.

Thou-.

a-.
Mlrtioer., S•Ue. 110; Nl.&amp;oa, Teua, 107;

Edmond;, Califorala, )06; Kaoblaueh ,
Minaeaota. lOS; Soow, CaUforDla, 104;

C\.rtii,Detroit., I02.

DOUBLES: E. MartiDeZ, SeatUe, 32;
Belle, a..EVELAND, 29; DiSarcill.l. California. 1.5; 0 1l.c.y, ao.toa. 21; Baerp.,
CLEYEL\ND, 22: 7arelied witb 21.
TRIPLES: Lofton, CLEVELAND. 7:

R. Alomlr, Torotllo, 7: Brady ADdenoa ,
Baltimore, 6; O'Lary, Botloa, S; Vina,

Mllw-. !I ~ B . Willi.aml. N• York.':
Kaoblluch, MiiUleiOla. S; DiS.-c:lu, Cal·
ifomla. S; White. Torontri, 5.
HOME RUNS: lh::J11111, ChiateJ, 27;
Y•uah11, Bo1ton, 26; ~ · Ramirez .
CLEVELAND, 24; McOwtre, OatJaod,
24; T. Mortluz, s-te. 22: R. l'llmoin&gt;.
Blltl~~~tn, 22: Edlooodl, c.JIIonla, 21 .

. STOLEN BASES : T, Ooodwtn ,
Kauu City, 31; Colenu, K~ City,

25; L. Johblo~o Chi~o.24; KDDblaudl.,
MillatJCU, 23: Niao~. Teut, 23; R. Hen·
denon, Oai.llDd, 22: LDftou, CLEVE-

LAND,20.

'

PITCHING (I decillo")' W.Wfiold,
lo;toa, 11-1, .917, 1.51; R. }oblilt)ll,
Sooltle, II· I, .917, 2.79; .......... Callfomla, 10-1, .909, US; llenruo ......_
CLI!VI!LAND. 9-1 •.900. 2.62, Bdioclo,
BCIIIDIII 7-1, .115, J.lS; DWelll, Odioit,
10-J, .769, 3.04; Bootlo, Clllf...U. 6-2,
.750, f ,ll ; StotUtmJfe, Or.klaad., 9-3,
.7S0,4.0J.
STRIIJ!Otn'l: ll. IobD.IOII , Seaule,
liS; Appier, Jtauu City, 132; StoHl•
myre. Oltlud, 124: Flaley, canronla.
t20;
Yort. Ill; 1.
New Yort,91; lluooa,IOiloD. 96.
SAVBS: Men, CLEVELAND, 29;
Lee Smith, Call(oraia, l4; Bcker1ley,
OU:Iud, 20; D. Joaa, Baltimore. 19;
AJU\lera, Bo•toll, 19; Wettelaad 1 N1w

eo..,-

"'"""".u.

Yort. II; 1\loota&lt;&gt;IIIOQ, IWIM City, II;
Hezlaemu.,Ddrait, 11.

.3!16: Dua1to11, Cb1caao•. 34J; D. Bell,
Hcutton, .JJ5; Bonilla, New York, .315;
Blcbelte, Colorodo, .324; Sq\11, Moltrell,
.32J;Ona.,Chicqo,.32l.
1
RUNS: 81Uio. Hou.atda, 11; Bondi,
Su Franciloo~?o; Fialey, San Dieao, 68;
81JWeU, HOUlton, ISS; MODCb\, Lo1 AnJC!es, 6J; McRae, Oticaao, 60; IMtia,

Oat.,...,fblorwlo, 63.
~

~City l,!llm&gt;it4 (16)

-

By BEN WALKER

trip."

CINCINNATI, S9.
RBI: D. Bell, Houlton, 7S; Bichette,
Co lando, 71; BoDd.l, San FraDC:iaco ~ 61;
Baawell, HOUitOII., 66; R. Saaden,
CINCINNATI, 64; So1a, Cblcaao, 6J;

St. Lo11i1 (Oaborac 0-3) at Florida
(R,pp ~). 7'0S p.m.
Pfttlbllff,h (Parria 4-2) at New York
(Pu"ip"" 2-S). 7,4() p.m.

lolloa 7, TUII I

I

~

.

BAmNG: T, Owyaa, Su Dleao.

Hou11oa (ltUe -4-10) at Su Dieao

.c.:s

MilwiUW ............. -42 44
Clllcoa•••• •ooooooo••••• •• J6 ..

ClllfCJnlio ...............H

. .· ~··

On the NFL pre-season scene,

NLleaders

Yon 2, Pllbburj)ll

Ia Allo•lool, aNCINNA114
UooalDa 1, San Ditto I
3, A11aol.o l

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.............. ]() S6

j

The' Daily Sentinel • Page 5

. Pomeroy • Mid_5:11eport, Ohio

())lcqo I, Pbl.a.dcJ_Jibia ().

Major leagues

DdroiL ................... 40

asserted himself and put an 'end to
i~" Cleveland manager Mike Har·
grove said.
Before being placed on the dis·
abled list, Hersbiser won five
games in a row between May 9 and
June 5. During that span he was 5·0
with a 2.11 ERA.
Manny Ramirez hit a two-run
homer and drove .in three runs and
Paul Sorrento hit a rolo homer for
the Indians.
Eric Plunk pitched the eighth
and Jose Mesa fmished for his 29th
save in 29 chances.
Cleveland scored in the first
against Seattle starter Salomon
Torres when Ramirez walked with
the bases loaded.
The Indians made it 2-0 in the
second on Carlos Baerga's RBI
single.

Scoreboard

Baseball

X..

;2-2 with a 6.20 ERA in four starts
before Sunday's impressive performance. .
"I definitely needed a couple
starts to get back in the groove,"
Hersbiser said. "But it's kind of
like riding a bike. I've come back
from a career-ending type of injury,
so I wasn't too concerned about a
tweak in lhc back..'' .
In his July 25 loss against California, Hersbiser allowed five hits,
five.earned nms and a homer.
Hershiser, who gave up solo
homers to Jay Bubner and Mike.
Blowers, wallred ooe and struck out
five on Sunday.
"Today I could locale my fastball oo both sides of lhe plate and I
bad my brealting ball when I needed it," Hershiser sai4.
"Every time it looked like Seat·
tie might be starting a rally Ore!

.• ;4
.
:~;,..·~

~~·1't

Indians tally 5•2 win over Mariners
SEA TILE (AP) - For Ore!
Hersbiser it was a minor comeback.
In 1991 be came back from
maj!r reamstructive surgery on his
right shoulder lbat sidelined him
for more tbao a year to post a 7·2
·record with a 3.46 ERA. ·
Early Ibis month Hersbiser came
back from 15 days oo the disabled
Jist recovering from a strained
lower back.
On Sunday. all be did was come
bact from a rough outing to fourbit Seattle over seven strong
innings oo tbc way to a 5·2 Oeve·
lancJ'win.
Hersbiser {8·5) bounced back
from bis last start on July 25. wben
be gave up five runs in just 2 _113
innings. It was his shortest outing
since Aug. 16, 1991. ·
After returning from the dis·
,abled list on July 7. Hersbiser was

'
'

1..

Monday, July 31, 1995

HITS: D. Bell, Hou;toa, 119; T.

Owyan, San Dleao, Ill; Blchene, Col·
orado, IlL Oracc, Chicago_, 107;
Cordero, Moalrul, 104; Filley, Su

Oiego,104; Bonilla, New Yort, lOJ.
DOUBLES: Grace, Cbica1o. 3S;
Gordero, Molltreal, 27; Bonilla, New
York, 2.5; ll Slll.dcn, CINCINN'A11, 24;
Lontford, SL LGuia, 24; McRM, Chkqo,
24; Bapell, HOUiloa, 23; Bichctte, Col·
orado, 23.
TRIPLES' 00aJ11111, Ia AopiN, 6;
Mcbe, OicqO, 6; Bullet, New York, 6;
Bullett, Cblcaao, S; Lark.! a, CINCINNATI, !li; INDitoa, Cbitqo, .5; I n tied
wlth4.
HOME RUNS : L Wilker, Colorado,
23; Oaot, CINCINNAn. 22; Boac», San
Fraacilco, 22; Galll'l"i!aa, Colorado, 21;
C11tilla, Colorado, 20; Bichette, Col· ·
orado, 20; Solll, Cblca1o. 18; Bonilla,
New Yark, 18.
STOLEN BASES: Veru, Florida, 31;
~k.in, CINCINNATI, 31; Fiolcy, Saa
D1eao. 2S: D. l..ewll, CINCINNATI, 23;
R. Sanden, CINCINNAn, 22; D. Bell.
Ho11110o., 22; Lankford, SL LoW, 12,
PITOIING (I deci•lou): 0 . Maddul. ·
AtlaDtl, 11·1, .917, 1.64; Smiley,
CINClNNATI, 10-1, .909. 3.37; Clontz.
AtiiJila, 7· 1, .87S, 3.16; C. ~ Moatr.
al, 9-2, .811, 3.LS; Nomo, l.ol A.apl•,l·
2•. 800, 2..04; ~ulllng:er, ChitiJO, 1·2,
.BOO, 1.94; Sw1R, Color1do, 6 -2, .750,
l .13.
STRlKEOUfS : Nomo, Los ADaelc;,
1!10; Bene;. Su Diep!, 126; Smolf%, At·
laata. 122; 0 . Maddu1, Atlaata, Ill;
S:P-1111ina, Pbiladelfhia, 114; P.J. Mat·

11

, Montreal, 11 ; Fauero, Montreal,

10 .
SAVES: Slocu"mb, PhHadelphla,l4;
Myen, Cbi"'I, 24: Hooke, St. Loula, 22;
Roj11, Montreal, 20; J. Braatley,
CINCINNATI, 20~ Todd Wonell, Lo1
A.naele~,

II; Herrman, San Dlcao·. 17:

Bect.SulFrucll&lt;:o,l7.

Transactions
BaoeboU
· A.erkM Ltape
BALTIMORE ORJOLES: Optioned
Mart Smllh. oytfielder, to Rochtatrr of
the IDtern•tioaal Le.aue. Scat Joe
BorvWJk..i, pitchllf, to Rochellet. Rcealled
Rklr: JCri,Yda, pitcher, from Rocbe&amp;t.et,
CIDCAOO WHITE SOX: Annouaced
• the rditemellt of J o~ n Xruk, detl&amp;Dittd
blu..
r
KANSAS CITY ROYALS~ Sent Bob

Hamelin, detianated hitter, and Chril

Styna, inOeld~ , to OrnaJ.. of the .Amorl·
caa .Aua;iatlon. Called up Scott ADderlOB, pitcher, from Omaha. Actiuted
Edp Cil:eRI, infielder. rrvm the 15-day
dlllbled Ua. Mo'ted eMil Hauey, pitcher,
Crom the l!l·diY to tile 60-day d111bled
1lll.
TEXAS RA.NOERS : W• i¥ed Steve
Dueehele, lh1n:l buem&amp;D. Recalled Lull
Ortiz, third balenwl, from Otllborr~~ City
of the American A.uocl11ion. Sent Lou
• Frazier, outHddcr, to .Otlaho~m City,
TORONTO BLUE lAYS: Pl.ated. [)an.
ny Col. IDd Dlrren Hall, pit.chcn, on the
U-day dilabled IIJt . Moved Duane Ward,
pitcher, from the 1~ -dly to the 60-day dil·
lbled lilt. Called up Paul Menhan aad
Jimmy Roam, pitchen, from Synaue of

lhe .._ , • .._..

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The Daily~~!!-!~~~

:.."

Monday, July 31, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

,.

ANNOUNC EMENTS

Page6

30 ~nnouncements

,. ·------------------------------------------------~----------------~------~-----

~-OVAL

will continue
· to receive funds
'

'

Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL), of which Meigs County
· ··. L'jbraries arc a pan. cominue 10 be
funded at 75 cents of the avcm£e
sllllewidc dollar. Eric S. Anderson.
:: director, reponed to the boar&lt;l of
· trustees at a meeting this week.
·
Anderson said that the status ot
public library fum.l~ - the Library
- and Local Governmenr ~upporl
•• Fund (LLGSF) -ha&lt; beeu reuuceu
to 5.7 percent. This will ura.&lt;tically
. limit the funding provided to )he
• equalizmion wmponcm of the formula, which means OVAL member
,. libraries will he fun&lt;lc&lt;l at the
. reduced 75 cents of 1hc

av~rage

.. Statewide dollar.

•.

The

Stale Library

Boar&lt;l

_approved a lhree percent increase

• . for 0 VAL operations aml $200,{)()(J
per year wm; also · proviUOO for the
;-. four other chartered regiunal

library systems. The _Ohio Public
Library Information Network
(OPLIN) fun&lt;lin£ w;c&lt; incre.~se&lt;l by
., $8 million, the &lt;lirector reported.
.., Anderson indicated thai lhesc funds
will prnhahly prnvi&lt;le a&lt;lditional

,,. - insrallatinn hardware
. , hut. at this
linw there wn~ nu lurthcr mhmn ; l ~
:: tinn .
,. Rhon~a

Am~s.

of Maypi&gt;rl, P~•­
.• was hir'etl as the Access Service:-:
_ Coor&lt;linalor. She will b~ rcsp&lt;m&lt;i·
bl e for co nnecting the mcmtlcr

.:. _ li~rarie s to

U~e

OPLIN (Ohio Puh-

lie Lihr:u·y Information Network)
as well :L" incrca"ing l.11c numher of
local rt!sources mnurueJ on tiH!
I menu:: !.
On 1he recommen&lt;lat ion or Bill
Burchiun. OVAL Board personnel
commi1te.c chalr ru1J repre~entative
from the Briggs Lawrence Coumy
Public Library in Ironton. lhal
Bonr&lt;l appruve&lt;l five budgets 10
support cooperative programs.

Anderson

announce~

that four

libraries incem.l tn (ontinue purtici·
paring in the Reading and The

Young Chilli prnwcr.
Ruth Metcalf, representing the
,Stare Library or Ohio, Wll' awarded
a certificate or apprecialion for her
five yea!' of !'ervace as liai so n

between 1l1e two bodie.s . She H
being replaced by Jay Burron. who
al so altentltt..l the mt=t'ting reprcsemin£ lhe Stale library.
.
The Boar&lt;l approve&lt;l purcha.&lt;e of
a new print e r to replace Hn eight
year ol&lt;l unit. They also approve&lt;l a
contrnet with Litho Intcmational of
Columbu.&lt; for printing the Fall
19~'i B&lt;Klks By Mail cat:uog.
OVAL is the only stale fun&lt;led
rebillllfll lihmry sys tem iu Ohio. It
serves Ihe citizens ami lihnu·ies of
Athens,
Hocking . Jackson,

Lawrence, Meig , , Pike, Ross,
Scioln, ami Vinton Counties with
programs nf services deVeloped hy
Uwse lihraries.

__Area rain welcomed .
"

'

:. :By HAL KNEEN

POMEROY - WI"'' ~ &lt;liffcrencc rain make:-.! Corn leave:-. arc
unfurlin g from their drouglll condi·
~ ·tions. Sweet corn is t:t.-.:-.eling out

."

- · and tilling out tht: · rows of kernels.

Alfalfa and hay liel&lt;l&gt; have restart·
::- ed growth·. sn perhaps another cu\tin£ can be taken before 1:~ I, ·
Vegetable growers. especially

· mation. call OSLI Extcn.&lt;ion llclmonl County oft ice at (614) 6'!'il45'i.
R~hind

the s-.:tnt:s

The Meigs Cnunty Fair !rom
Aug. 14 ~ 1 ~ is less than two weeks
away. Deh111d tbe scene.&gt; are many

volunh;;ers anti husinesscs pn.:par·
ing thi s year's fair ' activities . The
frustratiolls and h(,!adaches arc
those without irrigation. may con- . many . llnwcver. somehow all the
tinue· to have a hountiful season
&lt;u.:tivlly resolves itself into a well- afler all. Hom eow ner~ 10o. have orgtmized ..... pectacular event
heen c;1g:crly ;!waiting th e ~ound nl: remcmherc&lt;lthc rest of U1e year, or
lhC S l~u1 in~ gun &lt;1 -" they n:v ur the if you win l"i"' place. maybe the
lawn mower_hi do hatrlt.: a!!:lin~t the
rest ot' your life!
·
grow in~ l"tlades of gra.,:-. .
Plan on participating in the
While m:111y goo{.] things c.:onH.:
many events. Exhibit your &gt;luff,
wit.ll · lhc rain. weeds too, will he
whether il be livestock, horticultur· allempting 10 complete lh ~ ir life al products. art, photography, flow:. , cyclt! to .pnx.luce seeds or i~crem~e er 1\rnmging Hr my ..favorite, ·" bnktd
,. : their root food storage reserve!'&gt;.
goods." Remember to pre-register

__ Cominuc your ctlons in culling U&gt;c
weeds down to prevent them from

, going ro 'ecd.
Work with your ncighhors muJ
- - lownship trustees In eliminate those
' · weed J14:'ltches thnt appear along l.11c

- ' rOad edge ami fence rows ., Most

,, : herbicide usc

shoul~

he &lt;lela yeti

·'"· until
S~ptemhcr when
plant StfUSS
;&gt;! ••
•
•
.
is les . . and hcrhlralc s are more

fm open ch«&gt; exhibition&gt; !rom 10
a.m. lh 4 p.m. on Aug. 9 or Aug. 10
at the Fair lloar&lt;l Office . A Meigs
('ounly J\griculwral Society memhcrship tickcl is rCliUin.:LIIo show in

open das~ cx.hihit...:. (Hal Kllt't:'ll is lht' u~rkullural
extensinn u~~nt fur Md~:s CuunI he

ty .)

- · c{fective.

"~ · · Homenwn~ rs. thi s al so applies

. _ lions, so Jday any herhicide appli·

fication

hring samples to the ex ten -

' ' sion oflkc . follow herhiciue lahcl
_ instructions ''s tn appliratHlll. how
" ·much. what safe ty !actor:-.. when
an&lt;l where lo apply chemical,_
Rnwhunlt'l'

cnur~t'

13owhunlers. do you

n~cU

;;- Bowhunlt:r EliiiCJiion Weeke nd
·, will he held Au g. 21&gt;-27 at 4- 11
_ Camp Piedmont.

"' .. · The camp. sponsored hy lhL•
~·~ Ohio Bowhunt e rs Association.

~: ODNR's Divisi"n of Wiltllilc .
Ohio St.;tte l lnivcrsity .Extension.
~ ,· a•i&lt;lthe

4-11 Camp Piedmont llo:ull
Dirccmrs. i:-. in response to a

'u sport which is g rowin~ in ( lhio und

" re4uircs a lt1l of cUucalwn in the
areas of hunter safely. c1hics. a1!U

resp&lt;Hlsihilitit=s. wilt.llirc hah11at and

J

·•"
·; ;general
·· ·

huntiug pmcticcs.
A crunping nnt..l prc-rcgistratinn

- ree of $30 per person tor the event
i's requir et..l hy Aug. 2 1. Make
•··checks payahle to !lSI·! l~x tcn s ion .
.~

~ ·410 rox S·hanllllll Pl&lt;tCL', Sl .

Clairsville. ( Jhio 43'!50. Fur in lor-

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
;: • MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
··IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS,
-- PROBATE COURT,
MEIGS CQUNTY, OHIO
~.

Accounts

t~nd

vouchers

ci( the following named

have been llled
t.' ln·the Probate Court, Malga
• CountY. Ohio, lor approval
and settlement:
-- ESTATE NO. 16148 ·Ninth
~ - - ll~uclarlea

Account of Fannie Miller,
. ~- Guardian of the Person, and

_. !otate of Grover C. Oliver,
· •rin Incompetent Person.
_J;STATE NO. 28227· Final
."~nd Dlatrlbutlvo Account of
_; Wilbur E. Robinson and
M•rlene

Donovan,

Co-

" Executor• of the Estate Of

•·' Glen
E. Robinson,
Oecoaaed.
. , , ESTATE JI!,O. 27945· Final
'· and Olatrlbutlvo account of

.

-

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
annou nee meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

to

attend a c c rlification l'Oursc'! 1\.

~r ot"

.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission,"
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Veterans
Service Office, Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend
Community Choir, with director
Roger Williams, pianist Sharon
Hawley. Practices are 7-8:30 p.m.
Mondays at ans council on Nonb
Second Avenue in Middleport. Fll'
delails, call992-5438.
CHESTER - Free skin testing
clinic for tuberculosis, Chester Fire
Departmen~ Monday, 4:30 to 6:30
p.m. Everyone in food service
required to have annual skin testing
for tuberculosis, including those

Public Nollce
Born"Jce
Bailey,
Admlnlltralrlr of the Eatato
of

Robert

0. ' Bailey,

Deceaoed.
ESTATE NO. 25917 ·Final
and Dlotrlbutlve Account of

Beaver family
The 27th annual reunion of
Charles W. and Fannie Lee (Wolfe)
Beaver family was held recently at
the Star Mill Park in Racine with
49 family members and friends
attending. Table grace was given
by Ernest Bush.
Recognized and presented
awards were Mattie Beaver Hill,
92, lhe oldest woman; John BeaVC'J",
78, the oldest man; Krista Smith,
tbe youngest girl; Dallon and
Dakota Imboden, youngest boys;
Ernest and Flossie Bush, married
the longes~ 46 years; Brad and Stacie Holsinger, newest married, one
month; Alun and Kenda Armstrong, Hamilton, traveled the far·
thest.
Attending were Ernie and
Flossie Bush, Donald Manuel,

Mary Fro:ster. Robert. Roberta and

1osepb, Mary Smith and Krista,

Roush family

The annual reunion of tbe
Gerald and Shirley Simpson. Betty
SpaiUI, Cbelsey, Dalton and Dak01a · Roush/Rausch and Allied Families
Imboden, Todd and Diana Bissell, of America will be held on Aug. 18
Andrew and Brady. all of Racine.
and 19 near Point Pleasan~ W.Va.
Brad and Stacie Holsinger,
A banquet will be held Aug. 18
Carol Oine, Seva, Lee, and Bobbie at the West Virginia National
Sue, Long Bottom; Ray Proffit and Guard Annory. The cost is $8 for
Jay Holsinger, Syracuse; John adults and $3 for children.
Beaver, Brenda Neutzling, RayA catered picnic at tbe West
mond and Dolores Donahue and Virginia Farm Museum will be
Darlene Freeman, Pomeroy; Roy served at noon Aug. 19. The cost
and Mary Gillilan and Gregory, for this is $7 for adults and $3 for
Chester; Grace Holsinger, children. Reservations 'for both of
Reedsville; John and April these must be received no later than
Holsinger and John II of Bidwell. Aug. 10.
Alun and Kenda Armstrong of
The tickets will be issued to ·
Hamilton; Rex and Beatrice Car- ' attendees at the functions rather
lyle of Westerville; Virgil and than mailing them . Checks for
Patricia CoUins of CircleviUe; Mat· reservations are 10 be seril 10 Sbeltie l{iU, Harold' and Helen Bosler, dori F. Roush, Treasurer, 117 Marand Jeni Ann MyersofCarroll.
shall I;&gt; rive, Mt. Lebanon, Pa .,

Country Naturals
Gifts &amp;
Accessories

15228.
The Roush/Rausch family.
which
to the Ohio Valley as
early settlers, bas numerou s
descendants in Meigs, Gallia. and
Mason Counties.
Several Roush brolhcrs, one sister who married a Waddell, and
one cousin fought in the Revolu tionary War and then left the
Shenandoah Valley 10 settle here.
The four volumes printed on the
family will be available for sale.

came

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

Mary E. Rou1h, Executrix of

COMMUNITY ·
CAB CO. INC.

By Ed Pelerson,
Social Security,
Manager ·ln Athens
Although thousands of people
with HIV infection are receiving
Social Security or Supplemental
Security Income disability benefits,
we believe there may be otben
wbo might be eligible for these
benefits and may not be aware of .
them.
Some people may not realize,
for example, that HIV infection
does not bave to be full-blown
AIDS. They may qualify for benefits under Social Security disability
programs if their condition pre~
vents them fnm working.
And because disability benefits
are available from Social Security
under two programs - Social
Security disability benefits based
on prior work, or Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) benefits
based on need -many people with
AIDS/HIV who need fmancial help
may qualify for disabinty benefits.
Here are two frequently asked
questions on bow Social Security
can help people living with
HIV/AIDS.
Question: What is SSA doing to
help people with AIDS get their
benefits faster?
Answer: People applying for
SSI benefits based on an allegation
of HIV disease may qualify for
what we call "presumptive disability payments".
We may immediately begin paying up to six months or SSI benefits
while we prepare a,fonnal decision
on tbe claim to individuals wbo are
not working, have limited income
and resources, and whose medical
source confirms tliat the HIV disease is severe enough to meet
SSA's rules ..

If we later decide tbat the person

should not have ~n eligible for
benefits, be or she does not bave to
repay this money. Moreover, aU
SSI and Social Security disability
claims flied based on a diagnosis or
AIDS are put on a fast track within
SSA to ensure that they .are processed as quickly as possible.
Question: What if I have certain
symptoms of HIV/AIDS, but none
of them are severe enough for me
to qualify for benefits?
Answer: In deciding whether
you are disabled, we look not only
at the medical manifestations of
HIV, but also the impact of the
medical condition on the individu·
al's ability to function.

.

~EADING

frame home, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, cellar, built in
cabinets, hutch &amp; bookcase . Front and back enclosed
porches. Woodburner, central air, garden area. An
abundance of flowers , frUit trees and berry vines. Some
fencing, outbuildings, chicken coop. Nice little farm close to
SA 7. Public &amp; cisle&lt; water. ASKING $49,900. Make
appointment to see this one!

Unless exception a are

To: Gerald Bunger, dba
M&amp; DAophalt Molntonance
Pro'a, .

filed thereto, oald accounll
wildt bca for hohari ng 1Jdofore
aa1 ourt o1 I e 31af' ay o1
Auguot, 1995, at which time
aald account• will ba
considered and continued
from day to day u~til finally
disposed of.

Laat Known Addreoa
2:ze5 St. Rt. 40 E.,
Lawlaburg, Ohio 45338
Purauanl to Ohlo Revlaed
Code Secllon 1311.11, you
are hereby noll.llod by
William Sluckey ond Royal
Oak Roaort Club, fka Fomily

tho Eotate of Edson
E.Rouah, Decaaoed.
ESTATE NO. 28270 · Final
and Olotrlbutlve Account·of
Pauline Hill, Executrix of tho
Eatata ol Ralph CIHiord Hill,
aka R. Clifford Hill, aka
Any person lnterealed
Clifford Hill.- Deceaoed.
may file written nceptlono
ESTATE NO. 26938- to said accounla or to
Fourth Annual Account of · matters pertaining to the
Jennifer L. - Sheets, execution of the trust, not
Guardian ol the Eatato of Ieos tho'n five dayo prior to
Lettie
Young,
an tho date set lor hearing.
lncompetant Peraon.
RobertJudge
Buck
ESTATE NO. 28018- Final
and Dlotributlve Account ol
Common Pleas Coun,
Jamee Hobetetter, Executor
Probeto DIYialon
of the Ellati or William
Malgo County, Ohio
Hobstetter, Dec.elsed.
(7) 31
ESTATE NO. 27040 Sacond Annual Account of

Reaorte, Inc. to commence

oull on the lion lllod In
Volume a, Page t83 of lho
Molga . Counry Olflcial
Recorda.

Wlrrlam Sluckoy
17, 24,31
(8)7,14, 21; BTC
j....!:~..::::.:.:.;:.:.:.::__ __
(7)

TNngt•ebuuln' lnlht

'4'/ANT ADS

Take

with a beautifu view of the river.!l 6 room, 2 baths, 3
bedrooms. Level tot. Landscaped. New Lenne)( H.P.IC.A.
Nice place.
ASKING $61,900

POMEROY- One floor frame home wilh 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
baths. Gas FA heal. lull basement with utility, bath, rec.
room. storm doors and windows, central air, dishwasher,
Island range, coVered patio. Anached 1 car garage In
basement. Central vacuum system, attic space. A lot ·Of
house. Home in good shape. Immediate possession .

Joseph s: and Carolyn Drage"of
Potomac, Md.

Incredible price of $25,000.
VISITORS
Larry anu Dessie Taylor of Miu &lt;llepon were recent guesrs at the
home of Randy and Lisa Thompson of Westerville. A surprise party
was held for Judy Overturf Dowling or Bay Village. formerly nf
M itl&lt;llepon.
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor also visitc&lt;l
with her mmher, Ellen Smith. an&lt;l
her brother, Fre&lt;l Smith, at the
Inter's home i1• Newnrk Salurday.

RUTLAND · Recenlly remodeled 1 112 slorylrame home.
Vinyt exterior, 2-3 beOrooms, bath, appliances, plaster walls,
wood flooring, attic space, basement with washer &amp; dryer.
L$rQ~ living room wilh atrim doors that open ont.o new front
covered deck. Home includes ceiling tans and new ceiling
light fi ~tures . Cute Home · Small lot. Immediate possession!!

.

ASKING

$29,9~

'.

SYRACUSE· One owner 1970 12 x 60 mobile home wllh 2

THE 1995

pain

out

of

polnling. Lot us do it lor
Free E.stimales
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Alter&amp; p.m.
614·985-4180 3124194
30

•

County, Ohio, for approval

ol William Emmett Larkins,
Deceased.

ESTATE NO. 26103- Final
and Distributive Account of

and settlement:

ESTATE NO. 28438 ·Final

and Distributive Account of
Mary Lisle, Executrix of the
Estate of Marcia B.' Karr,
Deceased.

•

Helen · A. Clevenger,
Administratrix of the Estat~

and Distributive Account of

Irene C. Murphy, Executrix
of tho Estate of Carl M.
Matlack, Deceased .
Unless exceptions are
tiled thereto, said accounts
will be for hearing before
said Court on the 31st day

Phyllis M. Glasgo, Execulrik of August, 1995, at which
of the Estalo of Kenneth time said accounts will be
Lawrence, .Qeceased.

ESTATE NO .

16148-

Eighth ~ccount of Fannie
Person and Estate of
Grover C. Oliver, an
Incompetent Person.

ESTATE NO. 28773 ·Fine!

and DistributiVe Account of
Martha Vennari, Executrix. of
the Estate of Mary Elizabeth
Chapman, Deceased.

considered and continued
from day to day ur;~lil finally
disposed of.
Any person interested
may file written exceptions
to said accounts or to
matters pertaining to the
execution of the trust, not
less than 'five days prior to
the date set for hearing.

Robert Buck
Judge

ESTATE NO. 26235· Sixth

Current Account of Shirley
A. Stephenson, Guardian of
the Person and Estate of

Common Pleas Court,

Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio

(7) 31

'

Tomato
Pickers
Phone ·
247-2063

.

TIDS _YEAR'S EDITION

992-2155

'

BATHTUB

\\..\

Mixed breed, male dog. whi18 w11

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

(limestone Low Ratesl

·---···-. ··-

.

'

!lack hoe.
Services.
Homo Sites, Land
Cl~aring, Septic
S)•sh•ms &amp; Orivewa}'S.

Top Soil, Fill llirl

4/ 13195 .

Buzz's Carpet

~Installing,

fnc.

We will install carper
. and flour coverings.
Givc us a call al
614-~92-3379 -

I R Years Expe rience .
Hours
Monday lhru Friday
8:00a.m. ro 4:00p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. 10 1::00 p.m.

published one lime, to wit:
on tho 27 day of July I 995,
(being at loaot thirty days

in

said

tho · Dally

Sentinel, a newspaper of

general circulation In tho
County aforesaid.
Theodore C. Fisher
(7) 31 1TC

-CHECKDtE

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frarne Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800-848-007
DARWIN, OHIO
._,

fr11JQ1 TFN

MANLEY'S
HdME IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding, Concrele,
Room Addlllons, Etc
(€:4) 388-9865
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, OH 45614
11 o

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-:3838

1112/Un

Two bhu;k pig11, one pot-bel1 1~d.
Gt&lt;t- 985-3818.
Young roosters to

g1~eawav.

985·4288

60

614 ·
.

Lost and Found

Lost Dachshund Red With ,Some
Black lelt Hlne leg Shaved, Andrew Road, 325, t60, \linton. '614· ·

388·9814.

'

Found: Watch, Upper End 01 Ciry
Park, Gallipolis, 814· 446· 1471 . ·

Lost: At - Strip Mine Ar-.a, '7r7,

(Specialize_ in
driveway spreading)

,.

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

Seven month old "cciHie mh: to ' .
oood home, 614-387-7553. . ,

HAULING

•Interior &amp; Exterior

- TruckinJ,!;- Limestone,

Whir&amp; Male Ma ltese Small Dog,
Rewardl 614-357-0409, 81.4..446·

7249.

Limestone,
Gr~vel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ALL·BRITE
CLEANING SERVICES
· Tile Floor Strip,
Wax, &amp; Maintenance~
Carpel Cleaning,
. Complete Facility
Cleaning, "Periodic
or one time
Free Estimates
Call 992·7272 or
1-800-990· 7272

•

90 model Chevy 112 ton Silvera·
do, almosl all options, 1_38,000,
very good condition. S5, 70&amp; firm,
~ 14·9!::12·4, 1.
All Vard Sales Mus! Be Paid In

Advanc e . DEADliNE: 2:00p.m.
the day belore the ad is to .run.
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edlrion • 10:00 a.m'.·Sal·
urday.

Augu st t st. 2nd, 42 Smithers
Avenue , Ladies &amp; tnrant Boy s

Clothes , Houa..~hold

lte!lls &amp;

Help Wanted

August lSI, 2nd, 8 Till
Green Terrace Court.

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Service

Various American Wheels on Sale

In

614· 446-6437 ,

WICKS

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Pluml)ing
•Roofing

Bi1lldo1,in~.

For Free Estimates

Notice Is hereby given

mentioned

Grey Ar'!gora Show Rabbit. 2
Years Old, To Good Home Only !

.blue &amp; 1 brown eye, 9moa old, to
good homo qrly. 304-675-6520.

110\UIW
E\L\UTJN(;

Call Wayne Neff 992-4405

notice,)

614· 949-2313.

v9.o~\\l.~,ef. MIKE MARCUM'S

614-245-0437

House Repair &amp;

Remodeling

that ~esalca Lynn Lankford,
Case No. 29022 of 2 Cave
St. Pomeroy, DH. 45769,

as

Golden Retnever/ Border tal he
pups, light blond&amp;, had flrsl shots,

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

1·800·377 -4477

Imperial Tire

Reasonable
Insures- EKperlenced'-'

Sept. ·I I 995, the date tho
application ia ro -be heard,

Froo kmens, 814-949·2756. · .

992-5591

NOTICE
Ravlaod Code, Sec.
2717.01(A)

prior to the court day of

992· 7771..

PHONE

Case No. 29022

me Jessica Lynn Lankford,
Theodore C. Fisher and
made solemn oath that the
notice, a copy of which ia
hereto attached, was

F1ve adorable kinens to good
home, mother good mouser, '6 14

28 Years Experience

Roorn Addlllons
Siding, Roofing, Patios

Tho State of Ohio, Molgo
Counly
Personally appoar~d before

304-675 ... 850

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES

Licensed. &amp;

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
Remoqellng
Kirchen &amp; Ejath'

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In Tho Malter of
Name Change

County Court House.

tyr old, very good w/chllt{rc n.
cull, loveable, good home onl y

MISC.

:d.

:ma::

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

ant Valey Road, Rio Grand~ Ra1n
/Shine, largo Var ie ty Item's To
Include; Nice Clotheil, Gl•seWare
Canners, Col landers, Mise. Au ·
gust 1 ·6th, 9:00A.M..-4:00P.M.

Pom_eroy,
Mlddlepon ·
&amp; VIcinity

All Yard Sa les Must Be ?'aid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day belora tha ad ia to run., Sun·
day edition - 1:OOpm Friday, "'o" day edition tiJ :OOa,m. Saturdqy.

MOilERN SANITATION

Waiting far owner
Seduded on 7 wooded
acres.(more availablel
3 BR/2 BA. Tuppers Pl.
water, heal pump, heavily
insulated· Must see!
17 mi from Pomeroy,
17 mi. from Arhens

large Garage Sale : 1361 Pleas·

810 S. Second, MlddleporJ.•July
28 !hr ough Aug us t 4. Frtezer,
couChes, chairs, desk. tables: lots
m1sc.

1012t~n

NEW HOME

·

715 S~camoro, Mlddlepor.t , Au ·
gust 1· 5, something tor Wet"yonel

State At. 33
Darwin, Ohio

-

i

? 325

Augusl 1· 5, S A 124 between Sac
lem Center and Wilkesville. FUrm ·
lure, appliances, Cloltl&amp;a, elc:. :
August 1st- F1ve Pointa area on
Fla~oods

I

' 59,000
614-997-7713

"I ~

: I I I '" I

t

"•

'" , I

"

'" I

992·3954
Emergenc Phone g85-3418

"

.. ...

Rd.

August '1 · 5, 525 Grant Str.eet,
Middleport. Baby clolhes to &amp;iu
6T, misc. 8am·6pm.
Emerson Johnson resldance m
Porlland. August 1-4.

·' F1rs1 ever yard sale · corner ot

Lonely? Fihd 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

Howard L Wrilesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR ·
Gutters
Downspouts
. Gutter C(eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168
5/16.'94 TFN

Having Problems,
need answers to
tough questions
talk live to a
Personal Psychic
Now! ·
1-900-825-3800
Ext 4274 .
$3.99/Min 1B yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

Elm and Fourth S!m Racine . Au gu st 1· 5.
Flea markel·yard sale, 124
Rac1ne, August 1· 5, 9·7, Iota of

Oi.'Of)'thing ..
Four

lamily- IWO milas out leading

Cree~ Rd . or! SR 7 on right Au ·
gu.st t · 5, naw and used Items,
lace- 2t~ds St, rriple lace .09/yd .

beads 5/yds. S1. 9am·5pm.
Garaga sal•· Auguat 1·2, Gle n
BiasoU residence. lurn at Memory
Gardens, 112 m1fe otf SA 7 Lots ol
clothes ·and mtsc . Ram or sh1ne
9am·5pm.
·
July 31 · A.ugust 4, two m~ei on
Hysell Run, Pomaro~. Wo n and
teen cloth1ng . Pro Fo rm rtlss ·
!ramer we 1ght mach1ne. scanner
antenna . 10arn..Gpm.

.. - '

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

Uov1ng sale · furniTure, Wllterbed ,
hid&amp;·a·bed, lablo, ole, mlf clothes,
_h ousehold iloms, ra•n or s~ino,
1140 College rd., Syracuse; el.ot 992·6881 •. August1&amp;2

Limestone &amp;Gravel,
Septic Syste~s, Trailer C. _
House Sites.

Vard Sale. Augu sl 1-2-3. g. ?, Rt
7 beside Staro H igh wa~ Garllge,
Pomeroy. Ohio, misc.
·

Reasonable Rates

Joe N. Sayre

Pt. Pleasant

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

&amp; VIcinity
Vard Sale . 231 1-B Monr.oe Ave
Aug u91 2, 3 , 4. 8am· 4pm. ·An ·

t1ques . clothes. we1gh1 be(lch .

@eJ~~Mlh

Stop in &amp; Sign-up lor

FREE BICYCLE
G1veaway August 1 Listen lor
W1nner on Big Country Radio

Has Part Time
Positions Available
For CNA'~·

"

ALL 3 SHIFTS
Contact Jan Elias, ADON
At 333 Page St.
. Middleport, Ohio
992·6472
E.O.E.

~-

f_'/,'1.\0

Drivcw.ays.

formerly Poor Boy T~re&amp;
Dual E•hausllap1n's
Glasspack ...... ... ...... $109.95
Dual E•hausl Tap in's
Turbo's ................... $119.95
Alignment Fronl end ... $19.95
Alignmenllour wheel .$34.95
Rolalion &amp; Compuror Bal. lour
wheel .
.......... $1995

Get Your Message Across
With ADallr Sentinel

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Chip Repair l11 Tubs Or Sink&amp;,
R~surf.1ce Old Ceumic Tile. And
Fiberglass Shower Crocks Or Sags

Public Notice ,

I

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 11, 1995.
Advertising Deadline Is
·
August 4, 1995. ·
· ·
CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD~·

'

FULL WARRANTY UKE NEW

For information
leading to the artesl
and conviction of
the person ?r
persons causmg
damage and theft at
the American
Legion Farm on
Bailey Run . Contact
Sheriff Soulsby.

Donald G. Stephenson, an

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

614-992-2834
992-7821 ,1261, m..

Announcements

has applied to the Common
Public Notice
Public Notice
Pleas Court, Probate
Incompetent Person.
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Division of Meigs Counly,
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
ESTATE NO. 28287 - Final Ohio, for an order to change
and Distributive Account of her name. to Jessica Lynn
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
. Hazel G. Wllron, Executrix Fisher.
IN THE MATTER OF
of the Estate of Grace A.
SETT:LEMENT OF
Said application will be
Whaley, Deceased.
-ACCOUNTS,
heard In sold Court, at I 0:00
ESTATE NO, 28297- Final A.M., on lho I day_ of
PROBATE COURT,
and Distributive Account of Septembo,, 1995, at Meigs
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouchers
of the following named
fiduciaries have been filed
In the Probate Court, Meigs

Licensed/Bonded

Black/white mu:ed dog, apwo&lt;t

614-992-7643

_rooters,

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING

25 Years Erperlonce

1/2 Truck Load O f Large l tmo

FREE ESTIMATES

R &amp; C Excavating
Septics, Land
Clearing, Ponds ,
Homesites,

Giveaway ·

stone, 614·245-0610.

2112s'321tln

Bill Slack
992·2269

FREE .
ESTIMATES

$1,000.00 Reward

bedrooms, 1 bath, utility area, range &amp; refrigerator. Covered
patio , outbuilding, nice landscaping. Quiet Street. The
property had gas heat, Syracuse sewer &amp; water hook-ups,
cable and oome newer carpeting.
ASKING $16,500

WE NEED LISTINGS. FARMS·&amp; ACREAGE &amp; RIVER
FRONT PROPERTIES ARE IN ~OT DEMAND. WANT TO
SELL?? LIST WITH US II
HENRY E. CLELAND JR ......................................992·2259
TRACY L. BRINAGER.........................................949-2439
SHERR! L. HART................................ :....:............742-2357
KATHY M. CLELAND.................... ....................... 992-6191
OFFICE................................................................. 992·2~59

the

·

40

( No Sunday Calls)

Bonded
Free Eslimatcs

•Septic Tanks
•Plumbing
•Water Lines · etc.
•Concrete Work
•Gravel-Hauling
•Welding/Fabrication
Certified

you. Very reasonable.

MIDDLEPORT- 1992 Modula&lt; home on double corner lol

CHESTER - The Cbester Garden Club will bold a family picnic
and auGtion at 6:30p.m. Wednesday at Kathryn Mora's home.
Mea~ beverage provided.

Grueaer, an Incompetent

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removecl
Misc. Jobs.

Mon.~Frl •

Interior &amp;
Exterior

CREEK ROAD· Approx.- 3 acres wilh 1 story

Miller, Guardian of the

NOTICE OF UENHOLDER
TO COMMENCE SUIT

AND REMOVAL

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

OFFICE 992·2259

WEDNESDAY
POMERO'Y- Narcotics
Anonymous meeting, 7 p.m. ·
We&lt;lnesday in· Sacred Heart
Catholic Church basement.

Shirley A. Jonoa, Guardian
of the Estate of William A.

J&amp;L INSULATION

TREE TRIMMING

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.0Q

8~5727 .

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAl . nne! RESIDENTIAL

111SIItfn

ESTATE NO. 28408 · Final

Public Notice

949·2512

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

To

BAILED

Free Estimates

TUESDAY
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the Page ville Township building.

Public Notice

YOUR NEEDS

FOR SALE

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

CuS!bm Butlding &amp;' Remodeling

Free Estimates
843·5124
992·2984

HAY

8:00 0.11),·3.:30 p.m . . ..
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.

Haskins joins law firm; birth announced

THURSDAY
POMEROY -The PERl group
will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. Speakers and lunch starts at
noon.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

Office Hours:

who work at the Meigs c;unty
Fair, Connie Karschnik, R.N.,
tuberculosis clinic nurse, said.

POMEROY - FOE Auxiliary
meeting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Tuesday potluck.

AND MIXED

539 BRYAN P(ACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772

For example, some people living income brackets, you may have lO
with AIDS may have lbree or four pay income taxes on part of your
manifestations of HIV (candidiasis, benefits.
weight loss, anemia, for example) ·
This year, an estimated 20 perthat alone are not severe enough to cent of those l):ceive benefits from
meet our medical criteria, but still Social Security wiD have to pay at
qualify the person for disability least some taxes on the benefits
benefits if he/she is unable 10 work they receive.
because of bis/her condition.
Get Estimate Before Collecting
Taxes on Benefits for Higher Beneftts
Earnen
Even though you may not be
If you're nearing relirem~nt age,
planning to retire soon, it's still a
here's something you should know good idea 10 contact Social Securiabout Social Security.
·
ty ... 10 lind out wbat your benefilS'
will be when you do decide to stop
Even though the amoum of your
working. And the easy way to do
benefits is not affected by pensions,
that is with a free benefit estimate.
savings and other forms of retireJust call 1-800-772-1213, 24ment income, if you're in the upper hours-a-day.

Mattbew P. Haskins of Cam·
He is' the son of Charles ·P. and
bridge, Mass., glliDdson of the late Jo Ann Haskins of Spencerville,
Noah and Blanche Haskins of Mid- Mass.
dlepor~ will join the Washington,
Blanche Haskins was a longD.C. law fum of Fried, Frank, Har- lime correspondenr of The Daily
ris, Shriver and Jacobson_ in Sentinel lhrough bet column "Did
August
. You Know That"
He graduated magna cum laude
In addition, Matthew and his
from Harvard Law School on 'June wife, Melinda, are parents of a son,
8 with a juris doctorate degree.
Andrew Preston, born June 9 at
This past year, be worked as Brigham and Wpmen's Hospital,
president and editor of the Harvard . Boston. He weighed seven pounds,
Journal on Legislation with articles 11 ounces.
published in bodl the Harvard JourMaternal grandparents are
nal on Legislation and Tax Notes,

ALFALFA

• Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling
• New Additions &amp;
Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.

Real Estate General

This organization was started by
the late Rev. Lester L. Roush or
Sutton Township who wrote the
first and second volum·es on the
family. The reunion bas not been
held in this area in many years as it
moves around the United States.

SIGMAN'S ·
CONSTRUCTION

Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992-9949 . 992-6471
Mon - Fri 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.ni. - 5 p.m.
Sun . by appl. only

Social Security for HIV/AIDS victims

Person.

Roommate wanted to share apan
ment, 2 tiocks trom MU, Hunlln9
ton .• S250JIT1CJ plu s utll ntes, 304

.

unlilthc time lawns need to .

·· be mown weekly . Rememlicr 10
.. identify the weeds needing to ht:
.... contrnlle&lt;l.
If you need lielp with tl1c lllenti~~

Beaver reunion held; Roush reunion set

arn Gun Club. );)4-&amp;75-~180 •

Community calendar

~ ~ , (0 you. Currently our lnwn ~ are still
" ·. recovering from t.lu: Llfougllt· comli~·. cations

$100 REWARD for lnfor mattO'l
about the vanda ll &amp;m at Pt Pleas

'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
.
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473
!f7')EJ 4

H&amp;H SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193
612/lmo

record player wltapcs, &amp; mi!iC

80

Public Sale
and Auction ·

Rick Pearson Auc11on Company,
lull time auct1oneer, complero
auct1on
service . . Uhn:~ed
111166,0hiO &amp; Wesl V1rgima, ~30-1
773·5785 Or 304· 773·5447. ,

90

Wanted to Buy .

Clean • Late Mode! Ciirs . Or
Trucks , 1987 Models 01 Newer
Smtth Bu1c1&lt; Pontl!lt, t900: Eas1
ern Avenue, OBJhpolls.

Decorated stoneware, wa H•tele ·
phones, old lamps, old thern1ome ·
ters, old clocks. antrque lurntrure.
R1venne Antiques . Russ Moore,
owner 6 1 4·992· 2526 . W&amp; buy
estales

J &amp; D's Auto Parts and SalVage,
buymg wrecks, Junk auto-s &amp;
trucks . Also. pans lor sale. 304 -

773-5343

or 773-5033

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•
Monday, July 31, 1995

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 31,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER
440
To)) Prtc~K Pa1d Old U S. Cams
SJver Gold Dtamonds All 01&lt;1
C•lleGhbles PaperweighTs E1e
l.t • TS Cotn Shop 151 Second
A~nue. Galltpohs 614-446 2842

1 and 2 bedroom apanments tu r
n1st1ed and unturn shed, secunty
deposit requ red no pets 614
992 2218

WAnted to boy anttque and u~d
tumtture no Hem 100 large or too
small W1il t&gt;uy one p1ece or co m
pt&amp;te estates Osby Martin 614
992 7441

1 Bedroom Near Hol zer s Air
Condn oned Super N1ce $259 f
Mo Ut1l I es Deposit ReqUifed
No Pets 614 446- 2957
2 Bedroom Apartment Trash
Water Sewage Pa1d $295/Mo +
Oepo!ll, 614 446 2481

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Wtth
Or W11hout Mo tors Cal l Larry
liVOiy 614 388 9303
Wanted To But

2 Bedrooms 920 Founh Avenue
Gallipolis S295fMo U111111es Pa1d
614 446 4416 After 7 PM

Used Mob 1l e

Homes 614 446 01 75

Wanted • Or 5 Gallons Black
berr ies Wtll No t Pay $1 2 A Gal
ion, 614 245--9393

2bdr m apts total etectqc ap
phances furn1shed laun dry room
facil1ll8s close to sc;hool 1n town
Apphc at1ons ava1lable at V llage
Green Apts W49 or call 614 992
3711 EOH

Would ltke to buy TWO good useQ

motorcycle helmets

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Apartments
for Rent

614 992

5053 alter Spm
I

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

"You read somewhere that they I! grow better tf
you talk to them m a foretgn language?·

.,.,.,,.,.,....,....,.,.:...,....._ _..,..__
AVON ' AU Areas • Shuley
Spears, 304-675 1429
Avon Earn $8 $14 fHr No Door
To Door Full /Part T me 1 800
73601681ndRep
AVON SFLLS ITSELr
Ave ra ge $8 $ 15/Hr At Work
Home
D1scounts! No Inventory I
Tea tory Ophonal lndtrep
1 aoo 74 2 4 738
AVON EARN SSS at home at
wor~ All areas 30 4 882 25 45 1
000 992·6356 INDIREP
Clean Honest Dependable MIF
No Expa11ence Necessary We
Tra 1n No Sales No Travel No
.Resume -$50 000 Per Year For
Cons1derauon Send 1 sA s E To
PAM 1313 Fa1rgreen Avenue
Urna OH 45805

Dependable non smoker needed
10 care lor 2 smalt children Leave
name &amp; number at 304 675 4363

berwtten noon 9prn
Onver With Class A COL wanted
We haul Wllhm a 7 10 8 s1a1e area
No Northeast loads Home11me
pad vacatton &amp; hohdays Call 1
000 59&amp;6790
Easy Work' E~ce ll ent Pa~' As
semble Products At Home Call
To l l Free 1 800 467 5566 E•t
313
FantastiC Sam s Now H1rmg
Gua ra'nteed Wages Pa1d Vaca
110ns 614 446-7267
Job open1ng Me1gs County
Board of MRDD opemng lor Early
Childhood Spec al Educauon In
structor at Carleton School Must
have current val d OhiO Depa.rt
ment or EducatiOn teaching cer
uf cate afld have or be w1lhng to
obta1n Oh10 Department ol Educa
11on Early Educat1on ol Hand1
capped Val dation Send resume
by August-ath to Carleton &amp;:hool
PO Box 307 1310 Carleton
S!reet Syracuse Oh1o 45779
lady to hve 1n With elderiy woman
references requ1red pays S 150
per wee~ 614 742-2076
Local Phys1c1an s of11ce needs
LPN or medical ass1stam tO fill tn
for vaca11on 1Hness etc Pos1110n
cou ld become lull t1me Send re
!!Ume to Box G 26 %Pt Pleasant
Reg1ster 200 Mam St Pt Pleas
ant WV 25550
Middle aged lady to share my
home 304 882 24:36
Need CNA s to prov1de 1n nome
care for elderly and d sa bled m Pt
Pleasant area lmmed1at e pos1
!Ions ava lable $5 50/hr Contact
Panhandle Support Serv1ces 1
600 495 1011 Senous mqu~r 1 es
only
Office Au lstant Wanted Ouah
fled Candidates Must Possess
Organ1Zallon Telephone Et1
queue And 9ecretanal E-pen
ence Interested Persons Call
614 569 4171 For Appl1t:St1on
Owner Operators Needed Top
percentage pa1d haul ng Within a
1 to 8 sta.,te area No Nortneast
loads Call 1 000 598-6790
Part T1me Temporarly Help For
Fall And Holiday Season Apply
At JoAnn Fabnc s Silver Bfldge
Plaza Gall1poi1S No PhOne Calls
Seamsuess needed 304 882
3772
Tetemarketer 1Recept10n1st In
Fast Grow1ng Busmess Send Re
sumes To CLA 358 cto Galhpo
l1s Oa 1ly Tribune 825 Th1rd Ave
nue Gall1p0hS OH 45631
TRUCK MECHANIC
Local Pr va1e Fleet In Need 01
E•penenced True~ Mechan1c
Some Refngerat1on Exper1ence
Helplul CDl A I1!.!!i
so 52 Hours Per Week @ $10 00
Per Hour
Benefits Package Includes
Ra1ses Based On Perlormance
Pa1d Vacauons
Health Benefits
40 t K Ret rement And Profit Shar
mg Plan
Send RePlies To P 0
Gallipolis OH 45631

Bo~ 76 9

Wanted someone to do m1nor
remodeling on two houses maJOr
remodeling on one house Pay by
JOb or nour If Interested send ret
erences and qualil1cat1o ns clo
Tho Da1ly Seotmel P.O Box 729
11 Pomeroy Ohio 45769
,

180 Wanted To Do
Ace Tree Service Complete 1ree
care 20~rs exp &amp; msu re d hee
estimates 614 441 1191 or 1
800 508 8687
Bas1c Office Cleanmg F"roo Esu
matesl6t4 256·1274

180

Wanted To Do

-------~---1
Gene1a l Mamtenance Pa1nt1ng
Yarct Work. Wmdows Was1'1.ed
12 x65 Concord 3bedroom 1bath
Gutters Cleaned light Haul ng
wi 1 0~20 treated porch lots of
Commer~cal Resden ual Steve
tras.Call3046757158

4

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7~73!9~1~5~5::~~~~~~~

~

I

1993 l,.d1es ManufaCTured Home
And 2 5 Ac res t4x80 Home
Features 3 Bedrooms 1 314
Baths LIVIf:lQ Room 01mng fK1tch
en Combo And Ut1llty Room Metal
Storage Bu1ld1ng With Concrete
Floor Concrete Walks And PatiO
LocaTed On Kemper Hollow Road
For More Info rmatiOn Ca ll 614
A.41 0233

SCIOTO COUNTY
Area 5 Wooded Ac
For Hunung $4 500
nanc1ng Only S500
$101 46 Per Month 4 Years
Interest 614 775 9173

2bedroom With basement close
to schools $14 500. Call 304
675 6621

'

We G ve 10% D1scount For
And All 10 Year Contracts
A 4 Year Balloon

RENTALS

510

Household
Goods

Appliances
Recondllloneel
Washers Dryers Ranges Rein
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cl!y Mavtag 614-446
7795

~arpet &amp; Vmyl In Stock $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Patterns Of Kl!chen Car

pet In Stock. Over 35 Pallerns
Vmyl In Stoc~ Mollohan Carpels
614 446 7444

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Heat Pump
Gas Furnace t ~ere Garage
AddiSO n Area, . $il2 000 614 367
72\;7
3 Bedrooms Batn &amp; 1f2 L1vmg
Room Fam il y Room F1ntslled
Basement CA In Ground Pool
61-4 446 4895 Please leave
Message

Unfurmshed 2 bedroom house
mea &amp; clean no 1051de pets, ref
erences reqUired, $200 depos11
$275 a month rent 614 992-3090

3bedroom Ranch 2 acres 304
675 1272

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

4 Bedroom Br~ck 2 Baths Full
F1n1shed Baseme nt 2 Ca r Ga
rage 3 Acres Pool 614 446
1025 36t6 Sta1eRou1e 141
Back of Cl1l10n near pond 2b&amp;d
room water gas eleCTfiC full
basement $t5 000 304 B82
.:..:..._
3348 Carol

____

Four btjroom house lor sa l e
free gas two story approx 3 acr
es Bradbury area 61 ~ 992 6100
N ewer log home Oil e and 1f2
story on full fm1shed basement
one mealy landscaped acte t two
~IIC'hens 2 112 baths wh~rfpbol
tub, skyl 1ght Window, full !font
porch, neat pump satellte system
and much mor&amp; p11ce $69 500
614 742 2853 lor an appomtment
Palest ne Ck Rd 3bedroom
2bath 14x70 mob1le home
carpet new sep!lc, crty water mo
b1le home &amp; 1acre land 1 Land
contract $10 OOOdown,
f1nance S20 000 304-562 5840

w111

320 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
1994 Fleetwood 14x76 2br
many e~tras
pay off only
S22 800 must be moved 304
773 5051

Sepltt: Tank Jet AeratiOn Motors
New &amp; Rebuilt llnstalled Call
Johns John 614 446-4782
~
S1mmons h1de a bed, good conch
bon $150 614 742 2337

2 Bedroom Tra1ler On Upper Ro
ule 7 SXIOJMo 614 446-2515
2 Bedrooms CA M1tchell Road
Gallipolis $275/Mo Depos lll
Reference 614 643-~16 After 4
PM
3 Bedrooms CA. M1tchell Road
Gal ~ 1pol1s , $300/Mo Deposit 8
Rele1e nces 614 643-2916 After
4 PM
3br all electnc Gallipolis Ferry,
$250tmo plus utilities 304 675
4088
f..l,ce 2 Bedrooms 4 Miles North
From Holzer On 160 $285/Mo
Secunty Deposit 614 446 - 8189
614 446 6865
Travel Trailer LoT For Rent On
Route 7 AI AddiSOn, OH, 614
446 0175
Two bedroom partly furn1shed
good clean cond111on porch
yard pnvatc lot abo1.1e New Ha
ven $275 w th walef and s&amp;wer
304 882 2466 anytime

430 Farms for Rent

440

Apartments
for Rent

Modern 1 Bedroom Apanment
614 446,;Q390

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ol1ve St Gallipolis New &amp; Used
furn ture, Maters, Western &amp;
Work boOts 614 446 3159
VI RAFUANITURE
614 446-3158
Quality Household Furnl!vre And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Carry I RENT-2 OWN
And Layaway Also Ava1~ble
Free Delivery W1th1n 25 M1les.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Rrverme Ant iques
1124 E Main Street on At 124
Pometoy Hours M T W I 0 00
am to 6 00 ~ m, Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 pm 614 992 2526

540 Mlscellaneous
Merchandise
81 Datsun 510 stat10nwagon
$400, ZTR D1xon ndmg lawnmow
er ,_61 4 992 ~291
1 Amana 24 OOOBTU ate, $350 1
Hot Pomt small ale, $100 304
675 2074

.,_
11
k&lt;p.j&gt;"\

Pets for sale

AKC Reglslered Cocker Span1et
Puppy Male Buff &amp; White
Wo rmed Vaccmated Champ1on
Bloodlme, 0 0 B 312195 $200
614 379 2728
Loveabje Rabbits $10 Each Dwarf
&amp; Min1 Lops Vartety Of Colors 8
Week! Old 61&lt;1-446 6824
Poodle pupp1es toy &amp; tea cups
AKC shots &amp; wormed Coolville
614-667-3404
Reg1s1ered Boston Terner male
puppies S100 3:14-882 2622
S1benan Husky Pup AKG Reg1s
tered $150 614 256--1003

570

Musical
Instruments

PEACHES RAYNOR 614 446
4807

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Cannmg Tomatoes $3 /Bushel
P1ck Your Own &amp; 8Mg Your Owr\
Containers Don R H1ll Farm le
'\art Falls 614 247 2532
Canmng tomatoes $4 bushe l
bnng
conta1ners,
Marshall
Adams, letart Falls 614 247

2055
Canmng tomatoes mcred1bJe
corn, '"614-992 5866 or 614 992
3985

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
1988 Oliver tractor/loader runs
go.od good l1ydraul1cs $1,500
OBO 304-675 7397
6 Row John Deere Corn Planter
12 Ft Otsk, Cutt•vator A.ll For
$300 OBO New Holland 717
Corn Chopper, $500, OBO 614
245--0610
Drscount farm tractor parts lor
Muse~ Ford IH &amp; others
S1d01's Equtpment Co Hender ~
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1-800
277 3917
July Sale Spec1als 5030 Ford
62hp 4wd, 1b8, syncho trans 2
pump hyd, $22,900 3930 Ford
2wd 45 np 8~2 trans, 1 double
valve $15 500 650 New Holland
15001 round baler sut ng or net
wrap bale command demonsuator
S15,900 472 NH Haybme stub
guards $7 950 254 NH Rake &amp;
Tedder combmatlon $3,800 816
NH Forage wagon 3 BenTer WITh
6 12 tandem axle 12ton gear
12 5Lx15 t~res 18 400 Model 30
Forage Blower 1,000 rpm $2 700
weathered Keeler s Servrce Cen
ter At 2 St Rt87 304-895 3874

Building
Supplies

Block, brick sewer .pipes wmd
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,
A o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Pets for sale

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Fea.
tunng Hydro Bath Jul1e Webb
Call et4 446 023t
2 Female Cllows AKC Regis tered 9 Weeks Old 614 446-

8861
AKC Cocker Spanrel pups cham
pJon blood lmes, Buff Black,
BlackfWhlte $150 304 937-2733
AKC Golden RetrTever Ready To
Go By August 1st S200 Shots 1
Wormed, 614 379-2961
AKC Reg Golden Retnever pup
p1es light blonde, s1x weeks old 3
puppies left $150 cash ontyl614
992 7651
AKC Reg1stered Datmat1ons wnh
l?edtgree ane malt:~, one tamale,
all shots, vet chetked, $250/&amp;a ,
614-742 2654
AKC
Registered
German
Shepherd Shorr Ha1red Pomter
Pupp1es, Call After 4 PM 614
245-5697
AKC Scomsh Tamer pupp1es
small non sheddmg first shot
wormed, S250, now takmg depo&amp;
ns can prck up August 6 Athens
614 592 1625

Livestock

14 Year Old Ch1ICI Btoke Registered AOHA Mare Shown In 4 H
614-446-3889
Good lamrly mtlk cow Jersey, 5
yrs oh:i 5 hp garden tJIIer, rear
lines, new St1hl cl1am saw two 8
wk old calves, 10 rronth old Reg
1stered mate German Shepherd,
utili!)' tratler factory hit bed 5x10,
With 6' statk racks w1ll !1811 w•lh Of'
Without racks 614 742 3409
Well Broke Ct111Clrens Pony 614
388 9~9

640

Hay &amp; Grain'

Ear Corn $2.75 Bushel, 900 1000
Bushel, U Haul Call Alter 6 P:M
6\4388 9008

TRANSPORTATION
710 Autos for sale
10 hp Gravely tractor With at
tachments 16 horse Craftsman
80 model Cad1llac call 614 992
5532 for more tnlormabon
1975 Pontiac Catahna W1lh Air
Condrt1omng In Very Good Con
d1t10n! $1 000 61-4 319 2720 AF
TEA 6 PM
1982 Bu1ck Skylark. .4 dr, A 1
condruon. all tile options 48 000
actual m1tes, 2 8, 4 ely $2, 100
614 992 6719
1982 Plymouth Hor~zon $400
1984 Pontiac F1ero newly rebuilt,
$1 500 Ashley wood burner $50
304·895-3214
1982 Ponttac ~ran ~m $1,200
1~78 Ford Fa~rmont t400 6U
446~958

1982 Trans Am Arr PW, Tilt &amp; l
Tops, $1,650 614 4-41 tS01
1983 Chev Malibu Good Condr
t1on, 6 Cylinder Auto $825 Call
304-675 2352 Aher 4:30
1984 Pcnt1BC Bonneville LE 304
675-61369
1984 Toyota Cellca GT silver w/
bra, runs great, too~s good htgh
m1leage $1,500 304 675-1443

41 Sen Kennedy

emperor

42 City In Utah
45 scandinavian
49 Ape
51 - out stretch
52 Loch -

I'

1985 Burck laSabf'e l1m1ted Edh
t•on, runs good looks good
Phone 304 675·51 06 alter 5pm
1985 Sunb~rd Ponllac Stal1on
Wagon Auto In Floor Ll"te Rust
Doesn t Smoke Cheap On Gas I
$600 614-44 H 555
1986 Plymouth Ae),ant Stat1on
Wagon $950 614 245--9151
1986 Pontiac Sunblfd 1 8 eng1ne
lots of new parts good shape
304-675 6t49
198lJ' Cavalier CS $1 200 1984
Ftero $1,200 1984 Thunderbird
S700, 1984 Toyota Truck it tOO
16 Ut1hty Car Tra11er $850 61-4·
388 9906
~986 P lymouth Sundance AC
T1lt Stetmng AutomatiC Cru1se
Electnc Seat Belts, 68 000 M1les
$3 450 01!0, 614 256-e169

1986 Plymoutn Voyager LE
Wl!h Wood Tnm AIC ~""''e.
AMfFM Cassene H gh
N1ce S3 900 514 441 0914
441 1971
1988 While Butck Park Avenue
Loaded, Well Ma1ntatned Extra
Clean I $5 200 61" 446-8423
1989 Mercury Grand Marqws, V·
8, AutomatiC loaded Mmt Con
dlt1on 72,000 Miles $5 500, 614
441 0414
1991 Sunbird convertible $6 900
:.K)4 675-5318 ewntngs

opposite
22 Greaay
57 Mao -tung
24- bene
26 Novehst Ferber
DOWN
27 Tiny

750 Boats &amp; Motors
tor sale

2286
1973 In ter national 314 TOn 345
Engme 6.9 coo M11es $2,500
looks &amp; Runs Good 6~4 446

1984 S 10 Chevy Blazer 4x4
$3,000 080 304-675 3581
1985 N1ssan wrth topper good
shape approx 85 OOOm1 , 4cyJ
$2 900 304 895-334&amp;
1989 GMC 1121on, 350 VB auto
overdrive, cruise, a~r, 1111, am fm
cassene new tires, 6rakes ex
llausl, askmg $10 000 304 675

5332
1993 Ford Splash Sharp! load
edl L1ke New low Mileage! 614
256-6753
1994 Che11y Silve rado 4x4 VB
23 DOOm• 304 675-6253
1995 Ford 150Xl 6&lt;;yl long bed
~~~e alf, tilt 7,000ml 304-6751995 S 10 Pick Up Call 614·441
1183
For Sale Or Trade 1986 Ntssan
Prck Up, 4 Cyhnder, 5 Speed, AMI
FM Casselle Topper, Bed Cover
CB New T~res &amp; Wnee ls Very
Dependable S2 800 814 256-

6867

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1978 Ford 314ton SuperVan ex
tra long, 6Cyl auto $800 304 6756416 or 304 173-6074
1979 4 Wheel Dnve Blazer Good
CondrDOn, Body Farr, S1,200, 61&lt;4379-2720 AFTER6PM
1990 DOdge Ram Van B 250,
72,000 Mlfes, $8 ,000 Can Be
seen AI Galli poll a Dally Tr~bune,
825 Third Avenue Gallipolis

Ohio
1993 N1ssan Oueat Mm1Van, Ex
~~·:.,;ondnton, S16 500, 614-

W~EN '(OV DON'T
~

KNOW At&gt;NTHING, 'I'OU

2•

Pas ~

1992 Sea Nymph lxlat wuh tratfer
75 hp. Johnson eng1ne With lots ole~tras take over payments 614
949 2872

home
had

w1th overt1t c k s However South
th r ee

an 1magmattve 1dea At tnck

W£&gt;.st was ready He pl.Jycd low smoothly

YOU#l NEST eGG. v/1/..L

BANk:

NfVe,

tMTC:~ If

YOU

~eeEP Pec~•N6

AT IT, fl/l ....

.,

'

New gas tanka, one ton truck
wheels, rad1ators floor mats etc
D &amp; R Auto R1pley WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

I

-,,..., .. ----•

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

BORN LOSER

,,.

' :XX ~SCRIM\t-ll&gt;o.TIOt-li,N o..R

• .-

"''

,

The defense collectc'&lt;l I he next sevCfl
tncks South took the club linesse los
mg to East s king West took two heart
lricks and the d1.unond ace then East
won t hree dtamond tncks Along wtlh
tnck one, that spelled four down
Note that rf We st .. ms trtek three
wtth the dtamond •ce the contract will
make As West d1dn t open the b1ddmg
as dealer, he cannot hold the dub king
m addttron to h1s heart honors and the
di1amond ace South wtll have no optton
but to play a club to dummy' s ace Wlth
benevolent results to the dcclanng
s1de
Always conSider wrthholdmg a wrn
ncr that cannot run away If the duck
mtght m1slead an opponent about the
he ofthe land

Phtlltp Alder's book, 'Get Smarter
at Brtdge, " ts avatlabte , auto
gmphed upon request, for $14 95
frem P 0 Box 169, Roslyn Hts. NY

OFFICE: 7

11.577 0169

1993 Camper Inn Broo~ 30Ft
614 446 4465

I M

c.ctii~Go

UP WITH

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUis Campos
Cf'!IPb 11l~ Cophor cryplograms

b~ lmnou::; poop!e past and present
f ach It&gt; IIN n Ihi' r •p hno ~lanrlf. lor &lt;~no lh6o Todny s clue P oquals F

'T D

X F 5

ur crr:Mirrllrom quoldllons

PYCNHM

K G R C

C

TRBNC

l F T H

VKHX
R S

XFXBHM

D F V

'

ROBOTMAN

'

ILUQEL

I I: I' I
I

I'

.--[--,--~~~. ~-~:

,..._Nr--0-r-B...,Y

One day I overheard a wrse
fellow tell h1s fnend, "People
L......L__J.
__J.
___J._____J ,._
you shou ld want lo get even
~--'------~-.., w1th are those who have genD R E E N G - I erously - - -- - - you '

I I I

PC!&gt;S
Camera (CC)

:&amp;.:.II_:O~o~~=k=6=1=4·.:99=2:_-:5t=83~----- ~
C&amp;C General Home Mam ~

r Pops

..,
"'-1

~

broken romance? The Astra Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand
what to do to make the relatronsh1p work
Mall $2 75 to Matchmaker C/o thiS news
paper, P 0 Bo)( 4465 New York NY
10163

ASTRO-GRAPH
DRYWALL

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

wv

,..

A'Your
·
W'Birthday

Freeman s Heatmg And Coolmg
Installation And Servrce EPA
Cert1fied Residentral Commercial
614 256 1611

Tuesday Aug 1 1995

MO Electrical and
Refrlgeratl.on

....

C F T

NYP E HH

I WOND&amp;I! WH~f
P&amp;'OPLE; TAU{ A90tJT
OIJ TliOSE TIIIJV6S

8~1 Omck's Home Improvements
add111ons remodeling, roohng
s1dlng plumbing etc Insured call

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

TYSYBHM)

PREVIOUS SOLUTION I smash a gwtar because I hke them I usually smash
a gu1tar when rt's aiTis best ' ~ Peter Townshend

MONDAY

AppllancP. Parts And Servn:e Al l :
Name Brands Over 25 Years E • "'
1
penence All Work Guaranteed
Frenc h C1ty Maytag 614 4-46
7795

Ron s TV Serv1ce, spe&lt;:aal1l1ng m
Zenith also serv1C1ng most other
brands House calls, 1 800 797
0015
304 576 2398

NRC

O Complete

I
"
Tomcat - Threw Clamp Legton
- ICE CREAM
Granny always sa1d lhat life was unpredrctable 1th ink
she sa1d thai so she cou ld eat her ICE CREAM f~rst

_,'

Hang ftniSh, repair
Ce1lmgs utx1ured, plaster repair
Call Tom 304 575 4186 20 years
expenence
•

YS X

RC

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Home
Improvements

6323

VR M,

T H

IYKFMXY

'

''
'

CNB,

X F J S

CHI I

C F

TO GET ANSWER

13ETWEEN NATE AND
FORRE.ST GUMP 1

"

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
'
Unconditional hfet1me guarantee
Local references furn1shed Call
(614) 446 0870 Or (614) 237 .....
0488 Rogers Waterproollng Es t
rabhshed 1975

1786

pre!

UNSCR~MBtE ABOVE LETTE~S

"-LL THE Slt'IILJ\RITIE S

'

Res1den11al or commercial w1rmg
new servrce or repairs Master lT·
censed eleCitlclan Ridenour
Elecwcal WV000306 304 675

anow

48 Roll-call
reply
50 Navy ship

P~INI NUMBF~ED tETIE~S IN
THESE SQUA~ES

Self conta1ned camper for sale r
sleel)s 5 has s1ove, refngerator, ""
&amp; ba thr oom $1 000, 614 992 '
6572

COMFORT ASSURED DEAlER
lAWIIENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps A~r ConditiOning Jl
You Don I Call Us We Both loset
FrH Estimates 1 800 287 6308
614 446 6308, wv 002945

moll on
47 Slides on

the chuckle quoted
1 .
1.
.
•
_
•
bv fdhng 1n the m•ssmg words
L...l-..1.-.I--L--1--l vou deYe!op from !lep No, 3 below

•

BIG NATE

Must Sell 1972 Lark camper 22ft
elecrnc J8Ck new lr~dge, landom
axl. tully equ1pped $2 200 080 ' '
B14 368 9482

820

46 Hond

~-::,l"s,--TI:__.:,Ic:":__TI--r-1

24 Ft layton Camper Sleeps 6
Wnh Air Cond1t10n1ng Awn 1nQ', &amp; 1
Bathroom
Good Condttton,
$3,995 614 379 2139

Aoofmg and gullers commerctal
and resid8f1,tla! mmOf reparrs 35
years eKperrence 614·992-50411

family
31 Baseball
game
division
33 Borderad
38 Sonnet.part
40 Feel
41 Belial
42 An O'Neill
43 French
stoneware
44 Short race

the defend
frlt ll W,ls

hc,played a dt amond to hiS kmg But

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

tenence- Palnt1ng vmyl s1d1ng
carpenlry, doors, ~mdows baths
mobile home repair and rrore For
free eshmate call Chet, 614 992

.,.+-'9~-4=....-1f='-l 1 29 Ancient
ltallifn

""

a showet of ram

has the club kmg the cuntr.Jct w1ll t nil

Budget TransmiSSions Used &amp;
Rebu11t, All Type1, Access1ble To
Over 10.000 TransmiSSIOn, Also
Paris Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates, 614 379 2935
,-

810

handle
28 Being

Allild!'l'

t10n wtth dummy s ace
The stmple hnc 1s to play a spade to
hand and take t he &lt; luiJ finesse If West

0

1995 New 17 112Ft Maxum 135
HP Mercru1ser Inboard
14'
Hours Ver~ N1ce 614 446 9569

SERVICES

21 Eaoleotto

•K

malevolent
Agamst three no trump West led the
heart kmg Declarer ducked the f1rst
tnck but look the lwarl J&lt;lrk C"onllnu.t

~AVE TO PRETEND 'I'Oll
KNOW EVERYTHING

'.

8267
1980 Jeep CJ5, good body good
eng1 ne, $4,200 Call 304 6 75
3882 after 5pm

Pas~

was certain ly benevolent to
tng Std e but the drC!(.lt f't

1987 16 112 Foot G lasport 120
HP Inboard Motor Open Bow
Low Hours Very N1ce $5 500
614 367- 7912
'

rronth 304 882 3772

85 StJbaru Brat, Hop 91,000
m1les turbo charge 6 14 949

P~tss

tv actor

Kan 26 Alleviated

The tnck three duck 111 lod,JV s de,tl

1

$3150, 304 773

1991 pull behind Hot Dog Stand
4ft • Of~ self contained eQU1PfT1:9tll
mclueled ready to work $3,000 ,
304 675 6416 or 304 773-6074

84 Mazda truck, ate S sp. Alprne
stereo wrth cassene sport
wlleels, 17 000 m1les $9000 614742 2878

1,.

Vas!oi 1i N1
Op'emng lead

duck m

1977 Starcrat 16 w th top 1978
Mertur~ 90 hp Wllfl powert1lt boat

1993 Ford Splash, Sharpl Load
9dl Like New low Mlleagel614

720 ltucks tor Sale

Pasfl.

Staten19 Cronbeam
23 Metal bar
24 Not working
(II)
25

By f'lullrp t\lder

PEANUTS

1974 Glastron 15 Ft 65 HP
$1 000 1977 Marqu1s '11 Ft 1 t s •
HP$200001!0 614 2566315

1990 Valor told out campmg tratl
er 1n good shape steeps 6 not
used much $2,300 304·895
3348

1994 red VW Jetta Gl 113 700

10 Reaounded

4 Wall recess

The 19th century En~hsh ptaywnght
and humOJ tst Douglas Jerrold wroh'
''He was so benevolent so merc1ful ,1
man lhJJl 111 h1s nm;takcn p.tssJon he
would have held cUI uml:trel!&lt;:~ ove t a

1993 Eagle VISIOn TSI Loaded
Green &amp; Grey, 39 000 Mrles
$13 500 614 256-1618 614 256
1252

or take over lease $281 per

3 Working

Who has
which card?

Kawaskt tcZ400 Good Con.d111on
$550 61(..441 1199 After 5 PM

1975 26 Foot Holiday Vacatton Campet Good Shape Everythtng ..
Worksl614 4461400

1994 Plymouth Suridance 4 Door
12000 M1les Excellent Co}td1tt0n
Air, Cassette $9850 WJII Con
s1der Parttal Trade 614 256
8854 258 6329

I !1&gt;
2N1

Honda 70 3-wheeler good cond1
tiCr\ $350 304·675 2074

1993 Dodge Darona ES Loaded
54,000 M1les, 16,000 lett On
War Askmg $10 500 614 368
8743

1993 Gee Tracker LSI 4.14
31,600 Miles 5 Speed, A1r Cas
sette, $10,500 614 446·1811
Leave UesBBge

17 NY 'I

B Nursemaid
g Director Kazan

whole)

Robin -

35 Most

11 Excavates

5 Tropical tree
6 Rigid boss
1 Globe

30 - de Havilland
1 - - angle
32 Ktnd of rock
2 In - (os a
34 Actress

Vulnerable Both
Dealer West
.South
W1•st North Fast

WE WOULD A-BEEN
WE HAD US A
TO CHURCH SUNDAY, FULL HOUSE!!
PARSON--UH-,._~
BUT PAW'S
OUT OF
TOWN
AN'--

790

1993 Ford Thunderbird V 6, Au
tomallc, PW, Ol, AUIFM Stereo
Alu mmum Whettls Excellent
Condtnoo.$9500 614-441...()414

•K
SOUTil

~ BARNEY

1992 Chrysler Frfth Avenue E.x
cellent Cond11ion, Grey With Dark
Grey lnter~or, 1 Owner 76,000
U1lea. e14 446-6754

256--6753.

Arthur 56 Delete's

to be

unusual

1990 Yamaha 4 wheeler 12Scc
$1,500 080 61+388 9482

760

54 Madam's
counterpart
55 Tenms pro

• i 6 3
tJ1 076l

t K H I
• 9 5 4

1984- Honda ves 110 Magna,
new ures m1nt con 1t1on, red
$3150 304 458-108ll;_

tra1ler 19 78
5707

monster
53 Golfer
Ballesteros

¥K Q J 10
oA 9 2
..s 3 2

¥9 H4

ClW51!yNEA lnr:

71 0 Autos for sa

misfit (sl.)
12 Highest part
13 Construction
beam (2 wds)
14 Jal 15 Had lunch
16 Merging
18 Strong wind
20 Hosiery
mlshars
21 Part o

Motorcycles

1988 Yamaha 350 4 Wheeler
Utility Model, Front &amp; Back Racks
AutomatiC Shaft Dnve, H1gh &amp;
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l l o w Range Good Cond1t1on
$2,000 Ftrm, 614 256·6596

560

- Z

4 Fiddling

Al~HI I2

• AK J

Wf&amp;-itf'IH

1 Full Blooded Brown Sw1ss Cow
Com1ng W1\h H41r Second Calf
U1ddle 01 August614-245-921Z

550

If 1H6Y SA'r'

rrwrl.QJQ

1977 Yamaha 400, Very Goocf'
CondUtonl $900 614 379·2720
AFTER 6 PM

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upngllt Ron Evans Enterprtses,
Jackson Oh10. 1 800 537 9528

While Chnstmas tree, 7ft, $15
304 882 2436

A.RE: SP+t'IIJG 5::M£11-\I)j2,
aJ PRiu:::.iR£.

:6~1·:..:-~=:2.:.3~7=00~----------~'i

1---------------.. .

39 Exuberance
40 Team

• 9 B 4

1973 Harley Davidson Super
gltde oleler b1ke redone, very de
pendable, looks great $7500 hrm,

630

Wa nte d to buy two good used
motorcycle helme t's 614 992
5053 aher 5pm "''''

Aelngerator Wh1te Whirlpool
Frost Free $125 Srde By Side
Coppertone $195 Refr1gera1or
No rge Almond $225 Admi ra l
Fr~ezer $150 1 Kenmore Wh 1to
Side By S1de lea And Water In
Door $475 Maytag Wringer
Washer $150 Desmger Washer
L 1 ~e New $205 1 Year Warranty
Kenmore Dryer $95 Wh~rlpool
Wasller $95 Skaggs App l ances
76 V1ne Street Gal11polis 614
446 7398 1 BOO 499 3499

740

Small Pieces Of New Carpet 614·
379-2720 AFTER 6 PM

Tandy 1000 TU2 Computer Two
Monitors 1 VGA 1 CGA Color
Printer (Dot Matrix) 24 Dm Extra
Software Also Brand New Brother
Model 680 Fax Mat:t11ne (Brand
New) Computer Desk Furntture
All TillS For Only $600, 614 988
2133 l:eave Message If No An
...r

3 Bedroom House W th 1 Acre
land 1 On L1ncoln Pike 6 1/2 M1les
From Centenary $24 000 614
446-0050

Three bedroom
m Racme
lois ol closets eat m kllchen
large carport b1g lot 614 949
2286

Will do all types masonary wor~
bflck block stone Free est1
mates :l&gt;4 773-6021

Dehum1d1f1er
Carpet Power
Stretcher Under laymen! Stapler,
Small linoleum Roller, 614 446
2857

'tOU TEL.L
Wf-\E:fJ \1-16::£ R:ll..lnCII&gt;.~S

•

Baby bed stroller car seat
'fNf ng, 1N3lker :1&gt;4-67S-o4548

Furn1shed EII1C1enc y 701 Faunh ElectriC Wheelcha irS E lectriC
Avenue Gall polis $200/Mo Ut1l1
Scooters New/Used Scooter L1ftt
t1es Pa1d Share Bath 614 446
Sta~rway Elevators L1ft Chairs
::;:.,:.:;:_:::._;:_:---:::.:_-,...---- 1 -''-1..:6:..:,A..:"..:"'..:7..:P..:M::.__________ Bowman s Homecare 614 4-46
614 446 S&amp;i 1
1975 New Moon Tra1ler 14x70 2
7283
3 Bedroom 2 Full Baths Ga
Anent1on ConstructJon Workers
Georges Portable Sawm1ll don t
Fedders A1r Cond1110ner 17,000
haul ypur Jogs to the mill JUSt call
Heat Very Clean $8 696 6 1
2bedroom apt completely fur
388 0208 Aher 6
n1shed 1nctudmg washer dryer &amp; BTU s 3 Yean Old $200 614
304 675 1957
:.:.:..:::::...:.:._.:._:.:.__ _ _ _ _ 1 garage 304-67&amp;-2884
245 5il43
1977 Ne:w Yorker 14x70
Will Do lntenor Eilteflor Pa1nrmg
mamta 1ned 304 882 3166
BEAUTIFUL APAR TMENTS AT Fpr sale aU new Brattier lap com
Reasonable Rates Expenenced
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON puler pnnter 800, Cannon cop1er
L1ml!ed Offer! 1996
ESTATES 52 Westwoo«l Dr1ve 600 3 p1ece d1nn1ng room set
References For Free Estimates
Call614 245-5755
3tH 2ba1h St695 down
rrom $226 10 $291 Walk to shop $800 614 949 2791 or 614 949
&amp; mov1es Call 614 446 2568
month Free delivery II.
2128
Only at Oakwood Homes
Equal Hous1ng Opportu111fy
He 1 10 seer 4 ton alf cond1t1oner
WV 304-755 5885
Counuy Srde Apartments large compressor 304-675-5027
New 1996 14x70 mcludes
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Water Sew
JET
0 'u',.•
210
Business
1n g sTepsb,',.
'·n"one
age Garbage Included WID
AERATION MOTORS
Opportunity
homeowners
Hook Up $360/Mo Oepos t Re
Repa~red New &amp; Rebul'l In Stock
months FREE lot rent
qUired 513 922-{)294
Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537 9528
INOTICE I
down arid $2().7 17 per month Call
OHIO VALlEY PUBliSHING COt·_:80::_0-:_83::;7.:.-3::238=-'
Furn1shed Apartment 939 Sec
recommends tt1at you do bus1
ond Gallipolis 1 Bedroom $28~
ness w 1tn people you know, and
Pr ca Buster! New 14~70 2 or Mo UtiiJtleS Pa1d 614 446 4416 K1ng S1ze 3 P1ece Cherry Bed
room Su1te $300 614 379-2720
NOT to send money through the 3br Only $995 down S1951month After 7 P.M
AFTER 6 PM
ma1l until you have mvesllgated
Free delivery &amp; !etllp Ont-, at
Grac1ous I1V1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
the olfenng
Oakwood Homes N1tro WV 304
755 5885
apartments at Village Manor and K ng woodburner two loads o!
l~rewood , three p1ece bedroom
R1vers1de Apanments n M ddle
learn to make money with little
su1te ele&lt;;.tflc range e14 949
money Sen d SASE to Kevin 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
port From $232$355 Call 614
3302
992 5859 Equal Hou smg Oppor
Connell PO Bo~ 5647 Athens
55 Acres Of land W11t1 28~32 tumlles.
OH 45701
New Irregular Jeans and shorts,
Bulldmg On Clay Chapel Road 1
BOO 287 6308 614 446 6308
N1ce 2bedroom apanmenr w/d $S'pr aU weott See Peggy at 132
VENDING Won 1 Get R1ch Outck
nookup References Deposit No Bunernut Pomet"oy
Will Get Steady Cash Income,
Four lots near Aacme approx 1 pets 304 675 5162
P11cecl To Sell t 000 820 4353
New RCA VCR Plus 4 Head Vid
112 acres each s•art1ng at $5000
eo System On Screen Program
call614 949 2025
N1t;e large 5 Room Apartment
mmg Cosl $400 New 614 446Upstairs Second Avenue Galli
7127
G"-LLIA CONlY Just East Of polls Depos1t $275/Mo 614 367
Srare At •7 30 M1nutes South Of 0221 614 446 0542
Now available at Pamt Plus lor
Galhpol1s 25 Wooded Acres
Overlookmg The Ohro R1ver
Twm R1vers Tower now accepting your log home cedar s1dmg de&lt;:k 1
or outdoor turmture AKZO NO
$22000 Ont-, $2000 Down And applications lor lbr HUD subs1d
BEL SIKKENS COATINGS 304
$264 30 Per Month 10 Years
1zed apt for elderly and hand1
575 4064
10% Interest 614 775 9173
capped EOH :xl4 67&gt;6679
All real estate advertiSing In
GA~llA CONTY Just East Of Upstairs A~artment 238 Fhst Old log house make an olfer
ttus newspaper IS sub1ect to
304 675-5944
Stale At t17 30 M nutes South Of Avenue GallipOliS Great Loca
the Federal Fo3.1r Housmg Act
Galhpohs lots Of Deer And t1cnt K1tchen With Stove &amp; Refng
ol 1968 which makes 1t Illegal
Turkey On Thts 24 Wooded Acr
erator $285fMo Plus Depos1t 8 One Tosh1b1a Color 20 TV New,
Never Taken Out 01 Carton $459
to advertise "any preference
es Only $12 900 Owner Fmanc
Referenc~s No Pets 614 448
Will Take $300 Old Fash1on
limitaTion or d1scr ITIInatlon
1ng $900 Down And $158 58 Per 4926
Porch Glider 614-367 7401
Month
10
Years
10%
Interest
based on race color religion
ALSO
13 Wooded
Acres
450
Furnished
sex tam hal status or national
Queen s1ze water bed beautiful
$6 900 Onl~ $900 Down And
ong1n 01 any 1nten110n to
m1rrored bookcase headboard
Rooms
$127 48 Per Month 1 5 Years 100/.
baffled mattress w1th heater and
make any such preference
Interest More Wooded Ac rea ge Rooms lor rent week, or month
thermostat padded s1de ratls,
hm1\a\10n or diSCflm1nat1on ~
Available Same Area 614 775
Slartmg at $120/mo Gallla Hotel
pedestal base wrth three drawers
9173
614-446-9580
and room for three more ask1ng
Th1s newspaper Will not
$175 call6 14 992 7774
H11ts
Lot
118
approx
Sleep1ng
roo
ms
w1th
coo~
ng
Meadow
knowhngly accept
100~200 2m1 frOm Pt Pleasant
Also trailer space on r~ve r All Refngerator s1de by srde, 9reen,
advertisements for real estate
Must sell Wrll nego11ate 304
hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m
good condition, St50 Cha1n lmk
which s 1n VIolatiOn ot the law
fence 4x8.x4hlgh posts &amp; gate,
Our readers are hereby
304 773-5651, Mason WV
$50 304-675-6132.
rnlormed that all dwellings.
REMOTE beau11ru1
1 460 Space for Rent
land 3 m1les south ol
advertised 111 th1s newspaper
Refngerators, Stoves Waaher1
are ava1table on an equal
Oh1o Mt Union Rd Four
Bus111ess Space 960 Sq Ft New
And Dryers All Recondrlloned
parcels. one 9 acre
ly Remodeled E~cellent Locahon
opportup11y basrs
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
es range from
Ample Parktng 614 256 6336, AI
Wtll DeNver 614-669-6441
Owner hnanc1ng
ter 6 PM
map 614 593 6545
SAM SOMERVIlLE S ARMY
REAL ESTATE
SURPLUS by Sandyv1lle Post 01
MERCHANDISE
Scen1c Valley Apple Grove
hce noon 6pm Fn Sun CoUecla
beaut1ful 2ac lots publiC water
bles, small md1V1dual equipment
Jr 3:14 576 2336
310 Homes for Sale
304 273 5655

Sun Valley Nursery School
Chrldcare M F earn 5 30pm Ages
2 .K Young School Age Ounng
summer 3 Oa~s per Week Mm1
rrum 614,..46-3657
BabySit Infant Or Toddler In
My Home Rodney Area Refer
ences 614 245 5887

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

3 Rooms Furmslled Uull(les Pa1d
$250t Mo $ tOO Depos, 94 lo
cust Gallipolis, Bt4 446 t340

1-ViJ ( AfJ

1989 Caravan Good Cond1t1on 1 1
Htgh Mileage $4 500 614 446,
2509 After 4

Ope dmmg room su 1te 3pc bed
room su11e washer dryer, sola
k1ng s1ze waterbed 304 575
4558

2 RQoms Plus Bath Lafa-,ene
MatT No K1tche11' AU Ut httes pa1d
$1 75 00 Month Deposit Requ1red

• Q 5
•A Q J I 0 7 6
F. t\ST

EEK&amp;MEEK

1987 GMC 314 Ton Van 6 2 D1c
sel Very Good Cond11 10n &amp; Very
Dependable $3 950 614 256
15t4

3 Ton Cenral lm Cond 1t1oner
Package 1System Or Spl1t System
S1 250 lr'lstalled 5 Yr Warranty
All Parts. t 800 287 6308 614
446 6308

400iJW•n- Gtneralor,
gas powered used less than
40hrs $6ee 304 675 6416 or
304 773 6074

7

• fi 5
¥A 5 2

1987 F 150 4x4 New 302 Engtno •
Paint And Tires E~cellent Cond1
non 614·245 9061

2 P1ece Sectional 2 Chests, End
Tables t&lt; tchen Table 2 Lamps
614 441 1183

2bedroom furn shed utd1t1es ln
eluded References 8. depps11 re

----------~ ~------------------~---------------------16~1~4~4~~~77~~=-----------11 0 Help Wanted
-

1986 Jeep Cherokee 4x4 Gooel
614 446·9664

Condi~on,

14 000 BTU Comfort Atr Wmdow
A11 Cond1t1oner Only Used 2
~nthsl614 446 2941

Coricrete &amp; Plast1c Sepllc Tan~s.
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpflses Jackson OH
' aoo 537 9528

Mme

1 From -

8 Social

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Answer to Prtvloua Puzzle

36 Dollar bill
37 Sparrow's

ACROSS

Be sure to keep abreast ol current know!~
edge 1n your chosen ITeld 1n the year
ahead A promot.an IS Indicated if you re
bnghter and better mtormed than your
assoc1ates
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You w1il know
how to be strong and assert1ve today
wtthout be1ng brash or overbeann.g You
can protect your nghts w1thout stepptng
on anyone s toes Trymg to patch up a

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) St14 a11ons
can work out as you env1S10n I hem today
espec1ally those of a commerc1al or
f1nanc1af nature lmag1ne posttrve resu!ls
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) It w111 be
1mperat1ve that you eXerctse your Tnllla
11ve today 1nstead of wa1!1ng on others Ia
ltght lhe fuses tor you Carry your own
malches
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) Assess Stl·
uattons JogTcafly today, but also g1ve ere
dence to your 1ntuttton That little votce
could provtde a brg edge m competJIIve
tnvalvements
,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Dac 21) You
WTII have a marvelous faculty today for
tmprovmg or butldmg upon the Tdeas of
others Make notes when assoc1ates
elCpress their v1ews
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Malena!
mottvat1on could provtde you w1th the ·
mcenttve you requtre today to be an
ach~ever It you want somethmg strongly
enough, you II succeed

1

•

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) In partner
sh1p arrangements today 11 w1fl be up to
you to determrne the pace and course •of
actiOn You could lose valuable 11me wa1t·
1ng tor yo~;~r cohOns
PISCES (Fab 20-March 20) Wha\
seems unresolvable and complex to a
fnend could prove easy for you to unravel
today U se your talents to help a pal
uniTe these knots
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Seek ac1•v•
hes today that are phystcally and mental
ly sttmu!atmg Make sure however that
they are netther too strenuous nor too
structured

TA!,IRUS (April j!Q-May 20) Try ro use
your trme effectively today domg con
strul:ttve thtngs Serv1ces you render to
ofhers wtll be acknowledged and apprect

ated
GEMINI (M8y 21-June 20) Put less
emphas1s on material tnterests today and
more on aesthetiC pursutls SuP,erftctal
goals will produ~e only hoUow returns
CANCER (June 21-Ju\y 22) Do not
leave loose ends dangling today m a
llnanctally meanmgful arrangement
Make pvery ettor1 to conclude these mat
ters sat1sfactortly

•

....
'

�/

Monday, July 31,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel
I

Thirty years after its birth, Medicare's future not certain
By AMANDA DAVIS
Associated Press Writer
INDEPENDENCE, Mo - Only
in their mid-30s, Leo and Barbara '
Kazma won't even be eligible for
Me dicare for years, but they sti U
are concerned about the program
and its future.
"Enti tlements are a big pan of
the budge~ and cuts need to come
fmm everywhere, even Medicare,"
Leo Kazma said. "If we don't control spending today, tbe young people like ourselves won' t be ab le 10
afford it (health care) in th e
..
.
future.
The Des Moines, Iowa, couple
were in the audience Sunday for a

national town ball meeting on lbe
30th anniversary of the aeation or
Medicare. The meeting at tbe Harry
Truman Presidential Library - in
tbe auditorium where President
Johnson signed legislation creating
Medicare i n 1965 - became a
complaint session about.GOP proposals to slash tb e program's
spending .
~
Democrats chose Independence
beca use Truman tried unsuccessfully tbrougbout his administration
to create some type of national
bealtb insurance.
Similar meetings in Boston ;
Portland, Ore .: Tampa, Fla.; and
Lorain, Ohio, were linked by sate!-

lite to th e Independence event,
wbicb drew a mostly senior capacity crowd or 250.
"They are raiding Medicare to
pay for a tax cut and that is
wro ng ," said House .Minority
Leader Richard Gepbardt, D-Mo.
He said balf the tax cut would go to
familie s earning more than
$100,000 a year.
Republicans have proposed saving $270 biUioo in Medicare costs
over tbe next seven years by reducing the program's growth rate. The
Clinton administration says that
could cost senior citizens an average of $2,800 over those yearsif
half tbe savings is taken from beneficiaries.

Sen. Christopher Bond, R-Mo .. slashes in Medicare would endandefended GOP plans for Medicare ger tbe health of senior citizens.
and noted that Clinton's own Medi" We will not go back 10 the
care Board of Trustees has warned days when older Americans
the program could be broke by brought, bags of apples to pay for
their doctor visits," Shalala said,
2002.
" Medicare bas to be fixed so it drawing cheers from the crowd.
"You worked fori~ fougbt for
doesn' t go bankrup1," be said in a
statement. ·
·
. it and earned it, and we are n·ot
Under the GOP budget reso lu- going to let them take it away, "
tion. Medicare still would rise I said Hou se Democratic Whip
percent per person above projected David Doni or of Michigan.
Rep . Joseph Kennedy of Mas·
inflation, Bond said. Otber reforms
will help account for new patients sachusetts, speaking in Boston, said
coming into the system and make tbc generation now receiving Medisure care providers continue to get care provided "moral leadership"
tbrougb two World Wars and other
reimbursements.
Health and Human Services trying times.
Secretary Donna Sbalala said such
" Now we' re going to lum our

backs on tbem when they need a
little medieal care?'' be asked.
Bob Hemenway. a retired pipefitter from Kansas City, Mo., rose
from the audience to ask why both
parties could not work together to
correct problems in the program.
"Isn't that why you' re elected?'' he asked. ·
· Also attending the session was
Johnson's daughter. Lu~i Baines
Johnson, who watched her father
sign the legislation creating Medi·
care.
"We are mindful now, as daddy
was, that Medicare is not a
panacea. No piece of legislation
ever is," she said.

Lake Erie warms Tampering hasn't tainted fair, manager says
to Ohio wineries
CLEVELAND (A P) - The
Lake Eric region is known for
-plcaslllltix:aches ·and taSty walleye,
but it al so is one of the nation's top
winemaking areas.
From Toledo to the Pennsylvania border, lake breezes warm the
land , bold off fros t, keep down
humidity and create a climate
f"vorablc to tbe growing of grapes
used in wincmaking .
Grapes arc ·grown near Cincin·
nati and the central regions of the
state. Dut tbe lake provides tbe climate most suitable for vincyanls in
Ohio, which ranks fourth in tbe
nation in the number of wineries
and sixth on overall wine produc·
1

lion.
"In the fall, it delays tbe frost
and in tbc springtime, witb the lake
frozen , tbe temperatures arc cooler
longer. It gives us a longer fro stfree growing time,'' said Garth
Cahoon, a retired Ohio State University horticulture professor who .
specializes in grape growing.
Grapes c an grow almost any where, but du better in nortbern climates , sail! Cl"udio Salvador, the
wincmakcr lor the Firc lirnds Winc ry in S"ndusky. Southern states:

COLUMBUS (AP) - The general manager of 1he Ohio State Fair
wiU. a wine industry have to spray and the state agriculture director
their vines as many as IS umcs a see ·something positive coming
ear to ke ep-dis eftse and pe-s tS -rfOI!lllveStoclulilnpering tbat lllinLaway, be said.
ed competition at last year's fair .
Ohio's earliest vineyards were
They say the action the state
i~ the Cincinnati area and tbe state
took against offenders sent a strong
at one time led the nauon rn wme message to exhibitors nationwide.
"We caught the people who
production. But mildew and blad:
rot contributed to a decline m tried· to bend the rules," said
Ohio's wine'industry . .
.
. " " Richard Frenette, genenil manager
Prohibition all but killed 11 unul of the state fair which begins Frithc 1960s, when the Ohio Agricul - day and runs ~ugh Aug. 20.
tural Research and Development
He said tbe controversy actually
Center in Wooster began encourag - may help to improve tbe livestock
ing grape growers to try French- competition.
American hybrid grapes.
·
State agriculiure Director Fred
American characteri stics of the Dailey agreed.
hybnds allowed them to surv1ve
"We have a situation now
Ohio winters and French traits con- where honest kids have a better
tributed l~ tastier wines.
chance of winning, and I think it's
The_v;mter of 1993-94 was bartJ going to enhance tbe interest of the
on Ohto s. vmeyards. But growers
livestock competition," he said.
are replanllng.
.
The figures back that up . In
Economtcs bas played a role m
1994 9 284 exhibitors showed
the re-emergence of wineries in !he
25,41,3 ~!limals. This year, 9,409
state. Concord grapes used for JUICe · exhibitors will ~bow 25 981 anior jelly sell for less than $200 a
mals
'
ton .. The same ~eight of wine-proD;,;ley said tbe Food and Drug
ducmg grapes bnn~s $1 ,300. FarmAdministratlon began testing livestock at some of the prestigious
ers ~bo produce wtne can rcaltze a
profit of $9,000 from a _ton of · shows across tbe country after Ohio
gr~pes.
disclosed its tampering problem.
''Once we exposed tbe problem,
we exposed it around me nation,"
Dailey said.
After tbe offenders violated tbe
office.
rules of the state .fair, the agriculWhitney is currently serving her
tUre department stepped in to see if
third term as master of Star Junior
any criminal acts were committed.
Grange.
l,_ast year, seven of the top_10
She oblllined tbe highest award
steers and the grand champiOn
in Junior Grange work -Super
lamb were contaminated witb vegJ.G. - two years ago and is the
etable oil. or clenbuterol. Vegetable
only Junior Granger in the county
oil· is used to smootb the contours
to bold this award. She bas also
of lbe animal, fiUing in dents on the
been a state winner in several talent
·
categories in Ohio.
body. Clenbuterol decreases fat and
Linda Montgomery is ber Junior
increases muscle, promoung qmck'
Grange leader.j'atty and Opal Dyer
er weight gain and paler meat in
of Star Grange are the Ohio State
veal calves. It is sold in Canada and
·Grange Junior directors and led the
camp activities.
'·

•
• Sta te 0 ff ICe
AS hIey WIns

Members of Star Junior Grange
No. 778 of Salem Center participated in the recent four-day state camp
at Friendly Hills Grange Camp
ncar Zanesville.
Attending were Whi tney Ashley
and Emily Ashl ey, dau ghters of
Keith and Erruna As hley of Rock
Spring; &lt;::arson Yos ~ son o( Ch,uck
and Anita Yost of Oak Grove; and
'Kyle White, son of Jo se ph and
Connie While of Wilkesville.
·
Whimey Ashley was elected
assistant steward of the Ohio State
Juni or Grange . She is the rirst
Meigs County Junior Grange member to eve r be elected to a stale

Riffle to ~ddress group
Chuck Rime, Pomeroy pbarma- . answer questions. He said those
with questions about medicines
cis~ will be speaker at a meeting to
they
take should bring tbe
be held at the Senior Citizens Cen ter on Aug. 8, from 10 'a .m. to medicines in their original conllliners. An emphasis of the meeting
noon.
.
will be on appropriate use of
Rifne of McCullough and Riffle
Drugstore, will give tips on ,safe medicines to avoid negative reaction.
and effective medicine use and

Names in the news
BALTIMORE (AP) An
aspiring Maryland filmma)cer ~as
filed a $1.8 billion lawsUit accusmg
Sony Pictures and John Si~gleton
of stealing the film scnpt for
"Higher Learning."
'
Darry I Wbangn said that in
1991 be submifled his script, .
"Caugbt.Out There," to Singleton,
wbo wrote and 'directed "Boyz N
·· the Hood." "Higher Learning"
contains .. similar scenes, similar
themes and even a charactet with
the same name," Wbanon said.
Tbe suit seeks $900 million in
compensation and $900 million in
punitive damage~ from Oscar·nominee Singleton, hts producuon company, Sony Pictures, Columbia Pictures and a Sony Theaters representative.
·
A spokesman for Columbia
declined to comment, and calls to
Singleton· s publicist and .agent
were not returned. A Sony lawyer

-ilqng ·Botttom
news notes ·
The Long Bo11om Senior 'Citizens meet the second and 1'ourth
Wednesday .of each month t.tl 1hc

conununity building.
James Mount ami Belly Karr of
Circleville and Leal1 Clary and Dill
Glenwood hav e visited Georgie
Mount ami bmthcr Emory Weekley.
·
Karen Young, who was formerly employed with Dr. Geor~c Kusnir, is. no.w workmg al Oluo 11111vcrsity.
Juanita Well s visited Lela .
Hawk . Also visiting were Rubert
and Mary Bowles and grandc hildren from Pomeroy , Bc.lly and
David Ross uf Middleport and
Ma x ine a nd .C"rl llu nnel l o f
Columhus.
Leota Ferrell, Medwa y. spent
Ute week witl1 sisters Mac Mc Peck
and Ada Bissell.

declined to comment.
"Higher Learning" grossed $38
:.million nationally this year before
leaving theaters, according to
Entertainment Data, a Los Angeles
company that tracks movie rev·

enue.
YAKIMA, Wash. (AP) - Bonnie Dunbar wants to set tbe •record
straight.
Recent news reports that
claimed the shuttle astronaut's
heart slopped beating last October
during a NASA experiment were
"totally inaccU111te,' she said.
Dunbar was injected wi.tb a nontoxic dye tb~l allowed doctors to
study bow kidneys function in zero
gravity. It caused an "unpredictable reaction with my bndy
chemistry, but my neart didn't slop
beating," the medical engineer
said . .
"I'm nol going to open up my

medical records," she said. ''In
fact, I'd like to put the wbole thing
to bed."
Dunbar was aboard tbe 'shuttle
Atlantis when it made tbe historic
linkup last month with the Russian
space station Mir.
Now she says sbe's ready for a
vacation. "I've been away from
home for far too long," Dunoar
said last week. ''I need to answer
my mail.''

, ., FIREMAN ' S FESTIVAL
The annual firem e n's fesli val
held recently oy the Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Deparunent at
Harrisonville wa!' a success,
according 10 D:m L•mlz, fire chicl'.
Lantz said that many individu, als, husjnesscs anO groups Llonalell
items cmJ s uppon~d the fund raiser.

Music w&lt;1' by C. .1 . and t,he Country
Gentlemen and the Nashvillian
CouJ)try Club line dan cers .

is Osed as a respiratory aid for horses but it is illegal in the United ·
States.
Ten people have been convicted
on charges including eontributin·g
to the delinquency of a minor,
attempted theft, sale of unapproved
drugs and sale of adulterated meat .
Some forfeited their prize money;
others were banned from exhibiting
at the fair for atleastlhree years.
"My guess is that if we would
have cneeked the bottom 10 steers,
we would bave found them clean,"
Dailey said.
In June, state legislators enacted
the Livestock Show Reform Act,
making it a felony to administer
illegal or unapproved !!rugs to livestock, or otberwise illegally tamper
with livestock before or during
exhibition. FirSt-time offenders .arc
charged with a fourth-degree
felony and a maximum of 18
months in jail and a $2,500 fine:
Second-time offenders face 10
years 'in prison and a $5,000 fme.
Dailey said Ohio was tbe first
state to set such penalties for livestock tampering.
Two weeks ago, Dailey asked
the Midwestern Association of
State Departments of Agriculture to
adopt resolutions asking Congress
to provide additional money to
fight livestock drug-tampering, and
for more surveillance and testing to
ensure tbat food safety, consumer
confidence and ethical standards
are upheld. He also asked the group
10 ask Canada to prohibit exportatioo of clenbuterol:
Although the livestock competition is being cleaned up, it's not the
only thing at the fair.
The fair is designed to welcome
back visitors to a familiar, affordable setting for fun . Frenette
believes in the adage "'If it ain't
broke, don 'I fix it."
"We don't attempt to make a lot

Disney to acquire
Capital
Gities-ABC
•
•
1n surpnse merger

NEW YORK (AP)- The Walt
Disney Co. will acquire Capital
Cities-ABC Inc. in a surprise merger of entertainment and communications giants valued at $19 billioo.
Under the agreement announced
today, the biggest merger ever in
the media business, New Yorkbased Capital Cities will become a
subsidiary of Burbank, Calif. -bascd
Disney.
The combined company will
still be caUed The Walt Disney Co.,
and Disney's chairman, Michael D.
Eisner, will stay chairman and
chief executive.
Disney already produces ABCTV's hit comedy "Home Improvement," and Eisner held several
programming jobs at ABC in the
1960s and '70s.
Tbe deal .would be the second

Clarification
Advertising un a commemorative poster of Meigs County to be
produced by Hometown Publications USA of Highland Heights ,
Ky. is nnw being sold in Meigs
County by Mitzie Myers.
An article in Wednesday's edition of The Daily Sentinel about
the posters in\licated that all proceeds will be retnmed to .the Meigs
County Tourism Committee.
That is unt accurate, said
Myers, adding that the TourisiTh
Committee will only benefit from
'selling t11e commemorntive posters,
not from the monies paid by businesses which elect to go on the
posters.
.
Businesses which pay 10 be
included on the laminated poster
will

each receive six copies once

the ·project .has been completed,
according to Myers . Area landmarks, such " ' schools and the
· courtlJOusc, will be included at no
cos( sfie added:
She ~a id about 80 busine sses
will be featured on the poster and
tbat 3,000 will be printed once the
sale has been completed. Posters
which remain after the business
distrihution, about 2'.500, will go tO
the Meigs County Tourism Committee to be used as a fund raiser.
1l1at committee will sell tl1e posters
lor .$5 eacl1.
• ~ · 1/

•

largest in U,S . history, behind only
tbe $25 billion acquisition of RJR
Nabisco Inc. by Koblberg Kravis
Roberts·&amp; Co. in 1989.
There have been reports for
weeks speculaling-llilil Westingbouse Electric Corp. is putting
togeth·er a $5 billion bid to buy
CBS Inc.
.
Recently, Viacom Inc. agreed to
sell its local cable television operating systems to Tele-Communications Inc. in a deal valued at $2.25
billion. Gannett Co., the nation's
leading newspaper publis-her,
announced it is acquiring Multimedia Inc., a publisher and producer
of talk shows, for more than $1.7
billion. ·
Disney is a household name for
cartoon characters like Mickey
Mouse, animated movies like
''Pocahontas' ·' and its Disney
World and Disneyland · theme
parks. Its characters appear on the
Disney Channel on cable television, in 400 Disney Stores, on a
huge variety of licensed merchandise, and in books and magazines ..
· ln addition to ABC-TV, Capital
Cities bas a network of 225 afflliatcd TV stations and owns eight. It
plans to acquire two more in
August.
It also owns 80 percent of sports
cable broadcaster ESPN, bas interests in the Lifetime and A&amp;E cable
networks cable cliai:mcls, and bas
21 radio stations.

It also publishes newspapers
including The Kansas City Star and
F'on Wortb (Texas) Star-Telegram;
shopping guides; magazines; and
books.
The acquisition, already
approved by tbe boards of both
companies, is subject to shareholder approval and federal antitrust
review. The companies said they
expected the deal to be concluded
by early 1996.
Because the businesses arc complementary, the companies said
they do not expect jobs will be lost
in the combination. '
Under the proposal, Capital
Cities shareholders would receive
one share of Disney stock and $65
in cash for each of tbeir shares.

of major changes every year," said
Frenette. "If it worked well the
year before, we bring it back."
The Ejection Sea~ for example,

is returning, - ..

-·

~

For those who have the gumption to brave this ride, bere' s what
it does: The rider is strapped into a
form-fitting seat, winched up 20
feet from the ground and then catapulted skyward from rwo 120-foot
towers in three seconds, soaring
more tban-14 stories into tbe sky.
"It's like a big slingshot," said
spokeswoman Jill SchaUer.
A single rider pays $30; a rjde
for rwo costs $40.
The Ejection Seat is one of 74
rides this year.
· Ms. Schaller said a family of
four could expect to spend about
$67 for a day at tbe fair.

~~ht~~

•
NOELLE

· New things are popping up .o n
tbe fairgrounds. Direc;tly behind the
Celeste Center, where the major
entertainers perform, is a new stage
tbat will showcase free local enter. tainmem as well as some biggername acts, such as John BrennJIII
from MTV' s "The Real World."
"It will be a better sound quality stage that seats about 2,000 people," said Frenette.
There also is the George V.
Voinovicb Livestock and Trade
Center, where there will be beef
exhibits. It is named after tbe governor.
· And there are stock car football
· games, tractor pulls, pig races, virtual reality displays . For shopa- ·
holies, the bus tour of QVC, America's borne shopping network, will
broadcast live from the Celeste

PICKENS

Pickens, Drake installed
as 4-H Ambassadors
Noellt; Pickens, daughter of
Patty and Ray Pickens, Pomeroy,
and Cbrisly Drake, daughter of
· Debra and Thomas Drake, Racine,
were installed as Cbaner State 4~H
Ambassadors in a recent ceremony
at tbe Ohio State UniverSity.
Both girls have been active in 4H for eight yoars. As Ambassadors, the two will participate in
statewide leadership, citizenship,
communications and public relations experiences; serve as 4-H

spokesperson with elected and
appointed government officials, the
media, state associations, donor
groups, civic groups, parents, volunteers and others; and work with
other State 4- H Ambassadors to
plan a statewide 4-H Ambassadors
project to strengthen and expand
the Ohio 4-H program.
They will be assisting at the
Ohio State Fair on photography
day and helping )Villi 4-H volunteer
recognition.

New president named for
Columbus College ofArt
COLUMBUS (AP) - A former
college administrator in Michigan
has been hired as the new president
or the Columbus College of Art
and Design. ·
·
Charles L. Deihl will succeed
Joseph v. clmzani, who retires
Sept. 1, the school said Friday.
Canzani, 80, bas been president of
the college for 45 years.
. Deihl, 57, wa.s president of
Kendall College of i\rl &amp; Design in
Grand Rapids, Mich.
"I think be will build on what
we've got, which is ·very solid,"
said Robert Lazarus, a member of
the Columbus school's board.
"He's aware we' ve got somethmg
preuy good going here."

Lazarus said a screening committee conducted a national search
for a new president. Deihl was
selected from among more than 50
candidates.
Deihl was chosen because be is
a trained artist and has experierice
at similar colleges, Lazarus said.
During his six years at KeOOall, '
Deihl al'so was a professor of fme
arts. He previously was dean of tbe
faculty of arts and humanities at the
Stale University of New York in
Buffalo~ N.Y .. and worked at the
University of Cincinnati, Bradley
University and Ohio University.
About I, 700 students are
enrolled at the Columbus art
schooL

~. ?Zitojean d ?Ze/!ectioltd
1

~

Gilt Shoppe. 354 East Main Streel
(
)
_
Pomeroy . Ohio 45769
614 992 5790

SALE

10•70%oFF
+

Everything In Store
Open Monday • Fri~ay
August 1st· 11th
Monday • Saturday
August 7 • 12th
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Page4

Pick 3:
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'
"r

· ~ ....,.

Vol. 46, NO. 66
Copyright 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 1, 1995

A~P job reductions .

Utility giant slates
18yoffs at area Pl8ntS0

extend.to fi_ve states

•

By Tbe Associated Press
Job cuts announced Monday by American Electric Power Co.,
listed by state, town, name of lbe plant and number of jobs cut
. OHIO
.
·
TOTAL: 430 jobs.
• Beverly, Muskingum River Plan~ 85.
• Brilliant, Cardinal Plan!, 100.
• Cheshire, James M. Gavin Plant, 100.
• Columbus, Pickaway Plan~ 5.
• Conesville, ConesviUe Plan~ 140.
WEST VIRGINIA
TOTAL: 505 jobs.
•Glasgow, Kanawha River Plan~ 30.
• Moundsville, MitcheU Plant, Moundsville. 95.
• Moundsville, Kammer Plan~ 85 .
• New Haven, Mountaineer Plant, 80.
• New Haven, Philip Sporn P.lant, 85.
• St . Albans, John E. Amos Plant, 130.
INDIANA"
TOTAL: 220 jobs.
• Rockpo~ Rockport Plan~ 125.
• Lawrenceburg, Tanners Creek Plant, 95 .
KENTUCKY
TOTAL: 55 jobs.
• Louisa, Dig Sandy Plan~ 55.
VIRGINIA
TOTAL: 20jobs.
• Cleveland, Clinch River Plant, 10.
• Glen LYil, Olen L'yn Plan~ 10.
SOURCE: American Electric Power Co.

By ROOD AUBREY
"Utilities are making too mucb employees and union representaAssociated Press Writer
of this competitive tbing," be said. tives began Monday.
COLUMBUS American 11 They're using it as an excuse, as
A message left Monday at the
Electric Power Co.'s plan to cut far as I'm conce.r ned, to lay orr office of the International Brotherhood or Electrical Workers Local
about 25 percent of its work force people and raise profits."
The cuts at 16 power plants in No. 1466 in Columbus was not
is pan of a national trend, a uWities
analyst at an investment research Ohio, Wes't Virginia, Indiana, Ken- returned. "
tucky and Virginia wil) begin in
The company said in June it
company said.
. The company is cutting 1,200 of. early October and continue next would restructure to separate power
generation and energy delivery
its 5,200 workers in five of the year.
seven states it serves to improve
Tbe company offered a sever- groups, but Monday's announcethe performance of the Columbus- ance plan, wbicb includes up io one ment was the ftrst time it offered
bcsed utility, President E . Linn year of pay, continued medical and details.
AEP is a public utility holding
Draper said Monday in a news life insurance and job search help.
Those who do not accept it face company. Through subsidiaries it
release.
.
:
Utilities employed abo.ut termination, said John R. Jones, generates, buys, transmits and dis415,000 people tbree years ago, but AEP senior vice president of fossil- tributes electric power to 7 million
the indusb'y now is down 10 about hydro generation.
people.
310,000, said Gary F. Hovis, direc"We bope that many employees
It bas operations in Ohio, Inditor of utility research at Argus will find our severance plan attrac- ana, Michigan, Kentucky, Virginia,
ReSearch.
·
tive, limiting the need for nonvol- .West Virginia and Tennessee.
Hovis said in a telephone inter- untary reductions," Jones said.
AEP closed at $34.50 Monday
y)ew from New York that utilities
Workers age 55 and older were on the New York Stock Exchange,
are overreacting to fears about pos- offered retirement packages.
unchanged from Friday ..
' sible deregulation and competition.
Information 'J'C'elings with

Racine housing program
attracts 13 homeowners
inspection and homeowner
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
_
approval.
Thirteen Racine homeowners
Work began in June on Racine's
are currently participating in Community Housing Improvement
Racine's ongoing Community Program - designed to help lowHousing Improvement Program to-moderate income homeowners
(CHIP) and eligible homeowners renovate their houses.
still have time to take advantage of
The village was awarded tbe
the program, Grants Administrator · CHIP grant last year and people
Jean Tru'SseU.
meeting grant guidelines can
Trussell submilled a report on receive up to $18,500 for needed
the J!roject to the Meigs County repairs which may include roof
Board of Commissioners Friday. replacement, new windows, furThe report also indicated that five naces, painting and other items,
bomes are now under conslnjCtion Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton
rehabilitation, with one home near- explained.
ing completion and ready for final
Tbe county housing office bas

--Readying -f or school__,

received and processed 31 applications, according to Trussell. Of
these, 13 have been a~provcd Jlll(l
are in the program. while seven are
pending approval. •
Eleven applicants have either
dropped out of the program or did
not qualify under its guidelines, she
said,
People applying for the grant
first have to meet low-to-moderate
income status. Next, a grant rontractor determines what the bouse
needs. If lbe needs exceed $20,000,
the home is deemed not worth
repairing and is made ineligible for
(Continued on Page 3) .

I

,;".
I

State says sales ·tax benefit not exact
COLUMBUS (AP) - Tbe state
does not know bow much extra
revenue it collects from a sales tax
that produces more tban lbe official
rate, a state official said.
Ohio's tax schedule requires
upward rounding of all fractions,
said Mark Engle, a Columbus
lawyer. In lbe 1960s, the Legislature decided that "we might as
well round up and make some extra
revenue," be said.
Carol Bessey, tbe state's deputy
tax commissioner, said Monday
.she believes the rounding has

always -been in place. Sbe said no
information is available jlbout how
much money the state has collected
' because of the policy.
HCiearly there's a revenue
impact," Bessey said. "We don't
know what that would be."
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati and chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee, told The
Columbus Dispatch in a story
Monday that he has heard few
complaints about the policy.
'Tve been here 23 years," be
said. "And I can't say people are

Campaign law Soulsby's
legality bid
nephevtl"is
hits obstacle
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state
bas run into a roadblock in its legal
counterattack against labor union
lawsuits to block a campaign
finance law from laking effect Aug.
23:
Judge Evelyn Stratton of
Franklin County Common Pleas
Court on .Monday rejected a
request from Attorney General
Betty Montgomery to declare the
new law constitutional·.
Montgomery bad gone to court
op behalf of Secretary of State Bob
Taft in response to separate !awsuits against the law tbal were med
in U.S. District Court in Toledo
and Maboning County Common
Pleas Court in Youngstown.
Mark Weaver, an assistant attorney general, said Stratton di~- ·
missed the mauer m Franklin
County because there was no pend- ·
ing challenge to the law. and
because laws were presumed constiwtional unless proven
. otherwise.
.

"It will require a change 111 tactics" Weaver said. "We're going
10 ~view our options over the next
few days. Whatever tbc venue,we'll continue 10 figbt to protect
'
campaign finance re.orm.
~
Unions contend tbe Jaw that
would impose limits on ~arnpaign
contributions would unfauly target
them .

..

•

,

interim D.C.
police chief

Larry Soulsby, a 24-year
member of the Washington, D.C.,
police depanmen~ and nephew of
Meigs County Sheriff James . M.
Souls.by, was recently named
interim chief of the nation's capital's 3,850-member pollee force.
Soulsby, 44, a West Virginia
nali ve who until recently bas
served as assistant police chief,
was named interim chief by D.C.
Mayor Marion Barry.
He replaces Chief Fred
Thomas, who resigned citing personal reasons . Barry said be is
considering Soulsby to be permanentchief.
Tbe mayor bas told Soulsby to
work on a long list of initiatives
that include moving 79 officers
from ,tas·k forces and nonpatrol
assignments 10 palmi duty in the
city's seven police districts. Seventeen of those officers are to
come from tbe Violent Crime
Gang Task Force.
Soulsby commented that
police officers working with residents will make "great inroads to
stop ·me ·camage that's occurring
in our city. We'll be committed
to these citizens. We'D be responsive 10 you."

beating down my door because of
tbe change."
Jim Henry, senior vice president
and general counsel for the Retail
MerchanL• Council, said tbe schedule bas "nickel-and-dimed" the
public and is a windfall for the
state.
Henry estimated that rounding
upward bas increased state revenues from Ohio's 300,000 relllilers by several millioo dollars a year
since the 1960s.
In budget year 1994, the state
eollected just more than $5 billion
·
in sales tax.

Eastern High School's exterior has been entirely repainted.
Chris Stout and Paul Brannon are nearly finished with the,
painting after five weeks of work. The lirsl day for teachers is
Aug. 25, while students return to school Aug. 28 at Eastern, '
Meig.s and Soutliern school dlstric~. (Sentinel photo by George
Abate)

Attit~e

toward gover.nment
'not _pretty,' new poll reveals

That surpasses polls dating back contenders for the 1996 presidcnW ASHJNGTON (AP) - This
10
the
late 1950s that showed dra- tial race. Jesse Jackson, who bas
·• just in : Government wastes too
malic
discontent
in times of politi-· sought the presidency twice , has
much money, t.mericanS don't like
61
percent
distrnstful not ruled out another try.
'tal
crisis
slick politicians, taxes help busi69
percent
The analys(S said the public is
in
1974
after
Watergate,
ness and hurt people and, dam it,
in
1980
when
Americans
were
looking
for a dynamic personality
why do we keep letting all those
being
held
hostage
in
Iran
1\nd
62
not
lied
to
any group.
inimigrants in?
1990,
after
the
cougres
•
percent
in
Add up all that natiooal disconsional
bearings
an&lt;llrials
in
the
Greenberg
said the public is
tent and the results are that tbree of
·
Iran-Contra
affair.
likely
to
continue
10 be disenchani. four Americans distrust govern"Tbe
frustration
continues,"
cd
in
the
ncar
future.
But Steeper
men I, the. most in polling history.
said
Alan
F.
Kay,
president
of
the
said
the
tide
could
tum
if the leadAnd, according to pollsters wbo
foundation.
"Washington
coniine
ers
quit
bickering
on
topics
such as
took the country's political temperto
be
having
a
nervous
break·
Waco
and
Whitewater
and
com'
ues
ature, voters might be bot to try a
down."
plete
·serious
attempts
to
reduce
tbe
tbird -pany president.
The
level
of
distrust
has
budget
deficit
without
cutting
pop"It's just not pretty," said Stan.
"
increased dwing Clinton's [enure. ·ular programs.
ley Greenberg, who does political
71
percent
in
1992,
72
percent
·
polling for President Clinton.
"1. don't think anything is per- ·
"This is a period of continuing and . in 1993 and 1994, and now 76 percent
according
to
foundation
surmanent,"
Steeper said. "Govern ' certainly deepening cynicism." ·
vey~.
But
the
pollsters
blamed
ment
!I'JSt
increased under R,eagan.
"It's a critique of both parties
Republicans
as
much
as
Democrats
But
ngbt
now,
people don l perand the· system as a whole," said'
for government's poor showing, cetve anythmg getting done. The .
. ~ep~bli~n pollster Fred St~per.
noting that triJst continued to -plum- Democrats anil Republicans can
lbts kmd of attitude, tbi~ kind of
met
after the GOP won control of share tbe blame."
diSCQntent ts a lJ1'!JOr openmg fpr a
Congress in November 1994.
· third pany."
"The political cynicism bas not
Reasons people listed for di sTbe bipartisan poll, issued Moobeen dispelled by the winds of trusting government mcluded wastday by the Americans Talk Issues
change. If anytbing it's been wars- ing money, pohllCtans telling peoFoundation and conducted with
pie whatever will get them elected,
ened," Greenberg said.
help from botb 'Greenberg's and
The pollsters mentioned 199 I . taxes that help co'Voral:?ns more
Steeper's organizations, said· 76
independent candidate Ross Perot than people, pohucl31ls do whatperhnt or the people questioned
an4
former Joint Chiefs of Staff ever they want" once.elected, and
responded that tbey rarely or never
Chairman Colin Powell as two !~ws that help u~lmtg~~nts and
trust government "to do. wbat is
well-known potential independent
burt Amencan ctuzens,
right."

·-

Low tonight In 70s. Partly
cloudy. Wednesday. partly
cloudy. High In 90s.

1 Section, tO Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Defense
ofATF
Reno insists cult
leader was cause
of Waco deaths
By MARCY GORDON
Associated Press WriiH
W ASlllNGTON - Attorney
General Janet Reno, facing a
grilling from GOP lawmakers over
her deCision to order a tear gas
attack tbat ended the siege against
the Dra'ncb Davidians, in sisted
today that cult leader David, Korcsb ·
was solely responsible for the
deaths of 80 followers .
" We all mourn tbe tragic outcome. But the finger of blame
points in one direction - it points
directly at David Korcsb ," Reno
said in wrillen testimony for the
final day of House hearings on the
1993 siege near Waco, Texas .
''The fate of the Branch Davidians
was in David Koresh' s bands, and
he chose death for the men and
women who had entrusted their
lives to him. And be, David Kore'
sh, chose death for the innocent
children of Waco."
·
For weeks, Reno bas been on
the defensive as Republicans
attacked her decision to authorize
U1c FBI to usc tear gas on April 19,
1993. And a GOP co -chairman of
the hearings, Rep . Dill Zcliff of
New Hampshire, said the govern ment "killed over 80 people'.' at
the Davidian compound and he
believed President Clinton was
;,,valved in the decision.
Without mentioning Zeliff by
name, Reno said in her testimony
that "such a position is an insult to
the trnth."
From the day of the FBI assault,
Reno has taken full rcsp&lt;insibility
for the decision, and she said last
week that Clinton. ''never pressured
me to do anytbing in this matter."
She did not address the issue of
Clinton' s role in her written testimooy fo( the bearing !'
"We're trying to establish
· responsibilitr, at a level higher tban
Janet Reno, ' Zeliff told reporters
on Monday: "I don't believe that
Janet Reno all by herself, with less
than. two weeks' experience, made
that decision ."
Zeliff's allegations brought an
angry response Monday from tbe
.White House, which called them
baseless and irresponsible. And
even some of his Republican colleagues appeared to distance !bernselves from his statements.
Zeliff's co-chairman, Rep. Dill
McCollum, R-Fla., said he agreed
with tbc Justice Department's finding that the fire that ended the
,•tandoff was sta11£d by the Oavidians inside the compound and not
by the tear gas used by FBI agents.
Tbe gassing has been a central
pan ot the pouucauy cnargoo hcar1ngs now in tbcir lOth day. To end
a 51-day siege that followed a
botched federal raid, 1hc FBI used a
tank to punch boles in the compound and then filled it wi~ the
tear gas. Several hours after tlic gas
attack began, a ftrc swept through
the building.
Korcsh and the 80 followers
died in what government investigators called a mass suicide. Seven teen of the Davidians were round
dead of gun shots.
"Our response wos mca.&lt;urcd."
said Reno, who had taken office
five weeks before her decision .
"We inserted gas, the n waited,
then inserted more gas," she l&lt;ild
the lawmakers. " We were very
careful never to in sert more gas
than a fl"dctioo of the concentration
required to move people without
endan gering them, Six hours went
by ..~ix hours. Still, no O'lf carne
out.
Reno reiterated her defense of
her deci sion to authorize usc of the
gas, say ing she asked a ci"ilian
Anny expert whether it could cause .
pennanenl harm , especially \O the
children and elderly, and was
assured it was safe.
On several occasions, Reno has
publicly defended her decision ,
most recently at her weekly new s
conference last Thursday . But in
her statement today she directly
targeted Koresb, wbom Democrats
have vilifi ed in the hearings by
stressing the aUcgations of bis child
sexual abuse and dictatorial hold
over his followers .

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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>July 31, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
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        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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    <tag tagId="1382">
      <name>devault</name>
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      <name>roach</name>
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    <tag tagId="3840">
      <name>tewksbary</name>
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</item>
