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•

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

the
came.
-Hopefully, they will work themselves out or "the system" this
week so they won't dampen the
annual Meigs County Fair which
opens next Monday. Aug. 14.
If you plan to compete at !be
- fair, however, you've got to think
· about it TillS week. The deadline
for entries in all departments is this ·
Thursday, Aug. 10. No ed'tr:ies will
be accepted after the deadline. The
fair board office located on !be
Rock Springs Fairgrounds will be
open from 10 am. to 4 p.m., botb
this Wednesday and Thursday to ·
accept your entries. And, by the
way, you must have a membership
ticket to sign on.
Chuck Cannin of Racine came
close to being a big winner on the
Ohio Lottery's television show Saturday night
·
Chuck got into !be finals with
two other contestants for the
$50,000 prize but his name failed
to appear on the board three times
before one or his competitors had
reached that goal.
At any rate, Chuck did win
about $16,000 in his appearance on
the show-and who's in the position to sneeze at that amount of
money? That should keep the wolf
away from the door for a spell.
The Delia Queen quietly made
its way up the Ohio past our communities Sunday morning. There
was no calliope music but I would
assume that the boat's staff did not
want the music to interfere with the
church services going on about the
towns. Good thinking if that is,
indeed. the case.
Julie Buck and Brian Howard
were married in an lovely ceremo-

By ED PETERSON,
Soda! S«urity manager

State m01or vehicle agencies can
now verify the Social Security
DIDllbers provided by applicants for
Church in Pomeroy drivers licenses witb the Social
'Security Administration under a
Quite professional in her new rule effective recently. The
appearance as vocal· soloist as well provision is aimed at persons who
as being a maid of honor was use fraudulent Social Security
Brian's sister, Lisa Howard. She numbers to get drivers licenses to
did a beautiful job. Come to find use as false identification for variout Lisa is a theater student at the mis illegal activities, i.e., to cash
University of Cincinnati and bas checks, use credit. cards, avoid
had alot or training. It sbowed!
child support payments.
In the mid-80s, Congress authoOpie Cobb or Middleport who rized states to use the Social Secuhas bad a variety of experiences in rity number to keep records and
his long life, agrees with a recent administer some state programs.
comment that it is, indeed, "a small Now SSA is verifying the Social
world".
Security numbers for states to belp
He recalls back in 1931 be was !bern maintain accurate· records.
leaving Forth Worth, Texas, bead- SSA verifies whether the name and
ing back to West Virginia with 15 Social Security number match
cents in hif pocket. Hitchhiking SSA' s records, and the state locates
was his mode or travel and be the person and corrects its records,
·
chose 10 return to West Virginia via if necessary.
Florida.
•
Eacb state and .the District or
He was picked up in Waycross,
Ga., by a man who asked him his
destination. Opie answered:
"Charleston, W. Va." (Actually, he
was b~ding for Clendenin). In the
Something new in the baking
conversation the driver of the vehiand canning division at the Meigs
cle asked Opie' s name and when he
County Fair is the cookie rontest.
heard it inquired if Opie knew a
Entries in the category must be
man by the name of Mark·Cobb at
made
from the Pineapple Drop
Clendenin, W.Va. The driver knew
Cookie
recipe below and brought
Mark who as it turns out · was
to
the
Coonhunters
building on the
Opie's uncle.
·
~oek
Springs
Fairgrounds
by noon
By the way, Opie is hoping to
Monday
for
judging
that
afternoon.
publish another boot sometime this
· First, second, IU)d third place
summer. It's to be called: "Some
winners
in the class will be awardH igblites-And Some Not So
ed
premiums
of $2, $ UO and $1.
High."
. . As with other open classes,
Tbe hot weather bas bad some entries must be made at the secregood points. All of the authorities tary's office on the Rock Springs
tell you not to "overdo" it. Tbat Fairgrounds by 4 p.m. Thursday.
The recipe to be used in the
means you don't have to feel bad
cookie
contest is as follows:
because the grass is a litl\e high or
PINEAPPLE
DROP COOKIES
!be flowers are being overtaken by
3/4
cup
sugar
weeds. But it doesn't mean !bat
1 cup margarine or butter softyou can't keep smiling.
ened
I teaspoon vanilla
I egg
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
112 tsp. baking soda
112 tsp. salt

purposes. .

Lawbreakers using fake Social
Security numbers create errors in
SSA's records as well. By helping
states find people who use forged
documents, SSA can maintain the
integrity or the Social Security
records and open~le more efficiently.
SSA follows strict laws and reg·

ulations governing the disclosure or
personal information in verifying
Social Security numbers. SSA will
verify only that the personal identifying data submitted by the State
motor vehicle agency match or do
not match data in its system of
records, and identify the data elements that do not match. SSA will
not disclose the data contained in
· its records if the State agency has
non matching data. Also, SSA safeguards all information received
· from siates and prohibits the states
from selling or using information
received from SSA for any other
purpose.
Questions and Answer
Q. Does Medicare cover mammograms?
'
A. Medicare medical insurance
· (Part B) helps pay for X-ray
screening for the detection or breast
cancer, if they are provided by a
Medicare-approved supplier.
Women 65 or older can use the
benefit every 24 months. Some
younger women covered by Medicare can use the screening benefit

more frequently. You Medicare
carrier can tell you how often
Medicare will pay for a screening
mammogram for you. Medicare
also pays for diagnostic mammograms as needed when symptoms
are present.
Q. What are the advantages of
receiving Social Security benefits
by direct deposit?
A. Direct deposit is the most
convenient and safest way to
receive monthly payments. Beneficiaries with direct deposit never ;
have to worry about a los~ stolim,
or misplaced check; an unprotected .
check sitting in the mailbox when ·
they are away on vacation, if they ·
are sick, or if they are hospitalized;
and making a special trip to the
bank or standing in line to deposit
their checks. For more information
about direct deposit, .call Social ;
Security's toll-free lelephone num- ·
ber, 1-800-772-1213, any business '
day between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.
When you call, have your Social
Security number and a personal
check or bank statement bandy.

1 eight.ounce crushed pineapple
in its own juice
(Pineapple well drained,
reserving liquid)
112 cup coconut
112 cup chopped pecans.
FROSTING
2-.112 cup powdered sugar
3 to 4 Tbs. reserve pineapple
liquid
· In large bowl combine sugar
and margarine. Beat until light and
fluffy. Add vanilla and egg and
beat well. Lightly spoon flour into
measuring cup and level orr. Add
flour, baking powder, soda and salt.
Mix well. Stir in pineapple,
coconut and pecans. Drop by tea- ·
spoon full two inches apart on
ungreased cookie sheet
Bake 350 degrees 11 to 16 minutes or until light gqlden brown.
Remove from cookie sheets and
cool completely.
In medium bowl combiile frosting ingredients, adding enough
pine.apple liquid for desired frost- .

ing consistency; blend well. Frost
cold cookies.

MONDAY
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township T~stees meeting Mon·day, 7 p.m. at the office building. ·
RACINE - Volleyball general
meeting, 7 p.m. Monday, Southern
High School; conditioning Tuesday, 8:30 to II a.m. for grades nine
through 12:
CARPENTER
Columbia
'Township Trustees meeting Monday, 7:30 p.D). at ftre station in Carpenter.
I

.

SYRACUSE .- Sutton Town·
ship Board or Trustees meeting
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Syracuse
Municipal Building.

Sports,Page4

RACO

The regular monthly meeting of
the Racine Area.Community Organization was held July 25 at Star
Mill Park, with Libby Fisher giving
the invocation before the 6:30 p.m.
dinner.
Following the dinner, the business meeting was opened by President Kathryn Hart. The secretary's
report was read by Lillian Weese,
and Tonya Hunter gave the treasurer's report. .
Members discussed the 1uly 4
celebration, concluding' that tbe
group's events, including the frog
jumping contest, food booths and
children's games, were successful.
· Members made comments and
suggestions· for the 1996 celebration.
.
·
In addition, the group's food
booth at Buffington Island Days
proved successful, it was reported.
It was noted the annual fall res-

'

Competitive biddin.g waived
for Meigs-Gallia Airport ·project

•

'

'

. ct-120 Pages or
3 SubJe 5" X 8" Notebook
10 ·

,

69

VINYL
BINDER
1.5" With Pocket

By GEORGE ABATE

pee float.

Sentinel News Staff
Final preparations arc under
way for !be first ever Midnight
Magic Electric Parade in Middleport.
The paralh: will begin at 9
.p.m. Saturday in downto)Vn Middleport, said Bruce Wolfe, show
director. The half-hour extravaganza will feature lighted costomes with 73 performers from 6
to 65-years-old.
.
"Come and have a good time,"
Wolfe Siiid. "It will be somethifig
to see. I'm real anxious to see
what it wiD be like."
The parade route will step ofT
from the Dave Diles Park area,
but the viewing area hegins on
North Second Avenue. It will
continue north on North Second
Avenue to Walnut Street, turn
right and then go down Walnut
Street
"The reason we're being
sticky about it is it's being wired
for sounil," Wolfe said, adding
the parade route will be blocked
off beginning at 4 p.m. .
.
Tbe parade t.s dt vtded tnto
seven separate untts:
- opening uti it, police and
fire department escorts;
- second umt, parade banner
with color guard;
- third unit•. Bi~ Bend Cloggers under the tlu-ecumr of Vlvillll
May;
. ..
.
..
-.fourth umt, Paru Gras a
Mardi qras sty I.e sho:w; .
. - ftfth untt, mtdntght ball
wtth £ourt dancers and hooped
gowns;
- sixtb uriit, clocktower float
the tallest float; and
- seventh uni~ country unit
with comedy, a barn dance. with
· the Midnight Cloggers; and a .tee-

100 Pages

5 Subject

200 Pages
I

.

junior/senior high· at 5 p.m. Monday at the high scliool.

1

MIDDLEPORT - Tbe Meigs
Junior High cheerleaders meeting
for any eighth grade girls, 5:30
p.m. Mottday, Meigs Junior lligb
stadium. For details, call992-6818.

RITE AID .
IBUPROFEN
TABLETS OR CAPLETS

POMEROY -The Meigs Band
Boosters meeting 7 p.m. Monday
in the band room. ·Discuss the
Meigs fair booth.

Pkg. of 50

49

RACINE - Racine Village
Council meeting in regular session,
Monday, 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park.

SALE PRICE

TUESDAY
POMEROY ·-· Pomeroy Village Council meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. at Pomeroy Municipal Build,.

POMEROY - Cbuclc Riffle,
to give tips on safe and
ALFRED - Orange Township effective medicine use, 10 a.m. to
Board of Trustees meeting Mon· noon. at the Senior Citizens Center, l
· day, 7:30 p.m. at home of Clerk Tuesday. To get answers to specific
. · questions on medicines, seniors are
Pany Calaway.
requested to bring them in tbeir
original
containers.
CHESHIRE - Vacation Bible
· School at Sil¥er Run Bapiist
RACINE - Southern High
Church through Friday, 6-9 p.m .
School
football helmet fitting 5
nightly. Ages 4 and up.
p.m. Tuesday at !be high school
REEDSVILLE - Vacation followed by meeting for football
Bible School at the Reedsville Fel- parents for students grades 9-12 at
lowship Church of tile Nazarene 7p.m.
will be held Aug. 7-11 from 6 to
DARWIN- Bedford Town8:30p.m.
·
ship Volunteer Fire Department
REEDSVILLE - Eastern High Committee meeting Tuesday, 7
·
School football.belmet fitting for p.m. at townsbip ball.

BIC WAVELENGTHS
-·

·

249

UNITED
REBATE

'•200

INSTANT
COUPON

-so~

FINAL~~~~ FREE

pbarmacis~

r.~---------------------~
RITE AID PHOTO FINISHING COUPON
IDDoWI.

tM LUi'iM ..,

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&lt;MIItt'l 5IM ~ ................ « l'll&lt;l' ~ l'lllftltfflltf

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Savings &amp;Quality S10ff :

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As~As~ H $3
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(!ldoltn.~~r~.,....."'llodllil!'*"llri!IJ

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fb llllidltt Dill tiMr l'romalrle GociG fllu A119 20 1!1&amp;5

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CIIJIMTITU liMITtO • SC*E ITEMS MAY..CIIE II.YAilAIU IN ,t,I..L SlOAES • fiiOT AESPOI'tsiiii.E f(ll TYI'OORAI'IUCo\1. ERIIOftS

PENS

~"lay Sports Sh'

• 1mmers
or Hot Waves . 6 Pack or
BJc Opposites
5 Packs

CLAIROL HERBAL
ESSENCES SHAMPOO

REEDSVD.LE - . Free TB skin
testing clinic ~onday, ~-7 p.m. at
Reedsville fire ball. All food service workers at county rair must
have a yearly skin tesl

ing.

•

SALE PRICE

YOUR
FINAL COST

SPECIAL

BUY

2 Liter

He~rs Potato

ChipS
4 oz. baa

. •

79.

¢

Beverage items plus applicable taxe:i and deposits.
II£VEI'Wl(

I'AtC[S AAE rOR NON- ~IEJRIO[PJ\TED PROO\JClS OM.Y

For the Rite Aid Pharmacy nea~ you ... call 1-800-4-DRUGSTORES

COW¥BVS (AP) - Air show
fans wbo were disappointed by the
cancellation of a performance of
the Blue Angels will not be getting
ticket refunds, the show's promoter
said.
On Saturday, officials of !be
Rickenbacker Air Show said full
- refunds would be offered by mail
after a low cloud ceiling forced the
cancellation of the precision formati\)n flying team's performance,

~~------------~--~--~~~~~~~~~

\,

'
•

.
'

Although the building remains
open. access from the north, south
and east sidewalks was restricted as
a safety precaution for pedestrians.
"We feel there is a serious concern to safety. It's in such condition
that it's starting to come off !be
building in some cases. At this
point no stone has fallen," said
Thomas Poulton, an arcl.i!i:ct with
administrative services.
·· Controllers agreed to waive
competitive bidding rules to
increase the amount of an existins
contract wilh Fcinknopf, Macioce,
(l.' untinn~d

un

l,a~~

3)

. The secretary's office on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds will be
open Wednesday and Thursday to
accept open class entries for the
132nd Meigs County Fair, Aug. 1419.
The office will open at 10 a.m.
both days and close at 4 p.m. The
deadline for registering entries in
all open classes is 4 p.m. on Thursday.

The purchase of a membership .
\ll.e_only entry fee to exhibjt in many cit the j)epanmenis. Debbie Watson is secretary of the
Meigs County Agricultural Society
and will be available to answer
questions concerning entering
exhibits in the fair. Telephone
number or the Jair board office is
992-6954.
Watson reported that the dcidline for entering open .class beef
and horticulture is also Aug. 10,
not a day later as stated in the premium list
qc~et.i'

The parade bas taken a year to
produce. All costumes were
designed for specific members of
the parade, Wolfe said. The coun
gowns c()~L at least $300 each not
including electrical wiring. Also,
the wigs were $80 each.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Critics of
Already, individuals from
a man~facturers' proJ&gt;Osalto buy
Marietta have asked Wolfe to put
electnctt&gt;: from the cheapest
on a similar parade during
sources
satd the plan could ·burt
Thanksgiving.
restdenttal and small-business
Wolfe, 26, bas worked as a
users.
.
show and parade perfol'fller at the
.
Industnes
generally get electric"
Magic IUngdom in Walt Disney
tty
from
a
regulated
utility that has
World for fivc'years. Recently, be
a
monopoly.
witbin
its franchise
was promoted and now trains
area,
even
tf
cheaper
J?'?Wer is
new performers.
available from a nearby utility.
"! can't believe I get paid 10
The manufacturers' coalition,
do this stuff," Wolfe said, adding
called
Industry Energy Users.Qhio,
he has been in 892 parades.
wan.ts
the Le'gisla.ture, lh~ Public
Allhough, Wolfe works fullUuhues Commisston of Qhio and
time for Disney this event is not
the
Fedc:ral Energy Regulatory
sponsored by Disney . Wolfe's
Comnussto~ to allow large users to
friends and co-workers did help
buy el.ectnetty from the lea~t
with the parade preparations,
expenstve,.source.
Tbe co~cept ts
though.
.
known
as
ret:UI
wbechng..
'' A lot of this was financed
The group .• &lt;:fforts fatl~d last
through me and The Midnight
year when a b1ll m the Legtslarure
Cloggers who perform all year
round and get donations," Wolfe
added.
Many parade pieces were built
and designed in sections in FloriWASHINGTON (AP) - In a
da and then shipped here Wolfe
gesture
to the right, Senate Majori·added.
'
ty
Leader
Bob Dole is promising to
. The parade will continue if '
get
tough
with welfare recipients
there is a light rain, be added. If
who refuse to work as be pushes
rain falls at lhe beginning of the
legislation to dismantle dozens of
parade it will be delayed up to a
social
programs and give states
half bour before being canceled.
·
new
responsibilities
for the poor.
Tbe music will be piped out in
Dole,
R-Kan.,
moved
early to
a medley form, with four floats in
appease
his
conservative
critics
as
the parade, he added. ·
be
began
a
weeklong
drive
to.
get
"It's just been ·a group effort."
his sweeping plan to overhaul the
Wolfe said. "This is the ftrs.t year
nation's
welfare system through a
for it. Hopefully in time we ·can
divided
Senate.
·
do this every year and make it a
Conservatives argue that the
tradition."
·
legislation does not go far enough
to curb rising rates or out-of-wedlock births, while Republican moderates and Democrats say the legisThe Columbus Dispatch reported laliori fails to provide the child care
necessary to help single mothers
today.
But on Monday, promoter C.K. move from welfare to work.
"I can't stand up and sa)' this is
Newwmb and Associates or Clevegoing
to pass," Dole declared
land went back to its original poli-.
Monday,
as be was rewriting his
cy of no refunds unless the entire
to
require
that the benefi~ of
.
bill
show was canceled, the newspaper
·welfare
recipients
be cut when they
said.
refuse
to
work.
·
Since every participant except
Sen.
Phil
Gramm.
R-Texas,
and
!be Blue Angels put on a perforother
conservali
ves
bad
sought
the
mance Saturday, the show was not
tougher
work
requirements,
but
are
considered canceled.

-Angels fans get no refund.

Coke/
Oiet Coke

study showed some weaknesses in
the facade .
Controllers approved the release
or $42.1 million in government aid
for private schools that have almost
231,000 students across the state. ·
State aid is provided under a
program the Legislature authori&gt;.ed
in 1967.
.
. Controllers voted 6-1 for the
special study at the Ohio Departments Building after the Ohio ·
Department of Administrative Services said a prelW.inary exarnimltion showed some weakness in the
marble facade.

Fair entries .------Almost finished----....,
still being
'accepted

The Midnight Magic Electric Parade will begin at 9 p.m. Saturday In downtown Middleport, said Bruce Wolfe, show director.
The balf-bour extravaganza will feature Ugbted cll!ltumes with 73
)led'or....,n. Memhero.of. theMidnight..Cloggers will ~rform In the
parade. Above, Meigs County native Wolfe poses with Mary Poppins In front of tbe Magk Kingdom where be works as an enter· .
'
tainer. ·
·.

Middleport parade
scheduled Saturday

FIVE'- STAR
NOTEBOOK

"

"I

Sentinel
Classifieds
992-2156

Wire Bound

KEVIN V. KING

COLUMBUS (AP) - The stale . project.
Controlling Board Monday waived
-Spend $79,300 to buy 133
rompetitive bidding for a $158,524 acres of land for additions to the
contract with Aiiport Technology Zaleski and Pike State Forests.
and Planning Group, Cincinnati,
In other action, slale architects
for services on airpon master plans should know in two months or so
for, the proposed Gallia-Meigs whe.ther lhey will have to replace
Regional Airpon and the proposed the deleriorating marble exterior or
a·60-year-old downtown govern. Alliance Municipal Airpon.
Other southern Obio. projects ment building.
included:
The board authorized a
- Spend $425,080 to upgrade $389,840 study to determine if the
the drinking water supply system at 400-pound chunks of marble were
Hocking Hills Stale Park. Waive in danger or falling to sidewalk~
competitive bidding 10 hire BBS
Access to the building was
Corp., Columbus, to design !be restricted Friday afler a preliminary

j

PRICES EFFECTIVE AUGUST 7 THRU 13, 1995

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 8, 1995

•

Alden Library Archives Department In 1991 jllld 1992, he was a
leaching assistant for the Upward
Bound Summer Residential Program at Ohio University.
He also bas two brothers, Nick
and Jared, all of Shade.

GEOMElRlC
OES\GN
NOlEBOOK

Low lonl~ht In 705, rain .
Wednesday, showers. Highs lb
mid an..

1/ol. 46, NO. 71
:Copyright 1995

tival will be held Saturday, Sept. 9.
Also, plans were finalized to
cater a local picnic as a moneymaking project.
The organization tabled the fall
yard sale. the purchase or fall banners and Cbnstmas decorations.
The Pledge or Allegiant:\! was led
by David Zirkle to adjourn the
meeting. Fifteen members attended.
.
This month's meeting will be
held Aug. 22 at 6:30 p.m. at the
park building.

-Community calendarTh~ C~mmunity Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit gr!&gt;ups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any lype. Items
are printed as spate permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.

Pick 3:
027
•
Pick 4:
4895
Buckeye 5:
13-16-19-24-37

Cookie contest something new at Meigs fair

King one of 24 students from
around the world to complete
advanced biology course
Kevin V. King, son of Larry and
Gloria King pf Shade, recently
completed an intensive, six-week
course at the Marine Biology Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass. He
was one or 24 advanced biology
students from around the world
selected to attend lbe I 02nd annual
embry()logy course entitled "Cell
Lineage and Cell Specification.''
King attended lectUres by scientific leaders in the fields of chick,en, frog, fish, qy, mouse, worm
and sea .urchin lleve lopment. In
addition, be learned the latest laboratory techniques to srudy development at the molecular level.
He is pursuing his doctoral
· degree in molecular biology at the
.. university of Missouri, Columbia,
· where he is studying the action or
one gene, daf-5, in both develop. ment and lifespan delermination in
. the soil' worm, C. elegans. King
received his bachelor or science
degree in zoology from Ohio Uni. versity in 1992 and graduated from
Meigs High School in 1988.
He i~ a former srudent employee
of Diagnostic Hybrids, Inc. of
Athens and or Obio University's

Columbia now can check with the
Social Security Administration to
verify the Social Security number
being used to establish identity.
People caught using a fraudulent
Social Security number are prosecuted by the U.S. Auaney's offiCe.
One or the most COPlrnOn reasons for using someone else's
Social Security number is to get
officially issued identification documents such as a stale-issued driver's license or an identification
card. Once these lawbreakers have
establisbed false identification,
!bey may use it to fraudulently
apply for public assistance programs such as medical services or
cash payments and otber illegal

Ohio Lottery

Dodgers
defeat
Giants

Social Security numbers to be verified for drivers license

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

Monday,August7,1995

Workers are putting the ftnlsblng touches on
a bridge on Baer Road in Chester Township,
meaning the road - used a connector between
Pine Grove Road and stale Route 7- should be
open In a matter of days, according to Mike

Lawson of M.L. Contracting. The bridge's abutments were washed out during flooding In May.
· The county received emergency funding lo renovate the bridge, Lawson said. Here, Lawson
e,:arnines hi.111

company'!~

handiwork.

Group seeks·&lt; changes in electric access
did not make it to a vote. Tbe bill J .''There are opportunities for subwould have·.allowed large users to stantial savings." .
buy electnctty at wholesale pnces
Competitive retail electric sales
fr&lt;J?I supphers or the1r choice.
would encourage power producers
!be Columbus D1spatch report- to use extra capacity to generate
ed Monday that some small users electricity and inlTCase revenues. ,
worry about IJillllufacturers making With a strong incentive to produce
deals w1th uuliues that could leave .electricity efficiently, electricity
residents and small business with costs should decrease, he said.
more expensive power.
But groups representing small
Electrici'ty on the whohJsale electnc users wonder whether they
market is available for 2 cents to 3 would benefit.
cents per kilowatt hour, compared
"I think that is a buge conwith industrial rates that range from cern," said Roben Tangren, Ohio
5 cents in Columbus and CantOn to Consumers' Counsel, who repreII cents in Toledo, said Sam Ran- · sents residential cuslomers in utilidazzo, the industrial group'.s ty cases.
lawyer.
The PUCO or other regulators
"For a large steel company, ~bably willbave to 1mpose conone-tenth or a cent difference re(T- dttions to make sure people who do
resents about $1 million a year in not use as much power can take
the ultimate bill," Randazzo said. advantage of competitive electric

prices, he said.
Tangren's govl-rning board has
not taken a position on electric
wheeling, but the agency is watching the issue.
Peggy Claytor, manager or energy purchases for Timken Co. or
Canton, said small users should be
able io compete for low-cost electricity by joining large groups or
cooperatives.
Tirnken Co. calculates that competitive electric sales would significantly reduce its $38 million
statewide electric bill.
"We are looking for major cost
reductions of up to 40 percent,"
Ms. Claytor said. "Electricity is a
major portion of our costs, and the
market~ in which we compete are
extremely competitive."
·

Dole to get tough with non-working welfare recipients
continuing to press Dole for more know they don't have to."
controversial changes, including
Dole's bill has the backing of 32
restrictions on aid to immigrants other Republicans and be is keepand a ban on cash welfare to teen- ing the Senale in session this week
in hopes ol getting it passed. The
age mothers.
. "It is unfair for the working tax- House passed its ·version of welfare
payers of this country - and I reform in March, and began its
mean people who drive a truck for summer recess Friday.
I 4 hours a day, wait tables all
The Dole plan ..would shift job
training, child care, and cash welnigh~ and make beds all day - it
is unfair to ask these people to fare programs to the states in three
spend their bard-earned tax dollars block grants. States could alw
to suppon lhe reckless irresponsi- choose to take over food stamps.
Unmarried teen -age mothers
bility or a teen-age mother who bas
children out or wedlock and contin- would be required to live at home
ues to' have them,·· said Sen. Lauch and attend school as a condition of
receiving welfare, all families
Faircloth, R-N.C.
Faircloth, who believes out-of- would. have their benefits cut off
wedlock births are the root cause or afier five .years, and adults on lhe
welfare dependency, said middle- . rolls would be required to work .
The legislation also would can class families who want children
must plan, prepare and save money. cel the government's longstanding
"But welfare recipients don't. promise to provide a subsistence
prepare or save before having chil- income to poor mothers and children, because they know they will dren and curb welfare spending by
get the money from the federal $70 billion over the next seven
government, that the taxpayers or years.
this country will take care or their
"There are a lot of people out
cbil~en," Faircloth said. "They
(rectptents) don't take responsibili- there with no hope, and that s what
ty for the very simple reason they

this debale is all about.. How do we
change the syslem?" Dole told his
colleagues.
But Dcmocrals called the GOP
plan punitive and predicted children would suffer. Sen. Edward
Kennedy , D-Mass ., called it a
"home-alone" policy for children
whose ·parents !&gt;ill be forced to
work wilhout adequate child care.
And Sen. John Breaux, D-La.,
said it would pass huge costs .for
caring for poor families on to the
states. ·
"You can't require states to
double the number of people working; and do it by freezing the
amount of money they get at the
1994 level," he said.
President Clinton has stopped
short or threatening 10 veto the
plan, but his administration, like
the Democratic senators, contends
Dole's legislation is built on phony
work' requirements and would do
little to help welfare recipients get
!lie education, training and child
care they need to keep a job.

�•

Tuesday,August8,1995

Commentary

Page2
Tuesday,August8,1995

OHIO Weather
Accu-Weatber- forecast for daytime conditions and bigh 1emperarures

No·apologies for a necessary act _ _ __

111 Court Street
I pose a question often asked in
the wake of catastrophic events:
Where were you on Aug. 6 and
Aug. 9, 1945, wben tbe United
flr-'U.Tr1EDIA. INC.
States dropped atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Do you remember what you
ROBERT L. WINGET£
were
doing when you got the
Publisher
news? How you reacted? Did you
think we would still be debating the
strategic necessity and moral conCHARLENE HOEFLICH
~ARGARET LEHEW
sequences of using these nuclear ,
C:eneral ~anager
Controller
weapons a half century after the
fact?
I am a member of the rapidly
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
dwindling pool of possible responword s long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
denls to those questions, but I have
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publi shed. Letters
to confess I don't remember bearshQuld be in good taste: addressing issues, not personalities.
. ing the news. I was a 4-year-{)ld tot
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...... ' at the time, playing in the streets or
..
a small town in Maryland. What I
do remember about the period Is
the darlc cloud of sorrow that settled over our family when we got

Pomeroy, Ohio

Are the states ready
for prime time?

By Jll.L LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHJNGlDN - Some states didn'l provide any money for destitute fatherless families wben Congress created the federal welfare program 60 years ago. "Mothers' pensions" dial did exist were spolly and
stingy, and many vanished altogether as the Depression wiped out public
treasuries.
.Congress offered this bargain for wbat was viewed as relief for widows
and children: a modest federal contribution contingent on states putting up
some money and offering benefiiS statewide. At the time, aid was available in only half the counties of states with pension progrnms.
Thus began the federal-stale parmership now known as "welfare."
For six decades the federal role evolved in response to social changes,
economic cycles and state sbonromings.
In 1950, with states turning away families or putting them on waiting
!isiS, Congress required them to let everyone apply, detennine eligibility
promptly and pay benefiiS to every eligible family.
In 1961, after Louisiana cut off aid to 23.000 children in 60 days
because of "unsuitable" homes, Congress banned such cutoffs unless the
state arranged for the children to be cared for elsewhere.
Later, as women moved into the work force, Congress reacted by
requiring work and child care. As illegitimacy soared. from about 3.5 percent of U.S. binbs in 1935 to 32 percent today, there were new requirements to identify fathers and coDcct child suppon.
.
, . Now, Republicans in Congress are prepared to b~d over a pile of
money to the governors with few strings attached. States would po longer
have to contribute a share or operate their progrnms statewide. Nor would
federal dollars rise wilh growing need.
,
The movement bas been spearheaded by a srilall group of activist GOP
governors heralded for welfare inno..ations in the tough-love mold work .requirements, time limiiS, no additional cash for babies born to
mothers already on welfare. TheSe experimeniS - in Wisconsin, Michigan. New Jersey, ~assacbusetts - have been widely publicized in the
drive to turn over welfare authority to states.
Is the rest of the counuy ready?
"The states have a long track record of blocking refonn," maintains
Roben Rector, a welfare expen at the conservative Heritage Foundation.
Most of them be rates "exceptionally mediocre to abysmal."
Success, to Rector, means reducing the caseload, driving down iDegitimate births and quickly moving people into work. "Some federal pressure
is needed" to prod slates in those dinlctions, be slid. ,
Welfare advocacy groups also say state performance bas been wanting,
but they have a whole different set of reasons.
·
·
'
Some states are using the discretion already available to them "to
adopt poticies lbat arc harsh, counterproductive, and deny aid to eligible
needy children," the Center on Social Welfare Policy and Law said in a
June repon called ''Left to the Tender Mercies of the States.''
Among the group's findings:
-The average benefit level in the Aid to Families with Dependent
Children progrnm in 1994 was 38 peitent lower than the average in 1975.
AFDC and food stamps combined make up less than 25 percent of median
income in 42 states.
-States have not only failed to adjust benefiiS for inflation, but some
are also cutting benefit levels outright.

NOliN

JUNKYA!t\?
\?06

'fEAR$,
J

tTTA

HULM~I'&gt;&gt;Foi':T WOI&lt;Jll

r...R-n:ce..,_,.---.-

What is the solution?

For some reason, Wall Street gets
all excited about this process.
On the other band, Disney could
make it work. It certainly has a
'

/an Shoales
genius - verging on psychosis for self-promotion and image prOtection. The Disney Channel promotes iiS theme parks, which sell
the action figures from Disney
movies, which show up on the Disney Channel. Disney is just like
that mythical snake that swallows
iiS own tail, except it bas lawyers;
and makes more money than a
boopsnake ever dreamed.
Disney insisiS it's not going to
tamper with ABC programming,
but who knows? ~aybe Sam Donaldson and Diane Sawyer will have
to we.ar ~ickey Mouse hal.~ on the
air. ~aybe Goofy will show up on
"Nightline" with Heltr)' Kissinger
to discuss our involvement in
Bosnia. Maybe ABC will dump
Roseanne, and replace her with
Hayley Mills.
lv,faybe the Sunday morning chat
shows could move to Space ~oun­
taiil. I wouldn't mind seeing David
Brinkley and George Will a little
green around the gills, or even
screaming in terror, as they debate

the issues of the day. No_problem
there.
Disney certainly bas a beJter
shot of malci.!Jg it work than Westingbouse, which just used ils billions of pin mone;9 to buy CBS.
When I was a boy, the Westingbouse motto was, 1'You can be
sure if it's Westinghouse." Not sO ·
sure _now, are we? What do~s
Westmghouse do, exactly? Didn t
.it used to make refrigerators? How
did this company get fiom J)reserving ~ood to paying lhe salary of
Dav1d Letterman? B~ me.
And I ftan.kly don t see bow the
creation o( Time/Life/Warner has
~proved, entenainment !ime certatnly 1sn t .any better. L1fe magazine is just a shadow ~f iiS former
self. W~ner Mus1c ts spendmg
most of lis time defendmg 1tself
about "gangs Ia rap," and the rest
of iiS time divesting itself of executi~ wbo have any enthusiasm for
mus1c.
Where will it lead?
I predict that Disney will own
eve~ything by the year 2010. The
Unlled ~!ales of. Am~rica wi!l
become Walt D1sney s Amenca," and we'll have to pay a low
daily fee to remain here. The president will be replaced by the
audioanimatron "President Lin-

IToledo Iss· I
IND.

Maxine D. Chapman
W. VA.

Today's weather forecast

.,

Meigs announcements
Picnic planned

Stern'!1'•eel meeting
The Big Bend Stemwbeel Association meeting will be at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the Pomeroy carpenter's union ball to discuss plans for
the regatta, .
TP VFW to meet
Tuppers Plains Veterans ofF&lt;Ieign Wan Post 9053 will meet
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at post home.
Dues are due.

f

and more like a concrete person :
and less and less like an abstracled :
criminal ...

The problem is, there are no l
"abstracted" crimiPals. Every per- ;"
son on death row is a real peliion. 1
Every one is bumWt. They may or :
may not have pareniS who weep for :
them. They may or may not have 1
communities that pray for them. :
But they all have lungs that breathe i
air and bearts that pump blood and •
histories lhat began long before i
they commitled their aime.
:
These people should not be •
excused for what they have done ;
any more than Susan Smith should,;
be. But if there is an impulse that ;
forbids us from killing our neigh- •
bor, no matter bow horrid her :
ctfme, then perhaps that is an :
impulse wonb heeding. If we can- •
not pull the switch on a familiar 1·
face, then we should not pull the .
switch on Wtyone.
· •
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated ;
writer for Newspaper Enterprise ;
·Association.
.
•
(For Information on bow to :
communicate electronically with •
Ibis columnist and others, con·
tact Ame.rica Online by caiUng 1- 1
800-827~ exL 8317.)
i

'

.

'

cards only.

Burlingham Modem Woodmen
is sponsoring a picnic, Saturday,
6:30 p.m. at the southbound park ·
on State Route 33, neat Darwin.
The camp will furnish sandwiches
chips and melon. Guests are wet:
come. Take laWII chairs.

coin,'' Congress by something
called the "America Loves to Sing
Club!" and the Supreme Coun by
Diana Ross, appearing nightly.
On the bright side, the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco and Ftreanns
wUI be replaced by something·
called "The Watertainment
Group," Bill Clinton and Newt
,Gingrich will be replaced by the·
audioanimatrons "Mr. Waffle"
and "Bonehead.,.' Food and shelter'
will be extra, of course but all the'
rides will be free.
'
Now, rub ointment on your SUitburns, and enjoy the parade. The
parade's theme tonight will be our
theme for the next century, "Anything You Want! Whatever It
Takes!'' Remember where you,
parked, and come see us again real
soon. With your good credit, of
coursc.
·
- {To receive a .complimentary,
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1-'
800-98!1-DUCK or write Duck's ·
Breath, 408 Broad St. Nevada·
City, CA 95959.)
'
Ian Sboales Is a syndicated •
writer for' Newspa.per Enterprise
Association.
·
(For lnforinalion on bow to
communicate electronically with
tbls columnist and others contact America Online by o:aiHng 1800-827-6364, exL IQJ7,) .

-~

Maxine Doris Chapman, 86, died Monday, Aug. 7, 1995 in the Senior
ViUage Nursing Home, Blanchard, Okla., following a lengthy illness.
Born May II, 1909 in Tuppers Plains, sbe was the daughter of the late
Cecil and Lola Caldwell.
~urviving are a son and daughter-in-law, WiUiam and Patricia Cbap. man of Newcitstle, Ok!a; a daughter, Bonnie Ramsey of Beauford, Ga.;
13 grandchildren and 23 great-grandchildren; a sister, Pauletta Dean of
Lakewood; and other relatives and friends.
Sbe was also preceded in death by her husband, William Howard
·"BiU" Chapman; two daughters, Patricia and Betty; Wtd a sister.
· Memorial services are pending. Arrangements are by tlie Eisenhour
Funeral Home, Blanchard.

South-Central Ohio
in the mid 80s. Chance of rain is 50
Flash flood watch today. Show- percent.
ers and thunderstorms likely, some
Extended forecast "
Thursday ..• A chance of showers
with heavy downpours. High 80 to
85. Southeast winds 5 to I 0 mpb. ~d thunderstorms. LOws 65 to 70.
Highs in the l!liddle and upper 80s.
Chance of rain is 70 percent. ·
Friday ... A chance of showers
Tonight, showers and thunderstorms likely. Low around 70. and thunderstorms. Lows 65 to 70.
Light southeast winds. Chance of Highs middle 80s to lower 90s.
Saturday ... Partly. sunny. Lows
rain is 60 percent
.
Wednesday, variable cloudiness around 70. Highs upper 80s to mid
with scattered thunderstonns. High 90s.

Touch of humanity strikes in S.C. _ _ __
doned his daughter by committing mercy for its criminals? Is there
something in the town's tapwater
suicide.
.
In this country. the abuse excuse that breeds this·kind of humanity?
Of course not The reason Susan
does not normally breed much
Smith will not be executed is that
Sara Eckel
sbe .belongs to the ·community that
tried her. Half the members of the
sympathy. And, indeed, it did little jury knew her well, and one juror
for most Americans, the. majority' was Smith's former baby sitter.
of whom believe Smith sbould ·be Tbe jurors knew her as the girl .
on·death row.
voted "friendliest senior" in bigb
But in Union, Smith was seen as school, the sweet-faced checker at
more a trouliled girl than a bard- the Wino-Dixie, the mother who
ened criminal. Legal expens knew seemed to love ber two boys. She
there was little chance of a death was real to them. Sbe was human.
sentence. Indeed, the lawyers in the
Not that the jurors went easy on
case bad to interview hundreds of · Smith. She was found guilty of
prospective jurors before they murder, not mansliw¥bter. And the
could fmd 12 who would even con- charge was "guilty, ' not ''i!uilty
sider carrying out such a sentence.
but men tall): ill.'' It was agreed
"I don't want that one on my that Smith did a hmible thing, thai
conscience," ~aid one prospective sbc knew what she was doing, and
juror. "I lbink that would make me that she should pay for it
the same person as the murderer,"
But they couldn't pull the trigsaid another. Both were dismissed.
ger. When it came dOwn to order. The majority of Soulb Carolini- ing the death of one of their own,
ans sup(Krt capital punishment. So someone whose family and friends
wby, with such an undeniably they would surely pass on tbe
bicleous crime, would it be so diffi- slreet, they just couldn't do it.
cultlo find jurors who would con"In a small town, dial's just the
sider invoking it~ Is Union a way ·life is," University of South
strange poclret of bleeding beans in Carolina .School of Law Professor
a country .that insists it wants no William McAninch told The New
York Ttmes. "{Smith) seems more

Kathleen Askew, 72, of Gallipolis died Monday, Aug. 7, 1995 at ber
residence. She was a retired employee of the Chessie Railroad System.
Sbc was a member of Ladies Aux.iliary or VFW 114464, the emblem club
in Jackson and the Ladies oC the Moose.
Born Jan. 28, 1923 in Meigs County, sbe was the daughter of the late
Arthur Scott and Aoy McElbenney.
Survivors include a daughter, Joyce Montgomery of Cbesbire and two
grandchildren, Nathan and Wendy Montgontery.
She was preceded in death by ber husband, Carl Askew and two brolbers, James and Paul Scott.
Services wiD be 10:30 am. Thursday at Waugb-Halley Wood Funeral
Home with Rev. Anbur Lund officiating. Burial wiU foUow in Gravel Hill
Cemerery. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral
bon&gt;e.
.
VFW Auxiliary services will be conducted 7:)0 p.m. Wedn~y at the
funeral borne.

•

How much is that network in the window?

The Walt Disney Company
bought Capital Cities/ABC Inc. the
other day. I gather it was something of an impulse buy. Disney
was out browsing, a few billion in
pin money just burning a bole in ils
poCket, when it saw ABC in a window, wet nose pressed against the
glass, wagging its cute lillie tail.
How could Disney resist?
Some might wonder lliby Disney needs a network. After all, this
is a corporation that seems to have
everything: theme parks, cartoon
. EDITOR'S NOTE- JID La wren~ covers CongresS for The Asso- franchises, even a hockey .team:
ciated Press.
WelL as I understand it, the purchase of ABC is an attempt by Disney to gain what corporate America calls "sy!Je,rgy ." What this
means, in layman's lerms, is this:
Say you've got a pencil, and you
know someone wbo bas a piece of
Dear Editor
op the present system. It is a sys· papt:r. If y&lt;)u merge with !!lat perOn July i3, Congressman Frank tem that ~e oul of colonial times son, it makes it easier to write
Cremeans held the first of four · when the ctlles back then wanted to something down .
town ball meetings on the crisis in. have .and keep control versus ~e
Unfortunately, you now have
two lert bands. Don't worry. That's
~edicare. The meeting was in agrar1an counll)'sl~. An~ th~CC: 1s
Marietta at a senior citizens center. lhe lack of good JObs WI~ hvmg where downsizing comes in. You
Mr. Cremeans talked for 20 to 30 wages, etc .. &lt;:Jur area bas b1g prob-· chop off the fat, eliminate redunminutes, using overhead .Projec- lems reqUJnng b1g answers. We dancies, and throw away any ·pan
lions to describe bow Medicare need elected leaders who can not that looks like it knows what it's
wiU go broke in the year 2002 if only1understand complex pro~lems doing. Before you know it, yoo've
aUowed to continue as it is now. -but also have the capac1ty to got a slim, trim megacorporalion
The rates of both the medical cosIS develop pr;~ctical solutions.
that's half the size of the origin31
and growth of rccipienls is too high . I .can respect any politician w~o companies and ~ice as, inefficient.
for the amount of money being put . IS willin~ to stand before the public
into the pot. Mr. Cremeans then at any ume at any place {and not
gave three examples of fraud and just 'safe' places) and openly dis·
abuse. Very good.,
cuss the. iss~~· Who is wiUing to
.r But in my opiruoo be gave abso- g1ve thetr ~pn;uon. But not some of
Iutely no solutions to the problem these pohllclans today who you
_ and seemed to have no under· can't get out in the open for honest
In Washington these days, the
standing of the options. I, in fact, debate. I do ~i~ that at the very talk is tough. Concern for the poor,
asked him what are your solutions least - a pohtictan should know the disadvantaged, the screwed up ·
and what do you see as the options. ' the options on significant issues
is scarce. Instead talk is of personal
·He looked at me thoughtfully facing the people of his or her dis- responsibility, of being tough on
but did not reply. He then walked trict
·
aime, of not giving out handouts.
to the other side of the room to take ·
As for Mr. Cremeaiu - Sir, Three strikes, two years, one mis-.
another question . Then be walked you might consider hiring me take and you're out.
back to me - looked at me very (rather than one of those slick IlanBut in Union, S.C., this past
thougbtfully again, and said, I do dlers you have now).
,
month we've seen something that
want to reply to your questions.
In answer to my question, bere seems utterly out of touch with the
But be didn' t. He then walked to is one option {for free). You say:
times: compassion.
someone else and took their ques"No one really knows exactly
Residents of the small town are
lion .
what the answer is at this moment relieved dial Susan Smith was nol
So, obviously, be would like to But here's an option I think we sentenced to dealh for killing her.
respond to the questim - what are should consider. Let's have the two yoimg sons. Though some citiyour solutions, what are the options leadership of the House, and the zens are still outraged at the
-if only be knew wblit to say.
leadership of the Senate and the. woman who drowned her children
I don't think be bas an answer. . , President all agree to put together a and then lied to the nation for nine
. The problems that face us today bipanisan blue ribbon committee to days, saying that they'd been
are complex and require not just study the prOblem for siX months abducted, for the most part the
looking thoughtful ·- but actual and come out with a recommenda- anger in Union bas sofrened into ·
thoug·bt, study. and broad under- tion that wiU save Medicare. Fur- pity.
. .th
.
standing. ·Our present health system ther, let's agree beforeband dial no
"Let be WhO IS WI OUt SID cast
is designed not to give health care matter what the recommendation the rtrSt stone," reads the biblical
to all. It is designed to make profit is, we will approve it and the Presi- admonition on the shores of John
for businessmen masquerading as denr will sign it And not question D. Long Lake, where Smith sent
doctors. Our schools are poor it."
her babies to a watery death.
due largely to being very under- • To tbe people who voted for
Cenainly a number of sinners
funded, due in tum to a school Congressman Cremeans. If you're have cropped up in the case. There
funding system that is aazy. If you not rich- you do have an option. · was the stepfather wbo molested
or 1 or anyone were !15ked to develBob Smi~ Smith. The mother who failed to
op a school funding system today
Pomeroy defend her. The father wbo aban- there is no way we would devel~

Letters to the editor

with complete confidence: For the
remainder of bis life, not a day
passed diat my father did not think
of his brother and ponder his fate
and grieve for him.
I offer this personal history as a
Joseph Spear
way of telling you diatl have a bias
ing raid over 'New Guinea. His about the bombs . I believe that
remains have never been recovered Harry Truman did the right thing
from the jungle where be died, half when he gave the order to drop
a world away from those who them. By August of 1945, major
Japanese cities bad been leveled in
loved him.
I remember my grandmother's firebombing raids, but still they
nervous breakdown when she got refused to surrender. A massive
the news. She suffered bouts of invasion of the main islands was in
depression and migraine headaches the offing, and Truman believed it
until the day she died. I remember· would cost hundreds of thousands
the tines of sorrow on my grandfa- of lives of young men like my
ther's face. He suffered several· Uncle Harley. So he dropped the
heart attacks ill the ensuing years bombs. He sacrificed a hundred
and finally succumbed to one. And thousand Japanese lives to save six
I remember my father's silen( grief. times dial many Americans.
As Bill Clinton said last April,
He never talked much about per·
son3I feelings, but I c8n say Jbis Truman did what be had 10 do, and

the word, a year before, that the
aircraft in which my uncle, Harley
A. Spear Jr., who was a tailgunner,
bad disappeared while on a bomb-

Kathleen Askew

MICH.

the United States will apologize to
no one for it
We do not apologize to the revisionisls in our own country, most
too young to know what the war
was about. who attempt to portray
the United States as a ghoulish
nation that needlessly annihilated
two Japanese cities. A group of
them even tried to rig an exhibit at
the Smithsonian Institution this
spring to downplay American sac. riftee and empbasize Japanese suffering.
We do not apologize to the
Japanese critics wbo refuse to
accept their country's aggressor
role in the ,war. They invaded
Korea and China and Indonesia and
Malaysia and Vietnam alld Laos
and Cambodia .and other Asian
lands, they say, primarily to free
them from the yoke of colonialism.
Tbey·attacked Pearl Harbor, they
say, because it was the ~nly honorable response they could think of to
an Allied embargo that cut off their
supply of oil.
And what did they get for their
high-minded conduct? They gol
bombed with nuclear weapons. As
Prime Minister Tomiicbi Murayama put it when Clinton made his
remark about Truman, the president bad endorsed "the massacre
of huge _numbers of noncombatant
civilians." He wished, be said, that
Clinton "bad shown some sympalhy for the feelings of the Japanese
people;"
'
Murayama didn't say anything
about the rape of Nanking, the
sacking of Shanghai, the Ba1aan
death marcb, the physical abuse of
prisoners of war. the dissection of
live POWs, the beheading of nuns,
the sexual indenture of Korean
girls.
No, all that mattered was the
''atrocity'' of the bombings.
The question, it seems to me, is
not whether it was an atrocious ac~
but whether it was a necessary one.
They started this ·thing. We
ended it We do not apologize.
· . Joseph SpeJ~r Is a syndkated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
.{For Information on bow to
c2mmunkate electronically with
tills columnist and otbers, contact America Online by caiHng 1800-827~364. exL 8317.)

1

BloodmobUe to visit Wednesday
The American Red Cross bloodmobile will be at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center on Mulberry
HeigbiS Wednesday from 1-6 p.m, ·
.·
Beneftt sl~. to be held
The Beheven Fellowship Ministry will host a benefit sing and
white elephant sale, Saturday
beginning at 2 p.m. at the Rutland
. park near the Civic Center. Several
gospel groups wiU be singing and
those attending are encouraged to
take a lawn chair. The concession
stand will be operating. All proceeds will go toward building a
balhrooni, Rev. Margaret Robinson, pastor, said.
·

.
.
Curds reunion
. The 88th annual CurtiS reumon _
'Will be held Aug_. 20 at ~ Lo~g. .
Bottom Co~umty Building wtth
a potluck dinner fo be served at
12.:30 p.m. H&lt;?Stess .~II be Molly
Fl••abetb Cunis Pulliit&amp;.
Wright blrtbday set
The 80th birthday celebration
for Wilma Wright of Hockingpon
will be from 5-7 p.m. Aug. 16 at
the Nonb Bethel Methodist Church
on Route 7 between Coolville and
Tuppers Plains. All friends inviled,

Homecoming set
The Hysell Run Holiness
Church will observe homecoming
all day SWJday iilthe cbUJ~;b. Dinner will be at noon and then: wiU
be a guest speaker and special
singers at a 2 p.m. service. Pasror
Bob Manley invites all former pastors of the church and the public to
allend. The evening service wiD be
at7:30 p.m.
I

To tnHt Wednesday
Syracuse Village Council will
meet in continued session at 7 p.m.
Wednesday in council qullrters.

Mary E. Keller
Mary Elizabeth KeUer, 80, Middlepon, died Monday, Aug. 7, 1995, at
ber residence.
Born Jan. 2, ·1915, in Middlepon, daughter of the late Eapb and Mary

VanCooney Dalrymple, she was a former hospital dietician and member
of the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
· Sbe is survivetl by two daughters, Wanda Keller of Pomeroy and
Karen Thacker of Middlepon; two .daugbters and sons-in-law, Paula and
Worley Rife of Middlep&lt;rt and Bonnie and Curtis Barker of Columbus;
14 grandchildren; lbree stepgrandchildren and eight great-grandcbili,lren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Paul Keller, in 1984; a
brother, Jack Dalrymple; three sisters, Gertrude Wya1~ Mytle Wagner and
Alma Newton; and a grandson, Jack Miller.
·
Services will be held Wednesday, I p.m., aa Fisher FWJeral Home in
Middlepon with the Rev. James Keesee officiating. Burial will foUow in
Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. atFtsher Funeral Home.

Flossie Moeller

I

WASHINGTON (AP) - Mlrny bearing or NOW checking aooount
fees consumers pay for checking rose by 11 percent to $219. Monthand savings accounts rose more ly maintenance fees rose 14 peite\)1
than twice the rare of inflation in to $8.64. By contrast, the inflation
the past two years, a period when rate during tbe study period, as
banks earned record profils, a study measured by the consumer price·
index, gained 5.5 percent
·
released today said.
-For
regular
checking
The U.S. Public Interest
the annual COS! rose 10
Research Group. a consumer advo- accounts,
percent to $202, while monthly
cacy group, compared fees o~ 2? I maintenance fees rose 22 percent to
banks in 25 states and the Dtstnct
.
of Columbia with a similar study of · $7.11
-Average monthly balance
23 stales the consumer group per- requirements, which consumers
formed in 1993.
.
,
meet· to avoid annual checkThe study found that from 1993 ·must
ing fees, rose 30 percent to $1,242.
to 1995:
-The cost of no-frills checking
-The annual cost for WI interest accounts
rose 6 percent to $144 per
year.
.
-Automatic
teller machine
The Daily Sentinel costs rose 6 percent
to $1.01
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-•-•-

Stock reporta are the I 0:30 Lm.

quote• provided by Adv01t of
GaWpolll.

1995 Mason County Fair
Tuesclay, Aug, 8
5 p.m. • Market Hog Showmanship
6 p.m. • PPMS Band
8 p.m.· Jr. Market and Open Swine Show
6 p.m.· Beat the Clock Basketball
6:30 p.m. • Fair Queen Contest
6:30 p.m. • Farm Tractor Pull
9p.m.- RlckK. and the All Nlghtera
11 p.m. - Gates Close
Wectnllday;Aug. 9 .
9 a.m. • Fair opens
10 a.m.- Open Sheep Show
11 a.m. - Pie Eating Contest
1 p.m. • Pedal Tractor Pull
1 p.m. - Commercial Feeder Calf
Show
2 p.m. - Craft Demonstration
3 p.m. - Jon Brannan
4:30 p.m. - Hannan Band

Competitive bids.&lt;;;nunued from Page
Scbappa Architccls, Columbus, to
analyze the exterior of the building.
State Architect Randy Fischer
said the company will recommend
bow to correct a potentially expensive problem.
The building houses lhe Ohio
Depanmcnt of Education, lbe Ohio
Department of Agriculture, the
State Library, and other offices. It
is the temporary site of the House
of Representatives during renovation of the Statehouse.
State money for parochial and
other privare schools is channeled
througlt the publi£ school districts
within whose territory the nonpublic schools operate.
·
The single-largest amount of
$3.2 million went to lbe Cincinnati
school districi, where nonpublic

By Tbe Asso&lt;iated Press

Gertrude Rupe

Correction

Hospital news

marriage licenses

•

1)

schools enroll 17,981 students.
Cleveland' schools· collected
$2.9 million for 16,247 student&lt;,
wbile the Parma district was given
$1.3 miUioo for 7,408 studenls.
Other districts and the amount
of aid for nonpublic schools included Columbus, $2 million; Toledo,
$1.9 million ; Akron, $948,672;
Dayton,
$799,893;
and
Youngstown, $722,484.
The money is used 10 provide
lextbooks, computer soft ware, math
and science materials, and other
services to private schools.
Release of the money represenls
. the rtrst-half payment of tbe total
$84.3 million legislators approved
'·in such aid for nonpitblic schools
during lbe current fi~al year.

Flooding prompts
evacuations in Ohio

Aash flooding caused by down pours of 4-5 inches overnight left
numerous roads under water .in
Flossie Barton Mlieller, 89•. of Watson Gi-ove Road, Cheshire, died
western and central Ohio and
Monday, Aug. 7, 1995, at Holzer Medical Center.
·
forced a few evacuations, authoriBorn June 26, 1906, in Meigs County, the daughter of the late Pearl
ties said.
Wtd Gusta Reynolds Barton, sbe was a bomemater. Sbe was a member of
. There were no repot1S of evacu.tbe Little Kyger Congregational Church.
ations
in the ~eigs-Gallia County
She is survived by two sons, Bernard and James Moeller, both of
area
according
to local authorities.
Cheshire: a daughter and son-in-law, Emma and Charles Ross or ColumNo
major
roads
were reported
bus; two grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and two great-grealclosed
by
the
bigb
water,
Portions
grandcbildren.
U.S.
23
in
Delaware
County
of
Sbe was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph MoeUer; a brother,
were
covered
with
water
but the
Charlie 9anoo; and an infant sister.
highway
was
not
closed,
the
sbcr·
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Wiltis Funeral Home
iff's
depanment
said.
in Gallipolis, with the Rev. Ricbartl L. Villson officiating. Burial will folA few homes in Piqua in Miami
low in the Gravel Hill Cemetery.
County
and Fon Recovery in MerFriends may call between I and 2 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral bonte.
cer County were evacuated when
· high water entered ·their lower
floors. authorities said:
Charles Stanforth, chief dispatcbcr in the ·Miami County Com. Gertrude Evelyn Rupe, 86, of Phoenix, Ariz., foonerly o( RutlWtd, died
munications Center, said many
Sunday, Aug. 6, 1995, in Phoenix.
. .
other families in Piqua left on their
Born Sept. 28, 1908, in Rutland. tbe daughter of the late Oren and
own·as the water began to rise.
Bessie Smith Stansbury, sbe was abomemaker.
In Fon Recovery, assistant Fire
Sbe is survived by her daughter, Mary Ann Davidson of Indio, Calif.;
Chief Tim Day said several streciS
two sons, Richard Rupe of Pomeroy and Lewis "Jake" Rupe of Pboenix; . were closed and three feet of water
eight grandchildren; and 12 great-grnndchildren.
was in the fire station. Ohio 119
She was preceded in death by ber busband. Wayne Rupe; and a brothwest of town was closed by bigb
er, Dwight Mutchler.
..
.
·water, be said.
Graveside services will be held at 10 am. Friday atlbe Miles Cemetery
He bad no ·estimate of lbe numin Rutland.
ber of evacuees but said they were
Friends may call 11etween 7-9 p.m. Thursday at Fisher Foilei'81 Home in
mosUy occupaniS of basement and'
Middlepon.
.
ground level apartments.
Contributions may be made to lbe American Cancer Society Meigs
County Unit, P.O. Box 813, 444 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 456311157.
A Pomeroy mayor's report in
last week's Daily Sentinel inaccu·
rarely reported the name of a man
charged
with loitering and Sp(!ed1;37 p.m., Cook Road, James
Uniu of lhe Me.i gs County
ing.
Victor
J. Coates of Long !lotEmergency Medical Service logged Smith, Holzer Medical Center.
tom,
not
Victor
Cotults, faces these
RACINE .
eight calls for assistal!ce Monday
charges. The error was due to
1:31 a.m ., Main Street and
including one transfer call. UniiS
Pomeroy coun officials.
Tyree Boulevatd, Julie HiD, HMC;
responding included:
10:58 p.m., slate Route 124,
MIDDLEPORT
2:32 am., Overbrook Nursing Henry Lemley, refused treabneqt:
RUTLAND
Center, Virgini~ Burger, Veterans
9:57 a.m., Nichols Road, Mary
Memorial Hospital.
Flizabeth Keller, dead upon arrival;
POMEROY
II :46 a.m ., Mjligs . Mine 2,
James Emmen, HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
10:17 a.m ., volunteer fire
M~y admissions - !ra V&lt;m-_ department and squad to state
cooney, J&gt;omeroy; CarQe Deem, Route 7, motor-vehicle accident,
Racine.
.
Ferrell Venoy, St. Joseph's HospiMonday discharges - none .
tal.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. 7 - James
Logan, Mrs. Gregory Gibbs and Couples issued
daughter, Ralph Blackstone.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. James
Bevins, daughter, Wellston; Mr.
The following couples recendy
and Mrs. James Holley, twin . received marriage licenses in the
. daughters, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Meigs County Probate Court of
James Massie; son, Point Pleasant, Judge Robert Buck:
W.Va; Mr. and Mrs. Marte Wilcox;
Briap · James Howard, 23,
son, Oak Hill.
·
Columbus, and Julianne Renee
(Published wltlt permission)
Buck. 20, Pomeroy; David Lowell
· Rees, 20, Athens, and Michaella
Plants confiscated
Ann Jooes, 22, Pomeroy;
Brian Keith Bailey, 27, and Lori
Camouflage-elM Meigs Cmmty
Ann
Mundry, 24, both of
Sbe.riff' s deputies and lawmen
Stepbep Wayne
Reedsville;
from other agencies nabbed 366
Deaver,
25,
and
Karen Elizabeth
marijuana planls throughout the
SaliSIDan,
19,
both
of Racine.
county as pan of Wtnual marijuana
eradication effons Monday, Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Squlsby
reported this morning.
Meigs County deputies and
deputies from the Marion County
Sheriff's Depanment along with
officials from the Ohio Bureau of
Criminalln~gation and IdentifiPOMEROY
cation and ·the Ohio Depanment oC
Near
Pomeroy-MelOn
Brklge
Natural Resources panicipated liJl
992-2588
part of Operation Grand Slam, the
~ 04 N.2r.t Mi&lt;J&lt;I"~~•I . (~I
VINTON
&lt;.fJ:l·ll 05~
10·5 A1(•l thru ~J1
name of the eradication exercise,
Gallla County Dlaplay Yard
Vb.J.. Ma:&gt;h,:r(~r(1 l)hr.~M~. l..u'\.tJlolo'd\
Soulsby said.
155 Main St.
Lawmen used two helicopters
.388-8603
during the operation, be said.

.Consumer banking fees
double in pa~t two years Meigs EMS logs 8 calls

Published every nfrernoon. Monday through

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area Deaths--

WednEsday, Aug. 9

· \..._

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

\\) ..

'

Heavy rain and high water also
was reponed in Champaign, Logan
and Shelby counties. Severa.!
SIICCis were flooded in St. Paris in
Champaign County, the sheriff's.
office said.
.
Continued showers and thunderstonns predicted for. today prompted the National Weather Service to
issue a flash flood watch for the
western two-third of lbe state .
Forecasters said the slow-mov,
ing stonn clouds could move over
eastern Ohio tonight.
The rain will become more scattered on Wednesday. Temperatures
will become a little wanner with
highs close to 85.
Later in the week. a tlricr air
mass will move into the state and
temperatures will climb into lhc
90s, lbe NWS said.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 95 degrees in 1914
wbile the record low was 46 in
1989. Sunset tonight will be at8:39
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
6:37a.m.
·
Acros.• Ute nation
Sizzling beat fanned out over
, the Plains again today, sea breezes
· c_ooled tbe Atlantic Coast and
~!!!Jillli lined up over the Ohio
· River Valley.
··

The Light
Toacf)
By

Dave
Grate

1

of
Rutland
'
Furniture l·~~~-'-J
The teenager called the lelephone
company to come check her phone.

MThere mus1 be something wrong ·
· witt1 it," she

e~plainad .

"I haven't had

a call for an hour."

•••

What we really need is a car that
doesn't go any faster th an its driver
Can think. '
·

•••

So money doesn't buy everything. It
makes you feel bet1et until you have

everything. ·

•

•••

Author Mark Twain said that when he

was 18, he though! he knew
everything, and that his fQiher knew
noth1ng. Four or fiv e years later," he
admitted, he was amazed at how·
much the old man had learned.

.f.

• ....

Think you're important? Stick a finger
in a bucket of water and see how big
a hole it leaves.

You're always.
·iiiP.Orlant when J.OU
shop at Rutlana
,Furniture. Our
Custo11ers Are #l.
7 SHOWROOMS

11 WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rl. 124, Rutland, Oh.

742-2211

�Tuesday,August8,1995

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

.

~

3 On the NFL pre-season stage

Dodgers, Braves and Mets post wins
error by Dave Hansen on Royce Clayton's
Giants, three times intentionaUy, increasing his
grounder and Kirt Manwaring's double put
National League-leadidg total to 82. He walked
runners on second and third with one out.
eight times in the four-game series, which tbe
But Clayton was thrown ow at tbe plate on
teams split.
·
Mike Benjamin's grounder to Hansen at !bird,
In other NL games. Allanta beat Montreal 5and Astacio got pinch-bitter John Patterson to
1 and New York beat Aaida 5-2.
ground oul to second.
Braves 5, Expos 1 - Atlanta's victory at
"If you're standing out tbere for .J2 innings,
Olympic Stadium increased the Braves' lead in
it's a lot better to win those games than to lose
tl)e NL East to 11 1/2 games, the club's largest .
them," Karros said. "There's nothing worse
f~tst-place margin since· moving to Atlanta in
than playing 12 innings on a getaway day and
1966.
losing ."
·
. Kent Mercker (6·6) scattered seven hits·in 6
Dodgers starter ·Kevin Tapani, making his
213 innings, and Fred McGriff knocked in two
runs.
·
second start since being traded to Los Angeles
from Minnesota on July 31, 'allowed one run
. Jeff Fassero (10-9) allowed four runs in
and four hits in seven innings. But be walli:ed · seven innings as Montreal closed a 3-8 homesfour, only the seventh time in I S2 career starts
land.
· he bas walli:ed more than two batters in a game.
The bright spot for Montreal was David
· "It's a strange park with that wind blowSegui extending .his hitting streak to 17 games
ing," said Tapani, who was malting his Canwith an RBI single in the fmt
dlesticll: Part debut. "I didn't have much of a
Mets 5, Marlins l - Dave Mlicki, who
breaking ball today." . .·
started in place of the injured Pete HIU'Disch,
• Giants startet Trevor Wilson allowed one · ·won for the f1rst time in eight starts. In sttiking
unearned run and four hits in seven innings. He
out a career-high 10 at Sbea Stadium, Mlicld
bas not won since June 3, getting two losses
(5-5) gave up two runs on seven bits in seven
innings.
and six no-decisions in his last eight starts.
"Another good outing for Trevor. You hate
Pinch-bitter Joe Orsulak hit his flrst horne
to waste them," Giants manager Dusty Baker
run of the year, a three-run sbot in the seventh
said. "He's been our bard-luck guy this sea- · inning off reliever Terry Mathews (3-3), as the
son.'~
.
'
Mets rallied froiD a 2-1 deficit ·
Barry Bonds walked four times for the

f!!._the AL,

. ·

.

. ·

Red Sox and Angels among wi.n ners
· ···n was the best stuff I've bad
By MIKE FLAM
all' year: b~t the worst fielding
Associated P,ss Writer
A pitcblng duel between Stan- game I'·ve bad. If I catch a ground
ford aces reduced the returns of · hal~ we may still have been playDarryl Strawberry and Bobby ing now," Mussina said.
Pat Kelly followed witb a two- ·
Bonilla to New York into a.
run double for a 3·0 lead.
sideshow.
Bonilla. in his f1rst appearance
Jack McDowell, whose claim to
·· fame thus far this season 'IVas .mak- in New York since tbe Mets traded
ing an obscene geswre to the home him tb Baltimore, went 0-for-3 ·and
fans. threw a three-bitter Monday is hitting .216 in tbe AL.
In other AL games, Boston ·
night as the Yankees earned ·a 3-0
victory ova Mike Mussina and the topped Toronto 5-4 in 10 innings,
California trounced Texas 9-2,
Baltimore Orioles.
Strawberry, 'returning to the city Minnesota beat Oakland 9-6 and
where be played eight seasons for ~eattle defeated Chicago 6-4.
the Mets, received a 20-second
Red Sox 5, Blue Jays 4
.. • ovation wben be came to jjat for
Boston completed an 8-2 road
the f1tst time.
trip at the Skydome with its fifth
But with botb McDowell and straight victory and retained its 5
Mussina at their best, Strawberry's . 1/2-garne lead in the East.
0-for-3 perf!lllllllllCC bad no impact
Jose Canseco was hit by a pitch
on the game between the second- from Tim Crabtree (0-2) leading
and third-place teams in the AL off the lOth and moved to third
East.
wbe11 the next two batters walli:ed..
"The notoriety (of Sttawberry's Mike Macfarlane's fly ball to shal· return) certainly didn't detract from low right was deep enlll)gh to score
the game. That was a real major- Canseco.
. ' league ballgame out there," Yan·
Stan Belinda (8-1) weDI 2 2/3
· kees manager Buck Showalter said. innings. getang the victory despiJe
'
10 winning his IOOth career allowing Devon White's gamegame, McDowell (9-8) pitcbed hiS · tying, three-run homer -in the
first shutout of the season. He eighth..
.
struck out five, walked three and
Angels II, Rangers l
allowed only one runner to reach
California's big hats delivered at
second base.
home as J.T. Snow, Tony Phillips,
McDowell said he was inspired · Tim Salmon and Jim Edmonds all
by the early success of Mussina homered in support of Mike
· (13-6), the winningest pitcher iii Harkey's third straight victory.
the majors.
In pitching the Angels to an 11"It keeps you locked in when a game lead ova TeXl!li. Harkey (7guy goes out there and is so domi· 6) pilcb~d his fourth complete
nanl early in the game," McDowell game in 100 career siarts.
"
said. "We got a couple breaks and
Scott Taylor (1-2) lasted only 3
won the game. There's not much 213 innings iii his third major
more that you can say about it than league start.
. that." '
Twins 9, Athletics 6
Mussina held the Yankees to
Mark Acre walli:ed .214-bitting .
two hits though six innings, but Rich Becker with tbe bases loaded.
with two outs and two men on in and two outs in the eightb to force
the seventh, Tony .Femandez hit a in the. winning run at the
bouncer back to the .mound that Metrodome.
bounced off Mussina's glove and
After Minnesota blew a four-run
behind tbe mound. He threw wildly lead and fell behind 6-5. Marty
past fm;t, allowing Sierra to score Cordova led off the eighth with a .
from second.
home run off reliever Carlos Reyes

(1-3) to .tie· the game. Kirby, Puck·
eu, who went '3-for-5 with four
RBis, added a two-run single to ·
account for the fmal margin.
Pat Mabomes (2-5) pitched
three-hit ball for four innings, ,and
Dave Stevens pitched ·the ninth for
his sixth save.
Mariners 6, 'White So;~&lt; 4
Mike Blowers continued driving
in runs, knocking in two more at
the King dome 'to give him I 0 in his
last three games and 17 in his last

five. His 68 RB!s for the season are
good for lOth in ibe league.
Blowers, Jay Bohner and Tino
Martinez homered as Seattle· won
despite allowing four unearned
runs.
Tim Belcher (8-6) allowed six
bits and walked four in 6 2/3
innings.
.
Wilson Alvarez (4-7) dropped to
0-3 in his tbird start againsl the
Mariners this season.

~~

•

GOOD. JOB, ERIC! .:.._ Los Angeles lltlrd base coacb Joe Amalfitano congratulates Eric Karros as the latter roun!ls third and heads
for borne after hitting a two-run homer lit tbe llth inning of Monday
night's National League game against the host San Francisco Giants,
who lost3-1 because of that shot. (AP)

Nearly two of five central
football
Ohioans want pro
.
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Thirty-eight percent of the central ·
Ohioans polled said if Columbus
develops a major league sport. it
should be footbaU.
.
Another 16 percent favored bas- ·
ketball and 14 1Jercent preferred
l!aseball, said the poll, released on
Monday. Fourteen percent said
none, or bad no opinion.
Hockey received 7 percent support, while soccer got 6 r,ercent.
Three percent said "other ' and 2
percent said "all."

Of those polled, 31 percent said
their favorite team was the Cleveland Browns, followed by the Dal·
las Cowboys witb 13 percent. ·The
Cincinnati Ben gals were third, with
11 percent.
The Columbus Dispatch/Gallup

Brovelli dies at 84

random telephone poll was con- .
ducted July 2'7-30. The Gallup·
Organization surveyed 507 fans in
seven
counties:
Franklin,
Delaware, Fliirfield; Licldng, Maili-.
sori, Pickaway and Union. Tbe
margin of error was five.percentage
points.
Canadian Footl!all League offi·
cials have expressed an interest in
Columbus. They visited earlier this
year to meet with officials who are ·
considering building a downtown
arena/stadium complex. · ·
In .J 992, Columbus hosted a
team in the World League or
American Football. The league
folded after one season in part
because of poor attendance.
I

Youth .league
signup slated

PITTSBURGH (AP)- Angelo ·
Brovelli, a quarterback with the
The Big Bend Youth League is
. Pitisburgb Steelers when they were in the process of signing up fifth
. known as the Pillsburgh Pirates, and sixth graders for the 1995 (ootbas died of a heart attack. He was baU season.
·
.
84.
.
This is the lOth year for the
Brovelli died Saturday night in league and the next signup is SaturAcampo, Calif., where be. was a · day from 10-n~on at Big Bend
rancher. He played quarterback for Health and Fihless in Middleport,
the Pirates in 1933-34.
Baum Lumber in Chester and at the
With Brovelli's death, the only shelter area at Star Mill Park in
living original Pirates are tackles Racine. Coaches for the 1995 seaSam Cooper and Ray Kemp and son aoe ·chuck Knopp. Tom Smith,
TAGGED- With umpire Larry McCoy watching from a dis- end Wilbur Sortet.
Bill Porter and Rick Kearns.
tance, Boston's Tim Naebrlng (foreground) llnds himself tagged out
l..ast Sept. 18, Brovelli was an
Conditioning will begin the
by Toronto third sacker Ed Sprague at tblrd base after Naebring honorary captain at the Steelers
week
of Aug. 21 in Syracuse. Play·
tried to gel there on 'Blll kasselman's single In the second Inning of game with the Indianapolis Colts.
ers
w1D
be contacted by phone witb . •
Monday's American League game In Toronto, "!'here tbe Red Sox The Steelers wore uniforms from
details
concerning
physicals and
won 5-4. (AP)
·
·
the 1930s that day.
the exact time of conditioning.
Brovelli was tbe key.back in the
· For more information contact
Steelers' single-wing formation Dave Jenkins atl-304-S82-2976 or
and was paid $400 a game. He Lisa Roush at 992-341!6.
played on both offense and
'
defense.
"What else?" be said in 1994. Volleyball· coaches to
dieo (VBDL.andi.ogham 2.-2), 3:3S p.m.
' 'There were only 26 of us on the meet at OU tonight
oftheCaHfomia Leap
Colorado (Ritz 9-6) at Florida (Burkett
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Si&amp;ned
squad."
9-10), 7:05p.m.
•
All Di visi.on 13 volleyball
SaJ Baado, pocrll mar~aaer, to a thrceNew Yorlt (bringbausc.o l-1) at
He once tried to tackle.Brort!t,_o · coaches have been invited to attend
y~~toa,
,
Philadelphia (Qua.olri119-6t, 7~95 p.rn,
SEATrLE MARINERS: IleiiJDaled
Nagorski.
.
·
CINCINNATI (Burba 5-2) at Allanta
a rules interpretation meeting at
Eric Ouftdenon, pilcbN, for -.iBDrmnl.
· (Maddux12-l), 7:40p.m
"He educated me. When I tack. Ohio pniversity this evening.
Monueal (Martiaez 9-7) at Hou1ton
Nat'-.. ~....e:
led him, it felt like my shoulder
"(Swindel!7-5), 8:0S p.m.
The session is set for 7:15 in
FLORIDA MAlUJNS: A&lt;:qulted Bud.
SL lpuiJ (Morp~~ 4-4) at Loa Angela
was
sitting on my hip." ·
dy
.;Jroom,
pitcher,
from
lhe
Detroit
Room
115, at Morton Hall.
(Candiotti S-10), 10:35 p,m.
.

Scoreboard
{BultCh 1-2), 8~05 p.m.
OU:land (Wojciechowski 0-1) • MiD-

Baseball

neaota (Rodtlgu~ 2-&lt;4), B·QS p.m..

Torooto (Ouzman 3-8) Ill Milwau.kee

Major leagues

(Spara 7-S), 8:0l p.m.
Octroi( (Nilkowaki 0-l) at Teu1
(RoamiO-S).II:;M p.m. ·
, Olic:qo (Bolton 0.0) a Seattle (B01io

AMERICAN LEAGUE
l•tern DiTiiion

n

lUm

Bo1t0.11 ....;..............S4

L &amp;&amp;.

39

.581

New Yort... ............ 4&amp; 44
.48

B'altimc~ ............... 4S

Ddrolt.. ................ ,42
Taro.oto ............ ,..... 40

.

'

~·

.5~:2

.414
.432
.00

f

S3

Centr.l Dt.Woa
CU!VELAND ....... 63 21 .692
Milwlukee ............. 4S 47 489
XaDiu City ........... 44 . -46 .419
OiCIIO .. ._............. 40 .52 .43.5
MliD.D110ta .............. 33 60 .35.5
Wa&amp;rmDh-bloa
l6 .617
. Teu. ..... :; ..... ,.... ,... 47 47 .!500

CaUCoraia...............n

Scallk....................47 47 .SOO
Ook!&gt;,ad ................ 44 52 .4ll

7-S), IO:ll p.rn

Ill

NATIONAL LEAGUE

S.S
9

!:a
. .. n b
PIUia:lclphla ...........48 46
Montreal .....................
Amda ................... 39

li.S

New

l&amp;.S
23..5
31

ll
II
IS

Min.IIC10t19, Oatland 6
.se.tt~e 6, Chlcaao 4

22.5

6.5
13
20.$
2l.S

10

New Y~ 5. Florida 2

11-

Toclay'sgames

Boltimono (Kdvdo 0.0) ol N"' Yort
(Cone 11-6), 1:35 p.m.
c.uroroio (Abbott 7-S)
Cl!y
(Oordon 6-7p:Ol p.m.
·
OatJaad (Prieto 2·4) at Miaaaaota
(Rde 7·1 0), S:Ol p.m.
"
.
Toronto (Carrara 1-0) at Milwaukee
(Boo• 6-8), 8:0.5 p.m.
Dolroil (Bcr..... 4-6) ol Tex. (Oroa

.

Clllcaao (Bartottl 1-1) at Seattle '

.

Weclnesd.y'• game.
• :boa 7-1) It NetJ' Yc:rt:
(Kaml,.ieclli _..2), I:Ol
CLEVELANl&gt; (Hil 1..0) al Bo1Lon
- · ~~ 7:0l p.m.
Calif..... (Abbott 7-S) o l - City

.,

1

,

Pittlbur&amp;b (Neqie 10-4) at San Ft.!·
ciKO: (VaiOel 0.1). .f:0.5 p.m.
Colorado (Saberhaaen &amp;.S) at Aorida
(Oordaer 4-4), 7,os p.m.
New York (Corneliu.t 0.1) at Jbiladel·
phla (Gteea 8-7), 7:3S p:m.
CINCINNATI (Wel11 1-0)
&lt;Smaltz a-.S), 7:40p.m.

Transactions
FootbaU

Nadonalli'~ball

BasebaU
Ameriean Leap
BOSToN RED SOX: Recalled Ken
Ryan, pitcher, from Trenton of the Eutern League. ·
1
CALIFORNIA ANGELS ?" Auia.ocd
Daria Entad, outfie\dc; , to Laie Elll.oore

I.e.-

·ARIZONA CARDINALS: Slaud
MII'CUI Dowdell, wide receiver.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Claiml!d
Sle~ lncl, comerblw:t. off waivn from
the SL LDUi.a Rami.
PIULADELPIUA BAGL/lS: Apeed
to tern. with Guy Mcintyre, 1\*d.

·3

7.~

Ati.IDLI S, Mo11trea1 I
Loa Anaela 3, San Fra.DCilco-1 (12)

CLBVEI..AN'D (Clark 6-3) • BoltoD.
(WU.fidd 12-1), 7:Ql p.rn

r·m.

.394

Monday'• scores

Too12bt '1 games

BaltiiQIR. :

Yort: .............. 37 $1

1Ui
!5.5
1a.s

WatuDDhtHD
·Colorado ............... .52 42 .553
Loa Anaelt1 ........... 49 4S ..521
San Di~BO .............. oW 49 .473
· S111 Francllco ........ .f2 52 .«1

eauromia 9, Ttxu2
New Yort 3,Balt.imcn0

(B,... 1.0), lO:Ol p.m.

.n

.511

Ill

.468
.433

I
Cattral Dh'IROII
CINaNNATI .......l!l 32 ,648
Houawa ..............:•. 5.f 40 :S7.f
0\lcago ................. 47 46 .SOS
Pitllburgh .............. 39 l3" .424
St LOU1a ................ l9 jiS .415

~ooday'sscores

p.m.

50

.~

.

Tigm for • player to·be aamed.

· E•lera Dhillon

12
14

BoooQ. S, ToroDto .4 (10)

4-ll~ 1:3$

.

.ar. Atfllil•

Sa.a Die10 (HamiiiOD 4-,) II OlicaJO .
(foota 7-T), I :Ol p.m.
MootreaJ (Heredia 3-S) at HoUIIon
(Reynoldl 7-6),1:0l p.m.
St l..ouia (O.bome t)-4) at Lol Ana:ele~
(Mwtiaez 11·7}, 10:05 p.m.

Wedaesday'i gamei
Saa Dle_to (Blair 4- 1) al Cblcaao
Plwb\lrih(W-I · ll)ltSan fnm.

(Cutillo 7·5), 2 ~20 p.m.

SIGNUP
.
'

·Big Bend Youth Football League
. . Saturday, August ·12, 1995
5th and 6th Graders
10:00 • 12:00 Noon
(hester • Baum Lumber
Middleport • Big Bend .Health &amp; Fitn~ss
Racine • Star Mill Park Shelter Area
For further information contact:
Lisa Roush 992-3486 or
Dave Jenkins 304-882-2976.

BATTERIES

SHOCKS

TIRES

COMPUTER BALANCE
4 Tires For The Price of~ 3
With This Ad

TIRE

By BERNIE WILSON·
big part of our offense."
.be honest with you."
.
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Beating,
Means, who gained a team- ·
Rams: Running back Jerome
~ defending AFC champion San . record U50 yards last year, said Bettis ended his 14-day holdout
D1ego Chargers in an exhibition he would sign a new four-year, and engaged in a bruising, full-iX&gt;nopener meant everytbing to tbe $7.4 million CQntract today. He's tact practice Monday.
Minnesota Vikings. even if they expected to play in Sunday's borne
"The only thing I am behind on
exaggerated a little. ·
game against tbe San Francisco is geti'tng th.e timing together,
''We have a legitimate shot to 49ers, a rematch of the last Super things like that . I ~)link that just
challenge for the Super Bowl this Bowl.
comes .with time," said Bettis, who
year," said middle linebacker Jack
Chargers coach Bobby Ross was spent most of the morning watchDel Rio, who stuffed Rodney Cul· unhappy with lite way the Vikings ing and reviewing basics with
ver for a safety on the Chargers • dominated up front. '
Rams assistant coach Johnny
fourth play from scrimmage. Tbe
"Tbe thing that just smacks me Roland. "We're just going over,
Vikings went on to beat the Charg- right in the mouth is what we're rehashing the pass protection.
ers 23-19 Monday night.
· doing at ibe line of scrimmage," Things like that - the really
· Tbe Super Bowl's 5 1/2 months RQss said. "Evay time we go and important things I need. to know
· away, but the Vikings' defense did try and run the ball, there's pene- .before I can step out there on the
look good, even to quarterback uation."
field."
Warren Moon.
Things weren't better on
While Rams Coach Rich Brooks
'.'Our defense will be the key for ' defense, where the Chargers were is pleased with having Bettis in
us," Moon said. "We have a lot of missing linebacker Junior Seau and camp, he worried Monday about
new faces. If they jell, and I think end Leslie O'Neal.
quarterback Chris Miller, who
: : they wil~ we have a good chance to
"That's no excuse," Ross said. missed practice because of a mild
win our division."
"People still have to tackle. We· concussion suffered during Sa!UrMinnesota's defense capitalized haven't had a linebacker that will day's exhibition game at Seattle.
on several Chargers mistakes. step up in there and smacl&gt; some·
Browns: The Browns have a
•. When a pass from Stan Humphries body in the jaw yet
new quartelback: Jim ~cMahop.
· bounced off Ronnie Harmon's
''On second defense, that was
The veteran is expected to sign a
bands, Charles Mincy was there for the poorest display of tackling in a one-year contract for tbe minimwn
the interception. When a long while," Ross said.
.
salary of $178,000, plus playingHumphries pass hit lineman Isaac
The Vikings originally listed time bonuses.
Davis on the back, Esera Tuaolo Moon as being out witb a strained
"We're excited to bave Jim join
plucked it out of the air,
muscle in his right shoulder. But be us, •• coach Bill Belichick said.
Alfred Jackson completed the started and played two series, lead- ''Above everything else about him,
trio of interceJ!tions, picking off ing the Vikings to a 27-yard fu:ld be's a winner. He's proven that for
fourth-stringer Craig Wbelihan.
goal by Fuad Rev~iz.
years. He wiD make our team betThe Vikings also knocked three
" My shoulder bas progressed ter."
Chargers out of the game - back. well," Moon said. "It was imporMcMahon is 66-30 as a starter, a
up quarterback Gale Gilben with a tant, psychologically, for my teain- winning percentage 'Of .691, the
·sprained left shoulder, rookie mates ·to see me out there working best of aU active NFL quarterbacks .
receiver Jimmy Oliver with dislo· well. I wanted to play more; I went
Cblefsi Backup fullback James .
cated right shoulder, and Culver along_with the coach's decisionY
Saxon will miss Friday's game at
with a bruised right knee.
Brad Johnson, a fourth-year pro, Arizona after injuring his knee in
Cui ver was starting in place of rebounded from an early intercep- Kansas City's exhibition victory
Pro Bowl running back Natrone tiOI) to throw a 29-yard touchdown last Saturday.
Means, who suited up but did m;&gt;t pass to Qadry Ismail and lead an
Coach Marty Scbottenbeimer
play, having ended an 11-day bold- 80-yard scoring drive in the third said Saxon won't require surgery
out only three nights earlier. The quarter. Johnson was 11-for-.13 for and will probably resume light runChargers gained only 51 yards on 124 yards.
. ning next week.
··
18 rushes, with Culver getting eight
Roolcie TareD Aetcher·retumed
Stariing ·strong safety Brian
on five carries ·and one touchdown.
a kickoff 90 yards for a touchdown Washington ftactured the orbit in
"We've obviously got a lot of with 4:47 left in the game for the his right eye wheq bis helmet
work 10 do," Culver .said. "We'v~ Chargers' last score. Vikings rook- became loose and struck the side of
got tO be more physical. The effon ie James Stewan gained 92 yards his face. Although Schouetiheimer
~ was good, but we didn't !lo as well
on 16 carries.·
said the injury wouldn't require
as we'd like to as far as up front." ·
Elsewhere around the NFL:
surgery, Washington didn't return
The Vikings led the NFL in
Bears: Rookie Rashaan Salaam with the team to training camp and
rushing defense in 1994, allowing is lJillldng an impression on Dave also won't play Friday . .
on!~ 68.1 yards per game.
Patriots: Backup tight end John
Wannstedt, albeit not the one the
'We didn't play too well up Chicago coach was loolcing for.
Burke underwent·arthroscopic knee
front," 16-year veteran right tackle
Salaam, the Bears' top pick in surgery Monday, lea'ving New
Stan Brock of tbe Chargers said. the 1995 draft who joined the team England shon-banded at yet anoth·"It doesn't matter who you have last Thursday followin' a two- er position.
· running tbe ball if.you don't bl()ck. week holdout, left pracuce early
Burke, in his second year, ·
·and we did!J't block very weD.
Monday, saying he was dehydrat- injured his right knee during prac·
· "Having been aro'und a long . ed.
lice in a driving rain Sunday. His
· time, though. I can tell you that
"That's called being .o ut of arthroscopy was the third perexhib.ition games are notliing to get shape," Wann~tedt said "It's hot, formed thus far in camp,
'too high OllltlOO low about.''
I know, but be has to be in sbape to
Inside linebacker Vincent
But; said Humphries, "It will be be able to pmctice and to be able to · Brown a·nd defensive · Jon Hand
, good to get Natrone back. He's a . get better. That's discouraging,' to also have bad minor knee surgery·
and remain sidelined.

NBC pays $1.258· for exclusive
rights to 2000 &amp; 2002 Olympics
in.Sydney, Australia, and $545 mil·
By JOHN NELSON .
NEW YORK (AP) -One week . lion for tbe Salt Lake City Winter
· ago, ,Disney bought ABC-Capital Olympics in 2002, both reconls by
·
Cities for $19 billion. The next day, huge margins.
was
just
too
good
a
deal
"This
· c westingbouse bought CBS for ~5.4
ior
us
not
to
say
yes
to,"
IOC
fV
· billion. On Monday, NBC spent
committee
cbilirman
Dick
Pound
of
· $1.25 billion .for two Olympic
Canada
said.
"This
was
a
pre-emp· ·aames.
· · "As pan of the arrangement, we tive bid on the pan of NBC.'.'
Pound said that NBC also will
· will now be selling NBC to the
supply
cacb organizing committee
, IOC," network. president Bob
with
about
$10 million in promo· Wright said. "It's Monday. It's our
tional
support,
driving tb~ total
tum."
·
or
the
package
to at least
value
· He .was joking, but was there a
$).27
billion.
o
connection? Did NBC make its
NBC
bid
$456
million
for the
··mega-deal with the International
1996
Atlanta
Games,
at
the
time a
. Olympic Committee to keep the
record
for
the
Summer
,Olympics\.
2000 Sydney Summer Olympics
· and the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter while CBS' bid of $375 million for
Games out of the bands of Donald the 1998 Nagano Games was a
winter record.
Duck?
,
Fox owner Rupen Murdoch wa:i·
"You can't ignore the sale of
known
to 'be keenly interested in
ABC to Disney, but the fact of ~e
matter is, ABC alone is eapable of .the Sydney Games. Although a
competing with us on the field of U.S. citizen, Murdoch is a native of
Australia. wbere be began his tele·
sports." wright said.
· . According to Monday's vision a11d uewspaper empire.
He never even got a chance to
announcement, NBC will pay $705
million for exclusive U.S. TV bid. Neither did ABC or CBS, both
·rights to the 2000 Summer Games of. which were in!Qrested in Syd·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

night's NFL exhibition game against the bost San
D.iego Chargers, wbo lost23-19. (AP) ·

Davis signs papers to commit
Raiders to 16 years in Oakland
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Locking the Raiders into returning ·
to Oakland could be the easy part.
Getting them to stay through the
16-year term of the stadium lease
will depend on turning written
commibnents jnto reality.
·
Club owner AI Davis said as
much Monday after signing .the
final papers committing the Raiders
to play ~~ the Oakland-Alameda
County Coliseum, their home base
before a 13-year foray to Los
Angeles.
.
Davis said he had kept his pan
of the bargain, and be expects coli·
sewn officials lo do the same. To
lure the Raiders back, local offi·
cials have promised an $S5 million
s·tadium modernization and $42
million in loans to the' Raider:; to
finance their relocation and to build
a trai!ling facility nearby.
"Everyone has to .perform.
Words are just part of a contract.
It's the spirit of the contract that's
important," Davis said. "We've
got to get all these things done and
makeitareality."
·
Davis also said the contraCt contains an escape clause under which
either side could back out of the
lease if provisi.ims in it are
breached. ·
·
City and county officials have

Edwar~s

approved issuing $22!. million in details delayed the signing of the
bQnds to pay for the renovations final agreement for 4 1/2 hours.
and fund the operating loans for the
''Somewhere.
someplace,
Raiders. The bonds arc to be repaid there's a fat lady singing,' Oaklargely through ticket revenue and land mayor Elihu Harris said.
sales of so-called personal seat
But in a strained attempt al
licenses. Tbe licenses, one-time humor. he .also told Davis to hurry
fees ranging from $250 to $4,000,
up and sign _the deal so everyone
give people the right to buy Raiders could go home.
.season tickets for 10 years.
''This is the longest labor I've
The coliseum will be expanded ever been tbrougb," . added Gail
by 15,000 seats to 65,000 and the Steele, president of lhe Alameda
luxury suites .will more tban double County . Board of Supervisors.
rrom 57 to 175. The stadium recon- "Now let's get down to business
struction is scheduled to be com- and play ball. We're happy they're
pleted by the start of next season. here."
Crews will begin worlcing two 10The team plays host to another
hour shifts a day foUowing compte- Los Angeles runaway, the St. Louis
lion of the baseball season by the Rams, on Saturday in its rust game
Oakland Athletics, a stadium co· back at the Oakland-Alameda
tenant.
County Coliseum.
If the construction deadline isn't
The signing of the final documet, the coliseum could pay a $5 m~nts were expected to be a formillion penalty to the Raiders:
malily, but the news conference to
"I'm not out to hun anybody," announce formalization of tbc deal
Davis said. "(But) the time con· . held in the Raiders' new silver and
straints are great We want that sta- black locker room, was delayed
·
dium ready for 1996. That's wbat from I p.m. to 5:30p.m.
we've been promised. That's wb31/
Finally, Coliseum president .
they've said they're going to do."
George Vukasin cam.e to tbe podiFor their pan, city and county. um and declared, "Yes, we're realofficials expressed relief tbat the ·ly going to :have a signing ceremopaperwork was out of the way so . ny. Wbo has tbe documents?"
they could concentrate on stadium
"Yes, there were issues thatsurrcconstruction and ticket sale.&lt;. Last faced this afternoon,·· Vulca.sin
minute wrangling over contract added. "We worked together to
resolve those issues."

Korda promises to pressure Samptas
.in second round of ATP Championships
coon:

'

breaks triple jump mark
We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners And
·Mobile Home
Owners Spacial
. Savings.

.

:By TERRY KINNEY
- MASON, Ohio (AP) - Petr
Korda remembers beating Pete
Sarnpms, and tfilnks he can do it
.again.
•. "I'm going to bit the ·, ball over
·the net, and be's going to have
pressure," Korda sl\id of Sampras,
wbo faces Korda in the second
round of the ATP Championship.
"I've always played good matches
against him, and I've beaten him
:several times."
Korda bas a good memory,
'because it was 1992 when he bad
three consecutive wins over Sampras - two of them on clay. Since
then, -Sampras bas beat .bim seven
straight times, most recently on two
consecutive weeks in 1994.
, Korda, of the C~b Republic,
routed Aaron Krickstein 6-2. 6· 1.
Monday night to advance to the
match with ·the second-ranked
· Sampras. ·
· "I'm ready for the match and
.will try to play as well as I can,"
Korda said.
: "You can beat anybody in these

CHARGING AHEAD -Minnesota running
back James Stewart (28) runs behind bis Unemen
for some of his 9~ second-half yar!ls l.n Monday

ney. In fact, the NBC announce- ·
ment came as a shock to them. Bid- At the World Championships,
ding on the 2000 Games wasn't
expected to take place until mid·
September, while the Salt l,ake
City organizers tf.iditionally would
'
have bad to wait another two years By. ROBERT MILLWARD
again and it was clear be bad gone won the silver with ·a total of 8,489
to get a TV deal.
·
a lot furtber. This time it was 18.29 and Canada's Mike Smith placed
GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP) NBC now baS won tbe rights to
meters (60-0 1/~, and .the crowd third with 8,419.
Jonathan
Edwards
didn't
just
beat
four consecutive Summer Games.
.
went wild.
It televised Seoul in 1988, his own world triple jump record.
.The competition was all .over
He
did
it
twice
and
vinually
put
it
Barcelona in 1992 and already bas
and Edwards. who bad bro~en his
been announced as the U.S. rights out of reach.
pre-championships record by 12
Edwan!s.
who
only
broke
his
bolder to the Atlanta G1imts. It
1/4 inches. even sat out three of the
paid $300 million for the Seoul own national record in June, six jumps before collecting his gold
became
the
first
triple
juinper
to
Games and $401 million for . break 18 meters Monday, then fol- medal froin Queen Silvia of SweBarcelona.
· . ·
lowed tbat by becoming the fm;t ,to den. ·
NB,C. meanwhile, bas not done
Brian
Wellman
of
Bcnnuda
won
through the 60-foot harriet.
a Winter Games Jince Sapporo, smash
the
silver
with
a
leap
of
17.~2
•.
and ·
And· he did it in tbe World
Japan in 1972, for "-hicb it paid a
Jerome Romain of Dominica the
·
.
paltry $6.4 million. CBS did the Championships.
bronze l!'itb 17.59.
A
quiet,
modest,
religious
man
last two Winter Games, in
Edwards· ba~k -to- back world
'
who
once
wouldn't
compete
on
Our statistics show that mature dri· ··
Albertville In 1992 and Lilleham· . Sunday ,' Edwards' now has to records overshadowed Gwen Tor- .
main 1994. .,
vers and home owners have fewer and :
reoce's victory over rivals Merlene
accep! that be's a star.
The unique two-Game.s deal
less easily losses than other age :
"In my mind, there is still a dis- Olley and Irina Privalova in the
took less than a week to put togethgroups. So it's ooiy fair to Charge you ;
tance between what I read about 100 meters.
er. · .
. ,
less lor you1 insurance. insure your ;
Already victorious over 'them in
"The decision was made in a and who I am," the Englishman a semifinal that turned out to be a
home and car with us and save even •
· said after coDecting bis world' title
half hour," Ebersol said.
more with our special muili·policy '
Monday.
·
rehearsal of th~ fmal, the 30-year"People are comparing my per- old American Olympic 200-meter
discounts.
formances 10 those of Bob Beamon titlist was again ahead of them aU
and Butch ReY,DOlds. and tbat feels the way as she was clocked in
very odd because. these are legends 10.85 seronds.
in the spon. And this is just' me. It's
Ottey. world champion over 200
quite bumbling to do what I've meters, was seeond in 10.94 and
European c)1ampion Privalova coltbingi. J was 'fop 10. J don't think Gre&amp; R!Hed&lt;lci, a Canadian-born dbne.''
Tbere
were
signs
that
something
.
lected
bronze in 10.96.
I'm such a bad player to beat Pete. player now representing Britain,
speciJ!.l
was
about
to
happen
wben
If I'm going to play the way I'm upset !Otb-seeded Ricluird Krajicek
It was Torrence's fm;t individu·
the 29-year-old triple-jumped 18.39 al world
playing, he's goin~ to have a little of Netherlands, 7-6 (7-4). 6-3.
title, while Ottey now bas
time on the
Tw!l other seeded players (60-4) and 18.43 (60·5 3/4) at a .more inedals at tljese champimeet at Lille, France, on Juni: 25.
Andre Agassi, the lQP.seed, does moved into the second round ..
although
both. performances were onships than any other competitor.
· not play until Wednesday. Today's
No. 11 Jim Courier, the tour's
even Carl Lewis. The Jamaican hilS
match betweenDanielVaoekofthe top-ranked player in 1992, beat wind-ai.ded.
It seeoied only a matter of time. 11 - two golds, ·three silver _and
Czecb Republic and qualifier Jared Palmer 6-3, 6-2, and No. 15
Two weeks before the champi- six bronzes.
Jerome ·Golmard of France, will Todd Martin edged'Jaime Yzaga of
Dan O'Brien won his third
onships. be broke Willie Banks'
determine who goes against bim. · Peru, 6-3, 6-4.
.
decathlon
title, totalling a year's
10-year-old
world
mark
of
17.97
.
Six former ATP titlists are .in
"I think I can play better, and
best
8,695
points
after a shaky start
this year's field. Two were elimi· hopefully I'm going to," Coorier · (58-11 1/2) by stretching to 1-7.98
that
left
bim
liailing
by 107 in sec·
nated MoQday.
·
said. "But getting through the f1rst (59-0) at Salamanca, Spain.
ond
after
three
of
lite
I0 events.
Then
j::ame
his
most
spectacular
Mats Wilander of Sweden, the ' round like that, it's a good start to
perrormances yet, at the World
winner four times in the 1980s, lost this tournament for me.
·
Despite failing to win a single
Championships
with royalty in the discipline outright, the American
to Renzo Furlan of Italy 6-4.• 7~
"I tbink I've still got some good
OGAN
(7-4). Guy Forget of France, the tennis in me, and I'd like to lrr and · stands and a crowd · buzzing in hauled back the lead with big
anticipation.
~RNER -·
winner in 1991. lost to 16th-seeded mine that as much as possible. •
~cores in the 110 hurdles and the
Edwards
set
off
for
bis
first
Insurance·
s~~·"•ti
Alberto Berasategui of Spain 7-5,
Todd Woodbridge of Australia:
pole vault, and won by 206 points,
jump
and
flew
past
the
old
record
4~. 6-4.
beat MaliVai Washington 7~ (8;
a big victory margin.
214 EAST MAIN
That left two-time defendins 6), 6-4 and will face eighth-seeded to reach 1S.l6 meters (59-7). He
raised
his
arms
in
delight
and
modof
victory,
Virtually
sure
champion Michael Chang, Sam- Michael Stich of Germany in the
POMEROY
estly accepted the fans' cheers for O'Brien jogged his way through
pras. Stefan Edberg and Boris second round.
992-6687
Becka. .
,
Rain forced the SUSpeDlliOn Of a being the fm;t man past 18 meters the final event, the 1,500 meters,
legally,
and
past
it
by
a
long
way.
and
finished
ninth
in
that
race
in
.Auto-o.m.r. ~ ·
The top eight seeds received . late match between Australians
But there was that feeling there 4:5~.52.
L•le HOm"e ya• Out•f"lf!M
·.
first-round byes. Becker and Mark Woodforde and Jljson
was
more
to
come.
Eduard
Hamalamep
of
Belarus
·
7N.'Mflollt,;•;~o
Chang, like Agassi, do not play Stoltenberg.
Edwards raced down the runway
until Wedne~y,

, r

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Vikings top Chargers 23-19;
Browns acquire McMahoh

•
Page4
Tuesday,August8,1995

In limited NL action,

By ROB GLOSTER
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Jose Bautista
says his only mistake was the hanging slider
that Eric Karros bit into the Jeft.fJCid bleacbers.
The home run in the 12th inning gave the
Los Angeles Dodgers a 3-1 win ova the San
Francisco Giants on Monday, but a pair of
chin-high fastballs that nearly hit Karros may
also have been mistakes.
With one out in the 12th, Mike Piazza singled off Bautista (2~) before Karros - after
twice getting brushed back - t ollowed with
his 20tb home run.
"It gets you going, it gets the adrenaline
,going, no doubt about it," Karros said of the
close pitches . "When I hit it out, I was
pumped."
Bautista bas allowed 17 bomers this season
in 80 innings.
''Like all the otber times, it was one bad
pitch. It was a slider; a banging slider," be
said. "It's like all the balls I've thrown this
year. I make one mistake and they bit it out of
the art." .
,etonio Osuna (2· 2) got four outs. siJ'ilting
out the side in the lith, for the win. Todd Wor·
reD pitched the 12th for his 20th save, striking
out J.R. PbiUips with two outs and two men on
base to end the game.
Dodgers reliever Pedro Astacio worked out
of a jam W. the bottom of tbe ninth. A throwing

.

..

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,August8,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,August8,1995

Rebellio~s step-daughter is really looking ·for authqrity figure
:•••

Ann
Landers
"1995, u. AnQMel
T""'" s~

•

CfMIOrl Syndicate•

'

Dear'Ann Landers: My family
• · situation is unbearable. My 15-yearc old stepdaughter, "Lottie." has been
living with my husband and me for
18 months . She left her mother's
7 house by mutual agreement because
she could not get along with her
mother's live-in boyfriend . Before
this, she used to visit us twice a
month, and to be perfectly honest, l
did not look forward to seeing het

l cannot say anything good about
having this girl around. She is rude
and sneaky, has flunked several
classes and has no interest in school.
Her friends slink in and out of our
home and are an unwholesomelooking lot. I have found evidence of
pot smoking. To put it blun~y. I am
fed up to the teeth with this girl and
the way she has disrupted our lives .
My husband's head is buried in the
sand. He says , "She is just
experimenting. It's a stage she is
going through. She only yells at us
to show ·off to her friends." Ann, I
·wasn't raised this way. l barely speak
to Lottie, and l am losing respect for
my husband. l have tried therapy, but
neither my. husband nor Lottie will

go.
I think Lottie should go back to her
m!llher. I don't want to break up my
family, but I can no longer tolerate
this girl's daily tirades. Our home is
like a war zone.
' ·
· I'm sure Lottie doesn 't want to
leave. She has her daddy conned. My
husband says his c:.x·wife is not fit to
raise their daughter. Where do I 10
from here? -- LOSING IT FAST
DEAR LOSING IT: LoUie is
clearly in charge, and this has got to
stop. You must insist on family
counseling. which means all three ~r
you. Believe it or not, the girl wants
an authority figure to take control.
I urge you to deep-six the therapist
you were seeing. It sounds like he or

she was zero effective. Good luck.
Dear Ann Landers: Sometimes
your advice is lousy. I'm referring to
the subject of older people giving up
their driver's licenses.
You seem to lump all older people
together without considering their
mental or physical condition.At what
age do you think people should be
forced to give up their licenses?
Perhaps we should put an age limit
on other occupations as well, such as
people in public office, surgeons,
judges, lawyers and advice
columnists.
I would like to see some of the
really dangerous people removed
from our streets and highways. I'm
talking about those who are drug and

alcOhol abusers, the legally blind IJld
the mentally retarded wbose
judgment is questionable. What say
you now, Miss Landers? -•
SACRAMEN10, CALIF.
DEAR SAC.: You've made some
excellent points, but as far as I know,
there is no law in any slate that says
a driver must surrender his or her
license at any. given age. (I was a
lousy driver at 35.)
I do believe, however, that too
. many states are far too lenient when
it comes co re-issuing driver's
licenses. Drivers in every slate should
be road-tested at age 70 instead of
getting an automatic renewal through
the mail. (P.S. I got a letter today
about a 98-year-old man in Florida

who was just issued a new driver's
license. He had a perfect record, and
there were no grounds for refusal.)
Gem of the Day: Straddling an
issue is like straddling the middle of
the mad. You are likely to get hit from
both sides.
Whats rhe rrurh abour por,cocaiM,

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Vii· lage Council meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. at Pomeroy Muryicipal Duild-

~ Planned

in g.
RACINE - Southern High
School football ~lmet filling 5
p.m. Tuesday at the high school
followed by meeting for football
parents for students grades 9-12 at
7p.m.
\
DARWIN - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department
Committee meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. at township ball.

• POMEROY -

Obio Eta Phi

Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi s~
picnic Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Horace
Karr cottage. Bring covered dish
and oblong or square scarf. Park
and ride at Meigs High Scbool ·at
6:45p.m.

RACINE - Mandatory conditioning for Southem High School
football players grades nine
through 12 from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at high school. Call Mike·
Kloos, 992-2795 for details.

POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School, Carleton Church, Kingsburg Road, in progress through Friday, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Crafts and programs with Lenny and Patty, ventriloquists. '

POMEROY - Pomeroy group
of AA will meet at7 p.m. Thwsday
at Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Mulberry Avenue. AI-Anon will
meet at tbe same time.

WEDNESDAY

. POMEROY - Sweet Mountain
Sound, I p.m. Wednesday at the

Parenthood dinner, speaker slated

Planned Parenthood .of South- Education &amp; Vigiiance. an agency · knowing them and speaking out
east Ohio will host its annual din- to educate citizens about the pur- . wben they come into their communer on Monday, Sept. 18 at 6:30 poses and crimes of bate groups nities.
While in the area, Cochran will
p.m. in the Baker Center Ballroom across the United Slates. His talk
on the Ohio University campus in also will draw a connection also be available to scboo:td
·
Athens.
between women's health clinic ter- civic organization meetings.
Tbe dinner is $20 per rson.
The evening's featured speaker rorist bombings and members of
Reservations must be confumed by
,· will be Floyd Cochran, a former racist bate groups.
Tbe message of Education &amp;
Wednesday, Sept. 13.
member of the mililani racist orgaPlanned Parenthood is a private,
Vigilance is that citizens can sucnization, Aryan Nations.
no!l·profit organization providing
Cochran resig'1_ed membership cessfully counter bate group
prevenlative reproductive health
in Aryan Nations m .1992 ,to form recruiting and organizing efforts by
services to women and men .

1995 FOOTBALL PREVIEW .
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30TH
F.EATUJUNG

•MEIGS MARAUDERS •SOUTHERN TORNADOES
•EASTERN EAGLES
•WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS
•OHIO STATE
•OHIO UNIVERSITY
•CINCINNATI
•CLEVELAND
PLUS MUCH, MU.CH MORE
·I

PPSEO health service sites are
located in Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Ross
'a nd· Vinton counlies. For more
information, calll·614-593·3375.

Meigs County Public Library under
sponsorship of the Riverbend Arts
Council.
POMEROY - Living in the
Solution Group of Narcolics
Anonymous, Wednesday, 7
at
the Sacred Heart Catholic burch,
Pomeroy.

&amp;in.

POMEROY - Southem High
School golf team organizational
meeting Wednesday, .5: 15 p.m. at
tbe Meigs County Golf Course.

Announcement~

WILLIAMS

TRENCHING
•Septic Tanks
•Plumbing
•Water Lines· etc.
-concrete Work
-Gravel Hauling
•Welding/Fabrication
Certified
Licensed/Bonded
25 Years Experience
614-992-2834
992-7821712t11 mo.

LSD, PCP, crack, spud and
dowMrs? 'The Lowdown on Do~"·
has up-ro-the-miiiUie information on
drugs. ·Send a self-addressed, long,
busiMss-size envelope and a check
or .money ordu for $3 .75 (this
inclu&amp;s postage and handling) to:
Lowdown, cloAMI..mukrs, P.O. Box
11562;Chicago, Ill. 60611..0562 , (In
Callllda. send $4J5 .)

Public Notice
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
SEPARATE SEALEO BIDS
FOR:
For River ·Front :r~~~;:~~~~
Area Project .
oldawalko, electrical
and lighting, aheltor
ture,.and related work.
Will be received by
Vlllege ol Pomeroy at
oHica ol tho Mayor, ~!~J},~~
Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio
until 11 O'clock AM
September 8th, I 995
then at tho office of
Mayor the bldo will be
publicly opened and read

alo.ud.
·'Contract 1peclllcattono
and bidding d0cumenta

be vtowed at tho office
SBA Conaultanta, Inc.

10247 Chillicothe Pike.

"' Box 730, Jackaon, ,QH .

45640 (Ph: 814-2811-2155)
may be picked up
ordered by mall for
which Ia

Thio proJect 11
partially fundod by·
ACR and CDBG.
Englneer'a . eattmate tor
1hi 0 pro1eel 11 $&amp;4,940.
A bid guaranty, as
required by Section 153.54
of the Revised Coda of
Ohio, ahall accompany aach
submitted,

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

81 Proceeds . from S~tle of

Bonds ................ 430,000.00
State Sourceo ............... o.oo
Federal Sourceo ........... o.oo
Operating Transfers· ln ......
...........................8,900.36

may be revocable: only by Operallng Tranafera • Oul ••.

.

.t- .
'
...'

Advertising Deadline
August 23rd
CaU Dave or Bob At
992-2155 For· More Information .

Hey, Friends and
Family! Place An Ad
Wishing Your favorite
Player, Cheerleader, or
Bond Membe r
"Best Wishes, too!"

The Daily Sentinel

--

Various American Wheels on Sale

ell

992-5591
Having Problems,
need answers to
tough questions
talk live to a
Personal Psychic
Now!
1-900-825-3800
Ext 4274
$3.99/Min 18 yrs .
ProcaiiCo.
(602) 954-7420

•

DAYS
CAR WASH

-

"

M~TYOUR

Howard L. Writesal
ROOFING

Complete
Detailing

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eanlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2.,168

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

Dulldo•ing, Backbot!,
Services.

Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
PROCALLCO.
(602) 954-7420

..

Remodeling

Every

Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios

Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt •

Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.

Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
4/1~ I

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
SfXings Grange will meet at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the ball.. Election of
officers, will vacate ball for fair.

To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news
and offer news tips

,,'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473
1l22/94

Buzz's Car&amp;et
Installing, nc.

,o\\~'­
o~\ss i.

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING
SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUlL T UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES
28 Years Expe rience
PHONE
1-800-377-4477
614-245-0437

Everyone
Welcorrw

We will install carpet
and floor coverings.
Give us a call at
614-992-3379 18 Years Experience.
Hours,
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

AND MIXED
HAY
FOR SALE

To

BAILED

YOUR NEEDS

949-2512

.

40

Giveaway

1 little lem ale k•lten 304 ·675·
25&lt;7
2 puppies; mo1her Reg. S1bqrian
Husky, dad Hus~y/Chow mix; real
cute . 304 · 773 · 5952 or 30&lt;(·882·
29141eave men&amp;Qe.
·
6·8wk old Gorman Shephard :pop-

py, ferrule. 304t&amp;7S.5505 anytime.
Ado rable K1ttens Long Haired,
Blue Eyed. e l(t'ef!ks, Good Home
Elderly cat needs home w/lnendly
poople, troo. :ll-4·675-7129.

One year old pari German
Shepherd/ Collie, 1wo year old
German Shepherd / lab w /
houses, 614·992·5242.
'
Part Doberman, part Rottweiler,
2yrs old. mala. 304-458-1513., -.

Phil cO Fro&amp;t Free Rilr! gerator ~ -Needs Repair, You Haul It -. IU; •
'rours r 61 4-446-8()62. '

60

·

Lostand Found :

round : Collie Type Dog, Vtcltlity
St R1. 850, BlctNell, Call To Identify!
Call Alter 5 :00 614-388-8201 .

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUCTION
• Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling
• New Additions &amp;
Garages .
• Electrical &amp;Plumbing
Free Estimates
843-5124
992-2984

ALFALFA

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

~~~ s\v.~'t MIKE MARCUM'S

--

Lonely? Find Him
or H e r 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

Birthday card Shower lor Nts.
Mae Uoodeapaugh, age 87, Au ·
gust 11 . cJo Care Ha'lfen Nurtmg
Home. State P:oure &amp;2, N. , Pt.
Pleasant, WV 25550.

Only, 614-«6·8111 .

RACINE
GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT

For Free Estimates

For Free estimate call 949-2512
REASONABLE KATES
~"""

818/ttn

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remo4ellng
Kitchen .&amp;l:jath

Reasonable
Insures · Experienced

•

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump 'rruck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.P.O. Box 587

1-9D0-388-0400

Hom10 Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.

()()•)
•)()•.)()
._,; - ,.)0.)0

· J.D. Qrilling Company

CO PINION!

511&amp;'94 TFN

110\\'\IW
E\C .\\ \TI\(;

0

0

Public Notice
Advances-fn .................. o.oo
Operating Tranofero- Out. ..

Public Notice
Extracurricular Actlvllleo ....
Benellts ................ 46,496.52
.................;..... 103,943.23
Purchased Servfceo ............
CloM Materials &amp;Foes .......
............ t ............... ...... o.oo
............................ 1,2~2 .08
o.oo Advances • Out ~ ............ 0.00 Supplln &amp; Materials ...........
Misc. Recelpto ..... 27,522.94 Total Other f'tn. Sourceo
....................... 134,036.70
Grants In Aid
· (Uon) ................ 165,729.18 · Capital Outlay ........ 1,671.00
Stale Sourceo .2,254,173.00 E~cess Recelpts/Sourcea Other Object• ........ 1,537.15
Fede•al Sources 510,059.84 Over/( Under)
Total Olabursementa •
Total Receipts- (Operating) Dlabuuements &amp; Other (0per) ............... 5,360,611.38
.................... 4,392,266.59 Uon/Net .............. (5,452.37) Exc. Rcpto. Over /(Undt~)
Beginning Fund Caah Dlsb.................. (846,561.69)
DISBURSEMENTS:
EXPENDITURE
Batonce ................ 11,102.45 OTHER
FINANCING
DISBURSEMENTS
Ending Fund Caah Balance SOURCES (USES)
lnotructlon....... 2,482;664.97
......................... 11,650.08 Contribution• &amp; Oonaliona.
Supporting Services ........... Unreserved Fund Balance ..
.. ......................... 9,111 .61
.................... 2,373,101.75
.... ~.................... 11,650.08 Prec. &amp; Accrued Int. on
Extracurrlcul&amp;r Aetlvltlea •..•
AGENCY FUND : RECEIPTS . Bonds ................. 484,000.00
.........................88,913.85 Taxea ............................. o.oo Proceeds from Sale of
Debt Servlcea .... 123,712.06 Earnings on Investment• .. Banda ................ 430,000.00
Employ1eea Satarlee &amp;
.. ................................0.00 State Sourceo ...... 13,129.72
Wageo ............................ O.OO FoOd Servtoeo Sales ... 0.00 Federal Sourceo147,599.48
Emploreee Retirement Er:tracurrlcular Activities ....
Operating Tranafero ·ln ......
Bonettto ...............:......... o.oo
.:...;................... 24,478.98
....................... 13,948.75
Purchaaed Services ..... o.OO
Class Materlata &amp; Fees ....... Advancea-ln .............. 432.31
Supplln &amp; !lfaterfals .... o.oo
. .................................. 0.00 Operating Tranafers ·Out ...
Capital Outtey ............... O.OO Misc. Receipts .............. 0.00
...................... (13,948. 75)
Other Ob]acto ............... o.oo Graoito ln Aid
Advancea- Out ...... (432.31)
Tolal Disbursements • Slate Sourcea ............... 0.00
Total Other Fin. Sources
(Oper) .............. 5,068,392.63 Federal Source• .......... 0.00 (Uaoo) ............. 1,083,840.79
E•c. Rcpts. Over /(Undo•) Total Receipts · (Operating) Exceaa Recelpta/Sourcea
Dlsb.................. (678,126.04)
......................... 24,478.98 Over/( Under)
OTHER
FINANCING DISBURSEMENTS : •
Dlaburaementa &amp; Other
SOURCES (USES)
. 'EXPENDITURE
Uan!Net ............. 237,279.10
Contrlbutlona &amp; Donations. DISBURSEMENTS
Beginning Fund Caoh
........................... 6,128.6a lnstructlon .....................o.oo Balance .............. 269,059.80
Proc. &amp; Accrued tnt. on Supporting Servfeeo ........... Ending Fund Caah Balance
Bonds ................. 484,000.00
..................... :............ 0.00
.......................506,938.70

tho owner.,. Upon entering
.. 0 .................. (13,900.36)
Into a contract with the Ad vanceaout ...... (432.31)
owner, t h e contractor must Total Other Fin. Sourcea
then file a bond lor tho (U aaa ) ................
· 915,128.68
amount of the contract, and Exceaa Receipts/Sources
tho check or letter of
Over/(Under)

...

THURSDAY
CHEsTER - The Shade River .
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM meeting, 8 p.m.
' ThW'Sday at Cbestez lodge.

Septics, Land
Clearing, Ponds, ·
Homesites,
Footers,
Driveways.
Licensed &amp;
Bonded
Free Estimates

- .-

lollowa:
,
1) A .certified check,
caahfer'o check, or letter of
credit equal to 10 percent of
the bid. A letter of credit

.,

POMEROY- Anyone interested in playing Meigs Higb School
football needs to j)e in the varsity
locker room at 7:30 ~.m. on
Wednesday.

R &amp; C Excavating

··--·

-

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERC IAL 'mul HESIIJENTIAL
'
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
( No Sunday Calls)
21 12192/tln

Los1 Cockallel. grey w/ white at
end ol leathers, yellow head w l
orange cheeKs Children's Q&amp;l,
answers to MRocky·. If found call
304 · 773· 56&lt;18 or 304 -773-9102
Reward

70

Yard Sale
.., Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

4 r amrty · 4030 Ingalls Road,-011
2 18, Wed. ~ sat. Lo1s Of Gpod
School Clothes. Mrsc .

All Yard Sates Mu st Be Pa1d In

proposal

r·

Imperial Tire
Service
formerly Poor Boy Tires
Dual Exhausllap in's
Glasspack ............... $109.95
Dual Exhaust Tap in's
Turbo's ..................... $119.95
Alignment Front end ... $19.95
Alignmentfour wheel .$34.95
Relation &amp; Computer Bat. four
wheel ......................... $19.95

rfhe Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

ANNOUNCEMENTS

---------Community calendar---------The Community Calendar is
· published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
· angounce meellng and special
events. The calendar is not
· · designed to promote sa les or
· · fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Extracurricular Activities ....

Unreserved Fund BalanCe ..

.. ,, .............................. 0.00
.......................506,338.70
Services ............... 0.00 Cash In Banko (Net) ........... .
Employees Salaries &amp; · ........................ 506,338.70
lnveslments .................. o.oo
W•~~&lt;~• ·· ............. ,." ......... o.oo
Employees Retirement Total F.und Balance ........... ..
Bonellto,........................ 0.00
.......................506,338.70
De~t

Purchased Services ........... .

........................... 1,030.97
Supplies &amp;Materials ...........
......................... 20,709,96
Capital Outlay ........... 653.00
Other Ob]ecto ........ 1,339.15

Memoranda Oeta
Aaaeased Valuallon ............

........ :..............60,319,991

Property Tax levlea

lnalde10 Mll1 ............. 3.5000
Outolde10 Mll1 ........ 23.7500
Total Dlaburaements • ADM ........................... 901 .00
will then be returned to the Dlaburaemen1a &amp; Other (Oper) ..., ... ,. ........ , ~3,733,08
Number of Non-Cert.
aucceasful and unaucceas- Usn/Net.. ........... 239,002.64
Ere. Rcpll. Over /(Under) Employeos .................. ~.oo
lui blddera when the Beginning Fund Coah Dlsb ........................... 745,90 Nuoribei ol Cert. Employee•
contract Is executed.
Balance •....•... •.•.. 240,872.93
OTHER
FINANCING
................................ 59.00
OR
Ending Fund C01h Balance SOURCES (USES)
Summary lndebtedneat
2) A bond lor tho lull
....................... 479;875.57 Contrlbultona &amp; Donattona. Banda
amount of' this bid. The Unreaerved Fund Balance ..
,. ......................... 2,982.93 Balance · Beginning ol
owner will retain tho bond of
....................... 479,875.57 Prec. &amp; Accrued Int. on Period ................... 60,000.00
the aucceaalul bidder but PROPRIETARY FUNDS
Bonds ............................ 0.00
Fiscal
the owner wlll return the RECEIPTS: OPERATING Proceeda from Sate of Redeemed-During
Period
...................
20,000.00
bond of each unaucceoalul RECEIPTS
·
Banda ........................... 0.00 Balance 6-30-95 ... 40,000.00
bidder aher ·a contract hae' Taxes ............................. O.OO State Sources ............... o.oo Summary Indebtedness
been executed.
Earnings on Investments ..
Federal Sourcea ........... o.oo notes
Attention of bidders Ia
.................................. 0.00 Operallng Transfers • ln ...... Long &amp;Short Term
called to all requirements Food Services Sales •••.......
................................ 48.39
Beginning of
contained In the bid packet,
......................... 19,875.89 Advonces-fn .................. o.oo Balance
Perfod ................. 212,618.00
particularly the Federal Extracurricular Actlvftfeo .... Operating Transfefa ·Out. .. New leauea-Ourlng' Fiscal
Labor Standards Provlolons
..................................0.00
....... ...................... (48.39) Period .............. 1,093,000.00
and Davla-Bacon Wages, Clase Material• &amp; Feea .......
Advanceo • Out ............. o.oo Redoomed·Durfng Flocal
var~oua inaurance require-:......................... 17,403.23 Total Other Fin . Sources Perlod ................... 93,051.18
menta, various equal Mlac. Recelpts ............ 25.00
(Uses) .................... 2,982.93 Balance 6-30·95 ...................
opportunity provlalona.
Grantt In Aid
,
E11cees Receipts/Source•
.................... 1,212,566.82
Succetaful bidder to State Sourcea ............... O.OO
OverI( Under) ·
I certify the following
provide an OSHA approved Federal Sourceo .......... 0.00 Olaburaementa &amp; Other report to be lcorrect 1nd
oaloty plan for proposad Tolal Recefpll ·(Operating) Utea/Net ............ :....3,728.83 true, · to the beat of my
work before work.can start.
. ......................... 97,304.12
Beginning Fund Cash knowledge:
No bidder may withdraw DISBURSEMENTS:
Balapce...... , ......... 11,084.22
·. Dennie E. Hilt
. hlo bid within alxty (60) dayo EXPENDITURE
Ending Fund Cash Balance
Trea•urer of the
after the actual date of DISBURSEMENTS .
·......................... 14,813.05
Board ol Education
opening thereof.
lnstructlon .....................o.oo Unreserved Fund Balance ..
814-949·2213
All bids shall be properly Supp&lt;)rtlng Servfcea .... O.OO
......................... 14,813.05 (8) 8; 1TC
algned by an authorized Extracurricular AcllviUe$ .. .,
TOTALS
raprooantotlvt of the bidder. . .................................. 0.00 RECEIPTS ·
All blda shall be staled Debt Services ............... 0.00 Tareo .. ............. 1,419,392.17
and plainly marked "Staled Employees Salarfo.s &amp; Earnings on Investment• ..
Bid lor River Front Parking Wageo ................. 107,195.30
.......................... 17,175.41
Looking for a Pet?
Project, Pomeroy, Ohio".
Employees Retirement Food Services Sale• ..........
The own'er reaerves the Beneflts ................ 46 1496.52
......................... 79,875.89
right to reject any or all bldo Purchased Servlcea.251.11
Extracurricular Actlvltlea ....
Shop
eubmitted, and wave any Suppllea &amp; Materlala ......... ..
........•............... 128,4:!2.21
lrrogulerlllas.
'
....................... 113,326.74 Cfo11 Materials &amp; Fees .......
the
By tho Owner Capllal Outlay........ 1,01p.oo
.........................17,403.23
The VIllage of Pomaroy Other Objecto ........... 198.00 Misc. Racefpta ..... 27,547,94
(8) 8; 15, 22, 3tc
Total Dlaburaements . 'Grants In Aid
(Oper) ................. 268,485.67 Slate Sourcea.2,254,173.00
Public Notice
Exc. Rcpto. Over /(Under) Foderel 50urceo510,059.84
Cla..tfledo ... your at
COMBINED FINANCIAL
Dfob.................. (171,181.55) Total Receipts · (Operating)
home ohopJIIn« eenter.
............:...... 4,5.14,049.69
REPORTOFTHEBOARD OTHER
FINANCING DISBURSEMENTS:
Find
great buyo on pell,
OR THE SOURCES (USES)
OF EDUCATION F
Conlrlbutlono &amp; Donations. EXPENDITURE
pet accea111orie1, and
FISCAL YEAR ENDED
JUNE 3D, 1995
.................................. 0.00 DISBURSEMENTS
1erticet,
lnotructlon .......2,482,664.97
SOURCE DESCRIPTION
Prec. &amp; Accrued fni. on Supporting
Servlcn
.........
..
CaD for complete details
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS . Bondo ............................ O.OO
.................... 2,373,101.75
RECEIPTS: REVENUE Proceeds from Sale ol Ext111Currfcullr
on placing
Acdvltleo ....
RECEIPTS
Bonds ........................... 0.00
ads to sell for yoo.
......................... 88,113.85
Sta~ Sourceo ...... 13,129.72
TaxOI ............... 1,479,392,17 Federal Sourceo147,599.46 Debt Servlceo .... 123,712.08
Eamfngo on fnveotmonlo .. f?peratfng Tranolero . ln ...... Employeel Salaries &amp;
......................... 17,175.41
. ........... :....;..........5,000.00 W.geo ................. 107,195.30
Food Servlceo Saleo ... 0.00
Empfoyooo Ratlrament

992-2156

NEW HOME
Waililg for owner
Secluded on '2 wooded
acres lmore available)
3 BR/2 BA, Tuppers Pl.
water, heat pump, heavily
insulated· Must seel
12 mi from Pomeroy,
17111i. from Alllens

'59,000
614-992-2713

Bill Slack
992-2269 or
304·773-5960

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

NEEDED: Fair Workers,
Pies &amp;"Cakes donated · ·
Contact: Eastern Athletic
BoosiE!rs at
Texas Tans in Chester.

WICKS

I

'

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

.
.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

~

Help·Wanted ·

WANTED: COMMUNITY SKilLS INSTRUCTOR
positions available to teach communlly and
personal skills to an adult with learning limitations
in Meigs County. HOURS: (1) 32 hrsJwk. (live-In); 8
am Sat. thru 8 am Mon. ; sleep-over required; 2-hr.
weekly staff meeting; or as othe{Wise scheduled;
vacation/sick benefits.
(2) 18 hrsJwk. : 11 am-7 pm, SatJSun.; 2-hr. weekly
staff meeting; or as otherwise scheduled;
vacation/sick benefits.
High school degree, valid driver's license, good·
driving record, three years licensed driving
experience, and adequate automobile Insurance
coverage required. Training provided. Salary:
'" to start. If Interested send resume to:
$5.00/hr.
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH. 45640; ATTN: Cecilia,
Deadline for applicants: 8111195; please specify
which position applying for. Equaf'Opportunlty
Employer.
30 Announcements

YARD SALE
EWING RESIDENCE
4TH ST., POMEROY
AUG. 10TH &amp; 11TH
8 A.M. · 4 P.M. ,

Feeney Bennett Post
128 American Legion
Meeting 7:30P.M.
Reading and Vote on.
proposed changes to
1-tonslltutlon and By-lawi.

NOW AVAILABLE
GALLIA COUNTY JR .
FAIR VIDEO TAPES ,
•LittJe Miss/Little Mrc
-Queen Contest
•Antique Tractor Pull
•Demolition Derby
VIDEO TRANSFERS
Gallipolis, Ohio
614·446·6939
614-446·1370

AB&amp;TAUTO
3RD ST.

Cus1om Building 6 Remode)ing

•NEW HOMES
• A,DDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992-2753

August10 · 11, 10 ·•'1. behindjair

949-2882
RACINE, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00 hr.

Oil Change .................... : .... ~: ...... $17.95
F'ront End Alignment ........ ......... $19.95
TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

Check Out Our Tire Prices
Most major credit cards accepted.
Owners: Richard Moore &amp; Ed Chaney .,..,"

clothrng, toys, &amp; more.

•

large yard sate. August 2- 8. Jots
of baby c lot hes 0·24 mon th s.
men's, women's. baby lurniii!He,
Joys &amp; m1sc .. tur n on Bald~ntl b
Ad, 1 1/2 mile on lett lr om ~r
lland, rnlo. ca N6 14·843·,5135. •

Pl. Pleasant :
&amp; VIcinity
Basement Sale. 2321 Mt Vernon
Thur Aug 10. 7am·?
~

80

Public Sale
and Auction

A1ck Pearson Auchon Company.
lull umc auctroneer, co mpl'ttte
auction
service .
LlcenJed
•e s,Ohio &amp; West Virg inia . 304773·5785 01304-77J.544 7.

Country Naturals
Gifts &amp;
.Accessories

90

Wanted to Buy :

Cle an

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

La te

Mod el Cars • Or

Trucks,. 1987 f.Aodels Or New er,
Smit h Buick Ponti~c, 1900 E~st­
ern Avenue, Galhpq_lrs.

Decorated stonewar~. wall ltle·
phones, old lamps, old thermDI'fl8·
ters, old clocks , antrque furn imre.
Riverine Antiques . Russ
owner. 614 -992 · 2526 . We uy
estates.

Mot'"·

Bailey Run Rd.

Happy
Birthday
Robyn!

1 p.m. to?
All Legal12 g~.
In Memory

Love, Mom

Group will meet
· Friday, Aug . 11 at

7 p.m .

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

-· ..

be.
around you,

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

For more information
· In

Compliance·

with

Section 5705.27 ol the Ohio
Rlvlood Code, the Melgo
County Budget Commloolon
will hold public hearlnga on

tho 1996 budgoto ol all
town1hlp1, corporations
and all other political

oubdlvlolono. The Budgot
Commloolon will rrreol on
August 16, 1995, baglnnlng
at 10:00 A.M. In the
Auditor' a 0111 ce of tho
Melga County COurthou1e.

Molgo County Budget
Com million

Nancy Parker Campbell

-

(8) 8 1lc

Howard Frank

John Lentoo

And whlspered"Come
home with me."
With tearful eyes we
watched you suffer,And watched- you fade '"'
away,
Aflhough we loved
you dearly,
·
We could nol make
you stay.
heart
A golden
stopped beating,
A determined splrfl
was at rest,
God broke our hearts
lo prove to us
That He only t~kea the
best.
THE CHILDREN AND
GRANDCHILDREN

~

:

... -.

~ -

·. •·

..

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

So He put His arms

·

Simpson , MD will be
the featured speaker.

Certified Air Conditioning Service
Now Available F.or Trucks
of Any Size.
Auto, Farm &amp; Industrial
Equipment
Freon Reclaiming and Recycling
Available
CARMICHAEL'S fARM &amp; LAWN
Phone: 614-446·2412 or

All Ya rd Sa tes Must Be Pai4 In
Mvance. Deadline : 1:OOpm .the
day before lhe ad IS to run, Sun day edrlloii 1:OOpm Frrliay, Man·
day edll•on l O:OOa.m Satur&lt;lay.:

Legion Farm

Disorder Support

Holzer Health HotliFJe
' at 1-B00-46,·5255

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

grounds on Crew A!1 ., waterlled ,

"Your Parts or Ours"

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
ALLEN DILL SR.
I
ON HIS 89TH
BIRTHDAY
God saw thai you
were getting tired,
And a cure was not lo

,

Movmg Sale : Dresser With Mirror, Nrghl$1and, Desk /Chair, lpne
Roctrner. Exercise Ma chrne,
Mower Dump Cart. Stroller, 614&lt;'141 · 064 1 leave Message.

7-13-95

Attention Deficit

call the

. SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Advance DE ADLINE : 2:oo ' p_m
the day betore the ad rs to run
Sunday ed11ron · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edilron · 10 :00 a.m. Saturday.
:

Shooting match

The Holzer
Medice~l Center

in the Frer1ch
500 Room . Richard B.

5. Clean &amp; check ftlter system
6. Chec k belts
7. Chec k electri c..::JI system
B. Repl ace filter bag

4 CIP&lt;m nil mov tng pmts
Toke the pain out ol
painting. Let us do lt lor
All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts ·
you. Very reseonable.
One year warra nty on work performed.
Free Estimates
Valid on all nation ally adverti sed brands
Before 6 p.m. leave
We service most makes &amp; models.
message.
After&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180 ,.._ . : 368 W Main St., Rtpley, \fN
304·372·6 144

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Sojl, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
.

Spec tal offer tncludes
1 Clean motor
2 Gr£:&gt;&lt;L;P roll er bear1ngs
3. ·CIPan &amp; check agt!ator

Interior &amp;
Exterior

HAULING

.

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special ·

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

IUmastona Low Rates)

'

Joe N. Say~

110

BULLETIN BOARD
1 0
6° column inch weekdays
18°0 co.lumn inch Sunday

~

Umestane &amp; Glllvel,
Septi1 Systems, Trader &amp;
Hause Sites.
·•
Reasonable Rates

.

Get Your Message Across
With A.Dally Sentinel

..

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
.
.

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

- . -

J~~~~~~!~!!~ti~.I
MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.

8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
"ooflng, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows,·Garagea.
Free Eotlmoteo
1/tlftfn

I

.•
~

110

Help Wanted

Avon -Earn SB · $15 IHr. FI/U 1
. Part·Time, No

Door To Doot,

ADDITIONAL &lt;;COME

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding, Concrete,
Room Additions, Etc.
(E ~ 4) 388·9865
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, OH 456 t 4

H&amp;H SAWMILL
PorlabiQ
Bandsaw Mill
32124Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles ·
614-742-2193
61211 mo .

Gen.

efits. 1 · 000·8~7 &lt;18&lt;10, tnd tn.p. •
·:

DELIVERY DAIVER
'.
Par! ·T1me Fenollgas. A leade[-ln
The Propa'n e Gas lndus1r y,. Is
Soekrng Resrdent1a1 Bulk OetiW:ry '
Onvers To Work A Part~ Titne

Var1able Schedule We N~ed
People Who Are Neat. Courteot~s
And· Fnjoy Meettng And Servirlg
The Publl~. Excellent Opportunio/
For Someone Looking For Acfdt·
!ronal lncme Or Seasonal W~ .
To Oual ily, You MuSt Ha11e ·Or
Obtain A. COt Dr1~ers Ucense
Wtlh HBzardous Materia l • Endorsement. App ry Or Send Re·
sumo To ·
• FERRELtGAS
8265 Stato Rou1e 588
GallipoliS, OhiO •56l1
Ann ·· PI Pteasan1. Postal Po4ru .
!tons ava1table Permanent fulltirr)e
for clerks/soners . Full benetna.
For eum date . applicauon a~
salary mfo : 708 · 264 · 1600 ext
3670, Sam to Bpm.
AVON

I All Aroas ! Shrrtey

,Spears. 304-675-t429.

�•

Tuesday, August 8, ·1995
Pa'ge 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,August8,1995 -

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9 .

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

3 Bed1ooms 14117 0 Uke New
Stove Relr ge rator S300rMo ...
Depos rt Co lum bus 6 14 8 78

AV:GN EARN $$$ at ho me llt
w01k All areas 304 88 2 2645 1
SOt !192 6356 INDrR[ P

5532

A a~ s 1 ~r needed on Wolfe Per~

hed Tra ter Depo st! Re
q w ed No Pets Call Alter 6 P M
614 256 1304 St At 7 South

540 Miscellaneous

B
1

N•ce three bedroo m mob le home
n M ddlepor! centra l atr r'1Q pets
&amp;14 992 5858

1 table saw $35 Craftsman 1/
4 she et sa nder $10 Craftsman
11 0 pc ratchet set $40 Two
t 300wau electrtc heaters S5ea
F1sher Pnce booster car sea t
$10 Craftsman 318 drt ll wt case
$20 30ol 675-3718

n c\, days SGStw~ 61 4 992 4103

Sliter nee ded Sa tvrdil¥5

amSOOprn 6149923891 al

ter ~Scm

Be~t~l ltlan wanted 304 675 1960
or 304 675 5845

Three bedroom tr a ler cem ra l atr
rove and ret ngerator no pet s I
Depo sJt and reterences req wred
"6 14 992 22 72

Co~ puler Users Neeoed Wor "
Ow n Ho ur s 20K SOK /Year 24

Wanted boarde r to pay 112 on
rent and ut tlt lles 14• 70 tra ter
own bed and bath country semng
n Pomeroy prefer smoker 6t4

Hrs 714 249- 7469 En 1173

'

Da 'Y Farm M1l k. er And Herd s

men

70

80

Co w5

Flat s

992 7093

Slnnch on Ba rr- Cal l Even ng s

614 245-504 7

430 Farms for Rent

Ded1tated Female Alto And Ma e
Bartone Needed Fo r M 0 R Gos
pe1 Grou p Call Chuc ~ 6 14 441
0469 Leave MessaQe

"The problern w1th th1s place 1s 11s only
beach house dunng low tide'

drr ~ers

F anm st1 c Sa rn s Now HH1n g L1
ce n se d Cosme tologi st Guar
an,te ed Wages Pa 1d Vacat o ns
6 14 446 7267
Hel p Needed On Da ry Far m Du
ttes Inc ude Mt ~ tn g Feed mg
Cl e anr ng Ca ll Andy Adam s At
614 379 2744
Ja m the long term he al th car o
frel d Seet&lt;.mg luI t me actrv ty d1
rl! ctor Pont Pleasant Nursmg &amp;
Rehabtlttalton Ce nt er ( formerly
Carehaven) Sta\e Route 62 Ao
ute 1 BoK 326 Po mt Pleasant
WV 25550 304 675 3005 A
G tenmar~ Assoctates Fac lr ty

EOE
Lawn ma tntenance
6 14 992 73)3

part t•me

Ma tur e Day Sh It Help For Grtll &amp;
fr ont L IJe 614 446 - 3278 Or
P c k Up App tt cat ton At Oatrv
Que en 169 Upper Rtver Road
Gall pohs
Need a lull I me babySttler tn the
Sttll er svtl e Portland area wh1le I
work day sh It start ng the mtddle
of August ch1d 1s rwo years old
pea se call 614 843 5135 al ter
6pm
Needed Baoysll!er For One Chtld
2 3 Days Week In Our Home
6 14 4.1\ 6 6958
No b per tence Neces-sary! $500
lo $9 00 Wee~ly / Potent tal Pro
coss ng Mortgage Aofu nds Own
Hours Call (909) 715 2300 E - t
7132 (24 Hours)
Ofltce Ass sta nt Wanted Ouatt
lie d Ca nd rdates Must Pos sess
0 f gam zat ton Telephon-e E tr
queue And Secreran at E xpert
tlnce In ter ested Persons Cal
61 4 569 417 \ For Appltcanon
Pa rt T me S~rvtce Tech Prefer
E•1xmenced But W II Tram A Self
Mot vaung Person Send Resume
To IJtg Boys Wate r Toys 4249
No l! h Stattt Route 7 Chesh re
Oh o 45620

180

EOE
WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR Poslt tons Ava y
able To Teatti Com muntty And
Pe rso nal Skt ll s To An Ad u t Wtth
Le a rntng ltmttalt€-ms In Metgs
C ount~ HOURS ( 1 ) 32 Hrs IWk
(l ve In) a AM Sat Thru BA M
Mon seep Over Req Ut red 2 Hr
We ekly Staff Meet ng Or As
Ot herw se Screduled 1/acatton I
Stck Be nett ts
(2) 1B Hr s IWk 11 AM
7 PM
Sa t / Su n 2 Hr Weekly Stall
Mo
ot ng
Or
As IS
Otherw
se
Scheduled
Vaca tton
ck Bl!ne
l t!S HtQh School Degree \/a d

for Sale
Wtll Babys tt In fant Or Toddler In
M~ Home Rodney Area Refer
erc es 614 245 5887
Wtrt clo all types masonary work
bfiC I\ block sto ne Free estr
mates 304 773 6021
W do babystUtng rn my ho me
reasonable rates II ex ble hours
close 10 school 304 675 2784

W II Do In teno r Extt:mor Pamtmg
Fleasonable Rates bpenenced
References Fo r Free Est•mates
Ca I 614 245-5755

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bu!.l
ness wtth people vou know and
OT ro send mone~ through the
ma il unttl you have mvesttgated
rna offer ng
Establtshed Ballcart:t Sho p For
Sale ln Galhpot s 614 446 8554
Loca l 1/endmg Route For Salet
New Wave Snack ! Soda Ma
ch nes Ca ll Today I 1 BOO 350

8363

230

Professional
Services

T &amp; M Garage 202 2nd St Ma
son Moved to thiS new local on
SOHV lor any tncon~emence We
are now open for bustness 304
773 6018

REAL ESTATE

120

Situations

Wanted
Auentton Wooung Parents al!er
school ch ld tare M1ddlcpon
area wtll ptck up chtld provtdc
snacks all forl$5 a day 614 992
6926
'

180

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Servtce Complete 1ree
care 20yrs ex p &amp; tnsu red free
esltmates 614 441 1191 or 1
BOO 508- 888 7
Care For The Elderly In Gall polls
611\ 1\t\t 0713
General Ma1ntenance Pamhng
Yard Work Wtndows Washed
G uucrs Cleaned Ltght Hauling
Commeru;;al Restden ttal Steve
6 t4 446 8001

All real estate adverttsmg n
this newspaper IS subJect to
the Federal Fa r Housmg Act
of 1968 whtch makes it illegal
to advertise "any preference
limitation or dlscnmrnatton
based on race color rei g10n
se11 familial statu s or na110na1
ongln or any lntentton to
make any such pref erence
ltmltatlon Of drscnmtnalton •
This newspap er wrll not
knowlmgly accept
advertisements for real estate
whtch ISm violation o f the taw
Ourreaoersarehereby
tnlormed that all dwellings
advertised n this newspaper
areavatlabl eonanequal
opportunity baSis

~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hou se Ne I Ave nue
614 446 1904

2bcdroom wtth basement close
to schools $1-4 500 Ca I 304
67 5 662 1
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Heat Pump
Gas Furnace 1 Acre, Garage
Addtson Area Prtce Reduced To
$59 000 614 367 72B7

3 Bedcooms Bath &amp; 112 L.v ng
Room Fa m ly Room FtntsMed
Basement CA In Ground Pool
614 446 4895 Please Leave
Message
3 4bedroom 21ull baths custo m
kt tchcn full basement, level lot tn
Galhpol s Ferry 304 675 1252
3bedroom 2bath Ranch sectton
al fireplace 12x16 deck 1 11
2lots Ptne Ave Mea-dowbrook
304 675 t 294
House And lot Low Down Pay
ment Easy Terms 3 B~rooms 1
Bath located Near E'tYtngto n f
Altce Road Area Call 1 BOD 448
6909 Ask For t.t anhcw

lovely Brtck Rancher 3 Acres
Wooded Lot Near G reen Elem
School " Bedrooms 2 Baths
Br ck Fueplace In LR Full Base
Geor ges Portable Sawm11t don 1 ment W th Famil~ Rec Storage
haul your logs 10 the mtll JUSt call Room Over 3 100 Sq Ft l vtng
304 67S..195 7
Space 2 Ca r Garage Beau!lful
landscape For Pr vacy lngr0und
Pa nttng lntertor ~ Extenor Ouah
Pool Wtth Deck large Storage
ty Work 25 Years Exper~ence
Bulldtng$127000 614 4461025
6t4 44t 0702
Pr cad cheap 10 se ltl e estate 5
Pro less Otla l Tree Ser11tce Com
room one story house 2 bed
p ete Tree Care Bucket Truck rooms bath carport pa 110 ba so
Serv1ce 50 Ft Reach Stump Ae
ment out of all flood waters 11ery
moval
Free Esttmatesl In
good location &amp; nerghborhood lo
surance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
caled at 632 Grant St Middleport
1ce Call And Savel No Tree Too Oh o $25 000 614 992 7047
Btg Or Toe &amp;malt~ I i~well Ohto a14-742 2550 or 614 384-6364

H14 J88-ilflol3, Sun

·'1110

Valley HU,.ery

Stho~

....,.,::le9m

Ch ldcaco M-1'
2 K YoUnt Sdtaof
Summer 3 Days per
mum 614-446 3657

WJII Babystt Nonsmoker Refer
ences Monday Frtday Days Ex
penenced l 614-446 89t0
We do vm~l sidtng roofmg mtert
or and e.~~:teriOf' parnt1ng at very al
fordable Pf'IC&amp;S 614 992 5a59

1971 Fr eedom 12x65 Best olter
or land Co nt ract a~a ll ame 304
675 8872 between 9am 4pm
please eave message
1982 Clayton t4x60 2bedroom
new carpet aU etect rtc atr
$7 500 1917 Homene 12x56
2bedroom gas good condtlton
$4 900 304 67S..7346
1984 Shultz 24x60 Modular
Completely Remodeled New Root
New Furnace &amp; Heat Pump
$20 000 614 446 7767
1987 Clayton 14x70 2 Bedrooms
2 Bath.s CA Total Electm lm
maculate Two Ntce To Descrtbe
Wtl Mollel614 446 6661
2bedroom trailer ready ro move
tn $500 Must be moved 304
675 3415
Good Used 3 Bedroom Tra ter
$5 000 614 245--9565 E11emngs

440

Merchandise

o·

!10M.EUSIOS "THAT WJJ
~:;

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 000 Miles $6 000 Can Be
Seen Ai Gallipolis Daily Tnbune
825 Thtrd A11enue Ga lltpol ts

!JrcRCI~SR

18 Cu Ft Chest Freezer Good
$125 Used Refngerator $65

AFTER 6 PM 614 379-2720

740

18" .space saver Kenmo re dtsh
washw $40 304 675 7545

• 8 4

• A98752
•K
SOUTH
•K Q 5 42
• 6 4
• Q3
•Q J 10 4

Motorcycles

1987 Vulcan 750 19 000 M les
$2 500 614-446 4648

1992

Gravel/ ndtng mower
40~deck. very little use 304 882

New 1996 14x70 tnc ludes skrrt
tng steps blocks one year
ho meowners msurance and stlr:
months FREE lot rent Only $1025
down and $207 17 per month Call

~we. rustic: ranc: tf' style 3 or 4
tltedroomt two baths full fmtsh9d
ba8ement 25x27 lam1ly room
large stone fireplace large deck
three outbulldrngs on approx 6 7
atres three miles from Mtne 31
price $89 900 call 614 742 2228
for appotntmenl
Throo bedroom two balt1 LR FR
basement. while alumtnum stdmg
garage butl dmg 1 5 acrl:is
Ractne bho In town by Methodtst

Church $45 000 614 949·2709

1 Bedroom Apartment In Galtpo
hs $250/Mo • Deposit Rcferenc
es 6t4-446 7130

AKC Golden Retnever Ready To
Go By August 1st $1 50 Shots/
Wormed 614 379 ;:'961

1 BedrOom Garage Apart(flent
References Large Kttcnen L111 ng
Room large Bedroom Loca ted
RotJte 7 614 446- 2606
2 Bedroom Apartment Trash
Water Sewage Patd S2951Mo +
Depost! 614 446 2481
Fu r ntshed Apart ment 2 Bed
rooms 920 Fo unh Avenue Galli
poli $29 51 Mo UtlttteS Pad 6t4
446 4416 Alter 7 PM
2bdrm aprs Total electnc ap
pltances furnished laundry room
factllltes close lo sthocl m town
Applrta ttons ava1lable at Village
Green Apts #4 9 or call614 992
3711 EOH
2Rooms Plus Bath Lafayelte
Mall No Ktlchont All I:Jt hues pat d
175 00 Month Depost t Reqwred

BEAUTIFUL APARTM E NTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

I 800 837 3238

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $226 to $29 t Walk to shop
&amp; mov.1es Call 614 446 2568
Equal Houstng Oppottuntty

Pnce Buste r I New 14 .1170 2 or
3br On y $995 dowr $1 951month
Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Home s Nttro WV 304
755

Country S•de Apartments La rge
2 BedJooms 1 Balh Water Sew
age G;ubage Inc luded WID
Hook Up $360/Mo Depostl Re
qUifed 51 3 922-0294

330

Furntshed Apt 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
All Uttllltes Pad $250/Month 919
Second A~e 614 446l3945

sees

Farms for Sale

45 Acres Water Eleclrtc Seprc
Cable Telephone No Restrcttons
Ac e T.a Boat launctng Into Rae
coon 8 Miles South Of Ga lrpolis
$14 000 614 446- 252B
55 Acres 01 land Wlth 28x32
Bwldtng On Clay Chapel Road 1
800 287 6308 61 4 446-6:xl8
1 39 Acres Along The Ohto Aver
Along The Dam Camprng Ftsh
mg $12 ooo, 614 446-2528

5 Acres For $t2 000 located
Between V1nton &amp; R1o Grande
SailOr Road 614 388-9737

Four lots near Rac tne approx 1
112 acres each starttng a! $5000
call614949 2025
REMOTE beautilul rtdge top
land 3 mt es south of Carpenter
Oh o Mt Unron Rd Four 7 acre
parcels one 9 acre parcel Prtc
es range from $7066 to $83&lt;~7
Owne r lrnanc ng Ca ll for good
map 614 593 854 5
Scen1c Va 1ey Apple Grove
beautiful 2ac lots publtc water
Clyde &amp;wen Jr 304 576 2336

RENTALS
41 0 Houses for Rent
3bedroom house at 22 19 ltncoln
A~e 304 675-130 1
Four bedroom part furn shed
HUD approved no pets referenc
es $375 rent call 614 992 6886
alter 6pm
Ntce th re e bedroom house tn
Mtddlepo rt no pets 614 992
5858
Small HolJ SO 2 Decks Overlook
tng Raccoon Shelt(ilr House
large Dock No Pets $300/ Mo
6142566 11 2
Two or three bedroom house tn
Rutland depostt and refertnces
reqwed no pets 614 742 2661
Unfur n she d 2 bedroom house
n1ce &amp; clean no tn!11de pets ret
erences requtred $200 depos1t
$275 a rronth rent 614 992 3090

420 ·Mobile Homes
for Rent
12x65 2 bedroom $200/mo wa
tor me uded $200 dep 614 992

3486

12x65 2bedroom 1 bath on At 2
Crab Creek 2 Hor se l ck Rd
$300 rmo Depos t &amp; references
304 369 644 7
3 Bedrooms 14K70 Almost Newl

Co ra Mtll Road Near Cor a Qn
Raccoo n Creek Ntce Farm 1/tew
$300/ Mo Mr Wood Cot 614
878 5532
2bedroo m Famtly Pr de Tra1le r
Park $200 /mo plus damage de
post! &amp; ullltltes Re ferences re
qutred 304 576 2373
200droom fu rniShed parl!a l uult
t1es pa1d $100 depos t 304 675
6512
2bedroom washer/ dryer ac all
eleclfiC no pets Mason WV

304 773 5751

2b d
y
D
e room ou pay utltttes e

I ::=.:.:No:.r&gt;&lt;::..:.:~::.3:.:0:.:4.:6:.:75:_:2~53::5::_·_

Pass

Furmshed Etftctency Share Bath
$19 5fMo Utthtres 'Patd 607 Sec
ond Galhpohs 614 446 4416 AI
ter 7 PM
~ac1ous livtng 1 and 2 bedroom

apa rtments atl/tlla{le Manor and
Rtvers tde Apartments m Mtddle
port From $232$355 Call 614
g92 5859 Equal Hou stng Oppor
tuntttes
Modern 1 Bed room Apartment
614 446 0390
Ntce 2 Bedrooms 4 112 M1t es
From Galltpol s Water Stov e Re
fngerat or Furn sr'!ed No Pets
$250!Mc 614-446--8038
Stonewood Apartments now rent
tng one bedrogm all electr c for
elderly and dtsabthty FmHA sub
stdtzed Equal Hou s ng 6 14 992

Bhp go cart 4 wheeler ttres 1 11
2yrs old great shape S600 30-4
675 1575
Concrete &amp; PlastiC:: Sepuc Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallon~ Ron
Evans Enrerpnses JacksOn OH
1 800 537 9528
Daybed portable S nger sew ng
machtne bab ~ cradle for more
mlormatton call 614 949 3308 an
ytme
Electnc Countertop Range Vent
less Range Hood Cetltng light
F1xture Avocado Color Afte r 3
PM 614 446 6278
Electnc
Scooters
Sta trway
Bowman
72B3

Wheelchatrs Electnc
New/Used Scooter ltfts
Elevato rs Ltf t Chatrs
s Homecare 614 446

Btrd s Iguanas Tara ntulas mtce
Ftsh Tank &amp; Pet Shop 2413
Jackson Ave Potnt Pleasant

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaued New &amp; Rebu tlt In Stock
Call Ron Evans· 1 000 537 9526
JI/C 6 DtsC CD Player Wtth
W1red Remote $31)0 61-4 388

9109
New wheelcharr call Rev Marga
ret Rob nson at 614 992 2463

Sleeptng rooms wtlh cook lf 9
Also trailer space on rr~er All
hook ups Call aiJer 2 00 p m
304 773-5651 Mason WV

MERCHANDISE
510

Household
Goods

Appltances
Re c ond lliO ned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relr
g ra 1ors 90 Dav Guarante'e
French C t ~ Uaytag
t 4 448
7795

e

Carpot &amp; 1/myt In Stock $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60. Patterns 01 l&lt;nchen Car
pet In Stock Over 35 Patterns
V.nyl In Stock Mol on an Carpets
614 446 7444
Country Furn tture Furnt!ure lor
E~rv Room 6m1 At 2 North Pt
Pleasant ~4 675 6820

GOOD USED

I 800 499 3499
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complele home !urn st11ngs
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 p111es our Bulavilte Ptke
Free Oeltvery
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St Galhpol ts New &amp; Usod
lurntture heaters Western &amp;
Work boots 614 446 3,59

675 4084
Orlando 4 Hotel Ntghts Near Ots
ney Use Anyt tme Patd $300 Sell
$99 6t4 470 2696
01Jtdoor propane deep fryer nev
er u.sed $45 304 675 6416 or
304 773-6074
Queen wate rbed crtb mattress
stroller car seat 614 949 2393
Relr~ gerators Stoves Washers
And D ryer s A I Recond !toned
And Gaur anteedl $100 And Up,
Wtll Deltver 6 14 669 8441

Save on ktds school 1eans new
31$10 l ues Wed &amp; Thurs onlv
Peggy ~2 Butternut

AppharH:es Great Deals On
Cash And Carry I RENT 2 OWN
And l ay~;~w;:~y Also A'.'atlable
Free Delivery Wnhtn 25 Miles

I

Three female and one male Jack
Russell tamers $250/ea 614

742 2050
Whtte Mate Husky Pure Umegts
ter&amp;d Rare Long Hatr t 1 Months
Loves Ktds $60 614 446--8627

570

Musical
Instruments

1 Year Old Bundy Clar net For
Sale Bought New Patd $450 In
Mtnt Cond1Don 614 245 9099

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Canntng tomatoes $3 a bushel
ptck your own bnng contarners
Eugene Davts Farm Rowe Ad
Racrne 6t4 247 3263
Canntng tomatoes $4 bushe l
brrng
conta tners
Me rs.hall
Adams letart Falls 614 247

2055

Septtc Tank Jet Aoratton Motors
N ew &amp; RebUilt !Installed Call
Johns John 614 446 4782

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Uprtght Ron Evans Enlerpnses
Jackson OhiO 1 BOO 537 9528

Comtnerctal Home units h om
$ 199 Buy FACTORY DIRE CT
and SAVE t Call TODAY lor NEW
FREE coi~H catal og 1 800 -462
9197
Tandy 1000 TL/2 Computer Two
Mo nt tors 1 VGA t CGA Color
Pr nter (Oat Matm} 24 Otn E•tra
Soltware Also Brand New BroP"ter
Model 660 Fax Machme (Brand
N ew} Compl.lter Desk Furntture
A I Th s For Only $800 614 988
2133 leave Message 11 No An

,.,.,

-'------~---- 1

Whtto Campe rtop P1~;k Up
614 446 4141 Aft er 6 00
Weekends

550

Building
Supplies

Block brtck sewer p pes wtnd
ows lintels etc Claude Wtnters
Rto Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pst Groomtng Fea
tur ng Hydro Bath Julte Webb
Calt6 t4 446 0231
2 AI&lt;C regtstered mafe Shrh tzu
pupptes born 6121195 614 742

1984 Renault Encore 2 Door
Hatch 4 Spd Low Miles $725
614 379-2645

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
1947 John Deere Model A WJ!h
Front End Loader New Ttres Ex
cellent Condtllon $3 500 1950
John Deere Model A Completely
Rebutlt New Pant E•cellent Con
dltton $3 350 614 643-2300 8-4
614 643 2916 After 6 PM
9N Foret Tractor $ 1 995 B N Ford
$2 395 640 ford $3 295 960
Ford Dtesel Power Steenng

1985 Old s Cullass 4 Door Aura
PS Atr PB Crutse Mags Look s
Runs Great! $1 500 OBO 614

Two 9 50x16 51 res brand new
Sentry Load Range D $150 304
675 6416 or 304 773 6074

1987 Cadtllac Sevttle lea ther rna
roon all power opttons eKcellent
condttiOn 614 992 3270
1988 Chevy Beretta 2 0 a~r
standard 85 OOOmt Make offer
304 773 5155 or 304 773 9107
after 5pm
1968 Tbird 38l new patnt tmted
w ndows exc cond 304 B 75

2776
1992 Chrysler F1fth A11enue Ex
cellent Cond•t ton Grey Wt!h Dark
Grey lntert or 1'~" 0wner 76 000
Miles 614 446 6754
1992 Ply mouth Laser 41 000
mtles e•cellenl condition great
gum lea ge S8600 614 992
6725

Au etton 0 H Mtlttnzl e- AQfiCUf
ture Center A ugusl 12 1995
10 00 AM
6 5 Tye No Ttl!
Dnll Ourallute No Ttll Coulters
Do uble 01sk Ope ners 2·-13·
Pres!;~ Wheel § Oeprh Bands a·
Row Spacmg Acre Counter Le
gume And Coot Season Gram
Boxes $3 500 Mrntmum B d Gal
lla SWCD 614 446 868 7
Dtscoun l fa rm tractor parts; lor
Masse~ Ford
IH &amp; others
Siders Equ tpment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 BOO
277 3917
FFur Specta l Buy 1 cham saw
cham get 1 tree Stder s Equ tp
ment Henderson
Massey Ferguson 245 Dtesel
New Holland Round Baler Mas
sey Ferguson 19 Baler 614 367

7576

3 Chow pupp es lor sale born

630

Livestock

gende $550 304 895-3703

810

TOOO

~DEMNL

Phtlhp Alder's book, Get SmarteT
at Bndge ' ts avatlabte , auto
graphed upon request, for $14 95
from P 0 Box 169 Roslyn Hts NY

A F'RIX:&gt;R.N-'1 7
FlA.y A C:NIIE .,..

Fll£

THAN l THOI.B1Ti

11577 0169

by Luis Campos
Celeb 1y C pllt! c1yp1oqrams are createo I om Quolauons b~ lamous people pasl and present
Eac h ktlltJr rn Ihe c phur S!Ht\ds lor anotnor roctav s clue 0 eq~als W

R NV G

G W t

VSHYIVWCS

H L N F G

LNNU

CAVGJFYGCNA

C G , '

DCGW

BFXXIJ
' SOLUTION
PREVIOUS
(Golfer) Peler Jacobsen

B H YG

CRSNJGHAG

HA

IH J G W
ZCZA

G

Y N R t

LFYURCAVGIJ

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The most tmportant c lub 1n the bag ts patience • -

'~!:t~~, S©\\~lA-&lt;Zt-trs·
idlted 11., CLAY

WDID
IAMT

POU.AN

0

Sleor ronge letters of
fotJr scmmhled words
low to form f our words

r
•

~A...--R'Tc__,E
_R'"'T"'--IIm::::
• "'
5

1

Y
At a very young age I was
taught to help others Grampa
sa1d Th e w ork of the world

1 I I

L..L.....l.- 1..-L._l.,
..-N_Y_L_P_E_T---.I can t wa1t to be done by
• • • ·--- people

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1.

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Co mple te the chvd.le quoted
by ldlrng tn the mrn•nw words
you develop from srep No 3 below

.:\PRINT NUMBERED lfll fRS I
'f:1 IN THE SE SQUARES

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Wholly· Yours- W/10op ·Behalf · POWER

STRKEA

Homa
Improvements

ITUESDAY

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF lNG

C&amp;C General Ho me Matn
tenence Patmtng vmy l st dtng
carpentry doors wtndows baths
mobtle home repatr and more For
free esttmate call Chat 614 992

6323

t993 S tO Bla ze r 4x4 Ta hoe
Package 26 000 Mrles Automat
1c
Scarlet 1G rey
Loaded l
$17000 614 44 1-t717

Ron s TV Ser vtce spectallztng m
Zen th also serv c1ng most other
brands House calls t 800 797
0015 WI/ 'JtJ4 576 2398

1995 F 150 Super Cab 6Ft Bed
7 500 M les Automattc Transmls
s1on PS PB AC CC TW Bedltner 614-446 2072

820

Plumbing
Heating

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps A r Cond1110n1ng II
You Don t Call Us We Both Lo se I
Free Esttmates 1 BOO 287 5308
614 446-6308 W.J 002945
Restdenttal or commerctal w r ng
new servtce or reparrs Master lt
censed electnctan Rideno ur
Elec tncal WV000306 304 675

1786

' 1

year ahead by ma1hng $2 and SASE lo
Ash o ·Graph c/o thts newspaper P 0

Box 4465 New York NY J.l)163 Make

m a good cycle lor laun Ching untque
endeavors

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept 22) ThiS could be

PISCES (Feb 2Q.March 20) Somelh1ng

.one of th ose unusual days when you
accomp ltsh far more than you anttCtpated
because everythtng falls 1nto place so

unusual mtght develop today gtvtng you
a posstbiltty to fulftll a s uppressed ambt
t•on You mustnrt dawdle tf a wtndow of

easrly

opportunl1y opens
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) Try lo asso

too wtse fo le t tmpul stve urge s govern
ac tmn s but today thai whtch you do
tmpromptu mtghtlurn out best

SCORPIO (Oct 24·NOY 22) You are

Wednesday Aug 9 1995
l n the year ahead your ftnanc ta l
prospects wtll probably have mare u p s
than down s Negattve tre nds could be
self tnduced so avotd extravagance or
wastefulness

you have somethtng worthwhtle to offer
start looktng for-o morket today You

sure to slate your zodtac stgn

UBRA (Sept 23·0Ct 23) Usually 11 1sn I

&amp;

Freeman s Hea1mg And Cooling
InstallatiOn And Serv1ce EPA
Certtfted Aestdenllal Commercl81
6t-t 256 1611

840

I

ASTRO-GRAPH

DRYWALL

A tavonte leacher taught me the differences between
reform and revo lut1on Reform ' she sa1d, "corrects
abuse wh1le revolution transfers the POWER

HIGH

7795

Earl &amp; Home Matntenance vmyl
srdtng rooftng e•tertor patnttng
power washmg Free Estrmates
6 14 992 445 t 01614 992 4232

Dohkey 1yr old female .extremey

TO
GET Tl1t KAN6 Of

,.. [1-\ 1RYIN0 TO TURN IT 0'-\ I

7

SERVICES

1992 GMC 112 ton Sterra Vonec
'W 6 automattc AIC Leer hydrau
ltc bed cover 44 500 miles
StO 500 614 992 6061

198 7 GMC 3t4 Ton Van 6 2 Ote
set Very Good Con dition &amp; Very
Dependable $3 950 514 256
1514

floa?£ ~ FFIClJLT

'I

Pop Up Camper Sleeps 8 Awn
mg AC 3 Way Relrtgerator
$4 500 614 446 1294

5332

&amp; 4·WDs

WJ..LY 7 lo.IAAT ~ YOJ mlt:\6

CELEBRITY CIPHER

e Rrverlront one acre flat
water sept c electrtclly 1Ox 50
mob le home n.ar up $21 500/otr
er 304 345 6360

Hang hn•sh repair""'
Cetltngs rexrured plaster repa1r
Call Tom 304 675 4t86 20 years
expenente

vans

•

...

,

Arbuc~

Btll Omck s Home Improvements
addnrons remod el•ng roohng
s drng plumbmg etc Insured call
Btll Omck 614 992 5183

730

lt\1') t-I(W C&lt;»\PUTEJ&lt;.I5 EVEN

1990 V kmg pop up sprmg load
ed arms 2 burner ~sJove smk atf
sleeps 6 hgh twe ghl easy to pull
very ntce $2 200 304-675 2949

Excellent condtt1on no rust 1985
Renault Encore 3door hatchback
Sspd ac am lm casse tte ra dtO'
126 OOOmr $995 Call 304 6 75
1794 after 5pm

For Sate Or Trade 1986 Ntnan
P~k Up 4 Cyl nde• 5 Speed AMI
FM Cassette Topper Bed Cover
CB New Ttres &amp; Wheels Ver~
Dependable $ 2 BOO 614 256BBti)

'I

sp ecu l ,lltvc

West led the d1amond mghl Although
th1s had all th e aura or a Si ngle ton
South dec1ded he couldn t handle a 5 1
d1amond spht Also maybe West was
making a clever lead away frQm the
kmg So Soul~ played low from th e
dummy After "m nm g w1th th e kmg
East return ed a d1amond So uth
br eathmg a Silent Sigh of relief wht•n
West follow ed su1t
Assummg East had t he d1amond
Jack, South saw 12 tncks f1 vc spa de
Winners m hand three d1amond tncks
two club ruffs 1n the dummy and two
hearts - yes that fin esse would have
t~ work too
South ruffed a club m the dummy
cashed th e spade ace and pl ayed a
spade to h1s king notmg that West d1 s
carded a club The second club ruff 10
the dummy was followed by the d1a
mond ace, on wh1ch South threw a club
and the d1amond 10 cover ed and
ruffed South drew East's last trump
played a heart to the qu ee n and
cla1med when the finesse succeeded
North·South moved on to the next
stage, but their luck ran out as they
didn't make the team

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

$4500 81&lt;992 5532

90 mode t Chevy 112 ton S1tvera
do almost all opttons 138 000
very good cond1t1on $5 700 hrm
614 9924111

BORN LOSER
, .,.

Appttance Parts And Ser11 ce All
Nam e Brands 011er 25 Years Ex
1 pertence Al l Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 614 446

65 Musrang ~89 n1gh perfor
mance engt,ne auto sharp

13 Chlrota1s cross Ieeder calves
Average wetg hl 550 6001bs 6
steers 7 hetfers 304 675 2648 or

304 675 3308

790

UnconditiOnal ltleltme guarantee
local references furmshed Call
(614) 446 OB70 Or (614) 237
0488 Rogers Waterproofmg Es
tabltshed 1975

GMC 112ton 4WD 350 VB
iTverdn ... e cru1su air ttlf am1m casseue new hres brakes
eKhaUSI asktng $9B00 304 675

..

'

aoo

379 2645

1979 Ford F 150 New Moler New
Transmtss on
Good Shape
$1 BOO OBO Alter 4 PM 614
446-7252

SI\V f :t ~
tfAVE ONLY TWO ~
fAULTS--·~
EV~ItYT~II'IG :t fAY ~
ANI&gt; Wf,Vit-IINO
~
:t 1&gt;0.
§

327 Chev Engme $600 614 446
4141 Alter 6 00 Or Weekends

New gas ranks on e ton truck
wheels radtatQrs floor maTs etc
D &amp; R Auto Rrpley WV 304 372
3933 or 1
273 9329

'

PARAC14UTE5?

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1985 Honda Accord LX maroon
automattc atr condltlomng load
ed extra nrce $3850 614 9g2
2594 attar 6pm weekdays or any
ttme weekends

720 ll'ucks for Sale

~AVE

FllANC.IN~

Budget Transmt sstons U sed &amp;
Rebu h All Type s Accesstble To
Over 10 000 Transrntssto n Al so
Parts C lutch es &amp; Pressure
Plates 6 14 379 2935

1985 Butck La Sabre' Umtted Ed I
11on runs good look s good
Phone304-675 5106

1994 Plymouth Sundance 4 Door
12 000 M1tes Excellent Cond hon
A11 Cassella $9850 Wt ll Con
stder Parttal Tra de 614 256
6854 256 6329

3066

AKC German Shepherds 1st
snots &amp; Wormed Ready To Go I
614 446-7117

t97B CheCy car hauler factory
wedge bed ~ectnc wmch $2 600
304 578 2816

9 S W. tncltana
10 Type or
cotton
11 Read rapidly
17 Hurrlea
19 Marlcedwith
lndentallona
22 Thing In law
23 Jot24 Nago
25 Wann
28 Order ol
whale a
27 Pleauo
28 or polling
eventa
29 Fathera
31Chcoallng
35 lmlta1e
37 Fury
40 Eaoy (oJI
41 Equine lather
42 Endol-k
abbr
43 Thanka-44 Cruoh
46- noire
48 Vacation opot
49 Otymptc org
50 Grcoek letter

t8

ter, s howm g at least game va lu es m
spades WJlh a smgleton 01 votd m dubs

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

BaJa 17 bass boat 150 HP Mer
cury Black Max 0 B engtne ap..,
pro• 100 hrs otl tn)eCtton dual
fuel tanks ERgle dr ve on trailer
45 lb Truster trolling motor 55
Tu 1bo II prop and alum prop
Very mce M F 614 992 23t0
ask for Greg Alter 5pm or wee
kends :Kl4 882 3529

1984 Olds Delta 8B 350 V8 2dr
ntce bodv beau ttl ul mter1or
Proneer stereo $1 200 or trade
fot lrtJCk 304 576 2818

PEACHES RAYNOR 614 446
4807

TR'1' TO LAND IN
THE WATER.

1990 FourWtnns open bow sk t
boat 110 Ike new Wtth tratler all
accessor es 304 6 75 6813

760

7Age

8 Bumped Into

Pass

South made an even more

1985 Bomber t6 112 Fl Ftsh And
Sk1 115 HP f.toror EMcellent Condttton Must See To Apprec1ate
$6500 614 446 t155

1960 Z28 Camara rust lree runs
good 305 new l~res &amp; wheels
$2 000 304 675 1238

1252

Wtns or 5 hQrse rotot Iter 24~
$200 6t 499234t1

tered $10Q each 1 black male
one toco lemale •1 red female
614 992 2232

79 Cadtllac Coupe De Ville
n.eeds transmtsston rebutlt $300
79 Ford tr uc:k paris take all for
$300 614 7421306

Pass

bid but he had a sound reason He was
m the last round of a quallfymg event
for h1s counll)''s nat10nalteam needmg
a b1g wm to reach the f tna l s t age
Hence h1s shut my eyes and hope Jump
to SIX spades
[!lorth s lour club reb1d was a splm

24ft Sun Tracker Party Barge
$6000 080 614 742 2722

Autos for Sale

3985

$3 895 614 21MH1522

For sal9 water bed ht de a bCld
table lounge char btcycle
Items 1140 College Ad
cuse Ohto 614 992 6881
8pm

o

: : = = - - - - - - - - - - 1 1 9 9 3 Eagle V stan TSilo aded
Canntfl(l toma toes 1ncred ble Green &amp; Grey 39 000 M1les
$13 000 614 256-1618 614 256
corn 614 992 5866 or 614 992

SUNOUEST WOlFF TANNING
BEDS

.:.:::::..:::::::::.:_::~:.::::---'"' Apr d 13! h parents A K C reg r s
1/IRAFURNITURE
6t4 446-3158
Qual ty HousehOld Furmture And

$10 co Each e14-38S.8577

BEL SIKKENS COATINGS 304

APPLIANCE S

Wash ers dryers re fr tgerat or s
ranges Skaggs Appl,ance s 76
1/tne Street Cj.ll 614 446 7398

Rabbtts For Sale lop Ear Netner
land Dwarf Dutch $5 00 To

.::.:..:::..:::=.:..:...:.:...:::::___

Shar p Fax Mach ne ltke New
614 256 1682

Rooms lor rent week or mon th
Starttng at $120/mo Gafl a Hotel
6 14 446 9580

Male Rottwe1ler 2 yrs old some
obedrence tratnrng
German
background ped tgr ee proven
stud prefer some one Without
ch ildren 1301bs $250 614 742
3802

Yellow Jackel Go Cart W1th Ro ll
5 HP Bnggs &amp; StratiOn En
8 MonthS Old R dden Poss1
Hours To rat Would Cons d
,; ·t ...o, For Ntce Honda 50 614
446-6861

WE

71

4 ComedianPhlllpo
5 Ra11on
6 Petite

1 Barge
2 Yard (2 wda )
3 24 hours ago

Yesterday I featured a deal m wh1ch
East tl)'lng to get a good result made
a speculative double Heres one where

PARAC~UTES .SI-IOULDN'T

TRANSPORTATION

DOWN

33 Actress -

By Pht!hp Alder

I NOTICE WE DON'T ~AI/E

89 Corstca lour door automattc
Engltsh Spr nger Span el Pups
AI&lt;C Super Btrd Dogs And Pets
Born 6 21 $300 614 245 9092

1993 Honda A.TI/ 300 4x4 Excel
tent Cond t10n Lqw Mtleage Olive
Green Fronl Bu~per Sitek Stop
pers Foot Pads Asktng $4 250
614 446 9627

Alfalfa Hay Square Bales 300
600 Bales Po t Belly Pigs 614
245 5622

Square bates $1 $2 Round bales
$15ea Taktng orders for 2nd cut
nng unlil Sept 1 304 6 75-3960

four-poster

32 Pie - - mode

Bid up, play up

Hay &amp; Grain

640

PS PB $2800 614 985 J8J9

Reg tstered Chthuahua pupp!es
7wils old mate ltghl brown le
mate-lawn 304-675 7732
Now avatlable at Pa tnt P lu s for , ...
your tog home cedar Std1ng deck Stbenan Husky Pup AKC Reg1s
or out door lurmture AKZO NO
tered $150 614 256-1003

ftce noon 6pm Frt Sun Co llecta
bres sm all tn d1v1dual equtpment
304 273 5655

C1rc l e Motel lowest Rat es In
Town t Daily Weekly Monthly
614 446 2501

304 675 2063

Nordic Track li fe Srr~der Cycle
S150 Like New 614 446-8662

Tw n Rt~ers Tower now accept tng
apphcatrons lor 1br HUO substd
tZOd LIP! lor elderly and handt
capped EOH 304 675-6679

Furnished
Rooms

AKC Regtslered German Short
Hatred Potnler Pupptes Ca 1 Alter
4 PM 614 245 5697

Good Meta Des~ $40 4 Tra sh
Bags Ass orted Ktds &amp; Women
Clothes $25 614-446 7556
Gravely Super Convertable Elec
lftC Srart 12 Speed 6 Auach
merits 614441 - 1446

Now WW 16 Bumper Pool horse
stock trailer w1th sadd)e compart
ment $4000 614 985 9813

AKC Regt stered Golden Retr ever
pupptes hght blonde wrormed and
has ftrst shots $125 cash only I
614 992 7651

For Sate Cub Cadet lawn Mower
BHP $250 00 304 • 675 5751

SAM SOME RVILLE S ARMY
SURPLUS by SandyVIlle Posl Of·

450

AKC regtstered Da mat an pup
ptes 7 wks female $100 male
$1 SO ltrsl shots and checked
6 14 985 4401

AKC Regtstered Cocker Spantel
Puppy Male Buff &amp; W htt e
Wormed 1/acttnated Champ1on
Bloodltne D 0 B 312195 $200
61 4 379 2728

3055

Upsta rs Apartme n t 238 FHst
A11enue Gall pot s Great Loca
!toni Kttchen W th Stt,lle &amp;. Aelr ~
erator $285/Mo Plus OeposH &amp;
References No Pet s 614 446
4926

AKC Regtstered Dalmattan pup
pes 3 males hvor spot 2 females
b acklwhlle $150 304 675 3738
afte r 6Pm

54 Salamander
S5 Sore
56 -or Wight

Pass
Pass

4•

Openmg lead

depos I req wed no pets 6 14
992 221 B
Mtn1ature horses male $500 /ea
wh tte 30• AMHA Regtstered eK
cellent wtth children red roan w1th
wh tle blaze 32 112· AMHR Reg
rstered Wtll trade lor equal value
rtems such as small enclosed
cargo traJier 614 992 51 88

temperature

25 - Zlmballst
26 Grouped
30 Item for a

Arthur
34 Did an
attorney s lob

I t

Pass

HOW MUCH DO
I OWE FER TATER'S
CHECKUP, DOC?

A.I&lt; C Golden Retnever Pupptes
Vel C hacked
Wormed
1st
Shots $175 614 446-2251

63

Answer to Prevfoue Puute

Vulnerable Both
Dealer North
West North Easl
South

BARNEY

1 bedroom apanment tn M ddte
pon all u!dt! as pa td $250 per
mor1th $100 depos 1 614 992
7806 Bam 10pm

.. J 9 7
• J 10 5
+K J 7 6

¥K 987

to&gt;

nickname

EAST

.. a

"'6"

001V

1990 Gee Tracker 4X4 Con\/
AM I F M Cass AC Looks And
Runs Greet! I $5 500 614 ••6
4558

.

WEST

· ~~sa&gt;

Oh~

Apanments
for Rent

ltm ted Offer I 1996 doublewrde
_4_&lt;_46_77_:33
_ _ __ _ __
3br 2bath $169 5 down $2591 1
3bed room Duplex lull basement
month Free del very &amp; setu p
On ly at Oakwood Homes N tro garage forced atr heat &amp; ac 304
675-3753
wv 304 755 5885

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Good Dm.ng 310 Homes for Sale
Aeco rd T h r ee Yea r s l c en sed jiE;;o;;;;;;;;'ii;;;~;T;w;;;;;;;

Dnvmg EJ.penence And Ad e
Automobile In surance
Co11erage Requtred Tratntng Pro
vtded Salary $5 oo rHr To Star!
11 Interes ted Send Resume To
p 0 BoK 604 Jackson OH
45840 ATT N Cectl ta Oead l ne
For Appltcants 8f11f95 Please
Spe c ly Wh tc::h Post! Or'1 Apply ng
For Equal Opportunt!y Employer

f4.t70 Wtndsor Detu•e E•cellent
Condtt on Large KHchen L1~ ng
Roam 2 Bedrooms 1 Baths
$12 000 614 245 9431

50acres wllog cabtn tobacco al
totments $42 000 304 697 3223

D"v••, L.cenoe

ot quate

a

320 Mobile Homes

Wanted To Do

~ tf W I I P.S VO U 10 JOin

(h e Pi Pleasant Job Servtce ts
cu rr ently accopttng appltcattons
fo r JTPA funded tratntng Mu st be
WI/ res dent or last emp oyer a
WI/ company 304 675 0857

NORTH
8 8 95
•A 10 6 3
wA Q 3 2
t A10952

1989 C hevrolet Astra Van
70 000 Miles Automat c Atr
Crutse TJit Looks Runs GooPI
New T1res Luggage Rack 4 Captatn Cha~rs 1 Bench Seat $4 900
614 446-8172 614-256-6251

1 and 2and
beoroom
I~==========:-r~~=~::======1 mshed
unfur ntapartmenTs
shed sec'U lur
rtty

Pep per P ckers Aro und 8f20195
P~y B~ Bucket Phone Evenmgs
t\ 14 2 45-5047
Sarah Co11entry Csser'1ttals Inc
the TraditiOn &amp;
herttage or the most respected
name tn dtrect sel ling Call ~udy
304 523-7123

$3 200 OBO 814 44 H1584

2286

Dom1no s P1zza 1n Pomeroy s now
h nng

1986 Pt:;mouth Voyager Van Au
tomal!t Cold lw Ntce Van

Buy 01 se n Rrverme Ant tques
1t 24 E Mam Street on At 124
Po meroy Hour s M T W 10 00
am to600 pm Sunday 100 to
6 00 p m 6H 992 2526

36 Rubber·making
material
1 Eyelid problem 38 -oictalea
5 Plant part
39 Find \,oe
9 -and downs
tum of
12 Lab IUbl
40 Mountain ridge
13- and ffre
4 t Uneacortod
14 Nervouo twitch
male
15 Approximately 44 Genus of
(2 wds)
rodenta
16 Curse
45 Watch pocko1
18 Rainy
47 Singer Julio19 Use a towel
50 Ola glossy
20 No manIabrie
-Island
51 -Grande
21 Mysterious
52 Luxurlolll
23 Lincoln's
53 High

now e nterrn g a reasonably prolonged
cycle wh e re you may denve greater
matenal grattftcallon Conttnue datng the
be st yo u can

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Dec 21) Com
pantons could be eastly swayed to your
way of th•nktng today owtng to your com
pelltng present,atton of matters y,ou
enthustast•cally su pport

c•ate wtth progresstve th tnker s today
Va luable tnforma t1on a nd co ncept s can
be gamed t hrough an open mtnded
eKchange ol tdeas

TAURUS (April 20.May 20) A sudden or
unusual sh1ft rn your career mtght transpire today It could prove beneftctal and
QIVB you a more advantageous posrllon
than your present one

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Fool free lo

'

c hange your mtnd or Olake adjustmen ts if
you re tnvolved 10 an arrangement that
you feel ts better for the other guy than tt
IS for you

LEO (July 23· Aug 22) Try no1 to feel

CAPRICORN (Dec 22·Jan 19) You r

despondent tf thmgs haven t been too
exc11tng for you soc1ally la t e ly
Impro vements are tn th e offing tod ay
L~o lreat )'Curse~ 10 a birthday g1H Send
for your Astro ·Graph predtc hons for the

msltncts for addtng to your re sources
could prove unusually accurate today Do
not tgnore them they m1ght reveal ways
to mcrease your holdtngs

could turn out to be' very fortunate tor

AQUARIUS (Jan 20.Feb 19, II you feel

you

CANCER (June 2hJuty 22) Keep your
schedule as llox1ble as poBBible today
Th1ngs you do on lhe spur of tho moment

AUGUST al

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mlddlepprt, Ohio

•

Tuesday,August8,1995

I

Olen Harrison remembers what it was like growing up in the past
By Olen Barrloon
Pomeroy
Returning once more to times.
places and people of long ago.
known only by a few who have
reached the Golden Years of life, I
would like to revive the memory
with a few more incidents of those
long forgotten events in some of
our past ~ves.
Many have things they would
lilce to forget; while others tax their
minds in trying to remember and
keep within reach, parts of life that
meant so much then, and today
meaus a lot more.
How many today, especially
men, remember when they were
small and the clothes they bad to
wear? Do you remember the knickers or knee pants, lhe bloused shirt,
bow tie, long black stockings.
patent leather shoes, buuon style.
and the hair all slicked down with a
generous amount of oil or Vaseline
that was widely Hsed.
It was then you were ready to go
·anywhere, whether it be Sunday
school, church. town on Saturday
night, birt~day party, or wher.e

ever. If it was cold, they added
what was called a Mackinaw, or
coat, that was so heavy and stiff
you could hardly move, and top
you off with a big toboggan, pulled
down over your ears.
We see the same thing today on
TV where the mother dresses the
youngster in a heavy snow suit that
covers from bead to toe , put on
gloves and put them outside in the
snow, where in a matter of an hour
or so, they come knocking at the
door, half froze, soaking wet and
ready to call it a day after a big
bowl of Cream of Wheat and a
glass of hot lemonade.
Kids are kids anytime, anyplace
or anywhere. whether it be today or
m tbe past. A few years pass and
the youngsters grow up and go to
school. Finally they reach another
phase of life known as the teen
years, wbicb is entirely another
story.
I am going to go back in the past
and see bow many hearts beat a lit-.
tie faster when they remember
growing up and having tbeir first
date.

If it was a boy, be eitbar hitclled
up Old Dobbin to the black,'shiny,
rubber-tired buggy, or if the family
bad a car, maybe a Model T Ford.
Olds, Chevy, Max wei~ Studebaker,
or some other, be would promise to
do about everything in the work
line around the place for quite a
spell, just to borrow it for one
night.
If it was a girl, she was always
waiting and hoping the right boy
would l\Sk her to go on a single or
double date. The choice of places
to go were very limited to etther a ·
I 0-cent movie, a barn dance, to
town on Saturday night, or a nice ·
drive in the country.
It was through Ibis part of life,
that many families were brought
together by the budding romance
and marriage of their treasured
children, This too, brought another
problem, which was bringing the
bride borne, and causing unforeseen difficulties, until it was decided lha1 the newlyweds would bave
to find a place to live.
· Back then, there were very few
vacant
so the next thing in

Musical
-program set
for library

line was to build a house. Timber the problem was still there and
bad to be cut, lak,eD to the mill and solving it just the same.
sawed iniQ lumber, and then came
Time p•ssed and the youngsters
the job of building a place to live, came, dfe$Sed the same, grew up in
usually on or close to both parents, tbe same surroundings, bad chi!as children then didn't slray too far dren of their own, and the process
from the family nest. But the repeats itself down through time,
neighbOrs were friendly and many until tbe present. A family's home
times to others bad donated time for their children is what it's all
and labor to build a livable bouse about.
.
where the new couple could set up
I only hope that it will cause a
bouse-keeping.
lot of us, to may stop and think
The young couple did not fore- what my family means to me.
see the many lrials and lribulations Through the years, a lot of sacrithey would have to go through, but floes were made, but it bonded the
being strong, and witb a life abead. family ties closer together.
they would make it. The families
I would like to see the modem
helped them a lot by furnishing day parents dress up llleir kids, the
~~ with thin's for the bouse. and
way they want, put them out in the
giVlng them livestock, such as a snow, bring them in wet and cold,
cow, hogs and chickens, t'? help give them a bowl of Cream of
take care of the meat and milk for Wheat and a glass of bot lemonade,
the coming generation, which was and after it's over, put their arms
soon to be.
around them and hug them tight,
I kno~ all this sounds like a and say, "I love you". Doing Ibis
made up story, but I lived through would result in a close-knit family
that 'period and I know a lot of that could survive most any prob~lder ones _ lik~ myself did the · !em. Maybe I have touched some
same. ThiS sttuauon may have been people tbe wrong way; but they
a ~ttle different wit!t city_ folks, but

know and I know that Jove will
perform wonders. I didn't have
much when I was young, and I
don't have much now, but I lived
through it all.
I was beadslrong like a lot of the
younger generation is today, but
my mother !fied to tell me right
from wrong, and now a lot older, I
can understand why. I hope that
some of you old ones remember
those long past memories. If you
do, and the desire is there, you can
bave the same enjoyment as if it
were yesterday. Don't l~t modem ism force you into tbe background. All we older ones bave left
are tbe memories we shared when
we were young. It is good material
to talk about.
! am going to close for. no~,
IDltil a later date, when I agam wtll
try to make the mind remember,
and the bean beat faster, in trying
to recall some of the things we
went through and shared when we
were young and restless. Thanks
again for maybe sharing witb me,
times put away but not forgooen.

Pick 4:
8193
Buckeye 5:
1-5-12-18-35

Vol. 46, NO. 72
Copyright 1995

with 96 bids, followed by CBS' 91. an exira bid for a total of 13.
The networks had been tied at 85
Jason Alexander and Cybill
nominations each.
Shepherd are co-hosts for the cereABC added three nominations mony, to be broadcast by Fox.
to its 39. Fox Broadcasting Co.
The new Emmy nominations:
now stands at 19, up two, while
-INDIVIDUAL ACHIEVEcable's Home Box Office also MENT IN COSTUME DESIGN
added two nominations for a total · FOR A MINISERIES OR SPEof 50.
CIAL: "Buffalo Girls,'' CBS; "In
. NBC's hit hospital drama Search of Dr. Seuss," lNT; "The
"ER," which bad a leading 20 Piano Lesson (Hallmark Hall of
nominations after the&gt;' fiJuly Fame), CBS; "Scarlell" (Episode
announcement, remains in front I) , CBS; "A Woman of Indepenwith 23. Its closest competitor. dent Means" (Pan I), NBC.
ABC's "NYPD Blue," picked up

LOS ANGELES (AP) - NBC
emerged as the network Emmy
leader and "ER" gained three
more nominations when nominees
in six delayed categories were
· announced.
'
Most of the nominations for the
47th Annual Primelime Emmy
Awards were announced July 20,
but voting ties in the six categories
caused runoffs, tbe Academy of
Television Arts &amp; Sciences said.
With tbe new nominations Monday, NBC now bas the lead going
into the Sept 10 awards ceremony

2 Sections, 12 Pagtis 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 9, 1995

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

would like to award certificates to
those who bave been voting regularly for 50 years or more and persons who have been poll workers
for 25 years or lfiOre and have not .
been previously honored.
Rita Smith, director of the
Meigs County Board of EleCtions,
and Jane Frymycr,deputy director,
are asking residents wbo have been
voting _regularly since 1944 to call
tbeir office at 992-2697 or send
their name, address, telephone

SWEER MOUNTAIN SOUND • Roger and Mary Gilmore will
present ''Music and Folklore of Appalachia" at 1 p.m. Wednesday
at the Meigs County Public Library.

---DISCUSS FLOOD DAMAGE - Pomeroy village council mem·
ben, left, met with approximately 10 Union Avenue-area residents

By JIM FREEMAN

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•

.

.

truck, $286.79; perpetual care,
$7,228.52; cemetery endowment,
$38, I 18.5 7; police pens ion,
$642.91; building fund, $4,083.91;
recreahon, $3,562.89; permissive
tax, $2,553.48; law enforcement,
$2,232.33; total, $238,629.54.
In other business, council:
-Accepted the resignation of
Don Ward from the street depanment and ratified the appoinWlent
of Michael Klein· as a volunteer
firefighter.
- Met in executive session with
members of the Bedford Township
Volunteer Fire Departmem Committee and Pomeroy Fire Chief
Danny Zirkle to discuss personnel
and legal matters.
- Accepte d the transfer of a
liquor license from Henry Hemsley
to Rhoda,
n 1nc. doing business as
Gas Plus on Nye Avenue.
Continued on pa.ge 3

Transfer case
• ReiTKlte

Key&lt;ss Enl!y
•leather Interior
: L,oaded'

Monday - Saturday: 9 am •
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

I
• I

Byer tells Chamber Meigs
is ready for

447 pot plants seized Tuesday
. Lawmen participating in tbe ·second day of Operation Grand
Slam, a marijuana eradication program, seizcil 447,marijuana plants
from the eastern end of the county Tuesday, Sll,id Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
·
'
i
Meigs County deputies and deputies from the Marion County
Sheriffs Department along with officials from the Obio Bureau of
Ctiminal Investigation and -Identification and ·the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources arc participating in the operation .
Soulsby said he is pleased with amount of marijuana seized so
far and added that the plants will likely be destroyed Friday.
Officers nabbed 366 plants Monday during the first day of the
eradication exercise briqging the total to 81J plants.

. Hy GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stalf ,
Meigs County is prepared for
more flooding and disasters, said
Bob Byer, Meigs . County
Emergency Services manager. B~er
addressed the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce at its
regular meeting at the Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Cen1cr.
"We had a lot of problems
getting lhe state to recognize our
emergency," Byer said of the
Mother's Day flaslt Oooding.
The state did not criticize the ·
county units for the response to the
emergency, Byer added.
The county's EMS office does
more than dispatch · emergency
squads, Bycr added.
Tht
office
coordinates
hazardous materi~l pl~ns, ·
emergency management agency,
has a diving rescue team, teaches
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and
emergency medical rechnician and
advanced emergency medical
rechnician programs, he added.
~~w c•rc a resourCe manager for

engineer's specifications.
The council will contact a bonding company to .force Fields Excavation Co. to fix the water lines
that cross Leading Creek above and
below the Main Street bridge near
Birchfield Funeral Home, council
decided.
Fields Co. installed the lines and
earlier Ibis summer placed rip-rap
around the lines. Community and
council members bad complained
lhat this summer's work on! y acted
as adam.

reeled this erossing per the instruc-' requesting disposal of the trash,
tion of Dale Hart with the Villag~ cars and furniture in front of the
of Rutland," Fields wrote.
home.
To replace the line, the village
The board also lilllended an old
would have to pay for the labor and
ordinance stating that grass and
material's along with' $1,500 to
grass clippings can not be placed in
reimburse for the use of equipment
the catch basin to prevent drainage
during the 1994 blizzard, Fields
problems.
wrote.·
In other business, the Ohio
'Numerous other problems with
Department of Transportation conthe lines exis~ village maintenance
tinues with two months of curb,
worker Dave Davis said.
storm. ~wer and paving in the vil·Meigs County Prosecutor John
!age .
Lentes wrote Fields a letter about
Councilman Dick Fetty said be
the creek crossings.
will try to get lhe center line on
Jeff Fields of Fields Excavating · · "If the Village does not bear
Salem Street moved so cars cao
wrote the council a letter explain- from you or you refuse to start
park on both sides of the slfeet.
ing what responsibility he WOJJld work by A~g, )5~ !995, th~ Village_ -CIIlmltly, ca·scan only-park on tho
intends to contact the bonding comeast side of the street.
take.
"We deny responsibility for the pany and request their assistanoe in
During the last nlontb, Dave
floating of the creek crossing at the hiring another contractor to com- ' - Davis fell lhrough the bed of tbe
park. We do agree that the fune!al plete the work. At which time you
dump tmck and broke his arm. This
is the flfSI village employee injury
borne (crossing) did float some- will be charged as required in the
in eight years, Smith said. Medical.
what. Although it was below the contract documents," Lentes wrote.
In other action, council will
bills will be turned over to workbottom of the creek it was not to 24
inches as specified. We then cor- write a letter to a village resident " er' s compensation.

~AEP to open regional service centers in Ohio, W. Va.

• Elecuoni: Shm

•

Jilt=·· "*

is somehow l~aking into a creek
behind her home.
"It smells terrible," she said.
After meeting with tbe Union
Aven.ue residents, Blaettnar
informed councillhal some Lincoln
Heights residents want the area
between the street and their sidewalks paved.
Discussion on the topic ended
after councilmen said tbe village
could not do the work for free without sening a costly precedent
"If we do it for them we'll have ·
to do it for everyone," Blaeunar
explained.
Clerk Kathy Hysell 'presented
the following balances for July:
Jenera!.. .$72,595.65: . sa_fety •..
594 ·21 • street, (-$7 •180.23) • state
highway, S 10,869. 92; fire,
$1541111
• .22;
, . ; cemetery. $10073
water• $12 •079 .12; guaranty-meter,
$18,817.89; utility. $8,163.13; fire

officials resolve drainage problem

'By GEORGE ABATE
: Sentinel News Staff
Rutland Village Council bas
resolved one long-standing
drainage line problem, but continues to struggle with a water line
'dispute. The council discussed both
issues at last night's regular council
: meeting.
1
David Wilkes, of Depot Stree~
, will sign an easement by Friday so
. work can begin to replace a
. drainage pipe, Village Clerk-Treasurer Sandy Smith said.
'"That's been the bold-up for the
· last three or four months," Smith
: said. "As soon as it occurs we'11 go
· to the site and determine the size of
lJipe needed." '
,
) Wilkes bad filled in bis properly, forcing water onto his neighborS
and restricting flow to the drainage
. pipe.
.
.
In other business, council talked
· about bow to fix two creek cross: ings that were nol installed to the

fro Doc Fees Oelrmocr

F~o~

·

age wtll not accept responsibility
for the bouse."
. Almost three months after heavy
"The village does not want to
rams ·floodedpartsof'Pomeroy, vii- take responsibtlity for nothing,"
!age officials and residents still face Ward said. "I want my house to be
the daunting task of repairing dam- standing here when your done."
ag~ infrasbe·tructurefp.
V
"You've got your house to proem rs o omeroy illage tec,t; you're not being unreasonCouncil and approximately 10 able," Blaettnar said. "We don't
Union Avenue-area residents met want anything to happen to.your
during Tuesday night's council bouse. We wiU lake every precaumeeting to discuss the aftermalh of uon to protect your bouse."
the May 14, Mother's Day flood.
Concrete will be poured in 10
Water flowing down into the strengthen the footer which supUnion Avenue area damaged sto~ ports the house.
·
and sanitary sewers. The weight of
"It should be stronger than
the water blasted boles .in people's ever," Anderson said.
·.
yards and basements.
"But we wiU not he responsible
~- Mebeeanwbile,sedvilblage officials· for your bouse," Blaettnar added.'
· · .....
r Tve n accu · Y residents of "It was built on a village storm
ru _mgandto repau storm-damaged ·sewer more than 100 years ago." •
drains
sewers.
"This is notJ'ustapothole we're
Pa W d ' b
A tsy arb -s1 ouse on Union talking abou•~ "Ward cou·ntered.
venueV~lasla Ult al,?ngside an old
Anderson noted that workers
sewer. I ge wor..ers now want will have no way of knowing lhe
to repair the sewer, but Ward refus- extent of the' flood damage until
es to allow the work unless council . lhey are allowed to dig.
takes responsibility for any damage
Blaet.tnar said he would present
to her bouse wbicb may result.
Ward With a new agreement stating
The village proposes lining the !)te village would take all possible
• old sewer with a new pipe, con- p~autions to protect her home . .
: necting at least two houses onto the
Councd!Den William Young and·
: pipe, and 'bacldilling the hole, cov- George Wright examined the area
ering the old structure with six . earlier, met with residents and pre:incbes of concrete, according to senled a list of items that need cor,.. village administrator John Ander- reeled. However, homeowners are
. son, wbo will oversee the work.
upset that the village bas not fol: "The village wants to go in and lowed through with the repairs.
: do the work,"· Mayor John W.
Susie Soulsby, wbo lives across
.·Biaetblar said, "but lhe bouse sits from Ward and further up the
· on a wall of the sewer and the vii- _ stree~ commented that raw sewage

AConversi

lriJt Pnce -.

1

Sentinel News Staff

Buy ABrand New '95
• Cruise Control
• AMIFM CasseHe
• 4 Captain Chairs
·Sofa/Bed
• Indirect Lighting

Tuesday night to discuss flood-related damage In their neighborhood. Residents are frustrated that village officials have not
repaired sewers and drains damage In lbe May 14 flood.

POI1J~roy council, homeowners discuss-flood damage

numbers and birth date to the
Meigs County B.oard of Elections,
112 Mulberry Avenue, P.O. Box
688, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·
They are also asking residents
who know someone who bas been
voting regularly since 1944 to
encourage them to call the Board of
Elections office. Taft bas scheduled
a ceremony to present the cenificates for 10 a.m. Thursday, Sept.
28, at the Senior Citizens MultiPurpose Building on Mulberry
Heights.
·

~ Rutland

• Vista Bay Windows
• P/S, P/B
• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• Tilt Steering

Sentinel News Stalf
A free breakfast every morning
will be offered to all students
attending Meigs Local schools
when they return to the classroom
this fall.
Action to "free" tbe breakfast
cafeteria line was taken by tbe
Meigs Local Board of Education at
its Tuesday night meeting held in
the board offices.
The board also voted, on recommendation of Supt. Dill Duckley, to
waive the cost of fees, including
those for workbooks, for all stu-.
dents in grades kindergarten
through six for the 1995-96 school
year. Cost to the district will be
about $22,000. The only fees
which the dislrict will not pay for
the elementary students are those
for elective subjects. sucb as band,
Buckley said.
As for the free breakfasts, Joyce
.Vance. food service director. met
with the board to explain ·how getting more students to participate in
the breakfast program will bring in
more federal and state tax dollars
for the nulrition program to the district
Now the government pays
$1.185 for those wbo q~alify under
tltc poveny guidelines for each free
breakfast, 88.5 cents for a student's
reduced cost breakfasts, and 19.5
for those who pay the f1~l 85 cents
which is charged for a breakfast
· Mrs. Vance used figures from
orie day last year in the eight
schools where breakfast was served
to point out tbe ratio of paid,
reduced and free. On that day there

I

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were 53 who paid the full amount,
39 who were served at the reduced
"cost; and 455 who received the
food free.
It was explained that since the
reimbursement formula from the
government is so much higher than
the actual cost of serving the break. fasts, the more students in the
"free" category who .eat breakfast
at school, the more federal and
state dollars flow into the dislrict.
Tbe philosophy, as stated by the
superintendent is that by removing
the "stigma" for students from
povcny level families who eat free
or at a reduced charge by making .
breakfast "free to everyone", more
of the students who qualify for free
breakfasts will lake advantage of
the program. The result of tba~ said
Buckley, will be a "higher reim. bursement" from federal and state
coffers.
In fac~ Vance .said that the district will "make" 34 cents on a
breakfast by making the meal free
to all students. The cost of -serving
breakfast is 40 cents, she said. The
average reimbursement. according
to the food service director, taking
into consideration those who are
served free, those who pay part,
and those who pay all, is 74 cents.
Personnel, cleaning supplies, .and other 110n-food related
materials arc not included in the
costs and can be reconciled with
lhe 34 cents, it was explained. No
additional personnel will be
required to serve the additional students coming in for breakfast,
Vance told the board'members.
Continued on page 3

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Board of elections seeks long-time voters
Qid you vote for Thomas E.
Dewey when be nearly beat Harry
S. Truman for president in 1946?
Did you vot~ for Franklin D.
Roosevelt in 1944, 1940, 1936, or
1932?
Did you vote for his ftftb cousin
Theodore Roosevelt in I 904?
·
If you did and you have been
. voting regularly since ·then, the
Meigs County Board of Elections
would like to hear from you.
Secretary of State B.ob Taft

Low tonight In II&amp;, portly
cloudy. Thursday, partly sunny,
highs ID upper 1105.

Meigs offering
free breakfast
to all students

I

'

767

Sports, Page 4

'

• Driver Side Alrbag
· • Rear Anti-Lock Brakes ·
) Power Steenng·

Pick 3:

Emmy nominations announced in six
delayed categories; NBC lead network

Roger and Mary Gilmore who
perform as "Sweet Moumain
Sound" will present a program at
the Meigs County Public Library,
. Pomeroy, at I p.m. Wednesday in
Uie downstairs reading room.
The program, sponsored by tbe
IG verbel)d Arts Council through an
Ohio Arts Council gran~ is free to
everyone.
The musical presentation will
center around the three stringed
instruments invented in America.
the Appalachian dulcimer, five
stringed banjo and autobarp. and
will include other folk instruments
such . as the hammered dulcimer,
courting dulcimer, fiddle, guitar
and penny whistle in a variety of
combinations.
The two will also demonstrate
more rustic instrumems like the
J~ws barp and spoons. ,Interwoven
with the music are bits of mountain
folklore - tall tales. superstiti(lns,
bome remedies. snake lore and
even a ghost story.
The Gilmores will also be
demonstrating the dancing ability
of the band-carved Appalachian
clogger or lumberjack.

"""i!iil

Ohio Lottery

Braves .
stop Reds
win streak

.: From AP, Staff Reports
One week after announcing
· plans to cut hundreds of jobs,
: American Electric Power Corp . .
, said it will open regional service
oenters in West Virginia and Ohio.
The centers, in Charleston and
Lancaster, will asSist administra·
tive, maintenance and technical
operations, the company said Tuesday.
.
· It did not say how many work- .
en woold be hired.
• The company announced last
· week that it would cut one-fourth
of its 4,800 workers in five states.
AEP said tbe layoffs are needed

for it to compete in a deregulated

"entire work scope" of the regional
centers.
In a news release, AEP
The promotions for Dunlap and
announced that Wayne Dunlap, McCullough are effective Sept. t:
managa of the Columbus Southern Jones said the two will work ternOhio Power Co. subsidiary at porarily at AEP's CoiUII)bus beadConesville, will · bead the quaners in setting up the centers
Charleston center and Mark and. determinrng t~c staffing
McCullough, assistant manager of · . requtrelllents.
the Appalachian Power, Co.'s Jobn
In related moves, AFP haS proE. Amos Plant in St. Albans, moted Don Lambert to succeed
W.Va., will •direct the Lancaster Dunlap at the Conesville plant and
center.
Jobn Lester to replace McCullough
John Jones, AEP's senior vice at the Amos plant. Botb were .•
president for fossil and hydro gen- employed in management positions
eration, said the utility giant bas not at the plants before the promotions,
finalized staffing levels and the Jones said.
·
environmen~

AEP announced July 31 it was
culling staff at II power plants,
including four in !be region. The
· plants will be staffed to only perform "running maintenance," or
maintenance performed while tbe
plants are producing energy, rather
than being staffed for both running
maintenance and scheduled out. ages, AEP officials said.
Tb.e layoffs include -100 j~s at
the James ,M. Gavin Plant in
Cbe'sbire; 80 at the Mountaineer
Piant. New Haven, W.Va.; and 85
at the Philip Sporn Plant, also in
New Haven, The Amos plant is
bein2 hit witb .l30 layoffs.

r---Local
c

I

-

IIOB BYER

.

the county beyond the scope of
individual towns or the county,''
Dyer said.
Curren~y. the rescue deparuncul
bas added a diving team . In the
future , a team will be set up 10
mitigate streams, he added.
Continued on page 3

bri.efs-~

-Man hospitalized after crash
. A Tuppers Plains man was listed in good condition this morning
St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va., with injuries received
in a one-car crash Monday on State Route 7.
.
Ferrell Vannoy, 81. was transponcd from the scene of the 9:50
a.m. crash by the Meigs EMS. the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State
Highway Pitlrol rej)oned.
Troopers said Vannoy was southbound in Orange Township
when his car went off the right side of the road, struck a culven and
then an embankment.
The car was moderately damaged, the patrol said.
10

Carey slates open door session
· An opcn·ctoor 'session bas beeri scheduled by State Rep. John A.
Care_r Jr., R-Wellston, for Friday from 10-11 a.m. at the Chester
Fire IJepartment ·
Carey's constituents in the 94th District with qucstions~nd concerns about state government are encow:aged to auend.
- ---c:-~

Syracuse immunizations set
Free immunizations for area children from birth to through middle school will be given from 10 am.-2 p.m. Aug. 22 at the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Departmen~ health officials said.
· The Childhood Immunization Program (CIIIP) is a mobile h&lt;;alth
program of the Ohio Ultiversity Col~e!\e of Osteopatltic Medicine.
· Continued on page 3

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