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                  <text>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

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•

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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.

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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

�(

·commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

\-

Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
• Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are. welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are su bject to editing and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned lene'rs will be publi shed . Leiters
.should be in good tas_te, addressing issues, not personalities. .

..

What other newspapers
are saying around Ohio

VVednesday,August9, 1995
Page2
VVednesday,August9,1995

South-Central Oblo
Today .. .Variable cloudiness
witb scattered showers and thunderstorms. High 80 to 85 . South
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
is 50 percent.
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy. A 30
percent chance of showers or thunderstorms early. Low in the upper
60s. Ugbt south winds.
Tbursday ... Partly sunny. A 30

WASHINGTON - As Serb that lheir grand hero Prince Lazar · again!" That simple S:Cntence, and
nationalists continue their fell in a last effort to bold back the the incautious stokmg of Serb
aggression in Bosnia and Croatia, · invading Ottootan Turks.
nationalism
against
the
. .
some international diplomats fear ' And it was in Kosovo that the "repressive" Albanians, became
that bloodier ba1Ues lie ahead in the
the horse that Milosevic rode to
fight over Kosovo.
populist
power. ·
What is Kosovo? It is a province · By Jack Anderson
Several years later, when
in southern Serbia, where 2 million
Croatia and Bosnia declared
and
ethnic Albanians outnumber the
independence, Milosevic applied
200,000 Serbs living there. But lhe
Michael Binstein the same principle of ''greater
Serbs run the government and the
Serb" right to lhese ancient lands
police force in a repressive manner current war in the former and declared war.
that includes many human rights Yugoslavia began -on a spring
At the moment, Kosovo is
violations.
night in 1987. A young, relatively closed to foreigners . Although
Yet that only tells part of the unknown Communist politician ethnic Albanians bold a numerical
story.
from
Belgrade,
Slobodan majority, they are not rioting or
"Kosovo is Jerusalem to the Milo'sevic, was conducling a rising up against their Serb masters,
Serbs,'' one Serb nationalist me.eting to bear the gripes of because they are waiting until they
explained to us. ' 'It is lhe holy minority Serbs about the Albanian feellhe time is right. Evidence that
grail. It is the place of pilgrimage. majority.
the time may not be too far off
It is the place which stirs our hearts
When many Serbs from the came several years ago when a
and souls."
outside tried to cram into the thousand feuding clans, who bad
Indeed, the province was once packed meeting ball, Kosovo been murdering each other for
the cradle of ancient Serbia. And it police beat several of them back. centuries, called an end to the
was there in 1389, in the most Milosevic put. an end to it wilh the _ blnod feud to c.on.c.c:nlrale llieir
celebrated battle in Serb history, cry: "Nobody will ever beat you attention on the Serb overlords.

THIS' W~EK wi#v DAVID BRINKLEY.:.

What Nbanian nationalists hadn't
been able to do for decades, the
. prospect of lhe single potent Serb
enemy had accomplished.
In a telephone interview with
our associate Dale Van Alta, a top
United Nations peacekeeper in
Zagreb, Croatia, was blunt about
the future of Kosovo.
"We know that tbti last war in
Yugoslavia will be in Kosovo," the
peacek«per said. ''Tbllre's no way
around it. We're glad it's quiet
now, but it won't alwa~s be that
way. It is similar to the M1ddle East
peace talks, which leave the most
contentious issue for last Jerusalem. Kosovo will be so
nettlesome, ~nd probably so
bloody, that we've all put off
considering it until Croatia and
Bosnia settle down."
Though the wars in Croatia and
Bosnia have occasionally
threatened to spread into. the rest of
Europe. conflict in Kosovo may
finally bring it about. U.N. and
diplomatic officials outlined for us
what they consider the "nighbllare
scenario" of Kosovo:
The Serbs, having satisfied
themselves with tenitorial gains in
Bosnia and Croatia, turn their
' attention to the 2 million ethnic
Albanians in Kosovo. The Serbs
have the guns, but the Albanians ·
have the numbers and the will.
Soon, however, lhat doesn't prove
enough and the Albanian.; begin to
. lose.
·
About this time, Albania. which
shares a border with Kosovo,
would come to the aid of their
elhnic cousins. So, too, would lhe
large Albanian community in the
bordering republic of Macedonia.
The Serbs, seeing a chance to take
back the independent state of
Macedonia, would then invade. But
bolh Bulgaria and Greece consider
Macedonia their tenitory, so they
quickly get involved in the bloo4y
conflict.
·
Turkey couldn't stilnd idly by if
Greece entered the war against
Albanian Muslims.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Today in history

their plan, from the current $4,800
per year to $6,700 in 2002.
Democrats claim - without
exact numbers - that $6,700
won't adequately cover medical
costs,
but that begs the question of
Morton Kondracke whether
Medicare costs can be
to balance the federal budget and brought down from their present
only 28 percent favors such steps if level of 10 percent growlh per year,
the purpose is to provide a tax cut.
double the rate in the private
Democrats, who were far ahead' sector.
in the Medicare propaganda fight
The GOP is promising to bring
last winter, continue to pound on the Medicare growth rate down
the theme that Medicare "cuts" through
"market-oriented"
are designed to "pay for tax cuts solutions but not through
for the rich:"
'•vo,uchers,'' which the public
· Recently on "Meet the Press," tends to oppose.
·
House Minority Leader Richard
So rat, . Republicans have
Gephardl, 0-Mo., also indic~ted delayed unveiling a specific
plan,
depriving
that part of his party's strategy IS to Medicare
downplay the significance of the opponents of the juicy target that
federal Medicare trustees report President Clinton provided in 1994
issued in April showing that with his 1,400-page health care
·
Medicare will run out of money in plan.
In interviews, House Ways and
2002.
Gephardt said, "The program's Means Chairman Bill Archer, Rnot going broke tomorrow .... You Texas, and health subcommittee
have insolvency problems 1n Chairman Bill Thomas, R-Cillif.,
have denied any aim to k«p their
2002."
According to the Harris/Kaiser product secret, claiming that (as
poll, 70 percent of Americans Archer puts it), "this is a daunting,
believe that the Med1care system IS difficult issue" that requires more
in danger of going bankrupt and 48 Study.
Archer said that the GOP
percent express a "bigh level of
concern" over that fact, indicating proposal will be unveiled before
,that Republicans are ahead on this the Sept. 22 reporting deadline for
measures to be included in ·the
argument.
What's not apparent from polls House budget reconciliation bill.
is wbelher the public views GOP By lhat schedule, the proposal will
policy a5 "cuts" or .as "redycti~ms be fully exposed to public attack
in growth." Republicans are gomg for ~ss than a month before it's
all out to argue that per capita voted on in lhe House.
Medicare spending will rise under
Polls indicate that the public is

-----------------

John Cunniff
Twenty-five percent of respondents
called it a. ~'significant challenge,"
up from 13 percent in 1993.
What ca\Jses such a situation?
Fast growth, for one lhing. And
perhaps a slowdown in job mobility. "Downsizing" headlines spread
insecurity, perhaps inclining workers to stay put rather than aspiring
to better jobs. ·
That too is somewhat ironic.
Despite the lone of headlines, job
creation has been very positive .
About 3.6 million new jobs were
created last year, and a record 63.2
percent of adults were employed in
this year's firSt quarter.
Ne verthcless, workers do not
appear confident. Compensation
remains modest. Dunkelberg' s survey show fewer employers than
last year are raising wages, and that
plans for future raises are even less

lower.
Workers, be says, are "happy to
b~ve a job. prefer to remain mconspicuous, and so don't ask for a
raise," an attitude suggesting tbtiy
might also not risk reacbltlg for one
of those unfilled higher-skill jobs:
Whatever the reasons, lhe list
must include education and training.
Gary Kushner, National Small
Business United chainnan, laments
that owners must hire and train
their own work forces, a plaint that
, reflects the breakdown of the
apprenticeship system lhat once
sustained small businesses.
More indicative of failure are
some of the statistics so often
ignored by those who believe the
overall jobless rate - it was 5. 7
~rcent in July - .tells the story of
labor. It doesn't; sometimes it disguises the story.
The July jobless rate for
teenagers was 18.2 percen~ and for
black teenagers 39 percent. Both
figures rose sharply over ibe previous month, discrediting claims of
those who argue the economy is
"fully employed." .

6:30 p.m. ·Will Power Tumbling

Demonslratlon

7 p.m .• Beat tM Clock Basketball
7 p.m. - Little Mister &amp; Mlaa

Mason County .
Leader Memorial
7 p.m•• Jr. and Open Dairy Show
7 p.m. - Demolition Derby
7 p.m. • Youth Horse Show
7 p.m •• Jr. Style Show
9 p.m.· Jon Brennan
11 p.m. -Gates Close

7 p.m. • 4-H

ftre teams went door·to-door in the
south end of the dty oo Tuesday
aslting residents to so to a temporary shelter at the Shelby County
FLOOD RELIEF DONATION • The Gallipolis Elks Lodge
fair~rounds. However, only three •
107
Tuesday donated more than $1,100 for floor covering and
fauulies agreed to leave, he said.
other
Items for victims of the Mother's Day flood In May. John
''The evacuations were just preGoold
in,
left, presents the donation to Jim Anderson of Anderson's
cautionary," Wearly said
Furniture and Appliance wbo suppllo!d the materials, while Bob
Wood, right, watches on. Both Elks memhen are from Meigs
County. To dale, the lodge bas donated $1,762 to aid flood victims,
from pag• 1
Goold In said.
' ·
In order to fully protect children from contagious diseases, such
'as whooping cough and polio, children need a minimum of three
offering.~:ntlnued rrom P•9•1
doses of OPT and oral polio -.:accinc by 2 years old.
·
AlSO, Hepautts B vaccinations will be given free to children born
The breakfast program has been math) teacher at the Bradbury Eleafter Nov. 22, 1991. Parents should brins previous shot records.
offered several years in the elemen- mentary School for the 1995-96
For details, call-1-800-844-2654 or contact the Meigs County
tary and junior high anclthis year is year with funding from the federal
'Health Department
being expanded to include lhe high Title I budgel
school.
The board also agreed to accept
. The three board members pre- funding from lhe Division of Vocasen~ Larry Rupe, president; Randy
tional Education for an applied ·
No one was injured after a car backed into another ve"!cle in
Humphreys, and Roger Abbott, all English teaching position at .85
Joe's Carry Out parking lot Tuesday afternoon, accordmg to
voted in favor of making breakfast unit for Meigs High School. The
Pomeroy Police Department reports.
free to -everyone and providing remainder of the cost of fiUing the
Joshua J. Starcher, 16, of Marion, was cited with improper backworkbooks tree of charge to all stu· position will come from district
ing and, leaving lhescene, records show.
dents, kindergarten througb sixth funds.
Starcher backed his 1989 Pontiac il)to a truck at 5:20 p.m. _Tuesgrade.
·
.
Rodrigo Barnedo Lopez was
day and left the scene, reports stated. Starcher's car bad light dam·
The resignati~n of Laura Miller accepted as a tuition-free foreign
age to lhe right rear.
.
·
.
igh school btology teacher and exchange student at Meigs High.
Gerald Pullins, Pomeroy, reported his 1990 Chevrolet uuck had
g ' uack coach and Jeff Baker as Revisions to two policies, one
light damage to the left rear.
junior bigb football coach were regarding expulsion for possession
accepted during lhe meeting.
of firearms and the other about
Keith Eubanks was hired as seniors continuing at Meigs when
from pag•.1
junior high football coach. their parents move from the disApproval was given to creating a tric~ were approved.
The county's many miles of weather and news can be received position of Title I (reading and
Ohio River riverfront make the from this program, Dyer said. .
Also, weather-alert macbmes
coullly more susceptible to
·hazardous chemical leaks. Byer are being purchased for all the
county schools, the Carleton
said.
closes streets
Avenue to Walnut. Walnut Street '
"A lot of stuff goes up and Scbool and county garage. Severe Middleport
Middleport
will
close
off
several
to
Front Street. Also Dave Diles ·
down the river and ironicaUy quite wealhel reports are transf~rred via
streets
at
4
p.m.
Saturday
for
the
park
and municipal parking lot will
a bit of tonnage Is dropped off amateur radio.
Midnight
Magic
Parade
at
9
p.m.
be
closed.
Some grants have been received
between Reedsville and Racine"
for this equipment, including $200 The roads .include North Second
locks, Byer sliid,
·
Southern.football signups
Last year, Reedsvllle registered from a state grant and $600 from
Southern Junior High football
492 tons passing through the locks, the Mason Veterans of Foreign
and helmet fitting will be
signups
but only 478 tons passed thf&lt;?ugb Wars, Byer said.
held
a\
5
p.m. Friday. Conditioning
In emergency situations, the
the Racine locks. Many cbem1eals
begins
at
8 a.m. Saturday. Attenare stored on lhe West Virginia ·county EMS bas access to a 450Am Ele Power ........ :.............. .34 1/4
dance
mandatory,
call coach
gallon tank of water, while
Akzo ........................................6l3/8
side, Byer added.
992-2381.
O'Brien
at
Ashland OU ........................... .33 518
Recently, the d~partment Pomeroy has an 8QO..gallon tank,
AT&amp;T ............ .........................51 718
Byer
said.
Also,
residents
can
be
installed a weather satellite diSh for
Grange to met
Bank One ............................... .31 518
about $2,500. This instrument wiU evacuated to a cburcb camp off
The Racine Grange will meet
Bob
Evans
..............................
.l8 314
provide up-to-minute reports on U.S. Route 33, schools and fire
Champion Ind....................... .lJ 1/4
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the baU.
weather, wind · speeds and stations.
' Charming S.hop ........................4 314
barometric pressure. Radar,
In' other. business, the chamber
City Holding ...................... ,..........27
Music In park canceled
·
Federal Mogul ..:.....................211 318
learned about the county's booth at
Saturday night's music in l)le
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................... 43 114
tbe Ohio State Fair, said Judy
park at Star Mill Park in Racine bas
K-mArt .......................................... 16
.Williams, chamber tourism
been
canceled Ibis weekend.
Lands End ............................. .15 1/8
coordinator. This display can be
Limited lnc................................... l9
· viewed through Aug. 20 in the
Multimedia Inc...................... 41 J/8
Buckeye building.
People's ................................. .21.1/4
This Thursday, Lt. Gov. Nancy
Ohio Valley Dank ...........,...... .34 112
Hollister will pose with county
One Valley ............................. .30 112
officials at the booth, Williams
RockweU ................................45 5/8
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. .l6 112
said.
Royal Duk:h..........:..................... !ZJ
The chamber also beard from
Sboney's Inc ........................... 11 118
Peggy Roush of UJe Ohio Bureau of
Star Dank ...............................SO 1/4
Employment SeMces. Roush, a
Wendy lnt't.-. ..........................19 1111
Flatwoods Road residen~ said lhe
Worthington Ind ....................lO 1/8
Gallia County office serves Meigs
County and will consolidate with
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
Jackson County.
·
quotes provided by&gt; Advul o
A new building in Rio Grande
GaUipotls.
will likely be built, which the16tate
agency will lease, Roush said.
In other news, a golf benefit to
fight cancer will he held at noon
The Daily Sentinel
·Thursday at the Jaymar Golf
· !liSPS !13-%01
· Course, Cllrunber President Horace
Publi shed every aftcfnoon. M onday th rough
Karr said.
Friday, Ill Cuurt S1. , Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
Next month, Ohio University
Ohio Vnllr:y Pu bli ~ hin g Comp ony/Muhimediil
football coach Jim Grobe will
Inc .• Pomeroy. Oh io 4."i7 69, Ph 992· 21."i6
Seco11d cla,;s postage paid rtt Pomeroy. Ohio.
speak to the chamber at the
Carleton School in Symcuse.
Member: The Amx:t:'lted Prt. \~ . tlfld the Ohio

Meigs

· - Accepted the mayor's teport
of$3,077.
- Approved lhe lhird ·and fmal
reading of a mutual aid agreement
between Pomeroy and Gallipolis
volunteer f~ departments.

· COLUMBUS - The Bob Evans
Farms board of directors announced Tuesday the creation of
three new executive positions at the
company, including lhc promotion
of SICwart K. Owen$, 40, to president.
Owens, a member of the company's board of directors. was
appointed executive vice president
and chief operating officer in January 1994. He will continue as
chief opemting officer. He bas been
affiliated with Bob Evans Farms
since 1987 when. his family's
business, Owens Country Sausage
of Richardson Texas, was
purchased .
·
Daniel E. Evans chairman of lhe
board and chief executive officer,
remains in· that role wilh the
company.

Meigs announcements

Stocks

EMS logs 2 calls

·POMEROY
11:35 p.m., Cave Strce~ Lorella
Price, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
RACINE
8:55 p.m., volunteer ftre department and squad to Apple GroveDorcas Road, controlled bum on
. Oscar Maynard propeny.

Hospital news

VETER~S

one pr1ce for each piece regardless
of s1ze per model .

SERTA"-FIRM STARTING IT .

$9 9

ANY SIZE, EACH PIECE

•

T~';i&lt;;nu~'s?,':'.en

4 p.m. -Sidewalk Art Conteal
4 p.m .• Baby Beef Show

'

Present were Blaettnar, Hysell
and councilmen Scott 1)iUon, John
Musser, William Young and
George Wright. Absent were councilmen Bill Haptonstall and Larry
Wehrung.

responsibility for food products,
markcling purchasing and technical
services. Wi Ill the company since
1967, Williams was formerly
senior group vice president of food
products, marketing, purchasing
and technical services.
The ftrm's annual stockholders
meeting is Monday, Aug. 14, at the
Bob Exans F3Dlls shel~erbouse, Rio
Grande .

Larry C. Corbin , 53, was
promoted
prcside.nt

to c~ccu1ivc viCe
with
continuing

responsibility for all restaurant
operations. Corbin, fonncrly senior
group vice prcsi!Ient of restaurant
operations, has been wi,th Bob
Evans F'!fllls _since 1962.
Roger D. Williams, 44, is also
promoted to cxccu1ive vice
president with continuing

eanout
f•

Newspaper Associmion.

ed:

Choose your Serta comfort. then pay

3 p.m. ·The McGruders

-·-·-

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded two calls for assistance
Tuesday. Units responding includ·

IlL StYLES, Ill FIRMIIISSIS,
All SIZIS

p.m .• Pedal Tractor Pull

2 p.m. -Craft Demonstration

Owens named BEF president

Byer tel/s.r;:ntlnued

PRICE

1

Pomeroy Counci/.C.o:tlnued rrom pag•1

No one hurt in Pomeroy accident

SIZES

11 a.m. - Youth Horse Show
11 a.m.- Flags &amp; Colors Display

Thursdav, Aug_ 10
9 a.m. • Fair Opens
~
9:50a.m.· Younguns Call Show
10 a.m .• Open Beef Cattle Show
10 a.m. ·Junior Beef Show
11 a.m.- Watermelon Eating Contest

Local briefs••c;onttnued

beginning to accept some elements
of the proposed solutions that
Republicans have dangled for
public c6ilsumptioo. .
.
According to Kaiser/Harris, 72
percent of the public favors
incentives for managed care and 55
percent favors higher premiums for
those who stay in fee-for-service
programs. "Choice" is a key GOP
buzzword.
But other details are yet to
come. Only 20 percent of voters
favor raising out-of-pocket
expenses for Medicare recipients, a
possible vulnerable poipt for the
GOP.
· In his re.cent radio address,
President Clinton claimed that the
"huge· tax cuts" planned by
Republicans would . make it
necessary for ''older couples to pay
$5,600 more out of their pockets,"
which "many people just won't he
able to do." Archer says he doesn't
know yet whether co-payments will
increase under GOP plans.
According to an official of the
American Association' of Retired
Persons, the GOP plan also will faU
under attack If it appears
"radical," if 1cbaog~s are
"sudden," if lhe plan seems "put
together ~bind closed dool'$," or
if it is "steamrollered" through
ConF,Ss
.
It s tib:ty that those pbrases will
soon app·e ar in ads on your TV
screen. The propaganda wars are
far from over.
,
(Morton Kondracke Is
execuUve editor of RoD Call, the
newspaper of Capitol HID.)

The term is tricky, variously
explained as a point beyond which
more hiring merely produces inflation, and as the minimum attainable
level in view of a certain numbeialways moying between jobs and
so temporarily une!Dployed.
But those teenagers aren't likely
to be temporarily unemployed.
More likely, IIley are unemployable
without additional education,and
training, no matter bow hard they
look. And, presumably, they have
been looking.
It is sometimes argued that
youngsters can't get•jobs because
of the complex skills required by
employers in Ibis, the computer
age. But. while ·that might apply to
upper level applicants, it probably
doesn't for beginners.
Dunkelberg, for one, suggests
that because lhe computer can do
so many routine assignments it bas ·
even lowered the level of skills
required of beginning workers.
The expl;mations lie somewhere
else, demanding to he understood.
John Cunniff Is a business
analyst for Assbciated Press

WldniSdiY. Aug. 9

5 p.m. • Up Sync Conteat
5 p.m .• Market Lamb Show

Residents of Prospect, Ohio,
were allowed to return to their
homes after the flooding of the Bat·
tie Run Creek forced a daylong
evacuation, but other residents in
central and western Ohio weren't
so lucky . .
Sidney police Chief Steve
Wearly said today that !?'~lice and

Qualified workers hard to fin·d,__
· _ _ __
The other survey, by National
Smau Business United and Arthur
Andersen's Enlerprise Group,
found much the same problel]l .

1995 Mason County Fair

percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms. High in the upper 80s.
Extended forecast
Friday ...Fair. Lows 65 to 70.
Highs middle 80s to around 90.
Saturday ... A chance of thunderstorms norlh ...Oiherwise fair. Lows
around 70. Highs upper 80s to
lower 90s.
Sunday. .. Fair. Lows 65 to 70.
Highs upper 80s to lower 90s.

Storms flood Oliio counties

GOP is winning Medicare marketing war
program.
On the olller hand, Harris found
that only 44 percent of the public
favors reducing Medicare growlh

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Today's weather forecast

Kosovo will be thornier still than Bosnia

By The Associated PreS.
Exceq&gt;IS of Ohio editorials of national and slalewide imcrest
Dayton Daily News, Aug. 7
The recent New Jersey Supreme Court decision upholding "Meagan's
Law" won't be the last word, but the court's thinking makes a lot of
sense.
New Jersey's top court said sex offenders could be required to regisier .
with police after their release from prison and that, in-certain cases, other
people have to be notified 'that a sex offender is in the neighborhood.
The decision is at odds with a deci.jion by a federal judge, who said the
law was unconstitutional. Which ruling will prevail is, for the moment.
unclear.
·
Releasing sexual offenders from jail is taking a chance. Promising the
offender a second chance and anonymity is putting the liberty of somebody who's not ipnoceni above lhe safety of people who are.
Mount Vernon News, Aug. 4
The past few years, a group of spons fans has argued for "pay-toplay" statuS for coUege alhletes. The argument is the fact these students
who are on scholarships often do not attend classes l\ll(l in general spend
llleir time being paid to play.
There are argwmeniS pro and con on Ibis, but until such rules are created and accepted by llle colleges, the participants of a college sport. any
sport, must be amateurs in good standing wil,b lhe National Collegiate
Athletics Aswciation.
·
·
·
Thus it was when the NCAA came do~ hard on Alabama: three years
probation including a postseason ban this season, scholarship reductions
and the forfeiture of II games in which an ineligible alblete played.
When the spons fans, particularly those who back Alabama, start to
scream this faU, perhaps they. should investigate who made the mistakes
and what kind of mistakes. A mistake is a mistake; a lie is a lie. The latter
deserves stiff penalties . .
Chillicothe Gazette, Aug. 4
The Senate closed the door again on open government when members.
voted 52-48 against open ethics bearings on Sen. Bob P~ckwood.
The Senate Ethics Committee bas been investigating for 2 1/2 years
charges that Packwood, R-Ore., sexually harassed women, tampered with
Through _shrewd marketing,
tvidence and solicited jobs from lobbyists for his ex-wife.
.
Republicans have made dramatic
We question wby the Senate wants to keep the d.oor closed on this
headway in persuading the public
. . issue. .
,
that the Medicare system needs
Is it because the Senate stiU considers iiSelf a private club? One that
reform, but they stiU face the huge
will investigate others in public but keep the dirty laundry of its own
hurdle of seUing a specific plan.
p~embers behind closed doors?
·
Six · months ago, when
One of the guarantees of our Constitution is the right to openly hear • Republican policy was widely
charges and the evidence backing those charges. The Senate should honor
characterized as merely "cuts,"
. that concept.
polls indicated that GOP plans to
·The (Tiffin) Advertiser-Tribune, Aug. 4
change the health system for the
Vice President AI Gore's "reinventing government" initiative seems
elderly were as politically lethal as
to have faded from the Washington mdar screen, allhough OQ.Ce in awhile
"touching" Social Security.
it blips once or twice to trumpet some modest savings proposal. Every bit
Now, Republicans have
of savings that can be wrung out of the federal budget is worth doing, to
succeeded jn cban~ing the terms of
.. be sure.
.
, ·
debate from "cuts ' to "reductions
But as renowned management expert Peier F. Drucker reminds, no one
in the rate of growth" and are in
: should confuse lhe initial hoopla surrounding "reinventing government"
·the process of convincing the
' for real~ substantial changes in the way government works.
,
public ·that the system needs to be
;
As Drucker notes, let's be skeptical about ballyhooed management
"saved from bankruptcy."
·· decisions that outside of llle ne.ver-never land of government wouldn't
According to a CNN/USA
draw a second glance.
Today poll last month by Gallup,
Tbe Marion. Star, Aug. 4
65 percent of the public, including
:
The Ohio School Boards Association sent out letters encouraging
54 percent of people OV!!r 50 and
: newspapers to encourage citizens to run for a seat on lheir local school
4 t percent of those over 65, now
• board.
believes that Medicare faces
~
You can talk about tl!e education policies of the governor and the pres"serious problems which require
ident and tbe Congress all you wanl But it's atlhe local level where decidrastic action," lhe basis of. the
sions are made that can have a tremendous and immediate impact on
GOP argument for reductions in
school life.
Medicare growth.
It's one thing to sit in Washington or Columbus and vote on what
Similarly, a new survey by GOP
, : schools .should do. It's a whole different thing to look a neighbor in the . poUster Frank Luntz for the Health
' eye and vote against him on school policy.
.
Care Leadership Council, a
It can be a frustrating job, but what's most important is lhat it's a job
consortium of large health care
· • that can make a difference.
providers, shows that 76 percent of
the public favors "fundamental"
change in the system.
And a late J unc Harris poll for
the ~aiscr Family Foundation
showed thai 73 percent of the
•
public favors "reducing lhe rate of
By Th~· Associated Press
growth"
in Medicare sr:nding to
Today is Wednesday, Aug, 9, the 221st day of 1995. There are 144 avoid "bankruptcy'
in the
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on Aug. 9, 1945, three days after the atomic bombing
of Hiroshima, Japan, the United States exploded an atom1c bomb over
Nagasaki, killing an estimated 74,000 people. ..
On this date:
In 1790 the Columbia returned Ill Boston. Harbor after a three-year
NEW YORK - Manufacturers
voyage,
be~oming
the
.ftrst
ship'
to
caiiy
lhe
American
flag
around
the
are
cultlfig payrolls and scoren1r
·- world.
1 •
•
comp.ani~s llf~ downsizing, but
In 1842, a border dispute between the United States and Canada was many also are facing a challenge of
resolved wilh lhe signing of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty.
another sort: Finding qualified
In 1848, the Free-Soil Party nominated Martin Van Buren for president workers to fill job openings.
at its convention in Buffalo, N.Y.
The problem isn't new, but it
In 1854, Henry David Thoreau published "Walden," in wbicb he may be growing, reflecting the
described his experiences while living near Walden Pond in Mas- rapidly changing demands of lhe
sachusens.
job marke~ and perhaps indicating
In 1936, Jesse Owens won his fourth gold medal at the Berlin also a failure to deal quickly with
Olympics as the United States took ftrst place in the 400-meter relay.
lhe disruption.
·
In 1944, 258 black American sailors based at Port Chicago, Calif.,
Two sinall-busincss surveys
refused to load a munitions ship three weeks after another ship exploded, released in the past few days sugkiUing 320 men, two-thirds of lhem .black. (The sailors were court-mar- gest the situation is worsening, an
' ·Jialed fined and illlprisoned for their refusal.)
·
.
ironic twist in a labor market that
'
In 't965, Singapore proclaimed its independence from the Malays130 so often seems infused with insecu·
Federation.
.
rity and apprehension.
..
In 1969, actresS Sharon Tate and four other people were found brutally
Economist William Duakelberg
murdered in Tate's Los Angeles home; cult leader Charles Manson and a reported that 25 percent of all
group of his disciples were later oonvicted of the crime.
.·
member companies respondmg to
Ten years ago: A federal judge in Norfollc, Va .. f~und retiired Nayy an ongoing National Federauon ?f
officer Arthur J. Walker guilty of seven counts of spymg for the Sov1et Independent Business survey tn
Union.
·
.
•
·
July said they bad one or more .
Five years ago: A week after Iraq invaded Kuwa1~ 'Yestem Euro~ openipgs that were hard to fiU.
diplomats and Arab witnesses re~d that Iraq hal! virtually sealed. liS
Plans to hire were strong, he
borders, preventing thousands of fore1gners from leavmg Iraq or.Ku~a1t. . sald, but finding qualified workers
One year ago: A divided Se~ opened f~ deb~ on ~gas!auoo to . was increasingly difficult. In fac.t.
provide health insurance for millions of Amencans wtthout 11. FirSt lady he said, 10 percent called 11 th~tr
HiUary Rodham Clintoo, interviewed by heal.tb re~s. accused oppo- number one problem, a compla1nt ,
nents of Democratic b.ealth reform biUs of restoring to scare tactics.
category usually reserved for taxes. ,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

MEMORiAL
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Pomeroy

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�Wednesday, August 9, 1995

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Page4
Wednesday, August 9, 1995

top Reds

s~4;

Redskins ax Lohmiller; Means inks new deal with Chargers
By The Associated Pnss
Means signed a four-year, $7.3 receive $750,000 roster bonuses in
-Chip Lobmiller is out and Eddie million contract with San Diego; 1996 and 1997.
Morray is back in lhe NFL' s latest Stubblefield agreed to a three-year,
. "It is shorter and more expenkicker shuffle, while Natrone $6. 75 million deal with San Fran- stve _lhan we anticipated,·· 49ers
Means, Dana Stubblefield and cisco; and Matthews agreed to a p_restdent Carmen Policy said.
Bruce Matthews put their contract four-year contract with Houston for
But overall we are very satislted
hassles behind them.
and delighted with lhe prospect of
$10.3 million.
Lobmiller, an eight-veteran and
Means, a Pro Bowl starter after Dana reporting to camp and being
former Pro Bowl selection, was his second season, will play in Sun- committed contractually for the
waived Tuesday by the Washington day mght' s exhibition game against next three years.''
Redsldns, who then signed Murray, San Francisco. The running back_
Matthews arrived in Houston's
a 16-year veteran released two sat out Monday night's loss to Min- camp Tuesday, the guard's 34th
weeks ago by Philadelphia.
nesota after ending his 11-day birthday.
"You look at all lhe kickers and holdout Friday.
"For biro to miss a few days of
punters moving around, you l)ever
"He's in reasonably good camp is not quite as imponant as
know who's playing where," said .shape, a little bit better shape than I some of the younger guys,'' generLobmiller, who missed an extra lhougbt, ". Chargers coach Bobby a1 manager Floyd Reese said
point and a 29-yard fteld goal Sat- Ross said . "What's got to come
· Cowboys: Pro Bowl defensive
urday night al Kansas City after now is football conditioning."
tackle Leon Lett accepted a conmaking a career-low 57 percent of
Means received a $700,000 tract extension worth about $14
his field goals in 1993 and 71 per- signing b&lt;inus and will bave a base million lhat coounits him to Dallas
cent in 1994.
salary of $337,000 this year. His for lbe next ftve seasons.
"I had as much patience as I base plly will jump to $2.05 million
The Dallas Morning News silid
could," coach Norv Turner sai.d. in 1996 with a $300,000 roster today that ·a formal announcement
"After Saturday, I just thought it · bonus, $2 ·million In' 1997 and is being witbbeld pending interprewas timtHo go in a different direc- $2.25 million in 1998. Tlie Cbarg- tations from the NFL on the struction.''
ers also agreed to renegotiate if ture of the contract in regard to the
Lobmiller, 29, was to make Means is productive Ibis season.
salary cap.
$691,000 Ibis season. Morray, 38,
Dana Stubblefield, a defensive
Lett was scheduled to make
who joins his sixth team in five end who also made the Pro Bowl in $750,000 in the final year of his
years, signed for the $178,000 his second season, ended a 20-day previous contract. Starling
league minimum.
·
holdoul He will have base salaries linebacker Darrin Smith is the only
"It's a job, and \bat's really lhe • of $200,000 in 1995 and $1.525 unsigned player, He is seeking a
bottom line," MUITlly said.
mUlion in I996 and 1997 and will · one-year deal for $700,000 and bas

Astros also lose

defeated Sl. Louis 4-3 and Pitts- by a Met this season.
burgh stopped San Francisco 9-5.
All-Star Tyler Green (8-8) lost
MarUns
5,
Rockies
4
his
fourth straight stan.
T he only race left for the
Chuck Carr's double in the botPadr~ 3, C~bs 1 _
Arlant a Braves is against the
tom
of
the
13th
inning
scored
Terry
J
~Y
Hamtlton
st~gled m the
Cincinnati Reds-for the best record
Pendleton
as
bosl
Aorida
rallied
.
dectdm~
r~n.
and
p1~c~~d 6 2/3
1 n the National League.
from
a
4-1
deficit
in
lhe
ninth.
sl!ong
mmngs
for
VISLUng San
Despite ex-Drave Ron Gant's
one
out
in
the
13th,
Diego
..
With
'hcst dfom. Atlanta took a 5-4 vicPendleton singled and moved to
Hanulton (5-5) allowed one run.
tory Tuesday night in the opener of
second
on
a
wild
pitch
by
Roger
struck
out five an~ walked rwo. .
a three-game se ries between the
After
Greg
Colbrunn
He
also
got a smgle_lhat made tl
Bailey
(3-5).
two besttcruns in the NL
Carr
bit
a
line
drive
into
2-0.
It
was
hiS stxth bit and fourth
walked,
,In squaring the season series at
the
right-field
corner.
RBI.
4-4, the Braves increased their lead
Buddy Groom (1-0) earned his
K~vin Fo_s~ (7 ·8) gave up three
tn the NL East to 12 1/2- games series.
ftrSl
NL
win
in
his
first
game
with
runs
m ftve mnmgs.
Smoltz
(9-5),
who
bad
only
one
over the Philadelphia Pbillies. They
the
Marlins
after
being
acquired
. Expos 6, Astr.os 0
win
in
his
previous
seven
starts,
if1111rovcd their record to 60-34,
from
lhe
Detroit
Tigers
on
MonMmses.
Alou snapped an 0-fo!only percentage points behind the allowed six bits in seven innings.
.
14 skid wuh a threC-run homer m
With
the
game
tied
4-4
in
the
i{cds' 59-33 mark that leads lhe NL
day.
the seventh inning at the
Cooual by 6 112 games over Hous- sixth inning, Chipper Jones greeted
Melli ll, PbiUies 10
"Astrodome, and Gil Heredia earned
reliever Chuck McElroy (3-3) with
ton.
Carl Everett drove in a career- his first victory in over two
Braves starter John Smaltz gave a leadoff single, stole second and . high five runs and reached base six months.
up three runs in lhe flril inning, but scored one out later on David Jus- . times as New York extended host · It was Montreal's lrrsl victory
scu lcd down to keep his team in Lice's single. -·
Philadelphia's losing streak to six over Houston in seven games this
In other NL games, Florida beat games.
the game .
season, and only lhe second Lime
"I t's not a huge series," be Colorado 5-4 in 13 innings, the
J;:verell went 3-for-3, and Ibis season lhe Astros were shut
said, ''but it was big for me person- New York Mets nipped Philadel- walked three limes in support of
ally since I haven't been winning ' phia 12-10, San Diego topped lhe Reid Cornelius (1-1}, who won in out.
Hefedia (4-5), who hadn't stanmuc h lately. A lot of the Reds Chicago C11bs 3-1, Montreal his second major league start.
Everett's
five
RBis
were
the
most
(See AL on Page 5)
blanked Houston 6-0, Los Angeles
played here, so it' s family, and
you'd rather beat family than anybody . And we ' re fighting for the
best record in 111&amp; league.' '
Gant bit a lhree' run homer in
the ftrst inning to giole lhe Reds a
3-0 lead, and added a sacrUice fly
against lhe team lhat released him
before lhe 1994 season.
"I persenall y like to show them
what_they lost," Gaol said. " Sure,
both teams have big leads in their
division, but our goal is to win Ibis

Ry M'IKE FLAM
As:.ociated Press Writer

.

•

..

9

'

In the AL;

-·

"

GETS DOUBLE - Cincinnati's Barry Larkin arrlvu at second
base with a double ahead of the throw to Atlanta second baseman
Mark Lemke during the first Inning of Tuesday night's National
League game In Atlanta, where the Braves won S-4. (AP)

AL

Red Sox beat Tribe 5-1; Brewers slip by Blue Jays 6-5
llv .IIMMY GOLEN

I' BOSTON (AP) - By the tim e
Red Sox manager Kevin Kennedy
~ '' I 10 the mo und 10 talk to Tim
\V:1kefield, his pitcher, catcher and
the sold -o ut Fe nway Park crowd
v. crc all conspirmg aga in st him.
" T im w as .looking a1 me and we
v. ere

!Iyin g to formulate a plan to
let him go a little longer," catcher
"-lt ke Macfarl a ne said ' or
Ke nnedy's eighth -inning visit on
Tuesday mghL "But Kevin didn ' t
have that ' pull him ouCof the
game' wa lk out Lhcre . He just gave

him a little .breather. And 1 thought
1~

was gocxl Inn i ng."

Tu the uel ight of the biggest
r:r nway c ro wd of the season,
Kennedy left Wakefield in, and the
knuckleballer held on for his ninth
consecutive vic tory , a 5-1 decision
over tl1e Cleveland Indians.
" I sa id '1 didn ' t come out here
w t:Jke yo u out. Bull think the fans
llhoughl so), "' Kennedy said. " If I
a manage r that was easily
111IVucnced, that would have done
11. ~lcca u sc 1 might not have made
11 hack ~1 the dugout."
Wnkc fteld (13 - 1) allowed six
htLs, including Eddie Murray's 14th
hume run of the year and 472nd of
hts career, walking one and s(rilcing
l&gt; ll l fo ur as Iloston won its sixth
strmght. Wakefield's AL-best sixth-

·.v:"

Lee Tinsley had three hits and
complete game dropped his major
career. Wncn I saw it hit the
league-leading ERA to 1.61 and drOve m four Boston runs.
ground, that ' s when [ was
·
It .was 1-1 with one our in the. exc ited.;,
tied Baltimore's Mike Miissina for
fourth when Troy O'Leary, who
the illost wins.
"It was a good win for
"I guess we know who our ace entered the game in an 0-for-12
everybody. We've been battling all
slump, singled for one of his three
is." Kennedy said.
year long and again tonight. We
Mark Clark (6-4), who gave up hits. Macfarlane doubled and they JUSt stayed with them long enough
10 hits in 6 2/3 innings, took the both scored on Tinsley's single.
to get a wtn ,"' smd Bill Wegman
In other AL games, Mileaukee (5--4} , who pllchcd two scoreless
loss.
Released by Pittsburgh in the got by Toronto 6-5, Seallle edged
innings to get the victory.
spring and not signed by Boston Chicago 10-9, Texas defeated
The Brewers scored single runs
until May 27, Wakefield has not Detroit 4-1, Minnesota downed
in the seventh, eighth and ninth
lost si nee June 14 and he bas not Oak_land 5-3, California stopped innings to rally from a 5-2 deficit
not allowed more than three earned Kansas C•ty 4-0 and New Y.ork and send -the game into extra
runs in any of his 16 starts- 14 of crushed Baltimore 11 •4.
innm gs. And they did it without
Brewers 6, Blue .lays 5
them Red Sox victories.
much help from Scitzcr.
Kevin Seitzer had been there
''He exudes confidence,"
Macfarlane said. "I lfon 't know before- several times.
In the seventh inning, he came
what happened in the past, but the
guy makes me feel that much more up with the bases -loaded and two
outs. In the ninth, there were two
confident behind the plate .."
" All 1 know is [ never gave up men on when he went to the plate.
Both times , Seitzer made th e
on myself," Wakefield said .- "I
battled like crazy the last two inning-ending out.
Then, in the lith, he hit a shot
years .... There is no secret."
Kennedy was booed by the 10 deep right-center with runners
crowd of 34,574 when he went to on first and second, and the one-out
the mound to talk to Wakefield in double scored Jeff Cirillo from
the eighth. The fans cheered when second base to give Milwauke« a 6·
Kennedy went back to the dugout 5 .victory over the Toronto Blue
·
alone, and again when Wakefield Jays on Tuesday night.
" 1 crushed it, but with Devon
took the mound in the ninth.
''It was a very good move to White out there, that dude's like an
keep him in," Cleveland manager antelope," Seitzer said. "He's just
Mike Hargrove said. "He didn ' t caught so. many balls of mine that 1
thought were extra bases my whole
-throw a lot of pitches."

San Diego 3, Cbicaao 1
·Moatrcal 6, Housloo 0
Los AngelCI 4, St louia 3

•MEIGS MARAUDERS •SQUTHERN TORNADOES
•EASTERN EAGLES
•WAHAMA Y,IHITE FALCONS
•OHIO STATE
•OHIO UNIVERSITY
•CINCINNATI
•CLEVELAND
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE

Sara Dieao (Blair 4·1) at Chica11o
(Ca&amp;lillo 7-5), 2:20p.m.
Pitubw&amp;h (WaJB«. l·lJ) at Sau Frao.ci•co (VanLa.ndingham 2-2), 3:35 2:m
Colorado (Ritz 9·6) al Aorlda (Burkdt
9·10), 7:0.5 p.m.
New York (hriaib~uun l-l) at
Philadelphia (Quanlrilf9-6), 7:35p.m. .

Eutern DIYilioa

lill

39
44

.585
;:527

Ballimore ...............4S

49

.479

S.5
10

Detroil ....................42

Sl
54

.447
.426

13
IS

Toronto ...... ..........40

CINCINNATI (Burba 5-2) II AUa.ota
(Maddux 12-1), 7:40p.m.
Mootreal (Martinez9-7) at Houston
(Swindell 7-5), 1:0.5 p.m
St. Lcuil (Morpa 4-4} 11 Los Anaeltt·
(Candiott.i .5-10),10:3$ p.m.

C'cntral DI•IJ&amp;on
CLEVELAND ....... 6l 29 .685

Milwaukee ............. 46
Kanua City ......... ..44
Chicago ........ .......... 40
Mi onesota .............. 3+
We~~ern

47

.495

17.5

47

.48&lt;4

11.5

53
60

.430
.362

23.5
lO

Thursday's gamet

36

.621

Seallle .................... 4&amp; 47

.SOS

11

Oakland ................. 44

.454

16

Tex~

·

'

DI•Woa

Califor nia , ............. 59

... ... ...........,..48 47

53

.50.5

San DieKO (Williil.llll 2·8) at Chicaao
(Tractaei4-B), 2:20p.m.
Pitubwg.h {Parris 4-4) at San Fraocil·
co (Brewington 2-1), 3:3.5 p.m.
·
Colorado (Retar 3·0) at florida (un4ecided), 7:05p.m
New York; (Pu!Jipber J.6) at ~iladel·
phia (Juden 0- 1), 7:35 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Smiley 11-1) at Atlanta (Giavine I 0-.5), 7:40p.m.
Montreal (Henry 6-9) at Houston
(Drabek: 7·5), 8:0.5 p.m.
St. Louis (~ovae:k -4-3) at U. Ana:cle. (Norno 9-2). l0:05 p.m

ll

Tuesday's scores

Bo sto n~ . CLEVELAND I

(ahfomia 4, ~nsas Cily 0 ·
, Mmnesow 5. Oak.land l
New York l l . Baltim:Jre 4

Tn lll!i 4. Detroit I
M1l wauk.ee 6, Tomnlo S (I I)
Scanl e I0. Chicago 9

Today'.&amp; games
Baltimore (Moyer 6-4) at New York
(Kamicniee li 3-l). 1:05 p.m.
CLEVELAND (Hi ll 1·0 ) at Bo11on
{Hansoo 9-4), 7:40p.m.
California (Finley 10-1) II Kaa.1111 Cil:y
(Bunch 1-2), 8:05p.m.
Oakland (Wojciechowski 0-1) • Minnesota (Rodriguez 2-4), 1:05 p.m
·
Toronto (Gu:unan 3-8) at Mi,.auk.ee
(Karl 2·2), 8:05p.m . .
De.troil (Ni t k.owski 0- 1) at Tena
(Rogers 10-5), 8:35p.m
Oliei!lill (Bc!lton o-O) ar_ Seattle !,B01io
7-5}. 10:35 p.m.

Transactions
AmericMLtape
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Slaaed
Mite Hartlt)', pltcha-, and aui1n~

to Roche.ter of the Ioteroational Leque.
CALIFORNIA ANGELS: Recalled
J01e U!!-d.ltCObd buemaa, from Vaacou·
ver or the Pacific Co•t Leap. Optioned
Rnd Correia, shw'tltop, t9 Vucouw:r.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Eterclaed

Thursday's games
Califoroia (Langston 11 -1) at Kansa.a
C1ty {Jaconle 0-2) , 2:35p.m.
CLEVELAND (Nagy 10-4 and Ogca
5-J} at New York (Rivera 4-2 and Hitch·
cock 5-6), 2, 4:35p.m.
Ball imo re (Brown 5-1 } at Bo1ton

lill

Phll:ldt:lphia ...........48 47 J05
Montreal .............. ..4.5 50 .47-4
f-lo rida ...................40 51 .440

12.5
15.S

18.5

r.iew Y or k .............. 38

22.5

34

57

.6Jiil

.400

CrnlrallHYllion
Cl!'I CINNA11... .....59 33 .641

l!oll.'lton .................547 •.71
Chil!ago ..................4
Pit tsburgh ..............40 53
St Louis ... ............. 39 56
t

.55600&amp;
·
. ~30
. ~11

61.sl r'
19.5
21.5

Wutern 011'1Ron
d ur ado ........... .. ..52 43 .547

Los Angele~ ......... ...SO
S&lt;1n Q 1ego .............. 4S

4.5
49
Sao fra.ociw;! ........ 42 .53

.526

.479
.442

Tuesday's scores
P1ltsburgh 9, San Francisco 5
Florida 3, Colorado 4 (13)
New Yorl1: 12, Philadelphia 10 .

2
6.5
10

1_

1~-day di&amp;abled lilt
SEAITI..E MARINERS : PIKed Steve

pitcher, from the

f~y. pil~er. on waiven for lht purpose
of &amp;ivins rtim hll uncoaditioDal releue.

I

••

••
...·'
·'&gt;
.~

•.

...•
.~

~

•

,
I

•

•
·'_.

..

SootherD League.

·

3/4Jon
0

•'

,.'

Nadonal Football Le•ue
ATI.ANTA F~ncd Devin
BUill. aafcty, to • ?J'ur-year coo'iract.
BUFFALO BILLS: Released Tmy
Quino, ufety, &amp;nd Myron Glan, cOrnerback. &amp;lined Petii'·Tuffol li&amp;lbackar1 to •
lroc-ajent con!Pct.
~ CfDCAGO BEARS: Waived Trevor •

L

end, aud Ted Rot~m. offeoaive lineman

DALLAS COWBOYS' Rol,.ed Rod

•.•,

Aleundet, wide receiver; John Alldenon,

cornert.ck; ud Kurt Bloedom, punter.
NEW YORK GlANTS: Waived Chri.a
Mazyct, defea1ive tack.le, &amp;~d Tyler
l.awrtDU. linebacker.

.,

•
••

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS : Sian~d

four-

year contract. ·
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS' SIJ•od
MMioa Butta, Nnllina: b.ck.
·

Usl Price

.. 110,219
F""'Y Reba1e . . . . . - $300
GMAC 1st Time Buyer

•
'..
••
••

WASHINGTON REDSKINS : Wai~

Chip Lobmil!.-. pl..Wctu. Sla•ed Eddie Mumy, place.lticiu.

••"
•
•

•••

Big Bend Youth Football League

r

1

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August 23rd
Call Dave or Bob ;At
992-2155 For More Information

Hey, Friends and
Family! Pla(e An Ad
Wishing Your Favorite
Player, Cheerleader, or
Band Member
"Besl Wishes, too!"

The Daily Seniinel
'

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McMahoo, quarterback. Releutd Avrom
Smllb, runniaa t.ck; Trumane Bell, tiJIX:

Saturday, August12;'' 1995 ·
. 5th and 6th Graders
10:00 • 12:00 Noon
Chester • Baum Lumber
Middleport • Big Bend Health &amp; Fitness
Racine • Star Mill Park Shelter Area

.

o..l&lt;••

Pl-D
ELPHIA PIUWES: Waived
M.-iano DuDCaD, infielder. Acquired Brian Koelliaa, infielder, rrom Olaltanooaa
of the Soulhetn Leque u compelllllion
[or CinclnnaU claimina Duncan. Pl.:ed
Bohby MUD01, pitcher, and Ton)' l.oll.lmife. outfielder, oD the IS-day disabled
lilt. Activ.al.ed Gary Vanho, outfielder,
from the 1.5-day disabled lilt. Recalled
Kevin Jordan, inf&amp;eldet, and Paul Aetchet,
pitcher, from Scraaton-WUtet·Barre of
1 ,
the lntemationaltaiue. .
PmSBURGH PIRATES: Activated
Kevin Youna, outfielder, from the 15--day
dlubled lilt. Optioned Deoni1
Kon\liZCWSid, pitcbct. lQ Carolina or the

1

·-

•

two plar;j,to be named.

Cobb, rWiback.

BIG CATFISH - Pomeroy's Gary Haning holds up two catfish
be caught early Tuesday morning, The largest catflsb weighed
more than 30 pounds and look mor" than 25 minutes to haul in on
50-pound test line. Haning used shiners along the river near the
Pomeroy_Exxon. (Sentinel photo by George Ahale)

I

••... •.
..,.

SIGNUP

·•

'·

..

AbaA:ITO

&lt;Mimed au,...

••"
•
•
•
•

.. . ' ' -S500

Tom Pedln Olscxluf1 .. . • $631

Saie~iee sa'788

..

·

I

,.

FLORIDA MARLINS' Troded Bobby
Will, pitcher, to the Tex• Ranaera for

NatroDe. Meanl, numin&amp; bact, io

NATIONAL LEAGUE
L ~n

Jim AbbOtt (8-5) allowed seven in eight-plus innings and snapped a
Mall Whiteside gamed his
hits in .seven innings, and Chili three-game losing _streak, He had
second save and Scan Bergman (4Davis s ingled, doubled a.nd not recorded a vi&lt;:tory at home
7) took the loss.
homered to lead California at game since July 15.
Kansas City.
Davis, stretching his hitting
streak to 13 games, slammed a
two-run homer off Tom Gordon (6NL action. !~onlinued from Page 4)
8) in the fourth.
----~------Twins 5, Athletics 3
Jeff King became the frrst Pirate
Rookie Brad Radke surrendered ed since July 7, earned his lrrst vicin 101 years to homer twice in an
four hits through eight innings and tory since May 31.
Shane Reynolds (7-7) pitched inning as visiting Pittsburgh bit
Kirby Puckett homered and
four homers and scored nine runs
doubled as Minnesota handed .seven innings and sbUCk outiO.
Dodgers 4, Cardinals 3
in the second inning.
visiting Oakland its fourth straight
Eric Karras bit his second game·
King led off with his lOth
loss.
After giving up a double to . winning home run in as many days, homer of the season and bit a solo
Jason Giilmbi in the second, Radke a solo shot in the eighth inning that shot for the· eighth run as the
(8-10) retired 15 of the next 16 pulled host Los Angeles within tv;o Pirates sent 12 men to the plate.
The only other Pirate lO homer
batters before allowing consecutive · gantes of first-place Colorado in
twice in an inning was Jake Stensingles in the seventh. Dave lheNL West
Karros greeted reliever Jeff Par- zel, who did it in the third inning
Stevens pitched the ninth for his
reo
(3-4) with his 21st bomer lead- against Boston on June 6, 1894.
seventh save.
Denny Neagle (11-4) allowed
ing
off
lbe eighth.
. Rangers 4, Tigers I
Pedro
Astacio
(4-8)
pitched
a
five
runs in eight innings for PittsMickey Tettlcloll'' s two-run
scoreless
eighth,
and
Todd
Worrell
burgh.
homer backed the pitching of
earned his 21st save in 22 opponuSergio Valdez (0-2) started for
Kevin Gross as Texas defeated
nities.
Detroit.
lhe GianL~. who have losf 20 of 29.
Pirates 9, Glan.ts 5
Gross (5-11) scattered eight hits

'''..,'

COLORADO ROCKIES: A&amp;:reed to

Cor the 1996se.on.
·,
OAKLAND ATIH.EtiCS: Optioned

'

rum
.w
Atlanta ...................60

the Mariners ahead 9 -8 with a
pinch RBI single in the seventh
inning.
Bobby Ayala (4-4), Seattle's
closer and the fifth Mariner p(tcher,
got the victory with 1 1/3 mnings
of scoreless relief.
Jay Buhner had a grand slam for
Seaule in the fourth inning.
Yankees 11, Orioles 4
Ruben Sierra drove in a careerhigh seven runs with a homer,
'double and single, and David Cone
won his third straight decision for
New York.
·
Sierra's three-run homer off
Baltimore's Rickt Krivda (0·1) in
the sixth inning gave · the host
Yankees a 3-2 lead and overcame
·Brady Anderson's lith homer, a
two-run shot, in the top of the
inning.
The Yankees added five more
runs off the Orioles bullpen in the
seventh, including Sierra's threerun double, and added three more
runs in the eighth. the final coming
on Sierra's single.
Angels 4, Royals 0
'

·'"'
.,'

term1 with Ben Ptt:rict, ettcha-.

CbHJ O'Brien, offeuive lineman.

Detroit (Uma 0-3) at Tu1111 (Darwin I ·

Eulirn Dh•\Non

----------------------

...-·
'

{Cormier 4-2), 7:05p .m.

9), 8:"p.m

Browns: Jim McMahon participated in practice after signing a
one-year· deal that will reportedly
pay lh~ 35:year-old quarterback
slightly more than the minimum,
with incentives lhat could push the
deal to $2 million.
' "I want to go back to lh~ Super
Bowl, and I think this is my best
opportunity, from what was out
there being offered," said McMahon; who played in only two games
for Ariwna last season.

.,..
·~
••
., .•

t no Duncan, Infielder, orr waiverJ from
the Philadelphia Phi!Yet.

their option on Dennis Martiua, pitcher,

Ramoa Fermin, pileher, to HuntJVille or
the Southern League. Activated Jim Coni.

•

Aikman.

in 1970, to talk with the media.
Giants: An MRI exam COD ·
firmed that quarterback Dave
·Brown bad nothing more than a
bruise to bis right elbow and should
be out no more than two weeks.
"This is not a serious injury,"
said Dr.-Russell Warren. the team's
orthopedic surgeon. "It is a moderate bruise, and the recovery should
be in the neighborhood of two
weeks.''
Brown was injured in Sunday's
game at Cleveland.
Early today, the Giants reportedly signed rookie running back
Tyrone Wheatley, leaving just Derrick Alexander of Minnesota and
Michael Westbrook of Washington
as the only unsigned fiTSt-rounders.
Eagles: Guy. Mcintyre, a livetime Pro Bowlguard wbo spent last
season with Green Bay after 10
years with Francisco, signed a oneyear deal for $525.,.000, with a
$100,000 signing boiltts and incentive clauses for anc'lher $225,000.

,.
•..

N•lonall l.eiiJ.!-1
• CINCINNATI REDS: Claimed Mari·

FootbaU

Falcons: Former Aorida State
safety Devin Bush, selected 26th
overall in the 199 5 deaf~ agreed to
terms on a four-year contract.
Bush, who b:&lt;d 164 tackles and
three interceptions i_n threC college
seasons, was expected to_sign today
after a physical·exam.
Defensive tackle Moe Gardner
is expected to be sidelined for up to
three l"eeks after arthros copic
surgery Monday to repair torn cartilage in his right knee . He was
injured in Saturday night' s game
with Philadelphia.
Raiders: Former San Francisco
coach Dill Walsh was in camp at
Oxnard, Calif., as the guest of Oakland coach Mike White.
"As I'm sure you know , be's
been one of my best friends for
some time, so I'm glad be's here
supporting us," said White, who
worked with Walsh when they
were assistants at Calil'ornia and
Stanford.
The Raiders declined to allow
Walsh, who was on the team' s staff

Rams: Chris Miller confronted
a reporter from a TV station that
said Monday lbe SL Louis quarterback planned to retire because of
recurring bead injuries.
:.'Kind of a shame when someone takes the liberty, when someone just comes along and says on a
livo telecast without talldng to the
main source, they're going to say
that I'm thinking of retiring, that's
nonsense," said Miller, who sustained his fourth concussion in two
years Satorday night in Seattle.
A representative from Athletic
Helmet Inc. will stop by the team's
camp sometime this week to fit
Miller with a belmet similar to one
worn by Dallas quarterback Troy

contests.sc~n-ti_nu_cd_r_ro_m_Pa_ge_4_)

CLEVELAND BROWNS: SlgDC:d Jim

BasebaU

Torbnto (Ht&gt;ntgen 8-9} at MilwauJr:te
·cspasu 7-S). 2: 05p.m

been offered $425,000.

~

Today'• g~naee:

AMERICAN LllAGUE

FEATVJUNG

TEXAS RANGERS: Sianed Vh:tor
Lopez, catcher, tind au11aed him to
Charluton, S.C. or the South Atlantic
Leap.

Alhwta 5, CINCINNATI 4

Major leagues
l!' L in

•

WED_NESDAY, AUGUST 30TH

Baseball

BOiiton ..........·..•..•... .S~
New YorL ............49

hit on that last one."
Toronto lost its fifth straight
game and Milwaukee snapped a
five-game home losing stre&lt;tk.
" We jumped on them early , but
then we kind of stalled and then
slowly let them back in;"
Toronto's Ed Sprague said.
P'\ul Molitor and Shawn Green
homered for Toronto.
Mariners 10, White Sox 9
A one-out, nimh-inning single
by J ocy Cora scored Alex Diaz
from second base as Seattle edged
Chicago in a slugfes~ Cora had put
(S~e Al on P:~ge 5)

1995 FOOrBALL PREVIEW

Scoreboard

:wm

"Good redemption," Seitzer
said. ' 'The one with the bases
loaded, 1 hit it down the first base
line and I thought that was a
double. I mean I smoked that baiL'·
But first baseman John Olerud
back-handed the bouncer for the
final out.
" Next time ~p. two outs and
Hamilton on first, I got all excited.
I was trying to rip one down the
corner and give him a chance to
score," Seitzer said. "1 was feeling
real good, and then I chased a bad
pitch.
"So it was at least nice to get a

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

On the NFL training camp scene

In the NL,

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~e:r

�•

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

~ednesday,August9, 1995

Por;neroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 9, 1995

STOCK YOUR FREEZER
WHILE PRICES ARE LOW

NBA and players' union reach ten·a tive agreement
By WENDY E. LANE

won' t be a diffiCult sell," be said.
•'We don't think it's going to be a
problem."
The targets of the hard sell will
be Michael Jordan, Pabick Ewing
and other players whose opposition
scuttled the previous deal, causing
a deep rift among the membership
and biggering a drive to abolish the
union .·
A previously sci vote on disbanding the union now will also be
a referendum on the revised deal,
union executive director Simon
Gourdine said. ·
"We're very happy the NBA
met our concerns,' ' Williams said.
" We feel very fortunate that we
could work out an agreement at 5
minutes, 10 minutes before midnight."
.
The talks were a last effort to
get a new deal before the union
acquiesced to the wishes of Jordan's faction and relinquished its
authority as the players' bargaining
agent. The union had said it would
take that step if there wasn't an
agreement by midnight.
More than three hours ofnegotiations produced an agreement that
·
-

NEW YORK (AP) - The NBA
and its union got together on a lastminule labor deal. Can the players
get togelber and approve..it1
With yet another contmct proposal before it, a divided membership must decide whether to accept
tbe six-year deal or dissolve tbe
union and try to win beuer terms
through the courts , potentially
jeopardizing the stan of the 199596 season.
Arter reaching the tentative
agreement late Tuesday night,
NBA commissioner David Stern
and leaders of the players associalion will spend the next three
weeks selling tbe revamped deal,
which replaces one the players
rejected in June. Its approval would
end the month-old lockout.
"We have our work cut out for

us," union president Buck
Williams of the Porlland Trail
Blazers said. "We have to get out
and explain the deal and let il stand
on its own merits.''

Stem, flanked by 25 players a1 a
midnight press conference, ·w as
more oplimistic.
"Our ind-i cations are that it

r

In the ATP Championship,

·

eliiminales the luxury tax, a sticking point with players in the ·previous pact, and includes a $1 million
exception for lealns over the salary
cap to si'n free agents.
Also mcluded are two additional
exceptions to the salary cap: a provision under which learns can use
50 percent of an injured player's
salary to sign another player and
one that permits a player who bas
completed two seasons with the
Saine 1ea1n 10 re-sign at double his

Cleveland's Danny Ferry said .
"The playen; should feel this is fair
and reasonable. At least now they
have two sides they can look at."
Should the players vote to
decertify ~ather than to accept the
new contract, it would clear the
way for an antitrust lawsuit filed
against the league by Jordan,
Ewing and 14 other players. The
suit seeks to end the lockout and
abolish the salary cap and coDege

salary.

Jeffrey Kessler, the lawyer who
filed the suit, said' the second
agreement is still "too good for the
owners at a time when the Kniclcs
are charging $1,000 a Seat."
The . league and the union
reached an agreement in June on a
six-year lleal containing approximately $5 billion in player salaries
and benefits. But it was derailed
when Jordan and Ewing, displeased
with the proposal and with the
union leadership. advocated dissolving the union. Approximately
200 players signed petitions, filed
with the National Labor Relations
Board, saying they no longer
wished to be represented by the

lo exchange, the union agreed to
let the NBA reopen the contract
afler three years if salaries exceed a
certain revenue percentage. And
the NB A still gets a rookie salary
scale and abolishes multimillion
"balloon' payments tacked on the
end of some ve1eraos' conttacts.
Houston's Clyde Drexler said he
believed there was mucb for players to like in the revised agreement.
"I still think it's .very fair," he
said . • 'Everything has . been
increased from the last deal. The
cap continues to rise and there's
more free agency."
.
"It gives more people freedom
to move from team to team,"

·

Jan Siemerink of ~etherlands.
Two-time defending champion
Michael Chang bas an evening
match against Alex O'Brien. .
In Tuesday's feature, Petr Korda
took second-ranke.d Pete Sampras
into a tiebreaker before Sampras
prevailed with his overpowering
serve 6-3, 7-fJ (7-3).
"The way I'm playing, it was a
difficult draw for me... Korda said.
"I'm playing quite well ... but I
have to wait for my chances.'·
. In the other evening match,
11th-seeded Jim Courier beat
Vince Spadea 7-5, 7-fJ (9-7). Earlier, Sandon Stolle of Australia upset
16th-ranked Stefan Edberg of Sweden 6-3, 6-1".
"I got off to a,good start, even
though I didn't think I was bitting
the ball that well," Sampras said.
"Then I let up a little bit. Once I let
him back into the match, be played
weD."
Korda of the Czech Republic
often was clocked in the 100 mph

MASON, Ohio (AP)- Most
piayers would want to go into ·a
match with top-ranked . Andre
Agassi with both eyes open. Daniel
Vacek of the Czech Republic will
· do his best.
. Vacek, ranked 65th, earned his
chance at Agassi in today's second
rQund of the $1.8 million ATP
Championship by edging qualifier
. Jerome Golmard of France in three
sets Tuesday. Then he ran into
Boris Beclcer' s mcket.
Vacek: and Becker are lloubles
partners. They had just picked up
in the first set of a rain-delayed .
match when they mixed up their
signals and both went for the same
overhead shot.
Becker's racket bit Vacek below
the left eye, ending the match .
Vacek: received five stitches to
close the wound.
Becker, the No. 3 seed from
Gertnany, was. scheduled for his
first singles match today against

·

range on his firSt serve, while Sam- and I never let him get back in the
pras topped 120 mph.
match.
· ··"I was not going for the -big
"To beat someone ofStefan's
serve today,'' Korda said. "ll'.s class ... it's a big win for me."
very important to get the flfSt serve ·
Edberg, seeded 12th, said he
in against Pele because on the sec- "felt stmnge" during his match.
ond serve be can come in and hit
"My game wasn't there today,"
the big points."
said Edberg. "My mind wasn't
For Edberg, a two-time ATP foclfsed on what I was doing, and
winner, it was the frrst tim_e in 12 be bit the ball well. "He bas a lot of
years be lost before the quarterfi- talent. and be bit the ball very
nals. Stolle, ranked 199tb, over- sweet."
came his early uncertainty to take
Edberg, the top-ranked player in
advantage of Edberg's lack of con- 1990-91, slipped out of the top 10
centration.
this spring for the flfSt time in II
"I have trouble starting off years. But be said that at 29, be's
against frrst-class . players," Stolle not thinking of quitting any tilne
said. "I start off nervous and a lit- soon.
lie tight."
"I fmd that sornetilnes it's a litHe gave up a servioe break. but lie bit bard to focus; that's somerallied .to break Edberg and lake thing I have to work on," Edberg
control.
said.
• 'I just ·wanted 10 get into the
"It (retirement) is always in
match," Stolle said. "The biggest your mind. You think, 'Someday
thing was to break him right baclc, it's going to be over.' But I'm sliD
and that got me back in the malcb. not quite fmished yet"
The chances be had, 1 shurbim out

SECAUCUS, N.J. (AP)
Afler putting on his U.S. Olympic
jersey for the first time, Hakeem
Olajuwon hardly cared that it was a.
bit tight. After what be went
through to get it, the fi I wasn't
importalll
· "It's beautiful," be said Tuesday when be hied oil the red, white
and blue No. 15 jersey for the first
time.
.,.
For Olajuwon, being one of the
fliSt 10 players selected last month
fQr the 12-man 1996 Olympic 1ea10
marked the end of one mission and
the start of another - winning a
gold medal.
. Ever since pros were first
I

In Friday. issue of

Th~

Daily

Sentinel it was reported that Bib
Hysell of Pomeroy was tied with
Harold Lohse for fourth In the
Riverside Senior Men's League
standings.
Bob Hysell is tied with Lohse
for fourtb.
· ·
The Senlin£1 regrets the error.

298 SECOND ST.

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Cabbage 17c
·

12 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

LB.

Broccoli
77cBUNCH

S1rlo1n np Steak •••••~••

New White

FRES.H BONELESS . .

I

Ch1cken Breasts •••• !~...

10 LB. ~AG
EVER~

.

.

Potatoes S148
FRESH CORN

$

US~A C~OICE BONELESS BEEF , .

7·UP
PRODUCTS

179

12 PK
12 OZ. CANS

s219

FRESH

MORNING

•
$229
Chicken L1vers ......~ ••••
SLB TUB

LARGE

.(
s
]99
9
8
_
Turkey
••••••••••••••••••
L!·
•••
Cubed Stea k••••••••••••••
Polish Sausage ••••••i!·•• 99c

·Bed Pillows

_ GROUN~

BUCKET

.

LB.

SUPERIOR

MEIGS FARM MKre

'•·

'I

$2 99
Bacon •••••·•••~~~!~~. ·

KITCHEN PRIDE

992-7527

•

Sliced

CRISCO
SHORTENING
'

.

THREE
· POUND

$ 39
GATORADE.
32 OUNCE

BNNER ·:~ ••••••••••••••• ~~•.•• ]19

s

c
COITONNELLE
BATH TISSUE
· 4 ROLL PKG.

l10.LIDtfll

Freslh Peaches•••~ •.':;•••• 49c
VALLEY BELL lk
s
]89
2°/o -Mi •••••••••••••••6!~,~ ·
_BORDEN AMERICAN IND. WRAPPED
s]49
Cheese •••••••••••••••• JlRI·•• .

COQ~I)OOr;

Please, indude your name' and
phone # with recipe.
Deadline for all recipes
is October 20, 1995

••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS

I

1

1

s
]19
.
h
k
.
Ice Cream ••••••••••••••••••
Groun d C uc ••••••~...... HAGAN P~~MIUM

1

$ 29

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast ••••••••• ~~.... ..

____ _

__ .

'12 GAL. ROUND

LYNDEN FARMS SHOESTRING FROZEN

Potatoes •••••••~o.o.z•••••

$ ]99

4 $1.

will be given in Gallla County area by

614·446·1744

:

•

Friday, August 11, 1995- 9:00·Noon

•

PURE SWEET ·

BLENDED.SUGAR

• Call Toll Free 1·800,634·5265 for an Immediate appointment. ·•
: The tests wiD he given hy a Licensed Hearing Aid Spedahst •

*

Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding ccnversation is invned to
have a FREE hearing test to see if this problem can be helped. Bring this
coupon with you for youl FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
UMWA • UAW ·ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER
INSURANCE PROVIDERS
WALK-INS WELCOME ·

..
• .

•
•

4LB.BAG

99(

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

II!~====~~

·························• ~
•

COCA·
COLA
PRODUCTS

POMEROY DAiLY SENTINEL

•

•
•
•

c

8 AM·lO PM

Send Us llour
Favorite Recipe

AID CENTER •
• '\ ~·HEARING
1312 Eastern Avenue, (Route 7)
•

Correction

2l1TER

Monday thru Sunday

SOLID NEW •

thought of ever being able to play

-. McNeeley says recognition
will be his after Tyson bout
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Peter
McNeeley realizes the world
doesn't know be's the guy Mike
Tyson will oppose Aug. I 9 when
be returns to boxing for the first
time in four years.
McNeeley says everyone wiD be
aware of bis.identity aflerWard.
"All you people out there have
been abusing me, disrespecting
me." McNeeley said Tuesday at a
press conference to promote the
bout at the MGM Grand in Las
Vj~gas. ''I'm used to it. I love it I
just keep coming back. I' Ill like tbe
thing that wouldn't leave. On
August19,1'm coming for respect
"When I wrap Mike Tyson in a
cocoon of horror, they'll be singit:lg ,
at the House of BlueS'."
With that remark. Tyson smiled
and feigned a look of terror as
~ repoi'INS"llllll""l!thers In the au&lt;lience
laughed and applauded.
.
Tyson, 29, who bad a home in
Southington, Ohio, haSJl't fought
since June 28, 199 I , when be won
a 12-round decision over Razor
RuddOck in Llis Vegas. He spent
!hree years in prison for raping
Desiree Washington, a beauty
pageant contestant. He was .
released earlier this year.
McNeeley, 26, ranked as the
. No. 7 heavyweight contender by
the WBA and the No. 10 conlender
by the WBC, didn't begin his professional caree&lt; until. two months
after Tyson's most recent fight. .
Tyson is 41-1 with 36 knock- •

. STORE HOURS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU AUGUST 12, 1995.

one of ti!em on the_floor at a time,
for America.
· Olajuwon said be would gladly
"It wasn't a dream anymore for shift to power forward on occa&amp;ioo.
me," be said. "I decided 10 concentrale on other areas."
But on a hip through Boston in
late 1994; be contacted Alan Dershowitz, the Harvard law professor
aild attorney whose celebrity
clients have included O.J. Simpson,
Leona Helmsley and Mike Tyson.
Over dinner, Dershowitz said be
thought Olajuwon could get permission to play from FIBA and
offered to belp.
."1 just think Hakeem Olajuwon
is the best role model in the NBA
today for young people," Dershowitz said. "It would have been
really a tragedy if be wasn't
allowed to play in the Olympics.''
THE
FIBA was willing to listen 10
Olajuwon. When USA Basketball
will be p~blishing a
made its selections for the learn in
June. his waiver from FIDA was all
outs; McNeeley is 3'6-1 with 30 but assured of going through and
be was invited to join the team
Imocko~.
right
around the time be was leadMcNeeley bas slopped his last
ing
Houston
to its second conS\'(:ueight opponents in the frrst round,
tive
NDA
title.
including four this year. Twenty-.
"I thought it was too good to be
one of his 30 lmockouts have come
true,''
he said.
· •
in the frrst round. However, be bas
It
wasn't.
A
few
weeks later,
not fought anyone of great repule.
FIB
A
secretary
general
Borislav
Although be seemed in good
Included 'in the cookbook will be recipes from
Stankovic
granted
Olajuwon
an
spirits, Tyson kept his comments
exception to the rules. He was free
brief during the news conference.
Meigs Gounty residents, at no charge.
"I'm just glad to be here," be to play with -Orlando's Sbaquille
said. "There's not mbch I can say. O'Neal, San Antonio's David
The rec_ipes :wiil be categorized as follows:
Robillson, Utab'5-!Carl Malone and
I'd be happy to answer questions."
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bread/Grains .
Asked if he was concerned 'John Stockton, Cbkago's Scottie
about not having been in a teal Pippen and the rest of Dream Team
. • Cakes/Pies' &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
fight in over four years and, there- III in Atlanta.
fore, not being bit, be quickly
"This is the highest level ·or
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
replied, "I haven't been bit too competition in the Uniled States,"
much when I was fighting, either.''
be said. "To be selected as one of
• Soups and Sandwiches _
About I! is strategy, be said, the players, (one of) only 12 to rep"Just to win in spectacular fashion.
resent the U.S., it's a,big honor."_
Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:
I'm not a spring chicken in this
II also will mean big fun for
Olajuwon, who relishes the opporbusiness. You Imow what I do."
Holiday Cookbook
Tyson said be •II take a Muslim tunity to play alongside O'Neal and
c/o The Daily S~ntinel
name sometime in the future. For Robinson, the other two Dream
the tilne being ; he'll remain Iron Team Ill cenlers. To allow coach
111 Court Streei, Pomeroy, Oh 45769
' Mike.
..
Lenny Wilkens to have more than

allowed to participale in Olympic
basketbilll competition ill1992, the
Houston Rockets' center dreamed
of playing for his adopled country.
He watched, with longing, the orig· inal Dream Team win gold in
Barcelona.
.
But even though he became a
U.S. citizen in 1993, inlernational
basketball rules prohibited him
from playing for the Uniled States
because be bad represented his
native Nigeria in an international
· tournament when he -.:as a teenager.
· .
By the time a 1ea1n ·was chosen
to represent the'Uniled States In the
1994 world championships, Olajuwon bad largely given up any

PEPSI
COLA
PRODUCTS

POMEROY, OH.

/

Hakeem's 'American dream' becomes reality
By WENDY E. LANE

said malcing the 11 tb-bour deal was
the only way to make sure the season starts on time.
"For us, the issue turned on the
fact thai the erroneous legal advice
our players had been receiving
would be tested by the potential
loss of the 1995-96 season," be
said. "That was a risk we very
much did not want to take.''

draft.

Sampras edges Korda; Courier also wins
By TERRY KINNEY

players' association.
The NLRB called for a decertification election on Aug . 30 and
Sept. 7. More lhan-400 players wiD
be eligible to vote for eilber decertification or accepting the new deal .
No vote was scheduled for learn
owners, and Stern indicated be
would wait to call one until the
players make their decision. He

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

PETER PAN

PEANUT BUTTER
180Z.

99(

UMIT 1 PLEASE

SHOWBOAT

PORK &amp; BEANS

4 1
ISOZ.s

LIMIT 4 PLEASE

STAR-KIST
TUNA

.
·$1
2
6.5 oz.

UMIT 2 PLEASE

c
CHEF·BOY·AR·DEE

2 CHEESE

PIZZA
28 oz.

SJ.94
Less Coupon on Box..

:.55

~:~:::........-$13 9
HOSTESS
CUP CAKES OR
TWINKlES
12.8 OZ.·13.5 OZ.

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Whobrey
birth
announced

McKenzie Allyn Whobrey,
daughter of Scou Whobrey and
Autumn Griffith, was born July 26
at Holzer Medical Center.
McKenzie weighed eight
pounds, 20 ounces and was 20
inches long.
The infant's maternal gran!lparents are Mike and Nancy Griffith
of Pomeroy, and the paternal
grandparents are Larry and Jean
Whobrey of Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents are
Ruth Carr of Pomeroy and the lau:
Leslie B. Carr, aloog with Fredrica
Faris of Pomeroy and the late
Daniel Griffith.
Paternal great-grandparents are
Gene and Angia Walker of Gallipolis, the late Lora Jones, Larry
and Phyllis Whobrey of Gallipolis
and the late Rose Wbobrev.

Ashley ·.
chosen as
color
bearer
The Daughters of Union Veu:rans of the Civil War have
announced that Rachel A.sl\ley has
been chosen by the nationat president to serve at this year's national
coovention as color hearer.
Rachel has been a national
color hearer for the past two years.
Th.is year the national convention
will.be hcld.at Kearney, Neb. The
l)aughter of Keith and Emma AshIcy, Pomeroy, is a member of Elizabeth Rector Buell Tent #19 of
Marietta based on the service of her
third great-grandfather, CPl.
William Ashley.
She recently returned from
attending the state convention of
the Ohio Department D.U.V. at
Canton. She was accompanied by
her father, who serves as the state
pianist for the Ohio D.U.V. While
there, they attended the opening of
the new D.U.Y. museum in Massillon. Rachel participated in the ceremonies by performing a vocal solo.
One of the items on display was a
piece of the Lincoln White House
china as well as documents from
1885 on the founding orilie D.U.Y.
Rachel was again chosen to he a
state color bearer 'for the Ohio
Department. Her sister, Whitney
Ashley, was chosen for the forst
time to he a state color hearer.

VVednesday,August9,1995

MCKENZIE WHOBREY

'
Plans •for exhibiti'ng
in the·
Meigs County Fair flower shows to
be staged Monday and Thursday of
next week in the senior fair building were made during a recent
meeting of the Chester Garden
Club
.
Ka·~~
Meeting
at the home of _,..
and Woodrow Mora, members dis·
cussed and assigned classes in
which the club will exhibil It was
also voted to purchase a membership ticket for a community youngster who will he exhibiting in the
junior.flower shows .
Judy Bunger was the assisting

hostess for the annual picnic and
auctiOn. Bob Wood and Bob Miller
were the auctioneer for the garden
produce, baked goods, plants and
other useful items. Devotions given
by Lola Tobin were entitled 'This
Is My Garden, Lord". She was congratu 1ate f or acceptance of her
flower bed photos which have been
published in a second national publication "Birds and Blooms."
Maye Mora gave a memorial
tribute for long-time clUb member,
Ada Holter. She used scriptures
from Proverbs noting a "merry
heart", so typical of Mrs. Holter,

wbo was ~nown
for ber love of
~
gardening and lived the Ohio Association of Garden Club's mouo,
" ToSbateKn~.r·. tp Grow, to Show, and

0

1

SAVE STEPS!
.Shop the
Want Ads

shows. She
received
a secondflower
place
award
in the
convention
show, it was noted.
The sunshine project of the club
will he carried out this month by
Jean Frederick.
Dessert and punch were served

-

WILLlUIS
ftiEICBIIG

Betty Dean presented awards to
the club from the OAGC convenlion which she attended. Bolh pub- at
close of
business meeting.theGuests
notthementioned
were .
licity and program books were Mary Kautz, Roy Miller, Don .
rated superior.lt .was nou:d that the Mora, Roy Holter, Larry, Kitchell
cookbooks are complete apd are and ·Sammy Bunger, Jackie Frost,
being sold to club members and the . Richard, Denise and Jennifer Mora,
public for $10. Mrs. Dean talked and Horace Karr.
abo!lt tbe drought, its effect on garSeptember meeting will he held
dens, and urged members to sup- at the Sumner Road borne of Betty
port the Meigs County Fair flower Dean.

•

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

COPYRIGHT 1!J95 • TliE I&lt;AOCEA co' ITEMS ).NO PRICES GOOO SUNDAY,
. AUGUST 6. THROUc:;,..t SAT'IJROA~. AUGU ST 11, 199S IN POME~¥ &amp; GALLIPOI..t6

Wf AESlRVE T11E RIC:OHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES NONE SOLO TO PEALERS

.....Up tO 50(:

idl

seestoreForoetalls.
'

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE,

.

6-Pack 12-oz. Cans

YOUR TOTAL VALUE

-

We will install carpet
and floor coverings.
Give us a call at
614-992-337918 Years Experience.
Hours
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

7122/94

LEADER.

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

Four 6-Packs
Per customer At
This Price, Please.

ALFALFA
AND MIXED

.

HAY
FOR SALE

YOUR NEEDS

949-2512

BULLETIN BOARD
16°0 column Inch weekdays
18°0 column inch Sunday

'AIN, COLORADO

-- CALL OUR OFFICE Ar 992·2155 --- 2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
--- ·

·olathe

8u1.1.1iii IIIli UVHI\U UK;MULinE;

sweet-corn ·

NEEDED: Fair Workers,
Pies &amp; Cakes donated
Contact: Eastern Athlelic
·
Boosters at
Texas Tans iA Chester.

'

U.S. GRADE A
(4-7 LB. AVG.)
AU WHIT£. MEAT

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

Perdue
Fresh Turkey
Breast ........... lb.
LOW FAT GRANOLA, CORN POPS OR

Kellogg's
..FrootLoops
14-15 oz.

Kroger
Apple Juice
64oz.

Kroger
Wheat Puffs
6-oz.

.n. . ,
{' \\ ! .
-

-~ t:J:A~:.·\~~ Certified
Air Conditioning Service
Now AvaiiJlJ!Ie For Trucks
~-:';.,

SAVE ssoo "Scan •Rite"
Guarantee
. on 1-Day Admission Or
ssoo Off Z-Day Admission.
I

=

,.i i, ::.··,i

= ~&gt;'·;~,ry,:
: ~~"':~&lt;- &gt;·.
).

If our electronic check-out system orints and charges a
orice for an item diFferent than the stated price For
that-item; you get one of tl1at item absolutely I=REEt
Items with ·~ off' labels will scan the price on the shelf
tag minus the amqunt of the ·~off' laQel. Note:
Alcohol and tobacco products excluded by law.

:- ,,.
,· .. ,.,.,

---·- -·· .

.--.

_

,-

·-

- ~=
\·

-

,.,

-·i

~~

ol Any Size.
Auto, Farm &amp; Industrial.
Equipment
Freon Reclaiming and Recycling
Available
CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN
Phone: 614-446-2412 or

RACINE
GUN CLUB

House Repair &amp;

_..;;.
-- -,
~

Reasonable

Call Wayne Nefl992-4405
For Free Estimates
4/13195

I

Everyone
Welcome

oe • ayre

SAYR~ TRUCKING

'614·742·2138 .

--....1

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

~9.'~'e MIKE MARCUM'S

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
· Misc. Jobs.

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

8/4/tln

Help Wanted

SIGMAN'S

WANTED: COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
poslllons 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 otherwise scheduled;
vacation/sick benefits.
(2) 18 hrslwk.: 11 am-7 pm, SatJSun.; 2-hr. weekly
stall 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:
$5.00/hr. to start. If interested send resume to:
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH. 45640; ATTN: Cecilia,
Deadlln&amp; for applicants: 8/11/95; please specify
which position applying for. Equal Opportunity.
Employer.
I

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

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Jay Elmer Pendleton would
like to express their heartfelt thanks to all of
.
thetr frtends and neighbors for thetr many
acts of kindness during the loss of our loved
one. For flowers, cards, money, food, phone
calls and prayers. To those who took the
time to visit my sweetheart during his
illness, to Ira and Hope Eblin for their love
and support and many acts of kindness; to
Rose Deem for her love and support; to
Bonnie Brown, Pomeroy Post Office, a ·
friend; to Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment and care; to the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service for treatment
and care and transportation, first to
Veterans Hospital, then to Ohio State
University in Columbus, Ohio; to the
Reverend Paul Cottrill for the memorial
service; to Henry and Hester Eblin for
hymns; to Bruce Fisher of Fisher Funeral
Home for service, support and klndn&amp;S!J~ the
pallbearers; to the Middleport Police Dept.
for escorting the funerl\1 procession; to all of
you our sincere appreciation. May God bleu
each and every one of you.
Wife, Madeline Pendleton,
and all of her family and friends and his son,
Beacher Pendleton and family.

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems, TraDer &amp;.
House. Sites.
Reasonable Rates
J NS

v9: ..

Every
Wednesday Nile
S:30 p.m.

Insures ·Experienced

~~~~~:~:..

For Free estimate call 949-2512
REASONABLE RATES .
'"'"'"

o~~._s,at\1.\.

TRAP SHOOT

Remoclellng
Kitchen a f1eth
Remodeling
Room Addltlono
Siding, Roofing, Patios

&lt;)()''
._..,.,.,
....... -.)0,)0

James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.

81!!11fn

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES
28 Years Experience
PHONE
1-800-377-4477
614-245-0437

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement VVindows
Room Additio.ns • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and llESIUENTIAL
FnEE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643

Free Estimates
843-5124
992·2984

Bill Slack
"' 992-2269 or
304·773-5960
'
NEW HOME
Wailing for owner
Secluded on 2 wooded
acres (more available)
3 BR /2 BA. Tuppers Pl.
water, heat pump; heavily
insulaled- Must see!
· I 2 mi from Pomeroy, ·
I 7 mi. from Athens

'59,000

( No Sunday Calls)

614-992-2713
21 I2/92/lln

(Umestone low Rates)

WICKS

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

HAULING

Interior &amp;
Exterior

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

Take the pain out of
palntjng. Let us do It for
· you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After6 p.m.
614-985-4180 312.;,,

SMITH'S

AB&amp;TAUTO

CONSTRUCTION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(6t4) 992-5535
(6t4) 992-2753

3RD ST.

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

"Your Paris or Ours"

30 Announcements
B1rthd,ay card Show er for Urs .
Mae Moodespaugh, age 87, Au g~·. t 11 . c/o Cere HAven Nu.rsmg.
Home, Stafe Rau to 6?, N . Pl .
f'lleasant, WV 25550
·

40

Giveaway

Oil Change ................................. $17.95
Front End Alignment .............. ~.$19.95
TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

1 Male Puppy, Vorv Friendly,
Good With Children. 614 -441 ·

Check Out Our Tire Prices

1 Year Male Bla ck Lab Chow
Genlle, 614 -367-7317.

Most major credit cards accepted.
Owners: Richard Moore &amp; Ed Chaney ·~2111"

Country Naturals
Gifts &amp;
Accessories

0654

2 pupp1 es~ mother Reg. S1berran
Husky, dad Husky/Chow mi•, real
cute. 304-773·5952 or J04 -68Z·
29141eave message.
Fabnc Scraps For C ralfs &amp;
Owlls, 614 -211S.5064

Free Puppres, 6 14·367·0539.
One yeat old part Ger~an
Shepherd/ Col Ire , two year old
Gorman Shupherdt lab wt
housos. 614·992 5242

3.17 North 2nd
Avt!.
Middleport, Ohio
Mon-Sat.
9am- 5 pm

Pan Dobetm an, pr~r t Ronwerler,
2yrs olo, male 304-458-1513.
Pt11lco Frost rw e Rolr rgerator
Needs Repa ir, You H au l It Its
Yours! 614-44 6 8662

30 Announcements

Perhaps you sent a
lovely card.
Or sat quietly in a chair.
Perhaps you sent a
.funeral spray.
If so we saw il there.
Perhaps you spoke the
kindest words,
As any friend could say;
Perhaps you were not
there at all,
Just thought of us
that day.
Whatever you did to
console our hearts,
We tlnmk you·so mueh
whatever the part.

Shooting match
7-13-95
Legion Farm
Bailey Run Rd.

1 p.m. to?
AU Legal12 ga.
Public Notice

&amp; VIcinity
4 Fumll~ 4030 IngAlls Road, 011
218, Wed . SaL Lo ts 01 Good
School Clothes, Mrsc

Development Community
Houaing Improvement

Progrof!l for the Village of
R.oclne\ whl~h lnvolvot lho
rehab! ltotlon of 20-24

aubatandard home• with
total project amount of
$360,000, may call or come
Union Ave, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, next door ·to . the
LIHer Control Office, to
reque1t an appllcellon for

· Office Hours:

by

Statement ol

proof of liability

ln•urance and worker'•
compen•atlon.
The
contractor will ttren be

ploced on o llot of quollflod

contractors. The1e qualified
contractor• will be notified
at to da1e1 end time• that

bldo will be received for

r8habllltatlon work on
deaignated home• In the

i'
I

400

J&amp;L I"SULATION

Quallllcatlon•. StalemeRI
mu1t be re1Urned to the
CHIP ofrlce, accompanied ,

TIME ,

7th Houso Out 775, Relrrgeralors,
I ap10p CorTipU UH, L&lt;iltltl lrrmffirng
rab le. NICe Cl ot hrng, Lots 01
M1 sc 11th, And 12th , 9 00 TO

'SChorlt1

to tho Molgo County CHIP
ofllce located at 39350

Contractor~

Vard Safe
Gallipolis

contracton

lntereotod In bidding on
~bo for the Metga County
Ohl'o [!"epa rlmenl ol

Special thanks to
Pomeroy -E.M.S., Joe
Struble, Scott Walton
and Harold Mullen.
Also to ·Bruce
Fisher at Fisher
Funeral Home for his
help and kindness
and AI Hartson from
Middleport Church ·of
Christ.
.I
THE FAMILY OF
NQRMAN
HUMPHREYS

SfiVERS

70

PUBLIC NOTICE
Qualified

- in a hurry... TRY
- CLASSIFIEDS
REAL
-

-·
1 :~ ~
=·
=·
~iii iii li li iii iii iii i iii iii iii iii iii ii.. iii iii iii iii iii iii iii iP.

·•

, "'""TFN

Card of Thanks

The Holzer
Medical Center
Attention Deficit
Disorder Support
Group will meet
Friday, Aug. 11 at
7 p.m. in the French
500 Room. Richard B.
Simpson, MD will be
the featured speaker.
For more information
call the
Holzer Health Hotline
at 1-800-462-5255

SLICED
FREE!

r-------------. .......................

Sweetheart, God knew that you were tired,
And the hill• were hard to climb•
So He gently closed your weary eyes,
And whispered, peace be thine.

NOW AVAilABLE
GALLI A COUNTY JR.
FAIR VIDEO TAPES
•Little Miss/Little Mr.
•Queen Contest
•Antique Tractor Pull
•Demolition Derby
VIDEO TRANSFERS
Galiipolis. Ohio ·
614-446-6939
14·446-1370

IN GLASS JUG

9-,_

Card of Thanks

Get Your Message Acrots
With A Dally Sentinel

Each

1-900.388-0400
Ext. 6742
$2 99 p"r min
•
"'
'
Must Be 18 ,yrs.
PROCALL CO
'
(602) 954-7420

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
168
94

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

BAILED TO

LARGE 12-5/ZE

California ,
cantaloupes

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eanlng

110\\\IW
1-:\1 . \\ \TI\C;

110

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

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete·
Remodeling
Stop-&amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

Diet
or
CGIII Classic

Always Good, Always fresh,
Always Kroger.

i3C

first!

Ho~~~F7~'~sel (~:;~~~::! P!~~: s~rilling ~?c~.~~:~t

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·4081
Week Day S:OD-5:00
Open Saturday
9:0D-3:00 "''""

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.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

Imperial Tire
Service
formerly. Poor Boy Tires
Dual Exhaust tap in's
Glasspack ................ $109.95
Dual Exhaust Tap in's
Turbo's ..................... $119.95
Alignment Front end ... $19.95
Alignmentlour wneeJ .$34.95
Rotation &amp;Computer Bal. four
wheel ........................ $19.95
Various American Wheels on Sa~

Items &amp; Prices Good Through August 12, 1995 _
·WED iHUR FRI ~T
s 10 11 12

.......,--..;.__~, r--------.

DAYS
CAR WASH
Complete
Detailing

992-5591

.

.,

•

R &amp; C Excavating

•Septic Tanks
•Plumbing
•Water Lines - etc.
-concrete Work
•Grjlvel Hauling
•Welding/Fabrication
Certified
licensed/Bonded
25 Years Experience
614-992-2834
992·7821 712011 mo.

Auxiliary ·selects
local officers
Emma Ashley of Rock-Springs
bas-been named n~onal recording
secretary for the upcoming national
encampment of the Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War to be
held in Columbus.
Margaret Atlcinson, president of
tbe Auxiliary made the announcement of Ashley to that position
where she will he keeping minutes
of the four-day convention ..
Also seiected was Whitney Ashley, daughter of Keith and Emma ,
Ashley, as a national aide-de-camp
to the nation:d president. During
the convention, she will assist the
national president in the work of
the convention.
At the recent meeting of the
Ohio Department of the Auxiliary
SUV, Emma Ashley was elected to
a member of the department council as one of two delegates to the
national encampment. Her daughters, Whitney and Rachel, were
appointed state color hearers.

Pome'roy • Middleport, Ohio

Garden-.club plans flower exhibition

Area students
earn degrees
Twenty area students received
,degrees from Ohio University in
June.
Graduating were Natasha Szarlca. Pomeroy, bachelor of fme arts;
Norman Humphreys, Pomeroy,
bachelor of science in industrial
technology; Henry Cleland,
Racine, bachelor of science;
Christopher Adams, Reedsville,
bachelor of science in sports science; Kevin Burgess, Syracuse,
bachelor of science in mechanical
engineering; Sarah Philson, Syra- ·
cuse, bachelor of science in hearing
_and speech sciences.
Graduating with honors were
Suzanne Clay, Chester, bachei~Y of
business administration; Gina
·West, Coolville, bachelor of science in chemical engineering;
Shannon Miller, Coolville, bachelor of arts; Michelle Winebrenner,
.Racine, bachelor of arts; Kimberly
Newman, Syracuse, bachelor of
science in sportS sciences; Lori
Crow, Syracuse, bachelor of buslncss administration; Shannon
Wood, Syracuse, bachelor of arts.
Graduating with high honors
were Patricia Gibbs, Cheshire,
bachelor of science in nursing; Jennifer Stephan, Coolville, bachelor
of science; Leigb Redovian,
Pomeroy, bachelor of science in
journalism; Paula Pi~kens,
Pomeroy, bachelor of science in
communications; Cheryl Pape,
Syracuse •. bachelor of science;
Robyn Stout. Syracuse, bachelor of
science.
Receiving a graduate .degree
was Mary Findley, Racine, master
of health administration.

Wednesday, August 9, 1995

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
Mon.~Frl .

8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

VInyl a Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacemlmt,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Ooors, Storm
Windows, 'Garages.
Free Eatlmate•
1/1Mfn

Public Notice
Grant• Admlnl1trator,

at

992·7e08, Monday thru
VIllage of Roclno. Further Frldoy, 9:00 a.m. to S:00
r
lnformatfon can be obtained p.m.
by contacllng Jean Tru ..ell, ' (8) 7, 9, t1; 3T~

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT
floofing, Siding, Concrete,
Room AddHions, Etc.
(S~ 4} 388·8865
P.O. Box 220,
~!dwell, OH 456t4

H&amp;H SAWMILL
Portable
Handsaw Mill
32124Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742·2193
612/1 m
b

All Yatd Salns Mus! Be Pard In
Adva ntc DEADIINF 7 DO p m
the day hofore the ad rs 10 run
Su nda~ edr110n 2 00 p m Frrday
~onday edmon · 10 ·oo a.m Sat ·

ur dar

·

Garage Sate . Arr Compros~r. 31.11
HP 150 P SI Reese H1tch, Color
r V Ch1na Catunet , l: nd Ta bles.
We rgh t t111rng BM ch I Werg hts,
Clothes. Toys. rr r -Sat, B-? 520
Jackso n P r~e. At rc ss Hwy Pa :
!ro t
Thur sday &amp; F rrda~. 13 4 Oak ·
Drrve, [lv ts Plnw Co ll e&lt;:11on. 9-4

PIA

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vloinlly
All Yard Sales Must Be Pard In
Ad¥ant e Deadlme 1 OOpm the
day beloro the ad rs to run, Sunde.~ e0111on- 1.00pm Frrday, Monda'( 9dr110n lO :DOa m Sa.wrday.-

�..

VVednesday,August9, 1995

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel o Page 11

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACRQSS

alate

Answer to Previous Puzzle

36 Llberaeo,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Pomeroy,

730

Middleport

~-

oo~

N1ce three bedro om house tn
M1ddlepon no pets 614 992

and rrlday, n&amp;xt to Lat

5858

""'ir•cpry Syracuse Teenage

s.c

;..~

Pt.
&amp;

Small Ho use 2 Decks Overlook

l!O

•ng Raccoon $1'1e11er House
Large Dock No Pets $300/Mo
614 256 6112

Pleasanl
V1cinily

~, t
l"•Sale 2321
·~..,::l1a.m?

Unlurmshed 2 bed r oom house,
n1ce &amp; clean no ms1de pets rei
erences reqwed $200 depostt
$275 a month rem, 614-992 3090

420

Late Model Cars Or
1987 Models Or Newer
:,-1
Bu'c"' Pon 11ac 1900 East
) " fJ. en&lt;.~ a Ga hpolts

12x65 2bedroom 1 balh on At 2
Crab Creek 2 Horsel1ck Ad
$300Jmo Deposll &amp; rererences
304 369 E447

~

)

atod stoneware wall tele

o~

, " old laiT'ps old thermomao a cloCks an11que furnnure

"I lhtnk I was stx when I realized 1 was destined for
a ca~eer at lhe Department
Motor Vehtcles •

ot

3 Bedrooms, 14)(70, Almost
Cora M11 Road, Near Cora

~ \1 •

ne Antiques Russ Moore
""' tr 614 992 2526 We buy

,.,

120

H" e loid or Black wl whne lace

Sltuallons
Wanled

Attention Work ng Parents alter
J b. D s Auto Pans and Salvage school chtld care Uiddleport
:. •f1" 9 wreds JUnk autos &amp; area wij pick up child provide
ruc l.s Also pans lor sale 304 snacks iilllor 15 a day 6U 992
, 3 "i343 or 773 5033
6926

Ho.u.se And Lot low Down Pay
ment. Easy Terms 3 Bedrooms, 1
Ba th located Near Ew1ngron 1
Alice Road Area Call 1 800 448
6909 AP. For Matthew

Too P&lt;ees Pe o Old ,us
S vt r Gala D1amonds All
Co tJ(;ll bles Paperweights Etc
M r S Con Shop 151 Second
\~c1ue G~~;lhpolrs 614 446 2842

lovely Bttck Rancher 3 Acres
Wooded Lot Nea r Green Elem
School 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Bt~ck F1replace In LR F&lt;JII Base
ment W th Fam1ly Rec Storage
Room 011er 3 100 Sq Ft llvmg
Space 2 Car Garage Beautifu l
landscape For Pnvacy ln"round
Pool Wllh Deck large Storage
Bwld1ng $127 000 61.4.446 1025.

~~~~~~----- 1~~--------------

N anred to buy ant1que and used
!u•ntture no 11em ,oo large or roo
• small Will buy one p1ece or com
~lete estates Osby Martm 614
392 7441
Wanted To Buv Junk Autos W1th
Or Wllno ur Motors Call Larry
liiiCIV 614 386 9303

180

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Serv1ce Complete tree
care 20yrs exp &amp; maured lree
estimates 614 441 1191 or 1
BOO 508-8887
Expenenced Careg1ver Would
like 3 Preschoolers To Help Get
Ready For Kmdergarden Rodney
Area, Call Alter 3 30 PM 61 4·
245-9252

General Maintenan ce Pamtmg
Yard Work Windows Washed
Guuers Cleaned l ght Hauling
Wn ted lo Bu~ Used Mob1le Commer1cal, Res dent1al Steve
H:Jrres 614 446 0175
614-446-8861
Wa" ed Church Pews And P1a
'10 614 286-6522

ty Work 25 Years Expenence
614 441 0702

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Georges Portable Sawm111 don t
haul your logs to the m11t JUS! call
30467S.1957

Z
s Runnmg Or Pam!Jng ln!enor &amp; Ex!IHJOr Ouah

'hLJ led Old Honda s Many

Help Wanted

A11on Ea rn $8 $15 I Hr Full/
Part T me No Door To Door Ben
ehts 1·800 827 4640 lnd !Rep
Artn Pt Pleasant Postal Pos1
1ons a11a11a~e Permanent lullnme
lor clerks/sorters Full benefits
For elam date appltcat10n and
salary 1nlo 708 264 1600 ext
36 70 Bam to Bpm
AVON I All Areas 1
Spears 304 675 14~

Sn ~r ley

AVON SELLS AT WORK H0!11E
live rage $8 $15/Hr Benehtsl
No Inventor~ Or Door To Door
Jndtrep. 1 800 742-4736

AvoN
EARN
work All areas

$$$ at 1'1ome at
304 882 2645 1
800 992 6356 INDIREP

Bab~slttar f"'e eded Sa t&lt;Jr days,
7 ooaru 5 OOpm 614·992-3891 al
rar5pm
Beauhc an wanted 304 675 1960
or 304 675 5845

Corn~uter

Users Needed Work
Own Hours 20K -SOK / Yea r 24

Pepper P ckers Around 0120!95,
Pay By Bucltet Phone Evenmgs
614 245-5047
The Pt Pleasant Jeb 6erv1ce la
currently acceptmg app11catiO,ns
for JTPA funded tra1n1ng Mu st be
WV res1dent or last employer a
WV company 304 675 0857
EOE
WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS
I NSTRUCTOR Pos 11!0ns Avail
ab le To Teach Communny And
Per sonal Sk•ll~ To An Adult W th
Learnmg L1ml!at1ons In Me1gs
County HOURS (I) 32 Hrs IW~
(l ve In) S AM Sat fhru 8 AM
Mon. Sleep Over Requited 2 Hr
Weekly Slat! Meenng Or As
Otherw se Scheduled Vacation I
1 Sck Benehts
(2) 18 Hrs fWk 1t AM
7 P.M
Stu /Sun 2 Hr Weekly Sta ll
Meeting, Or As Ot'""'erwlse
Scoedulod, VaCIIIIOn /Sicl&lt; 8en1~~~
111s High Sc'hool D&amp;tt~e.
nr ver s L cense Good Dnv1ng
1 I' !l Ord Thre u Years ltcensed
1u .v m g E x pane nc e And Ad e
qua e Automobile Insurance
Coverag e Requ 1red Tramtng Pro
v ded Salary $S 00 /Hr To Start
It lnreres!Cd Send Res&lt;Jme To
P 0 Box 604 Jackson OH
4561\0 ATTN Cecilia Deadline
t--or Applicants 8f1 1/95 Please
~pec1 ly Whtch Postt1on Applytng
For Equal Opportumty Employer

Furnished Tratler, Deposit Re
qu1red No Pats Call Alter 6 PM
614 256 1304 StAt 7 South
House For Rent In Country 2
Bedrooms Garage Gas Heat
$300JMo Depos t, References
614 426 6926
N1ce three bedroom mob1le home
m Middleport central a1r no pets
614 992 5858

Pn11ate rustiC ranch style 3 or 4
bedrooms two baths I'JII finished
basemen! 25'x27' tam1ly room
large stone f~teplace large deck
three outbuildingS on apptox 6 7
acres three miles hom M1ne 31
pnce $89900 ca11 614 .742 2228
for appointment

Three bedroom trailer central a.,
stove and refng~:ualor no pets I
Depos1t and references requ~red
614 992 2272
Two bedroom partly lurn1shet:1
good clean cond11 on porcl'1
yard pnvate lot abo11e New Ha
ven $275 with water and sewer
304 882 2466 anyt1me

440

~""~co~s~B~~~l5-~58S~I~~~~[

430

t 4170 2 Bedroom•
~
Total Electric, lmN1ce To Desc:nbe
1 ..._
.:.:;:.:.:;::.c..:c...:....:.:c
___
t4-r44B-68e
ready
to move·
bedroom
trailer
2
In 5500 Must be moved 304 •
875-3415

1 Bedroom Range Aefrtgerator
Furn1shed A1r Condm oned $259/
Mo Ut!ltttes, DtpOsit Requ ire d
No Pets 814·446-2957

1

2 Bedroom Apartment Tras h
Water Sewage Pa1d $295JMo ...
:O.:epo::.::":.:1..:6..:14
.:....:
44.::6:..:2:..:4::
1_ _ _ _
8.::
Furntshed Apartme nt 2 Bed
rooms 920 Fourth Avenue Galh
e~,.$Z9S1Mo
PM
Paid
polts
44
16 Arter 7UtllHtes

825 Third Avenue

This newspaper w1ll not
knowllngly accept
adver11sements lor real estate
which is 1n v olallon of the law
..""""""ffi readers are heretiy
lnlonned that an dwellings
advertised 1n ttlls newspaper
are available on an equal
opponunlty baSis

310 Homes for Sale
2 Bedroom House Nell AvQnue
614 446 1904
:..:,:...:_:.:...;:::.,::...__ _ _ __
2bedroom With basement close
to schools $t4 500 Call 304
1 _ _ _ _ _ _ __
:67:.:5:..:66::::;2;:
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Heal Pump
Gas Fumace 1 Acre Garage
Addison Arel, Prtce Reduced To
$59 000 614,367 7267
3 Bedrooms, Bath &amp; 112, ltvmg
Room Fam1l~ Room, Fmtshed
Basement, CA In Ground Pool
614 446 4895 . Please leave
Me55agv
;::.:_:::;::::;;._ _ _ _ _ __
S.drf*ns Gas Furn'ace Ffee
Garage, 40 Acr~s $39 900
Ot Addison 614 367 7259
:.61:..4:..44.:,:::6..:.1.:9=88:....._ _ _

=---

3 4bedroom 2tu11 baths c;ustom
~1tchen full basement level lot, 1n
Gallipolis Ferry 304 675-1252 "
3bedroom 2Dath Ranch s6ct1on
al !~replace t2x16 deck. 1 11
21ots Pme Ave Meadowbrook
304 67 5- 1294
::.:..::.:..:.::.::..__ _ __:__ _

614

Prlc. Bu.'.rl Now 14 • 70 2 Q
3br Only $995 down, $195/tronth
Free de t,very &amp; utup Only at
Oakwood Homes Nnro WV 304
7SS S885

350 Lois

&amp;

Acreage

45 Acres Water Electrrc SeptiC,
Cable, Telephone, No Restrcuons,
Ace To Boat launcmg Into Rae
coon 8 Mrles South Of GallipoliS
$14 000 614·446-2528

Household
Goods

740

Appl ances

Recondtttoned

Washers

Dr~ers

grate rs

90 Day Guarantee !

Ranges

Furnished Eff1c1ency Share Bath
S1951Mo Untmes Paid 607 Sec
ond Gall polls 614 445 441e AI
tl@f.7RM

5 Acres For S12 000, Located
Be1ween Vtnton &amp; R10 Grande
Sallor Road, 614 388-9737

N1ce 2 Bedrooms, 4 112 M11es
From Gall1poi1S WalSf", Stove Aefr lgerator Furmshed No Pets
$250rMo 814 448-8038

Ashton Upland Road beau11lu l
tacre lois No trailers Will
double w1des , publiC water

Stonewood Apartments now rent
mg one bedroom, all electnc lor
:$.::10:::0:::00::..:30::..:4..:7.:_36:..9.:_5:..:1~6-~--l elderl~ and d1sablltty FmH A !iUb
Four 1015 near Racine approx 1 Sldlled Equal Housmg 614-992
'
112 acres each srarnng at $5000 3055
:ca:ll~6:,:1.,:4.:9.::49:..20=2.:5:___ _ _ _ _ Twm R1vers Tower now accepung
scenJc valley Apple Grelle applications lor lbr HUD subs1d
beautifu l 2ac lots pub11c water 1zed apt for elderly and hand1
Clyde Bowen Jr ~4-576-2336
capped EOH 304-67[t-!1679

1

Upsta~rs

RENTALS

-----------1
Hous~s

Apanment 238 Flfst
Avenue, Galhpohs, Great toea
t1onl Kitchen W1th Stove &amp; Relng
erator $2851Mo Plus Deposit &amp;
References No Pets 614 4464926

at 2219 lincoln
450
1

Furnished

Rooms
Four bedroom part fu rn1shed
HUD approved no pets referenc Circle Motel IJlwesr Rates tn
es $375 rent, call 614 992 6686 Town! Da1ly Weekly Monll'11y
al1er 6pm
614 446 2501

Looks And

e14

446

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURN ITURE 62
01 ve St Galhpohs New &amp; Used
rurn1turo heaters Western &amp;
Work boots 614 446 3159
VI RA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Quality Household Furn lUre And
Appliances Grear Deals On
Cash And Carry' RENT 2 OWN
And la~away Also Ava. lable
Free Delivery W1th1n 25 M1les
530

Anllques

Buy or sell R1vertne Ant ques
1124 E Man Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 1 00 to
600pm 6149922526
540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

18 Cu Ft Chest Freezer Good,
$125 Used Relngerator $65
AFTER6 P.M 614 37~-2720
18M space save-r Kenmore d sh
washer $40 304 675 7545
1992

nd1ng mower
11ery lillie use 304 882

2286
2 P1ece L111 ng Room Bra~ H 11
Brown E~ce11ent Cond1t10n et4
245 5t17
3 Ton Cenral A.tr Conditioner
Pac~age System Or Spht System
$1 250 Insta lled 5 Yr Warranty
All Parts 1 800-267 6308 614
446 6308
4pc white w1c~er set ht\a11y duty,
h1gh bac~ed new 304 675-1564
8hp no cart 4 wheeler ures 1 1/
•
2yrs old great shape $800 304
675 1575
Apple llc Computer Color Mom
tor lmageWrtter II Color Printer,
F1sher VCR Camcorder W th Trt
pod 614 256-fl647
Concrete &amp; PIUIIC SeptiC Tanks.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises Jackson OH
1-800 537-9528
Daybed portable Stnger ltwlnQ
machme babv cradle for more
mformat1on call 614 949 3308 an
yttme
Electric Countertop Range Vent•
less Range Hood, Cellini light
Fl I
•
d C I'
r
3
xure .,voca o o or
tar
PM 814 448 8278
"

1E~[~W~h~o~e~lc~hfa~~t~a~E~Ie~c~tr~lc
, NewiUiid Scooter Ufts,

Nord1c Trac~ Ute Strider Cycle
$t50 l1ke New 614 446-8662
Now available at Paml Plus for
your log home cedar s!dmg deck
or outdoor furn1ture AKZO NO·
BEL SIKKENS COATINGS 304
675 4084
Orlando 4 Hotel N ghts Near Disney Use Anyt1me Pa1d $300 Sell
S99 614 470 2696
Orlando 4 hotel n1ghts near D1s
f"'ey use an~t 1 me pa1d $300 sell
$99 304 347 2489

540

630

Miscellaneous

5 ltberatea o~a
6 British
nobleman
7 Ms Merkel
8 Structure on

What cows
chew
2 - Knlevel
3 - McEntrre
4 Hot cereal

llqu1d
35 Unconscious

a roof

'"'

Llvestoi:k

South

West

North

East
2 ..

2NT

Pass

3 NT

All pass

Opemng lead

•2

Trust your
partner's signals

Block bt~ck, sewer ptpes, wmdows l1mels etc Claude Winters
R1o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121
560

25' Hams Float Boat 50 HP
nson Motor Needs Repair,
Make Oller 614 446 88132 614
9B5 4349

Pets tor 5ale

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng. Fee
tunng Hydro Balh Juhe Webb
Call 614 446-0231
2 AKC reg1stered male Shih tzu
pupp1es born 6121/95 614 742

3066
3 Chow pupp1es for sale born
April 13th parents AKC reg1s
tered S100 each 1 black male
one coco female 1 red female,
614 992 2232
AKC German Shepherds 1st
Shots &amp; Wormed Read~ To Go'
614 446-7 1H
AKC RegiStered Oalmattan pup
pres 3 males hver spot 2 females
blacK/while $150 304 675 3738
after 4pm
AKC registered Oalmat1an pup
p1es, 7 wks , female $1 DO male
$150 t~rst shots and chec~ed
614 985 4401
AKC RegJstered Golden Retr~ever
pupp1es l1ght blonde, wormed and
has l~rst shots $125 cash only!
614 992 7651
AKC Reg istered Cocker Spanrel
Puppy Male Bufl &amp; Wh1te
Wormed Vacc1na ted Champion
Bloodline, D 0 B 3/2/9 5 $200
61.4 379 2728
CFA Registered S1amese K111ens
Blue Pomt &amp; Seal Potnt Wormed
&amp; lmer Trained, 614 367 7705

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

Round Bale Hay For Sale Stored
In Barn, Never Wet 614 245
5117
Square bales $'f $2 Round bales
$1 Sea Takmg orders tor 2nd cur
tng until Sept 1 304 67S.3960
TRANSPORTATION
710

Autos tor Sale

79 Cad11tac Coupe De V1lle,
needs transmiSSIOn rellu 11 $300
70 Ford truck parts take all for
$300 614-742 1306

good condHion 72 000 m1les call
6t49923139

HJ88 Chevy Beretta 2 0, air
standard, 8S OOOm1 Make otter
304-773·5155 or 304 773 9107
after 5pm

1 Year Old Bundy Claflnet For
Sale, Bought New Pa1d $450, In
M1nt Cond111on 6t&lt;4 24&amp;-9099
580

Frulls

&amp;

Vegelables

Canmng romatoes 1ncred1ble
corn 614-992·5866 or 614 992
39!15
FARM SUPPLIES

&amp;

LIVESTOCK

1~

New gas tanks, one Jon truck
wheels, radiator&amp;, noor mats, etr;
D &amp; R Auto, R•J&gt;oy WV 304 372
3933 or 1-800-273 9329

Slbortan HuaRy Pup, AKC Roliis·
tered 1150 814 256-1003

Musical

BANK

~~~~~~---~__:_--

1985 Honda Accord LX maroon.
automatiC a1r condltiomng load
ed exrra n1ce $3850 614 992
2594 alter 6pm weekdays or any
time weekerds

1986 Ford lTD good condlt1on
$800 304·875 5944

Instruments

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Full s1ze bench seat for a Ply
mouth Voyager mrn1van gray
$75 614 985 428)

Registered' Chihuahua pupp es,
7wks old, male·UQhl brown fe ·
male-fawn 304-675-7732

HE 'S ALWAV5

l!~!!i~E!~A~I@to~r::5=p~m~o:r~w~o::::•

1985 Buick laSabre L1m1ted Edt
11on runs good loo~s good
Pho,... 304 675 5106

1986 Chevy Celebnty Eurosport
mce clean 87,000ml $3 300
304·1375·4361

I HAVE A DEDICATED
MECI-IANIC .

ON Tf.IE JOB

Budget Transmtss1ons Used &amp;
Rebuilt All Types, Access1ble To
1984 Renault Encore 2 Door Over 10 000 Transm iSSIOn Also
Hatch, 4 Spd low M1les $725 Parts Clutches &amp; Pressure
Pla!es 614-379 2935
614 379 2645

Aabbtts For Sale lop Ear Nether
land Dwarf Dutch SS 00 To
$10 00 Each 814 388'8577

570

I-lOW DO VOU KEEP
YOUR PLANE 50 CLEAN'

1982 Plymouth Reliant 2 door

1985 Olcts Cutlass 4 Door Auto
PS Air PB Cru1se Mags, Looks
Runs Great I $ 1 500 OBO 614
379 2845

Wh1te Male Husk~ Pure Unregts
rered Rare long Ha~r 11 Months
loves K1ds $60, 614.446-3627

1985 Bombe, 16 112Ft FISh And
Sk1 115 HP Motor Excellent Con
d1110n Must See To Apprec;mte,
.:_$6.:_500.:__.:_6_1_4_·4_46_1_15'-5---1
1990 FourW1nns open bow, Ski
boat 1!0 l1ke new wtth trailer, all
accessor~es 304 675-6813
Ba)a 17 bass boat 150 HP Lter
cury Black Max 0 B engme ap
100 hrs oil lflJeCtlon, dual
, Eagle dnve on tra1let',
Truster trolhng motor, SS
II prop and alum prop
M F B14 992 2310

89 Cors1ca, lour door, automatiC,
PS P8 $2000 614 985-3839

Male Aottwetler, 2 yrs old · some
obedience trammg
German
background, ped1gree, proven
stud prefer some one Without
children 1301bs S250, 614·742·
3802

Three female and one male Jack
Auuellterr lers S250tea 614
742·2050

PEANUTS

790

campers

- ITOP PUStiiNG MY

ruTTON5, MAPAM ...
.I. AM A ~M&amp;.
'TELt.t~

I

~t-IOW TH,!;..T£'VE GOOE 'eNLINE' "''
-.:!In\ MY I\IE:.IJ COMRJ"\'eR

&amp;

1975 28 Foot Holiday Vacation
Camper Good Stlape, E11etylhlng
Work• I 814-4148·1400

1947 John Deere Model A With
Front End lo~der New Tnes E~
cellent Cond1t1on $3,500, 1950
.John Deere Model A Completely
Rebwlr New Pa1nr Excellenr Con
dtlJon. S3,350 8 14 643-2"300 8 4
6\4 6432916After6P.M
9N Ford Tractor $1 995 8 N Ford
$2,395 640 Ford $3 295 960
Ford D1esel Power Steenng,
$3895 614 286-6522

D1scoun t larm rractor parts lor
Massey Ford IH &amp; others
S1der 11 Equ1pmenr Co. Hender
son, WV '304 675 742~ or 1 800
277 3917

Save on k1ds school Jeans, new,
3/$10 Tues Wed &amp; Thurs only
Pegg~ 132 Butlernul

Fatr Spec1a1 Buy t chatn saw
cha1n get 1 free Stder's Equ1p
ment Henderson

Septic Tank Jet Aeration Motors
New &amp; Rebu11t Jlnsral1ed , Call
Johns John 614-44&amp;4762

Massey Ferguson 24.5 D1esel
New Holland Round Baler Mas
sey Ferguson lr9 Baler -614 367
7576
W1nsor 5 .horse rotol!ller,
$200 614 9!12 3-111

24~

730

Vans

&amp;

4·WDs

1987 GMC 314 Ton Ven 6 2 D1e
sel Very Good Cond1t1on &amp; Very
Oepend~le S.,3 950. 614 256
1514
1989 Chevrolet Astra Van,
70 00 0 M 11 e s Au to m a tiC, A If,
Crtuse T11t Looks Runs Good!
New Tires luggage Rack 4 Cap.
tam Chair:~ 1 Bench Seat $4 900
614 446-81n 614·256-6251

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Ciphe1 crypi09H1ms i'lre crei'l ltld lrom quolahons bv !amous pooplo pas! and
Each leHer tn the c!pher stands lo anolher Today s clue G oquars Q

SMXOUWUH

X J G B V

wv
J K

SGTM

WL

J K

SWEM

F X W S

OMXVWUH
FXEWUH

W LX X I

ft

-

WOlD
UMI

O four
Rearrange letters of
acrombled words '"•
be·
low ro •orm four words

1'

BULODE

I I' I I I

1

l

l

TUXEL

~ I I" I

-,G,_S;:_,T:......:O:,.,...H:._,...-1/m• '~,n

My cous m wants to enler
space sctence I had a posler

1--L-l.--.l.--L.--'m

made th at read Space Sclent1sts Have Thetr Feet On The

.

e

BIG NATE

preaant

LYMOU
PREVIOUS SO LUTI ON "The mosl 1mportan1 fa cl aboul Spaceship Earth an
tnstrucflon book d1dn t come w1th tt
A 8uckm1nster Fuller

The1! Heads In

Q

Complete the chuckle quoted
by lllmg m fhc m1SS1ng words
you deve lop from 51cp No 3 below

PRINT I'IUMB[RED t[TltRS IN

THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAM8l[ ABOVE lETTERS
TO GU ANSWER

•
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

SERVICES

Confer· Delve , Racer - Plenty - PERFECT

Home

I come from a large lamtly At a very you'ng age 1was
laugh!
help others Grampa satd, 'The work of the

to

world ca n I wat! to be done bv

i-16~t

l Srr, ADVANC~P ON 11/E.

~VOLIJTIOI&gt;IAf'.Y LArYDGR iiiiLL ION~

OF

YEA~S

AND NOW 11/E. ..._........_

QJJESTION LOO\'!S LARGE'
WkAT SHALL l f)O WITH

!(f.W·FOUN[) POWERS?

'Your
'Birthday

InstallatiOn And Service EN
Certified Residentral Commercial
6t4 256-1611

Thursday Aug 10, 1995

_ _ _ _ __

Your leadership qualtttes could be conSiderably enhanced tn the year ahead All
that Will be required IS a stronger, cons1s
tent beltef in your abthtres
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Parlnersh•P
arrangemenls could work agarnst you
today Strrve for Independence and don t
let a weak or tnepl ally deter you Know
where to look for romance and you'll find
1t The Astra-Graph Matchmaker Instantly
reveals whrch s1gns are romantteally per

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps Atr COndlhOntng, II
You Don I Call Us We Both Lo1el
Free Esttmates t 800 287 6308,
61• ~-6308, WV 002945

F.:__;,:_:..:.:..::._.:__=::.::::.__ _
Res1dent1al or commercial wmng,
new aerv1ce or repatrs Maater ll
censed electfttlan Ridenour
Electncal WV000306 304·615·
1786

•

PERFECT oeoole •

AUGUST9l

ROBOTMAN

~F"'ra_e_m_a_n"'s-H"e_a_t"m"'g-:A.:n:.,d-:C:-o-o-lln-,g·•
j::.!~::::::..::.;..:;_

FBLWI

5

Arbuckle, Riverfront, one acre ria~
wat~r. npt1c, electricity 10x5D
mob•IO home, fi'"r up, $21,!00/al
or 304·3-15-8360

840

111811
49 G·man (ol.)

1 I' I I I

Improvements
1989 N1ssan Sentra 1988 Ford
Tempo (48 000 M1les) 1986 VW
Jette (Needs Mo tor ) 814 258 Appliance Patts And Serv1c1 411
Name Brands Over 25 Vear1 E•
6483
penence All War~ Guaranteed,
1992 Pl~mourh laser 41 000 French C11y May tag 814 .ue
mtles, 8)1Cellent conditiOn great 7795
gas m11eage $8600 614 992BASEMENT
6725
WATERPROOFING
1993 Eagle Vts ton TSlloadetl Uncondmonal llfer1me guarantee
Green &amp; Gre~ 39 000 Miles local references rurn1shed Call
$13000 Et4·256-1618 614 256 (614) 448·0870 Or (61 41 237
0488 Rogers Waterproohng Et
1252
rabhshed 1975
1994 Plymouth Sundance, 4 Door
12 000 M1tes Excellent Cond1l on,
8111 OrriCk s Horne lmpro'llemertt•
A~r Cassella S9ilst'l W1ll Con
s1der Par 11al Trade 61 4 256- addrt1ons remodeling, roo!Jna,
s1dmg plumbtng, e1c Insured, call
6854, 256·8329
8111 Orrick, 614 992 5183
720 Trucks for Sale
C&amp;C General Home Main
1984 Ford Ranger PICk· up 614· renence- Pamtlng, vmyl s1drng,
256-6551
carpontry, doors wtndows, balhl,
mobile home repair and more fOt
1989 GMC 112ton, 4WO 350 va , free estrmate call Chet 614-992
auto overdnve cru1se a1r tilt, am. .6:::32=3:....._ _ _ _ _ _ __
fm cassette new tnes brakes,
ORYW/\Ll
exhaust askmg $9800 304 675
5332
Hang flrnsh, repa1r
Ce1lmgs textured plaster repa~r
199.2 GMC 112 ron S1erra Vortec Call Tom 304 675-4186 20 yearl
V 6 automatic AIC, Leer hydrau •":::':::pjll:::..::'onc:.:::•:....._ _ _ _ _ __
lie bed cover 44 500 m1les, •·
$!0,500 5 14 992 6061
Earls Home Maintenance v1nrt
s1d1ng ,eofmg, elftor~or paln!lnQ,
1993 S 10 Blazer 4x4 Tal'1oe power washmg Freo Est1matas,
Package, 26 000 M1les Automat 614 992 4451 or614·992 4232
IC l Scarlet /Grey
loaded I
$1 ,000 61.4 441-1717
Ron's TV Service sp&amp;ciahzlng m
Zentth also serv1cmg most other
1995 F 150 Super Cab 6Ft Bed brands House calls 1 800-7977 500 M11es, AutomatiC Transm1s 1 .00:::_15:::.:.WV:..:.:304::.:..:5::7:.6.:23:::98::;:_~-­
Sion PS PB, AC CC TW Bedlln- tEif 614 446 2072
Rooltng and gutters commeretal
and rea1dent1al, minor ropairl 35
90 model C1'1evy 112 ton S11vera years expenence, 614 992 6041
do almost all options 138 000,
vary good condition $5,700 hrm. 820
Plumbing &amp;
6149924111
· Heating

68117

45 Mane
46 Amorouo look
47 Ballerlna'o

1 .
.
.
_
•
.
L_JL...J._..L_L_JL...J

very nk:e, $2,200 304·675·2840

Pop Up Camper Sleeps 8, Awn1988 T bird 3 8l, new pa1nt, tinted
Ing AC, 3 Way Relr lgeratot
wmdowa , exc cond 304·675
$.4 500,814-448 1294
2776

For Sale Or Trade 1986 N1ssan
P1ck Up 4 Cylinder 5 Speed AMI
FM Cassette, Topper, Bed Cover,
CB New T1res &amp; Wheels Very
Dependable $2,800 614 258-

Magnani

44 Roo!
overhang

...--T_R_E__K-'-C-0--...,~ ~~~~~~ ~-n~.

1riJgo VIking pop up epnng load

ed arms 2 burner atove alnk, mt,
~oepo 8, llghtwoight oaoy 10 pul,

1

61 0 F;mn Equipment

Here s a tncky defense ba sed on a
deal tn the first book mentioned
East opened wtlh a weak IWO· btd,
6· tO htgh card potnts South overcalled
wtth a strong two no trtlmp and North
raised to game
West led Ius spade East won wtth
the king, cashed t~ e spade ace, then led
the spade seven, hts lowest spade as a
sutt·preference stgnallor clubs He wa s
suggestmg that hts only potenttal entry
lay tn clubs
Getting the message, West dtscarded
the club ace'
Now the contracl was dead, declarer
betng unable to do better than cash htS
etght tncks

BORN LOSER

42 Soccer alar
43 Actrass

sion

showmg a good s1x card smt and some

Motor Homes

1989 Ford Tempo 71 000 M1les, 4
Door Alf, $3 900 May Cons1def
ParMI Trade 1314 25e-8854 6t4
256 832Q
810

Devyn Press published two books
With a hmtled gen era l appeal last June
Each costs $12 95 and can be ordered
by calling &lt;8001274 2221
"The Arnerocan Forcmg Mmor
Boddmg System" by Joe Lutz and Jerry
Fink descnbes an mloicate b•ddmg sys
tern m wh1ch a one-club opemng IS
strong, arttfictal and forcmg, and a one
dtamond opemng 1s eolher natural or a
stro ng no I rump The authors also
make some mterestrng defen stve s1g
nahng recommendatiOns For sertous.
system onented part.nershtps only
"Appeals Comm1ttee Dects1ons from
the 1994 NEC World Champtonsh•ps"
hsts almost all of th e appeals heard m
Albuquerque Unfortunately, what I
cons tdered the most conle.nttous deer
s10n Isn't mcluded because, J assume tt
happened on lhe last day too late for
mclus10n m th e datly bulletm and hence
lhts book If yo u are mterested m the
laws of the game. lhts book wtll appeal
to you - rf you'll excuse the cxpres

oehool
10 Advl. .
11 Being
1g Sollfoyor
20 Graceful
anlmol
22 Jog
23 Trade
24 Prolix lor
mutual
25 Director
l&lt;aun
26 Droop
27 Slopped
28 Nol out
29 Wound m•rk
31 OHiel llble
5,280 ' " '
Ending
Fruit drink
Over (pral )
40 Doha'o
country
41 Go owfltty

By Phillip Alder

Supplies

9 Engllah

34
35
37
38

Building

SAM SOMERVILLE S ARMY
SL.lRPLUS by Sandy111lle Posr 01
f"e noon 6pm Fn Sun Collects
bles small 1nd1V1dual equipment
304 273 5655

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upt~Qht Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson Qh10 1 800. 537 9528

l HOPE TO SEE
YOU SUNDAY,
SNUFFY

While Campertop P!ck.Up $300
614 446 4141 Aller 6 00 Or
Weekends

Stoves Washers
And Dryars All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
Wll Delrver 614-669 6441

Rerr~geratora

48 Copper coin
49 Lard
50 Vtllaln In
t7 Seed
Othello
containers
51 Forearm bone
18 Shul hard
52 Mrs Paron
20 Gill
53 Cairo's
recipient
river
21 Dawo
54 Cherished
22- Aviv
55 The (Gar)
231mpalo
56 French
26 Garlands
stoneware'
30 Sldo of o room
31 Designer
DOWN
Christian32 Slnbad a btrd

Vulnerable Both
Dealer East

Merchandise

550

41 Olslanee

44 Range of
hearing

34 Turn to

•7653..2

Deer

40 Sine- non

nickname

t A K

675 1782

c

39

8 Wax

33 Onassls

• A K

1992 Suzuki GSXR 600 Approx

Auct10n C H McK1n;z1e Agncul
ture Cent1n August 12 1995
10 00 AM
6 5 Tye No Till
Dnll Dura flute No Ttll Coullers
Double D1sk Openers 2·x13•
Press Wheels Depth Bands, a·
Row Spacmg Acre Counter Le
gume And Cool Season Gram
Boxes $3 500 M n1mum Bid Gal
ha SWCD614 446 8687

Queen waterbed, cnb mattress,
stroller car seat 614 949 2393

•Q 4
• Q 6 5 4

5,300 M1les Extras• $5 000 614
446 1405 Da~s Aft&amp;r 5 PM 30•·

JVC 6 01sc CD Player W1th
W red Remote $300 614 388
9109

New wheelchair call ReY Marga
ret Robrnso n at 614 992 2463

•A

.J

alter Spm

Cannmg tomatoes $4 bustle !
br 1ng contamers
Marshall
Adams letart Falls, 61 4 247
2055

Mov1ng Sale Dresser Wl11'1 M1r
ror N1ghtstand Desk tCha1r lane
Rectmer Exerc1se Machine
Mower Dump Can Stroller 614
44 1 0641 leave Message

• 9 7 4
• 76

304·773 5155 or 304 773 9107

Call Ron Evans 1800 537952S

cond1t on

.1086 52
+J 85432

Less than 10,000 actual mllet

Cannmg tomatoes, $3 a bushel
p1ck your own br~ng conta1ners
Eugene Dav1s Farm Rowe Ad
Ractne 614 247 3263

log house good
$1 000 304 675-5944

EAST
• AK10987

1988 Harley OaYid5on 8S3 Sporl
ster custom deluxe Brandy Nme

Gravel~

40~deck

red S3 150

•2

1987 Vulcan 750 19 000 M1let,
$2 500 614-446-4648

Co unt ry Furmture•FurMure lor
Every Room 6n11 Rt 2 North Pt
Pleasant 3)4 6 75 6820

LAYNE S fURNrTURE
Complete home furn sh ngs
Hours Men Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 miles out Bula11 lle P1ke
Free Dehvery

WEST

SOU'rH

Carpet &amp; V1nyl In Stock $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Panerns&lt; Of Kitchen Car
pet ln Stod Over 35 Patterns
V1ny l In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 446 7444

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances , 76
Vme Street Call 614 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

Molorcycles

new hres, m•nt cond
~&lt;4 - 458- 1088

•KJ1098

Sf£ SA~ 5Hii +-lAS A
G.Jir' II.J THE ~A\.£L
aiSII..E:~ 511€' l.t.J¥JTS
M€ 10 M€61'

1984 Honda V65 1100 Magr1a.

Relr~

AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red New &amp; Rebu lt In Stock

Grac1ous llvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
616acre Schult cusrom class1c apartmen1s at V1llage Manor and
mobile home 4ml !rom 22nd St R111ers1de Apartments 1n M1ddle
port From $232$355 Call 614
s1opl1ght on Jencl'1o PriVate
..
304:::::6:_:7:.5:::3:;:564:;:::._-:---:::-:--::--:·l 99Z 58S9 Equal Hous1ng Opper
run111es
1 39 Acres Along The Ohm RIVer
Along The Dam, Campmg F1sh
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
1ng $12 000 614 446-2528
61 4 446 0390

for Rent

0

BEAUTIFUL •P•RT"ENTS •T
" "
m
,..
BUOG~T PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Ome
!rom $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614 446 2568
EquaJ Housmg OpporruMv

Furmshed Apr 3 Rooms 8 Bath
All Utlht1es Pa1d S2501Month 919
Second Ave 614 446 3945

55 Acres Of land Wllh 28•32
BU1Idmg On Clay Chapel Acat:l t
800·287 ~:l&lt;l!!. 614-446-6308

410

51

I riC Slart 12 Speed 6 Attach
ments 614 441-1446
JET

Country S1de Apartments large
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Water Sew
age Garbcrge Included WID
Hook Up $360/Mo Depos1t Re
qUI red 513 922-Q294

50acres w/log cab1n, tobacco al
lotments, $42 000 304-697 3223

AC

8995

•J 3
., Q J 3
t Q I0 9

1990 Gao Tracker 4X4 ConY
AM IFM Cass
4556

3bedroom Duple• lull basemenr
garage forced air 1'1eat &amp; ac 304
675 3753

Farms for Sale

NORTH

Gat11pollt

O~o

Runs Great ' $5 500 614 .UB-

I
Elevators l11t Chairs
2Ddrm apta tota l electric, appltances furnished laundry room Bowmafl 1 Homecare 614-446·
lactht ea close to school m town
7283
A 1
1 bl
v
PP ICitiOns Sllal a eat lllage Glasstop Dinette Set Glass ShoU
Green Apts fl49 or call 814 992 .:ro Match S300 814
388 9261
3711 EOH
2 Rooms Plus Bath lalayette Good Metal Desk $40, 4 Trash
Mall No Kltchenl All Utllllles patd
Bags As!lo r ted K1ds &amp; Women
$17500 Month Depos t Reqwred Clothes $25 614-446 7556
614 446 7733
Grallely Supor Convertatie Etec

L mlted Offer I 1996 doublawide
3br, 2bath. 11695 down $2591
month Free del very &amp; selup
~~~Y~!~~k;:~d Homes, Nitro

330

&lt;~&gt;

1 bedroom -apartment m M•ddle
250
port, all uhhtJes
paid $
per
month $ 100 depo 911 614 992
7806 Bam-tOpm
1 Bedroom Garage Apartment
Reloroncaa L
Kl h
L
R
L • aBrge I c enL llllng
oom arge edroom, ocated
Route 7 614 446-2606

New 1996 14x70 includes skirr
1ng, lteps blocks one year
homeowners msurance and SIX
months FREE lot rent Only $1025
down and $207 17 per morrth Call
1 800 837 3238

All real estate advenlslng In
th1s newspaper Is subjec11o
the Federal Fair Housing Act
oi196B wh1ch makes 1tlllegal
h:l a~ven1se ·any preference,
limitation or dlscrlmlna11on
based on race color religion
seK lsmlllat status or national
orlgm or any lntenllon to
make any such preference,
limitation or dlscrimtnatlon •

Apanments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmerJts fyr
nlshed and unfurnished sAcunry
deposit r~qu ~red no pets 6t4
992 2218

1,~x70

~~~~~~~~~~H~•:•~I~P~u~m:p~.

Farms for Rent

1 1 stall horse barn on 20acres
lorlease :rl4 369-6447

e

14x70 Wmdsor Deluxe E•cellem
Cond1110n large K1tchen l1v1hg
Room 2 Bedrooms 1 Baths
We do y1nyl s1d1n_~ roQ.Ung mten
12 000 614 245 943,
or and exter or pa1nt1ng at very af
1 Freedom 12x65 Best otler
land Contract ava•lable 304
lordablepnces 614992 5659
Will Babysit Infant Or Toddler In 675 8872 between 9am-4pm
My Home Rodney Area Refer please leave message
1 4 24
11975 New Moon Tra11er
2
Will Do lntenor, E'•tenor
3 Bedroom 2 Full Baths, Gas,
Reasonable Rates,
Heat Very Clean S8 ft9ft !14
References For Free
388-0208After6
Call6 14245·5755
t982 Clayton 14M80 2bedroom
210
Business
new carpet a II eI ectrlc a~r
S7 500 1i77 Homellt 12x56
Opportunity
2bedroom, gas, good COnditiOn,
$4,900 :Jl4·67S.7346
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO 1984 Shulrz 24x80 Modu lar.
recommends that you do bual- li;;;;;,j;e;lly Remodeled, New Roof,

Fantatt 1c Sam s Now Hlr~ng ll
censed Cosmetologist Guar
an teed Wages Pa1d Vacat1ona
614 446 7267

Oli!Ce ASSIStant Wanted Quell
r1ed Cand 1dates Musr Possess
Organization, Telephone E11
quetle, And Secretarial Experr
ence Interested Person!' Call
!314 56!) ot17-l ForAppilGatiOn

3 Bedrooms 14x70 Like New
Stove Refrigerator $300/t.Ao ...
Depos1t Coi&lt;Jmbus 614 878
5532

Pr~ced cheap to se111e estate 5
room one story house 2 bed
rooms bath ciupoft pat1o base
ment our or all rlood waters very
good tocat10n &amp; ne1ghborh0od lo
cat&amp;d at 632 Grant St M1ddlepor~
Ohio $25 ooo 614 992 704 7
614 742 2550 or 614 384 6364

or

8ervlces

No Expanence Necessary! $500
To $900 Weekly /Porential Pro
cegsmg Mortgage Refunds Own
HollrS Call (909) 715 2300 Ext
782, (24 Hours)

2bedroom You pay utll1t1es De
posit No pets. 304-675 2535.

W1ll Baby!lll Nonsmoker Refer
ences Monday Fnday Days Ex
penenced ' 614 44 a89t0

n Male
o ed 1cate d Fema 1e All a Ad
Bamone Needed For M 0 R Gos
pel Group Call Chuc~ 614 441 T &amp; M Garage 202 2nd St. Ma·
0469Lealle Message
son Mond to thfa new location,
ror any Inconvenience We
Dom1nos P1zza n Pom&amp;roy 11 now
open ror Duaineaa 304
hlf r'J~ dr \lers
I .......n. a

Needed Babys11ter For One C1'111d
2 3 Deys Wee~ In Our Home
61 4 446 6958

2bedroom washer /dryer ac all
electnc no pets Ma6on WV
304 77J.5751

Wanted boarder to pay 1/ 2 on
rent and utilities 14,K70 rra1ter
own bed and bath country semng
n Pomeroy, prefer smoker 614
992 7093

nesa with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
Darry Farm Mtlker And Herds ma•l untll you have rnveatlgattd
men
70 · 80 Cows
Flats
H 1
ng;:::________
SlanchJon Barn C.' I Ev.nlng' -1"~;:,:0::;"':::;:,
6 14 245-5047
230 Professional

EOE

2bedroom lurnuthed pan1al utili
lies pa1d $100 depos1t 304 675
6512

Profess1onal 1ree Serv1ce Com
plete Tr~~Care Bucker Truck
Servtce ~ Ft Reach Srump Re- Sphr ltwel house tor salem Syra
moval Free Est1matesl In cuse, lully equ1ppad kltchon With
surance, 24 Hr Emergency Serv· d1nmg area one bath, two bed
ICe Call And Savel No Tree Too rooms up rwo large rooms down,
e 1g Or Too small B1dwell OhiO office/ utHI!y room area sunporch
6,4 388-9643 614 367 7010
Located m nice neighborhood
near school total electflc 614
Sun Valley Nu rsery School 992 6970
Ch1!dcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young Schaal Ago ounng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mml 320 Mobile Homes
mum 614 446 3657
1 5al

Hrs 714 249 7469 Ext1173

Jo1n the long term hea111'1 care
field Seek ng lull time act1111ty dl
reclor Po nr Pleasant Nurstng &amp;
Rohabll1tai1M Center (formerly
CarehJ.ven) Stare Route 62 Ro.
ute 1 Bo~ 326 Potnt Pleasant
WV 25550 304 675 3005 A
G lcnmark Associa tes Fac•ll ty

Raccoon Creek N1ce Farm V ew
$300/Mo Mr Wood Col 614
878 5532

310 Homes tor 5ale

800 9001DS 304 675·3454

CT70
Not 614 245-9239

MERCHANDISE

1990 Oodge Ram Van 8 250,
72,000 MIIU S6 000, Can Be
Seen At' Gall1po1ts Daily Tr1bune,

o'f-~'1. fo!!-1"~1:' ~AI:¥ Of All'i~Mii!'IIIT;
~~i'$ "7/'&lt;Y ~HE:'D ~ WILLIN~ To
f"1 'folJ 4vys Two f&gt;ovN I&gt;S of
.ctt~&lt; l&gt;t&gt;A!Z. 10 qf;'f '"tO ~1\q::: ....

7795

12x65 2 bedroom S200Jmo wa
ter 1ncluded $200 dep 614 992
3486

1~

Man~

304 773-5651 Mason WV

French C1ty May tag

for Renl

c~

50s

Mobile Homes

~04

Wanted to Buy

&lt;;I l '

Sleep•ng rooms With cooktng
Also uallar space on r1ver All
hook ups Call atrer 2 00 p m

38 PIIIOVIr meal

12 Eye layer
13 Reagan s son
14 S W Indians
15 Amounl owed
16 T•me period

tomauc Cold A1r Nu;;e Van,
$3,200 OBO, 61" ""1-0584

feQUifed, f\0 petS, 614 742 2661

..; I earson Auct1on
1 mt.&gt; auctiOneer
... on
serv1ce
:r
r o 8.
West V1tg1n1a
5 '85 Or 304 773 5447

l

Rooms for rent week or month
Start•ng at $120/mo Gallla Hotel
614 446-9580

Two or ltnee bed•o~:~m house m
Rutland depos1t and references

MtVernon

Public Sale
and Auction

90

&amp; 4-WDs

1988 Plymouth Voyager Van , Au

&amp; VIcinity
• "•

vans

PHILLIP
ALDER

lor one

1 Game lloh
, S Common
1 aliment

feet ro1 you Ma1l $2 75 to Matchmaker
c/o th1s newspaper P 0 Bo)l 4465 New
Yorl&lt; NV 10163
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl 22) Today you
m1ght be near the outer hmtts of letung
tasks that requ1re attentton slip past you
Unfortunately add1tronal neglect could
make 1t exira hard ror you to catch up
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23) Coerctng
ln3nds to do your btdd1r'lg today would be
the wrong approach Your acuons could
evoke an 1mmed1a1e, angry response
SCORPIO (Oel 24·Nov. 22) Occaston·
ally you m•ght get a tnfle miffed tf someone oulshrnes you Play 11 smar1 today by
keeprng a smrle on your tace
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Dec 21) II you
know certa1n top1cs 1rrrtate a fnend avotd
dtscusstng them today Once they are
Introduced they could move you both
closer to an argument
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Thts
could be a 1ncky day for you f•nanctally
bolh personally and commerc1ally Avotd
d01ng anyt:h1ng rec~less or 1mpuls1ve
AQUARIUS (Jan 20.Feb 19) Tolerance
as well as gtve-and lake Will be requrred

1n your personal relatronshrps today Be
forgrvm.g w1th compan1ons even If lhe1r
behaVIOr bugs you
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Guard
agarnsl the tendency to create problems
today where none should most Make rt a
p01nl not to step on anyone s toes
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) In your
J•nvolvements w•lh fnends today don 1 be
a know 11-all Your pals w111 respond more
favorably to consultatton than they w111 to
dtctatiOn
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) If you have
author~ty over others, w1eld 1t w1sely
today Associates who th tnk you abuse
your power Will lind ways to even I he
score at a taler dale
. GEMINI (May 21~June 20) You might
champ•on an unpopular cause today
whtch IS of course your prerogattve Just
resist tryrng to force your vtews on mdependenllhlnkers
CANCER (Juna 21.July 22) Move cau·
ttously tn JOint venturt!s today espectally
tf 11 requtres you to make an 1nvestment
You musln I hes1late to ask probmg ques·
t10hs

�Page 12 • Tt.oe Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 9, 1995

Reader asks why cruelty in prisons is so easily accepted?
Ann
Landers
11

1995,

~

u. AtiQo!IM

Syrdicar. lll'd

CrMklrs

Syndic~~~•"

Dear Ann Landers: I saw a movie
recently about prison rape. It was
graphic and tenible. Everyone knows
about this vile practice in prisons, but
nobody seems sufficienll y outraged
10 do anything about il. I don't get it
The media go berserk about
endangered species and animal
rights, but nothing is said about the
Ol)going physical abose of inmates.
With the new "lhreesuikesand you're
out" law,nwly young men will spend

the rest of their lives behind bars. Is 10 your question . Their anonymity
this not enough punishment without will be pro~a:ted . Thanks in advance
adding physical and sexual assault by for your cooperation.
sub-human perverts? Why is the
Dear Ann Landers: I am so mad
American social conscience so at my father I want to scream. Molher
blunted in this area?
and Father just celebrated their 50th
I have never heard an outcry from wtdding anniversary, and all of us six
any human rights group on this kids scrimped and saved for I 8
subject, and I have never heard my months 10 give lhem a fabulous party.
church speak about it. This is a Father said a while back he didn't
hideous problem .. and it's real. We want a pany because he "hateS to put
really ought to give a damn . .. anybody ouL • Mother just sat back,
OUTRAGED IN MIClllGAN
smiled and never said a .word .. as
DEAR MICHIGAN : You have usual.
· Last night, we arranged to
raised a very interesting question, and
"borrow" the horne of their neighbor
I do not know the answer
I do "give a damn," ho..;eve~ and to accommodale our big family. This
am asking prison ofl'tcials all over lhe included kids, cousins, in-laws, "out·
United S!aleS and Canada 10 respond laws" .. everybody we could think of.

Several people flew in from out of night long. My two brothers say lhty enjoy such a delightful surprise.The
Slate and one from another coun~ry
will not speak to Father until he man has a sickness of the soul for
All in all, there were 64 relatives at apologizes. My older sister left With which, I fear, there is no cure. My
this celebration.
condolences to your mother and 10
a splitting headache.
My parents' neighbor "invited"
This morning, I called Moth~ and you, dear.
Mother and Father over for a snack again, she apologized for Father
Gem of the Day: No mauer what
happens,
there is always someone
and some card playing. When my How I pity her. Fifty yews with a man
who
knew
it would.
folks walked into the foyer and we so mean. I can't even find lbe ivords
yelled "surprise!!" Father's face got 10 ask him why he did iL Do you have
Is thar Ann Lantkrs column you
white, then red. We were all stunned an explanation for such bizarre clipped years ago yellow with age?
when he turned around and walked behavtor? .. TEARFUL DAUGH· For a copy of her mosr frtquently
requuted poelnS and essays, send a
out of the house. No one, not even TER IN TAMPA, FLA.
his brother, whom he hadn't seen in
DEAR TEARFUL: Your father self-addressed, long, busintss-size
II years, could persuade Father to sounds like a control freak who envelope and a cMck or moMy older
return. He went home, got his C&amp;l'OUt cannot tolerate anything he isn't in for $5.25 (rhis includes postage and
charge of. He hates the idea that you handling) to: Gems, cloAnnl.mlders,
of the garage and drove oll1
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6()6IJ.
I burst into tears. Mother was so put one over on him.
How sad that he couldn't even 0562. (In Canada, send $6.25)
embarrassed that she apologized all

TOPS names biggest weight losers

Chester
·High holds__
reunion

l

The Chester High School Class
of 1951 held its annual reunion at
lbe Chester Volunteer Fire Hall
'
July 30.
The group spent much time
\. }
reminiscing and taking pictures.
· Nellie Parker gave the table
CHESTER REUNION - The Chester High School Class or
grace before the baske! dinner,
1931 held its ailnual reunion rec:enily. From ten lll'e: (sealed) NeUie
while lrene Parker's birthday was · Parker, Pauline Ridenour and Irene Parker; (standing) teacher •
hOnored with a birthday cake and
Earl Knight, Virgil McElroy, Fred Smith and Opal Wickham.
singing.
.
Those attending made a conU'i- were : Virgil McElroy, Pauline bcrs of the class including Bertha
blllion 10 lbe fire department
Ridenour, Irene Parker, Opal Wick· Smith, Mary Buck, Betty and KenOpal Wickham was congratulal· ham/ Fred Soiith, Nellie Parker, nelb Davidson.
Next year's reunion will be held
ed for her work in organizing lbe Earl Knight, Thelma Hayes and
atlbe
Chester ftre hall !be last Sunreunion.
Mildred Caldwell.
day
of
July.
Those attending the reunion
Cards were sent to lbc .iU meg~_,

Several TOPS aild KOPS mem·
bers were recognized for their
efforts to lose weight at a recent
meeting.
.
The best weight losers for TOPS
#OH570 Pomeroy chapter were
Jean Thomas and Maggie Biggs .
Shirley Wolfe was the runner-up.
The best weight loser for KOPS

.

was Julia Hysell with Linnie
Aleshire the runner-up.
Leader Nancy Manley read an
article on weight loss and
Stephani~ Snyder read one about
TOPS want ads.
Shirley Wolfe won lbe fruit bas·
kel and Mru garet Henderson won

the gadget gift in the drawings. Ms.
Henderson gave a humorous read·
ing.
The group holds its meetings
Tuesdays at the union carpenter
l..all in Pomeroy, with weigh-in
between 5-6 p.m. and meetings
beginning at6 p.m.

OU posts spring quarter dean's Jist
Several area students were
named to lbe Ohio University
dean's list for spring quarter.
To be named to lbe lis~ a stu·
dent must have earned a grade
point average of 3.3 or beuer on a
scale of 4.0 for the quarter and
have earned 16 hours, 12 of which
. were taken for a letter grade . .
Named were I onathan Merrill,

~ew Haven; Brandy Ritchie, Jenmfer Stephan and Kennelb Hymes
of Coolville; Matthew Clark and·
Stephen Smilb of Lang'sviUe; K~ith
Spencer and Tyson Ros~ of Long
Botlom; Robby Wyau ·and Ryan ·
&lt;rowan of Middleport;
Courtney Midkiff and Susan
Wolf of Pomeroy; David !hie,

Freddie Matson, Jamey Holter,
Julie Hill, Kathryn Ible and
Michelle Winebrenner of Racine;
Angela Murphy, Doneue Dugan
and Steven Barnell of Reedsville;
Linda Oliver, Rutland; Jennifer
Gibbs and Tracey Powell of Sha!Je;
Andrew Fields.and Cbery I Pape of
Syracuse.

---------...;__--Community c a l e n d a r - - - - - - - - - - - Tile Community Calendar is
publislled as a free service to
non-prorit groups wislllng to
announce meeting and .special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE
Maoda!Ory
co(ldilioning for Soulbem High
School football players grades nine
through 12 from 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday at high school. Call
Mike Kloes, 992-2795 for details.

POMEROY - Sweet Mountain
Sound, 1 p.m. Wednesday at lbe
Meigs County Public Library under
sponsorship .of the Ri verbend Arts
Council.
PO~EROY - Living in the
Solution Group of Narcotics
Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at
the Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy.

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

Anyone

interested in playing Meigs High 7:30p.m. Thursday at Pomeroy
School football needs to be in the Carpenters Union hall, regatta
varsity locker room at 7:30am. on plans to be discussed.
Wednesdax.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
THURSDAY
Springs Grange w~I meet at 8 p.m.
POMEROY - Pomeroy group Thursday at lbe hall. Election of
of AA will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday officers, will vacate ball for fair.
at Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Mulberry Avenue. AI-Anoo will
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
meet at the same lime.
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post9053 will meet Thursday, 7:30
CHESTER - The Shade River p.m. at post home. Dues ate due.
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM·meeling, 8 p.m.
Thursday at Chester lodge.
SATURDAY
RUTLAND
Believers
POMEROY - The Big Bend Fellowship Ministry benefit sing
Stern wheel Association meeting, and white elephant sale, Saturday,

2 p.m. Rutland park near Civic
Center. Gospel groups to sing,
CO!)cession stand to operate.
Proceeds go 10 bathroom
constru,ction.

Darwin.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Hysell Run
Holmess Church homecoming, all
day Sunday. Dinner at noon,
speaker and special singers at 2
p.m. service; evening service, 7:30
p.m.
.

POMEROY -Burlingham
Modern Woodmen picnic,
Saturday, 6:30 p.m. southbound
park on Stale Route 33 near

You~/1

Mou·n t!ng &amp;
Balancang

Come Up Aces With
,The Classifieds

v

541
Pick 4:

5827

~~

f

.......:::.. '

Super Lotto:

•

11-12-14-16-17-21
Kicker~

219760 .

Vol. 46, NO. 73
Copyright 1995

Going
public

Eastern board r"""'"--A changing seen
faces deadline
for building plan
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Architects set up lbe preliminary timetable with lbe Eastern Local
·Board of Education Wednesday to meet an October deadline for new
school construction.
The local district. must gel state approval in October to place a school
building levy on the ballot next March, said Board President Ray Karr..
State building J!SSistance funds could pay 80 percent of construcuon
costs, which a slate official had earlier estimated at about $8 miUion.
.Addressing lbe board were architeCts Steve Cassady of Vargo, Cas·
sady, Ingham &amp; Gibbs of Marietta. and Dave Zoeller of Marr, Knapp &amp;
Crawfif of New Philadelphia.
.
During the next two monlbs, lbe disU'ict needs to:
• develop a building committee, including lbe board, administrators,
teachers and residents;
• gather information about the current schools, including drawings, and
detennine the needs of the disU'ict; and
• set public meetings to get a consensus on what type of school should
be built.
The stumbling blocks toward construction will include whelber lbe
high school's current site can be used with a gas w~U and pipeli~e cross. ing it, Zoeller said. Also, the current status of lbe htgh school will deter·
mine whether it can be adapted for future use.
The board should consider olber land rhat may be available, Zoeller
said.
At a minimum, the district will need a new elemenwy building to
replace Chester .and Tuppers Plains Elemenlary schools, Karr said.
. ·
Potential options include: kindergarten through sixth grade and a htgh
school; kindergarten through eighlb grade and a refurbished high school;
and kindergarten lbrougb eighlb grade, changing the high school 10 a
junior high school, Karr said. .
In olber board business, Nancy Larkins and her teChnology committee
updated the members on the disU'ict' s computer needs.
.
Larkins estimated it will cost about $16,000 for four personal comput·
ers with CD-ROM and printers for lbe high school library.
The state's SchooiNet program wiU pay 10 wire each class room and
put a computer in each room, Larkins said. ,But, lbe disU'icl must develop
a plan.and submit it to the state, sbe ijdded. The program's deadline is
· spring 1999.
"We need to get lbe teachers interested and educate teachers as well as
students," Larkins said.
.
.
The computer links could be tied in with construction of a new school,
1

---~-·

on Evolution &amp; SXA Tires!

RAC's parent firm wants to trade tts
stock on market

The Rock Springs ralr·
grounds is a changing scene ao
preparations move forward for
the opening of the 132nd Meigs
County Fair on Monday. The
benches at lbe hillside stage are
being refurbished and replaced
as needed, buildings are being
readied for exhibits, new poles
and electrical equipment are
being installed, and general
sprucing of the grounds Is taking place; Lighling in an area
near the grandstand Is being
imprpved this year and on
Wednesday, Ohio Power Co.
instaUed a couple of new poles,
right. The secretary's office was
busy as residents came In to
register their entries in open
classes for the fair. Below, Sec·
retary Debbie Watson, behind
the counter, assisted Jean
Alkire, left, ·and Helen "Sam"
Pickeps of Racine In registering
their entries. (Sentinel photos
by Charlene HoeDich)

r

Racine Council moves to renew street light contract
PRICE!

ISe.asCltn .Radials
. . . . . . . . . . . .ONLY

155/80R13
165/SOR 13
75/SOR 13
85/SOR 13
185nSR14
19Sn5R14

.. . . . .. 19.99
.... . .. 24.99
.... . .. 27 .99
...... .29.99
. . . . . 31.99
.. I . ... 32.99
. .35.99
... 37.99
. .38.99
. .39.99
. . .41.99
... .42.99

4

Formula
IIAJTII

Tires ...

9 o ;z aerosol (886275)
Reg 1.49
um,tl p&amp; ws!omer

•

OVER
Starting Fluid

OFF!

Gull Road,

Buy

WD-40®

101 " ' (4;57901
Reg 1.19
L1m1t 2 per w sromel

Sternwheel fest
packets slated
by merchants

77

e 4th

with trade -m

I

60

•

Low

Maintenance Battery
Up to 5Jqg.a..@ 0' F (835 ca @ 32' Fl.
(49l~l0) ~Oc77 without trade·in .
. I

&amp; Get a, $50
Quality Gift
Certificate!

40 Month low Maintenance Battery ·
Up to 350 CGI@ 0' f (450 ca @ 32' f )

(493478) 29 77 Without trade-on, 24.77
With trade-In

ll!l1-111-- ....._

,_,_._,

r-11 -

77

w ith trade-m

72 Month Power Pro Plus

Battery

Up to 87) cca II 0' F (1175 ca @ 32'

f).(743443) 44.77 without trade-in .

Yo u • r e · G o n n a • L o v e T h Ji s F a r m S t o r e !
Prices Good Thursday, August 1 Dth through Saturday, August 12th
Stc·2 H,ours: Monday through Saturday Sam- 9pm

• Sunday 9ani. 6pm

Racine Village Council bas company will install brighter, high contractor to begin work, he reportapproved lht first reading of a reso- pressure sodium lights that produce ed.
He also reported lbat the memolution aulborizing the signing of a 9,000 lumens, McDade and
Carmichael
pointed
oul
randum
of understanding between
new contract with Ohio Power Co.
Presently, lbe village pays $509 lhe contractor and lbe project direc·
Ron ·McDade and Ron
Carmichael of Ohio Power made a a month for mercury lights that tor relieving the village of liability
presentation to council Monday produce 7,000 lumens . The new for lbe construction of the musewn,
and payment for materials, should
night on thecrenewal of the street rate wiU be $450 a month.
be
signed wilbin a few days.
Councilman
Dale
Hart
reported
light oontracL
that
things
are
coming
togelber
in
It was ajso noted !bat volunteers
They explained !bat lbe rate is
the
Cross
Mill/Racine
Museum
working
wilb the contractor must
now a statewide fee for street
sign
release
forms.
·
project.
lights. The village will see a .t2
The
limbers
for
the
base
should
Council
also
approved
a
resolu·
percent reduction in the rate patd,
but will see a 25 increase in the be deli vercd by the end of the week · tion authorizing the transfer of
amount of light because the power . and lbe foundation is ready for lbe funds in lbe general fund to pay

Arrangements to prepare wei·
come packets for captains of
boalll comi~g here for the Stemwheel Fesuval on Oct. 5-8 were
ade when the Pomeroy Mer·
m
. .
Wd
chants Assoctauon met e nes·
day m11te Bank One offices.
Jim Anderson presided at the
meeting and treasurer Vicki fer·
balance of
re II repone d. a .
.
$4,752.85, not mcludmg funds 10
the ornament sale account
Plans for participation in back·
Io-schoo 1 adve rtising were dis·
cussed.
It was reported lbe revitalization
o'ects are moving forward and
prlb 'the
n de should be built
" e
prome a
IbiS year yet. .
.
· Pomero~ Vtliage Councilman
George Wngh~ who serves as a
liaison between council and lbe
merchants, reported !bat the fool
patrol showed 20 hours walking
downtown in lbe past week. He
also reponed that lbe telel'bone
boolb .on Front Street wtll be
mo~ 10 Second Street near lbe
shen~rs offic~ as a step toward
reducmg l01tenng .

workers compensation . There had water system projects that will be
been an increase lbat was not atJliC· getting underway, it wu.• noled.
ip(lted when the appropriations
The clerk's financial statement
were made at lbc beginning .of the was approved and the following
balances reported: general,
year, it was noted.
Council !ben tabled action on an $36,777 .0.4; refuse, $25,790.27;
ordinance sent by the mayor to parks/museum , $712 .72; street,
authorize borrowing of money $39,867.06; stale highway,
from the Ohio Water Authority. $3,563.96; fire equipment,
The mayor was IQ have gollen $70,920.64; water department,
information from the board so $80,~53.66; cemetery·, $1,458.42;
council would kn.ow what was water deposits, $5,048 .05; fire
department grant, SI ,232; cemetery
being borrowed.
The money would· be lbe match endowment, $6,800; fire depart·
lhe village has to have for lbe three
(Conlinued on Page 3) .

•

. By MARTHA BRYSON H01l£L
Associated Press Wrller
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Ravenswood Aluminum Corp,' s
parent company, once controlled
by fugitive commodities trader
Marc Rich, has asked for govern.
mcnt approval to trade Its stock ()n
a public exchange.
.
Company and union officials ·
confmncd Wednesday that Century
Aluminum Co. has filed documents
with the federal Securities and
Exchange Commission indi:aling
lbal it intends to sell stock •n lbe
company.
"Other than that, nothing much
is going to change," said Dewey
Taylor, president of the United
Steelworkers union local at
Ravenswood.
"The structure, the board of
directors' and th~ management of
the.corporation will rcmai.n Pretty
milch the same," Taylor srud.
Century Aluminum Co. is now
owned by Glencore International
AG of Zug, Switzerland. 1bc company was previously known as
Marc Rich &amp; Co. AG, but ll.ich
resigned as chainnan of the company in 1993 after giving up ma.Jority
control.
Rich was indicted by a federal
grand jury and fled the lJuited
States more than 10 years ago. ll11i
government qas been unable to
extradite Rich f!QITI Switzerland to
face charges of tax evasion, racke·
teering and participating in illegal
oil deals with lnm.
Rich's control of the company
became an issue when Ravenswood
locked out 1,500 members Of lbc
United Steelworkers of America in
a labor dispute that began in Octo·
ber 1990. Ravenswood and the
Steelworkers finally reached agree·
mcnl on a new contract m June
1992.
.
Taylor said the Ravenswood
plant has been running well since
lbe lockout ended and now ts pro·
ducing at full capacity.
"We've maximized production
out of Ravenswood for the f(rst
seven months of the year, and
·we're booked solid through the
month of August also," .Taylor
said.
"We anticipate !bat it will run
that way through the rest or tb&lt;!
year, although projections at:e for a
slight slowdown in Ibis last P3rt of
the year," he said.
in !990, lbe company's busi~~ess '
was heavily concentrated on pr0 •
ducing flat rolled aluminum U5ed in
beverage cans. But much _of lbat .
business disappeared dunng lbe
company's 20-monlb fight witb the
(Continued on Page 3)

Slip-struck Syracuse
street closed to use
arc' responsible for keeping
Council approves 10 · ents
lbeir children ofT the streets and out
p.m. curfew In village . of other public areas after 10 p.m.

-'-s-- KATHRYN CROW

Y
Sentinel Correspondent
A pon10n of Bndgeman Street
[
lbe He'di
Beegle residence 10
1
rom
College Road has been closed,
Syracuse Mayor Ja~es Pape
mfonned V1Iage Council dunng a
recessed session Wednesday night
The portion of the road closed
·
h
has ~na hazard for some ume, e
explruned.
Pape was given authority to
·
contact lbe Oh'tO Bn'd ge Amencan
Culvet;t Co. 10 ev~uate the danger·
ous ShiJ and provtde cost figures
for reprur.
.
Pape wiU inform Grants Admin·
istrator Robert Wingell with the
cost figures and Wingell will apply
for an eme~gency grant for repair
of the area, it was noted.
In addition, council voted 10 put
into effect a 10 p.m . curfew for
those under 1g years ofage.
. Council approved lbe final two
readin s of the ordinance 10 enact
lbe cJew, effective immediately.
Under the new ordinance, par-

unless !bey are accompanied by a
parent or guardian.
Meeting with council was Don·
nie Hendricks who, on behalf of
the Syracuse Racquet Club, pre·
sented council with $1,000 toward
lbe cost of repairing lbe village ten·
nis courts.
Tbe proceeds were obtained
lhrough a recent tournament held at
the Syracuse Tennis Court, Hen·
dricks said.
The leading conU'ibulor was Dr.
M.C. Sbah, be said.
Council expressed its "sincere
appreciation" for the domition.
Also meeting wilb council was
Pool MatJager Keith Eubanks, who
discussed pool operations. The
pool will remain open during the
Meigs County Fair next week, providing attendance is large enough
10 make it economically feasible.
· Attending
were
Pape,
Clerkfl'reasurer Janice Zwilling
and council members Eber Pickens,
Donna Peterson, Dennis Wolfe,
Bill Roush, Larry Lavender and ,
Kathryn Crow.

FLOAT PREPARATION - Benjamin
Fontenot of Louisiana helps build a noat at
Manley's garage in Middleport Wednesday
afternoon. Fontenot works with Midnight Magic

.(\

•

Low tontgbiiD 6&amp;, partly
cloudy. Frklay, p1rtly sunny,
blgb• lD lower 901.

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 ten1s
A Multimedia Inc. NewspaPer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 10, 1995

"We need io make sure !bey are being utilized. I'm all for technology
but !bey need to get some valuable educati~n out of it," Karr said. More
specific costs were requested for next month s m~ung.
.
In other business, Arch Rose made a pre~ntauon to the board seeking
two-way radios for lbe district's buses.
The bus CBs are not functioning, Rose said.
Two bids have been made by North Communications in Parkersburg,
W.Va., and Electronic Consultants in Ravenswood, W.Va .. Rose said.
The items lbat would be purchased would include 11 mobile units, two
ponable units, one repeater system and installation costs.
-' · (Continued on Page J)

10W-30. 10W·40 or SW·lO . 1
quart (710855·48, i03232)
Reg 1.29 Lim1t 11 quart-. ~r customer

,.

Sports, PageS

Pick 3:

Karrsaid.

l(d'

Ali Climate® Oil

• Reds
top Braves,
hike lead

Ohio Lottery

'·

EledrJc Parade Director Bruce Wolfe at Dislley
World In Florida, The parade will begin at g
p.m. Saturday in downtown Middleport. (Se 11 •
linel photo by George Abate)
'

•

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