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                  <text>Local briefs--Peoples Bank posts dividends
POMEROY - The Peoples Bancorp Inc. ~sled a third quaner
dividend of $0.17 per share. This rate represents a 6.3 percent
increase from the second quarter 1995's dividend of $0.16 per
share.
"Our perfotmance during the fust half of 1995 supported tbis
increase in dividends," said Robert E. Evans, presidenl and ~·
"We are pleased to be able to increase the return for our shareholders through dividend growth."
Headquartered in Marierut, Peoples Bancorp 'bas assets oC m&lt;R
than $530 million.

Seniors may file for tax exemption
POMEROY - The deadline for filing for the homestead e~emp­
tion bas been extended to Sept. 29, said Meigs County Auditor
Nancy Parker-Campbell.
The total yearly income requirement bas changed from $16,500
to $20,800 per year, Campbell said.
Other qualifications for the homestead exemption are one must
be at least 65 years old during tbe filing year or be permanently and
totally disabled, and you must own and occupy your borne as your
principal plaoe of residence as of Jan. I of the filing year.
. Campbell encourages homeowners who meet these requirements
with a total yearly income fCl' 1994 of under $20,800 to feel free to
call her office at 992-2698 between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to discuss filing procedures.

Sanders joins AMAA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -The American Maine-Anjou AssOCiation
announces that Tommy Sanders, Crown Cicy. bas joined the AMAA
as a new junior member:
The AMAA is an association of progressive cattlemen dedicated
to the promotion and future growth of the Maine-Anjou breed.

New member of organization
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. Hill Top Farm. Gallipolis, is a new member
of the American Angus AssOCiation.
The AAA, with more than 29,000 active adult and junior members, is the largest beef cattle registry association in the world. Its
computerized records include delliiled information on more than 12
million registered Angus.

Champion earnings·up 11%
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Champion Industries, Inc. reports
earnings for the third quarter·of·the current fJSCal year increased by
II percent over last year's figure, rising to $602,000.
Earnings one year ago were $544,000. Champion thus continues
its record of increasing quarterly earnings over the previous year in
every quarter since going public in January, 1993.
The flfiD' s board also declared a regular quarterly dividend of
five cents per share at its Aug. 21 meeting. It will be paid on Sept.
22, to shareholders of record on S9PI. I, 1995.

Endangered species
/

By KIM HAR,LESS
raJ surroundings. It said, in effect,
GALLIPOLIS - When we in that government must protect
Ohio bear the controversy sur- threatened plants and animals by
rounding the protection of endan·- forbidding destruction of their
gered species, it's easy to dismiss habitat Now congress is looking to
the issue because the highly publi- rewrite the Endangered Species Act
cized cases are primarily in the of 1973. Groups such as the Ameriwestem part of the country. Why can Farm Bureau are hopeful that
should we worry about the fate of this time a little common sense will
the timber industry? Because the be added to a law that is in dire
timber industry's fight with the need of a little common sense.
Endangered Species Act is only a Here is what Fann Bureau would
magnification of the larger issue- like the Endangered Species Act to
the rights you haves or may not . include:
have, as a property owner in the
-Compensate landowners when
United States.
use of their property is restricted by
Whether or not threatened endangered species regulations.
species need protection is not tbe When a law is for everyone's beneissue-we all want to protect plants, fi~ everyone should help pay.
animals and their habitat for future _
-Establish voluntary. incentivegenerations. The issue is bow we bas-ed protection programs for
go about doing i~ and most of all, landowners who have listed species
who pays.
on their lands.
The Supreme Court upheld in
-Require that sound science be
June the interpretation that the used to determine species listings
Endangered Species Act prohibits and that related actions, such as
not only direct harm to endangered habitat delineation, be subject to
species, but also harm to their natu- scientific review.

Economic
growth reports
boosts stocks

---Earns State Fair honors---...,

BySTEVESAKSON
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Interest-sensitive issues such as banks and utilities helped stocks .rise Friday after
two economic repo!tS revived
hopes for another rate cut by the
Federal Reserve Board.
The. Dow Jones industrial average rose 20.78 to 4,601.40.
Advancing issues oumumbered
decliners by about 3 to 2 on the
New York Stock Exchange. Big
Board volume totaled a light
~55.65 million sbares as of 4 p.m ..
down . from 299.18 .million on
Thursday.
.
The NYSE's composite index
gained 1.50 to 300.85. The Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stoclc index ·
gained 2.64 to 560.10.
The Nasdaq composite index
. weakened on a second day of losses iJ1 the technology sector. It fell
0.96to 1,019.97.
At the American Stock
Exchange, the market value index
gained 2.05 to 530.97.
Low mortgage rates helped push
up sales of existing single-family
homes in July a surprising 5 percent, to the highest level in more
than a year, the National Association of Realtors reported . The
group said sales rose to a seasonal. ly adjusted annual rate of 3.99 million. Home sales usually stimulate
the overall economy because they
lead to other purchases.
The Federal Reserve Bank of ·
Philadelphia $aid a survey of 52
forecasters showed the outlook for
inflation over the next five quarters
looks better than it did three
months ago. The panel expects the
consumer price index to rise 2.9
percent in the third quarter. That
prediction is down from 3.5 percent
in last quarter's survey.
Taken together, the reports
meant good news for bonds and
stocks.
·
Normally, bonds might have ·
fallen on the home sales report
because a growing economy can
increase the threat of inflatiOJ1,
eroding the value of bonds. Lower
bonds sometimes pressure stocks
because when bond prices fall,
interest rates rise, boosting borrowing costs.for corporations.
The Philadelphia Fed report
helped quell inflation concerns.
The resulting bond rally accelerated late in the day and stocks went .
along.
"Th~re are some solid gains in
· tbe financial sector, particularly
banks and insurance companies and
this is obviously being helped to
some extent by the improvement in
the bond market, even though
existing borne sales \\'ere stronger
than expected," said Hugb loboson, chief in vestment officer at
Fust Albany Corp.
The low inflation picture
increases the betting on Wall Street
that the Federal Reserve Board will
lower interest rates a second time
this year, said Johnson. ·

See puzzle on page 02

OSU wins
Kickoff
Classic

•

••

Ohio Lottery
Super Lotto:
S-7-10-13-21-44
Kicker:
11-3-1-1-2-9
Pick 3:
0-9-0
Pick 4:
3-4-0-3

Sports, PageS

~

Vol. 46, NO. 85

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 28, 1995

Copyright 1995

,____Back to school-----.
..... .,_.1

champion honors in the junior diYision exhibit
at tbe 1995 Ohio State Fair last week.

Shannon Fallon, right, Patriot, Is pictured
with her Angus steer which captured reserve

Coffee Futures hit 10-week
high on Brazilian pest reports
By DAVID DISHNEAU
AP Business Writer
Coffee futures prices leaped to a
10-week high Friday on reports
that a leaf-eating pest has invaded
coffee-growing areas of Brazil, the
worl(l' s top produoer.
Coffee traders are sensitive to
any threat of tighter supplies out of
Brazil. where 1995-96 production
is estimated at about balf the size
of last ycy's crop.
. On other commodity markets,
lumber futures rose sharply and
cattle futures approached a threemonth low . The Commodity
Research Bureau's index of 21
commodities slipped 0.08 point to
239.62.
Green arabica coffee beans for
September delivery rose 3.25 oents
on New York's Coffee, Sugar &amp;
Cocoa Exchange to $1.536 a
pound, the highest daily settlement
for near-tenn deliveries since June
15 .
Prices zoomed higher on reports
Brazilian fanners were having trouble controlling the spread of leaf
miner worms. The moth larvae bur·
row into leaves and defoliate trees.

The pesrwill not reduce the
1995-96 crop, which is nearly barvested, but could affect 1996-97
production, analysts said.
"At this point it's much too
early to speculate about the impact
on the 1996-97 crop, which only
starts flowering in a few months'
time," Merrill Lynch analyst Judy
Ganes said. .
The Brazilian winter bas been
warmer than usual, making trees
more susceptible to the worms and
worms more plentiful, according to
analyst Steve Platt of Dean Witter,
Discover and Co.
Coffee futures have risen 33.1
cents, or 27 percent, since July 6 as
this year's Brazilian crop size bas
come into focus. Earlier this week,
the Brazilian coffee brokerage flfiD
Woltbers and Associates estimated
the crop at .13.15 million 132pound bags, down from 26 million
last year.
The crop was decimated by two
severe frost• in June and July of
1993 that killed a large number of
trees . Brazil produces about onethird of the world's coffee.
The U.S. Agriculture Depart·

ment estimated Brazilian production at 17.6 million bags ear~er this
summer. Analysts expected the
USDA to reduce that estimate.
Purchases of coffee by U.S.
roasters are on the upswing as fall
and winter - the peale consumption period - approaches.
Eastern, Meigs and Southern local students all beaded h~ck to school today omclaUy starting
the 1995-96 school year. Pomeroy Elementary students disembarked a Meigs Local school bus
Ibis morning. Motorists should be on the lookout for school bwes loading and unloading passengers and 'for students walking to and from sehool. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

fARM

mm.®

Murder suspect surrenders to law

S~~ME:

· Caroll K. Snowden
342 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis
......... 446-4290

A

Slale Fatm Insurance Compan1es

,.. ,,., ..... ,,

Home 0111ces: Bloomington. lltiMs

ORE ·YOU·BUY~•••(
OPTIONS .tl FINANCE (Interest) UTES
•

i

0&lt;

·~

j

If

•

(,term• "~~o~t)

Are you investing... ?_c_on_t1n_uac~_,ro_m_o_-1 _ _ _ __
employer allows - usually between with a professional who is qualified to
Monitor yourinvestmentsregu2% and 15%. For 1995, you are ale . assess your situation and review your Jarly. Monitoring performance and
lowed to make a maximum contribu- ,risk tolerance as it relates to various managing your 401 (k) assets are
tion to your 40l(k) of 15% of your investments. Based on this review, you important tasks since· they directly
annual salary up to a maximum of will have to decide which investment affect the balance of your savings at
$9,240, an IRS-mandated index that choices best fit your needs.
retirement. As changes in the econis adjusted annually. (Be sure to
Stick with. the plan. Even if you omy affect'the markets, your invest·
consult a taJ&lt; advisor prior to deter- .become temporarily uncomfortable ment returns may fluctuate. Learn to
mining your contribution amount.)
with the investment choices in your e~pect and accept these fluctuations.
Take advantage of matching plan, stay in it. The advantages of All the while, keeping in mind that
contributions. Many companies of- participating can be more powerful you are saving over the long term, you
fer matching contributions. Some will than investrljent choices that fluctuate. may want (IJ make adjustments to
match dollar for dollar, others will
Diversify. Most employers offe~ reflect major market or lifestyle
,contribute a certain percentage of several choices for investing your changes.
'your salary depending on the amount 401(k)contributions. Fore•ample,you ·
As with any investing activity,'
you contribute. Togetthemostoutof may be able tb allocate your contribu· you should consult with an invest. your 401 (k), contribute at least the tionsamongfi&gt;ed•incomeinvestments men! adviser for more thorough inamount that will enable you to re- (such as FDIC-insured certificates of formation.
ceive the maximum matching contri- deposit) and variable income invest•$12 is appro•imately $12.60,
bution.
menL&lt; (such as stocks or bonds). Gcn- derived by laking 1.8% simple inInvest for the long term. Your emily, it is wise to diversify your as- terest earned on $1,000 investment
savings should accumulate first from sets. And usually, the closer you get to ($18) and subtracting 3% inflation
simply participating in your com- retirement, the less risk you should ($18.00- $5.40 = $12.60).
pany's 401(1&lt;) plan, then from hav- take and the more you should consider
Mark Smith i'l an investor with
ing the right investment mix. With · fixed income investments.
Advest, Inc., in .its Gallipolis office
today's lower interest rates. merely
saving isn't enough. For example,
when inflation is running at about
· 3% annually, putting $1 ,000 into your
plan's guaranteed investment selection that pays 4.8% (only 1.8% after
inflation) will actually cost you about
$12 in spending power. • To reach
your retirement savings goal, you
need to become more than a saver,
you need to become an investor with'
a long horizon and a solid financial
plan.
The stock market, with its vola·
tility and 'risks, scares many inves·
tors. But the polential reward for invesung m equuies can be convincing. Historically, (since i925), even ~¥.-'~F.
with cyclical downturns, large company stocks have returned an average ~~+.!=*
10.3% a year before inflation. This
does not mean you should put all your
40 I(k) savings i~to stocks Instead, you
mtght want to constder the prof~­
sional ·management and diversifica- ~+7+.'.;1-;k*
lion of stock mutual funds. (Be sure to f*H.t'Ftri~
obtain a fund prospectus, which includes delliiled infonnation about the
fund including charges and expenses,
lind read it carefully before investing.)
Consull with an investment executive or financial planner. Meet

••

Sunday, August 27, 1995

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

. . PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
- Incorrect emergency phone
numbers were printed again in
phone books, increasing the call for
a county-wide enhanced 911 sys-

.

tem.

sRAND

•Power Windows
•Cassette Radio
•Carpet Savers
•Tilt Wheel

· •Auto. w/OD Trans.
•Remote Trunk Release
•Whitewall Tires
•Power Door Locks

NOT A4 CYLINDER
WITHOUT
CRUISE
•
OR CASSEnE!

Analyst reports
1•cent decrease
in pump prices

1985
' FORD LTD

1991

GEO METRO
Auto., A/C, red.

$1588

-$399
1987
CENTURY

1986
LEBARON

. 1988
BARETTA G.T.

SJSOO

SJ995

$3995
.'

'

.

"People don't normally check
phone numbers in an emergency
situation," said fireman David
Niermeyer of the Blennerbasset
Volunteer Fire Department
Roy Terek, external affairs manager for Bell Atlantic in Parkersburg. said ~bout 50,000 phone
books distributed last y;eek had
inaccurate numbers.
He did not know how or why
the numbers were printed. Parkers-

NEW

•3.1 Liter V-6 engine
•Cruise Control
•Rear Window Defroster
•Visor Vanity Mirror

1 Section, 12 Page• 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pro, con arguments
filed ·in ballot issues
By JOHN CHALFANT
of the Ohio Adult Parole Authority
• Renew a 10-year, $1 .2 billii:m
in granting commutations, just as program of state aid to local g(jVAssociated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A Nov. 7 bal- governors already do in granting · emments for road: bridge, water,
lot issue that would limit a gover- pardons.
sewer and similar infrastructure
"The passage of Issue One will projects.
nor's power fb reduce sentenoes of
prison inmates would help restore preclude hasty, 'last minute' sen• Raise from $500 million 4o
faitb in the state's criminal justice tence reductions and will ensure $1.2 billion the amoun1 the Ollio
.that any decisions to commute a Department of Transportation may
system, proponents said.
Opponents contended that a criminal's sentence are well- borrow for highway construCtion;
governor should have the right to ipformed and not politically moti·
Total state construction debt
reduce a prisoner's sentence when vated actions carried out near the already stands at $5.5 billion.
end of the governor's term in
appropriate facts come to light.
Opponents of the construction
. Those were among the argu- office;" backers said.
debt limit plan contended that lbe
Opponents said governors must state should finanoe highway, road,
ments favoring and opposing the
constitutional amendment that leg- retain the power to commute sen- bridge, water and sewer projects :CO
islators gave Secretary of State Bob tences to promote justice in rare a pay-as-you-go basis, rather tJran
' borrowing more money.
Taft on Friday to include in elec- cases.
' 'The framers of the state constition advertising and publications.
"By 2003, the interest on ihe
The amentlment, designated tution in their wisdom decided that . debt will exceed the dollars spent
Issue I, was proposed in response it wa&lt; preferable to grant the state's on new road construction,''· OIJIIOto former Gov. Richard Celeste's chief executive unfeuered power to . nents of Issue 2 said. "It's eXlldly
decision in 1991 to commute the issue commutations," opponents this kind of irresponsible debt ~
sentences of seven death row said. "We agree. There is no gOOd has caused our federal insolvenreason to alter this constitutional cy.••
inmates to life in prison.
.
State law requires legislators to principle."
Proponents contended the
Arguments also were subD)itted amendment would renew a local
write pro and con arguments for
amendments to the Ohio Constitu- for an&lt;! against Issue 2, an amend- public works program that 70 perment that would let Ohio borrow cent of voters authorized in 1987,
tion that they place before voters.
Issue I proponents said the more money for state highway and and would provide more money for
amendment would require gover- local public works projects.
state highways as a result of raising
issue 2 would:
nors to consider recommendations
· a debt cap unchanged since 1968.
\

Henderson and Redmond Ridge

area Friday and Saturday. McConibay said Myers was talked into
turning himself in ,by a friend, so
when be was approached by officers Saturday night, it was witbout
incident
Myers is housed in the Mason
County Jail awaiting a bond bearing before Judge O.C. "Hobby"
Spaulding .
A spokesman for the circuit
clerk's office said the orders were
wailing to be signed for a court
appointed attorney for Myers. After
an attorney is signed, a bond hearing will be set

Wrong numbers vex emergency staffers

·ife

P.U ''",
'v

wanton endangerment.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Myers' grandfather, Zenie E.
A Henderson man is being held
without bond for the alleged mur- Myers, 85, of Redmond Ridge, was
der of his grandfather, and wantoo found dead at his residence around
endangerment of his mother and 9 am. Friday with a single gunshot
wound to the abdomen.
stepfather.
At 2:07 a.m. Friday, the sberZenie Junior "J.R." Myers III,
18, of Redmond Ridge, was arrest- ifrs department responded to a call
ed without incident, on Walnut at the home of Robert Russell on
·street in Henderson by Deputy Redmond Ridge. J.R. Myers had
Charlie Steams and Trooper Eddie . allegedly fued two rounds from a
Starcher of the Point Pleasant shotgun at his stepfather, Robert-·
Detachment-West Virginia State Russell.
Police, acccording to Deputy Curt
Authorities checked the elder
McConihay of the Mason County Myers' borne after Russell bad
Sherifr s Department.
asked deputies to check on him.
Myers is charged with first
Police searched for Myers in the
degree murder and two counts of

Low tonight Ia 6&amp;, mootly
clear. Tuesday, partly lliunny.
Highs Ia tho tower 90s.

..

"

burg was the only phone book with
wrong numbers, be said.
The error concerned police and
fuefighters.
Charlie Meyers, a Williamstown
fueman and president of the Wood
County Firefigbters Associatio'n
said he almost panicked when be
saw the numbers.
"There are life and death situations. You make a mistake and
you've got problems," be said.
''This supports our efforts for E911 in this county. There are !QO ·
many numbers to start with, let
alone have the phone company get
it wrong."

The Wood County Commission
bas debated an Enbanoed 911 system for years. Under the enhanced
system, callers' names, phone numbers, addresses and directions to
their homes appear on a screen.
Parkersburg and Belpre, Ohio,
offer the enhanced service, but
those cal~ng from nearby towns in
West Virginia and Ohio may reach
an operator in Charleston or Virginia, said Linda Johnson, Wood
County sherifrs dispatcher. '
In West Virginia, 28 counties
offer enhanced 911 service, five
b,ave ba·sic 911 service and 22
counties have none, Ms. Johnson
said.

California's Wilson kicks
off run for White House

NEW YORK (AP)- California
LOS ANGELES ~AP) Gov.
Pete Wilson, formally kicking
Competition continued to drive
off.
a
slow-starting GOP presidendown gasoline pump prices,
which lost a penny a gallon as the tial campaign, says the nation and
summer driving season neared a its values are "under siege" .by an
out-of-control federal gove'rnment
close. an an31yst says.
Americans are suffering under
The nationwide av.erage,
"the
oppressio~ of federal
including all grades and taxes,
tyrants."
the fear of violent crime
was 120.73 cents per gallon on
and
a
climate
of welfare dependenFriday, compared to the Aug. II
cy,
Wilson
said
in .ll speech la!lnchaverage of 121.73 cents per galing
a
five-day
announcement
tour,
lon said Trilby Lundberg, pubHe
also
denounced
iUegal
immilis~r of the twice-month! y Lundgration as an example of unfair
berg Survey.
"Competition is the main burdens borne by law-abiding
cause for the drop," said Lund- Americans, a theme that helped
berg. who polls 10,000 gas sta- him win re-election as governor
tions. "Demand is high and last year.
Wilson set the tone for his tour
relliilers are competing fiercely
by selecting the Statue of Liberty
for sales.
•'The prices today are more as a backdrop for the public kickoff .
than 4 cents lower Uum tlie same of a candidacy that has been in
place for sevetal months.
time last year," she said Sunday,
The famous statue symbolizes a
The average price per gallon,
·including taXes, at self-service nation welcoming immigrants, but
pumps was I 13.96 cents for Wilson in his Battery Park speech ·
unleaded regular, 124.03 cents used it to underscore his theme that
for mid-grade unleaded, 132.26 there is a "right way" and a wrong
cents for unleaded premium and way to enter America.
"We teach our children to·
113.87 cents for leaded regular.
At full-service pumps, tbe respect the law, but nearly 4 milaverage was 150.51 cems for lion iUegal iounigrants in our coununleaded regular, 159.19 cents try break it every day. And Washfor mid-grade unleaded,, 166.12 . ington actually rewards these lawcents for unleaded premtum and breakers by forcing states to give
them ben7fits paid for by the tax!51.18 cents for leaded regular.

payers,' · he said ·in prepared
remarks.
Illegal immigration, along with
attacks on affirmative action and
career criminals, are pillars of Wilson's pointed appeal to disgruntled
Americans.
He plans to stress that message
as he tries to make up for his late
start in the presidential race,
already crowded with Republican
contenders.
His announcement tour was taking him today from New York to
the first-primary state of New
Hampshire, and then Tuesday to
Boston, Philadelphia and Buffalo,
N.Y. Stops later in the week will be
made in Georgia, Aorida and Iowa,
then in San Diego, where he served
11 years as mayor.
Recalling bis own Irish immigrant grandmother and her police
officer husband who was killed in
the line of duly. Wilson said their
values live on, "maybe not in the
halls of government but in the
homes of America."
Today; be said, "The values that
guided us for 200 years are under
siege and so is America. American
optimism is being undermined by a
federal government that is out of
step, out of touch and out of control.''

TOP BUYER -Home Nallonal Bank of
Racine/Syracuse, was recognized as lhe top
buyer of animals at the 1995 Meigs County 4·H
Junior Fair livestock sale during Saturday
night's annual banquet held at Eastern High
School. About 800 4-H club members and their
families, buyers, their employees and families,
and guests attended the banquet. Home National
Bank purchased' 43 animals. Tom Wolfe, bank
president, fourth row, right, and other employees are pictured here wilb the 4-H club members
from whom the bank purchased animals. In the
first row are, from left, Jeremy GUiilari, Jennifer
Harris, Aaron Yost, Janet Calaway, Kayla
Gibbs, Adam Johnson, Derrick Frackler, Steven
Kauff, Lori Harris, Rees Wyant; second row,

Mary Nally, Jtsslca Ju.stlce; Patty Nally, Joe.
Rupe, Ashley Ryan, Jessica Janey, Mary
Rankin, Billie Jo Welsh, Carrie Sheets; third
row, Joan Wolfe and Dortba Salser, bank repre·
sentatives; Sari Putman, Melissa CUrrord, Weiley Karr, Erin Harris, Stacy Wilson, Heather
Dalley; fourth row, Leslie Parker, Rebecca
Scott, Jeremy Calaway, BJ. Ervin, Gary Cooper, Jason Ervin, Tyler Johnson, Chad Hubbard,
Betsy Sheets; fifth row, Wayne Roush, Gary
Norris, Claudia Roush, Maxine Rose, bank reps1
David Rankin, Clnda Bratton, and Nicole
White; sixt.h ·row, Donna Nea.. , Ben Petrel,
Krista Smith, BID Nease, bank representaUves,
Robert Harris, Arl Tobin, Alban Salser, and
back, Grover Salser, Jr., Ted Smith and Brent
Rose, bank representallve•.

I .

RUNNER-UP - The Farmers Bank &amp; Sav~
logs Co~ Pomeroy, purchased 30 animals at the
1995 Meigs County 4-H Junior Fair livestock
sale held allbe fair. Saturday night at the aMU•
al 4-H banquet held at Eastern High School, the
hank was recognized for Its outstanding support. Pictured with Paul Reed, president, Ed
Durst, and Betsy Hawthorne, hank personnel,
adults cooler, are 4-H club members from whom
the bank purchased animals. They are, from
loft, front, Ashley Hager, Theresa Baker, Jen·

-- -

. ' ' Chris Barringer,
nifer Goeglein, ·~-Alan Haley,
Grant Dixon, Pamela Rupe, Jared Hupp,
Meghan Haynes; second row, Christy Riley,
Jennifer Allen, Susan Tobin, .Bobby Rupe,
Kristina Kennedy, Amanda Upton and Heather
Dailey; third row, LesUe Parker, Anthony Doer·
fer, Brian Hoffman, Chance Watson, Chuck
Parker and Jonathan Avi•; and fourth row, ·
Robert Harris and R,andy Burke. (Sentinel pho- .
tos by Charlene Hoeftlch)

,..

'

�CommentarY ·

Page2
Monday,August28,1995

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

f!MULTIMEDIA.INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
. · CHA RLENE HOEFLICH
.: : General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wordot lung . All letlcrs arc subject to editing and must be signed with name,

,

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. ,~ : address and 1elcphone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
: ~ should be 111 good la£tc, address ing issues. not personalities.
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Supreme Court disciplines
lawyer for helping client

'·

By PAUL SOUHRAOA
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - One good tum deserves a reprimand.
That's the message Cleveland-area lawyer George Minefl Jr. got from
the Ohio Supreme Court.
The court slapped Mineff with a public reprimaild last week for loaning a needy client more than $5,000 in 1991.
That sort of deed is a no-no, according to .the code of ethics, which
says a lawyer may not have a fmancial stake in the outcome of a client' s
lawsuit
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Never miJtl that Minefl - who in the same year received an award
from the Legal Aid Society of Cleveland for his pro bono work wtth
needy clients - never got his money back or attempled to coDect II from
the client, Mario Cianci.
..
.
Neither Mineff nor Cianci could be reached for comment Mmefl did
nm return phone messages left at his office and Cianci bas an unpublished
number.
But according to court records, Mineff represented Cianci in a workers' compensation case. Cianci bad been injured on the job a year and two
lawyers earlier, but had not yet received any benefits.
.
Mincff told the court Cianci asked him fer money about seven weeks
later. Mineff said Cianci told him be was eating only one meal !l day, and
it was apparent be was losing weight. Cianci also had ~ evtcted ~
one residence for failing to pay his rent, and bad recetved an evtcuon
notice from a second, Mineff said.
.
. By November, Cianci bad had it with the workers' .compensabon system and anyone associated 1with it, the court papers wd. On Nov. 18, be
burst into Mineer s office, yeDing and usin&amp; abusive language.
Mineff then Iwithdrew as counsel and told Cianci he. didn't have ~o
repay the money. Cianci hired a fourth lawyer and ulumate~y got hts
workers' comp benefits and money from a personal mJury lawsuu.
"He should have known better, but he did it innocently," said Raymond Grabow, a lawyer who sat on the Cleveland B~ Association disciplinary committee that recommended the sanctions agamst Mmeff.
A lawyer can from some costs, such as co~ filing ~ees. hiring a court
reporter or getting police or medical reports, (~rabow ~d..
.
" What we're not pennitted to do is substdize a client m theU' personal
life," he said. ·
,
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It goes back to the old English legal concept of' champerty,
ra w
said. It means lawyers should not put themselves in the position where
they might not get paid back if their client loses.
.
Mineff said he wasn't aware of the rule, Grabow satd.
That's understandable, given that some states do allow lawyers to
advance money to needy clients so the~ can wi~~ ~ngtby legal .proceedings - and the rules had changed m some Junsdicbons smce Mmeff
was in law school.
Ohio isn't one of them.
.
Grabow said the issue comes up all the time when lawyers represent
poor clients.
·
"You jus! have to teD them you can't do it." be said.
For Mineff, it could have been worse .
.
Two justices - Chief Justice ~~~mas Moye~ and Paul Pfetferwanted to suspend Mineff from pracucmg law for SIX .months.
I

Today in history
By.Tbe Associated Press
. Today is Monday, Aug. 28, the 240th day of 1995. There are 125 days
left in the year.
·
.
· Today's Highlight in History:
: On Aug. 28, 1963, 200,000 people particip~ted in a ~aceful ciyil
rikJlts rally in Washington D.C., where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. dehvcred his ''I Have a Dream' ' speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial.
· On this date:
·
·
In 1609, Henry Hudson discovered Delaware Bay.
·In 1749, Gennan author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was born in
Frankfurt.
·
.
In 1774, 'Molher Elizabeth Ann Seton, the rtrst American-born saint,
was born in New YQrk City.
•
In 1828, Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy was born near Tola:
.
In 1916, Italy's declaration of war against Germany tooic: effect dunng
Wqrld War!.
.
:. In 1917, 10 suffragists were arrested as they picketed the ~bite House.
• In 1955, 40 year.&gt; ago, Emmett TID, a '!!lack leen-ager from C!ticago,
w~ abducted from his uncle's home in Money, Miss., by two wbtte men
aQar he bad supposedly whistled at a white woman. He was found brutall)"lhurdered three days laler. Two suspects were later acquitted by an allwhite jury.

Berry's World
1. WI\S A
1"EeNAGrE
Wt~~WOLf.

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THE "IT'LL NEVER HAPPEN TO
ME" DEPARTMENT

--Area deaths--

OHIO Weather

Saddam and Uday: like father like son
WASHINGTON - · 1be recent
defections· of two of Saddam Hussein's daughters and theirilighranking husbands have left Saddam 's favorite murderer- his
eldest son, Uday - in the unquestioned No. 2 position.
··
It is an ironic turn of events,
considering that only six years ago
Uday was imprisoned and threatened with execution by his father.
Uday botched his own suicide
attempt in prison, but later
redeemed himself to his ruthless
father.
In 1989, we first reported on the
rift between Uday and his father,
which was the result of a secret
second marriage by Saddam. lnlelligence sources have provided a
full picture .to our associate Dale
Van Atta of the son and Saddam's
heir apparent. ·
By the mid-1980s, according to
our sources, Saddam, in a private
family gathering, "blessed' Uday
as the "crown prince" of Iraq. Further evidence of this was the secret
''hiring '' of one, and possibly

more, doppelgangers - Uday
Iook-alikes who would pose as him
in dangerous settings. One double
who defected back in 1992, Latif

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binst~in
Yabia, turned Uday down on the
"offer" in 1987. then was imprisoned and tonured into accepting.
Cosmetic surgery gave him the
appropriate dimples; his front Ieeth
were pulled out to give him a set
like Uday; be was given special
shoes to make him 6-foot-2 like
Uday ; and be went through six
months of training mimicking
Uday's gestures and voice. The
price of traveling as Uday - living
in luxury palaces and traveling in
royal entourages - was the stress
of experiencing at least a halfdozen assassination attempts.
In 1988, when the long war with
Iran was over, Saddam stole anoth-

er man's wife in a secret second
marriage. Uday viewed the marriage as an insult to his mother,
Sajida, and waited until he could
exact revenge on the aide de camp
of Sad dam's who bad made the
marriage arrangements. He saw an
opportunity at a celebration weeks
after the marriage and beat the
young captain to death in front of
others.
Saddam, who loved the aide,
threw Uday in prison and convicted
him of murder. Uday tried suicide
and failed. Saddam ordered an execution, but relented and ''disciplined" Uday by sending the man
and his mother to Geneva in splendid "exile."
At this point, the long -time
defense minister of Iraq , Adnan
Khairallab, made his objections 'to
Saddam,;about the treatment of his
sisteu'Saddam's wife Sajidab.
Khairallab, popular enough to be
often considered as Saddam's successor, disappeared from public
view and, in spring 1989, died in a
mysterious helicopter crash Sad·

L.. 2 ... 3... 4..,5... 6 ...

Accu-Weather• forecast for

dam is believed to have ordered.
Uday was bact in Saddam's
good graces in time fer the August
1990 invasion of Kuwait. Saddam
secretly sent Uday otit of the coun·
try during Desert Storm - and
ordered the Uday doubles to go to
the front to show Iraqis that his
own son was risking his life against
the U.S.-Ied fighting forces.
Since the war, Saddam bas
allowed Uday to amass his own
personal fortune, become editor-inchief of the daily newspaper,
Babel, and head Saddam's personal
security forces.
Uday bas been eliminating his
rivals with a ruthlessness his father
clearly admires. The starkest example of this came recently when
· Uday shot Saddam's balf-brolber
Watban Ibrahim Takriti. Watban,
ll'ho bas reportedly since died of
his wounds, was one of Saddam's
closest henchmen and relatives but Uday was not thrown into jail
this time.

IMaosfield lssoI•
IND.

Yo~

VFW .

~-

Several inteDigence sources told
us that the mosr driving reason why
Saddam's• son-in-law, Lt. Gen .
Hussein Kamel, recently defecled
(o Jordan was out of fear that Uday
would kill him too.
Hussein Kamel was often
viewed as a potential successor to
Saddam both because of his position as chief of Iraq's development
of biological, chemical and nuclear
weapons .:__ and because .o f his
marriage to Saddam's oldest
daugh,ter, Raghda. He was groomed
to succeed Saddam, especially during the time Uday was in disgrace
with his father.

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Surviving are his wife, Mary Kathleen Slack Cavender of Silvenon,
W.Va.; a daughter, DOnna Cavender Moore of Columbia, S.C.; a son,
Clifford (Corky) Arnold Cavender of Lyman, Wyo.; five grandchildren;
and a brother, Theodore T. Cavender of South Charleston, W.Va.
He was also preceded in death by a son, Keith (Pude) Cavender; and
two brothers and a sister.
Services were at 2 p.m. today, Monday, Aug. 28, 1995 in the StraightTucker &amp;: Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, wilb the Rev. Roy Canterbury officiating. BuriaJ'was in the Ravenswood Cemetery.

June Glaze

W.VA.

June Glaze, 70, of Columbus. formerly of Middleport. died Friday,
Aug. 25, 1995 at her home.
.
· Born Jan. 20, 1925 in Rtidand, the daughter of the late Hcrben and
Helen Naomi Maguire Miller, she was a homemaker. She was a member
of the Bradford Church of Christ.
·
She is survived by a son and daughter-in·law, Richard and Kelley
Glaze of Boise, IdahO'; a daughter and son-in-law. Charlot!~ and Ronald
leo
Lancaster of-Columbus; four daughters. ·nrenda. Helen, Patrtcta and Rose
Glaze, all of Columbus; five grandchildren; brother and sister-in-law.
Herben and Frances Miller of Rlicine; sisters, Eileen Bowers of Middleport, Jean Michaels of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Helen Reed of Middlepan; and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by ber husband, Herbert E. Glaze.
Services wiD be 11 a.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport. with Keith Cooper officiating. Burial will follow in the Riverview
peratures wiD return to normal.
Cemetery in Middlepoit. Friends may call between 6-9 p.m. Tuesday at
The rectlrd bigb for this date in · the funeral home.
Columbus was 97 in 1948. The
record low was 44 in 1887. Sunset
Monday will be at 8: II. Sunrise
· Tuesday will oo at 6:56 a.m.
Evelyn L. Ingram, 77, Columbus, died Sunday, Aug. 27, 1995 at
Weother forecast:
Northland Terrace.
Tonight.. .Mostly clear. Lows
She was a member of the McKendree United Methodist Church and
from around 60 northeast to 65 to retired from the Bureau of Worker's Compensation.
·
70 south.
Survivors include two daughters and sons-in-law, Bettie and Mike
Tuesday ... Parlly to mostly Leist of Grove City, and Jane and Tom O' Neil of Columbus; a son and
sunny. Highs in the upper 80s and daughter-in-law, James R. and .Cheryl ln;&amp;ram of Gabanna; seven ~rand­
lower 90s.
children and four great-grandchildren; a stster, Ruth Swepston of Hilliard;
Extended forecast:
and a brolber, Dob Lee of Racine.
Wednesday and Tbursday .. Fair
She was also preceded in death by her husband, James E. ingram.
and bot. Lows from the mid. 60s to
Tbe family will receive friends today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m; at
around 70. Highs from near 90 to Schoedinger Linden Chapel, 274~ Cleveland Ave., Columbus. Servt~~
the mid 90s.
wiD be 2 p.m. Tuesday m the ~wmg Fun~ral Home, Pomewy, wtth vtstFriday ... Dry and not as. bot. tation one hour prior to servtces. Bunal wtll follow tn the Suttpn
Lows in the 60s. Highs in the 80s.
Methodist Church Cemetery.
.
In lieu .of flowers. contributions may be made to the Sutton Umted
Methodist Church, Racine Ohio 45771.

By Tho ASsociated Press
The warm and dry weather pattern will continue for Ohio.
Monday night will bring clear
sides and lemperatures that should
be comfortable. Lows will once
again settle into the 60s ..
·More dry weather is expected
for Tuesday and Wednesday. Temperatures will be a little warmer
each day as it will turn into a very
warm week.
High lemperatures Titesday will
reach the upper 80s and lower 90s
and most of the state will see high
temperatures between 90 and 95 on
Wednesday.
·Cooler weather looks lilce it will
rerum to the state on Friday as tern-

Evelyn .l.. Ingram

·

RESERVE MARKET PEN -'- )(en Kirk, the poultry prince, '.
earned "' reserve champion status at the Meigs County Fair f&lt;ir '
market pen poultry with these two chickens. Kirk lives In Salem
Center.

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Local News in Brief:---.

Units of the Meigs County
5:10p.m. Saturday, Bashan
Emergency Medical Service Roa·d. Luvenia Hayman, Holzer r-""-recorded eight calls for assistance Medical Center;
·
3:54p.m. Sunday, State Route·
Saturday and Sunday . Units
responding included:
338, Ruby Nakao, treated at the
A vehicle was stolen from the upper Pomeroy parking lot SaturMIDDLEPORT
scene;
day nigh~ accmding to Pomeroy Police Department records.
1:58 a.m. Sunday, Country
8:18p.m. Sunday, State Route
Jerry D. Barney, Wilkesville, reported his 1990 Jeep Cherokee
Mobile Home Park, Tanya Harris, 124, Portland, Clifford Connley,
two-door was stolen after be entered Jimmy's Sports Bar at 10:30
Velerans Memorial Hospital.
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
p.m. Saturday, according to reports. When Barney returned at 12:50
POMEROY
RUTLAND
a.m. Sunday, .the Jeep v.:as gone.
.
12:26 a.m. Saturday, volunteer
9:37 a.m . Saturday, Mudfork
Other identifying points about the vehicle include: red color with
ftre department and squad to Stale · Road, Sherri Butcher, refused treatblack pin stripes, tinted windows and license plale number JFMI89.
Route 7, motor•vehicle accident. ment;
John M. DeMoss, VMH pending
8:22a.m. Sunday, Painler Ridge
ma~Jt/
transfer to Ohio State University Road, Christal Taylor, VMH;
Hospital via MedFiigbt helicopter- . 1; 56 p.m. Sunday, County Road
A Pomeroy man was discharged Sunday f~o~ Obio State University Hospitals, Columbus, for. treatment of mJunes suffered m a
ambulance.
1, Hattie Boyd, 0' Bleness Memorione-car crash Saturday on State Route 7.
RACINE
a1 Hospital.
John M. DeMoss, 29, 34115 Willow Creek Road, was trnnsported from the scene by the Meigs EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospima~ket
tal, tbe Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stale Highway Patrol ~ported . He
COLUMBUS (AP)- Indiana· points 50.00-51.50. few 49.50 and
was later trnnsfencd to OSU, a hospital spokesperson satd .
Obio direct hog prices at selected 52.50; plants 52.00-53.50.
The patrol said DeMoss was southbound in Salisbury Township
buying points Monday by the U.S.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs .• country
at 12~05 p.m. when his car went off the right side of the road. Tbe
.
Department of Agriculture Market points 44.00-51.00.
car then struck a fence, continued on and came to rest in a ditch.
News:
Sows: sleady to 1.00 htgberJ
The car was moderately. damaged and DeMoss was cited for
U.S. I-3 300-500 lbs. 34.00Barrows and gilts: 50 cents to
driving under the influence, driving under suspepsion, failure to
mostly 1.00 higher; demand good.
38.50; 500-650 lbs. 35.5040,50.
control and rio safety belt.
u.s. H 23o~260 lbs .• country
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Patr~
Saturday admissions - none.
A Reedsville youth was cited for failure to control Friday by the
Satu(day discharges - Virginia
Meeting set
Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stale Highway Patrol in a one-car crash on
An easement signing meeting rumns, Racine.
State Route 68 I.
wiD be held from 5-8 p.m. Monday
Sunday admissions- none
Troopers said Bradley S. Yobo, 17. 54342 Eden Ridge Road,
at the Tuppers Plains fire hall.
· Sunday discharges- none.
was westbound in Olive Township at 6:56p.m. when be failed to
Attorney John Lentes and engi- HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
navigate a right curve, drove off the right side of the road and overDischarges Aug. 25 - Merlin
neers will be present to answer
turned his car.
questions. Maps wiii show sewer Tracy, Joshua Adkins, Jewel Mays.
The car was severely damaged, troopers said.
lines. A similar meeting wiii be Seth Amos. Elizabeth Brisker,
held at the same time and phice Andrew Denbow. Lois Perkins,
Emily Spires, Patricia Rice, Jason ·
Sept 12.
Oliver. Angela Cundiff, Angela
Nefr'. · Robert Lewis, Frank
Sorority to meet
There were 83 Super Lotto tickCLEVELAND (AP) - No tickPreceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Schwanger, Lisa Leport. ·
ets
with five oT the numbers, and
ets
were
sold
naming
all
six
numBirth - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
· . Beta Sigma Phi, luncheon at noon
each
is worth $1 ,074. The 4,814
bers
drawn
in
Saturday
night's
$8
Thursday at tbe Oak Room in Kinnison, son, Albany.
Discharges Aug. 26 - William million Super Lotto drawing, so the tickets showing four of the numAthens,ldckoff to year's activities.
·
jackpot for Wednesday's drawing bers are each worth $58.
Masters, Donald Leach.
In
Kicker,
one
player
had
the
will
increase
to
$12
million,
the
Discharges Aug. 27 -,
Trustees to meet
exact six-digit number and can
Lebonan Township Trustees Michelle Turley , Mrs . Michael Ohio Lottery said.
claim $100,000. The winning ticket
Sales
in
Super
Lotto
totaled
will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Kinnison and son.
was purchased at Green Acres Gro$3,240,507
.
Kicker
sales
totaled
the township bwlding.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
cery
jn Gaysport in southeast Ohio.
$523,518.
Chapman, son. Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Nicholson, daughter,
Coalton.
·
The Daily Sentinel
(Published with perndssion)

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GRAND PULLET- Odie Karr of HarrisonviUe ·won a grand', ..
champion for his pullet at the Meigs Coun\y Fair. He also took a .,
reserve champion title ror his fancy poultry.
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Crash injures Pomeroy

Today's livestock

·super Lotto jackpot to ·i'ncrease

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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26 Weeks...... ,.................................... 547.06
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Rale~ Oul.'lide Mflgs Counly
.]J Week..\ .... . .................
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20 Weeks ........ ........... ................. ...... 549.66

52 Weeks...

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... .34 3/8
Akzo,.......................................60 718
Ashland OU ........................ ,.. .31114
AT&amp;T .....................................SS 1/8
Bank One ............................... .33 518

POSTMASTER: Send a t.kl re~~ correcti on~ to
TI1e Datly Scnttnd. Ill Court St. Pomeroy.
Ohio 4S7ff.l

. ............ S%.20

Bob Evans .............................. .IS 518
Champion lnd ....................... .l3 114
Charming Shop ,...................... 5 114
City Hotdlng ..................:............. .lS
Federal Mogul ....................... .l1 tl8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .3, 318
K-mart ..........:.........................141/8
Lancb End :. ............................ 17 3/8
Limited lnc............................. IB 314
Multimedia Inc......................411/l
People's ................................. .211/l
Ohio Valley Bank.........................3S
One Valley ............................. .30 Ill
RockweU ............................... .43 518
Robbins &amp; Mye ..................... .l7 114

Royal Dutch .......................... llO 318
Sboney'• Inc........................... !! Ill
Star Bank ................... - .........54 1/4
Wendy lnt'l...... - ........." '""'"'19 1/l
Worthington 1nd.................... l, 3/8

-•-•Stock reports are the 10:30 • ·":';

quote&amp; provided by
GaUl polls.

~Adve1t

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tickets Reedsville youth

Announcements

Pu bli J;hed every oflcrn oon. Monday through

~1L.

report

Hospital news

lion provided for .in the 1994 bill
over a five-year period and mandated that $10 billion be spent on
prison construction, leaving just $5
billion for no-strings-attached
block gr311ts allowing states and
. cities to spend on any program they
. cbose as long as it was declared an
anti-crime project.
The chances are that linle of the
money w·ill be spent to beef up
police forces.
Dole's bill, however, provides
$12 biUion in block grants, tighlens
·requirements that the money be
spent on law enforcement and earmarks $2 billion specifically for
providing extra police· in high-.
crime areas. The measure also adds
$1 billion to prison construction
funding.
The ·need for more priSons and
cops are argued persuasively by
two Democratic experts on crime,
Prof. John Dilulio of Princeton and
New York attorney Adam Walinsky, once a top aide to Robert F.
Kennedy.
According Lo Dilulio, only
IOO,OOO people were sent to jail in
)1992, though 3.3 million violent
crimes were commined

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EMS units answer 8 calls

Jeep stolen from lot

{Morton Kondracke is execu•
live editor of Roll CaD, .the newspaper of Capitol IDD.)

-

Warm and dry conditions
to continue through week

Dole should seize the crime issue

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Kenneth Arnold Cavender, 75, Rt. 2, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Friday, Aug . 25, 1995 in Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va., from
injuries .sustained in a traffic accident in Jackson County, W.Va.
Born Dec. 29, 1919 in Charleston, W.Va.. son of tbc late Harrison and
Mattie Durth Cavender, he was a retired welder at Kaiser Aluminum
Corp.
A World War II veteran and fonner prisoner of war, be was awarded
the Purple Heart and medal for bravery. He was a.member of the Ripley

• IColumbus 192° I

words under this resolution must of the First Amendment iri aU sea- sional Conduct can get lawyer,.o; 'into
"Be regulated both inside and out- sons - provided this hypothetical trouble. She quotes Seth Rosner,
side the courtroom ... in every cir- in the Wall Street Journal:
chair of the ADA's professional
cumstance where a lawyer is pre- ·
"If two lawyers are discussing
coirunitlee:
tax policy, and one says, 'We
"Stories come back to us about
should reform welfare because judges wbo, once they have someNat Hentoff
some of its recipients are lazy,' be thing in writing from a bar group,
bas
violated the ABA policy imposed sanctions. It just makes
5enL by reason either in whole or in
because
be has manifested 'by them .feel more comfortable about
part" because of his or ber status
words'
an
indication of bias based moving
who go too
as a lawyer. (How can one be sure
.. againstlawyers
•
on
socio-economic
status."
f
ar.
which pan is the lawyer?)
I put this hypothetical to George
Dissidents at the ABA predict
One huge problem with this
Kuhlman,
chief
ethics
counsel
of
that
the new speech code will also
reckless resolution - which
the
ABA.
He
agreed
that
Professor
be
used
in some disciplinary prodemeans the ABA and therefore its 1
Rotunda
was
correct.
The
use
of
.
ceedjngs
against lawyers around
members - is that it does not proin
tba~
context
the
word
'lazy'
the
country
- even though it is
vide any clear definition of when a
would
be
speech
unbecoming
an
supposed
to
be only "aspiralawyer can be eharged with violatABA
member.
tional."
ing its overly broad language.
Kuhlman added, however, that
Defending the policy !Jf deployI asked a number of the 'peecb
this
speech
code
is
not
pan
of
the
ing speech police within the ABA •.
code's proponents if there will be a
ABA'
s
Model
Rules
of
Professionone
of its officials told me, with
· list of impermissible words and al Conduct. 1berefore, there are no asperity, that "some people go too
phrases that an ABA member may
consult before be or she speaks actual punishments . The co'de, far in protecting the First Amend"inside and outside the court- Kuhlman stressed, is "aspira- ment.' But it's more dangerous, I
tional.''
suggested, wben the powerful
room.' '
But
a
leading
member
of
the
American Bar Association goes in
I was told there is no such list or
Young
Lawyers
Divisio·n
told
me
the
opposite direction. Consider the
any set of specific guidelines. Yet,
that
in
time,
this
resolution
wiD
be
example
set fer the nation when it's
as any law student knows, you
moved
as
an
amendment
to
the
most
visible
group of lawyers
can't be convicted of breakit1g a
Model
Rules
and
if
it
passes,
there
diminishes
.free
speech in the name
law that is too vague to be underwill
indeed
be
sanctions
for
the
of
a
greater
good.
·
stood.
ABA
members,
young
and
old,
Nat
Hentoff
Is
a
nationally
Furthermore, since this ABA
resolution is not limited to who do not bold their tongues. But renowned authority on the First
exchanges in courtrooms, it is a the sanctions may well accompany Amendment and the rest of the
policy without boundaries. Ronald the speech code just as it is now. In BID of Rights.
Rotunda - a law professor at the the July 17 National Law Journal, . (For Information on bow to
Gail Diane Cox repOrted that even
University of Illinois, active on codes which have not yet become communicate electronically wltb
·ABA committees, and a guardian pan of the Model Rules of Profes- this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online bv caiUng 1800-827-6364, ·ext. 8317.)

aged 15-24, homicide is the leading
cause of death.
Similarly, for blacks of all ages,
1992 marked the highest level ever
, of victimization by violent crime of
all types, nearly double the rate for
whiles.
Io spile of news stories indkating that crime rales have dipped. a
new CBS-New York Times poll
shows that crime is named as the
most important problem facing the
country by 12 percent of the popuIation, beating the economy and
unemployment narrowly and far
outdistancing health care, family
breakdown and Congress.
In 1992, candidate Bill Clinton
wisely seized upon the crime issue
to make himself out to be a "new
Democrat," prom ising to place
100,000 . more police on the
nation's streets.
However, legislation be offered
in 1993 contained funding for only
a small fractio~Jiof that number.
Tbe Democratic Congress hiked
the funding in 1994, but it's still
adequate to l?ay for only about
15,000 full -ttme police and tb'e
money is spread out all over the
nation, to high-crime areas and
peaceful ones.
•
This year, the Republican-dominated House of Representatives
slashed $5 billion from the·'$30 bil-

Kenneth A. Cavender
PA

ABA deploys its own speech police
Colleges and universities must
.now proceed at their peril if they
enact codes punishing speech that
might demean other students' race,
sex, religion or sexual orientation,
among other categories . Courts.
declaring the.se attempts to enforce
civility overly vague, have ruled
them invalid.
Nonetheless, the 117-ycar-old
American Bar Association - with
a membership of 370,000 attorneys
- has decided to monitor the language of its ranks. Despite the
ABA's record of advocacy of free
speech, its House of DelegaleS bas
recently rcvi~ "political' correctness" by passing a resolution
enthusiastically offered by its
Young Lawyers Division, one of
the largest in the ABA.
The resolution condemns bias
- in words or conduct - by
lawyers in the course of their' professional activities on the basis of
"race, sex. religion, national origin, disability, age, sexual orientation or socio-economic status."
The only exception to the use of
offensive words is when they "are
otherwise permissible as legitimate
advocacy on behalf of a client or
cause." ("Legitimate advocacy" is
intriguingly undefined as is the
more problematic "illegitimate
.
advocacy.") .
As the ever vigilant Young
Lawyers Division points out in an
accompanying report, lawyers

condttions and high

MICH.

Uday clearly felt threatened by
his brother-in-law. Hussein Kamel
became particularly alarmed during
the last several months at criticism
of him in Uday's newspaper. If the
pattern Uday bad established followed this time, Hussein Kamel
would soon be killed by "unknown
assassins." Wathan was denounced
in Uday' s newspaper before be was
shot by Uday himself.
Jack Andelrson and Michael
Blostein are writers for Unitell
• Feature Syndicate, Inc.

,.,.

•'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aug. 29

Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., can index of serious crime - which is
score a political coup ~ and do the based on police report$ - there bas
nation a lot of good - by seizing been an overall !Imp of 8 percent in
control of the crime issue, wbicb all serious crimes over the past
remains at the top of the public's
list of national problems,
Dole is the author of a bill that Morton Kondracke
would significantly increase fund- three years, altl\ough the number of
ing for police, especially in high· violent crimes has dropped by a
crime urban areas, and for prison smaller amount.
construction. If be calls it to the
In New York, Houston and
Senate floor for passage when some other big cities, the number
Congress returns from summer of murders logged by police
vacation, he can steal a march on dropped by more than 30 percent
his Republican presidential rivals during the frrst half of 1995 from
and on President Clinton, who is 1994 levels.
stiD defending the crime bill passed
However, other statistics aren' t
in 1994.
so encouraging. According to an
If Dole is smart. he can also. use annual study by the Justice Departthe bill to broaden his appeal ment's Bureau of Justice Statistics
among blads, Hispanics and other - based on household inlerviews
usually Democratic constituencies . - the number of persons victimby selling it as an answer to the ized by violent crime rose from
plague of violence afflicting inner 51.1 per 1,000 persons in 1992 to
cities.
53.9 per 1,000 in 1993.
The New York Tunes and some
1bere was a 3 percent rise in the
columnists have seized upon staiis- number of murders between 1992
tics showing a modest decline in and 1993, and the national murder
the crime rale in the past few years, rate in 1993 was 10 per 100,000
but crime experts note that the persons. In 1960, the murder rate
numbers represent a mere dip from was six per 100,000.
a horrendous! y high level in recent
Murder is a scourge in black
years and are lilcely to be washed America, which accounts for 12
away soon by new demographic ·percent of the U.S. population, but
trends.
more than a quarter of all murder
According to the FBI's latest victims. Among young black males

'

.-,

Monday, August 28, 1995

oa

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.
'
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�Monday,August28,1995

Sports

The .Dally §n~H!~.~!

Ohio State routs Boston College 38-6
By RICK WARNER
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(A.P) - One day after Michigan
o~ned the college football season
wtth a last-second victory, another
Big Ten power opened its season
with a rout.
No. 12 Ohio State pounded No.
22 B~ston Colleg_e 38-6. Sunday ~
th~ Kickoff Classtc .at Gl3llts Stadium . Eddte George ran f~r two
touchdowns, but the most unport"nl plays for the Buckeyes were a
97 -yard k1ckoff return by Shawn
~prings and a 99-yard scoring drive
m the second quarter.
,','11 was.a very solid victory for
us~ ~?1o State coach John Coo.per
swd. We woo the game eas1ly,
but made enough mistakes that I
can go back home and do some
coaching." .
The lppstded game was a stark
contrast to Saturday's thrilling
Pigskin Classic, where Michigan
rallied to beat Virginia 18-17 with
a lDucbdown pass on the final play.
This one was decided with 2:13
left in the third quarter, when
George's nine-yard scoring run
made it 31-6 one play after Ohio
State recovered .a fumble by BoslDn
Coll~ge's Justice Smith.

Page4

Reds notch sweep of weekend series
"That's the best team we've
seen all year," said Jay Bell, one of
just four veterans remaining from
the Pirates' 1990-92 division Iitle
teams. "If they keep up this pace,
they're going lD be a tough team lD
beat in the playoffs."
Pirates manager Jim Leyland
wouldn't predict the winner of a
possible Braves-Reds playoff, but
said, "That's the best offensive
club in the league . We got our
brains beat in all weekend. When
they're not whacking the ball
around, they're beating you with
their legs."
Only two Reds starters - Hal
Morris and Darren Lewis on Friday
- failed to get bits in the series.
All nine starters bad bits Saturday .
and Sunday, including Benito Santiago, who was in an 0-for-11
slump before going 2-for-4 with an
RBI Sunday.
"This should be an eye-opener
for us - and not just the players,"
said Leyland, whose title teams
were dismantled due to escalating
salaiies. "That's what il takes to be
a championship team. That's a $41

By beating Tigers 9-2,

million payroll over there, but if we
want to gel to that level again,
we've 'got to add something, we
can't be subtracting all the lime."
The Reds played the weekend
without cleanup hitter Ron Ganl,
who has strained rib cage muscles.
"I don't know if you could' even
say we were full throttle in their
series. because Ron wasn't playing," Moms said. "It's a different
lineup with ·Ronnie in there. Tbe
guys did swing the bats preny wen,
andwefoundalotofboles."
Schourek (14-7), raising his
average from .146 to .204, singled
after Jeff Branson's go-ahead RBI
double in the second. He singled
again as the Reds scored in ~th
the fifth and sixth innings.
Schourek, a teft•)lander who bad
never won more than seven.games
before this season, allOwed five hits
in seven innings . He struck out
three and walked one, and threw
only 89 pitches.
Rookie Esteban Loaiza (8-6)
took his first toss in eight starts
since July 19, allowing five runs on
11 hits in six innings. He gave up

.

one hit in seven innings in his only
other start against Cincinnati.
·"He got defensive and flopped
some pitches in there, and I don't
know why," Leyland said. "But
I'll find out. He kind of backed off
and started throwilig Slow stuff."
Noles:
Before Sunday,
Schourek waS 2-4 with a 5.47 ERA
against Pittsburgh .... The Pirates
have lost three straight at home
since winning seven in a row ....
Bret Boone was 6-for-48 before
doubling in the ninth .... The Reds
have won 16 of 21 from Pittsburgh
over the last two seasons? ... The
Pirates shuffled their rotation for
the three-game Colorado series,
with Ross Powell (().!) moving up
to Monday and Denny Neagle (115) switching to Tuesday .... McCurry allowed eight earned runs in
three innings in the series, jumping
his ERA from 4.07 to 5.26 . ... The
Reds are 30-9 against the NL Central. ... Cincinnati.has a better
record against the Pirates in Three
Rivers (87-64) than in Riverfront
Stadium (76-70), which also
opened in 1970.

.

Indians tally"'weekend series sweep
' best record to 76-35.
Indians huilt a seven-run lead by ment - 'Ob, they're going to gel
By CHUCK MELVIN
Hcrshiscr
(12-5)
lo
7-2
tn
to.
the third inning.
stale' -why don't we took at it as
CLEVELAND (AP) - A huge
starts
since
returning
from
a
''When
you
get
a
big
lead,
an opportunity to do some Ulings? I
lead in the standings and a huge
sprained
back
in
early
July.
The
you've
got
to
throw
strikes
and
get
think we should use it to our
lead on the scoreboard gave Ore!
66
runs
in
guys
out
early
in
the
count,"
he
advantage."
Indians
have
scored
Hcrshiser the luxury of doing a litthose 10 games.
said.
Jim Poole pitched two perfect
tle tinkering Sunday.
He
gave
up
two
runs
and
four
But
be
also
wants
to
make
sure
innings,
striking out five of the six
"I'm trying to come up with
bits
in
six
innings,
walking
six
and
the
Indians,
himself
included,
use
hitters
be
fa,ed', and Paul Assensome things: new deli very, new
striking
out
follr.
He
blanked
the
the
next
month
wisely
rather
than
macbcr
finished.
grips, dirrerent sturf," Hersbiser
Tbe Tigers lost for the 12th time
said after he won his fifth consecu- Tigers on three bits- two of them simply coasting into the postseative decision, pitching the Cleve- misplayed by right fielder Manny son. So be's experimenting with a in 13 games at Jacobs Field since
land Indians past the De!roit Tigers Rli!IIire~ - unlit Franklin Stubbs few new pitches, as be did late in ' the park opened last year.
bit a two-out, two-run double in the his Cy Young Award season of
''Everybody talks about their
9-2 . .
sixth.
•·
1988
before
he
led
the
Dodgers
·
bitting
, but the last few days, their
Paul Sorrento homered and
The
walks,
a
·
s
eason
high
and
past
Oakland
in
the
World
Series.
pitChing's
been pretty good, too,
Eddie Murray drove in three runs one shy of matching a career high,
"!think
we
have
a
little
hiverhasn't
it?," Detroit manager
for the Indians, winners of four
straight and eight of their last nine disturbed Hersbiser, who admiued · age here to get better," be said. Sparky Anderson said. "In fact, I
(See INDIANS on PageS)
games. They improved baseball's his concentration lagged after the. . "Instead of looking at il as a detri-

.

Scoreboard
Colorado (Bailey S·S) at Pittsburah
{Powell 0-1),7:35 p.m.

Baseball

TuesdaY's games

Major leagues

U .S
16

Philadelphia at San Fnnci•co, 3:35
p.m.
I
Odcaco 11 Florida, 7:DS p.m.
St. Louia It CINCINNATI, 7 :35p.m.
Colorado Ill Pilllbw'ib,7:3S p.m.
Howtou at Atlanta, 1:40 p.m
New Yortat Lol ADgelea, lOtOS p.m.
Montreal II San Dteao.I0:05 p.m.

20
13.S

AL leaders

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulem IM\'Woa

Ium

ll£ L rd.

BOIIoD. ..•.. .'..............70
New York .............. 34
Bollimore .............. l4
Torocto .................. 49
Dettoil ................... 46

43
Sl

.619
... 82
.411
.44)
.411

~

62

66

ee.... DI•W.

CLEVELAND .......76 3l
Milwa~W .............SI 5-4
Kan5al City ...........S4 S6
Chkago .................. 47 63
MillDelota ........... ... 39 72

.6Bl ·
.511 ll.S
.491 li.S
.427 l8 .S
.JSI
'J1

w...era Di•b&amp;oa

California ...............67
Texa~ ..................... 59
ScatUe ...... ,............. S7
Oal&lt;land ................. ll

.

.588
.522
.504
.478

41
54

56
60

Ill

7.5
9J
l2.l

Saturday'• scores ·
CLEVELAND 6, Dettoil2
Toronto 3, ChiCIJO 2
Oaklaod 11 , Boston 4
Texu tO, Kanau City 3
MiiWIII.Lkcc 7, Minnetotl 6 (I 0)
Seanle7, Ntw Yori.O
Baltlmore S, Callfomi• 2

Sunday•s scores
a..EVEU.ND 9, Detroit 2
Torooto 2, C'hicllao I
Milwaukee 14, Miancaota 1
Xansu City S, TelAI2
Boltoo 4, Oai.hllld I
Baltirnot'e 4, C&amp;li(ornia 0
New York 5, Seattle 2

Tonight's games

To~.ooto (Carrara 1-3) al CLEVE·
LAND (08,. 7-l), 7,05 r,·m·
·
· Kan1u City (Fiem ag: 1-S) at New
York (McDowellll·9), 7:35p.m.
Tel81 (Witt 2-1) 11 MiDDe&amp;ota (Pam
l ·l),I,Olp .m.
Milwaukee {McAndrew 2-l) Ill Odcaao (Alvarez S-7), 8:05p.m.

Tuesday's games
Seattle at BoltOD, 7:o3 p.m.
Torootc at CLEVELAND, 7:05p.m.
Oatland aJ: Baltinue.7:JS p.m.
California at New Yori.,7:3S p.m.
M1Jwautee at KaiiiU City, 1 : ~ p.m.
Tn.111 at MioiiCIOta, 8:05p.m.
. Detroit at Olicqo. I :OS p.m

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutem DlviAoa

Ium

ll£ L I'll.

lil

~9

.Sll

t4.S

.418

19

60

.4SS

2U

63

.437

US

Atlanta ................... 72
Philadelphia ........... S9
MoatreN ................54
Aorida ...................SO
New Yort: ..............49

.649

39
SS

Central Dlw!.llon
'CINCINNATI ........ 70 ' 41 .631
HoUiloB ................. 57 55 .509
Chicaao ..................,
S7 .4SI1
St. Louia ................48 6S .42S
Pittstn•ah ..............47 6!1 .420
W..CernDiwWa.
Lo&amp; Anae1~ ...........60 s. .526
Co\Oflda ................sa ss .s u
san Diego ..............ss 57 .491
Sao fnuldscv ..... :.:.S2 61 .460

13.5
ts .S
23
23.S

L.S
4

1.S

Saturday's scores
Atlanta 7, OJielao l
New Yor~ 7, SanDieao 6
Aorida 6, HoUIIOD 2
Philadelphia 9, Loa ADJelell 4
Sao Franciaco l. Montzea\1
CINCINNATI 7,1'lttlbur&amp;h 6
Sl Louil S, Col&lt;nejo 4

Sunday'• Storti
Montreal 1, Saa Fnlllciaco 0
&lt;JNCINNATI 10, l'lDJhur&amp;lll
San Dieso 4, New York I
AUaola 3, Olica&amp;o l
Sl Louil I 0, Coknd11 S
Aorida 10, Houstoa 2
Loa An&amp;elet9, Alilldelphi•l

Monday'• gamu
Allanta (Avery 6-9) at Ch\caao
(Nav;vro 11-S). 2:20p.m.
Houston (Broc:al\ 4-2) 11 Florida
(Valdea 0-0), 7:0S p.m.
St. Louia (Watson S-S) at ONC1NNATI"(Wella3-l ), 7:35p.m.

BATI'ING: E. MartiDel:, -seattle, .367;
Knoblauch, Miuouota. .336: C. Dni1,
California, .334; Salmon, CalUomia, .J2S;
I . Radriauet , Teu1 , .324: Thoma•.
Chicago, .323; Seitur, Milwaukee, .323.
RUNS : Phi\Upa,_Ca\ifornia, 105; Edmo,uh, California. 104: E. Martian. Seat·
Ue, 91; Salmon, California. 90: Belle,
Clevehmd, IS: JohD Valentin. Bo.wn, 14;
Thomu. Chicaao, 14.
RB); Vauahn. Boatoo, 99; BdmoudJ,
California, 97; E. t.1artine:t, Seao.le, 95;
M. Ramirez, Clenlud. 94; Thorn~•.
Chica11o. 90; Belle, Clevelaad, 19: T.
Man.loez., Seattle, II. •
HITS : Baeraa. Cleveland, 148 ; E.
M.-tinez., Se.ttle, 144; Kooblauch, Mlnnaota, 142; Belle, Cleveland , 131:
- SalmoD, California, 136; L. Johoaon,
Chic:aao. 136; Puci.eo., Miancaota, 114:
Nia.on, TeUI, U4.
DOUBLES: E. Martine&amp;. Seattle. 42;
BeUe, Cleveland, 40; Seitz«, Milwautte,
21; Puckett, Mloneaota. 28; C. Riptcn ,
Baltimore, Tl; Edmondl, California, 26;
O'leary, Bnaton, 26; John Valentin,
Boston, 26; DISarcioa, CallfonUa, 26;
Bnldy Andfnon, Baltlrmre.l6.
'
TRIPLES : LofloD, Clevellod, 12 :
Brady Anderson, Baltimore. 9:
Knoblauch. Miuoesota, 8; R. Alomar,
Toronto, 7; NuDDally, Kana• City, 6; B. ,
William&amp;. New York. 6: 9 are tied wUb S.
HOME RUNS ' Thomu, Chlcai&lt;&gt;, 33:
VauilU&gt;. BDII&lt;&gt;o, 32: Bello, cte.. lud, 31;
R. Palmelro, BtlUmore, 31; Bdmondl,
Clliroraia. 30: Salmon, California, 30; M.
Ramira, Clevelaad, 251; Oaettl, ~•nau
City,29.
STOLEN BASES : T . OoodwiD,
KIDW City, 35: Knoblauch, MlanetOia,
:Mj ColellliJI, Seanle, 32; Ni1.on, Te1.11,
32; Loftoa, Clevdand. 10; L. JohlliOD,
aucaao, 30; R. HendcnoD, Oakland, 26. .
PITCIDNO (ll docllloDI)' w.un.td,
Boaton, 14·2, .875, 2.30; R. John1on,
SCiide. l:&gt;-2, .867, 2.68; Ta'YVez, OeV6Iand, 9·2, .813, 1.90; I..anptoo, Califor- '
uia. 13-3, .812, 4.27; D. Wella, Detroit,
10·3, .769, 3.04; Hluoa, BO&amp;tolf, 13-4.
.765, 1.76; Stottlemyre, Oakland, 12·5,
.706, 4. 19; Henbi1er, Clevelaad. ll-S,

.706, 4.26.

STRIKEOtrrS: R. Jobnaoo, Seattle,
229; StotUemyre., Oatlaod, iS6; Flnley,
California, 156: Cooe, New York. 148;
Appier, X:auua Cily, 145; Hanaoo,
Bolton, 120; A. Leiter, ToroDto, 116; J.
McDowell, New Yort, 116.
SAVES : Men, Clevelaud, 38; Lee
Smith, California. Jl; A&amp;Uilera, Bottoa,
25; Eckenley, OU:Iand, 24: Wetteland,
New York, 23; Montaomery, Kanus

~~2:~:::~icoao._22
BATTING: Piatta, Loa Anaelea, .367;
T. Gwyaa. San Dieg:o, .3S7: Bichette,
Colorlldo, .334; D. Bell, Houaton, .330;
Lattin, Cincinnati, .310; Bomilla, New
York. .32S: Culilla, Colorado, .319.
RUNS: 'Finley. SllD Diea.o, 89; Bipio,
Howtoa, 88; BoDdt, S1.11 Franclsoa, 14;
Lartia, Cinciauatl, 12 ; R. Saudon,
CinciDDiiti, 71; MODdeal , Lol Anael~. 17;
Bidlette, Colondo, 11.
RBI: Bicheue, Colorado, 99; ,Son,
Chicaao, 91: R. Sanders. Ciocianat.l, 90;
D. Bell, Howton, U; Boodl, Sa.n Franci&amp;co, ll: OIDl. Cincinuati, II; Oalwraaa.
Colc:nldo, It .
IDTS: Bh:: hetle, Colorado, 149; D.
Bell , HouatoD, 147; T. Gwyaa, Sao
Diego, 14$; Fioley, SaD Dieao, 143;
McRae. Chic•ao, 139; Grace, Chica(to,
134; Cutilla., Colorado, 132; Luk..io,
Cincinnati, 112.
DOUBLES: Grace, Chlcaao, 43; R.
SIDden, Ciocinnlll. 32; Cordero, Mootreal, 3 I, McRae, Cllicaao, )(}; Lankford, SL
Louia; 29: BicheUe, Colando, 21; Mon.ndini, Alilaclelpbia, 27: 0 . Hlll, San Fnulcilco, Tl.
TRIPLES : Buller, Loa ADJelea, 9;
Ooualez. Cbicqo, 7: D. Sanden. Su
Francilco, 7; Floley, San Dleao, 7; E.
Youna, Colorado, 6; Bullcltt. Chlcaao. 6;

Offerman, LDI ADpiCI, 6; McRae, Chicaao,l':i; J)JDiton , Cbica&amp;o, 6. ·
HOME RUNS: Bichette. Colorado, 12;
Castilla, Colorido, 30; L Walker, Colorado , 21: Gaat, Ciociooati, 28; Soaa,
Chicaao. 27; Galarraaa. Co)pl'ado, :27; Pi·
azza. loa ADaelea, 26; Bondi, San Fran·
' ·
.cisco, 26.
STOLEN BASF..S : Veras, AOJida, 42;
l.atlia, Cincinnati, 42: Finley. San Dieao.
32; R. Sanden, C1o.;innaU, 30; D. Bell,
Ho1.11too, 27: Dl.ewia. CillCiDDiti, 27; E.
Youog, Colorado, 25; I.JreShielda, Loa Aa- .
~teles. 25; Butler. Loa Anaclea, 2~ .
PITCEDNG (11 deciaionl}: G. M•d·
dux. Atlantli, 14-2, .875, 1.16: Smiley,
Cinci1111ati. 11·2, .846, 3.12: Glavi ne, At·
la.ota, 13-5, .722. 2.86; N11varro, Chicago,
11 -5, .687, 3.19; Nomo, Lo1 A.nieles, !OS, .667, 2.59; C. ~rer; , Monttea\, 10-S,
6£17, 3.46; Bull ina«. OticafO. 10-~ ..667,
3. 16; Schourek, Cincinnati. 14-7• .667.
3.49; Smaltz. Atlanta, 10-~ •. 667, 124.
STRlKEOtrrS : Nomo, Lo1 Ao[!.elea.
194; Smaltz, Atlanta, I SO; G. Maddux,
Atlanta, 148; Faaero, Montreal, 139: PJ.
Martinc::z, Mootreal, 138: Reynoll\f;, HoUI•
too, 137; Schouret, Cincinnati, 126:
Be11e1, San Dieao. 126.
SAVES: Myen, Chica11o. 29:
Slocumb, Vhillde!phia, 28; Heni.e, St.
Loui1, 28: Ho'ffman, Slln DieiO, 2S: J.
Branlley, Cincinnati, 25; Todd Worrell ,
Los Ange\ea, :lS; Dock. Saa Francisco, 24.

Football
\

NFL exhibition action
· Saturday's scores
Kanau City 17, Mioneaot.al3
Caroliu6, N.Y. OiiJlts 1
Dallal 10, Hotliton 0
San Franci&amp;co 17, Seattle 7

AP Top 25 college poll
Here •e the Top 25 teanu In the Auociated Press colleae football poll, witb
rmt-place votq ia pa.rentheaes, current
recordl u of Jut Saturday, tot1l poinll
baled on 2S poinll for 1 fint place vote
du'nu&amp;h ooe point for 1 25th place vote.
WI.. wec.k'li final rantiq:

Ium

L•l

:!H. l'la..W.U

l. FloridaSL (3l) ........ O.O-O
2. N.....ka(ll) ..........O.O-O
3. Teu1 A&amp;dd (6) .......0-0.{1
4. PellDSt..ll) .............. 0-0-0
l . Flortda ( ) ...............0.0-0
6. Aubwu (2) ...............().0-0
1. So\AheroCaL ....... ,.0-0-0
I . TellDCiieCI (1) ..........0-0-0

1.306
1.298
lJ48
1,168
1.011

I
2
3
4
l
' '
7
8

9. NotreDame .............0.0-0

999

9

IO.OinOST............... l-0-0
II . Alabama ............... .0-0-0
12. Miuni ....................0.0-0
13. MichiaiD ............... l·0-0
14. Col&lt;n&amp;l ............... .0-0-0

962

12

1)01
1,«6

1,360

940

I0

11
l4
l3
l6

1'6. Otllhoma .............. 0-0-0

890
765
103
536
'13

17. Vifaibia .................O.l-0

407

17
l8
19
20
21
24
2J
24

u: ucu....................o-0-0

18. Tuu .....................0.0-0 380
19. 1\riz.ona ....... ...........0-0.0 34S
lO. North Cln&gt;lloa ...... 0.0-0 331
21. Wilo:Juio .............. O.O.&lt;J . 300
22. WlllhlqtoD ........... 0.0-0 220
23. WESTVIRGINIA0-0-0 214
24. VirgilliaTed:\ ........ 0-0.0 191
lS. Illiooia ................... 0-0-0 170

I~

Other rec:eiTinl 'l'otuz Oreaon I 56.

Ka.n1a1 St. 139, N. Carglina St. 124,
South C.Olin1 107, Botton Co\lep 71.
BriiJWn Youoa 74, Colorado SL 64, Mla-

liaalppl St 36, California 34, Teus Tt~ii!h
23, Duke 10, BoylO&lt; 9, Clemloo 9, Synocw •
LING GREEN I, LSU 6,
Louinille S, retoo St. 4, Arkanua 3,
Geafia 3. So dtem MIN. :2, W•tuap!D
Sl 2, Iowa I, evada l.

Transactions
BosebaU
M..tor Le~e &amp;. .ball
TAMPA liAY DEVR. RAYS: Slped
a workiDi a~treement with the Butte ,
Mont. Copper Kl1111 of the Pioueer
l.eque Cor oDe year.
Amerlc:aniAaa'"
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Recalled
Joe Borowllci, pitcher, fi'om RochCiler of
the Ioternatioall Leque.
BOSTON RED' SOX: Actlwted Zaoe
Smith, pitcher, from :the U-day dlaabled

liaL Deaiaoated Juan Bell, iafielder, for
~~&amp;iga~nt.

ClnCAGO WHITE SOX' Purclwod
the contract of Mike Carneroo, outfielder,
rrom Blrmlnaham of the Southera ·
league.
OAKI;AND ATIUEI'ICS: Activated
Mar~ McGwire. fint bueman, from tbe
IS-day diAbled lillt. Optiuacd John W•diD, pitcher. to Edmonton or the P!lcific
Coa~t Leilgue.
N•Uonal Lcque
·
FWRIDA MARLINS: Purttwcd tbe
contract of Marc Valdes, pitcher, from
Cbarlone or the International League.
PI-ULADELPI-DA PIDLUES: Placed
Darren Daulton, catcher, oo the 60-day
disab led lilt. Recalled Mike Lieberthal,
catcher, (rom Scraotoo Wi\ket-8111Te of
the International l.eaple.
ST. LOUIS: Activated Tom Pag:oozzL
calcher, from tile IS-day diaabled !ill
l&gt;elianated Oerald Perry, fint baaemao
for wignment.

...

Football
National Foocball Lugue
ARIZONA CARDlNALS: Walveod Sebas)iao Barrie, defeoslve tackle, and Dilly
William~, wide receiver; Carloa DrooP .
cor oerback; Walter Dun1on, runnina·
back; and Lance Scott and Pal Meyer, offemive linemen.
ATLANTA FALCONS : Releaaed
Dunstao Andenou, dcfeuive end; Lin·
coin Coleman, runnina bact: Dwayoe
Oordoo, linebacker; Nate Lewd, wide receiver; Tom McHale. offeollve tackle;
/ Rob. Selby, guard; aod Thorraa Williaml,
defeosive tackle.
BUFFALO BILLS : Re\ealed Rick
Strom. quarterback; TyroDe Wlllla1111.
wide receiver; Filmel Johuoo, defea~ive
back; Che Foater. rullback: Tom Nunen
and Mike Sheldon, offe111ive lioemeo; aod
ShaD non Clavelle. defensive cod.
GREEN BAY iPACXERS: Waived
Oeoe McGuire, center; Charlu Hope,
B,Uatd; Tommy Faa.n. def&lt;;Diive end;
Bcroard Carter and ,Rufrin Hamilton,
linebacken; Mitch Berger, placekicker;
and Ouulea Swann, dc(enaive back. Traded Fenic Co!lona, defeftlive end, to New
Eogi8Dd for r,ut couideratiou. Acquired
Joe Smw, of ensive tackle., from Philadelphia and Lind1ay Knapp, o!fenaive lineman , from Kansas City ror undltc\osed
draft pickl. Placed LeShon Johnson , runDiD' back, on the phy•ic ally-unable-to·
perfCJm tilt. .
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS : Re·
le.ed Scott Si11011. klcter; Plul Siever
and Ric h Tyllk.i, offenaive ~dl; Ryan
Mc:Cotaod.Brant Boyct, linebaci.en; Derat Boykio, cornerback; Deltet' McNabb ,
; rullback.: Jasoo SirrunoDI, defeuive end:
and Curtia Manh, wide receiver. Traded
Mike William~. wide receiver, to Miami
for Pete Mitchell, tiaht cod. ActiYated
Craig Keith. tight end.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Re·
·lea.ud Mike Pittl and Jon Hand, defe11.1ive ·
ends . Waiv et1 Daua Skene,, offen1ive'
guard ; lay Walker, quarterback; Jeff
Wilner, tight end; SyJvener Slanley, defenlive lincmao; Carlos Yancy, corner·
back; and Bill Schrqeder, wide reoeiw:r .
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS : Releued
Cary Blanchard, licter; Tom Roth, lineman; Ty rone lohn1on, 'Wide rece iYer; .
J~ Fuller, ufety; and Many Tho~ ­
soo, tiaht end. Acqu ired Wl\he
Broujhton, ooae tackle. from the Oakland
Raideu Cor ao undisclosed 1996 draft
pici..

NEW YORK JETS : Releued Chad
and Doo DIVil, llnebacteu;
A!au A\lea and Curti1 Ceuer, wide re·
ceivm; Diad EotoD IDd Alan Youna, defeasive taci.lea; Vallee Joteph, defen~lve
bact: Sheridan May, fullback: aad Terrence Wi1dom, a;uard. Acquired Charles
Wilsou. wide receiver, aod M•c SpladJer,
defensive tack.Je, from Tampa Bay for a
1996 fourth-round dnlfl pick.
SAN DIEGO QIARGERS: Relwed
Get'ald Slovacek aod Earneat Oreeoe, offensive linemen: Ottia Cowart, linebacl·
er; all:d Veroon EdWards aud Cornell
Thomas, defe111ive eodt.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS' Wai.,d
Mariou Bultl, ruMiDI baclc; Burt Oroll·
man 11Dd Troy Wilaon, defensive eodl;
Darin Jordan and Aotooio Armatrooa,
lineback~ Thea Adami, auant; and Tim
Jorden, tight end.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS :
Waind Todd Ph ilcox , quarterback;
Cedric SaUDdeu, tiaht end; Hermn
Smith, defeuive end; 'Clarence Verdin,
wide receiver; aM Vince Work:mao , 1'1111·
ningbact

"They beat us in the critical completed 17 of 31 passes foc 187
areas of the game- that's the long yards,- but was intercepted twice
and short or It," Boston College and sacked three limes. "Their
coach Dan Henning said. "We defense played great when it countcame off the hall, they came off the ed, and our offense didn' L''
ball better." ,
Ohio State took a 21-3 lead with
· The turning point came in the 37 seconds left in the ftrSt half on a
second period after Dan McGuire 12-yard touchdown caleb by tight
of BoslDn CoUege kicked a 24-yard end Rickey Dudley, who took •
field goal to make it 7-3. Springs short pass lrom Bobby Hoying and
look.the ensuing kickoff, cut across went in unwuched.
lbe field and sprinted down the
Tile score capped a 99-yard
sideline for the longest return in drive by .the Buckeyes, who conKickoff Classic history,
verted a third-and-10 from their
Springs, a sophomore defensive own one wbeo George dashed 14
hack whose father Ron was a run- yards with a swing pass from Hoyning back for Ohio State and the ing, woo got the ball off just before
Dallas Cowboys, was aided by be was blindsided by linebacker
crunching blocks by Jeff Wilson ManHaff.
and Terry Glenn.
Hoying, wbo was 17 of 26 for
"The idea I bad in my bead 269 yards, repeatedly burned the
was,. 'Come on Shawn, you can Eagles with similar swing passes.
take tt all the way,"' Springs said.
"Bobby took some shots, but he
"Things opened up and I got great did a good job of getting rid of the
blocks."
ball in those situations," Cooper
Boston College moved to the said
Ohio State 19 on its next possesGeorge gained 99 yards on 17
sian, but the drive ended when carries before sitting out the fourth
quarterback Mark Hartsell was quarter. Smith carried 24 limes for
stopped short on a rourlb-and-1 119 yards for Boswn College.
sneak.
"It wasn't as easy as it looked,"
"They sto~pect us on a couple said George, the game's MVP. "I
of big downs, said Hartsell, who think BoslDn CoUege came out and

played lDugb. but we made the big
plays."
'One of those plays was a diving
47-yard catch by Glenn in the third
period. Glenn celebrated by thrust·
ing. his arms in the air, which drew
a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct
penalty under a new NCAA rule
designed to crack down on show. boating.
"It was just a spontaneous reaction, but I bad to do something
because it was such a great catch,"
Glenn said.
It was the third straight blowout
in the Kickoff Classic . Florida
State beat Kansas 42-0 in 1993 and
Nebraska defeated West Virginia
31-0 last year. The Seminoles :ind
Cornhuskers went on to win tbe
national cltampionship.
. Ohio State scored on its opening
drive, marching 80 yards in ei~bt
plays. A 27 -yard pass from Hoymg
to Matt Calhoun set up a 12-yard
touchdown run by George, wbo
dived inlD the end zone after being
bit just sbon of the goal line.
The Buckeyes' fmal score was a
12-yard pass from Tom' Hoying,
Bobby's younger brother, to Dirnitrious Stanley in the fourth quarter.

Bart~um

.. .

•

Goody's 500.. o__;_&lt;C_on_tin_ued_fro_m_Pa-=g~e4_;_)- -

HOOKED - The Cincinnati Reds' Lenny Harris finds himself ·'
booked by th gloved hand of Pittsburgh r~rst sacker Jelf King In tbe
ninth Inning of Sunday's National League game In Pittsburgh, wbere
the Reds won 10-1 to sweep the weekend series. Because the
· encounter knocked tbe ball from King's glove, Harris was able to get
W second on the play. (AP)
·

Labonte gets win
in Goody's 500
By MIKE HARRIS
BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) - Terry
Labonte was smiling and glib in the
wee hours of Sunday morning,
moments after Dale Earnhardt
nearly ruined his night.
Earnbard~ trying desperately to
catch Labonte on the last lap of the
rain-delayed Goody's 500 at Bristol International Raceway,
slammed into the rear of Labonte's
car, sending the leader spinning
backward across the finish line.
"That's the ftrst lime I've ever
won a race going backwards,"
Labonte said. "My ear didn't have
a scratch on it until that last lap, but
I'm not mat! at Dale because I won.
If I hadn't won, I might have been
a little mad at him.
'
"But I honestly don't believe he
intended to wrec!&lt; us. It was just
one of those deals that happen in
racing_''

Earnhardt, who crulle from the
back of the field to the front twice
during the long night of racing,
said, "I couldn't catch him . I got
jammerl behind those slow cars and
I got into him, and be still wound
up winning the race. It was all just
close racing., ~
·
Earnhard~ wlio pitted during the
last caution period on lap390, gave
up track position, but used his
fresher tires to charge from ninth
on lap 429 to second on lap 487.
The seven-time Winston Cup
champion nearly caught Labonte,
who was slow·ed on the final lap by
several lapped cars racing each
other for position.
"Those guys didn't sbo\v any
reSpect for the leaders," said
Labonte, who picked up his third
victory of the season and the 16th
of his Winston Cup career. "Dale
bad fresher tires and be was catching us, but I thought we had

enough laps. Then we caught that
traffic and it got close.
''Dale caught me and gave me a
little shot in the back. I stayed in
the gas and just beat him across the
line.'''

The start of the race was
delayed 89 minutes by rain, and the
race was further slowed by 15 Caution flags for a total of 106 laps,
sending the record crowd of 79,000 .
home well after midnight
.
': ·
Dale Jarrett, who led 99 laps in
the second half of the race, wound
up third, followed by 12-time Bristol winner Darrell Waltrip, recordsetting pole-winner Mark Ma,rlin,
series point leader Jeff Gordon and
series runner-up Sterling Marlin.
Labonte, driving. a Hendrick
Motorsports Chevrolet, took the
lead from Jarrett on lap 432 and
hung on · .as EarnhltJdt sliced
through traffic trying to catch him
and came up a tenth of a second
short.
·
The winner, who averaged
81.979 mph, won $66,940.
The early part of the race was
punctuated by some rough driving
incidents with the field still
bunched together.
. ,.
On the 31st lap, Earnb;p'dt ran
into the back of Rusty Wallace as
the two longtime competilors battled for fourth place. lbe incident
sent Wallace spinning into the wall •
at the bead of the main straight· •
away and NASCAR sent Earnhardt
to the rear of lhe field for rough
driving.
After the race, Wallace threw a
water bottle at Earnhardt and the
two bad a brief but heated discussion. No blows were struck.
'
Just 20 laps after that ftrst incideil~ Dobby Hamilwn ran into the
rear of Brett Bodine's car, sending
(See GOODY'S 500 on Page 5) ,

By DAVE HARRIS
Seqtlnel Correspondent
Pomeroy native Mike Bartrum
(Meigs '88 &amp; Marshall '93) bas
earned a SPot on the Green Pack•
ers' roster.
Bartrum survived the last cut
from 60 players to the mandatory
53. The fmal cuts were made Sunday at4 p.m.
Bartrum was a member of the
Kansas City Cbiefs' practice squad
in for six weeks in 1993 and was
activated on Oct. 27, 1993. He saw
action in three games and one playoff game tbe rest of the season. He
was waive4 by the Chiefs on Aug.
24, 1994 and was out of football
the rest of tbe season. While teaching scbool in Kansas City, tbe
Packers signed biro to a contraCt on
Jan. 19.

In the four pre-season games,
Bartrum got extensive playing
time. In the four games, in which
the J'ackers went 3-1, be pulled in
two passes for 33 yards and one
touchdown, That touchdown catch,
wbicb broke a 17-all lie four seconds into the final period, brought
in the winning points in the Packers' 27-17 win over New Orleans.
Bartrum also saw extensive
playing time on special teams,
doing the majority of tbe long
snapping. Besides . being on the
punting team, he was also on the
kickoff and kickoff return team. He
picked up one ,solo tackle while
pla~ing on special teams.
·
I thought that pre-season went
really well," Bartrum said wben
contacted at his Green Bay hotel
room Sunday evening. "I feel that I

ONE
LESS

THING
FOR YOU

. "TO
· uGGLE
J
You 've got a lot on your mind . You're building
your world and your insurance needs are ·
real. But you don't need to add th1 s worry
to your list.
Talk to your independent agent. Insist on long term experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen . Just do this one thing,
and leave the juggling act to us _

Your Independent Agents
Serving Meigs County Since 1868

..
'

,.

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE

WHERE

,·

In· the PllCkers' 35-23 win over
Washington Friday, Bartrum graded out in a winning performance. "I
was in on 37 plays and bad only
three or four minuses and grade4
out at 85% , which is a real good
grade."

The Packers bad acquired the
services of All-Pro Keith Jackson
from Miami in the off-season, but
Jackson refused to report, putting
Bartrum in a five-way battle for the
three light end spots.
Jeff Wilner was traded lD New
England two weeks ago, and Jeff
Stowers was released last week.
Mark Cbumura, a fourth-year play-

Warren Local defeated the
Meigs Marauders 2-1 in a controlled football scrimmage Saturday morning at Vincent.
The Warriors jumped out on lDp
on a 41-yard touchdown run. But
th~ Marauders came back with a
dnve the was capped off when
Bre~t Hanson bit Paul Pullins withan etgbt-yard scoring lDss.

The Warriors posted the final
late in the contest on a fouryard pass play.
· ·"Overall ii was a good scrimmage," Marauder coac.b Mike
Chancey said. "Early on we got off
the a slow start, but the kids
responded and played hard the rest
-ofiJ!e way and executed well."
The Warriors impressed the'

score

third:year Marauder coach. "Warren is a good bard nose football
team, I think they will have another
good year. I'm proud of our effon,
but we need to play bard from the
, beginning. I thought our defense
played well, we gave up a, ~ouple
of big plays, but that was my fadll
as much as the kids.
The scrimmage was the last

Pomeroy

992-3381

,,

representing the

The Ohio Casualty Group
of Insurance Companies

EXTRA EFFOR T IS

..

.

Meigs reserve golfers defeat Gallipolis

tune-up for the Marauders, who
will open the 1995 season at home
Frit,lay against the GalUa Academy
Blue Devils. The kickoff for the
contest between the former Southeastern Ohio Athletic League rivals
will be 7:30 p.m. at Bob Roberts
Field in Pomeroy.

In a two-player reserve match at
Cliffside Golf Course on Aug. 22,
Meigs defeated Gallipolis 91-107 .
Joe Hill led all Meigs golfers with
a 42, while teammate Steve
, McCullough added a 49. For the
Blue Devils Morgan Saunders
carded a 53, while teammate Jason
Coburn bad a 54.
Other Meigs golfers wbo played
at Cliffside in a practice round
included Gary Acree (43), David
Heighton (49), Josh Price (53),

Jared Woods (56) and James Hudson (63) .
!he Meigs ~arsity (13-10), • •
y&lt;h1ch played Fnday in the Hunt'
mgton Invitational at the Esquire
Country Club, will play in the "·':;
Parkersburg l.nvilational at the
Parkersburg Counll'y Club today.
;
On Tuesday, the Marauders will
start their defense of their five
straig~t Tri-Valley ConferenCe golf
titles m a match at the Meigs County Golf Club.

,.,..

.....,,

.,.
'

.

'•

Send Us llour

Favorite Recipe

·•'

•

®

teains.''

er, from Boston College, is listed
on last week's depth chart as the
staner, Bartrum is his immediate
backup. Jeff Thomason, a thirdyear pro from Oregon, is third on
the depth chan.
Dartrum and Thomason have
been battling il out for the secondteam spot all during the pre-season,
but Thomason went down with a
knee injury a couple weeks ago. He
is questionable for next Sunday's
opener against the St. Louis Rams.
" I feel that a I bave received a
chance of a lifetime and I have
made the most of i~" Bartrum said.
"I was lucky to be in the games
at the right time when the right
play was called and I made the best
of the situation. I just made the
most of the opportunity. Hopefully
I will be here all· year, but I have lD
just things day lD day."

Warren Local beats Meigs in ·e xhibition

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a

·HOLIDLJll
COO~BOOK
PULLS IN PASS ,..... Several Melp Marauders
celebrate the elgbt-yard touchdown caleb by Paul

111 Second St.

bad a really good camp, my btoCti::
ing bas improved and caught both
passes they threw 10 me in a game
and I played well on the special

·'
•'

Bodine spinning off the fourth turn. sliced through-traffic, moving to
After the ensuing caution period, 15th on lap 161. ninth on 174, fifth · ·
those two were running lDgelher at on 184, third on lap 187 and second ··
the back of the field and Hamilton on 188.
He then bunted down leader Jeff
was forced up the track by Bodine
as be tried to pass in the fourth Gordon and easily moved into the
turn. As the two cars drove toward top spc)t on lap 195.
the ftrSt turn, Hamilton drove bard
But Earnhardt's troubles were
inlD the rear of Bodine's car, lifting not over. He rammed the rear of
it bigb in the air before it spun up then-leader Derrike Cope on one
inlD the firstlurn wall,
restart, damaging the front of his
Hamilion, driving for Richard Chevy, and later slammed inlD the
Pelly, was sent to .NASCAR's rear of Lake Speed, doing further •'
penalty box for five laps before damage.
being allowed lD rejoin the race.
Somehow, his Richard Childress
On lap 108, Earnhardt, who bad Racing crew was able to keep the
been working his way through the car running strong and Earnhardt
pack, feU back all the way to 29th kept coming back, nearly winning
after be was clipped on the left rear the race. He led four limes for 81
by a spinning Morgan Shepherd. laps.
Earnhardt
had to pit twice during
Gordon extended his point lead
.
the caution for quick repairs
·
to a season-high 176 points over
After the green flag waved, The MarUn, with 'Marlin 280 back and
· Intimidator appeared to have the Earnhardt 294 behind with nine
fastest and probably the best .han- . races remaining.
dling car on the. race track. l!e
I.

gets second spot on depth chart.

Included in the cookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County residents, at no charge.
The recipes will be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bread/Grains
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
• Soups and Sandwiches

PuUins (middle, beyond tb't Warren Local defender) during Saturday's scrimmage at Vincent,
where the host Warriors won·:Z-11n wucbdowns.

Cooper signs five-year pact to stay at OSU
The school announced the sign- $130,000 base salary this year and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ing
on Sunday during the Kickoff incentives that could add a year lD
Ohio State president E. Gordon
Classic,
whicb Ohio State won with · the contraCt each season, dependGee bas approved a five-year contract for football coach John Coop- a 38-6 vicwry over BoslDn CoUege. ing on whether Cooper's teams
Cooper, in his eighth season as reach.certain performance levels:
er that includes several incentives.
- Winning a national champiBuckeye
coach, agreed to the tenns
Cooper and Gee announced in
onship.
. 'December that they bad agreed to Dec. 2, two weeks after the Buck- Finfsbing in the top 10 in
the new contract, but the deal was ey~s beat Michigan 22-6.
The Associated Press or the
either
.
"I
f)gured
I
had
a
contract
the
not finished until last week. The
CNN/USA
Today poll.
,
Board . of Trustees still must . day Andy and I shook bands. That
-Going
lD
the
Rose
BowL
approve the deal, but that is expect- was good enough for me," Cooper
said last week before leaving for
- Winning nine games, included lD be a formal.ity.
the
Kickoff
Classic.
ing one against.MiCbigan.
Gee signed the contract on FriOther incentives· reportedly
Allorneys for both sides have
day. Cooper signed the contract .
Wednesday and athletics direclDr been working on wording in the include cash bonuses for achievements such as high graduate rate
Andy Geiger said be signed Thurs- contract since then.
The contract includes a among players.
day.

Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:

Holiday Cookbook
· clo The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.

Deadline for all recipes
is October 20, 1995

Indians win ... ___:&lt;~Co;,:;Dtm;,:;';;;;ued;;,:fl:.::;rom;;;.:,:Paa:a:e~4)c..,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--:-:-_
think in this series tbey did everything well. There's nothing over,
there that I see as a problem."
Jose. Lima (1-6) couldn't get
through the third inning, yielding
seven l'lmS, one of them unearned,
and six bits in 2 1/3 innings.
Cleveland scored twice in the
ftrSl ou Carlos Baerga's RBI single
and Albert Delle's double-play
grounder.
The Indians sent 10 men to the
plate 1111d ~red five timcl in lhe
third inning. Belle drew a basesloaded walk, Murray singled home
two runs 11nd Jim Tho.m e bit an

RBI single, fmisbing Lima. Sorrento capped the inning with an RBI
single off Joe Boever, the ftrsl of
Sooento's three hits.
Murray added a bases-loaded
sacrifice fly in the fourth, and Sorrenlo .hit a solo home run in the
flflb, bb 21st - 1111 ooJolnl .....-cahigh.
Notes: Including spring training, the Tigers are 1-13 against the
Indians this year- 0-5 in exbibidon games. ().6 at Jacobs Fteld and
1-2 in Detroit .... Right fielder
Bobby Higginson, billess. in his
previous four sam~. was scratched

from Detroit's starling lineup
because be wasn' t feeling well ....
The Indians bad their full starting
lineup on the fteld for only the 13th
time Ibis season. They are 9-4 in·
those games.... Thome turned 25
Sunday .... The Indians are 48-1
when Jose Mesa appears in a game.
.•. Ramirez is in a 1-for-12 skid ....
There were 'six double plays in the
game, three by each team ....
Jacobs Field was sold out for the
34th straight lime. All of the Indians' remaining borne games are
sellouts .... Poole also struck out
five in two innings July 5 against
Te~as.
1

'

OUR POI,ICY

1'\
•

.TOUCHDOWN BY GEORGE - Oblo Slate tailback Eddie
George (27) gets away from Boston College defensive end John Day
(97) on his way to the end zone In the third quarter of Sunday's Kickoff Classic In East Rutherford, NJ., where lhe Buckeyes won 38-6 In
part because of George's two klucbdowns. (AP)

In the Green Bay Packers' camp,

•
Ca1ca~du

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

In the Kickoff Classic,

By sinking Pirates 10-1,

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds .didn't compile the
secood-best record in the National
League by being polite guests.
However, after overwhelming .
Pittsburgh, they bad members of
the Pirates praising them. ·
Pete Schourek joined Atlanta's
Greg Maddux as a 14-game winner
and had three of Cincinnati's 16
bits as the Reds finished off a
tllree-game sweep of the Pirates
with a 10-1 victory Sunday.
The Reds had 54 bits, batted
.419 and outscored the Pirates 3610 as Pittsburgh was swept for the
eighth time this season . The
Pirates, who committed five errocs
in their fifth consecutive loss, have
swept only one of their 37 series.
Reggie Sanders drove in two
runs, giving ,)lim 10 RBis in the
series and 14 'overall against Pillsburgh. The Reds, the only nonexpansion NL opponent with a
winning record since Three Rivers
Stadium opened in 1970, finished
5-1 in Pittsburgh and 7-2 overall
against the Pirates.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'''

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�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 28, 1995

Monday,August28,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY

PRODU
RIPE • FRESH • DELICIOUS

SHURFRESH ·
HOT DOGS

'•
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I

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

•

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FINE
FOODS&amp; ·
DAIRY

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RED AND WHITE
SEEDLESS
GRAPES

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FINE
MEATS&amp;
·PRODUCE

12 OZ. PACKAGE

CHUCKWAGON
BACON

ECKRICH
BOLOGNA

16 OZ. PACKAGE

· 16 OZ. PACKAGE

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GROUND ·

'•

(

-CHUCK

••

(

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POUND

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POUND

"

- BOB EVANS
SPARE RIBS

USDA CHOICE
TOP SIRLOIN

~~ l• .4•

"

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POUND

.

POUND

.

PEPSI-COLA &amp;
PRODUCTS -

FARM FRESH
· TOSSED SALAD

(

s

:

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Limit 2
with $10
purchase

POUND

- 1-

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...

c

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BAG

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[

99c
5
CAPTAIN CRUNCH CEREAL• 16 ounce box ••••••••••••••••••••• 1.99
DUNCAN ·HINES FROSTING •

SHURFRESH
2°AI MILK

'

16 ounce can •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~

(

ALL-PURPOSE #1
WHITE
POTATOES
. l• •

.•

,

24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

. r --

. I

COKE &amp;PRODUCTS • 2 liter bottle •••••••• ~ ••~•••••••••••••••-••••••••• ~ ••• 79&lt;
SHURFINE .CUT BROCCOLI (frozen) • 16 ounce bag •••••••••• ~•••••• 89c
BANQUET DINNERS • Frozen Assorted Varieties • 6.75-11 ounce ••••••• 99&lt;
--DUNCAN HINES CAKE MIX • 1a.s ounce box ••••••••••~ ••••••••••••••• 79&lt;

LIMIT 1 WITH
$10 PURCHASE
&amp;COUPON
INSIDE

•

· .. .
'· .
o

SHURFINE SUGAR

ONE GALLON JUG

SPOUND BAG .

· QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
.
' . •' ll'POORAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.
L

'

C

UMIT ONE WITH $10.00 PURCHASE
GOOD ONLY AUG. 29 &amp; 30, 1995

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

'

•

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IIII
II
llII

SHURFRESH 2o/o MILK
ONE GALLON JUG
LIMIT ONE WITH $10.00 PURCHASE
GOOD ONLY AUG. 29 &amp; 30, 1995

---~L---------~-----•-------------I

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�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday,August28,1995

..

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Pet iguana with restroom rights shakes visiting. relative
Ann
Landers
"1 995, U.~
lime~ s~ &amp;n~:~

CrNIOts SyndiCate"

Dear Readers: I am on vacation,
but I have left behind some of my
favorite columns that you may have
missed the first time around. I hope
you enjoy them. --ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: We went to
visil my brother-in-law and his wife
last weekend, and I am sti II shaking
from the experience.
My sister-in-law told us when we

She also said it was hannless and I
was siUy to be so upset.
I didn't get much sleep that
weekend, and I still shake when I
think of it. Having an alligator in an
adjoining room is not my idea of a
restful weekend. Please tell me if
something chat looks like a crocodile

lhe children's bathroom because che
· batluoom connected to lhe sun porch
where we were to sleep was not
usable. No other explanation was
given.
After I unpacked, I went into lhe
adjoinine bathroom just to wash my
hands. I almost died of fright. There
was a 5-foot alligator in che bach tub.
I ran downstairs and asked my sister•
in-law what chat thing was doing in
there. She was very cool about it and
said the kids had been given an
iguana by !heir uncle last yea~; and i,t
had just kept growing.
1'1 asked what !hey planned to do
with i~ and she said chey'd probably
give it to lhe zoo as soon as they could
talk the childnen into parting wilh it.

bunnies suffer the same sad fate at
Easter time. Most people don't know
what to do with the chickens and
rabbitS when !hey grow up.
That poor iguana was not meant to
flop around in a bathtub. I hope your
sister-in-law takes him to a zoo soon.
Please tell her I suggested it.Animals
have rightS, too. ·
ish~ess andifaniguanacangrow
chat big. (It must have weighed 30
Dear Ann Landers: We had a fire
pounds.) No one in Grand Rapids has in our home last week, and I feel !ike
ever seen one of those things . ·- the luckiest person in lhe world -- yes,
FRAIDYCAT
lucky because my husband an~ I and
DEAR CAT: Your sister-in-law our two children are alive. When I
gave you lhe straight goods. Iguanas chink of what might have happened,
can grow to be 5 feet long. I think it's 1 shake all over.
The fire started in lhe living room
criminal chat animals are sold to the
public as novelty toys for kids . -- faulty wiring. It was 3 a.m. when I
Thousands of baby chicks and smelled smoke. By lhe time I realized

saved our lives. And now I want to
thank you because it was in your
column chat I read it -- at least 12.
years ago. -- MRS. J.D.P.
DEAR MRS. J.D.P.: Your letter
made my day. Thank you for letti~g
me know. I hope every word you
wrote will be read carefully by ochers.·
Who knows when any of us might
need chat lifesaving advice?
Fuling prtssured to have sex?
How well-informed are you? Write
for Ann Lmrders' booklet "Sex and the
Teen-ag.r." Send a self-addressed,
long, business-size envelope and a
check or money onier for $3.75 (this
includes postage turd handling) .to:
Teens, do Ann LAnders, P.O. lJox
JJ562, Chicago, Ill. 6061/-0562. (In
ClllliUla, send $4.55.)

there was a fue downstairs, I couldn't
see my hand in front of my face. I
awakened my husband, called lhe fire
department, grabbed the childnen and
made a run for lhe back stairs. It was
so full of smoke we had to tum back.
I remembered reading something
years ago about pulling a wet
bedsheet over your head with holes
poked through for your eyes . The
sheet would help protect you from the
smoke. We raced to the bedroom,
took the sheets off the bed, held
them under the shower and poked
holes with scissors. I carried one
child while my husband carried
the other down the back stairs to
safety.
That wet bedsheet stunt probably

Sayre birth ,----State fair winner-- Weaver
announced
places in
pageant

•

Kurt and Donita Sayre announce
the birth of their daughter, Deeanna
Alexis Sayre, bom ·at Holzer Hospital on July 6.
Deeanna weighed 8 pounds, 8
· oz. and was 21 inches long. Deean- ·
na was welcomed home by her
older sister, Breeanna Nicole.
Grandparents are Dwight and
Sylvia Sayre of New Haven, W.Va
and Joyce Manuel of Racine and
Donald Manuel of Letart.

.!' "''

'"
DEEANNA SAYRE

The Community Calendar IS
published as a free senlce to
non·prorlt groups wishing 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 of days.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
council meeting, 7:30p.m. Monday, viUage ball.
POMEROY _:_ Meigs County
Veteran s Serv(ce Commission,
7:30 p.m. Monday a1 the Veterans
Service Office, Mulberry Avenue.
MIDDLEPORT - The Oh Kan
Coin Club wil!,Afieet at the Downing bouse a!)( p.m. The meeting is
free and open to the public.
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club open bouse meeting Monday,

7:30p.m. at Rutland Methodist
Church. OAGC slides on hardy
perennials for part of program .
Questions and answers with Hal
Kneen, extension agent. All members welcome.

ATHENS -Lupus support
group meeting at Grosvenor Hall
from 6:30 · 8 p.m. Monday ·with a
speaker. ·
CHESTER - An lzaak Walton
meeting wiil be held at the l.;u~ak
Walton Farm at 7 p.m.
Cheryl Jewel~ au ei~hl year member of the Harrisonville 4-H
Club, took outstanding of the day In exhibits at the Ohio State Fair
Wednesday witb her refinishing projects. Here she Is pictured witb
an antique dresser which she refinished. Cheryl Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert JeweU.
1

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middlep()rt
Youth League's end of the year
meeting will be held at 7 p.m. at
Middleport ballpark.

-..
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:
. ,:
ALL· BRITE
CLEANING SERVICES
Tile Floor Strip,
Wax, &amp; Maintenance. •
Carpet Cleaning,
Complete Facility
Cleaning, Periodic
or onetime
Free Estimates
Call992-7272 or
1-800-99Q-7272

•
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742-3212
Turn on Depot Slln
Rutland 1.2 miles.
IVIOI1

••'
••

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I

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••

The Williams reunion was held Williams, Middleport; Cheryl
recently at Southside Park in Gould, MurraysviUe, W.Va.; Roma
Lee Crislip, Coolville; Eugene and -:
Athens. Sixty-one attended.
•
The youngest attending Wl\8 Betty Kelley; Stephanie, Ryan and
:
Shelby Ervin, Athens; tmveling the Cullen Levering, Pickerington;
:
farthest were Jack and Laura Sayer, Jeff, Karen and Jessica Wright,
Growveport;
Jack
adn
Jennifer
:
Vero Beach, Aa; winnng the 19.95
:
quilt were Raymond .and Marjorie Ervin, Langsville; Scott and
Kim
and
Rochelle
•
pauline
Ervin,
Williams, Pollorb, Mo.
Vamest,
Judy
and
Theresa
V~est:
:
Others altending were Tom and
:
Nancy Bain, Columbus; Mike and Brad, Dana, Kerry and Ryan ErVin;
Jackie
Venitillion,
Scott
and
Clara
Grace Powell, Sugar Grove; Julie,
Rachel and Rebelcab Young, Rock- · Jane Ledford; Evelyn Bridgewater,
bridge; Catherine Copeland, Mor- David and Sandy Williams; Scotty, ," I
•
I
ristowne, Te1m.; Chuck and Kaye Melissa and James Ervin; Ronnie,
Sharon
and
John
Ervin
and
Keith,
Williams, Shade; Paul Parsons,
''
Gallipolis; Mrs . Pearl (Helen) SbcUy and Shelby Ervin, Athens.

•

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Insures- Experienced

Call Wayne NeH 992-4405
For Free Eatimates
•

4113195 t

-·............ . .
• "

949-2512

-

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1:::
,_

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-.

......,..

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,._.

$500.00 Reward
For the recovery of one pear
shaped diamond stone. lost in
front of the Video Touch in
Pomeroy. Contact - Paulette
Harrison 614-992-6248

'.......'

\Save $6000 \

.,

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BRAND NEW '95 CHM G·20 3/4 TON

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G-20 3/4 TON
CONVERSION VAN
• llnver S~B Air Bag
• Anlt·Lock Brakes
• A1r Condit~
• Au.tomatK: CNerdri~e
• Vtsta Ba~ Windows
• Power Steermg
• Power Brakes

• Power WmdoWs
• Power Locks
• TiH Steermg
• Crutse Contra
· AMIFM Cassette
• 4 Capta1n Cha~rs
. Sola/Be&lt;l

~

.,.
....
•

·RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN

• lndllect U9h!lng
• Premium Wood Pkg.
• Full Converston
• Aluminum Running

·Color T.V.
• Drrver Side Air Bag
• Anb·Lock Brakes
....r Condition

Boarels
·l.oadecll

• AutomatiC Oierdrive
• Vista Ba~ Windows
• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

• Power Windows
• Power l ocks

• Cruise Control'

• 4 Captain Chm

..

..

LAI Pnce

.. $21 ,309

• Aluminum Running Boards

$11,688
BRAIII NEW '95 PONTIAC GRAIII AM
·16 Valve Power
• OrNer S~e A•rt&gt;ag
• 4 Wheel Anh·lack Brakes

• Powo!Steenng

• Power Blakes
• Power 0001 LOCI&lt;s
· AI.NFM S!eroo
•Steel Betted Tires

·SiyledWIIoels
• Well Equ!Jped!

Tom Peden 0iSC01.rt .... ·• $2,446

.• $3.459

Sale Price

Sale Price

~~~S28,888
BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY TAJIJE 41100R 4x4

1-'33211
BRAND NEW '95 BUICK I fS4BRE
• "' Ccrlllion
• Aulomaic
·~Airbags

• 4 ~ AniH.ock

B&lt;alles

• P""' Sleenng

• Til Slee&lt;ing

• P..er Brakes
• P..er Qoor locks

• Custom CIQII11nt~K&gt;'

.p..,,wmr.s
• At.I'FM SlerO&gt;

·S~ed~S

. • Well Eq•ppo;l
No Co: Fees. Delil'l!ltiCI'

• A1r Condition

• AUIOmat&lt;

• Duru Art&gt;ags

·4~Anli-L OCI&lt;

Slakes

ISave '4959J

•P..er Steering
•P..er B&lt;akes

•P""' Qoor Locks

·P..erWIOOow1
•AIJJFM C..Sette
•l1tt Sleerii'&lt;J
·Cruise C0011o

....-·

. .. ... $31 ,334

l.Jit Pnce .

·Air Coodilion
• 350 V-8 Power
• Automatic OVerdrive
• Driver Side Airbag
• Anli·lock BraKes
• PIS; PIB
• Power Windows

350 V.a PUWER

~

. .•'

R~ease

• Heavy Duty .
Tra~lering

Equipment
• Remote
Keyless Entry
tWOocFees. Olmer!!l"

Noon·

"

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J&amp;L INSULATION

...

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Handmad~

Quilts
u

Appliqued Tulips"

"Grandmother's Fan"

Mrs. Pearl
Williams
782 High St.
Middleport

·--- ..

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8 Puppies. Father : Registered
Bour, Black Mask Face. 61-4 ··
367 -7043, 61 4· 367-7705.

fema le, mother

to go. 304-882-2519.

r-~---~~"'1
(limestone Low Rates)

·. WICKS

HAULING
(Specialize In
driveway spreading)

Limeston~,

Garages
• Electlical &amp; Plumbing
Free Estimates

843-5124
992·2984
In Memory
In Loving Memory
of My Husband
Chief J.J . Cremeans
who passed away
August 28th , 1985.
There is a link death
cannot sever. Love
and remembrance last
forever.
Sadly missed by Wife ,
.Children &amp; family

"

."

am·9pm
6 pm

...
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1 •II

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St At 850, Bidwell. Ca ll To.ldemifyl'
cai!AI~ers :oos14· 36B· B201 .
•

Oil Cha'nge. 1............................... $1.7.95 ·
Front End Alignmimt ................. $19.95
TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

'

LoS11

'-'388"-·836
:=
9_

_

_ _ • _•
•••

•••'"' '· ·

Most major credit cards accepted.
Reward . lost Dog, Yellow Lab, .. ,.
_..!:O~w~n~e:;!r:;:s,;,.
: ~R~Ic~h!!a!!r~d~M~o~or~e;_&amp;~E~d~!!!!!!~":!"":!:":J Ma le, 95 10s. v;c;nHy: SoUihwell·

I

ern Sch ool, Name : -sud Lite',.
614 -24&amp;-56 58, 614-379-2747.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

2 Family Yard Sale : Mons; Wom - '
~===-=--=-·
ens, Childr en&amp; Clo1hes. Toy s,

'

Otshes, Misc. 10 Pme Stree1. 8-6.

All Yard Sates MuSt Be Pa•d In ~
Advancu. DEADLINE 2:00 p.m..
th e day belore the ad IS to run
Sunday edlt1on • 2:00 p.m. Friday: '
Monda~ edition. 10 :00 a.m. Sat· ' ' ·
urday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

RACINE
GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT
Every
Wednesday Nite
S:30 p.w•

~~~&amp;~V-:Ic,.,-I_n-::lty~.,....,.. . • ~

J.D. Drilling Company

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In• .. ••
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm 1he·: .. .
Clay befo re the ad IS to run, Sun- • day edition• 1:OOpm Friday, Mon.: • :;
day edition 10:00a.m. Saturday.
•: ~

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
. systems, lay lines, underground bores.

:-'--=--:--:::--:c:-c'--=·
.Augu! t 28 thru Sept, 4· 38400 SR• : : ;

124 wes t, one mile oil SR 7 on &gt;~ .:
nght Now Items of crafta, dotNa, . • '".
J9W~ry and glassware.
• : :;

. ..

Moving sale· Monday through· : :,.;
Thursday, August 28·31, 10am-? ' . ••
De!ks. books, bicyc le, exercise :· :
b1ke, ball ca rds, misc. Five Points · · ...
beh1nd Marathon.
·
• • ....

For Free estimate call 949-2512
REASONABLE RATES
813111o

8/4/lln

~~~~~-------- ··~

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

MEET YOUR
COMPANION! .

:::
·'

Yard Sale · 622 4th St , New Haven , Joe Bradley residence, TueWed, Aug 29-30

1·900·388·0400
Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs •
PROCALLCO.
(602) 954-7420

80

.• . •·•

Public Sale
and Auction

·~·

~::--~-,..--=---· .•

R1ck Pearson Au c tion Company, :· : ·
full 11m a auc ll oneer, complete ·· .. •

a uctton
se rv 1ce
l•censed ·: .. :
, 66.0h1o &amp; We st Virginia , 304 ·" . ~ ..

8/811 mo.

773·5785 Or 304-773-5447

..

90

•
•
•

Wanted Jo Buy

Clea n

Late · M odel

Cars Or

Tr uc~s. 1987 Mo dels Or Newer

Sm1th Bu1ck Pont1ac . 1900 East:
ern Avenue. Ga111pohs .

Shop Classifieds

Drunkers Paradise: Jodie Ihle and Lisa Stethem; Candace Bunting and Janie
Burke; Stacey Mills;
· .
·
Glass of water race: Jodie lble, Lisa Stetbem, Stephanie Story-Schwab;
Ride and run race: HoUy Milboan and Jodi Ihle; Brandi HyseU and Stephanie
Story-Schwab; Jon Smith and Jayroe Miller; .
·.
· Dasb for cash race: Holly Mtlboan, Brandi HyseU, S~ Craig;
·
Dollar bill race: Jon Smith and Brandi HyseU; Jodie lblc and Jayme Miller:
Daniel Young and Lisa Stetbem;
Boot race: Brandi Hysell, Lacey Bunting and Candace Bunting; Jayme Miller, '
sandy Smith and Jon Smith; J~ssica Wheeler, ~tacey Mills lllld Usa Stethem;
Egg and spoon race: Brandi HyseU. Jon Smtth, Sara Craig;
Tackup race: Holly ~ilhoan, Step~anie Story-~chwab and Stacey Mills:
DanieUe Grueser, Jou Snuth and Matt~; Brandi Hysell and SaJ_~dY Smitb;
Sack race: Brandi Hysell, Lacey Bunung and Jon Smith; JeSSica Wheeler,
Stacey Mills and Stephanie Story-Schwab; Jayme MiUer and Beth Bunting;
Potatoe Race: Brandi Hysell, Stephanie SICC'y-Scbwab and Jessica Wheeler;
Stake race: Holly Milhoan, Brandi Hysel~ Candace Buntiug;
Barrell race: brandi Hysell and Sara Craig; Candace Bunting and Holly Milhoan· Stephanie Story-Schwab and Jayme Miller;
,
·
O~erall senior award: Brandi HyseU; overall junior award: Stacey MiUs; overall
novice award: Jon Smith.

_

~:~~ ~;1g:.:::~~~·w;n

612/1mo

Everyone
Welcome

Yeaco1o Fema1e·wo1!'

Lm lemale Beagle, tan !ace. wi1t1 '

Dec:orated stoneware, wall tele phones, old lamps. old rhermome ters, old clocks, ant1que lurn11ure.
R iver ine Antiqu u . Russ Moore
ow ner. 6 14-992 - 2526 . We buY

Scuba Classes Now Forming

In Lovi ng Memory of
Scol1 Alan Burke
~ho left us 7 yrs. ago
today Aug. 28, 1988
Gone but not
forgotten
August is still the
saddest month of the
year.
Dear Lord,
Please take this
message to our
loved one up abov,e~
Tell him how much we
miss him and give
him our love.
The world would
seem like Heaven if
we had him back
again .
And to all who still
have their loved one,
cherish them with
care:
For you'll never know
the heartache, till
you find they are not
there .
Sadly missed by
Parenls: Bob &amp; Gay
Ann , Brother, Randy
Sister &amp; Family, Lori,
Jeff, Ryan &amp; Alex,
Grandma Douglas,
Great Grandpa,
Aunts, Uncles, &amp;
cousins

1r2

l1ko Qog . W!Biack leash . 614 ··

Chack Out Our Tira Prices

__
L
?===:;;:=5i:!:::1!
.
1
1

Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742·2193

441 - 1707·
Founo: cou;e Type Dog, v";""y

949-2882
RACINJ!:, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00 hr.

"Your P111rts or Ours"

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

&amp;

Lost and Found

Short Black With Brown Face Pe-

k•ng ese Type, Female Dog. 6 14- ·

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

o Remodeling
o New Additions

r------------....,..---,160
AB&amp;T AUTO
3RD ST.

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages ·
• Complete
Remodeling

o Siding

lull blooded

Free puppies, part B&amp;agte Ready

H&amp;H SAWMILL

o Roofing

15

Goklen RetriEWef", 6 14·742·2554

,..RO.....,.B....
ER
.... ~-;s'""s.._E....
LL....

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUCTION

•

E1ght puppies· stx male and rwo

7122194

- '1

The following were winners in the 4-H Horse Fun Show held Saturday, Aug. 19
at the fair. Winners are listed in descending order:

·"

TOU FREE 1·800·822~0417 • 312·2844
844·5941• 422-11756

- ··--

Horse Fun Show winners posted

•Electnc Tailgate

• P..er Door Locks
•.Power Dnver Seal
• AM/FM Cassette
• Tilt /CrUISe
• Rear W1n&lt;IOW
Delogger

-~ -

' son of Judy A. ~":" of .Mi~eport recendy
Marine Pvt. Thomas M. Stewart.
completed II weeks of intensive training~ earn the utle ~anne.
.
During the training conducted at Manne Corps ~~~~ De~t, Parris Island,
S.C., Stewart completed a variety of cballengmg trammg evoluuons tlestgned to
improve physical and mental stren~th.
.. .
. · .
In addition to the rigorous pbystcal cond1Uonm~ program, classroom mstrUcuon
and practical application exercises, Stewart was mtrod~ced to tbe ~ore values of
che Marine Corps inCluding honor, courage and ~llllll!tmc:n~ The unponance of
the core values was iUustrated throughout the trammg, mcluding customs, courtesies, Marine Corps history and traditions.
.
.
.
.
·
Stewart wiD continue his training throughout his career wtth the Manne Corps.
He is a 1994 graduate of Meigs High School of Pomeroy.
.

·loaded!

·Sola/Bed

" .127.9&lt;17
.• $1,5110

Factory Rebate .. .. " · $1,(XXI
Tom Peden Discooll . · $2,3:21

..

Marine training completed

.••,.

......
""~ ..
: . . $13.~
F~tory Rebate . . .. .. · $500
Tom Pedlln Oi!cold . . · S\,411

614 -388-BOm ,

~P'

.•• ..!'

• Full Conversion

•AM/FM Cassette

.

, n ·...

• Indirect l 1ght1ng
• PremiUm Wood ~g .

•Till Sleenng

.. I

mo.

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

I'

Umes.tone &amp;G.;.~
Septic Syslems, Trailer &amp;.
Hause• Sites.
Reasana.le Rates
N. s.~..
SAYRE TRU KING
'614-742-2138 .

Joe

Buzz's Car_pet
· Installing, fnc.

. . With ADallj Senl·l.:el.

OUR OfFICE "' 992•2155

~~

CALL
1-900-820-6500
Ext. 2809
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
!111Y1

-=

'
.. 'XCAVATION

All

"

.,
...... ".

'-'

PSYCHICS
know

"

.__,

--·

- HAULING &amp;

539 BRVAIII PLACE
I
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
· Ofltce Hours: Mon.-Fri.
Interior &amp;
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Exterior
VInyl
l Alum. Siding,
tho
pain
out
Take
oi .
Roofing, VInyl
palnttng. Let us do H for I
. i
Replacement,
you. Very reasonable.
I
Windows,
Blown
Free Estimates
'
Insulation,
Storm
BetorfJ 6 p.m. leave
· Ooora, Siorm
message.
Windows,'
Garages. t
After 6 p.m .
Free
EaUmlites
.614-985-4180 3/2..... :
1/1Mfn
.,. -

2 Year Qld Male Black Chow,

1012t/Mitfn

-

Giveaway

Fu ll -Blooded, No AKC Papera,

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

YOUR NEEDS

, . . BULLETIN'
'6" column inch ·weekdays
column Inch su..day

·~
......

!lYe, ISO mature individual for

_,

BAILED TO

.-,

~

Young, SIW!M, 5'10~, 190 \bs., br/
hr.', bliey&amp;s, Intelligent and aurae·. - :

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

FOR SALE

1

........
...

Riwr. OcL 6, 8, 13, 15, 20. &amp; 22.
1-800-347·1231.

40

HAY

"

MTN . STATE MYSTERY TRAIN
Fa !\ Fol1age Tra 1n Tnps See
WV's New River Gorge Na t1ona\

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

LINDA'S
;AINTING &amp; CO.

Re8soneble

- •'

( No Sunday Calls)

Paul ttahano

AND MIXED

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Homt Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
FBI Dirt

Hause Repair &amp;
Romodltllng
Kitchen &amp; ~th
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios

I

t W1ll Not Be Aeaponstbl e For
Art( Debts Olh&amp;r Than Uy Own.

friendat1ip and more, Jimmie
Green, ·p.o , 456i9·261081 , lu·
casville, Ohio 45699-0001 .

110\\ \IIJ)
E\C.\\ \TI\(;

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

30 AnnouncemenJs

Competitive aelarlea end excellent benefits.
II you are energetic and looking for rewarding
opportunities, send your resume and salary history to:
Director
P.O. Box464, Coolville, Ohio 45723

61.4•992·7643

"

ANNOUNCEMENTS

One Step Complete Auto Body Repair

..

•

Aggressive groeery wholesaler seeking experienced
meat dept. managers and Journeyman meat cutters to
manage and merchandise meat departments In their
corporate stores located In Soulheaslern Ohio

ALFALFA

Bill Slack
992·2269 or
304·773·5960

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy•. Oh.
g92·4081 '
Week Day 8;0D-S:OQ.
Open Saturday
9:0Q-3:00· 1/t/lfo

'

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

;~;·;(=6~14~)~~~2~~~27~5~3==~J ~~--------------------------~v~·~~=;,m~ ~--------------~~--------~~~

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jo~s.

Comp(.ete
Detailliig ·

-••

mo.

JO~::~v~EJJ·MEAT cunERS

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
,
I:

(614) 992-5535

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

DAYS
CAR WASH

•

F~~~~~l~ATES

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

~1 ...4TFN ~---------..1

•Septic Tanks
•Plumbing
•Water Lines- etc.
&lt;Concrete Work
•Gravel Hauling ·
•Welding/Fabrication
Certified
Licensed/Bonded
25 Years Experience
614-992-2834
992-7821 7r.!OII mo.

'•

self-presentation, personal ap[ljlarance and responsiveness to questions.

),

WILLIAMS
IRENCBING

•
'l

'
MELODY WEAVER

Call for Low Prlr:es

ROOFING

••
'

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
• NEW HOMES
• ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
ROO
•
FING

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radlatora &amp;
Recores Available

-·- ·

'NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES II
949-2.168
:

co::~:~:ION

Tony's Portable
Welding ·

Howard L. Writesel

'
••
••

ISave $6000 I

.

•'

.-

Williams family reunion held

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education regular meeting Monday, 8 p.m. at the high
school.

oa11v Sentinel • Page 9 .:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

CHECK THE

-

Melody B, Weaver was recently
awarded the tiUe of First Runnerup at the Miss Gallia County
pageant
.
She is the duaghter of Phillip
and Karen (Neigler) Weaver of
Gallipolis, formerly residents of
Meigs County.
Melody is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Carrol Neigler of
Sytacuse.
She is a 1995 glllduate of River
Valley High School and plans to
attend Mount Vernon Nazarene
College in the fall. .
The pageant judges poise, personality,. activities, achievement,

-Community calendar--

Monday, August 28, 1995

YOUNG:J

CARPIHER
SEBIICE

•ROOIT1 Additions

•NewQtiagee
,
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing

•Roofing

elnterlor &amp; Exterior

·Open Water
·Advanced Open Waler
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
•·Assistanl lnslructo r
• Specially Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuba Instructor
614-992•3314

estate! .

POMEROY, OHIO.
Septic tanks cleaned l portable toilets rented.
. weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Sites •
Parllu

·Junk cars or Wll\ p1ck up g1veaway
car&amp;, 614·992-606.9 any11me.

·

Top Pnces Pa1d . Old U.S. Com!,
Silver, Gold , D1amonds, AU Old
Col/ect!bl&amp;s, Paperweight &amp;, Etc.
M.T.S. Com Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-446-2842.

•
•

Wan!ed to buy · ant1que and used
lurnirure, no ~ tem to.J large or too

Will buy one

oma!l.

p1ece

orcom· ·

plete estates, Osby Mart1n . 614 ·

992 ' 7441 ·

Wanted To Buy: Juo&lt; Autos With
Or Wllhou t Mo &lt;o&lt;a. Call Laocy

...•

lJvel,. 6 14-388·9303.

Painting

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Also Concrete Work

(FREE ESTIMATES)'
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 Pomeroy, Oh.
11121/tfn

•
•

\rucks . Also, ~Jarts lor sa le 304 ·
773·5343 or 773-5033.

6-11 · 1 mo. pd

MODERN SANITATION

•

.J &amp; D's Auto Par ts and Salva ge,
bu ~ 1ng wreck!. junk au to s &amp;

i»4i)l'
,. ,_. ._. . _____________._.._. . ._.,1
r

..

'·

:e·,;:,,,.,

• ··

:. . •: :. • :

992-3954
Emerge ncy Phone 98 5-3418

Abiding Concrete
.Construction
Commerciul unq Residential
Driveways, Patios, S l ~ bs, Parking lots, Curb; &amp;
Gutters Sidewalks, Porches, Tear-out and
Replacement

41960 Kaylor Road

Reedsville, OH 45772

Doug Crites
614/667-6825

Shop Classifieds

110

Help Wanted

Avon Sells Earn $8 ·$15 /Hr, Bo.
nuses , Banel1ts t ins . Door To
Door Optiona l D~tect Ma 11 Pro gra m Ho!ltntt 1· 800 · 298 -0139
Jnd IRe~
'

AVON

SELLS AT WORK ·HOME

.•

Average $8-$1 ~Hr. Bonelnsl
No Inventory Or DoOf' -To -Door
lndtrep. 1· 0CI0·742· 4738
AVON

'•

.•

'•

EAR N SSS at home -at

work. All areal. 304·882-2645, 1·
800·992·6'l56. INDIREP
Dental Au i stant. Exper 1ence
helpful. Most •mpottan t reqwre·
ments . very postiiVQ altllude. wt llmgneu to \earn , out gomg per sonality, strong sense of respo nSibi lity, lni11BIIV8 , !18Jiblllly, and de·
s1 re to help poople. Please •n·
ctud&amp; at least o ne page tell1ng
about yourse\1, mctud1ng work ref .

~~~~~~:~d•and wt'r-j you would be a
(~
appl1cant Respond to
R·2-4. cto Pl. Pleasant Reg1&amp;181 ,

200 Mam St.. Pt. PIOasan1

wv 25550.

.

·'•
•

·'

�•

Ohio

Monday,August28,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

; Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

•

28, 1995

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
41 Pot..u· 42 Select
1 Splrltual leoder 45 Wavy
5 ExerciH
49 Dr8WI oHon·
ayatem
liOn IWIY from
9 Sine - non
52 He had an
12 - St laurent
Irish Roae
13 Hlmaloyon
53 Chlneae
plant
pagoda
14 - •nd downs 54 Spout
15 Bill of faro
55 Threshold
16 Mica
56 JFK eight
18 O.vll· llke
57 Legal eagle
20 Aroma
(abbr)
21 Guardian spirit 58 ~oot part
22 Gave food to
24 Correapond
DOWN
27 Scallop, e g.
1 Athletic
31 Author Zane bulldlngo
32 Aland
2 Layer of the
Tlppereye
33 Over there
3 Monthly
34 Roman 3
ex.panse
35 Contemptuous
4 Mostly
calla
S - Arafat
38 Bright color
6 Of the ear
37 Style
39 Lone Ranger'• 1 Baoaboller
Hodge a
companlol\
8 Aofar - 40 Printing fluid

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
410 Houses for Rent
AVON I All Areas
Spears, 304-675--1"129

I Shtrley

Avon Eern SS $15 IHr No Door
To Door Ful l 1Part T1me 1 800
736-01681nd Rep

DRIVER IMANI&lt;GER
Amb1t10n. Sell Starter Needed To
Manage A New Transpor1a110n
Location In GallipoliS Area Mu s!
Have Val1d Dt1vers L1cenu Able
To Wo rk Long Hou rs To S!arl
New Locat1on Exper ence WttM
Start Up Lccatton HeiJ'Iul Salary
Plus Send P:esume To Manager.
PO So;~~ 164203 Columbus OH
43228

Counuv Furnitur e F ur niture lor
Every Room 6m1 Rt 2 Nonh, Pt
Pleasanl ~4-675-6820

House For Rent In Counuy 2
Bedrooms Garage Gas Heat
$300/ Mo Oepos l! References
614 425 6926

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Was hers, dryers. refttgerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vlne St-reet Ca ll 614 446 7398

N1ce clean 1br Clilton double
lot $275/ mo $200 depos11 no
pets.304 -7 73 9t92
Small 2 Bedroom House Outot
Country Road 10 M1n From Gal!t
pohs $200/Mo Wa ter Patd Ret
erences tOepos 1t, 614 446 8263
Before 9 PM

Small House Near K Man Unlur
n1 shed. S300! Mo • Gas Ele&lt;:lnc
See At tO Btrch Lane Galttpohs
614 446 1822 KeepTry1ng

598 6790

Dnvers

01spatchers Needed

Thr e e or lou r bedroom house
107 Plea sant R1dge Pomeroy
HUD approved $300 plus uttl•t1es
614-.698 6002 fWemngs

Fronch C1tyTax1 614 446 8341

Earn $tooos weekly stulhng en
velopes at home Be your boss
1
nlo no
SA S E
Stan
nowobhQilllon
No ekp Send
free supplies

p, •.,,g.W1un
n
nter

10
195609
32719

•L PO 60 '
Spr1ngs
Fl

"Please don't turn me 1nto a vamp1re
always hated work1ng 1he ntght Shtft!"

I~==========:t-===========1

E asy Wc rkl EHe ll ent Pay I As
semble Products AI Home Call
fo il Fr ee 1 BOO 467 5566 Ext

313
E•per 1enced Appliance Techn t
ctan For Repa1r &amp; Dehvcty Par i
Trme Will Develop Into Fr.tll f 1me
App ly At French City Mayrag
1704 Eastern Avenue Gatllpclhs
Gall ta Metgs He ad Start Is Ac
ceotmg APplitahons for The Fol
lowmg Pos tons
SPEECH TH ER APIST M etgs
County Appli cants Mus t Be L1
censed By The State Of Oh10 Pr1
or E •penence .6.s A Speech
TMera ptst Work mg Wl\h Pre
School Children A nd The tr Fa
mdtes Is Pretlered Thrs Post!IOn
Is For Approximately 16 Hours 1
Week In Me19s CoOJnty

180

Wanted lio Do

Babys1111ng , Any Age Days Or
Even1ngs Mercerv11le Area Call
An)'llme 614-2S6-e865
Cert1hed child care prov 1der has
opentngs for days and 9\len mgs
lor child ren or all ages NutntiOUS
meals and snacks, act11111res and
p1 13n11' of TLC T 20 aecepled 24
hours Rt 7 top ot Eastern htll,
614 985 4308
General Mam tenance Pa1n11ng
Yar d Work Wi ndows Wast~ed
Guitars Cleaned light Haulmg
Commerlcal, Res•dent1a! Steve
614 446 8861
Georges Portable Sawmtll don t
haul your logs to the mtll JUS! call
304 675 1957
Protess1onal Tree Servtce Com
plete Tree Care Bucket Truck
Serv1ce 50 Fl Reach Slump Remollal
Free Est tma tesl 111
su rance 24 Hr Emergency Ser'&lt;l
1ce Call And Savel No Tree Too
Btg Or Too Small• Btdwell Ohto
614 388 9643 614-367 7010

Applicants For ThiS POSiltOn
Must H ave A Va l id Dmer s l1
cense And A Clean Dnv 1ng
Recor d To Mee t The Requ 1re
ments Of The Programs Fl&amp;el In
surance Camer Interested lnd1
vtduals May P1ck Up An Applica
tto n Or Send A Resume To Gallta
Me1gs Head Starr, 3086 Stare
Rou te 160 Gallijlol1s, Oh1o Between SilOAM And 4 00 PM
Monda y Fr1 da~ For Addit ional
Information, Call 614 446 6674
..-- The Oeadltne Fo r Accepung Ap
p1ca11ons !s400 PM 9115'95

Sunshme Day Care 1?fl Church
Streel Btdwell 614 388 8955,
Fu ll T1me Part-T1me, Before And
Arter School Care

Gallta Me1g s Head Si an Is An
AAIE EO QpporUJMy Emplo~er

Would ltke To Babystt 1 Ch1ld
Infant Or Todd ler In My Home
Rel&amp;rences. 614· 245 5887

Local Company Need s Ortver
Loader For Garbage Truck Must
Ha11e COL s Sen d Resume To
PO Bo~ 117 Bt4r'ell OH45614

W1ll Do Babysllttng In My Home
Spnng Valley Area Cen the d
CPR Ho t Meals 614 446 8340

No E~pertence Necessary' $500
To $900 Weekly IPoten hal Pro
cessmg Mortgage Retunds Own
Hours Call ~909) 715 2300 Exh
782 (24 Hours)
Nur!;ie Atde Trammg Program
Pomeroy Nurs1ng &amp; Rehab ll tauon
Center w1ll be ollertng rr aln mg
clas ses m the momh of October
App licatiOns are now bemg ac ·
cepted at 36759 Rocksprmgs Rd
Pomerow Class s1ze 1s 1 m1ted
Three (3) re feren ce pap ers are
reqUi red Wllh appl cat1on Apply m
person between tOam 3pm M F
Siu den t s that success lully com
plete the TCE class wtll be eltgtble
to r employment Absolu!ely No
PhOne Calls EOE

Sun Valley Nursery School
Chlldcare U F Gam 5 30pm Ages
2 K, Young Schoo! Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mtnt
mum 614 446·3657 .

Wtll Oo Babystt!lng In My Home
Mercer'&lt;ltlle Area 614 256 1006
614 256 9301
Will Oo !ntenor Extenor Pa1n!Jng,
Reasonable Rates E •per1eneed.
Reter ences For Free Esttmales
Call 614 245-5755

.

FINANCIAL

21 o

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEV PUBLISHING CO
reco mmends tha t you do bus1
ness With people you know and
NOT to send money through the
matl .,.nul you have rnvest1gated
the offertng
Bustness Opportumty, Meetmg
Thursday 31st 7 02 Pt.A Lowe
H01el, Pt Pleasant WV Bestde
Post OH~ee InformatiOn, 614 446·
6263, Dale

M us ! Sell local ladles Heallh
Overbrook Center a 100
Club And Tannmo Sa lon Full
long 1erm care fac1111y ss :~::,~:~.~ . Equ1pped W1lh Establis hed Cus
a temporary part 11me a 1 1
tamers Awatllng Re Opemng
a Oe lme dlcal record s asststant
S&amp;rlous lnqUirtes Only 6 14 245
The postlton 1S 20 hours pe r
5903
week The pos1t1on could lead to a
permanent posthon at Overbrook R etai l Busmess For Sai: ~o
Center The pos t11 0n requ res Gran de lmmed1 ate Possess1on
'ellen1n g and weekend wo rk Send Great Potent1al low Investment
your resume 10 Overbrook Center For More tnformauon 614 2.45
or stop m 10 complete an
9109
!ton Overbrook Center 333
Street Mtddleport Oh o 45
TR AVEL AGENCY Own your
owll tra11el agency have a great
EOE
mcome, !ravel free 1 800· 860
Owner Oper ators
44 92
percentage pa td haull '·o,lhea&lt;;d
1 to 8 state area No 111
loads Call 1 800 5~&amp;6790
·---------•
Part T1me Med1cal Soc •al Worker
Speech TherapiSt Phys1cal Tt1cr
ap1s1 Need ed For Contract In
Home Evaluati ons And V s 1ts
CNA s And Cert1hed Home Health

A1des

Needed

Home Health Care
mg WV And Oh10

1

Serv
614

4A1 · 1779

Pometoy NurSing &amp; Rehab Center
IS accepllng app11cauons for Cer
tille d Nurstng Asststants Apply
a1 36759 Ro cks prmgs Rd Po·
mercy No Phone Calls EOE
PoStllo n avanable Dietary Atdel
Cook part· t me \lartable shtl!s
Pomt Pleasant Nurs1ng &amp; Rehabtltlalto n Center (formerly Careha·
ven), State Route 62 Route 1 Box
326 Poml Pleasant WV 25550
3:14 675-3005
Secun ty guards mus110 able 10
work any shtrt tncludtng
weekends must have clean po
lice record good work htstory re
t1able tra nsportauon
cense and home
starts at S4 75 pttr
hOurs per week, call 614 669
2874 Mon Frrday 8am-4pm lor
appotnrnent

A.ll rea l esta te advert1s1ng m
th1s newspaper ts sub]ecllo
the FOdera I Fa ir Houstng Act
ot 1968 which makes tlllegal
to adve r1tse ·any preference
hm1tatton or dtscnmlnat!on
based on race color rettgton.
SeiC tamtll al status or na110nal
ongtn, or any tnlentlon to
make any such preference,
hmtlallon or dt scrlmlnat1on •
This newspap er Wilt not
knowbngly accept
advertisements lor real estale
wh tch Is rn violation oltM taw
Qur readers are hereby
1ntonned tnat all dwellings
advert1sed m thts newspaper
are avatlable on an equa l
opportunity ba SIS

REAL ESTATE

Seek1ng parl·t1me quahf1ed Nurs
1ng AsSistant Bnng resume 3009 .;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Jackson Ave Pt Pleasant, Wed

310 Homes for Sale

01' Fr1 after 2pm

:._:..::.~.:..;::.,._ _ _ _ _ _ ltac;, 6 room house $17,000 Lee

someone needed to milk cows Ba1rd 304 675-5714
hourly wage pa1d vacation Send
name, phone number &amp; e;~~pen
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Heat Pump
ence PO BDlll 312, Henderson, Gas Furnace, 1 Acre, Garage
WV 25106
Add1son Atea, Pnce ' Aedoced To
$57 000 614 367 7267
Wanted Truck Ori'J&amp;r With Clean
M\IR E,..pemtnced W11h Dump 3 Bedrooms Balh &amp; 1/2, llvmg
Tra •ler A Mustl Call Lisa Alter Room, Fam1ly Room, F1n1sh~d
5 30 PM 614-286-4951
easement CA In Ground Poo l

180 Wanted TO DO

~~~.:~:

Ace Tree Servtce Complete tree
care, 20yra exp &amp; msured free
estimates 61-4·441 1191 or 1

3bedroom 2Dath Ranch section
al, fireplace 12xt6 deck. 1 11
21ots PH)e Ave Meadowbrook
304 675 1294

800-508-8887

4895

Please L,tave

310 Homes for Sale

12x65, 2bedroom I bath on AI 2
Cra b Creek 2 Hor sel ck Rd
1 3001mO Oepos1t &amp; references
304 369 6447

Sac 3tH' complete kttchen laun
drl' room garage new sep11c &amp;
c1ty water SomeNtlle Realty 304
ti7S-3330 or 675 3431

2 Bedroom Tr arler On Raccoon
Creek Road '$250 Oepostl 12501
Mo Plus Ut1l tt1es No Pets 614
441-0000

For sale by owner- lhree be(jroom
house w1th three outbYJidmgs ap
pro• one acre pr1m~ commerc tal
land at Ftve Potnts Dwner movmg

For Sale by owner 3br , 2 s1ory
104 llber['f St 3:14-67~4677
House Fo r Sale B~ Owner 1 8
Acres Wtth House And Attached
Garage Separate 14;~~30 Work
shOp 29 H11ltop Drr'&lt;~e Off Ne1gM
borhood Road 3 Bedrooms LR
DR, 1 BR Wilh Laundry Area Gas
Furnace W ith Heat Pump New
Water Tank, Large Front Porch
C11y Water Cheap Unlmest Green
Towns hi p , Call 614 4"16 6302
From6To 11 PM
located Qn Edgemont Or 1ve 3
Bedrooms FtniShed Basement
Ftrep!ace CA D1shwasher t 112
Baths Garage &amp; Carport lmme
d1a1e Posses st on S72 000 , 614
446-3117
P r~ce Re duced S 125 000 4 Br
Br1ck, 2 Baths F1n1shed Base
ment 2 Car Garage, lnground
Pool Wtth Deck Srorage BUild ng
3 Acres 3616 Stale Route ·141
Galhpolts. 614 446 1025

320 Mobile Homes
for Safe
14x56 2 Bedrooms , Claylon
t993 Sktrttng Steps Blocks
Porch 1 Bath 61 4 388-9900
1988 14x70 Claylon Honzon 3br
2 OOth CA 304 937 ~g
1992 Mans on Meda!11on t4X72
3BR 2 lull balhs w lskyhghts
cathedral cetllng throug hOut
"ltghl Cheery• $15 750 00 614
446 0625
Fo r Sale tn Glenwood 1ac land
1990 3br 2 bath mobrle hOme
ctty water $28 sao w 1th $4500
down Owner lmanctng 304 562

Two bedroom house carpeted
stove nO relngerator clean no
pets depo stt and references re
qutred 614 992 3090

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3tH
2 fu ll ba th ba sem ent
screened 1n porch/ breezeway
(carpeted), doUble garage/Work
shop new roof 1995 10 14ac
304 675 4575

-""-"-""_:.I_ca_ll_6_1_4·_99_2_ 6300
____

Household
Goods

House for rent on S1a1e Route
338 one mile from Apple Grove
carport, cellar house 011ed ook1 n ~
Oh•o Rt11er HuO accepted 304
372 5686 or 614 247 2120

Ortver With Class A COL wanted
We haur wnnm a 7 to a state area
No Northeast loads Homet1me
pa1d vacat1on &amp; holidays Call I •
80()

510

1

2 Bedrooms Furnrshed 1/3 Acre
Lot Rt 7 South, Relerences Re
qu1red No Pets 614 256 1304
N1ce two bedroom mobile home tn
Mtddlepor~ 614-992 5858
Two bedroo m pan ly furnrshed
good clean cond1!1o n porch
yard pnvate lot abo\le New Ha
ven $275 w11h wa ter and sewer
304 882 2466 anymne

430 Farms for Rent
11 stall horse barn on 20acres
for leaSe 304 389 6447

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unfurntl!ed sec urtty
deposit required ni).pets 614
992 2218
2 Bedroom Ap anment Trash
Water Sewage Pa !d S2951Mo +
Depo S11 614 446 2481
I
2 Bedrooms 2 Baths, 2 Mtles
Notth Of V nton, $300/Mo + S300
Deposit + Electr tcrly No Pels
61 4 388-9080

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
1987 Toyo ra Ptck Up Excell~t
CondiDon 614 367 7-441
~

NORTH

&amp;MEEK

1988 Ch8'Jy shortbed 4x4 Silv&amp;fado atr ctu 1se tilt am m cas·
rner $5500 call 614

IVHAiS '1tt!J2
Sf'tCIAl 1Ulllii!T 1

' 800 &lt;99 3499

t·"

Merchandise
------------1

9 ~ear old reg1stersd Tennessee

Sunray gas cooks!ove. avacado
color $150 ~4 U3-!H92

STORAGE TANKS 3 ,ooo .Ga!! on
Uprght Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson, OhiO 1·800 537·9528

Antiques

Buy or sell R1venne Ant1ques
1124 E Ma tn Street on 8t 124
Pomeroy Hours U T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 10010
t;1 00 p m 6t4-992 2526

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
tO Gun Cabme1, Blue Endr;;hner
Sect1onal , Love Seat, We1ght
Bench Set New Refrrgerator G E
Shop Vac Carpel Cleaner,
W1nches1er 22 R1fle Model t 90
Wards WesleriJeld 22 R1!le 614446 9701
1993 Down Eas1 Hot Tub Excel
lent Condition I Holds 5 People
Excellent Quality, Cedar Wood
Wt th Cover Wooden Sw1ng &amp;
Trellts 1 Wooden We ll House,
Bolh Am1sh Made Both Wnh Ce
dar Roofs 614 446-1098

Extra N1ce 2 BR Unfur(}t shed Ga 3ft door &amp; storm door 304-675
•
rage Apt CA In GalllpcliiS $3001 7666
Mo No Pets ' 614 446 2300 61 4
4 Suncrest cemetery lots
446 6787
$ 100ea 614 446 0465
2bd rm apt s total elec trtc ap
pltances lurmshed l aundr~ room 4 wrought 1ron posts 1983 Cad1l
fac1ht1es close to school n 1own lac E l Dorado all m very good
ApplicatiOns ava•lable at Vtllage cond1bon 614 992 3244
Green Apts 149 or call 614 992
4 2 Inch Btg Screen Stereo TV
3711 EOH
Wtth Surround1ng Sound Capabtl
2Rooms Plus Bath Lafayetle Ill' ltke New Trade For Farm
Tractor 4x4 Ptck Up 4 Wheeler
Mall No Kttchenl All U!11il1es !)aid
W tth PTO 6 t 4 256-6114 Any
$1 75 00 Monlh Depos11 Required
614 44&amp;7733

,,,.

• J 7
•AJ10 752

Wanted rnlo rmat1 on of Robert,
SR Jr , Adams Family Bunod m
Adams Celj'letery, Mason 'Ctty S
Adams 5930 Sycamore Bartlett

TN 38134

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brrc~ sewer p1pes wmd
ows lintels etc Claude Wtnters
Rto Grande OH Cal! 614 24 5
5121

560

Pets for Sale

740

C rossbred Ch1-Angus, Matne
Angus Ch1 Matn e Cows 22 Pas
ture Bred Hetlers Approx 1000
lb Should Call In Feb March
Tra de Feeder Calves 614 388

1995 Yamaha Wamor lour wheei-"'
er 350cc 6 speed wtth revers'
e•cellent cond1t10n S3800 OBO
614 992-6977
~ I

8366

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Ho i stem Cow On DH I Tes t 6 14
245 0610

2 AKC Boston Tamers 1 male 1
lemale. S200ea 1 purebred Boxer
neutered, no papers $150 304·
675-2074

Ten black w hile laceo ca l11es,
l tgh1Wetghts, 614 698 7244

640

Hay &amp; Grain

F~rst cunmg hay fo r sale, ro und
AKC Bassett pupp•es 5 &amp; 6 bales $1500 Square bales, $1 00
weeks old ready to go $ 1oo , 1304 882 22&lt;7
614 667 3856
Square bales $1 $2 Rou nd bales
$15ea
Takmg orders for 2nd cut
AKC Golden Remover Pupptes
Vet Che cked
Wo rmed
1st nng unlll Sept 1 304 (175-3960

AKC Aeo tstered 6 Week O ld Rat
Terners For Sale 614 256 1951
AKC Reg1s1ered Chow Chow
Pupp1es, Shols, Wormed Also
Pupptes 112 Chow $35 Each
614 388-8436
AKC Regtstered male Potllera
man wh 1te 614 992 3085 alter
4pm
Jack Ru ssell rerrters pupp es for
sale $250 each 10# lull grown
614 742 2050
Netherlaf')d Dwarf rabbitS, good lor
4 H prOjeCIS $5ea 304 675
6118
Pupp1es mtntalure Schnauzers
salt &amp; pepper, also Toy Poodles
AKC shots and wormed, 614
667 3404

a

1979 1000 Suzukr motorcvcle to~
sale, rot ot new part runs e .. cel 1
lem, s 14 992 6069 call anytime
"'
~~~~~~~~-- ·
198\; 1100 Honda lnterstatt. :

TRANSPORTATION

71 o Autos for Sale

'

'

I REMEMBER
DOWN

QUESTION

EVER'1'TJ.IIN6 ELSE
TAKEN ..

GOING

TJ.IE LIST ..

17 open bow Inboard, 140 hp' ;
$4000 call 614 992 4004 lor
more mlormat1on
'
1977 Starcrall 16 with top Mer.,
cury 90hp with power mm a"d
1
!railer 304 773-5707 alter 4pm
19go Yamaha Waverunner ~X
650 $2800 3)4-675-6352
l.
1995 Kawasakt 750 ZXI JO! skt ~
wtth cover lour year e~:lended t
waffant~ and tratler, askmg ~
c_
___:.
________________
,
$59SO
614
992·6026

~'M tteGOMMtNI&gt;ING

~Xt"l$~, B~fO~t

54Ft Sommer Set House Boat h:lr •
Sale Sleeps a Very Clean \:
$25 000 Eve 614-446 1324 or ,
Day 614·446-6579
•

65 Mustang, sharp $4500 or
trade for 4WD 614 992 5532.

you~ MvS'-L.~

M£-MO~Y

••

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

tiAS'

AM,.,tSIA.

85 Plymout11 Honzon 4 door au
tomat c creme puff 85,000 mtles,
otl changed every 2500 m•les no
rUst perfect trflenor S1850 614

985 3356
1971 Plymou th Roadrunner Ong1
nat 340 Eng1ne Good Condition

$2 000 614 388 1!863
197a Fa~rmonl 6 Cyhnder, Auto
Runs Great Good Cloan Cad
$1 ,000 614 441 1687

Budge! Transm•sstons, Used &amp;
Rebut I! All Types Accesstble l'IJ.
Over 10 000 Transmi ssion AI~
Parts C lutches &amp; Press u,_re
Plates 614·379-2935
·'

Today sees the start of the U S ()pe,n
Tennis Champtonshlps at Flushtng,
Queens, NY Some tenms stars are
bndge players The most famous IS
Martma Navratllova, who has often
played brtdge durmg rain delays But
verhaps the best player IS Buster
Mottram, who was Britam's top tenms
player durmg the late seventies and
early eighties He was ranked m the top
20 in the world m 1978 and 1982 Smce
qUlttmg the tenms cirCUli m t 984, he
has had more time for bndge
Mottram played today's deal skillful
ly. The British favor hght opemng b1ds,
and Mottram had the vulnerablitty on
h1s Side
Many players would take advantage
of the "free finesse" by nmnmg the first
trick to the1r ace-Ja ck tenace But
Mottram saw that he needed the heart
Jack as a hand entry later m lhe play
Also, West's lead was probably from a
collection of low cards ThiS would be
true unless West had led from Q-10·8
alone, bul then the contract was proba
bly unmakable Mottram called for
dummy's heart king
Now Mottram needed to wm four
club tncks Any play would work
agamst a 3·3 break, but if the clubs
were sphltmg 4 2, 1t was more likely
an opponent would hold honordoubleton than the doubleton nine eight So, Mottram served a club to hts
ace and drop-shot a low club back
West won and sWJtched to a d1amond,
but Mottram lobbed up dummy's ace,
passed a heart to hiS Jack and smashed
out Wlth the club Jack. The contract was

157741169

-

..BIG NATE
1"\d X I"'

614 992.0805

C.

"'

Jot"'!

u we.

Outdo

Acting award
Trick

Holler

Moalem

commander

51 Racl&lt;et otrlng
motorial

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity CVl-r cryptograms ••• c,.ated from quotahona by lamoua peop6e pa•t and

Each

s·u

lelttt~lflltt.

E

Cipher alandllor aoottt.r Tod.ty'a dtA F equals G

P VF BC Z E L S E J

EUMOSNE

s·u

CGSZZ

CMOYSEJ,

YVG

ISGW

EUMOSNEJ

I WB

pr..-nt

ZBLMC

E
EJ

( Z .

ZSAMCGPlM

E .

lETMO)
LZERM
RSLEN .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "To attrac1 men I wear a pertume called New Car
lntenor ·~ -

A1ta Rudner

':~~:t:~' &lt;O©RJJ1&lt;A-~t.trs·

WOlD
lAM I

Edll•d tty ClAY • POllAN

0

Rearrange letters of the
four Ktombled words below to form foOJ r words

B YS L 0 M
0 P GR N

I I' I
A L AML

I I I I' I

One cut1e to another.
"When I found oulthat money
~-------.. d1dn 'l grow on trees I was alN1N0 0 T
ready out - - a - - - · "

I0

~-_,,,....,:.:.,-.,,~5.:..:.!,...-,jr;G,.---1

Complete

I._J.LJ._ j___::J.L-l.L.--l

by ldl1ng

the chuckle quoted

•n the mtssmg words
you develop from Slep No 3 below

I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

August . Youth · Annoy - Turg1d . YOUNG
Turmng fifty was a tough lime for my husband H1s
Grandma told hlm, "You'll never be as old as you are
this m1nule and you'll never be as YOUNG e1ther "

Home
Improvements

MONDAY

BASEMENT
WATERPR(lOFING
Uncondtttona! lt!ettme guarantee
Local references furnished Cull

(614) 446-0870 01 (614)

23~-,

0488 Rogers Waterproolrng
tabhshed 1975

li•

1

IT~ SOii'T t:f W&lt;~ !lf/116 A MltrAIIr
~VPf~f.IERO.
I-lAVE TliE AB1urr

AIIP

STAY AWAKE WU/Ul
/l.fS1
l:.M H'IP'RSfr;,ITIVE , TOTALLY
WIR£P !'M 1'4SCMNIAC MAN!

ACCCJTe HF,A/1.111(5

r

•

-----,
Appoltance Parts And Servtce All '
Name Brands 0\ler 25 Years E~
penance All Wo rk G u aran t e ~
French C it y Maytag 61 4 -44.5 ·
1
7795
• tli

cmtm

w

fiAI?I(' WHAT'$ TlW
HUMMI/16 MY SUP€2IIA~

IN~~O" Ttt

TliE t;t)IJI/P

OF klY DIGITAL CLOCK

AOVAIIC/1/G ONE MtiJVTE 1

PCRCfiViP'

BtU Omck s Home Improvements'*
add tt to ns remodehng rool mg~
S1d1ng, plumbing e1c Insured call
B1ROmck, 614-992 5183
C&amp;C General Home Ma•)l
tenence Pamllng, vmyl stdtn"g
carpentry doors wtndows baths
mobile home rep~llr anrl more For
free estml81e call Chat BH-99'2

ASTRO-GRAPH

6323
Earl's Home Matnlenance, vrnxL
Stdmg rooltng e.1ter1or palnttng
power washtng Free Esnmatlii
614 992-4451 or61-4-992•4232 ..

BERNICE
BED~ OSOL

Ron s TV Servtce spectahz1ng m
Zenith als o servtcmg most other
brands House calls 1 800 797
0015 wv 304 576 2398

i
I

Rooftng and guners- commerctal
and residential mmor repatrs ~5
years exper1ence B&amp;B ROO ,....
lNG, 614 992 5041

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Freeman's Healing And CoollnQ
Installation And Serv ice EPA
C&amp;r'blted Res1den11a1 Commerctal
614 256 1611

Electrical and
Refrigeration

-==:-:7."=:---"
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
.,
Heat Pumps, A1r Cond1t1onmo U ''
You Don t Call Us We Both Losel '.'
Free EsltmaTes 1 800 287 6308,
614-446-6308 ~ 002945

=--.:c.:.=:..:.:...:..:::::.:::.__ "

______ ! Aestdenllal or commercial wtnng

new ser'&lt;ltCe or reparrs Masler l~o­
censed eletl flctan Rtdenour
Electrtcal. WV00030e 304· S75

1786

46
47
48
50

vs

SERVICES

840

ex.am
45

. , UN SCRAM BLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I

·'

810

ICIIIOrl

43 Arrow pol1011
44 Futura allyl.'

P"NT NUMBERED LEIIERS IN
THESE SQUARES"

t980 Dodge Trans Van 24 fullY'
sell con1a1ned 360 motet $300.0
30 Globe S ta r Camper &amp; lot
Holiday Ht!ls E,..cellent ConditiO')
Electrrc. Wa ter, Alf Heat, Sew/'
age $7 500 614 894-3101

stew
Handle of •

aword
39 -Aviv
41 aueotlonable
42 UHI

l

Truck topper, full s1ze over !he•
cab Xl4 675-2246
• '

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

38

rtoon,•, ts avatlable , auto
!IT&lt;liJ!Jeaupon request, for $14 95
0 Box 169, !Wslyn Hts , NY

Topper for ' 85- 92 Fo rd Aanger r
very good cond1t1on $100 61t4 ~
985 3548
:

790

sue--

29 EleCtrical unit
f---t--+--1. 30 Oppotlta of
acto
32 Sticky
substance
35 Storage area
38 Hungarian

v~
ca::::&gt; ~ MVE:. N-IY l~f&gt;..TE
Phiillin Alder's book, "Get Smarter
a&gt;f:NI~ FOIZ.YOO 7

New gas tanks, one ton tru~
INheels rad1ators floor mats etc •
D &amp; A Auto, Rtpley WV 304 372•
3933 or 1 800 273 9329
:

I.:::.:...::.:;:.:.----,--- -

9449

TllAT'S
A GOOD

14 F1 Jon Boat Trailer 7 112 tH~
Gas Motor, Elec Tro lltn g Motor,
Depth Ftnder, $1 500 614·245-o
5978
•

760

Pass

By Phill1p Alder

~$=2,=50=0~61_4_4_~~9=~~3------;- :

Spnngmg Holstein Hetrers DHI
Re cor ds Also Breed tng Aged
Bulls, 614 286 2496

Shots, $100 6 14 446-2251

Motorcycles

:6.::75-:.13:::::50.:.__ _ _ _ _ _-"...::

Extra N ce Yearly Pam1 F1lly 614
245 5087 304 67&amp;-4893

t •

All eyes on
Flushing Meadow

1973 Honda 350 mo1orcycla 1
good condition S500 OBO 304 1

992 5188

Pass

,,_

Pass 2 •
Pass
Pass 3 NT
All pass
2 NT
Opemng lead. "8

payments 304·675 6269 or 67S2669
"'. ',

AMHA a Mtn1ature Mare 3r
show qual1ty 2 yrs old excellent
relined conformation $700 614

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Fea
tunng Hydro Bath Jul1e Webb
Call6t4 446 0231

5 Black lab pups i\KC Regts
tered 304 67&amp;-6359

I.

vott
know
22 C_.,.arlng
9 Campusai'H
10 Copable of
23 p,..holldlly
(2 Wdl.)
111M
11 Jacob's son
11 Musical ending 24WHktnd--l·
coming abbr
19 Olooentlng
25 Olva'l solo
26 Hllo gerlando
27 Ble..lng
21 Actreot

2•

1995 S-10 4.x4 ptckup cru1se, flU, '
AC, gomg to college, cant a fiOrd

Livestock

Wa !ket geldmg sotrell w1 th UaJ:
mane &amp; tar l very flashy $1 000
614992 7008or6 14-992-3537

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South
West North East
South

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250,
72 000 M1les, $6,000 Can Be
Seen At Gallipolis Dally Tribune,
8 25 Thud Ave nue Galhpolw
Oh10
J.

19'80 Camara Black 305 Engme
Has Been Rebuilt Good Cond t
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
11on• Call Alter 6 PM 614 256BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
51140
1377
ES TAT ES 52 Weslwood Ortve
570
Musical
from $226 to $291 Walk to sho p
L1m1ted Ollerl 1996 doublew1de, &amp; movtes Call 614 446 2568
1981 BW Rabbi! $1,300 614 446
Instruments
3br 2ba th $1695 down $2591 Equal Houstng Opportunity
0158
month Free del tvery &amp; setup
2 Year Old WW Ktmball Pta no
1981 Crtat1on Runs Good $700,
5pc ~ueen s1zc bedroom su1te
Onl~ at Oakwood Homes N1tro Ell:ecuttlle apt tbr lull k11chen
Ltghl
Oak Excellent Condl! ton
$250
304
895
3366
61"1 643-(1012
W'!J 304 755 5885
di shwasher washer/dryer central
614· 446 4989
a1r &amp; hea t water 1urntshed prt
-'------~--- 11983 Olds Custom Crutser $500
Baby bed stroller, carseat sw1ng,
New 1996 14170 1nctudes sk1rt
vate entrance reference s de
For Sale Console Ptano Wanted,
614 992 2271
!Nalker 304 675 4548
mg s1eps blocKs one year pos t3011 675 5733
respo ns1ble party to make lolf'll
homeowners msurance and StM
monthly payments on ptano See 1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme,
months FREE lot rent Only $1025 Fur n1shed 2 Bedroom Aparlment , Ches1 Freezer $100 3 Pc Kmg
Stze Bedroom Sune $200 , An
locally Call1 800 268 6218
Body E•cellent Runs Good
down and $20 7 17 per month Call Across From Park Gall1pohs AI
t1que Dresser \1)\ntty W1th M1rror
$1 200 080 614 44 1 1434
t 800 837-3238
C No Pets Referen ces Depostt $80 2 Swtvel Cha1rs ,W1Ih Sola
Snare Drum 1Case Flute /Case
Requ~red S3501Mo 614 4-46
614 388 87 11
1984 N1ssan 50th Ann1versary
$125 OIIICe Desks $15 &amp; Up nn
Pflce Buster! ~ew 14x70 2 or 0577
300ZX Turbo
T Top
Ntce
er $45 614 379- 2720
3br Only $996..down $1 95tmonrh
580
Fruits &amp;
$4 000 OBO 614 367 0138
Fr ee de l1 very &amp; setup Only a t Furn1shed Apanment Al l Uttlt!les
Chorea corn l ed beef for the
Vegetables
Oakwood Homes N•tro WV 304
Pa1d Downsta1rs $t851Mo 919 freezer S1 per lb hang1ng W&amp;P;;Jhl,
!965 BuiCk Le Sabre Ltmtted Ed1
755- 5885
Second Avenue 614 446 3945
t1o n runs &amp; looks good Truck
6t4 985 3805
Red Raspbernes Taylors Berry
!Opper, full SIZEt 304 67~5106
Patch 614-245 904 7
Furnrshed Eflic tency Share Bath Commerctal grade tables cha1rs
330 Farms for Sale
S19 51Mo Ut ltl es Pa1d 607 Sec
198 5 Ford Es cort $800 t984
and bars t-o ols K tn g s•ze wa
590
For Sale
Approll: 480a c 250ac woods
end GallipOli S 614 446 4416 AI
Ford Escort Stat1on Wagon ssoo
terbed
F1sher
Rack
syslem
wtCD
150ac r1ver bottom nver frontage
1er 7 PM
or Trade
614 446-6958
player rntegrated amp dual cas
Homes!ead Really Broker 304
GraCIOUS I vmg 1 and 2 bedroom sene deck, 2 150 watt speakers
675--5540 or 304 682 2221
For sale or trade - Royal Oak
t985 Mustang GT Au1oma11c T
apartments at ~Vrllag e Manor and 304-875 7481
membershtp, 614 992-3314
Top, $3,400 614 441 -1587 Lea\le
Rtvers1de Apartmenls tn Mtddle
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
MesS:age
Compte1e Grtl Seoul Un1form Size
port From S2G2 $355 Call 614
tO
$75000BO
614245-0134
2 mobile home tots, 112m1 out 992 5859 Equal Housrng Oppor
1986 Grand Am Auto PS PB,
FARM SUPPLIES
Sandhtll Rd S1251mo tnc ludes tunlltes
Crutse, Ttlt. 109 000 M1les S2.C)QO
Concrete
PlaStiC SeptiC Tanks
&amp; LIVESTOCK
water sewage and garbage 304
F1rm 614 256 6543
300 Thru 2 000 Gall ons Ron
New large upstatrs 2 br apart
675-7481 or67S.7566
Evans
Enlerpflses
Jackson,
OH
ment 4 m1les west of Tuppers
1986 Olds Calats Runs Good ,
1 800 537 9528
9110ac lot At 2 above Galltpoll s Pla tns on681 614 985 3504
S1 600 Call Alter 5 00 614 446
610
Farm
Equipment
Ferr~ close to town beau ttlul nv
1~3
N ce two bedroom apartment-4 tn EleclfiC Wheelchat rs /Scoo ters ,
erVtew 304 67S..7241
t9
68
John
Deere
2355
Tra
ctor
New /Used Scooter 1Wheelchatr
~meroy 614 992 sass
1987 Sunb~rd GT $1 800 614
L1f1s. S!atrway Elevators Lrlt 55 HP, JD Corn Planter Cult tv a
Camp Si te 11 38 Acres Me tgs
379 2938 After 4 PM
to r 614 245-0610
Cha1rs,
Bowman
s
Homecare
Twtn
R1vers
Tower
now
accept
ng
County, Salem Township Fu ll
614 446 7283
apphcat1ons lor 1br HUD substd
1988 Oldsmobile Tornado above
24 K24 Basemen t Complete
2 stlage wago ns New Hollarn:l 1
tZed apt for elderly and hand1
average cond1110n loaded $4 700
Good Hr.mtmg Good Butld1ng Sqe
row,
held
chopper
Gall
blower
Ht Effectency l P: Or Na!ural Gas
capped EOH 304 675-6679
not 614 247 2500
$13 000 Cash Ed Brown 6 14
92% Fu r naces 100 000 BTU 304 675 185a
388 9973
Wedge Apartments I &amp; 2br no $1 250 Installed t-800 287 6308
, 988 Stra1os 1700Xl 4Cyl Ch8\l
August Tractor Sale
614 «6 6308, Duct Systems And
pets 506 Burdetle Street 304
l&amp;o Excell Cond1t1on S6 500 00
Agco
Alhs
trac1o
r
s
w1th
world
Four lots near Racme approx 1 675 20 72 after 5pm
A1r Conditioners Free Esumates
614 446 7386
famous a1r cooled d1esel engmes,
1f2 acres each, start1ng al $5000,
call 61 4·949-2025
JET
41 &amp; 5?hp, all come standard w/
Ponllac F 1reb rd E~cellent
450
Furnished
AERATION MOTORS
radtal
!Ires,
Hyd
spool
valve
1~~~~·~6~1~4~36~7~7~1~9~2:.:_:.:....:..:
1 S14 775 9173
Rooms
ropes &amp; canopy 4yr or 4 OOOhr 1
Repatred New &amp; RebUIII In StoCk
drtve tram warranty, warranty best
1991 Chrysler Lebaron good
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528
Cucle Motel lowe st Rates In
OVER 1500 ACRES FOR SALE
tn the tndustry
conditiOn caii6H 992 3314
Town l Daily Weekly Monthly
4650 2wd 41hp $13 900
GALUA CONTY ' Just East Ot 614 446 2501
lo-yeseat $40, Chatr $25 Good 46602wd52hp$15900
t992 Ford Escon LX Wagon PS
State At 117 30 Mtnutes Soulh Of
C.:.on.::d:.:'
'
:
:"'
.
::"::6:.:1.:_4-_4_::46:.:9::59=:.7
____
4650
4wd
41hp
$17
900
PB,
cr urse h11 eli:C cond, 42k
:
1 4660 4wd 52hp $20 500
GalltpoiJs 25 Wooded Acres Rooms lor ren t week or month
mt1es 304 675-7951
S1art1ng
a1
S
t20/mo
Gallta
Hotel
Overlookrng The Ohto A tv er
Magtc Chel gas ra nge $125
F1nane 1ng lot 3 4 or Syrs at 49°4
$21 00 0, Only $ 2 000 Down And 614 446- 9580
2500 btu Amana a1r condl!toner
or lake cash rebate Keefer s
1992 Plymoulh laser 4t 000
$125 , 614 992 2426 between 7
Ser 111 ce Cen!er. S! Rt 87 p 1 mt les ell:cellenl condttron grea t
$251 09 Per MonTh 10 Years
Sleepmg rooms w11h cook1ng
10% Interest
9pm
Pleasant &amp; Atpo ley Ad 304 -895
gas mtleage $8600, 614 992·
Also tra1 1er space on r1ve r All
3874
6725
hook ups Cal l alter 2 00 p m
Now
available
at
Pamt
Plus
for
SCIOTO COUNTY Lucasville 3:14 77J.5651 UasonW\1
85 Ford Esc ort 49 000 mtles
your log home cedar s1dmg deck D 1scount farm lract or part s lor
Area 5 Wooded Acres Good
or ou tdoo ~ turmture AKZO NO
Massey, Fo rd IH &amp; other \
St 500 614 2473042
For Huntin g $4 000 Owner F1
460 Space for Rent
BEL SIKKENS COATINGS 304
Stder s EqUipment Co Hender·
nancmg Only SSOO Down And
675 4084
son wv 304 675 7421 or t 800 _ Red 1986 Trans Am Good Condt
$88 87 Per Month, 4 Years, 10% Have vaeanc~ tn fT'fi home b r el
277
3917
t1on 1983 New Yorker, 614 441
Interest
derly 304 675-7541
Relngera tors, Stoves Washers
053"1 614 446 1514 Leave Mes
And Dryers All Reco ndi!Joned John Deere 730 Dteset. John
sage
We Gtve 10% D1scount For Cash Tra.11er lot on Braod Run Rd. New
And Gauranteed! 1100 And Up Deete60 Gas 614 379 9381
Haven,
$60/mo
304-773·5881
And All 10 Year Contracts Have
Will Deliver 614 669-6441
720 Trucks for Sale
A 4 Year Balloon
.:.:.:...:.:.:..:..:.:_:....::.c.::___:_:..:___ I John Deere A Trac lor 614 286
SeptiC
Tank
Jet
Aera
lton
Motors
2
96
1978 Ford F1SO Super Cab, 351 ,
MERCHANDISE
4
Lo t For Sale 90 • 172 On Kr st1
New &amp; Rebuilt !Installed, Call
auto tool box amf fm ale power
Onve,61 4 446041 8
Johns John 614 44&amp;-4782
converter, S2 950 614-949·2249
Massey FergOJson 16 5 Tra e~or
$5,350 New Holland Mow1ng Ma
Scenu: Valley A pp le Grove, 51 0
Household
t981 Fo'd F t5o $80() 614 446Sola And Chait To Ma tch Good ch1ne $695 Vermeer Round Bal
bea ullful 2ac tols pub lic wauu
ConditiOn. S225. 614·441..0701
Goods
6958
er
$2
500
T0
20
Ferg
uson
Wrth
Clyde Bowen Jr , 304 576 23313
Bush Hog &amp; Blade S2 550 614·
Appliances
Re conditioned
1984 Chevy S 10 4x4 4 Speed ,
Sunlight Pop Up Truck Camper 288.0522
Washers Dr yers Ranges, Relfl
New Clulch Brakes 2 Ttres 614·
RENTALS
Fo r &amp; Ft Bed, Asktng $1,500
grators , 90 Day Guaren1eet
367 7279
J U ~ruck Bench Seat W11h Oak New 16 bumper pvl! horse tra1le r
French Ctty Uay1ag, 614 446
Drmk Hotdmg Arm Res t $400 with saddle compartment 614
1984 S· tO 4x4 Staler 121K E.
7795
410 Houses for Rent
614 245-9109
985 9813
cetlent Condtllon $3 450 OBO
614 446 3342
LAVNE S FURNrTURE
Tandy 1000 EX computer wJcolo r New 3' potalo plow $80 , 3 pt 6
3 Bedr ooms, Full Basement 7
;:_~_:.:::..:_:..:_
monitor software &amp; games 1n&lt;:lud brush hog, $485, 614·843-5216
Complete home lurntshmg s
Mtlee Norlh 160 From Hol zer
1992 Chev S1lverado 4WO, WHy
Hour s Man Sat, 9 5 614 446
ed excellent for beg1nn1ng stud
Hospital Avatlable 9115J!iJ5, Can
ctean, eo OOOmt $14 500 304
ent asking $350 neg , 614 742 Wtll Dtg Your Potatoes Or Ren t
0322, !l m•les out Bulavtlle Ptke
Show !iJ/5/95 Deposll, Relerence
The Plow ~easonable 614·245675 5541
Free Delivery
3011
Requtred 614 446-0595
4ll:8 Factor ,. Tra iler With Dump
Bed
Fou r 31x10x50 Whtte
Ra 1sed Laredo T1res Mounted On
4 Ne w White Spoke A1ms Call
Any lim e All er 5 PM 614 3677927

•Q98 3

SOUTH

730 vans &amp; 4-WDs

~~=;=::::=======r=======·~-~.,~-='"'~:1

Stove Freezer Washer Dryer
Relngerator. 614 256 1238

530

•Q9 8 4

¥A J 3
• 5 2

W11.4 ·m

630

614 446 3158
Ouabty Household Furnnure And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Carry! RENT-2-0WN
And Layaway Also Ava1labje
Free DeiMlry Wnhtn 25 Miles

•K 6 3
orQ I072
• K 10

" 9 8 6

2927

J.Ap.,.....(

540 Miscellaneous

VrAA FURNITURE

EAST

•Q 8 5 4
•K 6

1948 Jeep CJ3A $2 000 firm, ex-'
cellent condmon 614 992 341 t

mont cenlel bod 304.075-2895

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Oltv&amp; St , Gallipolis New &amp; Used
lurnttute healers Western &amp;
Work boots 614 446 3159

TILL ITS ()JeR..

WEST

e

446 7398 1 800-499 3499
Sle ep&amp;
r couch 11antt~
loveseat,
cha1
r, ant1que
colorlarge
TV,
glass end latHes small entertam -

E!U1 IT.S IXJr O.liR

1994 Chevy Elltended Cab 4r4 ;
a•r crutse nil, amtlm cassette
equ11 power wmdowlf locks. tow 1
tng package bedltner approx
33.000 mtlel Take over pay
ments or payo ff, call 1-4 949 -

Rerngerator Avacodo Green
Frost free S t95 , G E Refrrgera·
tor New Compreuor 1 Yeat
Warranty Ltke New S350 Refrigerator Harvest Gold Fro1t Fret,
$150 , Kenmore Washer $85 ,
Whtr lpool Washer 3 To Choose
From S150 Wh 1rlpool Waahef,
Heavy Duty L1ke New 1 Year
Warranry $205 Match1ng Dryer,
$205 1 Year Warranty Whirlpool
Dryer A11acodo Green $95 Ken
more Gas Dryer Heavy Du ty
$ 150 Electric Range 30 Inch
Harvest Gold, $95 Electnc Range
Whrrlpoot $125 Uagtc Chef Gas
Range $150, Skaggs Appliances.
76 V1ne Street, Gall1p0!1S 614-

82895

• A 10 9 2
orK 54
• AJ763
.fd

1987 S 10 Runs Great Has Cos·
met1C Damage Great Wor~
Truck, 614 367 032t

e=.
Tuesday, Aug 29 1995

In the year ahead your cha n ces for
advancement m your c hosen fteld look
hopeful provtded yo u bu1ld upon your
present foundat1on 1nstead of searchtng
fOJJgreener pastures

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept. ~2) Rema1n pru·
dent 1n the management of your personal
resources today If you re wasteful now
remorse could follow later Trymg 10
pa.fch up a broken romance? The Astro·

PISCES (Feb, 20-Morch 20) Examme

Graph Matchmaker can help you under
stand what to do to make the relat1ons h1p
work Ma tl $2 75 to Matchmaker c/o lh1 s
newspaper P 0 Box 4465. New York

your mot tves honestly today regardtng
your treatment of a friend As k yourself tf
you re bemg cool ru sl b ecau se you're a

NY 10163
L18RA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Be you' usual

tnfle env1ous
ARIES (March 21·Aprl119) Do not vac1l·

graCIOUS self today, but do not hes1tate to
asser1 yourself m a development where
you feel you 're be1ng put upon by another

late today about pertinent Issues If your
pds111on ts fuzzy , 11 Wtll serve to confuse
as welt as frustrate your allies

SCORPIO (Ocl. 2Hiov. 22) Make cer·

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) II you f1nd 11

ta1n that anyo ne you pratse today truly
deserves your accolades Flattery for the
sake of flaltery could slam your 1mage
Wlth.,lnstncenty you don't deserve

necessary to work wtth unfamthar too ls or
matenals today at least be sure to read
the mstruct1ons ftrsl Guesswork could

penalize you

•

. SAGITTARIUS (N.,ov. 23-Dec. 21)1f you

GEMINI (May 2f · June 20) Alihough

step out of character today and are mce
only to the 1nd1V1dua1s who you hope to
get somethmg from 1n return you'll be
severely d•sappotnted

potential love 1nterests will find you lnler-

CAPRICORN (Dec 22·Jan.

1~)

It w1ll be

Important today to understand others llke
you f o r who and what you are Your
approval won t need to be embelliShed by
pretense

eslmg and appealmg today don't be
taken 1n by one who manipulates others
through flanery
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Do nol
make any prom1ses to your mate today
s1mply for the sake of exped1ency He or
she w1ll hold you to your word and wont

let you w1gglo oot of 11
19) LEO (July 23·Aug 22) II may prove
Conhdent1al matters you hope to keep W1Sflr tn lhe lpng run Ieday to lernporanly
secret could become common knowledge shelve a dtslasteful task II your heart
at thiS t•me 1f you tan&lt; to the wrong peo- ISn't 1n your work , your m1nd won i be on
tt either
ple Select !hose you !rust carefully
AQUARIUS

(Jan.

20-Feb.

AUGUST28

�.•
Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Monday, August 28, 199S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wells
stops
Cards

Buckeye 5:
11·12-21-25-31
Pick 4:
0592
Pick 3:
.575

Sports,Page4

Low toolgbtla ~partly
cloudy. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. Hlgbs In the 90s.

I

A SUBJECT FOR EVERYONE!

VoL 46, NO. 86
Copyright 1995

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 29, 1995

Middleport Council rejects
low bid on trash collection
(

)

Meigs County officials, Including
James M. Soulsby
shown here, discussed concerns over local jaBs at a meeting In the
Meigs County Courthouse Monday afternoon. Here Soulsby
explains to State Representative John A. Carey Jr. (R-WeUston)
and Ohio Bouse Speaker Jo Ann Davidson (R-Reynoldshurg) the
difficulties his office will face In housing addlllonal prisoners
under a new Ohio law.

..

B~C~

TQ

SCHCC~

SAY

'i

TO DRUGS
Now that school is back in session, it's
vital that you exercise additional caution
on the roads and advise your children to
look both ways before crossing the street.

It's also important to warn your children
against going anywhere with someone ·
they don't .know or eating anything given
to them by a stranger.

These days, you just can't be too careful!

THIS IMPORTANT MESSAG EIS BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE FOLLOWING SPONSORS:

Valley lumber &amp; Supply
992·6611

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

Ingels Furniture and Jewelry
992·2635

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Baum lumber Co.
985·3301

CHESTER, OHIO

..

•

The Shoe. Place and Locker 219
.992·5627

POMEROY, OHIO

· K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

Qu~lity
992·3345

POMEROY, OHIO

Print Shop
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fisher Funeral Home
992·5144

SYRACUSE
992·6533

.· · Rose's Excavating
949·2493

992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

Downing·Childs-Mullen·Musser
Insurance

POMEROY, OHIO

992•2342

RACI~E, OH'O

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tee
992·6128

992·2556

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2432

992·5020

992·2955

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"YOUR BANK FOR LIFE"

POMEROY
742·2136

POMERQY, OHIO

742·2333

tobacco. Mier about two montbs,
an ordinance could he instituted,
Robinson said.
- beard cockroach complaints
f~ Sarab Eads of Walnut S~t
about a nearby propeny owned utJack Carsey that bas forced her to ·
hire an exterminator. Carsey must :
either fumigate the property or;
move his tenants out, Mayor•
Dewey Horton said.
;
-passed the second reading.bC:
~ ordinance that will put backflow•
blt~fk valves in new or problem :
propeny.
~
- learned that traffic continues:
to speed on South Second Avenue,:
with children at risk sinoo a pet bas'
already l;&gt;een kiUed, resident Sbelly;
White said.
·
several drains along:
Sycamore Street were plugged up;
resulent Lawrence Powell said.
- learned that more complaints .
have been beard about unkempt
property. ·
'

corridor and Its connection to 1:
77 ," Thornton said.
All three counties wiD adverti:~e
in a special Appalachian supplement of Plant Sites and Pluks magazine that will be pilblished soon;
ThorntonI added.
Morton, Leonard and Thornton
will attend tbe Midwest plastics
show in September to market lhe ,
region. The area may also be advertised on the Internet
This group will meet on .a
monthly basis..

Colvin re$igns as.Southern district music teacher
Personnel changes and insurance coverage were the main ropics
of discussion at Monday night's
meeting of tbe Southern Loc~l
Board of Education held at the higb
scbool.
.
.
The boanl.aceepted the resignation of David Colvin as music'
teacher in the district, and hired
Jennifer Montgomery on a one year
contract. Also accepted was the
resignation of Lori Brinager, bigb
scbool secretary That position will .
be filled by Patty Circle who bas·
been working in anotber school. ,
Cint:ra Winebrenner who was laid .
off sometime ago was recalled ID ·

fill a secretarial position al the . Warner Insurance for buildings at
Syracuse school.
·
$6,360 being accepled.
Also accepted was ·Thelma
Also approved was a contract
Salser's resignation as a cook. Sbe between Southern Local and Dotis retiring . Mary Smith was son Brothers, an exterminating
recalled from layoff ID a four hour company, for pest con1rol at .a cost
custodian position at the high of $940.50.
school.
Julia Gopfen o.f Germany was
Substitute teachers·hired were
accepted as a foreign exchange stuCarolyn Robinson, Pamela Zirl&lt;le,
dent. She is .staying In ·Syracuse
Kathy Garrison, Debra Barber, and
with James and Patsy Warner. .
Craig BuiZ.
·
The handbook from Letan EleInsurance coverage was mentary School was apl;'roved by
approved with tbe bids from
the board.
Nationwide Insurance for fleet
Plans were made for Supt.
insurance at $9,600, and Brogan- James Ray Lawrence, Treasurer
,

Dennie Hill, Marty Morarity, board
members; an~ Bob Collins, to
attend a meeting on Sept. 6 in ,
Columbus regarding architectural
services for tbe proposed new
kindergarten through eighth grade
building in the district.
It was generally agreed that if
student teachers are available from
Rio Grande, tbey will be used in
tbc district's schools.
Auending the meeting were
Susie Grueser, president; Pete
Thoren, vice president; members
Don Smith, C. T. Chapman; and
Morarity, SupL Lawrence and Hill.

lnfor.m ational meet for AEP workers set Wednesday
Electric Power Job Training PlaceAn informational meeting on the
availability of stale servioos for job ment agencies, U.S. Sen. John
retraining and placement fbr Glenn's office and the stale Bureau
employees at tbe (len. James M. of Employment Services to be. on
Gavin Power Plant bas been sched- band to address employee issues
uled for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at and concerns.
River Valley High School.
· ' AEP announced July 31 it' will
Stare Sen ..Jan Michael Long, D- be laying off employees at power
Circleville, said be bas arranged for plan\S in a five-stale area. including
representatives of tbe American 100 at Gavin, starting in Ocrober as

part of a performance improvement

P~i hope this meeting serves to

provide additional information relative to job training and job placement assistance," Long said. "We
must do all we can to see to it that
these employees are aware of services and opportunities available to
them."

·

The Gavin layoffs are Included
in an overal I 1,200 job reductions
throughout the AEP syslern. Within
tbe region, the utility giant plans ID
cut 85 jobs at the Philip Sporn
Plant and .80 at the Mountaineer
plant, both at New Haven, W.Va.,
and 130 jobs at tbe John Amos
'Plant at SL Albans, W.Va.
Contlnlltld on page~

.......--Bike winner-___,

Its

. TUPPERS PLAINS·
985·3161

Williams &amp; Associates Insurance Birchfield Funeral Home
992·3985

County Chamber and CIC execu- the region."
Marketing business sites wiD be
tive director Hugh Morton will be
tbe representative from Hocking key, Morton said.
"While we continue to address
County.
Athens County's officers will be · needs in OlD' own counties, it makes
Paul Leonanl and William Coffey. sense to combine our limited
Leonard is the president and chief resources to market. the region,"
·
executive officer of tbe Atbcns Morton said. .
The communities' partnership is
Area Chamber of (:ommerce and
a natural step forward, Thornton
Economic Development Council.
"The regional approach to eco- added.
"We have a number of things in
nomic development is the way for
the future," Leonard said . "The conunon in particular the desire to
more we cooperate, the better for see the completion of tbe Route 33

Portsmouth paper purchased
by American Publishing Co.

.Farmers Bank·

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

· Meigs, Athens and Hocking
county development groups have
joined to form a new consortium ID
push completion of the U,S. Route
· 33 connector, said Julia
Houdashelt-lbomton, Meigs ecoDOOiic development director.
.
In addition to lobbying for Ibis
critical highway construction, •tbe
' new group will market the area for
business relocation and growth,
Thomron said
lbomion, will represent Meigs
County in this group. Hocking

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The their fatigue as Lee fmished his lestimony. Although tbey took copijudge.may have been right
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito ous notes last week during Lee's
recommended that prosecutors . direct testimony under tbe theatrispend a scant 30 minutes cross- cal defense lawyer Barry Scheck,
STAMFORD, Conn . (AP) .-- hensive ·services lhan newspapers
. examining Henry Lee, lest they most of them ·wrote hardly a won!
Thomson Newspapers Corp . has traditionally :offer," Harrington
bore the jury and open themselves during cross-examination.
Prosecutors ·have litlle time to agreed to sell three of its U.S. daily . said.
up to more damage from t~e
"The three newspapers affected
nation's most respected forensiC recover. Ito set aside today ID deal newspapers to American Publish.
by
today ' s announcement are all
with tbe explosive Mark Fuhrman ing Co. for an undisclosed price,
scientist. .
sound
newspapers, but tbey do not
Instead, Deputy District At!Dr- tapes, which the defense wants ID tbe companies announced.
fit
our
stralegy,''
he said.
·The publications are among 25
. ney Hank Goldberg spen~ almost play for the jury ID brand Fuhrman
Larry
J.
Perrotto,
president and
all of Monday's court sess1on on a a racist liar who is capable of fram- U.S. daily newspapers Thomson
chief
executive
officer
of American
said earlier this year it planned to
; rambling interrogation that re;~cbed ing Simpson.
Publishing,
said
tbe
purchases
are
The tapes contain intervi.ews sell as pan of a reorganization.
its nadfr in a discussion of whether
part
of
lbe
company
s
strategy
to
The newspapers are tbe
· a while splatter at the murder scene between Fuhrman and an aspiring
expand
its
ownership
of
rural
and
screenwriter who now lives in Portsmouth (Ohio) Daily Times;
came from a bird or·a squirrel.
"Most of it was incomprebensi- North Carolina. On them, Fuhrman . The Tribune of New Albany, Ind. semi-url)an daily and weekly"publible," said Loyola Law School pro- repeatedly uses racial slurs and and The Ricjunond (Ky.) Regisler. cations.
American Publishing, which
The sales are expected to close
fessor Laurie Levenson, one of sev- speaks of beadng and framing suspublishes
96 daily newspapers, is a
eral analysts who thougbt the pros- pects. Spokesmen for tbe recently early this fall, pending regulatory
subsidiary
of Hollinger Inc .. a
ecution stumbled in handling one retired detective have Said be was approvals.
Dick Harrington, president and Canadian-based international newsof Simpson's most imponant wit- playing a role ID make for a bel(er.
publications
story.
·
·
·
•
chief
executive officer of Thomson paper company.
nesses.
include
the
Chicago
Sun-Times.
The
judge
has
been
studying
16
Newspapers,
said
Monday
tbe
sale
"Perhaps Hank Goldberg, in
Thomson Newspapers publiShes
hours' worth of tapes and tran· is part of the company's plan,to
retrospec~ should have taken)udge
142
daily newspapers and several
scripts.
The
defense
wants
jurors
to
organize
its
newspapers
into
slriiteliD's advice," Levenson said. "The
non-dailies
across tbe United States
·hear
about
an
hour's
worth
of
gic
marketing
groups
serving
points he's trying ID make seem to
and
Canada,
.incl~ding The Globe
material.
regional
markets.
be getting lost. Much of it just
and
Mail
of
Toronto. It is one of
Fubnitan
1estified
that
be
found
"Each
of
these
will
become
a
seems downright perplexing.''
the
main
operating
units of The
bloody
glove
on
Simpson's.prop·
markeling
and
communications
a
Jurors sequestered for more
Thomson
Corp.
eny
the
morning
after
the
killings.
company
providing
more
comprethan sev~n months , didn't bide

POMEROY, OHIO

Fruth·· Pharmacy
992·6491

.

'Boring' cross-examination
resumes in Simpson case

King Hardware

Veterans Memorial Hospital
POMEROY, OHIO

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

(row's FamUy Restaurant

.Adolph's Dairy Valley ·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .. 992·21 04

Home National Bank
RACINE
949·2210

Ewing Funeral Home

off, but retained Middleport
In otber business, the council:
-gave Middleport Police Chief
·Sid Utile a leave of absence until a
retirement fund problem can be
resolved.
, - will install two ftre hydrants
at $4,000 at the end of Fourth and
Fifth streets as part of a paving project to ensure protection for rcsidents and three cburcbes.
· -learned about a SilO a m01itb
maintenance contract for the vii- •
lage's trees tbat were planted two
. years ago. Ponland' s Jeff Harris of
Tropical Seeds said many of tbe
trees were planted two montbs too
soon causing them to die.
Last year's rainy weather had
limited the need for watering the
trees, but dead branches will be
removed this fall, Harris $aid. The
mainlenante contract ends September 1996.
\
- will ask that all publicallyaccessible viUage offices voluntarily ban smoking and smokeless

Ohio House speaker
Meigs joins Athens, Hocking in lobby group
Davidson, officials
mull jail problems
By JIM FREEMAN
facilities insiead of building more
Sentinel news staff
prisons.
.~'The solutions out there (to
Neighboring counties have
jail and prison overcrowding) are their own problems, Lentes
not simple ones," Ohio House explained. Vinton and Jackson
Speaker Jo Ann Davidson (1~- counties bave no jail. Meigs
Reynoldsburg) told Meigs Coun- - Cottnty's 100.year-oldjail fails ID
ty officials during a meeting in meet stare standards as.does GalMeigs Coonty Monday afternoon. lia County which baS lbe best jail
Davidson, tbe first woman in the area. be said.
House speaker, and local Ohio
Soulsby advocates the conHouse member John A. Carey Jr. structjon of a new, prefabricated
(R-Wellston) met with Meigs jail for . Meigs County. Such a
County officials Moriday after- · structure would relieve some of
noon to discuss problems with tbe problems officers face in
lodging prisoners; parlicularly housing prisoners.
problems that may stem from a
"Money is always the probnew senlf:ncing law to take effect · Jem," Gerard said. "We can't
next summer.
afford ID house prisoners out of
The two mel with county com- the county."
missioners Fred Hoffman and ·. "Community corrections can
Janet Tackett. Prosecutor John R. ease pressure on the jail, but it
Lentes, Sheriff James M. Soulsby can't solve the problem," he said.
and local community corrections "Sheriffs are being turned into
committee cbllirman Paul Gerard. innkeepers."
Lentes addressed law enforceHe said stare support is needed
ment concerns over a new sen- for allernative programs such as
tencing bill taking effect next community corrections.
July which calls for convicted
"We don't want a blank check
fourtb-degree felons and· fiftb- forever ... just any break we can
degree felons (a new felony get," be added.
class).
T)le pr.oblem is that Ohio's
Lentes maintained !be new prison system is operating at 176
law will overwhelm inadequate percent of capacity, Davidson
county jail like Meigs County's fXplained.
J.OO-year-old facilily.
Tbe state is tryin~ to relieve
He said the state's money overcrowding to b:ep the federal
would be better spent on local
Continued on page 3 ·

e

By GEORGE ABATE
chase a single 30-pound bag for
Sentinel News Slalf
$1.40 or pay $7.42 per month.
Middleport Village Council
The bid sizes will not alfecl resmoved to protect one of the vil- idents' rates, !bough, Gilmore said.
lage's businesses at its regular The village will make more money
meeting Monday nigbL .
ibrougb billing, with lower bids. .
By a 3-2 margin, council did not
"Roger Manley's fatber. started
accept tbe low bidder for trash col- hauling 51 years ago with a push
lection and tben threw out all bids cart," Gilmore said. "If we awanl .
forcing the process stan again.
· the bid to other than Manley's it
Co!Jncil members Jim Cllitwor- will. be the loss of four jobs in our
thy, Miele Childs and Beth Sliven · community."
•
voted against tbe low bidder, wbile
But, Robinson said the village
Councilmen Nick Robinson and sbould accept the lowest bid sinoo
Sieve Duofee were for and Council the company bas li good reputation
President Bob Gilmore abstained.
and Manley's was not within 5 perOf the five bids, Manley's Trasb cent of the low bid. ·
Service of Middleport bad the
Manley's bas five employees
fourtb highest bid. Manley's with four dedicated to trash collecoffered $9.25 a montb for regular tion, owner Roger Manley, Sr.,
service and $7.50 for senior citi- said. Manley's bas operated since
zen's trash collection.
1944.
General Refuse Service Inc. of
"(The recycling center) would
Milton, W.Va., placed tbe lowest probably close too," Manley said if
bid. For regular service, customers his company does not get the trash
would be charged $7.92 a montb. bid. Earlier Ibis year, Manley had
For senior citizens, tbey could pur- sold three-fourths of his business

R~TLAND,' OHIO

!

•

•

''

The area Boy Scouta ralud money through Its servl&lt;e organiza-

tion. Boy Powe~ Inc. of Pomeroy gave away an Ill-speed mountain

bicycle. From left are: Don Frymyer, scoubnuter of Boy Soout
Troop 24!1 In Pomeroy; Ashley Payne; Middleport's Angela Payne,
bike winner; and Bob Anns, president of Boy Power Ino. (Sentinel
' photo by George Abate)
·
.

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