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•

Ohio Lottery

Cowboys
run past
Giants 35-0

Pick 3:
766
Pick 4:

9706
Super Lotto:
15-16-20-33-42-46
Kicker:
819904

Sports, Page 4

Low tonight In 50s, clear.
Wednesday, sunny. Highs In the
80s.

•.

aI
Vol. 46, NO. 90
Copyright 1995

Middleport
teen is held
in shooting

Salute to workers----. Safety
•
re1gns
•

Patrol attributes
higher visibility
to quiet weekend

Sentinel News Staff
&lt;?fficials may.charge a Middleport teenager with attempted murder foiIowmg the sbootmg of another teen Saturday near Middleport.
Meigs County sheriffs ~eputies respqnded to Leading Creek Road
around 11:15 p.m .. after receiVIng a call from a ju\(enile who said be had
been shot, Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
The shooting victim, Chad Wise, age and address unreported, bad been
shot once in the lower-left abdomen allegedly by another youth wielding a
handgun, Soulsby said. Both juveniles are students at Meigs High School,
he added.
Officials have not determined the cause of the shooting, he said.
·
Wise was transported by the Middleport squad of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital, from where
he was transported to Ohio State University Hospital in Columbus via
MedFligbt helicopter ambulance, according to EMS reports.
Soulsby said Wise was last reported in stable condition.
He said Wise provided deputies with information leading to the arrest
of a 16-year-old Middleport boy, who was lransported to a youth faciliW
in Zanesville pending a hearing in juvenile court. He may later be bound
over to the Meigs County Common Pleas Court as an adult, Soulsby said.
The name of the suspect is being withheld.
Soulsby said investigators have not determined why Wise was shot.
The incident remains under investigation, he said.

.

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 5, 1995

-

'

NATO answers Serb
defiance with attacks
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Huge clouds of smoke
. rose from Serb- held suburbs of
Sarajevo today as NATO warplanes struck quickly at rebel Serb
tar~~ts around the Bosnian capital.
NATO unleashed the new
airstrikes after Bosnian Serbs
refused to bow to demands and
move their big guns out of range of
Sarajevo: '
.
The Bosnian Serb military
reported numerous explosions. The
Serbs did not say what was•
· attacked, but claimed that there was
extensive damage and civilian
casualties. There was no confirmation of the Claims.
Western military sources said
targets · were similar to those
attacked last week, when NATO
went after ammunition dumps,
anti-aircraft and nidar sites, and
command-and-control installations.
Sarajevans rushed out of their
homes, looking skyward for 'the
planes attacking their Serb foes.
People ran along the streets for a
better view. After an initial wave of
airstrilres that began· last Wednesday, many had begun to get dis-

· couraged about the possibility of
continued NATO action.
Last week's ·attacks ended on
Friday, when NATO and the Unit- ed ~ations declared a pause for
Serbs to meet a series of demands.
They included moving about 300
artillery pieces, tanks and other
heavy weapons more than 12-112
miles outside of Sarajevo.
The rebel Serbs moved some
weaponry, but fell far short of
. pulling all their heavy weapons out
of range of the Bosnian capital.
The deadline for the Serbs to comply expired at11 p.m. Monday, and
a tense · standoff ensued until
NATO struck after noon.
"We hope that this operation
will make clear to the Bosnian
Serbs the futility of further military
activity,'' said a statement from
NATO Secretary General Willy
Claes.
Warplanes zoomed over the
western part of Sarajevo, and loud
explosions followed in the city's
Serb-held southwest suburbs. ,After
the initial strike, more air activity
and several more explosions wert! .

...-

,._

l·

.... y

,. ~,

,,'

,, -...""

.

.....

"

L

•-I

PATRIOTIC THEME- Flags and streamers In red, white and blue decorated Corey
Longstreth's mini-bike in Saturday's Labor Day parade at Rutland. He took second place in the
bike category. (Sentinel photos by Charlene Hoeflich)

..

Rutland tips hat to Meigs' labor force
land Brownies Troop 1208. Other
trophy award winners in the
parade led by the Ms:ijlS Marauder Band were Howafd Frank on a·
four-wheeler, fi'rst, and Corey
Longstreth on a mini-bike, sec- ·
ond, in the bike category; Roger
Dlack, first, and Buddy Ellis, second, in antique. cars; and Pumper
3 of Pomeroy, first, in fire !rucks.
Taking the top award of $50 in
t11c cake decorating contest was
Dorothy Leach of Cheshire, who

A salute to the labor force of
Meigs County highlighted the
fifth annual Rutland Fish.Festival
held Saturday in Rutland.
A parade and cake decorating
contest carried out the theme,
with trophies and cash awards
going to the winners in several
categories.
Taking the top a~ard in the
parade category for floats was the
Rutland Panthers 4-H Club. Second place trophy went to the Rut-

'

saluted coal miners in colored
iCing. Pic winners were Maxine
Lee, Pgmeroy, with apple-raisin,
first, and a $25 prize, and Sue
llall, Middleport, second, a $15
prize.
Country, contemporary, and
gospel singing, interspersed with
clogging, karate, Indian dancing
and baton twirling, was featured
throughout the day on the stage.
G:une, craft and food, bootl1s were
in operation all day.

L-------------------------~---------------------------------------J

heard.

"

Bend Area native wins honorable mention as 'top cop'
MASON, W.Va. -Bend Area
native William K. Marshall Ill has
received national recognition as
honorable mention for West Virginia's ''Top Cop." The award is
given by the National Association
of Police Organizations, Inc.
Marshall, a three-year veteran of
the West Virginia State Police, was
nominated for the award by State
Police Col. Thomas Kitk.

'.'1 was really surprised," Marshall said. "I didn't know anytl1ing
about it."
Marshall said he received the
notification letter at his office and
just expected it to be another police
charge card.
·
"I was really shocked," he said.
"I didn't know who to call first."
Marsball, who is stationed in
Huntington, was involved .in a case

of 47 stolen four-wheelers i'n West
Virginia, Ohio, and Kentucky; had
100 felony arrests, 159 misdemeanor arrests and wrote more
than 3,000 tickets in 1994.
For receiving this a&gt;Vard, Marshall was invited to attend the "Top
Cops" awards ceremony iri Washington, D.C. on Wednesday , Oct.
25.
The 1987 graduate of Wah:una

High School is the son of Karen
Johnson of Mason and ·William
Marshall Jr. of P&lt;&gt;meroy. lie is the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J.
Roush of Mason, and Mr. and Mrs.
William K. Marshall Sr. of Jensen
Beach, Fla.
Marshall said he plans 10 make
the state police a career. lie hopes
to go as far as he can during 25
years of service. "Only 22 years til

go," he said.
Marshall was recently promoted
to the rank of senior trooper.
The senior trooper followed in
his fat.her's footsteps as he, too,
was a IIOOper. Marshall said he wa~ .
always interested in becoming a
lrooper because he has a desire to
help people and likes the respect
given to state lroopcrs.

Legal woes /multiplying
for Super Lotto winner

L"EADING THE WAY The Meigs
Marauder Band led the way for ,the Labor Day
parade In Rutland Saturday as a part of the

..

observance saluting the labor force In Meigs
County.

MONROE (AP) - A man who
won $4.7 n\illion in an Ohio Super
Lotto drawing in July is facing
more charges following an alleged
run-in with police.
Two officers were treated for
minor injuries early Sunday after
Charles Rice Jr., 33, of South
Lebanon, rammed their cr.uiser
with the 1995 Corvette he bought
with his iottery winnings, police
.
said.
Police charged Rice with two
counts of felonious assault and one
count each of felony fleeing and
eluding, resisting arrest, driving
under the influence, driving under
suspension and possession of marijuana, Monroe Police Sgt. J .R .
Bowling said.
lie was released on $50,000
bond and the car was impounded.
Carolyn Duvilbiss, assistant

..

Warren County prosecutor, said
Monday that she had no further
information on the case. Neither
Monroe police nor the Warren
County Sheriff's office returned
phone calls on Monday.
Rice held the winning ticket in
the July II.\ Super Lotto drawing
worth $16 million. Rice had selected the $4.7 million cash discount
option, which pays in a lump sum
the money the state wo~ld have to
invest to cover jackpot payments
over 26 years .
The same week he won t11e lottery, Rice was charged with reckless operation, drug possession,
drug abuse and failure to appear in
court on a disorderly conduct
charge.
•
Police said they were called
Sunday when Rice refused a cab
ride and got i.oto his car outside a
night club.

•

•

From AP, Staff Reports
The Labor Day weekend passed
quietly in t11e region and area law
enforcement reported no serious
incidenL~ involving the heavy volume of lraffic passing Uuough over
the tluee-day holiday.
Lt. Dan Gibson, commander of
t11e State Highway Patrol's GalliaMeigs Post, said increased police
presence on t11e highways resulted
in no major accidents.
The palrol reported 24 deaths on
Ohio's highways during the holiday, but none occurred in the
patrol's district area.
"In that respect it was a very
successful weekend," Gibson said.
"We feel the additional presence
made a difference."
Overall, the G-M Post wrote
913 citations, including seven for
driving under tl1e inlluence and 307
for no seatbelt or child restraint.
Gibson said the increased
emphasis on highway safely occurs
during the three major summer holiday weekends, Labor Day being
the last. At each post, 90 percent of
the trooper strength worked instead
of the standard 80 percent on a normal weekend, he explained .
The stronger enforcement was
accomplished by having troopers
work 12-hour shifts. The additional
cos1 is covered by federallunding
directed toward safety efforts, Gibson said.
·
"You won't see U1is again until
Memorial Day '96," he said.
Elsewhere in Ohio over lhe
weekend, Gov. George Voinovich,
a former union laborer and exmayor of Cleveland, helped pay
tribute to the 27 unions and 2,500
workers who built the $92 million
Rock and Roll II all of Fame and
Museum.
'
The Labor Da¥ mood was far
from festive in Warren, where hundreds of. union sympathizers
marched a half mile from WCI
Steel mill to rally in support of mill
workers. Steelworkers have been
off the job since Thursday, and the
mi II has hired replacemeill work·
ers.
The president of the Ohio AFLCIO, William Burga, attended the
rally at the Trumbull County
Courthouse.
Dut generally, the day was set
aside for fun and relaxation.
Thousands went to the AFLCIO's l-1bor Day Picnic in Cinciitnati.
And about 10,000 people came
to a 25-year-old Labor Day tradition - U1e II U1 Congressional District Caucus picnic at Luke Easter
Park in Cleveland. Ohio Democratic Party Chairman David Leland
attended the festivities hosted by
U.S . Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio.
"What is really inspiring about
lhis is the outpouring of warmth
anU affection for the congress man," Leland said. "I've been to a
lot
cvenL~ with a lot of political
ligures, but this was really impressive. Everyone just wanted to sec
him, to hear him, to sh-ake his
hand."
Voinovich, a former member of
Laborers Local 310 in Clcv nd,
hall Director Dennis Darrie nd
others honored electricians, ir
workers and laborers who had built
a new landmark.
"This is the heart and soul of
rock 'n' roll and it's very evidenl
your heart and soul was in it," Darric told tl1crn .
Construction workers and tlteir
families were treated to lunch at a
tent set up next to the glass-andsteel hall.
The ceremony opened wit'h
Marvin Gayc's rendition of "The
Star Spangled Danner" and ended
with Starship's "We Duilt This
City (On Rock 'N' Roll) ."
Meanwhile, an Ohio State Uni versity labor history expert predicted the workmg class will mobilize
to fi'ght efforts to weaken unions.
"You can only squeeze so far
. before workers strike back, " War·
ren Van Tine said, citing wages
that fail to keep up with inflation.

ot

I

�•

Commentary

Tuesday, September 5, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh1o

Page2

--Area deaths-- Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather

Tuesday, September 5, 1995

Wedn~day, Sept. 6

Kantor stays focused on workers' rights

The Daily Sentinel

WASIIINGTON- When federal aulhonues freed 74 Thru nnm1
grants reccnUy from a VIrtual slave
camp m Southern CahforniB replete wath razor-w1re, attack dogs
and armed guards - most of the
country was shocked
One except1on was US lrade
Rcprcscntauvc M1ckey Kantor
You would thmk tlus would be
1mposS1blc · he told us 'I m surpnscd but I'm not shocked People
w1il lflke advantage of workers 1f
the) lfC allowed 10 do so ll u can
h.1ppen here •s there any doubt m
anyone s mmd tlmt m less v1gllant
dcmocrac1es and less developed
CCOnOIII ICS thiS IS tak,ing place? '
On th•s Labor D,oy the Cahform,, c.1se and many more s uch
cx.unples of deplorable worklllg
cond1t1ons around the world stand
as tlac unfuushed bus111ess of the
l1bor movement In tl1c late 1960s
Kantor- who was then a young
attorney - fought to end ch•ld
slavery m the Citrus fields of South
Flonda Children as young as 7
were hvmg behmd barbed ware 111
shacks w1th dul floors and no elcc-

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

$MULTIMEDIA. INC.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Pubhshcr
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
(.cneral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETfERS OF OPI~ION arc weiCOITle They should be loss lhan 101)
v.ords long All letters art.:: subJeCt to ec!nmg and mu~a he stgned wuh name
address and 1elt:phonc number No unstgned letters wtll be published Letters
!&gt;hould be m good taste tddressmg tssues not person tittles

Ohio Perspective:

•

--

Child abuse 'crisis'
sends urban leaders
in search of answer

trtC1ty
Bow much progress has really
been made? Cons•der these examples from around the world

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
• In Ch1na, where f~rsl lady
Ihllary Rodharn Clmlon Will soon
arr1ve for a women's conference,
12-year old.&lt; work 15-hour sh1fts m
te•ule plants for as hllle as $10 per
month Ch1ldrcn even younger
work 111 fucworks factones, wh1ch
are se t-up to produce exports for
the Unucd States
• lnd•a 1s perhaps the world's
most notonous nauon for ch1ld
labor abuses An cstunmcd 55 m•lhon ch•ldren work under extremely
cxplolliVC conditiOns Children
workmg m the carpet mduslfy
often ellfll less than a dollar a day
When they make m1stakes they arc
pumshed by beaungs and torture
When a ch1ld cuts a finger dur

mg weavmg, some employers
scrape sulfur 10to the wounds and
set the wounds on fire to prevent
the ch1ld from blced10g on pnzcd
carpet fibers. accordmg to Senate
tesumony last year
• In Thailand an estimated
150,000 children under the age of
13 work as prost1tu1es Those who
work m the leatlaer 10dustry there
have been fed amphetam•ncs so
uacy can stay revved up and endure
longer hours - somct1mcs gomg
days Without sleep
• In Peru 12-year olds can work
12-hour sh1fts 10 th e mmcs for S3
dollars a day
• In lhe Ivory Coast, the average
age of a child laborer •s 7
'I talk about 11 1n almost every
speech I make, and I w1ll conunue
to talk about 11.' Kantor says "I
thank 10 years from now no one
Will doubt you should negot!Uie
workers' Standards, em U"onmental
nghts and ant1-corrupuon agree-

ments

H

But now at's a completely d1f
fereot Situation for Kantor Ills
message 1s often Jammed by an

I c;TILL F~i;l
T~T C.lUNA OOb~'T

By JAMES HANNAH
A&lt;-•oc•aled Press Wr~tcr
DAYTON- A rd.-;h of deaths m lhe area has focused anentwn on lhe
problem of child abuse a mull• headed monster lhat lives 10 every cuy,
oflicaals say
Were m a ms•s 1l1ere's no quest1on about•~ Montgomery County
CommiSSIOner V1cki Pegg sa~d • fhc caseworkers arc overworked The
c.uls ot reported abuse have mcrcascd
However, she sa1d ch1ld abuse IS no more prevalent m Dayton than m
Olhcr U S Cities
We tend to reflect the national p1cture, believe u or not Ms Pcgg
sa1d As bad as thmgs are and as shocked as th1s commymty IS were
not d1fferent
1 he corrunumty has been rock~d by a sencs of ch1ld deaths
• On Aug 23 pohce were ~ailed to the West Carrolllon home of 18month uld Omem Marks who was found unconscwus and later d1cd The
coroner saul her mJunes were conSIStent w1th "shaken baby syndrome '
1 he ch•l&lt;l s father Ronald E furncr Jr was charged wath mvoluntary
manslaughter
• On July 18, 4 year old Samantha Ratch1c was reponed m•ssmg Her
bancred body was found four days later m an abandoned foundry Her
mother Therressa Jolynn Ruehle, was md1ctcd Thursday on a ch.uge of
murder
• On June 22 a Jury lound 18 year-old Rebecca Lynn Hopfer gmlly of
murder Ms Hopfer was accused ol secretly dehvenng her baby g~rl at
home, wrappmg the ch1ld m plastic bags and throwmg her 11110 the trash
1 he reasons for abuse arc mull1plc officmls speculate
Ms Pcgg s;ud the problem appears to be fueled by a combmatwn of
drug abuse and the prevalence of smgle, teen aged mothers who are
• overwhelmed and undereqmpped '
Ms Pcgg saad 90 percent of the cluldrcn taken mto protecuve supem
s1on by ch1ld welf.u-e officialS come from fam1hcs With drug problems
"We'll never absolutely stop·~ 'she smd 'But what we need to do IS
try to deal w1th the ISSue of teen pregnancy And we need to get senous
about drugs and the users '
Ms Pegg sa1d the mcreasc m r~porL' ol child abuse may be due m part
to new technology that enables autlaonlles to detect shaken baby dcalh"
1n cases that m the past may have been bl.uped on cnb death
Mary Kay McClelland, director of protecllve serv1ces for the Montgomery County Children Serv•ces Board saad referrals lo the agency
ahout phys•cal abuse have been mcrcasmg over the past three to f1ve

tiSh~ TU~ ~~~OR

AND nu; DIGNITY
a: AVISIT I=ROM
'"~ l~t LADY

Accu-Weather" forecast for

•
INO

Showers T storms Ra1n

years
"It's probably,, rcllccuon of v1olencc m soc1ety, • she s;u d "A nd lhe
kids arc easy VICtims '
Dean Sparks mt.lke ma~1ager for the agency s;ud he tlunks the preva
lence ot drugs weapons and a lesser respect for human hfe are j:lchmd lhe
m,rease
.. s k
"And young parents tod.1y l1.1vc a d1fhcult tUlle 10 copmg,
par s
s:ud 'll1cy don't have the extended fam1ly members around '
But Sparks sa1d removmg ch•ldrcn from the home can harm them emotionally :uad psychologiCally
Nevertheless, Ms McClelland saad, tl1ere arc tw1ce as many chaldren m
lhc agency's care today Ulan tl1ere were two years ago

Nat Hentoff

w1thholdmg hfe support because
they cons1dered the case would be
fullle Now th1s was 111 contrast to
the pat1cnt s or fam1ly s w1shes
l.hcrn
Somet1mes
they d1d ~liS wuhout
I had a ma1den aunt who would
mfonnmg
the tamlly, someeven
never go to a hosp1tal because she
was ccrtam she would never leave tunes they d1d 11 over lhe faamly s
ah ve At last she had to go, and WIShes '
But was th1s ululatcral fm.tl
she tumed out to be nght
l he Alnenc;u• I horac1c Soc1ety JUdgment lawful? Do due process
nghts stop at the door ol the mtcn
IS more exphcll than the AMA m
the se life ami de.1th matters II s1ve care umt? Rcocn~y. !here wa~
dccl.ucs lh,H hie support 'can be a case Ill poml G1lgunn v Mas
llmllcd wllhout the consent ol sachuseus General Hospital 1 he
hosp11al and 1ts physiCIJins appear
pallcnt or surrog.llc when tl1e wier
ventwn 1s JUdged to be futile ' 10 have won - accordmg to 1 he
That ommous word IS defmed as New York 111ne&lt;' headline 'Court
treatment ' th.11 would be h•ghl) Ruhng L1m1lS R1ghts of Pataents'
1he vcrd•ct produced a collec
unlikely to result m a meamngful
t1ve s•gh of relief among many
survtvallor the patient
For some years now we have phySICians around the country
Alter all, some of them have told
all been urged to arro ve at lhe hos
p1tal w1th a lnmg v.lll or some me the patient or tl1e rclat1ves d1d
other advance dlfeCIIve so that the not go to med•cal school and have
doclors w1ll know how far we want not had years of expenence m
th em to go In keep us alive
dctcnnunng when 11 IS best - for
lncreasmgly, however, !lac pahent s the pat1ent- to say goodbye
w1shes arc •gnorcd m the best pro
The Massachusetts case con
fcss1onal JUdgmem of tllC doctor
cerned 71 year old Cathennc
On NatiOnal Public Rad1o Dr G1lgunn who lor years, had suf
Michael W11kes h.IS told of a study fercd from heart d1scase, dmbetcs
mvolvmg 'a tl10usand or so doc
chrome unnary tract mfect1ons and

Today in history
By The Associated Press

Today ts Tuesday, Sept 5, the 248th day of 1995 Tbere are 117 days
left m the year
Today's H•ghhghl m ~hstory
Fifty years ago on Sept 5, 1945, Iva Togun D' Aqwno, a JapaneseAmencan suspected of bemg warume broadcaster "Tokyo Rose," was
arrested m Yokohama ConviCted of treason because she was suU a US
CIUZen. D Aqumo served su years m pnson, she was pardoned m 1977 by
President Ford
,
On thiS date
I
~
In 1698, Russ•a s Peter the Great amposed a tax on beards
/
~
In 1774, the first Conunental Congress assembled m Pbiladelph13
~
In 1793, the Re1gn of Terror began durmg the French Revoluuon as the
Nauonal Convenuon mstlluted harsh measures to repress counter-rcvoluuonary acUVIIJeS
In 1836, Sam Houston was elected pres1dent of the Repubhc of Texas
In 1882, the nauon' s first Labor Day parade was held m New, York
In 1905, the Treaty of Portsmouth, endmg the Russo-Japanese War,
• was s•gned m New Hampsbtre
In ~939, the United States proci31Dled 1ts neutrality m World War II
:
:: In 1957, On rhe Road by Beat aulhor Jack Kerouac, was first published
In 1972, dunng the summer Olymp•c games m Mumch, West Germany, II Israelis, live Arab guemllas and a pohce officer were killed m a
hostage drama that began when the guerrillas attacked the Israeli delegauon
In 1975, President Ford escaped an attempt on h1s hfe by Lynette
"Squeaky" Fromme, a diSCiple of Cbarles Manson, m Sacramento, Calif
In 1977, the US launched the Voyager I spacecraft two weeks after
launehmg Its twm, Voyager 11
Ten years ago V1o!ence continued near Cape Town, South Afnca,
where noung agamst wbate-nunonty rule had sp1Ded mto white neaghborhoods for the first ume
F1ve years ago Iraq• Pres1den1 Saddam Hussem urged Arabs to nse up
a
10 Holy War agamst the West and former aU1es who had turned agamst
ham In Moscow, Sov1e1 Pres•dent Mikhail S Gorbacbev met w1th Iraqi
Fore1gn Mmtster Tanq Az1z
One year ago A UN -sponsored populat1on conference opened m
Egypt, w1th Norweg1311 Prime Mtmster Gro Harlem Brundtland lashmg
out at the Vaucan and Mushm fundamentalists by defendmg aboruoo
nghts ani! sex educauon
Today's Birthdays The presiCienl of the MouQn Picture Assoc~auon of
. Amenca, Jack Valenu, 1s 74 Former Federal Reserve Board Cbauman
• Paul A Volcker as 68 Comedian-actor Bob Newhart IS 66 Senator John
Danfonh, R-Mo, 1s 59 Actor Walham Devane as 56 Actress Raquel
Welch IS 55 "Cathy" cartoorust Cathy Guisew1te IS 45
,
Thought for Today ''!Its only the poor who are forb1ddcn to beg
Anatole France, French author and cnuc (1844-1924)

By The Associated Press
A dome of hagh pressure w111
conunue to dommate Ohw's
weather through Wednesday, w1th
skies mosUy sunny and h1ghs an the
80s w•th low hutmd1ues
Clear skies at mght wall allow
the mercury to dip mto the 50s
An approachmg low pressure
system could produoc some ram for
OhiO OJI Thursday the Nattonal
Weather Servace sa1d Cooler temperatures also are likely

Dy The Associated Press
II was a deadly Labor Day
weekend on Oh1o's streets and
haghways, w1th 24 people killed m
traffiC accadents durmg the fourday penod, the State H1ghway
Patrol satd today
The toll eclipsed the 21 traffic
deaths reported dunng last year's
Labor Day weekend
Th1s year's total mcluded one
traple- antl two double-fatality
crashes S1x of the VICtims were
pedestnans. the patrol saad
The patrol counted the fatal• ties
from Fnday through Monday
Tbedead
MONDAY
HUDSON
M1chael
DeMarchi, 32, of Hudson, and
sons Cbnstopher 5, and M1cholas,
3, m a two car colliSIOn on a Citystreet m Hudson
MA YFfELD VILLAGE Ralph J an1ck1, 72 hometown

had been dwgnoscd w•th P.~rkm
hospnal soc•al worker "lhat a rchason's d1sease As descnbcd by bllnatwn fac1hty m1ght be w1lhng
med•cal ethiCISt Alexander Morgan to accept her mother's transfer "
Capron m the Hastmgs Center 1 he mother was still all ve then
Report, she had also recently She d•cd, presumably w1th d1gmty
"undergone a mastectomy for wllhout lcavmg Massachusells
breast cancer ' And "'h1le m the General l!ospnal
hospital she expenenced repeated
The hospnal won the case and
seiZures that resulted 'm bra1n n 1s bemg appealed "The greatest
damage and coma '
danger at the moment " says
Her daughter, Joan, ' made 11 Capron "1s that people - espcclear to the phys1c1ans that her cmlly phystc1ans and hospital execmother always saad she wanted utives but patients and thear l:umcverythmg poss1ble done med1cal
)lc~ as well - w1ll be miSled by
ly " Nonetheless the anendmg medm coverage mto thmkmg that
phySICian - supported by the hos
the law has now placed the dec•
p1tal's Optamum Care Comm111ee s•on about wh1ch treatraent should
- placed on her chart a do not
he used (espec1311y w1th cntlcally
resuscitate order
111 pahenls) solely m phys•c•ans
After v1gorous protests from the hand.&lt; '
daughter, another phySICian evoked
The verd•ct has not been
the DNR order wntmg m the rev1ewed ye~ so 11 actually has hi
patient's chart "I find II d1ff•cull lie s1g ruficancc m law An cventull
to prov1de a medacal reason to court rulmg on these ISsues w1ll be
avmd (res uscltaUon} that IS as pow
cruCial for many of us particularly
erful as the (fam1ly s) demc to as the cost of med1cal care deter
have 11 done" After thai phys1c1an mmes more med•cal dec1s1ons And
was overruled, Mrs G1lgunn was hospitals ought to tell patiCnts
weaned from the resptrator because whether an advanoc darcctlve hke
- the doctor who d•d 11 sa1d m a livmg w1ll IS L'lken senously only
court - the resptrator ' was post
1f the patient doesn't want "every
ponmg her death tbe Intent was thmg posSible done med•cally '
to have her go out w11h some d•gn•If 111s a one way Ucke~ what ol
ty'
• the trust between the pat~ent and
Alexander Capron co-director the physlc13n at beds•de I
of the Pac•f•c Center for Health
(Nat Henloff 1s a nationally
Pohey and Eth1cs at the Umversny renowned aulhonty on lhe F1rst
of Southern Cahfornm, notes that Amendment and the rest of the
Mrs G1lgunn's daughter told the D1ll ofR•ghl&lt;}

'

John Cunniff
lly advertiSers no long can stress
uauqueness because 11 m1ghl not
cx1st They maght mvcnt phony d1f
ferences but nsk detecuon 111 domg
so
Th•s IS espec1ally so where fashIOn 1s mvolvcd "Whatever makes
pe9Jlle respond," says Garfield, the
cnhc for AdvertiSing-Age, an mduslry trade pubhcauon "ll IS not
llltrlllSIC quality '
One certam way to obtam a
response IS to offend popular standards To outrage One mllhon dollars of ads m1ght brmg you $100
m1lhon worth of pubhcny, he says
lt1s what Calvm Klem d1d With
h1s Jean ads The ads, w1dely cnuCIZed as explomng the scxualuy of
youngsters went over the !me, says
Garfield and the controversy
threatened to damage rather than
enhance sales

What happened could, however
be repeated by advertiSers m the
future. somellmcs because "good '
advcrtiSmg means pressmg the
acceptab•hty lun11 Klem 11 seems
went too lar Others m1ghl madvcr
tcntly cross the hnc
51111 the problem for Klem, who
recalled the ads, m1ght have been
not .-;o much m the concep~ howev
er d•slasteful 11 was to many peo
pic but m the executiOn
As Salzman sees 11, the provoca'' ve poses of Klem ad youngsters
was meant to help teens 1dcn11fy
themselves, to g1ve them a sense of
bc!ongmg while reaff~rmmg their
umqucncss
Salzman concedes the subtle
ness of th1s m1ght escape adults
but she beheves the message got
through to the targets The targets,
of course, were the kids "The ads
were not shockmg to them " But
they shocked Salzman
"I thmk they (lhc ads) were son
of alarmmg, but! thmk a lot of
youth culture as alamung,' ' swd the
thlfiYISh Salzman, a product of
Drown and Harvard umversmes

unknown, m a one car crash on I

271 m Mayfield V1llage
SPRINGFIELD Martha
Anthony 87, of Spnngheld pedes
Iraan struck by a veh1cle on a
Spnngfield Clly SIICCI
ST CLAIRSVILLE - Reneue
L Brookens, 46, of Johnsonville
S C , and her brother m law John
C Brookens, 52, of Sunbury Pa
m a one-car acc•dent on I 70 m
Belmont County
YOUNGSTOWN - Donald
Wilham Earl Sr
38 ' of
Youngstown a pedeslnan struck
by a car on U S 422 an Malmmng
County
MANSFIELD - Muzey Kalala,
50 of the Bronx, NY a passenger
on a bus on I 71 10 RIChland Coun
ty
SUNDAY
KENTON ~ PhylliS Markley
59, of Kenton, a pedestnan run
over by her own car on a Hardm
County road
SPRINGFIELD - Teresa C
Sparks 38, of New Carhsle, when
a car and the motorcycle on "h1ch
she was a passenger collided on
Oh10 235m Clark County
ASHTABULA - Rocky C
Hudspalh 17 of Andover 111 a
t)VO car acCident on an Ashtabula

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ll3 960)

Nor, you m1ght ad were most
Amcncans the targets The kids
were Whale the k1ds m•ght not
have sensed lhc ads as cxplmtat1ve
m.my adults d1d Amencans arc
grow1ng older and much advcrtiS
mg •s auned at younger people
It explams why so many m1d
die-aged and older Amencans com
plam that they fa1l to understand
much of today's advertiSmg Not
bemg the targets, the message
arrows fly on by them
Much of today's ads says
Garfield, are des1gned for a generalion weaned on MTV and accustomed to fi 1m pyrotechnacs act•on
and surreal messages There •s a
feehng that auenuon rn1ght nol be
held w1thout the same treatraent
Sophasucated mdced "Much of
the value of a brand m1ght be 10 the
advertiSmg Itself," he explams
What 1s of value m the produc~ he
says m1ght be the sense corrunumcated m the ad Itself
(John Cunniff IS a busmess
analyst for The Associated
Press.)

Sunny Pr Cloudy

Cloudy

The record-h1gh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
stauon was 99 degrees m 1954
wh1le the record low was 45 111
1902 Sunset tomght w111 be at? 57
p m and sunnsc Wednesday at
704am
Weather forecast·
Ton1ght Clear Lows m the
50s
Wednesday Partly sunny
northwest Mostly sunny elsewhere

Weekend fatalities tota/24

Ads may outrage, but they sometimes sell
NEW YORK - What ever
became of sunplc clear, mstruct1ve
adverusmg about the quahty and
ments ol producL,?
If you must ask tl1ose questions
you reveal your fa1lure to under
stand commumcations m llus age
of mfonnat1on overload, when peo
pie are ex posed to so much to
remember they become confused
and forgetfulmstead
AdvertiSers must make you
remember thear message and they
do thiS by creatmg desue on your
part Havmg done so, they must
educate you, wh•ch IS to say they
must convmce you lhat•t•s m your
mterest to buy
Often they do th1s with techmqucs and messages that have httle
apparent relauon to the product but
much to do w1th the target's psyche such as aruculaung a need O&lt;
arousmg a fcchng Or, outragmt
you
The so called tried and true way
of scllmg JUSt doesn't do that "It's
not stylash enough to provoke
deSire, ' says Mar1an Salzman of
Cluat-Day Advert smg, where she

Ice

Warmth, sun ~q dominate
scene througtr Wednesday

Is this the end of due process in the ICU?
urms around the country the vast
OIUJOnty of lhe doctors admitted to
umlatemlly e1U1er (.hscontmumg or

Flumes

il:l1995 AccuWealtlar Inc

In the late 1960s, Kantor's only
soapbox was South Ronda M1gr:u11
Labor Serv1ces a workers' nghts
organ1zauon that he helped create
Now he has access to the Oval
Otfice where be has had many pn
vate discussions about workers'
nghts wnh h1s old fnend, Prcs•dcnt
Clinton
lie may fmd that u's ntr CllSICr
wagmg a revolution from the
Whne House lhan tl was from the
cnrus groves a gencrauon ago
(Jack Anderson and M1chael
Bmstem are colummsl&lt; for Umted Feature Synd1ca1e}

tors who work m Intensive care

• IColumbus ls3• I

-

cconom1cs

In the current ed1110n of the
Amenean Med1cal Assocm110n
Code of Med1cal Eth1cs •t as clear
ly stated that ''phySicians are not
etb1cally obligated to dehver care
lhat m !hear best professwnal JUdg
mcnl wall not have a rc!tsonable
chance of benefiung theu paucnts
Paucnts should not be g•ven treat
mcniS s1mply because they demand

James E. 'Bun' Denney

MlCH

array of odd bedfellows rang~ng
from Cabmet colleagues to bus•
nessmen to promment Republican
congressiOnal leaders
"Our tnck IS staymg on Ihe
rollmg lo~ " sa~d one admmiStra
han source refernng to Kantor's.
need 10 balance the confllctmg
.1gendas ol the departments ol
St~te , Agncullurc and Commerce
'We get shot down all the tunc for
bemg too hard on Japan and Chma
You also have tremendous pres
sure from the busmess eommumty
that says, 'Leave us alone"'
Kantor IS scornful of lhe alliance
between conservauve pohllc1ans
and busmess leaders, and believes
11 1s gmlty of a double standard
'They JUSt tend to be very aruculate and outspoken about support
ang democracies and market
econom1cs Kantor says I hey
ought 10 be the ones most support' ve (of workers' nghts} because
tlaat s how we re gomg to grow stability grow market econom1cs and
grow democrac•es 1n&gt;thc world lm
JUSt cunous about why there IS th1s
f.ulure to connect on th•s •ssue'
If he can 1 appeal on prmc1ple
Kantor seems prepared to make 1
pockclbook case for why the U S
government should press workers
nghts w11h fore•gn governments despite the fact tl1at they arc oltcn
unreceptive 10 the message Bnush
Prune Munster John MaJOr lor
cx,unplc, has politely told K.mtor
to mmd Ius O\\ n busmess
Dcs1dcs bcmg a moral ISSUe
slave labor IS an unfa~r compcllllve
.tdv.mtage Kantor argues that
hurls the Unatcd States, costs JObs
and leads to unfalf trade On the
other hand nat1ons that adhere to
•ntcnl.lllonally rccogmzed labor
st.mdards arc 1nvanably stronger
democrac•cs and stronger market

Publuhed every nfternoorl Mnndlly lhro.-gh
Fnd3)' f II Cour1 St Pomeroy Oh n by the

Oh10 Vnlley Publ1ghmg Compnny/Mu lumedHI
Inc Pomeroy Oh10 4.5769 Ph 992 2156
Sttond clau postage prud at Pomeroy Oh•o

Memi:H'r The A~~octated Preu and the Ohm
Newspaper A~soc1at1on
POSTMASTER Send addreu correc uon~ 10

The Dally Senunc:l Ill Court St Pomeroy
Oh o 45769
~
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Canitr or Motor Route
One Week
One Month

Ooe Yenr
I

Sl 75
$7 60

$91 00
SINGI E COPY

I'RICE

Dmly .............•.......... :...................... . 35 Ccms
Sub~cnbers n01 desmng to pay lhc earner mny
rem11 1n ndvnncc dm::ct to The Dnily Senunel

on 11 three

SIX

or

12

month bil!ll ~ Cred1r w11llx:

g1ven cmter each week

No mbscnp110n by ma1 l pcrmmcd 1n areas
where

home camer service~~ nvruloble
MAIL SUDSCRIPTIONS

lmklt Mrlp County
13 Weeks

SP 92

26 Woeko

$47 iJ6

~2 Weeks

$92

~6

RaiH Outside Meip County

'II

13 Week.&amp;
26 Weeks

$25 61
$49 66

~2

$96 20

Weeks

The Daily Sentinel • Pag~ 3

James E Bun" Denney 76 Vmton d1ed Sunday Sept 3 1995 m St
Mary s Hosp1~'li lluntmgton, W Va
Born June 22, 1919 111 Dloomf1eld, J,lckson County son of the late
Tbomas and Mary Scurlock Denney, he was a reurcd auto mcchanac and
US Army veteran of World War 11 who served 111 the Europe.m Theater
He was a member o' the Joseph Freeman Amencan I cg10n Post476
W•lkesv•lle, and lhe VFW Post
Survavmg are h•s w1fe, Bonn1e Snyder Denney, whom he mamed Oct
14, 1940 m Ga!lipohs, three daughters, Conme Denney of Gcorg•a
Donna Jean McCown of Radcliff and K1tt1e Lee (Herbert) Shaffer of
W•lkesvalle etght grandchildren and 10 great grandchildren a brother
George Denney of Panonsvllle, and a s•stcr Mabie G•lkc&gt; of Paucns' 1lle
He was also preceded m dl:ath by a granddaughter a brother .md two
SISters
Private graveside serv1ces Will be held a1 the convemcncc ol the t;umly
at the Pallonsvalle Cemetery Arrangements ue by the McCoy Moore
Funeml Home Vmton

Three men face felony charges of theft and vandalism m the
apparent theft of a road s•gn early tlns mommg
Joseph and Ph1ll1p Marcmko ages 20 and 19, respectively, of
Eden R1dge Road were c11ed by a Me•gs County Shenffs deputy
along wuh Dcnms Marcmko of I uppers Plams, accordmg to a
report from Ule Mcags County Shcnffs Departracnt
1 hey arc accused of stcnl1ng a state h1ghwa1 Sign from along
State Route 681

Philip A. Smith

Area mall charged in

Ph1hp Anthony Sm1th, 87, 33565 New Luna Rotd, RUIIand d1ed S.u
urday, Sept 2 1995 at the Holzer Med1cal Center
He worked as a carpenter w1tb the Pomeroy Cement Block Co hom
1924 to 1959 and was also a farmer
.
Born March 21 1908 m Pomeroy, he was the son of the lue An~1ony
O'Bnen Sm1th and Lllhan Duerr Sm1th He was a member of tl•e Emcr
pnse Umted Methodist Church
He 1s surv1ved by a daughter and son-m-Jaw Darlene and Fra11k Casto
a grandson and hiS w1fe, St Sgts Terrence P Sm1th and Deborah Sm•th
of LaLuz, N M , and a granddaughter Trac1 Casto of Racmc ll•c gr.md
children were reared m lhc home of the deceased
Also surv1vmg arc two great-grandehaldren, three s•slcrs W1lma
B1bbce of Lancaster, Clara M1lhoan of Long Bottom and Jc;u, Sc•dcnabel
of Pomeroy, and severalmeccs and nephews
Bes1des h1s parents he was preceded m death by h1s w•le Dorothy
Anderson Sm1th m 1987, and four SISters Illlda Wlute, M•ldrcll D uncs
M&lt;UY Schaefer and Sue Goeglem
ScrVICCS Will be I p m Wednesday Ill the Ewmg ruucral !lome
Pomeroy Inc Rev Melvm Franklin Will olfic1ate and bunal w111 be 111
Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy Fncnds may call .11 the funcr al home
trom 6-9 tomght

Steve Tackett
Steve Tackett of Cmcmnau, fonncrly of Pomeroy d1ed Sunday Scpl
3 1995 at Good Samantan Hosp1tal Cmcmnau
He was born m Charleston, W Va to the late Elisha and Sylv1a Scragg
Tacket~ and reured from McLean Truckmg after 30 years of serv1ce lie
was an mstructor for AAA of Athens tor five years, and a lJ S nuhtary
veteran of the Korean War
He ts surv1ved by h1s w1fe, Rhonda Tackett of Cmcmn.au two sons
Dav1d and lylatthew Tackett, both of Cmcmnau, three daughters and 1wo
sons-m-law, V1ckie and Wayne Schober of Sarasota l'la Stcpha•ue :u1d
Todd Smtih of Cmcmnau, and Jenmfer Tackett ol C.ncmn.ll• one siSter
Wanda SetUe of Buffalo, W Va, one brother Ross Tackell ol South Car
olma, h1s mother and father-m-law, Prentice and Carol !less of Perrysville, and several meces and nephews 1wo grandsons and lhrce step
grandchildren
lie was preceded m death by h1s parents, one granddaughter and four
siSters
Serv1ces w1ll be 11 am Thursday m the F1sher Funeral Home M1d
dlcport M1htary serv1ccs and bunal w1ll follow 111 the Cherry R•dgc
Cemetery Fnends may call Wednesday !rom 2-4 r m .md 7 9 p m at llle
funeral home

County road
SPRINGFIELD - Dav1d S
Creager, 19, and Enc Anthony
Devme 20, a passenger, both of
Spnngfleld, m a one veh•cle accadent on a Clark County road
BELLEFONTAINE An
umden~fied person k1lled m a fiery
one-car crash along U S 68 111
Logan County
McCONNELLSVILLE - Danme Severt, ~2 of Crooksville,
crashed has p1ckup on Oh10 555 m
Morgan County, was eJected and
then run over by an oncommg car
SATURDAY
CINCINN11. TI - R1chard F
Unns of the Me1gs County
Montague, 65, of Cmcmnau, a
pedestnan who fell beneath a bus Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce
recorded 24 calls for ass1s1ance,
on Oh1o 264m Hamilton County
mcludmg two transfer calls dunng
TOLEDO - Todd A Wnght
the Labor Day weekend Unns
19 of Curt1ce, when h1s motorcycle crashed on a Lucas County respondmg mcluded
MIDDLEPORT
road
7
19
p m Saturday, Beech
CIRCLEVILLE - Paul Hall
Street,
Helen
Cook, Veterans
83, of Columbus a pedestnan
Memo~l~osp•tal.
struck by a car on U S 23 m P1ck
7·58 p m Saturday, McGrath
away County
Bob Patterson, lfcated at the
Road,
AS I !LAND- Thomas P Bess,
scene.
9, of Ashland, a pedestnan struck
II 24 p m Saturday Lead1qg
by a car on an Ashland County
Creek
Road, Chad W1sc Oluo
road
State
Umversuy
I Iosp1tal,
EL YRlA - John H Bmch 25
11
39
p
m
Sunday
ass1s 11ng
JJf Elyna when h1s motorcycle and
another velucle collided on a New Haven squad Mary C Good
mght Holzer Mcd1cal Center
Lora~n County road
II 55 am MoncL1y, South Sec
FRIDAY
ond
Avenue, Ronald Holley VMH,
CANTON - M1chael J Sm•t
S
51 p m Monday Middleport
ley, 45 of Mass•llon a passenger
Department W1lliam B
Pollee
m a truck acc•dent on OhiO 93 m
VMH
Gregonch
Stark County
POMEROY
HAMILlDN - Fruth A Baker,
II II am Saturday Anne
33, ol Camden, m a two car ace•
Stree~ Nanna Curus, VMII,
dent on a Butler County road 1
J.O 50 am Sunday McGrath
WARREN - Amy L Newber
Bob Pauerson O'Bieness
Road
ry, 29, of Shaker He1ghts, m a two
car acCident on Interstate 80 m Memonal llosp•l.'li
8 26 p m Sunday Pomeroy
Trumbull County
Nursmg and Rehah1hL1t10n Center
Betty Momssey VMII
RACINE
CHARLESTON, W Va (AP}
10 16 am Sund.1y, Mam Street
- Domesllc coal productiOn Dorothy Badgely IIMC,
totaled 20 3 m1lhon tons dunng the
week endmg Aug 26 up 2 percent
from the 19 9 m1lhon tons proHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
duced the prev1ous week; lhe U S
Sept .J releases - Mary Wh1te,
Department of Energy reported
Hazel
Moms, Tasha Blackstock,
Tuesday
Sm1th, Lucy M•ller Juha
Bndgct
In Oh10, the 587 thousand tons
Butler
Nellie Jones , Dorothy
of coal were produced dunng the
Sebrell,
Jacqulyn
Mitchell, W1lham
penod, compared to 569 thousand
Jackson,
James
Owens,
W1lliam
tons the weeks before
Armantrout and Chnsune Marcum
Sept. 1 births Mr and Mrs
Thomas Byrus, a son, of Henderson, W Va and Mr and Mrs John
Am Ele Power .............................. .34
Shriver a son of Galhpohs
Akzo
591{2
Sept. 2 releases Vlfgli Roush,
Ashland 011
.33 5/8
Mrs
Jerry Barney and son, Mrs
AT&amp;T
56
Shnver and son, Carol
John
Bank One
.34
Walhams, Dons Edmger, N1kk1
Bob Evans..
18 1/4
Garrell! Howard Mead and Debra
Champion l'ld
.22
Charm)ng Shop
4 7/8
Byrus
City Holding
.25
Sept 2 b~rths Mr and Mrs
Federal Mogul
ll
Joseph Bryant a daughter from
GoodyearT&amp;R
401/4
Vmton, Mr and Mrs Ph11i1p Long
K marl
14
a daughter, of Galhpohs and Mr
Lands End
17 J/8
and Mrs Franklm Shobe, a daugh
Llmlled Inc.
18 7/8
ter from Leon, W Va
Multimedia Inc
42 5/8
Sept 3 releases - Matthew
Poople's
• 23
Jankowski,
Paulene Blazer and
Oblo Valley Bank
.35
Mrs Phalhp Long 11nd daughter
One Valley
.30 Ill
Rockwell
45 3/8
Sept. 3 births Mr and Mrs
Robbins &amp; Myers
.27 1/4
Matthew Sp1llman, a son from
Royal Dutcb 120 7/8
Poml Pleasan~ W Va and Mr and
Sboney'slnc
II 114
Mrs Kevm Stone, a son
Star Bank
52 318
Sept. 4 releases L1lhe Pesey
Wendy lnt'l
19114
J1mm1e
Pauerson, Mrs Franklin
Worthington lnd
.20
Shobe and daughter, Paula Kemper, Mrs Joseph Dryant and daughSiock reports are the 10 30 a m
ter, Mrs Kevm Stone and son and
quoles provided by Advest of
Gallipolis
Mrs Matthew Sp1llman and son
Printed with permissiOn.

Squads record 24 calls

Coal output rises

Hospital news

Stocks

-•-•-

3 charged with theft, vandalism

4 42 p m Sunday State Route
IN, Chtford Conley VMII,

II 42 p m Mood ay Bald KnobSllversvallc Road, Susan Wallbrown, IIMC,
7 33 p rn Monday, volunteer
fire dcparunem and squad to State
Route 124 motor-vehicle acc1dent.
W1lham D Gregonch treated at
tl1e scene,
9 31 p m Monday Yellowbush
Road, Velma Wmland, treated at
the scene
REEDSVILLE
3 43 p m S.1tnrday, State Route
681, D1lly Murphy, St Josephs
llosp1L1I,
10 36 p m Sunday, New Luna
Road Helen Combs IIMC
RUILAND
7 51 p m SaturdaY, St.llC Route
143 Rosalie Kmg, 0 llleness
12 32 p rn Sunday Crouser
Road, Els1e Cronscr, IIMC,
6 06 p m Sunday Dcx tcr Ierry
Mullens. treated at tl1e scene
7 32 p m Sund.ly Hy sell Run
Road Charles Daaley (,ram Mcd1
cal Center
1 UPI'ERS l'LAINS
7 23 p m Suud.ty, Stale Route
7 fony Jones C.undcn Clark
Memonalllosp•tal,
6 49 p m Sunday, State Route
124, Alan Cheval•er St Joseph s

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP)- lnd1maa
Oh10 ducct hog pnccs at selected
buymg pomts ruesd:oy by the lJ S
Departraent of Agncullurc Market
News
Barrows and gilt~ mostly 50
cents lower, mstanccs I 00 lower
Plants mostly I 00 lower demand
hght
US 1-3, 230 260 lbs country
pomts 46 00 47 50, few 4H 00
early plants 47 00 4&amp; 50
U S 2-3. 230 260 lbs country
pomts 41 00-46 00
Sows unevenly steady
U S I 3 300 500 lbs 31 00
32 00 500 550 lhs 32 00 35 50
550;650 lbs 34 00 37 lXl
Boars 25 00 29 (X)
Esumated rcoc1pls 32 000
For the week b lffOWS and g1l ts
2 50 lower, sows 3 00 lower

Two cited for trespassing
Two Pomeroy ,lfc 1 reSidents allegedly takmg a Monday cvenmg
llshmg 1I1p at ,, pm He pond mstcad cau •hi Citations for trcspassmg
Chnstophcr St1lcs I'J :Uld a JUVemle w e Cited on charges of
trcspassmg I he two .uc llCllsed or tresp.lSS lg on tllc property of
Donald Wooten Dye; \ ilk Road .ICCOrdut' ~0 a Meags County
Shcnfl's Department rcpon

A Ravenswood W V.a man was d arged by dcpuucs w1th dnv
mg under the tntlucn~.:c and luhuc to coutrul tollowmg a onc-vch1 ..
cle cra'h on State Route 124 ncar R 1cmc Monday cvcnu1g
Walh.lm B Grcgonch 41 was eastbound when he lost control of
hiS 1985 Chcvrolcl P" knp 1111ck wh1ch shtl of tl1e ro.1d and struck a
ditch accordJng to 1 report f1oll\ the Me1gs Comlly Shcnff'~
Deparunent
1
Grcgonch was trc Hc&lt;l at the scene hy tile Rac1ne squad of the
Mc•gs County Emergency Me&lt;lK.II SerVICe lie w.as later transported ob Ve1erans Memonal llo.&lt;pllil by the Middleport squad after
bemg pl.accd mthc M•d&lt;llcpon J ul
•

Missing man found dead
A Mc1gs County man reponed miSsmg rcecntly was apparently
lound de.od m Mynlc Bc.1ch S C dunng the I abor Day weekend
Kevm Grady, Raunc was found m ,, hotel room accordmg 10
Me1gs County Shenll lames M Soulshy Arrangements have not
hccn announced

Tape or no tape, O.J. team
will pursue Fuhrman's role
• LOS ANGELES (AP} - 0 J
Sunpson s lawyers .arc gomg after
Mruk I uhrman tlns week tape or

c xccrpts Ito allnwcd h .1lso h.osn' t

such d•sgustmg depth he s c.1p 1hlc
or rrammg rtn Amcncnn sporL'i hem
for murder
I he defense Witness l1st uu.:l ud
cd Kathleen Bell who c.une tor
ward a yc 1r .1go to tell the ddcnsc

sa~d whether 11 w1ll put Simpson on
the SlUnd
S•mpson 4H hIS pleaded mnoccnt el.ummg he" Uae v1ctun ol an
clnhor uc pohce lramcnp 111 wh1ch
I uhrman played a key role lie IS
expected to wr.1p up Ius case th•s
week wuh the .mla-l"uhrm.m wll
ncsscs and perhaps .1 couple of
WllllCSSCS lO diSCUSS hiS h,uad CUl
Alter tl1e delcnsc rests the pros
ecuuon gels to put on a rchull.ll
case wh•ch could lastlwo weeks
Much of S1mpson s hopes hmge
on such wnncsscs as Bell c.u led to
COliJUre an ugly lin 1ge of J'uhnn;ua
m JUrors mmds
When Bell flfst made allega
uons of rac1sm I uhrm.m' s lawyer
Robert I onrtelot bl.1sted Ihe
defense b1d to mtroducc such ev1
dcncc as ' Ucspic,~blc" ,\mJ ' des
perale
Now I ourtelot's gone ~ he
qwl .Ls Fuluman's CIVIl lawyer alter
hc.tnng Fuhrm.m's r.tctsl r,uus on
t1pc - and the delcnsc b•d as very
much ahve Dell, too l•1s surv1ved
She was nervous about lcst•(y
mg her lawyer s;ud, but tlae play
mg of I uhrman s taped rcma/ks
lasl week m public - ouL~•de the
jury s hc anng - gave her new
conhdencc
Her reactiOn w.ts a sense ot
vmd•callon, sa1d attorney Taylor

.1bou1 an ugly lllCHJcnt 111 wlud1

Da~gneault

Fuhrman advoc.1tcd the m.ISs
k•lling of bl.1cks - only I uhnnan
dadn t usc the word 'blacks
lie sa1d 111ggcr

"h s real mumad.tllng to stand
up and s.ty anytlung before 300
m1llion people, D.ugneauh sa1d
"!lui people know she IS tellmg the
truth and there·~ ,, comfoq 111
th ll •
llcre s wh.ll llcll s.ud she
remembers
Wh1lc working 111 Redondo
Beach dunng 1985 and 1986 she
some time s stopped at a Manne
&lt;orps rccrmtmg otlice downs~11rs
to chm A few tunes she encoun
tcrcd .umthcr "Isltnr I os Angeles
police Ofl1cer M uk I uhnnan

no tape domg cvcrytlung they

(,\11

to rebound !rom ,, dei.ISGilmg rul
mg on ruhrm m's recorded ultn
VICWS

We rc gomg to end on ~• lug.h
note ' prmmsed le.1d dclense 111or
ncy Johm11c Coclu 111 lr • I vel y
one says Mark Fuhrman d1d nn1
have tl1c opportm111y to pl.ml the
glove We are gomg to show th 11
he d•&lt;l
file f~rst order ol busmcss
today the filmg ol an ex tenSive
motwn seekang to have Judge
Lance Ito change hiS mmd .ahout
allowmg only two rcl.ttlvcly
mnocuous smppets from the t.1pc&lt;l
Fuhnn~m uHcrv1cws
Also pl.anncd was ,, renewed
awock on all the cv1dencc collected
.11ter I uhrm.m sc,oled Simpson s
wall wtthout .1 sc(trch warr mt the
mormng alter the June 12 1994,
muulcJs ol N1cole Drown S1mpson
and Ronald Goldman
fhcn tt's U1c w1tncss lmcup a
senes of people the defense hopes
Will paHII ruhnn ln as d

fciCISt

Of

Anoth er woman who s ud "rhc
stung hy I uhrmfln s r.1c1SI

w IS

tongue, Andrea 1erry, was .t!so on
U1c watness list as w.ts scrccnwnt
mg professor Laur t 11.11"1McKmny
who anrcrvaewctl ( uhrm m on lhc
tapes I he dc lcn se h ISn't sa1d
whether 11 plans 10 usc the two

Announcements
Dmner planned
Durhnghrun Modern Woodmen
wIll have a dmner .11 McDon.ild' s
111 Pomeroy Smurd oy 6 to 8 p m
IIKJSe ol the can1p and UICtr guests
are to regiSter when UlCy ,!fnve al
the restaurant to rccc1ve ,, $2 cer
ufic:otc IOward ~tear d1nncrs
Office closed Fraduy
The Mc•gs County Broad of
Electmns office w•ll be closed In
day so that employees may a11cnd a
distract mccung 111 AUacns
PTO to meet
A 1'1 0 mcctmg w1ll be held at
the Syracuse Llemcnlary School
I hursday 7 p m lo plan for 1.111
canuval and h tskcth til progr un
Aux1hary tn

met!~

The I a~1es Auxdi.II'Y ot the
VFW Post 9053 I uppers I' lams
w1ll meet Thursday, 7 30 p m at
the post home

THE lRS COULD GET OVER
HALl&lt;~

OF YOUR MONEY!

If you are an early rel~ree or ere otherw1se gettmg a lump-sum

d1stnbut1on from YOI.\r employer th e IRS eQu id take over half tf
th e transa ctiOn "not handled correctly Help from a qua hf1 ed tax
and mvestment professwnal os recommended For more
mform&lt;~l•on ur to schedule a free consu ltation ca ll

Karl Kebler IJI, CPA
Ph: (614) 992-7270
POMEROY
Near Pomeroy Mason Bridge

992-2588

VINTON
Gallla County Dlsplny Yard
155 Main St

388-8603

Investm ent and Tax Consultant
Reprcsentat•vc of f-1 D Vest FmanCial S€rv1ces
SPrur't'"' r)ffl'rf'd fhr(Ju~;l• 1/ /J Vr ~t huH•Umc rll S('C!Lrr t tr~ !111
Ad 111~nry H ill en offirttlf.{ thrrlll!{h lliJ VntAdut~Or} SotHr1 fm
4J3 f. I (1, ( nhnr~~ Hlvr/ Stt J(J(i fnJUif{ 1 X 7'i019
MemfJu

) /1'(

Ph (21 lj lj')6 /())/

�.
Tuesday, September. 5, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

- ~t·

....

lenged it from the outside, already
has signed a deal with Pepsi, contrary to tbe NFL' s deal with Coke.
And he has suggested licensing
revenue go to teams rather than be
divided equally among the league's
30 learns, a move that clearly
wo~ld give !fie Cowboys, who lead
the NFL is sales, far more money
than all others.
The agreement with Nike calls
for players and coaching staff to
wear Nike products although Nike
docs not bave a full agreement with
NFL Properties, which must
license all agreements.
Nike chairman Phil Knight, who
attended the game, said the Cowboys would wear no logo, including Nike's. On Monday night, tbe
Dallas coaches wore plain while
shirts, black pants and a white jacket with no logos, not even "Dallas
Cowboys."
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello
said tbe league would not comment
at this time. But officials of the

Giants were miffed that Jones
would put on his big" show on a
nigbt in whicb they bad one of their
own - the retirement of the No. II
worn from 1979 through 1993 by
Giants quarterback .Phil Simms.
now an NDC analyst:
The Jones-Nike agreement raises questions concerning a possible
auempl by tbe Cowboys to beuer
position themselves to sign free
agent Delbn Sanders, tbe smr cornerback and baseball outfielder
who has an endorsement deal with
Nike. Dallas cornerback Kevin
Smith was injured Monday night,
leading coach Barry Switzer 10
plead with Jones:
"If Jerry's around him, I'm
going to tell him. It's serious
now," Switzer said. "Get Deion.
We need Deion now. It ain't show- ·
lime anymore. It's serious business.··
However, even if Sanders were .
inclined to sign with tbe Cowboys
because of his relationship witb
Nike, Dallas would still face the

Ventura hits two lg rahd
slam homers in one game
Bv The Associated Press
O'Neill drove in a run in each of
."Robin Ventura's feat was so the first three innings as New York
impressive he was even cheered in look a 9-2 lead. Williams added a
Texas.
.three-run homer, his 16th, in the
The Chicago White Sox third eighth.
baseman became the eighth player
Edgar Martinez hit a two-run
in major league history - and the homer for the visiting Mariners, his
first in 25 years - to hit two grand 27th. in the first.
slams in a game in a 14-3 .victory Tigers 3, Indians 2
over the Rangers on Monday night.
Clint Sadowsky allowed three
Seems' Ventura isn't we.ll-liked hits over five innings in his major
in Arlington. ever since he got imo leagu'c debut 10 get the win and
it with N.olan Ryan during a brawl Tony Clark tripled for his first two
in 1993.
major league RBls.
· ''Yeah, I'm big in Texas," VenClark, called up Sunday, hii a
tura said with a laugh. ''This is the dri vc 10 center in the bouom of the
first time people have ever cheered 1 founb that eluded diving Kenny
f()r me here."
Lofton, rolled to tbe fence and tied
· They actually did cheer for him the game 2-2. Bobby Higginson's
when be came to bat in the seventh sacrifice fly then scored Clark with
inning, after having hit grand slams the game-winner.
in the fourth and fifth.
Angels 5, Orioles 3
·Ventura. who lied a club record
California snapped a nine-game
with eight RB Is, hit his first grand losing streak as Tony Phillips and
shun off reliever Dennis Cook to Chili Davis homered in a four-run
make it 8-2. ll was the sixtl1 of his fifth Ibm turned a 3-1 deficit into a
career to establish a franchise 5-3 lead.
record. His second, his career-high
Phillips· 22nd homer was the
25th homer, was off Danny Darwin_ Angels' first in 55 innings. and
and made it 13-3.
Davis' 18th homer provided CaliFrank Robinson was the last fornia with its first Lead in 75
major leaguer lo hit two grand innings.
slams in a game on June 26, 1970,
lim Abboll (10-7) pitched six
for the Baltimore Orioles. The last innings apd Lee Smith worked tbe
member of tbe White Sox to drive ninth for his 32nd save.
in eight runs in a game was Jim
Cal Ripken played in his
Spencer in 1977.
2,129tb consecutive game, leaving
"I need another day to rcnect him one shy of Lou Gehrig's
on it, 10 try and figure out what ' record. Ripken hit his 13th homer,
kind of accomplishment this is," snapping a 23-game homer
Ventura said. "I· know it's not drought, but the Orioles fost their
something I'll think about every sixth of seven, all at home.
day, bull won't forget about it Twins 9, Brewers 6
either."
Kirby Puckett hacJ two homers
In other AL games Monday it and Pedro Munoz had four hits as
was: New York 13, Seattle 3; the Twins rallied from a firstDetroit 3, Cleveland 2; California inning deficit as John Jaha hit a
5, Baltimore 3; Minnesota 9, Mil- grand slam for Milwaukee. It was
waukee 6; Toronto 6, Kansas City the Brewers' lOth of the season,
I in the first game; and Kansas lying the major league recorp set
City 9, Toronto 7 in the second by Detroit in 1938 and tl1e New
game.
York Yankees in 1987.
_
Defore each grand slam, Frank
Puckett hit his 21st and 22nd
ThOIJlaS was walked to load the homers off starter Scott Karl (5-4),
bases. although neither pass was . his 13th two-homer game. 'Inc secintentional.
ond, a two-run shot, made it 7-4 in
"Teams pitch around Frank the fourth .
with men on base, so Robin gets a
Kevin Seitzcr's homer in the
lot of opportunities with men on seventh brought Milwaukee witbin
base," White Sox manager Terry one, but the Twins got two in the
Bevington said. "That's quite an bottom of U1e inning.
accomplishment. You don' 1 get a Blue Jays 6-7, Royal' 1-9
lot of opportunites to do that."
Paul Molitor had five hits,
Rangers manager Johnny Oates including a three-run homer, in U1c
said there's no easy way to handle opener as Toronto broke a sevenThomas and Ventura.
game losing streak. It was the tJ1ird
"I have a great deal of respect li vc-hit game of his career.
for Robin Ventura but I also have a
PatHcnlgen (10-11) allowed six
great deal of respect for Frank hits in six. innings and improved to
Thomas," Oates said. "Neither 7-0 in his career against Kansas
City.
one is a piece of cake.''
Juan Gonzalez ~;jd given Texas
In the nightcap, Les Norman,
a 2-1 lead with a two-run first- called up from tbe minors earlier in
inning homer, his 21st.
the day, had a pinch-hit, two -run
Yankees 13, Mariners 3
triple in the eighth as U1e Royals
Bernie Williams drove in four rallied with four in -the seventh runs and Pau·l O'Neill knocked in two on Gary Gaeni's 31st homer
three and they were joined with -and tbrcc in tbe eightb.
three hits by Wade Boggs and Dian
Shawn Green homered in each
James as the Yankees had a season- game for the visiting Blue Jays.
. high 19.

Ripken can tie Gehrig's
playing streak tonight
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
DAL TIM ORE - Considering
that Cal Ripken bas nevefbroken .a
bone in his life, chances are he'll
make it through tbe next two nights
without any problems.
Even so, wbat if ...
Mike Mussina tbrows the first
pitcb of Wednesday night's game,
California's Tony Phillips lifts a
foul pop behind third base and Ripken trips over tbc special row of
box scats the Baltimore Orioles

have built for tbe big even~ fracturing his right foot.
Does he still get credit for his
2,13lst slmigbt game and break
Lou Gehrig's record?
·
'
"Somebody in baseball would
have to make a ruling," said Seymour Siwoff of the Elias Sports
Durcau, which compiles tbe official
major league statistics.
"It would probably go to the
Playing Rules Commillee," be
said. 1lle acting commissioner of
11

Continued on page 5

By The Associated Press
Gil Heredia got the last out of
When Carlos Perez left the the seventh and tbe frrsl two hillers
mound in the seventh inning with a in the eighth before pinch-hitter
no-hitler intact, the fans at Candle- Glenallen Hill ended the no-~iller
stick Park gave the Montreal Expos witb a single to center. That turned
rookie a standing ovation.
out to be the least of the bullpen's
When David McCariy' s first problems.
De ion Sanders led off the ninth
National League hit capped a tworun bottom of the nintb, those same with a single and scored on Barry
fans were standing and cheering Donds' double to left-center.
the San Francisco Giants' 2-1 vic- Williams was intentionally walked
lory Monday.
and, two outs later, McCarty sinPerez was making his first gled inside third base to drive in
appearance in two weeks because Bonds.
of a suspension for bumping an
"I stirted to pinch hit for him
umpire and a stiff lower back. The (McCarty). but something told me
Expos had decided to keep the lel't- to let him hit." Giants manager
hander on a pilc.h count and that Dusty Baker said. "Some of the
became a hot topic when he hadn't best "'!?ves arc the ones you don't
allowed a hit through six innings .
make.
He went out for tbe seventh and
Mel Rojas (1-4), Montreal's
retired the first two hitters then fifth pitcher. took the loss.
walked Matt \Yilliams, only the
''For a while there, Carlos Perez
second Giant to get on base. That had us eating out of his hand,"
brought out manager Felipe Ah,Ju,
Baker said. "For a young ·pitcher,
who ended Perez's day at 83 pitch- he has a prcuy good i~ca of what
es with the no-hiller still going,
he's doing."
"!knew they were ·going to ~'Ike Cuhs l, Rockies 0
me out early today. I didn't think
Frank Castillo threw a five-hitthey were going 10 let me go that ler for his first career shutout, his
far," Perez said. "I need to take first complete game of the season
care. of myself. I can't miss a
Start,' •
---~cal's
Alou agreed.
"I believe the health of a young
Cal's Countdown
pitcher comes before everything
H y The Associated l'ress
else. We had a plan for 60, but the
A look at Cal Ripken countway he was pitching we let him go
ing down ' to Lou Gehrig's
a few more," Alou said. "As a fan
record of 2,130 consecutive
I'd like 10 see a no-hiller. But I'd
games played:
like to sec the kid pitch five days
CAL-endar: Ripken and tbe
from now. too."
Orioles next play Tuesday night
In other NL games Monday it
at home against California.
was: Chicago 2, Colorado 0;
CAL-culating: Ripken has
Cincinnati 6, Houston 1; Florida 7.
played in 2,129 straight games.
Pittsburgh 3; Atlanta 6, St. Louis 5;
He is expected to tie Gehrig's
San Diego 2. New York I in 10
mark on Tuesday night at home
innings; and Los Angeles 5;
against California, and then
Philadelphia I.

and his third win this year over
Colorado, whicb fell out of first in
the NL West. Castillo (9-8), who
didn't walk anyone, has just three
wins in bis last 14 starts.
Sammy Sosa bit a two-run
homer in the bottom of the first. the
fifth straight game he pas bomered
against the Rockies. Sosa tied Colorado's Dante Bichelte for the
league lead in homers (33) and
RBls (103). '
Reds 6, Astros, 1
The Reds improved to 11-0
against Houston this season and
Mark Portugal evened his record
since coming over in the deal
involving Deion Sanders.
Portugal (9-9) allowed five hits
in six-plus innings and is 4-4 since
the trade.
Ron Gant, who had not played
since Aug. 24 because of strained
rib muscles. and Benito Santiago
homered in the fourth for tbe visiting Reds.
Marlins 7, Pirates 3
Gary Sheffield homered in his
first at-bat in front of the home fans
since June 10, a two-run shot tbat
highlighted a six-run first inning. It

countdown
break [he record Wednesday
night at Camden Yards against
the Angels.
CAL-Ibrating: Perhaps distracted by the standing ovation
he received after tbe fifth inning
when Monday's game became
official, Ripken did not sec first
baseman Rafael Palmciro's
warmup throw a'nd let the
grounder roll past him Into left
field. Earlier in the afternoon,
Ripken homered for the first
time in 24 games.

Sao Frucilco ...... S1 63

N.. ionaf Footb•U Uaaue
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eool

obstacle of fitting Sanders' contract
under the salary cap.
Jones has sugg.ested · the
endorsemem possibilities presented
by tbe Cowboys might be an incentive for Sanders. However, Tagliabue has said be would look skepticafly at any offer that did not pay
Sanders what the league considers
his market value.
Under the agreemen~ Nike will
promote controlled scrimmages in
the 1996, 1998 and 2000 exhibition
seasons. It also will build a tent to
sell its products at Texas Stadium.
"We have had discussions over
tbe past five years witb NFL Properties but have been unable to reach
an agreement," Knight said.
' 'This agreement with the Dallas Cowboys allows us tbe opponu:
nity to pursue our desire to be associated with one of the most popular
football teams in America white we
continue our efforts to work with
NFL Properties in an official
capacity."

... W
M;w
t
New ED&amp;Iand
I
B..r&lt;olo
..... 0
lDdianapolill ..... 0
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0
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0
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Cleveland
0 1
Jac:honville
0 I
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. .. 1 0
Ka1llali CLty .. 1 0
Oakland
1 0
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.. ' 0 1
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24 21
10 3
23 20
14 17
3 10

0 1.000
0 1.000

22 7
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o 1:000

TundaJ'I G.mN
SL Louil (Uril.uli 3-4) Ill Alllll!a (M.ddux 15-2), 7:40p.m.

Cinc:innllli {Vtola ~0 ) 111 Hous.toD
(Drabek 7-8), 11 : 0~ p.m.
Ptliladelphia (William~l -2) a1 Lo1 An ·
aelea (No100 1()...5), 10:05 p.m.
New York (Isrinahii.U&amp;ell 4-2) at San
Diego (Ashby 9· 8), l0:05 p.m..
Montreal (Martinez 12·8) ac San Fronci' co (Brewinaton 4-2), JO·O.S p m.
Only games scheduled
Wednf"ldiJ'I G.rnu
St. Louil (Petko.,..ek S-4) at AtlU~ta
(GlaYioe 13-6 ), 12:40 p.in.
Colorado (Reyooso 5--6) at Chicaao
(Bulhneer 11·.5), 2:20 r m.
New York. (Pubipher S-6) •1 San Dieyo
(Vale11.111ela 5· 3), 4:05p.m.
Pittsbw'gh (Elit:b 2·7) at Florida
(Banb I·S), 7:05 r,-m.
Ciaclnn.ati (Smiley 11·2) &amp;t Houstoa
(Swindell 8-9). 8:05 p.m.
Ptliladelphia (Grace 0.1) Ml.OI.AnaeliCII
{Valdes 11-9), 10:35 p.m.
Montreal (Alvarez 0.2) Ill San Francisco
(Leiter 9-8), 10 : 3~ p.m.
American Luaue Slandln11
Eall Dlvllloa
W L
Pe-t. GB
........... 74 4j
,622
Boa ton
.. . .... (Jj 60
.soo 14 5
New Yor~
.....,.. SS 6S
4$8 19 5
Baltimore
.. ·..... so 70 417 24
Toronto
........... ,49 70
Detroit
.412
2S
Centr .. Dlvblon
.... W L Pet. GB
Cleveland
. . ... 112 37
.619
Kanw; City ....... 61 .58
.513 21
Milwaukee
...... 59 61
492 2J
Chicago
......... 54 64
.4li 21
MinDCSoca
...... . 45 73
.311 36

17 1
717

0 .000
0 .000

10 34

NATION"AL CONFERENCE
Eul
.......... W L T PeL PF'PA
Dallas
......
WatLington
.
Arizona

....

l 0 0 l.OOO
I 0 0 l.OOO
0 I 0 .000

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27 1
7 27

N.Y. Gianta:
Philll4elphia

... 0 I 0 .000
. 0 , 0 .000

6 21

Chicaso
Tampa Bay
Detroit
Green Bay
Minne£ota

Central
I 0 0 1.000
. 1 0 01 .000

0 35

.. 0

31 14
21 6
2023
14 17

..

14 31

0 I 0 .000

I 0 .000
I 0 f"lllJ
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Atlanta
..... I 0 0 1.000
San Francisco
1 0 01.000
St. Louis
.... 1 0 01 .000
Carolina
0 1 0 .000
New Orleans
0 I 0 .000
Sunday'• Gamu
Cmcinnal:i 24, 1ndiana'poli12l ,
New England 17, Clenland 14
0

23 20

2422
17 14

20 23
22 24

s

ar

Houston 10, JacbonYille 3

Atlauta 23, Carolina 20, OT

was his tJ1ird homer in four games
since an 82-day stint on the disabled list because of tom ligaments
in his right thumb.
John Burkeit (13-11) pitched
seven innings, allowing II hils and
three runs for his sixth victory in
seven decisions.
Braves 6, Cardinals S .
Marquis Grissom threw out a
runner at home in the top of the
ninlb lhen drove in the winning run
in the bouom of the inning· with a
one-out single that drove in Rafael
Bclliard who had doubled.
Grissom threw out Bernard
Gilkey from center field on John
Maury's single to keep it 5-4, but
Mark Wohlers let tbe Cardinals tie
it when he walked Mark Sweeney
with the bases loaded. II ended a
string of 21 consecutive saves for
Wohlers (7-3), dating to May 10.
Padres 2, Met&lt; 1
Scott Livingstone drove in both
runs for the Padres, tbc second with · ('
a bases-loaded, one-out single in
the bottom of the lOth.
Bip Roberts led off with a single
off Doug Henry (3-6). With one
out, Tony Gwynn singled and Ken
Caminitf was intentionally walked.
Livingstone, who had an RDI single in the sixth, then singled just
inside first base.
The Mcts scored in the fifth on
lose Vizcaino's two-out single, his
fifth hit in his last27 at-bats.
Dodgers S, Phillies I
The Dodge·rs moved back into
first place by one-half game as
Raul Mondcsi hit a two-run homer ·
and Eric Karros and Drctt Dutlcr
had sacrifice nies.
Tom Candiotti (7-12) ended his
four-game winless streak, allowin~
a run and five hits over 6 2-3
innings. Mondesi's 24th homer
made it 5-l in the seventh.

San Francisco 24, New Orleana 22
Tampa Bay 21, Philadelplua 6
St. Louis 17, Green Bay 14

.s

Monlreal
Florida

New York.

.... ..... 58 62

: ... ..... 54 64

..... "52 67

W L

HoUlton

· 11ttsburgh
St. Louis

.. ..... 74 45

........ 61 59
......... 61 ~9
.... .... ll 69
70
We~t DI•IRon

.......... so

W

L

Loa Anaele$ .. .... 63 58
Colorado
........ 62 58
San D1eso

. ...... 59 60

Pc-1.

GB

.622
.508 13 .s
.508 13
.42l 23 .l
.417 24.S

.s

Pet.
.l21

Seatlle

GB

.sn 1n
.496 2 in

L

Pe-t.

......... 61 l3
.. ..... .. .. 61 59

.S62
.508

GB
6 .5

....... .. .. 60 60
.soo 7 .s
Dakland
.... .... 59 62
488
9
Monday'• Game•
New York 13, Seattle 3
Detroit 3, Clevelarul 2
CnlirornJa S, Ballimore 3
MmnesOta 9, Milwaukee 6
.
Toronto 6. Kansas City 1, 1&amp;1 game
Kansas City 9, Toronto 7, 2nd game
Ch!cngo 14, Texos 3
Only POle5 acheduled
Turlday'• Gamr~
Oakland (Stollemyre 12-S) at &amp;1t on
(Hanson I !-4), 7:05 p,m.
California (B. Andenon 6-7) at Balli·
more (Erickson 9-10), 7:35 p.m.
Seattle (Wolcott 2· 1)&amp;1 New York:
(Riveta 5-2), 7.3S p.m.
Chica11o (Fernandez 9·11} at Texas
(Rogers 12·7), &amp;:05 p.m.
Toronto (l[urtado 5·2) at Kanw City
(Appicr 13-8), 8:05pm.
Detro1t (Nitk:owski 0.2) at Minnesota
(Muno7.!-0),II :OS p.m.
CleYeland (Martinez 9-4) at Milwautee
(Sparb 7-7), 8:0S p.m.
Wedneiday's Gamu

Texi!IS

IS

Central Di•ltlon

CillCinnlll.i
Chicago

.. .. W

GB

.413 17 ,l.
458 '10 5
431
23

baseball also would have authority
to rule on this."
Here's the rub: Baseball rule
10.24 (c) says a consecutive-game
streak can be extended only if a
player completes a time at bat or
spends a half-inning in the field.
· That means because Daltimorc ,
is the home team. Ripken has to be
on tbc field for all three outs in the
Angels' first inning. As in, a broken ankle, a bruised hand or even a
bee sting could end the 13-year
string by the Orioles shortstop.
"Well, it's far-fetched that
something like that would happen," said Siwoff, a member of a
subcommittee that oversees such
U1ings. "But if it did, my personal
feeling is tbal U1e streak would con-

Welt Dl"t"blon

California

going back to the drawing board
this week on our running game."
Southe rn nell ed se ven yard s
rushing . Receiving -wise Mike Ash
led with two catches for 79 yards
Brian Pagel was l-35, Drumy Say~
2-32, Jamie Evans 5-38. Mau Rifnc 1-15. Jay McKel vey 1- 5, and
Chris Proffiu 1-2.
~outhcrn was not penalited all
that often, only at in opport une
times for a 4-40 ni ght with. nine
first downs. Defensively, Soutbern
was led by Evans with a sack and
nine tackles, John Harmon with six
tackles, Mike Ash with fiv e, Jay
McKelvey six, Brian Pagel three,
Proffiu three, and two each from
Joe Kirby, Man Dill, Kevin Porter,
and Nick Smith . Jeremy Johnston
had five tackles and an interception. Kirby and Dill hau furnhl e
recovenes.
Klocs continued, "We tml real
nice fan supjlorl and 1 was really
impressed witb tbe first class opcrationNcw Albany runs. We had a
lot of players play well on spcclltl
teams and punter Jason Writcscl
did a nice job for us."

tinue.''

The rules provicJc one exception
- if a player is ejected ·before he
caD meet lhe requirements , his
streak remains in~1ct. Twice during
Ripken's streak he has been ejected
in the first inning for arguing called
strikes, by Tim Welke on Sept. 25,
1987, and by Drew Coble on Aug.
7, 1989.
Siwoff, however, said that rule
10.24 (c) is merely guideline for

· Detroit (Lima 1·7) at Mlnneaota ~Ro­
driguez 4·5 ), I: IS p.m.
Oakland (Johns 3-0) at Boston
(Ciemem; 7-4), 1:05 p.m.
Califotnia (Boskle 6-3) at Baltimore
(Mu11ina IS·&amp;), 7:35p.m.
.
Sealtle (Belcher 9·9) at New York: (McDowelll'l·IO), 7:35p.m.
Chicaao (Keyw 4-6) at Texaa. (l'ew:Ubury S-5),11 :0.5 p.m .
Toronto (Leiter 9·8) at Kansu C1ty
(Gordoa lO-!il), 11 : 0~ p.m.
Cleveland (lUll 1·0) at Milwaukee
(GiveDJ ~-2), &amp;:OS p.m .

a

- -'

Southern hosts Waterford Fri:
day.
.
Sla1i111~1

s

Departmtnt

First dawn•

A

9 ll
7-46 6-2 11
213 liS

Y atds tu1h1n1

Totl.l yards

AVdl

13&lt;~6· 16-11·1

Fumblea.II05t
~ nalti u

311 Ill
4-40 4-4S

Pu n~

l-30 l /30

-Sports

-.

....

briefs~.

GAINESVILL E, Fla. (AI') _,_; ;
f-ifth-ranked Floiida , which wa~ ·
missing 12 players in its 45-21 sea·
son-opening victory over Hous101i
becau se or rules violations and eligibility questions , will get some
back for Sawrday' s garnc at KenlUcky.
Five players suspended for cuttin g classes arc now eligible :
receiver hcqucz Green, linebacker
Willie Cnhcns, defensive back
Mik e Peterson , receiver Jamie
Richardson and defensive end
Willie Rodgers.
Defensive end Johnie Church
('Omplctcd a one-game suspension
from accusations that he assaulted
. WI.f C.
IUS

'

'·

-~

GAHS reserves defea~
Meigs 40-6 in opener

Ripken.~~n_t_ln_ued_tro_m_p.....a...::..ge_4_ _ _ _ __

.s
.s

Pitbburgh 23, Detwil20
Miami 52, New York 14
Oakland 17, San Diego 7
Kansas City 34, Seatl!e 10
Washington27, Arizona 1
Chicaeo 3l. Mlnne&amp;Ota 14
Denver 22, Buffalo 7
Mooday'1 Game
Dallas 35, New York GiantJ 0
Sunday, Sept. 10
M1anu at New England, 1 p.m.
Oaklan'd at Washington. I p.m.
. Pittsburgh at Houston, I p.m.
New Orleans at St. Louil, I p.m.
Detroit at Minneaota, I p.m.
Carolina at BuCfalo. I p.m
New York Gianta at .Kansas C1ty, I p.m.
Tampa Bay at Cleveland. 1 p.m.
Denver at Dallas, 4 p.m
Indianapolis at New York Jets, 4 p.m.
Seatlle at San D1ego, 4 p.m.
I:x:ksonville at Cincinnati, 4 p.m.
Atlanta at San Ffancl5oo, 4 p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 8 p.m.
Monday, Sept. II
Green B~y at Chica¥o. 9 p.m.
National Lrague Slandlnp
Eul Oivl•lon
W L
Pe-t.
AUanta
.. .... .... 15 44
.630
Philadelphia
.... 61 60
.504

By SCOTT WOLFE;
got inside tbe five yard line. Faced
Sentinel Correspondent
with a fourth and two, Southern ran
New Albany scored in tbe first a flare , but Chris Proffiu came up
quarter, tben witbslood a Soutbem short and the half ended 7-0.
Tornado ch allen ge en route 10
The score remained at 7-0 for
claiming a 13-0 non - leag~e season- the third quarter, then New Albany
opening win Saturday in area bigb got aoother break at tbe 11:56 mark
school varsity grid action. The of tbe fmal round when they recovgame was the season opener for ered a Southern fumbl e and put
both clubs as New Albany goes to together a short 35-yard scoring
1-0 and Southern drops 10 0-1.
drive . The play cuhninated on a
· New Albany took the opening quarterback Allen Jeffers roll-out
kick and marcbed 75 y&amp;ds for the from six yards out. The extra' s
score. ending the drive on a Willie failed, tbe score 13-0.
Owens three yard run . The kick
Every time Southem would get
was good. Southern came back some momentum , they would be
witb a good drive, but fell shon and whistled for a penally. In tbe final
went for a Danny Sayre field goal. round, Southern threatened again as
but it too missed after Southern Maynard gained 15-yanls on a QD
was assessed a motion penalty.
roll-out. but the play was negated
New Albany came out early and on a field hold.
took Southern ' s running game
Coach Mike Kloes debut
away, forcing tbe Tornadoes to go came up short, but he was generally
to the air often where Jesse May- "pleased with tbe effort, saying'"lltc
nard went 13-26 for 206 yards and kids need to do a betlcr jo~ of
four interceptions, some of which wrapping up. The kids play~d hard
were denected before falling into for four quarters. We were a little
the opponents possession.
.
bigger than tbem, but they were a
With under one minute remrun- little quicker. We arc definitely
ing in tbe second quarter Soutbem

:S

Chic:oao 2. Colondo 0
Cincitlnlli 6, Houston I
SU. FruciJco 2, MolllnaJ 1
Florida 7, PitUburib 3
AtlaDta6 , St Louia S
San Dieao l, New Yurt l, 10 ialliap
Loa AnJelea ~ . Philadelphia 1

Pe-t. PFPA
1.000 l2 14
1.000 17 14
.000
1 22
.000 21 24
.000 l&lt;ll

Centnl
Cincinnat i

.41S

Mood.,-'• GwnH

'

'

New Albany edges Southern 13-0

Scoreboard

Giants rally late to top E~pos; Reds romp again
SMITH SCORES - Dallas' Emmitt Smith (22) breaks away
.. from New York defenders for a 60-yard touchdown run early in
lhe first quarter Monday night as the Cowboys won, 35-0 in East
Rutherford. (AI')

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5 .

Tuesday, September 5, 1995

Giants no n1atch for Cowboys
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
CAP) -Jerry Jones seems to be
having fun challenging the NFL
hiernrcby. Wby else would he sanction a news release geadlined
''Cowboys Owner Bucks NFL
Again" 10 announce a deal with
Nike?
.
It's not some thing that will
delight the other 29 owners or commissioner Paul Tagliabue, particularly coming from a man who
already has challenged tbe revenuesharing concept on which the
league is built.
The latest item is a seven-year
deal with tbe sporting goods manufacturer that nearly overshadowed
the Cowboys' 35-0 demolition of
the New York Giants Monday
night. In his typical understat ed
fashion, Jones declared:
·'This is a marriage of two organizations that transcend sports in
U1e UniiL'd States."
Jones, who is challenging the
NR.. from the inside in a way Donald Tromp and the USFL chal-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

goveming slrcnks.
"Actually, those rules can
change," he said .
Acting cmruniss10ner Bud Selig
plans 10 auend Wednesday night,
and could rule that Ripkcn's
appcru;ance counts. Selig may be
siuing .in the two rows of special
boxes buill for the game; it's tbe
first time the AmcricrUJ League hn.&lt;
allowed seats to he added on tbc
fiefd for a regular-season game.
"My decision is a clear reflection on the importance of the
event," AL president Gt.:nc IJudig
said.
Siwoff was a member of a commillee Jhat met in Colora~o
Springs. Colo., in 1957 10 decide
the qualiticaliolt&lt; for things such as
consecutive-grunc hillipg ru1d playing streaks. Among tl1c rules still in
place: a pinch-running appearance
alone docs not extend a playing
string.
"We didn't want any chi-

Galli a Academy lligh School's
Bloc lmps.scored in every period to

defeat visiting Meigs 40-6 on
Memorial Field Monday evening.
It wAs the season opener for both

teams.

In the frrst period, Gallia's Mike
Shaffer scored from three yards out
to make it 6-0. In the second period, Josh Bodimcr scored from 30
yards out ru1d T. C. Beaver kicked
the point after to make it 13-0. Just
before halftime. !leu Sheard
scooped up a Mm&lt;tuder fumble and
raced 60 yards for the Gallians
third touchdown. Chris Bowman
passed to Richard Stephens lor the
two-point conversion to ITJ.ake .it

21-0.
In the third quarter, Bodimer
scored again with 2:30 left in tl)c
quarter 10 make it 27-0. A kick for
U1c extra point failed.
In the fourth quarter, Dodimcr
raced 85 yards with 5:39 left IQ
play to make it 33-0. A pass for tbe
extras failed. Jason Hurt's 36-yard.
scrunper with 2:52 left in tbe ganic
made it 39-0. Beaver's kick from
placement was good.
Meigs scored with 19 seconds
left on a run hy fullback A. ·J'.
Vaughan.
Gallipolis will play Pt. Pleasant
at home on Sept. 16 in its next out-:
in g.

----Sports briefs----oKLAHOMA CITY (AI') Dot Richardson and Lisa l'entan dcz lead tltc list of 15 players chosen to U1c first U.S. Olympic softball team.
Richardson , at 33 the· oldest
member of U1e 1cmn. is a 14-time
Amateur Softball Association AllAmerican shortstop and NCAA
player of tbe decade for the 1980s.
A seven-member sclc,tion committce chose the team based on a

canery," he said. "We wanted to

eliminate a device ror an injured
player doing something merely 10
extend a streak. Otbcrwisc, a team
could announce ct p::1yer as a pinchru1mer, then pinch run for him ."

series of tryouts and competitions
held tlJc ·pa.lltwo years.
•
OU1cr members arc: outfielder
Laura Berg of Santa Fe Springs; :
Calif.; catcher Gillian Boxx of Tor- ·
ranee. Calif.; infielder Sheila Cor- .
nell of Diamond Dar, Calif.; pitcher
Michelle Granger of Anchorage, .
Alaska; pitcher Lori Harrigan or'
Las Vegas; outfielder Dionna Har- ,
ris of Wilmington. Del.; infielderoutfielder Kim Maher of f'rcsno. :

'------------------------.J .

Bengals defense improves in 24-21 ·win over Colts
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Cincinnati Bengals' defense was
beller in the opening game tban it
had been in the exchibition season,
except for one breakdown which
almost cost the team a victory.
In Sunday's season opener, a
24-21 triumph over tbe Indianapolis Colts, the Bengals' defense left
its mark. II stuffed Marshall Faulk,
prompted Indianapolis to pull quarterback Craig Erickson - and
nearly blew everything when it
tried to put the game away witb 10
men on tbe field.
·'Everybody on tbe defense was
just having fun the'· whole day,
doing our job and having fun,"
said defensive end John Copeland.

"I have never had fun like today."

That- translated into not much
fun for Faulk, who was held 10 49
yards on 19 carries, or for Erickson, who was pulled for Jim Harbaugh in tbe tbird quarter.
Copeland played a big role. The
Bengals' top draft pick m 1993 had ·
one of tbree Cincinnati sacks, was
credited with six tackles and
knocked down a pass.
''When the line stepped up, we
got it going," said middle
linebacker Steve Tovar, who,l
despite playing with a broken left
hand, tied for the team lead in tackles witb II. "I'm proud of them.
They've been taking a lot of criti-

cism and they played well."
In perhaps their best moment,
punter Lee Johnson pinned the
Colts on their I midway through
the third quarter with the Bengals
leading 16-10. Tovar stopped Faulk
for one yard, tben Keitb Rocker led
a surge that ended in linebacker
James Francis finishing off Faulk at
the 3.
On third down, Rucker found
himself dancing in the end zone
after a quick shotgun snap 10 Erickson got past him for a safety.
"I don't like to be negative, but
it seems we had more fans here
than in Cincinnati." Rucker said.
·'When someone comes into River-

front (Stadium), it's got to be. loud,
foree them to call timeouts."
The pass defense was equally
tough, coming up with three interceptions after picking off only 10
passes all of last year. Two of tbe
interceptions were by Bracey
Walker, a second-year strong safety
making his first NFL start.
The one big defensive breakdown came when the Colts converted a 4th-and-19 on tbcir gametying drive to end regulation, when
the Bengals had 10 men on the
field.
Bengals coaches declined to
point any fingers, blaming the error
on a miscommunication.

Browns offense sputters in 17-14 loss to Patriots
BEREA (AP) -The Cleveland
Browns had more tban 14 points in
mind when they spent a fortune
upgrading their offense during tbe
offseason.
After signing Andre Rison. and
Lorenzo White to multimillion-dollar deals, the Browns let them
touch the ball a combined total of
eight times in Sunday's 17-14loss
at New England.
Rison, signed to a five-year, $17
million deal, caught two passes for
14 yards. White, who has a threeyear contract worth an estimated
$900.000 a year, carried four times
for 6 yards and caught two paSses
for 12 yards.
Between them, that adds up to
32 yards total offense.
"Everything will gel clicking,"
Rison said Monday. "There's no

room for panic, but tbere' s no room
for laking steps back."
Rison served as little more tban
a decoy against the Patriots, distracting the defense while teammate Michael Jackson caugbt seven
passes for 157 yards and two
touchdowns. Rison was Vinny Tes-·
taverde' s target on a long pass in
the second quarter, but Ricky
Reynolds picked it off.
The Browns are counting on
Rison and White - playing behind
a highly regarded offensive line to invigorate an offense that ranked
no higher tban 16tb in the NFL in
Bill Belichick's previous four seasons as head coach.
"It's disappointing tbat we only
scored 14 points. Our goals are
h1gher than that, and we didn't hit
them yesterday," Belichick said.

"Part of that's an offensive problem, but part of it's a defensive
problem, too, in tbat we didn't do.a
good enough job of getting tbem
off tbe field and creating field position for the offense.' '
Tbe Patriots had the ball nearly
eight minutes longer than the
Browns, who got off just 48 offensive plays. New England, by com- ·
parison, had 75 plays.
"Really what we need to do is
keep the ball longer- gel it sooner
on defense, keep it longer on
offense, create more opportunities
for ·everybody: the running backs,
receivers. the whole works,"
Belichick said. "Jackson had two
opportunities and made big plays
on them. The one opportunity
Andre bad on the ·fly pattern down
our. sideline, Reynolds had it cov-

ered pretty well. and he (Rison)
didn't have much of a chance at tbe
ball."
Testaver&lt;le completed 20-of-29
passes for 254 yards, but only
seven of tbose completions and 75
of those yards came in tbe second
haiL That continued a distu~bing
trend from last season, when
Cleveland scored one touchdown
or less in tbc second hal( of nine of
its 16 games. ·
Offensive coordinator Steve
Crosby expects better. He said tbe
Browns have set a goal of 28 points
a game - a figure he concedes "is
high and may be unrealistic, but we
'!ave lhe capability of doing it."
"I'm just disappointed we
weren't able to cpntrol tbe ball on
the gfound better than we did,"
Crosby said.

Notre _Dame, OSU tickets.hot·item
I

COLUMBUS (AP)- There
would be only one way to make the
once-in-a-generation Sept. 30
matchup between Obio Stale and
Notre Dame any bigger, a ticket
broker suggested.
"If they play each other, you
have a ~ports happening that cannot
be matched - unless maybe
Woody was still coaching," said
Bill Mack, referring to the late

Buckeyes coach Woody Hayes.
Mack owns Box Office ticket
brokerage. He expects tickets witb
a face value of $25 to sell for as
much as $1,000.
"It's a once-in-a-lifetime event.
l!;ople want to say they were
there," he said.
The teams have not met at Ohio
Stadium since Nov. 2, 1935. Notre
Dame came from J&gt;ehind to win

'

that game 18-13. The Buckeyes
also lost to tbe Fighting Irish 7-2ln
Soutb Bend, Ind., the next year.
Sc;&gt;me Ohio State officials said
"never again." Fan behavior an&lt;1
the division of gale receipts were
rumored to be among tbe reasons.
But times changed. Obio State
plays at Notre Dame on Sept. 28,

1996.
What makes this month's game

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"Power or performance of the
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Mack said. "It's name recognition.
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beyond."
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Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 5, 1995

Tuesday, September 5, 1995

Ann
Landers
)

"1995. loa ~s
ThMI Synd~ta~• Af'IO
cr. .tcn Syndll':.at••

• DearAnnLanders:Whenourson
was 5, he started to blink his eyes a
lot. I mentioned thi s to hi s
pediatrician, who said, "Just ignore
iL" Ayear later, "Jooy" tx·,:an to shrug
his shoulders and fidget a great deal.
"Just nervous tics," the doctor assured
me. "He'll outgrow it."
These symptoms and others would
come and go. I almost went crazy
trying to protect Joe y from anything
that might 'produce stress. I took the

to look for.
.
Please leU parents again that if their
child develops tics or engages in
repetitive blinking, shoulder
shrugging, grimacing, tensing
muscles. throat clearin~. belchinR .
sniffing or humming, they should
contact the Tourette Syndrome
Association for mfornmtion. Send a
large, self-add ressed, stamped (75
cents) envelope to: The Tourette
Syndrome Assoc iation, 42-40 Bell
Blvd., Bayside, N.Y. !1361, or call
1-800-237-0717 . Thank you ...
LONGTIME READER
DEAR L .T. R .: That original
column diagnosis was made several
years ago, and I am still hearing about
iL The symptoms were so obvious to
me that I felt sa fe in labeling the

problem.
The credit should go to the many
fine physicians in my reading
audtence who have gone out of !heir
way to send me material and keep me
informed.
Dear Ann Landers: You think
you've heard everylhing?WeU,I11 bet
you have never heard this one before.
Our 16-month-old daugh~ had her
sun bonnet stolen right off her
head while she was sitting in her
stroller.
My husband and I were enjoying a
few hours on the beach at Coney
Island. We were getting ready to leave
and gathering up our things. I sat the
older child on a bench so he could
get his shoes on. Meanwhile, the baby
was strapped in her strollet

A man from Michigan is suing the
I turned my head for no more than
two seconds, and the next thing I sta~ for $4 mimon. He said he had
knew, her bonnet was missing. I was tlie winning lot~ry ticket but it flew
outraged when I realized what had out the ear window. Can you believe
happened.
an attorney anywhere would take the
We are thankful our little girl was case? Never mind, l'U bet there are
not hurt. but what is this world half a dozen bidding for iL -- PORT
coming 10 when a child's bonnet can CLJNll)N, OHIO
be snatched off her head in broad
Do you have questioiiS about sex,
daylight?-- DISGUSTED MOTHER IM no o~ to talk to? Ann lAnders'
IN BROOKLYN
lx&gt;okJet, "Stz and the Tttn-Agtr." is
DEAR DISGUSTED MOTHER: frank and to the point. Send a selfThe world is "where it's been coming (Jddresud, long, business-siu
to" for quite a long time -· and I am envelope and a check or money otrkr
speechless.
for $3.75 (this includu postage and
Dear Ann Landers: On the handling) to: TeenJ, c/o Ann lAnders,
subject of frivolous lawsuits, this one P.O. Box J/562, ChicagtJ,/11. 6()6]].
takes the cake. My husband and I 0562 . (In C&lt;lllllda. send $4.55.)
heard it on the 6 o'clock news a few
days ago.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
onnounce meeting and special
events. Tbe calendar is not

TIAMODORST

designed to promote s'a les or

fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guarante~d to run 'a
specific number of days.
t
MONDAY
CARPENTER - Board of
Trustees of Columbia Township,
Monday, 7:30-p.m. ftre station.
LETART- Letart Township
trustees, Monday, 7 p.m . at the
office building.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees, 7:30 Monday,' Syracuse Municipal building.

Rr · 1nion policy--spaced for "'"Y editing. Reunion
With U1c fami ly reu nion . ''"''m items should not exceed 300 words
quickly approaching, many will be and must be submincd within 30
submitting articles of f:untly activi - days of occurrence.
. ties for publication.
No exceptions will be made.
To ensure prompt publication,
All material submitted for publithe Gallipolis Daily Tribune and cation is subject to ctliting. Articles
The Daily Senrinel rcqtlcsts tha t will he puld1 ~ hcd as soou as possi·
articles be neally tvr&lt;'! '"' touh le .. •·· ' •·.
.

The conununity's needy wUI benefit from anJmals purchased at
the Meigs County Junior Fair livestock sale by Pomeroy Kroger
store employees. Funds to purchase two animals were raised
through various fund raisers or the employees. The meat from the
animals was presented Thqrsday to the Meigs County.Cooperative
Parish, Rev. Kenny Baker, director, pictured center, to be dis·
tributed in food baskets to the needy. Employees Gary Coleman
and Thelma J elfers made the pres~ntation.

LETART FALLS - PTO,
Letart Grade School, 7 p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY - Meigs High
Band Boosters meeting "I:ucsday, 7
p.m. in the band room.

beginning in October:
-Pay benefits ·10 about 48 million people;
-Process more than 6 million
commiltcd to prov idi n:; "world- new claims for benefits;
class service" to Om L'll'ilumcr' - Proc ess abo ut 16 million
you, the p~bli c. Th:n ·s "hat we say . requests for Social Security cards:

in our publishe d

&lt;.:U'\Ii•fll:.J

-;crv icc

standards, amJ t11m ' .., \'- k:t we aim
to deliver.
Most of us who provi !1 d1rcc t

se rvice to Social Sc·cutily ~us­
tamers work in one of our I ,299
district and branch oflices located
throughout the country. Branch
offices are &amp;mailer but generally
ofrer the same services as dist rict
offices. My office , located at :! 21
l./2 Columbus Ro:ltl .

i&lt;:. ;1

.1 ....

Ji

office.
· Ou1 agency has a long tradition
of providing tailored public service
through this network of acc~ssible,
community-based offices. To give
you an idea of the size and variety

of our agency w pl~loads, Social
Security' will, in U1e ~ew li scal year

- Post nho ut 235 million cam ·

in gs itr:lll $ tu workers'

carn~ n gs

rcconJs;

- Handle about 70 mi lliou telephone calls to our toll-free number,
1-800-772-1213.
We help people apply lor benefits and gel the evidence needed to
support their applications. We
resp&lt;lnd to inquiries on almost any
suh_jcc t dealing with government

ser vices, anti we inve stigate
charges of prognun abuse.
A growing nUmber of walk·in
visitors to our ofl1ccs can't access
government services any other
way. We provide ~crvice to many
clients who can't read, who have
difficulty communicating in
I

Living wills spe!l out choices

English, who live in remote rural
locations where they do not have
access to transportation, or who
have severe disabling condit.ions
that restrict their ability to communicate, These clients need personal
service - face-to-face interviews,
assistance in obtaining documents,
ami referrals 10 o.thcr agencies .for
services.
So when we at Social Security
talk about service to the public,
these are the kinds of services we
mean.
Working while Retired?
It's time for a reality check.
Working beneficiaries whose
benefit amounts depend on the
carnin,gs estimate they provided .
Social Security on the annual earnings report they filed last April
should be sure to· review their current earnings to see if they have
changed. If so, the change should
be reported to Social Security

RACINE - Racine noard of
Public Affairs meets at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at annex.
RACINE - Greenwood Cemetery trustees meet at 8:3d" p.m.
Tuesday at annex.
EAST MEIGS -Eastern Athletic noosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
with all parents of athletes urged to
au end.

SYRACUSE- The Syracuse
iloard of Public Affairs will meet
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Wale(
Board Omce.
WEDNESDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
PORlLAND
- PTO Portland
trustees, 7:30 Tuesday, home of
Elementary
school,
7 p.m. WednesClerk Pany Calaway.
day. ·
DARWIN - The Bedford
TUPPERS PLAINS -Olive
Township Volunteer Fire Depart- Township trustees, Tuesday, 7:30
ment Commiuee, Tuesday, 7 p.m., p.m. at the hOI'lC of clerk Martha
Durst.
Bedford Town Hall.

OPEN HOUSE
a.m.

~

?)

.J

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

\

.

'

a few newcomers. Weaver then led

the group in prayer.
A picnic lunch was served at I 2:30
p.m. Following lunch, a brief discussion meeting was conducted by
Maxine Rose. The following officers
were elected for 1996: lillian
Weaver, president: Marcus Weaver,
vice president; Dora Weaver, secretary; and Tara Rose, treasure r.
Recognized for traveling the far-

and

James E. Witherell, M.D.

Bobbitt's car hrought in more

than a 1947 Cadillac f-l eetwood

MEIGS HEALlH SERVICES
OF
HOLZER CLINIC

thest were Frank and Marian Brown ,
Satelitle Beach, FL. Alton Roush was

the oldest present and William Mar_tin was the youngest prest?nl. Birth-

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

POP-TARTS

FIVE. STAR FIRST GEAOR

Frosted Wildberry
11.4 oz.; Low Fat
Frosted Chocolate
Fudge or Strawperry
11 oz.

NOTEBOOK FOU
By Mead

days recognized were lillian Weaver,
Brent Rose, Brandon Weaver and
Tyler French. Aaron and Evelyn
Weaver's anniversary was recognized
as was the birth of Johnathan Hoff-

699 .

man . .

FIVE•STAR

Tommy Weaver showed some history he had co llected on the Weaver
family. The 1996 reunion will be
August25 at 12:30 p.m. at the W.Va.
State Fann Museum, same shelter.
Those auending were Rev. and
Jack Mayes of Point Pleasant: Dora,
Marcus, Aaron, Evelyn and lillian
Weaver, Letart; Alton and Inez
Roush, Letart: Tommy Weaver, New
Haven; Maxine. Brent. Jeff and Tara
Rose, Racine: Ben and Trevor Petrel,
Racine; and Chester, Erma and
William Martin of West Columbia.

5 SUBJECT
NOTEBOOK

,00~399
.

ERICAN PENCILS

AM
Natural- 10 Pack
Multi-Colored. Yellow or

~

1

(614) 992-6601

..

Holzer Clinic
Here for Your Health ...
Here for Your Lifetime'

RMCC
• .,.,..~,~ ""'o.-ld cto.W. ..·, ct... .....

V05
SHAMPOO OR
CONDITIONER

~

Assorted Types
15 oz.

Crovota·

Fair "Thank You" Ads
2 Columns x 5 inches Solid Line Box

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1 Col x 3 inMulti Line Box

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RITE AID MAXI PADS

$1425

Assorted Types &amp; Styles
Pre-priced $1.99

•···············
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2 Columns x 3 Inches
••
Dotted Line Box
$28 50
••
.want to show your appreciation? Fair
•

•ex.hlbltors "Thank You" ads are available at
•these sizes and ptlces. Ads must be paid in
:advance by mail or delivered to;

•

The Daily Sentinel

:
111 Court.Street
•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
• For additional ad sizes and prices, please call

:

992-2156

••••
..

I

The annual Weaver reunton was
held August 27 at the West Virginia
State Farm Museum with 21 present.
Marcus Weaver welcomed everyone
and had introductions as there were

,Wilma A. Mansfield, M.D.

'

a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~
Hillside Baptist Church
~

umn of 19 soldiers. resembling a
patrol returning home, marching
toward a U.S. flag.

Weaver family gathers

Welcomes

TOPS news

~

People who are overpaid by
Social Security are required to
return the money, either by direct
refunds or by having their ,benefits
rcducetl to cover the overpayment.
It's easy to report excess earnings and other events that would
cause you to be overpaid. Visit the
Athens SociaL Security office (9·
a.m. to 4 p.m.)or call us on our tollfree number, 1-800-772-1213,
business days between 7 a.m. to 7
p.m.

HOLZER CLINIC

Meigs Health Services will be operating
as Meigs Health Services of Holzer
Clinic, Drs. Witherell and Mansfield will
continue to practice from the 507
Mulberry Heights location in Pomeroy.
Together with Holzer Clinic of Meigs
County in Middleport, we will continue to
provide the high quality medical care our
community has grown to know and trust!

8,168 were listed as missing in
action.
The monument features a col-

used in the movies forrest Gump·
antl The Shawshank Redemption,'
which went for $6,600.
A 1961 Rolls Royce Phantom
used in the Bea tl cs' movie " A
liard Day's Night" fetched
$25.500.
Bidding was fierce on three'
Duesenbergs solei at no reserve. ·
meaning the owners set no mini·
mum price . On Su nday , a 1929
Duescnbcrg Murphy convertible
coupe sold for $1 .26 million.
' A $1.9 million bid was made on
a 1939 Mercctles-B cnz 540K Sport
Roadster. but the sale had not yet
been con !inned Montt1y .
Sandra Bolek of Cleveland put
in the high bid of $15,800 for a
1963 Volkswagen used in Walt
Disney movies as tllC original Herbie the Love Bug.

Registration deadline
nears for art festival

DR.GOTT

By PETER H. GOTr, M.D.
Although you may choose to
PETER
DEAR DR. GOTT: ll ow do 1 compose a detailed statement,
apply for a Jiving will'l
"generic" livin g wills are readily
GOTT, M.D. ·
· DEAR READER: More and available in most lawyers' and docmote people are eager to usc a · tors' offices and in many hospitals ..
fegal document to express their You don't have to apply. Simply
yiews and preferences about how ask for a standard form and follow
they wish to be treated when the protocol abou.tAsigning the living
end ~omes. Thus, living wills Will Ill Ule prel,t nce of witnesses.
which detail what Jifc- sustainin~ , Or, tf you prefer, address the issue ion, your diabetes is the probable
procedures patients want to avoid wtth your allorncy .
culprit and needs bellcr regulation.
~have become commonplace. In
DEAR DR. GOTI: I'm 15 and
To give you more infonnation, I
tbe opinion of many doctors have diabetes. Lately I've been am sending you a free copy of my
(myself included), people who extremely thirsty. Could tl1is be due Health Report "Diabetes Mellidon't wish machine life-support if to a malfunction of my kidneys?
tus." Other readers who would like
there is no hope of recovery should
DEAR READER: Possibly. But a copy should send $2 plus a long,
Sign living wills. Otherwise, the your increased thirst is more likely self-addressed, stamped envelope
patient may be kept alive perma- due to your diabetes. When this to P.O. Box 2433, New York, NY
ncnlly in a vegetative stare.
disease is not adequately controlled 10163. Be sure to mention the title.
(with diet and drugs, such as ·
insulin), the level of blood sugar
Copyright 1995 NEWSPA·
rises and eventually spills into the
urine, where it absorbs water and is PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(}'or information on how to
The Aug. 22 TOPS (Take Off excreted, causing dehydration and
communicate electronically with
Pounds Sensibly) meeting was thirst.
You should ac)drcss this prob- this columnist and others, con·
opened by co-leader Jeannette
McDonald with Phyllis McMillan lem with your doctor and have tact America Online by calling 1·
blood tests to check for sugar level 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.)C)ading members in prayer.
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensi· and kidney function. In my opinbly) members, those who have
reached their goals, said their
pledge and roll call. Juanita
Humphreys led TOPS members in
the TOPS pledge and roll call. Linoie Aleshire gave the secretary's
located on S.R. 143 just off Rt. 7
~
report and Jeannene McDonald ~
read the announcements.
//.
will be having
~
: Steph.anic Snyder gave a program "A Self-Analy~is of Bad Eatjng Habits and Ways of Changing
Sept. 6, 10:00
to 12:00 noon
V./
!Them." She gave a quiz, tips about ~
~ating habits. and · informational
~
Dr. Acree invites the public to attend.
sheets.
~
Refreshments will be served.
~
: Bernice Durst won the fruit basBring your kids, come enjoy a friendly
~
~t and Virginia Dean won the gadget gift. Weight recorder Angela //.
christian atmosphere.
~
Sharp gave the weight report.
View the classrooms, meet the teachers,
~
KOPS best loser was Bernice ~
burst. TOPS best loser · was ,;.
find outwhat we are all about.
.
V/
Frances Haggy with Jeanette
McDonald runner up. Members
8ang to the queens and adjourned.

ATTEND DEDICATION- Frank Vaughan, Pomeroy; Ken
Harris, Rock Springs, and"Frilz Goebel of Tuppers Plains, from
left, members of the Drew Webster Post 39 of the American
Legion, Pomeroy, attended the July 17 dedication or the lllltlonal
Korean War monument In Washington, D.C.

white 1985 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz read "RNS ON OJ ."
And when Shapiro's 1983 Mercedes Benz 380 SEL sedan headed
toward the auction block, the words
"O.J. did it, he' s guilt y," were
seen traced itl dust on the car's
black hood.
Gary Graham of Las Vegas paid
$8,500 for a 199 1 white Mercury
Caprio owned by Lorena ilohbitt,
who was acquittctl by reason of
insanity in 1994 after admitting
that she cut off her now ex- llUS·
band's penis .
"It's kind of a joke, really,"
Graham said. " I have a nightclub
in Missouri called Cruisers where I
have a lot of car memorabilia on
display , and I plan to put it in
there."

"There arc really only two types only guide that's been there."
EDITOR'S NOTE- He's a struck by lightning than winning
wants in a bookshop is to be left
leap insiJc.''
navigator in the vast oC'ean of the nationallouery?''
of book: U1e ones you've got and
l)ealers admire or detest Field alone.
Editions of Drif's Guide have
secondhand books and an unrebecause his guide, first issued in
To a waiter hovering close by in the ones you haven't," field says.
ETGOW is "easy to get on contained revelatory essays on
lenting critic of their purveyors. a restaurant garden. Field .
"There is no such U1ing as a rare 1984, describes what their shops with," KUTI is "keeping up the aspects of the trade which dealers
Even if you're not looking for an remarked: ''Can you arrange for us book or a common book . If you are like and the ran£C, condition image," NEB "not enough want to keep secret, such as what
old book, Drif Field's guide to to be struck by lightning? It would don't believe me. ask your nearest and prices of their books.
books," NSOC "not strong on they actually pay for books and
book dealer for a copy of the
Britain's secondhand bookshops be a fitting end to this meal."
His scabrous comments on the ·condition," WEBCOC "was
"ringing" auctions to prevent the
Is an entertaining read. Many
In the curious and anarchic trade world's second-best-selling novel dimmer shops have excitetl expecting a bclter class of cus- public buying,
dealers would like to see him of dealing in millions of mostly of all time, 'Gone with the Wind,' dem:mds for apologies, banishment tomer," and WYLAll, "watches
The 1995-1997 edition savages
horsewhipped•.
forgouen books, Field is the man to and see if he has it."
from shops and book fairs and you like a hawk."
the national and trade press for
(The Guinness Book of Records threats of hor sewhipping and
B¥GRAHAMJffiATHCOTE
find a book when others cannot, or
"A S!ljllUCI B\!ckcll Special" is . ignoritig a book Drif wrote last
Associated Press Writer
· can't be bothered, or don.'t know says Jacqueline Susann's 1966 lawyers . Some exam ples of his his descriptive terminology for, "A year on a court case involving the
novel "Valley of the Dolls' edged style:
LONDON (AP) - Drif Field how.
secondhand book shop where it is mysterious purchase of a f:unou'
reached into his bag an~ pulled out
The books he seeks are not the out Margaret Mitchell's 1936
''Looks like a modernist fish not always poosible to tell what is seconuhand book business in Lonan old book.
kind for which collectors and deal- "Gone With U1e Wind" as U1e all- tank, with mock grollocs."
going on ... " .
don by some fabulously rich i\Jner·
"It's about lightning," he said. ers pay thousands of dollars at auc- time best seller. Both sold more
Why are the se shops so often icans.
"A grunge special, the book
"Did you imagine there was a tion, but secondhand books which than 28 million copies.)
It was mysterious because U1ere
shop as occupation for somebody run by Ule weird :Uld woeful?
Addicts of sccontlhand book - who cannotlliink of anything bener
book on lightning? Do you know can be impossible to ftnd when you
"People who read arc introvcrL' are no big bucks in secondhand
that you have more chance of being don't know where to look.
shops regard Field as a benefactor to do and then does not wan\ to put and the people who deal are select- hook dealing. Field is convinced
of mankind. The latest edition of any effort into doing it properly. I ed from them," f-ield says. "They his book was ignored because the
his "Drif's Guide to the Second- like the owner's wife."
believe they arc doing it right and press wa' terri lied of being sued if
hand Bookshops of Britain" is a
they
alon e know how to do it."
it discussed the case.
"I tried to gel into this shop and
Golconda of information and opin- the gentleman told me I wa' not the
I le recalls a dealer nruned Guy
Field sent out 126 review copies
ions on 920 shops, including a list son of customer he wanted."
the Spy: "lie wore an ill-fitting which didn't produce a sirlgle
headed, " Well worth avoiding."
·
Amo.ng his singular, character- wig _and built a Dcrlin Wall of review.
l'icld goes to often remote cor- defining acronyms arc: AWYW, books across the door so you
"I run now claiming the world
Deadline for artists to register to Entry fees are $5 for each picoc or ners of 'tlle kingdom to see these meaning the proprietor "a~ks what couldn't get into U•e shop. His cus- record for copies sent out with no
participate in the 14th Annual four for $16. There is a limit of shops. as the cover testifies: "11le you want." Field says what he tomers had _to take up athletics to reviews ol&gt;t:uneu," field says.
Foothills Art Festival to be held at four pieces per category. At least
Canter's Cave-4-H Camp Lodge 130 tri-state. artists are expected to
near Jackson, is Sept. II.
participate.
The festival , sponsored by
The event includes musical ·
Southern Hills Arts Council, will entertainment Oct. 21 and ' 22 as
be held Oct. 20 to 22.
well as hands-on arts activities that
This judged, but not juried, fine illustrate techniques employed by
arts exhibition invites original work the exhibiting artists. Some artists
in the following categories: ·will set up booths at Ute festival to
Oil/Acrylic, Mixed Media/Print, display additional work. These
Pas.tel/Drawing, Photography, booths are juried under a separate
Three Dimensional Works, and application format.
•
Watercolor (including thinned
To get an application for
PRIC!=S EFFECTIVE SEPTEMSER 4 THRU 10, 1995
acrylics).
.
foothills An Festival, artists may
A trio of professional judges write Southern Hills Arts Council
·will award a total of $1,210 in cash_ at Box. 149, Jackson, Ohio 45640
prizes, sponsored by the Alliance ·or call the Council at 6141286of Ohio Community Arts Agencies. 6355.
.,

POMEROY - Eagles Aerie
Auxiliary, Tuesday, potlt•ck at 7,
meet a 8 p.m.

TUESDAY
PAGEVILLE- Scipio T'lwn ship trustees at the Page ville Town ship buildin~. 6:30p.m. Tuesday .

immediately. ·
overpayments occurred because
Because it is difficult to estibeneficiaries who · work while
mate exact earnings for the year, drawing benefits eamCd more than
Social Security ·encourages benefi- . they had estimated and their
ciaries who work to call to adjust income exceeded Social Security's
their estimated earnings if they get annual limits. The annuaJ ·IimiL' for
a raise, work overtime, or other1995 arc $8,160 for persons under
wise increase their income.
age 65, and $11 1280 for persons
Every year about a million peo- between age 65 anc\ 69. If you arc
ple receive more money from still working at age 70, the earnings
Social Security than they were enti- limits do· not apply so you no
tled to receive as a result of unan- longer have to repon your earnings
ticipated earnings. Most of these to Social Security.

AUBURN, Ind. (AP) - Herbie
the Love Bug and the Rolls Royce
used in the Beatles movie " A Hard
Day's Night" found new owners.
Even Lorena Hobbit's car sold on
the auction block.
But O.J . Simp son's lawye rs
Johnf1je Cochran Jr . and Robert
Shapiro thought $11,000 bids on
their cars just weren't enough, so
they kept U•em . .
While the superstar law ye rs '
cars didn't fetch hi gh prices , a
1932 J446 Duesenhcrg convertible
sedan brought in $550,00'0 for
Monday's high bid at th e Kruse
International ~5th Anniversary
Labor Day Collector Car Show and
Action .
Both of th~ defense attorneys'
cars bore remmdcrs of their role in
Simpson's double-murder trial . 'll1e
front license plate on Cochran's

Book detective can locate publication on any subject and critique its dealer

How th e Social Security Administration delivers service to its customers
'

.By ED PETERSON
·Social Security manager, Athens
You've probably heard that the
Social Security Administration is

The ltally Sentinel • Page 7

Herbie is sold at auction, but
O.J.'s lawyers keep th.eir cars

•

Three local veterans of the
Korean Conflict were among the
estimated 125,000 veterans who
made the trek to Washington, D.C.
for ceremonies dedicating the
national Korean War monument on
July 27.
Frank Vaughan of Pomeroy,
Ken Harris of Rock Springs and
Fritz Goebel of Tuppers Plains, all
members of Pomeroy's Drew Webster Post 39 of the American
Legion, attended the ceremony
coinciding with the 42nd anniversary of the war's end, a conflict
that bega'l in 1950 with North
Korea's invllsion of South Korea. .
Some 1.5 million Amr.rican soldiers were involved in the threeyear conflict. Before tbe war
ended, 54,248 Americans died and

Third birthday marked r--Needy benefiting---. -Community calendarTiamo Dorst, son of Tom and
Robin Dors~ celebrated his third
birthday with a party at Chuck E.
Cheeses in Parkersburg, W.Va.
The youngster decorated bis
cake, w:t' pre.scnted a balloon, and
enjoyed ;ongs aDtl dances. Attending besides his parents were his
brother, Tom Dorst, Jr.; maternal
grand parents, Ro bert and Belly
McDan iel, great-aunt, Belly Frazier; grea t-uncle, Melvin Durst;
'I cd, Tara, Jessie and Ric bard Fisher; Pam McKinney; Kathie and
Charlie Williamson; Josh Spires,
Kitt y Pu gh antl Erin Ralston;
Steven and Katie Shepherd; and
Elish" ilwton.
Scmling gifts were his sister,
Li sa; and Kencil Scranton, Darby,
AJ:unis a•d Jordan; paternal grandmother, Syn il Barr; great aunts.
Max ine Bca lm car and Grace Durst.

.

'Area vets
attend
monument
dedication

Ann spells out the symptoms of Tourette Syndrome
boy to three more pediatricians and
was told I should not be concerned
because there was nothing to worry
abouL
Af~r doing some research on my
own, I insisted that our pediatrician
refer Joey to a pediatric neurologist.
Sure enough, the diagnosis was
Tourcue Syndrome. Joey was put on
medication and has dramatically
improved .
Ann •. I'm writing to you because
half the people I've met whose
childnen have Toweue Syndrome told
me they ftrSt became aware of !his
iUness when they read about it in your
column. You had correc~y diagnosed
Tourette Syndrome from the
description of someone's behaviot
You then listed what types of things

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DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
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111 Second St.

Pomeroy

992-3381
Representing The Ohio Casualty Group or Insurance Companies

'

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.

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2 79
.89
•

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For the Rite Aid Pharmacy neat you •.. call 1-800-4-DRVGSTORES
I

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BUY

Coke or
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Diet Coke 12 "'k 12 ••. ""'

Your Independent Agents SalVing Meigs County since 18M

$gso

SPECIAL

'

,

�.
Page

8 • The

,

.........

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

Oops, we almost forgot: And the winner at MTV awards is
Indelible images all. But who
won for best video last year?
(Don'I slr.lili yourself: It was Aerosmilh.)
No, tllis isn'I thL Grammys and comparisons witll the typically
staid award shows make the MTV
people cringe .
.
"The perfect show' One we
cou ld barely control ," Andy
Schuon, MTV senior vice president
for music and programming, said
last week as preparations staried
for the 12th annual bash, which airs
Thursday, at 8 p.m. Eastern from
Radio City Music Hall.
"Bu t one we can keep on the
air," he continued. "You never
know what happens when you put

By LARRY MrSIIA.ME
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - It's
almost an afterthought, but it's
11uc: They actually hand out
AWARDS at the MTV Video
Music Awards.
Not that anybody remembers the
winners. Viewers can't forget last
year's creepy Michael-Lisa Marie
kiss that opened the show. Dack in
'89. there was Amlrcw "Dice"
Clay getting banned for reciting his
perverted poetry . In 1991. recently
arrested Pee Wee Herman resurfaced to ask, "Heard any good
jokes lately?" A year later, there
was Howard Stem's bun·baring bit
as uFartman."

Madonna, Courtney Love, Drew
Barrymore and Dennis Rodman in
the same room ."
Madonna is a nominee, while
her bizarre former beau Rodman is
a presenter. Love will perfonn with
her band Hole; she recently badmouthea presenter Barrymore in
Rolling Stone magazine.
The Red !101 Chili Peppersbassist Rea stood in his underwear.
miming masturbation during tile
1992 show - are also due to play
live. ·s o arc Michael Jackson,
R .E.M., Bootie &amp; The Blowfish
and Green Day (via remote from
Sweden). Dennis Miller is this
year's host.
Based on p.ast performance ,

here's what to expect when MTV
airsitsthrce-bourevent.
-BAD TASTE: Last year,
Acrosmith's Steven Tyler swapped
masturbation jokes with Madonna,
while Roseanne traded insults with
MTV VJ Kennedy over who was
doing the nasty with Rush Limbaugh. Sensing a theme?
-BARE CHEEKS: In 1991,
Prince- when he slill answered to
that name- cavorted in. a seethrough outfit U1at !lashed his butt
across America while dancers recreated a Romrm orgy. The song he
played: ... Gett Off," demonstrating
he can't spell or dress.
-DAD BLOOD: This mostly

j

began in January. And while it's
too early to tell if people have been
paying more attention to their
grades, said Likins, "I do hear students talking about it.:'
The top-scoring students in each
class at Gettysburg College in
Pennsylvania get the highest numbers. in the housing lottery, and a
chance 'to choose the. best rooms.
"It's a result of us searching for
a number of years for ways \O rec·
ognize academic achievement,"
said Dennis Murphy, associate
dean of the college. " We're trying
lo tell people what's importan~ and
we U1ink academic achievement is
importan I."
Straight-A students at the Universiiy of Texas at San Antonio get
a 10 percent discount on room and ·
board at the top-of-the-line
Chisholm Hall dormitory, which
has a competition-sized indoor
swimming pool, private bathrooms,
air conditioning, weight rooms a'nct
computer labs. Smaller discounts
apply for those with a 3.25 or
above.
Students who earn at least a
3.75 at Wheaton College in Massachusetts get a $200 gift certificate at the campus bookstore.
At Montclair State College in
New Jersey, student-athletes arc
encouraged to find sponsors, who
contribute to their teams based on
'their grades. Sponsors pay $10 for
every A and $5 for every B. The
volleyball team alone raised more
than $1,000 last year.
"A lot of our students spend
· thek time fund-raising, which takes
time away from studying," said AI
Langer, the college's sports information director, who came up with
the ide::.. "Why not raise the same
amount of money without them
hav·ing to do anything but go to

involves angry middle-aged man
Ax! W. Rose. In 1989, be was
involved in a backstage punch-up
with Motley Crue's Vince Neil
(who to root for there?). Three
years later, when accepting the
Michael Jackson Video Vanguard
Award, Axl sniped •. "This has
nothmg to do with Michael Jackson." And in 1993, the members of
Nirvana got Axl all riled up by
mockingly shouting his name after
their live performance.
The winning videos, by the way,
must have already aired on MTV;
which _means the host ~hanncl IS
narrowmg down the possible nom1nees long before it announces the

_..,.

••

...~#

'"

GRADE REWARD - Clark University sophomore Sarah Cass,
seen on the WorceSter, Mass., campus has registe.·ed to be part of
the school's grade reward program offering a fifth graduate year
free for students who maintain and graduate with at least a 3.5
grade-point average. This Is just one of tbe lncenlive and reward
programs being oiTered hy some U.S. colleges and universilies to
attract students. (AP Photo)

c1ass?"
Top students at Clemson University in South Carolina get priority course registration - a valuable
extra when enrollments are limited
- special check-out privileges at
the library and the opportunity to
li vc in one of the newest donns on
campus, wilh built-in lofts rmd pri-

vate baths.
Not all adminislr.ltors are entirely comfortable with tile trend.
"Achieving grades is a natural
thing for competitive people to
do," said Lehigh's Likins. HBut
wouldn't it be nice if the goal was
learning and grade~ were irrelevant?''

\

their shows and plans to start an
on-line service and a movie studio
for further integration.
''·The World Wide Web has
energized the content providers,
and people want it and people are
using it," Sernovitz said. "The
popularity of TV -related on-line
services and web sites is a great
indication that when that's combined with the actual TV shows,
this i,s, going to be a wonderful serv1ce.
.
.
.
. Kn~xv11le-~ased 1·19TV 1s takmg a b1g step m tllat d1recUon. lbe
cab!~ network, launched by E.W.
Sc.npps Co. _last October to more
than 6 million homes, plans to
release the f11st LIVmgHome CDROM m •md-Novcmber.
. An m1t1al diStnbutiOn of up to l
milliOn COs 1s planned through
computer stores, sales over the
HGTV network and ·bundlmg the
CD with other software packaged
w1th new PCs. .
"I can honestly say this is the
first integrated son of CD/on-hne
hybnd that deals w1U1 a televiSion
programming concept this way,"

The Web site will offer realsaid Kelly Rodriques, chief executime conversation with HGTV
tive officer of San Francisco-based
hosts and experts, a separate chat
Novo MediaGroup, which is proline for Living Home subscribers,
ducing Living Home.
·
and links to oth'er Web sites for
"Others are talking about doing
answers on topics . from grouting to
content on line, but nothing like
growing roses.
this," said Rodriques, who has
A key feature from IIGTV' s
worked in new media for years and
perspective is the Livingllome
as a consultant for other cable netmarketing component. HGTV
works.
promises interactive ads that will
Each quarterly LivingHorile CD
allow you to walk around a amo · promises a magazine-like menu of
showroom or mampulat~ glass wmfour or fiv_e !opics rel~ted to HGTV
dows man electromc. hvmg room.
- gardemng, decoraung, landscapT'lyota, Fng1daire and Pella
ing, .etc. _ and feature stories not
Wmdows are am on¥ the seven
only for reading but for interaction.
advertisers alrea~y signed up._ A
Fox example, LivingHome
few more w11l be added before L1vwould present a snazzy feature on
mgHom: reaches U1c mrnk,et. .. · . redecorating a room or landscaping
In the fulure_, IIGTV enviSions
a yard. Its software would let you
on-line shopp111g. for tools and
mock up a design, present you with
clothes at .~n H&lt;;J,TV-signature
two- or three-dimensional views of
remodeling store. ,
.
the project, and keep a running
The folks at HGl V are hopmg
spreadsheet of your budget or conconsumers will be so enthralled
structioo plan.
they w1ll s1gn up for a $39-a-year
The LivingHome CD also will
subscription. That's four COs a
be a gateway to an HGTV World
&gt;:ear and a few hours bf free on-line
Wide Web site the network pL1 ns to
time with each Issue.
establish on the Internet in DecemHGTV's goal is 100,000 subber
·

possible nominees. Winners are
selected by vote of m&lt;_lre than 700
music industry types.
. The person on the hottest seat
Thursday night is Carol Donovan,
whose hand rests on the network 's
bleep button. The show airs with a
five-second delay; that wasn't
enough in 1992, when Van llalen's
Sammy Hagar blurted out an
obscenity.
"It's really hard to walk that
line of good taste without falling
over," said Donovan, who. sweated
out several moments with
Roseanne last year .... But if you go
too far the other way, it's a boring
show. So it's a trade-off."

We Give Mature.
Drivers, Home
' OwnersAnd
Mobile Home
OWners Special
. Savings. .
Our statistics show that mature dri·
versand home owners have fewer and
less costly losses than oth~' age
groups. So it's only lair to charqe you
less for your insurance. Insure you•
home and car with us and save ever.
more with our special multi-policy
discounts.

James I;:. Pre·ston, Perfonnance
Technician and John Fisher, Jr.,
Office Supc'rvisor at Ute qhio Valley Electric Corporation s Kyger
Creek Plant, recently received their
anniversary awards for 40 years of
service to the company, as
announced by Ralph E. Amburgey,
Plant Manager.
Preston joined OVEC on June 6,
1955, as a guar~ in the Personnel
Departtnenl. Dunn~ that same year,
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
OHice ot Contracte

Legal Copy Number 95-564
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Malting Date 8-25-95
Surface Tranaportatlon
Program

Sealed propooals will be
accepted from

all pre~

qualified· bidders al the
Office of ContraCII, Room

he transferred to the Performance
Department and advanced to
Instrument Mechanic in 1957. In
1964 he transferred to the Chemical Department ;IS a Filter Plant
Operator and Sampler and
advanced to Chemist Assistant in
1967. In 1989 he became a Performance Technician in the Performance Department.' Preston and his
wife, Nancy, reside in Cheshire.
Fisher joined OVEC on June 20,

Public Notice

1955, as a Guard in the Personnel
Department and transferred to tile
Stores Department as a Stores
Attendant in 1957 . In 1962 he
transferred to the Accounting
Deparunent, where he advllilced tu
Sr. Plant Clerk in 1965 . In 1969
Fisher transferred back to the
S torcs Department and was promoted to Stores Supervisor in
1975. In 1981 he was promoted to

Public Notice

118 ol the Ohio Department, culverl and a llat-topped,
of
T ransportatlon, three aided culvert.
Columbua, Ohio, untll10:00 1
The Ohio Department of
Wednesday, Trllnaportellon hereby
8 . m.,
Seplember 27, 1995 lor nolllles all pre-qualified
Improvements In:
blddere that disadvantaged
Meigs County, Ohio for · business enterprlaes will be

Improving sections MEG- afforded lull opportunity to
124-(32.00) (32.93), State submll bids In reoponae lo
Route

124,

Townohlp,

Sutton

thlt Invitation and will not

by grading, be dlocrlmlnoted agalnSI on

draining, paving with the ground• of race, color,
aaphall concrete on a or national orlg'ln In
bituminous aggregate bate conalderatlon for an award.
artd by conatrucling a box
Minimum wage ratea for

_,

SMITH'S

-·-· .. -----

the bidding proposal."
Plans and specifications
are on file at the
Department
of
Transportation.
Jerry Wray
Dlr~tor of Transportation

-Interior &amp; Exterior

. Painting
Alao Concrete Work

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 Pomeroy, Oh.

OGAN

(9)4, 11;2TC

c.~·-..

~RNE!!";;~

.

nsurance Se'!"vices

, I

r

.i
.-'k,~

204 9{, 21!f{., '.Milf{ftport, OJ{

992-405510-5 '.Mon.. thru. Sat.
'l'i&lt;a, MastnCari, 'Discover, fA aUIJ

Free Eatlm9tee

112111fn

. ....,

..

-

.

know

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687
'
.AuJo.{)flllfU» flmuwltee
L•!e Home Car Bus•ness

71.t'No RdiJM'f!trA~

I

2112192/t!n

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

1

Using the Classifieds
Is as Easy as .. .

DAYS
CAR WASH

1111\\ \IW
E\C.\\ \TI\(;

Complete
Detailing

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

.

Top Soil,

Fill

992·2155

a

l

A problem well stated is a
problem hall solved.

• Garages
• Complete

I

11 WARIHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
742-2211

· ·

7~4

.

'

Joe N. S11yre ·

g,p WIITU

To

YOUR NEEDS

lnlerim and llnali '

' 0

_,.....,

aubmlulon to lhe Ohio Review and approve '
D a p a r t men t
o 1 appropriate conlraclor pay '

Development,

Office of

lnvoi'Je

housing

requesta. The CHIP program :

.IDl

mAINING. Mult bl ~to do It 1111
(mainly UtW work). Stop 1 See 1 nu
w.aJ.

:

•

acUvllles. Reference a mav

lee propooato from qualified be requesled.
profe~tlonala for consulting

Meigs County Coutlhouse

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

tervlcet necessary In the
rehabllllatlon
of

Written fee proposals will
Separate sealed BIDS for
be accepted until 10:00 the conalructlon of Peach
a.m., Septemb,er 21, 1995 Fork Water Main Extenalon

appproxlmalety

and may be submlttad to Project will IN received by

24

aubatandard homea In the
target area of the village of
Middleport.
The scope ot aervlcea for

the office ot lh~ Meigs
County Commhalohera,
Melga County C'ourthouae,
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH

the
Melga
County
Commlaalonera at the
Commlaelonera Offlc'l
Meigs County Court Houae

this project will Include:
ln•pectlon . of oubject

45769.
(9) 1, 5, 8; 3TC

Pomeroy, Ohio unltl 2:00
p.m. Local lime on Sept. 22,

houses, development ol

•peclllcatlono and coli
es~lmatea

ror

aame;

Aulotance In the bidding
proceae

Alltstance

aa

needed;

In

pre-bid

read aloud.

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIOS

Molg• County
Commlaalonart

(~

The Contract documonla
may be examined at the

following locatio no: The

Commlsalonera Office or ~

buy1ng wr oc-ks, 1u nk aulas &amp;
lrucks Also. par) s lor salo 304 ·
773·5343 or 773 5033

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

Junk ca ts or Will p1 ck up gtveaway
cars, 61&lt;1·992-6069 any11me

• Open Water
·Advanced Open Water
' Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
• Assistanllnstruclo r
• Specially Classes
.
Scott Walton
Open Waler Scuba Instructor

Wanted lo buy. ~nnque and usod
lurn1turo. no 1\arn too lArge or 100
srno tl Wtll bu~ ono pt oc e or com
•plere oslatos, Osoy Marttn, 614
992·7441

614-992-3314

Wanted lo Bu'{ Junk Autos W1th

Ot W1lhou1 Molot s Call larry
I tiiP.Iy 6 1&lt;I 388·9303

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toUets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job .sltes •
Reunions &amp; Parties

:

Wanted "Old" 0 UIIts. Hull , Wall &amp;
Hosev1ll e Ponory. Cash Pa1d, 614 ·
245· 9448
.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

~

992-3954
'
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Second Strut, Logan, Ohio
43138 .
'
Copies of the Contract
Oocumenta
and
apeclflcatlons may be
obtained at lhe office of
George
A.
Mara
Engineering, Inc. located at
55 Eaat Second Street,
Logan, Ohio upon' payment
of $40.00 for each set,
which will not be refunded.
The Engineer'• eatlmate

lor lhe Pro)ecllo $38,000.00.
Auguot 15, 1995 .
·
Fred Hoffman,

RACINE

l:loward L. Writesel

GUN CLUB

ROOFING

TRAP SHOOT
Every
Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.

NEW-REPAIR

Everyone
Welcome

8/Wn

Public Notice
Pruldenl Meigt County
Commlsalonera

(9)5, 12; 2TC

I

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eanlng
Painting •
FREE ESTIMATES
949-l168

Help Wanted

ADDITIONAl INCOME
OELIVfllY DR IVEH
Pari·Ttme Ferrollgas, A Loader In
The ~ropano Gas Industry Js
1 Sooklf\Q no s1dOn11a1 Bul~ Doh~cry )
Dr 1vtHS To · Work A Pan Ttmo
Vart ab le Sche du le We Need
People Wtlo .At t! Neat. Covrreo " s
And EnJOY Mccr1ng And Sorvmg
I he Public Excellenl Oppor1unny
Fot Someone lookmg For Addl·
lton al lncme Or Seasonal Work
To OuAI1fy, You Musl Have Or
Obta1n A. COL Dnvets L1con~e
WtiQ..._Hazardo us Materia l s En ·
1 dOr~ nt . App ly Or Send Ro
sumo To
FERRHLGAS. I
'
8255 S1a1o Rout!! 588
'
Galllpolts, OhiO 45fl3 t

·····=····· •·- . . ..... .

. Chrll

OSU T1ckers Any Gamel 61 d
&lt;1&lt;16·8105
lop Pnces flatd Old U S Co.ns,
Silver, poJtj, Dtamond s, All OM
Collecttbles. Pa ~orwotghls. Etc
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avanue, Galllpohs. 814·446-2842.

'

,.

'George
A.
Mara
Engineering, Inc., 55 East

will bo publicly opened and

J &amp; O's Auto Pwls and Salvage.

ESTIMATES

"

Public Notice

1995 and then at aald offic.

Public Notice

Don'! JunK Il l Soli Us Yo ur Non Worktng Ralngorators. Froelors,
Wa shQrs, Dtyers , Mtcrowavos ,
Color TV's vcn· s, Atr COt1dlllO[l·
ors, Computers, Off1co Ma ch1nes,
E1c. 614 -2 56·1238.

,

Thoae providing proposals

rehabltl1allon as a primary mual deloit pasl experience
Public Notice
In houalng rehabllllatlon 1--.;,..;;;;,;;,;;,.;,;,;;.,;;,;.;;,._ _

0 cilvlty and os ouch, lhe
COmml .. tonera will accept

Decorated slonowara. wall te le.·
phones. old lamps.' old thetmome·
rms. old clocks, anttque lurntlure
Rtver1ne An uquos Russ Moore.
owner, 614 Q92 2526 We buy
estates

MODERN SANITATION

•Sc:hlrftl

Wanted to Buy

Clean Lar e Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1987 Model s Or Newer
_,:;:_______..;::::.;;,:::.:;,::.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;;,.~:r Sm•I h Butck Po nna c. 1900 Ea s 1'
ern 1\vonue, Gallipolis

FREE

·;

houslnli' and Community will require approxlmalaly ~Mon.·Frl. 8 AM-8:30AM
'
Portnerohlpa. This project 18 monlho Io complete. N'lllllllflltlllllllllfllllllfllllllllllll·lll"

· will

90

949-2512

-~

praporlng a Round N7 recommandollon; Conduct -- HrVIcu, bl'llkal, Ill front end peril.
Communlly Housing and cona1rucllon lnopecll,ons : '
MUll have 2 '/811'11. ew,_lence _ un

Improvement application for both

L_

-..'"""

33

Scuba Classes Now For1min•al

)

nrea

..... _

;~

State Rt.

Public Sale
and Auction

R1ck Pearson Auc110n Company, ·
luii ,J1me auctioneer, complete
auclton
serv1ce .
licensed
1166,0hto 8 West V1rQ1r1ta , 304 1
773·5785 Or 304·773-5447

.

SALE

BAILED

Help Wanted

:

•

614-992-6223

SAYRE TRUtKING

PUBLIC NOTICE
I' conferences; Anlalance '" )
Poor Boy•
of Hendttnlon II looking (
The Office ol the Melgo rovlowtng bldo and :for 1 tWIIIIbll ...,..011 to blllt tires
11 •

Coun1y Commlesloners Is conlractor

80

Umestone &amp; Gl)lvel,
Septic Systems, TraHer &amp;.
Ho,se• Sites.
Reasonable Rates ·

Jessika Joy Kay 9/05/95
-Jason Michael 9/08/95
Jay Patrick 9/15/95

-

Re~alr

.Insurance Work Welcome

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

FOR

Public Notice

Auto Body

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Remodeling

,

$to~ Com~lete

· Free Estimates

HAY

-

One

Chuck Stotts

~IIIIJIIIillllll•llltllllllltflllllllllllllll"'
Public Notice

Expect only the
best at Rutland
Furniture, where·
you'll get the best
senlce, selection,
and. the b•st price!
• 124, Rutland, Oh.

Rt&gt;BERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes

AND MIXED

'

&amp; VIcinity

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
'
'

ber?

11 D

Huge ' ga·ra ge sale · Sep1 . 7· 8
Tackorvtlle Rd. oH SR 124. Racme:
Ramer resldllnce lools, collecllbles, gu11ar, much mom

Pt. Pleasant

----------~:::::_----~~~·~~·~~:J· !:=-=·==·=·-=·=-~-~::-~~

Sept. 6th &amp; 7th
m. · 5

Proud father: "The man who
marries my daughter will get
prize."
Date: "May I see it, please?"

Aft Yard Sales Mu st Bo Paid In
Advance . Oeadlmu 1.00pm I he
day before lhe ad ts to run, Sun.
day editiOn· 1:OOpm Fnday Mon ·
day ed1tion !O:Ooa.m Saturd9y.

(602) 954-7420

ALFALFA

Five Family Yard Sale
1 day only
Wed ., Sept. 6 9:00-4:00
830 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.
Boys &amp; Girls Clothing, Womens
clothing, size 12 P, Toys,
numerous household items.
Rain cancels.

918 S. Th1rd, Midd iOporl · Sept
lSI· 1pm-6pm.. Sep1 2nd, 5th, 6th·
10am -4pm Mtcrowave. d1shes,
glasses. pAns, books, lamps, end
tables, good clean 11ems

PROCALL CO.

,

Rustic Hill
Syracuse

of
Rutland

fi11SC

Must Be 18 yrs.

..

S

~311'"

$2.99 per min. ·

742-3212 .

What Three "J's" Up
Southern Way Have An
18th Birthday In •

BULLETIN BOARD
16°0 column .inch weekdays
saoo column Inch Sunday

810 South Second Strom, Mtddleport, Sepl. 1 through 5. lots of

Ext. 6742

Tony's Portable
Welding

Happy Ad

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Sentinel

1173 College Ad ·. SyracuseWednesd ay, dresser, N lftlondo
lind games, mtsc 9 OOAm

81B/1 mo .

Turn on Depot St. tn
Rutland 1.2 miles.

-- -·-

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

1·900-388-0400

614·992-3470

843-5124
992·2984
·-

Tools, old mon(ly. c lothtng, re crods. 8 track tapes, loiS m1sc
tlems , I 072 Second Avenue
Tues. Wed, Thurs.
. '

MEET YOUR
COMPANION!

Dirt

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recore~ Available
Csllfor Low Prices

~-·

Old Tab les, Glassware, Clothes,
Records , Adver ltsmg Samples,
!Wrosene Healers, Craftsman 16"
~croll Saw. Rad 1os, Do lls. And
Much Morel lots 0 1 Dollar ltems t
Sepl 6lh, 7th, 8-5, 622 Jay On11e

949-2512

REASONABLE RATES

') (t ') (t

CONSTRUCTION
. • Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling
' New Acfd~ions &amp;
Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Free Estimates

-

t

For Free estimate c'all

Gravel, Sand,

SIGMAN'S

-Bill Slack .
992·2269 or
304·773·5960

AU Yard Sales Mu s I Be Paid In
Advance DEADLIN E: 2:00p.m
the day before the ad s to run .
Sunday edllton 2.00 p m Friday
Monday ediiiOn · 10.00 a.m Sat·
orcay. ,

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

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
.. Limestone,

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp;'VIcinity

P.O. Box 587

·- WICKS
HAULING .

With the purchase of
a set of stru1s or
'
·shocks get FREE
installation . .

Misc. Jobs.

70

--·)(),)0

-September Special-

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

fQund . boy's Gall ta Acad em y
Blue nev1ls c!assnng at KFC,
112/tfn
Gallipolis . l'den111y name &amp; nng .
L._..;;..;,;,;,;,;;;,;:;,;,;;,;,;,;;;,;;:;;,;;~:;;,;:;;.;;,,;:;,.:;;,;;~:;::;;:;~:.:;;;:.J) pa~ lor ad 304-675-7732

J.D. Drilling Company ·

(Umestone Low Rates)

Lost and Found

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

Director

304-773-5533

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

60

P.O. Box 464, Coolville, Ohio 4S723
E.O.E.

MasonW.V.

Taka the pain out of ,
palnttng, Let us do H lor :
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Befo~ 6 p.m. leave
message.
After 6 p.m.
.614-985-4180 ,...,..

Shredded Paper To Gtvoaway
Galltpo lis Oatly Trtbune, 825 Thtrd
AventJe , Gallipolis, OhKl

H you are energetic and looking lor rewarding
opportunities, send your resume and salary history to:

Imperial Tire
Service

Interior &amp;
Exterior ,

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

Competitive salaries and excellent benefits.

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·4081
Week Day 8:0()..5:00
Open Saturday
9:0()..3:00 811/lfn

LINDA'S
;AINTING &amp; CO.

Relr 1gorator 10 giVeaway, runs
good, 614 -742·2793.

corporate stores located In Southeastern Ohio

-

Buzz's Ca'&amp;et
· Installing, nc.

"Your Parts or Ours"

manage and merchandise meat departments in their

4113195 I

1Nfllfn

Rabbits 6t4 &lt;l88·EI577

1-ound Shephard type dog Can &amp;
tdCnll ly. 304·675 7462

JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTIERS
Aggreaslva grocery wholesaler seeking experienced
meat dept managers and journeyman meat cutters to

B/1011 mo.

Dave
Grate

1 SHOWROOMS

( No Sunday Calls)

Pel Belly, Ptg, 6t4 ·4&lt;16 4824

919-2882
RACINE, OH .
•
Labor Rate $20.00 hr.

Check Out Our Tire Prices

SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodllllng
Kitchen &amp; Ejllth
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reiaonable
Insure•- Experienced
Call Woyne Nell 992-4405
For Free Estimates

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

CALL
1-900-820-6500
Ext2809
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

614-992-7643
MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS

Complete
Detailing

ALL

.I

COMMERCIAL .and RESIDENTIAL
- FREE ESTIMATES

NEFF REMODELING

DAYS
CAR WASH

PSYCHICS

By

getting used to things we never
expected.

' .

539 BRYMI PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2m
·Office Houri: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; AlUm. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
·Replacement,
Windows, Blown
ln•ulatlon, ·Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, 'Garages.

•Room Add~lons
•Nawooragea
oflaclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
ofloollng
·

Room Additions • Rooting

,.

3RD ST.

'

Garages • Replacement Windows

7 Family Yard Sale

***

Giveaway

Free To Good Lovtng Homt ·
Abandon Female Coll1e type Pup,
12 Weeks I Ge . . e Her Shots,
Wormed. 614-367 9389

AB&amp;,.AU,.O

I

I

,614-742-2138

You know you're getting older
when your recliner has six more
positions than you do.

Public Notice

set lor completion of this
work shall be as set forth In

J&amp;LIN~ULAmiN ~I

YODNG'S·
CARPEI'ftll
SEmCE

CALL OUR OFFICE AI

Life is a continuous process of

the bid propooal. "The date

--

I

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

~

j

•••

____

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Abiding Concrete
Construction

CONSTRUCTION
Cuslom Building &amp; Remodeling
•NEWHOMES .
Commercial ond Residential
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
Driveways, Patios, Slabs, Parking lois, Curbs &amp;
•REMODELING
Gutters Sidewalks, Porches, Tear-out and
'
•SIDING
Replacement
•ROOFING
'
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
Doug Crites
(614) 992-5535
41960 Kaylor Road
614/667-6825
(614) 992-2753 - - R~ville, OH 45772

***

Office Supervisor in the Accounting Department. Fisher and his
wife, Sarah, reside in Pomeroy.

this project have been
predatermln!Bd as required
by law and are ael forth In

-

"

Politics is the only sport where
the losers are the spectators . .

OVEC employees receive awards for years of service

9

0~1.

The Light
Toach

.

Page

Do,g &amp; Yard Sale llems, 61&lt;4·&lt;4" 1·

lent before tile actual dawn of interactive television."

*'**

Sentin~l •

3 Month Old Pupp tes 61-4·3870539
•

..

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
ASK ANNE ~ NAN
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN:
Often when we have traveled, I
have returned home and learned of
a wonderful crystal or china outlet
in tile area we have just visited. Is
there a directory of outlets published that I might secure as never
to· miss an opportunity again? I am
interested specifically in crystal,
china and linens. - CAROLE
HARNED, Bowling Green, Ky.
on antique looms and would make
DEAR CAROLE: There is a 2-inch tape if an order for several
publication called "Outlet Malls thousand yards came .in. "We have
USA" that is available for $3. It the widest selection of Shaker U1pes
lists more than 340 outlet malls and and custom patterns in the counshopping centers. The information try," Parkinson said.
is compiled alphabetically, py state,
Readers, any idert'?
the number of stores in the mall
DEAR ANNE AND NJ\N: Do
and the office phone so that you you know where we cm1 buy some
can call to find out stores are in the wooden hangers' We've been and
mall.
asked everywhere. - S. SMITH,
To receive a copy of this Sed:~ia, Mil.
newsletter, send your money to
DEARS.: We found sume cedar
Outlet Malls USA at P.O. Box wooden hangers in the Real Goods
3308, Crofton, MD 21114.
catalog. A set of rive with a pant
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I bar (item 54-129) cost $25.
have been trying to find 2-inch Remember cedar not only smells
heavy twill cotton webbing in col- good, but it also discourages insect
ors to reweave the seat and back of pests. To order, call 1-800-762Danish dining room chairs. We 7325.
purchased these chairs from Knoll
. STUMPED: VENUS TIJRPENin 1949-1950, and in 1967 we pur- . TINE - An old home remedy is
chased new webbing and redid the being sought by Mrs. Robert Bird
chairs. We managed to lose the of Prescot~ Ariz. Any ideas, Dear
address and can't locate anyone Readers? .
who handles this type of webbing
Write to ," Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
- ot.h er than the Shaker-type, P.O. Box 240, Hanland, VT 05048.
whic~ is only 1 inch in width . This
Questions of general interest will
webbing is the finished scat and appear in the column. Due to the
back of tile chair - it is tacked to volume of mail, personal replies
the underside of the seat so that the cannot be provided.
tacks don't show- nothing more
is put on top of the webbing. Anne B. Adams and Nancy
PEG WEYMER, Meadville, Pa.
Nash-Cummings ate co-authors
DEAR PEG: We know just of "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetwhat you're looking for but haven't stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
been able to find any and now we Two Prize Problem,Sohers
think we know why - because it Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
doesn't have much strenglh.
To order, ealll-800-888-1220K.C. Parkinson, owner of the
Connecticut Cane &amp; Reed Co. in
Copyright1995 NEWSPAPER
Manchester, Conn ., told us that ENTERPRISE ASSN.
tape 5/8-inch is the strongest and is
(For information on how to
.what the Shakers used. The l-inch communicate electronically with
tape is also used, but it's not as this columnist and others, con~
strong as the 5/8 inch.
tact America Online by calling 1flis company weaves tlleir tape 800-827-6364, ext- 8317.)

scribers in the rirst.ycar. .
·Channing Dawson, IIGTV vice
president for new media, said Livingl·lomeygives HGTV ''a great
opportunity to go forward with
interactive applications of our con-

The baily

40

Garden Network gets interactive with quarterly hybrid on-line magazine
By .QUNCAN MANSFIELD
Associated Press Writer
. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Cahle's flcdgUng Home &amp; ·Garden
Television network is planting the
seeds of its interactive future with a
quarterly magazine linked to the
Internet.
Appropriately, for a 24-hour
home remodeling and gardening
channel, HGTV says its LivingHom~. quancrly will be the first
"hy)&gt;rid CD-RO~ magazme and
on-line service for Its mc~e market.
. "Eve~ nelw?rk ~~ domg somethmg ti!at s on:lme, smd Andrew
~ernov 1 tz, preSident of _tile lnteracuve TeleviSIOn ~,ssociation m
Washmg_ton, D.C. Some_ of tile~
are mal«ng t~e move to mt~gratc
that on-l!~e presence to 1he11 TV
presence.
..
.
VHI. for example, offe:-&gt; weatller and sports news w1lh 1ts music
as a precursor to, an interactive
news service. Fox s fX cable network is "basically reading e-mail
: in~ssages on the air,'' Semovitz
. !;aid.
:· The Discovery Channel has a
series of CO-ROMs that spin off

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•••

,Never miss an outlet
mall again with directory

Colleges offering
tu-ition plus other
inQentives to keep
students studying
By JON MARCUS
As.•ociated Press Writer
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) Sarab Cass is worried about her
grades, and with good reason.
If the Clark Umvcmty sophomore maintains a 3.25 grade-point
average, the college will foot the
· bill for her to pursue a grapuate
·degree in health administption.
That's a $17,500 value.
' It motivates me not to slack
off in anything," said Cass, who
has so far managed to keep her
grades bigh. "I think people should
motivate themselves, but since it's
obvious that there isn't a lot of selfmotivation nowadays, it's nice to
have an incentive like tnis."
Free tuition, discounts on room
and board, and choice housing are
just a few of the carrots colleges
and universities are dangling m
front of their students to encourage
them to excel.
The idea is IO restore some
meaning 10 grades at a ti.mc when
"students expect that if they turn
up in class regular!~ and are brea~;
ing, that they're gomg to get a B,
said Clark provost Roger Kasperson.
At Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, students earning 3.5 or
higher- about an A-minus- also
get a rifth year of study fr~e. a
$19,650 perk at current p11ces.
They can use the time toward either
a second bachelor's degree or a
masler's degree.
·"We are in a period of our culture I would call the era of the
· incentive," said Lehigh presidentPeter Likins. "In several ways
we're trying to motivate young
people to make the best of their
opportunities.''
About 40 Lehigh students are
enrolled in the program, which

Tuesday, September 5, 1995

Tuesday, September 5, 1

Amnr~C .~~r o HontecrHc
Rura l
Oh to's Leader In Home.carc Is
Currently Soekmg Oualt1y Mmded
IC NA 's, CHt-1A's fi'or Fxpand 1ng
Sorv tcos In Home Health Care &amp;
SupplemoniAI Stalltng Sta1 11r g
Pay S6 50 Per Hour, App ly Al
731 Eas1 Matn Srreer Jac~ son

. OH

'

'

5/l etiH TFN J

ANNOUNCEMENTS
30 Announcements
I Will Not Bo Responsible for
' Arrt Debts 01her Than My Own.
Paulltal1ano

AVON 1 All Area s
Spears. 304-675 1429.

1

ShH ey

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn $8 ·$15 IHr At Wor ~ -fklme.
Dtscounlsl No lnvemory Q, Door
Door lnd !Rep 1 800 - 7&lt;~2- 1\ 738
AVON EARN SS$ at ho rne · al
work All areas 301\ BH2·2645, 1800·992·6356 INOtREP

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

39
40
41
42
45
46
49
50
52
53

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATIIE BLVD.® by Bru ~e Beattie

l&gt;e1 11e ry Dr vers Wanled Cash
.Comm srons Pad N r gh ll ~ 75 '
, .P,e Del very Plu s $4 35 Hr Unt
1orms Prov1dec Full Or Pal! T me
• Must Be Re li able Wnh Good
• Orvmg Reco d 18 Yea rs Or Older
Wtth Val d Or Ver s L1cense &amp; In
• su re d Veh tcle Apply In Pers on
At L tue Caesars Gall polis Oh10

!

Food Servrce Wor ~ ers Needed
Ga one Mer chan I Food Se v ces
&lt;A t The lJnrvers ty Ot Rro Grande
s lao"- ng Fo Pa 1 T me People
To Work In Our Food Court &amp;
Cater ng Dt1panmen1 Ca ll {614 )
2 ~ 5 5660 Or Stop By The Student
CerHer Annex Olfrc e To Apply
EOE

\

~vou

don t qualify for tickets to Hawa11 You re st11t
short 150 yards on your frequent fher miles ~

160 Wanted To Do

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

LABORER POS ITION AVILABLE
Root ng Ex.per ence Or W lrng
To lear n Re ferences T anspor
tat on &amp; HandToos A. Mus t Cal
61 4 446 4514 From 8 AU To 5
PM Mon Fr
Loca l Company Needs Or ve r
l oader For Garbage Truck Mus!
Have CDL s Se nd Res ume To
PO Bo• 11 7 Bdwe l OH4 56t 4

198 0 W ndsor 1 4.1(]0 E xc ellent
Condrt1on 2 Bedrooms 1 Bal h
Large K tchen large l tv ng Room
10xt2 U!rlty Buldng $12000 Ne
gotrable 614 245 943 1

W I Clean Houses Or Olltc es
WeeK y Or One T me Rele enc es
Ava !able 614 441 0870

1994 14x 60 2 Bedroo ms Unlu r
msh frd Commodore Never L ved
In 614 3889803

Ma f'1 To Do Jan to r al W or ~ Abl e
To Mov e App l anc e9 And Tra n
To Reparr Was hers 8. Dry ers
614 446 7398
MGA Tra nees Wa n ted No Ex
per e nce Necessa ry Career
G ow!h Po te nt al Ell:"c el! ent Ad
vancement &amp; Pay Based On Per
lormance Nor Trme In We Otfer
Pard Tra nmg Flmuble Schedu as
For A 40 1K Plan Med1ta l In
su ra nee App v In Per son At Gat
pol s l file Caesa s Or Send Re
su me To PO BoM 10 Barbours
11 !le WV 25504
No E~tpe11ence Neces sa r y $500
To $900 Week ly /Potenl ral Pro
ccssrng Mortgage Refund s Own
Hours Call ~90 9) 7t 5 2300 Ext
782 (24 Hours)
~~--~~--~~~
Oa k H
Oh o Based Tru cMng
Com pany Look ng For OTR Dr v
ers Srngle Or Teen Drrvers Must
Be Over 25 Years Old W Ill E •
per ence Go od MVA All Equ p
nen! Is late Model Conventronal
Tra cto rs W th Flalbed Call 614
682 7773 Or Al!e 5 PM 614
245 1304
Ov erbrook Center has fu ll 1me &amp;
pa t 1me pos t qn s ava rl ab e tor
CNA S all th ee shills Pleas e
comact JanE as ADON Over
U ook Cen!e r 333 Page Street
M ddlepon Oh o 45 760 614 99 2
64 72 E OE

1986 4x7'0 Fa r mon t tw o bed
roo m two tu bath s S 10 50 0
Must be m o~ed 614 742 2250

For salrt on Sumner Ad 2 bed
room house tra ler exce l em con
d ! on has roo m bu It on bac k
large trent porch cen tra a r new
ca pe tng under pnnng $16300
mu s se I leavmg area may tea11e
on rented lo1 ca ll 6 14 985 3877
or6 14 985 3348

FINANCIAL

21 D

Business
Opporlunlly

LUMB ER COS TS UP?" Stee l
burld ng s as low as $3 oo sq loot
Buy factory drrect from Natrona!
Manulacturer as aurhonzed dnal
er Wtll Jra n Some Markets taM
en 303 759 3200 ext 2200
!NOTICE I
OHI O VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
ne ss With people yo u know and
NOT to send money throUgh the
marl un tl you have rl\lesttgaled
rhe o,er ng

New Bank Repos Only 4 lett 304
7'55 719 1
Pr ce Buster! New 14x 70 2 Of
3br Only $995 down St951month
Free de ve y &amp; setup Only at
Oa"-wood Homes Nnro WV 304
755 5885

For sale or w 1 accep1 any prop
erry as pan or lu ll down payment
Oh o R1ver Campgrounds wrth 23
full hookups Was old Lock 24 at
Aactne large brrck bu ld1ng lour
hole roo ms thr eil apartments tn
s de bu ld ng 7 11 2 acres well
supp es all water a I lurntshed
two r d ng mowers some loots
$150 000 less tor cash 614 949
2526

Sale Or Take Over P a ~ m e nt s
1989 t 4x52 Cayton We st w nd
Mob e Home W tn Decks JSk rt
ng 606 473 1444

PSYCHOLOG IST THERAPIST

PREST ERA CENTER
Human ResourceS/
f.lason County Supervisor
PO Box 8069
l ~unt ngton WV 25 705
EOEIAA
RavenliWOOd C~re Center 1113
Wash ngton Sf Rav&amp;nswood
WV IS currently accepting applr
catiOnS tor me folloWing posrt ons
Nu s1ng Ass stants (Will Trarn)
regrstrat or~ lor classes s1anrng
soon bene t IS rnc ude competr
1rve wages pa d mea li pad va
cal on CNA Oonus re mbursed
trammg health nsurance paid
sh II drllerent al &amp; career adder
opportunures all mqu res may
apply wtlh rn da1ly references re
qurred
Secretarv
C e k fm med ate
Opemng 9 Monlh Pos 1 on
Hours A Week Cons!ruct on S te
Assrs!rng PrOJ8CI Eng nears W th
Purch ase Order Process ng
Data Input Document &amp; 0 aw ng
Contra Typ ng Etc Must Have
Computer Sktlls Will Be Usmg
Word
P10cessrng
And
Spreadshee! Sohware 304 576
2092 1 A M 5 30 PM Monday
Thru Thursday For Inter.' fNtl
Seekmg Re~pslered lo ng term
Nurs1ng Ass slants lor long
term care lacthty part trme van
able sh It$ Po1n1 Pleasam Nurs
rng &amp; Rehab lltat on Center RoUle
1 Bo~ 326 Potnt Pleasant WV
25550 :})4--675-3005
c&lt;:~re

180

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Serv ce Complete tree
care 20yrs exp &amp; msured free
est1mates 614 441 tt91 or 1
800 506 6887
E)(per enced care provtder WI I
care lor efderl~ tn lhfm home
304 675 72621eave ml!Ssage
General Matnlenance Parntrng
Yard Wor~ Wr ndows Washee!
Guuers Cleaned ltght Hauling
Commertcal Res1den11 a S1eve
614 446 8861
Georges Portable Sawmrfl don t
haul your logs to the mrU JUSt call
304 675-1957
Prolesstcnal TrN Serv ce Com
plete Tree Care Bucket Tru(:k
Serv1ce 50 Ft ReaCh STump Ae
moval
Fr ee Es1rmato s1 In
surance 24 Hr Emergencv Serv
rce Call And Savel No Tree Too
Brg Or Too Small I Bidwell Ohto
6 14 388 9643 614 367 7010

REAL ESTATE

Four lets near Rae ne approx 1
112 ac cs each startrng at $5000
call 614 949 2025
REMGTE beaut ful ndge top
aM 3 mtles sourh of Carpen1er
Oh o Mt Un on Ad One 9 acre
parce l $8347 Owne lrnancrn g
Call for good map 614 593 8545

1

Scemc Va ley App e Grove
beautrlul 2ac lots pub! c water
Clyde BoweQJr 304 576 2336

RENTALS

House Fo Rent In GaU po IS 614
446 0924
House on Mulberr y He1ghts Po
meroy $330tmo pus deposit and
references no pets 304 882
2945
Newly Remodeled Small 4 Room
Co II age No Pets Porter Area
614 3~1100 614 388-8000

420 Mobile Homes

3 Bedrooms 405 Sorr ng Avenue
Pomeroy OH All New lnsrde
Outs del Owner W I Help Ftnclnce
Down PaymenL304 583 7503
For sale by owner three bedroom
house w lh three outburld ngs ap
prox one acr e pr me commerc at
land a1 F ve Po ms owner movrng
must sell cal61-&lt; 992 6309
House For Sa le B~ Owner 1 8
Acres Wrth House' And Anached
Garage Sepa ate 14.x30 Work
St'\Op 29 H ltop Dr vo 011 NJ:~ gh
llorhOod Road 3 Bedrooms .LR
DR 1 BR Wuh laundry Area Gas
Furnace With Heat P ump New
Water Tank Large From Porch
C ty Water Cheap Uti t es t Green
Townshrp Ca ll 614 44 6 6302
From6To 11 P.M
Aver front by Forked Run State
Park 1994 two bedroom modular
40x26 8 With 12 x30 deck rwo lull
baths one ac e lot 40 -24 pole
barn to accommodate 30 pon
toon boat $85 000 Ches te r/ TP
Water D1s1rrct pontoon lloat ne
gouable 614 378 6,86
Sp 1 level house lor sa e rn Sy a
cuse i u ly equrpped krtchen Wrth
dmmg area one bath two bod
rooms up rwo large rooms down
office/ ut1lrty room area sunporch
1wo car garage fenced 1n back
yard Located n nrce nerghbor
hood near sctloo lotal electnc
614 992 6970
Three bedroom home 1n country
Whites Hrll Rd Rutland one bath
rn ground pool 614 992 5067
Three bedroom ho me on double
lot n Mrddleport asMrng $27 500
call 614 992 d539

Three bedroom home nrce nergh
borhood c ose to town $21 500
Su n Valley NUrsery School Com ac 1 Brenda Ootlre Turne r
Ch tdcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages Rea ty 6 14 992 3056
2 K Yo ung School J\9e Ot n ng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mm1 Three bedroo m house rn Syra
mLJm 614 448 'JfJcfi
cuse on Th rd Street S30 000
=~:.:__~_::.::__:___ _ _ _ , 614 949 2499

App ox 150 6 Cham Lmk Fence
$250 Lo ngwood Furnace Burns
Fue l 011 Or Wood Wrth Tank
$500 Drop in Pool Steps For In
ground Pool $300 614 446 3634
Alter 5 PM

450

for Rent
12 ~65 2t'ledroom 1 path on At 2
Crall Creek 2 Horse l rck Rd
$300/mo Depos rt &amp; referen ces
304 369 6447
14x 70
rooms
wa ter
qurred

part a ~ tur n stle.d. 2bed
1 112baths n country cty
$3 25 mo Re ferences re
No pets 304 773 5165

Ca m e Back Couch $90 Arm
ChaH $80 Maple Hu1ch $100
Car Sea t 1Carrrer $10 614 256
1556
Canopy Slyle Tann ng Bed 1
Yea r Old $400 10 Ft Alumrnum
Sat e I te D sh Wrt h Box $500
614 388-0408
Cherry Collee Table W th Glass
Inserts Four Drawer So 1d Wood
Chc stOIDrawcrs 6 14 4462913

C rcle Motel

Colon a couch and cha1r 1\oral
destgn good cond !l(ln $150 caU
614 992 5832 alter 6 30pm

614 446 2501
Rooms $25 And Up Cable A r
Phone lowest Rares In Gall pols
Da ty Weekly Monthly

Concrete &amp; P asttc Septrc TanMs
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enrerpnses. Jackson OH
I 800 5J 7 9528
E ectr c Wheelchairs /Scooters
New /Used Scooter !Wheelchair
l Its Sta way E evators L It
Cha s Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

Seep ng room s w t h cook ng
A so !railer space on rrver A
hooM ups Call alter 2 00 p m
304 773-5651 Mason WV

460 Space for Rent

$175 614

Tr a ler lo! For Ren! t 0 M es
From Ga I polrs On StAt 141 614
379 2501 At er 4 30

For Sale 6 Pc Bee! room Su te
$500 4 Pc Drnene Se1 $250 2
Pc lv ng Room Sutle $400 BunM
Beds And IJaltress $250 All L1ke
Newt614 446 1661

Tra1l er lot on Braod Run Ad NfNt/
Haven S601mo 304 773 sa a 1

490

For Lease

Free Drsney TtcMet JCvpreu Is
land Ttckets Comes W ttl 3 Hote
N ghl Slay Use Any1 me Pad
$380 Sell $99 614 470 l577

W II lease bu ldmg at 636 E Man
Street Pomeroy Oh o eJ;cel en\
locauon lor conven ence outlet
drtvo thru and ate For rnformat on
call 304 422 27'8 1

51 o

Household
Goods

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepatred New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 5379528

Appl iances
Reccndltroned
Washers Dryers ~anges Refr
graters 90 Day Guarantee
French C ty May l ag 6 1II 446
7795

K11 er Impact bow w/everyth ng
$200 304 675 6232

Carpet &amp; V ny In Stock $5 00 Yd
o!L Up 60 Panerns 01 K tchen Car
pet In St ock Over 35 Patterns
&gt;/ nyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 446 7444

Movmg Sale Sleeper Sofa Barca
Reef ners Fan W cker Furnrlure
Set Coffee Table End Tables
Lamps Carpets Etc 614 446

Cou ntry Furnrtu re Fur ntlure tor
Ever~ Room em At 2 North Pt
Pteasanl 304 675 6820

MTN STATE MYSTERY TRAIN
Fall Fo rage Tra1n Tnps See
WV s New Rtver Gorge Nat1onal
Rver Oct6 8 1315 20 &amp;22
, 600 347 1231

0909

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers drye s retr gerato s
anges Skaggs App lr ances 76
V ne Srree ! Cat 6 14 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

Murray 11 HP Mower Needs
Deck Runs Good 1150 614
256--6667

LAYNE S FURNrTURE
Co mplete homo lu rn rsh ngs
Hou s Mon Sal 9 5 6 14 446
0322 3 mrl es ou1 Bulavrl e Prke
Free De very

1 8R Apt In Gallrpohs Furn shed
Wartlr Gas Pa d No Pets $280/
Mo s. Daposu 614 446 2800
2 Bedroo m Apartme nt Trash
Water Sewage Pa1d $295/Mo +
Deposrt 614 446 2481
2bdr m apts total electr c ap
pllance&amp; furn shed laundry room
fac1h11es close to school n town
Apphcallons avarlallle at Village
Green Apts 1#49 or ca ll 6 14 992
3711 EOH

RCA Recerver Aeg•slered Boxer
Pups 9 Weeks Wormed Ta Is
Docked 2 Metes 1 Female 614
256--6128
Relr rgerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Recondlttoned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W111 Dell~er 614-669 6441

2Rooms Plus Bath Lalayelle
Mall No Krtchen' AI Ullht es pad
$1 75 00 Month DepoSit Reqwed
614 446 7733
Apartment &amp; Trat er
304 875 2579

Sears Top 01 The Lme Treadm1fl
614 446-9476
Sega game system wt5 tapes hke
new taMrng best oller 304 882

3324

2

•• 0 5 4

1974 Honda Tra11 90 2 000 Mrles
Very Good Cond 11on $450 614
256-6867

560

Pets for Sale

640

1979 1000 Suzuk1 motorcycle lor
sale ot of new pa r! runs excel
lent 614 992 6069 ca I anyt me

TH' GALS SHORE
LOVE OUR LITTLE
TATER, PAW !I

1988 2SOR 4 wheeler good con
304 882 2662

BO large round bales $12/ bale

YEP--MARY SUE IS
FLIRTIN' WITH HIM

lJ4 675-1365

71 D Autos for Sale

30&lt;1 576 2984

Puppres mrn1ature Schnauzers
salt &amp; pepper also Toy Poodles
AKC sho!s and wormed 614
667 3404

Torlre Pornt H rmalayan fema le
spayed $75 304 675 7693

1978 Ford Fatrmont Excellen t
Condrl on Runs Great Very Re 1
abe Must Sell Best Ollerl 614
441 1687

1 !Shp Mercur y outbo;;~rd Pro
Master Bomber f1sh &amp; sM1 boat
16ft $6 500 or trade lor ntce 4x4
truck 304 895 3567

1978 Otds Toronado good run
n ng cond $400 304 675 5589

14 a ummum V haul boat w1th 9 8
hp electrrc star t Mercur~ out
board $500 614 992 7368

1982 Red Thunderb rd 2 Door
Seoan Very Good CoM hon
56 000 M es See At 4132 Addt
son Ptke 614 367 7252

Musical
Instruments
2 Bundy Ctarrnets Good Condt
tron $250Each 6144463063
For Sale Console Prano Wanted
responsrble party to make low
monthly paymen son prano See
loc.:•:.'.:.'Y.-c:.a:_II_1_B00:.::.-2:.6:.:8.-6:.:2:.:&lt;.:::_8_ _
:.:

750 Boats &amp; Motors

1982 Camara 34K 1987 Mon1e
Carlo Aero Coupe 1989 Astra
Co nve rs on Van 1988 Beretta
1982 E XP Cook Motors At Cen
tenary 614 446 0103

Roglstered AKC Bassene Hound
Pups 9 Weeks Old 614 446
0974

I

Selmer Alto saxophone wtcase
vary good cond S700 nego!lable
304 675 1696
Snare Drum /Case Flute !Case
614 388 8711
Snare drum case Oooll.s good
lor begmner $150 304 675-4439
Trumpet lor sa e $250 614 742
3506

760

1985 4 WD S 10 Blazer 5 Speed
Loaded Excellent Cond lion Ask
tng $6000 614 446 6231 Or 614
441 2033 AsM For Wendy

350 Chev 2tBoh Short Block
614 245 0611

1975 Ford 5000 Tractor Seectve
Dual Power Ell:cellent Condrtron
$10000 6143792427

1985 Escor1 Stat on Wagon
Aula $600 6144466958
1986 Ford Ta urvs 93 OOOmt all
power ac cru se V6 3 0 $1 500
or trade lor 4 wheeler 304 576
2984
1989 0 ds Cutlass Supreme exc
cond lully loaded lumbar seals
&amp; extras 304 675 1388

1992 4 Srar horse tra rler
slant road all alum num alum"'""' I 1990 Dodge Sp1111 Auto Atr
wheels &amp; lugs f1n1shed
78 100 Mr es $3 600 614 256
quarters used very mle $1
6340
304 675 1950 be!Ween
1g92 Ctlavy Gee Metro 2d-oor
Sspd axe gas m11eage average
SOmpg $5 ooo 304 576 2644
AC comllme w1corn h&amp;ad &amp; table
Twc grav
beds Also s1raw lor

tv

1992 Mercury Sab e alation wag
on
&amp;passenger
loaded

~Ahce Chalmers B s ng1e

sa~le~30~4;;;6;;7;5:506~6~:;;;;;-;,;;;;;;;;l55
OOOm1 $12 700
or 304 6 75-5914
Plow Rues Good Good
$1 350 814 4-46 3767 614 446044()
0 scount larm tractor parts lor
Massey Ford IH &amp; others
Srder s EqUipment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800
277 3917
Joe Russ Farm Equ1pmem &amp; Fer
ttlzer located 8 Mrles South 0 1
Jackson On State Route 139
614 286 2731 JD 6400 Cab &amp;
Arr JD 7200 MF 1105 Cab &amp;
JO 4-430 Cab &amp; A r Ford
FWA W lh Loader IH 886
Arr Other Tractors JO
Combrne N H 335 Gnnder
(ltke New) Corn P1ckers 8.
leage Equ1pmen1

304 675 4132

720 Trucks for Sale
1976 314 Ton Chevy Booms Far
Wrecker 614 446-3243 After 5
RM
1979 Chevrolet 112 Ton 4 Wheel
Dr ve 87 000 Actual Mrles Good
Condibon $3 000 614 379 2-427
1979 Ctle\ly 11on cargo van wf
10ft bOx goO&lt;I cond $2 400 304
675 4054
1985 Chevy S 10 Tahoe pack
age auto V6 a1r pw pi ps pb
cru1se
e.xcellenl cond111on
$3 sao 304 6 75 7303

New lclea Un1 System 708
737 husk ng
bed 4 row narrow row corn head
15 gran !able 304-675-4308

Nanny Goal $60 Two
Sheep$50 Both 614 2561399
Want ed mformatton of Robert
SR Jr Adams Fam ly Burred n
Adams Cemetery Mason Ctty S
Adams 5930 Sy camore Bartlen
TN 38134
Washer Dryer Couch C harr
H1de a way Bed Table Chalfs
Boxspnngs And Mattress Ch1na
Cabi net loves eat 61"' 4463224

Antiques

Anltque Glass Collection 1940
To Date 300 Ptece Cartoon
Characters Peps1 Coke Jolly
6 14 ~56-M67

550

Bt.Jy or sell R1venne Antiques
11211 E Ma n Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
600pm 6149922526•

Building
Supplies

Blo eM br ck sewer ptpes
ows lrntefs etc Claude""""'"' ·
Rto G rande OH Ca fl 614 · &lt;'45 - j
5121

I

One black Angus steer lor sale
4 H prOJec t $1 2511b hang rng
werght 614 949 2007

1978 GMC •Jrmmy• 4x4 Auto
Trans PB PS PW 350 Cu In
Molar W1th 4 Barrel Carb Body
Rough Actual M1ias 59 000 One
Owner $1 500 614 446 3277

One Reg Appaloosa stallron
1961 Jeep Cherokee 4 Wheel
!hree purebred Appaloosa mares Onve In Good Condition Runs
one wtltl a colt one pant geldtng GoDd $1500 6t4-388-1122
one Appaloosa ge dtng one Fo d
8N tractor one Massey Fergu
1983 Chev~ S ,0 Blazer Sspd
son 65 d1esel uactor nrne feeder 6cyl • wheel dr1ve $2 600 304

cal,es 814 742 2076

Ponv Patnt Saddle Broke Very
Gentle 614 446 8981

675-2949
1986 Jeep Cherokee .tx4 Good
Condtl•on Low Mtlas 614 446
9684

Red Angus Srmmenral Cross Bull
Calves Sire Po,ver &amp; ABS Breed 1989 Ford Aerostar XLT lully
700 OBO
mg 5 112 Mos Old G1llespre SA loaded e~c cond
304 773--6063
588 614 446 3969

sa

-_-:__

--

___.;:.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1'Vf.

... EVE,YIODY fi..Sf

GOTTA

TAICEN.

•

•

"

wAS AI..~MDY

-

se ,..,e!

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

" " "#t""

..

• '•

'

BORNTOSF.R

"lo.loo~s

.-----...-...---'-....,

P'
A~ISCN(

WHI\T A.

ar ~ (:J.J'(S

~IS

\.11'0 IN..J'511'\
~Y!Af:&gt;

30 G obe
Holiday Htlls
E ectnc Water A1r
aoe $7
614 89"-3101

8 Meeting

Celestial bear
Paradise

AppleChemical
suffix

24 Caton-Tln Roo!
25 Foaolln
Howell
26 TV actor

Kon-

23 - - l o o t

9 Campus area

27 Hope
28 Senior tportt
team a

,_

35 fnlatuotlont
36 HIGh polntocj

hill
36Fuu

??

r··--------------~--1

••

39 Graaoland
41 Veiling
material
42 Scondlnavllll'
43 Wind
lntlrument
44 Athletic
building a
45 Tobacco
chew

47- and toe
48 Author
Gardner
5 t Palindromic

name

52 Prefix lor
cycle

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb 1y Copho cryplog am•

YGPCP

from Qu018IfMSb'f tamous ~ople p8!H And present
stands to another Toaa y s Clue A equals C

11 10 Cllililled

Eactl letla m 1he c pher

MFZMLB

B

D M S

Y X X

WONGYB

D F X XS
0 V

B

0 E

vL

vL

(WXCVPC

D F X X S

RKEOXC

FONGYZPONGY

AGMVJOXEI

F P 0 R M

R M V P B

PREVIOUS SOLUTION Somehow I suspect thai 11 Shakespeare were ahve
today he mtghl be a 1azz fan h1msell ~ - Duke Ellington

':~~:~:~' S©\\.dtiN\.-~£!fSe
Ed ted

by

WOlD
IAMI

CLAY I POL~l:A~N,:;;;;;:::;;:;::;:::::;;".;_

0

Reorror,ge letters of the
lour scrombfed words be
low to form fovr words

I

I

S ERU S A

I I' 1 I I
2

LEYLJ

I I' I'

..-

1 I' I I

I

I

WOR G RE

5

l he old man Iold me that
he had few fnends A fnend
he remtnded me ts someone wtth whom you can be

. •.

I0

~-T~7,....-TI-TI-TI6;;-TI--I
.

.

BIG NATE

_

_

_

_

.

Comp lclc !he chuckle quooed
by f II ng n the m•ss1ng words
you develop fr om step No 3 below

PR NT NUM BERED
I f11(RS IN SQUARE S

0

STRI&lt;f A8J.fN( N Tl£ Will ON
HIGH PRICE!; ~HOP THE CWSf/E.PS.

!TUESDAY

ROBOTMAN
Pil~!1r?IJ ME, 1Horr l.aiK'

,.,,,-,

SWAmP OJPII'T

WHAT~

11'~

IT CALLIW'

'Tilfi PA PGR

cvr

FROM 71/E ENO LEAF

179S
Home Improvements
roof ng
~'"sured. call

A:STRO-GRAPH

pred1cttons lor the year ahead by matltng

S2 ~SE 1o Astro Graph cl o lh&lt;S

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Restdenttal or commercial, wrrmg
new serv ce or repa1rs Mas1er Lt
censed eleclr can Aldencur
E ectr ca l WV000306 304 675
1786

6 Evening cloak
7 Long -

10
11
19
2t

30 Bright color'
32 Pigeon thed

I

I~

Appliance Parts l(nd Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
pe lence All WorM Guaranteed
French Ctty Mayrag 614 446

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps Atr Cond 1on ng If
You Don t Call Us We Bolh Loset
Free Estimates 1 800 267 6308
614 446 6308 WI/ 002945

suffr:JC
5 Private teacher

--.F,---A170--.-T--,O,----11~·~:

Home
Improvements

Electrical and
Refrigeration

4 lal'lguage

Pass
Db I

1'051C. wrrn"'
f!EAV'( ~T I

INTERE,nN'-

840

1 Dancer 1 skirt
2 Coun order
3 Bring delight
to

6 ..

SERVICES

Freem11n s Heat ng And Coo ng
lnslallatton And Servrce EPA
Cer1 fred Resident a1 Commercte.l
614 256 1611

DOWN

' 25 Soprano
1
Lehmann
• 27 No matter what
person
31 Hawaiian food
!Ish
32 Grafting twig
33 Honest 34 1\Jne
35 Price
36 Stepped on
37 Dig up

East

Sun frght Pop Up Truck Camper
For 8 Ft Bed AsK ng S1 500
GMC Truck Bench Seat Wtth
Oak Dr~nk Hofdlng Arm Rest
$400 614 245-9109

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondtttonal Ill!{ me guarantee
local references furnished Ca 1
{614) 446 0870 Or {614) 237
0488 Rogers Wate(prool ng Ea
rabllshed 1975

57 Marquts de 58 - of Wight

29 Cent. Amer:

soa

810

19 Explode
20 Family car
22Two
24 Own(SCot)

OIBZ

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

C&amp;C Genera l Home Matn
tenence Pamttng v1nyl stdrng
carpentry dears w ndows baths
mobtle home repair and more For
free esl mate call Chet 614 992
6323

1:1n11 717 combrne

I

~

Budget Transmrsstons Used &amp;
Rebu1 t All Types Accessible To
Over tO 000 Transm1ssron Also
l?ans Clutches &amp; Pressure
Pates 614 379 2935

790

i

9-S

6 HP Evenrude E•cellent Condr
Iron 500 565 M1necta Troll ng
M'otor Fool Transn $100 614
388 8183

New gas tanks ona ton tr uck
Wheels radtators floor mats etc
D &amp; R .twlo Arplev WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

0

I

1988 Stralos 170tlXL 4Cyl Chev
l&amp;o E~tcell Condrtlon $6 500 00
4 446 7386

1984 Renault Alhance $750 614
992 6833

54 Sinister
17 Ibsen character 55 Irish dance
18 Actress Hagen 56 Footllke pa~

West

Yesterday I featured a deal m whtch
a pa1r lost 5 200 pomts non vulnerable
m five clubs redoubled Today 11 was
an opemng lead that cost a large num
ber ofpomts
Three hearts IS the sort of kamtkaze
openmg btd that tts practittoners thmk
ts macho They cla1m that only Wlmps
would open two hearts And a noun
hasn t been Invented for anyone who
would pass Each to hts own I suppose
West overcalled three no trump m
the hope that h1s dtamond su1t would
run Easl btd what he thought he could
make SIX clubs North With two aces
doubled West mcorreclly thmkmg
North had made a Ltghtner double wtlh
a d1amond vmd retreated to hts sutl
Now North btzarrely btd stx hearts m
stead or doubling agam
When you have the balance or pomts
and the opponents sacrtftce often a
trump lead ts best SG West placed the
heart three on the !.able
There was a good ease for playmg
the heart nme from the dummy m ease
East had the smgleton 10 ~nd West
king doubleton m spades However as
West had a smgleton spade k1ng 11
d1dn t matter After playmg low !rom
the dummy and wmnmg With the heart
seven South took another heart ft
nesse led the spade 10 and, when the
king appeared, drew West's last !rump,
saymg 'JUSt the 12" trteks That was
plus 1210 to North South
How would other leads work' Rather
better The bes!, the spade king gcner
ales 800 pomts flour down) vta a spade
ruff and trump promotton a difference
of2,010 pomts

i

1986 30 Lowe Regency pontoon
boat stnk tce box toilet w~1989
110 Johnson outboard very good
condr!ron S9250 94 tra ler nego
t able 614 3786186

1992 Sea Nymph boat Wtlh trader
75 tlp Johnson engrne With lots ol
extras rake ovor payments 614
9492672

1985 Corvene Loaded 614 682
7512

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

lor Sale

1983 Rei an t K Sta t on Wagon 4
Door Good Body Good lnte11or
Needs Mnsub1st1r Eng1ne $150
Cash Or Trade For Guns 1983
Ford Escort 2 Doors Good En
grne Good ln!enor Runs &amp;
Dr ves Good Needs Body Pans
All Parts Avatlable $325 Cash Or
Trade For Guns 614 388-9181
Leave Message

1985 Chevette chrome wnee s
tinted wrndows alarm system new
brakes $750 304 882 2326

IT'S LIKE A f.IU6E
MONSTER DE\fOURIN6
EV'ER'(f~IN61N ITS PATio!
(

OBO 614

72 Plymo uth Ouster V 8 stan
dard nansmtss1on good llody
rail~ wheels n ce lntenor $2200
080 6 14 742 1603 aller 5pm

' 16 N M resort

By Ph1lhp Alder

4
8tus s1111
304 895

TRANSPORTATION
AKC Aegrstered male
3yrs o d good wl chrldren

Chirp
- t~ night
Can prov
Plant
contatnera

Answer to Prevlout Puzzle

Mloplaces
Owfng
ActroSB - Garr
Trodemarko
Sine - non
On - road
Pay penalty lor
Tug
Row
Dog lor ohort

From bidding
to leading

Harley Dav dson 883
ster De l u~e $5 000 hrm
73 5155 or 304 773 910 7
Spm

820

6!4 448 3158
Qual ty Household Furnrb.lre And
Appl ances Great Deals On
Cash And Carry! ~ENT2 OWN
And layaway Also Ava1lable
Free Dell'o'ery W thtn 25 Mtles

lead

RIGHT NOW II

Roolrng and gutter s commercial
and resrdentral mmor reparrs 35
years exper ence B&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 992 504,

VrRA FURNITURE

Vulnerable East
Dealer South
SGuth
West North
3.
3NT 4•
Pass
Pass
Obi
Pass
6.
6.
Pass
Pass
Pass

BARNEY

1986 Honda 125 4 wheeler alec
tr c start reverse ve ry good
co nd $1 400 304 675 2074

Hay &amp; Grain

•QJ6
+(I.KQ10 76

•QJ8 7 54
• I0
+8 5 3

6003

•

EAST
•98 2
•s

SOUTH

Motorcycles

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

SWAIN
AUC T ION &amp; FURNITURE 62
01 ~e St Galtrpohs New &amp; Used
furniture heaters Western &amp;
Work boo ts 614 446 3159

530

•K
K 10 3
+AK9754 2

t958 Harley Oav1son r grd frame
sprtn ger New trres &amp; patnt a xe
con d 19 000 OBO 304 773

610 Farm Equipment

MERCHANDISE

Re trrgerator Avacodo Green
Frost Free $195 G E Relr gera
2 Bedrooms Fur n shed 113 Acre tor New Compre ssor 1 Yea r
Warrant)' L1ke ~ew $350 Relng
l ot Rt 7 Sou!h Reterenc es Re
eral-or
Harve st God Fros1 Free
qu red No Pets 6 14 256 130 4
$1 SO Kenmore Washe r S95
Wh rlpool Wa she 3 To Choose
3 0.' ·· HS....!-:';~h$1 50 Wh rlpoo Was her
Dutv lrke New 1 Year
Warranty $205 McHch ng Dryer
$205 1 Year Warrar11y Wll r pool
Dryer A~acodo Green $95 Ken
more Gas Orver Heavy Duty
$150 Eleclr c Range 30 Inch
Harvest Gold $95 E ectnc Range
440
Apartments
Wh r pool $125 Mag c Chef Gas
Range $150 Skaggs Appliances
for Rent
76 Vtne Stre et Galhpolrs 614
and 2 bedroom apar tments fur
446 7398 1 800 499 3499
mshed and unlurnrshed secur ty
Stov e Free zer Was h er Dryer
depo srt requ ed no pe ls 6 14
Aelngerator 614 256 1238
992 2218
1 Bedroom Fu n shed Apartmen!
Ne• t To Ltbra y Gall po ls 614
486 8804

740

B::!by bed srroller carseat sw ng
walker 304 675 4548

Furnished
Rooms '

+9 4

1995 S 10 4 ~ 4 prckup crurse t I!
AC gorng 10 coll ege cant alford
pa ~ men t s 30 4 675 6269 or 675
2669

AQ uar urn And Stand 33 Gallon
Fat B ack Hexagonal Fully
EQwpped 614 446 2918

lw n ~ vers Tower now accepnng
appl catons lor tbr HUD subsd
rzed apt lor elderly and hand
capped EOH 3&gt;4 675- 6679

410 Houses for Renl

Two bed oom home m Pomeroy
fo r lease w th optron 10 buy renl
$310 /mo depos t requ red no
pets 6 14 698 7244

2 Story House W1th 3 Acras 2
Car Garsge 3 Bedrooms 2
Oaltls 614 446 2323 Aller 6 PM

Nrce One BR Unlurnrshed Apart
ment Ra nge &amp; Relng Provtd~d
Waler &amp; Garbage Pad Ocpos 11
Requ red Cal 614 446 4345 Alter
6PM

Ro oms lor rent week or month
Star ! ng at $120 /mo Gallr a Hote
614 4d6 9580
9 1oac ot Rt 2 above Gall po s
Ferry c ose to town Oeautrlul r v
er vrew 304 6 75 724 1

Ttus newspaper wit not
knowllngly accept
advertisements lor real estale
wh chIs in violation of 11'16 law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwell ngs
advenlsed In th s newspaper
are available on an equal
oppor1un1ty basis

Alder Royal 210 C Cop1er $550
Aecon d'rtroned New Drum And
Developer 614 446 4514 Mon
Fr BAM To5P.M

Nrce two bedroom apa r tmen t rn
Pomeroy 614 992 5858

+8 3

1,..1 L P~BI...EM HE REI FOLKS'
I WANTCHA T'OO IS CI~~E TH
~ WITH 'IOU~ CONTAIN~'

Sre
Wllh
$50
614

N 4th Ave M ddleport 2bedroom
lu rntshed apartment Depo srt &amp;
elerences requ red 304 882
2566

v

E•cellent Aeta Space ~variable
lalayelle Man 513 922 0294

All real estate advertising 1n
thrs newspaper 1s subject to
the Fecleral Fair Hous1ng Act
ol1968 whtch makes 11 II egal
10 adventse any preference
lrmltahon or d1scnmmat on
based on race color religion
sa~~: familial status or national
orlg•r or any lntentton to
make any such preference
limitation or d1scnm natron •

8 P ece Sect onat Sofa $100
gjer Fuel Oil Healing Slove
Bower $1 25 Wheelcharrs
E ectrr c Coo "- Stoves $50
379 - 2720 After 6 PM

• A 9 2

1995 A stro (pass 1 van 4 3 htre
CP V 6 gas eng1ne autom atiC
$18 SOD Jo seph Short 614 985 •
38&lt; 8

55 Btg Scre en TV Tosh rba
$1 700 614 446 8166

One Bedroom Apartme n l For
Re nt In A o G an de S315/M9.
UtI t es Included 614 245 9082 I
, . - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 No Answe Plea so leave Mes
New 1996 14x70 ncludes sk r!
sage
n9 st eps blocks one year
homeowners rnsurance and s ~ One bed room !urn she d apart
me nt tn M dd eport ve c ean
months FREE lot renl Only $ 1025 614 446 3091 1614
53
be
99 2 04
down and $207 17 per rronth Call
1 800 837 3238
lore 10am cr alter 6pm

Permanen t posrt on w ttl ben et Is
so me m "- ng requ red Send re
sume to Farm clo PO Bolt 156
Syracuse Oh o 45779

Prestera Carner for Mental Health
Servrctl Inc a 1'\ealth care pro
v dar ol mental hea th and sub
stance abu se servrces see Ms a
1censed psycho!og st or 1t1erap1st
10 provtde clr mca supe v sron to
Mason County programs and to
prov de cl n oa l se v c:es to adults
and chr d en n outpat ent sett ng
or w th contractual agenc es Re
qu re s Masters degree rn psv
enol ogy /hu man serv1ce s I e d
plus two ye ars ex per enc e and
pro fes s a nal I cense or I cense
el g bItt~ E~cellenl benelts SLJO
m 1 resume rnclud ng sa a y re
au rements to

Gracro,;s vmg
a nd 2 beoroom
apanmen ts a V llage Ma nor and
R vers de Apar lments 1n Mrddle
pon From ~232 $355 Call 614
99 2 5859 Equal Housrn g Oppor
tun t es
l arge apartment rn Pomeroy all
ultl1 1es pad $400 month 614
985 4256

• A Q J 7 63

Onoo

:F-,'-,o-s_n_e_d A
c-p- ,'-,-,m-e_o_t_A_U_
u&lt;-,-.-s 1 27 Ze n lh TV Works! floor
Pa d Dow ns ta rrs S1851Mo 9 19 Mod el 4 Year s O ld 614 446
Second Avenue 51 4 446 39 -&lt;5
6970
Fo r Sa le 42 Inch Br9 Screen
Stere o TV Wn h Surround ing
Soun d Capab lty l 1ke New Or
Trad e For Far m T actor 4.x4
P ck Up 4 Wheele Wllh P TO
(614) 256 61 14 Anybme

r----NOFITJH-!9;:;5;;~;;.,-,,

Seen A1 Gallrpohs Da ly Tr bune
625 Thud Avenu e Ga tlr polts

1 Ra nbow sweeper wuh anacn
B EAUT IFUL APART MENTS AT ments 304 67'5- 1726
BUDGET PR ICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Wes1 wood Dr ve 10 Gun Cabmet Bfue Endchner
tr om $226 to $29 Walk to srop Sect on al Lo ve Seat We i ght
&amp; moves Call614 446 2568
Bench Set NewAelrrgera!or GE
EQual Hous ng Opportuli ty
Sh op Vac Carpe t Cleaner
W nchestiH 22 A lie Model , 90
De uxe apanment do ~N fltown
Wa ds Wester! eld 22 Rrfle 61&lt;4
Pleasant 1b ed oom centra l
446 9701
&amp; ac d shwastler wasner &amp;
er all etec1 r c water tur •
15 cu brc foot dee~ freeze lor sale
304 S75 57331eave message
May tag wr nger washer $100
each 6 14 992 221 5
E.xecut ve ap t 1br lull MtcM n
d shwasner wa she rd ye r c.ent ral 1950 s Waterfa ll Bedroom Surre
arr &amp; heat warer tu 1n shed pr
Dou bleb ed 5 Drawe r Dresser
vate entra nce references de
Van ty W1tb Etched Mmor Stool
posrt 304 675 5733
6!4 446 3775 614 446 1708

.Earn $1000s w ee~ l y stu ltng en
'.~e l opes at ~ome Be your boss
Start now No exp free suppl es
nfo no oblrganon Send S A. S E
10 P estrge Un 1 Ill PO Bo x
W rner S~ rr ng s Fl
195609
3?7 19

H r ng Sales Represenlat ve s For
House Of lloyd Excellent Bene
hrs And Pay Free Krt To Star t
Fantasuc H os tess P~ n Also
BooMing Parti es 614 379 2 1 ~1

72 000 Miles $6 0 00 Can Be

1 Hussman LBF 4 Hot zonta l Dis
pl ay Fr&amp;ezer 1 Mast&amp;l'b It Step In
Coo ler 5 x4 f l a'fiOr 339 Sort
S&amp;rve Water Cooled Machrne AI
ter 5 00 6 14 245 9033 Be for e
5 00 6 14 44 1 11 41

1
5
9
12

13 !~pulse
14 Type of bean
15 Wear out

1990 Dodge Ram Va~;~ B 250
Apartment
Park W th ltvmg
roo ms Bath And Knchen Om ng
Room Wtttl Ret ng&amp;raiOI And
Stove Gas Prov ded No Pets
S27SrMo 6 14 448 442 5 61 4
446 2325

Sentinel • Pacle 11

In the year ahead condrttons tn general
look promtstng tor you espectally tn sttu
allOns where you have already latd sohd
loundattons One or more of your projects
may land 1n the w1nner s ctrcle

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Keep a weath
er eye peeled today lor both econormc
and career opportun1t1es lnstgnlftcanl
developments could suddenly become
very tmpor1ant Vtrgo treat yourseH to a

btrthdey gilt Send lor your Astra Graph

I

might be the day
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) You may

nefispaper~ 0 Box 1 759 Murray Hill
Statton New York NY 10150 Make sure
to state your zod 1ac 51gn

be espec1alfy fucky today You m1ght
begm partiCipatmg m a development
where someone you know ts already

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Ventures or

do&lt;ng quole well
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19) You are

enterpnses you ong 1nate or have 8 rree
hand 1n dtreC1lng should hve up to your
expectatiOnS today tf you don t delegate
too much authortty

entertng a cycle where you c ou ld be
more lonunate than usual through part
nersh1p arrangements Look for opportu

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) On most
occaS&lt;ons lhe ltnancoall&lt;ps g&lt;ven to us
by 1nslders are of little value Today how

ntl&lt;es lhrough alltances
TAURUS (Aprii2D-May 20) Acl &lt;n accor
dance wrth your 1deas today If you con

ever tnformai!On passed on to you mtght
bear mvesttgatlon

cetve ol a way to advance your ambihons
and asptrattons move on tl promptly

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec 211 Today

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Thtnk w1n
today tf partiCipating In any type of com

you might denve more enJoyment from
act1v 1t1es that are more verbal than phys 1
C::U Conversallons wtlh lrJieresllng fnends
could ftll the bill

Wednesday Sept 6 1995

I

petltJYe Involvement with pronounced ele
ments of chance whether II be sports
SOCial acttvtttes romance or busmess

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-.Jan 19) You are

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Important

1n a good cycre tor your flnanctaf attatrs
Somethtng that starts out small ITHght
suddenly evolve mto somethtng qu 1te
grand

changes you Implement today could have
far reachrng favorable effects Move
th1ngs around and make adjustments if it
oould better your lot 1n life

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 191 News

LEO (July 23-Aug 221 Your Judgment

you ve been hoping tor perta 1n1ng to an will be qutte QD_?d today prov1ded you
arrangement outs 1de of your 1mmedrate don t try to secohd guess yoursetf Abide
control could be forthcommg Today ~ by your on the-spot dec!Stons

UNSCRAMBlE LETT ERS
fO R ANIWlR

I

SCRAM-LUS ANSWERS
Wtunny Tnb e Wrung · Yeoman BIG MOUTH
A colleague gets mto trouble because she ts very
optntonated and outspoken Our boss says that
trouble comes from a narrow mmd combtned wtth a
BIG MOUTH

SEPTEMBER 5 I

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 5, 1995

Ohio Lottery

Rip ken
ties Gehrig's
record

Ill

Pick 3:
316
Pick 4:
6571

Buckeye 5:

Sports, Page 5

Low .t onight In 50s, clear.
Tbunday, partly cloudy. Hlglu
In the 80..

6-7-13·16·19

Ill
,Vol. 46, NO. 91
Copyright .1995

Video Ear Inspection Camera

U.S. pins hopes on monitoring trade pact

Comes to Beltone Hearing Aid Center
WHERE:

DAY: DATE:
TIME:
PHONE:

1312 EASTERN AVE.
_,
GALLIPOLIS, OH . .
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY .
. SEPTEMBER 6 &amp; 7
9 A.M.-4 P.M.

.

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Ewnomlcs · Wrlt~r.
WASHINGTON - The Clinton administralion is hoping a plan for
monitoring its auto pact wilh Japan will answer critics who say !he deal
will do little.to narrow !he huge trade gap between !he United States and
Japan.
Tile derailed package, unveiled loday, would contain' a variety of ways
Jo monitor success in increasing sales to Japan of American autos and
auto parts.
·
·
U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor called the auto deal "an
unprecedented set of commiunents made by Japan."
"Opening of the world's serond largest auto market is critical Ia the
U.S. economy," Kantor told a crowded gathering of auto industry executives assembled in the Old Executive Office Building lo hear details of the ·
plan.
·

DR A. J. BAILES OFFICE
224 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH
FRIDAY
SEPTEMBER 8
9 A.M. 4 P.M.

614-446-1744

·Call now to schedule your appointment.
THIS EVENT WILL BE HELD THIS WEEK ONLY!

FR·E E

SEEING .IS BELIEVING.

Real Ea'r ·Analysis .

We'll look into your ear canal with our New MEDRx Video Ear Camera.
You'll watch the TV screen and we'll explain to you what you're seeing . .
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Earwax in the receiver is still one of the most common reasons a
hearing aid doesn't work the way it was designed to. We'll inspect
your aid with ou'rvideo camera. You'll see if there is wax buildup or
corrosion accumulating in your aid. Service available for ALL hearing
aids regardless of where you bought them.
FREE CHECKUP and CLEANING of your present hearing aids.

A· 16'year-old Middlepon youth
was arraigned Tuesday afternoon
on a charg~ of felonious assault in
connection with the shooting of
another Middleport youth near
Middleport Saturday evening.
The youth was arraigned before
Ju\lge Robert Buck of the Meigs
County Juvenile Court
The victim, 16-year-old Chad
Wise, was shot in the abdomen by
the youth with a .38-caliber handgun. He is now listed in fair roridition at Ohio Slate University Medi·

•

Hearing Aid Analysis ensures you that your current hearing aid is
working at its maximum performance. We'll measure the .output of
your aid and compare it to the sounds they were designed to produce. We'll help determine .if you're hearing and understanding as
well as you should be.
FREE adjustment to maximize your hearing aid performance.

'

··'· '

,. .. ·•::"'.,_:

Workers are busy laying asphalt on tbe western end of tbe Drst phase of tbe U.S. 3311·77 con·
neclor road project. In the above photo, a truck driver dumps a load of hot aspbalt into a spread·
er machine forming the new roadway. Meanwhile, on the eastern end of the project, where earth
movers are stUI excawtlng the connector road, bottom photo, other workers are installing a large
culvert tbat will cross undet tbe existing State Route 7 near Five Points. The culvert will later be
covered with earth. Tbe 2.25-mUe first section of the proposed C'!_nnector betw~en Rock Springs
and Ravenswood, W.Va~ is expected to be completed by next year, Ohio Department of Trans. portatlon officials said. (Sentinel photos by Jim Freeman)
·
.

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/

Despite U.S. presence, leaders
stress strikes are NATO effort

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

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Where:

Dr. A. J. Bailes Office
1312 Eastern Ave.
224 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Oh~
Gallipolis, Oh.
Friday
Day: Wednesday &amp; Thursday
'
September 8
Date:
September 6 &amp; 7
9 A.M. 4 P.M.
. 9A.M.·4 P.M.
Time:
614-446-1744
Phone:
CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-634-5265
7 .DAYS A WEEK

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•
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.

. through the hills, southeast towards
Workers are presently ·laying Ravenswood, W.Va.
asphalt on the western, Rock
Also on the weslem end, workSprings end of the project nearest crs are installing a large culvert that
Meigs High School. Ncar the high will go underneath the existin_g
school, a new blacktop sutface cov- state route,
·
ers lhat existing portion of
Counting both stone a'l.d
Pomeroy Pike.
asphalt. !he roadway will be around
On the eastern end , at Five 20 inches thick, said Ohio DepartPoints, engineers arc removing · ·ment of Transportation project
earth from high areas overlooking · supervisor Charlie Brown.
·
The· 2.25-mile section of four.
State Route 7.
From that end, it is 'possible to
lane _highway, along with the slip
see where subsequent portions of repa1r along SR 7 south of Five
the connector road will wind
Points, is set 10 be completed by
June 19%.

cal Center in Colwnbus,
"According to witnesses, four
shots were fired ·at Wise after
which the youlh who commitled
the shooting left the scene and
returned to his home," Prosecuting
Auorney John R. Lentes said.
"Wise was able to make his way
to a nearby residence where help
was swnmoned," he added.
The name or the suspect is being
withheld due to the fact that he is a
juvenile, Lenles said.
The charge of felonious assault

is an aggravated felony of the second degree but that charge may he
amended to a charge of attempted
murder at a ~~ter date, according to
Lentes.
"No decision has been made at
this time as to whether or not the
juvenile will be auempted 10 be
bound over and,handled through
the adult system, he added.
. .
The suspect is being held at 'the
Zanesville Youlh Detention Center
pending further hearings in the
juvenile court.

DEP labels permit change 'major'

You asked for small... ·
when lnvisa™ is placed in your ear canal •••
it becomes ,virtually INVISIBLE

lnVISA

a modem, four-lane highway.

Tee·n arraigned in alleged shooting

HEARING AID ANALYSIS
Analyze Your Hearing Aid's Performance

'I

l

First phase of connector work
changes familiar landscapes
The landscape between Rock
Springs and Five ·Points has
changed considerably since Kokos·
. ing Construction Co . .broke ground
on the fJCSt pbase of the U.S. 33fl·
77 connector road projecr in
March.
With much of the excavation
work done, the future· $12.3 million
_ roadway - .complele with interscc·
lions and service roads - is
already taking shape.
Gone are the characteristic hills,
replaced with the gradual slopes
and gentle curves, cuts and fills of

FREE

VIDEO HEARING AID INSPECTION
·Preventative Maintenance Checkup

Connector progresses...

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•

The main feature of the monitoring agreement w.ill be the establishBuchanan said. "This does nor al1cr the fad that there was nothing in the
ment of an-interagency team composed,of live Cabinet-level agencies that . agreement. We got nothing·but another promise from the Japanese."
·
will work to gather data on sales of U.S. made autos and auto parts.
Buchanan and another GOP presidential candidate, Senate Majority
Commerce Secretary Ron Brown, who also attended the ceremony,
Leader ~o~ Dol~ of Kansas, have both been highly critical of the fact that
said that this "enfbrcement team" will provide increased access to the
the admm1strauon settled for an agreement that contains no specific
type of data necessary to ensure that Japan Jives up to its commiunents.
numerical targets. ·
Officials of both the auto and auto parts industries presented stale·
Dole, in a speech on the Senate noor after the deal was announced in
ments endorsing !he package in what llie administration hoped would he a
Geneva on Ju~e 28: blasted it as "vague, unenforceable, nonbinding.''
spread of widespread support in answer to critics who have charged that
The atlrnm1strauon has countered that even though the deal itself conthe administration's effon will come up short in producing actual results
tains no specific nwnbcrs for sales increa&lt;es, the U.S. government will be
•
because it lacks numerical goals.
closely watching 10 see whether Japanese auto companies live up to busiConservative Pat Buchanan, who is seeking the Republican presidenness plans tlmt ·were announ~d in conjunction with the agreement.
tial nomination; said the administration was making a futile . effon to sal·
The monuonng package IS dcs1gncd to set benchmarks for measuring
vage a bad deal.
those increases.
"This is_Bill Clinton's effort to -engage in political d;unage rontrol,"

COMPUTERIZED EAR ANALYSIS

You'll SEE ... exa~tly what we SEE

.

.•.

FREE

VIDEO EAR INSPECTION

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 6, 1995

I

airstrikes are "a NATO operaWASHINGTON (AP) - As
tion."
bombs fell 1m Bosnian Serb targets,
White House spokesman 'Mike
dropped more often than not from
McCurry
described Clinton as
under !he wings or U.S. warplanes,
"fully
supportive"
or the air
President Clinton was "fully sup·
strikes.
portive" of the NATO attack.
The low-key statements from
That phrase was an ·understatethe
administration masked the
men~ for it was Clinton and his top ,
intense
debare 'that went 'on
advisets at the Pentagon .and State
the
United' Stines and its
between
Deparunent who .urged the allies
allies
almost
from the moincnt
most forcefully to use air power in
Clintoo
took
oflice.
·
the Balkan war.
and
France
had repeated·
Britain
The administration iS going to
ly
rebuffed
calls
by
Clinton ror
great lengths to underscore that the
the Serbs,
decisive
action
against
Western allies, not the United
arguing
that
aggressive
strikes
States alone, direct the air cam·
would endanger their peacekeepers
paign, ·even though American air·
planes comprise more than half the on the ground in Bosnia. Now, with
the ground U{)()ps pulled back to
strike force.
safer positions, the allies seem to
"This is a NATO operation,"
Stale Department spokesman be reading from the same quote
book.
Nicholas Burns said Tuesday. As
British Prime Minister John
such, he left it to NATO spokesmen to detail the latest round or Major said Tuesday, "I fully sup·
port the decision to resume
airstrikes.
airs trikes . " A British official,
It was much the same at a Penspeaking on rondition of anonymi.'
tag~riefing Tuesday, where
ty, said the collapse of two of the
spo
Kenneth Bacon said not
U.N.- protected "safe areas" in
once bu three times that the

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The
The DEP submitted the drafl in allow no dioxin.
· •·
West Virginia Division of Environ·
response · to a request by' the state
Dioxin, shown to be carcino.;:
mental Protection on Wednesday
En~ironmental Quality Board. The genic in lests on lab animals, is a .
described its change to ~ero dioxin
board is hearing challenges to the byproduct of cenain industrial proin a wasre-water discharge permit penn it by the Ohio Valley Environ· cesses, including those that use
mental Coalition, the ACT Founda· chlorine cornjlounds.
for a proposed pulp and paper mill
as a "major" modification, acrord ·
lion and Monty Fowler of Cabell
Most pulp mills use chlorine to
ing to published reports.
Co.unty.
bleach paper so it is bright white·
:
Because the change is consid· . AI Morris, water management please consumers.
ered significant, !he public will get division director for the U.S. Envi·
Tbc proposed Apple Grove miir
a shot at rommenting on the perlhit ron mental Protection Agency ,would use chlorine dioxide, a com~
for the proposed $1 billion Apple · region that oversees West Virginia, pound the rompany says nullifies
Grove Pulp &amp;. Paper Co:, to be
has sa_1d the agency anticipates the fear of dioxin by reducing it to
built about 25 miles upriver from
levels so small they are undercvJewmg the changes . ·
Huntington on the Ohio River.
Tbe West Virginia Division o( . tectable.
·
, ·
The draft pennit will be submit·
Environmental Protection shocked
Dioxin is detected to a certain
led for public inspection in the next groups. oppo~ed to the mill last . point, but it then becomes too small
IOdays, a story printed today in !he
month :-"hen ll anno_un_ced 11 was and too hidden to e'ven the best
Huntington Herald-Dispatch
modllymg_the penon 11 gave t_he methods of measurement by the
reports. The public the has 30 days
company~~ August 1994 to diS· U.S. Environmental Protection
to make romrnents on the change .
· charge waste into the Ohio River to Agency.
·

•

•

Bosnia in July helped shift opinion
in Europe in the direction of the
Clinton administration position.
Speaking in California to a
roomful or' eighth-graders, Clinlon
explained U1e frustralions
"I think the United States has to
work within the United Nations ...
·but it' s hard for us when we're the
strongest country in the world and
the other countries don't do what
we think they should do and we
have no way of making them do
it," Clinton said. "Now we're .
working together ·and I agree with .
the p()licy."
In the Stale Department briefing, Bums said the Bosnian Serh'
may face continued intensive
NATO bombardment even after
peace talks are ronvened.
"It could very weU be the case
that we have peace talks going on
ON THE MOVE - President Cilnton sbouk hand• Tuesday
in Geneva and we have a continuaaner
speaking with students at Abraham Lincoln Middle School in
tion or the military action on the
Selma, Calif. On a lour promoting education, the president said
ground," Bums said. "It is somethe .NATO aUies were acting as a unit In retaliating agaiiL'll Bosnitimes necessary to use d1fferent
an
Serb defiance of a United Nations demand IQ cease attacks in
levers to achieve political objecthe Balkan War. (AP)
tives.''

·Non-teaching
Trimble staff
go on strike
GLOUSTER . (AP) - Non~
teaching employees m the Trimble
school district went on strike this
• morning after negotiators failed t6
reach agreement on a new contract.
Danny Lackey. 'schools transportation supervisor. said tbe
employees, including bus drivers·
and cooks, set up picket lines short.
ly before daybreak.
Classes were expectell to con tin:
ue as scheduled in the southeast
Ohio district, but bus and cafeterill
service would not be available, said
Garry Hunter, an attorney for the
district.
.
Talks between the two sides
broke off Tuesday night, Hunter
said.
The American Federation· of
. State, County, and Municipal
Employees, which represents the .
42 employees, has said the dispute
is related to wa~es.
·
. The district JUS! north of Athens
has about 1,100 stUdents.
There was no telephone listing
available for the.union.
.
.

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