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                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 6, 1995

Community Birthdays for the homeless are the cakeman's best medicine
calendar
1979.
Delores Ford, who has managed
the shelter on the city's tough
North Broad Street for five years,
says even the most alienated of the
homeless brighten up in the glow
of Farley's binhday candles.
"lust seeing your name on a
cake can make you cry," said 28year·old Hector Hernandez, a
recovering drug addict who got his
last cake in February.
Farley makes several different
types of the large, two-layer cakes,
including van.illa and chocolate. He.
learned his Waf around an oven
baking 10,000 loaves of bread a
week for a Virginia monastery.

more than just sweet nOthings, said
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ·Hardened by years on the street. 'Bethesda's Gino Lerario. The con·
Tbe Community Calendar l.s even the toughest of Philadelphia's fections are big medicine for
published as a free service to homeless soften when a crusty old restoring trust and self-esteem. and
non-profit groups wishing to salt named Pete Fruley gives them can help ease a homeless person
announce meeting and s'peclal a baodout they never asked for- a back into the community.
events. Tbe calendar Is not binhday cake.
"Some people need just one
dulgned to promote sales or
For the past four years, all 48 small link to bring them back to
fund raisers of any type . Items residents of the &amp;ity's Bethesda their fellows, and in some cases it
are printed 115 space permits and homeless shelter have received a ca n be as simple as a birthday
cannot be guaranteed to run a . home-baked cake on their binhday party," Lerario said.
specific number of days.
The Bethesda Project bas been
with a personal congratulatory
message from the 69-year-old for· working with what it calls the most
hardcore homeless - mental
mer sailor and monic
WEDNESDAY
u Anyone who survives a year
health patients, drug abusers, the ill
PORTI.AND - PTO Portland on these streets deserves a party," and elderly - since Father
Elementary school, 7.p.m. Wednes- Farley said Tuesday.
Dominic
a Roman-Catholic
But the rosette-dotted cakes are ... priest,
the ornPram in
day.

Farley, a Philadelphia native,
spent years in the Navy and the
merchant marines before joining
the monastery on the advice of a
spiritually inspired shipmate.
"The abbot called me in one
day and said 'I'd like you to be the
baker.' I'd never baked anything in
my life. I borrowed an old Army
field manual and learned. " Farley
said. "Holy obedience.''
He soon began pushing the
abbey's ovens until they were turning out hundreds of loaves a day to
be sold in Washington, D.C ..
supermarkets.
He left the monastery in 1969
after 15
married a former

•

nun· and had three children . Retiring from his machinist's job in
1990, he decided to devote his
spare time to the homeless.
The move has done wonders.
"People shun you when you're
on the street, step over you, make
you want to die," said Hernandez,
who has received three of Farley's
chocolate specials. "Then along
comes Pete to celebrate the fact
that you're still alive.'.'

Pick 3:
183
Pick 4:
8910
Super Lotto:

15-23-25-27-37-39
KJcker:

820835

Page4

·a I

Gene Sarazen was 20, too young
to vote, when he won the U.S.
Open golf tournament in 1922.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Zoning Board of Appeals meet 7 p.m.
Wednesday at council chambers in
Pomeroy village hall.
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - PTO meeting,
Syracuse Elementary School,
Thursday, 7 p·.m. to plan for fall
carnival and basketball program.

•

Manager
Big Bend
Food land

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections. closed Friday
so that employees may anehd district meeting.

•

EN,.ER '0 WIN fBII GROCERIES •••

LONG BOTTOM - lOOth
· Anniversary of the Long Bottom ·
· United Methodist Church this
· weekend .. Service, 7:30 Friday and
· Saturday, Rev. Norman Butler,
· Vienna, W. Va., guest speaker;
Sunday school at 9:30, worship at
109:30 with Jamie Sprague, speaker. Carry-in dinner at noon; pro·
gram at 2 p.m. with special music.
SATURDAY
POMEROY- Manley family
reunion will be held Satunlay at 5
p.m. at Roy Oak Resor-t. Those
auending to take a covered dish.

.,

.,.•

POMEROY - Burling~am
Modern Woodmen dinner at
McDonald's in Pomeroy,' Saturday,
.6 to 8 p.m. Those of camp and
guests to register at restaurant to $2.
certificate toward dinner.

•
•

Eighth Hudnall
reunion held
.o

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to Umlt Quantities • Prices Eff-=tlve Thru

By TOM HUNTER
Sentin~l News Staff
Plans have been finalized for the
1995 Middleport River Festival,
ofricials confirmed ·at a meeting
Tuesday night.
The Middleport Community
Association met to announce the
final lineup of entertainment and
activities for the annual River Festival, to be held the weekend of
Sept 15-16 at Dave Diles Park on
the riverfront.
The festival will kick off Friday,
Sept 15, with performances by the
Big Bend Cloggers at 5:30, and CJ
and the Country Gentlemen at 6:30.
Free hot dogs, snacks, and soft
drink will be provided, courtesy of .
the American Legion, Feeney Bennett Post 128 .
· On Saturday, Sept. 16, a.big day _
of entertainment gets underway
with a full slate of kid's activities,
starting at 11:30 a.m. with the
Meigs County Humane Society·
directed pet parade .
The parade will organize behind
Fisher Funeral Home at II a.m ..
then march down First Street along
,the river and stop when it comes to
Dave Diles Park. Prizes will be
awarded.
Kid's activities continue at
12:30 p.m. when a pizza eating
contest, tug-of-war, and sack race
take place. From 2-2:30 p.m., the
Mark Wood Magic Show will take '
place on the main stage, with the
Mark Wood strolling magic show
occuring throughout the festival
from 2:30·3:30 p.m.
.
At noon, the annual River Festi·
val Queen Contest takes place. with
young ladjes from the Bend Area
high schools competing for the title
of queen. At 12:30, an exhibition
from the Dazzling Dolls baton
corps takes place. The Big Bend
Cloggers will perfoQD at 3 p.m.
Artisan demonstrations will
occur from 1-4 p.m. with demonstrations of tine Appalachian folk
art, including basket weaving, claywork and wood sculpting. along
with seat weaving and chair caning.
At I p.m .. the annual river festival
horseshoe contest will take place.
Musical entertainment at this
year's festival kicks off at I p.m.
with Kim Batey. Roger and Mary
Gilmore wiih Sweet Mountain
Sound will perform at 2 p.m. Dee
and Dallas, a veteran performer at
the festival, will perform at p.m.
The Old Timer's Band from
Mason, W.Va., will perform ai 5
p.m., and the band White Rav~n
will perform its blend of classic
rock and contemporary rock-n:roll
· at6p.m.
All entertainment wiU take place
on the stage in Dave Diles Park.
Headline entertainment concludes the river festival with a
l"'ge-scale professional wrestling
sbow that will take center stage at 7
p.m. in the "squared-circle," to be
placed adjacent to the depot in the
park.
. .
The master of ceremonies for
the festival will be Chuck Kitchen.
'"Everything bas really came
together well for the festival . I'm
really excited about it," stated
. Community Association President
Dennis Hockman. ·
Hockman said all of the vendor
spaces for the festival's Race Street
food court had been reserved as of
Tuesday. Only 10 spaces in the
alleyway in front of the park
remai1,1 available for crafters and
vendors at the restival.

?

l KRAFT TOUCH OF
I
I
16 OZ. BOWL
1 BUY ONE, Gft
II

By JOHN CHALFANT
cOmpared with the current $450 million total. 1
Assodated Press Wrller
"I don't feel confident that we'll get an increase." Lee said at a news
COLUMBUS - Federal money ror a program that helps finance drug conference.
·
task forces in Ohio likely will keep coming despite a Climate of cutbacks
"I feel confident that people on Capitol Hill know ... the benefits and
in Washington, a state agency said.
·
they're aware that to do away with the ... program would be a fatal blow
The Office of Criminal Justice Services on Wednesday released a swn- to a lot of these programs," he said.
mary of last year's performance for a program that includes task forces
About 19 percent of the federal money channeled through the office
that operate in more than half the state's 88 counties.
for drug-related crime programs went to local multi-jurisdictional drug
Topping the tally: 2,204 arrests and $20 million worth of iUegal drugs trafficking task forces.
orr the stieets. Cost $3.3 million.
Other grants went for victim assistance, community corrections.
The office administers two federal grant programs for drug control and · domestic violence, witness aid, and other programs.
juvenile delinquency, conducts criminal justice research and provides polFederal money for the program was distributed partly on the basis of
icy infof!llation to Gov. George Voinovich and legislatOrs.
population, and Obio received $17.5 million for t11e current budget year.
Director Michael Lee said the proposed federal budget that cleared the
States must give at lest 64 percent of the money to local governments.
House recommended $475 million worth of national grants next year, although Ohio passes through 75 percent.

Festival Hillside Academy looking
schedule to become full-time school
finalized

Jim Johnson

RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
at the Rutland Fire Station.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Hillside Christian Academy,
offering an alternative to public
schools, opened its doors
Wednesday morning with an
open house,
.
Affiliated with the Hillside
Baptist Church of Pomeroy, the
academy is essentially a support
group for parents who teach their
children at borne.
However, Hillside Bapti"&lt;l
Church pastor and academy prin·
cipal Rev. James Acreel Sr. foresees making the academy a fullservice Christian school next
year.
.
The academy is outreaching to
loc:rt· home scboolers, he said,
giving out advice and lilerature
along with instructipn. The
academy will also offer field
trips, outings, sports and other
·activities to assist in the socializing of home-schooled ~1\ildren.
"It's basically for home
schoolers," he said. "We're here
to back them up on any curriculum they are falling short on.''
The academy features II allvolunteer staffers. 50 percent of
whom have kids in home schooling programs, Acree said. About
a dozen kids are currently
enrolled in the program.
The building · is already .
designed for schooling, according
to Acree, offering 11 classrooms,
a business office and copier
room, a nursery ·area for small
children of parent volunteers, and
a principal's office.
The academy's curriculum,
taught by volunteer instructors,
includes beginning music, art,
history, vocal music, biology,
business and money management, phy~ical education and
health, along with the basic read- ·
ing, writing and arithmetic.
"Out goal is not 10 attack anyone. just to teach (the children)
right," Acree said. "I feel the
direction taken· by pubhc schools
is disruptive to Christian beliefs;

·Not

tor

Lee's office next week will announce SIS million wonh of grants to
agenCies that submitted applications in May.
Statewide, 77 percent of task force arrests last year were for drug trafficking.
Cocaine and crack accoonted for 48 percent of the arrests, with mari·
joana 37 percent and LSD 3 percent. No other drug accounted for more
than 2 percent of arrests.
Those arrested were typically adult white males. Fifty-six percent were
white, and 36 percent were black. Hispanics and other racial/ethnic
groups each accounted for 4 percent.
Lee said task forces ihat involve multiple law enforcement agencies
have proven effective. But the former county sheriff stopped short of recommending a single statewide police agency.
.
"What we have seen is that Ohio is very proud of its partnership in law
enforcement with sherifrs' offices, police dcparuncntl and the State Highway Patrol," he said.
1
•

Education S.ervice
Center examines
enrollment figures
. Meigs County schools reported
a tentative total enrollment of 4,132
stutlents lfor the 1995-96 school
year, it was reported ai Wednesday
·night's meeting of the Meigs County Educational Service Center.
The center was formerly known
as the Meigs County Board of Education,

The tentative enrollment by district 'is as follows: Eastern Local,
847 students; Meigs Local, 2.462
students; and Southern Local, 823
studenlli.
Superintendent John D. Riebe'!
Sr. said the figures are down by
about 200 students compared to
last October, but said enrollment
may ·increase now that the Labor
Day holiday is over.
In personnel matters, the .board
approved Keith Eubanks as a regular employee in the position of
severe behavior handicapped teacher provided he receives proper cer-

TEACHING BIOLOGY - Joe Humphrey taught youngsters biology at Hillside Christian Academy Wednesday morn•
lng. The academy opened 118 doors with an open house ceremony and is operating u a support service for parents who teach
their children at home. The Rev. James Acree Sr., academy
prlnclpa~ said the academy may serve as a full-time Christian
school next year.
it is the main reason people are
all my heart that there has to be
pulling their children out of pubsemething done to rescue the
lic schools.
children," Acree sal d. "We're try"There arc religion-based, . ing to save our own children Christian principles in all we
we don't want to lose them."
teach," he added. "We stress the
"People say that (we should
· importance of the family, disci·
rescue the children) ... but we
pline, sharing and caring."
need to act on it. Rescuing the
"We pray, pledge allegiance to childten is the heart of this
the U.S. nag and the Bible 'While thing," he said.
promoting manners, ethics and
"The vision (of starting a regurespect for others," he said.
lar Christian school) has started
"Why are we here? I feel with and is on schedule."

ByALANFRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASH!NGTON -With a Sen·
ate vote looming on whether to
expel him for sexual and official
misconduct, Sen. Bob Packwood
says the way he's been treated
"makes the Inquisition look like a
study in fairness.". He declared
today: '"I have no intention of
resigning."
In a dramatic turnaround in the
33-month-old scandal involving the
veteran lawmaker, the Senate
Ethics Com.mittee voted 6-0
Wednesday to recommend the Ore·
gon Republican's expulsion. It is
the harshest penalty Congress can
impOse on one of its own.
A defiant Packwood appeared
on the network talk shows this
morning to press his case. "l don't
think it's fair to me or anyone else
to take away their lifetime job and
say you're never going to get a
chance to face your accusers, you'll
never get a chance to leU the public
your side of the story .... " he said.
"That is absolutely unfair, and
when you star! going that road,
that's a sorry day fpr America," he
said.
Declaring that "I have no inten-

lion of resigning." Packwood said,
''I want the public to at least see
the charges and see my responses.''
The panel'~ chairman, Sen .
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky ., and
ranking Democrat Sen . Richard
Bryan of Nevada scheduled a news
conference today to discuss the '
decision. They planned to release
documents gathered in the investigation.
The committee's three Republicans and three Democrats said
Packwood's actions were "a crime
against the Senate" and "bring
discredit and dishonor" on the
institution. Bryan said he hoped the
chamber would take up the matter
next week.
"I haven't talked to all of our
colleagu·es, but the ones I have
talked to also echoed surprise at the
severity of the recommendation,"
Sen. John Breaux. D·La., said on
"Fox Morning News.'' "But they
hasten to add they don't know the
information or facts that the Ethics
Committee had before them in
making this recommendation."
The problems have churned
around Packwood since days after
he was elected to a fifth six-year
term in 1992. The Washington Post

tification from the Ohio Department of Education and provided
the ·student enrollment requirement
is met.
The hoard also employed Esther
Barkat as a school psychologist,
half-time. 91 days ror the 1995-96
school year and Keith Euhank.1 as a
substitute teacher.
Bus driver certificates were
arproved for Howard Lawrence Jr.
·
and Carolyn Gillian.
In other business, the board
approved a parent mentor grant of
$25,000 and .approved textbook
adoptions for Biology 11 and typing
'in order to update the textbooks.
The next meeting will be held
Thursday, Oct. 5 at 7 p.m.
·
Also present were Treasurer
Carole Gilkey, Board President Jeff
Harris and members Howard Caldwell, ' I.O. McCoy and Jeanette
Thomas.

Teachers show support
for striking Trimble staff
GLOUSTER (APl - If teachers
at a southeast Ohio school district
do not return to work, a lawyer said
he will ask the State Employment
Relations Board today 10 order
them to do so.
Most of the district's 70 teachers did not repon to work Wednesday in a show of support for other
striking employees in the Trimble
school district, just north of
Athens.
·
.
At least six teachers and 43
pupils attended classes tod1y.
Th~ teachers are under a separate contract, so their action is an
unfair labor practice, said Garry
Hunter, an anomey for the district.
Hunter did not return a message
seeking additional comment t!¥1ay.
The Ohio Education Association
represents the teachers. Kevin

Whitby, an OEA labor relations
consultant in Athens, did not return
telephone messages left Wednesday and tOday.
.
Bob Turner of the Americari
Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees said the
strike is about wage increases. The
union represents 39 employees in
the district, including bus drivers·
and cook.&lt;.
"Obviously, we arc extremely.
pleased by the support," Turner
srud. "We'll remember them when
they .~re in contract renegotiations.
.
Two principals and five teachers
conducted classes Wednesday for
about 100 of the district's 1.100
pupils. Bus and meal service were
not available.

Murder case
indictments
are issued

Senate ethics panel votes
to expel defiant Packwood

OUTRAGEOUS- Sen. Bob Packwood, R·Ore., called the decision by the Senate Ethics Committee !o expel him for sexual _and
official misconduct "totally and absolutely outrageous" while
speakl113 to the press Wednesday on Capitol Hill. (AP)
reported that he had made unwanted sexual advances to numerous
women ovCJO two decades. The lawmaker, who turns 63 on Monday,
was married for most of the period.
· The charges against him gradually expanded, and he said that

NO PURO'.ASI NICISSARY. MUST Bill 01 OIDIR TO PlAY. ODDS &amp;OfFICIAL RULES AVAIIABL! AT FOODIAND
Wtc

2 Sections, 16 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 7, 1995

·Drug task force cash to keep coming

FOODLAND

TUPPERS PLAINS - Ladies
Auxiliary of the VFW, Post 9053,
Tuppers Plains will meet Thursday,
7:30p.m. at the post home.

J

Vol. 46, NO. 92

CHECK THI ClA~~IfiiD~ fOR All YOUR NIID~!

POMEROY - Open house at
Hillside Christian Acact•my. State
Route 143, Pomeroy, Wednesday
from 10 a.m. to noon.

Low tonight in 60s, rain.
Frklay, 70 percent chance of
rain. Highs In the 70..

•

Copyright 1995

TUPPERS PLAINS -Olive
Township trustees, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. at the home of clerk Manha
Durst.

The eighth annual reunion of
Lenora McNutt Hudnall of Albany
· and the late Ernest .Hudnall was
held al. the home of David Hudnall,
Jr. and Connie Phelps of Albany on
August 6th.
·
Garnes and contests for all ages
were conducted, and prizes were
awarded. The youngest attending
was Paul Douglas of Athens, with
the oldest in anendance being Ruth
Hudnall Cline of Marion. Traveling
the farthest to the reunion was Dennis Thomas of Cleveland.
Attending from the Albany area
were Lenora McNutt Hudnall,
"Shirley Osbourne, Howard and
Addie Hudnall, Robert Hudnall and
Edna King, Rob King, Tony King,
David Hudnall, Jr. and Connie
Phelps, Jason Starcher, Jo Bob .
Christy, Howard Sr and Kathy
Hudnall, Howard Jr. and Kayla
Hudnall, Jim Sr. and Charlotte
Hudnall, Larry and Willa Willard.
Chad Hudnall, Stacey and Zackary
Thomas, Bill Hudnall and Jenny
Hart, Glenna Wade and Bill· Wade
Jr., Melinda Douglas and Frances
Hudnall.
Other guests attending were
Ruth Hudnall Cline of Marion;
Katherine Wright of Akron; 'Frank
·Aieker of Syracuse; Vicki Bondurant of Lotteridge; Elizabeth
Creamer of Sharpsburg; George Sr.
and Bonnie Douglas of Stewart;
Charles Lee, Larry, Gloria, and
Jared King of Shade; David
Reeves, Julie King, and Shawn
~ecves of Pagetown; Joan King.
Butch. Lois, Randy. Amber, and
Andrew Haning, Ruth Steffel,
Robert Pickett, James Currey,
Betty, April, and Lisa Blankenship;
rony Reeves, Don and Jenn1fer
Laudermilt, Amber Laudermllt,
1amie and JoAnna Jeffers, Bruce
Caldwell, and Dale Hudnall, all of
Pomeroy; Penny, Lloyd, Lloyd Jr.,
Eric. Richard, Charles and Randy
fludnall, Bernard, June, Chnssy,
BJ., and Bubba Sharpe, Alfred,
Rebecca, E.W., and Michelle Hud~tall, John Aeiker, Kenneth Hudnall, Amy West and Rachel Hudnall Melissa HunSICker and Mike
fludnall, George Jr., Lisa and Paul
Douglas Mary Willard, Art Willison JoAnn Lee, Addie and Tom
Hudnall, and Mike Osbourne, all of .
Athe~.
,
.
• Tbe date for next year s reumon
~ill be announced iii July, 199(i.

Ohio Lottery

Ripken
-breaks
Gehrig's
record

or Pictorial Errors.

·'

heavy drinking contributed to his
problem.
On May 16, the committee
found "substantial credible evidence"' that Packwood made
unwanted sexual advances to 17
women on 18 occasions from 1969
to 1990.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - ·
. A Henderson man charged in the
murder of his gran!lfather was
indicted on five felony counts by
the Mason County grand jury
Prosecuting Attorney Damon Mor:
gan said.
Zenie Junior Myers Ill, 18, of
Redmond Ridge, was indicted
Tuesday for murder, burglary, petit
larceny, attempted murder and
wanton ~ndangerment, Morgan
said.
Myers is being held in the
Mason County Jail without bond In
connection with the Aug. 25 shoot·
ing death of Zenie E. Myers, 85,
Gallipolis Ferry.
Zenie Myers III is alleged to
have fired 11\'0 rounds from a shot·
gun at his stepfather, Robeit Russell, at Russell's Redmond R'idge
residence.
The elder Myers' body was
found after Russell as)&lt;.ed shcTifrs
deputies to check on Myers, who
hved next door 10 Russell, accord·
ing to news accounts.
The younger Myers is 10 answer
· the indictments Monday in Mason
County Circuit Court, Morgan said.

�'

Thursday, September 7, 1995

Commentary
The Dail,.Y Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

fbMULTIMEDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEfLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Coni roller

LETt tRS OF OPl~ I ON arc welcome They should be lcS&gt; than JOO
word'-! loni! All lt.:lleJ ~ arr su bject to cdltmg and mu st be s1gned with name,
&lt;t d dn:~~ and telephone number No uns1gned lcncrs will be published Le tters
should be

1n ~ood

tm, tc. address1ng ISS u e~. no: personaht1es

Washington Today:

Logjam politics

Page2:

Frtday, Sept. 8
Accu-Weather" forecast for

front of tbe Martin Luther King
Center." (Isn' t it nice to have moderate commentalors around 10 condep~n the extremists?) Shields and

Ben Wattenberg
llunt are not alone; liberals and
conservatives alike have shown a
renexivc distaste for Wilson's campaign.
1 am not now , nor have I ever
been , a member of the Montana
Mihtia l have lound David Duke's
policies repugnant. But after readmg Wilson's speeches from his
cross-country "Liberty Tour, " I
thmk h1s campaign is right on target lle is accentuatmg the social
tSsucs and the values 1ssues .
'' Amcpcan optimism ts being
undermined by the federal government .. ," he says. "It gives lip service to our values, but doesn't
seem to share them, and clearly
doesn' 1 fighl for tllem."
Not many Amencans would disagree that crime and welfare are

IWO of America's mo st important

problems, and that we ought 10 he
10ugher on both. The current level
of crime is subverting the essence
of civil society. Welfare, arguably ,
is pushing up illegitimate birlh
rates to an all-ume high That is a
clear recipe for social ltagedy and
turbulence.
Wilson is also right about aflirmative action. It started out as a
good idea for "outreach," and then
led to goals, timetables, sanctions
and compUance- that " · to pref.erence, proponionalism and quotas.
That corrodes the idea of merit ,
which is central to Amencan val ues. These days affumauve action
is harmful to both whites, blacks
and the American way of hfe Wilson recently changed the UnivefSlty of California's quota policies.
Wilson's stand on tmmigration
is more complex. He endorsed California's Proposition 187, which
stipulated tllal the state would no
longer pay most social service
expend1tures for illegal immigrants.

BANI( EMPLOYEES' NEW LOCATION ...

RECENTLY

MERGED

)lc

0

matcly enacted wiU10ut Congress'
help.
Eight decades later, a similar
scenario is shapmg up. Although

Joseph Perkins
little bas been written about ~~ 32
state legislatures have adopted resolutions calling for a convention to
propose the balanced-budget
amendment. If two more states sign
on, the American people will witness the first constitutional convention since the document was raliliedin 1787.
Dut the state resolutions call for
a limited convention. That means
that delegates can only d1scuss a
single amendment, in this case the
constitutionally required balanced
budget.
The reason the state legislatures
endorsed a limited ratller than open
constitutional convention is lhat
they wanted to allay any fears of a
runaway convention, m which delegates conceivably could re-write
the entire constitution.
Such fears are unfounded, of
course Even if delegates took complete leave of theu senses, and radtcally rewrote the constitution say rcplacmg the presidency with a
monarchy or remstating Prohtbition
--.. the proposals would still have to
he ratified by three-quarters of tllc
states.
So, then, since there is no real
danger of a runaway convention, it
makes sense to hold an open convention where not only the bat-

Today in history

•

anced-budget amendment is conSidered, but also several other
amendments lhat are supponed by
a solid majority of the Amcncan
people.
For mstance, a term-limlls
amendment applymg to members
of Congress almost certainly would
he ratified by the states. However,
the House failed to pass term limits
earlier this year and the bincrly
divided Supreme Court declared
thai states may no1 limit the terms
of their congressional represcntalives. The only way to get term
limits, 10 renect the will of 70 percent of the public, is by way of a
constitutional convention.
Delegates to a constitutional
convention might also restore the
anginal intent of certain amendments already on the books like the
14th, which bestows automatic citizenship on any person born on U.S.
soil.
The amcndmem was specifically
wrinen to enfranchise tile progeny
of black slaves who had lived and
worked and died in this country at
.least a century before Emancipation. Today, the 14th proffers citizenship to the babies of illegal
aliens who steal across the U.S.
border.
A revised 14th Amendment
would require the children of illegals to apply for naturalization
when they tum 18. If they choose
to become U.S . citizens at that age,
it will be a conscious decision on
their part.
Perhaps the one area of the constitution that's lacking is in criminal JUstice. The founders went out

That' s not a bad idea in principle,
although cutting off public schooling for the children of illegallffiffii grants is probably counterproductive. Most everyone is against illegal imrmgration. Wilson, however,
is not anu -legal-immigration. Pal
Buchanan has endorsed cutting out
legal immigratiOn . Presidenl Clinton, who appears in California to
cnt1C1Ze Wtlson on immigration,
bas already Signed on to a proposal
to reduce legal inumgration. Wilson, the alleged nativis~ has come
out for no so such thing .
What 1s 1t about W1lson thai
rmses hackles across the political
spectrum? He bas the polillcal
background of a moderate; he once
raised taxes, he once favored alTir- ,
mative action and he's now pro-'
choice (like about 70 percent
Americans, including about half or
registered Republicans).
How dare a moderate run on
popular conservative social
themes? That threatens everyone
on the hustings and on the televi,
sion shows. Liberals fear that a
moderate's tough endorsement of
tough themes might legitimize such
themes. Conservatives fear that
thclf Ideological monopoly is now
subJect to a hostile takeover by a'
candidate who also ha~ the popular '
side of issues where conservallves
fall short. So both sides 1say Wilson
is an insincere, pandering demagogue , who, goodness, has changed ·
some of his views.
Polit1cs is a pastime tllat never
cease~ to amaze. If a candidate
sticks by his beliefs he 1s con- .
demned as a dogmatic, inflexible~
rehc . If he changes over time, as
clfcumslances change, and agrees
w1th voters who have changed thw
minds for similar reasons, he is
called a panderer. My sense is thai
most Americans have another
v1ew: It a cand1da1e gets 'em all ·
angry he may he dmng sometllmg
right. ·
Ben Wallenberg, a senior retlow at the American Enterprise
Inslilute, is the lrost or the weekly
public television program,
"Think Tank."
(For information on how to
tommunicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 18011-827-6364, ext 8317.)

You

' ' '''

~

No doubi about it, 1hc U.S.
stock market is hot. So hot thai
now m1ght be tile lime to remind
ourselves tllat nothing goes up forever and to look elsewhere for
mvestment opponunities.
Jon Fosse! lS the chairman and
CEO of Oppenheimer Management
Corp. As a big endorser of invcstmg both at home and abroad, he
thinks mumal fund mvestors oughl
to have a portion of their money
mvested intemaUonally. Especially
now
"lbere are some early warning
signs that the market IS starting to
get a lillie bit more speculative,"
Fosse! said. "And the pomt to
inveslors is, you actually reduce
risk by diversifying around the
globe. You are not adding risk A
globally diversified portfolio (of
funds) is less risky lhan bein~
invesled in tbe U.S. market alone.'
Fessel explained that over the
long run, average returns on both
the stock and bond side are higher
on non-U.S. inveslments than on

I

U.S. mvestments. Some reasons for
that are because many foreign
economies are growing faster than
that m the United States, labor

Dian Vujovich
costs are often cheaper and tax situations m some countries are more
favorable for investing.
Then there is lhe size of the
world's equity market capitalization: Ten years ago U.S. stocks
made up half of the world's equily
market capilalization, but today
they make up only 37 percent.
Because stocks from around the
world arc a bigger player in world
economics than. ever before and
because stocks traded on markets
around the world don't always rise
or fall in tandem witll what's happening here at home, people who
blend their fund selections to
include domestic an&lt;l international
funds may wind up taking on less
risk and getting better performance
results over time.

•

•lcolumbus!74'

I

''"''
76'

Pt
01995 AccuWeather, Inc

Today's weather forecast
South-Central Ohio
Tonigbt ..Occasiooal rain. Thunderstorms also possible. Low 60 tD
65. Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph
becoming nortbeast. Chance of rain
80 percent.
Friday... Rain likely. High 70 to
75. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Extended fore&lt;:ast:
Friday nigbt ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of rain. Lows in the

COLUMBUS (AP) - lndianaObio direct hog prices at selected
b~ying points Thursday by the U.S.
Departmenl of Agriculture Market
N~ws:

Barrows and gilts: mostly 50
cents higher; demand moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 46.50-48.00, plants 4 7.5049.25.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 Jbs., country
points 41.50-46.50.
Sows: near steady.
.U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 29.0031.50; 500-550 lbs. 31.00-35.00;

60s.

550-650 lbs. 33.00-36.50
Boars: 25.00-30.00, few to
31.00.
Estimated receipts 32,000.
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Cattle; 1.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 60.0066.75; select 54.00-59.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 59.0067 .25; select53.00-59.00.
Cows: steady; all cows 39.00
and down.
Bulls: 1.00 higher; all bulls
45.50 and down.

Jobless claims are down
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of Ameriam workm filing
first-time claims for jobless benefits fell by 10,000 last week, tlle
fmt decline in Jive weeks.
The Labor Department said
ioday tllat new applications for_
unemployment insurance totaled a
sea.oonally adjusled 339,000, down
from 349,000 during the week
ended Aug. 26.
Many analysts bad expected initial claims 10 edge up by about
1,000 last week, similar to tlle
increase a week earlier. The decline
pushed claims to the lowest level
since Aug. 12, when tlley totaled
33'8,000.
The department repoti'ed earlier
tllat the unemployment rate dipped
to 5.6 percent In August, li'om 5.7
percent in July, as 249,000 jobs
were aeated.
·Because of the increases in
tec:ent weeks, the four-week mov·

Units of tbe Meigs C9unty
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 11 calls for assistance
W ¢nesday inr.luding two ltansfer
calls. UniiS responding included:
'
MIDDLEPORT
3:27 a.m., Overbrook Nursin~
Center, Edna Fosler, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
12:12 p.m., OBNC, Leroy
Miller, PVH;
4:21 p.m., Middleporl .Fire
Department, Paula Qark, PVI;l;
10:27 p.m .. Sycamore Street,
Paula Clark, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

The Daily Sentinel

''
I '
'

ing average of new weelcly jobless
claims inched up by 1,75.0, to
343,500 from 341,750 a week earlier. It was tlle highest since the
average 10taled 360,250 during tlle
period ended Aug. 5.
Many analysts prefer to track
-tlle less-volatile four-week average
because it smooths out tbe spikes in
tlle weekly repons.
In the state data, 35 states and
territories reponed decreases during tile week ended Aug. 26, and
17 registered increases. One was
unchanged. Stale figures are reponed one week later tban national
totals.
The biggest drops were in llli·
nois, 3,677; Obio, 2,818; Nortll
Carolina. 1,691; Arkansas, 1,663;
and California. 1,357.
Tbe largest increases were In
Missouri, 1,464; New Yorlc, 1,128;
Pennsylvania, 644; Tennessee, 447;
and Michigan, 333.

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

No injuries were reponed following a two-car accident at Rock
Springs Wednesday around 4;25 p.m.
Milton Hood. Middleport. pulled into the path of a car driven by
Joshua Howard, Pomeroy, according to a sheriff's department
repon.
.
Damage was listed as moderate to Hood's 1984 Ford and to
Howard's 1983 Camaro. No citations were lS.~ued .

!

"You would increase your risk the first place - 10 catr:b the vari- · !
if all you owned was foreign ous swings in market cycles 'around · •
stocks, but when you blend the the world.
· :
two, you've gotlhe besl of both
For the record, year-to-dale 1otal ' :
worlds," Fosse! said.
returns show that the average U.S. :
Susan Paluch, editor of Morn- general equity fund was up 23.13 · •
ingstar Mulual Funds, agrees.
percent, while the average intcma- :
"I think it has always been very lional fund was up 5.91 percent
important to have an international tllrough Aug. 24, according to Lipcomponent to most portfolios per Analytical Services.
·•
because you've got to keep in mind
When it comes to fund· selcc- •
that the U.S. market isn't always tion, Paluch says that if you're :
going to do well. No market can going to pick JUSt one fund, you're :
always do well," she said.
~ctter o.ff in a broadly diversified :
If you'd like to add a foreign mtemat10nal fund rather than in a . •
fund to your portfolio, the first ~ingle-country fund or an emerg- :
thing 10 do is read the fund's !ng-country fund - each of which ; ;
prospectus to see exactly where IS more focused and carries more •
your money will he invested. Fund risk.
:
•
names can he misleading: Global
funds will have more of their assets
Dian Vujovich Is the author or
invested in U.S. securities than "Straight Talk About Mutual •
•
international funds.
Funds" and "Straight Talk
The next thing is to realize is About Investing for Your Retiretllat tlle fund you select probably ment," both of which are pubwon't be performing as well as llshed by McGraw Hill. Senrj ,
U.S. funds are right now but, hey, ;questions to her in care or this •
that's why you're diversifying in newspaper.

••
'
•

-.

Published every aftemoon, Mnndny through
Fnday. I l l Coun St , Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohm Valley Pubhdung Compnny/Mullnnedia 1
Inc., Pomeroy, Oh10 45769, Ph 992-2156
Second clns~ postage prud nl Pomeroy, Oh1 0

Member: The Assoc111ted Press, ond the Ohio
A5SOCJatJon

Ncws~r

POSTMASTER: Send address com:ctJOnl to
TI~e Druly Senbnel, I I I Court St , Pomeroy,
OhJO 45769.

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
•
Inside Melp County
13 Week! ...
26 Weeks
52 Weeb
...
.. .
.
Rates Outside Meigs County
\3 Weeks .
26 Weeks
.
52 Weeks
.. ... ..... .... .

$2~ 92
$47 06
$92 56

$25 61
S49.66
.$96 20

HOLzER MEDICAL CENTER.
Sept. 6 releues • J onatban
Smith, S1aey Johnson, Karen Nottingham, Vera Yates, Dryan Seagraves, Frieda Greatllouse, Betty
Miller and Charles Devault.
Sept. 6 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Kleymen, a son, from Gallir,olis and Mr. and Mrs. Barry
0 Brien, a son, from Racine.
Printed wltb pennlsslon.

Marriage licenses
The following couples were
Issued marriage Ucenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
David Lee Hardwick, 19, Middleport. and Deena Michelle Jacks,
16, Pomeroy; James Dale Jones Jr.,
22, and April Dawn Herdman, 17,
both of Middleport; Charles Daniel
Martin Sr .. 19, and Erin Lynn
Smith, 20, both of Shade;
Timothy Chad Gaus, 25, and
Teresa Carol Meads, 44, botll of
Rutland; Gregory Scott Woodward,
41, Gallipolis, and Debra Michelle
Wood, 39, Middleport,

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Afler
months of defense claims that 0.1.
S1mpson was framed by a racist
detective, Mark Fuhrman returned
to the witness stand, sitting ramrod
straight with his head held high.
The man who six months earlier
testified be found a bloody glove
behind Simpson's bouse wa~ asked
a question for all the world - but
not the jury -to hear.
"Delective Fuhrman," defense
lawyer Gerald Uelmen asked, "did
you plan! or manufacture any evidence in this case?''
Fuhrman paused. His auomey.
Darryl Mounger, whispered something to him . Fuhrman finally
replied: "I assen my Fifth Amendment privilege."
As the detective was led out of
court, Simpson appeared overcome
with emotion. Tears welled in his
eyes and he buried his face in his
hands.
"Today you saw an unprecedented event," defense lawyer
Robert Shapiro said outside court
Wednesday. "You s,aw a lead
detective, who is the person
responsible for obtaining a maJority
of evidence in tllis case, refuse to
answer questions on the grounds
that it may incriminate him . It is
unprecedented in the history of
Jurisprudence."
In court, prosecutor Marcia
Clark complained that the question
was asked merely for headlines and
had very little to do with the business at band: a hearing outside the
jury's presence on whether the
judge should suppress evidence in
lighl of the Fuhrman rapes.
The questioning of Fuhrman
was the climax of the Simpson
defense, now in its ninth week, and
his lawyers are expected to rest
their .case this week, perhaps as
early as today. A hearing and two
witnesses are on today's agenda.
In all, Fuhrman invoked his
Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination on rour questions and said he would refuse to
answer any questions.
Legal analysts said Fuhrman
probably won 'I have to take the
Fifth in ' front of the jurors, who

Ralph Riley
Ralph Riley, 84, of Point Pleasant, W. Va .. died Wednesday, Sept 6
1995, at his borne.
· '
Born Jwe 23, 191 I, in West Columbia, W. Va., he was a son of the
late Patrick and Eva (VattMeter) Riley. He was also preceded in deall) by
three brothers, Edward "Joe" Riley, Teddy Riley and Baron VanMeter.
A retired employee of Apex in Delaware, he was a U.S. Army veteran
of World War II, ~here be served as a staff sergeant with lhe 3199th Signal Serv1ce BattaliOn He was a member of the American Legion SmithCapeban Post 140 of New Haven, W. Va.,and the Disabled American
Veterans of Delaware.
Surviving are his wife, Edith (Crump) Riley; three stepchildren, Elzctta
and George Young of Ashley; Jane and Red Bowles of Poim Pleasant·
Jack and .Judy Reynolds of Keyser, W. Va; tllree brothers, Patrick Riley:
Jimmy Riley and Marshall Riley, all of Mason, W. Va.; two sisters, Patsy
MiUer of Wesl C:olumbia, Lucy Chipps of Rutland; 13 gmndchildren and
14 grcat-grandcbildren.
The funeral will he Saturday, II a.m., at tile Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home ~ith the Rev. Charles Marker officiating. Burial will he in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens, where graveside military ntes will he conducted.
Friends may call Friday 7 to 9 p.m., at the funeral home,

Meigs announcements
Dance lessons to begin
Line dance lessons will be held
at the Amvets ball in Kanauga
starting Friday, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Bill Gillette will he tlle insi!Uctor.
Buckley Reunion
The 59th annual Buckley
reunion will be held Sunday at
Forked Run Stale Parle:, Reedsville.
Those attending should bring a
covered dish and table service
Dinner will begin at 1 p.m.

Railroaders reunion
Presenl and former employees at
Hobson and Dickinson, W.Va. and
their families are invited to attend
the annual railroad picnic and
reunion, Sunday, II a.m. at Krodel
Park, Point Pleasant. Picnic at I,
witb eacb family to take a covered
dish, meat and drinks to he provided.
Cemetery trustees to meet
A meeting of Greenwood Cemetery trustees, 7 p.m Thursday at
the annex in Racine .

held Saturday, 9 p.m. at Royal Oak
Park. Cost $5 per couple will! proceeds going to the Meigs County
unit of tile American Cancer Society.
Special singing set
Special singing will he held Friday, 7 p.m. at Faith Full Gospel
Church, Long Bouom, with Rose
Casto. Pastor Steve Reed invilcs
the public.
Homecoming Sunday
Homecoming will he held at the
Mt. Zion United Brethren Churcb,
Zion Road, Shade, Sunday with an
all day celebration beginning at 10
a.m. There will be a potluck dinner
a1 noon, music by the Divine Messengers and Generation with Tad
Cuckler speaking at 2;30 p.m. 1lle
pastor Aoyd Ross invites the pubhe tD attend.

Knnnugn Dri~e-ln

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes pro•lded by AdYell of
GaiUpolls.

1

1

Simpson
trial update
w.d., S.pirmber s, 1995

II&gt; Detectrve Marl&lt; Fuhrman was
called back to the stand but
refused to answer quest1ons

aboul whether he planted
evidence against 0 J. Srmpson
or falsrtred pol,;e reports
Fuhrman Invoked his F~th

Amendment nght aga1nst
se" ·mcnm1nat1on

II&gt; Rodenc T Hodge. a black man
Fuhrman once arrested,

teslrfred the detectrve turned to
h1m m the poltce car and sa1d,

"ltoid you we'd get you,
mgger" The jury was nollold
why Hodge was arrested

II&gt; Protesters chantrng "stop racrst
cops" marched outside the

courthouse to demand the
release of all the tapes an
wh1ch FuhrmQ.n spews rac1 st
comment s

have listened for two 'days as witnesses described their encounters
with Fuhrman and his usc of a
racial slur against blacks.
Loyola University law professor
SL'lll Goldman said the judge probably will instruct the jury that
Fuhrman took the Fifth Amendment rather than testify. But Superior Court Judge Lance Ito probably will not tell them what specific
questions Fuhrman refused to .
answer, Goldman said.
"Th1s jury, I believe, will not
know," Goldman said. "But members of the second jury, if this case
hangs, will.''
The defense contends Fuhrman
is a ·racist who planted the bloody
glove to frame Simpson in the June
12, 1994, knife slayings of Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman.

Closed For The Season

Thanks and see
you nexl year.

Dance announced
A square dance will he held Salunlay night at 8 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains VFW ball. Music will be
provided by tlle Smoky Mountain
Drifters w1th J . B. Wilson as the
caller.

FRI. THRU THUFJS
WALT DISNEY'S
POCAHONTAS 1
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446.()923

Our customers
appreciate perhaps the
rarest quality of all:

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Bank One ................................34 JIB
BoiJ E•ans ............................... l7 3/4
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Charming Shop ........................4 314
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Federal Mngul ....................... .ll 7/8
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K-marl .......................................... 14
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Limited In.::............................. 19 118
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Oblo Valley Baak .........................35
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Royal Dutcb .......................... llO 1/8
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Slar Bank ...............................Sl 7/8
Wendy lnt'l............................19 314
Worthlncton Ind......................... .lO

I·

Fuhrman takes Fifth
Amendment privilege

Lee Reed, 53, of Westerville, died Monday, September 4, 1995, at St
Ann's Hospital, Westerville.
Born August 2, 1942 in Ironton, be was a son of Naomi Reed of
Pom,e roy and the late Leonard C. Reed. He was a supervisor of track for
Conrail.and w!" an Eagle Scou~ Troop 247, I Iem lock Grove .
Survtvo~, m add1t1on 10 his mother, are his wife, Joyce (Sieelc) Reed
of .Weslervtlle; two daughters and sons-in-law, Sandra L. and Gwynne
Gf!D~es of Point Pleasant, W . Va., and Lisa G. and Matthew Musgrave of
Pomt Pl~asant; a step-son, Jobn Reid of Wes1crville; a slep-daughter,
Stepbante A. Re1d of Westerville; two grandchildren; a brother, David
Reed of Pomeroy; and sister, Connie (Mike) Fields of Gallipolis; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 10 a.m . Friday, Seplember 8, at Moreland
Funeral Home, Westerville, with tile Rev. Charles Domigan officiating,
and II am: Sat~day, September 9, at Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W. Va. Burial Will follow in Meigs Memorial Gardens.
Visiting hours will he Thursday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Thursday
at Moreland Funeral Home and Friday from 6-9 p.m. at Foglesong Funeral Home.

· POMEROY
12:22 p.m., motor-vehicle acci- Yearbooks In
dent on Sorden Road, Debbie
The 1995 Me1gs Marauder yearMorarily and Benton Dunfee, · books are available at the Meigs
VMH. Syracuse squad and Cbester High Scbool office. ·
Volunteer Fire Deparlment assisted
Homecoming planned
RACINE
Homecoming will he held at tlle
3:39p.m .• stale Route 124. Jen- Minersville United Methodist
nifer Carlton, VMH.
Churcb Sept. 17 " Regular morning
.
RUTLAND
services followed by carry-in din11:45 a.m., Happy Hollow
ner from noon to I: 30 when th,~;_
Road, Donald Pauley. PVH;
afternoon program will begin The
2;14 p.m., Zion Road, Cassanpublic is invited to attend.
dra Moms, PVH.
SYRACUSE
ACS Une dance slated
1;53 p.m .. Kingsbury Road,
A country line dance party reaRachael Slifner, VMH.
luring Jim and Carla Ryder will be

Hosoital news

(USPS 213-~J'

•

.

50s.
Saturday ... Dry. Highs in tlle mid
to upper 60s.
Sunday ... A chance of showers
norlheast ...Otherwise dry and cool.
Lows in tlle 40s. Highs from the
upper 50s north to middle 60s
south.
Monday .. .Dry and cool. Lows in
the 40s. Highs in tlle lower tD mid

Today's livestock report

of their way to provide protections .
for those charged wuh criminal
olfenses - in fact, live of the first
10 amendments concern the rights ·
of the accused - but they gave ..
short shrift to crime victims.
'
A constitutional convention ..
m1ght propose a stand-alone vic- ..
tims rights amendmenl - or delegates could heed tlle suggestion of "
a presidcnual task force a decade ,
ago that language he added to the .
SlXIh Amendment covering vic- ,
urns.
.,
The Sixth addresses tlle judicial ,
process, specifying the right to
counsel, to an impartial jury and to •·
confront Witnesses. The presiden-"'
tial ta.sk force favored tacking on a'"
sentence at the end guaranteeing ..
that the victim in every criminal
prosecution shall have the right to ' •
he present and heard at all crillcal
stages of judicial proceedmgs.
':
The failure of Congress th1s year
to pass either the balanced-budget
or term-limits amendment clearly
demonstrates that our lawgivers in
Washington are not up to the chat- ,
lcnge. If the will of the American ·
people IS to prevatl, then it is left to
the states to consider these amendments. as well as any others that
enjoy wide popular support, m a
constitutional convention.
Joseph Perkins is a colunmlst
for The San Diego Union-Tri- '
bune,
.
(For information on how to "'
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con .. ·'~
, tact America Online by calling 1: "'
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
-~

I

Deputies probe accident

Lee Reed
WVA

.

Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Dcpanment are investigating a hit/skip accident at the junction of state Route 681 and Rice
Run Road near Tuppers Plains Wednesday around 3:30p.m.
A white, late-model Pontiac GrandAm pulled onto state Route
681 and struck the side of a 1992 Pontiac Sunbird driven by Janine
Smitb or Reedsville, aa:pf'\ling to a report from Meigs County Sheriff Jaines M. Soulsby. 100 IJcindAm continued on.
Smith's car sustained moderate damage to the right side, the
report stated. No injuries were reponed.

lowmg an extended illness.
The daughter of \be lale Raben Lee and Tennie Irene Stafford Lawson
sbe was an employee of tile Friendship Village , where she bad been ~
cook for the past several years. She was a member of the Northridge United BapUst Church.
. Surviving are her husband, Charles Ledford; two sons and a daugbterm-law, Darryl Ledford of Dayton, and Charles R and Tera Ledford of
Tennessee; al,l(l a sister and brother-in-law, Hazel and Brad Lewis of Rutland,
She ~as ats.o preceded in death by a sister, Lois Blevins.
Semces will he 8 p.m . Fnday ,m the IGndred-Bames Funeral Home,
400 Umon .Blvd .. Englewood. The fam1ly will receive friends from 6 p.m.
Fnday unul tlle hour of tlle service. GmveSlde services will be held a1
noon S!"urday in the ViniOn Memorial Park, with the Rev. Rick McLioyd
officmtmg.
Memorial contributions may he made to the Hospice of Dayton.

o{,

lnternationa·l funds smooth the bumps

Hit/skip investigated

Joyce Ann Ledford
J~yce Ann Ledf~rd, 49, Day1011, died Wednesday, Sept. 6, 1995, fol-

States may propose budget amendment

!n

condittons and h1gh temperatures

Moderate conservative bugs liberals
A segment on tNN's "Capitol
rGang " dealt with the recent
announcement of presidential candidacy by Calift&gt;rnia Gov . Pe1e
Wilson , wh1ch was delivered in
front of the Statue of Liheny. The
video clips showed the candidate
criticizing a welfare system that
offers exua money to recipients
who have additional children while
on welfare , decrying the fact that
law-abiding Americans fear to go
outside because of street crime,
deploring an affll1ll3tive action process that has evolved into de facto
quotas and condemning the porous
border coni!Ol that allows a steady
stream of illegal immigrants into
America.
The CNN commentators were
less than happy with Wilson . To
Mark Sb1elds, the Wilson
announcement seemed like a
"recrmunem drive for the Montana
Mihtia." AI Hunt announced that
"Pew Wilson declaring his candidacy m front of the Stalue of Liberty is hke David Duke declaring 10

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

-A{ea deaths___.._.._ r-----Local briefs-___,

OHIO Weather

Thursda~eptember 7, 1995

By TOM RAUM
Associated l)ress Wriler
WASHINGTON - After a summer of bold gestures - NATO
airstrikcs in Bosma, bucking tobacco companies, recognizing Vietnam,
ovenures to Chma - PrcSldem Clinton faces perhaps the most difficult
challenge of hiS presidency.
He must dec1de whether tD stand his ground agamst Republican lawmakers who want to cut cherished Democratic programs - even if lt
means shuUmg down the government temporanly.
On the n1p Side, the R~publicans face a sunilar test of courage in the
pohllcal game of chicken that is fasl approaching - to see who blinks
first
W1th Clinton and Congress back from their August vacations, fi scal
crunch tunc hegins in earnest
It's been easy until now, with both Republicans and Democrats Clf·
c hng for months, jousting and lobbing rhetorical grenades at one another.
But now the Republicans, who stormed into power last fall vowing to
change bow things work, must deliver on that promise . And Clmton,
revvmg up his re-election effon, must show he is a strong leader and a
v~able candidate.
With less than four weeks left before the stan of the new fiscal year,
not a single one of tlle 13 spending bills needed to keep government in
operauon beyond Sept. 30 has passed Congress.
That is remarkable th1s late in the budget cycle, even given Congress'
historical pattern of procrastination Furthcnnore, Clinton has issued a raft
of veto threats on lhc measures in their present forms.
Other major bills are also backed up and overdue for final action . This
includes the majority of the GOP "Contract With America" 1terns Welfare reform and a major telecommunications bill also awrut long overdue
action.
With all the compeung forces convcrgmg - and a number of deadlines looming, including the federal debt bumpmg up agrunst the current
dcbl ce1ling -it's a sure recipe for potential disaster.
Clinton Sltategists say he'll try for the h1g~ road, while leaving the
niuy griuy of budget negouations with Congress to his chief of staff, Leon
Panetta, and other aides.
"The president is not gmng to get Into any green-eyeshade d1sputes
with Congress, the policy wonk stuff.,' ' Clinton spokesman Mike McCurry said.
The American Legislative
Whether Chnton, the ulumate "pohcy wonk," can rests! the temptaExchange Council, a group of pretion to tinker w1th numbers and programs remains to he seen
ponderantly conservative stale lawMeanwhile, he will make a senes of campaign-like speeches around
makers from around the country,
the country thiS month and next that )"ill portray him as protectmg govreccntl y held its annual meeting in
ernment programs that work and Republicans as seeking to slash popular
San Diego. A range of subjects
ones like Med1care to help finance a tax break for the wealthy
were discussed by the 1,500 atten"In the next 90 days in Washington, D.C .. we're going to make some
dees,
but the mosl inlriguing was
decisions that will say a lot about what kind of people we are and where
of calling the ftrst constiluthe
idea
we're going," Chnton told a Labor Day aud1cnce m California
tional convention ih nearly two
"I thmk I know what we have to do, and I want you to stand w1th me
centuries.
because you know what we have to do."
Were ALEC an uninfluential
There was no doubt that Campaign '96 was fully under way.
organization, then the subject of a
Clinton can benefit - up to a point - by usmg h1s veto power and
consUtutional wnvention might not
refusmg to back ·down.
he taken seriously. But its memberBut a I!Ue deadlock, with any prolonged shu tong down of government
ship includes the speakers of 32
services and programs, would work again&lt;! h1m After all, he was elected
state legislatures and 34 majority
on a platform that included a vow to end gndlock
leaders. If tllcy unanimously decid"At this point, 11 IS in Bill Chnton's mterest to have Republicans
ed that tltere ought to be a convensquabbling among themselves - the more they look like a bunch of
tion, then they very well could
politicians," said Nonnan Ornstein, an analyst at the American Enterprise
make it happen.
Institute
The purpose of such a convcnFurthermore, the sltatcg)l'has a Side advantage for Clmton: pmning
lion would be to offer amendments
down Senate M3Jority Leader Bob Dole - U1e front-runnmg GOP presi10 the constitution. Arlicle V
dential challenger- by keeping him m Waslungton and off the primary
extends this power to tllc states as a
campaign trail.
• way to compel Congress to act on a
Since 1931, the authonty of federal agenc~es to spend money has
constitutional amendment that the
lapsed nine times after the Oct. 1 start of the new fiscal year, - ranging
people and tl1e state leg1slatures
from a few hours to four days.
want
The Clinton ladministration says ll's senous Budget Director Ahce
The last time there was a serious
Rivlin sent agc~cy heads a memo late last month advising them to prepare
prospect of a state-led constitutioncomingency plans for shutting down parts of the government
al convention was just after the tum
Climon advisers concede he could nsk a backlash by appearing too
of the century. The state legislainflexible.
tures wanted Congress to pass an
Dut, "for a president who has only vetoed two b1lls m two and a half
amendment allowing for the d1rect
years in office, 1 don't think he's in danger of overplaying htS hand on
elecllon of U S. senators
vetoes," said Ann LewiS, Clinlon's deputy crunpaign manager
Congress finally proposed the
amendment m 1912, but only after
EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum covers the White House ror The
30 sillies (of the required 31 at the
Associated Press.
time) passed resotuuons calling for
a convention. Had Washmgton
remained unresponsive to the
states, the convention would have
been held and the amendment ulllBy The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, Sept. 7, the 250th day of 1995. There are 115 days
left in the year.
·
Today's H1ghlight m History:
.
On Sept. 7, 1892, James J . Corbett knocked out John L. Sullivan to
wm U1e world heavyweight crown in New Orleans in the first major prize
fight conducted under the Marquis of Queensherry rules.
On thiS date:
In 1533, England's Queen Elizabeth 1 was born in Greenwich
In 1822, Brazil decl~d its independence from Porlllgal.
·
In 1825, the MarquiS de Lafayeue, the French hero or the American
Revoluuon, bade farewell to Pres1dentJobn Quincy Adams at the White
House.
•
·
In 1901, the Peace of Beijing ended the Boxer Rebellion in China .
In 1936, rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin Holley In
Lubbock, Texas.
In I940, Nazi Germany began its initial bUtt on London during World
War II.
1963, the ~ational Professional Football Hall of Fame was dedicated 10 Canton, Oh10.
In 1969, Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen died in Washington D.C.
In 1977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the United States to
evenmally tum over conb'ol of the waterway to Panama, were signed in
Washmgton.
In 1977, co~victed Watergate conspirator G . Gordon Liddy was
released from pnson after more than four years.
In 1979, til~ Entenainment and Sports Programming Network _
ESPN- made tts cable TV debut.
In 1986, Desmond Tutu was installed as tlle first black to lead the
AngUcan Church in southern Africa

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

QUALITY
THAT ENDURES
'

'

POMEROY
Meigs County Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Kalla Miller, Manager
992-2588
VINTON
Gatlla County Display Yard
155 Main St.
Jay &amp; Joe Moore, Menagera

Kevin Lee Grady, 21, of
48360 Bowman Road, Rac1ne,
Ohio, d1ed Monday, Sept. 4,
1995 at Myrtle Beach, S.C
Born on March 20, 1974 in
Columbus, Kevin was the son
of Paul L. and Cathenne L.
Grady of Rac1ne Ha wa,s
employed as a secunty guard
The 1992 grad~,ate of Southern
High School played on the
football team there. He was a
five year 4 -H Club member,
spent four years.with Umt 3664
Nat1onal
Guard,
Point
Pleasant, W. Va . and was an
employee of H1lls Department
Store.
In add1t1on lo h1s parenls,
Kevin IS surv1ved by his
brother, Steven E Grady, h1s
sister-In-law, Tina Grady, a
n1ece, Cathenne Grady, and
spec1al fnends .
Funeral serv1ces will be held
Saturday, Sept. 9, 1995, at '11
a m at the Letart Falls
Cemetery Chapel. The Rev.
Kenneth Baker will oHic1ate
and bunal w111 be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Fnends may call Fr1day
even1ng from 7 to 9 p m. at the
Ew1ng
Funeral
Home,
Pomeroy.

••

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·
· ·
Page 4
Thursday, September 7, 1995

In theAL,

Ripken bfeaks Gehrig's mark; Tribe wins
By The Associated Press
When Cal Ripken set an
endurance record, fans responded
with an ovation that may have set
records, too.
..
For 22 minutes, 15 seconds, the
. fans at Camden Yards applauded
Wednesday night after Ripken officially broke Lou Gehrig' s record
by playing in his 2,13lst consecutive game. The Baltimore Orioles
shortstop was even prodded to take
a victory lap around the warning
track, shaking bands and giving
high-fives to his adoring fans .
''Tonight I stand here, overwhelmed, as my name is linked
with the great and courageous Lou
· Gehrig," he told the r•owd in a
postgame ceremony on the field .
"I'm truly humble9 to have our
names spoken in the same breath."
"Whether your name is Gehrig
or Ripken, DiMaggio or Robinson,
or that of some· youngster who
.picks up his bat or puts on his
glove, you are challenged by the
game of baseball to do your very
bcs~ day in and day out," be said.
"And that's all that I've ever tried
to do."
Ripken received more than a
dozen standing ovations. When the
• game became official at 9:20 p.m.
EDT after 4 1/2 innings, f~reworks

·.In the NL,

exploded and the-players joined in
the applause as the numbers on the
B&amp;0 Ware house outside the stadium dropped to 2-1-3-1.
In the houom of the fourth, the
crowd roared when Ripken llit his
third homer in three games, a drive
off Shawn Boskie (6.4).
"This year has been unbelievable. I've been cheered in ballparks
all over the country," Ripken said.
"People not only showed me their
kindness, but more importantly,
they demonstrated their love of the
game of baseball."
Mike Mussina (16-8) allowed
two runs in 7 213 innings, and Jesse
Orosco got .four outs for his first,
save since 1993.
In other games, Cleveland routed Milwaukee 12-2, New York
beat Seattle 4-3, Toronto beat
Kansas City 6-2, Chicago beat
Texas 7-5, Boston beat Oakland S2 and Minnesota beat Detroit 9-1.
[ndians 12~ B rowers Z
Albert Belle hit his major
league-leading 36th homer, a threerun drive that capped a seven-run
second inning at County Stadium.
The· Indians lowered their magic
number for clinching the AL Central to two.
Manny Ramirez hit his 31st
homer and Tony Pena had two RBI

.

.

.

singles as the Indians won for the
12th time in 14 games and sent the
slumping Brewers to their ninth
loss in I 0 games . .
Ken Hill (2-0) allowed six hits
in six innings. Rookie Brian Givens
(5-3) was tagged for eight runs and
eight bits in six innings.
Yankees 4, Marlnors 3
Jack McDowell ( 13-10) pitched
a six-bitter and struck out nine, and
Randy Velarde bit a ·two-run double during a four-run sixth at Yankee Stadium.
New York closed within I l/2
games of Kansas City, which leads
the AL wild-card race. Seattle is a
half-game back.
Tim Belcher (9-10) allowed four
runs - two earned - and six hits
in 5 113 innings.
Blue Jays 6, Royals Z
Joe Carter hit a key two-run single as Toronto ended a 2-9 road
trip, 'its worst of I 0 or more games
since 1977.
AI Leiter (10-8) allowed eight
hit~ in eight innings. Tom Gordon
(10-10) lost to the Blue Jays for
just the fourth time in 13 career
decisions, giving up five runs and
eight hits in 7 'U3 innings.
White Sox 7, Rangers S
Lance Johnson 'hit his careerhigh lOth homer, a two-run drive in

the sixth inning that helped stretch
visiting Chicago's winning streak
to eight
.
Texas, which remained 2 1/2
games back in the AL wild-card
race, lost its fourth straight and
ninth in 10 games.
Brian Keyser (S-6) allowed one
run in two innings, and Roberto
Hernandez 'got three outs for his
27th save in 37 chances . Bob
Tewksbury (8-6) allowed six runs
and 12 bits in six innings.
Red Sox 8, Athletics Z
Roger Clemens (8-4) had a season-high 10 strikeouts, allowed
four hits in eight innings and won
his fifth consecutive decision .
Boston's fifth straight win reduced
its magic number for clinching the
AL East to eight.
Doug Johns (3-1) allowed six.
j
runs and eight hits in 2 1/3 innings
CELEBRATE LANDMARK :_ Tbe Ballirnore Orioles' Cal Ripfor visiting Oakland, four games
ken
Jr Ranked by parents Violet (partially obscured) and Cal Ripback in the AL wild-card mce.
ken
S; celebrate the younger Rlpken's achievement after Wednes· Twins 9, Tigers 1
day
night's game against the visiting California Angels, which the
Rookie Frank Rodriguez (5-5)
Orioles
won 4-Z. He played In bls Z,l31st consecutive game to break
allowed three .bits in seven innings,
Lou Gehrig's ,,ron man" streak. (AP)
and Marty Cordova's RBI infield
bit snapped a 1-1 tie in a six-run - - -......--Sports briefs_.....__ _ __
sixth at Minneapolis.
Brian Maxcy (4-5) gave up four
Mike Tyson was only 20 ir:
The 1980 American Olympk
runs in one-third of an inning.
1986
when he became the youngest
hockey team defeated Russia and
Cecil Fielder hit his 29th homer.
Finland in key games to win the man ever to win the heavyweight
'
championship
gold medal.

'-

.

•

.

•

·Reds hand Astros 7-3 loss; Braves and Rock1es also get w1ns
••• • By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
·
homer. But mainly, be wanted to
·.: • HOUSTON (AP) - One night get back into action.
:-:the Cincinnati Reds showed they
"It was very quiet in here (the
·&gt;would fight if provoked. The next Reds' clubhouse) this afternoon,"
_: : :night, they showed they can play said Smiley, who allowed just three
-:· ;baseball too.
bits in the first seven innings.
:· : · After· three bench-clearing "You could teU that we were ready
· :: : :brawls that resulted in eight cjec- to rock and roU."
Smiley (12-2) extended bis road
: - ;lions on Tuesday night, the Reds
• : ·bounced back on Wednesday night winning streak to 8-0, dating 'to
beat tbe Houston Astros 7-3 June 8 last season when be lost at
: : ;behind John Smiley's pitching and St. Louis. He finished with a four'
:-;.Mark Lewis' hitting.
biner, struck out three and walked
: : "Last night, we showed what two.
.::: ;tdnd of team we are. Tonight we
"Our guys scored a lot of runs
:-:-came out and played good base- · for me early," said Smiley, staked
:: · ball," Ron. Gant said. "We've to a 6-0 lead. "[ was really nervaus
-· : basically played pretty well against and pumped, so tbe three runs
·: : them all year, and we just ·contin- helped get me going. It felt like a
; "ued that.
month since I pitched. But to get
•.
"I felt in the clubhouse and that much run suppon felt great."
Craig Biggio walked and Tony
.: : when I took batting prnctice that
~ · \ve really meant business tonight. Eusebio got the flfSt bit off Smiley
..: : We're a classy ballclub."
in the fourth. Sinuns followed with
:
The Reds went about business his seventh bomet over the center
:: in the regular season finale against field lence to cut the Reds' lead to
--; : the Astros, winning the season . 6-3 . .
Singles by Bret Boone and Jeff
:; . series 12-1. Houstpn's only victory
j: was a 10-1 decision in Tuesday- .Branson in the second inning pre·
; : night's fight-marred game.
cedeo Lewis' third homer on the
; : Smiley, pitching for the first flfSt pitch for a 3-0 lead.·
:: . time since be was sidelined with a
In the third, Gant's single and
~ : groin injury on Aug. 21, lapsed
Eric Anthony's walk set up Benito
: · briefly in the third inning and
Santiago's two-run double. Santia~ : allowed Mike Simms' three-run
go scored from third on second

:-:to

'.
,.
:.....

..··
.

-~.

Tonight'• game•

Baseball

'.

..

Atlanta at Florida, camp. of auap .
game, 6:05 p.m.
Allaru (Avery 6-11) at Aorida (Rapp
9-7), 7:05p.m
San Dieao (Dishman 4-6) at St Louis
(Watson 5-7), 8:05p.m

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE
E-llr• Okol.._

r.am
»:
8oll0n ................. ..76

L Ed.

liA

45
NewYori ........... ...61 '61

.621
.500

U.5

Ddrolt... . .............. so 71

.413

26

CentraiDh-llloa
CLEVELAIIJL. •. .. B4 Y1 .694
K.aDw Cil)' ...........62 59 ..SI2
Milwouk., ...•..... ...S9 63 .414
Olica&amp;&lt;&gt; .................S6 64 .467
MhmCIOCa ........ :... ..46 74 .383

22
2B
27 ~

~:~~:::::::::::::ji ~ ::~ ~j

,.'

..
.·
.·

;

'

W11tern Dlrit6on
Cali(ornia........ ..... ,.61 55 ..SS3
Seattle .... ......... .......62 60 .SOB
Texa&amp; .....................60 62 .492
DakliUid .... .............59

64

.480

'''

S~

7.S
9

VVednesday'sscores
MiMCM~ta 9,

Detroit 1
Bolton I, Oakland 2
New Yark 4, Scatle 3
CLEVEI..AND 12, MilwlllkcCI2
Olicaea 7, Teau S

Tonight's games
Seattle (Baala 9-7) lit CLEVELAND
(Nagy 12-5), 7:05p.m. ·
Olicago (Alvarez 7-7) at Ttllll ((lavlik
7-9), 8:05p.m
Texu at Mllw&amp;Ukee, 8:05p.m
Baltimore at CLEVELAND,'8:0_5 p.m.
Detroit at Tornnto. 8:05 p.m.
Bollou at New York., 8:05p.m.
Kanlu City at Seanle, II :05 p.rn
O.icayo at OakiiUld, II :05 p.m.
Miruwota a1 Califc.-nia., II :05 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ei.iern DbiRob

»:
AtlaDCa ...................77

L r.t.
.w .636

Phlladelphla ........... 62 61

.SO..

liA
16

Montreal ................ 59 61 .-t84

11.5

.462

21

.4311

24

Fla-ida ................... ss 64
New Yort ......... ..... .S_J 68
C.ntrlll

Dl~lalon

CIHCJNI'IATI .......75
Hauatrin .................62
O!.icaaa ................ .61
PitubufJh ..... .........51

st LaW1 ............ ,... so n

.4LO

We1tern DIYIRon
Colorado ................63 51 .S21
U,1 AJlielea ........... 64 59 .520
SaD Diej0 ..............60 61 .496
San. Fraocilco ........S8 64 .47S

Wednesday*11 scores

Nad~al B•ketball A~~Miatlolro
NEW YORK KNJCKS: Named Josh
R01mfeld dindor of public relation&amp;
ORLANDO MAGIC: Named Gary
Brokaw ••ilt.aDt ditector of acoulin1 and
baaketball WifJ idminiatntor.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS· Named
)abn Ciqterm:an Yice preaideat a( rnarketilljl; Quia HutaoD vice preaidellt of
lioket sates: and Diane Tuppeny-Hc:aa Ienior director af community relatior..

Football
N.tkmlll F~bllll le1Jue
CAROUNA PANTHERS: Waived
Kevin F.-t., offeuive lineman, ud Ja-

aoit Chlldl, orccnaive t.ckle. Re-alaned
Alan 1-Wier, coroubact.

z.

13.5
14
24

zs.s

3
S.5

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS' Sl1aod
Dcn-ic:k. Med, Mlbact. and lohD loluuon,
IIDC:Mcter. Waived Adam HalT)', widereeclv.-, Cram lhc practice aquad. Slped
Travis_Davia, aafety, ta the pnctiec aqulld,

OAKLAND RAIDERS: Re·•laned
Aundray Bruce, defea1ive eDd. WaJved
Cole Ford, kick«, and re-tlanad him 1a
the practice'aqu.d. Slaved Tom Robloct.
offeuive IIDemlll, ta the prac:lic:e squad.
Waind Joe Nedney, kicker, from tbc
practjee ~quad.

AUaota 6, Sl louil 1

Colorado 10. Chlcaao 4
SIUI Diego 6. N,..,. YorkS
Florida 2, P .... urgh I
CINClNNAfl 7, HOUIIOD 3
Philadelphia I, lAI Anat let 0
Mootreal. I, San Frm:::i100 2

Hockey
Nadoul Hockt11A•ue
BUFFALO SABRES: Si11Ded Bryan
Foillrty, defenaeman.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: Aareed to
terms with Juon Strudwick, defenseman.

--Sports brlefs.DETROIT (AP) - Detroit
goalie Milce Vernon will remain an
unrestricted free agent after an
arbitrator ruled the Red Wings'
· final contraCt offer was not accepted. '
Vernon, who helped the Red
Wings .to the NHL's best record
and the Stanley Cup finals for the
"first time in 29 years last season.
said he agreed to a two-year, $5.45million contract June 30.
The Wings said they pulled that
offer off the table before Vernon
accepted it.
Arbitrator George Nicolau
agreed with the Red Wings. He
also ruled Vernon and bis agent,
Larry Kelly, failed to accept in a
timely manner a subsequent offer
by the Red Win~s of $2 million a
year for two years . .

Carmel UMC
Homecoming

SAil FRA!'ICISCO 49ERS' Slaaed
Michael Williaml, c:otDC.'fblck, from tbclr
prx:tlee aqul. Re.leued Tme1ce W•ren, wide rec:einr-returner. Re-•laned
AlphoDZO Brownlna. wide receiwr, to the
practke aqu.l.

••
•

•

•- •

•

Sunda~Sept.

10,1995

Carmel UMC
Carmel Rd.
Racine, OH
Sunday School 9:45
'
Worship 10:45
Carry-In Dinner
_ 12:00 noon
"The Larkin Family"
1:30 p.m.
Everyone Is Welcome
Pastor Kenny Baker

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

~-:

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Marietta to host Meigs Friday ,night
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Cor~espondent
The Meigs Marauders will try
and rebound from last weeks sea·son openil)g heartbrealcing Joss to
Gallia Academy when the Marauders travel to Marietta to tangle with
the Tigers Friday evening.
The game wiD he the second of
three straight for tbe Marauders
against Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League opponents.
It will only he the second-ever
meeting between the two schools.
On Sept. 2, 1983, the Marauders
dropped a 9-3 contest to the Tigers
at Marietta. The Marauders had a
young sophomore end on that team
by the name of Milce Chancey. He
is now the head coach of the
maroon and gold.
·
The Tigers are coming off a 136 win over Belpre in last week;' s
opener. Marietta, despite being a
Division I program, ba&lt; only 36
players out for football.
·

The Tigers," led by seoond-year
head coach Jay Long , had their
problems in 1994, finishing with a
1-9 record, with the 0nly win coming over winless Athens . Tbe
Tigers in 1994 managed only 96
points in 10 games . Seven times
the Tigers were beld to seven
points or less.
Marietta is led by 6-0, 180pound senior tailback Jay Sauls .
Sauls led the Tigers last year with
364 yards rushing. The Tigers also
have a fine quarterback in senior
transfer Troy Meech.
In last week's win over Belpre.
Sauls rushed for 88 yards in 18 carries in~luding a six-yard touchdown run . Sauls also returned a
punt 67 yards for a touchdown .
Meech completed five of nine in
the air for 73 yards. including three
for 55 yards to 6 foot , 172 pound
sophomore end Darryl' S immons.
The offensive line in anchored by

In the Eagles' home opener,

E~stern

6-6, 230 pound senior tackle Kevin
Gross.
On defense , the Tigers return
only three starters . But the Tigers
limited Belpre to only nine first
down s and 169 total yards last
week.
Tbe Marauders were able to
move the ball against Gallipolis
last week , rolling up 238 total
yards , but were. unable to hit pay dirt. SophomQre tailback Matt
Williams led the Marauder ground
attack with 99 yards in 21 carries,
whjle the fullback tandem of Cass
Cleland and Jayson Parsmrs were
also able to do damage to the Blue
Devils. Cleland rushed for 46 yards
in 12 carries and Parsons added 31
yards in six carries.
Senior quarterback Brett Hanson
was six of 16 in the air for 68
yards . His receivers were Williams
(2-15), Cleland (2-10). Mike Marshall (1-3'3 ) and Paul Pullins 0·

, ,

10), as the Marauders had problems
getting their passing attack
untracked.
On defense, the Marauders were
impressive. Take away the broken
play that went for 60 yards and the
game's only score, and Meigs held
the Blue Devils to 162 total yards.
Linebackers Cleland and Parsons
led the Marauder defense. Cleland
chalked up I I tackles, while Parsons bad 10.
"Marietta is a good football
team," Chancey said. lbey have a
good tailback, quarterback and
have good size on U1eir offensive
line. Tbey heat Belpre last week ,
we must play played good solid
football, cut down on mistakes and
we can't stop ourselves on offense.
We are loolcing forward to another
tough football game this week."
Marietta plays its home games
at Marietta College's Don Drumm
Field. Kickoff Is 7:30p.m.

.

•

to take on Wahama Fr1day

'•

By SCOTT WOLFE
opportunity, from deep in their own
Sentinel Correspondent
territory. Bowen found Eric Hill on
This weekend one of the biggest a sideline route at the 1:30 mark.
rivalry's in the bend area will resulting in an 80-yard touchdown
resume when the W ahama White reception and Eastern's second
Falcons come to Easi Shade River score of the evening. Bowen again
Stadium for an expected dogfight went to the air on the point-after,
(or bird fight) with the Eastern finding Travis Curtis for the conversion. Eastern 15-0 led at the
Eagles.
Last week, senior leadership for . half.
For the se~ond time on tbe
the Eastern Eagles, on both sides of
the football, helped the Eagles and night, Sheets' seven.yard touchfrrst-year bead coach Casey Coffey down run extended the Eagles lead
· post a 35-0 victory over the host to 21-0. Bowen proved, as he did
Waterford Wildcats in the season all evening, that he can scramble as
opener for both clubs. Eastern is 1- well as he passes, busting in for the
0 and riding a wave of momentum. two-point conversion. Eastern Jed
Wabama stumbled earlier in the 23-0.
year and suffered their first ever
Sophomore Steve Durst saw
loss to Hamlin 26-15, but came action at qt}arterback in the final
back to beat Van last week.
quarter for the Eagles and made his
Eastern seniors' Brian Bowen, presence known with a eight-yard
Eric Hill, Jason Sheets and Micah touchdown strike to Corey Yonker.
Otto were the key players in an The conversion run failed, as EastEagles offensive attack that pro- ern finished their scoring for the
·
duced 414 yards in total offense e·t ening.
and five touchdowns during the
Sheets Jed the Eagles in rushing
with 23 carries for 118 yards and
evening.
.
Jason Sheets capped off a long. two touchdowns. Micah Otto fins.coring drive with a two-yard ished with 16 carries for 35 yards
touchdown run. Brian Bowen in his first start as the Eagles' fulladded the two-point run, and East- back. Milce Smith was 2-35.
Eastern will bave to watch out
em led 7-0.
Leading 7-0 in the second quar- for sophomore quarterback David
ter, Eastern capitalized on a huge

Mitchell, who can scramble and
pass. Also, Dale Johnson can ramble out of the WHS backfield,
opening the season with an Itcarry, 101-yard effort. Johnson was
the lone ground game, however, as
W ahama as a team was just 25117.
Mitchell and Johnson had the
lone two WHS touchdowns, one of
which was a 77-yard run that came
from an offense that had struggled
most of the night.

Last year, Eastern held to defeat
Wahama for enly the third time in
the school's history.
Mitchell can throw, but under
intense pressure from the Hamlin
defense, he was off his mark. In the
past. Mitchell has shown much
poise in threading the needle to his
'receivers; The main receiver is
Gabc Scott, who in the first game
caught three passes for 26 yards.
Game time is 7:30 p.m. Friday
at Eastern High School.

THE MARAUDER IS BACK -The Meigs Marauder, after several years of absence, reappeared Friday evening at the Melgs-Gallla
Academy game. He Is shown getting ready to lead the rootball team
out of the locker room berore the Marauders' 6-0 loss to the Blue
Devils. [lis expected thai the masked Marauder will make an appearance at most home football games.

WE WILL

ON ANY

HoT BE ·UNDERSOLD
ITEM

Southern to host
Waterford Friday
Last week in a game betwe~Iitwo teams that had struggled in the
past, New Albany defeated Southem 13-0 in the season opener.
This week, the Tornadoes will
not have a long road trip to contend
with and has another 0-1 team to
face on their own turf. The Tomadoes are hungry. Wildcats watch
out!
Last week; New Albany scored
in the first quarter, then withstood a
Southern Tornado challenge en
route to claiming a 13-0 non-league
season-opening win Satprday.
' Although penalities didn't eat
., up mass quantities of yardage, they
: · : did come at inopportune times for
: · the Tornadoes, who in all respect
could have brought home a win.
The bright spots: Jesse Maynard
went 13-26 for 206 yards :Wd four
interceptions, some of whtch were
deflected before falling into the
opponents' possession. Southern
, netted seven yards rushlng. Among
his receivers were Mike Ash (279), Brian Pagel (1-35), Danny
Sayre (2-32), Jamie Evans (5-38),
Matt Riffle (1-15), Jay McKelvey
(1-5) andCbris Proffitt(l-2).
Defensively, Southern was _led
by Evans with a sack and nme

The Southern Tornadoes, led by
coach Howie Caldwell, boosted
their record to 4-P with two m~re
big wins over ·Ohio Valley Chostian and Vinton County. Southern
is now 4-0 ove{ and 3-0 in the
league.
Against Vinton County Southem (4-0 overall &amp; 3-0 in the TriValley Conference) won 15-2 and
16-14 led by Bea Lisle's 10 points.
Jonna Manuel had five. Brianne
Proffitt had six, Jennifer Lawrence
had four and one ace, Sarnmi Sisson bad four and Emily Duhl had
two. M. Waters led VC with seven,
while Barney added four.
Ag:iinst OVC, Southern pounded the Defenders 15· 7, 15-4. Proffitt led the way with nine points
and three aces with one block,

AT ANY TIME

899

-

· tackles, "John Harmon with six
tackles, Ash with five, McKelvey
with six, Pagel with three, Proffitt
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 had fumble recoveries.
Disappointments: s·outfiern just,
did not get its ground game going,
which in tum burt its passing game .
Overall the passing game was
good, but it coult have been better.
Southern wiD have to stop Nate
Long, the most ialented in the
Waterford backfield. He was t11e
leading rusher for Waterford witll
64 yards on 11 carries. Dustin
Jones added 21 yards on 10 carries.
Long was the leading reCeiver for
the Wildcats, with two catches for
14 yards.
Waterford did not show much
offense as they were up against a
tough Eastern defense that netted
them only 101 totill yards .
Southern as a team netted 213
last week. All in all it should be a
good game, and Tornado coach
Milce Kloes and company hope to
have good fans support for the season opener.

Wlllttl Mlb
Cltrame Ill'

1 YEAR WARRANTY

hdll Spiolll'l

917

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E~ct.y

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WIPER BLADE CLEARANCE

FROM

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$21ff

Southern spikers beat
OVCS &amp; Vinton County

:

GREEN BAY PACKERS: Re-•ianed
Dirk BoraoaDI)oe, lid:er, ta lhe priClice
~quad. Waived Seth Dl.ttmu, o((euive
tackle, from the pndice aquM.
IACKSONVILLB
IAOUARS '
Waived Reaaie Cobb, runnloa bact.
Claimed VauaJm INnt., llUUii•J ba~t.
off wai"Cff from the New Orleao~ S~nll.
MrAM1 DOLPHINS: Walvod Lee Mc-Ciilltoa, fullback, and Jaaan larnet., offg.
aivelil'le~ .

&lt;6

.620
60 .508
60 .504
70 · .421

Natlonall.u1ue
CHICAGO CUBS: Re~alled Mite
Hubbard, catcher, and T.erry Adama,
pit~;her, from Iowa of the Ammcaa Auocialiml. Purchased the conltlctl o( Mike
Walker aad Twt Wcnddl, pit~hcn. Cram
Iowa. Desianated Tom Edeaa, pitcher,
and Todd Pratt.. catcher, for auiaament.

Basketball

ToraDio 6, KanA~ City 2

Iuao

Transactions
Baseball

Friday's ~ames
,•

aggressive against us."
Braves 6, Cardinals 1
At Atlanta, Ryan Klesko's tworun double highlighted a six-run
fourth and Tom Glavine had an
RBI double for the Braves.
Gtavine (14-6) gave up five hits,
walked four and struck out five
before being lifted after five
innings and 104 pitches. Loser
Mark Pelkovsek gave up five hits
and walked one in 3 '1J3 innings.
It was the Braves' fourth
straight victory. It was the fifih l.oss
in a row for St. Louis, which has
won only two of its last nine
games.
Padres 6, Mets S
Bip Roberts singled over a
drawn-in outfield to score Steve
Finley with no outs in the bottom
of the ninth, lifting San Diego over
visiting New York.
After the Padres rebounded
from a 5-1 deficit to tie it 5-5, Fin:
ley led oJf against Jerry DiPoto (46) with a single in bis first pinchhitting appearance of .the season.
Scott Livingstone followed with a
single. moving Finley to third.
Roberts then bit a fly ball over the
head of left fielder Damon Buford.
Doug Bochtler (4-0) pitched
two-thirds of an· inning.
Marlins Pirates 1
· (See NL on Page S)

Friday's games.
Su Fraaciacu at Olicaao. 3:20p.m
AUllltaar Aorida, 8:05p.m.
·
New York a1 Montreal, 8 : 0~ p.m.
HOUSloa at Philadelphia, 8: 0~ p.m
Loa AngeJea lit. Pinsbw'Jtl, S:O.S p.m.
Su Diego at St. Louia, 8:05p.m
aNC'lNNATI at Colorado, 8:0~ p.m

31.5

Balt.imall! 4, California 2

.
..

Colorado, which leads the NL in
batting hnt had a .207 average and
scored only 27 runs in the first
seven games of its road trip, bad 14
hits against eight Chicago pitchers.
Bates, a rookie subbing for
inj)lfed shortstop Walt Weiss, gave
the Rockies a 6-4 lead with ·a
bases-loaded double in the third off
Jim Bullinger (ll-6). Armando
Reynoso (6-6) was the loser.
Phllll~s 1, Dodgers 0
At Los Angeles, Mike Grace
allowed two infield singles over
seven innings for his first major
league victory and Kevin Elster hit
a sacrifice fly in the eighth as the
Phillies heat the Dodgers.
Ricky Bottalico and Heathcliff
Slocumb combined on the three-hit
shutout with Grace (1-1), the fourth
by the Phillies againsl the Dodgers
Ibis season. Oracr;, maldng his second big-league start, struck out
three and walked four. Slocumb
pitched a hitless ninth for his 30th
save.
Ismael Valdes (11-10) was the
loser.
"It's kind of frustrating, losing
1-0," Valdes said. "I wanted to ·
win and help the team, but there
was excellent pitching by the other
pitcher. They've shut us out a few
times and they play hard and

Scoreboard

.•
.•

':.' .

baseman Biggio's throwing error to Colorado. I0, Chicago 4; Atlanta 6,
first base.
St. Louis I; San Diego 6, New
Donne Wall (0-1), making his York 5; Aorida 2, Pittsburgh I; and
frrst major league star~ didn't last Montreal 8, San Francisco 2.
Rockies tO, Cubs 4
long against the division-leading
The hottest division race in the
Reds. He lasted 2 213 innings, trailing 5-0. He allowed six hits, National League just got a little
bolter. And it figures to warm up
wallred three and struck out two.
"It's a tough job for a young even more in the coming days.
"Wait until everyone starts
pitcher to come in against th~
Cincinnati Reds," Astros manager playing in the same division," ColTerry Cullins said. "He hadn't orado manager Don Baylor said ,
been here in a couple of days. His after 1.00 Roclcies ended a road trip
wife just had a baby, and he steps with a 10-4 victory over the Chicaout there one night after we had a go Cubs on Wednesday. "Then
big brawl. He'll get another chante you're going to see tempe~ flare
- when we play Los Angeles, San
to pitch for us."
It was a disappointing end to the Francisco and San Diego."
season series for the Astros, who
The Rockies' victory left them
had hoped to be challenging the tied with Los Angeles for the NL
Reds for the NL Central title. West lead. The Dodgers lost 1-0
Instead, they're going on the road, Wednesday night to Philadelphia.
trying to get into the playoffs as the
The Rockies (63-58) open a
wild card .
weekend series with Central Divi- ·
"We just ran into a good base- sion-leading Cincinnati on Friday
ball teafll," James Mouton said. night, while the Dodgers (64-59)
"Now we've got to go on the road open a series in Pittsburgh.
and play good baseball,. This is
"It's big to go home 5-3 instead
where you $sert yourself, and try of 4-4," Baylor said of the eightto play well against the teams thai game road trip.
are in the ~e position as you."
Fill-in Jason Bates capped a
Houston's nine-game road trip five-run third inning with a threebas stops at Philadelphia, New run double and Colorado brolce out
York and Montreal.
· of a rare hitting slump to beat
Elsewhere in the NL, it was Chicago.

Thursday, September 7, 1995

while Sisson added eight points
and an ace. Amber Thomas seven
and two aces, while Jennifer Cummins had four. Cummins also ahad
a great frontline game with five
kiDs and three blocks.•
Lisa Jo Vollhorn led OVC with
five, while Pollard added four.
After Thomas gave Southern a
4-0 lead, Proffitt's ace gave SHS a
5-0 tally . Vollbom tied the score
for the Defenders at 5-5, but that's
as close as the game got, as SHS
rolled to a S-5 tally behind Cummins and on to the 15-7 win.
Sisson reeled off eight straight
points that encompassed two
Defender time -outs to stop tbe
momentum, but Southern catnc
right back for a 15-4 win .
·

TIIIICII .

AtttHrEI

'

NL games..~c_on_ti_nu_ed_fro_m_P_a.:..ge_4_J- - - - - At Miami, Greg Colbrunn
capped a I.Wo-run first innin~ with
an RBI single and extended b1s bitting streak to r7 games, leading
Aorida past Pittsburgh.
Willie Banks (2-S) allowed six
bits, including AI Martin's RBI single in the third, and one run m

seven innings for the victory, his
second since June 1994. Robb Nen
pitched a scoreless ninth for bis
19th save.
Denny Neagle (11-7) allowed
just five bits and two runs in six
innings but remained winless since
Aug.8.

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�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 7, 1995

Meigs Junior Golf League ends season

JUNIOR GOLF WINNERS - Pictured are
members or the Meigs County Ju.nlor Golr
League, which recently completed another suc cess rul season. Pictured are (rront row, L·R)
Matthew Warner, Brice Hill, Ben Bookman,
Chris Smith, Brandon Bumgardner, Brandi
Thomas, Jayne Davis, Jeremy Roush and Chad
Unrein. · In the second row are Adam Thomas,
Eric
Faulk, Matthew
Nick

Smilh , Zack Meadows, Justin Rousli, Adam
Chevalier, Marc Basrr, Carson Midkiff, Josh
Price, Josh Althouse and Ryan Pratt. In lhe lhird
row are John HiU, Joe Hill, Steven McCullough,
Jared Warner, Andy Davis, Jeff Brown, Garrett .
Karr, Tommy Roush, Sandra Young, Cory Stewart, Jason Warner, Sean O'Brien, Adam Thomas,
Jon Stewart, David Anderson , Robert Harris and
Amanda Nappt•r

and Jeremy Roush
.
13-16 - David Anderson and
Zacb Meadows
Second place
8-12 - Tbadius Bumgardner
and Andy Davis
13-16 - Sean O'Brien, Jared

The Meigs Junior Golf League
ended its ·season with a scramble
beld on Aug. 4 .
Tbe winning teams with .a score
of 32 were those of Sean O'Brien,
Brice Hill, Jon Stewan and Sandra
Young; and David Anderson,
Adam Thomas, Jeff Brown and
Brandi Thomas. A 33 was made by
Steven McCullough, John Hi.ll,
Nick Smith and Chris Smith; and
· the team of Garrett Karr, Robert
Hams and Eric Smith.
Regular season play ended with
the following slandings:
First place
8-12- Brandon Bumgardner

Unrein, with top birdies going 10
Anderson, Roush, Karr, Matthew
King, Adam Thomas 1 Joe Hill ,
McCullough, O'Brien, Thomas ,
Price, Justin Roush, Eric Smith and
Josh Althouse.
The league medalists were
Roush (ages 8-10), Andy Davies
(11 - 12), Josh Price (13-14) and
Anderson (15-16) . Three Most
Improved golfers were Chris
Smith, Ad.am Thomas and Brandi
Thomas . A pizza party followed
the scramble. Top Flite provided
the door prizes through Larry Mar·
tin of the Junior Top Aite Tour in
Parkersburg, W. Ya.

Warner
Third place
8- 12 - Garrett Karr, Brandi
Thomas and Adam Chevalier
13-16- Ste ven McCu1ough
and Jon Stewan.
Winners of Pac trophies were
David Anderson , Jeremy Roush
and Jeremy Roush . Birdie awards
went to Jared Warner and Chad

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Training Of
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MORNING

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EVENING
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FIRST -PLACE WINNERS - Flrsl-place
In the Junior Golf league were, Brandon

t~ams

Ten season starts, Colletta said.
Purdue led I 9-0 at .halftime, but the
defense fell apart in the second half
and West Virginia came up just
sbort, missing a short field goal in
the final seconds to fall 26-24.
· Purdue also bas problems with
the secondary, and the team needs
more deptli, Colletta said
One area that isn't a problem for
eime.
: · "I don't dwell one minute on the Boilermakers is offense. Full·
N~tre Dame's problem, that's tbeir back Mike Alstott rushed for 109
siiuation ," Colletta said Tuesday yards and tailback Corey Rogers
dtlring his weekly teleconference added 78 . The two are among the
fr~m West Lafayelle. "They just best running backs Notre Dame
will see all season, Holtz said.
happen to be our opponent.'' ·
"They're probably the two best
' In one of the most stunning
upsets ever: Notre Dame lost its backs in the same backfield that we
bcime opener to perennial Big Ten will face Ulis year," he said.
dctormat Northwestern. It dropped
Notte Dame from No. 9 to No. 25
Notre .Dame might have an easiin: the rankings and the Irish are cr time defending Purdue than
still reeling, trying to figure out Northwestern, though, Coiletto
what went wrong.
said. The Boilermakers don't
:Their 'Woes, coupled with Pur· . spread the offense across the field
due's win, give the Boilermakers as does Notthwestern, he said.
For Notre Dame, tbe biggest
the upper hand a.&lt; the teams renew
th~ annual rivalry Satu('day. Purdue problem is consistency . The Irish
hasn't beaten Notre Dame since aren't as talented as teams of the
1&lt;l85, and the irish have a 43-21·2 past and it so far lacks big-play
a&lt;lvantage in the series that dates capability, Holtz said, To u\ake up
for its lesser talco~ the team has to
back to 1896. '
: "I thought oire of the harder be consistent and it wasn't against
taSks we were going to have partie· Northwestern.
Holtz said the offensive line that
ularly early in the year was going
down to (Purdue)," Irish. coach caused so many problems la.&lt;t year
Lou Holtz said. " It's compounded is playing welt individually, but
more because I thought we'd be hasn't jelled as a group. The Irish
taking a more confident, better really don't have a receiver they
team."
can go to besides Derrick Mayes,
Purdue wilt practice just a.&lt; hard and running backs Randy Kinder
as. it would for any game but there and Robert Farmer fumbled the
wiU be no special preparations just ball on two critical occasions.
beicause the Irish are the opponents,
"Had we won the football game
CoUetto said. No matter what Notre .. . I would be silting here telling ·
Dame or anyone else thinks, a you I think we have a chance to be
game is a game, he said.
a pretty decent football team, ' '
· C':olletto also isn't worried how Hoilz said. "But not when you
Notre Dame was affected by the lose, not when you lose like we
to's to Northwestern.
did."
· "I don ' t have any concern or
Holtz said be has no idea what's
sy1npathy or anythingfor Notre going to happen to his team .. It
DWJ!e," he said. "What happened could go 0-11 or 10-1. h7 satd.
to·Notre Dame is no concern to us . Either way, Notre Dame wtll sur·.
... :I reaJiy could care less."
vive, he said.
·
.
:While the win at West Virginia
"It's not the good old days nght
was a confidence boost for the now," he said. "But) want to tell
Boilermakers, the team still has a you one thing about Notre Dame,
Iol of work to do before the Big NotreDamewillalwaysbeback."

By NANCY ARMOUR
- .SOUTH BEND, Ind . (AP)Don't blame Purdue coacb Jim
Colletta for sounding a little
annoyed.
'
· His Boilermakers opened the
season with an upset of then -No.
23 West Virginia, but all anyone
·WalliS to ask Colletto about is Nolie

Several contractors seeking
$,30M in suit against Gateway
~LEVELAND

(AP) - Unpaid
contractors are seelcing $30 million
in ! lawsuit against Gateway Economic Development Corp. and the
NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers.
rbe lawsuit filed Tuesday in
Cuyahoga County Cominon Pleas
Court accuses the pro basketball
tea01 of demanding "expensive and
unnecessary enhancements" that
drove up construction costs of
GuOd Arena and rendered Gateway
inselvent.
!'There were lots of changes
tbaJ were made on the Gunds'
(team owners) - · the Cavaliers' insiStence," said the contractors'
ia~yer, Sheldon. Berns. "And

-

Gateway never had the money to
pay for those things.''
W ben the Cavaliers signed a
construction agreement with Gate·
way in 1991, the arena was slated
to cost $118 million. The arena's
final price tag was $152 million.
Tbe 22 contractors are demand·
ing $11 million for outstanding
bills Gateway so far bas been
unable to pay and another $19 miilion in punitive damages and inter·
est
In addition, the contractors are
askin~ ~e court to invalidate the
Cavaliers lease and order the arena
sold to pay off the debt.

A'
PIRE
FU
I
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Ann wants to know how m·any men want'-to forget 'the act'
"the act"? ·· VIRILE ANQ OVER 60 a store for some small items. As we
DEAR VIRILE AND OVER 60: I . walked to our car to return home, my

Ann
f Landers.

accept your challenge. How about it,
gentlemen? Let me know if you
would settle for being held tenderly
"1995. Los l.ngeles
and be willing to forget about "the
Timn SyndttaJe and
Creators S~ndot&lt;lte"
act. "
Send a postcard to Ann Landers ,
Dear ADD LaDders: My wife is no P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 longer interested in sex. She insists 0562, with just a sentence·· ora word
this ·is perfeclly nonnal because of .. yes or no. And please add your age.
yotlr survey showing that 72 percent The card need not be signed, but
of women would rather be h~ld ciose comments are welcome.
Dear Ana Landers: I was
and treated tenderly and forget about
"the act." Maybe that's why so many interested in the letter from "Upright
men , even the married ones, arc in L.A .," who was disgusted that her
friends took advantage of ditzy
looking for the other 28 percent.
Why don't you do a survey to find cashiers.
out how many men would settle for .· Some 40 years ago, when 1 was a
preschooler, my father and 1went to
being held tenderly and forget about

12
Begmnmg Thursday, ept.
•
the Holzer Medical Center Hospice
Program wiU offer training to any·
one interested in becoming a program volunteer in Meigs or Gallia
Counties, according to Sue Bowers,
RN, CRC, program director.
Training sessions will continue
orr Sept. 19 and 26, and Oct. 3, 10,
17 and 24 at the Addison Freewill
Baptist Church from 12:30 to 3
p.m. The church is located on
Addison Pike .2 of a mile off State
Ro te 7
'
··
~Th~ impprtance of volunteers
to the Hospice program and as
members of the Hos ice team cannot be over emph~sized," said
Bowers. "We could not provide the
scope of services so urgently needed to enhance the quality of the

of money that would 1cmp1 me to Ma y. th e sc hoo l boa rd made an
che at. And it amazes me ho w enlightened decision and eliminated
fantasti c I fee l whe n I poin t out to a its sc hool requ ireme nt restricting the
"ditzy " (read : t ire d , worried , leng th of hair for male student&lt;. in
overworked and underpaid) clerk that the future , the hair need only be neat
he or she has underchruged me. 1'\ley ·and clean.
can't get over it. ·· ART
The school board fe lt there were
RASMUSSEN,BOTHELL,WASH. more important th ings to be dealt
DEAR ART: Thanks fora beautiful with such as gang activities, drugs,
letter. It took me back to the third tee n -ag e pre gnancies and rac ial
grade where !learned a poem I have ten sions.
never forgotten . It staned, "I have 10
Aside from the sc hool authorities
live with myself, and so, I want to be being relie ved of e nforc ing parental
fit for myself to ki}Pw."
responsibilities, they can now focu s
on more imponant problems, and the
Thanks for the memories.
Dear Ann Landers: One of the teachers can concentratethc ir elfons
schools in our district isolated a single on teaching rather than serv ing as hair
student in a separate classroom police.
because of the length of his hair Last
I hope more schoo l di stricts will

father looked at his change and said ,
"We have to go back." il seems the
cashi er had mistakenl y g iven him
change for a $20 instead of a $5 biU.
On the way home, I aske d my
father why he had gone back since
no one would have known if he had
kept th e mo ney. He ex plained in
painful detail that he would know,
and that was enough for him . He put
it .this way, "What you think of
yourself ca n be a lot more important
than what others think of you."
My father passed away 10 years
ago, but that lesson stuck with me.
As I have grown in both years and
maturity, I cannot imagine an amount

follow su1t. -· DUNCANVILLE.
TEXAS
D E AR TEXAS: It is ha rd to
believe that today the leng th o f a
s tude nt's ha1 r wou ld be an iss ue
anywhere in the civilized world. The
dinosaurs who isolated th~ long·
haired student sho uld be replaced.

Is alcohol ru ining your life or the
life of a loved one? "A lco holism:
How to Recogt~iz e It , How to Deal
With It , How 10 Conquer It" can turn
thin gs around. Send a ,&lt;elf-addressed,
long, business-size envelope and a
check or money order for $].75 (thl&lt;
mcludes postage and handling) to:
Alcohol, clo Ann Landers, 1'.0. Box
11562 , Ch icago, 11/. 606 11 -0562. (In
Canada , .&lt;end $455.)

I
is l'
..

lives of our pallents and thetr fanu·
.
'th t th r
and special
1ICS
WI ou . e tme
talen~ contributed by our volunteers.
.
. .
"Followmg the trammg ses ·
sions, plans call for Hosp1ce se~­
v1ces to bec?me avruiable to rest·
dents of Me1gs County m the late
fall,'' she added.
.
Am~ng the staff who wtll be
instructing th~ classes Will be
Holcomb, RN, Debra Cox-Adki s,
Bcreav.ement Volunteer Coo~dma·
tor; Cmda Saunders, LSW, and
Alicia. Saunders, RN, Pauent Care
Coordmawr.
.
To reg1ster for the !'fosp1ce vol·.
unteer tra1nmg sesstans, or for
more mfonnat1on on the program.
res1dents may call Debra CoxAdkms at 446-5074.

Middleport TOPS .news
lo sers throughout .th e s ummer
Sandy Queen was weekly be st
were. Peggy ilarunan. Cheryl Lauloser and Sheila Stone was runnerdcrmilt, Drcama Pi ckens , Dclinda
up at last week ' s mee tin g of the
Middleport TOPS club Chapter Ch:UJcy, Christi Lynch, Mary llud·
son , Nancy Freeman , Donn a
.#1908. A net loss of 19 pounds wa.'
Vance , and Marilyn Wilcox . Run·
reported fpr the wee k fr o m th e
ncrs· up were, Miss y Myers, Missy
members weighing in.
Frazier,
:UJd Sharon St ewart. Win Dreama Pickens presided at the
ne
rs
of
the "Goodi e IJa s kc t"
meeting and announced that a new
throu
g
hout
the summ e r were
contest using a football field motif
Cheryl
Lauderm
ilt , Chri sti Lynch ,
will begin Sept. 7. A cash prize
will be awarded to the best lose r Sharon S1cwart, Dreama Pickens,
Robyn llawk, :md Marilyn Wilcox.
after a six weeks period.
Members sharctl personal suc- Five new mcmhcrs were welcomed
cess stories on weight loss . Mi ssy durinr, the summer.
Meetings arc held every Thnrs Frazier led the program in which
at the Middleport Church of
day
she gave a qui z on sugar. Sh e ·
reminded membe rs to read labels Christ wilh weigh· in be ginning at
bcrore purchasing fnpU anti to
5: IS p.m. and tl1e meetin g follow ing a.t, G:(Xl p.m .. For more informa remember lo look for " h itldcn "
tion,
call 992 -75 32, '192· 7215. or
sugars, such as fruclosc.
992-71%.
The "Goodie IJaskct" was won
by Sharon Stewart. Weekly be st

!:"

TRAINING TEAM - Some or the starr members or the Holzer
Hospice program who will be Involved In the training of volunteers
ror Meigs and Gallla Counties are len to right, Judy Davis, RN;
Debra Cox-Adkins, Volunteer/Bereavement Coordinator; Carl
Berryman, Hospice volunteer, and Jan Holcomb, RN. The training
wiU starl Sept. 12.

_________;.___ Community calendar-___,...--------The Community Calendar Is
published as a rree service to
non·profll groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. Th~ calendar is not
designed lo promote sales or
fund raisers of any lype. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

Bumgardner, Jeremy Ro.u sh, Zach Meadows and
David Anderson.
·

Purdue to face No. 25
Notre Dame Saturday

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Hospice volunteer
jtraining
to
be
off.ere~ .·
· ·
s
1995 FALL SCHEDULE

'l&lt;'

Thursday, September 7, 1995

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - PTO meeting,
Syracuse Elementary School,
Thursday, 7 p.m. to plan for fail
carnival and basketball program.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Ladies
Auxiliary of the VFW. Post 9053,
Tuppen; Plains will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the post home.
RUTLAND .- Rutland Town.·
ship Trustees, Thursday, 6:30p.m.
at the Rutland Fire Station.
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
Township Trustees, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the township hall.

LONG BOTTOM IOOth
Anniversary of the Long Bottom
United Methodist Church this
weekend. Service, 7:30 Friday and
Saturday, Rev. Norman Butler,
Vienna, W . Va., guest speaker;
Sunday school at 9:30, worship al
109:30 with Jamie Sprague,'speaker. Carry-in dinner at noon; program at 2 p.m. with special music .

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections, closed Friday

chcon.

reunion will be held Saturday at 5
p.m. at Roy Oak Resort . Those
attending to take a covered dish.

so that employees may atteAd dis·
trict meeting.

SATURDAY
POMEROY -Manley family

RACINE - Racine C:all Festi val Saturday, 10-8 p.m . ai Star Mill
Park.

POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen dinner at
.
SUNDAY
McDonald's in Pomeroy, Saturday.
RACINE -The annu:~ l1:trvcst
6 to 8 p.m. Those of camp and .
guests to register al restaurant to $2 Festival will be held Sunday at U1e
St. John Lutheran Church, Pine
cenificatc toward dinner.
Grove Road, Racine . Worship will
be at II a.m. followed by a potluck
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
dinner at noon, and an afternoon at
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 10 a.m. Sat· · I :30 p .m . The 25th annivcrs:uy
ordination of women will be hchl.
urday, Episcopal parish house.
Linda Warner, speaker. Noon lunGALLIPOLIS - The Diabetes

support Group will meet in the
French 500 Room at Holzer Mcdi·
cal Center on Sunday, Sept. 10
from 2 .to 4 p.m. Speaker, will be
Dr. Rud Stout, Endocrinologist,
llol7.cr Clinic.
LONG IJO'IIDM - The Freedom Gospel Church will hold their
Homecoming services Sunday a)
U1e church on county road 31 (Bald
Knob/Stiversville Rd.) . Sunday:
School will he at 9:30 a .m .• fol-·
towed hy worship service, and a
dinner at noon . Rev . Roger Will·
ford will ofnciatc services, with the
guest speaker being Clyde r=errcil.

..

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• Ta~~el, Tags. Tille. Fees e~tra Reb;lfe lr'dt.Qed m &amp;ale poce ot new Yehck! ltsled wllefe apphCable On~~ credit Not responsible lor typographat errOfS

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

�•
Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 7, 1995

Thursday, September 7, 1995

•

Justice Department report says kids more violent, more '1ictim

Biographical drama 'Truman' soars on HBO
By SCO'ITWR.LIAMS
a broken-backed snake, Japan
AP Television Writer
grimly fought on in the·Pacific and
NEW YORK (AP) - On AtnJ nobody bad an inkling of whether
12, 194S, Vice President Harry S. be was up to the job.
Tbat's the central dynamic of
Truman was summoned.to Eleanor
Roosevelt's study. She told him, "Truman, " adapted by screenwnt·
very gently, that her husband, Pres- · er Tom Rickman ("Coal Miner's
ident Franklin D. Roosevell, was Daughter" and "Everybody's Alldead.
American") from bistolian David
Stunned, Truman asked her if McCullough's Pulitzer Prize-winning biography.
there was anything he could do.
''Is there anything we ·can do for
Truman was the least likely or
you?" Mrs. Roose.velt replied. great men, and the HBO biopic
"For you are the one in trouble unsparingly recounts bis early
now.''
years - bow be failed as farmer ·
That moment, with all its ,ten- and came under ftre in World War
demess and pain, is faithfully and I as an artillery captain in France.
subtly depicted in "Truman,"
It also depicts bini as the disparaged
son-in-law of an oppressive
HBO's biographical drama. It stars
mother-in-law
(Lois Smith), and
Gary Sinise as the Man from Indethe devoted husband of an
pendence and airs Saturday night.
At the moment be succeeded impolitic wife, Bess (Diana ScarRoosevelt, Truman was a month wid).
shy of his 61st birtbday. He'd been
He was failing as a haberdasher
vice president less than three when kindly Fate and his war
months and FDR and the Cabinet record made him a protege of Misbad left bin\ in the dark. .
souri's notoriously corruJ!t PenderThe Third Reich was dying like gast machine, wbicb installed him

as a county commissioner. Truman
held his nose and followed orders.
"!low' d you like to run for the
U.S. Senate~" Boss Tom Pendergast (superbly played by national
treasure Pat Hingle) asks Harry
from the back. seat of his touring
car. "I got these three fellas I
asked. They couldn't do it for one
reason or another. Got one more
fellow I can go to."
So it was that "the Senator from
Pendergast" entered the Senate,
where be proceeded co get in good
with other, similarly endowed
politicians.
He seemed headed for an
unspectacular career in the nation's
most exclusive men's club, until
pure happenstance thrust him into
the presidency.
The great works that followed
- whether his conduct of tbe war,
the Marshall Plan, integration of
the U.S. armed forces, or his longshot presidential victory in 1948 were purely Harry Truman.
An "ordinary man" whose steel

was tempered on tbe anvil of history, Harry Truman proved himself
an extraordinary man.
Gary Sinise's performance is
worthy of bis subject His excellent
perfonnanoes in "Apollo 13" and
"Forrest Gump" notwithstanding,
"Truman" finally gives him center
stage. He makes .Truman come
alive, and grow and chahge before
your eyes.
It's not in the makeup although Gordon J. Smith's prosthetics create an eerie resemblance.
It's not the voice, either, although
Sinise's pi~bed vowels and-abrupt
intonation al'e evocative.
It's how Sinise's banked, inner
performance makes y~u see tbe
man himself, all his fears and
twitches and bravery leaking out
from behind a public face.
History bad never met a president like Harry S. Truman, and but
then, nobody else ever bad greatness thrust upon him quite so rudely or, for that matter, risen to its
challenge quite so nobly.

f

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Top-ranked party school can party - without the beer
SOUTH KINGSTOWN, R.I. take a stand at URI," President experience."' said Nathan Maine, a
(AP) - They can party till they Robert L. Carothers said in outlin- 23-year-old business major from
West Greenwich.
l!rop at the University of Rhode ing the ban during an assembly.
The policy comes a week after
Students who are 21 or older
Island - as long as it's without
URI,
which bas about 12,000 stubrewsky.
· can have alcohol fn their room~.
.
dents
in undergmduate and graduA week after it was named tbe but there will be none allowed at
nation's top party school by an fraternity parties, homecoming ate programs, was named. the top
annual guide, the University of events and all other student activi- party school in The Pnncet\}n
Review Student Access Guide to
Rhode Island on Wednesday ties, be said.
·
F'trst·offendeis fate fmes of $30 the !lest 309 Colleges.
banned alcohol at stitdent events on
The
paperback,
which
is
put
out
to $SO and second offenders up to
campus.
"More and more of our students $100. A third offense will result in by a New York publishing company and not affiliated with Princeton
are demanding that they not be a two-semester suspension.
Some students said the ban was University, sends representatives to
imposed upon by others whose
colleges to survey students and
judgment and behavior is impaired unnecessary and too sweeping.
"Drinking is part ·of a college ba5es the guide on their responses.
by substance abuse. It is time to
URI offtcials stressed that the

new policy is not a response to the
ranking. They noted the school bas
for years implemented programs
and policies aimed at curbing alcohol use.
URI banned Thursday night parties in 1988 and beer keg parties in
1990.

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A.ndrews bI•rth
announced

Raymond and Megan Andrews
of Chester announce the birth of .
their second son, Dillan James, ·
born July 28 at the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
He weighed nine pounds, two .
ounces and was 21 inches long. Mr.
and Mrs. Andrews have another
son, Tyler Ray.
Maternal grandparents are
Nancy Cale of Middleport and the
late Kenneth Calc. Paternal grandparents are Margaret Andrews of
Pomeroy, and the late Clarence
Andrews.

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--Society scrapbook
BIRTHDAY OBSERVANCE
Wilma Wright of Hockingport
was honored on her birthday, Aug.
16, with a gathering of family and
friends at the North Bethel Church.
Among those attending were
nieces, Phyllis Hinkle and Linda
Ayers of Charleston, W. Va., and
nephews, Bob and Sco11 Woodford
of Lucasville, and Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Woodford of Belpre.

Reg. '5.95

CLOWN MINISTRY
The clown ministry, '"No Compromise" will be presented by the
Porterfield Baptist Church at the
Reorganized Church of Jesus '
Christ of Latter Day Saints, Portland-Racine Branch, located on
Loveell Road, just off County Road
35, on Sept. 17 at 6 p.m. Fellowship will follow. The public is
invited to attend . .

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I

"The Baby Boomers' kids are lion bas more deadly weapons in for pne in five violent crimes.
-Between 1983 and 1992, the
moving into the years when they're their bands, more dangerous drugs
doing crime," Snyder said in a in their bodies and a much more juvenile weapons laws violations
telephone interview.
casual auitude about violence. In more than doubled for each metal
"The children are poorer. There addition, too many kids are under- group- an increase of 167 percent
for blacks, 129 percent for other
are more minorities. And they have socialized and undcrsupervised.''
more guns .... II' s dangerous to be a
Tbe report estimates that if the races and 106 percent for whites.
--40 percent of juvenile crime
kid,'' Snyder said.
juvenile population increases by 20
James Alan Fox, a criminal jus- . percent over the 1990 Census, and occurs after school, whereas for
lice professor at Northeastern Uni- arrest rates continue to climb as adults the crime rate is highest
vershy in Boston, attributes the ihey have in the past decade, the before and after midnight.
-Only 22 percent of the attack·
increasin~ lawlessness to chil~ren number of juveniles arrested for
wiJo aren t supervtsed, espectally violent crimes will double by 2010 ers of juveniles were strangers, ·
compared with 42 percent for
after school. Statistics show that _to more than 260,000.
adults.
crime by and against juveniles
The report also says:
.- Between 1984 and 1993, the
peaks at 3 p.m. and again at 6 p.m.,
-Between 1983 and 1992, the
number of gun-related murders of
be said, and the Justice Department rate of juvenile arrests for violent
report conftrmS !bat.
crime increased by 100 percent, juveniles increased fivefold.
--Guns were used in eight of 10
"This generation is the young compared with a 60 percent
. homicides committed by juveniles.
and the ruthless," Fox said in a increase for young adults.
-One-quarter of juvenile vic·
telephone interview. "This genera-Juveniles are now responsible

RichardS. Clh.e
Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class
Richard S. Cline, son of Richard L.
and Joy F. Cline of Sll McNell
Ave., Point Pleasant, W.Va, is currently halfway through a six-month
overseas deployment aboard the
guided missile cruiser USS Princeton, which bas included duty near
Iraq in the Persian Gulf.
Cline is one of 400 sailors wbo
departed San Diego in early April
for the voyage to the Western
Pacific and Indian oceans and Persian Gulf. So far, Cline bas traveled nearly 28,000 miles.
Cline's ship is part of a sevenship battle group wbicb includes
more than &amp;0 tactical aircraft, and
ships and. submarines armed with
· Tomahawk cruise missiles. · While
in the Middle East, Cline is
assigned to the Navy's new Sth
fleet, which is responsible for all

Alfred United Methodist
Church's annual reunion is scheduled for Sept. 17 at the church.
Basket dinner is at 12:30 p.m.. with
the program by the· Classics starting at 2 p.m. All are welcome.
Many from the church and the
community attended the wedding
of Edna Harmon and Clarence
Warner at the Tuppers Plains
UMC. Attending were Edna's sisters, Thelma Henderson and Osie
Follrod; Mr. Wamer's sister, Eloise
Archer; and family; Clair Follrod,
Nina Robinson, Nellie Parker,
Sarah Caldwell, Charlotte Van
Meter, and John Taylor. Marilyn
Robinson of Alfred and Leann Fick
of Columbus provided the music.
• Eloise and Russell Archer hosted their children and families over
the weekend. The Archer's guests'
were Jim, Mary Lou, J.R.. Lindsay,

U.'S. naval operations from the
Suez ·canal to India, and as far
soutl) as Kenya.
·
Ciine joined the US Navy in
December, 1990.
'' Jeffrey, C. Shiflet
Navy Petty Officer lsi Class
Jeffrey C. Shiflet, son of Jack H.
and Elizabeth L. Shiflet of Route I,
Rutland, recently received a Leuer
of Commendation while assigned
aboard the ballistic missile submarine' USS Ohio, home ported in
Bangor, Wash.
Shiflet was recognized for his
superior performance of duty. Shiflet consistently performed his
demanding duties in an exemplary
and highly professional manner.
A 1982 graduate of Meigs High
School, Shiflet joined tbe Navy in
January 1986.

.-...
COMMENDATION· Navy Petty Officer First Class Jeffrey C.
SbiOet, left, or Rutland, receiving bls Letter or Commendation
rrom the U.S. Navy.

battle scenes to ba ve a sense of
purpose and direction," Gibson
said following the press viewing of
· the film.
. Also Wednesday, the French
government announced that Gibson
would be named an Officer of Arts
and Leiters, one of France's most
prestigious cultural honors.
NEW YORK (AP) - Albert
Einstein's earliest manuscript on
the theory of relativity is expected
to go for an astronomical sumagain.
Sotbeby's said Wednesday il
expects it will sell for $4 million to
$6 million at the Dec. II sale. The
manuscript already made history
when it sold for $1.2 million in

time is not absolute and mass and
energy are equivalent.
The equation E mc2 -energy
equals mass times the speed of
light squared - appears in several
different forms. The hand-written
manuscript was probably ciJmplet- ·.
ed in 1912, but publication was pur'
off by World War I. Einstein, using
pencil and black and brown ink,
riddled the text with numerous corrections, additions and deletions, as
weD as diagrams and formulas.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Hollywood booker caught with
Hugh Grant was sentenced to six
months in jail and fined $1,350
after pleading no contest to ~ewd
conduct.
' EsteUa Thompson, 23, was also
1987.
.
TJte 72-p_age p~per ts ~ lengthy . ordered Wednesday to take a class
rcvtew of Emstem s spec181 theory on AIDS and perform five days of
. of relativity, demonstrating that community service.

Thompson, also known as
Divine Brown, was sent to jail for
violating probation imposed for
two 1993 prostitution convictions.
She was ordered to repon to jail on
Nov. 2.
Outside coun, she said she was
looking forniard to an acting career,
playing "good roles. Dramatic,
sexual, you know, the good stuff.''
Since her arres~ Thompson, the
mother of three, bas modeled lingerie, made a TV cOIIlDiercial and
reportedly got thousands from a
London tabloid in exchange for her

Come On Over To Bob's ...

• Macintosh Apples
• Gala Apples

J10LIDdll
COO'i~BOOK

a cyl, 5 spd, AJC, tilt, cruise, stereo, all power.

LEASE THIS'TRUCK!

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

HERE'S HOW IT WORK'S

FUTURE VALUE

14,900
·
• 9,264*

(Lease End Residual Value) --,~=~.:.....*-*
(Lease !;&gt;epreciation) ,

5 636

.

Over 40 FordL Lincolnt Mercury
Cars &amp; Ford Trucks eligible in
stock to choose from!
*Lease end residual value (Purchase Option Price) is based on 15,1 10 miles

per year for 2 years.

.

• Stanley Prune Plums
• Bartlett Pears
• Damson Plums
(Great for Plum Jelly &amp; Preserves)

·

.. Plus taxes, lease charges, state truces &amp; lic8nse. Due at lease ,inception

Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:
Holiday Cookbook
clo The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, 0" 45769

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

And Still Available ...
Fresh Supply FREESTONE CANNING

PEACHES

"Now is the time to enjoy all your favorite fruit
at the peak of their flavor. You can eat the
fresh now or can and freeze them for later."

Now ready for planting ...

Fall Hardy Garden Mums
over.20 Varieties To Choose Fro

8 inch pot$ 3.

59 .each or3 for$1 0 .,00

Coming Soon: .
• Flowering Cabbage ·
• Fall Pansies
• Flowering Kale
TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

Fun For

114 Mile North of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, Mason, WV

AU Ages!

o

Phone (304) 773-5721

OPEN Mon.· SaL 8 a.m. · 8 p.m. Sun. 9Jt..m. · 8p.m.

Session Includes: Make-Up Artistry, Wardrobe Changes

Call For Appointment, 773-5352

SHEAR DESIGNS UNLIMITED
Just Below Brid e

\

Fresh From The Shenandoah Valley

keyless entry.

1994 FORD F·150 XLT

(Capitalized Cost)

and Samantha Archer of Springfield: Joyce, Steve, and Stephanie
St. Clair of Lancaster: and Jackie,
Eric, Erin, and Jody Brooks of New
Marshfielil.
Weekend guesls of Thelma
Henderson were Linda Williams of
Belpre; Bertha and Frnncis Niegsch
of Pittsburgh, Kansas; Randy and
Kris Jamesian of Lima; Larry Converse of Columbus Grove; and
Mike and Jennifer Evans of Winchester, Kentucky. They attended the
Edith Young Harper reunion at
Tuppers Plains. Others attending,
from the county, were Kathy, Slacie, and Alan Watson; Osie Mai
and Clair Follrod. Alicnding from
Athens were Karen, Steve, Drian,
Katie, and Brannon Follrud.
Nellie Parker was a weekend
guest of Samuel and Com Michael,
Stiversville.

story.
. Tejano star Selena
Grant and Thompson were
Court TV and Univision, the
arrested June 27 by vice squad ofli- nation's largest Spanish-language
cers who spotted them in the TV network, wanted to televise
actor's white BMW.
Yolanda Saldi,..ar's .trial, which
The star of ''Four Weddings and begins in Houston ()ct. 9.
a Funeral" and ••Nine Months"
District Judge Mike Westergren
pleaded no contest in July to lewd said Wednesday that the cameras
conduct. He was fined $),180 and were banned from the trial. Both
placed on two years' probation.
the district attorney aqd Ms. Saldivar's lawyer had opposed llve
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP) TV covernge. ·
.
- A judge is refusing to allow live
Ms. Saldivar, 34, is accused of ·
TV coverage of the trial of the shooting Selena to death outside ·a
woman ch,arged with murdering budget motel March 31
I

Send Us llour
ravorite Recipe

VEHICLE PRICE

· tims are killed by other children.
-In ·1992 alone, 2,595 children
were murdered, seven every day.
-One of every five child fatalities was attributed to homicide, the
No. 2 cause of death behind mocor
vehicle accidents.
L-Juveniles ages 12-17 weremore likely to be victims of violent
crime, inclu(jing rape, robbery and
simple assault, than adults 25 and
older.
-From 1980 to 1992, the number of children who were subjects
of child ,abuse and neglect reports
nearly llipled. from I million to 2.9
million.
That section of the report concludes, "Today's abused and
neglected children are likely to be
tomorrow's violent offenders."

-Alfred .happenings-

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a

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GLAMOUR .PHOTOGRAPHY
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1995 FORD
ASPIRE

ingly lawless society.
"This report is a road map to
the next generation of crime unless we do something now,"
Reno said in remarics accompanying the report.
The 188-page document is the ·
ftrst ~prebensi ve compilation of
data on juvenile crime and victimization from more than 50 sources,
according to the Justice Department.
Howard Snyder, one of tbe
Philadelphia-based authors at the
National Center for Juvenile Justice, said two things are pushing
the juvenile crime mte up: a growing number of children and a growing intensity of violence as teenagers use more weapons, especially
handguns.
·

_ . f\llilitary news-----

VENICE, Italy (AP) - After
portraying a medieval Scottish
bero, Mel Gibson played the role of
modern movie idol a( the 52nd
Venice Film Festival .
"Bravo. Bellissimo," fans cried
when Gibson appeared. His 13thcentury epic "Brnveheart" -shot
on location in Scotland and Ireland
-was shown Wednesday.
To promote the ftlm, four actors
in medieval Scottish battle dress
rode horses through the streets of
Venice. Gibson's character,
William Wallace, defeated the
English wjtb a small but courageous army.
"Bravebeart," also directed by
G!bson, got a wann reception from
critics and reporters, who especial.ly liked the batde scenes.
"I viewed all the battle scenes I
could from different movies for
'inspiration ... I .wanted even thee

.

2·3- Week D•llvery
. By MALCOLM RITI'ER
tbe Hubble. Their observations said.
Ends Decem•er 5, 1115.
One possibility, he said, is that Clltc:ll wiUtOtl1r
AP Science Writer
suggested that under the standard
yo~r dllllf klr poutltlllimltllilns.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stan- · theory, the universe would be only the .universe contains much less
matter than standard theory. says.
dard theory of the universe may 8 biUion years old.
have to be revised because the age
Both Hubble studies were aimed The traditional idea is that the uniit implies for the cosmos is too at finding the most sought-after verse contains just enough matter
'
young, new observations from the number in astronomy, the so-called that it will continue expanding at
Hubble Space Telescope suggest
Hubble constant, which is the rate an ever-slowing rate, never quite
When tlie observations are inter- at which the universe is expanding. coming to a bait.
preted according to standard theo- That number, combined with
Dut by assuming instead that the
ry, the universe is estimated to be assumptions about the cosmos, universe contains only one-tenth
about 9.5 billion years old. But that gives an age for the universe.
that amount of matter, for example,
clashes with solid evidence that
In the new study that age comes the new finding implies an age of
·some stars are older, ai least 12 bil- to 9.5 billion years, give or take 1.1 12.S billion years, Tanvir said.
lion 10 17 billion years old.
biUion, under standard assumptions
Other observations have sugOne obvious solution to the con- about the universe.
gested that the universe contains
flict is to reviSe the standard theoTan vir said that estimate is less matter than standard theory
ry, says astronomer Nial Tanvir of unlikely to be right, given the cal- says, "so maybe that should be our
. Cambridge University in England. culated ages of the oldest stlirs. The fll'St point of retrea~" Tanvir said.
He presents tbe new worl:: with cok _ star ages have been extensively
Another way out would be to
R. JOHNS,
LTD.'
.._....
,....
leagues in today's issue Of the jour- scrutinized, and it appears they resurrect a concept that Albert Einnal Nature.
could not be lowered without stein invented but later repudiated
The age conflict made headlines resorting to fundamental changes in as the biggest blunder of his life.
last year when another team of sci- scientific understanding of particle It's called the cosmological con- '
enlists reported their findings from physics, be said.
Stant. It basically says that the vacSo the new study suggests that uum of space contains an as-yetthe standard assumptions abont the undetected force that affects the
212 E. MAIN
cosmos might be wrong, Taovir motion of matter over immense
POMEROY
distances.

By LAURA MYERS
Aaoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - America's children are tum1n1 to crime
at such an alarmiDgmte that juvenile arrests may double by 2010,
the Justice Department said today.
They're also more likely to be
victims of crime, especially at the
bands of their peers and with guns,
according to the report, "Juvenile
Offenders and Victims: A National
Report."
A noted criminologist who
tracks juvenile homicides called
today's violence-wracked generation "the ymmg and the ruthless."
And Attorney General Janet Reno
worried thai if government doesn't
increase its efforts to fight youth
crime, citizens will face an increas-

- - - - - - - - - - - - - N a m e s in the n e w s - - - - - - - - - - - - -

0811111

Challenge to standard theory of universe
renewed with space telescope· study

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

P!Jmeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mason

Kennolh McCullough, R. Ph. . Cherie• Rlftle, fl. Ph.
f\onsld Hanning, R. Ph..:
Mon. thru Sui. 8:00 o.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sundoy 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 9~·2955
E. Maln.Frltndly S•rvlce Pomeroy, Oh.
Wook
'UI9

2400 Eastern Ave . Gallipolis, OH
(across from K-Mart)
Phone (614) 446-1 711
I .

OPEN . ~on .·Sal &amp;am.· 9 p.m Sun. 10.a.m .. 6p.m.

�Pag~ 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~lated Preu Writer
:: BEUJNG - Afler two days of

teugh talk from the United States
ob human rigbLS at an inlei'Datiooal

TUESDAY

11
Porkette
Mashed Pot a t·oes
with Grav y
Green Beans

Bread
Blushing Pears

18
Kolbassi
Mashed Potatoes

Sauerkraut
Bread
Peach Slices

Meigs Senior Center
September Activities

14
Oven Fried Chicken
Scalloped Potatoes
California Mixed
VfU&gt;etables
Bread
Sunshine Bars

16
Spaghetti with
Meat Sauce
Buttered Peas
Tossed Salad
Peach Crisp

19
Creamed Chicken
on Biscuit
Brussel Sprouts
Waldorf Salad
Rice Raisin Pudding

20
Meatballs on Rice
Cauliflower
Tossed Salad
Bread
Cinnamon Apple
Slices

21
Sliced Turkey
Mashed Pot a toes
with Gravy
Peas !. Carrots
Mandarin Orange
in Gelatin

22
Beef and Noodles
Carrot-Raisin Salad
Orange Juice
Oatmeal Raisin
Cookie

26
Chicken Patty

27
Johnny Marzetti

Oven Browned

Green Beans

Potatoes
Lime Perfection
Salad
Rosy Applesauce

Carrots ·
Cookie - HDM
Ice Cream - Site

av ai\ahlc to paint.
A reprcscntali ve from the
Athens SocJal Security Office
wi ll be at the Center on
Wednesday. Septembe r 13 and
27. from 10 to II a. m.·
September is Women's Health

activities are quilting. sew ing.

sc hedul ed~

Month and several programs arc
sec details in article .
Wednesday, September 13- tnp
to Can ton for dinner theater and
show "G uys and Dolls", standby
seats ava ilable only.
Wednesday, September 13~ the
Stroke Survivors Support Group
will meet from I to 3. Anyone
who has su ffered a stroke or a

caregiver fo r a stroke

Mashed Potatoes
Peas
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

28

1

•
·"

•

..

, 29

· Baked Steak ·
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Broccoli &amp; Cheese
Bread
Rocky Road Pudding

·

v,icti~

is

' invited to attend.

Thursday, September 14- an
evening dinner will be held ,
with serving from 5 to 6:30.
Cost for the meal of baked steak,
mashed potatoes and gravy.
gree n beans , co le slaw, roll,
desse rt and beverage is $4.00
per person·. Following the meal
musi c will he played by The
C lassics with a free will offering
taken for the musicians .
. Friday, September 15 - I he
Arthritis Support Group will
meet from 10:30 to noon . The
Arthritis Self Help Course to be
held at the Meigs County Health
Department this fal l will be
discussed.
Wednesday, September 20- the
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic
will be held from 9:30 to II :30.
Wednesday, Septemlier 20 the ' Alzheimer 's Support Group
will meet from 1 to 3-. with
Jean e tte Thomas as guest
speaker, who will share her
expe·rienees in caring for an
Alzheimer's patient.
Thursday, September 21 - the
monthly birthday party will be
held , with seniors celebrating
birthdays in the month honored .
Thursday, September 28 Secretary of State Bob Taft will
. be present at I :00 to hono r
persons who have voted lor 50
years or niore and poll workers
who have served 25 years . This
event is sponsored by the Meigs
County Board of Elections.

women· s conference; China IOday
in effect replied: Mind your own
business.
The Beijing government bad
maintained a stony silence on
Hillary Rodbam Clinton's strongly
worded remarks Tuesday to conferees at the Founb World Conference
on Women.
China also refrained from reacting to even more pointed humanrights comments the next day from
the U.S. delegation chief,
Madeleine Albright.
Today a Foreign Ministry
spokesman was asked point-blank
about what she had said.
"Some people from some countries have made unwarranted
remarks or criticism of other countries," said spokesman Cl&gt;en Jian.
"We would like to caution these
people to pay more attention to the
problems in their own countries,"
he said. ·
In her speech, Mrs. Clinton
championed human rights worldwide and chastised the Chinese for
heavy-handed security at a gathering of private women's activists
outside Beijing. •
She called China's surveillance
and shadowing, confiscation of
materials and denial of visas to
some activists ''indefensible.''
The leader of the British delega-

FRIDAY

Meat :Loaf
Mixed Vegetables
Parslied Potatoes
Bread
Orange !. Grapefruit

.'

Sections

+---------+-----;;;;~;:==~===;=======-===:::::;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'

The Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to
4:30 p.m. Senior citizens arc
invited to participate in daily
activities and spec ial events. The
Senior Nutrition Program meal
is served at noon daily. Daily
pool. Uno. games and vi sit ing
with friendS. Weekly activities
are Chorus Practice on Tuesday
at I :00, the Knitting Circle on
Wednesday from I0 to 12. and
Ceramics Class on Thursday
from 10 to 12. The cost for the
Ceramic Class is $1.25. to cover
cost of paint and brushes , plus
the price of the ceram i ~ Hem.
·Halloween items arc now

THURSDAY

13
Vegetable Soup
Ham Salad Sandwich
Banana
Chocolate Chip.
Cookie

25
·Betty Mauer and Mary Davidson are shown holding the finished
product from a craft class recently sponsored by RSVP. The fans
are made of plastic forks, lace, ribbon and silk nowers.

WEDNESDAY

12
Oven Baked .Fish
Skin On Potatoes
Carrots
Bread
Mixed Fruit

Liver and Onions

..

These RSVp volunteers completed 31 laprobes for the resid'e nts at the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center. The material was donated by Helen Frank. These ladies spent many, many hours ...
,....
sewing these by hand.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Thursday, October 5- Hea lth
Informa tion Fair will be held
from 10:00 to noon. Twenty area

Monday. October 2, for 10
weeks on Mondays and
Wednesdays at 3:30p.m. Cost is
$.50 for each session allcnded,

health organizations a nd
agencies will be present to

new members arc Welcome.

explain serv ices and programs.
Free blood s uga r and blood
p:cssurc scree nings will be

A trip

Dinner Theater for the "Old '
''"
Fashioned Family Christmas"
show on Thursday. November
30, has a few scats available.
Call Alice Wamsley, 992-2161
., '
for information.

.....
...

...

the Miami Valley

f"·e:;;;::~;;-:::;~:-:&amp;:-:ow;&gt;;::;;
· ;;;;:----;;W~E'i:i;HOMNUio;aR--, ·.~ :

~ flelers · '

g tven .•

Friday, November 3- the
annual Arts &amp; Crafts Fair will
be held with area craftspersons
on hand for holiday and gift
buying.
The "Over 50 Exercise Class"
will begin a new sess ion on

In

POMEROY, OH.

.'~

r.:a;;:,

~

212EAST MAIN ST.
992-3'785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS ' '
'!I'

...
..

TAWNEY JEWELERS &amp; STUDIO
SEE US FOR DISCOUNT TO ALL
SENIOR CITIZENS

'

'

Watche.s • Diamonds • Jewelry
Cameras • Photo Finishing • Old Photos Copied

422 2nd Ave.

I

446·1615

Support group meets
on third Wednesday
: The Alzheimer's /Related'
Oisorders Support Group will
~gain be meeting the th ird
~cdnesday of every month. We
have ·had some time changes in

the

past.

We will mec t.l
~eptember 20th at the Meigs
Mult;purpose Senior Center
from I p.m. to 3 p.m. Jeanelle
Thomas will be the guest
siJeaker. She will be sharing
with us the experiences she has
had and is having with the care
of her father. This will be very
informal so bring your questions

and experiences . Sharing is
caring.
David Snyder from Overbrook
will speak at our October

.·September is
National Women'-s
. Health Month
The

Meigs

Multipu'tpose

Senior Center will sponsor a
se rie s of hea lth programs
throughout September to
celeb rate Women's Health
Month . On Seplemher 5th.
Angie Roush, B.S .N .. R.N., and
Lenora' Leifheit, R.N., will
discuss "Cholestrol and Heart
Disease".
Dick
Huffer.
Admi'flistrator. of 'Long Tcnn
Care, Veterans Memori-ul
· Hospital , will present "Elder
Abuse" on September 12th. On
Septemberc 14th , Dr. Kenneth
Glinter, D.O .. OB-GYN , Ohio
University,
will
present
"Es trogen Replacement". On
September 28th, Judy Jenkinson.
R.N .. will discuss "Breas t
Cancer". All programs will
begin at II :00 a.m. All program

presenters will be avai lab le to
answer questions.

L

•

$295
Call 441- I 971

414 2nd Av~.

...
'

'"
( \II

'

' ' ,I

...

....

n E W YOiFIKEiFI

• ' I'

. '"'

HOME"Serving
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
Southern Ohio for over 17 years"
yc;r-~ Everything

'

~

. for the

PatI ent
at
H0 me
o

. ..'
.

. ,;

Cervical Pillows
· Traction Equipment
tens Units &amp; Supplies
Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
First Aid Suppljes
Dressings

' ,.

.,

....
.'

446-2206

SAl'' JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)
- Hurricane Luis roared into open
seas IOday, leaving at least 13 people dead, thousands of properties
decimated and roads littered with ·
the debris of interrupted lives:
reftigerators, cooki~g pots and a
flimily photo album.
.
· Stirring the seas to anger and
winds to destruction, Luis tore up
streets and brought down so many
telephone lines that it was impossible to confirm unofficial reports
that the 700-mile-wide storm bad
killed dozens more elsewhere in
the Caribbean.
Communications to many
islands were cut after Luis powered
. •through the eastern Caribbean with
125 mpb, as was electricity and
water. Today, the storm bas
strengthened to 140 mph in the
Atlantic as it moves northwest at
about9 mph.
IL is not expected to endanger
mainland United States, but the _
National Hurricane Center said residents of Bermuda :should keep an
eye on the storm.
St. Marlin appeared hardest-bit
of the islands blasted by Luis.
''There was so much damage
that it's impossible to make an
assessrnen~ • Michel Diessenbacher, the French representative on
Guadeloupe, which governs St.
Marlin, said Wednesday night.
The Associated Press was
unatiJe·to confum reports of dozens
of deaths on the tiny British island
of Anguilla, between St. Martin
and the Virgin Islands.
Diessenbacher reported nine
deaths Wednesday on St. Martin:
two on the larger, French part and
seven on the Dutch St. Maartin
side.
· Dozens of people there were
reported missing, presumed
dragged into the roiling seas, and
about 1,000 of the island's 50,000
residents were homeless.
Rescue attempts were foiled
· hours after the eye of the tempest
had pas_sed by fresh storms bringing "a curtain of rain and wind"
that prevented a French military
helicopter from landing and a boat
from landing, Diessenbacher said.
France had sent 252 disaster
workers from Paris to Guadeloupe
on Tuesday, but they were unable
to reach St. Marlin Wednesday. he
said.
In the former British colony of
Antigua and Barbuda, the main
hospital was destroyed and roofs
were tom off schools, houses and
: hoiels, said Prime Minister Lester
Bird.
.
St. Kitts and Nevis reported that
75 percent or buildings on its
islands, also former British territo:
ry, had been ripped to pieces.
Until Wednesday. Luis h~d
caused four deaths: a French tounst
swept away from a jelly in Guade·
Ioupe; a man wbo .never returned to
collect $4,000 offered to recover a
boat tom away from its moorings
in Dominica; and two men killed in
Pueno Rico. one electrocuted by a
power cable downed by the storm

RACINE GUN
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Shotgun, Factory
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Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning
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discussion or come and go as

need

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If your hearing ;
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old -- Give us a

meeting on his experiences with
an Alzheimer's Unit. Again this
wi ll be the third Wednesday
October 18th. This win be a
time 10. ask any questions
concern ing .a special unit for
· only Alzheimer's victims.
Come and · join · us. Take a
hrcak. Know.i ng what to ex peel
is half the banlc of care giving.
The more you know about the
disease proces s of yo ur family
member the eas ier it is to cope.
These meetings arc ve ry
informal so come for all the ·

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.I

lion, Baroness Lynda
icized Mrs. Clinton'
attack" on Chi
"I don't think that helps to
change things. We work by quiet
diplomacy," Chalker said in a
British Broadcasting Corp. radio
interview.
Human rights have emerged as a
.major theme at the women's conference, with speaker after speaker.
insistin~ they are inseparable from
women s rights. ·
Some think it is counterproductive to embarrass or offend the
gathering's Chinese bosts.
Criticism of China continued
today on another topic: its refusal

to halt nuclear weapons tests. At a
meeting of an international lawmakers' group held in Beijing's
Great Hall of the People, a dozen
Scandinavian parliamentarians
wore T-sbirts with a picture of an
atomic blast and the word "stop"
in Chinese.
As the protesters spoke to
reponers afterword, Chinese security shoved photographers trying to
take pictures of the group.
The private women •s gathering
whose woes prompted Mrs. Clinton's criticism of China was winding-down.
,
Activists at Huairou. 30 miles
outside_!l_eijing, said they bad

THIS SALE AT
BOTH LOCATIONS!

scored some successes despite most overall goals. the specifics are
logistical problems, run-ins with problematic. As of today, the text
Chirese security, and their muddy, of about one-fifth of the conference's 120-page draft platform
bare bones meeting site.
The activists came to China to remained in dispute, according to
negotiator John Mathieson.
lobby and work with delegates to
Women's health is "clearly the
the main U.N . conference.
area
where there is the most negotiAt that gathering conferees were
ation required.' ' he said.
making progress toward resolving
Conference spokeswoman
some thorny disputes but acknowl- I
Therese
Gastaut said common
edged today that a lot of hard negoground
has
been hard to find also
tiating lies ahead.
of sexual orientation.
on
the
subject
More than 5,000 delegates have
Conservative
critics question
tackled an ambitious platform
whether
the
conference
document
meant to help women achieve
should
-i.nclude
a
call
to
end disequality and overcome obstacles
crimination
against
lesbians.
Gay
like poveny and lack of education.
activists say the proposed protccWhile participants agree on

tions don' t go far enough.
Conference participants agree
that translating the gathering's
paper promises into real resull&lt; will
take money, and lots of it. A key
goal is to"tonvince governments
around the world that women arc a
.
good investment.
"Investing in women is good
economics as illeads to signiflcam
productivity gains and provides ·
large societal benefits," -Minh
Chau Nguyen, bead of the World
Bank's gender analysis and policy
section, told a news briefing.
"This is not a politically correct
statemen~" .she said. "It is a hardnosed economic fact.''

ACQUISITIONS FINE JEWELRY

BOTH
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9 DAYS 0 LY!
FACTURER'S DIAMOND SAMPLES

!

1o

Acquisitions Fine Jewelry has been selected to liquidate the overstocked inventory of a large national
jewelry manufacturer. Over $300,000 of fine jewelry is available (It a Savings of 50% to 60% off suggested
retail prices. Along with these savings, our current inventory will be offered at extra special prices.
H.UNDREDS OF FINE JEWELRY PIECES AT GREAT SAVINGS!

Hurricane
death toll
totals 13

,,
•

''"

:sarah Boyles, a resident of the Stonewood Apartments in
l\1iddteport, is having her blood pressure done by Diana Coates,
RSVP Coordinator and Health Coordinator. This is a service
pi-ovided monthly to all ,lhe l'l'sidents at the apartment complex.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

~all for China to improve human rights falls o.n deaf ears
By CHARLFS HUTZLER

MONDAY

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

FABULOUS DIAMOND BRIDAL SETS AND TRIO

GEM STONE RINGS
Value $279

SALE
$139

Value $979

Value $2200

SALE
$489

'SALE
$1099
13 Diamond Brld1l Sel
5/ 8 Carat Total We1ght

13 Diamond Bridal Set
1/3 Carat Total Wetght

Purl and 3 Diamond Fathlon Ring

Value $599

Value $999

SALE
. $129

SALE
$499

3 Opal and 4 Diamond Fashion Ring

SALE
$299

SALE $299
3 Diamond Trio

S~LE

BEAUTIFUL DIAMOND SO LIT A IRE RINGS

G1rnet, Amtlhyat,.or Blu. Top111nd 2 Diamond

WEDDING RINGS

Value $699

Value $1200

SALE
$349

SALE
$599

1/ 4 Carat Sollta~r&amp; Ring

· Value $2000

SALE
$999
10 Diamond Wedding Ring
1 Carat Total Weight

Value $499

1/3 Carat Mlfqulae Solitaire Ring

SALE
5
799

SALE
$1975

SALE
5325

11 Diamond Engagement Ring ·

25 Diamond Engagement Ring
1 Cara t Total We1ght

112 Carat Tota l We1ght

10 Dl1mond Wedding Ring
1/4 Carat Total Weight

· Value $1800

Value $3600

SALE
$899

SALE
$1799

Value $999

,.

Created Emerald and 8 Diamond Fathion Ring
314 Carat T G W

Value $599

SALE
$299
Created Rubv and 6 Diamond Fashion Ring
13/4 Carnl T G .W
'

FASHION RINGS
Value $399

29 Diamond Engagement Ring

27 Di1mond Engagement Ring

16 Diamond Wedding Ring

SALE
$299.

Value $1600

Value $4000

Value $679

$169
Ruby anci 2 Diamond Faahion Ring
I/3Carat'T G W

FANCY SOLITAIRES IN YOUR FAVORITE STYLES

SALE
$199

1 CA rat Total We1ghl

3/4 Carat TotRI We1ght

1/2 Carat Tota l Weight

3 Diamond Fashion Ring

Value $299

Value $1200

PERFECT DIAMOND GUARD RINGS

SALE
$149
12 Diamond Anniversary Ring

Value $499

SALE

Sapphire and 8 Diamond Fashion Ring
718 Carat T G W

Value $350

YOUR CHOICE

MEN'S

Sapphire and 6 Diamond hshlon Ring

1/ 4 Carat Tota l Weight

SALE
$99

SALE
$499

SALE
,$219
Value $599 ·

3 Diamond Bridal Set

Value $219

Value $449

314Carat T.G .W.

•

Value $269

RUBY-SAPPHIRE-EMERALD

Value $699

Value $499

SALE
$349

SALE
$249

SALE
$599
9 Diamond Fashion Ring
t/2 Carat Total We1ghl

Value $650
8 Diamond Guard Ring

249··

5

6 Diamond Guard Ring

1/ 5 Carat Total We1ght

LADIES

Value $449

SALE

8 Qlamond Fashion Ring

224ea
M1n'e or Ladles 6 Diamond Wedding Ring

5

1/4 Carat Total We1ght

Value $650 ·

1/8 Carat Total Weight

MEN'S RINGS

SALE
$325

.SALE

SALE $139

5325

Value' $299

SALE
$149 •

YOUR CHOICE
Ruby or Sapphire and
2 Diamond Pe'Jdant

1 Diamond Pendanl

'

• 1 Diamond Fashion Ring

Value $795.

SALE
5
397
Man's 5 Diamond Ring 114 Carat Total We1gllt

Value $299

Value $140
Value $799

SALE$69
Diamond Earrings
1 10 Ca ra t Toral We•qhl

5 Sapphire and 12 Diamond
Bracelet
21 /4 Carat T G w

SALE
.$149

Value $999
Value $999

SALE$499
48 Diamond Bracelet
1 Carat Total We•ght

SALE
5449
21 Dllqtond F11hlon Ring
3/8 Carat Tota l We1gllt

All prices are based on manulaclurer's suggested retail.

Men's Black Sttr 1nd 2 Diamond Ring

MANY MORE STYLES AT COMPARABlE PRICES.

This Special Sale Will End

on September 1Oth at 5 p.m·.

ACQUISITIONS FINE JEWELRY
151 SECOND AVE.
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446·2842

EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIRMAN ON STAFF

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•

�••

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Ohio News in Brief:
Pipe bomb removed from building
CUYAHOGA FALLS -The Summit County bomb squad
found a 12-incb pipe bomb made from a beavy galvanized metal.
Nooe of the approximate 500 workers at Towne Centre Executive ,Suites had to be evacuated Wednesday, although pol;ce did cordoo off the area.
Police have no idea who plaoed the bomb there or why it was
done.
" Suminit County Sheriffs Capt David C. Bailey, a bemti techni,
cian, retrieved the bomb and placed it in a container to be tr.msport,
ed for destruction. He said it appeared that the pipe bomb would not
explode unless the wick was ignited. The wick did not appear lo
·!lave been lit.

Man remains under tight security
WARREN - A man found innocent by reason of insanily in a
slaying must remain under strict security at a mental hospital in
Columbus, a judge ruled.
James Hubbanl: 30, has been at Central Ohio Psychiatric Hospital since 1993 after he was found innocent by reason of insanity in
the slaying of Sallie Beatty, 21. of Niles.
Beatty was shot and killed in September 1991 as she sat eating
her lunch in ·a car parked outside a Niles restaurant
A psychiatrist from the· maximum security hospital had recommended thai Hubbard be moved to a ICISs restrictive hospital in Massillon, but assistant Trumbull County Prosecutor Peter Kontos
opposed the move.
Trumbull County Common Pleas Judge Mitchell Shaker ruled
against the transfer Tuesday, statin'g that a less restrictive environment was not consistent with lfeatment goals, Hubbard's welfare or
public safety.

Bond set for driver in fatal crash
CUYAHOGA FALLS - A driver has been charged with three
counts of aggravated vehicular homicide in a two,car wreck that
killed a father and his two sons.
. Bond for David Hinerman, 19, of tile Cleveland suburb of Brook
Park, was set at $100,000 Wednesday. according to a coun official.
Hinerman did not enter a plea. llinerman is to be arraigned Friday
in Municipal Court.
If convicted, he could face up to 10 years in prison on each
count, the Cuyahoga Falls prosecutor's office said.
The crash occurred about 6:30 p.m. Sunday in the Akron suburb
ofHudson.
·
Hinerman had a blood alcohol level' of 0.13 percent, Hudson
police Sgt. David Robbins said. The legal limit is 0.1 percent.
Killed in the accident were Michael DeMarchi, 32, of Macedonia, and his sons Christopher, 5, ~d Nichola~. 3. Police said Hinerman apparently drove through a stop sign and struck DeMarchi's
car.
'
Hinerman was released into police custody from Akron City
Hospital on Tuesday after undergoing plastic s.urgery on an eyelid.
lie was being held in the Summit County JaiL
·

By MARCY GORDON
Ruby Ridge has become a symAssociated Press Wrlt.r
bol - both in Congress and across
, WASHINGTON- Now thai the country -of concerns that fed·
white separatist Randy Weaver has era! law enforcement has used
leveled a volley of charges against excessive force.
Jaw enforcement. top officials will
Sen. Herbert Kohl of Wisconsin,
scramble to counter him as they the senior Democrat on the Senate
defend government actions in the Judiciary subeomminee, said the
shootout that killed Weaver's wife shootings "mark a sad chapter in
and son.
the history of American law
Tbe FBI, especially, is under enforcement."
pressure for its co nduct at
But officials maintain that feder.Weaver's mountaintop cabin al' al prosecutors already were investiRuby Ridge , Idaho . The Justice gating Weaver for possible
Department recently opened an involvement in bombings linked to
investigation into allegations that a white separatist group.
high-level FBI oflicials engaged in
Weaver was "not some inno~
a cover-up. Five FBI officials, cent guy in tile woods minding his
including Larry Potts, the former own business," said a law enforcedeputy director, have been sus- ment official, speaking on condipended with pay.
tionof anonymity.
Sympathetic senalors rarely
Top officials of the federal
challenged the veracity of Bureau of Alcohol , Tobacco and
1 Weaver's allegations during the
Firearms, were to testify today.
opening day of hearings WednesOfficials of the FBI and the U.S.
day into the 11-day standoff in Marshals Service are expected to
August 1992 that also left Deputy be. witnesses at later hearings,
U.S Marshal William Degan dead. which are being chaired by GOP
High-ranking law enforcement presidenlial hopeful Sen. Arlj;n
1
officials had issued "'death war· Specter of Pennsylvania.
rants' ' against his family, Weaver
Law enforcement officials have
asserted. He said an FBI sniper said previous! y that their agencies.
· dclibcralely shot his wife and later actions at the site were wrong and
there was "a cover-up of what real· . in some cases illegal, but that none
ly happened" at his home.
of Weaver's family was killed

DAYTON- Two ci,ty sewer workers were injured when an elevator they were riding plummeted in an underground shaft.
The workers were removing debris from an underground pumping statioo Wednesday and had just ridden the trash elevator to the
· surface when the elevator cable slipped off a pulley. said Charles
Davis, superintendent of sewer ntaintenance.
The elevator fell 20 feet to 30 feet imo the mud. One of the
workers suffered a broken leg and the other some mino1 injuries,
Davis said.

Officer, police dog injured
· DAYTON - A police officer and a police dog were recovering
from their wounds after a case of mistaken identity.
The dog attacked the officer Tuesday night a~ police tracked a
domestic-violence suspect, police spokeswoman Cbelley Seibert
said.
Two officers and the dog were on opposite sides of a woode4
area. The dog picked up on a scent, was relea'ed by its handler and
began attacking one of the officers. she said. ·
The'officer did not realize it was a police dog and fired two shots
al the animal, striking it once in the leg, Ms. Seibert said.
The officer was lfeated for plincture·wounds at Saint Elizabeth
Medical Center. A veterinarian 1re3ted the dog, which is expected to
he back at work witllin three weeks, she said.
·
-The Associated Press

The following land transfers
were recorded recently in the offtee
of Meigs County Recorder Emmagene Hamillon:
Deed, Cora and Wayne Samuel
Michael to Charles A. and Kelly C.
Weedle, Lebanon, 2.543 acres;
Easement, Susanna E. Fitzgerald, Susanna Elizabeth Arnold to
Family Homes Inc., Salisbury;
Deed, Susanna E. Fitzgerald,
Susanna Elizabelh Arnold to Family Homes Incorporated, Salisbury;
Deed, Susanna E. Fitzgerald,
Susanna Elizabeth Arnold to
Trustees of the Enlerprise Church,
Salisbury;
Deed, Charles A. Sr. and Lori•· '
D. Ritchie to Brian K. and Terri L.
Bowling, Sunon, ·.829 acres;
'Deed, Peter Caruso to James T.
Tbem and Diana L. Bauserman,
Middleport parcels;
Deed, Lee Sterling Jeffers, et. al
to David D. Williams, Columbia,
.808 acres;
Deed, Doris F. Grueser, Doris F.
Grueser Living Trust to Clyde E.
and Deborah A. Sayre. Sutton par·
cel;
Certificate, Mary Rose Mitchell,
deceased, to Victor W. Mitchell,
Lebanon parcels:
Deed, Roben and Joyce Romine
to Robert L. and Deborah K. Lawson, Rutland, 112 acre;

' Ann
Deed, Les.lie and Ruth
Scarbrough to Kenneth and Melissa
Riddle, Orange, 1.001 acres;
Certificate, Charles Taylor
Neece, deceased, to Roy Rogers
Neece and Howard Douglas Neece,
Salisbury parcels;
Certificate, Dorothy L. Baker,
deceased, to Deanna C. Shepard,
William D. Baker, Rodney E.
Baker and Michael A. Baker,
Chester parcel;
Deed, Darlene M. Kemmer to
John J. Kemmer, Rutland, Ll30
acres;

Deed, Marvin G. and Lois N.
Burt tc:i Ruth A. Smith, Pomeroy
lot;

·

Deed, Lawrence and Violet L.
Bush to Connie Mae Tucker,
Letart. 42 acres;
Deed, Carl and Valma Barnhart
to Charles A. and Joyce Barnhart,
Olive tracts;
Deed, Beatrice S. Quinlin,
Calvin Quinlin, .victor Milchell,
Sanford R. Shahan Jr. and Phyllis
F. Shahan to George Davis,
Lebanon, 129.382 acres;
Affidavit, Els;e Shahan,
deceased, Chester Shahan to Douglas Little;
,
Deed, Vernon R and Sheryl L.
Little to Samuel A. and Gloria J.
Gibbs, Hobson lot;
Deed, Raymond R. and Leiba.

Cotterill to Roger D. Collerill, Scipio, 18.795 acres;
Deed, Beneficial Ohio Incorporated to Shirley J. Diddle, Rutland
parcels;
Deed, Curt West and Wendy A.

Interior &amp;
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painttng. Let us do it for

you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Befor~ 6 p.m. leave
message.
Afler6 p.m.
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MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
·OHice Hours: Mon.-Fri. . ·
6:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
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Pomeroy, Oh .

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ENDOCRINOLOGIST,
HOLZER CLINIC

'

Public Notice

I

Rely On Us For
Complete Coverage Of
Your Favorite Sport and Team

THE DAILY SENTIN.EL
,"On The T" Middleport, OH 992-3148

'

Commissioners, Meigs
County Courthouse, 200
East Second
Slreet,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Fred Hoffman, President
Meigs County
Commissioners
(8)

American
legion
Post 602
Racine
Steak Dinner

written statements of the
Intent
with
direCltor's
respect to th'e issuance,
denial,,
modification,
revocation, or renewal of a
permit, ll~ense, or variance.
Written comments and
requests for a public
meeting regarding
a
proposed action may be
submitted within 30 days of

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SEPT. 8 &amp; 9, 9-5

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Public Notice

2T04 P.M :

31; (9)7, 14; 3TC

oHice In the Melg's County

Public Notice

Courthouse, 200 E. SeCond
Slreel, Pomeroy,
Oh Ia

PUBLIC NOTICE

The
following
applications and/or verified
p.m. at said office opened complaints were received
and the following draft,
and read aloud.
Plans, Specifications, and proposed, or llnal actions
bid forms may be secured were issued, by the Oh-Io
at lhe office of the Meigs Environmental Protection
County Commissioners In Agency (OEPA) Lost Week.
the Courthouse at 200 E. "ACTIONS" Include tho
Second Street, Pomeroy, adoption, mod~ficatlon, or
revocation of orders (other
Ohio.
Each btd musl be lhan emergency orders) i
accompanied by either a bid the issuance, denial,
bond In an amoLJnt of 100% modUicatlon or revocation
· of lhe bid amount with a of licenses, permlls, leases,
surety · satisfactory to the variances, or certificates;
aforesaid Meigs County and lhe approval or
Commissionerl or by disapproval of plana and
"Draft
certified check, cashiers speclflcati~ns.
check, or letter of credit Actions" 1are ·written
Llpon a aolvent bank in the statements of the Director
Environmental
amount of not leas than of
protection's
(Director's)
10% of the bid amount in
favor of the aforesaid Meiga Intent with respect to the
County Commissioners. Bid Issuance, denial, etc . of a
Bonda
thall
be permit, License, order, etc.
accompanied by Proof of lnleretted pereons may
Authority ol the official or submit written comments or
requeat a public meeting
agentolg~lng the bond .
Bids shatl be sealed and regarding draft actions .
marked' as Bid for Meigs commenta or public
County CHIP Racine meeting requests must be
Sidewalk Improvements and submitted wllhln 30 daya of
mailed or · delivered to : notice of the draft action.
"Proposed Actlont " are
- Meigs
Counly

45769 unUI10;00 a.m., Sept
15, 1995 and then at 1:00

Call Wayne NeH 992-4405

12 noon
$5.00 meal

ROOM

SUNDAY, SEPT.

• M'EIGS MARAUDERS
• EASTERN EAGLES
•SOUTHERN TORNADOES

Experienced

Sun. Sept. 1Oth

CENTER

Seated proposals for 1he
repair/placement ol 3,120
Lineal leel of sidewalk In
the Village of RaCine, Ohio
will be received by the
Meigs
County
Commissioners at their

Insures~

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUal ON
• Roofing
• Siding
· • Remodeling
• New Addilions &amp;
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Free Estimates

HOLZER MEDICAL

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

Remodeling

30 Announcements

DIABETES
SUPPORT
GROUP

'

MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS
JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTIERS
Aggressive grocery wholesaler seeking experienced
meat dept. managers and journeyman meat cutters to
manage and · merchandise meat deparlments In their
corporate slores located In Soulheastern Ohio
Competitive salaries and excelfent benefits.
If you are energetic and looking for rewarding
opponunllles, send your resume and salary history 10:

843·5124
992-2984

';

FRENCH

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

P.O. Box 587

BJ10J1 mo.

368 W. Main St.,

R1pl~y.

WV

304·372·6144

.-------------------'1.

Kanauga, Ohio -Into Call446·6188
'

( No Sunday Calls)

5116194 TFN

Everyone Welcome

'

shocks get FREE
installalion.

Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable

J.D. Drilling Company

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

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Remodl&gt;llng
Kllchon &amp; Ejalh

=t-'i)l'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

notice of the proposed
aclion. An adjudication
hearing may be held on a
proposed action if a hearing
request or objection is
received by the OEPA
within 30 days of tssuance
of the propoSed acliOn.
Wrllten·comments, requests
for public meetings, and
adjudicallon
hearing
requests must be sent to :
Hearing Clerk,
Ohio
Environmental Prolectlon

Agency, P.O. Box 1049,

C9lumbus, Ohio 43216·1049

(Telephone ; 614·644·2129).
"Fin·al Actions : are. actions
of the director which are
effecllve upon issuance or a
stated effective date .
Pursuant to Ol"lio Revised
Code Section 3745 .04 , a
final acti.on may be
appealed
to
ll"le
environmental board of
review (EBR) by a person
who was a party to a
proceeding befr.:are the
director by filing an appeal
within 30 days of notice. of
the final acllon . Pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code Sec lion
3745 .07, a linal action
Issuing ,
denying ,
modifying, revoking, or
renewing a permi1, license,
or variance which is not
preceded by a proposed
action , may be appealed to
the EBR by filing an appeal
wi1hin 30 days of Issuance
of the final action . EBR
appeals must be filed with ~
Environmental Board ·of
Review, 236 Eatt Town
Street,
Room
300,

Columbus, Ohio 43215. A
copy of the appeal must be
served on the director
within 3 days af1er filing the

appeal with the EBR.
J Final approval ol plans
and specifications
l8adlng
Creek
Conservancy
District

Rutland, OH ISSUE DATE
08/30/95, Thlo llnal action
not preceded by proposed
action an~ It appealable to

EBR.

W ellfletd

AB&amp;TAUTO

Abiding Concrete
Construction

3RD·ST.

Commercial ami Residential
Driveways, Paiios, Slahs, Parking lots, Curhs &amp;
Gutters Sidewalks, Porches. Tear-out and

:

949·2882
RACINE, OH
Labor ~=tate $20.00 hr.

"Your Parts or ·Ours"
Oil Change ................. : ............... $17.95
Front End Alignment ................. $19.95
TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

Repl ace ment

Check Out Our Tire Prices
41960 Kaylor Road

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

Reedsville, OH 45772

614-992-4236

One Slo• C.Omplete Auto Body Re.air

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Gara11es
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

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

•

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

985-4473
7/22194

Call for Low Prices
742-3212

Turn on Oepol St In
Rutland 1.2 mites.
~lOft

los!' 20' Telescop mg Ftag Pole
Se! , New, St1ll In Sh1ppmg Bo~
BeiWeen Old Rl. N35 W Rodney
P1k.e , Rt "35 W. 1/tnton To Porter
Belong1ng To Vuttnam Veterans
01 Amenca. Chaprer 1709. Re
ward Call 614·379·2352. Or 614
386·8004

70

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
? Fam11y Fnday 9· 5; Sat 9· 12,
flalt1C1ay Hts 011 RL 7 (Gar!Jeld
Av(l] Baby And Toddler Clothes.
Port·A·CnQ, Sassy Seat, Stroller,
Toys , ln cludtng . R1d1ng Horses.
Push ·Toys. Tree -House Slide.
Ad ult Cloth1ng, Hou sehold, Items,
lnctudtng Toaster Oven, T 11 . Ice
Maker, Books

917. 9t8195, 9·4, Cemervttle (Be·
s1dc Old School) Broad Srreet.
Summer, Wtnter Clothes Fo1 Eve
ryoner 01shes, Toys

Be Pa1d In
Advance . DE A OLIN E. 2 00 p m
the ·day belora the ad rs to run
Sunday ed1110n · 2:00 p.rn Fr1day
Moriday ed111on 10 ·oo am Sat·
urday.
All Yil.rd Sales Mu st

Fr1 811'1. ~Sat 9th, 9· 5, 14101 SR
554. Bidwell.
·
l"r •. Sat . ·1037 S t Rt 218 , lnlam
Tnru Womcns lg &amp; X· lg . Toys.
M ISC

Fr1, Silt 9 5, 1074 Md1son P,ke. 1
M•le From Add1son Bab1CS, Child·
rens, l ad•es. Materntty, Toys
Garage Sale Is! T1m(l f h1s Ye&lt;1r1
9110 M1 Sourn On Rt 218 Sept
7th. 8!h. \=lth, 9 ?
Sat. 3 Fam1ly, 9·11 , Green Terrace
fratler Parll, B1ke, Lois Clothmg.
Blinds, Home lnt, lo~ s .

Sopt 7th , 8th, 9th, 10·4. 5J Vme
Street, K1ds IAdul! Clolhos. Toys,
Lois More!
Thurs -Sat, 9·6. lngalfs Road 011
2t8. lot s 01 BaqJ'I:ltns, Ra1n 1
Shtno. ·

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Saturda't'. 91h. No ea1
ly birds, 9am 4pm Ma1n Street ..
Rutland. Dav1d Hy sell restdence
Lots at boys c;;lothes. s1zos new born · 41, kttchen table and
chaus, lovesea t and charr, diSh·
DS. kntCk knacks Rain cancels.
Garage sale. Sept 8,. Fn . Sepr 9,
Sat ,Wrpple Rd. 5 Pomts,' Pomcr
oy. ra1n1sh•nc

L:~rgo Y'ard Snle. Sopr 8. 9, Sue
cess lld longbo('l orn. Oh. clothtng
ll. mtsc 1tems. •
MOVIfiQ SIIIO t 345 Laurel Stroot".
Pomeroy Sept B 9 , t0am -6pm
Ham or sh•ne

Movmg. garage, /1. yard Sale. 237
SouTh ?th St , Middleport , !urn• ·
lura , bfJby 11ems, assorted 11ems.
Sept 7 6 9

Sept 7·9, bchm(J Masontc Lodge
1n nac1nc Men. women, grrls plus
srle clolhtng, Home lniQ rto r,
aquartum, s1oroo, o•erc1se b1ke,
spt1t ra11 fenc.mg. mos. telescope,
13" cqlor 1 V, toys, lots ol rh1sc. 11
ta1ns 1n gArag~

110\\\111)
E\C \\ .\'1'11\C
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.

lhursd;:,y and Frtday S1ewart Rd.·
oil Bradbury 5 M1ddlepon Ram
w111 cancel, 9am Spm

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

Yardlbake sale Monday, 6 .30- ?
SH 7 near Eastern H S Benet11
Hobson Chnshan Fellowsh1p
Church. nurvsh•ne

Trucking~

Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

mo.

MEET YOUR
.COMPANION!
1·900-388-0400
· Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
PROCALLCO.
(602) 954-7420
818/1 mo .

YOUNG''

CARPErrrER
SERVICE
•Room A,ddltlons
•New Garages
•Eteclrfoal &amp; Plumbing

•Rooting

•Interior &amp; Exterior

PalnUng

Also Concrete Work

ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 Pomeroy, Oh.
(FR~E

1121/t1n

Public Notice
Development, Contract A.

Yard Sale

Sopt 7·8, turn l1rst road le ft !rom
M1ddlcport H1ll. filth hOuse

- ..

(9) 7; 1TC

Found Brown /W11uc Male Young
Oog , Cora M11t RPa·d '614 245
5366

r r1day, 8th

814/tfn

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

Found boy's Ca lt•a Academy
Blu&amp; Dev il s clas sr1 ng at KFC .
Galllpo los Ide ntif y nan1e &amp; rm g.
pay tor ad 304·675 77:.12

B1g yard sate 1ns1de and out. hrst
f1me: Fnda~ . Salurday, 10am.Spm
Go :;13W, turn nghl on CR 1Q , 112
m1le Watc h !or s1gns Large women 's clo 1h1ng , collecllbles , much
more

Chris
Scherfel

Tony's Portable
Welding

446 2693
.

All Yard Sales Mu sl Be Pa1d In
Adv ance Deadllfle 1 OOpm tho
dfly betore the aCI 1S to run, Sun ·
day ediHon· ' OOpm Fr1day, Mon ·
day cd111on 10 ooa m Sa lurdat

Every
Wednesday Nite
Everyone
Welcome

Sp rmg Val ley Drt ve Area . 614

~vun

RACINE
GUN CLUB
. TRAP SHOOT
5:30p.m.

LosJ and Found
-::B:,.,:-,-:,w::::,, ,-, .,.,.,11-,n-,

Lost 1 1t 2 Yea r Male RJ ~ck. W1th
Some Wh1te Around PmQ Stree t
In Galllpolrs, 614·446·7685

.__ _;;;;...,_ _ _ _....,;n;.,.;&amp;.&amp;:;:::::::..;::;,....:._;....';·,';,.';,.';m,;o;,.pd
:;;.,

-September Special~
With lhe purchase of
a set of struts or

House Repair &amp;

614~992~3314

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

For Free Estimates

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel

Limit One With Coupon

!···==····· ... !..--.:

.. i

DAYS
CAR WASH

992·4081
Week Day 8:00-5:00
Open Saturday
9:00 - 3:00

hnparial Tire
Service

•NEW HOMES
.
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

• Open Water
~:?'". • Advanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
• Assistant Instructor
' Specialty Classes
Scott Walton
Open Waler Scuba Instructor

I

811011 mo.

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

60

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
weE•kly &amp; monthly rental rates.
&amp; Parties

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

SMITH'S
CONSiRUCTION

J&amp;L~NSULATION

r----------------,
Scuba Clo sse s Now Forming ~F.-u~nd:-::-2

MODERN SANITATION

CALL

AMVETS LINE DANCE
LESSONS
STARTING FRI., SEPT. 8.
New Hours: 7:30 to 10 30
lnst .. Bill Gillen.

•

ALL

- .,

$5.99

.

PSYCHICS
know

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

I.

Some Selected Items

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND
COFFEE

'

Save Up To 75% on

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

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

•

(

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Bill Slack
992·2269 or
304·773·5960

Ciine to Gary E. and Kathy L.
Spencer, Columbia, 4.316 acres;
Deed, George Douglas and
April Lowther, Gary E. and Kathy
L. Spencer to George Douglas and
April Lowther, Columbia parcel;

'

.S ave A Minumum of 20% off
Manufacturers List Price Every Day

Sh1h-Tzu. (;hampagne COIOl , npu.
tered, shots, to best home wur no
cOlldren 30 4·675 ·4650 or 304
675 430 2

Wednesday Evenings
Food land Advertisement
should have read

34.5 OZ CAN

Giveaway

Save Us From rne Po und ! 4
Seven Week Old Ours1 de Wa tch
Dog lype Pupp1es. Leave Na 'Tl e
AOCI Phone Numoet On Mach.nf!
6 14 446 -37 69

intentionally. Without admining away tears as he spoke of watching
wrongdoing, the federal govern- his fatally wounded wife, Vicki,
ment recently paid the Weaver fall to the floor of the Weaver
family $3.1 million to settle its cabin with Uteir 10-month-old child
claims.
still clutched in her arms. One of
In his t~stimony Wednesday, Weaver's daughters, Sara, wept in
Weaver satd he made two mis-- the audience as he testified.
Mrs. Weaver was holding open
takes: He sold two sawed-off shotguns to an ATF undercover infor- the door to the cabin as Weaver,
mant, and then he failed to show up family friend Kevin Harris and one
for his trial. He said be sold the of the Weaver's daughters fled into
guns because his family needed Ute it. Seconds earlier, from a hidden
position 200 yards away, Lon Hori$450 profit from the lfansaction.
"If I had it to do over again, uchi had fired ill Weaver, woundknowing what! know now. I would . ing him in the shoulder.
Horiuchi has said he was shootmake different choices," Weaver
told the senators. "I would come ing at a man - who turned out to
down from the mountain for the be Harris - 1\lld that he shot Mrs.
Weaver by mistake. Horiuchi' s
court appearance."
But he added, "I did not cause bullet passed through Mrs. Weaver
federal agents to violate the oath of and hit Harris.
Weaver's 14-year-old son,
their office."
Weaver tried to explain his Samuel, was shot and killed the
views on the separation of races day before, Aug. 21.
Microphone in hand, Weaver
and so-called Zionist control of
government. Senators and even used a mockup of his Ruby Ridge
Weaver's own lawyer denounced homestead to make his case as senators gathered to watch.
his beliefs as extremist.
His family slumbled upon feder''I'm not a hateful racist as most
people understand it," Weaver al marshals as they were checking
said. "I believe that if there is sep- out his property in anticipation of a
aration of races. scripturally speak- military-style operation to arresl
Weaver on a weapons charge.
ing, that's what I believe is riglll."
Weaver was acquitted in 1993
Weaver, wearing an open.-collar
denim shirt and blue jeans, wiped on ~barges of murdering Degan.

Best Wishes To All Our.
Meigs County
Fall S~ports Programs

said the change would support
some of the district's "most dedicated and competent employees
who also happen to be gay and lesbian." She said many live in fear
of losing their job.
The school board's policy states
it does not disa:iminate on the basis
of race, gender, creed, national origin, age or handicapping condition
in its educational programs, activi-·
ties and employment policies.
Discrimination based on sexual
orientation is not prohibited by
slate or federal law, Ms. Hudson
said.
· Phil Martin, executive director
of the gay-rights group Stonewall
Union, said a policy change would
allow the school board to join the
city of Columbus and local companies and agencies that prohibit discrimination based on sexual atientation.

SAVE20% EVERYDAY
MIDDLEPORT
.DEPARTMENT STORE

The Daily Sentinel• Page 13
40

Meigs property tran$fers posted by .recorder

Columbus school board
·says no to policy change
TbJ

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Feds expected to counter Weaver charges

Workers hurt in elevator mishap

COLUMBUS (AP) Columbus Board of Education
decided not to add two words to its
policy against discrimination: sexual orientatioo.
The board voted 5-2 Tuesday
against a proposed policy change.
Member Mary Jo Kilroy presented
it after President Robert W. Teater
tried to keep the resolution off the
board's agenda.
Teater said the issue might
inflame the community.
The vote came after discussion
among board members, parents and
gays.
"We want the best chemistry
teachers, the best English teachers,
the best math teachers," Ms. Kilroy said. "And if one of those best
teachers also happen to be gay or
lesbian, they need to be able to do
the best job by not living in fear."
Mary Jo Hudson, chairwoman
of Ohimns Against Discrimination,

Thursday, September 7, 1995

Thursday, September 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

(Umeslone Low Rates)

WICKS
HAULING

AND MIXED

fOR SALE
BAILED

60

To

949-2512
-

. .

.

-,

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

••
·

SAYRE TRU KING
~614-742·2138

·-·--··

.

90

. .

Shop Classifieds

Wanted to Buy

Clean I ate Model Cars Or
Trucks , 1987 MOdels Or Newe 1
Sm•lh Bu1c~ Pon!IBC , 1900 East :
ern Avenue, Galltpolls

I

Umestone &amp;GtliYel,
Septi1 Systems, Trader &amp;.
House Sites.
•
Reasonable Rates

Jaa N. Sa~re

Public Sale
and Auction

Rtck Pearson Auct1on Compan~
lull 11mc aucttOne8r, compiQt~
auct1on
serv1ce
L1censod
«66.0h1o &amp; We st lltrgrma. 304 ·
. 773 5785 Or 304- 773·5447.

YOUR NEEDS

~

We will install carpet
and (loor 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.

fl Family Garago Sale· lt6 South
Tt111d St , Mason. Sept 6· 7·8 ,
9am . ? C toth1ng all SIZes . toys.
crall s, Dntl!rtAinmont center. tabiO
&amp; Cna~rs, baby bed. lots ot rnrsc . •

HAY

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

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

4-Family Yard Sale Next to Craw.
lord·s Henderson Wed · Sar 9am.
., ClotMs. toys, &amp; m1sc

ALFALFA

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dec orated s1on.eware. wall tela·
pnono ~ , aid lamps , otd lhormome '
tcrs . old clocks. anttque lurn1tu'e
l11veflno. Ant1quas Russ Moor e
owner 6t tl -992 ·2526 We bu ~
estatm.

Don't Jun~ 11 1 Se1r us. You' Non
Worlt. •ng Retr~gEirators. Fr8ezers,
40
Giveaway
Washe.rs , Dryers , Microwaves .
Color T 1/"s VCR's, A1r Cond11i0n·
3 Month Old Puppres, 614· 367 · &amp;rs, Computors. Othce Machmes
0539
Etc 514-256· 1238
•
Housa To Be Tor n Down &amp; Re - J &amp; D's Auto Paris and Salvage,
moved 837 Th1rd Ave nue. Galh b u ~ 1 ng wrecks , Ju nk autos &amp;
pO li S, 614 446· 1651 , 614 ·446
truc~s Also pans lor sa te 304
4136
773·5343 or 773-5033

Part Turner. part Chihuahua dog, Junk ca rs or wtl1 J;1ck up Ql\leaWAy
housebroken 304 -675-6029
cars, 614 992 6069 anyt1rne

�Thursday, September 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA

BRIDGE

CroJJsword

Puzzle

8111=• If;.

~

. a

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
Lana 5acres or more 30.4

4196

562

?b edroom trarl4&gt;r References &amp;
d&amp;po5rl No pets Also tra rler lot
At 62 N Locust Rd Pt Pleasant
304 675 W76

Top Pr~ces Pa rd Old uS Cams
Srlve r Gold Dramonds All Qld
Collectrbles Paperwerghts Etc
M l S Corn Shop 151 Second
A:..,enue GallipoliS 614 446 2842
Uiii~d fu rnu ure , antrques

Two Bedroom S250tMo Plu s Utrl
riles Oepos 1 References Re
qurred Rl 218 After 6 PM 6t4
983 4607

Wanted To B u ~ Junk Autos Wrth
Or Wrthout Motors Call Laffy
l vel~ 6 I 4 388 9303

Two bedroom partly 1uri'1JSheo
good clean condnmn porch
ya rd prrvate lo t above New Ha
ven S275 wrth waler and sewer
304 882 2466 anytrme

one
prece or complete estates Osby
M~ rtn 6111 992 7441

440

Wa nted "OW Ourlls Hull Wan &amp;
Rosevrlle Ponery Casn Pard 614
245 9448

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments tur

n shed and unlurnrshea secur ty

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

depos t recur red no pets 614

992 1216

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn $8 $15 fHr At Work Home
Discounts I No Inventory Or Door
Door lnd tAep 1 800 742 .4738
'
AVON EARN $$$ at home at
work All areas 304 BB2 2645 1

BOQ-992 6356 I!'IDA1EP

Babysl\ter Needed Mornmgs
Monday Frrday Call Alter 5 PM
614 446 1466
DATA SYSTEMS COORDINA
TOR For Reg1onal Behavioral
Hecrfthcare Adm 1nr strat ~e Au
thonty The Coordmator Collects
Organrzos Analyzes And Pres
ents Servrces Data To ASSISt
Plannrng Program Development
And Resource Managamont
Mu st Oe Ab le 1o Wor~ W1th
MacOS Mac Networking ,And
MaJor Ma cJmosh Appl1cat1ons
Must Have Database Experrence
And Abrlrly To Adm 1n ster A
Management lnlormatron System
E:wpe11ence Mamtalnrng e ma I
Sysmms A Plus
Bacrrelors Degree In Cornpuler
Sc ence Or Relaled Degree Re
qurrcd Salary Range $18 000
$22 000 Plus E~ce ent Fn11ge
Oenelm Posruon A'.la lab c lm
n1edrarel y
Send Res ume And Letter 01 In
terest By September 181n To Or
rector Of Operanons ArMns
Hock ng Vrntor 317 aoard P 0
Box t30 Athens Ohro 45701

EDE

Delivery Drr\lers Wanted Cash
Comm1s1ons Pa d N ghtly 75:
Per Delivery Plus $4 35 IHr Unr
lorms Provrded Full Or Pan Trme
Must Be Aelrable W th Good
Drvrng Record 1B Years Or 0 oer
W th Valid Dn\ler s l rcense &amp; In
sured Veh icle Apply In Per san
At Lrtl1e Caesars Galhpohs Oh1o
Earn $1000 s weekly stutl rng en
velopes at home Be yo ur boss
Start now No e-p free supplres
n1o no obl1gatron Send SASE
to Prestrge Unrl ~L P 0 1:3oJ
195609 Wrnter Spr ngs F
32719
Food Ser'IIICO Workers Needed
Gardner Merchant Food Ser11rces
At The Unrversrty 01 Aro Grande
Is Loo~mg For Pan Trme People
To Wo rk In Our Food Coull &amp;
Carer rn g Depanmcnt Cal11614)
245 5660 Or Stop By The Student
Cen ter AnneJt Of! ce To Apply

EOE
FT mcome PT work Earn thou
sands SASE TrrCan EnTerprises
PO Box 1506 SpotsyiYanta VA
22553
H rrng SaleS Aepresentatrves For
House 01 lloyd E •cellent Bene
'rs And Pay! Free Krt To Start
Fan tasrrc Hostess Pl an Also
Bookrng Partesl614 379 2197

'I would have en1oyed the cocktail party more
w11h the yacht actually m the water"

l;;=;==::;::;===-r:===========1
_1_B_O__W
___a_n..:t..:e..:d_"_o:._:D:_O.::..___ 1310 Homes for Sale
G ve 'fto.. ParTy For Christmas Grits
&amp; Oecorat1ons Free Grits Far
Hostesses That Qualify 614
446 - 3769 Leave Name And
Number

Located Hedgemonr Onve Fur
nrshed Basement 1 112 Baths
Frreplace CA Garage Carport
lmmedrare Possess on $72 000
614 446 3117

I Wrll Do Housccleanrng Bonded
CaU Ch11s 614 256 9322

Modern 5 room house drntng
area bam lf4 acre Qarage ut1rty
buildrng Nelson Rd Rut and
$3:9 500 614 742 2873

Rub &amp; Scrub Cleanmg Servrce
dus!lng mopp ng wmdows iind
more Complete servrce or touch
ups References on request call
Te11y at 6 14 992 4232 or 614
992 4451

Wr ll Bab~s11 Nonsmoker Refer
ences Monday Fr day Duvs Ex
per enced 614 446 6910
Will Clean Houses Or 01frces
Week ly Or One Trme References
Avarlable 614 441 0870

Three bedroom home n country
Wh las H II Rd Rut land one balh
rn ground pool 614 992 506 7

\'Vtll Do Baoys!llmg In My Home
Mon Thru Frr Have E~perrence
614 4466758

Three bedroom home on double
lot rn Mrddlepor! askrng $27 500
call614 992 4539

Wrl Do lnrer1or E:wterror Parntrng
Reasonable Ra tes Experrenced
Re lerences For Free Es11ma1es
Call614 245-5755

fhree bedroom hone mce nergh
borhooCI close 10 mwn $21 500
Contact Brenda Oottre furner
Really 614 992 3056

Wou d rke to do babys ttmg m mv
home anv ages any hours 304
675 5529

Three bedroom house rn Syra
cuse on Thrrd S1reet $30 000
614 949 2499

FINANCIAL
21 o

Bustness
Opportunity

"lUMBER COSTS UP?• Steel
ourld1ngs as low as $3 00 iQ foot
Buy lactory d reel tram Natrcnal
Manufacturer as authOfiZecl deal
er Wrll tram Some Mar~ets tak
e l 303 759 3200 9KI 2200
INOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends th'al you do bust
ness w1ttL people you ~now and
NOT to send money lhrough the
marl until you have rnvestrgated
the a Herrr'Q
Excellent Retail Space A~arlable
lalayette Mall 513 922 0294
For sale or will accept any prop
erty as part or full down payment
Oh10 Aver Campgrounds wrth 23
lu ll !lOokups Was old lac~ 24 at
Racrne large br ck burldrng fou r
hotel roams three apartments rn
s1de bu ld ng 7 112 acres well
supplies all water all lurnrshed
two r d ng mowers some tools
$150 000 less for cash 614 949

2526

REAL ESTATE

noohng E ~pcrrencc Or Wrll rng
l o I earn Rolerences Transpor
ta on &amp; Hand fools A Must Call
614 446 4514 From 8 AM To 5
PM Man Fr

P~r rnanent pas t on wrth bene! IS
sorne mr • ng requ ed Send re
sumP to Farm Clo PO Box 1~6
S~racuse O!'lro 45779

Ravenswood Care Center 1113
Washrngton St RavenswoDd
W'J rs currently acceptrng appll
catrons lor the follow ng posit ons
~~ ursrng Assrstants (Writ Tra n)
regrstrat on for classes startrng
soon bonefrls mclude tompetr
tr11e wages pard meals pard va
catron CNA bonus rermbursed
trarnrng health nsurance pard
shrfl dtlleren t al &amp; career ladder
opportun1rres all rnqurrres ~ ay
apply wrthm darly references re
qurred
Roofers wamed 614 992 5041 af
!er6pm

Wanted Optometnc Assistant
Optometnc ll ollrce management
experrence preferred Reply 10
Bo• 729 12 m care of the Sentt
nel Pomeroy Oh 45769

160 Wanted To Do
Ace Tree Servrce Complete Tree
care 20vrs exp &amp; msured lree
estrmates 614 441 1191 or 1

800 506 B6B1
Expenenced care provrder w1ll
care lor elderly rn !herr home
304 675 72621eave message
General Maintenance Parntrng
Yard Work W1ndows Wast1od
Guuers Clea ned Lrght Haulmg,
Commerrcal Aes rd ennal Sreve
614 446 8861
Georges Porrable Sawm1U don t
haul your logs to the m1U ,ust call
304 675-1957

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
,980 W ndsor 14x70 xcellent
ConditiOn 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath
large K rchen Large lr'.lrng Room
10~12 Uhlty Bu1ldrng $12000 Ne
614 245 9431
1984 Fa•rmont total elec trrc cen
tral a r 2bedroom bath 8 half
very nrce 304 675 3448
1986 14x70 !=armont two bed
room two full baths $10 500
Must be mo\led 614 7~2 2250
1994 14x60 2 Bedrooms Unhn
Commodore Never l1ved
2acres 1994 Sprrngbrook mobtle
home 3mr At 2 N on Rt 62 304
675 6986
Lrm rett Qlfer' 1996 daub ew de
3br 2bath $1695 down $2 59
month Free delrvery &amp; setup
Onl~ at Oa~wood Homes Nrtro

WV 304 755 5BB5

L mrted Orterl New 14x60 No pay
ments alter 4yrs Only make 2
payments &amp; mc11e n 304 755

5566

New 1996 1th70 1ncludes skrrt
rng steps blocks one year
homeowners 1nsurance and srx
months FREE lot rent Only $1025
down and $207 t7 per mon#'l Call

1600 637 3238

LABORER POSITION AVILABLE

No Exper tence Necessary ' $500
To $900 Weeki~ /Potent a Pro
cessmg Morrgnge Refunds Own
Hours Call (909] 715 2300 Ext
762 24 Hour s)

Ouret country hQme two bed
rooms and bath basement gas
well and furnace sa1ellne Cl sh 36
acres call"514 985 4243
Spit! evel house for 10ale m S~1a
cusa fully equ1pped i'lrtchen wrth
dmmg area one ba th two bed
rooms up two large rooms down
otfrc el utrll'f room area sunporch
two car garage fenced rn back
yard Located rn mce ne ghbor
hood near schOol total etec trr c
614 992 6970

•Sun VAlley Nursery School
Ch•ldcare M F Bam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Du11ng
Summer 3 Days per Wee~ M nr
mum 614 446 3657

I Ha\le Emphasema lookrng For
A lady fo L 11e In For Her Board
614 44 6 3419

MGR Jr arnees Wanted No [x
p~rrence
Necessa ry Career
Gro wt h Potentral Eu:ellent Ad
11ancement &amp; Pay Based On Per
ro rma'lce Not T me In We Olfer
Pard Trarnrng Fie~ ble Schedules
For A 401K Plan Medrcat In
su ra nee Apply In Person At Gal
1pohs Lmle Caesars Or Send Re
sume To PO Box 10 Barbours
v lie WV 25504

Good $1 ,500 614-3881122
Remrngton 7400 30 06 .semr
w!S1mmons wMeuul scope
used $400 304 675 S529

530

1983 Chevv S 1o Blazer Sspd
6cyl 4 wheel drrve $2 800 304
675 29-49

Antiques

1983 CJS Jeep redfblack $2 500
hrm 0 Greene call 304 458
1554 leave message durrng dav

Anuque Glass Collection 1940
To Date 300 Prece Cartoon
Characters Pepst Coke Jelly
614 256-6867

,984 Ford Convers en Van
72 000 Miles Ratsed Roof 4 Swt
va l Seats Couch Folds Into Bed
Burl! In Closet Good Trres Run
nrng Boards $4 500 614 446
0703 After 5 PM

Buy or sell R1verrne An trquet
1124 E Ma1n Street on At 12~
Pomeroy Hour&amp; M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunclay100to
6 00 m 614-992 2526

NORTH
• 7 6 3
• 5 J 2

EEK&amp;MEEK
~

1'-l\/t:SllGATIOI..J CF

FU.lDifJG f&gt;.J.J

1JlE; ~IJPiTE: Si.JBcoMMirr£~

lfJ~TIGATIQI.J

C1V I~VE.STIGATIOO'S
66!;.1-J Rl5T R)IJtO

Of 1H£ su:A\t

+1A~

MAJJDm:

EIJt;R

Tfl,e:

FtE.U~ "THAT

IN~TI&amp;'liTt

9664

New Bank Aepos Only 4 lelt 304
755 7191

All real estate ad..,ertiSrng 1n
thiS newspaper rs suOJ&amp;et to
lhe Federal Falf Housrng Act
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
10 advertrse any preference
hm tat100 or drscnmmat on
based on race color rellg1on
se• lam1lral status or natiOnal
ong1n 'Or any 1nten11on to
make any such preference
limitation or dlqcrlmlna!lon •
Th1s newspaper wrfl not
knowflngly accept
advertisements tor real estate
which ts 1n viola Iron of the law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
adver1rsed In thrs newspaper
are avarlable on an equal
opportunity baSIS

Pr ce Buster' New 14•70 2 or
3br Only $995 down $t95tmonth
Free dell\lery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes Nrtro IN.IJ 304
755 5885

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
26 acres With barn located rn
Mason $35 000 304 773 5081
9110ac lot At 2 above Galhpolrs
Ferry close to rown beautiful r y
er vtCIN 304 675-7241
Four lots near Racrne approx 1
1r2 acres each startrng at $5000
call6t4 949 2025
REMOTE beautrfu l rrdge top
la nd 3 m les south of Carpenter
Oh o Mt Un on Ad One 9 acre
parcel $634 7 Owner frnancrng
Call lor good map 614 593 8545
Scenrc Valley Apple Grove
beaut1ful 2ac lots pubhc water
Cl~de Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

RENTALS
31 o Homes for Sale
14x70 2 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths
Some Appl ances New Hot Water
Heater Deck Underprnnmg Only
SS 000 614-23ofi-672S
2 bedroom Hanmger &amp; 4th Mtd
dleporl $25 QOO seen by appornt
ment ooty 61.4 992 3436
3 Bedrooms 405 Spnng Avenue
Pomeroy OH Atl New l lns1de
Outsrde 1 Owner W1ll Help F nance
Down Payment 304 583 7503
3 Bedrooms State Route 141 10
M1 les Out Gall!polrs 24 •32 Ga
rage New f1eat Pump. &amp; Furnace
In Ground Pool New Sate 1 te
Drsh Galha County local School
Drstrrct 614 379-..2 410 Alter 5

PM

4bedroom 2 I J2bath large family
room on 1acre 1m1 behrnd Han
ford 304 882 3326
House For Sale By Owner 1 8
Acres Wrth House And Altached
Garage Separate 14x30 Work
shop 29 Hrlltop Orrve OJI Nergh
borhood Road 3 Bedrooms LR
OR 1 BR W1th Laundrv Area Gas
Furnace W th Heat Pu mp New
Water Tan~ large From Porch
Crty Water Cheap Utrlrtres' Green
lownshrp Call 614 446 6302
From6To It PM

410 Houses for Rent
3 Bedrooms Full Basemen t 7
M1les Norl h From HMC Oeposrl
&amp; Referenct:s Requrred 614 446
0595
3bedroo{T't $300/mo Camp Con
ley area 304 675 3812
HauS&amp; For Ren1 In Galhpolts 614
446 0924
House on Mulberry He1ghl!i Po
mercy S3301mo plus dsposrt and
relerences no pets 304 882

2945
Newly R.emodeled Sma' 4 Room
Collage No Pets Porter Area
614 388-1100 614 386-8000
Small 2 Bedroom $200 Oeposrl
S300t Mo Utrl!t es References
Requrred 614 446 4069 II No
Ans Leave Mehage

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x70 partrall,- lurnrshed 2bed
rooms 1 112beths rn country crty
water S325fmo References re
qwed No pets 304 773 5165
2 Bedroom Mobile Home On Bob
McCorm1ck Road Gall1pohs 614
446--9669

South
2 !'lT

NOW !I

550

Furnished Aparrment 3 Rooms &amp;
Barh All Utll tres Pad Downsta1rs
$250/ Mo 919 Second Avenue
Gall pols 614 446-3945
Grac1ous lrvrng 1 and 2 bedroom
apaHments at VIllage Manor and
Arversrde Apartments 10 Mrddle
port From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5859 Equal Housrng Oppor
run111es
N 4th Ave Mrddlepan 2bedroom
lurnrshed apartmen t Oeposrt &amp;
re1erences reou red 304 882
2566
N ce One BR Unfurnrshed Apart
ment Ra nge &amp; Refng Provrded
Water &amp; Garbage Pard Deposrt
Requrred Call 614 446 4345 After

6PM

One bedroom lurmshed apart
ment rn Mrddleport very clean
614 446 309116 14 992 5~04 be
fore lOam or alter 6pm
..
Small apartment 304 675 2722
Twrn R vers Tower now acceptrng
applrcatrons for 1br HUO subs1d
rzed apt for elderly and hand1
capped EOH 304 6 i'5-6679
In Ga llpohs ut1lrt1es paid except
electflc deposit /references
$1651Mo 614 446 7130

450

Furnished
Rooms

C rcle Motel
614 446 2501
Rooms $25 And Up Cable Atr
Phone lowest Rates In Gallipolis
Da11v Wee~ly Mon!l'11y
Rooms lor rent week or month
Start ng ar $120/mo Galha Hotel
614 446 958D
Steeprng roo ms wrth cook rng
Also trader space on r '.ler Al l
hook ups Call alter 2 DO p m
304 773-565! Mason WV

460 Space for Rent
Trader lot on Braod Run Ad New
Haven $60/mo 304 773 5881

MERCHANDISE
51 o

Household
Goods

Applrances
Recond toned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrr
graters 90 Dav Guarantee!
French C rt ~ May tag 614 446
7795
Carpet &amp; Vrn~l In Stock $5 DO Yd
&amp; Up 60 Pauerns Of K tchen Car
pet In Stack 0\/er 35 Pa11erns
V nyl In Stor,;k Mollohan Carpets
6t4 446 7444
Countr~

Furnrture Furnrture for
Every Room 6mr Rt 2 North Pt
Pleasant 304 675 6820

Drnette table wrlh Sl~ cha1rs and
bu llet portable GE drshwasher
ca I 614 985 4265 tea11e mes
sage

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refr geratcrs
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vrne Street Call 614 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

LAYNE SFURNrfURE

1982 Cub Cadet r dmg mower
12hp $800 100amp marn fuse
box $30 Grr l s 16" b1cycle $20
304 675 3581
24 round abo11e ground pool
sand filter and ladder $495 614
949 2844
27 Zen rth TV Works I Floor
Model 4 Years Old 614 446
6970
4 Pc Sec tonal Sofa J C Pennys
Full Srze Truck Topper B l ac:~
Front Gas Range
For Sa le 42 Inch B1g Screen
Stereo TV W1th Surroundmg
Sound Capabrlrty L1ke New Or
Trade For Farm Tractor 4X4
P ck Up 4 W heeler Wrth PTO
(614) 256 6114 Anytime
75gal aquat1um wlwhrsper 5 lrlter
a1r pump stand and accessor as

$350 304 675 5529

8 P ece Sectronal Sofa $100
gler Fuel 0 I Heat ng Stove
Blower $125 Wheelcha rrs
Electrrc Cook Stoves $50
379- 2720 Alter 6 PM

Sre
Wrth
$50
614

Alder Royal 210 G Co p1er $550
Recond toned New Drum And
Oe\leloper 614 446 4514 Mon
Fn6AMTo5PM
Baby bed stroHer carseat swmg
walker 304 675 4548
Brown L1v1ng Room Sur te Falf
Condrtron $200 614lB6 9871
Bro~h

I chma cabrnet table w/6
chairs oval colfee table wtmatch
rng end table all good cond tron
Chest type freezer 20 1 cu It by
Southern States good cond sell
rng no longer need $250 304
458 !086
Commodore computer montter
pr nter dtsk dt~ve software S200
304 675 4612
Concrete &amp; Piastre Sep t1c Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ro n
Evans Enterprrses Jackson OH
1 80(}.537 9528
Electrrc Wheelcha!rs /Scooters
New /Used Scooter JWhee chair
lrhs Sta trway Elevators Ltft
Cha1rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283
E•erc1se Mach rne $175, 614

3BB 6293
For Sale 6 Pc Bedroom Su11e
$500 4 Pc 0 nette Set $250 2
Pc lrv ng Room Suite $400 Bunk
Beds And Mattress $250 All Lr~e
Newt 614 446 1681
Free Orsney Trcke tiCypress Is
land Trckels Comes W th 3 Hotel
Nrght Stay Use Anytrme Pard
$380 Sell $99 614 470 1577

Krng Coal Or Wood burner $200
614 367 7113
Marcy Home Frtness Center
Bra nd New Pard $700 Askrng
$550 614 367-785

MTN STATE MYSTERY TRAIN

1979 1000 Suzukr motorcycle for
sale lot of new part runs excel
lent 614.992 6069 call anytrme

560

Premwm allalla hav rol ls $25
Morgan Farms Rt 35 304 937

1989 Suzukr RM 80 e•celt ent
1
never raced 614 992

Pets lor Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groomrng Fea
tur ng Hydro Bath Julie Webb
Call 614 446-0231
7wk old lu ll blooded Boston Tern
er pupptes not Reg stared le
male $75 304 458 1086
AKC Reg Beagle Pups $60, Each
Steve Stapleton Wark 6t4 446
4172 OrAnytTme614 256 1619

AKC Regrstered Dalmatran pups
$100ea 304 675 3738 aher 4prn
AKC Registered male Dalmat1 on
3yrs old good wlch ldren $200

304 576 2964

AKC Regrstered Shrh Tzu pup
p1es 7wks old 1 female 1 mae
Warmed &amp; shots 304 675 7499

atter Spm

AKC Ae9rstered Cocker Spanrel
Puppres $150 614 379 :l728
B rds ~uanas Tarantulas mrce
F sh Ta nk &amp; Pet Shop 2413
Jackson Ave Pont P1easan t
304-6 75 2063
CFA Regrstered Himalayan Per
s•an Kr!tens 1st Shots Wormed
L Uer Trarned No Chec~s 614
367-7705
CFA Reg srered Hrmalayan K!t
tans
Vet Checked
Shots
Wormed 614 446 8253
F1ve Cockaterls and two chmch 1
las for sale 614 742 2525

570

Musical
Instruments

2 Bundy Clar nets Good Condr
tron $250 Each 614 446 3063
For Sale Console Pmno Wanted
responsrble part~ to make low
monthly payments on prano See
locally Ca!11 BOO 268 6218
Geme nhardt rtute used 3mos
excellent cond11 en new cos !
$479 wlll ,sell fo r $300 304 675

3097

Saxophone $775 clannet $275
843 5481

16t4

Selmer Alto saxophone w1case
very good cond S700 neg ot1able
304 675 Hi96

Snare Drum 614 256- 1651

Trumpet for sate S250 614 742
3506

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment

-

Murray 11 HP Mower, Needs
Deck Runs Good $150 614
256-{1867

2 w1rc corn crrbs Cal 304 675
4308

RCA Recerver Reg1stered' Boxer
Pups 9 Weeks Wormed 1arls
Docked 2 Males 1 Female 614

256-6126

Refngerators Stoves Washers
And Orvers All Recondt1 roned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W1ll OeiJver 614 669-6441

Sola And Charr To Match Good
Condr1ron $225 &amp;14 441 0701

OltYe St Gall polls New &amp; Used
OR614446 265
furnrture heaters, Western &amp;
Work boots 614-446 31 59
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upnght Ron Evans Enterprrses
VrRA FURNrfURE
Jackson Ohro 1 800 537 9528
614 446 3158

Wamed mformatron of Robert
Jr Adams Fam rl y Bufled m
JA&lt;larriSCemetery Mason C1ty S
IA•darno. 5930 Sycamore Bartlett

38134

6548

Shelled corn for sale alfalfa hay
614 992 6466

1992 Hare~ Davrdson 883 Sport
s1er Delu•e lets ol chrome 614
99250t1

TRANSPORTATION
710 Autos for Sale

1983 Olds Meg a Runs And
Looks Good lns1de IOut srde
1979 Chevy Prck Up Truck Runs
Good Bodv Farr Straight 6 Cylln
~ 614 387 7346 Afl:er 4 30

AC combme w/corn head &amp; table
Two grav11v beds Also straw for
sale 304 675 S086
D scounl farm tractor partS for
Massey Ford IH &amp; others
Srder s Equrpment Co Hender
son WV. 304 675 7421 or 1 800
277 3917
Gravely Accessones Rolollller
And Rotot1 tler Plow Excellent
Cond1110n 614 446 2021
Heavy duty lowboy dual wheels &amp;
ramps 614 992 6035
Russ Farm Equrom,ent 8 Fer
located 8 M les South Of
Stale Route 139
14-26!l·213t JO 6400 Cab &amp;
7200 MF 1105 Cab &amp; A1r
Cab &amp; Arr Ford 4630
loader IH 886 Cab &amp;
Arr Other Tractors JD 4400
Comb ne N H 335 Gr nder M :cer
(like New) Corn Pickers &amp; Sr
leage Equ1pmen1
New Idea Unr S~stem 708 power
unu 717 combrne 737 huskrng
bed 4 row narrow row corn head.
15 grarn table 3:14 675-4308
Will Org Ycur Potatoes Or Rent
The Plow Reasonable 614 2459449

NO, MA'AM I UNDERSTAND..
T14AT'S L.li=E

LAST ROW, UPPER DECK
AT T~E BALLPARK.
ROW IN TI4E CLASSROOM

1994 Yamaha Trmber wolf runs
ll~e new $2 600 304 57&amp;2400
1995 Yamaha 350 banshee 4
wheeler r dden approx 8hrs st11l
under warranty $3900 304 895
3253
Kawaskr KZ400 $475 OBO 614
441 1199

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

7512

1985 Escort Statron Wagon
Auto $600 614 446 6958

'fE5,MAAM I WAS WONDERING
I~ 1 MI6HT i1AVE A DESK
IN THE SACK ROW

$2 000 614 992 3672

s

1985 Dodge Da~tona Runs Good
/Looks Good S1 200 080 614
446 7252 Aller 4 00

PEANUTS

1992 KX 250 perfect cond1t10n
manv works parts rea6y to race

11 5hp Mercury outboaro Pro
19B3 R&amp;l ant K Statro n Wagon 4 Ma ster Bomber Ish &amp; s~1 boat
Door Good Body Good !nte 11or t61t $6 500 or trade lorn ce 4x4
Needs Mrr subJshr Engrne $150 true~ 304 895 3567
Cash Or Trade For Guns 1983
14 afurnrnum V haul boat w1th 9 8
Ford Esc on 2 Doors Good En
9rne Good Intel or Runs &amp; hp electrrc start Mercur y out
Drr\les Good Needs Body Pans board $500 614 992 7368
All Parts Allatlable $325 Cash Or 1-:---.:..C.-'-.:..C.-~::...:.=::...:.-­
Trade For Guns 614 388 _9181
t988 Stratos 1700Xl 4Cyl Chev
l&amp;o Exccll Condnron $6 500 00
l eave Message
614 446 7386
1g65 Chevene chrome wheels
tnled wndows alarm system new 1992 Sea Nvmph boat wrth !rater
bra~e!, 750 304 882 2326
75 hp Johnson engrne Wtth lots ol
extras take over payments 614
1985 Cor11ette loaded 614 682 949 2872

•

Q

•

•

E mall FandEBobT@AOL COM

•

BORN LOSER

,.

Wo.H s.\E

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1nsect

9 Soviet city
10 Oft he dawn
11 Grafted, In
heraldry

6 Conceits

19 Slender
pmnacle

West

North

East

In "Faust," Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe cla1med that "The deed 1s
everythmg, the glory nothmg
In bndge, th1s surely 1sn't true If the
deed- your b1d or play - IS nght you
wtll rece1ve some glory, 1f only a "well
done" from partner But 1f the deed
ISO t done you Will have an unhappy
partner on your hands And maybe even worse - a JOUrnalist watchmg
who 1s only too w1lhng to comm11 the
miSdeed to paper
Agamst three no trump, West led the
heart queen To avmd blocking the sUit,
East covered w1lh Ihe kin g llf Wests
heart su1t wasn l strong enough to per
m1t th1s overtaking play he would have
led a low heart, not the queen) South
ducked th1s tnck. but won East s heart
contmuataon
Wtth only seven tncks, South had to
make somethmg of dummy s d1amonds
He led the five and when West played
the two, finessed dummy s etght East
won w1th lhe Jack and sw1tchcd to a
spade, but a mom ent later South was
claammg nme tncks two spades one
heart, four d1amonds and two clubs
West was mantled WJlh metaphoncal
mud, haV1ng miSsed a chance to mur
der the contract When South led the
low dtamond from hand at tnck three,
West should have played the queen If
declarer ducks th1s, West cashes three
heart tncks So declarer must wtn wtth
dummy's ace Then he can finesse the
dtamond 10 through East, but the su1t
1s blocked South gets only three d1a
mood tncks, wh1ch ts one fewer than he
needs to make three no trump
Watch out for the rare second hand
htgh

78 100 Miles $3 600 614 256
6340
1990 Escort \lery nrce $1 SOD
Also 1983 Che'.ly Mahbu 4 door
new pamt 304 675 2352 after

790

1991 Red wuh black 10p Mercury
Caprr XlT convertible excellent
shape low m1leage looks new
Call 304 675 4663
1994 Frreblfd Loaded New Con
dttron Prrce $13 200 614 446
0219 6144463117
For sale or lrade 1984 Ford
Crown V1ctorra S2 000 or uade
lor piCk up truck 614 992 6154

1971 Chev One Ton lang
Wheeler Base Good Cond ttton
614 256 6574
197ti 314 Ten Chevy Booms For
614 446-3243 Alter 5

Wrec~er

PM

1976 Ford Explorer 302 w11h cam
4 speed good t1res dual exhust
runnrng boards runs good $975
614 247 4292
1978 Che'.ly 350 automat c lots
of new parts 614 992 5011
1978 GMC 4 wheel drtve S2 BOO

OBD 304 675-5065

1982 Ford EXP Hatchback 4 Cyl
4 Spd New Trres Battery t
Bra~os Runs Good Sunroof
$1 200 OBO 614 446 9315
1984 S tO Chevy Blazer 4x4
$2 500 OBO 304 6 75 358t
1986 Nrssan Pld1 Up 4 Cyl nder
5 Speed Very Good Cond1tron
$2 495 614 256-686 7
1986 S 10 prckup 5spd V6 a r
exc cond 304 372 3896
1987 Toyota Pi'c~ Up Excellen t
Condoon 6143677441
1987 Ranger 2 WO PS PB New
T res, 614-379 2222 Ewmtngs.
1968 Toyota ptdl. up, 4wd 80 000
mrles 4 cy l extended cab auto
e•cellent cond1t1on $7250 1314
992 3564

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1978 G.MC •JimfTiy~ 4x4 4uto
Trans PB PS PW 350 Cu In
Molar W11h _. Barrel Carb Body
Rough Actuar Mrles 59 000 One
Owner, $1 500, 614 ... 46 3277

53 Govern

55- Finn
56 Non-profit
org
57 I Love59 Wooden tub
61 Nothing

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce lebril~

Crohe1 Cf}'plograms are ~ r ea\lfd hom quulahons b~ lamou!&gt; peop fl pas.lnnd prtt&amp;ont
Eactr terter n lhe c phar stands lor llnolher Todav s cJuv H aquai!J (J

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Lp

HSAILPSE

HELLO,

NATE. SEE

~ou

11RS

CZ.ER\JIC.KI

I'FTER
SCtmL

AFTER SC.HOOL'

t&gt;ID YOU

GET

DETENTION
ALRE,.,DY 7

1r

Appliance Parts And Servrce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
perrence All Work Guaranteed
French Crty Maytag 614 446

NOT

1r

THAT DAllY
'UZ!LIR

S©\\.4tl1A-~t-zrse

- - - - - - - Ed1t•d hy CLAY I

1'11£ Nt;V8R 'PA&gt;&lt;D Af8\'Al£
~'fl&gt;\llli&gt;£R ~foRE 1

rr IT'S' A lli1l£

INTIMIDATti'iG

B1ll Omck s Home Improvements
addttrons, remodeli ng roofrng
srdrng plumbrng etc Insured call
Bill Ornck 614 992 5183
~
C&amp;C General Home Yarn
tenence Pamt rng vrnyl srd1ng
carpen try doors wmdows baths
mobile home reparr and more For
free estimate call Che1 fl14 992

Ron s TIJ Servrce specrahzrng rn
Zemth also servtc ng most other
brands House calls 1 800 797
0015 wv 304 576 2398

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

~rae mans Heatmg And Cool ng
lnstal latro n 4nd Servrce EPA
Certrfled Resident al Commerc1al
614 256 1611

640

Electrical and
Refrigeration
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Heat Pumps Arr Condltronmg If
You Don 1 Call Us We Both Lose I
Free Estrmates 1 800 287 6:ma
614 448 6308
002945

wv

Rnsidentlal or commerc1al wrr1nQ
new serv1ce or reparrs Master Lr
censed electnc1an Ridenour
Electncal WV000308 304 675

1766

ma1hng $2 and SASE 10 Astro Graph clo
thts newspaper P 0

Box 1758 Murray

H1ll S1a11on New York NY t0150 Make

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Rootrng and guuers commerc 1al
and res denllal mrnor reparrs 35
~ears elCpenence B&amp;B ROOF
lNG, 614 992 5041

820

govern you 1n the year ahead Send for
your Astro-G raph prediCttons today by

sure to state your zodtac stgn

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23} There IS a
chance that you mrght have to take care
of cenarn responstb1ht1es today that are
not of your mak1ng Clean them up
tnstead of lentng them fester

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22} Do no1 lake

'Your

'Birthday
Fnday Sep1 8 1995
In the year ahead you 1mght tall back
upon loyal old fnends who wtH play
1mpor1ant roles tn your affarrs However
make sure you thoroughly mvestrgate the
credentials ol strangers before formtng
any new alliances

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) In compe1111ve
developments today SIZ9 up your oppos1
tton realtsl1calfy They may hold more
trump cards than you do Get a Jump on
l1fe by understandrng the rnffuences that

gambles or ftnancral rtsks today on
hearsay even 1f 11 ts passed on to you by
a reliable old pal Your lnend s facts
m1ght be faulty

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Dec 21) Remam
honest wtth yourself today regardtng your
mol tve s when dotng th!ngs that could
effect others Suppress your selltsh
des1res

was agreed upon

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20} Carelully
werghed and analyze deCISIOns today
Try nol to make Judgments 1n haste
because what you agree to today m1ght
not be to your advantage tomorrow

ARIES (March 21-A.prll 19) A responso
brlrty you recen!ly brushed aside mtght
create complrcatrons lor you Ieday It
could also leave an assoctate dtsappotnt
ed even angry wrth you

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be very
selective rega·d1ng soc1al contacts today
Avotd an tndtvrdual who has a talent lor
pttttng people aga1nst each other

GEMINI (May 2t-June 20) Today

you

mtght 1rnd your household 1sn t large
enough for two strong wrlled chtefs You
may be the one who has to remove a few
feathers from your war bonnet

CANCER (June 21-July 22) In diSCUS·
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Nega11ve slons wtth others today you may be able
thinkers could turn out to be very poor
companrons today They n1tght 1mplant
doubts tn your mmd and cause you to
worry about thtngs needlessly

to make your potnts, but thts doesn t
mean they wrll be recetved or accepted
Do not force your 'lllews on fnends

AQUARIUS (Jan 2G-Fab 19} In a JOint

your guard up m your frnanclal affatrs
today you m1ght suffer some form of loss
through an assoc1ate Keep your own

endeavor today you or the person w1th
whom you re tnvQived mtght expect more
from the other than IS reasonable or than

POLLAN

Q Reorronge

leners of the
four scrambled words be
low 10 form fovr words

I

DIRHOC

I

GETOB

' I I' I I .I
I PI

I

_T.--11~..~,

II sa fa ct of life my fnend
s1ghed When I find the shoe
that
f1ts 1t s usually the wrong
_____

.

_

_

_

_

.

,.

Complele the &lt;huck le quoled
by hflrng rn the m•urng words
you de11elop from ~top No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

7795

Earls Home Mam tenance vrnyl
srdrng roofrng extenor pamt1ng
power washrng Free Estimates
614 992 4451 or 614 992 4232

T M

YET

!THURSDAY

6323

E

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

STRI&lt;E Alli.DW N TI-E \'1M ON
HK;H PRICES: ~HOI' THE CU.SSfiEDS.

MUST

L P

PREVIOUS SOLUTION
I wrtte p la ys because d ra l ogue IS the mosl
respectable way of contradrctrng myself - Tom Stoppard

8
HI

K T S C

KT S C

VSA.GYLA.

.

BIG NATE

A.

BGMMWPEI

C LAKAJ
I
f---rl--rl---r-1
--r,----r.,5~ O
I

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncond1trona1 I fetrme guarantee
Local references lurnrshed Call
(6 14 ) 446 0870 Or (614) 237
0488 Rogers Wa1erprooflng Es
tablrshed 1975

I L P

UWUM

I LP

A.SWVWMTX J

v

T X X PM

B S A. K

EA.KPILWMV

_I I 1 I .

SERVICES
810

R A AU J

E T J

ILPJ

'-rS_K,R-,.,.A4

1975 '26 Foot Ho liday Vaca t on
Camper Good Shape Everythmg
Worksl614 446 1400

4pm

1991 Cutlass Supreme Loaded
Call Alter 5 304 675 7523

quantity

1-1

1

back

32 Fairy tala
character
33 Grain
36 Standard
39 Sicken
41 Bouquet
44 Pos1al abbr
46 Aug hra
48 - A.rafat
50 Type of sign
51 Blow a horn

lD &amp;../&gt;..

•

Snakelike fish
Tlda1ype
- Claire, Wls
- - onthe

28 Real
29 lnactlvtly
30 Small

~N. (f:f£.g.l

1987 Buck Somerset exc work 1 ~ ;.;,,;
tanks on e ton truck
car $1 500 080 30 4 882 2221
11
rad1a1ors floo r mats etc
D a. R Auto A play WV 304 372
1988 Olds Cutlass Cerra Very 3933 or 1 800 273 9329
Good Condrllon Betwen 8 AM 9

PM s14 w.oo21
1990 Dodge sp"" Au10 A"

21
24
26
27

Pass 3 NT
1111 pass
Openmg lead • Q

lU~DOOT

350 Chev 2
614 245 0611

Budget Transmrss ens Used &amp;
Reburlt AU Tv pes Accessrble To
1966 Ford Taurus 93 OOOmr all
Over 10 000 Transmrss1on Also
power ac cru1se V6 3 0 $1 500
Of trade for 4 Wheeler 304 5Zp Parts Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates q 14 379 2935
~•
2964

720 Tl'ucks lor Sale

1992 4 Star horse tra1ler 3 horse
slant road all alummum alum num
wheels &amp; lugs hn1shed ltvrng
quarters used very little SIS 000
304 675 1950 be !Ween 9 4pm

992 5161l

2016

1982 Camara 34K 1987 Mo nte
Carlo Aero Coupe 1989 Astra
AKC Aegrstered Oachshunds 1 Con\lersron Van r986 Bereua
1982 EXP Cook Motors At Cen
shots &amp; wormed 304 1375 2193
tenary614 4460103
AKC Reg1ste(ed Da mat ar1 pup
pres shots &amp;'&gt; wormed wr t&gt;e 1983 Camara new rotors brakes
&amp; ba nery no rust 85 OOOm11es
readv 6128195 S200 304 675
S3 000 OBO 304 675 3097
5553

Fall Foliage Trarn Tnps See
WV s New R1ver Gorge Nat ronal
Rver Oct 6 8 13 t5 20 &amp; 22
1 800 347 1231

New Com fort Rest queen s1ze
mattress &amp; box sprrngs $125/sel
new Broyhill coffee tab e 614

1974 Honda Trail 90 2 000 M1les
Very Good Condrtron $450 614·
256--6867

700 lb round bales of hay for
sale 614 8113 5350 or 614 949
2201

Snare drum case books good
lor begtnner $150 304 675-4439

Aepa1red New &amp; Aeburlt In Stoc~
Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537 9528

Hay &amp; Gratn

6063

Block bnck sewer prpes wrnd
ows I ntels etc Claude Wmters
A10 Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Sharp Carousel II mrcrowave
20gat tan~ wlllu orescent
hoed &amp; cabtnel stand Kmg wood
&amp; coal sk:lve 304 675-1780

And Layaway 41so Available
Free Oehvery Wttt1tn 25 M1les

640

Snare drum wlcasa accessor es
$200 Bass gu11ar Pea'.lev amp
$175080 3046753779

Stove Freezer Washer Dryer
Refrgerator 614 256 1238

Cash And Cat.yl RENT-2 OWN

Building
Supplies

Hr El ffecrency L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU
$1 250 Installed 1 800 287 6308
614-..446 6308 Duct Systems And
Arr Condll oners Free Estimates

Septtc Tan~ Je1 Aera1lon Motors
New &amp; Rebutll /Insta lled Call
Johns John 614 446 4782

Oual!ry Household Furnwre And
App!1ances Great Deals On

Holstern Cow On DHI Ches t 614
245 0610

304 675 2903

Complete home fur nrs hrngs
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 mtles out Bulavrlle Ptke
Free Delivery

•
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

2 Precipitation

8 Joke

art exhibit
5 Twisted

By Phtihp Alder

1958 Harley Dav son rrgrd frame
sp11nger New !Ires &amp; patnl e~c
cond $9 000 080 304 773

EOH

FurnJshed Apartment All Utrlrttes
Pa 1d Downstarrs $185/Mo 9t9
Second A'.lenue 614 446 3945

38 Distinctive atr
40 East lnd1an

group of nine

4 Place for an

Climb up
to push him down

ELVINEY?

2bdrm apts tor aI e ectr c ap
p ances lurmshed laundr y room
lacrht es close 10 scnaol n town
App!tcatro ns available at V 1 llage~
Green Apts lt49 or call 614 992

E:wecutrve apt 1br full krtchen
dish washer washer!dryer central
arr &amp; heat wat ef !urn shed prr
vate entrance references de
posrl 304 675 57;13

WHAT'S

TH' LATEST DIRT,

2 Bedroom AP&lt;1 rtm cnt Tr ash
Water Sewage Pard S2951Mo +
Oeposrt 614 446 2~81

Beech St M ddleport 1 &amp; 2bed
room !urn shed ap1s Ullltres pard
References..&amp; depos1t 304 682
2566

37 Goad

1 Pre-adult

7 Musical

3 Rams' mates

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

t bedroom apa nmen t downtown
Pt Pleasanr 304 675 6492

BE"AUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drrve
lrom $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; movtes Call 614 446 2568
Equa Housrng Opportunrty

Answer to Prevloua Puule

g:~er

35 KntUtng wool

K 2
•A 7 6
• K 5 l
8A K 6 3

---'-~-'--------

Apartmem &amp; Trarler Utrl tres Pard
304 675 2579

B5

aA

614
Mo 446-2957
• Utrl t es Depos1t Aequrred

2Rooms Plus Bath lalayatte
Mall No Kitchen' All Utrhtres patd
S175 oo Month Depasrt Requrred
614446 7733

10

SOUTH

1 Bedroom New Extra N1ce Arr
Condrt a ned Near Holzer s $2591

3711

aQ

•K 4
•J 7 3
8Q J 9 7

• Q 2
8 10 8 5

UP"

.

EAST

aJ 9 4
•QJ 1096

~'lHIOOISA

m

2

WEST

GeT

YOJ

1986 Jeep Cherokee 4Jt4 Good
Cond tron Low Miles 614 446

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

9 7 95

•Al0986
84

1 Bedroom Furnrshed Apartment
Ne•t To Lrbrar y Gallrpolrs {i14
486 8804

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Shrrley
Spears 304 675 1429

t961 Jeep Cherokee 4 Whee l
OliVE!' In Good Condrtron Runs

tree

42 Measure
1 Opposite of
of tan~
43 Lukewarm
4
Verdon 45 Urged
8 H1gh spirits
47 Badly
12 Car assem ~
49 Future bks
biers' assn
50 Profs deg
13 Jason s ship
52 Rower s need
14 Vast period
54- alcohol
of time
58 Reporter 15 -ala mode
Lane
16 Actress Sue - 60 Caroled
17 Small tnsect
62 Baktng ptt
18 Photographer 63 Do - others
-Adams
64 Skeleton parts
20 VIew
65 New Deal prog
22 Chemical
66 Type of terrier
suffix
67 To have
23 Writing tool
confidence
25 Adolescent
68 Actress
27 Clad
Francis
31 N1gerlan cit~
34 Ace
DOWN

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) If

records

you don t keep

W1sdom Upper· Kmfe · Fus1on - OUR OWN
Grandpa says that we would not lake so much
pleasur-e tn observ1ng the faults of others 1f we had
no faults'of OUR OWN

SEPTEMBER 7 I

�•

Thursday, September 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

'llllil

Ohio Lottery

Indians
clinch tie for
division title

Pick 3:
479

Pick 4:

5560
Buckeye 5:

Page4

Low t011lght In SO., cloudy.
Saturday, cloudy. Highs In the
70..

19-21-24-29-35

10 DAY~ ONlY!
OPEN ALLDAY
SATURDAY
9 A.M.·5 P.M.

•

Vol. 46, NO. 93

Water, sewer
change eyed
List
Price

Sale

Ann1vor~ry

Price

p, 1ce

12 MONTHS.
..

5 pc. Pine .......... ·: .................. '349 ..... '229 .... '198
Cha~&lt;s

36" x 48" Trestle Table . 4 Padded Seat

5 pc. Oak ............. .................. 1479 ..... 1349 ..... '289

42~

Tile top pedestal table , 4 white/natural chairs

7 pc. Green/Cherry ... .. ... ....... '799 ... ..'649 .... .'549
•

6 Bow back chairs, 36" x 60" Table

Wood Edge table, 6 elt'tra heavy chairs

7 pc. Light Pine .... .. :............ '1299 .... '999 .... .'749
7 pc. Nostalgic Solid Oak ... '1399 .. .'1 099 ....'899
Claw foot, pressed back chairs

•

..

SAME AS CASH!

BUY NOW - NO INTEREST
CHARGES TO PAY

Gibson s8.6cu. rt. Futt'oJoss. lin """"" .. .. ...... '899 ....... '799 ...... .'649

Westinghouse

Frigidaire

•

cu. n. tJetuxe . ...,. ...,...,. .... '899 .. .. .. . '749 .......'629

19.9 cu.

n. ·Gall"".,.,,."'"" ....'1199 ...... '999 .......'839 .

Premier 36" ou Rongo

D;oiiat c""' .... .. .. ...

'529; ...... '499 .......'459

w"'' Oriv .... : ........ '369 ....... '329 ...... .'299

Tappan

30" o.. R""l'•

Gibson

30" e1oc. Self/C-. IIi"" .......... .....

'579 ....... '519 .......' 469

Gibson 30" e~oc .•,.. WNte, o•01•- ......... '539 ... .... '489 .. .....'449
.

;·

.

Tappan 30" Etoc. Clock, •·•·12.e· """""· ....... .. '479 .. .. ... '429 ...... .'379
Gl bson

Olthwaahor . ... ""'" bulll.tn ........... '369 .. .. :.. '289 ..... ..'2 39

Maytag Auto WaohorLNge Tub .... ...... . .. . ... '539 ........ '499 .......'459 .

9 pc. Oak Dining Room Suite .... '1799 ... '1399 ..'1 088
Oval table, padded chairs, hutch/buffet

18

Gibson 1u cu. n. sxs. c"'"'"""' Sllel""' ... .... '1179 ...... '979 ..... ..'799

We Appreeiate Your BusinessWe'll Treat You Right!

42' x 72' Drawer table, Heavy padded seat ch.Ors

Prrcc

"

SHOP EARLY FOR THE BEST
SELECTIONS.

7 pc. Oak ................. .. .... .. ..... '1299 .. .. '899 ..... '699

Price

Gibson 20.6 cu.lt. Canti~er shelve~ .... '899 .. .. .. :'749 ..... ..' 629

FREE GIFTS FOR EVERYONE!

42" x 66" Table. 6 Stylish Chairs

Annwer .c;rvy

Glbsolf 15.4 cu.lt. Frostlree, rollers .. .... '649.... .... '549 .... ...'499

•FURNITURE ONLY

7 pc. Country Oak .. .............. '999 .... . '699 ..... '56 9

Sale

Gibson 1a cu. n. •"""" Ice - " ... ........... . '799 ...... .'699 ..... .. '579

36" Table with leaf and 4 all wood chairs.

5 pc. White ...... .. .................... '899 ..... '699 .... .'499

List
PfiC:e

APPLIANCES

LIVING ROOM SUITES

IJst

Sate

Price

Prtce •

AnnHtersa ry
Prtce

Traditional 2 pc .'.. . : ........ .. ..... 1799 ..... 1 599 .....1349

Kelvinator Etec. Dryor ""'..,.,, ""· ......... '389 ....... '349 .......'299

Green/mauve floral

CURIOS &amp; GUN
CABINETS

Ust
Price

Sale
Price

Armwersary
Pr •ce

RECLINERS &amp; CHAIRS

Beige multi color print

Recliner 2-oo """"""'" ................... '229 ....... '179 .......'139
Catnapper "i"l '"""""'·..."""""" ....... ...... '539 ..... .. '429 .......'339
Fhtxsteel """"""·w.. "' """'"'·c... ""'"' ..... '528 ....... '369 .. .....'299
Catnap per w•• '"'"""'·1""" . ........ ,ouch...... '679 .... .. . '549 .......'469.

Colonial2 pc .......... .. ...... .. .... 1899 ..... 1 699 .....1529

lighted, tempered glass

Blue print

Cherry Curio .... .. ......... .. ............ '359 ...... '269 ...... !229

Contemporary 2 pc .. ........... '999 .. .. .1799 .. ...1599

Arched Top, Etcned glass

Corner Curio ............. ... ............. '389 ...... '299 ...... ~259

Black/mauve/blue. black trim

Light oak, hghied

Sectional ........ .. .. .. ............... 12699 ... 12199 ..' 1799

Solid Oak Corner Curio ... ........ '529 ... :.. '419 ..... .!339
2

doo~s

Medium Oak Curio ...... .. ... ........ '399 ...... '299 ...... !249
. Side Entry

Corner Table with stereo/sleeper/recliner

Sectional .... .. ................... .. . :•1799 ... 11299 ....'899
Reclining e~s. oak,lbrass trim, multi print

Dark Pine ........ .' .. ... ... ...... ... .......... '529 ...... '399 ......~3 39

Double .Recliner Sofa ......... 11346 .... 1999 .....'749

6 guns, lighted, door locks

Flexsteel, Blue stripe

Oak .................. ... ....................... '699 .... .. '569 ...... !479
12 gun , deer glass, pistol rack , locks

Contemporary .3 pc . .... ....... 11799 ... 1 1399 ....'949
~

Black "FiaJC leather" overstuffed

TELEVISIONS

List

Sate

Ann&lt;versarv

Price

Price

Pun~

Zenith 13" Color .......... .. .... ............ '299 .. .... . '269 .. ..... ~ 199
Cablt! Tune•

.

Zenith 19" Color .. ... .... ...... ....... .. .... '369 ...., .. '299 ....... ~249
Cable Ready. charcoal cebinet

,

Zenith 19" Remote Co.lor ....... ....... '399 ....... '339 ... .. .. ~27 9
Ctosed Ca~ton

Zenith 25" Remote Color ............. '579 ....... '489 ... .... '399

Country Sofa/Love ......... ........ . 1 1799 ... 1 1399 ....'999
Oak trim, green print

Traditional3 pc ................... 1 1499 ... 1 1088 ....'799
Contemporary 3 pc ... .. ....... 1 1999 ... '1499 ....'999
Early American 3 pc ...... ..... 1 1599 ... 1 1199 .. ,..'899

Table model. !tollS stereo

Zenith 25" Remote Console ..... .... '639 ... .... '579 ....... ~~~9
L

Oil"- 01 P•l"l@. SEQ Stereo

Zenith 27" Remote Console ..... :... '699 ....... '639 ...... J599
Pine F1n1sh Unoversal Remote

Zenith 27" Remote Console ... ...... '799 ..... .. '719 .... l.~679
SYS l

Zenith

35' Table mode&lt; &amp; •s·rso· Pr0jec11on

mode~

.............. REDUCED

..

'

List
5ale
Anhtversary
ENTERTAINMENT
Price
Price
Pr1co
CENTERS &amp; DESKS
Maple Finish Desk ........ ... .. ...... .... .. '199 ....... '149 .........~99
Studltnt oesk, large dr awt~~ 5

IRc•lltlliP desk/Drawer Unit.. .... .. ..... '379 ....... '269 .......!199

I Cl1er1-y Entertainment.. .... ........ .. ... '639 ....... '499 .......~399 ·
154' r•'·""""'·· slideout

I Plr1e Entertainment ... .... ~ .........:.. ... '549 ....... '399 .......!329

Sale
Price

Annr~~ersary
Prrce

,

·

l.ile Oak, shelllleadboa"d

4 pc. Ashley ................ ..................... '799 ....... '599 .. .... .1399
tops, &amp;:IOOf pleee•

•

Traditional 3 pc .. .... .... .. ....... 1 1599 ... 11199 ....'899

4 pc Lehigh ....................................'839 ....... '679 .. .... .!549

Beige/Green Floral, Pillows

5 pc. Slnger ...................... ............. '1199 ....... '899 .. .... .!599

Dark pine. Door DrMSM, !Itched glass tnm

Country 3 pc; ........ .. .. .... .. ... .1 1999 ... 1 1499. ~1 088
Black muiti print, bun leg, pillows

Contemporary 3 pc . .. ......... 11899 .. .1 1399 ... :'999
Blue/Aqua Pattern. oak trim, overstuffed

Traditional Sofa ................... 1599 ..... 1499 .... ~399
GrecnM'ine Stri e, Pillow back

SOFA SLEEPERS

List

Sale

Price ·

Price

Annrversary
Pr1ce

.

Contemporary Oueen .. .. ... .. .... ......... '739 .. .... . '599 .. .. ... !399

Beige with

' noral strype
mauve

Traditional Queen .. ............. .... .......'999 .. ..... '749 .......!549

.,

Blue multi prinl

•

ute pine, hutch mirror, hMd llo loot

4 pc. Bassett ............ .. ............. .. .... '1299 ... .'.. '999 ....... !749
6 pc. Slnger .... ..........~ .................... '2299 .... . '1799 ... .!1399
"Soutlwwestern" Pine, n1gh1 stand
'
6 pc. Webb ........... ... ,..................... '2499 ..... '1999 .... ,1599
Oak,

swing mirror. poster bed

BEDDING

Traditional Queen ...... ........ .. ..........'699 ........ '549 ...... .!399
Bll.lll!MatMl Pattern. \11tow ptliows

,

Cherry, pediment bed, lice size O'aWMl

Traditional Queen .. ............. ......... .. .. '899 ... .... '699 ....... !499
I&lt;8"Wide., "Protective Tops'

Ust
Price

4 pc. Vaughan/Basse~'·\ ............. .. .... . '699 ...... . '549 ....... 1449 ·
Qek with blade

Blue/Beige Pnnt, pillows

Pine Roll lop Desk ....... ..... .. ........... '499 ....... '369 ....... !299

P11ce

4 pc. Ashley ................................... '899 .. ..... '699 ....... 1499
W•hed o¥ or black door piece&amp;

Beige swirl panern, throw pillows

Anntversary

Price

Flexsteel..;,.,.,. ""''""' """ """"'· •·- ·....... '735 ....... '519 .... .. ~429
Kirby """'"'""'"""·"""""''""'c ................ '469 .... :.. '379 .......' 259
Flexsteel ·m......,.· """" ,.'"'""··"""'"- .. '824 ....... '639 .......'525
England wan '"''""'wt'" cl18lse. M"""' ........... '549 ....:... '429 .. .....'349
la·Z·boy eNloe'""""'""''""'· choice ot cole....... '569 ....... '449 . ..... ~379
La·z-boy '""""'''"''""· .......................... '599 ...... :'4 79 ...... ~329
La-z•boy -·•!"''""'·""'""""' """· .......... :.'539 ....... '419 .. .... 1349
Glider Rocker....,......... "'""'"'""'"''"· '289 .. :.... '229 .......'179
Oak Glider Rocker ........."'"' ......... '429 ..... .. '339 ...... ~289
Athens
Swivel Rockerm ............... '379 ....... '289 ...... .. 229
.
.
Charisma w""'"' "'·"""'"""............... .... '419 .. ... ,. '269 ...... 1199
BEDROOM SUITES

Layered back, oak/brass trim/blue

Blue/Mauve Antron Floral

Zenith 27" Remote Color ..... ... ...... '629 ....... '539 ....... ~439

Sale

Contemporary 2 pc ... ... ....... 1 999 ..... ~699 .....1499

Light Oak Curio ........................ '319 ...... '229 ., .... !1 98
..

List
Price

.

.
Camel Back Queen ................. .......'999 ..... .. '799 .... ... !629
FleKsteel, Btue Check Pflnt

Contemporary Queen .. ................ '1079 .. :... '839 ...... .!699
;;;;;p;:;;;;;piiiiiillal•

·

Sale
Price

Price

An nlversa'Y
Pnce

TWIN SIZE
·'
Miss match firm u.pc .. .... .... .. .. ..... '139 ........ '99 .... ..... !78
Day sleeperf!rm 0Lpc .......... . .. .. ... '149 ....... '119 .. ... :.. !88
Serta Gentle touch "· pc...... .. ..... ..'179 .. :.... '129 ........ !99
Serta Pedic Firm ••. pc.. ............. , ..'229 .. ..... '179 ...... 1129
FULL SIZE
Miss match firm •. pc.. . .... .. .'.... .. ... '179 .... .... '119 ........ !89
Serta Premier H.pc. .... : .. .. ....... ...... '199 ..... .. '149 .. .... 1129
Seita Rest Ill u . pc.. ........ . .. .. .. .. .. ... '279 ....... '199 ......!169
Serta Perfect Sleeper ••. pc ...... .... '399 ....... '329 ..... ·'249
QUEEN SIZE
Fleetwood firm sot ..... .. ..... .. ..... .... '399 ....... '319 .. ... .1249
Bed of Roses nt ............ ..... .. ....... '439 ...... . '369 .. ....!299
Serta Rest Ill nt . ...... .. ..... : .. .. .. ... ... '529 ....... '449 ......1369
Serta Perfect Sleeper nt . .. ... : .. .... '799 ....... '689. :... .1549

..j;;;;iiipiiil;;;

Stern wheeler rises again--.·Welfare

reform·
Senate passage
prospects appear
to be improving

Special ordinance suggested at
Syracuse Village Council meeting

HURRY IN WHILE SELECTIONS ARE GREAT! ... LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ... 12 MONTHS TO PAY!
DINING ROOM SUITES

1 Section , 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multlmedlolne. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 8, 1995

Copyrlght1995

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
· Discussions on which alleys, to
leave open or to close, water line
problems at London Pool, and pro·
posed changes to the water and
sewer ordinance highlighted a
meeting of Syracuse Village Council Thursday night.
Meeting with council was Jack
Williams, a member of the Syracuse-Racine Regional Sewer Distric~ who proposed that warer and
sewer be coupled by a special ordi'
nance.
Williams explained the sewer
operation to council. He said that
the purpose of bis proposal to book
up waler with sewer is to create a
more effective operation. The matter was iabled until the next meeting to allow time for council to discuss the issue with I. Carson Crow.
village solicitor.
Also meeting wil,b council were
Mary and Don Hendricks. and Jim
Titus, about closing Oak Alley .
The matrer will be resolved after all
propeny owners arc informed and
signatures obtained. it was decided.
Also meeting with council was
Butch Lisle about leaving· an alley
open which runs past his propeny
on Founb Street. This malter was
also tabled for further discussion
with the village solicitor and resi -

denls involved.
· A motion mad e by Kathryn
Crow to close Asb Alley was alsO
tabled until Mayor James Pape
looks over the area and talks to residen!S. This issue will also be con'
sidered f!lflher at the next meeting
of counc'il.
Pape informed council that
repair of the slip on Rustic Hills
will cost approximately $30,000
for piling, backfill and asphalt .
This information will be given to
Bob Winget~ gran!S adminisuator,
who will apply for an emergency
grant to pay for the cost of the
.
repair.
The mayor also reported that
there .are major problems at London Pool in regard to recycling of
water. ·
He indicated that there is a broken or collapsed line creating some
problems. Someone will be secured
to test the lines. Eber Pickens Jr. is
in charge of banding the pool problem.
Complaints had been lodged
earlier about closing the poo1 when
season ticket bolders were swimming. The closing occurred, it was
reponed, wben there were at least
IS season ticket holders in the pool
and during regular hours of opera(Continued on Page 3)

· The Jean Mary, a $1.3 million sternwheeler that sank
across the river rrom Pomeroy

last year, was spotted 'wheeling
its way past the village Thursday, presumably on its way to
the Ohio River Stemwheel Festival in Marietta. The 87-foot
luxury vessel sank In the river
on Sept. 14, 1994, following last
year's Marietta festival after It
st~uck the Pomeroy launch
ramp, according to owner
George Douglass. Local stern·
wheelers said the boat will
return to Pomeroy for the Big
Bend Sternwheel Festival on
Oct. S-7. Shown above is the
Jean Mary as It appeared
Thursday ... and as It appeared
last September, right. i

-

'

'I

·' l

..

Newspaper asks "for DEP files .gag~ order to be lifted
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) applications last week . Gazelle
- The Charleston Gazette asked a lawyers Suzanne M. Weise and
Kanawha County judge to open Pauick C. McGinley asked Circuit
state Division of Environmental Judge Herman Canady to unseal
Protection files on a proposed S1.1 the documen!S. ·
"For the DEP to block public
billion pulp mill. in Mason County.
"Blocking public access to per· access to its application files at a
mit application files ... deprives the . time when a controversial permit
public of irs right to meaningfully decision is about to be made is
participate in the environmental clearly violative of the ci-tizens'
decision making process," the rigbt to be informed about the
activities of government," Weise
request filed Thursday said . .
and
McGinley wrore.
•
Tbe division sealed the files on
Th
e
newspaper
asked
for
the
the project's environmental permit

injunction against the DEP file sealing at tbe same time they
agreed to allow the environmental
agency to intervene in the
Gazette's lawsuit against the W~st
Virginia Development Office.
The Gazette sued the Develop·
ment Office in May, seeking documen!S that might reveal what kinds
of government loans, tax breaks
and other incentives the company
could receive for building the mill
in West Virginia.
DEP lawyer Bill Adams last

week asked Canady to allow his
agency to intervene in that case to
seek clarification of a July 12 order
Canady issued in U1e Development
Office case.
Canady ordered th e Development Office to provide the Gazelle
a list of tllC wilhheld documents
and appointed Charleston attorney
Tom Hayes .as a special master to
review the records land recommend
which ones should be released.
Written Gazette freedom of information act (FOIA) requests

were denied Wednesday and
Thursday for three documents in
the air permit file, even thougb
they are not on the Development
Office lisl of withheld documents.
In a Thursday )cllcr to the
Gazette, its renewed request, filed
Aug . 30 for access to all of the air
pennit files was not addressed. Previously the Gazette was allowed to
regularly review the air pennit files
under a FO IA request filed in
February .

Packwood dodges expulsion
vote flap by resignilng his seat
By JILL LAWRENCE
day night on CNN's Larry King . ~rly asking J)COPl~ with legisla~vb
Associated Press Writer
Live program, estimated Packwood snterests to bore hiS estranged wtfe;
wASHINGTON - Sen. Bob would remain 30 to 60 days. Du~· and obstructed the commtttee probe
P:!ckwood said after he announced . ing that time Packwood migM ue by alten~g hiS d1anes.
he would resign that "an immense up loose ends, stay on as nom mal
The diane~ matrer was forward weight has been lifted." He might chair~an of th';, Senate Finance ed lo the J~suce De.panmcnt. Comhave been speaking for the entire Commmee. and ~.enamly vote to muree Chainnan M1tch McConnell,
Senate, spared tbe agony of an re[&gt;resent hts stale.
R-Ky., satd the. changes Packwood
expulsion vote and now free to
Glum, red-eyed colleagues made ~she anuctpate&lt;). a subpoena
concenuate on the crush of legisla- praised Packwopd on 1bursday for were cl~arly Illegal and could
tiwe business at hand.
bis loyalty, integrity and legislative cany a pnson sentence..
, The grave sexual and official skills, and some questioned the
Pack~ood bad dented that. he
misconduct allegations against the s~ver,i!Y ?f .tbe judgment ag~inst altered h1s ongmal taped d1arses .
Oregon Republican, festering for ~•m;, 'Il!•s IS a moment for .gnev· He ~cmowledged he altered cop1es
nearly three years. came to rcsolu- m~. satd Sen. John McCam, R- . ofb!s d1ary '!~pes af';"r he gave the
Lion within 24 hours. ·Packwood Aiiz.
..
ongmals to his law7.crs. He sasd the
delivered his tearful resignation
The war'!! noor tnbut.es fr.om ta~~ contamed p~rso.nally.or
address less than a day after vow· Packwood tnttmates, .mcluds?g ]:!Oh,t!cally embarrassmg mforma" ing to fight a unanimous ethics Dole. contrasted dnunaltcall~ w~th uon and he feared they would be
•, panel recommendation that he be the Senate Ethtcs Commtttee bh~· leaked.
. .
expelled.
·
tcring assessment of the senator s . P~ckwood, 62, ~hose m hts resognauon speech to tgnor~ the recent
Just when Packwood would behavior.
actually leave, however, was uncer·
The committee concluded that unpleasantness and d1scuss the
lain.
. he made unwelcome advances hsghhghts o,f, hts 27-ye~ career. He
Senate Majority Leader Bob t~war.d 17 wo~en ;. tned to reduce . talked of fnendshtp s beyond
Dole, R-Kan., interviewed Tburs· hss alunony obhgatsons by omprop- count."

Officials identify teen shooting suspect
Officials now say they know
from .other youths, Ross made up
more about the even!S leading up
tales of his involvement in other
the shooting of a 16-year·old Midcriminal acrs - including one in
dlepon boy last weekend.
which be claimed to have sbot a
Chad Wise was allegedly shol
man in tbe knees, Prosecuting
by another Middleport boy wbo
Attorney John R. Lentes said.
authorities now identify as Thomas
The other boys did not believe
James Ro$S liT, 16, also of Middle·
the stories, prompting Ross to take
other action, he alleged.
port.
Wise was allegedly shot by
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
Ross once in tl1e abdomen witb a . backed up Lentes' interpretation of
.38-caliber handgun. Ross bas sioce
the event.
been charged wilh felonious assault
The shooting wa&lt; not gang- or
in the Meigs County Juvenile
drug·related, Soulsby said . In addition it does not appear to have
Coun.
In an attempt to gain respecl
resulted from a dispute over a girl,

'

as some ~tave speculated, he said.
Lentes claims Ross was
engrossed with movies and music
that glamorize violence.
Another youngster wbo was
allegedly with Ross before the
shooting said .he drank some beer
and watched Menace II Sociery, a
film portraying gang culture, to
motivate himself for the shooting,
Lentes said.
Ross w'as arrested by Meigs
sherifrs deputies shortly afler the
incident
This week, Lenles and Soulsby
(Continued on Page 3)

''

By JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Conservative Republicans are claiming a
breakthrough in their drive to
rewrite the pany' s welfare bill to
deny higher benefits to mothers on
welfare who have more children,
improving i!S prospects for passing
the Senate.
The deal was struck Thursday in
a closed-door meeting of Senate
Republicans, whose differences
over illegitimate binbs helped stall
debate earlier this summer on the
pany's welfare overhaul, its marquee social issue.
Sen. Phil Granun, R-Texas, and
other conservatives had pushed
hard for a family cap - a policy to
end the automatic increases in cash
benefits that mothers on welfare in
most states receive when they .&amp;ive
birth to another child. ,
Gramm said Senate Majority
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., his rival
for the GOP presidential nomin~­
tion, had agreed that single mothers
should be denied "more ·and more
cash ... for having more and more
children on welfare."
Under the compromise, states
would be allowed to decide
whether:to give these families inkind benclirs, such. as voucher.. for
diapers and formula, to care for·
their youngest children. Gramm
said.
Anli-abonion forces bad sought
the vouchers, based on their fears
that ending suppon would encour·
age more abonions.
.•
Gramm· said the bill would
reward states that reduce rates or'
out·of· wcdlock births without
increasing the number of abonions.
. He said the legislation seeks to dis\ mantle the federal welfare bureau ..
cmcy as il shifts programs for the
poor to the sL11es in lump sum paymen!S known a&lt; block ~ranL&lt; :
• Dole was not nearly as specilic,
telling the Senate only, "I think
most of the differences have been
resolved on our side because we' ve
tried to base our bill on three principles: creating a real work requirement, returning authority to the
states and restraining welfare
spending.
"We think these are the princi·
pies that are necessary if we're
going to provide the dramatic
rcfonn, to provide hope and opportunity to the Americans in need."
Gramm said the agreement
improves chances the Senate will
pass welfare reform, possibly by
next Wednesday.
"This is a major breakthrough,"
he said in an interview. Hif we can

bold these provisions on the noor
and prevent amendmenrs that sim·
ply commit us to more welfare, I
think .we' re going to have a very
important bill. ... I think we're
going to pass this bill."

LEAVING SENATE- Oregon Sen. Bob Packwood, left,
appeared Thursday with Senate .Majority Leader B11b Dole at a
fund -raiser In Portland, Ore, after Packwood announced he would
resign his seat in the wake of the Senate Ethics Committee's recommendation that Packwood be expelled. (AP)

Pipe·firm's suit against
commissioners dropped
I

A U.S. Disuict Counjudge Thursday dismissed a lawsuit against
the Meigs County Board of Commissioners.
Welding Inc. of Charleston, W.Va., filed suit against the board
on Aug. 18, alleging that specifications for a water storage tank for
a Leading Creek Conservancy District project unfairly excluded
their product
"Leading Creek wanted a glass·lined water tank." said Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes, who represented the commission.
."They thought their steel tank wl!Sjust as hi gh in quality."
Judge Sandra Beckwith of the U.S. District Court. Southern District, Columbus, dismissed the suit following a relcphone conference Tuesday. Lenles had filed a motion 10 dismi ss.

L.------------------------....1
!
•

Gramm said his dispute witb
Dole on welfare .. is now ovJr"
although one sticking point ·
remains: whether teen-agers who
have children out of wedlock
should be given their own welfare
check, as some conservatives have
demanded.
The negotialions over the family
cap marked the Senate' s second
day of debate on the GOP legislation, which would trim spending on
food stamps and other welfare pro- .
grams by $70 billion over the next
seven years and give states vast
new powers to design and operate ·
their own programs for the poor.
In the forst· vote since the debate
began, th,e Senare rejecled a Demo·
cratic alternative, 54 to 45 , almost
along straight party lines . One
Democrat. Sen . Max Baucu s of
Monlana, rejected his party's bill,
while one Republican, Sen. Frank
Murkowski of Alaska, did not vote .
Even as their own plan was
defeated, Senate Dcmocrars were
united in their attacks on the GOP
legislation.

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