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                  <text>'O hio Lottery

Dodgers,
Angels post
key wins

'&lt;~!Pick

3:

350
Pick 4:

3494
Super Lotto:
3-9-10-16-18-32

Sports, Page 6

Vol. 46, NO. 107 /
Copyright 1995

Kicker:

Low tonight In 50s, mostly

048924

clear. Friday, sunny. Hig.h In MOs.

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, .Thursday, September 28, 1995

Couple sought for questioning

Hartford man, 52, found dead in trailer
By MICHELLE CARTER,
OVP News Staff
POINT PLEASANT - The
Mason County Sheriff's Depart·
menl is searching for a Hartford
couple in connection with a homi·
cide !hat was discovered Wednes·
day.
Timothy WiUiam Gibbs, 36, and
Risa Lynne Sayre Leonard, 32, are

wanted for questioning in the death
of Jack Roush, 52, of Hartford.
Deputy John ·McCoy reported
the sheriffs department was called
at 2:12 p.m. by a neighbor who
reported Roush had not been seen
since Sunday night 'and !hat his
truck was missing . The neighbor
went to Gibbs' uailer, where Roush
and his wife had been staying,

·GOP's pension plan
proposal opposed

looked in the window and saw a
body on the floor . Roush's wife
had been a patient in a Huntington
hospital since last week and was
not home at the time of !he incident.
Mason County Coroner Dr. Breton Morgan said Roush was shot
twice . The fatal shot was to the
right chest area with the second
wound, appeaiing to he a grazing
wound, on !he right shoulder. Mor-

gan said the wounds appeared to be
from a small caliber weapon, shot
from a distance . The body has been
taken to the State Medical Examin·
er in Charleston for an autopsy.
Roush's 1974 Chevrolet truck
was found Thursday at garage in
Point Pleasant, where it had been
abandoned because it had been
wrecked, according to McCoy: The
truck will be processed by authorities.

Deputy C.C. McConihay reponed Gibbs and Leonanl purchased a
1988 Ford Escort station wagon ,
dingy white or gray in color with
dark tint on the hatch, front driver's
and passenger windows. The other
windows are not tinted . The vehicle
has blue interior and a black bra on
the front.
Gibbs is five feet, 11 inches tall,
175 pounds with brown hair and
eyes. He has many tattoos on his

a

\l
1i

'Raid on assets like Jesse James
pale in comparison," Reich says

PAGE EIGHT - FALL CAR CARE EDITION ·

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 27, 1995

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Running On Empty: Low Fuel Levels Cause Fuel Line Problems
Rumford, RI --In !his no-timefor-anything world, most everyone
pushes !he limits. If you'tc amo~g .
!hose pushing !he limit of your gas
gauge and frequently running your
car on empty, you may be doing
your engine serious harm accord-

ing to AlliedSignal's FRAM brand
filtration experts.
"In the winter, motorists seem
to pay closer attention to fuel levels
because they fear that fuel lines

f

, will freeze," says Bob Pond,

AlliedSignal' strainer for filter products.

""However, while the lines

may freeze when a near empty gas
tank allows condensation to form,
!his moisture buildup doesn't cause
problems only in the winter. At all
times, !he presence of too much
water in the fuel system can present
problems."
·
Leaving your gas tank near
empty night after night will cause
excess condensation to buildup and
the inside of your gas tank can

corrode. Rust flakes will accumulate and prematurely clog the fuel
filter, which, given the difficult
access to fuel filters .on most cars,
,
can be a ha.ssle to replace.
While 'lhe fuel filter will re·
move some moisture buildup, if
thereis teo much waterforthe filter
to handle, the fuel injectors and
other components within tbe fpel
·:.... system can become corroded.

And, according to Pnnd, betank topped off or at least more.
!han half full, particularly in the
cause the cause and effect relationship between poor engine perforfall. .(f your fuel filter becomes
clogged before the manufacturer's
mance and water in the fuel system
takes time to develop, it is not enssuggested change interval, then you
ily recognizable. "You could end
niay have a corrosion problem in
up spending ·too much time and , your fuel tank.
money having a technician diag-

AlliedSignal Automotive
Aftermarket is a leader in the North
American replacement parts and
original equipment service markets.
Based in Rumford, RI, the unit
markets and distributes FRAM Iiiters, Bendix brakes and Autolite

electronics.
AlliedSignal is an advanced
manufacturing company serving
customers worldwide with quality
aerospace and automotive products,
chemicals, fibero, plastics and advanced material~

r-----------------;..._____________. ;. ____'T',

WhY Waste Time?

nose the problem."
If you continually run on-:0r
at-near empty, this forces rust or
other particles into the fuel line and
will clog !he fuel filter, causing
poor engine performance.
Fortunately, late model cars
have sophisticated computers that
compensate for problems. If the
fuelli Iter becomes too clogged with
contaminants, fu'el pressure will .
drop and the engine will usually
shut down before more serious damage can occur. When and where the
car stalls out-perhaps ·a deserted
stretch of highway - should be
enough to convince drivers DQJ to
· drive with the gas tank nearly empty.
''Though older cars don't have
a computerto tell the engine to shut
down, you will notice that the car
will (Jecome sluggish and perhaps
. surge now and then." says Pond.
''Either way, the clogged filter must
be replaced, and the ga5 tank will
need to be repaired or replaced."
To avoid these annoying prob·
lems, Pond advises keeping the gas

When It Comes To Auto Financing...
·We Won't Give You The Run-Around!

Bui one thing has not changed; the
smaller engine does not take kindly
to neglect.
E..mple: a four-cyclinder car
with one spark plug misfiring may
require 54% more tiine to acceler-

ate from 25 mph to 55 mph than
when it is running on all four. That
makes a big difference when, loaded
down with passengers and luggage,
yo11 merge with high speed traffic
on an Interstate Highway.
Inlhesametes~aneightcyclinder

car's accelemtion rate dropped 28%
with one misfiring plug.

How To Avoid Being Stuck In ''Pork"

You've been through it before. You
start out wanting a new car... then.
wham! bam! and presto, . you have
bought the car you didn't particularly :·
want at a price you didn't want to
pay. Happens to all of us. We will
simplify things for you. Come in and

Have you ever wondered why releasing pressure on the transmisyou had so much trouble shifting . swn .
out of PARK on ·a steep grade? An
The Car Care Council suggests
aulomatic transmissio'n. when in a si mple procedure lo prevent bePARK position, locks the driving ing jammed in PARK on a grade;
wheels. On a steep grade you'll
I. Du not put it in PARK until,
need more than normal pressure to with foot brake applied, you've
move the shift lever. This is b~o&gt; secured the parking (emergency)
cause the transmission 's purking · brake.

pawl

resists.~ he

vehicle's tendency

2. Before releasing the parking

to roll.
To help iJ stuck sh ifllevCF, on a
very steep grade, the vehicle will

brake, apply the foot brake and
move the shi ft lever to NEUTRAL

or DRIVE.

need ;m uphill push or pull,thcrclly

Oh, say...

..

(Continued from Page 7)

tions from G.E.:
Remove the outer trim for ac-

cess to the adjustment screws. To
raise the beam turn the top adju&lt;trrff,nt screw clock.f.se; Counter
clockwise Lu lower the beum. Turn

the side adjustment screw clockwise to move the beam to the right

..

and counterclockwise to move
to rhe lett

if

Ways and Means Chairman Dill
Archer, R-Texas, derided the Cabinet members' charges as a politically motivated attempt to scare
people. He said the legislation
would require corporations making
withdrawals to leave an ample
cushion of 25 percent more than
needed to meet c;,w,rent liabilities.
Moreover, by removing compa-&lt;~ies'_ fears that their money will be
tied up if they contribute too much,
the proposed change would encourage companies to make larger pen sion contributions or, if they don't
already .offer pensions , to create
plans, he said.
"It's going to mean more workers are going to have retirement
protection than if we don't do tl1is
bill," Archer said.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency has issued a proposed denial of a Marielta company's
plan lo build an infecUous medical waste incinerator in an
Athens County village.
The proposed denial of Environmental Services Inc.'s plan
allows lhe company to request a hearing within 30 days. If a
hearing is nol requested within thai time, lhe denial becomes
final.
The EPA has denied I he company's permit .application to
' build an Incinerator in Coolville based on siting c:riterla In new
legislation adopted by lhe agency. According lo lhe new rules,
an Incinerator's waste handling equipment would have lo be
300 feel from lhe property's boundary lines, and cmild not
located within 1,000 feet of a home or school.
Environmental Services has appealed lhe criteria to the
Environmental Board of Review.

Smaller Engines Not As "Forgiving"
and performance of downsized cars.

al is part of a larger bill, adopted by
the Ways and Means Committee on
Sept. 19, that would reduce the
budget det;icit by $38 billion over
'
seven years.
The provision is expected to
raise $9.5 billion for the govemment because companies would
pay corporate income taxes on
withdrawals !hat would be pennitted at any time and for a~y purpose. Currently, withdrawals are
permitted only if the money is used
for retirees' health benefiL,.

Ohio EPA issues denial
of incinerator proposal

•

Automotive designers have
come a long way with the comfc!n

WASHINGTON (AP) - ·Three
Cabinet secretaries responsible for
!he health of the nation's pension
system oppose Republican legisla·
tion they said would endanger the
retirement security of 13 million
Americans.
"We are going to see raids on
pension assets that will make .the
train robberies during !he days of
Jesse James pale in comparison,"
Labor Secretary Robert Reich said
Wednesday.
Reich serves as chairman of the
Cabinet-leVel board overseeing the
federal Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corp. He and the two other board
members - Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin and Commerce Secretary Ronald Brown_ adopted a
resolution urging Congress to reject
the measure approved last week by
!he House Ways and Means Com·
mittee.
They said it would trigger withdrawal of up to $40 billion fromoension plans in !he next five years
- rwice that removed by companies during !he corporate takeover
frenzy of the 1980s, the pension
agency said.
•
The Republican plan, it said,
potentially affects 22,000 pension
funds covering II million worker
and 2 million retirees. ,
The pension withdrawal propo

Bring each beam into its final
position by turning the adjusting .
screws clockwise so the head lamp

tell us how much you want to pay.
Apply for' a loan for that amount, and
when ifs approved, you're ready to
go shopping . Having the loan
already approved might even help
~·ou get a better deal. It can't hurt to
try.

Yorir Bankfot'*...
Fo Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Company

211 Wesl Second Srreer
Po eo.· ~26
Pomeroy. OH 45 76Q
61 oll9'12. 21l6

will be held against its tension
springs when the operation is (:0111·

pleted.
If your lights continue to be

Route 7
P 0 Bo• JJQ
!uppers Ploons. OH 457U
61416&lt;17 · l1~1

out of adjustment. consult a ser-

vice technician.

Member F,O.f.C.
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-UfriOIIIt

· ~~~~~~~~----------------------------~~--------------------------~

HONORED - Racine's oldest resident, 100year-old Mona Farra, was presented a plaque
and flower arrangement by Kathryn Hart, pres-

Racine's oldest resident, Mona Farra,
observes 1OOth birthday with party
The oldest resident of Racine,
past five years has been her
Mona Farra, whO observed her
daughter-in-law, Betty Farra, the
IOOth birthday on Sept. 21, was -· widow of her son, Floyd "Pete"
honored ·by the Racine Area · Farra.
Community Association (RACO)
Detty came to Racine to help
at a dinner party Tuesday night at
her mother-in-law after she was
S tar Mill Parle
injured i•n aii automobile acci.
On behalf of RACO Mrs .
dent. In that accident the centeFarra was presented a plaque and
narian suffered a broken leg , was
a floral arrangement by Kathryn
on a walker for a time and then
Hart, president. A decorated cake finally had to resort to using a
was served in her honor (allowwheelchair to get around :
ing the dinner.
She said she "likes to go" and
Mrs . Farra, who has spent
that while not being able to walk
most of her life in Racine, has
has slowed her down, it hasn't
lived in the same house on
SlOpped her.
Broadway Street for the past 40
She likes to g(, for rides,
years. Residing with her for the

insurance.

·enjoys ~hopping, and loves to
visit. Watching television and
reading are also favorite pastimes.
As for her health her daughter·
in-law says it's good, "just a little
hard of hearing", that she take s
very little medicine and eats any·
thing she wants. no "worries
about diet."
. Besides Floyd, her deceased.
son, Mrs . Farra has a daughter
and son·in·law, Myra and Curtis
Dodily of Fort Walton Beach,
Fla.; and two sons and daughters.
·in-law, Joe and Winnie of Rome,
N. Y., and Ralph and Josephine
of San Antonio, Texas.

'

Cochran attacks Fuhrman in summation
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Johnnie Cochran Jr. told jurors he has
seen evil, and it has Detective
Mark Fuhrman's fate.
"Mark Fuhrman, is a lying, perjuring, genocidal racist," Cochran
said in a soaring, sermonlike summation in the 0.1. Simpson trial.
"This man is an unspeakable disgrace .... He is sinful to the prosecution.''
Cochran spared no insult in a
clo§ing argumen-t Wednesday that
accused Fuhrman and the Police
Department of framing an innocent
man in a cruel, self-serving "rush

CARPORT COMES DOWN • A carport belonging to Donald
A. McKnight, 1668 Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, carne lurnhllng
down after an aa:ldent Tuesday mornlngt. Pally L. Landacre Lau.
dermlll, 111, of 1667 Lincoln Heights, was backing from her drive.
way, when she lost control of her 1980 Ford LTD. The car then hit
a front support on the carport, bringing the carport on lop of her
80 Fonl LTD. No Injuries were reported. Laudermllt was cited for
faUure to contro~ operating under su.•pension, and failure to have

ident of RACO which ho.•led a celebration for
Mrs. Farra Tuesday night al Star Mill Park.
(l'hoto hy·Charlene Hoentch) .

to judgment."
Ful\rman's festering, racist
vendetta against Simpson, Cochran
contended, began back in 1985,
when the detective responded to a
domestic violence call between
Simpson and then-wife Nicole
Drown Simpson. The ·couple sickened Fuhrman because .it was a
black man married to a white
woman, Cochrnn said.
"From· that moment on, any
time he could get OJ. Simpson, he
would do i~" said Cochran, whose
summation continues today.
The golden opportunity arrived
early the morning of June 13, 1994,
when Fuhrman was called at home
and dispatched to a double-homicide at Ms. Simpson's Brentwood
condo, Cochran suggested. At the
scene were the slashed bodies of
Ms. Simpson and her friend Ronald
Goldman.

"lie knew what he was going to
do on this particular night ,"
Cochran said.
And what he was going to do
was carry a bloody glove from the
crime scene to Simpson's1 house a
few miles away, a house Fuhrman
remembered from_that 1985 call,
Cochran said.
Fuhrman testified he found ·a
glove at Simpson's house that
morning, a glove that appeared still
sticky with blood.
"Why would it be moist and
sticky unless he brought it over
there and planted it !here to try to
make this case?" Cochran asked.
~~And there is a Caucasian hair on
that glove . This man cannot be
trusted . He is central to the prosecution and for them to say he's not
important is untrue and you will
not fall for it."
The proof of Fuhrman· s racist
views was clear, Cochran said,
from the ~1pes played to !he jury,
through the testimony of the
woman who interviewed Fuhrman
on the ta'fles, and through another
woman who was subjected to
Fuhrman's vile mouth. Fuhrman
has since retired.
Cochran also accused other,
unnamed police of taking socks out
of Simpson's hamper during a
search of his house and planting
them at the foot of Simpson's bed.'
Tben, Cochrnn said, police smeared
blood on the socks to incriminate
Simpson. DNA tests found Ms.

Simpson's genetic markers in the
blood.
And, Cochran said, one of the
lead investigators, Detective Philip
Vannatter, has lied from beginning
to end, lying even to a judge to
obtain a search warrant for Simpson's estate.
' 'You arc seeing and you have
seen this code of silence, this cover
up," Cochran tofd jurors. "You
can't trust !his evidence, you can't
trust the messenger. You can't trust
the message .
"O.J. could not, would not, did
not commit these crimes," he
declared, echoing words spoken by
Simpson last week while jurors
were absent.

Di splaying his llail: for theatrics;
Cochtan at one point put on a clark
knitted ski cap to rebuff a prosecu·
. lion suggestion that Simpson wore
a simi lar one as a disguise the night
of the murders.
'
"If I put !his knit cap on, who
am I?" Cochran asked jurors. ''I'm
Johnnie Cochran with a knit cap
on. From two blocks away, 0.1.
Simpson is O.J. Simpson."
Cochran's fiery oration came on
a day of dueling summations.
Earlier, the prosecution wrapped
up the first part of its closing arguments by playing Simpson's
recorded rage and the haunting
pleas of Ms . Simpson on a dramatic 911 ~1pe. The prosecution gets to
offer a rcbut~11 to the defense sum-

mation.

arms and should be consulerea
armed and dangerous, the sheriffs
department said. Leonard, 32, is
five feet , five inches tall, 120
pounds with green eyes and dishwater blonde hair. The duo has not
been seen since Tuesday.
Anyone wirh information on
Gibbs and Leonard is asked to contact the Mason County Sheriff'~
Department aJ675-3810.

State Patrol
opposed to
increase in
speed limit
By KEVIN KELLY,
OV1' News Staff
. Remember, just a scanl22 years
ago, when the speed lim t was 65
mph or higher everywhere'!
Should Congress approve compromise legislation between the
Bouse and Senate this week, Ohio
could be taken back to those
thrilling days of yesteryear when
the states were allowed to set their
own speed limits.
Dut Ohio safety officials don't
find the prospect very thrilling. The
congressional move to give the
speed limit decision to the legislatures has raised concerns that high·
way fatalities, both on interstates
and rural roads, will vault back to
pre·1973levcls.
"From a local standpoint, it's
just a common sense-type of
thing,'' said Lt. Dan Gibson, commander of the State Highway
Patrol's Gallia-Mcigs Post. "The
faster you're going when you
crash, the severity of personal
injury and property &lt;L1mage will be
greater."

Spqeding also accounts for the
highest number of citations the
local pcJst issues per year, Gibson
· said.

The patrol's mission is the prevention of fatal or serious injury
crashes, Gibson said, and during
holiday periods especially, enforcement focuses heavily on having .
drivers obey lhc speed limit.
During those periods, the patrol
also mount s informationa·l campaigns encouraging drivers to slow

down .
"The patrol' s stance. especially
forwhat i1 is set up for, is that it is
opposed to an increase in tl1e speed
limit because speed is a major contributing factor to injury and fatal
crashes," Sgt. John Durn , the
patrol's public infonnalion officer,
said.
Dut at the same time, should ihe
Ohio Legislature get the green light
Continued on page 3

Jobless
claims
down
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
number of American workers filing
first-time claims for jobless benefits unexpectedly lcll by 31,000 last
week to the lowest level in seven
weeks. It was the largest decline in
two months.
The Labor Department said
today that new applications for
unemployment insurance totaled a
seasonally adjusted 335,000, down
from a revised 366,000 a week earlier and the smallest since 332,000
were filed during the week ended
Aug . 5.
Tbe prev.ious Week's total originally was estimated at 365,000.
The 31,000 drop was the biggeSt
since claims fell by 51,000 during
the week ended July 29 . Many analysts had expected a decline of only
5,000.
After bouncing around the
375,000 range from May through
July, the numb er of new claims
began to fall, dropping below
350,000 until a 22,000 increase
during the week ended Sept. 9
pushed the level to 364,000.
Analysts had said the recent lev·
cis rcllcctcd modest job growth.

~.

�•

"Thursday, September 28, 1995

Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OhJo

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

•
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LElTER S OF OPINION arc welcome They should be less 1han 300
words long Allleners arc subject to editing and must be s1gned with name,
address and telephone number. No uns1gned letters will be published. Letters
shou ld be in good taste, addressi ng is sues, not personahties.

Wi II Perot's ego allow
·him to stand aside?
ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Ross Perot's announcement that he is forming a
new (lOiitical party that will field a presidential candidate in 1996 may be
the ultimate ego trip. And 11's one he may be flying solo.
.
Despite the Texas billionaire's protestations of non-candidacy, those
who have worked wiU1 him ami those who have followed biS career see
the pwposed political organization as tailor-made for a second Perot rres-

•

.I Toledo laoo I

Clinton wins by lambasting GOP extremism
America."
Clinton has develored a scrappy
- even Truman esque - wa y of
characterizing C'.OP rosllions, as he

billion in Medicaid cuts over seven
years in a program whose annual
budget now is $89 billion, guamnteeing that mill ions of poor and disabled reople will he denied medi-

Morton Kondracke:

'cal care.

did in endorsing the Senate version
of welfare reform and tltreatenmg a
veto if a House-Senate conference
moves in the House's direction. ·
" If the Congre ss giv es in to
extremist pressure and walks away
from thi s bipartis a n, Ame rican
common ground. they will kill welfare reform,'' said the president.
On the budget, Clilllon's line in
Florida was: "How we decide to
balance the budget will tell us a lot
about what kind of reorle we are,
what our vulues are .... So. tell
Congress to th10w away rhe partisan, extremist iU!!ology and
rhetoric and go to work for America's future ."
The public ha sn't yet fully
bought Clinton's idea that congressional Republicans are ''partisan
extremists," but it"s a line that
Clinton c:m be expected to rerea~
and the Republicans persist in providing him with material 10 pound
the (lOint home.
.
The most ammunition is $182

Republicans are vulnerable to
charges that they are blllh unfair
and ineffective, with House Republicans playing Robin Hood in
reverse while Senate Reruhlicans
slow down the legrslative process.
The net result is a decline in
s uppon for the GOP. According to
an NDC-Wall Street Journal poll,
45 percent of voters approved of
congressional Republican policies
in March, as the "Contract With
Americ-a" was being voted on, and
· 35 percent disapproved. In July, the
score was 41 to 39 rercent. In the
latest poll, 30 percent approve and
58 rercent don't.
Congress' numbers are going
down as Clinton's presidential
prospects are improving. A Los
Angeles Times (lOll found Clinton
would clobber House Speaker
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., 6! percent
to 32 rercenl. He'd beat conservative Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, by
55 to 35 rercent ami Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., by
51 to 45 percent.

..
•
,0 ·

Buchanan said.

Perot used a familiar forum- CNN's "Larry King ):.ive" -for h!s
Monday night announcement. Perot, who received 19 rercent of the pr~st­
dential vote as ;m inderendem in 1992, said he had no plans to run as the
new pany's candidate, hut neither did he rule it out.
"We want world-class reople," he said. "Some weirdo is not going to
get I0 rercem of our votes."
.
It was pure Perot. and to many observers; just the latest example of his
ego at work.
.
.
·' .
Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y .. branded it a publicity stunt to draw the
spotlight away from retired Army Gen. Colin Powell.
"When you see a giantlike Colin Powell come on the scene, you find
Perot in the shadows. not selling any books," Rangel said. "He had to do
something fast and he did it. He's an actor."
Stuart Rothenberg, a Republican who 'publishes a political newsletter,
agrees in part. ·'!think he WiL~ tired of seeing Colin Powell getting all the
ink ami all the hot stones. This is nothing new. He needed his fix of media
Hllcnlioll and celebrity. And he also really wants to be a player."
Whatever Perot's true intentions, his announcement shook both
Democrat' and Republicans and sent them scurrying to figure out what a
Perot candidacy - or the candi&lt;!_acy of a Perot-backed candidate would do to Ute politicallandscare. ·
.
. Altlwugh polls suggested that Perot in 1992 took ~otes away from both
Ropublican President George Bush and Democrat Btll Clmton, they also
A device I sometimes use to get
showed lltat most Perot surponers in 1994 voted Republican.
a
quick
read on where I should
· "Clinton's got to he in the White House with his feet up saying, 'Percome down on a complicated issue
lee!, this is just what I needed,"' said GOP pollster Luntz, suggesting is the Traficantometer.
Perot would hurl the GOP candidate the most in a three-way race.
It's really very simple: I check
· Out at the White House, the devclorment was greeted warily.
the record to see where Rep. James
:omton essentially brushed off questions, noting that he himself was Traficant, D-Ohio, stands on the
co)nmined to many of Perot's goals, such as a balanced budget.
same matter. If U1e loudmouth leg· Ann LewiS, deputy campaign director for Clinton-Gore '96, said, "II islator from Youngstown favors
·w:is inevitable we were going to see more parties and additional candi- something, chances are I will be
dL\les."
against it, once I have studied up
·As to the hypothetical impact of a Perot candidacy, or any other comon the subject. If he opposes it, I
bination, on Clinton's re-election chances, sbe said: "Be careful what you
w(sh for, you m1ght get it. I don't engage in that kind of too-clever will likely fmd it commendable.
The Traficantometer (traf-eeprophecy. I kllnw who my candidate is."
can-TOM-ah-ter) seldom fails.
.Of course, a potenlial nighunare for both Democrats and Republicans
Take the Unabomber manifesto
would be if Perot turned his party over to Powell.
and the qu~stion of whether the
:With Powell's enormous po(lularity and Perot's nationwide organiza- Washington Post and New York
tion, such a candidacy could be a big winner. Powell taps many of the Times should have published it.
same feelings and emotions that Perot did, hut without the baggage.
The Unabomber, as everyone
:l&gt;owell, traveling the country rromoting his book, even fueled such knows by now, is a nut who
speculation Tuesday, telling KTL/o'. Morning News in Los Angeles that he believes that advances in technoloand Perot "L1lk Jmm tune In tune.
gy are strangling the (IIane~ and he
·"We talked over the weekend and he indicated he would be milking · sends mail bombs 10 people he
lhts announcement.'· l1e said.
regards -as "techno-nerds." He has
·Right now, few politic;~ 1malysts expect Perot to be interested in turn- dispatched 16 .deadly packages
ing his orgamzation over to Powell, or for Powell to want to be too close- since 1978, killing three reople and
ly jdentilicd wllh the ecc~~·~•c Te~an.
.
. . .. .
injuring 23. Last April, he sent a
·Still, as Powell said, I II watch and wall and see how th1s miUatJve .letter to U1e Times demanding that
develops and keep my options oren."
it or another widely read publication (lrint a fonhcoming manuscript ·
:EDITOR'S NOTE: Tom Raum covers lhe White House for The in which he would lay out his
ASsociat~d Pnss.
credo.
"People who willfully and

TOO ~tRB~ GbT A TA~T(; Cf T"~lR OON MWICINE

...

Joseph Spear
they deserve it."
In June, the Post and T1mes
received a 56-page paper; not
counting addenda, from the
Unabomber. They had three
months to print it, he sa1d , or he
would "start bUIIdmg our next
bomb."
At the request of the Justice
Department and the FBI. t11e newsrarers (lUblished the mamfesiO Ill
tlte Post on Sept. 19.
Old Rant-and-Rave thought 11
was a stupid idea.
"Sometimes writers labor for
years to get tlteir m:muscripl.s published and never get a chance,"
Traficant thundered. "Out in
America, if you blow up a few people and terrorize a nation, you
become Ernest Hemingway
overnight."
The Traficantometer worked
once again. lnslinciively, I knew
the newsparers were right I only
had to figure out why.
It should be said, hefnre gmng

Out on the campaign trail, Clinton has raised more than $20 million and , including federal matching funds, exrects to raise a total of
$43 million by Feb. !5- none of
which he's likely to have to spend
fighting a serious primary opponent.
Instead, he can spend the
money, as he is already doing on
the trail, to get the message across
to voters of what his presidency is
all about.
As stated succinctly at a Florida
fund-raiser, Sept. 19, Clinton wants
the public to think of him and Vice
President AI Gore as follows:
" They make mistakes, but you've
got to give them one thing.
They've got a clear vision of what
they want America to look like.
They've got new ideas and old values. They are committed to working witlt Democrats and Republicans to find common ground based
on those values. And they're doing
what's right for the next generation, .~ven if it is politically unpopular.
Clinton's "vision" is to make
America " a high opportunity
place" in the 21st century technological economy through education . He's claiming devotion (o
such old-fa~hioned values as "family, community, excelLence,
accountability." He's also taking
credit for "new ideas" such as
reinventing government, national
service and expanded student
lmms.
He's also claiming responsibility for a steady economic recovery,
reductions in the crime and illegitimacy rates, and taking "unpopular" stands on gun control, tobacco
and Haiti. And though he doesn't
claim credit for rrogress on Bosnia,
he gets it in the press.
Clinton's other major argument
is that he, like the Rerublicans,
wants to balance the budget and cut .
health care costs, hut "in a way
that reflects our shared values and
what we owe to each other ... with-·
out cutting edu_cation, without
endangering the environment, without soaking the elderly."
Clinton seems to hope that the
1996 election will pit "common
ground" vs. the Republican "revolution." My guess? Common
ground's a lot more popular.
(Morton Kondracke Is executive editor or Roll Call, the news"
paper or Capitol Hill.)

further, thai the news husiness is

free will. This notion that the pre!IS
itself split oil the question. Some should never cooperate with the
argue, as did Traflcant, that the
law, I believe, is loathsome. Where
papers printed t11e document with a do you draw the line? Should we
gun at their heads. Most of 'the stop rrinting photographs of wantjournalistic dissenters seem to think
ed criminals? When our help is
llte Post and Times ceded control I\feded to solve serious, nonpolitiof their puhlicattOns to the govern- cal crimes, we should give it.
ment. Still others maintain the
3) It is arguable, I think, that the
manuscript had already been Unabomber manifesto was news
excerpted in earlier stories and had and worthy of publication in its
no journalistic value.
own right. Large newsparers pubLet's take these arguments one lish the full text of documents all
at a time:
the time. Ransom notes routinely
I) It is probably true, partially at get published. What's the differleast, Utat tile Post and Times print- ence?
ed the document bec~use they were
I can say with cenainty that the
under duress_ Why does ii anger born ber' s treatise wa' a lot more
some in our profession when edi- interesting than stories about the
tors and reporters act primarily as disaprearing American living
human hcings, secondarily as jour- room, or the vanishing American
nalists? A Justice Department offi- · lawn - both of which were given
cial quotccl by the Washington Post front-page treaonent this summer
put it succinctly: ."Although we in the Post.
don't know if (the Unabomber)
The Traficantometer. Big Jim
will stop if tl1e manuscript is rub- ought to patent himself. ·
lished, the odds are that he will
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
continue to kill if you don't." Will
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
the Unahomber's experience
Asociation.
encourage other lerrorisls to mur(For information on how to
der and maim? I think that's a -communicate electronically with
stretch.
thi'l columnist and others, con2) The newsrarers did not tum
tact America Online hy calling 1over their pages to the government. 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
They agreed to rublish of their own

•

Might Forbes be Willkie?_~_ _ _
.

. ',rr~- :... ~ ,

0 IM6 by NEA, tnc.

t

"If I were you, I would buy that company, focus
on the core business, boost revenues, then maximize shareholder value. •

Before you say "It can't be
done," rememher what Wendell
Willkie d1d in 1940. He was 48
years old, a businessman who had
never run for elected office and
was almost unknown to the American J?Ublic. He won the Republican
nommation for president. He also
played a vital role in moving the
GOP from isolationism to internationalism,
Willkie showed that when the
candidate has a serious idea, the oct
of running for rresident can create
the world's most powerful pulpit,
even if that candidate comes from
outside the political ranks. In our
age of media, that rolitical rulpit
for non-politicians has become
more powerful yet. Consider Je.~se
Jackson, Pat Robertson, Ross
Perot, Pat Buchanan and quite possibly, uh, what's-his-n:une, the fellow on all the magazine covers,
who beats Clinton in the polls by
IO points-· Powell.
Which leads us to Malcolm
"Steve" Forbes Jr., who has
recently announced that he will
seek the Republican nomination for

the presidency. Like Willkie, he is
a 48-ycar-old busincssm:m who h;t'
never run for elected office, and i~
largely unknown to the public. He

Ben Wattenberg

were under allack. The lirst wave
came from the Soviets and from
feuding anti-communist exiles who
sometime~ couldn't ligure oul who
they hated more, the Soviets nr
each other. The second wave came
from congressional and executive
branch opponents, and from competing government broadcast
bureaucracies. Providing direction,
funding and morale for such an
embattled operation took time and
skill. Forbes gave both unstintingly
with quiet strength, seeking no per-

is very rich, and since he has
announced, he has been casually
referred to as "Richie Rich" m•d a
"polo populist " Forget it. Anyone
who thinks that this is a quixotic
effort by a self-funding rich guy on
an ego trip is-dead wrong.
I've known Steve Forbes since sonal aggrandizement. ·"Mr.
1985 when he hccmne chairman of Forbes is in Washington," was Ute
the board of Radio Free secretaiial response so many of us
Europe/Radio Liberty, a mostly got so often from his New York
unsung but imronant weapon in office.
America's Cold War arsenal. I wa&lt;
During much of this time, he
then the vice cbairmmt of that cill- was rresident mtd CEO of Forbes,
zen board . AI its peak, "the Inc. and editor 111 chief of Forbes
Radios" broadcast honest news magazine, the flagship publication
and Jm array of opinions in '18 lan- of a highly profitable and burgeonguages within U1e Soviet Union and ing rublishing empire that carries
into five satellite nations in Eastern more advertising pages than any
Europe, keeping hope alive behind other American magazine, and was
the Iron Cunain.
(a(lpropriately) ranked in 1994 by
During the eight years of Advenising Age as one of "AmeriForbes' chairmanshi(l, the Radios ca's five best magilzines."

'

·~ •

PA.

•

Confused? Check the Traficantometer
knowingly promote economic
growth and technical progress, in
our eyes they are criminals," he
wrote, "and if they get blown ur.

Local briefs-__,

Marjorie J. Banks

Deer/car wreck reported

MICH

,

President Clinton is staging yet
another comeback. As be hits the
1996\ampaign trail. polls indicate
that his popularity is (licking ur
while that of his Repoblican adversaries (Colin Powell excerted)
slumrs.
What' s more, foreign policy is
going his way; he 's raising lots of
camraign money; the Reruhlican
Congress is falling in the public' s
esteem; and Clinton's June advocacy of a balanced budget plan and
modest Medicare cuts - much
criticized at the time - now seems
a shrewd move.
Polls indicate that if Powell
were the Republican candidate for
president, he'd beat Clinton by 8 to
10 poinls. However, Powell Isn' t
yet a candidate. Against declared
Republicans, Clinton is consistently abead, and his approval ratings
in various polls are m or above 50
percent.
..
The current political battle is
helping. As Wh1te House political
chief Harold Ickes rut it at a recent
press briefing, "The budget fight
that is going on now on the Hill
rresents this (administration) with
an opponunity to define where its
core values are and to fight for eaucation, the elderly, and investing in

29

A cc~ -Weather" forecast for daytime condit ions m•d high temperatures

Thursday, September 28, 1995

His Sizable ego may make it difficult for him to resist the urge to be at
the top of the ucket.
·
"He wallis 10 be anointed," said GOP pollster Frank Luntz, who was
Perot's pollster in 1992. But Luntz believes Perot can't ever win the presidency. "He'll be a kingmaker or a king breaker, but never the king."
The conditions Perot set for the candidate of his new pany, basically
fealty to a Perot agenda, seem designed to scare off any other political figure of stature. At least this early in the game.
"No one like Colin Powell or Lowell Weicks.r or Bill Bradley is ~~ing
to buy into that," said Druce Buchanan, a Umvemty of Te~as poht1cal
scientist and longtime Perot watcher.
Only 1f Perot puts his ego in check and separates "his own quirkiness"
from tlte new rarty platform can it have any chance of outliving Pero~

.. &lt;f)"r-·-· -~

Fr iday, Sept.

Page2

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area Deaths--

OHIO Weather

idential run.

Berry's World

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Forbes magazine has a point of
view, and it is most apparent in
Steve's engaging, award-winnfng
and often prescient column. He was
an early proponent of the muchmaligned "supply-side economics." So was Jack Kemr.
When Kemp decided not to run this
year, someone had to carry the banne.' of conservative economic optimasm.
As Forbes uses the running-forpresident podium in the months to
come, we should hear him say that
supply·side deals with more than
cutting taxes, and that it wasn't the
cause of the Reagan-era. deficits.
Forbes rut forth his theme in his
announcement statement: "It's
time to remove the dead weight of
Washington, and let the economy
run free." Forbes endorses sound
money, which means "a return of
the value of the dollar to a fixed
measure, such as gold.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
h•,tilute, Is the host of the weekly
public television program,
"Think Tank."

•

IMa nsf1eld In• I•

INO

~ ~

Youngstown

~

-I1

• IColumbus Iso" I

1:)-

W VA

_ rf7)4~~~~~~

~~~
' ' ' ' " , ,, ,
· ·: ... ...·.;.·......
.:: ---Flumes

Snoih

V1a A s sOCIB/9d Press Gra ph!CSN8/

fee

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

4
Cloudy

10 1995 AcclJWea th er, In c

Today's weather forecast
South·Central Ohio
Today ... Sunny. High near 80.
Winds light and variable.
Tonight.. .Clear. Low in the
lower 50s. Winds light.
Friday ...Sunny with a high in
the lower 80s.
Extended forocast

Saturday ... Partly cloudy. Lows
from the mid to uprer 50s. H.igbs
from the upper 70s to lo_wer 80s.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy. Lows 55
to 60. Highs in the low 80s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Lows near 60.
High from 80 to 85.

Perfect football weather
forecast for Ohio Friday
By The. Associated Press

Ohioans will enjoy a pleasant
early autumn weekend with sunny
skies and temperatures in the 70s,
the National Weather Service said.
Temperatures will be a little
cooler near Lake Erie as a result-of
winds blowing across the water.
A large dome or high pressure
will keep skies clear, allowing the
mercury 10 dip into the low 50s
tonight.
A slow-moving low .pressure
approaching Ohio from the west
likely will not produce any rain
before Monday, forecasters said.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 92 degrees in 1959
while the record low was 32 in
1942. Sunset tonight will be at 7:19
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:25
a.m.
Across the nation
Warm winds from the South
boosted temperatures in the Plain~;.
this morning, while Canadian
winds cooled temperatures in tile
Nortbeast
The warming trend in the Plains,
building over several days, should.
peak today with temperatures

around 85 degrees stretching from
the central DakOias to tl1e southern
Plmns.
In the Northenst, a cold air mass
moving south was cooling tempem·
lures from the Canadian border to
northem New England.
Thunderstorms were possible
today from Arizona to Oklahoma
and north to Colorado, while the
Pacific Nonhwest was expected to
get ·chilly, gusty winds from a
storm system moving out of the
ea,lern Gulf of Alaska. Some rain
and snow in higher altitudes wns
exrected from Oregon to Nonhern
California and in pans of Nevada.
In Florida, seasonable thunderstorms and local rains were expected.
The forecast today called for
temreratures in the 60s and 70s in
New England, the uprer Great
Lakes and the Northwest; 70s in
Ute mid-Atlantic states; 70s and 80~
_in the Midwest; and 80s and 90s in
tl1e Sout11. . ,
The nallon s hot spot Wednesday was Coolidge, Anz., where the
temperature reached 103 degrees.
The cold spot was Ruth, Nev .,
wltere the temperature dropred to
25.

Meigs announcements
Pickup date changed
Trash pickup in Racine will take
place Friday. The delay is due to
truck rroblems.

leton School cafeteria in Syracuse.
Proceeds will benefit children and
adults with developmental disabili·
ties.

Breakfast planned
The Meigs Association for
Retarded Citizens will have a pancake brunch Sunday with serving
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Car-

Smorgasbord planned
A smorgasbord will be held at
the Lottridge Community Center,
Sunday. Serving will be from noon
to 1:30 p.m.

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
'

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
seven calls for a'5istance Wednesday including two transfer calls.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
8:35p.m., Lower Route 7, Marvin Yeouger, Holzer Medical Center.
OLIVETWP
7:40 p.m., state Route 124,
Lydia Chevalier, St. Joseph's Hospital.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Pubh ~ l'led every 11ftcrn oo n. Monday through
Friday. Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Otuo. by 1he
Ohio Vu llc~ Publ1sh1 ng Compuny/MultmJCdla
Inc . Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769. Ph . 991· 1156.
Second cla~s postage pa1d a1 Pomeroy. Ohio.

Mrmber: TI1e A ~soc mt ed Press, and the
Newspaper Asroc1a11on

0~10

POMEROY
9:47 a.m., Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center, Della Norton, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
6:25 p.m., state Route 124, Jean
Teaford, treated at the scene.
TUPPERS PLAlNS
8:41 a.m., state Route 124, John
Hensley, VMH.

~ ubsc ripu on

by mail pernuu ed 1n areas

Voinovich threatens veto

down between Gov. George
Voinovicb and the House over a
bill to let law-abiding Ohioans
·
carry concealed guns.
Voinovicb on Wednesday
threatened to veto the bill that bas
VETERANS MEMORIAL
strang opposition fr~m law
drawn
WEDNESDAY
enforcement
groups. He s:ud there
Admissions: Betty Goodall,
was
no
demonstrated
need for such
Middleport; Della Norton,
legislation.
Pomeroy; Janice Baker, Racine.
"My attitude is that if the need
Discharges: None.
does develop, I'd be willing to look
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
at this again. But at this stage of the
SepL l7 releases - Lena Lam- game there is no compelling reason
ben, Williatn Honan, Thelma Nap- to take the drastic measure that this
per, Roger Ervin, Eva Bloomfield, · legislation is suggesting,''
Justin Gillum, Agusta Hall, Tina Voinovich said at a news conferEllis and Aja Blackwell.
ence.
Sept. l7 birth - Mr._and Mrs.
Arlie Curtis, a daughter, rrom
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hud·
son, a son, from Point Pleasant,
Our customers
W.Va, Mr. and Mrs. Trent Nash, a
appreciate perhaps the
son, from Mason, W.Va. and Mr.
and Mrs. Christopher Smith, a
rarest quality of all:
daughter, from "9inton.
Printed with permission.
COLUMBUS (AP) - OK, so
it's not quite "High Noon." But
the stage has been set for a show-

Hospital news

The Eastland Knot.

State patrol opposes...
truth is, speeding leads to more
deaths than all of the homicides
from last year."
If the legislature adjusts the
limit upward, the patrol will carry out the law, Gibson said.
"The bouom line is, whatever .·
the legislature aprroves , we wilr
enforce it," he said.
While ·a new sreed limit might
be problematic for Ohio, the
National Motorists Association,
based in Dane , Wis., is all for
incre:to;ed speeds .
"We wm1l the sL11e tmffic engineers, as well as the reople in tlmt
stale, the people and U1e politici:ms,
to decide what's safe," spokesmaii
Robert Morrow said.
Morrow said the 15,000-mem ber mganization, whose h:Lo;e is primarily in the western U.S., dis agrees with those who say speed ·.
kills.
•
"That's not true," he said. ''TI1e

safest possible speed is the speed of· ·
traffic, regardless of what the num bers on the signs say."

Shoney's Inc ........................... 11 IlK

Slar Bank .............................. .51 Jill
Wendy lnl'l... _. ....... _. ............. .11 1/4
Worthington lnd .................... 18 J/4

-·-·-

Stock reports are the JO:JO a.m. 1
quotes provided by Advest ol
Gallipolis.

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•

POMEROY

·@~~
Made In
Maine
1

io'rl."Cpclf"t,

Metga County Display Yard lllear
Pomeroy·Mason Bridge
Katie Miller, Manager

l '~A.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

992-2588
VINTON

Inside Meigs County

13 Week ~ ...
.
. . . . .... , . $13.92
26 Week ~ ................................. ...... $47.06
52 Weeks ... .. ............................... $92 56
Ralrs Outsldr Ml!ig!! County
13 Week ~ .. ... .. ........ ,.,,,. ........... 525.61

· The

26 Weeks ,.............
...................... 549.66
.... .
.. .... 596 20

MIDDLEPORT

52 Weeb... ...

breakfast will begin the 1996 fund-raising campaign.
The United Fund for Meigs County is in its third year and !hi.'
year raised more thou $12,000 to help surpon county groups and
organizations. llte campaign chairman for 1996 is Dick Warner,
manager of Krogers in Pomeroy.
For additional information or to make a reservation for the
Thursday breakfast, contact Susan Oliver, president of the United
Fund for Meigs County, at992-2161 .

Stocks

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dai ly ... .... ................. .. .......... 35 Cents

No

·The United Fund for Meigs County will hold it' kickoff event on
Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. The

to

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Roult
One Week
. ...................... $1.7 1
One Monlh . .... . .. .. . ...... ..... ..... .... S7.60
One Year ... .... ...
S91 00

where home earn er serv ice IS avnil able

United Fund kickoff slated

Cuts in Medicare,
Medicaid move forward

POSTMASTER: Send n d d rc ~~ correctJOns to
The D~Ji y.. SeniHJel. Il l Court St . Pomeroy,
Oh10 45769

Subscnbtrs n01 dcsm ng to pny the cnmer may
remit in ad\ance d1rect to The Daily Sentmel
on !l three, s1~ ur l:Z monlh b.'\su Credil will be
given earner each wet:k

No injuries were reponed following a deer/car collision on New
Lima Road in Rutland Township this morning.
Tina L. Lee, 33, Middleport, was westbound when a deer struck
the right side of her 1994 Pontine, causing moderate d:unage.

Continued from page 1
consider raising the limit, the
patrol' views consideration of bills
Oscar H. Smith, 90, Bidwell, died Tuesday, Sept. 26, 1995 in Holzer'
to do so as an opponunity to lobby
Medical Center.
for safer conditions on stale roads,
Born July I, 1905 in Gallia County, son of the late Jerome and Fannie Born added.
Cordell Smith, he was an employee of the Ohio Department of Trans"We have the ability now to
ponation and retired in 1967.
show, through statistics, that actual
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Katherine L. Hill Smith, in people are gening killed on the
1955; two sons, Harold Snillt, in 1984, and Paul Smith, i.n 1995; a daugh- road," he said.
ter, Margaret Figgins, in 1988; and six brothers and three sisters.
Armed with such data, Dorn
Surviving are three sons, Donald Smith of Vinton, William Clyde
said
31 percent of highway fataliSmith of Columbus, and Herben 0. Smith of Groveport; four daughters,
ties
in the U.S. in 1994 were
Marian (Dayton) Briggs of Gallipolis, Catherine M. Smith of Cincinnati,
by speeding. While Ohio's
caused
and Erma (lames) Hogan and Carol (Giles) Borden, both of Vinton; a
19.3
percent
rate in the san)e catestepson, Edward (Prudence) White of Bidwell;. and 17 grandchildren, !4
gory
is
below
the national average,
great-grandchildren, three great-great-grandchtldren, two stepgrandchtlit
is
the
state's
leading cause of
dren and a step-great-grandchild.
highway
deaths,
he
added. Crashes
Services will be 11 ra.m. Friday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis. Burial will be in the Providence Buck caused by failure to yield are the
second-highest causative factor at
Ridge Cemetery. Friends may call at the charel from 7-9 (l.m. lltursday.
16.8 rercent.
Education m1d enforcement have
been successful in reducing deaths
and injuries caused by driving
under the influence and failure to
use safety belt•, Born said, but an
emvhasis is needed on convincing
drivers not to speed.
The 1995 Labor Day weekend
WASHiNGTON (AP)- Witb Republicans In firm comsaw 24 reople killed in Ohio, an
mand the Senate Finance Committee seems poised to bless a
increase over 1994. But of that
massl~e deficit reduction hill tbat prunes nearly a half-trillion
total, Born said only six deaths
dollars from Medk:are and Medicaid, the government's health
occurred on state or federal highcare programs for the elderly and poor.
ways.
I·
"I know this Is going to pass because tbls Is a partisan, politi"After our troopers give out a
cal thing," Sen. Carol Mosley-Braun, D·~ll-, said Wednesduy
citation, the most frequent comill~
.
ment heard is, 'why aren't you out
( Her comment came shortly he(ore the GOP·controlled panel,
fighting crimeT" Borit said. "The
on an 11-9 vole, brushed aside a Democratic eiTorllo scale back
the Republican-proposed changes In Medicare and cancel a proposed tax cuL
The Democrats' defeat marked the first time the politically
Am Ele rower ......................-.35 J/4
sensitive Medicare measure has come to a lest vote In a commitAkzo __. ...... __.__. ..................... __..60 1/tl
tee In either the House or Senate. It showed that even RepubliAshland 011 ........................... .32 7/tl
cans who are skeptical about the lax cuts are willing to close
AT&amp;T.......... --. ...............................66
ronks behind the seven·year budget-balancing hillBank One............................... .3S 7111
" I've never heen for these tax cuts, but that has nothing to
Hob Evans ..__......................--... 17 5/8
Champion Ind .....................-..lll/4
do wilb trying to recover some costs," Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I.,
Charming Shop ........................4 J/4
said.
City Holdlng ....... __. .......................lS
President Clinton attacked the measure that he's expected to
Federal Mogul .................... __. .t9 1/tl
veto.
.
Goodyear
T &amp; R ..................... ...... .39
"Their "proposal to double the premiums, double the
K-mart .................................... l4 112
deductibles slop' giving Medicare to anybody under 67 years
Lands End .............................. 15 3/4
old, to rals; three times as much as II takes to hail out the trust '
Llmlled Jnc.-........................... 18 7/8
fund "has,nothlng to do with saving Medicare," he sold at a dinMulllmedla Inc ......................43 J/8
People's ....................................... .14
ner or the Hispanic Congressional Caucus.
Ohio Valley Uank ........................ .36
"II Is wrong, Ills not necessary and we should not do it."
One Valley ............................. .32 J/4
Rockwell .............................. 46 Sl/8
Robbin.&lt; &amp; Myen ...................29 J/4
Royal Dulch.......................... llt 7/8

Oscar H. Smith

KY

Showers T-storms Ra1n

Marjorie Joan Smith Banks, 64, R~tland: died.Tuesday, Sept. 26, 1995,
from injwies received in an automobile acadent m Jackson.
Born Sept 11, I 931, in Rutland. daughter or the late Satnuel and Lillie
Nelson Smith she attended the Rutland Olurcb of the Nazarene, was an
inderendeot truck driver and a member of the Teamsters Union.
.
Survivors include three sons, Gerald Eugene Rupe of Mount Sterhng,
David Ray Rupe of Columbus and Steven Keith Rupe of De!aware, Ohio;
a daughter, Patricia Ann Dingus of Columbus; 11 grandchildren and 11
great-grandchildren. ·
.
Also surviving are three brothers, Raymond Smtih of Pomeroy, Ronald
Smith of Middleport and Charles Smith of RuUand; three sisters, Betty
Schneemann, Mona Anderoni and Yvonne Whittington. all of Middlepon;
a special friend, Bill, and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by a brother, William Smith, and a sister,
Wanda Smith.
Services will be held Saturday, 11 a.m. at the RuUand Church of the
Nazarene with the Rev_ Lloyd Grinun officiating. Burial will follow in
Miles Cemetery, Rutland.
.
Friends may call Friday from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. at Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland.

SHOE PLACE

Gallla County lllllplay Yard

992-5627

155 Main St.
Jay I Joe Moore,- Managers

388-8603

Kenneth McCulloUgh, R. Ph-

Charleo RH!Io, fl. Ph.

PRESCRIPTION
E. Main

PH. 992-2955
Pomoroy, Oh.
'1118

Ronald Hanning, R. Ph_ •
Mon. lhru Sol 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 o.m.lo 4:00p.m.

�•

Sports

•

The Daily Sentinel
Page4

Thursday, September 28, 1995
Thursday, September 28, 1995

Meet the Marauders

Meigs to entertain Alexander Friday
quarterback as a freshman, be
switched to wilback, where he has
started and rushed for more than
1,000 yards in his sophomore and
junior seasons.
The Spartans also return quartcrhack Lance Rolston, a 5-foot-11,
167-pound sophomore who has
completed 14 of 44 passes on the
season for 183 yards. Chad Jarvis
es have all gone· down lO tl1e wire . has pulled in five passes for 109
Alexander opened the season wiU1 yards and two touchdowns. Ross
a 22-14 win over Zane Tmce. TI1e h:L' caught four for 35 yards.
Spartans then dropped a 14-7 con"Alexander we feel is a good
test to Belpre and 22-7 decision to football team," Marauder head
Tuscarawas Central CaUJOlic and coach Mike Chancey said. "They
last week a 20-14 game to Nel - lost a couple of games that they
could have won. They have one of
sonville- York.
Last week's loss was a tough the best if not U1e best running back
one for the Spart,ans to take. we will face all year in Ross. They
Ale&lt;ander was 41 seconds away also have a young quarterback
from winning its flfst-ever contest (Rolston) that will he a good o.ne.
over the Buckeyes and was forced They are well coached and it will
to punt from its own end zone. The be a tough game for us."
Spartan punter couldn't find the
Alexander i~ cmched by Dave
handle on the snap from center, and Boston Jr., a former NelsonvilleU1e ll uckeye.s recovered in the end York all-stater and Ohio University
zooe for a touchdown to tum what defensive back who is in his sevwould have been a 14-12 loss into enth year as head coach. ".Meigs is
a 20-14 win.
an outstanding football team,"
This week's game will feature Boston said. "Williams and Cletwo of the area's premier running land (Cass) are outs~1nding running
backs in Alexander's Mall Ross backs, and Hanson (Brent) is a
and Matt Williams of Meigs. Ross, · good qu:U1erback.''
a si&lt;-foot, 180~pound senior, W&lt;is
Williams, a six-foot, 175-pound
the !locking Division's player of sophomore, is having an outstandthe year in 1994 when be rushed ing year for the Marauders. lie
for 1,107 yards. After starting at leads Uie entire area in rushing with

I

662 yards in 92 carries (7.2 yards). caught four for 113 yards and CleIn last years 43-8 win over Alexan- land four for 45 yards. Hanson was
der_ Williams rushing for 216 yards si&lt; of 10 last year at Alexander for
in only 13 carries for an average of 126 ~ards :md lwo touchdowns.
Meigs is led on 'defense by
over 16 years a carry. ·
Cleland has carries 40 times for linebackersCleland and Parsons.
302 yards for an average of 7.6 Cleland leads the Marauders with
yards a carry, while Jayson Parsons 35 tackles, while Parsons has 33.
Tackle Adam Barrett and comerhas carries 12 times for 102 yards.
Meigs also features the area's back Israel Grimm have 21 each.
second leading passer and leading Grimm was injured in last week's
receiver in-quanerback Brent.llan- win over Waha!lla. The injury is
son and wide receiver Paul Pullins. not as serious as first thought and
Hanson bas completed 25 of 48 for he could be ready for action on Fri392 yards and Pullins has pulled in day.
Kick-off for Friday's homecom14 for 214 yards and a pair of
touchdowns. Mike Marshall has .ing game is 7:30p.m.

'

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ROBERT QUALLS
JAYSON PARSONS
Juniors Robert Qualls and jay.sun !'arsons are members of the
1995 Meigs Marauder football team_ Qualls is a 5-11, 165-pound tall· .•
back, end and safety. I'arson.&lt; is· a 5-111, 190-pound fullback and
linebacker.

;'
y

By RJ,JSTY MO..LER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Since Notre Dame already competes with Big Ten schools off the
field for recruits and on the field in
games, Ohio State coach John
Cooper suggested Tuesday that the
Fighting Irish should join the conference.
"If I was the Big Ten people,
I'd say (to Notre Dame), 'Hey, if
you want to play us, come· in the
conference,"' Cooper said at his
weekly news conference. "Why
play them? They're on NBC television, they recruit from coast to
coast, they get thei,r pick of top
players -at our expense."
The seventh-ranked Buckeyes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)•11be beginning of Eddie George's
career at Ohio State wasn't the ftrst
; time he bad been away from his
Philadelphia home.
The tailback bad been homesick
bcrore when his mother sent bim

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play witb games at si•th-ranked
Penn State and at Wisconsin. They
also must play three other teams
receiving points in the Associated
Press poll before they close Ute regular season at Michigan, currently
ranked eighth.
"People that subscribe to the
theory you can't get your football
team up more than three times a
year- I mean, why play Notre
Dame?'' Cooper said. ''Why play
them when you've got Michigan,
Penn State and Wisconsin and all
the other tough teams in the
league?"
At the same time, Cooper was
criticai of Notre D:une players who

0

-· Michigan to start Griese
.
at quarterback against Miami

ers I think were quuletl as saying
it's just another g:une for them . I

hope it's not another g:une for our
players . It's not another g:une for
me, I can tell you U1at right now."
lie added, "1 can't speak for
Notre Darne's players, but how can
it not be a big g:une for them? If
this isn't a big game, what big
games do they play?''

.

off to a military school to tum his
life around.
When Donna George saw the
first signs of misdirection if not
rebellion in her young son's life,
sheknewwhathadtobedone.
"He cried and cried, and he
whined to his grandmother, 'Don't

let· her. send m~ away!"' Ms.
George remembers.
She banished George from his
comfortable life - surrounded by
friends and admired by fellow athletes at his Philadelphia high
school -to Fork Union Military
Academy in Virginia.

Today, George is U1e star tailback at seventh-ranke&lt;J Ohio Swte,
where Howard "Hopalong" Cassady, Vic Janowicz and Lcs Horvath established the tradition of
great runners, and where Archie
Griffin followed in their cleats,
winning two Heisman Trophies.

George's journey can be traced
to the day .his mother called the .
military prep school. He. wasn't
involved in drugs, gangs, guns,
alcohol or breaking the law, she,
said.
lie just started to change and
Ms. George- a single mother
~~~--~~--------~~------~~ who worked as a night auendam
and part-time model -didn't like
what he was becoming.
"He was always a great kid ,
always very disciplined," sl1e said.
"But a' be got older, maybe 14
years old, he started growing up
. PAIINI
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and peer pressure set in. He started .
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"I noticed changes in his ~tti­
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tude
toward education, toward
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playing street hockey
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the time. It started getting out of
Eaolem ..,____ , ___....·-·-·· 2 2 .500 47 5I
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Her son admitted his attitude
0
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school,"
Eddie George said. "I
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didn't want to study. I wasn't
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had turned around after being sent
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She hoped Fork Union would be
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"it was tough love. It took me
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iqg my baby away," she said.
She dropped him off in August..
He grew homesick, she grew beansick.
.
But before parents weekend in ·
October, George called to say he .
would have a SUfllrise for her.
"1 went that day to his platoon.
Plntoon C, and e&lt;pected him to be
lined up with the oU1cr cadets," she .
said. "lie wasn't U1cre. 1 got worried. I was running along , Lrying co .
find him in all these s1rangc faces ...
Then I looked up and saw him , ·
holding the flag in his hands, stand- .
ing in format_ion. Tears carne to my
eyes :u1d my heart about burst."
George never liked Fork Union, .
but believed it was a primer for
what was ahead in his life.
"I. think the discipline has really:;
hclpeil me a lot," George said. "I(helped me focus on my goals and· :
made me disciplined not to do cer-:lain things like not party as much,
to sit down and study, to get U1ings
done when they have to get done."
Ohio State coach John Cooper
never knew the other Eddie. He .
only sees the one who wins every .
sprint in rractice, who outworks.
everyone on Ute tcwn, who never
can do enough.
So far lhis year, George, a
senior, ha&lt; run for 311 yards in two
games - both over ranked opponents. He rushed for 1,442 yards
last sca~on. ·
"He's played the best two
g:uncs he's played here," Cooper
said. "It's just an example that his
hard work is s~'Uling to pay off for
· him. Nobody has worked harder for
his success than Eddie George."

BLIC NODCE!

a quarterback is in a much different
situation," Carr said.
Griese, the son of former Miami
Dolphins quanerback Bob Griese,
is 2-oF-3 for 42 yards in three
games this season : He finished out
Michigan's 23-13 win over Boston
College on Sept. 16 after Dreisbach
suffered a mild concussion.

--Sports briefs--

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had said playing Ohio State was.
just another game.
"I'm looking forward to thegame . It is not just another game
around here, regardless of what
some might tell you," he said.
"Some Notre Dame football play-

THE LARGEST INVENTORY Of CHEVRDUTS, OlOSMOBilES, PONTIACS, BUICKS, GfOS, AND CONVERSION VANS
IN TOM PEDEN HISmRY HAS m GO!

the .area in,receiving

with 14 catches for 214 yards and two touchdowns. (Sentinel photo by
Dave Borris-)
-

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Michigan quanerback Scott Dreisbach bad a pin inserted into the
thumb of his throwing hand and
will be in a cast for about four
weeks, coach Lloyd Carr said.
The No.8 Wolverines (4-0) will
start backup quarterback Brian
Griese against Miami of Ohio (3-1)
on Saturday.
.
.
Dreisbach tore ligaments 11nd
sprained the thumb during practice
· Tuesday, when he hit a helmet during a passing drill. Dreisbach
underwent surgery Wednesday at
tbe University of Michigan Hospital, Carr said.
"If Scott was a lineman, be
would have his hand in a cast. and
could probably play this week, but

18
14 355
33 342

4

3

l..ofJM--------·

PULLINS SCORES - Meigs wide receiver Paul Pullins slips In
the end zone after pulling in a Brent Honsrm puss for a touchdown In

311

5

340
321

5Ift C..., NllloYCIIL..... --.....
PU ,.,_
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would not play a non-conference
road game," he said. "To me, it ·
doesn't make any sense to ~o
somewhere else - to Boston College, Syracuse or three times to
Pinsburgh. like we have since I've
coached here."
. Cooper said the rigors of the Big
Ten season should be enough.
"With the addition of Penn
State in this league; why play
another. top-five or top-10 te:un in
the country?" l!e said.
ll1is year Ohio State (3-0) has
already beaten two top-25 teams '
(lloston College and Washington)
in addition to Pin. After hosting the
Irish, the Buckeyes open Big Ten

ders

SMt

win nver Wahama. Pullins

pair of $25 tickets on the 40-yard
line was going for S I,()()() in Monday morning's papers ..,--Cooper
expressed dissatisfaction with having to play yet another quality
opponent.
"I'd rather play three victories
at home," Cooper said.
The Buckeyes get Notre D:une
before a capacity crowd of around
95,000 Saturday at Ohio Stadium,
but must travel to South Bend ne&lt;t
year. Cooper said he isn't in favor
of going on the road unless it's for
a ll ig Ten game.
Cooper said playing a high-caliber program like Notre Dame usually means ttading home games.
"If I was making a sched&lt;1le, I

Stint at military ~cho· ol credited for changing future OSU _s tar

tro:=.-

35~7

and 15th-ranked Irish have enough
to play for Sarurday after not meeting in 59 years, but if Notre Dame
joined the Big Ten, they also could
be playing for a piece of the Rose
Bowl.
Ohio State is the third member
of the Big Ten that Notre Dame (31), an independent, has played this
season. The Irish lost to Northwestern 17-15 and beat Purdue 35·28.
Notre Dame bad opened the season
with four straight Big Ten opponents in eacb of the previous four
years. Notre Dame competes with
Big Ten schools off the field for
recruits, too.
While most of Ohio w in a frenzy over Saturday's matchup - a

According to George's mother,
By RUSTY MlLLER

When You Make
Any Purchase
(Including Sale Priced
Items!) This Friday &amp;
Saturday, You'll Get. .. .

last week's

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Cooper challenges Notre Dame to become Big Ten member

For homecoming,

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Tbe Meigs Marauders will be
going for their founh consecutive
vic10ry Friday evening when they
host the Alexander Spanans in the
Marauders' annual 'homecoming
contest.
The Spanans head into the contest with a 1-3 mark, but those loss-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-,'
-'

-'

I

'••'

.
.

in the ~I for lr.'ls during tl1is s•lrl

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TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 •372·2844
344·5947. 422·0756

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

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�Thursday, September 28, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Dodgers beat Rockies 7-4 to lead NL West; Reds lose two .
By The Associated Press
The Los Angeles Dodgers did
what they had to do, taking two of
three from the Colorado Roclcies.
''It was our most important
game of llle season. A lot more
important to us lllan the Roclcies,"
Eric Karros said Wednesday night
after the Dodgers beat llle Roclcies
7-4. "This game meant two games
- we were either tied with them or
we were down two games. That's a
pretty important deficit to make
up."

.

Now, the Dodgers close the season with three games at San Diego.
while Colorado plays host to San
Francisco in a four-game series.
Karros homered and scored
three times, and Tim Wallach hit
two sacrifice flies as Los Angeles
reclaimed a half-game lead in tl)e
NL West.
"We pretty much have to win
the last four games.'· said Co l-

orado's Dante Bichette, who hit his
40th homer, a three-run drive that
tied the score in the third. ''It was
an intense game and we knew they
were going to battle. They jumped
on us and got a couple of runs
early."
.
Houston lost to Pittsburgh 6-3 in
II innings, giving the Rockies a
one-game lead over the Astros in
llle wild-card race. Rich Aude hit a
two-run single in the Uth inning
after Todd Jones walked the bases
loaded.
"This has got to be one of the
toughest things I've had to face,"
Jones said. "The team was strug ·
gling and I didn ' t do my job."
At Los Angeles, Kevin Tapani
(4-2), who had one decision in his
previous five appearances, gave up
three runs and seven hits in six
innings.
.
"Our guys really got up for this
game because they knew how bad

we needed it," Dodgers manager said. •'I just put the bat out and got
Tommy lasorda said.
a piece of it Fonunately it fell in
Todd .Worrell got six outs for for a base hit."
his 32nd save in 36 chances. Loser
Dan Miceli (4-4) pitched two
Kevin Ritz (11-11) allowed five innings and Sltllck out four . Jeff
runs and nine bits in six innings.
McCurry pitched llle II th for his
In olller NL games. Atlanta beat first major league save.
Philadelphia 6-0, Chicago beat St.
Braves 6, Ph Hiles 0
Louis 5-3, San Diego beat San
Greg Maddux (192) won his
Francisco 4-2, New York swept major league-leading 19th game,
Cincinnati 5-4 and 9-2 and Florida allowing three hits in six shutout
beat Montrea19-3.
innings to lead visiting Atlanta. lie
Pirates 6, Astros 3
finished the season with a 1.63
With one out in llle ·nth at lllc ERA, just above his 1.56 ERA of
Astrodome, Jones (6-4) walked AI 1994. Maddux is the first pitcher
Martin, who stole second. Jay Bell with an ERA under 1. 80 in consecgrounded out. Jones intentionally utive seasons since Walter Johnson
walked Orlando Merced and in 1918-19. Loser Michael Mimbs
walked Jeff King, loading the (9-7) gave up five runs· and eight
bases. Aude lllen singled off Mike bits in 4 113 innings.
Henneman, and Carlos Garcia folCubs 5, Cardinals J
lowed will! an RBI single.
Kevin Foster (12-11) struck out
"I faced Henneman last night a career-high 13 at Wrigley Field
and he threw me a split-finger, and as Chicago won its sixth straight.
I figured he'd do it again," Aude ·. Luis Gonzalez, Jose Hernandez and

Ozzie Timmons bad solo homers attack with a double and two singles. John Smiley (12-5) allowed
for llle Cubs.
Gonzalez homered on the third five runs and II hits in six iMings
pitch by Allen Watson (7-9) and for the visiting Reds.
In the second game, Bill Spiers
Hernandez homered two pitches
singled three times and drove in
later.
three runs. Reid Cornelius (3-7)
Padres 4, Giants 2
Fernando Valenzuela (8- 3) won allowed allowed two runs and five
his sixth straight decision, allowing hits in six innings.
Dave Burba (10-4) gave up four
one run and fo.u r hits in 6 113
innings at Candlestick Park. He runs and six hits in five innings.
also singled in a run.
Marlins 9, Expos 3
Jeff Conine became the first
Shawn Estes (0-3) allowed four
runs and five hits in seven innings. Florida player to reach 100 RBJs in
Trevor Hoffman got lllree outs for a season when he drove in four
runs at Joe Robbie Stadium.
his 30th save.
Mets S, Reds 4
Pat Rapp (14-7) allowed three
Mets 9, Reds 2
hits in seven scoreless innings,
New York swept a doublehead- winning his ninth consecutive deci·
er, winning the opener as Robert sion since Aug. 6 and increasing
Person (1-0) got his first big-league his club-record shutout string to 24
victory. He allowed one run and innings.
three hits in seven innings and
Gabe White (1-2) , making his
struck out seven.
first start since June 18, 1994, gave
Alex Ochoa led the Mets' 13-hit . up six runs in 2. 213 innings.

Thursday, September 28, 1995

'

Oakland. They are 2-7 against the
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
A's this season.
AP Sports Wriler
New York has the day off today
The head-to-head battles are
over and the AL West and the before opening a three-game series
wild-card race remain undecided. at Toronto on Friday night. Two
.Jt'll take four days of late-Septem- victories by the Yankees will
ber scoreboard watching to settle clinch at least a tie for the wildcard spot.
the playoff picture.
"We don't want to go into SunThat's the situation today
because the California Angels won day in a must-win situation,"
:their biggest game of the season pitcher David Cone said. ''It would
:wednesday night, a 2-0 decision be nice to settle Ibis thing before
Sunday and set up llle rotation for
' ·over the Seattle Mariners.
California's victory cut Seattle's the playoffs."
In other AL games Wednesday,
:Jead in the West to two games and
·kept the Angels I 112 games behind Texas downed Oakland 11-2,
the Yankees in the wild-card race. Cleveland beat Minnesota 9-6,
.New York beat Milwaukee 6-3 ear- Detroit beat Boston 7-5 and Baltimore defeated Toronto 7-0.
lier Wednesday.
· Angels 2, Mariners 0
Tile Mariners will finish the regSeattle entered llle game with a
ular season with four games at
seven-game
winning steak, a nineTexas. They are 8-1 against the
Rangers this year. The Angels fin- game home victory string and an
. ish with four home games agamst · opponunity to clinch a tie for llle

AL West title.
Chuck Finley (14-12) wouldn't
letlllem.
Finley, pitching on lllree days'
rest because Mark Langston has
bicep tendinitis in his left arm, got
his first win since Aug . 24. He
struck out four and allowed only
three hits in 6 113 innings before a
loud crowd of 50,212 at the Kingdome.
"I knew we needed a good win,
but I really didn't go out there with
llle thought llle whole organization
was riding on my· back," Finley
said.
·
California won for only llle second time in an eight-game road trip
and just the lOth time in 37 games.
"We didn't want to give lllem a
cbance to celebrate in front of us,"
manager Marcel Lachemann said.
"The guys didn't want that to happen and they didn'tlet it happen.' '·

ca·valiers trade Price to Bullets;
Williams expected to play center
CI,.EVELAND (AP) --: The
Cleveland Cavaliers, having traded
all-s1ar guard Mark Price to Washington, must tum their attention to
. finding a replacement for ailing
centerBradDaugherly.
Daugherty bad back surgery last
. year but won't be back in the Cavs'
lineup for af least a half season,
general mana·ger Wayne Embry
said Wednesday.
The most Jilcely candidate to m1
in for Daugherty is John "Hot
Rod" Williams who played center
last season but 'prefers to play forward.
Asked whether Williams would
be ready to play center for a half
season, coach Mike Fratello said
yes, indeed.
"Hot Rod is a team guy,"
Fratello said. ••Hot Rod will do
what you ask him to do for the salce
of the basketball team. He· s as
good a guy and as good a baskethall player-person combined you're
going to find as far as the total
package of giving what it takes to
win."
Facing at least half a season
witlj.out Daugherty and a need to
add some youth to an aging roster,
llle Cavaliers felt they had to deal
Price, Embry said.
"But we are not going to con-

cede anything," Embry said. "We
have a core of young players now
lllat we intend"to build with."
Price, the NBA's career leader
in free throw accuracy, was traded
to the Bullets in exchange for a
f"lfSt-round draft pick in 1996:
Price told sister television stations WUAB and WOIO in Cleveland that the trade surprised him.
"I was like, wow! I told my
wife and we lcind of sat there and
like: well, now what do we do,"
Price said. "There are so many
_mixed emotio~s. We real\~ loved
our tune !Jere m Cleveiand.
He sa1d the Cavaliers had conside~ed what..was best f~r the
team s future.· Obv10ust~, I m not
m those pl~s, so they tned to do
son;&gt;~thmg, Price srud.
I JUSt want to make sure everybody knows how much I apprecmte
llle fans and the people wht&gt; suppor1ed myself and my family while
we've bee~. here. It's been a great
nme years.
.
The Bullets, whtch had the
worst record in the Eastern· Conference last season; had been seekmg
a high•prnflle, veteran point guard
to run 1ts talented hut young fro~t­
court, wh1ch mcludes rook1e
Rasheed Wallace, second-year
player Iowan Howard and thJrd -

year pro Chris Webber.
Price. 31, a six:footer from
Georgia Tech who was Dallas' No.
2 pick in ihe 1986 draft, was
acquired by the Cavaliers later \bat
same day in exchange for a secondround pick in the 1989 draft
Embry, Cavaliers owner Gordon
Gund and Fratello praised Price as
a "truly great player."
''He's llle kind if player I would
pay to see," Fratello said. "That's
because people can identify with
him. You see him on the street in a
T-shin and jeans and he's a little
guy like you and me. So you think
you could play as good as he does
- until you see what he doos on
the basketball coon."
One of the NBA's best perimeter shooters, Price is coming off a
season in which he was hampered
by injuries. He broke a bone in his
right wrist Jan. 14;.-a supportive.
screw was insened surgically Jan.
25.
He missed 27 games because of
that injury and another seven
games for olller minor injuries.
· Price was ·not at the news conference. But Embry said Price
understood the Cavaliers' need to
trade him and was calm about it
after what Embry described as an
initial shock.

pitched the ninth for his 35th save.
Yankees 6, Buwers 3
At Milwaukee, Cone pitched on
lllree days' rest for the fmt time in
four years and won for llle ninth
time in 13 starts since he was traded to New York.
The game turned New York's
way in the -sixth inning when Ger-

106 N. 2nd, Middleport
992·2635

EWING FUNERAL HOME
108 Mulberry Ave.· Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2121
ESTABLISHED IN 1913

Dignity and Service
Always
OFFERING PRE-NEED
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ARRANGEMENTS
.
Ben H. Ewi
-Director
.

the first few games and the ground
game was limited despite the presence of three fanner Pro Bowl running backs.
Even after a 345-yard offensive
performance in llle Kansas City
win, llle Browns rank 22nd in the
NFL in rushing and total offense.
The Browns rimk near llle bottom in the AFC in total yards ahead of only the Buffalo Bills.
their opponent on Monday night,
and the expansion Jacksonville
Jaguars.
But Crosby things the team's 31 record and first-place position in
the AFC Central Division are llle
stats lllat matter most.
"Unless you've stood down
there in lllose same pair of shoes,
then you don't know what's going
on," he said.

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PARK ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611 .

O:lkland

(Onlivnon 9-.S) at tolifornin

(Abbollll .· ll),li :O.Spm

O'Neill

~o

Iwn

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulrrn DlvlMkm

lr

f:'l!!toa ...............
)lew York ............ ..76
la11imore ...............61
l)etruit ,..................60
'Joronto ..................S6

5~ ~

6S

.539

73

.482

HI

.426
.397

IS

Crnlral Dlvhllon
t-a.EVELAND ... 96 44 .686
~llW aty ...... .!...69· 11 .493
Chicaao .:.. ............. 66

74

~llw1Nkee ......., ..... 64

76
85

Mione50le .............. S5

.471
.457
.393

Wutun DlviMion
Sr-ettle .................... 76 64 .S4l
Cali[ornia .............. 74 66 .S29
Tea• .....................12 68 .S 14
Oakland .................67 73 .419

1il1

tl'f
as
27.5

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30
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41

2
4

9

:w-clloched division title

Wednesday's scores
New York 6, Milwaukee 3
Detroit 7, BOIIOD s
BalllrT'ICIRI7, Toronto 0
Te~• 11. Oakland 2
Caliromia 2, Seattle 0
Olicaaco 6, Kan.w City o
CLEVELAND 9, Minnesota 6

Thursday's games
CLEVElAND (D . Marlinn. l l-S) at
l :IS p.m
Boston (Ciemen5 9·S) at Milwaukee
(ficanlan 4-6). 8:05p.m.
Cllica&amp;O (~lvarez 8·10) at KansM City
(0ubiCDII·l4), 8:05p.m
¥~nne,ota (Rodriguez S·7),

Seotrle {R. Johnson 16·2) al Tnu
(PDvlik 10-9), 8:05p.m.
Oakland (lohnl -' ·2 ) at California
(lanpton IS·6), IO:OS p.m.

Friday's games
Seattle (Boalo 10-8) at Te.w (Wilt 3-4),1:05 p.m.
Detroit (lira 9·1l) at Baltimore
(Brown 9·9), 1:05 p.m.
MinneiOla (Parra I·S) at Chiei~O (An·
duj• 2·1}. 8:05p.m.
New York (Pettine 11·9) aJ Toronto
(leiter 11·10), II:OS p.m.
Bostoa (llanaon 14·5) at Milwaukee
(Bones 10·11), 8:05p.m.
Kansu City (Appier IS·9) at ClEVE·
LAND (Hershillt:l' JS..ti) , R:OS p.m.

»:

l-AUanla .......... ...90
Ptliladelphia .. ........68
New York ........... ..66
Aorida ............ ... ...65
Monlrral ........... ....65

L &amp;1.

51

7J
75
75
75

.638
.412

468
.464
464

!ill

Basketball

22

BwrkrlhWI Auoctatlon
CLEVELAND CAV AUERS: Traded
Mark Price, ~uard, to the Washinaton

24
24.5
24.5

Ctnlr..! Olvl•lon

x-ONCINNATI....82 58 .S86
ltnuJton .. ...... ..... ...74

Nallon~tl

Bullets for a 1996 first·round &lt;lr:lf\ tholce.
HOUSTON ROCKFfS: Signed Pete
Chilcutt, forwarD, to a multiyear o;ontr.KI.
"MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Signed
Shawn R-e5pert. guard , to a three· ye-ar

66

529

8

Chicago ........ ......... ?\ 69
St. Lnui5 .............. .60 110
Pitiiburgh .............. 57 R4

.507

ll
22
2S.S

contrnt:t.

.S

contract.

429
.404

' Wto5trrn Dlvho:lon
Ula Anselc~o ......... 76 tiS .SJ9
Colorll.do ................ 7S "6S 1· .S:u&gt;
San Dirao ..........,/69 72 .4K9
Sa11 FranciiiCO ... .....65 75 .464
J·clindled divi1ion title

7
10.5

PHILA.DELPIDA 76ERS: Sir.ned Jerry Stackhouse, gu:u-d, to e tlwee·year conlrxl.
SACRAMENTO KINGS : Re-•ianed
Michael" Smith. Corward, to ·a multiyear
·

WASIUNGTON BULLETS: Sir:ned
Rash«d Wallace, forward-center, to a
lluee-year con.tract.

Wednesday's scores
OJicap&gt; S, St. Louia J
Pittsbuf"Jh 6, Houston l (II)
San Diego 4, San Francisco 2
All:mta 6, Philadelphia 0
DH: New YorkS, CINCINNATI 4;
New Yort: 9, CINCINNATI 2
Aorida 9, Montreo~l 3
L.o~ Angell'.!17, Colorado 4
Todt~y's

games

Houston (Wall 3-1) at Chic~ao
(Dullinr:er 12·8), 2:20p.m.
·
CINCINNATI (Sthoureli: 17-7) at
Montreal (P. M:Jrtinez 14-9), 7:3.5 p.m
Sen Frencisco (Brewioeton ~-4) at
Colorado (Rekar 4·:5), 9:0:5 p.m.

Friday's games
Houston at Chicatto, 3:20p .m.
San Franciscu a1. Colorado, 8:0S: p.m.
Philadelphia 11 Florida, 8:0S p.m .

CINCINNATI at Montreal, &amp;:OS p.m.
A_tlantsat New York: 8:05p.m.
Pittsburgh at St. lours, 8:0S p.m .
Los Angeles at San Ditao. II :05 p.m.

Transactions
Baseball
N .. t~al Luaue
'
FLORIDA MARUNS: Purchait'd the
COnlracts Of Jeff Alkire, pitcher; aod lJou&amp;
O'Neill, outl'ielder, from St Paul or the
Northern Lea11ue. A~~ignW Alkire and

Foolball
Nallonal FoOtbaiiiA-,ue
DENVER BRONCOS: Walwed Rod
Bernstinc:, runnina blck, Sianed Glenn
Cadret..lifiC'baclr:er.
'
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Slanttl Joe
Wood, kicker, from the practice 1quad.
JACKSONVIu.E JAGUARS: Pl:~c:ttl ,
Monty Grow, J:~fety, on injured r~erve .
Clair~d Ben Colernat~, oCCensive au:~rO .
on waiven from the Atitone Cardinals.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS : Released
Tim Watson, u.fcty. Sianed Mlll"lin Bayless, safety.

"'""""·
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNINO: Returned Colin Cloutier, center, to Brandon

Auburn
Boston College
Bowling Grean
Cenjrar Michigan

40
22
23
31

• Kentucky
• Mlchlaan State
• TempTe
• Akron

• Cincinnati

'2,

Colorado
• Colorado State
• Duke
• East Carolina
• Florida
• Georgia
(Thurs.)
• Geo!'Qia Tech
Hawa1i
• Iowa
• Kansas State
l.S.U.
Louisiana Tech
• Memphis
• Michigan
• Minnesota
• Mississippi State
• Nebraska
• North Carolina
• North Carolina State
• Nonhwestem
• Ohio State
• Penn State
• Pittsburgh
• Purdue
Rice
• San Diego State (Thurs.)
• San Jose State
• Southern California
• Southern Mississippi
Syracuse
• Tennessee
Te11as
Texas Tech

26
23
24
27
36
26
24
29
37
34
28

• U.C.LA.
Utah

38
34

• Virginia
Washington
.
Western Michigan

45

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Towson
Troy State
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Cornell
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9

Ouqu81ne ·

,••

PralrMI View A&amp;M

27

Forfl"lam

26
23
28

.,.

39

DaviCison

~hune-Cookm11n

Florida A&amp;M

• Idaho

State

1

Soulh~m Illinois

Kno~llle

41

27

• Maine

24

ColUmbia
• Tannesaee-Chatranooga
\Central Florida
St. Francia (Pa.)

33

"

. 24

35

30

Atabeme - Birmin~ham

29

Cai· Da11ls
Chail&amp;ilon Southam
• Austin Peay

24

' L•hlci&gt;

"

27
36

Samford

Montana Slate

Bucknell

29
2B

11

• Cal Stale Sacram&amp;nlo
Wofford

"

' Colgate
Massachusetts .

28
26

Southam
Tennessee State
• Milllsslppt Valley
rr~no1s Siata

22
21

34

~J

24
20

52
44
31
20
21

,.
24
27

Central Connecticut Slate

•

TeJ~as

Southern Utah

• HumboiCit State
Tennessee Tach
Monrnoutn IN J )

Western Kentuck~

San O~ego
' Buffalo U.
Eastern Washington
Furman
Nor1hern Iowa
• Virp1nla M1111ary

• Union (N.Y.)

W.1t Che5ter
lock Haven
L~lng

Shippensburg
Lebaoon Vatlfl)l

Kutztown

M,H8fsville
• Montetair State
• Moravian
PlyrnoorM Stare

• Cheyney

30

American lnlarnaMnat
·Clarion
Soultwm Connecticut State
Delaware Valle)l

50
26
29

Ren11elaer

' Slippery Rock

. """""r••

F1~r

• St. lawrence
• W&amp;Shlngloo &amp; Ja"arson
Wesl&amp;fn MarytanCI

Westminster

• Widener
• Wllhs

20
21
17
JO
J1

,
'
",.
"
","
'

.

15
21
7

19

Bethany (W.V )

0

' Muhlenberg

Lindenwood

45

Junlala

34

AIDriQ1"1t

7

"

Other Games- Midwest

.

• A.l~a
• Ashland
• Auguslena (Ill.)
Aurora ,
Baker

35

IIHnOis Benedictine

21

Nonhwood
ll1lnol1 Wesleyan

25
2S

Balctw1n-Watlaca

'Bethany (Kan.)

39
17

CoOt-ado Cotleg~
• Defiance

""

Central M1UOIKI State
• Coe

25
2S

,.

oeo"""

Earl'lam

• Easl Cantr&amp;l QltlahornA

• Emporia State
• F.vangel

Grand Valley State
Hastings
Hillsdale
• Lawrence
• loras

,
Mid-America Nazarene
• Missouri Southern Sl jle
Missouri '.Iaiiey
~ Missouri Westem State

• MomingsiCie
• Mount Union
• ~ebraska · Kearney

32

20

••
•

Panl"1andle Slate
Washbutn

17

27
12

• Peru State

tO
3

Grlnne~

Simpson

' Culver•Slockton
Mluour i·Aolla

"
'

14

10
12
10

Sterlin~

13

30

' Alabama A&amp;M

14
15

10
22

' · St. Joseph's

17

' Nebraska Wesleyan
MusklnQ'!m

8

17

(Kan)

8

' Northea!t M1ssourl Slate

"

• Anda~&amp;on

19
12
10

' Carson -Newman
Canrre
• Concord

13

,.•

10
21
9

2~

' Elizabelh C1 t~ Slele
Emory end Henry
Fairmont Stare
· Fe"um
Fon valley suue

29

22

27
23

31

Gardner-Webb

7
15

24
· .26
20

' Hampden-Sydney

• t&lt;entucky Wesleyan

"

Lenoir· Rhyne

13

23

'MarsH1II
North Al&amp;bamll
· AanCiolph-Macon

7

21
14

2t

42
19

Sa11annah State

'

20

• Union (Kyl

7

13
10

20

•

19
17
12

2S

Winston ·Salem

28
25

7

• Cal lutheran
• Cal Stale Chico

14

Chadron State
Ha~s Slate

26

28

New Me•ico H1g1"1lands

24
33

• Soull"1ern Dragon
' Western 0!-agon
Western State
• Whlllier

20

16
17

12

THE HARMON NFL

13
24

10
17

Newporl News
• t&lt;entuckv State
• Wingate

20

"
,'

17
0

Bridgewater (Va )
BlacKburn '

• Elon

22

Nellllbtlrry
• U1
aopPi College

12

ton&amp;lee

12

13
10

21

•

22
27
25

JJ

20

21

RAWUNGHOAT}~

Fisher Funeral Home
Bruce Fisher - Direc1or
MIDDLEoPORT

James R. Acree Jr. Director

992-5141

26
20

17
15

,

Other Games - Far West
25
Azusa Paclllc
27
Saloma Slate

Fort

• Peei!1c Lutheran
Redlands
• Simon Fraser

10
28

,.'

21

la· vame

17

16
B

38

Va~sla Slata

' Weal Alabama
• w~sl Ge01g~

16
7
12

13
20

CataWba
. • Sewanee
West VIrginia Tech
Central Oklahoma
Nonh Carolir1a C&amp;ntral
• Millsaps
• West Vuglnia State

Wsh

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Installation
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10

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TRANE

15
7

Morris Brown
•

22
40
16

21

' Ea&amp;l Taus Slate

T

CloutS
'Gracelend
• McPherson
' St. Francis (Ill.)

31

HEATING AND COOLING

19

South Da~ta Slate
Augustana (S.D.)

29

Alban)l State tGa.)
Arkansas Teen

WARNER

T

Nabruka-Omaha
John Calrotl
Northwestern Ok.lohoma

MlehiQan Tech

W•:r,:e Stale (Mich.)

Pomeroy, Ohio

13
10

Jeweu

""27 51. State
Sl. Ambrose
Wr enberg
' t&lt;en)IO(l
"
Other Games- Soulh &amp; Southwest

15
9

992-3671

12

Soutl"1weal BBpli&amp;l

Bethel

ANDERSON'S

19

,.

23

• Saginaw 'Velle)l State
• Swth Dakota

• Kansas Weslayan
OIIYet (Mich.)

' Wooster

Will !.:~ m

we have the Serta

you want In the size
you need at a price
you'll like.

T
14

• lndllnapoh

"

Slate
Rose-Hutman

14

"27

25

• Ottawa
Pittsburg

13

• N0!1hwtst Miuourl State
lake Forest

•

I :&gt;V

p~

B

28

31
3S
29
31

Stat~

"•

M•nodlst
' Otterbein
Friends

4B

..d

19

• Hopo

• Central

Bfitedittlne
• Ferri! State

10
23

.

6

• Principle

"
41
"
"27
"

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY,
II nr~,U~•

15

33
43
35
30

Second, Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2136

.. , w~
••
J,,.•f

6

' Uasnchusetts- low~ll
• Woratstar Tach
Cal~ornia ·(Pa 1
Ithaca
Allrtd
Hoban

52

W.

221

20
10

34

27
3.3
34

BANK

10
19

John• Hooklfls

14

Northwast1m (rowa)
• OhiO Northern

17
14
12
19
14

• Libeny

• M~leb!Jry

35

• uu-c.w. Post

"
""
20
"
17

Stockport State

38

N01thern Michigan

,.
20
21
"

• Mansfield

27

• GettysburQ
• Indiana u:ra .)
• King's (P1.)

' Nof.lh Dakota

B
7
6

BOWdoin

23

21
25
37

•' Ed1nboto
" FDU-Madiaon

• North Dakota

19

32

36
t8

12

13

NorfOlk State
• Soul1"1east Mi&amp;sourl State

• Amherst
Bloomsburg
• Bullalo Stale
Co by
Dickinson
• East Slroudsbur~

• StJohn

FARMERS

Other Games - Eaot

' Pomona·Pi1zer
' Colorado Mines
Central Washonglon
• Clar&amp;mont·M -S
Puoat Sound
W1flamaua
leWIS S. ClerK
• Adams State
Menlo

13
7
7

,."
10
20

21

10
10
20

(row's Family Restaurant

FORE~AST

228 WEST MAIN
992-5432

Sunday and Monday, Oct. 1-2

Wheel Horse
TRACTORS and
RIDING MOWERS

THE NEW GOLD STANDARD IN
CHICKEN TASTE

17

' Mssa State

. ," For1 lMwis

(Sunday)
DALLAS, ..............•... 34
**WASHINGTON 16
The Cowboys held the Redskins to two touchdowns in their two games in 1994. while scoring eight themselves,
•
winning 34-7. Washington's Oashes of inspired offense won ' t be enough.
DENVER ................... 20
**SEATILE •......... I?
This divisional series has been much closer re&lt;lently: The .Broncos have won five straight from the Sea hawks,
but Seattle"s sloppy play was the difference in last year's 16-9 and 17-10 losses.
·
·
.
**HOUSTON .•.••....... IS
JACKSPNVILLE 12
A month ago the Oilers spoiled the Jaguars' home debut with a not too exciting 10-3 victory. It looks like
Houston and Jacksonville may have the basement of the AFC Central all to themselves.
**INDIANAPOLIS .. 26
ST. LOUIS ............. I9
The lasttitne these two teams met, in Los Angeles in '89, the Rams won 31-17. St. Louis got off to a fast start,
hut we don'tthink it will last--especially against the Colts" running game.
CHESTER, OHIO
KANSAS CITY ...•.... 24
•• ARIZONA ......•. 20
985-3301 or 985-3330
Though they may be less productive on offense than usual against the Cardinals' defense, the Chiefs will find a
-~=~~~~--::'----~~---1way to win. They haven't played since '86, when the Cardinals beat K.C. 23-14.
MlAMI ...................... 32
**CINCINNATI .... 1S .
Since the last Bengals victory over the Dolphins; in '77. Miami has won seven in a row, includin g last year's
historic first meeting between father-and-son coaches, Don and Dave Shula, 23-7.
NEW ENGLAND ..... 31
** ATLANTA ........ 28
This could be a wild one. matching teams that live by the pass but don "t defend well again.st it. After opening
against Cleveland, Miami and S. F., N.E. had a week off and should be sharper.
. OAKLAND ....•.......... 29
**N. Y. JETS
The Raiders have won their last.three games with the Jets. most recently 24-20 in '93. N.Y. would be better off
if this game were in Oakland, a continent away from the sniping New York media.
PHILADELPHIA ..... 27
**NEW ORLEANS 23
Not only do they have a more well-rounded offense, but the Eagles should be able to contain the Saints' strong
passing game. Two years ago,the·lasttime they met, Philadelphia won 37-26.
Mason • Point Pleasant • New Haven
.. PITTSBURGH ..... 30
SAN DIEG0•......... 20
Member FDIC
After a come-from-behind 37-34 win over thesteelers on· the last week of last season, the Chargers beat them
again in the AFC title game. 17-13. It doesn'tlook like they ' ll meet there again.
**SAN FRANCISCO 35
N.Y. GIANTS •....... I4
The 49ers march steadily onward, while the Giants stumble around looking for some way to ignite their attack.
S.F and N.Y. haven't butted heads since a 44-3 49ers ro~t in the '93 pl~yoffs.
,
TAMPA BA\'.•.....•..... 17
**CAROLINA ...... 10
The Panthers shouldnt expect any expansion sympathy from the Buccaneers. who needed a season and a half to
I get their first win in'77. Carolina's chances aren't going to gel much better.
(Monday)
**CLEVELAND ...... 28
BUFFAL0 ...•......... 24
STIHI.. •.
This series, led by the Browns, 7-3, hasn' t been renewed since the Bills pounded Cleveland 42-0 in '90. The
Browns are not only better, they've won more often on Monday nights than Buffalo.
(Open date: Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, Minnesota)

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Alcorn Stale
Nortnweatern Stete (La. I

..

26
65

• Montana
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Murray State
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• Pennsy111ania

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21

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Brigham Young
Navy
we~ Virgil'lia
Mississippi
Alabama
Maryland
• Nevada-Las Vegas
New Mexico Slate
Northam Illinois
• South Carolina
Tulsa
LouiS\Iille
Miami (Ohio)
Arkansas State
Northeast Louisiana
washington State
Ohio
Clemson
Indiana
Notre Dame
Wlsconsln
Virginia Tech
Ban State
• Army
Nevada
Utah State
Arizona Stale
Tulane
• Rutgers
Oklahoma State
• Southern Methodist
• Baylor
Fresno Slate
• Texas-EI Paso
Wake Forest
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• Kent

Drake
• Eastam Illinois

31

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35
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• Jacksonville State
James Madison

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South Carolina State

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22

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MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

When The Time Comes
See Us For Your 1996
Graduation
Announcements.

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255 Mill St. Middleport
992-3345

Your local .

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• Vanderbilt

• Delaware State
East~rn Kentucil.y

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PITTSBURGH STEELERS' Rc·

Nalionallloc-hrlAaeue
FLORIDA PAWI'IIERS: Sent Sle"e
Washburn and Alexei Kuduhov, ccnlerl,
to Carolina of the Americu Hockey
League.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS : Re-li&amp;nttl
Scou Niedermayer, de[enseman, and
Stephane Rieber, forward, to mulli yeer

24

Diil 11ware

99 Mill St.

JlJfled LaMonte Coleman, fulllr.ack, 1o the
praciice &amp;qUad.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS: Pl~~eod
Jim Lachey, tackle, on the Injured reserve
lill . ClaLmed Phil Yeboah·Kodie,
linebacker, on waivcn from the Denver
BronCOI .

Al1c.ansas

• oor,oo

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4X4

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Connecticut
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• Arizona

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• Appalachian State
• Arkanus ·Pine Bluff
' Boiie State

Green. managrr, fo a one-yrar contract

Major leagues

THE HARMON FORECAST

Sat., Sept. 30- Major Colleges - Oiv. 1-A

Major Colleges- Olv. 1-AA

Scoreboard
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FURNITURE, JEWELRY
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aid Williams hit a two-out fly ball
to left-center with the bases loaded.
David Hulse collided with Darryl
Hamilton and the ball fell to llle
ground, allowing three runs to
score for a 4-0 lead.
Randy Velarde hit a two-run
homer in llle eighth for a 6-1lead.

City Chiefs 35-17 on Sunday but
Crosby was still steamed over criticism of Cleveland's offensive performance in a 14-7 win at Houston
on Sepl 10. Some of the criticism
came from players.
Browns' left tackle Tony Jones,
a co-captain on the offense, questioned Crosby's play-calling in llle
Houston game.
'
Jones backed off .the comments
llle followjng day, saying he had
mad.e them out of frustration
because the Browns didn'i whip
the ovennatched Oilers.
But Jones' comment reflected a
feeling among some fans that the
Browns had showed little continuity on offense.
The team's newly a~uired $17
million receiver, Andre Rison,
wasn't involved in the offense in

Football '95
Catch All The
Excitement!

INGELS

Crosby says Browns' record needs
more emphasis than offensive stats
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Cleveland Browns offensive coordinalor
Steve Crosby says his critics
should focus on llle team's winning
record inslead of its sometimes
lackluster offensive statistics.
"Everybody tried to butcher me,
to run me out of Cleveland after llle
Houston game, and I've yet to figure out what I did wrong," Crosby
said.
"I mean, we won _llle game. I
have a problem will! (the criticism)
- I really do. If we had lost, I'd
have understood the bellyachin¥.
But it seems to me around here, it s
more important to look good and
lose than it is to win.
"If that's the case, then the
whole city of Cleveland has its priorities out of order in that area.''
The Browns beat the Kansas

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Angels blank Mariners 2~0 to reduce hosts' lead in AL West ·
The Angels scored both llleir
runs in the opening inning against
Tim Belcher (10-11). Tony Phillips
scored on Tim Salmon's bloop single to right and Salmon scored
from first on Chili Davis' double.
Troy Percival got out of a twoon, one-out jilin in the sevenIll with
two strikeouts, and Lee Smith

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Taxes and title fee not included.

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'

•1

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Page

8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 28,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By MELODY ROBERTS
The Lohg Boltom Community
Association will have a bake and
rummnge sale Oct. 5 and 6 at the
communit y huihJing. 1\ wide vari·
ety of iterns will he availahle.
Ruhy Brewer and Janie Fitch

Two Meigs County natives, Joe
Young and Guido Girolami, celebrated the 50th anniversary of the
meeting of the 651h Division of the
Am erican Army and the Rus'lian
7th Fallschirmjagcr Garde Division
at Enos River ncar Erlauf, Austria.
in May of this year.
The two men told the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club of their

Megan Danielle Tripp and
Amber Nicole Tripp. daughters of
Rodney and Stacy Trip, recently
celebrated their fourth birthd:iys at
. tlleir home in Chester. A Lion King
theme was carried out and the
group·enjoyed a hayride.
Attending were Alvin :md Barbara Tripp and Mike and Becky
Newell, grandparents; Bred and
Bertha Smith and Bo and Betty
Rothgeb, great-grandparents;
Andrea Hudson. Dorothy Harvey,
Todd , Kelly and Ryan Tripp.
Cheryl Swisher.: Susan and Jason
Pullins: Rian :md "Rochelle Davis,
Lori. Ryan and Alex Durke, Jayne,
Dakota and Baylee Collins,
Leighann anti Austin King, Nancy
and Carrie Morrisey, Debbie,
Adam, and Abbie Cheval icr, Decky
and Justin Cotterill, KHthryn and1
Virgil WimJon, Diana Windon,

1995

went tn th~ M rCoy~ Moorc Fu neml

Home in Gallipolis last week Ill
pay respects to Wilma Wmnslcy,
mother of U1c late Phyllis Larkins.
Alta Dallard is recuperating ol
home ami h:1s hecn released from

home healih c;u·c services_She and
her hushand llarlan's· nephew ,
Buddy Miller, who resides nearhy,
recently had liver surgery at the
Mayo Clinic.
EUROPEAN VISIT - .Joe
Young, a member of the Mid·
dleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club, spoke on his May visit
In the 50th anniversary
reunion or ,the me.ling .of the
Russian and American Forces
in the area where he fought in
World War II.
of the church who have served
meals over the years, and to Eldred
Parsons, member. A guest of the
club was Caroline Magne, t11 e
Rotary exchange student. She will
speak to the club at a program to be
arranged later.

June Oriflin is a patient at St.
Joseph's llospital.
Lauren Cumming~. daughter of
Matt and Ginger llayman Cum mings, rcccmly wns honort.'tl with a
binhday party.
Robert and freda Larkins have
been vacationing iu Tennessee
'around the Dollywood and Grand
Ole Opry area_
Mrs. Elizabeth BartllC and family were visited recently by Mr. and
Mrs _ Junior Dartne and family of
Columbus.
Eu£enc Erlcwine is now a resident of the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabil ita! ion Cen ter.

Society scrapbookPOST FOOTBALL PARTY
An aftcr-the-fuolball game party
will be held Friday night at God's
Connection Youth Center at 106
West Main Street, Pomeroy. The
party will extend until midnight.
Pizza, snacks, drinks and partying
in a Christian atmosphere is provided, according to Dee M. R.1dcr,
volunteer youth director. The center is a part of the United Methodist
Cooperative Parish in Meigs County .
HERB FEST
As a part of the Sternwheel Fes-

tival an herb fest will be held in the
Court Street mini-park Saturday,
Oct. 7. ll crhs , herhal breads and
crafts will he ·displayed and sold.
Senior citizens will he making and .
selling apple hutter.

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CORRECI'ION
Eric Datey attended the recent
birthday party honoring Alfred Zeigler, son of William and Nancy
Zeigler, Sumner Road in Pomeroy.
His name w::Lo.; incorrectly spelled in
a story about the party_

Required Serv-U
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614·742-2193
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Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

DAYS
CAR WASH
Complete
Detailing
128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4081
Week Day 8:00.5:00
Open Saturday
9:00.3:00

pu bUshed as a free service to
non·prurit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not

designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
a.., prinh!d as space permits and
cannot be guar.a nteed to run a
specific number of days.
THURSDAY
POMEROY _____: Pomeroy Group·
of Alcoholics Anonymous, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry
Avenue .

MlDDLEPORT - Preceptor
Beta n·eta meeting Thursday. 7
p.m. at the Ohio River Bear Co. in
Middlcpon.
MIDDLEPORT- Local 17 ,
OAPSE, 7 p.m. Thursday at the
Meigs Junior High School.
REEDSVILLE- Riverview

Garden Club meeting Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at home of Ruth Ann
Balderson. Program by Delores
Frank with slides of England trip. ,
TUPPERS PLAJNS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at post home. Dues arc due.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. al post holl\C.
DEXTER - Meigs County
Churches of Christ, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the Dexter Church of
:Christ. Bradford Church to have
devotions.
\ .
POMEROY - U.S. Coast
Guard Auxiliary meeting Thursday,
7 p.m. al Carpenters' Hall. All welcome.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Red Brush

SPECIAL

TliE REC ROOM
PIZZA • ARCADE
138 N. 2nd, Middleport
(Across from Johnson's VIdeo)

15" LARGE

IN STOCK

992-6344
Dine-In or Carry-Out
9122.11

mo.

Final2 Days

Sharon Kathyren Wright celebrated her frrst birthday Sept 15 a1
the home of her grandfather, Mike
Wright
Attending was her mother,
Tammy Wright; Mike and Lynn
. Wright; Jason and Kristen Wright;
Jean Wright: Ben, Sandy, Jessica
and Wesley Wright; Becky and
Kelly Anderson; special friend
Cunis Dalton; Rochelle Gloeckner;
Caleb Shuler; and Corrie Darst.
A Minnie and Mickey Mouse
theme was observed with a special
Minnie Mouse birthday cake.

JLcquisitions
:Fine Jewefry
• Fine Jewelry
• Repair Available
91

• Financing Available

Mill Street

Middleport
992-6250

Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.
Everyone
Welcome

614-992-5183

STO·A-WAY
STORAGE
304·882·2996
Comparabl~ Prices
&amp; Sizes ""'' mo.

The following applications
andlor verified complaints
were received and the
following draft, proposed,
or final actions were Issued,
by the Ohio Environmental

Protection Agency (OEPA)
last week.
"Actions"
Include the adoption,
modification, or revocation
of orders (other than
emergency · orders); the
Issuance, _ denial,
modification or revocation
of llcen$es, ·permits, leases,
variances, or certificates;
and the approval or

specUicatlons.
" Draft
Actions"
are written
statements of the director
of
, Environmental
Protection's (Director's)
Intent with respect to the
lsauance, denial, etc. of a
permit, license" order, etc.
Interested persons may
submit written comments or

request a public meeting
regarding draft actions.

Comments or public
meeting requests must be

submlned within 30 days of

notice of the draft action.
"Proposed Actions" are
written statements of the
Director's
intent with
. respect to the issuance,
denial ,
modification,
revocation, or renewal of a
permit, license, or variance.
Written comments and
raquest.s for a public.

meeting

~·oposed

regarding a
action may be

Public Notice
submined within 30 days of
notice of the proposed
action .
An adjudication
hearing may be held on a
proposed action if a hearing
request or objection is

Public Notice
Review, 236 Eat
Street,
Room

Town
300,

Public Notice
and Savings Company

reserves the right to rejecl
Columbus, Ohio 43215. A any or all bids submitted.
copy of the appea! must be
Further,
the
above
served on the Director collateral will be sold In the
within 3 days alter filing the · condition it is in, w·lth no ·

received by the OEPA appeal with the EQR.
OKpress or Implied
within 30 days of Issuance · Final approval of plans warranties given.
of the proposed action. · and apeclficallona
For Further lnlortnallon,
Written comments, requests Tuppers Plains - Cheater contact Mike Kloos at 992for public _meetings, and Water Dlstrl&lt;;t
2t36.
.
adjudicat·ion
hearing Reedsville, OH, Issue date (9) 27, 28, 29 3TC
reqi,Jests must be sent to " 09/15195
Sentinel
Hearing Clerk,
Ohio This final action not
Environmental Protection pr~ceded by proposed .
Classifieds
Agency, P.O. Box 1049, act1on and Ia appealable to
Columbus, Ohio 432t6·1049 EBR. Peach Fork Water
992-2156
(Telephone: 614-644-2129). Main Extension. Tuppers
"Final Act,ions" are actions Plains • Chester' Water
Happy Ad
of the Director which are District. ·
effective upon issuance or a (9) 28 1TC

I~

'

stated effective date.
Pursuant to Ohio Revised

Code Section 3745,04, a
final

action

appealed

may

to

.•

"Porsches"
88 944 , White , 65,1
5 sp.
I '"'en1thino. right frnrotl
damage, very clean
)$465C .OO 0 .8 .0. oartsl
930 Turbo,
I w/bl:ack interior· 26,
bumper, hn.nnl
rig ht front fende
mage
$26,000
8 .0 . Parts available.
914-6 6 cylinder 2.
L C.I.S. 916 flares , 911

Public Notice

be

the

PUBLIC NOTICE
Review (EBR) by a person
NOTICE Ia hereby given
who was a party to a that
on
Saturday,
proceeding belore the September 30th, 1995 at
Director by filing an appeal 10:00 a.m., a public oale wilt
within 30 days of notice of be held at 211 West Second,
Environmental Board of

the final action. Pursuant to Pomeroy, Ohio, lo sell for
cash
the
following
collateral:
Issuing,
denying.
1988 Ford Ranger PU f'er
modifying, revoklrig. or 1FTBR10T7JUC01788
renewing a permit, license,
1995 Gao Tracker l'er
or Variance which Is not 2CNBJ1869S6903189
preceded by a proposed
The · Farmers Bank and
action, mey b• appealed to Savings Company, Pomeroy
the EBR by llllng an appeal Ohio, reserves the right to

Ohio Revised Code Section
3745.07, a final action

within 30 days of Issuance· bid at this sale, and to
ol the · llnal action. EBR withdraw the · above
appeals must be flied with" collaleral prior to sale.
Environmental Board of Further, The Farmers Bank

Little Brothers can
be C~Jte aa ,.een in
this picture here
Happy Birlhday,
MARKlE PORTER

11(1\\ \1111
E\C \\ .\TI;\(;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Site~, Land
·Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Computer
repair/Service, Setups,
Installetlons,
·'
Upgrades.
Wlll write progrems
and databases.
Kevin 614·541·1630
Local most area.

WICKS

EXCAVATION

614-992-3470
ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE
1-900·255-1515
Ext. 1515
2.99 per min. Must
be 18 yrs. or older
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv·U
(619) 645-8434

'' You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

1-900-255-8585
· Ext. 7969
'2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-lone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434·

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Seplic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

llnperial nre
·service
Mason, W.V.
304·773-5533
;.September SpecialWith &lt;he purchase of
a set of struts or
shocks get FREE
installation.

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiato·rs &amp;
Recorea Available

Cs/1 fOI LOW Prices
742-3212
Turn on Depot St. In

Rutland 1.2 miles.
811011 mo.

ALFALFA
'AND MIXED

YOUNG'S
'CARPENTER SERVICE

• Room Addi1ions' 1 ·
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior,&amp; Exterior
Painti~g

Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992)6215
' Pomero1y, Ohio

NEFF REMODELING
SERVIa
Houee Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced

·-

Call Wayne Ne11992-

fOR SALE
BAILED

To

YOUR NEEDS

949·2512

For Free Estimates
C/13195

BULLETIN BOARD
16°0 column inch weekdays
18" column Inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AI 992·2155
8~·'LLtiiN 6UAKU UUiuliNE:

_ 2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! -

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
'8:00a.m. -3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing. VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
lneulatlon, Storm
1

Doors, Storm

Windows, Garages.
Free E1tlmataa
1119/tln

MEAL $5.00. Public invited

KARAOKE by
THE RIVER RATS
COURT ST. GRILL
Friday, Sept 29,

9 pm-1 am

3·D ARCHERY
Forkttd Run
Sportsman's Club
Every Sunday
Starting
September 1Oth
8:30am to
11:30 am
$7 sign up, children
9 &amp; under $4.
50% pay back.
· Children musl be
accompanied by adult.
11111

on your

25th
i

'•

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

3 Fam i ly · 9129, 9130, 1012195.
1016 Thtrd A11 enl.ie, Clot11os. 12
Monlhs -10 Prom Dresses. Cl3"s
4 FarTuly S1g Sale Thurs Sat. 8 '1
1030 Second Avenue, Gallipohs
4 Fam1ly Garage 1Salo 6 M1 So
Rt 7, Sept 281h Thru 4!n, Oc1

Satis action u.arantwf

6958 State Route 7 South, Ga ll •
polls, Saturday, Sep!embcr 301h ,
9 · 5. Furniture, D1sh o~. -.Gtass,
lool s, Much Much More l

J.D. Drilling Company

7183 State Route 7 Sovth. Frt, Old
Jewefery Clothes, MiSC.

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
L Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
Fqr Free estimate ca11949-2512

""""

LICEN SE D &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

\a\\ I\\.
o~~s'i. ~
v\l "'~\l~\c.

MIKE MARCUM'S
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

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

PHONE
614-245-0437

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special
Sp1:C1.ll o!! cr 1ncludu::.
1 CI(};HI rnclor
? ( irr·;)',c ·o\lc1 ;J!';ll 'l~_r;
3_ Cic.m &amp; check ag!t.1tor
4 Clcd rl ,t il movng r:ans

':, C:lr·&lt;~rl R dH·d illt!!l sy~;tem
'-• Clii·,-:K \wlh
l Clw::k c~ler: tr"ICdl :-;ys!0rn
n fle pl,tcr: f1l!r'r t:;HJ

All For Only $14.95
One-

Plus

Parts

vr;;H v... H icidl y CHI 1'."D1k iJI!iltHIII+'d

Valid ur1 Ltll n;·li~:Jnt~l l )' ,HJvr.•ltlsr·d L·unds
We service m os t makes &amp; models .

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
304-372-6144

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.
Eatab. Over 25 Yeara
Sales, Service, Parte
&amp; Installation
04-88 ·2996

.Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning -

Sept. 17

gn/lfn

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

Call your date now

1-900-255- 1515
ExL 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch -tone
phone required
Serv-U

19) 645-8434

ANNOUNCEMENTS

71h Hous e Our 775, Sept 29ih, ·
301h , 9 · 4, Wa te r Foun tain A nd
Much More l
ALL Yard Sa les Must Be Pa1d I n
Advan ce . DEADLIN E. 2 00 p .m:
the day bolore !he ad IS to r un
Sunday od1110n · 2 ·00 p,m Frtday .
Monday edit1on · 10 00 am . Sat
u1day.
·
Commun11y Yard Sate f rtday, &amp;
Sa turd:.y 9 00 A M To ? Home
lnter10r, Bays , And I .:Hlif!S Cloth ;.
tng, Cocker Spaniel Puppy , 10Speed BtkC, fwtn l:lod, t amps. Ba1
Stools Ancr M '"' Tu1n Onto
Georgus CH.'Cil r rom
n I Go 21
10 M ile F lrSI Subdl'o' ISIOn l ntt
· 0011 Street

s

Frt, Sn t, 8 AM 22Hl b i Stern
Ave, lot 21. Tupperwaro, HomC. ·
fnteqor, Sw~att..&gt;rs. Cams Dis11es ,
Frtday 9 ·4 Garage Sa le, 991 M1 1! ·
Cteek Road, 2nd House Left Pa st
Goff Course
Garage Sale . Boy s. Mpns, Worn
en Clothe s, C urta1ns, Household
I tems Alot 01 M tsc Sat Sept
30th. Oct 1st . 3 Mil es Out
Georges Creek t::,oad
Large At Mary Layne·s On Gro ·
ver Ro ad . ChCSh111~

Personals

liVE GIRLSI CALL NOWt
1·900·378·2500h1.8325 ·
$3.991Mm. Mu st Be IB Yr s

Wat(:h l- or

Yard Sa te S1gt1s1 9t30. 1011; 10 12: .
1013195, 9·5 Oa1ly
Mi sc ellaneou s Items. SlAt 141
On loll 2 Mtlc s fr om GallipO l is, .
Sat, Sun, Mar\ 8·5.
Porch Sale Ffld&lt;ty, SttiurdiJ y. 9 30
To 5, 580 Roc co Hollow Road
GalliJJOIIS. Oh10. .
'
Saturday 9130, B 00 A.M ·? 301 F ·
College Avenue , Rro Grand a.
Name Brnnd Clothing, Housahold,
MISC

Sa turday, 9? 515 Sola r Dr1vo In
Pl~nts Subd!.., ISIOn A lot Of O~ys
C.lothos. Slles s 7
·
Sept 29th, 30th. 10·5, 93 Gad1etd
A11 enuEt. M tsc Lots Of Ellery
thtng'
;
Thursday, Fr~day Sept 28th , Sept
29th, 3110 M1 Past Lmcotn Ptke
On Rt 141 O n The A1ght, :lnlant'
To ST G~rls Clothes. M ens Jeans. ·
ToOl s And Parts . Women s·
· Cfdlhes. Shoos, Ct·u1drens.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salt:~ Must flu Pard In
Adva nce De&lt;~d lon&amp; ,· OOpm tho ·
da~

005

on

da ~

bator e 1/le ild rs ro run Sun ·

edr11on 1 ooqm 1 rrdn)'.' Mon
day edrtron 10 QOa m Sarurda'(

Four lamrly yau1 snlu 110 S ~ etr
mbre S1 . Mrddloport Infant ro .
adu lt clothrng, somo housct"IOid

::'::-:Se~rv..;-U:,;(~61;::9!,;)64;:::;;,
.5-:;:84:;:34:__11ur n . cham s~w. benches, IOOis,

30 Announcements

lots of odds s. enos Saturday,
Sunday, Monday, l Oam 5pm
.

E•locn·s Personal Care lor elderly
We spec•a!•zo tn Alzhemmrs care
QNtng. 304 · 762·2544 .

Frr &amp; Sa t , 9129195, 9 4. 35620

40

Giveaway

1 1mo old puppy, mixed, !(~male .
whi!B W/brown, to bes(homc only.

Wolf Pen nd (o ff rouTe 143) large
sale .. lurnuuro . cla tho s. m1!&gt;C, ram
or sh1nc
Friday &amp; Saturday, 10 4. 790 MA
p te St' M lddtoport, lot!&gt; ol baby

11ems

good w tchil dren Al so tmo old ;:---;--:-:;-----~
caliCO kttlen . 304 · 675 · 4650 or F,day and Smurday ;1r.ros'l !rom
304·675-4302.
Ftshor Funeral Homo. Bam 11pm

2 Tabby Kill ens, 2 Mon ths Old Fr tday. Sep!Ambor 29 at nodOfiCk
Caii6 14·446· 769 T Eventngs
Gr 1mm·s on Broadway m Racme .
Plea so comet
2yr old male, noutered. hall Coll1e.
half lab , "good wt ch•td1 en 304 , Garage sale · Fr~day, Sa turd ay, •.
675-6595
Monday and Tue sda y Two m1los
3 Monlh Old Pupp•es : 614 367 · Hy sell Run Rd little ol every
th1ng.
05..19
•
G1ant b ono l tt yard sale l or liver
~ran splan t pat1cnt, r r•day and Sat
•
urday (9/29 -9130 ). 9am -5pm a! , • ~
Fo ur 2mo. old klltens . part Chiton, WV approx one milfl 11om ,
$1amose. black &amp; wh 1te. 304 - 773 - Mason Bndgo lots of niCO 11em st • •
Hot dogs , baked goods Ra 1n
5340.
cancels 1111 nt;~ •t weekend
Free F•rewood All Ktnds ·u· Cut
614-446·9346 .
Suulrfs movmo sate Sept 29. •
Oc!ober 3 (vcryth,ng goe s
Free pul pwo o d, .mu st cut, 614 · Tools, household ilems, an ttques,
949 2246 alter 5pm
etc Perry Rd 3 112 m ilti's s Long :
5mo . old femal e Pomen an 304 .

675-6183.

-

Bouom

SHOOT
AMERICAN LEGION
RACINE POST 602
STEAK DINNER
OCT. 1 - 12 P.M.

Lost Small MA te U lack &amp; Tan
Dog, last Seen ln 1ne McCia!'
key Road Or Morgan Ccntet nand
V1n1on. 0 11 Area , 614 388 9824

70

'Jresfi -Sifk_ :J[owers
(jift 'Baskets for a{{ occasions
· Stujj-it-'Ba{foons JfotJtir'Baffons
Singing Jdegrams
Jree Loca[ rfefivery

4405

Get Your Message Across
With ADally Sentinel

-

HAY

two rows of sapphires and one of
dtamonds. Fr~day, VIC tli iiV ol
Vaughan's, 614·992 ?602

Oh10 4571-iO

366 W. Mam St.. Riple y. WV

Tony's Portable
Welding

lost: d!J.rk blue Sapphire nng w th

992-4548

RBASONAJil I RATES

~

911 4195 2 mo. pd

Someone Special
It s/arts with an "R "
followed by ·· B" or
you might have a
nickname that begins
WI'th "C"
.
.
I don 't want silver. .. I
don't walll gold, I
don i want money,
just your hand to
hold, You know who
you are as you read
these lines because
I'm in your heart like
your in mine.
Your heart . is broken
and in need of repair
I put a band-aid on .it
to show you I care.
So if you let me /'II
be right there to
make your heart
better and always
care.
Love Always.
Red Heart

BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
(614) 949-JOtJ Phone
(614) 949-20t8 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT

HAULING &amp;

(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

rno.

M i d d l ~ p o rt .

•

(lime Stone Low Rates)

1-900-378-1800
Ext. 3140

91261"1

Alluring Sce nts

949-2512

8/Wn

Shrubs Shaped

$2.99/minuta
t8 or older
Touch-tone phone
required
Serv-u 1619) 654-8434

2!1:2/92!1fn

Computer Service

HAULING

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AIIID MORElli
1-900-884-9204,
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

( No Sunday Calls)

· GUN CLUB
TRIP SHOOT
Every

Light Hauling,

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Alter6 p.m.
614-985-4180

614-992-.7643

:.

Betzing's

Scores!!! Spreads!!!

interior &amp;
Exterior

:. I

RACINE

NHL·NBA·NFL

you. Very reasonable.

Only $6.99

disapproval of plans and
SHARON WRIGHT

REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

AND REMOVAL

Take the peln out of
painting. Let us do it lor

PEPPERONI

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE .

ALL BLACK
HILLS GOLD

HYDRAULIC

Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
Starting Sept I 7
I p.m.
Factory Choke
guns only.
Wi il shoot through
March '96

710 Autos for Sale

First birthday
celebrated

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additionsremodelingroofing - siding plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

t -

28563

Sports Conn•ct

.Sending gift~ were Fred Tripp,
great-grandfather; June Hudson.
Troy Yankuns, Lisa and Garrett
Ritchie, Paul, Teresa, Josh ;md Smn
Collins.
·

"

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20:00/HR

.

Bill Slack
992·2269

t;

Cheaper Rates

9/27195 rtn

Misc. Jobs.

".

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

12

and Removed

I

Wh1te W 1th Brown Wear ing Col
Iars Call Da le &amp; Ed•e Wo r.,.man
'6 14·368·8420 , 614 ·446 8828

Los1 small black femalo oog. no
ta1J. lame fronr leg . Cha se Rd
&lt;\iea , $150 reward . 614 £98 ?80F
or 614 992 ·2 168

27 1 North Second Avcnut&gt;

Forked Run

Church of Christ, Bashan Road,
gospel meeting, through Sunday, 7
p.m. with Sunday services at 10
a.m. and 6 p.m. Speaker,.Guy Mallory, Winter Haven, A a.
MIDDLEPORT- Marriage
maintenance workshop Friday, 7
p.m. at Ash Street Freewill Daplist
Church in Middleport. Evening to
conclmle witl1 renewal of martiage
vows and dinner provided by the
church. For reservations, call 9927410_
POMEROY - Gilmorcs to perform Appalachia music at the
Meigs County Courthouse noon
Friday in observance of 30th
anniversary of Ohio Arts Council.
SATURDAY
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
Sixth annual Herbfesl by River
Valley Herbalists on Sept. 30 from
10 a.m. t.o 5 p.m . at the
Ravenswood Riverfront Park. For
Information call Denise Arnold at ·
992-7573.

: I I I . I

TREE TRIMMING

----Cqf}lmunity calendar----The Community Calendar Is

;

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

RACINE
.
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

AMBER TRIPI'

Beth, Trunmi and Adam Lavender,
Todd, Darla and Jake Zuspan.
Amanda and Morgan Windon.
Janet and. Ashley Life, and Beth
and Colin Pierce.

: ,1

992-395 4
Eme rg e ncy Phone 985-3418

Guage
Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building

lost· 2 Beag le Dogs Blac k &amp;

FREE ESTIMATES
:. I

5116194 TFN

H&amp;H

•

MEGAN TRIPI'

MODERN SANITATION

Stale Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

Lost and Found

60

One Stop Complete Auto Blidt Repair
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Es\imates
· Insurance Work Welcome

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

Twins mark
birthdays

9

Long Bottom News

Rotarian recalls visit to Europe
marking anniversary of war's end
changed to land at LeHavre ,
Joe returned just two weeks ago,
France . Throughout the remainder Sept. II, from Lincoln, Neb.,
ith the 65th where he -auended the 50th
of the war he staye
lnfantrx Division hi
went in anniversary reunion of the 546th
after !h&amp;-Battle-o e B lge. The Automatic Anillery Battalion .
65th continued and wou up up While there, Joe learned that the
the same place as Joe's u il. The unit had shot down 64 enemy
65th liberated the last conce tration planes.'
camp which was located about 50
The saddest pan of the Youngs'
miles from Erlauf at Mauthausen.
visit to Europe were visits to the
The reunion at Erlauf in May cemeteries near Omaha Beach
experiences at the Monday night
had
both Russian and American where 10,000 young Americans are
meeting at HcaU1 McU10dist Church
Generals
shaking hands and the buried. The emotional impact of
in Middleport.
local
people
put on a big celebra- this visit can hardly be imagined, it
Joe and hi s son, Joe Jr ., spent
ti
lm
welcoming
th e returning was noted.
three weeks touring central Europe
American
soldiers
and each one
During the visits to Europe. the.
and England in connection with the
was
introduced.
Youngs traveled 10,000 miles by
reunion. Guido spent four wee ks
In the square at Erla~f is a plane, I ,000 miles by train and, as
1·isiting relatives in It aly and two
bronze
statue donated by the Rus- Joe indicated, it seemed they
weeks traveling central Europe.
sians
showing
.Russian and Ameri- walked nearly 1,000 miles. The ISYoung went to England with the
can
.soldiers
linking
arms with an day trip of the Youngs was not a
Third Army Headquarters Dattalion
Austrian
girl.
Another
local note is scheduled tour,. but they m&lt;~de their
in March, 1944, as a 19-ycar-old
the
American
memorial
was ·own arrangements traveling by bus,
and staye d in England for four
igned
by
Jenny
Holzer
a
.
niece
des
rented car and by train.
months. He came over Omaha·
A visit by Joe to the Rotary
lleach on D-Day plus 30 on July 6, of Dr. Charles Holzer. This statue
when completed will throw a laser Club at Linz-Ufahr brought out one
1944. He was with the Third Army
berun of light 10,000 feet into the difference between the clubs .
sweep across France under General
l'anon until Nancy in Alsace-Lor- air and will serve as an aircraft bea- Instead o'r appla11$e, they pounded
the tables. The Rotarians were very
ralnc where he was uansferred to con.
Joe had another interesting cordial and many spoke English.
the 54tilh Automalic Artillery BatAnyone interested in further
experience by linking up with an
tUion.
The primary purpose of this unit Austrian family he had known dur- de~1il s on the trip may contact Joe
ing the war. He corresponded with Young or Guido Girolami. They
was tu prote c t the Third Army
lleadq uartcrs at Arion, Belgium. the mayor of !he town to see if any each have hundreds of pictures
The unit was assigned to the 65th of !he family were still in existence taken in Europe and England.
Lloyd Blackwood, president,
. Through tl1e mayor, he was able
lnr:mtry Division going across Gcr10 reconnect with the frunily and was in charge of the meeting. 1l1e
m:my inlo Austria.
Guido Girolami shipped out of. snent a very enjoyable day with club sru1g "Happy Dirthday" to Dil'
the United States headed for Eng- them having the best meal he had lie Jo Krnwsczyn, one of the ladies
land but en· mute they were ever had, curried lamb.

The Daily Sentinel • Page

mo

Free yard sale lertovers. mus t
take au 304 ·675·1695.
T wo yard sales on Hy soll Ru n
Fr1day, Satu r da y, M onday
Heat pump to g111eaway. 614 992 · Tuesday i 318 m~o on lell. lots of
7102
clo thes. 1 112 m1 on le f1 . clolhes .
t&lt; 1uens, gray &amp; wh ,te, to good carpel shampooe r, m1sc ChtHJP
homes only. 304.895·3703
I:P:...":...'":...'·:..:e;;;t-:'·~99:::2.::.5::.:
2 7.::,5_ _ __

8nd

One year old blonde ma le Cocker
Spaniel. good w!lh children , to
good home, 614 ·992-2596
Tree !or f•HlWOod. must cu.t &amp; haul
away. 304..(;i75-870 1.

60

Lost and Found

$1 00 reward tor return ol yellow

Lab mnc. lamo leg, Rac ine VICin ity,
614 · 949 2266. 614 9 49 2119/
614-9-19·2300
Found Pu ppy. 6 Mos Old , Male.
Burt &amp; While Color, Vtc•n.r~ Galha
Academy Htgh School 614 ·446-

4479
Found Sferhno Eagle' s nng, 614 ·
992-2602.

Pt. Pleasan1
&amp; VIc in ily

1---:------=--G1a nt benefit yar d sale : tor lover
transplant pat1ent, 'Fr~da y and Sat·
urday (9129· 9130), 9am-5pm at
Chiton. WV app1ox one mile f,o m
Mason Bridge Lo!s ol n ce 1tem'!o1
Ho t dogs, ba~ed goods Ram
cancei!J hll neJt wookend
Yard Sale Baked goods hotdog s
Sat Sepl 30th Aa111 01 Sh 1n c
North At 33. Mason
Yard Sat a Ju" be"to"ro Iii Iroad
tra,cks Galli po lis Fot~v Turn '" at
roads1de park ana fo llo w 10ad
Thur , rn, &amp; Sat Cancoled 1f ram
10 ttl ?

.

.

�•
Thursday, September 28, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

, Thursday, September 28, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
39 Printer'•
measures
40 N.M. art colony

ACROSS

PHILLIP

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright
1 Bedroom Aparrmen1 App liances Furmshed 1 Bloc k From
Downtown Ga lli po li s, 614 4464639

Public Sale
and Auction

Prrvate Pa rk1ng Mamtenance
Free 614 446 2602

: R tc k Pearson Auct 10n Company,
• lu ll ttm&amp; aucttoneer, com plete
• jwctlo n
serv1ce
Ltcensed
• #66 OhtO &amp; West Vtrgmm 304
: 773 5785 Or 304 773 5447

1 Bedroom New, Exira N1ce Ar r
Condrt1oned Near Holzer's $2591
Mo + Unlrues DeposiT Requrred,
614-445-2957

1953 M38A. 1 m•ll tary
$10 000 m new parts,
ground up besl offer 614 -6&lt;:!5285

1bedroom Extra clean , utrhtres
garbage prckup. ac telling fans
garbage d1sposa t refngerator &amp;
stove lurnrshed No pets 304
773 5352 or 304 882 2827 even
rngs

Buy or se ll R1venne Anuques ,
1124 E Ma rn Slteet on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to
6 00 pm 614 992 ~526

1969 2 -Ton Dump Truck,
Shape
$2 500 Or Trade
Small Tru ck Call 614 446 - 45 1
Or 614 446-370 3

540

1974 Peterblll conventional
$4 aoo lrrm 304-675 7893

'

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

4 Mary - Moore
, 9 Status1 12 Dancer Miller
13 Valuable violin
14 Actress Merkel

15 Draw
16 Heathen

1995 Ford Mus tang. V6 , 5spd,
dark lor est green 1 S,800m1 • CD
player, am-rm cassette, power
drrver seat, pi, pw, cru1se, ac, anbloc.k brake system rear spa11er
S16,000neg 304-882·2094

I Bedroom Furnrshed Apartment
Ou1e t Clean Cenua l Heat Arr~

: -Aucttons every Fflday-Suurday,
• "i'pm Ut Al to Aucl1on 1 Rt 2 33
· ·crossroads· New merchandtse,
• QfOC8f!eS &amp; lots more Ed Fraz1er
:~30

ALDER

Ooot

1992 Plymouth Sundafi(;EI 4
Auto 70,000 U1tes $5 000, OBO.
614 ~ 1539 614-256-1233

Belgru m Brownrng auto f1ve 12
gauge shotgun S600 Fender well
storage/tool boa:es new S25ea
304-675-"1124

1 Can. prov

42 Rages
44 Middle Eastern

nation
45 Arab garment
46 Actress
Clcely50 As far- -

- 17 River island
NORTH

• 28 95

•Q J
¥AJ8 7542

EEK&amp;MEEK '

•J 4
... 8
EAST

•A 86543
'flO 9

• I0 2

• 8 3
•K 7 4

know

18 Stage whisper

20 tnlerno author
22 Nevada city
23 Non-profit TV

26 Carbine

WEST

'f 3
t A K 10 9 52

•J I 0 6 3
SOUTH

27 Speck of
moisture
29 Writing tablet
30 Harmful
32 Outline
33 MD s gp .
35 Transfer to
another's

51
52
53
54

Spasm
Halos
Coagulate
Author
Umberto 55 Chap
56 Highway curve
DOWN
1 Doha's country

2 Brand new
3 Motor

control

•K 9 7
Q 6

5 Ente11alner-

38 Experts

South
I NT

4.

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Wtth
Or Wt thout Motors Call Larry
Lwety 614 38&amp;9303

AVON

I

All Areas

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn$8 $151'Hr At Work Home
Otscountsl No lnvnntory Or Door

Door lnd /Rep 1 600 742 4738
Avon Earn SS $15 tHr No Door
To Door Full/Pan Trme 1 800
736 0 168 lnd Rep
AVON Sales S8 $i 5/Hr No
Door To Door Ma rl Order Pro
gram Bonuses 1 BOO Sn 4640
rnd Isis /rep
EARN SS$ ar home al
All areas 304 682 2645 1
800 992 6356 INDIAEP
AVON
war~

21

o

Business
Opponunlty

"LUMBER COSTS UP?~ Steel
bu rldrngs as low as $3 00 sq loor
Buy factory drrect from Nauonal
Manutac(urer as authonzed deal
er Will trarn Some Markets tak
en 303 759-3200 ext 2200
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ness with people you know end
NOT to semi money through the
ma1l unrrl you haile milestlgated
the ol!errng
Excellent Retarl Space Avarlable
Lafayette Mall 513 922 029&lt;1
REAL ESTATE

CARPENTERS HElPER Mvst
Have Mrn1mvm 2 Yrs Expenence
Trvck And Tools Req ur red Call
614 446 4514 Man
Fr1 8 A. f.A
lo 5PM

675 6986
Lrm1ted Ollerr 1996 doublew1Cle
3br 2bath $1695 down. $2591
month Free del1ver~ &amp; setup
Only at Oalc.woo&lt;l Homes N fro
WV 304 755 5885
l rmrred Offer! New t4x80 No payments alter 4yrs Only make 2
[)ayments &amp; move 1n 304 755 5S&lt;l6
New 1996 14x70, rncludes sk1r1
1ng, steps, blocks, one year
homeowners 1nsurance and SIX
monlhs FREE lot rent Only $ t025
down and $207 17 per month Call
1 800-837-3238
New 1996 Doubtewrdesl Drs
coums up to $5,000 rr1cludlng free
heat pump dehvery and more 1
800 251-5070ext 11
755-7191

Domrno s P1zza of Pomeroy now
h1rlng dnilers, 614 992 2124
Drrver wuh Class A COL wan!ed
We haul wrrhrn a 7 to 8 stale area
No NortheasT toads Home!rme
pa1d vacat1on &amp; holidays Call 1
600 598 6790

Pnce Bus1er1 New 14x7 0 2 or
3bf Onlr $995 down $195/month
Free dehvery &amp; selup Only a1
Oakwood Homes N111o W'J 304
755 5865

Earn S1000s weekly stu ffrnQ en velopes at home Be your boss
Start now No e11p, lree suppfres,
rn/o, no obhga110n Send SA S E
to Prest1ge Unrt #l PO Box
195609, Wrnter Sprrngs Fl
32719
Easy Work I E •ceilent Pay I As
semble Produc1s AI Home Call
Toll Free 1 BOO 467 5586 Ext
313
Experrenced Medical Secretary
To Apply At The Medrcal Plaza ,
938 SA 160 Gallipolis, OH 614
446 9Ei20

All real estate advertiSiflQ m
this newspaper rs subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes rl1llegal
to advertrse "any preference
11m1la_llon or dlscnm1nabon
based on-race, color, mllglon,
sex famrllal status or naUonel
origm or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or dlscrtmrnatlon •

which is In vlolatron of the law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In lh1s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baSIS

Help needed lor deer processmg
Crawlord s Grocery 304 675

5404
No Exper1em;e Necessary! S500
To $900 Weekly !Potentral Processrng Mortgage Refunds, Own
Hours, Call (909) 71 5-2300, Ext
782, j24 Hours}
Openrng Soonl New Sleak &amp; Sea
food Restaurant rn JOWn Now hrr
rng tor all stuhs wartresses, wall
ers, bartenders . cooks d1sh
washers , delrvery persons, etc
Forward resumes to At 1 Box
839 PI Pleasant, WV 25550 or
304 675-7481
Owner Operators Needed Top
j:)ercenrage paid hauhng Wlthrn a
7 to 8 state area No Nor theas t
toads Call 1·800 598-6790
Part Trme Experrenced Word
Processor tTranscrrpt10n1st Must
Be Knowledgable &amp; Word Perfect
Felxlble Hours Send Resume To
CLA 358, c/o Gallipolis Oarlr Trrb
une 825 Thlt'd Avenue, Galhpohs
OH 45631
WANTED MechaniC, engme (e
bu1ldrnc-a11 types, assembly of
motors Call 304 3 72 8633 Hrs 8

5
180

derson
home or
3 bedroom house rn BradDury 2
bath, above ground pool heal
pvmp approx 2 acres pr1ce to
sell 614 992 6190

Two Bedroom One Bath On A 718
Acre lol Wrth Two Burldrngs
Carport 30 Mrles Outs1de Gar
nesilrll e At Hawthorne Fla 1904 48t 3379
350 - Lots

Ace Tree Serv1ce Complete tree
care , 20yrs exp &amp; rnsured, tree
estimates 614 -441 - 1191 or 1
800-508 8887
Do You Need A Break From
House Work? Would You Like To
Come Home From Work A.np Ae
lax Call P&amp;J's Cfeanrng 614 388
810316t4 388-8269
General Marnlenance, Pamtrng,
Yard Work Wrndows Washed
Gutters Cleaned ltght Hau ling,
Commencal, Res1denual Steve
614-446 8861
Georges Portable Sawm1il don"(
haul rour logs to ~e mill JUSt call
304·675 1957
Home Cleanrng, General - De
1arled Wmdow Cleanmg, lns1de I
Outside, (last Chance Before
Wtnt91') 614-256 1370, Marsha
Mrscellaneou s, Home, Wrndows,
OH1ce Cleaned. Ask For Anne,
Also Stove For Sale 614-4461358
Profe1110nal Tree Service, Com
plate Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Servtce -50 Ft Reach Stump Removal, Free Estrmatesl In·
surance, 24 Hr Emersency Servrce -Call And Savel No Tree Too
Brg Or Too Small I B1dwell, Oh10
614-388-9643, 614-367-7010

Furn1shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Downstaus Utrlltres Furnrshed,
Clean, No P~tts Rolerence De
poSit Requ1red 614 446-1 519
Ga llla Ma nor Apanments Now
Accepung App lrcatrons For 1
Bedroom HUD Subsrd1sad Apart
ments, For 1Etderly And Hand icapped Equal Hous mg Oppor
tunrty 614 446 4639
Gracrous 11 vrng 1 and 2 bedroom
apanmems ar Vrllage Manor and
A1versrde Apartmems rn M1d(jle
port From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal Hous1ng Oppor
IUOilleS

&amp;

Acreage

Scenrc Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lois public water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336
RENTALS

3 Bedroom
S3251Mo ..
1472

38 acres house 2 bedrooms
bath, gas well furnace. good hunt
1ng 52 t55Sr 248 6149854243

Mason. large 3bedrDom Wllh tar
port some applrances rncluded
304 675 7783

4bedroom 2 tJ2bath, large famr ly
room on tacre, 1m1 behmd Han
lord 304-682 3326
4Bedroom Needs some repa1rs
Call Xl4-675-1900 after 9~
Pool 1 111 0 Mrles From Gallipoli s
At 141 614 446 1026
By Owner
low Ma1ntenance Brrck Ranch In
Gallrpol1s Three Bedroom Wrth
Bath And A Hall Full Srze Krrchen
Wrth A.pphanc es Laundry Room
Wrrh Washer D r yer Included
Full Baumenl Cenual Ar r Wi!h
Gas Heal, For Appointment 614
446 2573
Three bedroom home rn country
Wh1t1J'S Hrll Ad, Rulland one bath,
rn ground pool 6t4 992 5067
Wamed to rent professronal famIly would like to lease tour bed
room home 1n Mergs County call
614 992 7272or614 9926503
320

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

1 Acre 2 Bedroom Trarler Deck &amp;
Porch See To App 304 576
3288 Applegroile W VA
t968 PMC Brrcemeyer 12x60
304 372-;4()()
1970 12x60 good condrlton new
w1ndows , doors, new outside
parntttrrm, vndersklrtrng $2,800
304 675 7585 alter 7pm
1972 Concord 12x65 2bedroom,
1barh, gas stove &amp; furnace 11p
out um1 rn hvr ng room 304 372·
3400

~

Apanment, 1 Bedroom
I 1
Localed Between Gall1
polrs &amp;
Hosp1tal, Rent Plus
Uulwe s No Pets 614 446-2055
After 6 PM
Pt Pleasant lurnrshed ef11ency
u!llitres pa rd parll.rng Deposit re
qu1red 304 675 7783
Three bedroom apartment wash
erl dryer hookup brg k1tchen 11\1
rng room Thrrd Street Racrne.
$295/mo plus u1rl rnes $100 de
posrt 614 247 4292

304 773 5651 Mason WV
460

Space tor Rent

Trarler lol on Braod Run Ad New
Haven, $60/rro 304 773 5881
MERCHANDISE

51 0

Household
Goods

4 Room Small Cottage, On Corner
Ot 554 &amp; Bulav1Ue Prke No Pets
614 388-1100
Rental houses one two bedroom
and one mree bedroom rn Pamer
oy two bedroom house rn Middle
porr Send responses tlo The
Dally Sentrnel PO Box 729 14
Pomeroy Oh10 45769

420

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

12x55 Two Bedroom Trarler 614
245-5778
2 Bedroom In Poner Area De
posu &amp; Utrll!les. 614 388-9162
2 Bedroom Mobrle Home, State
Route 218 S225tMo $100 De
pos1t W:uer Pard, 614 256-1008

2 Bedroom Mobrle Home No
Pets S2251Month $tOO Deposrt
614 446 36 t7

2 Bedrooms t Bath, No Pets,
S250tMo Plus Deposrt &amp; Ublrfres
Skrdmore Road, 614·446 4426
Nice late Model 2 Bedroom 4
Mrles North 0! Holzer On 160,
614 446 8189 6t4 446 6865
N~ee

Mobile
Mrles Out
$235/Mo •
ences 614
6251

Home 2 Bedrooms 8
SA 218, Gall1po!ls
Deposrt Need Refer
446 8172, 614 -256

Two Bedroom. $250tMo Plus Ulll
rtres Deposrr Relerences Re
qu1red At 218 Alter 6 PM 614
983 4807
440

3 cush1oned brown sola, exc
conQ, reasonable 304 -773-5105
Reconditioned
Appt1ances
Washers. Dryers. Ranges, Refrr
graters 90 Day Guaranreer
French C11y Maytag , 614 446
7795
Broyhill blue couch w/mauve now
ers, Will deliver locally StOO 304
675 6937
Carper &amp; Vrnyt In Stock SS 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Pa"erns Of K1tchen Car·
pet In Stock Over 35 Patterns
Vrnyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets
61&lt;1 446-7-444
GODD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dr~ers, refngerators,
ranees Skaggs Appliances 76
Vrne Street Carr 614·446 -7398,
1-800 499-3499
•
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furn rshrngs
Hours Man Sat, 9 5 614 4460322, 3 mrl es out Bulavrlle Pike
Free Delivery

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur
nrshed and unfurnrshed, security
deposit requrred. no pets , 614
992-2218

Cemetary lots Greenbonom, WV
4 lots, $600 lor all 304-576-238)
Concrete &amp; PlastiC Sept1t Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses Jackson OH
1·800-537 9528
Drsney area, 5dayt4 hotel nrgMts,
use an~ trme Paid $310, sell
$100 304-343-9455
Efec1rrc Wheelcharrs /Scooters ,
New !Used, Scooter tWheelcharr
Lrfts Starrway Elevators, Lrft
Charrs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283
Emprre. Vent Free Gas Wall
Heater Auto Blower 18 000
BTU's used 1 Wrnter S200 6 14
446-4680

1

Machrne $125

614

FOR SAlE Adler Roya l 210 C
Cop1er S550. Recond111oned
New Drum And Developer 614
446 4514, Mon Frr, 8 AM TO 5

PM

Alpme CO Player, 2 1 2" MTX
Road Thunder Pros In Hatchbac~
Box Rockford Fosgate Punch 40
Amplifier MJX Thunder 280 Am
plrlrer 614 446-8778 After 6 30
P.M
Healthmaster 750 Dual Acton Ex
ercrse Brcycle. Just L1ke Newr
Hardly Ever Used! $60 614 247
2032 Evemngs Or Leave Mes

sage
Herl furnace 150,000BTU good
cond $125 304-675 6436
Hr-Etfecrency L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU
$1,250 lnsralled 1-800 287 6308,
614 446· 6308, Duct Systems And
A1r Condmoners Free Es~mates
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aeparred, New &amp; Reburl! In Stock
Calt Ron Evans, 1-800 -537 9528
Kenmore Gas Dryer Good Cond •uon $75 614 446 7503

!lons ol lrrtancrng ava rl able, layawars al'l(l' maJOr credit cards 614
667-7386

Krng Srze Waterb ed Mauress
Wrth Heater No Frame $50 614
446-2539
Krng Srze Waterbed Mattre ss
And Healer Included 11 00 Call
Bel ween 3 00 PM 6 00 p M
614 441 1918
Krng wood &amp; coal stove w!blower
$200 El Camino topper $50 304
675 4006
Kmg wood burnrng furnace good
cond used only a few years 304
675 1714
Krng Wood Coat Stove Wrth
Blower Plas11c Truck Tool Box,
Corner Cabrnet Wrth Countertop,
614 245 9179
MUS( SELL DUE TO Ill
HEALTH household goods, car
parts, lawn mower parts, antrques
some grveaway Items McGrath
Ad , Pomeroy, lollow srgns Will
also lake offers on heme and
acreage 614 992 4271

New Gym Set Cost $900 Sell For
$300 Also large Dog House
614 441 1093
New well pump wl pressure tank
never used, deep or shallow
$100 olf reg ular prrce 304 882
~J2 or 40&lt;1 5th S1 New Haven,
NordiC Track Walk- frt Classrc wnh
arm movement work out comput
er (tells spe&amp;d, calorres, t1me, d1s
tance and pulse) Used very lrllle
calf 814-992 5181 ah&amp;!' 5pm
Glass 614-245-5773

Parnt Plus Now In New Locat1on1
511 Burdeue St, across from Bel
lemeade UM Church 304 675

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 6~~~~-------0hve St , Gallipolis New &amp; Used
lur nrture. heaters, Western &amp; Queen Srze Waterbed /Solrd
Wood Frame Headboard Mrrror
Work boots 614 446 3159
Cabrnets, M1rror, Lrnear, Wave
less Mattress $225, 61 &lt;1-446
VrRA FURNITURE
0727
614· 448-3158
Ouallry Household FurrnJre And
Aefngerators Sto11es Washers
Appliances Great Deals On
Dryers All Reconditioned
CasM And Carry I AENT-2-0WN
Gauranteedl 1100 And Up,
And layaway Also Avartable
Will Deliver 614-669 6441
Free DeliVery Wrth n25 Miles
520

Sponlng

Woodburner Never Used You
Need To See 11 To Apprec1a re
The Pnce Ot $350 614 245 5713
Woodworkmg 1ools, band saw
drrll press la1he arr compressor,
S251ea 614 992 7102
550

Building
Supplies

Block. brrc.k sewer p pes wtnd
ows, lrntels etc Claude Wrnters
R10 Grande OH Call £14 245
5121
Meta l Root ng &amp; Srdrng Geo lex
111e Fab~rc For Dr1veways &amp; Etc
Trpar For House Cover Or lem
porary Storage Co\ler Alt1zer
Farm Supply 614 245-5193
560

Pets tor Sale

Groom Shop Pe1 Groomrng Fea
llmng Hydro Bath Jul re Webb
Call6t4 446 0231

2 Full Blooded Australian Btue
Heeler Pups 1 M&lt;:~le 1 Female
Baughman Farm 614 256 6535
3 Rat Temer pups, $50ea 304
675 5950
A.KC beauhful ChOw Chow pup
pres black blue and wnr(e $2001
ea 614992 75711
AKC Cocker Spantel Pups $50
Each H Serres Farmall $700
Brush Hog $200 Both $800 614
367 7901
AKC Reg Dalmatran puppres
shots &amp; wormed $200 304-675
5553
AKC Reg1stered Aonwerler pup
pres, born 815J9 5 $300 had lrrst
shots, AKC lemale (mother)
three years old good wrlh chr td
ren $150,614 -7423602
A.KC Regrslered Cocker Span1el
Puppres $150 614 379 2728
B1rds Iguanas Taranrulas mrce
F1sh Tank &amp; Pel Shop 2413
Jackson Ave Pornt Pleasan1
304 675 2063
German Shepherd Pv re Wh1te
A.KC Born 8/17195, $375 614
286 8753, 614 523-8965
570

Musical

Bach trumpet used very little ex
ceUent cond1110n pa1d $400 new,
sell $325 call614 985 4489
Bundy alto saxopnone ilery good
condrtron wllh mus1c sta nd that
has never be~n used and extras
614 949 2272
Bundy Clannet Excellent Cond1
t1on. $180 614 446 7691 Even.

'"9'

01scount farm tracto r parts for
Massey Ford IH &amp; olhers
Srdcr's EQuipment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 BOO
277 3917
1994 MF 231 -218 Hrs, 1978 JO
2940 2700 Hrs MF 135 Gas,
1968 JO 2355 2300 Hrs, 2 -NI
Corn Prckers 11Ft Brush Cuner
3 Yrs Old H&amp;S V Tank Spread
er Use(j 3 Months New Hay
Wrapper $5,500, Used Grarn
Dril ls New 3 Pt Fertrlrzer
Sp,ade" $375 used 3 Pr D" '
Mower Conditioner S2 995 JD
24T Baler $995 New JO 40 50
60 75 100 HP Tractors Grea t
Prrces 7 9% Frnanc1ng Year End
Sale On Hay Equ 1 pm~nt Low
Rate Fr nancrng Year End Sale
On lawn Tractors - No Payments
Or lmeres1T1l March 1, 1996
Carmrchael s Farm &amp; Lawn
1800 5941111
6t4 446 24121

Herter Calves 614 245

ooro

Freezer Beer
614 245-5207

Reg blac~ angus bulls 7months
to 3yrs of age Reg black angus
bred heders and yeadrng he1lers
304 6 75-2098
Re91stered Ou aner Horse Yearly
F1lly Out 01 May B Doc lncenrrve
Fund Should Make bcellent Ev
em Or Cow Horse $1 500 614
379 2932
Two regrstered Angu s bull s, 22
24 months old also a yearlrng
reg1s1ered Angus bulls prr ced 10
sale 614 742 3033
640

Hay

&amp;

Grain

PrcmrtJ m 18% alfalfa hay 2nd cut
SBDflon Morgan s Farm 304937:2018 Sept only
Square bales $1 $2 Round bales
St5ea 304675 3960
TRANSPORTATION

71

o

Autos tor Sale

$500 off all cars on th1s hst 1993
Cheily lumrna $6995 1992 Olds
Cutlass Supreme $6995 1991
Ford Taurus $2795 1988 Mer
cury Sable LS 13395 1989 GMC
S 15 $3495 1986 Ford F 150
$2395 1988 Ford Taurus $2295
Scotty s Used Cars New Haven
wv 304 882 3752
t969 Galaxy very Qood shape
runs well new battery, new trres
1 500 304-882 2394

s

1g72 Chevelle SS 614 98~4:))6
1974 Mu stang II \1 6 auto one
owner retitled good cond1tron
askrng $1200 musr sell 6t4 992
5407

Conn trumpet exc cond $250 1/
2karat dramond cluster rrng srze
7 $250 Call before 1pm 304 675
5726

1984 Fo1d Crown V1c1ona, good
condibon, S17g5 614-992-6154

Wanted to buy good used flute
61 4·992 2633 alter 6 pm
580

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
aeans lor sate, prj;;k your own
Blue Lake and hall runners 614 247 2142
White tJ2 Runner Beans, Pump
k1ns Poratoes Cress Greens,
Corn Fodder 6 14 446 9442

FARM SUPPLIES

&amp;

LIVESTOCK

14hp Economy Garden tractor wt
1urn rng plow cu1t1va to rs, snow/
garden blade $2800 304 6 75·
2217

CHANGES,
MA'AM?

Jt 1s

- -o

PEANUTS
•' AND TI-llS TALL GIRL WON
OVER T~IS SHORT 61ii:L, AND
TilE TEAM FROM AROUND HERE
SOMEPLACE LOST AGAIN .. "

AND THEN THIS ONE TEAM
SEAT THE OTHER TEAM IN
SOME KIND OF 6AME ''

''AND

6U'( RAN
FASTER T~AN 'mE REST OF
T~EM,AND THAT'S SPORTS
FOR TONIGI&lt;T. ANDW~O CARES?''!
TillS ONE

1984 Nrssan 50th Anmversary
3DOZ}( Turbo 'I 6, T-Top N1ce
$2800 080, 614-3&lt;;7-01~8
1985 Cutlass Supreme 307 HO
Au1o Loaded, $2 900 1989 Cut.
lass Calars 2 5 Auto Air, PS, PO,
PD $3 900 614 388--8575
1986 Chevrolet Celebrr1y $800
1983 Olds Cutlass $1 200, 614
446 6958
1986 Fo rd Mustang 70,000
Mrles 1986 Ford Escort, Bo th
Good Shapel614 256-1761
1988 Shadow t1 9 000 MI IDS
$1 200 614-256-1233
19 88 Ca11aher Z-24, 5spd, a1r
loaded extra clean 304-675
r226
t988 Honda Auto, 120 000 Mrles,
Good School Car $1,300, OBO,
1990 Ca\laher Orrves Good,
1p1,000 M1les, $3,250 080, 614
4&lt;11 1151 614-245·5592 Or Alter

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

25a

1968 Plymoth Rei ranee for parts
or whole car 304 675 4108 or
3047735064
1989 Burck 2 Door T-Type 1989
GMC Fvll Srze Prck-Up 1988 Berena. 1982 Escort, Cook Motors,
614 446 0103
t989 Chevy Corsrca Nrce Car
loaded $3 400 OBO 1986 Ford
Escort Auto $1 ,200 080, 614
441 0534

cemetery lot, and double
Suncrest Cemetery

M F 17 hole grarn dnll w11tr ferllhz er and grass seed boxes, 614 949 2574

1989 Nlssan 5entra, 4 ely , 4 sp,
good work car, $1 000 obo, 614
742-2357

Small well rooled, bundled, whrte
prne seedhnQs $3 per dozen
304-937-3119

W;tn!ed Small Mrlk Cooled Tank ,
Under 150 Gallons, Mus! Be In
Good Condrtron, 614-965 t922,
614-965-1266

1991 C~ Cavalier 5 Spct Trnt
ed Wrndows, Alum inum Arms
$4, roo. 614-388 8575

&gt;;l:'"+-+-1
-.1..._,_.....1

no-trump, a begmner wtns the f1rst

38 ChaHer
41 Yacht parte
43 Pierce
44 Cut
47 Actor Brynn.,.
48 Sign at 1 hh :
show (abbr.).
49 Mighty tree •

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
are creared Irom quota/ionl by tamoua peop6t Pit! and preqr,t
Each lttl1er '" !he cipher llands tOt" ai'\Othef Todly'l cW G ~~~ p

and wm s the last nme
Today s dea l occurred durmg a round

Celttbnty Clflhel" cryptogra~n~

'CNHMH ' K

FSH

CNRSB

CF

UH

K Y R X

R C

PFM

RSORCRSB

BHSHMYIIO

CMFYUIH

YLLHGCK

TV It

T Y IFF.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "You can't write muSIC r1ght unless you know how the
man that'll play rt plays poker " - Duke Ellington
•

WOlD
OAMI

en auclton four dmmonds was a trans

Motor Homes
18 Ft Camper Sleeps 6 Good
Condrtron New Refngerator New
Wate r P1pes $1 000 614 379 2699

]lORN LOSER
l JJ:)T (N.I'T SI-\P..K£.. TI-\1~ eoG,

t 976 Prowler 18 Burlt In AC
Sto\le Refrrg Good Condt11on
i
$1000,614 4410243

~ ~TOt--IER

P'l'VE &amp;f.N RESTING I~ e£D "' ~Ell. 11\E:II:£'~ YOOR.. PROeLD\I
F&lt;li&lt;'. ::£V£N t:AYS N&lt;D l ~TILL ! Dl D!-1 I YOU KJ-()W T!JAT ::eJ£N
DI\Y:) IN fYW fAAK£..~ ONE
FEEL DRAINED'..;.!_...c;."-\

"'

~

P'

I!

1977 Ford 460 2411 camper1
crurse, 2 arrs 4kw onan top carm
er cassette radro 4 awmngs W1ll
accept small standard transmr s
sron car on trade 304 675 3035

WE,O.,K. -z

,.-,,--~--1

r-----::;;;...,-r

Camper lor sale 20 Aluma Lrte '
good condrtron $2200 neg , 614 ~
992 2773 aher Spm or weekends 1

fer brd to four heart&gt;, West led a dia
mond to East ' s k1ng Oesp1te bemg
unable to see the South hand, East
sWJiched smartly to the club Jack Thrs
set up the fourth defensive Irick, the
club kmg, before South could oblarn a
diSCard
Timmg IS onen everythrng rn bndge

Plnlltp Alder's book , "Get Smarter
at Brtdge, " zs avazlable , auto graphed upon request , for $14 95
from P 0 Box 169, Ro•IY" Hts , NY
11577 ·0169

~

•

rI I

I TRENE

I LAvT

I II/

5

I

~

•

N I G WR I

~
~

a k1d I was always apolog1z1ng for some m1sch1ef 1 had

I

L_.J___t.__.J_l-_t._-.J-L-..J

~~-LLL--~~u~~~~--L-~

8
0

SERVICES

he.

ll l

J..-,~--,-~-,~r:6-TI::'7-,Ir---i

~

Home

DAR A f C

I

•~

1986 Sunlight Pop Up True ~
Camper Slee~n; 4 Furnace Srnk 1
Good Cond1t1on S2 500 614 245 ..
9109

1(~

gonen 1nto

Dad told me that

~:g_r~~'f,~~~~less unless ~ou

Q

Complete 1he chuckle quoted
by frll1ng m the m1nrng words
you develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS
IN THESF &gt;QUARES
UNSCRAMBlE FORI
ANSWfi
•

FaMOuS

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
'
Uncond1!ronal llfer1me guar antee;
Local references furnrshed Cal/
(614) 446-0870 Or (614) 2370488 Rogers Waterprool rng Es
tat)'IShe&lt;l 1975
'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
c.

r,

S~IJSO

Our son was depressed over the los1ng streak of h1s

1en '

· STRIKEA BLOW IN Tl-£ YrAA ON

ITHURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

:::::-::----:-:-'"':------:--~ '

C~&amp;C~~G~e-n_e_r~ai~H~o~m~e--~M-a-,n-!
:
•

1 '--~

MY ACU% ClJ'Tl;-A·I'IIOBIA HAS
FORCt::D M~ TO LOOK FoR WO'ii&lt; IIJ
A COMIC T!JAT HAS A!!SOLUTH'f
NOTJ.liNG

CUTE. IN IT IJQ iA\.1'&lt;1!-IG

AN I /11~\.S, NO P~IOCOCIOUS ~IDS,

NO YUI'?I£ fAmiliES

~

:

------~~---------- :

DRYWALL
'I
Hang l1n1sh reparr
~
Cerhngs lexwred, plaster r epa 1r '
Call Tom 304 -675 4186 20 years~
expen9!1Ce
1

'

Earls Home Mamtenance vrn~l 1
s1drng , roofing e~terror parntr ng~
poWe,r washlnQ Free ESTimates
614 992-4451

'====~~::::::::::::~~~~~lh~e year ahead
AS T R 0 ·GRAPH

Ron s TV Servrce, specralrzrng '"
Zemth also sarv1c1ng mosl othttr
brands Hou se calls, 1 800 -797
0015, wv 304 576 2396
Roofrng and gutters commercial
and res rdentra l, m1nor reparrs 35
years experrence B&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 992 5041

&amp;
~

;:F::,e::e:m::a:n.:s-;:H;:e::a-::ron:-9-;An::o:-::c-0~0 ,~.,9

lns rallatron And Serv1ce EPA
Certrlred Aes1dentral, Commercaal
6 14 256 1611
Electrlcl!l and
Retrlgera11on

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps Arr Cond111001ng It
You Don't Call Us We Both Loser '
Free Estrmates 1 800 287 630 8,.
614 446-6308 WI/ 002945
Resrdent1al or commercral wrrrng "'
new servrce or reparrs M8ster lr
censed electrrcran A•deno ur ~
WV000306 304 675 .,

Frrday , Sepl 29 1995
Condlttons .n general m1ght be more
enJoyable for you 1n the year ahead than
they have been 1n the past Some of the
good thrngs you 've been demed may now
be forthcomrng
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct_ 23) Follow your
1mpulses today 1f they d1rect you to buy
something you need 1or the home espe·
Clally 1f 11 can be used by all members of
the fam1ly Get a 1ump on hfe by under·
standing the mfluences I hat govern you rn

Send for your ALs•1r•o·--A-R...liE.I.S (March 21·Aprll19) Your luck wrll

Graph prediCirons loday by maohng $2
and SASE to Astro-Graph, cJo thrs news paper P 0 Box 1758 Murray Hrlf Statron \
New York, NY 10150 Make su re to state
your ZOdiaC Sign
SCORPIO (Oc1 24-Nov 22) You ar e
presently 1n a hopeful cycle whe re your
practrcal el(pectat1ons have marvelous
chances of berng gratrf1ed You w1ll need
to faKe the l1rst steps, however
SAGITIARIUS(Nov 23·Dec 21) Aema1n
cogntzar'lt of your purchast~g power s
today because you can now barga1n for
something you ve been want rng but
couldn't aNord
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan . 19) You
mtght be fortunate today rn frndrng the
nght person to help you promote somethmg you haven t been able to get off the
ground by yoursell
AQUARjUS (Jan_ 20-Feb 19) Unusual
cond111ons are sttrnng today that could
produce un1que types of matenal benef1ts
for you through a 1eas1 expeCied channel
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Today you
m1ght succeed 1n a development where
others have !ned and fa1l ed rf you grve
lull retgn to your Jmagmatton and
resourcefulness

ball team H1s grandfather told h1m that no success or
fa1lure IS necessanly FINAL

HIGH PRICES SHOP TI--E CLASSI'IE.DS

,,,

Brll O ~rrc~·s Home lmpro11ements• ;
addnrons remodeling roolrng ;
srdrng plumb1ng etc Insured, call't
Brll Omck 614 992 5183
•1
tenence Parntrng vmr l srdrng
carpen\ry, doors wrndows baths
mobrle home reparr and mote For
free es~mate call Ch~r 614 992
6323

Quartz · Unarm · L1mll. Raffle - FINAL
le

a

Appliance Parts And Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E~
per rence Al l Work Guar anteed
French Crty May ra g 614 446~
7795

840

36 Housing lor
a Dodge

rn the dummy tSouthl and drscard hrs
club loser on the dramond queen But
when East played a third dramond .,o;o
that Wesl could ruff away the queen,
declarer overruffed drew trumps and
drove out the spade ace North's club
loser drsappcared on the spade king
At the second table, where to the g1v

&amp;

Heating

34 Prince
Rainier's
realm

erght trrcks and loses the last f1ve
whereas an expert loses the first four

mond ace Now there was no defense If
East SWitched to a club, declarer would
wm w1th {he ace, draw trumps endmg

New gas tanks one ton truck
wheels, mdrators floor mats, etc •
D &amp; A Auto, Rrpley WV 304 372;
3933 or t 600 273 9329

Plumbing

Eastern
language

tablrshes lncks for th e opponents
There IS an old sa)'lng that expresses
lhis porn! well When playmg m three

Summer Nattonals
At both tables. t he contract was four
hearts At the first, North wa s the de
clarer East led the diamond king and
de spite' seemg the South hand as the
dummy , East conlmued wrth the d1a

Accessories

820

rodents
33 Middle

ftne

of the Sp1nguld M aster Knockout

tor Sale

810

31 Genua of

Teams , the prem1er event of the

Motors

Campers

Pass

be estabhshmg 111~.:ks for your Side, not
cashmg wmnct s espe(•t ally 1f that cs

1989 Polarrs 250 tra rl boss
$1 500 1987 Yamaha 225 $1,500
304 773 5109

790

P ass

than nut,' early rn the play, you need to

1985 CA250, all new parts mus)
sell 304-67S.3031

Lois Of E~trasl $6000 6t4
6095

Pass

ca shm g w1nners when
you re on defense However, more often

Motorcycles

&amp;

Dol

37 Sounds

1994 Astro Van loaded,
Will sell lor loan payo ff
5119

750 Boats

East

4•

Set up before
cashing out

'

1----------,-------:

740

North

Pass

By Phillrp Alder

1990 Dodge Ram Van B·250 •
72,000 M1les $6,000, Can Be:
Seen At Gall rpohs Darly Tribune 1
825 Thud Avenue Galllpoll''
Ohro

5~M

610 Farm Equipment

RUTHER
NOT SPOIL YORE
FUN, HONEY •

1984 Dodge Caravan 4 Cylrnder•
$3 200, 6t4 379 9447 614-379:
2425
.,

6H 245 - 1500

1978 Nova 4 Door Runs Good.
Many New Parrs $950 614-4461995

Trumper Bach TR 300 Used Very
lrttle New S645 Sell For $200
614 245-5870

I

I'D

WHAT SORTA

West

energy
10 Undivided
11 Made of
cereal
19 Sad

-.--+-t---1
21 Rou~hness
r
23 King a son
24- baked
--+-+---1 beans
Utensils
.,rl-+-+-1 25
28 Scooby-

Openmg lead t8

4 314 V,tfar10id 112 Angus 8. 112 1968 Rrnker Captr\la 18ft. open
Ch1an1na Bull 614 446 6755
bow, 4 3 l very good cond wrth
- - - - - - - - - - - ltrarler $6,200 304 675 7791
Black Marne AnJOU Cross Herter
614 446 0516
760
Auto Parts &amp;

Bundy Clarmet Very Good Con
d1tron, Newly Re Padded $200
614 446 2109

Ludwrg Snare Drum &amp; Stand For
Sate One Year Old Bu t Played
Very little 614 388 8815

WHEN
YORE YOUNG·UN
GITS
HERE,
LISSY

:-:-:---:-:-------1 1989 Cobra FISh &amp; Skr Boat t50
630
livestock
HP Ourboard Moror Deprh Fon&lt;!:;-;=:::-:-::-;::--::::::--:::-:--::-::--1 er Burlt-ln CB &amp; AMIFM Stereo

lnternatronal 756 Dresel Tractor
S4 995 964 D1esel PS l1ve PTO
$3,995, Sears 12 HP Lawn Trac
tor, $295, Case Lawn Tractor
$295 614 266 5522

Goods
4 srngle shot shotguns 1 srngle
shot 22cal nile 1 22cai PIStol
304-675-' 564

Wanted mformatron o f Robert
SA Jr , Adams Famrly Burred rn
Adams Cemetery Mason Crw S
Adams 5930 Sycamore, B(r tle tt
TN 3813~
\

Instruments

Now open Quality Furnrture Plus,
SA 7 Tuppers Plams Several op- Old Glassware Some Fenton

Apanments
lor Rent

Campground Membershrp, Camp
From Coast To Coast US /Canada $4 00 Per Ntghr API A!fl lla!~
Pd $3 600 Sacraflc. . .25, 1 800236-0328
.,

44~6~0~0~4~11i~:,;~~~~~ 388
E~ercrse
6293

Twm Rrvers Tower now accepting
appl1ca11ons lor 1br HUO subsrd
rzed apt for elderly and handr
Four lots near ~acrne approx 1 capped EOH 304 675-6679
112 acres each startrng at SSOOO
Unfurnrshed 2 Bedrcom, Carport,
call 614 949 2025
Sto\le Retrrgerator, Drshwasher
Hrdden Bu1ld1ng S1te W11h D11ve $275/Mo S275 Deposrt, 614 446
way S 5 Acres (O ld 35) 314 Mrles 3888 614 446 4491
From Foodtand Blacktop Road
614 446 7278 614 3889062
450
Furnished
OWN YOUR OWN
Rooms
LAKE
And Acreage Excellent For
Bulldmg Campsues E1c Appr 10 Rooms for ren t week or month
Acre Sprrng Fed S1oc~ed lake Start1ng at $120 /mo Gall!a Hotel
Wrth Island 3 Bedrooms, 2 112 614 446 9580
Balh Mobile Home W1th Add On
Sleep1ng rooms wrlh cook1ng
10 Mrles From Galhpo lr s Also trarler space on n\ler All
$125 000 614 388 8678
hook ups Call after 2 00 p m,

:3 Bedrooms, State Route 141 10
Mrles Out Gallrpohs. 24x32 Ga
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace
In Ground Pool New Satellrte
01sh Galha County local School
D1slrrct 614 379-2410

3b,edrooms ( 1 Master) 2balhs
basement screened 1n porch /
bjeezeway family room double
garage 12 54acres 304 675
4575

In Pornt Pleasant 3 Bpdrooms
Unlurnrshed Apartmenl Mus!
Ha\le Reference &amp; Deposr1 614

63 Acres Wooded Land Countr
Water &amp; Electr rc On Propertr.
$30,000614 256 1412

S Rooms Bath Basement, Decks
Wanted To Do

BEAUTIFUL APARTt.OENT S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES ,~ 52 Wes1wood Dnvo
!rom $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Ca ll 614 4.46 2566
Equal Hous ng OpportuMy

New Bank Aepos Only 4 lett 304
One bedroom 12x52 1977 Madr
son mobrle home. good condrtron
304-937 3119

Dr rvers Needed Short Tr rps To
Surroundrng Areas Requrre
rnen1s Good Drrvrng Record Pay
';;Very 2 Wee~s Vehrcle Provrd :&gt;d, 614 4&lt;16-3188

Buckwood Stove Wnh Blower
Some lnstallated Slove P1pe, 614
446 2518

2acres 1984 Sprrngbrook mob1le

home 3mr At 2 N on A1 62 304

I Shtrley

Spears, 3)4 6 75-1 429

Babybed, dressrng table, carseet,
stroller sw1ng 304 675-4548

FINANCIAL

SERVICES
Help Wanted

•

W1ll do babrsrtt rng rn my home
reasonable ra1es, !le111ble hOurs
close to school 304-675 2784

EMPLOYMENT

110

LOT

OF CHANGES

Top Pnces Pa1d Old U S Cams,
Silver Gold D1amo nds All Old
Cot teet bles, Pa per w e1ghts Etc
M T S Com Shop !51 SeGond
AvernJe Ga\hpohs 614 446 2842

&amp; 4·WDs

7 Airline Info

• Q 7 6
•A Q 5 2

THAR'LL BE A

Vans

6 Loiter

'fK

BARNEY

730

8 Peel
9 Units of

Sumac

4 Use the VCR

Vulnerable North -South
Dealer Soulh

Used lurmtu re anttques one
p1ece or complete estates Osby
Martin 614 992 7441

Answer to Prtvioua Puu..

be good Ieday on achrevrng your specofoc
atms today S h oot for someth1ng brg
even 1f rt rs a b1t grander than anytt11ng
you ve anempted prei/rou sly
TAURUS ~April 20-May 20) You can
acqu1re valuable know ledge to day by
c losely observ~ng those you admrre If
what they use works for them 1t ca n be
adapted to your c ir cumstances
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Grve prronty
today to arrang e men ts that e rther
mcrease yQJ.Jr presen ~earn 1ngs or pr o vrde
you w1th a new sour ce ol mcome Your
chart rndrcates money fo r you
CANCER (June 21-Juiy 22) ConSiructove
measures can be taken to restore harmony today rn an alliance tha t has been a bit
shaky lately Be the one to 1n1trate the
effort
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) Look lor belter
methods of handlrng the work you ' re
charged w1th today The answers are rn
your head so use your rmagmatron
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sapt 22) An opponunrty moght presen1 olsell today to orrng you
1n closer contact With a person you d like
to know better You mustn I let thts
chance sltp past you

SEPTEMBER 281

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery
...

Thursday, September 28, 1995

.

Buying American products will put the nation to work
Ann
Landers
• ,915,~ ~
'l1rnN s~ arvs

CrMtofl Syndlc:M"

Dear Aaai•Men: Do you have
room far one men 1eaer lbout why
youq people 11e not JeUin1 jobs? I

lmowwhy.
Olect tbe IIWIWaclwa'l tag on
tbe bKit ol your bloulc, eRa, COil
or suiL a.- 11e JOOCIIhat IIIey
-Dillie ill Sri bnb Btnglw!esh,
PUialln, Thailand or lndoneaia.
There IIICCI to be factory jobs for
Americana wbo were not well-

CCIIIIIIricl. diOie CIOUlllriel will most left hand.
She II angry wilh me because I
cerllinly refule to buy oun. Then
Some or my friends hive said I don't care to join her when abe is
lleiMm die peedy polidcilns llld wbcrewouldwebe?MicteyKanror, should live Kevin's ring beck, bull "aociaHzina" llld "llavin&amp; fun. • It II
the UDiona, most of our proclucu call your ollkc.
fed that I hive earned it. if you~ not fun ra- me to aay outantil3un.,
today Ill: not made in tbe u.S.A. Just
Dear Aaa l.aadtn: Two )'Citl my drift. What do you thint?· 'WIIcllina an intdliient woman drink
ay 10 find a pair or shoes made in 11i0. 1-eapc: ~ 10 be lllllried,llld - VANCOUVER READER
beneiC iDto an l!pllltJIIative, f9Ul·
America.
"Kevin" pvc me a I CUll di•mond
DEAR VAN: When the man IIIOIIIhed, aemi.o!!llcious 111a1e. The
Do us all a fa~ Ann. TeU your ring valued at $12,000. The brab the enpacment, t h e - Del(l day is II(ICIIt dealina wilh her
IQdcn to cbcct the 111• oa their engagement was cancded afa' lix bas Lhe ~t 111 keep the rina- Whell hangover and mood lwings.
""'•"*«!, but 110 -

Our factories

cln!hina aDd refuse to buy ln)'lbina
1101 ude by our fellow citizens.
•• ANNEMARIE IN PHILA·
DELPHIA
DEAR PHILADELPHIA: Local
ODMIII'lplioa ahould be IR*' 111111
what we llpllld oa imporll, but die
~you nxwnmend could
aerioul ~ If Amter _. .

II10IIIhs by mutual agroement. bcfcn
any wedding~ had beal
made.
We arc both enaqcd to other
people now. Kevin buulced aeveral
times that I live the ring beck, but I
like wearing It on my ri&amp;bt band
because It is a nice piece: of jewelr)t
My new fiBilCC bought me a much
refuse 10 buy producu made ill ocher smaller diamond, which I wear on my

tV:

Immunization clinic to
visit Meigs County

••

considmd joinina AI·Anon? If not.
I recommend iL AI for lhe "time
frame, • it depends on your lhnshold
of tobana:. It could be that calliDg
it quill might be the jolt abe needs 111
dry up.
I suueat that you lilt this over
with a profeaalonal.
Forget to save some of yoiU
I am aware that alcoholism is a favorite A1111 Landers coliUIIIIIl ·
diaea~~e and that ibis woman is in "NuggtuaNIDoolies"iltltullllwc
deni•l but wballime frame would ~lllluelf~btg,barillus­
you aUow for her to pt help befcn I 1/ze envelope llltd a clteck or money
call it quill? P.S. Thclc idiola who orderfor S5.2S (this illcludu posiiJ&amp;e
popoae Jegalinng c1rup should be aNI Nwi/Jng) w: Nugreu, cloAM
forced 111 live wish an ak:oholic for a Uwler~, P.O. B~ l1562, Cltlcago,
year a- ao. - NO STATE EXCEPT Ill. 606Jl-0562. (/11 CaMda, .rend

Ill: DOW loca"'d CMIICU.

the wedding is canceled by mutual
agreement, the ring 1bould be
reiUmed. To do ocberwiae llllba bakD;likeagolddigger-iCyouc.leh
"" drift.
Dear Aan Landen: There's 110
qoesaion that my girlfrioad ol eipt
months has a serioua clrinklnl
· problem. Her idea ol an CYelllaa out CONCERNED
S6.2S.)
is 111 make the bars and get drunk.
DEAR CONCERNED: Have you .

The Childhood Immunization
Program, a mobile health program.
will provide a free immunization
clinic for all area children from
birth through middle school Oct II
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department, and
from 5 to 7 p.m. at the McDonalds
in Pomeroy. McDonalds will pro·
vide a personal pizza for each child
receiving immunizations.

. In response to an incr~ase
measles cases, recommendatiOns
for giving the MMR (measles,
mumps and rubella) vaccine were
changed in 1989. The first MMR
should be given at f2 months of
age and the second one prior to
entering seventh grade.
In addition 10 the MMR and
other routine immunizations available to all children, the clinic is
able to administer the Hepatitis B
The clinic is provided by the · vaccine to children born after Nov.
Ohio University College of Osteo- 22, 1991. Hepatitis B is a series of
pathic Medici!IJ! Childhood Immu- three injeclions over a minimum of
nization Program's community six months.
mobile health unit, the Ohio
Bring your child's previous shot
Department of Health, the Meigs records. For more information
County Health Department, the about immunizations, call toll-free
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Depart- 1-800-844-2654 or contact your
ment and McDonald's.
local health department.

•

A humorous play in tribute to
JoAnn BaUJn, new sL1te councilor,
highlighted u meeting of Chester
Council 323, Duughters of America. held recently m the hall .
The play centered around an
imaginary trip tu Hawaii. Taking
part were Charlotte Grant, Opal
Hollon, Thelma White , Belly
Young, Mary Barringer, Mary
Holter, Laura Nice, and Goldie
Frederick. Elizabeth Hayes read a
poem, Helen Wolf sang a song, a11d
Esther Smith on hebalf of the
Council, presented her with diamond earrings.
Je:m Welsh, councilor, presided
at the meeting which orened ritualistic form with pledges, prayer and
scripture. It was noted the Beulah
Maxey has had surgery, that Iva
Powell is hospitalized and that Eva
Robson is recuperating from a fall.

f

The "Star Circu.•" L• coming to the Meigs Hlgb School gymnasl·
urn in Pomeroy, 7 p.m., Oct. 4 at 7 p.m. for one show. The circus
will feature variou.• performers, such as Thunderball, above, tbe
famous minialuro horse. Ticket prices are $6 for adults, $4 for
children 13 to 18, and children 12 and under are admitted free.

Mrs. Sm!th read.a letter from.the
state councilor notmg the appomtment of Erma Cleland as council
deputy of Chester Counci!J23.
Fnendship night to be beld in
Logan on Oct. 4 with a po!Juck at 6
p.m. was announced. It was also
noted that at the next meeting a
shower will be held for Sarah
Lawrence.
Nine birthdays were ol!served
with each of those honored receivin~ a card and glass. Potluck
refreshments were served along ·
with a birthday cake. ·
.
Others auendmg wc:re .A~ Bassell •. Mae McPeek, Vargama Lee,
Dons Grueser, Sharon Lawrence,
Eva Robson, Margaret Amberger,
Everett Grant, Lora Damewood,
Sandra .White, Marcia Keller, Jean
Fredenck, Kathryn Baum, Ella
Osborne and Ethel Orr.

106th Grand· Session of Order of Eastern Star slated for mid-October
The Grand Chapter of Ohio, the sermon. She will be assisted by
OnJer of the E.1stem Star, will hold the Rev. Donald L. Brown of Day·
its i06th Annual Grand Session in ton.
Battelle H:~l. the Ohio Center, 400
The Rev. McGlinchey was
North High St.. Columbus, Oct. 15 ordained at the Broad Street Christhrough 18. The headquarters and tian Church in Columbus on June
most related activities will be at the II and after her ordination, she
worked part time as chaplain at Mr.
adjoining Hyau Regency Ho!!:l.
Carmel
East HospiUtl. ln SeptemWorthy Grand Matron Gayle
Surherin of Marion, and Worthy ber, she begins a one-year residenGrand Patron Jake Frederick, of cy in Clinical Pastoral Education at
Bellville, will preside over the Riverside Methodist Hospital. Both
ministers are ESTARL recipients.
1995 "Precious Moments" session.
The Rev. McGlinchey was
To set the tone of the "Precious
Moments" session, a Vesper .Ser- sponsored by Bexley Chapter No.
vice will be held at 3:30 p.m. on 524 in Columbus, now Unison
Oct. 15 in the South Ballroom of Chapter No. 586. The Rev. Brown
the H~au Regency. The Rev. Kay was sponsored by Sharon Chapter
McGhnchey of Be'fley will give No. 132 in West Milton. A dinner

will follow the service. Those who
wish to auend the dinner should
caU the Vesper Dinner Chairman
Marcia Heyder at 614-876-1646.
!he deadline for reservations is
Oct. 9.
The 106th Grand Session will
oren on Monday, October 16 at 5
p.qa. in Battelle Hall. The Grand
Chapter Banquet will take place at
7 p.m. in the Regency Ballroom on
Oct. 17. Those who wish to attend
the Grand Banquet should contact

Toy run to be
held during .
festival

Chairman Carolyn Schulze at 614Grants are given annually to
870'63 73. The installation of the institutions and iodividuals around
1996 Grand Officers will close this . the state. In 1994, these grants were
session on Oct. 18.
in excess of $!60,000. Childrc{n's
The Order of the Eastern Star is ·Hospital in Columbusreceived $
a benevolent, educational and II ,850 for research to develop a
social organization of women with vaccine similar to the polio vaccine .
close ties to the Masonic Fraternity. to prevent the development of
The nearly 100,000 members in malignant cells. Children's HospiOhio are committed to help fight tal in Cincinnati also received '
disease and suffering as well as $11,850 for further study on bone
provide. scholarships to students in marrow tmnsplants. The Ohio State
religious training.
University Department of Obstet-

rics and Gynecology received
$11,850 to proceed with ovarian
cancer research. Ireland Cancer
Center in Cleveland received
$10,000 to improve chemotherapy
of breast and colon cancer. Over
$31,000 was sent to Th~ Central
Ohio Chapter of the American
Heart Association. Eastern Star
Training Awards for Religious
Leadership (ESTARL) were give(l
to 122 college and seminary stu- ·
dents amounting to over $83,000.

rtJ~(I•i{IJ'tt~-lfljfi/J~~~~/((ifi~.lfl-~'5! ~!!f{(.:ltf{l·~~·- ;J'('jl{(,·{'!t·. ~

~ 'CO'me

The Meigs County Bikers Association will hold their tenth annual
toy run Saturday in conjunction
with tbe annual Big Bend Sternwheel Festival.
A motorcycle show sponsored
by Bob Hoeflich
by the sternwheel festival committee will be held Saturday with signin beginning at 10 a .m. Judging
Hawley,
will be at 11:30 a.m. on Court
Thought sure I'd get calls from port musician.
Street with awards being given in
at least lop Ohio State alumni in
The aduils presented a piano three places at 5 p.m. in the. upper
Meigs County correcting my men- recital. It was a bit of a privale parking lot in conjunction with i(;
ffi~
tion of the Ohio State football team affair, however, and demonstrated other stemwheel awards.
~.
meeting "Harvard" this Saturday. to the adult students the effect of
Toy run participants will meet '
H~Wever, only one called. I well nerves on public performance. The on the Pomeroy Parking Lot at
knew OSU is playing Notre four got through it fine however noon and head out at I p.m.
Dame- just a slip in the cog. Am I and topped off the recital-attendA dinner/dance featuring several
the only one who bas those? At any ed only by themselves and their live bands including "White '
rate, you probably can stili get a teacher-with a potluck luncheon. Raven" will be held following the
$300 ticket 10 Saturday's game ifn The students are Jane Brown, run at the Watering Hole on state
you want.
Marie Curd, Sara Harris and Joyce Route 7 north of Pomeroy. Cost of
Feuy-and they're ali doing well admission is $5 or a new toy (no
A great tum()ul Friday evening with their late start on the piano. stuffed animals). Ali proceeds are
at Eastern when the Eastern High All four have been doing lessons
for the underprivileged children of
School Marching Band and the for about a year.
Meigs County at Christmas.
OhiQJIJniversily Marching 110
Senior Citizens and Job'·s
were featured in concert. It was an .
Edna Price ad vises me that there · Daughters have agreed to help
exciting musical experience is a new book just published on the wrap and store the toys this year.
enjoyed by some 700 residents. Delta King and the Delta Queen .
The concert raised enough money The new volume is presently on
from the gate admissions and con- sale at the Lafayette Hotel and at
pol~cy
cession sales to purchase a new the Riverboat Museum in Marietta.
computer for students of the Tup- I haven't seen a copy of it yet.
In an effort to provide our readpers Plains Elementary School.
ership with current news, the GalGood deal for everyone. The Tuplipolis Daily Tribune and Tire Daily
The Racine Area Community
rers Pl&lt;'\ins School PTO sponsored Organization will ·be staging its fall
Sefl/me/ wall not accept weddings
the entertaining.evening.
after 60 days from the date of the
yard sale-rain or shine-on Frievent.
.
day and Saturday, Oct. 6 and 7,
Interesting.
All
club
meetings and other
beginning at 9 a.m. at Star Mill
The Masonic bodies of the Mid- Park. The sale will wrap up what news articles in the society section
dleport Masonic Temple and the has been a very busy summer and
must be submiued within 30 days
Middleport Order of Easter Star fall for members of the organiza- . of occunence. All birthdays must
have purchased a chair lift from the tion.
be submitted within 42 days of the
occurence.
home of fonner Ohio State football
coach Woody Hayes. ·
The chair lift will go up to the
/,f .
1
second lloor of Uae temple covering
J\reert ~e •:.
both sets of stairs and this will
co,.~ lilt/:~,..~,,
allow older and disabled members
to auend their respective meetings
'"h . Ql/ 6"olte ~
as well as members who can no
o,.. q
longer climb stairs due to other
8
lte
•
health problems.
Cost of the chair lift installed is
$10,000.
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of Eastern Star, will be holding a
fund raiser dinner to help with pur- ·
chase of the lift on Friday, Oct. 6,
MIDDLEPORT, OH
from II a.m. until 7 p.m. The dinner will be held in the basement of
You're Invited to hear Pastor Leslie Hayman
the Middleport temple.
present a light-hearted message on the serious
The menu sounds great and the
cost for the complete dinner will
concerns affE!cting today's marriages.
only be $3.50. Residents may eat
in, carry out or members of the
organization will even deliver.
The evening will conclude with a renewal of
Those needing delivery can call
marriage vows and dinner provided by the
992-5330 after 7 a.m. on Friday,
church.
the date of the dinner.

On Over h 11:, t

)

.'._

;

$

For Beautiful Flowers And Fall Treats! . ~
~.
F~fLL GA.Rl~~·l\· rt l 1 ~~ ,.
~;
~
~

Beat of the Bend ...

$

"Over 20 Varieties To Choose From"

Large
. 8" Pot $ ~'"', .J
" 07 eac h or ..~ ~tOr
·

1f,,1 · '·

&lt;ll\li

·
----------------------·$~ fALL PANSIES
·

.

(~~·=·

...

,.
'Plant Now For Beautiful Spring Beds'

Mix And Match

~

"-'••&gt;
LARGE
SELECTION OF
FALL FLOWER

BULBS
INCLUDING

AND DON'T FORGET, BOB'S
FRESH FALL PRODUCE
Fresh from Shenandoah Valley
• Golden Delicious • Red Delicious
• M'Intosh • Grimes Golden

,,
5lb. Bag

• Tulips • Hyacinths
• Daffodils • Crocus
• Narcissus

Olb.Bag

A good time for several adults
who are piano students of Mrs.

.,

•'

.-

'

j't~

~"'"1*.
~
,til.
v-·1l
·.,

...

),,_
~

• Hartlctt Pears • Stanlr·'
&lt;

~

n•' &lt; r· ~ o1s
f' t .

s . "to

•

J'

..'
....

Friday, .Sept. 29 - 7:00 p.m.
Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church

\

'

....., _i

News

"Marriaae
·'t':'~,.; ··~
Maintenanee"
·~··

-,

The Latest Trend Is To Plant Your Pansies In The Fall
And Enjoy Beautiful Flower Beds In Early Spring.
Pansies Enjoy Cold Weather.

Per }"'lat

Pick 3:
4-3·7
Pick 4:
4-5-0-2
Buckeye 5:
3-13-18-21-27

Sports, Page 4

Mini-Pumpkitu, Indian Com,
Guord&amp;, Small Pie Pumpkitu,
't,"::rJ~~ck-·O·.l.arltei'R Pumpkins
For Your·Decorating NeedS!
Rt. 33 (1/4 M1le north Pomeroy/Mason Bridge), Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773-5721

low 1ontght In 50s, mostly
clear. Saturday, sunny. High in
80s .

..
VoL 46, NO. 108

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 29, 1995

Copyrlght1995

Play presented to local
Daughters of American .

Circus coming to Pomeroy

Meigs wins
TVC's golf
title

warrants expected for alleged suspects
By MICHELE CARTE.R
OVP News Stall
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.- Warrants may be .signed as early as
this afternoon for a Hartford couple wanted for questioning in the murder
of Jack L. Roush, according to authorities.
Timothy Willirun Gibbs, 37, and Risa Lynne Sayre Leonard, 32, were
last seen Monday moming when they purchased a 1988 Ford Escort station wagon froan a Middleport woman for $350.
The couple lived in U1e Hartford Trailer Park in a trailer ~wned by
Roush and hi s wife. For about a week, the Roush couple had laved wath
Gihbs and Leonard because of problems at their own trailer, according to
Mason County sherifrs Deputy C.C. McConihay .
Roush's body was found Wednesday afternoon in a bedroom ~f the
trailer. He was shot twice, once in the right chest area and once m the
right shoulde&lt;, with a small caliber gun. Authorities are still looking for

coming froan the trailer around miunight Sunday. Sounds similar to fire·
the bullets which exited Roush's body.
.
The suue medical examiner reported Thursday tlaat Roush had been crackers,muJ sh&lt;•uting were reported .
According to Dlankenship, invt!sligators have found that some guns
dead approximately three days, placing the time of death at either late
Sunday night or early Mm.day moming .
.
. . - . may have hccn stolen from the vicaim :uad that he may have been killed by
McConihay is working with Roger Blankenshap and Charhe Sask ot one of !~is own gu ns.
.
.
· Money could also be a motive in the C&lt;'L'e. Blankenship said interviews
the Mid-Westcm Drug and Y.iolent Crime Task Force on thq.invcstigation. The Mason County Sheriffs Deparunent is a member of the task have revealed that Roush usm~ly kept a lot of money on him . When his
force, which includes law enforcement agencies from Pumam and Lincoln bo~y was founu Wednesday, his w'~lct held $2.
Blankenship saiu autlwriaics have tiJUnd ou( that neither Gibbs nor
counties, as well as tlae Hurricane and Nitro Police Deparunents.
"The main goal is to get the couple back here," lllankenship said.
Leonard ha~ any money ~unday to buy beer. but paid $350 cash fm a
Blankenship said iiJVestigators have been conducting interviews and ·vehicle on Monuay.
background check&amp; while pulling the case together. lie srud bullet casmgs . The sheritrs department was called to the Hartford Trailer Park around
have been found at the muruer scene and U1a1 investigators believe. they 2:12 p:m. W'cunesday after a neighbor repoa1ed Rotish had not been seen
for a couple of uays and his 1974 Chevrolet truck was missing: The
know whm type of gun was used .
In interviews wiU1 neighl)ors, Blankenship said there were noises heard
(Continurd on l'a~e 3)
I

Taft recog.nizes
Meigs County's
longtime voters.
. By TOM HUNTER·
Sentinel News Staff
At the same time German troops
were preparing to bomb Coventry,
England, during World War II,
America was preparing for an
important presidential election.
It was November 1940 and
Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt
was seeking a second presidential
term, opposed by Republican Wendell Willkie and independent Norman Thomas .
During that 1940 presidential
election, current Middleport resi·dent Ruben Collins voted at the
polls for the nrst time in his native
West Virginia.
Collins was one of 83 longtime
Meigs County voters to he honored _.
by Ohio Secretary or State Dob
Taft, at a special reception held for
50 year-plus voters Thur.sday at the
Meigs County Multa-Purpose
Senior Center.
Tafl recognized the voters for
their "commitment to the elections
process, many of which date back
to the 1932 election of President
Herbert Hoover." ·
AS Taft presented proclamations
to those who have. voted 50 years
or more. he a&lt;ked them individually how long they had voted. Many

of those in attendance said they
pave voted for 55 to 60 years .
Collins informed Taft that he
served with Taft's father in the
U .S. Navy. Collins served with
Robert Taft II, in Company 1070,
29th Regiment at the Great Lakes
Naval Station, May through June of
1944.
,
·
Norman and Al ·regra Will of .
Rutland were :unong several coupies honored together with certilicates for voting longevity.
"Have both of you always voted
the same way?" Tart asked Mrs.
Will, referring to her husband's
voting habits .
Mrs. Will responded by s:aying,
"not at tirst, but then he convened
me." Taft smilej ~.d looked ~ver
to Mr. Wall, saymg, Good JOb ..
Lula Hrunptnn wa~ _celebraung
more U1a~ her votang longevaty at
yesterdays ceremony, It was als~
her 86th barth day and she wa.' 'recognized by Meigs County Board of
Elections Chairman Henry Hunter. .
Taft had Uae ram opportumty .ot
honoring a moU1 er and daughter. lor
voter longevity. Etta Collums and
her daughter! Helen Swartz, were
both recogmzed as 50 year-pluo
voters by Taft and Board of Elecli?ns Director Rita SmiUa.

Economy
continues
sluggish
growth /

VOTING LONGEVITY HONOREDOhio Secretary nf Stole Bob Tan presenl&lt; a cerliOcate to VIrgil King of Pomeroy. King was one
Three poll workers who have 25
years or mnre of service were hon ored .. They were former bo:trd of
elections member Norman Will,
Ba.rbara Sar~ent and Frances
Alkire.
.
Several county officials were in
attendance for yesterday's ccremo-

of 83 Meigs County voters honored at a ceremony held at the Meigs County Mulll-Purpose
Senior Center Thursday. (Sentinel photo)

ny, including Commissioner Janet
Howard Tackett, Treasurer Howard
Frank, Auditor Nancy Campbell.
Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer and
Recorder Enunogene Hamilto.n .
Also recognized were the past
director of the Meigs County Board
of Elections, Evelyn Clark, for her

auendance at the ceremony, and
current board member Henry Wells
as a 50-year-plus voter.
Longtime voters honored were
Emma Adams, Louise llartcls,
Cora Beegle, Loretta Beegle, Mary
Bise, Catherine Biron , Charles and
(Continued on Page 3)

New open records law prompts requests for changes
, COLUMBUS (AP) - Oflkials
representing everything from the
governor's office to the state's public universities praised efforts to
rewrite Ohio's oren records law .
But all thought it would be a lot
better if certain parts didn't apply
to them.
"The governor strongly supports and has a long history of fostering open government .." R?c~y
Black, ·Gov. George Voanovach s

director of legislative affairs. told
members of the Oren Records Subcommittee or the Senate Judiciary
Committee on Thursday.
However, the governor wants a
bill that allows better public access
to records but does not hurden ~ov­
ernments witla unre:L,onable costs, ·
Black said.
Tops on Voinovich's wish list is
an exemption for any memo or
other communication between the

governor and his policy staff and took a more narrow approach.
The state's public universities
Cabinet related to decision making.
"The interest in efficient and wanted three exemptions from disresponsible policy formulation closure:
• The resulls of research and
should rake primacy over - and in
all cases and at all times - com- other intellectu al property until
plete access to all discus sion s they arc puhlishcd, patented or
occurring within state govern· publicly relc:c&lt;ed.
men~" Black said.
·
·
• Information ahouL donor s
Mary Noonan, a lobhyisl for the beyond their n:uncs. the :unount of
Inter-University Council of Ohio, contributions a11d how th e mon ey
I

As Cochran ends fiery oration,
O.J. jurors to retire for decision
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Pres.• Writer
LOS ANGELES - Johnnie
Cochran Jr. was the preacher.
Barry Scheck was the teacher.
And when it was over, the-judge
told jurors in the OJ. Simpson trial
after nine months of
that by
sequestration, the lawyers will
finally stop talking.
"The case," Judge Lance Ito

today,

said, • 'wi11 be yours.''

Nicole Drown Simpson and Ronald
Goldman .
An acquittal. Cochran said,
would send a powerful message
against raci sm and ·police misconduct, and place ·those "twin devils
of deception" - Deaectives Mark
Fuhrman and Philip Vannatter in their rightful place.
.
"Stop t11is cover-up! Stop thas
cover-up''' Cochran bellowed in
the second day of his summation.
"You are the consciences of this

All that remain s is the final
word from the prosecution today in community." ·
Vannatter told the Los Angeles
its rebuuai to the defense 's 1-1/2
days of summations, which ·on Times that Cochran's argument
Thursday were part scaence course, was nonsense . "It's lies . It's
ridiculous," he said.
part tent revival meeting .
The summation reverberated
Scheck provided the technical
side, speaking at great length about from the courthouse to th e White
blood hair and fiber and a. pohce • House. President Clinton said he
departtnent so foul that when it's was concerned about the racial
not contaminating evide nce, it's implications of the triaL
"I'm concerned about it and I
planting it.
Cochran provided the fiery ora- bore the American people will not
let this become some symbol of the
tion.
In what some may call his finest larger racial issue in our country."
professional hour and what one he told NBC-TV in Washington. ·
Closer to home, Fred Goldman.
victim's father denounced as a
sickening display, Cochran father of victim Ronald Goldman.
unleashed a thundering summation. went before the TV cameras and
imploring the mostly black panel to lashed out at Cochran.
"This man is sick," he said.
"do the right thing" and acquit
Simpson in the slayings of ex-wife ''This man is a horror walking

will be used.
• The names of out-of·statc
reviewers of faculty members work
for tenure or promotion purposes.
Witne~scs from stare agencic~
had their reasons for closing oil
some information, (no.
The Department of Administrative Services wants to block the
release of pa sswo rds and olhcr
computer secu rity information.

WASIIINGTON (AJ')- The
economy grew at a sluggish 1.3
percent annual rate in U1e second
quarter of 1995, Uac slowest pace in
more than two years but slightly
sironger tlt:in earlier estimmes.
The Commerc-e Department said
tOday the revised figures do not
substantially change U1e picture of
a dramatically weaker economy.
Analysts said most evidence p&lt;)ints
to a solid recovery in the third
~uarter Ua:at ends Smurday ru1d contmued improvement tor the balance
·
of the year.
In another report, the depart ment said sales of new homes fell
9.6 percent in August, the largest
drop in six months after .soaring to
an IS-month high in July. Sales
were off in every region except for
the West.
Wall Street initially took the lat' est data in stride. The Dow Jones
industrial average rose 6 points in

early trading and th e key 30-ye:tr
Treasury hond was up 1/4 point,
yielding 6.5 7 percent.
"llae second 4u:ulcr will clearly
end up being the weakest one of
1995," said economist Druce
Steinberg of Merrill Lynch &amp; Co.
"Overall. economic growth
remains modcr;Jte and inflation
therefore remain s low."
A moa1111 ago, the government
said gross domestic product
advanced at a 1.1 percent ralc in
the April-June 4uaner.
Today's upward revis'ion was
due to higher military spending and
a larger investment by husincsses
in builuing invcn!Ories. Overall,
husines scs have hccn trimming
their stockpiles of goods on shelves
and in warehouses as the CCOJ1omy
weakened thi s year.

;

•

around amongst u&gt;."
·Simpson's farnily resrxmded ..
"It's wrong, even when you're
hurting, for someone to get up and
personally attack our lawyers and
say that they're liars," said Simpson's sister, Shirley Baker, in a rare
public comment.
.
Summing up the defense poruon
of the eight-month trial, Cochran
invoked biblical texts and quoted
poets and a philos·opher.

•

Subscription rate
increase set Oct. 1
Due primarily to gigantic newsprint increases totaling over 50 percent during the pa•t year, home delivery price of ihe POMEROY DAILY
SENTINEUSUNDA Y TIM ES-SENT!NEL will be adjusted by 25 cents
per week effective Oct. I.
.
The new price will be $2 per week,
with youth carriers and motor route
drivers receiving a significant portion
of the increase, which is only the
second in over four years.
While mail subscription rates will
rise proportionately, si ngle-copy
prices- 35 cent• daily and $1 Sunday
- remain unchanged.

CANOE JOURNEY- Three people taking o
slow boat trip to Florida paused at the Pomeroy
lene Thursday morning. John Langlaw of
Polaski, N.Y., said he started his trip In May,
ooming down the Allegheny and Ohio rivers

e

wutt!rwuy.

He is currently accompanied by
and Sherri
Schroer of New England and Iheir four cal•. Mr.
Schoer, above, seated in canoe, und Lunglaw
talk to local contractor Larry Banks. At right ts
Mrs. Schroer. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

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