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Page 10 o The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 3, 1995

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

'

Members sough~ for second year ·of Americorps grant at Ohio U
· Ohio University is recruiting
members to wolk in six projects as
pan of Appalachian Access, a collaborative. program funded for a
second year under the AmeriCorps
national service progllllll.
Ohio University has received a
federal grant of $388,803 to complete a second year of proje'is
seeking to improve access to beru~
care and education in Appalachian
Ohio, a region of 29 counties in
Southeastern Ohio. Th~ grant will
fund 2&amp; positions, some of which
will be filled by continuing firstyear members.
' ·Jh\: prCJgram is spon sored by
Ohio University, Marietta College,
Shawn ee State University in
Portsmouth and Washington State

Community College in Marietta
along with 20 community-based
organizations.
In exchange for one to two years
of service, AmeriCorps members
rec eiv e educational awards to
finance their higher education or to
pay back student loans. Each member also will receive an annual living allowance of $7 ,945, health
insurance and child care (if needed). Applicants must be atleastl7,
a U.S. citizen or legal resident and
a high school graduate.
The projects in which AmeriCorps members wiU work are:
Childhood Immunization Program: Service on a team that will
provide free immunizations to children throughout the region.

Johnson marks birthday

Number of AmeriCorps mem- information and services in small,
rural communities through outbers: 1.
reach, education, training and
Location: Athens.
Sponsor: Ohio University Col- transportation.
Number of AmeriCorps memlege of Osteopathic Medicine.
bers:
8.
Senior Companions Program:
Athens and TrimLocation(s):
In-home services and companionble.
ship to borne-bound elderly people
Sponsor: Rural Action,
in rural areas in an effort to postAppalachian Access and Sucpone institutionalization . .
Number of AmeriCorps mem- cess: Outreach to improve particibers: 4. ·
pation in higher education by youth
Locatlon(s): Georgetown, Cald- graduating from high schools in the
region.
·
well and Cadiz.
Sponsor: Corporation for Obio
Number of AmeriCorps memAppalachian
Development bers: 10 Location(s): Nelsonville,
(COAD).
•
St. Clairsville, rl'llortsmouth
HeallhCorps: Collaboration to Zanesville, Steubenville and Ri~
dev elop thi s pilot -project to Grande.
improve acc ess to health -care
Sponsor: Ohio Appalachian

Center for Higher Education.
Ready to Lt:am Program (RTL):
Outreach and training to improve
school readiness of children
through use of educational television.
Number of AmeriCorps members: 2.
Location(s): Athens Sponsor:
Ohio University Telecommunications Center.
Cbildcare Resource Network
(CCRN): Outreach and training 10
improve qualily and availability of
child care services.
Number of AmeriCorp~ members: 3
Location(s): Marietta, Dennison
and Portsmouth.
Sponsor: Corporation for Ohio

Development
Appalachian
(COAD). .
Qualifications for the positions
vary. The application deadline is
Oct. 16. New members will be
expected to begin working in .~eir
positions Nov. 6. A recogmtion
luncheon for this year's members
will be held in Ohio University's.
Baker Center Ballroom Nov. 20.
The second y~ar of the program
will be launcHed during the luncheon ceremony.
For more information or an
application, contact Pro~ram Coo.rdinator Nicholas Zefran m the Oh10
University Center for Community
Service, 204 Baker Center, Athens,
Ohio 45701, or at 6141593-4175
(FAX 614/59J.(l987).

supplies made
for squad
· Stuffed toys were prepared for
the emergency squad along· with
l'trst aid kits when the Reedsville•
Uniled Methodist Women met in
the church basement.

All club meetings and other
news articles in the sociely section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
oecurence.

These students were named the August stu- Chaffee, Carita Gardner, and Andrea Bartrwn;
dents of the month at Rutland Elementary and back row Tyler Barnes, Gary Kaulf, Lana
School. Pictured left to right they are, front row, · Barrell, Amber Snowden, and Brook Bolin.
Darin Horn, Jesse Mullins, Renee Bailey, Jodi Absent was Michelle Eggers.

Star Grange 778 installs new officers, welcomes new members
New oflicers of Star Grange 778
wen; installed al a recent. meeting
held at the hall.
Installed were Patty dyer, master; Larry Montgomery, overseet;
Vicki Smith, lecturer; Bob Fetty ,
sleward; Rick Macomber. assistant
steward; Maxine Dyer, lady assistant steward; Janis Macomber,
chaplain; Waid Nicholson, treasurer; chip Macomber, gatekeeper;

Peggy Smith, ceres, and Tom Bartley, executive comminee.
Dann y and Linda Will were
given the fourth degree, obligation,
and welcomed as member of the
order. Janis Macomber, deaf chairman, reponed that she has linished
all her yearly reports and submitted
them to the state. Patty Dyer gave
the youth report noting that Rachel
Ashley and Chip Macomber will be

playoff tilts
Sports,Page4

/

represe'nting Meigs County at the
Ohio State Grange Annual session
in Dayton in October. Dyer also
reponed that Star Grange received
second place on its display at. the
Meigs County Fair. She thanked
those who helped served the sale
recenlly and those who held work
and supported the Meigs County
Grange youth stand at the fair.
It was reported that Kyle White

received first place at the Ohio
S~1te Fair Grange junior talent conte st for a vocal solo, and that
Chelsea Montgomery received first
place in the miscellaneous category
with her clogging. Eric Montgomery received second place in
the reading category and Chelsea
Montgomery received second place
in a sign-a-song contest. Vicki
Smith and Connie White participat-

ed in the subordinate tafunt contest
with vocal solos.
EJdon Barrow s, legislative
chainnan, reported on prayer in tile
schools.
Lecturer Smith presented a program
entitl ed "September
Changes." Readings included "The
Most Beautiful" by Janis
Macomber, and "Today" by Connie White . Refreshments were
served to the nearly 40 ancnding.

It was reported that 78 sbutln
visits were made and cards were
signed for several friends. A thank
you card was received from Martha
Durst. It was noted that the basement doors were painted by Tom
Reed. members voted to get an
estimate for the outside church
door. Gladys Thomas and Lillian
Pickens were selected to choose an
attendance chart for the church.
Plans were made to sell pecans
next month and the group voted to
send its pledge to missions.

Nruned ui the n~ininating committee for new officers were Emma
Durst, Ann LaComb, and Pearl
Osborne.
Grunes were played and prizes
were awarded. Refreshments were
served· to those nruned and Mrs.
Bernadine Snyder and Mrs. Rose
Niday, guests, Mrs. Frances Reed,
Mrs. Nancy Buckley, Mrs. Nina
Boston, and Mrs. Susie Mash. Next
meeting will be at the church witb
Mrs. Mash as hostess.

Low loDtght lo 60s, showers.
Thursday, showers. High ID 70s.

•

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 11t
Copyrlght1995

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 4, 1995

If voters approve levy

Local opinion

Sentinel asked Meigs residents:
What's your opinion of the Simpson 'not guilty' verdict?

New building by
fall, 1998 is possible

Diane Jones was hostess for the
meeting conducted by Grace
Weber, president. Mrs . Emma
Durst gave the reading , "Daily
Thoughts for Daily Needs."

----News policy---In an effon 10 provide our readership with current news, the Gal·
/ipolis Daily Tribune and The Da1ly
Senrinel will not accept weddmgs
after 60 days from the date of the
event

Pick 3:
816
Pick 4:
7432
Buckeye 5:
17-18-25-31-35

~ Emergency

Rutland Students of the Month

Shelby Breanna Johnson celebrated her second birthday on Sept
~2 with a Barney party given by
her parents, Robert and Lisa Johnson, at their home.
Guests attending were: Alma
Johnson; Virginia Hayman; Viole~
Courtney and J conifer Hunnell;
Kathy and Kan4i Dougan; Pbyliss
Hudnall; Betty Barker; Ralph,
Elaine and Karl Gueltig; Beth Ellis;
Samatba and William Folmer.
Sending gifts were Billy and
Cheryl James; John and Peggy
Snyder; Roland and Sue Searles;
Larry Hudnall; Clarence Hayman
and Edith Jividen.
Prizes were won by Elaine
Guelting, Courtney and Jennifer
Hunnell, Alma Johnson and
Samatha and Willirun Folmer.

SHELBY JOHNSON

Indians,
Reds win

Fred W. Crow,
Homer Smith, Jr.,
Syracuse .
Mldd,leport
"lf I was on the jury, I
"I think be's guilty. I
have convicted him. Tbe
couldn't
think that members of .lhe jury
thought he was guilty, but there . wne fiame issue surrounding the
time of the murders always bothjust wasn't enough evidence to
ered me. I feel that Simps on was
get a conviction."
involved in the killings, but I
don't know if be actually committed them."

AprUSmlth,
ReedsvUle
"I dido 't really have an
opinion one way or the othet. I'm
just glad that the trial is over, and
that we don't have to bear anymore about it"

Festival
good for
business

According to a state formula ,"
By JIM FREEMAN
the district would have to pay a
Sentinel News StaiT
Fall, 1998. That's.wben South- minimum of $4 ,181,956, he
em Local School District students explained.
"That number is pretty solid,"
could move into a new districtwide, 650 pupil K-8 building - if he said. "Getting more money from
the state·would perhaps be wishful
voters approve.
Dave Zeller of Marr-Knapp- thinking."
To qualify for the state assis Crawfis Associates of New
Philadelphia said the state would tance, the board of education must
pay $3,148,044 of a $7,330,000 pass a resolution to continue with
project which would include the K- · the building project. The next step
8 building plus a 4,900-square-foot is to come up with a more detailed
addition to the high school consist- building plan addreS's ing the dising of a computer lab and science trict's needs - which will be done
lab located on the east end of the with input from a school building
building near the existing library.
· committee consisting of communiZeller address&amp;! district board ty members, parents and teachers.
The site for proposed building
members, parents and teachers on
the state-assisted building program has not been determined, according
at a meeting at Southern High to district Superintendent James
School Tuesday night.
Lawrence.
The $7.3 million figure includes
"Different places have been disland acquisition, development, util- cussed," he said. "We need the
ities, construction, fued equipment committee to look at sites."
including a kitchen, bleachers, sci"It's wise 10 have the site and a
ence items, library furniture, lock- sc~ematic of the building before
ers and loose furniture, and miscel- we go the ballot," said Zeller .
laneous items including surveying "Voters want to see what they arc
and legal costs.
getting. Voters want as much inforIf approved by voters on March mation as they can get."
19, the high school additions could
"We ' re talking a first -cl as!;
possibly be completed by the facility here - one that would be
beginning of the next school year, state-Qf-the-art," be said.
he said.
"
Referring to past, failed efforts

to gain support for a new building,
Zeller said, "there wasn't much
there in the way of communication."

"We've got to get out some
information," said district resident
and parent Dave Spencer. "People
arc tired of rumors and they want
facts."
Teacher Mkh aela Ku cs ma
agreed, "(people) need facts and
figures."
funding for the project would
likely come from a 6-mill levy to
pay off bonds over a 23-year period. The actual amount of the levy
could vary depending on the bond
interest rate.
Citing a table prepared by the
county auditor's office, Lawrence
said the owner of a $25,000 home
would pay an additional $52:50 a
year while a t)le owner of a
$75,000 piece ot" property would
pay $157.50.
Approximately 20 people
attended the meeting including
Lawrence and board members
Susie Grueser, Pete Thoren and
CT. Chapman.
The building committee will
meet Monday, 7:30p.m. in the
high school cafeteria. All commu nity members are welcom e to
attend and offer input.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NeW'S Stair
For some, the Big ·Bend Sternwheel Festival isn't just good fun
- it' s good business, as demonstrated by local merchants' decorating their windows and generally
contributing to a sternw~eel-friend:.., * TOM HUNfER
.
ly mood m the communtly ·
. _. ~ntinel News StaiT
Local merchants a~e exc1~ed
A parade themed on the days of
about the upcooung festival, which yesteryear and an old fashioned
ge~ u~derway Thursday.
. .. casino night at an 1890's saloon are
1\ s good for the commumty,
the featured events for the kickoff
said Becky Ande~on, co-owner '?f of the Sixth-annual Big Bend
Andersons Furmture and _Apph- Sternwheel Festival, which begins
ances in Pomeroy, who was busy it's three day run on the Pomeroy
decorating the store's show win- riv~rfront Thursday.
do':': wi~ a sternw~eeler motif.
The "Days Gone Bye" parade
l,t, giVes ~s ~. httle more ex~- begins at 6 p.m., with the parade
sure, she srud. Most of the bu~1- featuring nearly 30 units, including
nesse.~ are glad to get people m floats, classic cars, the Meigs High
town.
School band, clowns, and even
Je~eler Susan C~ark, owner of bicycles built for two, according to
Clark s Jewelry m Pomeroy, parade chairwoman Judy Williams.
agrees.
The theme. "Days Gone Bye,"
Continued on page 3
is centered around the nearly century long stemwbeel era on the Ohio
River, 1850 to pre 1950, according
to Williruns.
Many of the participants in the
parade, including the 15 c;~uee~ ~­
didates, will be dressed m VICtonway may have been influenced by an style clothing, reminiscent of the
photographs taken later. That dis- sternwheel era . Two Victorian
crepancy called all Park's testimo- floats will carry the 15 queen candidates during the parade route.
ny into question, be said.
The Big Bend Farm Antique
Another surprise was how jurors
Club
is providing antique tractors
apparently reacted _to harrowing
for
various
floats and wagons at the
accounts of abuse in the Simpson
parade.
marriage.
Longtime Pomeroy attorney and
"I don't want to come off as former All-American football playbeing insensitive about brutality er at Ohio State, Fred W. Crow,
against women," Cryer said, but will be the honorary grand marshall
CASINO NIGHT - Left to right are Joyce Quillen, Dianne
prosecutors only presented one of this year's festival parade.
The parade will be kicked off by
Lawson, and Patty Callaway in their hostess outfits for ''Casino
instance in which Simpson physiThe Jean Mary. The boat will play
cally abused his fotmer wife.
Night at the Riverfront Saloon.'~ sponsored by the Meigs County
"Tbe 1989 incident was signifiChamber or Commerce.
, Continued on page 3
cant for all of us, because from '89
until her death, there were no other
incidents where be touched her."
Cryer Sjlid be did notlmow who
cast the two dissenting voles in the
Mifsud said limited money has made the competiCOLUMBUS (AP) - Representatives from comfust straw poll.
tion stiff. Highway officials said in earlier sessions
munities
throughout
Ohio
who
feel
they've
been
Jurors ducked reporters at the
losers in the battle for bigh)Vay projects bad a few that reduced federal money bas cut the budget for
courthouse, and most were unavailchoice words for some Ohio Department of Trans- major construction projects from an expected $300
able at their homes.
million a year to about $150 miUion.
portation
officials.
ABC news reported that' the
" There's a hundred projects for every dollar Gov.
George
Voinovicb'
s
chief
of
staff,
Paul
Mifdaughter of juror Anise Aschenthat's the problem,'' Mifsud said.
sud,
convened
a
public
bearing
on
Tuesday
to
help
bach reported that ber mother was
Larry Long, executive director of the County
rethink the agency's spending criteria.
troubled by ·the question of guilt
Commissioners Association of Ohio and a member
"Why
·are
we
getting
shafted?"
Mayor
Ale~ M.
The daughter, identified only as
Olejko of Lorain,asked Tuesday as be addressed of the advisory committee, said officials in rural
Denise,, said her mother, a 61-yearcoumies fear that traffic congestion standards will
OOOT' s Project Selection Advisory Commiuee .
old retiree, called her after the jury
direct money to urban areas.
A
short
segment
of
Interstate
90
in
eastern
Lorain
reached its verdict Monday.
Officials in urban counties, on the other hand, are
needs widening to blend with sections that have four
"Sbe said, 'I think be probably
lanes in each direction, but the project· was not concerned that economic development criteria will
did do it, Denise,' " the daughter
among those announced earlier in the ,state's five- lead to building mostly rural highways, Long added.
said "1 said something like, 'Gosh,
"My general opinion is if you' ve got both sides
year plan, Olejlco said.
.
you' re kidding me.' And she said,
He said the project lost importance in the eyes of complaining so much, the department may have done
'No,' and she's crying. So 1 said:
the state because or the stretch o( highway's low a good job of coming down in the middle," he said.
'Why? What happened?'
David N. Goss of the Greater Cleveland Growth
accident rate.
"She said it was because there
"Don ' t criticize us because we're careful Association said his organization is concerned that
wasn't enougb evidence. And I
drivers," Olejko said
transit, 'rail and other forms of nonbigbway transsaid, 'Why?' She said, 'Because of
The department rates projects based on traffic portation aren't given enough consideration.
Mark Fuhrman.'''
congestion, accident rates, correspondence with a
Mifsud said most of the transportation budget
Fuhrman, now retired, testifiell
master plari for transportation corridors and econom- comes from gasoline taxes designated for highways.
that be hadn't used lhe word "nigic development potential.
ger" for at least 10 years.

Casino Night, parade to kick off
Sternwheel Festival Thursday

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 1000 BRAND
NEW CHEVROLETS, OLDSMOBILES, PONllACS, BUICKS,
GEOS AND CUSTOM VANS.
All will be sold at substantial discooots!

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 CONVERSION VAN DOOR HAS AN
INVENTORY OF OVER 300 BRAND NEW CHEVROLET
CONVERSION VANS.

Certified used car buyeiS will be on hand to give hlghest trade-in value for your automobile. Please Iring
your tiUe, registratioo card, illd payment book if
applicable• .

Plus $500 to $2000 cash back or 1.9% APR financing
available (lease UP. to 24 months) on selected models
on approved credit. Tenns available up to 84 months!

Selection includes Astro All Wheel Drives and G·20's,
both available with raised roofs or low tops. Prices
range from $17,488 to $36,988.

NO SALES PERMinED TO DEALERS. This clearance is
for retail cUstomers only. Prices apply to ~ailable
units only. No ordering pennitted at thes8 prices.

MST VIRGINIA'S lARGIST CUSTOM VAN DIAliR!

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PADDLEWHEELERS OF THE PAST- Becky Anderson, coowner or Andersons Furniture and Appliances In Pomeroy, was
busy getting In the sternwheeler spirit Tuesday, decorating tbe
store's show window. The window features pictures of old stemwheelers from the collection of Jim Titus, she said.

Lee's scientific objections influenced
Simpson jurors the most, not race issue
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Amid
the torrent of words that cascaded
over jurors during eight months of
testimony, one juror says the words
of defense expert Henry Lee
echoed loudest in the jury room:
Something is wrong.
' 'It was garbage in, garbage
out," Lionel Cryer told the Los
Angeles Times, referring to the
prosecution's evidence.
''There was a problem with
what wa&lt;&gt; being presented to prosecutors for testing from LAPD. We
felt there were a lot of opportunities for either contamioation of evidence, samples being mixed or
stored together," be said.
The jurors, who acquitted OJ.
Simpsori of murdering his ex-wife
Nicole Brown Simpson and her
friend Ronald Goldman, were
infiuenced most by scientific objections lodged by fo~n~ic path~logi.st
Lee - not ibe race •ssue raised m
tbumtering rhetoric by defense
attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr., he
said.
Lee peppered his testimony with
qualifiers, but to jurors he was "the
11.1ost credible witness of all,"
Cryer said.
Lee, Cryer recounted, said,
"There is something wrong here."
Another juror told her daughter
she thought Simpson was probably
guilty but voted for acquittal
because of the involvement of
Detective Mark Fuhrman, ABC
news reported.
ContradiCting many of the
bytnheses put forward by analysts
trying to peek tbrougb the veil of
secrecy· shrouding deliberations,
Cryer told The TliiiCS that:
-Jurors bad not made up !heir .

mind before they began deliberating Monday.
-Jurors were unconvinced by
prosecution arguments that Simpson was spurred to rpurder by the
need to conuol his e~-wife.
-The first straw poll. taken less
than an hour after they began, was
10-2 in favor of acquittal.
- I urors did not ask for a read..
back of limo driver Allan Park's
testimony to get a better idea of the
timeline in the case, but to clear up
an inconsistency in Park's testimony.
-Immediately after rehearing
that testimony, the panel took a
second vote, at about2:30 p.m.
It was the final vote, Cryer, a
black 44-year-old telephone company marketing representative told
the Times. ·
"I dido 't think we would all
come together on the same mindset so quickly," be said.
Cryer said the request for Park's .
testimony, which fueled s~ecula­
tinn that jurors were lookmg for
confirmation that Simpson bad
time to kill, was for something else
entirely.
Park bad testified that Simpson's Bronco was not palked at the
curb when be went to pick him up
for a ride to the airport. He said he
rang the buzzer several limes and
got no answer. Park said he later
saw a shadowy figure enter the
house and moments later a mao he
believed to be Simpson answered
the intercom and said be had overslept.
What jurors were concerned
about, Cryer said, was their belief
tba~ Park's testimony about the
num~r of cars he saw in the drive-

ODOT hears suggestions on highway spending

·A
I

'

�I

Wednesday, October 4, 1995

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.MULTt1EDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPI NIO N are we lcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subjec t to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not perso nalities.

Trial by rhetoric
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - The case has run a lot longer than the OJ. Simpson trial did- and with no judge to tty keeping arguments over Medicare
and Medicaid cuts in tine with the evidence.
·
It is all a matter of dispute, rival numbers and estimates, accusation and
countercharge over motives. The rbetoric never bas been restrained, and it
is ratcbeting up as Congress approaches die point of decision, or delay.
The latter, talk without action, has been stal)dard procedure on the
risky political business of changing benefits or costs in programs for the
elderly. The new Republican majority is determined to act this time, but a
veto could stall things again.
Medicare trustees warned earlier this year that the health care program
would go broke by 2002 unless it is overhauled, but that was not the fust
alarm. Prior reports from that panel had suggested the same thing, even
sooner. A commission on entitlement reform agreed in 1994 on the danger signs but couldn't fashion a consensus on what to do about them.
In varying forms , this dispute has been going on since sboflly after
President Clinton took office with his vow to overhaul the American
health care system to control soaring costs, especially in the federal programs for the elderly and the impoverished.
·
Those have been rising at unsustainable rates of about 10 percent a
year, too much for the budget to bear. It was most of a year before Clinton
had a health care bill, and it went ·nowhere in a Democratic Congress.
Clinton and his allies argued then that oply comprehensive change,
with universal coverage, could resolve the health care problem, and thalli
couldn't be don; piecemeal.
.
Now Republicans are pressing for a full overhaul of Medicare and
Medicaid, while Democrat.s want a limited ftrSt step. Sen. Tom Dascble,
the Democratic leader, outlined a plan Monday to curb projected Medicare costs .increases by $89 billion over the next seven years, and thus
keep the hospitalization insurance system solvent u~til 2006. That's supposed to buy time for a longer-term solution.
Republicans seek $270 billion less spending than currently projected.
on the troubled hospitalization insurance system, and with higher premiums and increased deductibles on•the Medicare Pan B program that covers doctor's bills.
Dascble called that "Medicare meltdown," and said it is really a ruse
to cover the Republicans' plan for a $245 billion tax cut over the same
seven 'years in which they promise to balance the budget.
•
While there was talk at the White House of a moderating mood in
Congress on Medicare, budget issues and other items, it wasn't evident in
the rhetoric or the theatrics. And there certainly was no such tone when
Clinton said Saturday that the Senate Republican plan for Medicaid
changes could send elderly wives 10 !(le poorhouse if their husbands bad
to enter nursing homes.
·
Nor did it sound that way in the televised talk show argument.s on Sunday, tbe arena for Medicare-Medicaid disputes almost every week.
Republican Sen. Bill Frist of Tennessee was on NBC calling Democratic
tactics "demagoguery, Medigoguery, Mediscare ...." Sen. Bob Dole, the
majority leader, said on CBS that Clinton's veto threat was part of a "fear
campaign to scare seniors."
. At a House bearing where Republican experts were supposed to
explain the 421-page Medicare bUI fmally introduced on Friday, GOP displays and a Democratic walkout came fust. Republicans set up a countdown to bankruptcy clock at the House Commerce Committee, ticking off
the seconds until2002. Democrats led by Rep. John Dingell walked out of
the session; the Michigan congressman called it a charade that would
1'rob seniors of their health care."

J_etters to the editor
Visiting in the 1920s
Dear Editor.
· You come along on a summer
Sunday afternoon drive with the
Walker family.
Now these happened in the late
1920s. I don't remember them real
good. but mom told me about them
several times.
Pap's family lived at Pine Grove
and we lived at Forest. Run and we
visited there on Sunday afternoon.
J"ap bad his old Model T, two-seated touring car. In the summer time
it was all open.
Mom and pop set in the front
seat and me and jlrother Lew sat in
the back. Pop uiOOid meet a lot of

Page2·
Wednesday, October 4, 1995

Thursday, Oct. 5

oN~ DaY

!

office and made off with $3.9 mil:
lion in stacks of neatly wrapped
$100 bills. The office was inside a
storage facility of a heavily forti·

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

fied U.N. compound in Mogadishu.
But the office door was easy
pickings: Its lock could be jimmied
with a credit card. The money had
been tossed into an empty bottled
water carton and stored in the bottom drawer of a filing cabinet.
Dozens of U.N. employees coming
in and out of the office- and who
were paid from the stash - had
seen where it was kept.
Scotland Yard was called in,
and investigators have since discovered bow easily the theft could
have been prevented. U.N. inspectors, and a trail of memos , bad
warned of a need for a better security and control system. Nine

LooK~ :aR-"IIND

anD sa;D, "TI\eRe's.MoRe
To~~~=~ Tl'lat-1 CHa$iHG a guc:::K.''

months before the theft, in fact,
U.S. officials bad warned the U.N.
that it particularly needed to. guard·
tbe payroll stash, accordmg to
knowledgeable.sources.
Their w~rries were backed up
by a conftdenual cable from
Madeleine Albright, the U.S .
ambassador to the U.N., to her
superiors in Washington on July
14, 1993. The cable was recently
shown to our associate Dale Van
Aua:
•'Of particular concern (present·
ly) is the operation of the $3 million-per-month imprest fund in
Somalia . Because there are no
banks in Somalia, the U.N. oper·
ates a cash operation. There is no
evidence of internal controls exercised over this fund, not even sucb
elementary procedures as a monthly cash count. It is evident that the
U.N. administrative officers
assigned abroad have received no
trat. · · . temal
•~I ..
nmg to m
conuu s.
Five months after Albright's
cable and four months before the
theft' an audit team from u N
•
· ·

! DoWNSiiiFTeD. I CIIT M'l
SPeNDiNG. I \'let-IT BacK
To

Bas;c.~.

\

\

NOW ! l'iave
TiMe FoRT~
TlliNGS "!'KaT aRe

so, w~e~

We~

Vov

JvLY

'LiliDoFF?

ReaLLY iM~Tatl"t'.

I

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Y k arned

head9u~~':rio~~ de':fcie~eies"
~u:r security "which if not cor

•

10 ~immediately would poten.
1
re~le
d 10.. theft'
•
1
u
ea ial safe ~as flown in and
lacedfnside a storage facility
p . ed with steel doors and a
ei·~tpp steel grille for cashier
- ~1 mg
nsors were on ord s.
A 0110 n10sethe cash would req er.
thcccss al f three separate .:e
1
-~~prov 0
·
vt
s.
. .
But the U.N· a~m~mstrato~ on
the scene found thiS mwoveme~t,
and cbobseil~ keep ~ f!IO~ey ~~~
~other u 10 ~
tn e 1
10 g cabmet whtcb, though locked,
was easily opened.
. The most rud:en~:rec~­
liOns were not l en.
en . e
cash for payroU arnved from Smgapore, a nouce 'Y.~ poJ:;d.to
mform employ~esii dus ;10g
the auenuon. ~ a an sun. Y to
the avatlabtltty of casb 10 the
to one confiden
0 flitee, " according
.
•
ttal U.N. audit '.~port. Another
r~port noted that. the exact posttwns and quanttty of the money
(were) obvious to money
receivers .... A hundred or more
civilians, military and contractors
paid daily could easily see where
the money was kept.' '
No one was allowed to carry a.
briefcase, package or box into the
office to prevent the removal of
cash without suspicion. But boxes
of bottled water bad been carted
into the office, and one of the
empty boxes was used to hold the .
cash.
In wake of the heist. three UN ..
administrati vc officers were dismissed for negligence. But a mooth
later, $61,476 .28 in cash was .
entrusted to a U.N. military official ·
in Somalia "through whose negli: .
gence the whole amount was lost,"
according to a U.N. audit report
In another incident, UN. critics
are still chuckling over the fact that
only this organization could lose
money to a flood in a place suffer··
ing from a long drought The UN.
lost $76,667 stored in a Somali•
basement. The money was
destroyed by mildew after the base- .
ment in which it was stored flOQded
following a rare rainstorm. ·
Jack Anderson and Michael.
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

1

IMansfield I·73• I•

DEAR BRUCE: Recently, I
DEAR L.W.: I don't see wbere
you have a problem at all. You received a bill from a utility cotl!mentioned that the property is free pany for a home which I bad occuand clear, so I assume that you will pied previously, but bad canceled
the service when I l)loved. The
company bas been very pleasant to
Bruce Williams
me and said that all I needed to do
is prove to them that I have been
mortgage the construction cost.s of living in my current borne on a
$160,000 Uust two times your full-time basis for the past year.
annual income). I am assuming that
When I sent them phOtocopies ·
you and your wife intend to contin- of my rent receipts, they said that
ue .,working and maintain a dual- this was not satisfactory because
income family.
-they are hand-written out of a
I don't have any trouble with receipt book. That's the best I can
your plan.
do. What do you suggest?- M.O..
I can appreciate your parents' Sioux Falls, S.D.
point of view that spending this
kind of money for a home seems
DEAR M.O.: Try a couple of
excessive, and so it was when they things. First, go to your landlord
were your age . But in today's and explain the circumstances and.
world, a couple hundred thousand ask him to type up a letter stating
dollars for a home, particularly in
the larger urban areas of the coun- that you have been a resident and
try, is not above the norm. Good have paid rent to him from whatever date to the present date. As a
luck!
•

his friends along the road and
would throw up his band and holler
at them.
Pop chewed tobacco and when
be hollered at them the tobacco ·
With a Bosnia peace agreement,
Clinton's political advisers are
juice would fly into the back seat the Middle East peace signing, and
convinced
- correctly - that
and get into Lew's and my eyes. Ross Perot back in the presidential
Republicans
have nothing to offer
This really burned and mom said game, the Clinton White House is
workers
whose
median weeki)'
we both started hollering and bawl- definitely out of its "funk:," even if
ing.
Now I don't really remember it the public is still in one.
Polls indicate that most Ameri- Morton Kondracke
but I don't imagine me and Lew
cans
continue to believe that the
.enjoyed the drive. Now it reminded country
income bas dropped from $498 in
is on "the wrong track"
me of a caption that appeared in the
are furious witb the govern- 1979 to $475 now and wbo are
funnies way back that was called and
ment
- the rationale for Perot's worried about their employability,
"Out Our Way."
new
party
Clinton &amp; Co. are their retirement, and their ability to
Virgil Walker basking in -but
good news and planning send their children to college.
Racine a political PR offensive to improve
Meantime, however, Clinton is
the public's attitude about the pres- facing the challenge of jugglin&amp; bis
conflicting promises to find "comident and the cotintiy's future.
Clinton himself caused a glitch mon ground" with congression.al
say "do your work." You teach in the program by using the word Republicans and his threats to veto
them one-on-one until they are fin- " funk" in an airplane chat with up to eight appropriations bills and
ished with their work. However reporters, inviting comparisons to budget reconciliation, perhaps closlong it takes.
Jimmy Carter's disastrous ing down the governtnent in midNovember.
.
This is not an attack on the "malaise" episode.
Clinton needs to - and probaschoolteachers. I believe that there
White House aides still worry
are some teachers who are trying that Republicans will play the word bly will- deliver a speech in
their very best but the public school back and charge that Clinton is which he sets forth his rationale for
system has their hands tied tlJat blaming the people instead of him- those vetoes and the compromises
they can't teach the way they self for what's wrong with the be's willing to make to accomplish
would like to . It's time that we .country, but Clinton did his best to ·his long-term program. · ,
For instance, chatting with
elect some men to the school board turn his mistake into a plus by
who are not just church goers but regaling a roomful of journalists reporters at a recent luncheon, be
some men who stand on what tbe with a lengthy discourse on his said be was willing to accept the
Bible says.
grand vision of where the nation Senate welfare reform bill ending
Now that I've said what I had to bas been and where it is beaded.
tbe entitlement status of Aid to .
say let me ask you this. Which
That vision - of the country Familie$ with Dependent Children
environment would you rather have working its way through a difficult because it contained funds for child
your kids raised in: the ungodly "transition" .to a global·, high-tech care and training, but that be would
environment of drugs, alcohol, sex. economy - presages a 1996 cam- veto block granting of Medicaid
profane language and, most of all, paign based on promises to push because be's convinced cashno morals, or in the safe haven of education, training, investment, and pinched stales will stop providing
your borne where you can teach expanded world trade in a second adequate medical care for the poor.
.Veto messages and vision
them about tbe love of God and the Clinton term.
Clinton's White House staff also speeches are in the future. This is a
way the Bible says they should
is exploring ways of inducing cor- time for counting successes. Clinlive?
Proud to be home school par- porations to share more of their ton is scheduled to brief foreign
productivity gains with workers affairs wlumnists - and the White
ents.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Hood instead of merely downsizing their House will otherwise put out the
word - that the Bosnia and
Pomeroy work forces and increasing profits.

\

•
"

'' '''

\

.•lcolumbusl 75o

•

\'

I

Two recent acts of vandalism are being investigated by Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.
Monday, the department wai called to Rutland Elementary,
where a lock and hasp had been knocked off the door to an outbuilding at the school.
It appeared that an attempt bad also been made to enter the main
building. Nothing was reported missing.
Tom Grueser, Pomeroy, re)X¥1ed Monday that more damage bad
occurred to the Meigs Fish and Game building on West Shade"
Road.
"
Tbe electrical boxes on the shelter house were damaged, and the
front door was damaged. Downspouts were also knocked down
from the building.

A1Y theft reported to officials
T.K. Workman, Carpenter Hill Road, Rutland reported the theft
of an all-terrain vehicle from his residence Monday, according to
Sheriff James M.,Soulsby.
According to police reports, Workman reported that his red
Honda 350 four-wheeler was sto.Ien soll)etime Sunday night from
his residence.
The Sheriffs department is still investigating the matter.

'''
WVA.

One cited in Pomeroy mishap
. Showers T-storms Ram

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

© 1995 AccuWeathe1, Inc

Vra AssocuJ /9d PrtJss Grapfllcs NBI

Today's weather forecast

One person was cited by the Pomeroy Police Department in a
7:50a.m. accident, Tuesday, on W. Main St. in Pomeroy.
According to police reports, James Priddy, 58, of Pomeroy was
traveling west in his 1981 GMC Truck, when -a 1982 Dodge Aries
driven by Michael W. Lightfoot, 18, of Pomeroy struck him from
behind.
Priddy's truck received light damage to the back bumper. Lightfoot's car received moderate damage to the front end.
Lightfoot was cited for failure to assure clear distance.

Continued from page 1
"It's really thrilling to have the
festival along the riverfront," she
said. "It's always a ·tremendous
time to have so many people in our
business district- especially with
the revitalization going on."
"I hope people enjoy the
cbanges'(with the revitalization),"
she said.
Clark said she enjoys visiting
with the boat owners.
"It's great that these people let
us see their boats that they have
worked so bard on," she said.
Clark also decorates ber window
with a stemwbeeler theme.
"It's exciting, the different windows , period clothing and
antiques," she said. "It's a sense of
camaraderie - working together
for something bigger."
Sbe also commended the Big
Bend Stemwheel Festival Committee.
"Obviously it couldn't happen
without them," she said . "The
sternwheel festival in recent years
has helped provide the motivation
for improving the riverfront."
According to local hotel owner
Frank Herald, the festival provides
a definite boost to bis business.
Approximately two-thirds of the
rooms in the Meigs Motel are
already reserved for the weekend
of the festival while the Mason
Motel is even more booked' up,
according to Herald.
Herald said be receives many
calls from people seeking information about the festival with calls
coming from North Carolina, Virginia, Columbus, Cleveland and
Cambridge.

would help everybody in all the
community."
"It's not just a Pomeroy thing,"
according to Herald. "Pomeroy,
Middleport and Mason depend on
each other."
"People love this area, the river
and leaves changing in the fall," be
said, "We have a lot of beauty
here."
Meigs County tourism director
Karin Johnson said her office has .
been getting calls from all over the
country.
·
"We get calls everyday -from all .
over," she·said.
Johnson said her office fields :
calls from Michigan, IUioois, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Aorida.
"We're helping out by scndin~ :
out fliers and a schedule of events ' ·
Johnson said. "We hope they sho:.V :
up."
:
Johnson said she plans to talk to ·
people during tbe event to deter- :
mine from where they are visiting. :
"We will know a lot more after
the festival," she said.
"Anytime a tourist comes into
the area, it creates a ripple effect,
tbcy buy from restaurants, motels
and buy gasoline," she said.

after midnight. Lows from the mid
50s northwest to the lower 60s
southeast
A Heiner's Bakery truck received heavy damage in a Monday
Thursday ... Cloudy with a
afternoon accident, according to Sheriff James Soulsby.
cbance of rain northwest. Rain likeAccording to police reports, Steven D. Gates of Proctorville was
ly southwest and occasional rain
traveling
west on state Route 681 in the bakery truck, wben be lost
east. Highs from around 70 north to
control
in
soft gravel on the berm of a curve. Gates lost control of
the mid 70s south.
the
truck,
driving
through a fence and over an embankment
Extended forecast
Damage to the truck to the front and left rear of the truck was
Friday ...A chance of rain. Lows
listed as ~eavy.
in the 50s. Highs 65 to 70.
' Gates was not cited in the accident.
Saturday .. . Partly cloudy . A
Other businesses are also affectchance of rain east early . Lows . '-----------------------~ ed, he explained.
upper 40s to lower 50s. Highs in
the 60s.
"People have got to eat too, it
Sunday...Fair. Lows in .the 40s.
helps every restaurant," be said.
Highs in the 60s.
"People always want to know
where they can go eat."
Six calls for assistance were
3:4I p.m., 39331 Bridle Road,
"We need to get on the ball and
answered by units of the Meigs Daniel Knots, Camden Clark, Park· promote tourism," he said . "It
County Emergency Medical Ser- ersburg.
vice Tuesday.
"
MIDDLEPORT
Tbe calls included:
4:23 p.m. Bradbury Road, Mary
POMEROY
Lathey, Holzer Medical Center.
Janet Ernestine Gordon, 71. Cheshife, died Tuesday, Oct 3, 1995 in
6:10a.m., Beech Street, Ray
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Garlinger. treated but not transportBorn April30, 1924 in Addison Township, Gallia County, sbe was the ed.
daughter of the late Baker and Mable Hawley Gordon.
RUTLAND
.. VETERANS MEMORIAL
: · Surviving are a brother, Emory Gordon of Middleport; two sisters,
8:49 a.m., Page Street. MiddleTuesday admissions -none.
Vesta Ham of Gallipolis, and Delores Moore of London; and several port, Everett Delaney, Pleasant
Tuesday discharges - Rhonda
tiieces and nephews.
Valley Hospital;
Stover, Middleport
· · She was also preceded in death by a brother, Robert Gordon; and two
I :45 p.m., 333 Pllge Street, MidHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
sisters, Violet Russell and Belva Miller.
dleport, Lillian Zerkle, Pleasan'
Discharges O.:t. 3 - Raymond
Graveside services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Gravel Hill Ceme- Valley Hospital.
McCarty, Joshua Ski(\ner, Mary
tery, Cheshire, with the Rev. Roy Bickle officiating. Burial will follow
SYRACUSE
Bishop, Susan Morgan, Charlotte
9:49 a.m.,Pomeroy Pike, Shawn Mercer, Hazel Ca:mden, Natija
services. Arrangements are by McCoy-Mobre Funeral Home Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis.
Mitch, Holzer Medical Center.
Salem, Justin Lawson, Nelma WilREEDSVILLE
son, Samuel Kemper, Daisy
Blakeslee.
c:ntlnued f;om page 1
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
,_.
Brumfield, son, Vinton; Mr. and
.
'
it's 'calliope on the rivelfront at 6 "Anie l)p", as they will receive
Mrs. Jonah McCoy, son, Bidwell.
Am Ele Power ........................36 518
p.m. for about 10 minutes, fol- $5,000 in fun money with their
Akzo ............................ ,...........58lll
(Publlshed with permission)
Ashland 011 ............................33 114
lowed by a series of short whistles $15.00 admission ticket. Additional
AT&amp;T .....................................641/8
that will officially kick off tbe fun money to be used gambling can
Bank
One ................................:l7 3/8
parade, according to Williams.
be purchased from the casino
Bob
Evans .....:.........................18 Ill
Tbe parade will line up at 5 p.m. cashier.
Champion lnd ........................ll114
ai Bob Roberts Field, and follow a
Game rules will be explained
Charming Shop ....................... .2114
route along tbe riverfront through around 7:20 p.m. for the casino
City Holding .................................25
dpwntown Pomeroy. Tbe parade games consisting of poker, black.
Federal Mogul ........................ 18 liB
W'ill travel down Main Street. tum jack, wheel of chance, craps, and
Goodyear T &amp;R ........................... .39
K-mart ....................................13 3/4
right onto Butternut Avenue at showdown.
Lands End ..............................15 318
farmer's Bank, come down Second
Gambling will begin at 7:30
Llmlled Inc............................. l!ll/8
sveet by the courthouse, and return p.m., with fun money to be used to
Multimedia
Inc . .....................43 518
to Bob Roberts Field.
purchase items at an auction at tbe
People's ................................ ~ 114
' Immediately following the end of the evening.
·
Ohio VaHey Bank .................:.......36
parade, the candidates vying for
Entertainment will be highlight·
One Valley ........................... .32 3/4
S!ernwbeel Festival Queen will be ed by a country d.j. and dance
Rot:kweU ......................................45
irtlroduced on the main stage dur- floor, along with spe~ial surprise
Robbins &amp; Myors .................. .Jl 314
ing· the festival welcoming cere- entertainment during the evening.
Royal Dulch .....•............. ....•.. ll4 1/8
Shoncy's Inc ........................... 10 fll
monies. The candidales will then
Food will be available, as w~ll
Star Dank .............................. .54 1/4
take part in a photo session aboard as a cash bar. Waitresses in dresses
Wendy lot'l. .......................... .21 718
from the old-west saloon days, will
the victorian-decored Jean Mary .
Worthington
Ind.................... 18 1/4
The rain dale for the parade is be getting change and serving the
scheduled for Saturday at 10 a.m., gamblers in attendance.
Stot:k reports are the 10:30 o.m.
The auction will begin at 10:30,
with line up at 9 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest of
"Casino Night at the Riverfront with several items will be availab)e · Gallipolis,
•
Saloon," is the theme for the casino for the many gamblers and bidders
'
night sponsored by tbe Meigs expected 10 attend.
County Chamber of Commerce.
Western, casual dress is request·
ed for Ibis fun event, with all proceeds from the event to benefit the
presents
Chamber of Commerce.
The doors to the casino, located
at. the Anderson's warehouse on
Mechanic street, will open at 7
p.m. At this time, players can

South-Central Oblo
Today ...Cioudy with a chance of
showers. High in the low to mid
70s. Light and variable wind.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
, Tonight ... Showers ... Witb a
chance of thunderstorms. Low in
the mid 60s. East wind 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 90 percent
· Tbursday ...Showers and thunderstorms. Rain may be heavy at
times. High in the mid 70s. Chance
of rain 90 percent.
Ohio forecast
· Tonight...Clouds increasing
from southeast to northwest. Rain
lilcely southeast and a chance
nyrtheast...Central and southwest

Truck damaged in accident

Meigs EMS has six calls

--Area Death-Janet E. Gordon

Hospital news

matter of fact, you probably can
type a letter yourself and just asil,
him to sign it
'
Furthermore, I assume that you
are currently paying utilities, so ,
why not include copies of your util-.,
ity bills? I am sure the company ·
will provide these for your present
residence. That should satisfy the
folks in your old community.
(Send your questions to; ,
Smart Money, P.O. Box 503.
Elfers, FL 34680. Questions of·'
general Interest will be answered,
in future columns. Owinl! to the .
volume of mail, personal replies .
cannot be provided.)
Bruce Williams Is a syndicated:.
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
,
(For Information on how to··
communicate electronically with ·
this columnist and others, con·:·
tact America OnHre by caiiiDI! 1·"
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.

Casino night..

Stocks

ttEALTtt.

FAIR

Friday
October 6, 1995

-·-·-

There doesn't seem to be the ·
slightest likelihood that Powell .
would run as the candidate of ·
Perot's party. If be runs at all, Powell seems to be leaning strongly
toward the Republican race, as sup-..
porters tell him how be could beat •
frontrunning Sen. Bob Dole, RKan .. in the 37 states (including ..
New Hampshire) that allow · ·
D~mo~rat.s to vote in Republican ..
prunanes.
Moreover, -Perot and PoweiJ'"j
would be a terrible fit ideologically 1
and personally. Perot is an isola- 1
tionist and trade protectionist,
wbtle Powell is an internationalist .
and free trader. In any event, Pow- ·
ell is too large a figure to put up :
with Perot's interference as the tit·
ular head of the new Independence
Party.
~'
Powell as the Republican nomi· I
~ee, along with a Whilewater erup- ·: :
tton, are l)le only disturbing fea· :
lures on Clinton's po,litical land·
scape, and they mil¥ be mere
chtmeras. For the moment, Clinton
is on a roll.
(Morton Kondracke Is execu·
tlve editor of Roll CaD, the news- !
paper of Capitol WU.)
·.. 1

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS l13·960)
Pdblished t very afternoon, Monday through
Fciday, Ill Court St, Pomeroy. Ohio. bll.l~
Ohio Valley Publishing Company/MultirTiiiUI
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769, Ph . 992- 2156.

second clw postage paid nt Pomeroy, Ohio.
M~ember: The Associaled ~ss, ttnd the Ohio

Newspaper Association.
POSTMASTER: Send addrtss correctiom to
The Daily Sentinel, Ill· Cour1 Sl., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4!i769. '
·

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Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, Oct. 4, the 277th day of 1995. There are 88 days
. left 10 the year. .
Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on Oct. 4, 1895, silent film comedian Buster .,
Keaton, known as "The Great Stone Face" for his deadpan delivery was ·
born in Piqua, Kan.
'
,, :
On thts date:
. •
.I~ 1777, George Washington's troops launched an assault on the
Bnttsh at Gennantown, Pa., resulting in·heavy American casualties.

J

•

' ~'

•

Clinton readies 'vision'
offensive
.
Mideast agreements are not just
happy coincidences or the work of
an administration that has finaUy
gotten its act together, but the coosequence of finn, consistent presidential leadership over rile past
three years.
The theme i~ that the successes
in toppling the military junta in
Haiti, eliminating nuclear weapons
in Ukraine and Belarus, freezing
the nuclear program of North
Korea, opening Japan to U.S. products, and moving toward peace in
Bosnia and the Mideast are all part
of a pauem that undermines Clinton's previous reputation for weak
leadership and inattention to foreign policy.
Clinton's emergence as a skilled
international player comes at a convenient time for blunting the appeal
of potential Republican presidential
candidate Colin Powell, a foreign
policy professional.
But even more than it.s foreign
policy successe.i, the White House
is gleeful over the re-emergence of
Perot as a possible third-party candidate who is certain to pull far
more voles away from the Republicans than from Clinto11 in 1996.

You

IND.

Parents shocked by cost of house
DEAR BRUCE: We are a couple in our late 20s, and we think we
are doing very well. Our combined
annual income is just over $80,000.
We have agreed to purchase a
home for $160,000, built upon a lot
which we own free and clear.
When I mentioned the amount we
intend to spend to my parent.s, they
went ballistic! They couldn ' t
believe that we would spend over
$200.000 for a home and lot.
We tried to explain to them that
the days of $30,000 houses are
long over, but they didn't want to
bear it. They suggested that we discu" this with you. ·
We have no educational loans
and our cars are very close to being
paid for. In addition, we have
almost $30,000 as an emergency
fund and contribute to 401s. What
do you think?- L.W., Austin,
Texas

PA.

Festival is good for. .•
"

Sheriff probes acts of vandalism

U.N. negligence led to huge theft in Somalia

Prefers home schooling environment
Dear Editor,
I'm writing in regards to the
comment Mr. John Hood made
concerning home schooling in The
Dally Sentinel. He said be felt
sorry for the kids that were being
borne schooled because they were
being taken out of reality.
I want to say that this is the third
year that my wife and I have borne
schooled our daughter.' She basn' t
been in one fight, or. been offered
any drugs , or bad a knife or gun
JlUIIed on her. She hasn ' t been
called any names. She hasn't been
taught that homosexuality is a way
of life. Neither bas she bad bead
lice or been·as sick as she used to
get when she was in public schools.
• She is not made to participate in
activities that are against her religious beliefs like dancing and rock
music and etc.
·
My daughter may pray when
she wants to and as long as she
wants to. As far as there being
more to teaching than just giving
!bell) lessons, bow right you are:
you don't take a 9-year-old and
tbiow the books on the table and

r---Local briefs· ---.

OHIO Weather
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high

/.
·
WASHINGTON ~ Nine
months before -the biggest cash
heist in United Nations history,
U.S. officials secretly warned the
U.N. that the way they were han~~~~ the cash fund in Somalia was
mVJtmg burglary.
The April 17, 1994, theft bas
still not been solved, though U.N.
employees are the prime suspects
- and at least two U.S. intelligence reports surmise that Somali
warlord Mohammed Farah Aidid
received a big chunk: of the booty.
Tbe dramatic case is further evidencc tha~ the United Nations is
careless wtth tts money. Amencan
taxpaye'rs kick in more than $2 billion each year to_th~ internati~nal
body and tts affthated orgamzauons.
,
Here's the untold story about
the middle-of-the-night $3.9 million burglary, pieced together from
U.N. and U.S. document.s and intelIigence sources:
.
In the pre-dawn hours of a Sunday in Somalia, someone broke
into a United Nations cashier's

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

No subscrt"ption by mail permitted in areas
where home carrier lei'Vice is available.

MAIL SIJIJ8CRIPTIONS
lnotdeM!IpCoam,

l~ ~:: :::::::: ::::: : : :

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Rota O.llido M!lp CooniJ
13 Wcoeb .................................................$29.2.1
26 Weeb ........... :....................... .:............ $56.68.
52 w.eu,.,........,............. ...................$109.72

Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

9 a.ni. to 3 p.m.

CASINO NIGH,. AT 'BE
RIVERFRON' SALOON

HOLZER CLINIC of
MEIGS COUNTY

located at Anderson's Warehouse,
Mechanic Street in Pomeroy
.OCTOBER·5th, 1995
6:00 p.m ..........;.............."Days Gone Bye" Parade
7:00p.m. top 7:30p.m ........................... Ante Up!!!
7:30 p;m. to 10:30 p.m ........ Casino (Pisce your bets)
10:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m .................. Auction (SOLO//)

FREE TESTING:

Cashier available for more Fun Money/

$15.00 ticket entitles you to
$5,000.00 in Fun Money
. Music • Snacks • Entertainment
Cash Bar •.Auction

.-:

-Height
-Weight
- Blood Pressure
- Pulmonary Function

- Hearing Test
- Blood Sugar/Cholesterol
-Vision Screening

Friday, October 6, 1995

Dress - Western

Holzer Clinic of Meigs County · 150- Mill Street· Middleport, OH

TUnlr JOU for supportint the Mdl•
.ChGm..,. of Commerce.

992-2188

TICKETS LIMITED
For more information call,(614) 992·5005

.•

._',

�•
•

Wednesday, October 4, 1995

·sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

Page4
Wednesday, October 4 1995

~

In major league playoff action, .

.

•

Meet th·e Marauders ~eUe's homer bat falls within league rules

•

Indians, Yankees, ·Braves &amp; Reds w1n

~By CHRIS SHERIDAN

~4

i'

HE'S OUT -The Los Angeles Dodgers' Chad FonvUie (right) Is
tagged out at tbe plate by Cincinnati catcher Benito Santiago In the

eighth Inning of their National League playoff series openerTuesday
night In Los Angeles, where the Reds won 7-2. (AP)

· Meigs wins West Virginia linkfest
by Dave Anderson (81). Clay Crow
(83). Mick Barr. (87) and Jared
Warner (93).
For Soutllern, Ryan Norris was
match medalist witll a four over par
74, Kevin Fields added an 85,
while Jason Shuler had a 90, Chris
Ball had a 95 and Matt Bradford
had a 96.
For the Meigs B team, Josh
Price led the way with a 96. Sean
O'Brien added a 97, J.R. Scarberry
had a 98, Gary Acree had a 100
and Jared Woods bad a 103.

Meigs woo tile six team River·Side High School Invilational held
'last Friday at the Riverside Golf
·Course in Mason. The win gives
:the Marauders a 116-45 record
.beading into Division II sectional
·play.
: Meigs posted a 329, Southern
iinished in second with a 344.
:Atllens was in tllird vJitll a 351, foiJowed by Trimble (356}, Alexander
i387) and tile Meigs "B" team witll
·a 391.
. Steve McCullough led the
:Meigs A team witll a 78, followed

bases loaded in the 12tb, 44,218
people watching the frrst playoff
game in the_ii city since 1954.
"Every pitch tonigbt 'meant the
ballgame for 2 112 to 3 hours. but
hey, a lot of us gained some playoff
experience tonight- about five
hours of it," Boston's Tim
Naebring said.
There were other highlight~
unseen by most of tile countl'}l in
this first- and perhaps lastyear of non-televised playoff
games.
At Denver, tile Rockies ran out
of position players and bad to use a
pitcher ~s a pinch-bitter with the
bases loaded in the bottom of the
nintll trailing 5-4 against Atlanta.
Lance Painter, the starter in Game
2 tonight, struck out to end tile
game.
· At New York, Ken Griffey Jr.'s
two home runs weren't enough for
the Seattle Mariners, who lost 9-6
to tile Yankees.
At Los Angeles, tile ReDs scored
four runs in the first and got a
strong outing from Pete Scbourek
to beat the Dodgers 7-2.
In American League action:
Indians S, Red Sox 4
Pena homered into the flfSt row
of tile left-field bleachers on a 3-0
pitch from Zane Smitb with two
outs.
• 'We broke out our secret
weapon,·· Cleveland manager
Mike Hargrove said. "You look at
Tony Pen a, and you don't think
home run . But Tony's a clutch
player. He's been a clutch player
all his life.''
It was the 1011) time this season
tllat tile Indians ended a game with
a home run, and it made tllem 14-0

AP Sports Writer
You bad to stay up real late and
know a whole Jot about descram·
bling saiellite signals in order to
catch the most dramatic moment on
tllefrrstnigbtoftlleexpandedplay·
offs.
Unless, of course, you lived in
the eastern half of Ohio or some·
where in New England. In tbat
case, you only had to worry about
the staying-up-late part.
Welcome to the expanded baseball playoffs. You get to watch one
and wonder about the others.
It was past 2 a.m. on a rainy
Tuesday night in Cleveland when
Tony Pena ended the last game of
the night with a solo borne run in
t!Je bottom of the 13th inning, giving Cleveland a 5-4 victory over
Boston.
Tbe Baseball Network televised
the game to approximately 25 percent of the country,leaving tile rest
of the nation in the dark. The
broadcast signal was scrambled,
too, so people at some sports bars
and folks witll satellite dishes were
shut out of tile excitement.
Because of the network's exclusivity rights, even highlights were
unavailable until the game ended.
That meant no early footage of
Albert Belle's homer, no video of
the umpires confiscating his ba~ no
seeing the probable AL MVP flex
his bicep at the Red Sox dugout as
if to say "This is my cork."
There was Boston scoring an
lith-inning run tllat was matched
by tile Indians in the bottom of the
inning. There was Roger Clemens
throwing in the mid-90s, Eddie
Murray grounding out with the

in extra innings.
The game went to extra innin¥s
tied 3-3. and Naebring bornered m
the lith for a 4-3Iead before Belle
tied it with a leadoff homer against
Rick Aguilera. The Red Sox con·
fiscatcd his bat, it was cut in half
and found to be legal.
"It's just a desperate effort to
throw a monkey WJ;encb in our season," Belle said. "I don't ncecfto
use corked bats. It's kind of a slap
in the face, but I'm going to remain
focused."
·Yankees 9, Mariners 6
In the first Yankees playoff
game in 14 years and tile first in
Seattle Mariners history. there was
more tension in tile middle innings
than there was at the end.
After David Cone walked in the
tying run in tile sixtll, the Yankees
came back with two runs for a 4-2
lead. After Griffey bit his second
homer of the night in the seventh
for a 4-4 tie, New York broke it
open in the bottom of the inning
witll four more runs.
Bernie Williams bad an RBI
double over Griffey's bead in center, Paul O'Neill bit a sacrifice fly
and Ruben Sierra bit a two-run
homer tllat sent a sellout crowd of
57,178 into a frenzy.
"I can honestly say it was the
most amazing crowd I've ever
seen." Cone said. "There were no
boos and they always started chant·
ing again. The crowd never gave
up and tlley sure helped me in theat
one inning when I was a little wild.
That was huge.''
. In National League action:
Reds 7, Dodgers 2
At the one playoff site tllat was
not sold out, 10,000 empty seals

were witness to a two-run double
by Hal Morris and a two-fWI homer
by Benito Santiago witll two outs
in the frrst inning, giving the Reds
aU the rwis tlley needed.
Schourek, an IS-game winner
appearing in his frrst career postseason game, limited tile Dodgers
to five hits and two runs in seven
innings.
Braves 5, Roc~es 4
Chipper Jones bit his second
homer of the nighl in the top of the
ninth, and tllen it all came down 1o
one major mistake: Rockies manager Don Baylor ran out of options.
In tile bottom of the nintll, Colorado loaded tile bases with one out
against Mark Wohlers, but Andres
Galarraga struck out on a high faslball for tile second out Due up was
pitcher Curtis Leskanic, but Baylor
didn't have any position players
left to pinch-hit. He had made three
defensive switches. used two
pinch-hitters and a pinch-runner.
The best remaining alternative was
Painter, and he struck out to end
the game.
"It happens," Atlanla manager
Bobby Cox said.

Scoreboard
12.3000. 5-Cio. Winton Woods 11.7000.
6-Washingtoo 01 Miami Trace 11 .4000.

Baseball .

Division IU

Major league playoffs

Region 9- I·AI.ron St Viocnt-St.
Mary 14.4000. 2-0lmsted Fal~ 12.8000.
3-Hunling Valle~ Univ. School 11 .9000.
4-Ak.ro'n Hoban 10.90()9. 5-Avon Lake
I 0.6000 . 6-Chagrin Falla K~nston
10.4000.
Region 10- J-Ciyde 16.1000 . 2·
Delaware Olenlang y 14.6000 . 1-0ak: Harbor 13.0000. 4-Bryan 12.3000. S-BucyNJ
10.9000. 6·Cols . Beechcrort.
Region· 11 - 1· Pol at1d Semi nary
18 .2000. 2-Alliance Marlingtoo 11.8000.
3-Cort1and Lakeview 12.8000. 4-Philo
12.6000. S-Can ri eld 12.SOOO. 6-Beloit
Wca:t Branch 11 .6000.
Region 12-1-Ham.ill on Ross 1·11.6000.
2-Cin. Purcell Maria.o \4.2000. 3- H.il\s boro 12.6000. 4-Kenering Aller 12.5000.
S-l...ondon 11 .8000. 6 (tie)-Morrow Little
Miami, Hamilton Badin 11 .3000.

American League
Tuesd.,.'t ~eora
New York 9 , Seattle 6; New York

IC*Is series 1·0
Clevcliwd 5, Bo1ton 4 ( ll); Cleveland
Jead5 seriCI 1·0

Tonlaht'' 11me1

Bolton (HaDIOD !S ·S) at Cleveland
(l-lcr&amp;hiiCI' 16-6}, &amp;:07 p.m.
Scaulc (Bcaa 7-2) ar. New York (Pet ·
tioe 12-9), 1,07 p.m

frlcb7'•aamu
aeveJud at B05tOQ, 1:07 p.m
New Yort at SeattJe, 8:07p.m

Saturday'•l...,u
aevelud Ill BOlton. 7:07p.m., if necessary
New Yori: at Seattle, 7:07p.m . if o~­
"""'Y

Division IV

Sacurd.,.'•l!un••
Colorado at Al.\anu. 7:07p.m . if nee·

Region 13- 1-0rrville 17 .7000. 2Casalali a Margaretta 15 .9000. 3-Air.ron
Man chester 14.7000. 4-Newark Ucl..ina
Va\l~y 14.0000. S-C\e. Bentdictine
13.2000. 6-Perry 11.0000.
Reaion 14-1-Cols. Ready 16.2000.2Vmaillei 14.5000. 3-Bellbrool. 12.6000.
4-Germa.ntown Valley View 12.1000. 5Swanton 9.7000. 6·Sprinafield Kenton
Ridge 9.0000·
Region 15- 1- Youngstown Ursuline
16 .7000 . 2- Bell aire 14 .7000 . ].
Youngstown Moone~ 10.5000. 4 -Goad.
Indian Valley 9.6000 . 5-Leavitltburg
LaBrae 9.00 00 . 6 (lle)- Zoarville Tus carawas VaHey, Hannibal River ,8.8000.
Region 16--1 -lRONfON 15.2000. 2LANCASTER FAIRFIELD UNION
12.4000. ]- PORT SMOUTH WEST
12.3000. 4-IRONTON ROCK HILL
11 .9000. 5-Cin . Deer Park. 9.0000 . 6WashiogtoD01 Washington 8.5000 .

Lol Angeles at Cincinnati, 7JJ7 p.m.,

Division V

NallonaiLeague
Tuudar'• More•
Cincinnati 7, Lc1 Allgc\ea 2; Cincio·
uti leadJ seriet: I ..0
Allanta S. Colorado 4; Atlanta leads
~eries 1-0

Toni&amp;hi'•IIUIICI.
anclnnlli (Smiley 12-.S) It lol Aog~
Ia (ValdealJ.II ), 1'07 pIll
Atlanta (Ginine 16-1) at Colorado
~-l-&lt;l) , I,QJ

p.m.

Frlday '•aunn

Co\Drldo at A.Uanta, 1:07 p.m.
Loa Anaele&amp; at Cincinnati, 8:07p.m.

. ..,

if De:Ces&amp;IUJ

Region 17- I· Roc ky Ri ver Lutheran
West 13.5000. 2-New LondoD13.3000. 3-

Apple Crtt k. Wiiyncdale 9.4000. 4-0rwell
Grand Valley 8.1000. 5-Avon 8.5000. 6
(lie)·Sullivan Black River, New Middletown Springfield 1.6000.
Regi on 18 - 1-Marion Pleaunt
16.3000. 2-Co!dwater 1\ .SOOO. 3-De!iance Tinora 11.2000. 4-Liberty Center
10.4000. 5-EirtlDfe Woodmore 7.3000. 6Marioo FJgin 6.3000.
Region 19-l -Woodsfield Monroe
Central 14.1000. 2-Lilbon David Anderson 12.5000 . l {tie)· CROOKSVILLE,
Steub. Cath . Ctnt. 11 .9000. S-New Malamoral Frontier 11.7000. 6-Asbland
Mapletotl 10.9000.
Resi c n 20- 1-C in . Marie mont
19.1000 . 2-CANA L WINCHESTER
11 .2000. 3-PIK.ETON 9.87SO . 4-COAL
GROVE DAWSON·BRYANf 96000. 5Amaml.a· Oearcrcek 9.2000. 6-Columbu.s
Academy 8.8000

Ohio H.S. sports
Football
computer ratings
COLUMBUS , Ohio {AP) - The second weekly football oomputer ratiogs aa
releued by the Ohio Hijh School Alhletic
Aa:IQCZ.itt ion, by di""vision and region, with
avenae bi-level point• per game (top four
turns iD each region advance to regional
•emifinala}:

Division I
ReaioD 1 - 1 -CI~ St.Isnatius 277000.
2-l.akewood 23 .3000 . 3-Strongsville
15 .6000 . 4-MidrJ\eburg Hta . Midpark
13 .7000. !S -Lal.ewood St. Edward

I HJOO. 6-Euclid II.SOOO.

DAME UOOO. 5·Ce4atville UOOO. 6Ansonia 6.9000.

- Volleyball poll

Region 21 - 1-Mogadore 12.0000. 2Norwalk St. Pau l 10.4000. 3- Edgerton
10.1000. 4-Defiance Ayenville 10.0000.
S- 1ndependence 9.2000 . 6-Nonh Bal li·
more 1.6000.
Region 22- 1-S I. Henr~ 12.4000. 2Co\urnbui Grove 12.0000. 3-New Brtmen
11.3000. 4-Dola Hardin Northern 9.2000.
S-S idney Lehman 8.8000. 6 (tie)·De&lt;iraff
River&amp;ide, Blu!non IJOOO.
Region B - 1-McDona.ld 11 .4000. 2·
Beallsville 10.3000. 1-Newark. Catholic
10.2000. 4-Bowentown Coootton Valley
9 .1WOO . 5-Lowellvillc 9.2000. 6-New
Wash . Buck:t::ye Cent. 8.8000.
Regi on 24- 1-Cin . Co untry Day
12. 7000. l·LANCASTER FISHER
CATII. 12 2000. 3-North Ltwilburg Tri·
' ' 11 .70 00. 4-PORTSMOtml NOTRE

KeUering Fairmont 20.4000. 3-Dayton
D.!Dbar 19.8000. 4-Cio . Elder 19.7()().). SW. Chuter Lalr.ola 19.0000 . 6-Cin. St.
Xavier 17.8000.

Division II
Region S-1-Amtienl Steele 17.1000.
2-Chardon 14.9000. 3-MadiioD 13.5000.
4-North Royalton I 3.0000. 5 (tie )Paineaville Rivmide, Ravenna 11.8000.
Region 6-1-Bowling Green 19.3000.
2-Coll . St. Franci1 18.9000. 3-Dublin
Scioto 11.000. 4-Fostori• 15.8000. 5·TiffiD Columbian 14.1000. 6-Cols. Mifnln

BasebaU
NatlonaiLeaa111
FLORIDA MARLINS ' Anlaned
Steve Decker, calcher; Mario Diu, infielder; Ruu Monnan and Tommy Greaa.
outfielden; and Richie Lewi1, pitcher,
oulri&amp;ht to Charlotte o( the Iotetnationll

COLUMBUS, Ollio (AP) -Tho thitd
weekly Oh~o High Schoo l Volleyball
Coaches Anociation poll, wilb school,
record ami IOt.al pointJ (rant-place Y()lel in
parentheses):

Division I
Will

Ina••

a.

Bukctball ANDel at loa
ATLANI'A HAWKS: Si&amp;ncd Doule
Borcc.l\lard, to • two-year contract.
CHARLOTTE HORNETS ' Siaoed
Pole Myen, prd.
DENVER NUGGETS: Sianed Antonio McDyesa, fawatd
HOUSTON ROCKETS : Re-liJned
Cbueky Brown, forward, and Cbarlea
Jones, ct:Olf!l'.
INDIANA PACERS: Sianed Eddie
~lonal

Steond 10: 11-Elyria SJ . 12-Chilli·
cothc (1) •9. 13-Brec::Uville 44. 14-W.
Chester Lakota 41 . 15-Co\s, Wattenon (I)
39. 16-Mentor 28. 11 (lie}-Siow, Cin.
Mother of Mercy 27. 19-Solon 25 . 20 Hil liard 24.

Johoaon, forward , and Ricl.y Pierce.
suard. Re-1igned Haywoode Workman,
guard. Announced Damon Bailey, guard.
hal aceepted a qualif~ing ofrer . Renounced lhe ri&amp;JlU to Vern Fleming and
Leiter Conner, JlUards; LaSalle Thompson, forward; and Greg .Kile . center .
Aafccd to lCm\1 with Travis Best, guard .
LOS ANGELES LAKERS : Signed
fred Roberu, forward .
ORLANDO MAGIC: Signed Jon Kon-

SERVICE &amp;
REPAIRS
TOYO STOVE
AND
KERO·SUN HEATERS
WICKS &amp;
ACCESSORIES
KEROSENE FUEL
CANS

PIC-KENS

cak. CICDiet .

NEW JERSEY NETS : Sig11ed Ed
O'Baooon, forward, to a three-year con-

BasketbaU

1-MlDSiield Madi&amp;on (16) 13-0 .......... 238
2-Wcatervillc South (3} 10..1 .............. 125
3-Cin. Seton (1) IS-2 .......................... 112
4-Wooster(1) 11-0......
........95
5-Cin. UrsuJine Academy (1) 11 -2 .......90
6-Ci n. Mt. Notre Dame J0-1.................79
7-Tol. Central Cath. (I) 15-1 ................72
8·Day. Cham.inado-JuliellDC IS.2 .........68
9-Rocty River Magoificu (4) 11·3 ......60
I O·l'l qua ll· l ........................................ .S4

tract.

PHOENIX SUNS: Signed Steve Turn·

er, far:ward. and Orlando Smart, g\Wd.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZE ItS'
Sianed Gary Trent, forward , and Randolph Childrca&amp;, gwud, to thr~CCoycat COD -

HARDWARE

traClJ.

SACRAMENTO KINGS : Agreed lo
terms with Tyus Edney, auani
VA.NCOUVER GRIZZUES: Sianed
Lawrence MOten, guard, to a two -year
oontracc.

MAtT WILLIAMS
JASON ROUSH
Jason Roush and Matt Williams are member or the 1995 Meigs
Marauder football team. Roush is a S-foot·IO, ISS sophomore guard
and linebacker. Williams is a slx·foot, 175-pound sophomore tailback
and linebacker.

Eastern spikers defeat
Trimble in three games
Eastern's volleyball team just kept them at bay for most or
advanced to 9-5 with a 13-15, 15- tile game.
Eastern coach Don Jackson said,
10, 15-6 victory over Trimble
"We bad a great serving night.
Monday night.
Eastern is enjoying one of its That's what carried us through tile
best seasons in recent years and is night. Trimble kept us on our toes
still in tile bunt for the Tri-:Valley all night long witb their dinking
and soft spikes, tflen kept us honest
Conference title.
Eastern was led by Rebecca a few times by delivering a bard
Evans with !2 points, going 16-17 spike."
Jackson continued. "We dug a
with an ace: Patsy Aeiker 11
points, going 13-15 with four aces, few of tlleir spikes and a few they
. and Michelle Caldwell nine points, bit out on tlleir own. I hope tllis is a
going 15-15 with an ace. Freshman good start to a long week as we
Jessica Brannon had seven points face four tough opponents."
Eastern faced Alexander, the
in a 13-13 night, Jessica Karr bad ·
three points with a 6-7 night, and TVC' s top team, before meeeting
Mindy Sampson was 6-6 with one Meigs and Soutllern in a tri·matcb
today. Soutllern is the conference
point. Overall Eastern was 69-73.
In spiking, Sampson led the runner-up.
. winners with a 12-13 night, one
Jackson expressed concern over
kill, and one block; Jessica Bran- the Marauders, as !bey are very
non was 9-12 witb two kills and much improved over tile fliSt meet·
one block; Patsy Aeiker 7-10 witll ing between tile two clubs. Eastern
one kill and one block; Rebecca won that match, but the Eagle~
Evans 6-10 witll one kill and one expect a better game today.
block; Jessica Karr 4-7 with one
kill and one block and Michelle -Sports briefs-Caldwell t!Jree blocks.
Tennis
Trimble bad been noted as one
ZURICH,
Switzerland
(AP) of the best passing and receiving
teams in tile conference. Eastern's Swiss youngster Martina Hingis,
front line play, however, kept tile who just celebrated her 15tll birthTomcats from finishing off tile job. day, defeated American Amy Fra·
Trimble is one of tile hardest spik- zier in tile fliSt round of tile Euroing teams in the league. Eastern pean Indoors tennis tournament.

By JIMMY GOLEN
CLEVELAND (AP) - In an
attempt at civic pride, the Jacobs
Field scoreboard boasts t!Jat Lillian
Gish once lived in Cleveland and
t!Jat the X-ray machine was invented here'. The !alter is especially
convenient these days, because it
means Alben Belle's bat doesn't
have to travel far when opponents
want it checked.
The Boston Red Sox asked for
Belle's bat to be confiscated early
tllis morning after tile Indians' out·
fielder hit a game-tying home run
in tile 11 til inning of their playoff
opener.
"We had some suspicions,"
Boston manager Kevin Kennedy
said. "We bad some information
given to us, so we bad it checked. I
executed the tllings tllat my organi·
zation told me about.
"It's happened before. I just
want to make sure everybody's on
a level playing field. Last year, I
guess, some of tile time it wasn't"
Cleveland won 5-4 in tile 13tll
inning when Tony Pena's home fWI
at 2:08 a.m. ~ent the Red Sox to
their lith consecutive postseason
loss. As for tile hat, it was cut in
half by league officials and found
to be clean and legal, if unusable.
• 'Nothing ventured, nothing
gained," Boston manager general
manager Dan Duqueue said.
"I wanted tllem to X-ray it and
give it back to me," Belle said.
''(Former AL president) Bobby
Brown split the bat open so it's in
two pieces. And be knows what be
can do with those two pieces.''
Belle also was accused of using
a corked bat last season in Chicago,
but before bat could be checked, it
was stolen out of the Comiskey
Park umpires room. It was later
returned, found to be tampered
witll and Belle was suspended for

seven games.
When he returned, he hit .476.
~ith 10 home runs and 23 RB!s in
the next .20 games. Still, Kennedy
said he wasn't worried about mak·
ing Belle mad.
"He's been on a tear all year.
So maybe he's been angry all
year," Kennedy said. "I don ' t
know how much more you can do
tllan he's done."
Belle hit 50 homers this season,
including a record 17 in September
and 31 in tile last two montlls.
"I know tllat be hit 50 home
runs. I'll take my hat off to tlla~ "
Red Sox third baseman Tim
Naehring said. " It's 51. including
tonigh~ I guess."
Naehring hit a solo homer in tile
top of the 1!tll to give Boston a 4-3
lead, but Belle tied it in tile bottom
half. After rounding the bases,
home plate wnpire Tim Welke had
tile bat taken away.
Back in tile dugout,'B~ was
caught by the lelevision cameras
pointing to his flexed muscles and
yelling profanities towards the Red
Sox dugout. Asked what be yelled,
be said:

Southern reserves
lose two of three
-latest matches

The Southern reserve volleybailers posted a big win over Gallipolis. but dropped hard-fought
games lo Belpre and Miller.
Southern defeated GAHS 15 -4
and 15-5 in two sets.
Kim Sayre led the way with 14
points, Jenny Friend added seven,
Melissa Layne four, HiUary Harris
tllree, and one each from Cyntllia
Caldwell and Ranetta Wheeler.
Southern dropped tile frrst game
at Miller 7-15, but came back to
force a tie-breaker at 15-10. Miller
won the rubber game of the match
Hunter to speak
15-8 to take the win. ·
at Meigs Chamber
Jenny Friend I~!d tile way witll
14
Cynthia Caldwell bad
luncheon Tuesday five,points,
Sa)/l'l\ had four, Ranetta
Ohio University men's head Wheeler had&gt; four and Harris had
basketball coach Larry Hunter is t!Jree.
scheduled to be the guest speaker at
Against Belpre, Soutllern again
the Meigs County Chamber of . took it to tllree matches after drop·
Commerce general memee~');ing tile first one 15-11. Southern
luncheon on Tuesday, Oct 10 at overwhelmed the Golden Eagles
noon. The luncheon will be held at 15-5 in the second game, then
The Carleton School in Syracuse dropped tile finale 15-6.
and tile cost is $3.
Harris led with nine points ,
Anyone interested in attending Sayre bad seven, Jayme Miller had
should call Patty Calaway at 992- eight, Caldwell had four, Wheeler
5005 for information or to make had two, and one each came from
reservations.
Jennifer Yeagucr and Friend.

"Basically, deleting tile exple·
lives, 'I don't need to use corked
bats. That's why I have muscles.'
... I take pride in how strong I am,
how much power I generate.
1 ·
"Acrually, it's kind of a slap in
the face. It's going to get me upset
but I'm going to remain focused.
We have.a World Series to win-and
tllis is tile fliSt step."
Kennedy said there was no
offense intended.
"I know tile guy's story. I know
be can bit it out without any cork,"
the Red Sox manager said. "There
shouldn't be any offense taken. It's
part of tile game. It's like if a guy's

throwing spitters. you check the
ball . We didn't have a whole lot to
lose and everylhing to gliin."'
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
wasn't so sure.
"They have a right 10 have the
bat checked, and they chose to
exercise tllat right," he said. •; aut I
don't know, in a playoff situation,
if gamesmanship has any place .
That's my personal philosophy."
Said Belle: "It was a desperate
attempl to throw a monkey wrench
into our season. But it's a big men·
tal advanlage for us if every time
we play someone tlley're worried
about if I'm using corked bats or,
not.

This Week's Speeials

~~~~~~~.~.~~-~

49 C
CAL. CELEliY ............................. 49
........... 3 lB.

BAG

C

OHIO RED &amp; GOlDEN
$266
DELICIOUS APPLES.PECK BAG
WHITE
$433
POTATOE$ ................. 50 lB. BAG

NEW SUNFLOWER GIFT ITEMS.
INCLUDES SILK SUNFLOWERS

MEIGS FARM MKT.

MASON, W. VA.
773·5583

Dh1sloo n
1!11.

Will

1-Cin. St. Unula (11) IS-3 ..... .. .. ......204
2-Suobwy Big Walout (9) IS.O . ....... 187
l-Norwalk (2)14-2.. .. ..................... 136
4-Tallmadge(2) IJ.I ...
.. ........ Ill
S-Copley 13-1 ..... ..... ... ....
.. ........95
6-Lebanon (1) 17-1 ............................. 82
7-LimaBath IJ.L. ........
.. ..........71
8-Salem (1)'12-2 ..........
.. ......... 52
9-Jc(fenon Area 12-0 ..... .................... ..41
10-Carrbridae 11·1 ................................ 42

5end Us llour

favorite Recipe

Second lit II -MINFORD (2) 41. 12Avoo Lake 40. 13·Bnley 31 . 14-l..IGraoge Keystone 32. U-Ciyde 31. 16·
Wilminaton 25. 17·Holland Sprinafield
22. 18-Ash.tabula Edgewood 20. 19Ravenoa Southeast 19. 20-New Co11cord
John Glell.D 16.

Division Ill
Will

l10LIDlJll

a.

Certified used car buyeiS will be on hand to give highest trade·in value for your automobile. Please bring
your title, registration card, and payment book if
applicable.

Plus$500 to $20011 cash back or 1.9% APR financing
available (lease up to 24 months) on selected models
on approved credit. Tenns available up to 84 10011U1S!

Selection includes Astro All Wheel Drives and G·20's,
both available with raised roofs or low tops. Prices
range from $17,488 to $36,988.

NO SALES PERMilTED TO DEALERS. This clearance is
for retail customers only. Prices apply to available
units only. No ordering permitted at these prices.

If You're Planning On Buying ANew Automobile Ibis Year, Do It Now!
Tom Peden's lowest Sale Prices Of The Year!
Hurry While Selection Is Good! When They're Gone•••They're Gone!

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

20-Ea&amp;t Pa1ICitiDe 12.

Division IV

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 CONVERSION VAN DEALER HAS AN
INVENTORY OF OVER 300 BRAND NEW CHEVROLET
CONVERSION VANS. .

COO~l)OO~ -

Suond 10: 11-Bellbroot 39. 12-Co\.
SchOol fa- Girls 31. 13-Pembenille Eut·
wood 34. 14-Heath (l) H. 15-Cruton
Norwayne 22. 16-Upper Sanduat'y lB . 17Melamora EvergreeD 16. 18-0id Wuh·
iogton Buckeye Trail 14. 19..()moi1Je 13 .

Ium

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY Of OVER 11Dl BRAND
NEW CHEIJR!!l!!!1OLDSMOBILES, PONTIACS, BUICKS,
GEOS AND C~1 um VANS.
.
All will be sold at substantial discounts!

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a

I ·ColuJWian• CrQt.Yiew (9} 12-0 .. .. 218
2·Franl.fort Adeoa (8) 12-1............... 19S
J.Archbold(ll 13-0........
.189
4-SpringfieldCslh. Cent. (2) 14-0 ...... 146
S-New P.-ia Nationa.l Trail (1) 12-1 ... 118
6-CI OL. ZANE TRACE 10.2... ......... 106
7-Marion River VaHey (2) 11-1 ............ 85
8·Aiuoo Hobao (I) 11-4... .................... 56
9-Mar ion Elgin (I) 13-1 .... ................. SS
10-Huron 9-4 ...
............. 46

Division VI

Region 2-1 -Brunswick. \9 .7000. 2
(tie}- Troy, Piqua 17.0000. 4-Tolcdo St.
Joh1'1 14.9000. S-F&amp;irborn 13.5000. 6Fremoat R011l1 .7000.
Rcaioll 3- 1-Wutenille South
21 .4000. 2- Youngstown Boardman
1$.7000. 3-Upper Arlington 15.0000. 4Grove City 13.6000. S-La.ncutcr 12.6000.
6-Reynoldiburg 12.4000.
Region 4-l-Cin. Co lerain 23.7000. 2-

Transactions

Prepare
For Winter

The Daily Sentinel • ~age 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

a.

1-St.Heory(27) 17-&lt;l .......................... m
2-BucomHopeweU-I..oudco 12-1...... \SI
).Rockford Parkway 14-2 ................... 138
4--MioenJ R;dge (2) 1+-1 .................... 132
~-Wiodham J:l-1 ....................... ...........95
6--New Wash. Bucleye Central\ J.-0 .... 19
7-Lorain Catholic 11-1 .......................... 62
8-Sidoey Ldtman 13-2 ..........................58
9--Covini(onll-1 ..................................$!
10-S. Clwleaton Southeastern 13-2 ....... 37

.~
!
. your recJpe
. Jnto
.
B nng
ouroJJ.ce
or send.'' (o:
Holiday Cookbook
c/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45769

Suon• lit 11-Edon 34. 12-0ibiODbura 30. 13-Antw!-'P 2S. 14-K.idron Cent
OuUtiu24. IS-New Bremen 23. 16·McComb 14. 17-Aihlaad Cre.tview 13. U
(lie)·Ka.lida, Fort Recovery 12. 20-0reenwic!t South Centra! II.

ISave $6400 I
BRAND NEW '95 CHM AS1RO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN

Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.

• Exl..,ded Chassis
• Driver S~e Air Bag
• Anli·l ocl Brakes
• Arr Condition
• Automalie Overdnve
• Visla Bay Windows
• Power Sleenng
• Power Bral&lt;es

Deadline for aU recipes
is October 20, 1995

11 .!00:&gt;.
ReaioD 7- 1-Cuya. Falls Wilsh Jesuit
16.7000. 2-Atron Springfield 16.3000. 3AI.roD Buchtel I S.7000. 4-Un ioDtown
Lake 13.7000 . 5.Wlnterni!le lndiao
Creek 13 .0000 . 5-Akron Firutooe
' 111000.

• Power Windows
• Power Locks
·Till Steering
• Cruise Control
• AM/FM Cassette
• Capt&gt;n Cha~rs

• Indirect lighlmg
• Premium Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Aluminum Running
Boards
•loa,ded!

•Sola/~

No 001; Fees. ~ed·

Reaion 8- 1-Cincilluli Turpin
11.3000. 2-Bcllefonta.ine 15".1000. J.-Celi·
na 13.0000. 4-Ncw Carli1le Tecumseh

ISave $6500 I

Isave $6100 1
BRAND NEW '95 CHM G·20 3/4 TON
LONG WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN

BRAND NEW '95 CHM 3/4 TON RAISED ROOF
LONG WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN
350 V-8 POWER I COLOR TV

350¥·8 POWER

• Orrver Sde Arr Bag
• AnHock Brakes
• Air Condilion
·350V-8Po~

• Automatic Overdrrve
• VISia Bay Windows
• Power Sleenng
• Power Bra&lt;es

• Power Windows
·Po~locls

• Till Steering
• Cruise Comrol
• AMIFM Cassette
• 4 Caplain Chairs

• lnd~ra:l Ughlrng
•.Prem1um Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Alumi1um Running Boards
•LOacfed 1

•Sola/~

MoDoc Fees. Ottwreo·

• Ratsed Roof
·Color T\1
• Orrver S.de Aor Bag
• Anli·lock Bra&lt;es
• Air ConditiOn

• 35&lt;1 V-8 Power
• Aulomalic Overdnve
• VISta Bay W1ndows
• Power Steering

• Power Bra&lt;es
• Powe~ Windows
·Power l ocks
• T111 Sleenng
• Cru1se Control
· AMIFM Cassette
· 4 Caplatn Chairs

• lnd11ect lighting
• Prem1um WoOO Pkg.
• Full Converscon
• Alum1numAunmng Boards
• Loaded' ·

·Sola/Bed

''

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10 LIS. I
3 DAYS
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All Natural C.H. 2001

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•

.\

Mor•dar - Saturdar: ani - 9 pm
Noon -6 pm

�I
.

P.age 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, October 4, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

'

Wednesday, October 4, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

testimonial
from
participants
ofthe
good
work
of
Job
Corps
,.
"

Ann
Lallders
11

1995, los Angelita
Times Syndicate anO
CrUIOfl Syndiclle"

'•

. De.r Au Laden: Some lime

:tao. JOII priatcd a lea« &amp;om Sqeal
::Shriver CIICOIJrl8lng your readers eo
-1oana

'

'

11010

about !be Job Corps

' ~ Jlroanm,. 6'cc residential
.:M"'I'km IIIII job 1raininJ JlRl8lllll

:{or adoiCKenll. Thanks to

~our

M!umo, Job Qxps aod ill aCalialcd

llrpoludnns wae iDundaled wilb

Service, a naliolial non-profit 198·
lzationlbatlsaCXJalllionoffive~
!llltional womco'a groups 111d aCalla!ed with Job Corps. WICS aod Job
Corps have continued to be nwturina
factors in my life.
Elizabelh Cahill, WICS regiooal
direetor,lskcd me to ICIId youane
1c:aa1 from our Job Corps studeoiS.
Please share our stories with the
you~~~ people who read your column,
and let lhem know thea uc people
who devote !heir lives 10 proviiliDJ
opponunitles to succeed and be
productive ei!lzens. It's what Job
Corps is all about. •• VERA D.

R)SIISTANT HXECU'I1VE
D
. , WICS
11
a in L.A.: I am 19 and
ex peri en ed a lot of problems
growing up. A friend told me about
Job Corps. I couldn't believe what
they oll'ered •• free job training, 6'cc
OED or high school diploma courses,
free medical and dental care, 6'cc
room and board and monthly
spending ~Y· I'm goil)l IIJ fmisb
my educallon here~ Job Corps and
am grateful thal this great program

·here, which means no drugs or
alcohQI,noweapons,noflgblina,oo
threatening others, ~o sexual
harassment I have experiencecl what
It means to be responsible, to Uvc
wilh people of difen:nuaces 8nd to
follow rules and regulations. Job
Corps IJid WICS have reaUy helped
me.
Darryl in Pa.: I just wanllo teU your
readers thal Job Corps is reaUy COO\-It helps prepare you for a good·
paymg JOb one aay. I nere ue also a
gaveme.af~hstartinlife. .
lot of afler·school.sctivities l~e
VeronicamNJ.:Iamaresadentof basketbalL ~stalfugreat,andtts
Job Corps. I have to obey !he rules safe here. TbisJS!hcbestmoveiever

'

'

made iD my life.
ue inraeslt.d. please caD 1-80()..l33Shaton:Sanepeoplewondtrwhat JOBS or 1·800-JOB-CORPS, or
lbeaovanmentisdoing for us. They wrirc Job~· r;o. Box 193768,
just have 10 look around. There ue San Francisco, Calif. 94119.
Job Corps centers all over !h.c Whal CtJII you gillt! IM pmon who
C:OUO!').'. I am being weU IBken ~ · has evtrylhlng? Ann Landers'
ot while gelling J:IIY education. Job boollel, "Gems, • is ideal for d
Corps bas niile trades for me to llighlstand or cojfre table. "Gems• is
choose from, and I decided 10 sllldy a col/eclio11 of Ann Landers' llfi)S/
accounting. AU lhcl~lllff and ICachers requultd poems and essays. SeNi d
sl!o':V us lhcy ~- They are like 1elf-oddreued, /o11g, bruiness·siU
fanuly to me.
tllvtlopeanda cMckormoneyOidu
DEAR VERA FORD: Thank you for $5.25 (tlrii includes postage and
for sending on ~ommen!s from latwlling}IO:Gems,cloAnni.twlert,
people whose hves have been P.O.Boxll562,CIUcago,lll.60611·
changed by JobCorps.Forthoscwho 0562. (In CaNulipend $6.25.}

:iaGulrieL But diCic IIC 11i1J "'o•sands
·dlob Corps eligible yoiJJh who have

ALL STORES .NOW
ACCEPTING JOB
. APPLICANTS.
EXPERIENCED HELP WANTED
ALL POSITIONS &amp; MANAGEMENT

bouom,IIIJI'ocd

; • Fortunately for me, Job Corps

•IJccuoc DOl only my salvation but
:illo my lishtll tbe Clld of !he tunnel.
:lbccarins aod JURIOIIive Slaf,along

·View or nrc.

:: I am ·now tbe assislant executive

I'
I
I

BUY ONE GET ONE

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8 oz.
CTNS.

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=nal

HILLSHIRE FARMS

Smoked
Sausage

:· She CUJTendy teaches poetry and
P:eative writing as a .volunteer at
~tland Elementary School.

Rutland church
to mark 166th
anniversary

$ 88

FOR

Coca
MORTON HOUSE
Cola
Beef Stew
Products

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16ndleon at Mount Union College
Ia AlliiiiCC later this month and has
lieen seiected to read a selection of

•·

..

.~·

i. She will receive her awards at a

:: The Rutland Church of Christ
celebrating its ]66th anniversary
i6is Sunday was organized Nov. 8,
ll!29 in an old log cabin belonging
18 Elder Elijah Ralhbum.
·
·: The cabin was located in a field
Jost across lhe creek on the Happy
Hollow Road north of Rutland.
,ltbout 30 were present for the frrst
meeting with 15 signing on•as char·
iir members. They were Elder .EliJah Rathburn and his wife, Polly,
William Sargent and his wife and
.On, John; Franklin Downing and
los wife, William Parker and his
wife, Betsy; Selah Williams and his
'lilife and mother, Gideon Barker,
lf}ay Bolton and John Humphrey.
• The ground oo which the church
ii now located was deeded to the
ctiurch on Oct. 20, 1885 by J.N.
ai!d Clarissa ~thbum. The parson·
!Qe location was deeded to the
ctiurch on Sept. 6, 1919 by the
i(athburn heirs, and the basement
dj the church was build and dedi·
a$edon
: · A11g. 7, 1893 by J.C. Zollar,
.,.esident of Hiram College .
•·sunday's observance will
i6dude Sunday school at 9:30am.
wOrship and communion service at
11p0 a.m. a bastet dinner at noon,
a(ld afternoon services with Scott
otter of Glen Allen,' Va. speaking.
M(. Carter was one of several mini$Jers 10 come out of the coiJgrega·
li4J of the Rutland Church. Eugene
U•derwood, pastor, invites the
p!Jl,lic to attend !be Sunday ser·

4.5 oz.

8 Lbs. Or More

~ward.

.

ALLVARIE'riES

•

v'

:qgnized

la!rpoems.

'.

-

bi Yogurt

~~Lentes
[places in
~porn petition

; • LeDICS is a prior national poetry
~ard winner of lhe Judson Jerome
I'Jletry Scholarship and has been
' jl_ublished in a wide range of
and state poetry publica-

LUICIABLES

ASST.
FLAVORS·

Umtt 1 FREE

COupon

CATHY LENTES

MAYER

SJ !!.

Chuck Roaet or
Equal or Leaaer
Value wfth This

t

'

'·

•"

Apple Cider.

Maxwell House
Coffee

Boneless
Chuck Roast

;,_lOr of Women iD Community

:· Lentes won first place in the
io!Welcome Aboard" category, for
:tlJe best poem submilled by an
•
~bio resident or native enterine the
!competition for the firSt lime.
She also received second place
liil the • A Picture Is Worth A Thou·
jomd Words" competition. She won
)onorable mention in three other
.:OnleSts: Ohioana Library Award
~r a poem relating to Ohio; ·
:tRewards of Hanemaking" and the
preater Canton Writers Guild

.'

TAMARAK FARMS
. USDA CHOICE
CENTER CUT BEEF

OSCAR

BEEF

...

•
'•

"
'
36-39 ()l. CAN ADC-RICH FRENCH-UTE CAFFEINE-COLUMBIAN

ARDIN

GROUND

p

:wl!b a ltnK:turcd educational 111d
: mlional syslem, allowed me 10
;eavlsloo s future and reap lhe
;Dpptnlliliesoll'ercd. I might add Ibis
:was not easy because my anger,
:tru.u.lion IJid apathy clouded my

•: Cathy Lentes, Rutland, was recin several categaies at the
t:.nt Ohio Poetry Day Competi·

IUGBIN'
.,

:JlllpOIIuDky.
·: In 1965, I graduarcd from high
:«hooollqe 16 but didn't rcalizc I
·W eo be 18tora:civea work permiL
:No one in my IChool gave me any
:pldance or suppm. Disillusioned
: wi!b tbe IChool sysrem and wilh my

,.

•

.'

:aut beard Of Ibis unique !rlinina

~ ielf'-cs~etm II rock
: )0 tbe IIICCIS.

"

•''
I

•

VEGETABLES
Corn,
Cut Green Beans
Sweat Peas
II Oz. Cans

•

99

18 OZ. BOX

s1

SJ

s 99
'•

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WHOLE STICK SUPERIOR

MI. Brand
Bologna
Ll.

·79c
...

j
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_________________________________________________________________________.}•
·;

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�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 4, 1

Wednesday, October 4; 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

•·

HEEL
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

..

Thursday - October 5th
1:00 p.m .
3:00p.m .
5:00 p.m .
6:00 p.m.
7:00p.m .
7:30p.m.- 10:30 p.m.
8:00p.m.- 11 :00 p.m.
9:00p.m .

Jewel City Crui se
Jewel City Cruise
Jewel City Cruise
Parade - Theme "Days Gone Bye" .
Jewel City Cruise
Casino Night - Sponsored by Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce (for information call (614) 992-5005)
Music Entertainment - White Raven
Jewel City Cruise

Friday, October 6th
1:00 p.m .
1:oo p.m .
3:00p.m .
5:00p.m .
5:30p.m .
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.- 11 :00 p.m.
9:00p.m .

Meigs High School Band and Flag Corp.
Jewel City Cruise
Jewel City Cruise
Jewel City Cruise
Boy Scout Order of the Arrow Dancers
Jewel City Cruise
Music Entertainment - Ricochet Band
Jewel City Cruise

STERNWHEEL
SAVINGS

Saturday, October 7th
9:30a.m .
11 :00 a.m.
11 :00 a.m.- 4:00p.m.
11 :00 a. m.- 12:00 noon
12:00 noon
1:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.

Flag Raising Ceremony
Jewel City Cruise
Chili Cookoff
Motorcycle Show
Introduction of Queen Candidates and Crowning of Queen
Race Cruise on the Jewel City
Sternwheel Boat Parade
Barbershop Quartet- French City Chapter of Society for the
Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Quartet
Singing in America - Sponsored by Farmers Bank
2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Sternwheel Boat Races and Awards Ceremony
2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Columbus Petting Zoo at Pomeroy Library- Sponsored by the
Pomeroy Library
4:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Chili Cookoff Judging and Awards Ceremony
5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Music Entertainment by Paul Doeffinger
5:00 p.m. · 6:00 p.m.
Captain's Dinner
6:00 p.m. · 6:45p.m.
Music Entertainment - Sweet Mountain Sound
6:00p.m.- 7:00p.m.
Masquerade Contest
6:00 p.m - 9:00 p.m.
Elks Drug Awareness Hot Air Balloon (free gifts for kids)
Corner of Butternut Avenue &amp; 2nd Street
6:45 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Dazzling Dolls Baton Corp .
7:00 p.m.
Jewel City Cruise
7:00 p.m.. 8:00 p.m.
Country Tonight
.
8:00 p.m. · 11 :00 p.m.
Music Entertainment - Crossover Band
9:00 p.m.
Fireworks \l,ruise on the Jewel City
9:30 p.m.
Fireworks Display
10:00 p.m.
Drawing for the·"JEAN MARY" Model
*"*Boarding on all Jewel City Cruises will be 30 minutes prior to cruise time***
'*'""'*'*'BON FIRE ON THE LEVEE THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY''"'""'
OTHER EVENTS:
Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday - Luncheon &amp; Craft Show Pomeroy Trinity Church
Friday &amp; Saturday - Yard Sale Pomeroy Methodist Church Parking Lot 9:00a.m.
Saturday - Herb Fest in mini park on Court Street 10:00 a.m.- 4:00p .m.
Saturday - Face Painting on the Parking Lot sppnsored by Farmers Bank
Saturday - Chicken Bar-B-Que dinner or chicken only (dine in or carry out)
Pomeroy Methodist Church 11:00 a.m.
.
Crafts, concessions, games , Water and Kids water safety demonstrations, and more on the Pomeroy
Parking Lot by the Ohio River
- Au events held on the Parking Lot in Pomeroy unless otherwise specified-

"YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD LENDER"

PAWN SHOP
State Certified
Fast Friendly Cash When You Need It

Stereo's * VCRs * Video Games
Major Items Out of Pawn Daily "Big Savings on Quality Merchandise"
TVs - Scanners - Gunes - Bows - Knives - Fishing Gear
- Chainsaws - Tools Big Selection of CDs at value
saving prices
Cameras - Tapes - Gold- Diamonds
Plan for Christmas - Use Our LAYAWAY PLAN

.

.

"We Loan Cash on Anything of Value"

115 West Second Street- Pomemy, Ohio

. 992-5846
"CLOSE To TH E COURTHO.USE"

Cold Pop

27ft Can

Sternwheel 3 -Day Sale

30% off

Cassette Tapes

Russell Stover

Country &amp; Oldies Reg. s4.99

Halloween Assorted Chocolates 1.6 oz.

Reg. 79rt

LY
Amity Billfolds

Womens Spray Colognes

Mens &amp; Wornens

Charlie, Jontue, Enjoli, Jean Nate
Reg. $6.95

Price
Sunglasses

/2 Price

1

~·c~-~S~
. Sa~
s~~ed
edZ'e·ecae

Timex Watches
Complete Stock

ONLY

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

.

.

.

:
Kenneth McCullough, Ph. Charles
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. lhru Sal. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
·
Week
'till9

$4.93

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
Is Proud to Bring You The Gentlemen Four
As a kick-off to the celebration at the Sternwheel Festival this
weekend, We are happy to bring you the Gentlemen Four,
members of The Society for the Preservation and Encouragement
of BarberShop Quartet Singing in America. The Gentlemen Four,
members of the French City Chapter in Gallipolis, will be
performing three shows in the lobby of our office in Pomeroy, at
9:15am, 10:15 am, and 11 :15 am on Saturday, October 7th .
This performance will be a warm-up for the big show at the
Sternwheel Festival later that day. We urge you to come in and see
this lively, exciting, performance - a reminder of a bygone era, and
a nostalgic trip to a simp,ler time.

PRICES
GOOD
THROUGH
MONDAY,
OCTOBER

Your Bankfn~···
r;;:"l
Farmers Bah__~
~

Summer
Clothing

75% Off

New Fall

Mickey
Clothing

20% Ofi

Including Christ11as &amp; Halloween
$6.00 ..........SAVE 1

1.00 per yard
Reg. price $6.00 to $12.00 ........ SAVE 12.00 per yard
Reg. Price$12.00to$18.00 ..... SAVE 13.00peryard
Reg. Price $4.00 to

Christmas Craft Ribbon Only

ahontas
&amp; Lion King

Tops

30%

99c

Per

~

.HOM:EFURNISHINGS
lllfa.ri!UIIlt
Rill

··-

spool

Off
All Dress
Shoes and
Flats

Buy One,

Create your own 'name or message' from our
beautifully handcrnfted 14Kt ~ld ~.

Get 2nd

~Price

8

't- 'A~.n.t"J«J ~ p.u.

* GLIDER ROCKERS
*RECLINERS
* GUN CABINETS
*CARPET
* DINING ROOMS
* SE·RTA BEDDING

30.00 Per Cube

-

113 EAST COURT STliEET, POMEROV

CHAPMAN SHOES

.....A PROUD PARTI~IPAIT II JIQJIRROY'S

oomon uvrrAUZAno• PLO.

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

Pomer,y's Quality Shoe Store

e~e-.-.
..

lu C'IP"H Vlo •n, 0~ .(!.7!)
"''.; b.'J) ·)h)1

.9Lnderson 's

POMEROY, OHIO

FABRIC SALE

Po m &amp;IOV 0~ A~ JbQ

6t4-991 1H6

Qoul e 7
P 0 lkn UQ

'95

614-992-2284

Racks Of

P 0 Bo• 6 ?11

Member F.DJ C.

THE FABRIC SHOP
110 W. MAIN ST.

1 11 We11 Seco nCl Sli l"el

9,1995

AT

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
OCTOBER 6 AND 7

&amp; Sov1ngs Company

L

•

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•

•

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center will
host the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile on Wednesday, from
1 to 6 p.m. The Red Cross is experiencing a. large shortage of blood,
and asks that all area residents
come to donate during this time of
urgency.
REEDSVILLE - Eastern Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m. Wednesday,
high school cafeteria.
CpS! VISITS MEIGS STUDENTS - Center of Science and
lnd.ustry Outreach Demonstrator Dave Brile talks to sidh grade
SaliSbury students as part of COS I on Wheels "Science of Sports"
The mobile classroom visited Salisbury Elementary on
Thur·sdav.

CHESTER - Friendship night,
District 13, Daughters of Ameri¢a,
Logan Council 120 to host Potluck
supper, 6 p.m. District officers
urged to attend.
POMEROY' Narcotics
Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
basement No dues or fees. Anyone
with drug problems, welcome 1800-766-4442.

SHOOTING FROM SENSE • Jonathan Wilson, a sixth grade
student at Sali•bury Elementary, shoot for a target he is hearing.
The ba~ket Wil•on was shooting at was equipped with a beeper, as
part of the out of sight eKhibit during Thursday's visit of the COSI
on Wheels "Science of Sport&lt;" program to the school.

ROLLING WITH SCIENCE - Daisy White (leftl and Tiffany
Hall (right), sil&lt;th grade students at Salisbury Elementary, partici·
pate In a wheelchair race, as part of COS! on Wheels "Science of
Sports" mobile educational program at the school on Thursday
afternoon.

THURSDAY
RACINE - TEACH, Meigs
CounJy home school support group
at the Racine First Church of the
Nazarene, Tyree Blvd ., 7 p.m.
Kathie Morrissey from The
Courtship Connection, speaking on
courtship plus a character building
seminar. More information, 9493119. as speaker.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion, Post 602, Thursday, 6:30
p.m. meeting with dinner.

:Study: Vision testing reduces fatal crash rate for elderly
:By BRENDA C. COLEMAN

POMEROY - Revival at Full
Gospel Lighthouse, Hiland Road,
Pomeroy, through Sunday, 7:30
p.m. each evening . Evangelist
Betty Baker and the Joyful Sounds,
Kingsport. Tenn. Public welcome. ·

said. • 'This study shows that
.i\P Medical Writer
license screening, particularly
' · CHICAGO (AP) - 'Requiring vision testing, is effective at reduc·
1vision tests before renewing driving fatal crashes involving senior
-er's licenses can significantly drivers.''
reduce fatal crashes involving
The eight states that did not
elderly motorists, according to a require vision testing during the
nationwide study.
1985-89 study bad 7 percent more
Tbe evidence suggests that fatalities each year among elderly
~fforts in many states to make it drivers than the 42 states with
easier to renew licenses may be mandatory vision screening, the
misguided, said the lead researcher, researchers reponed in WednesDavid T. Levy, an economics pro- day's issue of The Journal of the
fessor at the University of Balti- American Medical Association.
more.
Testing motoris!S' road knowl"Many peclple think license edge bad an insignificant effect on
screening
pro forma and the rate of fatal crashes involving
liObody is
.. Levy elderly motorists, researchers said.

REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees meeting Thursday,
6:30 p.m. at township building oa
lpppa Road.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO
will meet at 7 p.m Thursday at the
grade school. Parents are encour·
aged to attend.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of Alcoholics Anonymous meet
Thursday 7 p.m. at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church on Mulberry
Ave.

\"•I EDNESDAY
4

RUTLAND - Rutland Town'
ship tru stees , regular session;
Thursday, Rutland frre station.

CHRISTOPHER
MORRIS
·-··
·-.

Morris~

1 SATURDAY
;
SALEM CENTER - Stat
Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
878, Saturday, potluck dinner at.
6:30p.m., meeting at 8 p.m.

--

celebrates
birthday

HARRISONVILLE - Har;
risonville Lodge F&amp;AM 411, meet•
ing Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple. Refreshments.

Christopher "Dylan" Michael
Morris recently celebrated bis fllSt
birthday at the home of his grandparents, Warren and Connie Con·
nolly. Dylan is the son of Kevin
and Amy Morris of Elizabeth City,
N.C.
Cake and ire cream was served
tp Kenneth and Betty Barber of
Hebron; Roberta and Jus tin Hill of
Columbus; Carole Barber, Alta
Dill, Tony Rockhold, and Kristina
Connolly of Reedsville; Robert,
Freda, and Jerry Larkins of Long
Bottom.

· SUNDAY
POMEROY - Homecoming;
Carleton Church, Kingsbury Road~
Pomeroy, Sunday; 9:30 a.m. Sunday school; 10:30 am. worship ser'
vice; noon dinner, program 2 p.m.
with special music by the Gospel
Tones and Randall and Peggy Carpenter.

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.,

HARRl'IONVH.LE NEWS
Mr. Pete Eggleston and daughter, Mrs . Thelma Clark of
Charleston, Mrs. Thelma Meeks of
Shade, visited Mrs. Alpha B)llcber
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Riggs and
children of Columbus were recent
visitors of his grandmother Stella
Adkins Hunt Ruby Diehl.
Mr. Allan Gibson and sons of
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Gibson of Athens were Sunday visitors of Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
Mrs. Francis Alkire visited Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany
Tuesday evening. Also visiting
were Howdy Landaker and his s· ters, Nellie and Wilma, of Washington Court House
Mr. Ernie Mitchell is slowly
improying at his borne after having
beart surgery in Columbus.
Mr. Theron Durham and Mrs.
Marian Durbiun attended a week's
revival in West .Virginia recently.

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
event
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the'
occurence.
,...

THURSDI\Y
5

Physicians
move-office

Our Everyday Low
Prices On Purchases

1

ing to previous studies. And any
In 1989, the states that required
problems these drivers have will no vision testing for license renew·
only grow as baby boomers age.
al were Alabama, Kentucky, Mis;
"Now there's 13 million drivers sissippi, New Jersey, Oklaboma;
age 70 or older," Levy said. "By Tennessee, Vermont and West Vir·
the year 2020, it's going to be 30 ginia. Levy said be did not knoW:
million."
whether any states have droppc~
. While some states revoke the testing or added it since then.
hcenses of people wbo don't pass
Alan Hoskin, statistics manage.;
vision tests, others restrict seniors for tbe National Safety Council;
to specific times of the day, Levy said the study relied on sound
noted.
/
methods and reached justifiable:
"For seniors, that makes a lot of conclusions.
sense, because they tend to have
"There really is no basis foi.
more problems •. especially vision restricting driving on the basis o~
problem_s, a!, mg~t. and at busy age .alone, but it should be on thetnter~Uons dunng rush hours, • ab1h11es of the driver," be said:
be S31d.
from Itasca, Ill.

Copyright 1995. The Kroger Co.
. _,
Items &amp; PriCes Good In Gallipolis ! ~ice s Good In Pomero y.

Society
scrapbook

RECOGNIZED
: Joy Burdette of Coolville was .
tecognized as a 1995 national sales
award winner at the annual conveniion of The Longaberger ·Co. in
Columbus.
In recognition of annual sales
of more than $45,000 Burdette was
presented gif!S including an exclusive Longaberger basket with an
engraved lid. She was one of 249
~ssociates nationwide achieving
. that high level of sales.
: A branch advisor in the Hearu
Ojnd Hands directorship, Burdette
finished 17 in sales in her group of
1,800 consultan!S. At the regional
level, she was second in sales. Sbe
was also recognized for sponsoring
four new Longaberger Consultan!S
during the 1994-95 ftscal year.
Burdene's Branch is called Burdette's Birds and produc!S are displayed at numerous local functions.

Researchers controlled for dif"There might be additional
ferences among states (bat could lives saved among younger drivers,
skew the results, such as bow much because some of the younger
people drove on average, bow fast drivers also have vision problems
they drove. the degree of urbaniza- and are still driving," Levy added
tion, the availability of hospitals in an interview.
and other factors.
With tbe graying of America
During the four years studied, and some highly publicized fatal
an average of 17,294 drivers older wrecks involving elderly drivers,
than 70 were involved in fatal officials have been wrestling with
crashes each year.
bow to get hazardous seniors off
"We estimate that 282 live~ the roads without penalizing able
would be saved with universal ones.
vision testing compared with no
Although the 16-24 age group is
states having vision tests," they most likely to be involved in car
said. And that's only the lives accidents, drivers older than 65
saved in fatal crashes involving have the second-highest crash rate
senior drivers.
per vehicle mile traveled, accord-

RUTLAND - Organizational
meeting of the Rutland Civic Ceo'
ter Haunted House Committee
Thursday, 6 p.m. at the civic cen:
ter. Volunteers are needed. Interest'
ed residents invited to .attend.

BGSU DEAN'S LIST
Apty Lea Ann Well, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Deryl Well,
Reeds ville. bas been named to the
ummer dean's list at Bowling
Green State University.
· Well, a senior business adminis·
!ration major, was one of 232 student's who achieved grade point
averages of 3.5 or better on a 4.0
scale.
· Tbe studen!S honored represent
i2 percent of the University's
undergraduate student body who
attended classes this summer and- ·
were eligible for dean's list consideration.
· Well is a 1992 graduate of Eastem High School.

The Oaily Sent~nel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

I

,-------COS/ on Wheels----- -Community calendar~
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund ral•ers of any type. Items
are printed u space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
· specfie: number .of days.

..

Wednesday, October 4, 1995

Wednesday, October 4, 1995~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.,

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE

Dleteokeor

Eleven physicians associated
with the Ohio University Osteopathic Medical C~nter (OMC) are
moving their·practices to the new
Medical Office building of O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
The moves which are being
made this week includes osteopath·
ic physiclans·..currently located in
OU' s Parks Hall wbo specialize in
internal medicine, obstetrics, gynecology and surgery.
The physicians who will be_
moving to the 0 ' Bleness facility
are Paul Cadamagnani, D.O .;
Steven Carin, D.O.; Jack Chan,
D.O.; Catheiner Coates, D.O.; Timothy Coss, D.O.; Kenneth Glinter,
D.O.; Edward Gotfield, D.O.;
Christopher Meyer, D.O.; Regine
Neptune-Ceran, D.O.; Randolph
Purdy, D.O.; and Jack Ramey,
D.O.
According to Beverley Wyatt,
associate manager of medical support services, the demand for OMC
physician services bas multiplied in
recent years. To meet this demand
and to increase access for this
region' s citizens, the OMC has
added a number of new physicians
to its clinics in the past year and
now offers the area's patient population nearly 60 primary care
physician and other specialists.

eoca eofa elasslc
12-Pack 12-oz. cans

Two 1211acks .
per customer

at this ptlce, please.
U.UA INS/Ifetu IIUCT

Portsrhouie .or
T-Bone Steaks
Poun!l

U.S.OA. INSPKTEO SELECT

PGrterflouse or
T-Bone steaks

;-

Clorox
&amp;iquiiiBieach,
Calion

,._,-...,..

Hysell family
reunion held
The sixth annual family reunion ·
of tbe late Denver and Frances
Hysell family was held recently at
Star Mill Pa11t. Ral:ine .
A total of 46 family members
and friends attended the reunion.
Pictures were shared, games were
played and prizes were awarded
with Donald Hysell winning the
door prize. Welcomed as a new
family members was Mrs. Victor
(Lisa) Painter.
Officers elected were Gary
Hysell, president; Tammy Hysell,
vice president; Madeline Painter,
secretary-treasurer.
Plans for a Christmas party were
made and will be held Dec. 10.
Next year's reunion will be Sept.
22 at Star Mill Park. Attending
' were Becky, Bethany and Ryan
Amberger; Jason . and Andrea
Warner; Heather, Wendi, Fred and
Gary Hysell, Jr.; Lom and Amanda
Wolfe;' Linda and Kimberly Blake;
Donald and Stephen Hysell, Donna
Kay Hysell; Vincent Mossman and
Nichole; Janelle and Cody Hysell;
Dennis and Bill Hysell; Tammy,
Sarah Luke and Stephanie Ruof;
Connie, Daniel and Josh Thornton,
grandchildren and great-grandchildren of the late Denver and Frances
Hysell.
·
·
Others family members attend·
ing were Guy and Ruby Hysell,
Roger and Jane Hysell, Gary and
Tammy HyseK, Ivan and Evelyn
Wood, Ralph and Madeline
Painter, Chuck Blake, Bill
Amberger, Malt Roof. Amoni the
· visitors were Kelli Lightfoot, Oys·
tal Richmond, Tammy Laudermilt,
and Tod Ward.

1~ OFF LABEL REGULAR SCENT

tiiOUNTAIN KING

8one/BSs
Chicken
Breasts
Prwnd

Jumbo
Baklnll PGtatoes
'8-Lb. Bag

U.$.#1

Rounll
White Potatoes
'
So-Lb. Bag

WASHINGTON STATE GOLDEN OR

lied Delicious
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Pound

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Cottonelie
Bllth Tissue
4-Roll

A$SORTED VARtEnES

Plllsbur,

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�•
· : Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Public Notice

Board meets

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

The rains have started and it fig·

es t in th e aw1ard winning Point
unes what with the Big Bend Stern- Pleasant BlacK
Knighl Band- her
wheel Festival to get underway granddaughter, Jessica Cale, plays
Thursday. Perhaps, we' U get lucky a tnunpet in the organization.
and the wet will go away. A lot of
On Sept. 16 the Point Pleasant
work has gone into the festival so I musicians took part in competition
surely hope it does.
at Vincent High School near Hunt·
Been noticing members of the in glon and wo n a number of
Pomeroy United Methodist Church awards including the grand chamcarrying big bo~e s of "goodies" pionship. On Sept. 23, the Point
into the church. Th ey 're ge tting band took part in competition again
ready for a "giant" yard sale to be at Ripley and received the first
held both on Friday and Saturday at place design award and again the
9 a. m. each day , in conjunction grand championship. This is the
with the festival. The congregation fir st tim e in 26 years, Nancy
will also stage a chicken barbecue report s. th at th e band has won
beginning at 11 a.m. Saturday.
back-to·back grand championships.
Th e talen ted mu sicians have
Incidentally , at nearby Point been invited to Washington, D.C.,
Pleasant residents will be celebrat- on the Nov. lOth weekend and will
. ing Point Pleasant Baul1e Days, perform al lhe Lincoln Mt;morial
Oct. 6 10 8, with a wide range of from 10 a.m. lo II a.m. Veterans
activiti es planned for tbe three Day weekend. A specially prepared
days. Most activities will take place program of patriotic music is being
at the confluence of the rivers in readied for that appearance and
Point Pleasant Batile Monument West Virginia Rep. Bob Wise has
State Park, also known as the Tu- arranged a tour of Washington for
Endie-Wei Park-so if you don't the band members.
like the stem wheel :bit you do have
iln alternative.
I like to think that God will take
care of th e mi stakes that juries
A party is coming up Sunday, make. Gosh. I hope I'm right Do
Oct. 8, to mark the 90th birthday keep smiling.
anniversary of Kathleen Scott ,
long-time Forest Run resident. The
party begins at 3 p.m. at the Forest
Run Methodi st Church and all
friends and relatives are more than
welcome to help Kathleen celebrate
the occasion.

"God's People Gathering
Together" was the theme of the
Middl eport First Baptist Church
Board of Christian Education, host
for a potluck dinner at the church
recently.
The Rev Mark Morrow gave
grace. It was announced that
Wanda Shank bad been awarded a
place on the 1995 honor roll of
Christian education of the American Baptist Church of Ohio and she
received recognition from the
church presented by Marjorie Walburn, chairman of the Board of
Christian Education. She will be
acknowledged at the convention
mission banquet to be held on Oct.
20 in Akron.
Following the dinner, the group
ga thered in the sanctuary for a
singspiration.
Auending were Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Davis, Doris Lewis, Clara
Mae Darst, Lilly Hubbard, Patty
Arnold and sons, Justin and Casey,
Ginger Darst, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Wil son, Craig Werry , Texanna
Wh ite, Gwinnie White, the Rev.
and Mr s. Mark Morrow, Nan
Swartz and daughter, Hannah, Faye
Wallace, Wanda Shank and son,
Jordan, Troy Swartz, Ethel Shank,
Beny Gilkey, Helen Bodimer, Kate
Wilson.. Dorothy McCloud,
Dorothy Meadows, Marjorie Walbum, Cassie Stewart, Dawn Roush,
Heather Friend, Donna Grinstead,
Sharon Hawley Dixie Sayre Judy
'
'
McHaffie, and Mr. and Mrs. Man- ·
ning Kloes.

DARRIN SMITH
GILBERT, WV

Dorothy Downie of Pomeroy
and her hu sband, the late Ted
Downie, were at the infamous Ohio
State-Notre Dame football game in
Columbus 60 years ago. Coincidenlally, their granddaughter, Elizabeth Downie, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Allen Downie, of the
Pomeroy area, was on hand to this
year'!; game. Elizabeth is a student
at Ohio State.
· And, I can't help from commenting that if fans and police
can' t handle lha post game celebrations, maybe the game should ~
dropped. Worse things could happen, you know.

0

Personals
LIVE GIRl. SOCALL NON!

1·900·378·2500

992 2259

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00a.m. -3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
. Roofing, Vfnyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Eatlmoteo

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

Imperial nre
Service

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,

Mason, W.V.
304· n3-5533

Trailer &amp; House Sites.
Reasonable Rates

- September Special-

5715.19 of the Ohio Revised
Code.
·
Nancy Parker Campbell
Meigs County Auditor
(9) 26, 27, 28, 29;
(10) 1, 2,3,4, 5,6; 10TC

SUNDAY MORNING, OCT. 8, 10:30 AM SERVICE

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
PRICE REDUCED - OWNER WANTS
TO SELL! ! POMEROY · Corn er of
Flatwoods &amp; Rock Springs Road . 1.24
.A.cres with 25' x 51 ' Modular, Large
utility room, garden tub. walk in closet. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. Outbuilding, electric
F.A.
deck, TPC water. ASKING

SA 338 - Just Out Of Racine . 1 1/2
Story Frame Home . 3·4 bedrooms,
remodeled bath room , appliances ,
central air, water softner, artificia l
fireplace. Well, septic. Front Porch with
a great River View!! Very Affordable aL
$ 14 , 900 . Q.Q
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!' .

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumb1ng
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy. Ohio
112/tm

Live 24 Hours/Day
Talk to beautiful
NEW LIMA ROAD - RUTLAND - Cute
Older 1 1/2 Story Home with Ornate
woodwork. Hardwood/Carpet Flooring.
Wood burni ng Firep lace . Central
Air/Heat Pump. 7 rooms - 4 bedrooms
appliances , anic space, nice level yard
and garden area on this 2.9+ acres.
Also includes a 1969 Holly Park Mobile
Home. ASKING $36,900.00 COME SEE
THIS ONE!!

...

'~

·h,.

.i

,,--

GIRLS! 1-900-378-

SA 7 · TUPPERS PLAINS · 1+ Acre Nice re modeled 1 1/2 Story Frame
Home , 4 bedrooms , 2 baths, 2 car
garage, screened porch. Skylights, ·
Cei ling Fans . Nice kitchen with
dishwasher for those who Love To
Cook. TPC water. Cable, garden area.
Woodburner, electric B.B. Heat. Nice
clean home. Excellent Location. Make
i
to See This! !I

.

2500 Ext. 6557
$3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

PVBUC INVITED TO AlTIND

1-900-255-8585
1 1/2 Story Frame Home located On
Salem St. "SA 124" in Rutland . Home
contains 3 bedrooms, storage area.
Home needs some repair. Situated on
large level lot with Flowers and Fruit
Trees. ASKING $20,500.00 MAKE AN
OFFER
PEART ST. - MIDDLEPORT- 1992
Modular Home on Double Corner Lot
with a beautiful view of the Ohio River!!
6 rooms, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms . Level'
Lot. Landscaped . New Lenn ex
H.P./C.A. Nice Place. Make An
Appointment to See This.

rma

SPECIAL
FREE Tire Rotation
With This Ad

GENERAL TIRE
From one Browns
Fan 10 another

Nancy Cale has a special inter-

SYRACUSE · This Home Sits on a nice
quiet Street. Thi s home has 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, large living room .
equ 1pped kitchen , dining ro om .
Refrigerator &amp; Range less than 1 yr. old.
Also there's a dishwasher. Utility room
With newer washer and dryer. Front
porch, side deck, · on 3/4 acre lot
with lots of I
and some
. Call
OWNER

One Fl oor Frame Home with 3
bedrooms , gas heat , appliances
including washer and drye r. Approx. 112
Acre with fenced yard. Full basement.
Nice Affordab le Hom e. ASKING
$18,500
RAC INE · Double Wide with 3
bedrooms. one bath, kitchen, livirig
room, dining room sitting on a nice lot.
Electric heat, underpinned and in good
shape ASKING $26,900.00
RAC INE · 2 Story Frame Home w1th 45 bedrooms , 2 baths, living room
dining room. and kitchen . Shingled
roof, N.G.FA heat, sitting on a nice lot.
Walls are panel and drywall and floors
are carp et and vinyl. ASKING
$32,900.00
WE HAVE SEVERAL NES LI STINGS
BUT WE NEED MORE!! THE
MARKETS GOOD, SO IF YOU WANT
TO SELL NOW IS THE TIME!!!! CALL
US TO GET YOUR HOME SOLD
TODAY!!!

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY

Ext. 7969
12.99 per min.
Must be 1B yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645·6434

THE REC ROOM
PIZZA • ARCADE
138 N. 2nd, Middleport
lAcross from Johnson's Video)

15" LARGE
PEPPERONI
Only $6.99
992·6344
Dine-In or Carry-Out

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

Sports Connect

Up-To-Date
Soap Results

CALL NOWII!
1-900-178-1800
E.-t. 6335
$l .99 per min. Must be 18
yrs. Tou~h- tone phone req.
Serv·U (619) 6U·8U4

DAYS
CARWASB
Complete
Detailing
128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4081
Week Day 8:00-5:00
Open Saturday
9:00-3:00

H&amp;H

SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsmfl Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193
9112/1 mo.

91 14195 2 mo. pd.

.SALE

Megban Danielle Leslie, daughter of Brenda Leslie of Middleport
and Mark Leslie of Lusby, Md.,
celebrated her eighth birthday Sept
30 with a party at McDonald's
Attending were her mother and
sister, Caitlin, Judy and Kayl a
McCarthy, Cindy Capehart, Anna
Hartenbach , Laura and Sarab
H.o llen, Samantha Cole , Linda
Hayle, Karissa Beebe, Stephanie
See, and Chris Blank.
Sending gifts were her father,
grandparents, Sam and Martha Fry,
Becld, David, Michael and Adam
Ball, Brenda and Dale Rose ,
Am~r Bind, and Bob and Peggy
Lewts.

Reunion policy
With the family reunion season
quicJcly approaching, many will be
submitting articles of family activitil;s for publication.
To ensure prompt publication,
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
The Daily Sentinel requests that
articles be neatly typed and double
spaced for easy editing. Reunion
items should not exceed 300 words
and muSI be submitted within 30
days of occurrence.
No exceptior· 1iU be made.
All material .ubmitted for publication is subjecl to editing. Articles
wiU be published as soon as possible.

EMP AS

NEW-REPAIR

1·900·378-1800
Ext. 3140

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

·-·

BRAND

r-s"P'EciAL'ii1-l
1 6-8 oz. T-Bone Steaks
1
.
I 8 -6 oz. New York Stnps
I 12-4 oz. J31beye Steaks
1 ONLy $40 00
I
•

I

I

I

I

1# Falters Sausage Roll
and 1# Bacon
Coupon good with $1 o.oo
purchase at our trucks.
.
October 1995
.

L-------------~
r·-B~EAKFAsrsP"E"ci'A'Ll r---S"P"EciAL'ii4---,

I 12-2 ibs. French Toast Sticks
I 13-1 lb. Bacon
I 13-1 lb. Sausage &amp; Gravy
I 160 Sausage Patties
I l2o Hash browns
I I
ONLY $lO OO

1 112 · 4 oz. Ribeye Steaks
1 I 6 - 6 oz. T-Bone Steaks
I I
1o - Hot Dogs
.
1 I · 16 - Beef Sizzlers
I 132 · 4 oz. Hamburgers
1I
5lb. French Fries

L - - - - - - - - - - - .J L. ________ ..; ____ .J I

6 · Pepperoni Pizzas

r-----------,
r-------------l
#2
SPECIAL
6- 8 oz. T-Bones
12-4 oz. Pork Chops

16-4 oz. Hamburgers
1-5 lb. - French Fries
10 -Hot Dogs
2-1 lb. Sausage Roils
1 - P6pperoni Pizza

ONLV $45.00
·'

L!:~':_E_2.:,~~~~i!!!_.J

I
I
I
I
I

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additionsremodelingroofing • siding plumbing, etc.
Insured,
II Bill Orrick
4-992-5183

Custom Bui lding &amp; Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
. (614) 992-5535
614 992-2753

Take tho pain out of·
painting. Let us do it f~r
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180

,.....

5116.194 TFN

1
*SPECIAL #3
112-4 oz. Ribeye Steaks
112-4 oz. Pork Chops
192- Chicken Nuggets
110-Hot Dogs
I 16-4 oz. Hamburgers
Is lbs. French Fries
lbs. Wing Fingers
16-Pepp!lroni Pizzas
116 - Beef S izzlers
1
ONLY $65.00
1 FREE 20 Hash Browns

Is

12-Egg Rolls
5lbs. Wing Fingers
16-Breaded Chilt
1
1 Patties
1
92-Chicken Nuggets
16 _Beef Sizzlers
1
1
60- Sausage Patties
I 12- 4 oz. Pork Chops
I
5 lb. Breaded Perc~ AYCE
2-2 pak Apple Dumplings
I
ONLY $130.00
I
FREE 10# Potatoes
11 .
20 Hash Browns

(Specllize In driveway ·
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fiii,Dirt

TIME

SAVERS.

614-992-3470

Get Your Message Across
Wit• ADaiiJ Sentinel

Pomeroy
Marath·on
Riverside
Food Mart

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

10:00 am to 4:00 pm
Oct. 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10&amp; 11

I

I

I
'

I

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L.-------------.JL------------.J

-

It's _FREE to stop by &amp; look!
End October 31st, 1995

YARD/BAKE SALE
Oct. 7th, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church
Sponsored
"The Lend a

-

I

Middleport
American Legion
Announces 2
Nights of Bingo
Beginning Tues.,
Oct. 3, 199S.

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

=

c --' Specials

30 Announcements

BULLETIN BOARD
1 00
6 column inch weekdays
*800 column inch Sunday

I

•

WICKS
HAULING

REfiL

OHIO STEAK&amp;
BARBECUE CO.

THIS BLOCK COULD
BE YOURS!
LET EVERYONE
KNOW WHAT IS
GOING ON IN .YOUR
CHURCH, WHEN YOU
ARE HAVING A SALE
OR OTHER
e

,

I

f&gt;l'llt.l

01.1(.

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

Aedute your we1gh t . Take · New

Shape Diet Plan· and
Water

Pills.

H ydre~

Ava il able

Fruth

Pharmacy.

REDUCE; burn oil tat fast, take
OPAL tat)ets and E·VAP 01ure·
IIC. Available Fruth Pharmacy.
Middleport
,

MARINE
SERVICES
Ktn St •.hut oH Rt. 124, Syraaose, OH

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

Interior &amp;
Exterior

CLASSIFIEDS

r----------~---,
I
FREE
1

E

Sil''.' lt IS

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

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Howard L. Writesel

912611 mo.

'1• '11 Ill

v(1llo)

E'll RYTHif!G

TREE TRIMING
AND REMOVAL

SMITH'S
CONSTRUOION

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORElli
1-900.884-9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

Scores! II Spreadslll

NOTICE
Huge Savings

FOOD STAMPS
ACCEPTED

I

w~1 111c

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
Have 4 .years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen
at 614-843-5327
or 614-949-2632
after 10-10-95

(Lime Sione low Rates)

Leslie
birthday
celebrated

Check with us for details.

S."'·U (61 9)645·64 34

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

12 Guage

Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building
9127!95 tfn

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

E11een's Personal Care lor e1ot? r1y
We specialize m Alzhe 1mers care
QIVInQ 304· 762-.2544.

40

112 Sp il l Pupp 1es . Good Wi!h
Childr en . To Good Hame l 6 1&lt;1 ·
.
388-9974
~

·• -,

:,., . ,

I

·.

-,,-

- •.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

7/22194

••••••

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Companionship
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 858)

Cheaper Rates

$ Z.99 per min. Must be !8
yrs. Tour:h· ton. phone NC:f·

Sorv-U (619) 6-5·8-H

WELDING &amp; FABRICATIO N
$20.00/HR
28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
(614) 949-3013 Phone

HYDRAULIC REPAIR

3 Month Old Pupp1e s. 6 14 ·3fP ·
0539
6 PtJ ppi&amp;S, 61 4-36 7- 7708 .

DATES

ROMANCE

Giveaway

Black. Austra lorp rooste r 3011 ·
8953703
.
Cannmg Jars, 19 Doz . Pl. Or. 112
·Gal 614 ·368-9973
Clothes. 61 4·388-8449
Engl1sh SeHer pu p, e. Qmo old .
tree to good home. 304·675-6588
Pet Raccoon 6 14-446-4916

~t~&gt;!594-2008
~9-~~!!FA~x~J
NIGHT 60 Lost and Found
L_,:$;:3:;2·;:0:;0:/:H:R:_•_ _ _j((614)
Found Beagle On Afr1ca Road
6 4 94

2 01 8

Call To Identify, 614 -367-024 7

HHL·HBA·NFL

FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED OR .. CASH
• No Personal Checks, Please
.
.
. ·-- ... . . .
~

HOROSCOPE

ROOFING

$2.99/mlnute
18 or older
Touch-tone phone
requ'ired
Sarv-U (619) 654-8434

·

8325. ·

Ploaoo 992-6520 Hn. M-5 8:00-6:00

DAILY

012211 mo.

Brent Norton .
Guess Who

MEGHAN LESLIE

When your boat needs serviced•••
Come See The Boat Professionals!

With the purchase of
a set of struts or
shocks get FREE
installation.

Joe N. Sayre

E &gt;~.

$3.99/Min. t.tust Be 18 Vrs. :

Public Notice

CHESTER NAZARENE CHURCH

BATTERIES

005

1/19/tln

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Reference: 5715.17
Ohio Revised Code
The Meigs Countv Board
or Revision has completed
its work ol equalization. The
tax returns for tax year 1995
have been revised end the
valuations completed and
are open lor public
inspection In the olllce or
the Meigs County Audllor,
Second Floor, Courthouse,
Second Street, Pom eroy, .
Ohio 45769.
·
Complainto against the
valuations, as established
lor tax year 1995, must be
made In accordance with
Section 5715.19 of the Ohio
Revised Code. These
complaints must be filed on
forms which will be
lurnl shed by the County
Auditor and must be llled In
the County Auditor's Office
on or beltre the 31st dey ol
March, 1996. All complalniS
llled with the County
Auditor will be heard by the
Board ol Revision In the

The Daily Sentinel• Page ·13

ANNOUNCEMENT~

"

manner provided by Section

WILL BE SINGING A1 1HE

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Henry E. ClelandJr.. 992-2259

Saturdav. October 7th, at
10:00 The Home National ·
Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357
Bank will offer for sale at
'
public auction on the Bank
Parking lot the following:
Kathleen M. Cleland 992~6191
1992 Nlaaan Pickup Sarlel
11N6S01tS6NC313673
Office .......................... 992-2259
1992 Geo Storm
Hatchback Serial
fJ81RF4365N7527006
1987 Ford Ranger Pickup
·Serial
11FTBR10A5HUA78663
1978 Jeep CJ583 Serial
fJ8F83AH144301
The Terma of the sale are
FFICE
cash. Homo National Bank 1--------...;;;;.;,,;..:.;;;.::;_;~~.:;=;;;.;..,..,..-------1
reserves the right to bid at
the sale or to remove anv or
all Items from the sale at
any time.
(9)25,29,(10) 1, 4, 6, 5 tc

---

Larry .and Bessie Taylor believe
there's nothing like living in Meil!ii&gt;
County.
They were returning from ~ fish ing trip wlien tlieir VC!l tcle broke
down Saturday on Curtis Hollow
Road and darkness was moving in.
John and Beth Schneide r were
occupams of tbe first vehicle to
come along the road. The Schneiders stopped loaded up Larry and Bessie-and lheir boat-and took
them to their home~
Certainly belps knowing that
tbere are still some nice people
around.

Wednesday r October 4, 1995 .
Wednesday, October 4, 1995

-=
=

-

-

:itllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll r.

UCINE
GUN CLUB
TUP SHOOT
Every
. Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.
Schertel

Everyone
Welcome

Betzing's
Computer Service
Computer
repair/Service, Setups,
Installations,
Upgrades.
Wilt write programs
and databases.
Kevin 614-541-1630
Local most area.

gauge
Starts 1 p.m.-?

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Gun Shoo t
Starting Se pt. 17
I p .m .
Factory Choke
g un s o nly.
Will shoo t throug h
Marc h '96

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

Q~tSS\ ~

'9. "'t9.'l'c

MIKE MARCUM'S
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS

BUlL T UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES
28 Years Experience
PHONE
1-800-377-4477
614-245-0437

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call

949-2512

REASONABLE BATES
110\\ \IW

E\C.\\ \Tii\(;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limesfone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
Of~·)

'J

') n ._, o

'J--·&gt;0 •.&gt;0

Meet Your
Special
Someone
Today!!
Call the dateline
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 9789
$2.99/min. 1B+
Touch·Tone

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning
Sept.

17

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL ami RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

Call y our d ate no w

1-900-255-151 5
Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch -tone

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special
Speoal of!er 1nc.ludes

1 Cleenmolor
2 Grease roller beanr,gs
3 Clean &amp; check aq11a1or

5. Clean &amp; check l11!er system
6 Cl1eck belts
7 Check electncal system

4 CleJf1 all movmg p.1rts

8. Replace filter bilg

All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts
One vear warranty on work performed
VJIId on ail

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

Tony's Portable
Welding

R

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recores Available
Call for Low Prices

742-3212
Turn on Depot St. in
Rutland 1.2 miles.
&amp;'1011 mo

STO.A·D'AY
STORAGE
304-882-2996
Comparable Prices
&amp; Sizes ..., ....
ALFALFA
AND MIXED

HAY
FOR SALE
DAN'S WATER
REFIIII6 IIC.
Eltab. Over 25 Years
Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Installation

Lost small black. lemale dog. 'no
tail . tame front leg, Chase Rd .
area . $150 reward . 614 ·696·2806
or 614 ·992-21 68 .

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

2 Fam1ly : Oct 6tl. 7th, Fn, Sat , g.?
21 Ev an5 Ht s. Home lnter 10r
Bed spr eads , Curta1ns. C lothes :
Truck. Pa r ts . Electnc Heater s
Furniture, ~eg . Pomeran1an Pups'
Reg . li1malci.yan K111en.
. ·
4 Fam 1l y Ga rage Sale : Lots 01
Ga rage Sale Items Oc t 6th 71h
8th, (Fn. Sat. Sun) g.'?
·
·

Also
A ntiQues t Co llectiiJie Sale Lqt s
01 T h1s Type Items . l nc lud1ng
Large Pr1m1t 1ve D ry Smk Wcth
Hutch, $1,200, On St A t 325 2
M1. North 0 1 R10 Gra nde
'
5 Fam1 1y t 016th ·6th, 9· 5, PctSI
Holzer. At 160 On Kemper H oll~ .
112 M1le Clothes, Trumpet. M1sc .
714 Second A'len ue, 9· 4. Thu ro::;
5th . Fr1 6th , Ra m Po stpo nes To
Next Day
ALL Yard Sale!:. Must Be Pa1d · lr
Advance DE ADUNE 2 00 p , ,
the day belore th e ad I S to run
Sunaay ed1t10n · 2.00 p m Fr 1day
Mo nday ed1 \1on · tO 00 a .m Set .
urday
Es tate Sale : Ant1ques. Ant1ques1
Thurs. Fr1, Sat, 9· ??? Coun1er Uilp
l awnmo wer. Ou111s Glassware .
Fu r n1tu re. Clothes : HousehQid
Items. 1120 Sunset Dr 1ve . No
Early 8 1rdsl

BAILED

YOUR

To

NEEDS

949-2512

We service most makes &amp; models.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
304-372-6144

Alluring Scents
Middleport Oh1o 45760
992·4548

$7 sign up, children
9&amp; under$4.
50% pay back.
Children must be
accompanied by adult.
1111/t

One Day Only I Saturda y Octobe;
7th , L1ke New Wmter C lothe s
Coa t s &amp; N ever Worn Summe;
Cl o thes. To o ls . H ouseware s•
Crafls, Etc . Luggage Usod Once\
Every thmg Pnced To Go I Com~
Early I 2 M1les Out L1nco1n Prk.e

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Jresli - Sifl( Jfowers
{jift 'Bas(etf f or a{{ occasions
Stujfit-'Ba{foons Jiot Jl.ir 'Ba{fons
Sing1ng Jefegram.s
Jrep_ Loca{ defivery
SatisjactWng uaranted

Forked Run
Sportsman's Cl1b
Every Sunday
Starting
September 1Oth
8:3~ am to
11:30 am

s

Garage Sa le R te 7
&amp; 218
Thurs. Fn, Sat, T11 Noo n 1015. 1ai
6, 1017195
•

Ra1n/ Shme. Fn ·Sal , F1rst T1me t'n·
3 Years I 2nd House Campa 1 gn~
Road 011 554, Berween Chesh1re

271 North Second Avenue

3·D ARCHERY
SHOOT

Garage Sale 438 &amp; 466 Debb1e
Dr1ve. Fnday 9· 4. Carpet. Co uch .
tO Speed B1ke, Enc:yclopedla'-5 .
W1n1 er Coals , KidS Clol.hes &amp;
More 1

Oct 5th , 6tn, 7th, 9 A.M. ·5 P.M
3437 B ulav dle P1ke . Househo ld
And Home lntenor.

nJ.!IDnally .::tdver11scd bruncs

368 W. Main St .. Ripley. WV

4/13195

Found German Shepherd Pup
On Bear Run Road, Sunday, Call
To lden~ ty. 61 4-256-1793
·

Garage Sale 1.2 M1les Out Route
218, Ocl2nd·6th Lots of Items

(619) 645-8434

For Free Estimates

·

Fr1 , Sat . 9 ·5 , 1 77 Hil da Or1 ve
Spr 1ng Va Hey. Ca rseat , Bo os 1e;
Ca r seat . Boys . G~r t s Clothes
Toys.
·

( No Sunday Calls)

W711fn

(619)645·8434

4405

•

614-992-7643

Requ~red.Serv·U

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Atltlltlons
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
1nsurjlrs- Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992·

""""

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

ph o ne re quired
Serv -U

There will be
Bingo Tuesday &amp;
Saturday Nights.
doors Open at 4
p.m. Bingo starts
at 6:30p.m.

Shooting Match
Oct. 8th
Legion Farm
Bailey Run Rd.
All legal 12

B/4/ltn

Q\\~\

133 Butlernut · Fr 1day, Sa\urday ··
sewmg mach1ne. caomet , sfereo
lamps , Chr1stmas tree . sweepe r:
old wa tches . poued !lowers. lu g.
gage . collect1ble. muc h more
All Yard Sates Must Be Pa 1d In
Aovance . Deadhne 1 OOpm the ·
dav oelore lhe ad IS to run Sun.·
day ed1!10n · 1:OOpm F11day .' Mor\· ~
da~ ed1t10n 10'00a.m Sa!urday
:

All Ohio
Easy Payment
Auto Insurance
Accidents/
Violations

I

B a~ernent sale · St. Paul UM • ·

DUI- SR-22
DISCOUNTS
Best Rates
(614) 992· 7040
Pomewy
;

Barn sale · Oclober 6· 6 Fn aay
Sa tur day, Sunday , a.im ·6o m'
46354 SR 124. Racme. Oh1o. Caf. •
pen ter, g arden and mechan 1c ~
tools; cham sa ws. d11lls, mowers · ·
log cha ms : some ant1ques ; elec :
tncat an d e~tens1on co r ds ; 1ron
sk 1llets; pans; d1shes : and lots Qi , "
m1sc.

.·., '' "

Church, Tuppers Ptams . Oct. 6-7
9am- 4p m . C lo thi ng, turn it urO.: •
• ·
glassware, misc. items.
Garage sale - Fr1day . Oc1ober 6: · ·
1 :OOpm -B:Oopm. ; Sa turday. Oc · ,
Iober 7. Q:OOam -4 ·00pm. Fry res 1· '
dence ne11t 10 Sat1sbur y Etemen .' .. '
tary on Pomeroy P 1ke Tools -· · •
clothing· m1sc.
Gia nt Yard sale at the Pomeroy
U n1ted M ethod 1s1 Church, on
Second St., Frid,ay, Oct 6 &amp; Satr
Oc t 7, 1995 , time 9am each day. •
Saturday Oct. 7. barbecue ch1 ck~ . '

en dnner. 11am.

'

-'

�'VVednesday, October 4, 995

VVednesday,October4,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

The D#IIIY Sentinel• Page ~5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

?~.-AALUtU·E~Ynoib~,~.~~~~----------~~--------~------~~~-=~B~R~I~D~G~E~--~~========================~-~~--:t:.
NEA Crossword Puzzle

ACROSS.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlgbt

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

•

-~

1980 Governor 14x65, 2bedroom
1balh, electnc ac 304 372 3400

:Cralts &amp; barn sale- two m1tes
.Ravenswood Brtdge on 338 Lots

•al ditteftmltems 614 &amp;43-5327
·..,.----.:..._---::-_

New t996 Ooublew1des r D•s
up to SS 000 1ncludmg free
heat pump dehv~•Y and more 1
BOO 251 5070e .. t 11
count~

~·rge movtng sale Fndav ..Satur
41. Oct 6 7, yard toots house

~ld uems furnt!Ure, dtshes
'George While restdence old SR
.;l8
~Yard sale- Salurday

New Bank Repos Onty 4 leh 304
755 7191

Pt~ce

Oc! 7 Qam

Two 2 Bed room t 9 72 Mo btle
Homes 12x.50 &amp; 12x60 $3500 &amp;
$5500 614 388 9666 9 5

.,..he Ractne Area Community Or
,entzatton Star Mtll Park Octob

er 6·7 at 9 ooam TV records

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Chrtstmas Items, baskets exer
ctse equtpmen( wooden snelves,

63 Ac res Wood ed land County
Water &amp; E!ectr~c On Property
$3000061&lt;12561412

household ttems, clothtng Dona
liOn&amp; apprectated Delores Cle
Oavtd Ztrkle

614·949·2031 Pu;:k ups avatlable
Two family Portland Ohto Mead
ows restdence October 2 6 9am

5pm

11 0

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Garage Sale 2923 Maple Ave
Th ur

'Fr1 Sat Pans d1shes
good cloth1ng &amp; m1sc

lam~s

Y11rd Sale 2 1121T11 out Redmond
Rtdge Ad Donn1e Sergent Res1
dance Mon Thur 9am?? Sal
9am ?? Guns kn 1ves new 5hp
mower clothtng etc
Yard Sale At 2 N across !rom
Poplar Hetghts ~atch ror s•gns
T~Je Wed &amp; Thur Old Avon bot
ties kid's doth1ng and m1sc
Yard Sale 2635 lmcoln Ave Pt
Pleasant Wed Thur &amp; F11 Ra1n

or Shine
Vard Sale Mason 80 Rd , Ap~le
Grove Oct 5 ti 7 9 5pm

80

Public Sale
and Auction

A~Jcttons every Fnday Saturday,

7pm, Mt Alto Auctton At 2· 33
"Crossroads" New merchand•se
grocenes &amp; lots more Ed Fraz1er

930
RICk Pearson Au~;tton Company,
full t1me auct1oneer complete
auction
servtce
ltcensed
166 Ohto &amp; West Vtrgtnta 304

773-5785 Or 304-773·5&lt;47

90

Claan Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1987 Models Or Newer,
Smuh Butck Ponttac, t 900 East
ern Avenue Galhpol1s
Decorated stoneware wall tela
phones, old lamps old thermome
ters old clocks, an t1que furniture
Rtver~ne Ant1ques Russ Moore
owner 614 992 2526 We buy
estates

J &amp; 0 s Auto Parts Burmg sal
vage vehicles Selling pans 304

773-5033
Top Pnces Patd Old U S Cou,s
S1lver, Gold, 01amonds All Old
Collectibles Paperweights Etc:
M TS Co1n Shop 151 Second
Avenue GallipoliS, 514 445 2842
Used lurntture ant1ques one
ptece or complete estates Osbr
Marttn, 614 992 7441
Wanted To Buy Junk. Autos W1th
Or Wllhout Motors Call larry
LIVely 514 366-9303
We Would L1ke To Purchase
Small Trash Routes In Gallta And
Surroundmg Count1es, AB &amp; R
ServiCe 614 386-9686

Expertenced Travel Agent Per
sons Wtth Posmve Altitude And
Excellent Work Ethics , Ability To
Applr Sales &amp; Servtce Technntques, Telephone &amp; Computer
Sk.tlls Are Destred Musl Be Able
To Work Well Wtth Clien ts One
On One Send Resume To CLA
360 Gall•polts Datlr Trtbune, 825
Thlfd Avenue, Gatllpohs, Oh10
45631
Help needed lor deer processmg
Crawford s Grocery 304 675

5404
Home Typtsls PC users needed
$45 000 1ncome potenttal Call 1

BOO 513 4343 E&gt;l B 9368
local Garbage Co Needs Onver
W1th COL s For Part·tame Or Full
lime Pos1t10n 614 388 9686, 9 S
Need 5 Ladtes To Sale Avon
614 446 3358
Needed l mmedtatlr Secrelary
Olhce Manager Must Have Exp
On Computer And In Sale s Ft ·
nancmg &amp; lnventorr Control Call
For lntervtew, 614·441 1975
No expenence necessar y! $500
to $900 week.lytpoten11al process·
mg mortgage refunds Own hours
Call 909-715·2378 eKt 1377 (24
hours)

Hours, Call (909) 715-2300 E11
782, (24 Hours)
Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Street, Middleport has lull ttme
postttons for CNA s AN's &amp;
LPN s all shlhs Call Jan Elias or
Shel lt Ptckens lor more mforma
llonat6 14 9926472 EOE

POSTAlJDBS
Start $12 08Jhr For exam and a~
pltcat ton mto call 219 769 8301
ext WVS48, 9am 9pm, Sun-Fr1
Recepl!ontst
A Pos1t1on IS ava1lable lor a Full
T1me Recepttomst Preferred A~
phcants Will have Expenence 10 a
Med•catiCiencal Pos1t1on Dut1es
Wlll1nclude
Answenfig and FoU!Ward•ng au
Telephone calls Greettng Guests
and VISTI!OfS 10 Fac1hty ASSISt
Wllh Admtnlstrattve Ouues as Ot
rected Create an atomosphere ol
warmth and personal tnterest With
Res1dents, ViSitors and Stall
Computer exper~ence needed
good commumcatton and malh·
mat1cal sk1ll Apply at Scentc H11ls
NurstngCent@r 311 Buckr~dge
Ad Bidwell

180
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Help wanted

$35 000 IYR INCOME Potential
Read•ng Books Toll Free (1) 800
8Q8 9778 A 2814 For Detatls

Foo

Mental
Retardalton And Deve lo pmental
D•sab•l tt•es Program Full T1me
Openmg For Twelve Month Post

DUTIES Perlorm All Forms 01
Custodia l Work Ana AOiJitne
Ma1n tenance Ana Fl.epa1rs For
Bolh The Gu 1&lt;1 mg Hano School
And Gal1co Wo rkshop Buil&lt;l1ngs
CDL tCiass B A Plus
SALARY DepeMmg Upon E.
penence Full Bene lit Package

APPLICATION

Can Be

Wanted To Do

Ch1ldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Agos
2 K Young School Age Du r mg
Summer 3 Days per Week M1n1
mtJm 614 446 3657

FINANCIAL
Business
Opportunity

'LUMBER COSTS UP?" Steel
buildtngs as lOW as S3 00 sq foot
Buy lac1ory d~rect from Nallonal
Manufacturer as authonzed deal·
er W1ll tra1n Some Markets tak
en 303 759-3200, ext 2200

ta1ned Br Wr~n&amp;n Request To
INOTICEt
Galha County Board 01 Me,uoJ. 1 0HIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
PO Box 14 8323 North State Ro-- recommends thai yoiJ do bus•
ute 7 Chesh1re Ohio 45E20
ness wtth people you k.now and
NOT to send money through the
matl until you have mves11gated
DEADLINE O&lt;tober 11 1995

tne oHenng

THE GALLIA COUNTY
BOARD Of MRIOD IS AN
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

Cralt Busmeas for sale, Matn
Street Pt P1easan1 WV 304 675·
7580 aher 5pm

Stan now No exp. tree suppttes.
onto, no oblogaoon Send SASE 230
to Pr11t1ge Umt tl, P:O Box

HISSOG,

W•nter

Sprtngs,

Fl

32719
E•pe"enced Medica l Secretary

To Apply AI The Modotal Plaza,
D38 SR 180, Gollipoho. OH 81&lt;·
4-411·1M120

310 Homes lor Sale
1acre 6room house S 15 000
lee Ba~td 304-675 5714
3 bedroom house, 1n Bradbury, 2
bath above grolJnd pool heat
pllmp approx 2 acres pnce to

sell 614 992-6190

38 acres house 2 bedrooms
bath gas well furnace good hunt
tng 52155 Sr 240,614 985 4243
Jbedroom 2car garage tacre
land Sandhill Road 304 6 75

3986
3bedrooms ( 1 Maste r ) 2ba ths
basement screened tn porch/
breezeway, lamtly room double
garage 12 54acres 304 675
4575

Services

lawn Overseed•ng How to tmprove your lawn wtth thicker
growth, bener color and greater
res11tance to d•sease and
drought Call T &amp; T Lawn Sen11ce
lor tnlormallon, and free estt·
mates 304-675.1792

410 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom, Basement Ga ii•POIIS
C1ty llmJIS $395/Mont h Oepos I
8. References No Pets 614 446
0796leave Message
Broom s 2 3br mostly carpeteo
r elr1gerator &amp; Slave In Cluded
wa sher /dryer hookup depO Sit re
qut red No pe ts n o HUD 304
675 2884
Rental houses one rwo bedroom
and one three bedroom m Pamer
oy (Wo bedroom house 1n M1ddle
port Send responses c/o The
Dally Sent mel P 0 Box 729 14
Pomeroy, Oh10 45 ?69
Small house one bedroom ijv1ng
room. ktlchen. uultty room bath
gas forced a~r furnace, 6H 949
2734 or 614 -949-2635 No Sun·
day calls

420

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

12x65 2 Bedrooms. 2 Baths
Cathedral Seemed Lwmg Room,
Bed rooms, La rge Bath
1
Sunken Tub
AC
In
Clleshlfe 614 367 7671
2 Bedroom In Porter Area, De
pos•t &amp; Uulmes, 614 388 9162
2 Bedrooms On U~p er Route 7
$2751Mo + Ullll\les 6t4 446
2515
2 Tra1ler s For Rem Beauulul Rl\'
9f V1ew AC 614 441-0181
2bedroorn 2bath 14K70 all elec
tnc part1ally lurn1shed, c•ty water,
1n Me1gs $3251mo No pets Ref
erences 304 773 5165
3 Bedroom House Tra ler For
Rent In Rio Grande Relerences
Requ1red $275tMo + Depos1t,

614 379--2720 AFTER6 PM

Small Mobtle Home Upper Route
7 Reference Depos•t Requtred
614 446 3760
Two Bedroom $250/Mo Plus Ut1l
111es Depos 1 References Re
Qlltr&amp;d AI 218 Alter 6 PM 61 4·
983 4607

320

440

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

12x65 house tra•ler all electriC
2bedroom 304 862 2546
1g68 PMC

Br~c emeye r

12K60

304 372 3400
1970 12x60, good cond1hon new
wtndows doors, new outstde
pam!ltnm undersktrtmg $2 800
304 675 7585 after 7pm
1972 Concord t2x65 2bedroom
1 bath gas s1ove &amp; furnace, liP
out unit 1n l1vtng room 304 372

3400
1973 2bedroom 12x65 K~rkwood
$6 000 or trade lor Harley Davad
son motorcycle '86 liP 304 675

6102

Apartments
tor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lur
n1shed and unlurn1shed sccut~ ly
depost t requ~red no pels 614

1bedroom apanmen1 Henderson

ow ac 3Q4 372·3400

S 150/mo Oepostl 8 references
304 675-1972 after Spm

1977 t2x65 Federal3bedroom
Call304 675-1954 a her Spm

1bedroom Extra clean uhl1t1es
garbage p1ckup ac ceilmg fans
1980 Windsor 14x70 2 B ed garbage dtsposal relr~gerator &amp;
rooms 1 Bath Larg e K1tchen s tove , lur n1shed No pets 304
La rge Ltv•nll Room Relngerator 773 5352 or 304 882 2827 even
Stove Washer Dryer Wa l l A1r 1ngs
Cond1t10ner 10•t2 Ut•lltr Bu1ldtng
Excellent Cond1t1on $10 500 614 2 Bedroom Apartment Tra sh
662-6667
Wa1er Sewage Pa1d $29StMo -+
Depostt, 614 446 2481
1986 Holly Perk. t4x72 2 Bed
rooms large Bath WtD New 2bdrm apts, total electnc ap
Sktrtlng Excellem CoM111on Par pttances furn•shed laundry room
t1ally Furn1shed , By Appomtment fac1l1t1CS close to school m town
614 367 0424
Appt•ca ttons avattab1e a1 Vtllage
Green Apts #49 or call 614 992
1993 Clayron 14x70 3bedrooms, 37t1 EOH
all erectnc, heat pump wid range
frtdge, dishwasher m•crowave, 2bedroom apartment freshly
sktntng 304 675 5129
patnted $300 plus ut•l•t•es De
posll No pets 304 675 5054 alter
2 Bedroom 12K60 House Tra1ler 3prn
Wtth 3 Room Ed tiiOn In Back
Outbu•ld•ng 1 Acre lo1 MIL , 2Rooms Plus Bath Lafayette
$11 500 614 388 8236, 614 388 Mall No Kttchent All Utti1119S p'atd
$175 00 Month Oepos11 Requtred
9002

6 14 446 7733
2acres 1984 Spnngbrook mobtle
home 3mt Rl 2 N on Rt 62 304

675 6966
59 Schutz, 10x50, excellent con
dHJon needs plumbmg must sell

614 949 2823

Ltmlted Olferl 1996 doublewtde

3br, 2balh, St'895 down, $2591
month Free delivery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes, N1tro

'

Offer! New 14d0 No pay
ments alter ollfyrs Only make 2
payments &amp; move 1n 304· 755

556G
New 1998 14x70, .ncludes sk1rt

mg, steps, blotks , one

~ear

t1omeowner1 tnsurance and s•x
months FREE lot rem Only $1025
down and $207 17 per monlh Call

1-800-837·3238

6754

Mod ern 1 Bedroom Apartment
614 446 0390

1992 PlymolJth Sundance, 4 Door,
70 00 mt!es $5 000 OBO 614 ·
256 1539 614 256 1233

N Thtrd Ave Mtddleport 1bed
room lurmshed Oepos1t &amp; refe r·
ences 304 862 2566

Twm R1vers Tower, now accept.ng
appltcahons lor 1br HUD substd·
•zed apt for elderly and hand1

capped EOH 304 675 6679
450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms lor rent week or month
Starnng at S1201mo Gallta Hotel
614 4-46 9580
Sleeptng rooms Wllh cooktng
Also trailer space on uver All
hook·ups Call alter 2 00 p m ,
304 .773 5651, Mason WV

460 Space for Rent

3 Rooms &amp; Ba th, Upstatrs Water
Pa1d No Pets 91 Cedar Street,
Galhpohs, 614 388-1100
~
Furntshed Efhctency $235/Mo
Ut•l•t•es Patd, 020 Fourth Avenue
GaUipOits, 614 446 4416 Alter 7

P.M
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Onve
!rom $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov••• Call 814 4-'6·2568
Equal Hous1ng Opportuntry
Beech 51 Mtddleport 1 &amp; 2bed·
rooms llh l11195 patd Oepos1t &amp;
references 304·882·2566
Fu rn tshed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Downstairs Ulthttes Fumtshed,
Clean, No Pets, Reference, Deposit ReQutred, 614 446-1519

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Electrtc Wheel chan s /Sc oot ers
New ! Used Scooter 1Wheelcha1r
Ldts S t a~rwar Elevators lilt
Cha~rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283
E•erctse Ma ch tne

$125 614

Fodder Shocks And lncllan Corn
For Sale 614 245 588 7
Fuel 011 stove wt250gal rank &amp;.
stand $75 304 675 5770

304 372-5023
Healthmaster 750 Dual Acton Ex
erctse Bicyc le Jus! Ltke Newt
Hardly Ever Used I $60 614 24 7
2032 Eventngs Or l ea ve Me s

S390
HI Etlecte nc~ r p Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU 1

BOO 287 6308

614 446 6306

Duct Systems And A1r Con&lt;11110n
ers Free Esttmates

JET
AERATION MOTORS

K tng S1ze Waterbe d Mauress
W1th Heater No Frame $50 6 t 4
446 2539

Appltances
Recondmoned
Washers Dryers , Ranges, Rein
grators 90 Oay Guarantee!
French C11y Maytag 614 446
7795
Carpet &amp; Vmyt In Slock $5 00 Yd
B. Up 60 Patterns 01 K•tchen Car
pet In Stock Over 35 Patterns
Vmyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets,
614 446 7444

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appf1ances, 76
Vtne Street Call 614 446 · 7398

1 BOO 499 3499
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home lurmsh1ngs
Hou rs Mon Sat. 9-5 614 446
0322 . 3 m•les out Bulavtlle P1 ke
Free Dehvery
Now open Oualtl)' Furniture Plus
SA 7 Tuppers Platns Several op
t1ons ol l1nanc•ng ava1lable, laya
ways and major credtt cards, 614

667 7388
Stove Freezer Washer. Dryer
Rclrtgcrator 614 256 1238

K tng S1ze Waterbe d Mattre ss
And Heate r Included $tOO Call
Between 3 00 PM 6 00 PM
614·441 1918
large Ammana Oeep Freezer For
Sale, Good Cond1t1on, $150 614

440 4938
l1ke new 40 gallon water heater.
one year old enterla•nment cen
ler twm bed wtlh maltress and
box sprtngs 614-QQ2 3085

3950

No Longer Avatlable Longaberg
er Baskets L1ners &amp; Accesso
nes For Sale lnclud•ng Platd Ttd
tngs Tree Sklft £14 446 6602
Norttc Track Skt Type 614 446
731SAher 530pm
Now open Dav es Swap Shop,
Tllesday Wedn es day Fnday
Sa turday 1 6 Tools gun s and
toys
Old Camper Good Shape $450
Huntsmen Woodburner $275,
614 245 5943
Old Oak Buffet $250 614 446
Relr~g e rators

Cash And Carryl RENl2-0WN
And Layaway Also Available
Free Delivery WllhmlS Mtles

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

_...;;;;.;;.;;;;;;..:..;.;;;;.;;.;.;;;;.;;.;;.;;;;_, j Up" ghl Ao n Eva n s E n1er pr~ ses
520
Sporting
Jackson Ohoo 1 800 537 9528

Twenty otd hens St 501ea 6 t 11
Goods
::--:::---:~--::::-:,..-,:-:-70 1 992 738o
Bear Super Strtke XLR, 60 · 60 - - - - - - - - - - lbs, Stght. Ou1ver Rest Ltke New Woodburner Never Used Vou
$250, 614-4&lt;16 4279
Need To See It To Apprec1ate
~-:'---.:.....:....;;..._ _ _ _·!The Pr~ ce 01 $350 614 245-

530

Antiques

Bu~ or sel l R1vertne Anttques.

1124 E Matn Street on Rl 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am lo600pm Sunday 10010
6 00 p m 614-992 2526

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

5713
Wood burner S tov e $125 614

Babybed dress1ng table car seat
slroller swmg 304 67S-454S
Brand New Log gy Barou l adder
Stand $175 Never U sed 614
446 2316
Campground Membershtp, Camp
From Coast To Coast US 1Cana

da $4 00 Per Noghl API Allthated
Pd 13,600, Sacoafoce $425, 1·800236·0328

Chtlds Solid Oak Bedroom Se t,

Also Gold Rocker Chaor 614-446·
4215
Complete Gym Sot S1 ,200 Value
$ollf00 Washer Runs Good $100,
Body By Jake Workout $50 614 ·

&amp; PlastiC Sepuc Tanks,

AKC Mtntature Ptnschers Shots,
Tatls Docked Dew Claws Removed, 61•·379 2898 Susan

300

2,000 Galfono Ron

Evans Enterpnsea, Jackson, OH

1·80().537·9528

Beans lo r sale p1ck yoUJ own
Blue lake and hall runners 614
247 ?.142

590

For Sale
or Trade

1966 Dodge 2 ton !ruck 73 000
actua l m1lcs V 8, 4 speed trans
mtsslon wtth 2 speed rear aKle
!Ia! steel bed Wllh rack s, heavy
du1y 5 hydrau~c hit on rear good
cond1110n $1500 or trade or best
oller Call 614 949 2386

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

AKC R&amp;g Black Lab pups, shots
&amp; wormed 304 675 6359 or 304·

Couch, Loeseal &amp; Wmged Chatr. 675-6577
Uatchmg Set In Floral Pattern
SaTe As New Cond111on , 614 · AKC Reg•stered Cocker Spamel
440·3377
Pup]&gt;os $\SO 614·379 2728
Otsney area, Sday/4 hotel ntghts,
use any ttme Patd $310, sell

Beag les, A 1 gun dogs, males
and females for sale or trade, call

$100 304-343·9455

Grog Cundoff, 614-742 3517

ownera' org.

20 Soot
' 21 Cry of pain
2s Pronounced
12§ Fall behind
l27 Treet roughly
30 Big lizard
33 C.rrlar
34 Rocked
35 Altitude
36 Bell of yarn
37 Radiation
mea aurea
39 Complain

sounds
52 Pe-hll
53 More likely
54 Scatter

DOWN
1 Doll'a Houao
author
2 Hauler
3 WrllarRD9'rsSt.
Johna
4 Mouth par1a
5 Slangy
affirmative
6 How IWMI

10
12
13
18
20

7 Inebriated
8 Jump
9 Gravel ridge

Actor Danaon
More aordld
Slap--!
Mire
Writer's

'He didn't,
so he couldn't

86 Chevy AsuoVan 614 446
2445 Ask For PaiA

1948 Wolly s Jeep C-J 3A. $2000

AFTER 6 P.M

740

760

810

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

Appliance ,Parts And Servtce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E ..
penance All Work Guaranteed
French Ctty May tag 614 446

o

Autos for Sale

1974 Mustang II, V 6 auto one
owne r ret1!1 ed good cond1t10n,
askmo $1200 must sell 614 992

f.-~,D0lJfl

~~·~CfJMf:J Fro/o\&lt;:re£!

t966 Monte Carlo ac pw, pi ,
bucket sea ts w1re wheel covers,
new ttres, good condllton 304

675 6256
1987 Cavalier convert1bte, looks
&amp; runs good. 6crl 1 t34,000m • ,

$3 400 OBO 304 675 2267 after
7pm
1988 Caval ier Z 24, Sspd, a ir,
loaded extra clean 304·675-

12211
1988 Ford Taurus station wagon,

$2000 814·992·3194

by Luis Campos
c.lebnty c.,ner cryptOgramS are CfNiecllrom quogtiOnl by tamoul peop. put and presarn
Each letter In the cipher stands lor ano1t1er Todays cfW K equals G

HRIJCYHA

RNVG
VFBBIJ

GNN

RFYW

XCGGXI

G N N

YWCXZJtA
RNGWIJ

BHGWIJ . '

H A Z

KKNJCH

VGICAlR.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "V tctory has a thousand fathers but defeat as att
orphan • - Prestdent John F Kennedy
'
WOlD
lAM I

l . . ,. .~
.

ONDRAC

I

t--T-1.......,P1,--r::-F....,..,I

I

NECEP

~

I

-R....~T"H-~2-.---11
~0"':
'
1
I I I

.

Grandpa says that a dog's
stze doesn't mean anythtng 1n
a fight tt's the stze of the light
. . - - - - - - - - , 1n the dog that - - - • - -

I.

••

KUTBEC

I

. . " . .
L.......l-....1.-...L.-..L..-.L.......J

e

!he chuckle quo1ed

?v f1lhng 1n the mtsstng words
you develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

-.

::

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Bit; NAT.I!:
1'11 GOING TO CONCENTRATE ON SOME·
THING 50 [)15G.U5TING,
SO GROTESQUE, THAT I
w:lN'T El/t'll BE AlllE
TO CAACK A 51'11 LE!

QUIET,
TEDDY'

r HAVE TO
THINK!

SCRAM-LETS
GLOOMY
WINTRY
IMPEND
KILLER
TREBLE .
HUNTER
WEREN'T DOING

(614) 446-0870 Or (614) 237

Young people today are always
lhtnk1ng about what !hangs would be
lake tn ten years I thtnk that the future ts the tuna when most people wall
be sadly wtshang they had done the
!hangs they WEREN'T DOING now

7795

81ll Ornck s Home Improvements
add1t1ons , remodeling rool tng,
Siding plumbtng etc Insured call
8111 Ornck 614 992 5163
C&amp;C General 1 Home Uam
tenence Patnt ng vmyt s1dmg
carpentry doors Wtndows baths
mobile home repa~r and more For
lree esumate call Chel 614 ggz

6323
DRYWAll
Hang, f1ntsh, repa1r
Ceil•~ textured pla ster repalf
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 year.s
ex penance

ASTRO-GRAPH

Earl's Home Matntenance, vmy l
S1dmg, roofing, ex.tenor patntlflg
power wash1ng. Free Est•mates,
6 14 992 4451
Ron's TV Servtce spectal•z•ng tn
Zenith also serv1ctng most other
brands House calls, 1·800· 797

5, wv 30&lt; 576 2398

Hoolmg and gutters- commercta!
and restdenttal, mmor repa1rs 35
extperieroce . B&amp;B ROOF

5&lt;07
~~~~~~~--~---- •
----~-----1:
1960 Camara saoo. Couch And 820
Plumbing &amp;
Cha1r S 100 , Austra l•a n Saddle
$350 8~&lt;·379-2820
Heating
1986 Chevrolet Celebnty $800,
1983 Olds Cuttasr $1 200 614
446·6958

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1---,lr;-5-,lr--11--.,1--.,1"6-1 O Compleoe

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFI'IG

0468 Rogers Wa terprooftng Es
tabhshed t 975

71

...

lmpr~vements

3 Hor ses 1 Ouaner Hor se 2
Tennessee Walker s, 6t4 446
4110

bales, $1010$15 304·372 5023

f\f.- 1 Pf.-Y ~ 1YOU
C.~J·-i'T C£1 C:OlJIII

Home

Uncondtttonal hfettme guarantee
local references furn1shod Call

Square bales $1 S2 Round bales
$1S&amp;a 304-675 3960

;o

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

2 Year Old 0lJarter Hor se F1lly
$600 614256674t

Hay &amp; Grain

\

Bndge as a game full of negative tn·
ferences You learn somethmg posative ,
because of somethmg that dtdn't happen Occasionally. thas negatave mfer
ence as so sohd that you can bet your
contract on at Other tames though, at as
a tenuous inference to rely upon
However. any mference ts often better
than none
In today's deal. South had to judge
the best hne m three no-trump after
West had led the spade five and East
had put up the queen
Clearly. South had to make~se'Of hts
club suat After wmmng the first tnck
• wath the spade king, South ammediately
led the club king But East won wath the
ace and returned has second spade
West cashed four spade tncks to defeat
the contract
"Boy, was that unlucky," saad South
"I go down only af East has the club ace
and exactly queen-low m spades"
" Yet as that so unlikely'" asked
North "If West does have five spades,
he probably doesn 't have the club ace"
"Why not'' anterrupted South
"Because he would have made a onespade overcall "
That's true Everyone strams to bad
spades because the opponents must
then go up a level to outbad them Also,
af spades are 4·3. ducking the first tnck
only costs a trtck - an overtrack when West has the club ace Fmally,
two massmg aces are more hkely to be
one m each opponent's hand than both
mone hand
All the mferences, negative and posillve, pomt to the first -lnck duck bemg
best

25 Ft Dnve Camper Good Con
d1110n , For Sale Or Trad e, 614
446 6574

livestock

640·

SH,~r. rll~'~'~·

Parttng out 79 Ford F 100 ptckup,
exce llen l ca b, 302 eng1 ne, C 6
transmtsston, set of lou£ dtrecuon
al wheels w1th 3h10 5 General
Grabber !~res many good parts
614 742 2192

614 965-1266

Reg1stered Quarter Horse Yearly
F1tly Out 01 May B Doc lncent1ve
Fund Should Make Excellent Ev
ent Or Cow Horse $1 500 614

MY

CHANGe

0 &amp; A Auto Ropley, WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

614-992 7015

•

.. . ... . .

New gas tanks one ton truck
wheels rad1ators floor mats etc

SERVICES

6)4 592 2322 614 696 3531

If :I we~~ YOU :I'D

Budget Transm•sstons, Used &amp;
RebUilt All Types Accesstble To
Over 10 000 Tran.smtsston Also
Parts Clulches &amp; Pressure
Plates 614 379 2935

Two Ford 1 row corn pickers

Spec1at Fall Feeder Calf Sale Sat
urday October 7th, At 1 PM Cat
tie Accepted S tart1ng At 4 PM
Fr1day, Also Hauling Ava•lable

... . .

. ...

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1986 Sunlight Pop Up Truck
Camper Sleeps 4 Furnace Smk
Good Condttton S2 500 614 245
9109

630

. .. .. . . .

.

Motorcycles

01scount !arm tractor pa ris lor
Masser. Ford IH S. others
Stder s Equ1pmen1 Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800
27739t7

Wanted Small M1lk Cooler Tank
Under 1 SO Gallons Mu st Be In
Good ConditiOn, 614 965 1922,

. . . . . . . ..

1984 Kawasaki KX80
Runs Good $400 614 256 1

2 en S1lage wagons w1121on tan
dem runnul g gear $2,5001bolh 2
1500 bushel corn Wife cr~bs
$800/both 304 675-5950

~

1994 Astra Van loaded 22 000
mtles Will sell lor loan payoll, 614
992 5119

790

TRANSPORTATION

AKC beaut1lul Cho w Chow pup·
ptes- black, blue and white, $2001
ea ,614·992 7574

440·8737

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

560

Metal Roolmg &amp; S•dtng Geo Tex
t1le Fabt~c For Or~veways &amp; Etc
Typar For House Cover Or Tern
porary Storage Cover. Alti Ze r
Farm Supply 614 245 5193

2 German Shepherd Pups Full
B looded Males, 13 Weeks Old ,
6~4 446 4110

..II

DOG
LUKEY !!

13 Idle
14 Slbetlan tree1111 tract
'1 5 BR
16 Skinny llahea
17 Faulty
19 Firearm

By Phillip Alder

Bundy Alto Saxophone c;•~;:::~\,~~4~46~69~56~-------Cond•t•on 6'4 446 1423 Pr ce
$600
1987 Chevy S 10 4WO Bla zer,
V6 auto pw p1 304 675 6404
ludw•g Snare Drum S. Stand For 1--.,--'--'------~
Sale One Year Old But Played 1987 F250 Ford dtesel 72 OOOmt;
Very Ltnle 614 388 8815
new pump new InJeCtors, 2tone
patnt St 6000 304 675 14871rom
Older model 8aldw1n p1ano good 12 t2
mustcal shape 411 h1gh $600 1-----------~
080 304 576 4068
Dodge Ram Van 8 250.~
Miles $6 000 Can Bli,
Wa r.ted Good Upng ht P1ano 6t4
At Gall1pohs Dally Trtbune,
441 1013
825 Thud Avenue. Ga lllpolts
OhiO

Whaal tn your bag $7 50 per
hundred pounds Hay, round

Groom Shop Pet Groommg Fea
turtng Hydro Bath Juf1e Webb
Ca11614 446 0231

FAIR
'

FER THAT

OF YOR'N,

1982 AMC Eagle 4&gt;4 $700 614·

B lock bnck s&amp;wer p1pes wmd ·
ows, hnlels , etc Claude W1nters,
Rto Grande OH Ca ll 614 245
5121

Pets lor Sale

AT TH'

COUNTY

I'LL SWAP FER
LITTLE TATER II

vans &amp; 4-WDs

1979 4x4 Blazer $1 200, 6U·

Musical
Instruments

Two reg•stcrcd Angus bulls, 22
24 months old also 8 yearling
reg1stered Angus bulls pr~ced to
sale, 614 742 3033

560

730

570

Young Gtrls Bedroom Sul!e "-11
Wood , Full S1ze Bed Double
Dresser, Chest 01 Drawers, N1ght
Stand Hutch With She lves &amp;
Doors $900 614 446 1423

Building
Supplies

I'D GIVE

ENNVTHING

'!11 ;:;u-;k,

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer South
West North East
South
Pass 2 a
Pass
Ia
Pass
Pass Pass
3NT
Opening lead • 5

cond $3 500 304 675 7340

llfm Sonny, 61 4 992 3411

256-939 1

:::386=sx::-:':15~M~G~P~RM~•"'er"'t"'BM"""'c"'om-l 550
7S Gallon F1sh Tank, Complete
With Stand $300 6U 388 9842

MY HOUND DOG

WON FUST PRIZE

t980 lmernauonal Ton &amp; 1/2
Oump Tr uck E.-cellent Runmng
Cond1t on 9 Ft Snow Ptow &amp; Salt
Bo• 614 367-Q612 Any\lme

Reg Arab1an Geld 9 years old
15Hands Good broke 1rall horse
614-379 9122

379 2932

paublo DOS &amp; WIN UGA Mono
lOr Mouse $800 614 256 131 2

look.mg lor a Ilea liCk shampoo
that k1lls !teas monthly Ilea pro
grams cant? Ask R&amp;G Feed B.
Sllpp ty a t 614 992 21fl4 aboul
HAPPY JACK PAAACIDE sham
poo Contatns NO pyrethrtns t

Mov1e Sale 950 V1deo Mov1es
Newer Releases Class•cs Dts
noy 8 Adult s ti14 367 - 0612
Anyttrne
New ~r regular 1eans all SIZes, $51
pr &amp; up 132 Bunernut Pomeroy
OhiO All week

•K Q 2
+A 7 4
aK Q J 4

1 Where Naplea
II
i 8 Some Like

1985 Ranger 4K4, V6, Sspcl good

610 Farm Equipment

Stoves Washers
And Dryer s All Aecond!lloned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W1ll Deliver 614 669 644t

614 446·3158
Quality Household P'urntture And
Appliances Great Deals On

Full Blooded German Drahthaar
Btrd Dog 2 Years Old $200 614
256 1671 After 4 pm

Montgomery Ward llprtght freez
er ver~ good cond•t•on, 614 992

7638
VrRA FURNITURE

Pets for Sale

Greenhouses plasttc and glass
VariOUS SIZeS SacrifiCe must sell

Mob•le Home Space For Rent In
Centenary 614 446-4053

Household
Goods

560

OXl'J1 )AVt:R

BARNEY

86 Chevrolet C 10 Ptckup 614
446 2445 Ask For Paul

Repatred, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

510

('I"Jl( 10 A 'SIMPLE'.

'

720 Trucks lor Sale

Mobtle Home lot For Rent $100/
Mo Send Response &amp; Re ference
To CLA 361 c/o Galltpol•s Da •ly
Trtbune 825 Thtrd Avenue, Gall•
pohs OH 46631

MERCHANDISE

FRON\ A ::offi~(AlW
[:EA&lt;£5Sl~

1990 Ptymoulh Sundance 2 Door
Auto 76 000 M1les, $3,200 OBO,
6t4 256 1539 614 256 1233

388 8293

Spac•ous 1 Bedroom In Galhpphs
De~os1t Rclcroncc $225/Mo
61t. 446 7130 614 446 2131

S:J

19g2 Chrysler 5th Avenue. Grey
Wl!h Dark Grey Plush fntertor,
PW PO Mtnt Condttlon. 79 000
Mil es Call Alter 5 PM 614 446

446 oo"

Oltve St , Ga lltpolis New &amp; Used
l tHnlture heaters, Western &amp;
Work boots 61~ 440 3159

1 lg bedroom apartment S250Jmo
Depos•t requ1red 304 675 3100
days or alter 5pm 304·675 5509

1991 Mercury Ca~fl, well mam
tatned low mtleage pnce reduced
for qu1ck sale 304-675 4683

•A 4
t K 6 5
8t08653
EAST
' WEST
'I •At0754
aQ 9
•to 7 6 3
•J 9 8 5
+Qt082
+J 9 3
82
aA 9 7
SOUTH
aK J 8

lM IIJ ~ Cf
&amp;Jk)G OOIWGAACW

MV ~- CAst:
5kE'IJAR'()S HAVE NOT
&amp;EIJ MAi£R!Al.JZJA.X;
lATE.LY .

$4 100 614-388 6575

In Po1nt Pleasant 3 Bedrooms
Unl ur n•s hed Apartment, Must
Have Reference &amp; Deposit, 614

10. 95

• 6 3 2

199t Chevy Cavalier 5 Spd, Ttnt
ed W1ndows Alum1num R1ms

1·':::":.:"::'"::'::....:,----::--::----

EOH

NORTH

1989 Plymouth Acclcum Au10, A~r,
Ttlt Cr1.11Se, AM IFM Cassette,
59 000 Mtles Askmg $3,300
614 256-6340,614 256· 1539

apartments at Village Manor and
Atverstde Apartments tn Mtddle
port From $232$355 Call 614
932 5064 Equal Housmo Qppor

1 Bedroom Apartment Applt anc
es Furn 1shed 1 Block From
Downtown GalttpO!t S 614 446 -

1 BedrOom Downsta•rs Apart
men! In GaH1pol s Large L1vmg
Famtly!Dtnmg And K•tchen Areas
Als o Has Ut1hty Room $300/
Mom h Includes Water Depostl
And Relerences Requtred 614
446 3963

Escort Auto St 200 , OBO. 614·
441 0584

IGc:-r-a-'c'-,0-u-s-,,-,-n-,-.-nd-2_b_ed_r_o_om9

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

4639

Loaded, $3,400, OBO, 1986 Ford

Gallta Manot Apartments Now
Accepting Appli Cati ons For 1
Bedroom HUD, SllbS1d1sed Apart
ments, For Elderly And Handt
capped Equal Housmg Oppor
tunry, .614 446-4639

992 2218

1974 Academy 12x55, 2bedroom,
1bath, electriC, new furnace Wind·

• Limned

Professional

RENTALS

1989 Cht!'\IY Corstca Ntee Car

Furnished EHte1ency, 607 Second
Gall1polts Share Bath, S19Sillt•h
Patd 614 446·4416 Alter

Camp S1te 11 38 Acres 24 K24
Block Basement Completely F1n
1shed Good Hunting $13 000 Ed 1 -~---------­
Brown 614 388 9973 Metgs One bedroom apartment •n Mtd
Counr,
dleport all ut1ltt•es pa1d $270/mo
$100 depos11 614 992 7806 Sam
Charora•s .Lake Beaut1lul 2 25
Acre lot 01J et Des1rable Ne1gh 1-::'----------c:bornood Restncred $24 500 304
bedroom apartment, 125
Sl Mtddleporl three bed
273 0136 304 273 29110
aP&lt;&lt;rlrroenl 1n Pomeroy 614
Four lo ts near Aac tne approx 1
112 acres eacll start1ng at $5000
PLEASANT VALLEY APART
catl6t4 949 2025
MENTS are accepttng appltca
t1ons lor 28R 38R, and 4BR Ap
Scen1c Valley Apple Grove
pltca uo ns are tak.en Monday thru
beauttful 2ac lOIS puiJitc water
Fr1day lrom 9 00 to 4 00 Oll1ce IS
Clyde Bowen Jr , 304 576 2336
locate(! at 1151 Evergreen 0flve
PI Pleasant WV 304·675 -5806

Wanted to rent prolesstonal lam
•l r would hke to lease lour bed
room home 1n Me1gs County call
614 992 7272 or 614·992 6503

wv 304-755-5885

Excellent Ratatl Space Available

Earn S100Da weekly stufhng en· Lalaye110 Malt, 513-922-0294
velopea at home Be your bou

basis

Three bedroom home 1n cou mr~
Wh1tes HIU Rd Rutland one bath
•ngroundpool 614992506 7

Certthed daycare 1n my home
dars or evenmgs W1ll work wtth
your hours as needed Reason
able rates, can g•ve references
Meals and tun ttmes provtded

21 0

oppo~unlty

GOV 'f FO RECLO SED Hom es
For Penn•es On $t Oet1nquent
Tax Repo s REO s 'four Area
Toll Free Pl BOO 896 9778 Ext
H 2814 ForCurremL1shngs

508 8887

oon

knoWllngly accept
advertisements for real estate·
which Is In v•olal•on ol the law
Out readers are hereby
mformed that all dwellings
aa.oer11sed In th1s newspaper
are available on an equal

5 Rooms Baltt, Basement Decks
Pool 1 1110 M1les From GaU1polis,
At 141 614 446 1026

General Maintenance Patnttng
Is Look.ng For A Career M1nded Yard Work Wtndows Washed
lndtv•dual To ~ Provtde Fmanctal Gullers Cleaned light Haul tng
Serv•ces And Fraternal Benehts• Commet~cal, Restdent1al, Steve
In The Galltpolts Area Start1ng 614-446-8861
Income Up To $26K Comp lete
Tra1n1ng And Full Benell t Pack Georges Portable Sawmtll, don't
age Send Resume To AAL 81 11 haul your logs to me mtll lUSt call
T1mberlodge Trail Dayton OH 304 671&gt;1957
45458 Or Call 513 433 7706
Professtonal Tree Serv1ce, Com
(Collect)
plete Tree Care, Bucket Truck
AVON I All Areas t Shtrley Servtc:e ·50 Ft Reach , Slump R&amp;moval, Free Esltmates• In
Spears ~4-675-1429
surance, 2.41 Hr Emergencr Serv
AVON HOLIDAY SALES
tce Call And Savel No Tree Too
Earn S8 $15/Hr at Work Home B•g Or Too Small I Btdwell, Ohto
01scounts1 No Inventory or
614·388 9643, 614·387·7010
door lnd!Rep 1 BOO 742 4738
Rub &amp; Scrub Clean 1ng Serv1ce
AVON EARN S$$ at home at dustang, mopptng, wmdows and
work All areas 304 882 2645 1 more Compklte serv•ce or lauch000 992 6356 IND!I1EP
ups References on request, call
Terry at 614-992 ·4232 or 614·
Babys11ter In Mr Home Even1ngs
992 4451
2 PM Tttl 1130 PM 614 446
76 72 Be lore 2 PM
Sun Valley Nursery School

CUSTODIAL WORKER
Gal l• a Co~Jnty Boa rd 01

This newspaper will not

2072

call 614-992 7623 aher 3pm

AID ASSOCIATION
FOR LUTHERANS

All real estate advertiSing m
this newspaper Is subjecllo
the Federal Fatr Houstng Acl
ol 1968 whtch makes •t •llegal
10 advenrse ~a ny preference
limitation or dlscnminatlon
based on race color rellgton
seJC lam1lial slalus or nahonal
1 orig1n, or any intentton lo
make any such preference,
lim•tatlon or dlscnminat1on •

4 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 Car Garage
Above Ground Pool Porch &amp; Pa
110 Green Town sht p 614 445

Ace Tree Serv1ce Complete tree
care, 20yrs exp &amp; tnsured free
esttma te s 614 &lt;141 1191 or 1

800

110

Help Wanted

No Expenence Necessary! $500
To $900 Weeki~ /Pote ntial Pro ·
cesstng Mortgage Refunds, Own

wanted to Buy

Buster I New 14x 70, 2 or

3br Only S995 down St951month
Free del•vory 8 setup Only at
Oakwood Homes Nttro WV 304
755 seas

'f Marn Stree t Ractne Dave
~car's Couch chatr recltner
C*pel, baby clothes gtrls clothes
s1ze 1 6 toys adult clothes
household tlems

l~nd. 614-Q4Q 2071

PHILLIP
ALDER

40 Future bka.
43 Brier
4li Former N.Y.C.
mayor
4li Arctic homea
49 Cloth dealer •
51 Makea aleep

840

Thursday, Oct. 5.h995

Electrical and
Refrigeration

-;:;;;=====-··
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES '"

Heat Pumps, A.tr Condttton1ng If
You Oon't Call Us We Both LoSe, 1 ' ;
Free Esttmales, 1·800· 287·6308

614-446-6308 WV 002945

'F

Restdenhal or commerc1a1 w1rtng "
naw service or repatta Master l•: \~
censed elecanc•an Rutenour ,•

Elotlrttal, WV000308 304-875·
1786

cmur

'llrthdaf

Freeman s Heaung And Coohng
lnstallatton And Serv1ce EPA
Cerbf•ed Aestdenual Commerc 1al
1514 256 · 1611

"

~lor

Ftnancaal trends look
you tn the
year ahead. ln tact. you might expe~ence
some periods where you'll be graced with
unexpected windfalls at very destrab!•
times.
•
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Scan your
sources lor barga1ns today. espeC181ly lor
an ttem you've been wanting. There's a
chance you might find It at a very anractlve pnce . Know where to look foa
romance and you'll find it. The Astra·

I

Graph Matchmaker tnstantly reveals
whtch stgns are romanttcally pertecl lor
you Matl $2 75 to Matchmaker c/o thts
newspaper, P 0 Box 1758, Murray Htll
Statton, New York, NY 10150
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Someone
whose help ts essenttal to furthenng your
present tnten!tons mlght be more supporttve than usual today Get tn touch
w1th thts person as early as posstble
SAGITTARIUS (Nov_ 23-Dac. 21) A
development that could be of constder·
able matertal value can be worked out
favorably today tf you take tt upon yourself to r01t1ate the actton

CAPRICORN lDec. 22-Jon. 19) Thtngs
should work out smoothly lor you today tl
that whtch you hope lor yourseH you also
want lor others Selhsh thoughts m1ght
llmtt your potenttal
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 19) Today, tf
you do the very best you can , your
achtevements are hkely to be grander
than usual Keep an open mtnd and
reject allltmttattonS 011 your thinking
PISCES (Fib. 20-Man:h 20) Let persons
with whom you're tnvolv~d today know
you have Ieath tn them and thetr tdea&amp;.
Praise lrom you Will help stimulate their

ARIES lMarch 21-Aprll 19) Prepare to
move swtftly today tl a career opportumty
presents ttself Somelhtng unusual and
postltve , though of bnel duralton, mtght
develop
TAURUS (April 20..May 20) Your )udg·
men I os good today, espectally when
maktng snap dectstons Challenges wtll
awaken

know·how acqu1red from suc-

cessful past expenences
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Somethang tn
which you're presently tnvolved could be
more reward1ng for you than you reahze
You may begtn to see tl tor tis realwo~h ,
today
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your part·
ner tn a bustness arrangement may have
bener tdeas than you today Encourage
th1s person to express hts or her vtews
and optntons
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Follow your
tmpulses today W they urge you to make •
yourself of greater serv1ce to a person
who helped you recently Your deeds wtll
be appreciated and you'll !eel gratified
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your probebll·
tileS for SUCCeSS Will be conSiderably
enhanced today •I you treat life more ltke
a game than an ordeal

I'

•'

' .'

.. ••

�..•

.

:

•

.•

'

~

: Page 16 • Tl'le Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,October4,199S
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ,

ROYAL
CROWN COLA:
PRODUCft

SftiRE HOURS
Moadaylhra
Svnday

12 pk 12 oz. cans

8 All-10 PM

$219

298 SECOND St.

ahio Lottery

Indians,
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two in a row
in playoffs

Pkk3:
236
Pick 4:
1446

Super Lotto:
18·20-24-26~39- 43

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Sports, Page 4

•

POMDOY, OR.

WE RESERD ftiE RIGB,. ,.0 LIMI,. QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD ftiRU OCIJIOBER 7, 1-.

en tine

7UP
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIG COUPONS

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAilS

low tonight In 60s, showers.
Friday, cloudy. High In 70s.

Vol. 46, N0: 112
Copyrlght1995

2 Sections , 16 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 5, 1995

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

12 pk/12 oz.cans

Sternwheel Festival underway

4

SUPERIOR MOUNTAIN BRAND

Bologna •••••••••••
Whole stick lb.

DINNER BELL SMOKED

14oz.

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OSCAR MAYER

Bologna •.•••••.••L~~

saaa
'r·Bone Steak •• ~~·.
s.1,. 99
U.DA CHOICE

I

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PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS
2 Iller

$ 149

$1.49

szas

MOUN,AINEER SAUSAGE

· The sixth a~nual Big Bend · tel , musical entertainment will be
Stemwheel Festival got underway perfonned by Paul Doeffinger and
this afternoon with two and a half Sweet Mountain Sound at 5 and 6
days of entertainmen~ focused on p.m.. respectively . The Daz~ lin g
the Pomeroy levee.
Dolls Baton Corps will perfonn at
The entertainment begins 6:45 p.m. followed by the County
tonight at 8 o'clock with White Tonight dancers at 7 p.m. and the
Raven . The Meigs High School Crossover Band from 8-11 p.m.
Band and Flag Corps will perfonn
Entertainment chairwoman Jane
Friday at I p.m. followed by the Banks urged festival goers to bring
Boy Scout Order of the Arrow lawn chairs.
Dancers at 5:30 p.m. and the RicoThis year, the festival corruniuce
will sponsor a motorcycle show
chet Band from 8-11 p.m.
Saturday's entertairunent begins Saturday in conjunction with the
at I :30 p.m. with a barbershop Meigs County Bikers Association
quartet by the French City Chapter annual Toy Run .
of Society for the Preservation and
Motorcyclists wanting to enter
Encouragement of Barbershop the event can sign in s1arting at 10
Quartet Singing in America, spon- a.m . with judging to follow at
sored by Fanners Bank.
11:30 a.m. on Court Street. Awards
Following the barbershop quae- will be given in three places and

•
· 31b box
P8 ItII
•••••••••••••~••

EARLY ARRIVALS - Boats began arriving Wednesday for
the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival which began today at the
Pomeroy levee. Early arrivals were the Jewel City llnd the Virginia
and Jean Mary. Other boats were expeded to arrive today. Festival committee members stressed that no bottles, bikes or skateboards are allowed on the parking lot during the event.

Madi Gra
Paper
Towels

1995 festival schedule

roll

Thursday
Jewel City cruises at I, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m.
6 p.m. - Parade with theme "Days Gone Bye".
7:30-10:30 p.m. -Casino night sponsored by Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce.
8-11 p.m. - Music entertainment by White Raven.

BONELESS

Chicken

Breast!~~

PORK
LB

Cubed Steak •••• ~ ••••
YORimiWN BREAKFAS,. lb.

llal:llll ••••••••••••••••••

~~99

Friday
I p.m. - Meigs High SchooLJiand and Rag C6rp.
Jewel City cruises at I, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m.
•
5:30p.m. -Boy Scout Order of the Arrow Dancers.
8-11 p.m. -Music entertainment by Ricochet Band.

Delicious
Salted or
·unsalted
Saltines

age

Saturday
9:30a.m. - Rag Raising Ceremony.
11-4:00 p.m.- Chili Cookoff.
II am. - Motorcycle Contest.
Noor. - Introduction of Queen Candidates and Crowning of
Queen. ·
I p.m: - Race cruise on the Jewel City
1:30 p.m. -Stem wheel boat parade.
1:30-2 p.m. -Barbershop Quartet by the French City C'h:lpter of
·the Society for the Preservation and Encour::gement of Barbershop
Quartet Singing in Americ~ - Sponsored i&gt;t Farmer' Bank.
2-4p.m.- Stemwheellloat Races and Awards Ceremony.
2-3 p.m. - Colnmbus Petting Zoo at Pomeroy Libra.-y - Sponsored by the Meigs County Public Library.
4-4:30 p.m.- Chili Cookoff Judging and Awards Ceremeny.
5-6 p.m. - Captain's Dinner.
.
5-6 p.m.- Music entertainment by Paul Doeffinger.
.
6-6:45 p.m. -Music entertainment by Swr.et Mountain Sound.
6-9'p.m. - Elks Drug Awareness Hot Air Balloon (free gift~ for
kids) Comer of Butternut Avenue nnd Second Street.
6-7 p.m. -Masquerade Contest.
6:45-7 p.m.- Dazzling Dolls Baton Corp.
7-8 p.m.- Country Tonight.
8-11 p.m. -Music entertainment by Crossover Band.
9 p.m.- Fireworks Cruise on the Jewel City.
9:30p.m. - Fireworks display.
10 p.m. - Drawing on the Jean Mary model stemwbeel boat.

lib.

Kraft
Grape Jelly
or lam
32 oz.

YELLOW

Onions ••••••••••••
8111. bag

Other events
Thursday, Friday and Saturday - Luncheon and craft show at
Pomeroy Trinity Church;
Saturday- Herb Fest in mini park on Court Street from 10 am.
to4p.m.;
Saturday - Face painting on the parking lot sponsored by Fann·
ers Bank;
Crafts, concessions, games, Water and Kids water safety demonstrations. and more will be held on the Pomeroy Parking Lot by the
Ohio River. All events will be held on the parking lot in Pomeroy
unless otherwise specified

Paramount
lamburger
Slices
.•

ROSEDALE

Peaches or
CRISCO
SHORTENING
31b.

Llllllt I

$199

:Ground
MAXWELL
HOUSE
DC COFFEE

WHITNEYS
PINK
SALMON

HUDSON
CREAM
FLOUR·

84.8 oz. Limit I

14.7101.

Bib.

•s•

$119

$129

Board considers radioactive waste sites
COLUMBUS (AP) - Opponents of a plan to build a regional
low-level radioactive waste dump
in Ohio are fighting yesterday ' s
battle, a spokesman for Gov.
George Voinovich said.
The question isn't whether it
will be built, but when and where.
Mike Dawson said Wednesday.
. Critics have charged the newly
appointed Ohio Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Facility Development Authority Board of Directors with tilting toward the nuclear

industry, and say two members representing the public should be more
skeptical of the plan .
But Dawson said the decision to
join the Midwest Compact and
build the dump was made long ago.
''The purpose of this board is to
carry out that policy. It is not to
debate whether or not Ohio should
be in the compact or build the facil·
ity," be said.
Legislation that Voinovich
signed in June auU10rized Ohio to
build a low-level radioactive waste
I

Beef
10 lb.

.s

,,

.,

. :: FORT WALTON BEACH, Aa.
{AP) - Hurricane Opal' lost its
punch early today after crashing
· ·into the Aorida Pa~thandje, where it
· ::washed away beach-front homes
· '311d tossed boats ashore. At least
rthree people were killed.
· More than I million people lost
.:power in Flori~ Alabam~. ~r­
·gia and the Carolmas, offictals SaJd.
'lt could take days to restore elec;tticity.
. Almost thret dozen homes were
::destroyed by waves surging more
~than 12 feet above nonnal in tiny
•Mexico Beach, a town of 1,200
~bout 15 miles south of Panama
:City.
· · "They don't really expect there
Ao be much left," said city council
·member I::. ~die Stewart, fighting
·back tears.
· Opal. the second hurricane to
ambush stonn·wary Panhandle residents in two months, carried up to
_:5 inc~s of rain and heavy winds as
jt weakened while moving nor.th
through Alabama and towarti the

Appalachian chain.
By 5 a.lll! EDT, Opal had been
downgraded to a tropical storm.
Opal's dissolving eye was 55 miles
east of Huntsville, Ala., and the
sustained winds bad dropped to
about 40 mph. The hurricane's
winds had been as high as · ! 50
mph.
Forecasters dropped hurricane
warnings for the Gulf Coast,
although they warned of continued
high winds and heavy rains as the
storm moved north at about 25
mph.
The bowling winds bad already
done their damage, leaving a path
of crumbled piers , demolished '
homes, submerged highways,
downed .power lines and bitter
. tourists.
"I will never come to Florida in
hurricane season again." said Mike
McCormick, of Mobile, Ala., who
ned to a Pensacola shelter from the
same beach house be and his fami·
ly rented when Hurricane Erin
rHincd their la~ t vacalion in carl v

site to serve six Midwestern states,
including Iowa, Indiana, Wiscon sin, Missouri and Minnesota.
The Ohio law gives discretion
for siting criteria and the final
selection to the committee, with
oversight by the Midwest Compact
members.
Voinovich, Senate President
Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and
House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson,
R-Reynoldsburg, each appointed
four members to the board.
Particularly troublin~ for Steve

Gannis, the head of Ohio Citizens
Against a Radi oactive Envi ro n·
ment, are two members appointeJ
to represent the public on the 12member committee.
" Voinovich is aslute enough tu
know that if you ' re going to
appoint a member of the public, tn
appoint one who is compromised
by industry," Ga·nnis said Tuesday.
lie was speakin g of Esrh er
Ble ~ins of Jefferson, a member of
the League of Women Voters' stale
Continued on page 3

·'

United F~nd kicks off 1995 campaign
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Starr
The United Fund for Meigs
County kicked off its annual fund
drive with a Thursday morning
breakfast attended by 40 people at
the Meigs County Senior-Multipurpose building.
The United Fund for Meigs
County was fonned in 1993 to pro-

vide a local agency to solicit funds
and provide fmancial assistance to
county non-profit groups and agen·
cies.
The fund is not affiliated with
any national organization, and all
money raised for Meigs County
project is administered by the local
board, according to United Fund
board president Susan Oliver.

Man sentenced to·
two years in prison
Jurors in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas Tuesday
found a man innocent on a charge
of breaking and entering, but found
him guilty on related charges of
theft and receiving stolen property.
Wednesday morning, it was
detennined by the court that Swan
has two prior theft offenses making
the recent conviction a feJony of
the third degree. according to assistant prosecutor Chris Tenoglia of
the Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office who repre sented the state in
its case .
Tenoglia said Swan was sentenced to two years in prison.
Swan was represented by public
defender Steve Story.
"We're very pleased with the
outcome. we thought justice was
served," said Tcnoglia.
"It was a multi jurisdictional
conviction," he explained.
The Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Investigation and Identification, the

Meigs County Sherifrs Office and
the Pomeroy Police Departn\ent all
cooperated in the case, be said.
Thomas Swan was accused in
.the July breaking and entering of
Your Neighborhood Lender, a
pawnshop located on Second
Avenue in Pomeroy.
Swan and another man, Holly F.
Mullins , Pomeroy. allegedly
smashed out a window of the business and stole items from the store.
They were arrested soon after by
deputies of the Meigs County Sher·
ift s Dcparunent.
Mullins pleaded guilty earlier to
a charge of breaking and entering.
He was scheduled to testify against
Swan, but did not appear, according 10 bailiff Paul Gerard.
Mullins face s sentencing on
Oct.31.
Gerard said the jury deliberated
about an hour before returning its
verdicts.

:After blasting Florida Panhandle, Opal loses its punch

32 oz.

presented at 5 p.m. in the upper 3756 during the day. Aft er 4:30
parking lot.
. p.m.. contact Sherni an Mills or
Toy run participants will meet in llelva Miller at 992-3679 .
the parking lot at noon and leave at
Al so Sa turday, the Co lumbus
I p.m.
Peltin g Zoo will visit the Me igs
One of the festival's spicier Counly Public Library in Pomeroy
events, the annual chili cook-off, from 2-3 p.m. and the Elks Drug
will be held Saturday siMting at II Awar.cness Hot Air Balloon will be
a.m. with judging at 4 p.m.
at the corner of Buttemut Avenue
Prizes will be awarded in two and Second Street from 6-9 p.m.
classes: corporate and individual.
A herbfcst will be held in the
In the corporate class, first, second Court Street Mini Park from 10
and third place winners will receive a.m. to 4 p.m. and a masquerade
plaques while winners in the indi- contest will be held at the levee
vidual class will receive prizes of from 6-7 p.'m. with prizes to th e
$100, $75 and $50.
prettiest. uglie st and most original.
According to cook-off organizer
A fireworks display will be held
Shennan Mills, there is still time SatOrday at 9:30 p.m. and stern ·
for groups to enter the event. For wheeler cruises about th e Jewel
additional infonnation or for appli· City will be offered throughout the
cations contact Bel)Ill Miller at 992- event.

August.
The stonn, which began in Mexico where it left 10 dead, grew so
fierce in a two-hour period
Wednesday morning that forecast·
ers thought it might become the
strongest ever to hit the United
StateS.
"I don't think anybody can
remember a storm strengthening
that fast." said meteorologist Mike
Hopkins at Ute National Hurricane
Center in Miami.
Opal eclipsed infamous Andrew
when its sustained winds incrcase,d
to 150 mph while still in the Gulf.
of Mexico, Hopkins said. Andrew.
a category 4 hurricane. hallnushcd
a swath of south Dade County 'in
August 1992 to become the costliest hurricane in U.S. history.
With little time to prepare for
Opal , more than 100,000 coastal
rc ~ id c nt s fl ed inl and , jamming
hi ghway' Utal could not handle the
uaflk
Opal '·, stt &gt;rm center hlcw across
the Air Force's llUII~un l'idd, 2'

miles east of Pensacola, just after 6
p.m. EDT. East of Hurlburt, the
National HWTicane Center recorded
sustained winds of 125 mph and
gusts up to 144 mph.
In a year of record hurricane
activily, Opal stood out as one of
the wor st to hit the Gulf Coast
since Hurricane Camille killed 256
people in I%9.
•
Howling winds , rai'n and
washed-out roads forced emergen·
cy officials to wait for daylight to
begin ass essing the storm's dam age.
. Teams of federal emergency
workers and up to 3.500 National
t luard troopers prepared to tour lhc
-hardest-hit counties before da ybreak today to survey damage.
U.S. 98, a scenic coastline highway, was lloodcd with water and
debris from smashed houses. The
end of Panama City Beach · s new
1,500-foot concrete pier crumhlctl
into the Gulf. In Ila y Couni y. a11
estimated 200 homes wer e
destrOyed or damagctl.

.
1995 United Fund Drive Chair- over the past two years.
Herb Ellioll of Southern Oh 1o
man Dick Warner announ ced that
the goal for this year's drive will be Coal kicked off the 1995 fund driw
$18,000. The United Fund met pre- in a big way, with presentation of a
vious goals of $6,000 in 1993, and $700 check from the mine employees 1u Dick Warner.
$12,000 in 1994.
Oliver recognized officials from
Oli.tl4.r also recognized Southun
the James Gavin Power Plant for Ohio Coal for fundin g the kickoff
their work with the United Fund breakfast.
1994 United Fund. chairman
!luring the non-profit group's first
two drives. The Gavin plant ami Paul Reed of Farmers Bank was
their employees were the biggest introduced. Reed staled that the
contributors to the United Fund in annual "Dress a Doll" Chri sunas
1993 and 1994. '•
. program will be restruclured this
Oliver also recognized Southern year, with some of the dolls to be
Ohio Coal Company ·and Ohio auclioned off
Power for their money raising work
Continued on page 3

Deadline approaching
for absentee voters'

The Meigs Coun1y Board of
Elections is currently accepting
applications for absentee ballots, to
be mailed to Meigs County absentee voters, according to board
director Rita Smith.
The deadline for ballots to be
mailed is Nov. 4. at 12 p.m.
Due to difficulties statewide, the
Fourth District Court of Appeals
has recently decided a case affecting the manner in which absentee
ballots may be applied for and cast,
according to Prosecuting Attorney
John Lentes.
The Couf! of Appeals has held
' that no other individual may assist
a voter by signing his application
for an absentee ballot, nor in casting his vote on an absentee ballot.
The Court has held that thi s
blanket prohibition is to assure and
guard against a poss ibility tha t
undue influence may be brought to
bear in connection with assisting an
elector in casting his vote.

The onl y time an individual is
allowed lo have someone else mark
their ballot is when a voter is
un able to mark 1he ballot due 10
illi terncy or physical infinnity.
If a Vo ler in Meigs Counly has
such a inlinnity. Ute proper procedure is for that imli viduallo ctmtact
the Board of Election s who will
send out 1wo election oflicial s o(
opposite parties lo aid the voter,
according to Smith.
Any ballots that are not marked
in accordance with this procedure
cannot and will not be counted by
the Board of Elections. Any violation of this law will be investigated
by the Me igs County Board of
Elections.
Absenlee ballots can be cast, in
person, at the board office through
the Monday before th e election.
Nov . 6. The Board of Elections, on
Me chanic Street in Pom eroy, is
open Monday through friday , 8:30
a.m. to 4:30p.m.

•

SU 1{\'EYS DAI\IAGE • Roberti'.Jtcgrine examine s damage. at
the l'ensacola, Fla., Yacht Club Wednesday after Hurricane Opal
pass.d through the area. Pellegrino takes care of a 30-foot boat ar
the marina. (AI')

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