<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9296" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9296?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T11:54:38+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19727">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9ce7b643709e3444e5a900ceebfbc8ed.pdf</src>
      <authentication>abace283d2a0b4e495db0b10de54f4bd</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29857">
                  <text>.

Il

-

-

.

--

-- -

-

'·

"'
Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

PomeFoy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Auguat 5, 1996

Yes, you )leed a
·hammer, but.a
few wrenches
will help out, too

:.-r------w~'iffiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT~o:;:h;:io~L~o=u=er=y:-rr=;;;;;:::::::::=:r-=n
Pick 3:

Chiefs crush
·· Cowboys in NFL
. preseason action

6-0-8
Pick 4:
4-6-9-4
Buckeye 5:
4-5-22-30-35

Sports on Page 4 "

;

•

Br CHRIS GREEN
If a pipe is leaking or water fails to drain quickly
down the sink, why call a plumber when a pipe wrench
·or plunger will do the job?
Ir the washing machine shakes wildly when it's on the
spin cycle, why call a repair man when all that is needed is a carpenter's level to make sure the machine's four
comers are level7
No need to pay an in-home decorator to measure windows for curtains or floors for carpet when you can do
the job quickly yourself with a tape measure.
A small investment in a few tools for routine home
maintenance and household jobs can be a huge savings
down the road.
"I don't recommend you get a whole tool box full ot
tools," said Builder's Square senior sales associate John
Winter of Rockford, Ill. "We recommend that you buy
quality tools as you need them. Then you won't end up
with a surplus of tools that you won't need or will have
to replace."
Multipurpose tools such as a utility knife, slip joint
pliers and a set of flathead and Phillips-head screwdrivers of various sizes are tools that will be used more
than once, says Mark Van Vleck ofTrue Value Hardware
in Rockford, Ill.
Most homeowners can get by with tbe following
tools:
-' Safety equipment: Safety goggles guard your eyes
against flying panicles and when handling cenain liquids. Inexpensive disposable sanding masks give you
relief from dusts, odors and mists. For worlting with
toxic substances - such as lacquers or urea formaldehyde- buy a special disposable respirator or invest in a
dual-cartridge respirator with disposable filters.
-Claw hammer: A 16-ounce model is most useful for
driving or pulling nails and prying wood.
,
_ NaU set: Tapped with a hammer, it sinks the beads of
HANDY TOOLS • Multipurpose toolt such at a utility knife, slip joint plierl and a set
finishin 2 n•il• ""low lhe sulface so they can be con- of flathead and Phillips-head screwdrivers of various slzea are tools that will be used
cealed with wood filler.
more than once.
- Screwdrivers: It's good to have a few different lengths and widths .. For die small objects and reach into tight places.
slotted screws, one with a one-quaner-inch tip will handle most screws. It - Diagonal-cutting pliers: These have no gripping jaws and are used to
can be turned with a wrench if it has a square shank. Get a stubby one for snip wire and small metal pans.
tight spaces. For Phillips-head screws, a No. I and a No. 2 will handle most - Adjustable wrench: Tighten or loosen nuts and bolts with an adjustable
jobs.
. wrench. Adjustable ends are opened and closed by turning a thumbscrew.
- Hand saw: Get a crosscut saw to cut wood across the grain. They come - A pipe wrench: Used for tightening and loosening metal pipes.
with a I0-to-16-teeth per inch blades: 12 is a good choice for a smooth cut -lllectric drUI: Get a reversible model with variable speed control. Fitted
You also may need a rip saw, with 5 to 12 teeth per inch, to cut wood along with the proper bit or attachment, it can drill holes in almost any material,
the grain.
and can also drive screws, grind, sand or polish.
- Hacksaw: Blades come with 18 to 32 teeth per inch. In general, use -Hand drill: A push drill or crank-operated (egg-beater type) drill can drill
coarser teeth on thick metal and finer teeth on thin metal.
small holes in wood or plastic when you don't want to get out the electric.
-Coping saw: Cuts smaller diametr curves and filigree. Blades have 10 to drill.
20 teeth per inch for cutting wood, plastic or very thin metal.
- Flat r.Je: For smoothing metal edges or surfaces.
- Keyhole saw: Its tapered blade, with 8 to I 0 teeth per inch, can make - BI!ick plane: Used to smooth small areas of wood.
cutouts in wood with tbe cut staned from a drilled hole.
- Wood chisel: Get a one-half-inch size, to trim or shape wood.
-Adjustable pliers: Jaws open to varying widths. Versatile slip-joint pli- -Utility knife: Razor-sharp, it's used to cut screens, rope or trim wood or
ers are good for light gripping and turning. The jaws of groove-joint pliers other materials.
open to many widths, usually up to 2 inches.
- Putty knives: In 1- and 3-inch sizes, they ' re used for smoothing putty
- Lockinc pliers: Can be used as pliers, clamp, vise or wrench. Some have and plaster.
a cutting edge that can be used to cut wire, nails and small bolts.
- Carpenter's level: Used for checking horizontal and vertical surfaces, a
- Needle-nose pliers: Often with a cutting edge, they can bend wire, han- 2-foot model is a good choice . You also may want a small torpedo level.

65TH REUNION HELD- TheM Ch•ter High School graduatea
of 1931 celebl'allld their 65th reunion at a gathering at the Cheater
Fire HouM. In the group were left to right, seated, Irene Parker,
Mildred Colllna, Bertha Smith, t•cher, and Batty Davl11on; and
atandlng, John Bailly, VlrgH·McEiroy, Nellle Parker, Opal Wickham,
Pauline Ridenour, Fred Smith, and Earl Knight, teacher.

Chester alumni hold reunion
Chester High Ci.Ss of 1931 held
its annual reunion at Chester firehouse on July 28.
The nine members were joined
by two teachers and 14 guests. John
Bailey gave grace before the basket
·dinner. The afternoon was spent visiting and sharing memories. The
group made a donation to the
Chester Firemen and thanked Opal
Wickham for making arrangements.
They signed friendship cares for
Arvilla Frecker and Mary Buck.
Class members attending were
Irene Parker, Fred Smith, John Bailey, Nellie Parker, Pauline Ridenour,

Baking contest winners posted
Winners in the pie baking contest
at the Chester-Shade Days celebration were announced recently.
Winners were, in order, Kathryn
Mora, Enna Cleland and Kathryn
Windon . Also competing were: Ruth
Karr, Helen Blackston, Opal Hollon,
Elsie Folmer, Debbie Frost, Pat
Holter, Linda Edwards, Marge

over the bottom of a large nonstick
skillet. Heat the pan over medium
heat for I minute. Drop the batter by
tablespoons into the sltillet, spacing
I inch apart. Cook until the undersides are golden (about I minute).
Tum and cook for 30 seconds more.
Transfer to an ovenproof serving
platter.
Repeat with the remaining bauer,
greasing the skillet with the oiled
potato before each batch. Keep the
cooked blini on the ovenproof serving platter covered with aluminum
foil, in a 275 degree oven.
Makes about 4 dozen small bli ni
(serves 10 as an appetizer).
Nutritional analysis per serving:
38.3 calories; 2.0 grams total fat;
(0.8 grams saturated fat); 1.2 grams
protein; 3.9 grams carbohydrates; 17
milligrams cholesterol; 30 milligrams sodium.
MANDARIN PANCAKES
I and one-half cups all-purpose
flour
one-half teaspoon sesame oil
one-fourth teaspoon salt
three-fourths cup boiling water
About I tablespoon additional
sesame oil for pancake construction
Place flour, one-half teaspoon
sesame oil and salt in a medium
bowl. Add three fourths cup boiling
water. Gradually mix flour and
water with a wooden spoon to make
a soft dough. On a lightly floured
surface, gently knead dough until
smooth. Cover with a damp cloth
and let rest I5 minutes. Use your
hands to shape dough into a long roll
about l-inch in diameter. Add more
fl our if necessary. Place the point of
a sha'P. cleaver on cutting surface
with middle of roll under cutting
edge. Cho~ with a quick downward
motion, cutting roll in half. Chop
each half into 8 equal pieces. Roll
each piece lnto a ball, then pat flat to
make a circle. Brush top of eight circles with sesame oil. Place an
unoiled circle of dough on top of
each oiled circle of dough. Use a
rolling pin to flatten each pair of circles into one five-inch circle. Roll
both sides, changin~ directions frequently so flat pancake remains a
circle..
Cover pancakes with a dry towel .
Place an ungneased 8-inch skillet
over high heat for 30 seconds to I
minute. Reduce beat to medium.
Place I pancake in slilleL When
pancake puffs and bubbles appear on
tbe surface. tum and cook other side.

warm. Makes 16 pancakes.
Nutritional analysis per serving:
51.4 calories; 1.1 grams total fat;
(0.2
saturated fat); 1.2 grams

Maxwell. Mary Powell, Rebecca
Edwards, Helen Frank and Clara
Conroy.
Afterwards the pies were auctioned off for a total of $20 I.
Judging was done by Betty Dean,
Diane Rice and Opal Dyer. Cheryl
Browning and Elsie Folmer were
co-chainnen .

live in Sutton Township and my property is
appraised at $47,000. My taxable value is
$16,450. My taxes would increase $89.16 a
year.

This seems like little to pay
for our children's future!

protein; 8.9 grams carbohydrates; 0
milligrams cholesterol; 34 milligrams sodium.

l'l~a.•~ Vote

"YF..S" t'nr th~
Southern l.ncul Bond Issu~
Paid fnr

~y

the

Soulhcrn Locul Building

Cununittc~:

Kiml 1hillips. Trcilsurcr

Questions Concerning the Official Ballot for the Southern Local
School District's Bond Issue
This slates tha.t the hond issue
money can only he used for the
purchase of a site (which we
already have), conslrut·tion or
retonstrUl:li\m , and equipment in
the new facility.

OFFICIAL QUESTIONS AND ISSUES BAllOT
SPECIAL ELECTION -AUGUST 6, 1996
MEIGS COUNTY

This is one issue, a5.42 milllcvy.
hut the State of Ohio requires that it
appear on the hallot this way.
Thl(4.92)mills is the bond issue and
the .5 mills is an addition required to
repay the state for the money that it
supplies for the project.

PROPOSED BOND ISSUE AND TAX LEVY
SWTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

AMalo~ty Alflnnative Vote Is Necesnry For Pasuge.
"Shalt bonds be issued by the Board ol Education of the Southern Local School DistriCt for the
purpose of the acquisition, construction, reconstruction and olhlr lmproue•llnt ll1d
equipment of buildings and structurn, and the acqullition ofli.t n lhlrefcn, on eJtfler an
amount Sllfficient to raise the nel indebtedness of the school distrrct to within live thousand
dollars at seven per cent (7%) of lhe total value of all property in the school distriCt as IISilld
and assessed tor taxation on tne (Ill( duplicate tor the year 1996 or an amount equal 10
$3,665,000, whichever is greater, and a levy of taxes be made outside of the ten-m~l timllation for a maximum perio&lt;l or twenty-tnree years to pay tne principal and Interest ol such
bonds, the amount of such bonds being estimated to be $3,719,000 tor wlllch the leVy of ~es
is estimated by tne county auditor to average tour and nlnty ·two hunclretlls (4.92) mill&amp; tor
each one dollar of valuation, which amounts to ($0.492)101 each one hundred Cklllars or valuation?"
and
"Shalt an additional tevy al taxes be made tor the benefit of the Southern Local School 0is1r1c1,
lor the purpose of PAVING THE COST OF THE PURCHASI: Of ClASSROOM fACtUllES FROM
THE STATE, at the rate ol one-half mill tor each one dollar of valuatiOn, except that In lflale
year~ In which tile State Board of EducatiOn. pursuant to SectiOn 3318.051 or the Ohio Re'liled
Code. requi1es the distriCt to Increase tile tax rate to an amount greater than one-hilt miH, bill
not In excess ot lour millS. unw tne purchase price ii paid but In no caae lonQer than _,tytllree (23) yeart'"

Paid for by the
Southern local

If the school district would auempt to
do something financially to avoid the
full payment of this .5 mills, thcn thc
Statc wuld raise this millage to as
much as 4 mills. This is unlikely to
happen. Actually, in the histort of
thl! Building Assistance Program thc
state has only done so once.

J

Building Committee,
Kim Phillips, Treasurer

FOR THE BOND ISSUE AND TAX LM

14

AGANT THE BOND ISSUE AND TAX Lm

15

.'

'·

Vol. 47, NO. 66
1 Section, 10 Pagee

35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 6, 1996

A Glnnett Co. New1p1par

Fund drive will make
.----Along Main Street----.
pou~d (repairs possible
.y JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Steff
· The Meigs County Pound
Upgrade Project (PUP) now has
enough money to begin repairs to the
· existing county dog pound, the Meigs
Board of Commissioners learned
Monday afternoon.
Project Director Alden Waitt said
the PUP has received a $5,000 grant,
providing enough money to complete
the $23,000 project, which includes
adding additional space for animals
ahd putting a building over the
pound.
Commission President Fred Hoffroan said the commissioners would
meet with the Meigs Agricultural
Society about the planned upgrades.
The society owns the land where the
pound is located ,
Future plans call for a new animal
shelter, but that goal is several years
away, said Waitt. More immediately,
PUP supporters want to get the roof
placed over the pound before winter
to improve living conditions for the

dogs there.
Waitt thanked the board for its
assistance and others who had supported the project.
"We started out with basic
improvements and had an outpouring
of support," said Commission Vice
President Janet Howard. "It's been
great ... heartwarming ."
The board also met with Hysell
Run residents about recent nooding
in that area of Rutland Township.
The residents want the creek along
the road cleaned out to facilitate
drainage during flash floods. They
pointed out that senior citizens living
along the road have no way out during the floods .
"I personally don't have any quick
answers," said Hoffman. "There's no
short-tenn solution 10 the problem."
Howard pointed out that the county is trying to develop a countywide
plan to dredge creeks.
In other business, the board:
• Approved the lowest bid of
$96,812 submitted by Home Creek

•

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - First
Cremeans' letter. sent by fax to the
there was Watergate, named after the Strickland campaign, demanded an
location of a break-in where opera- explanation and warned, "You will
tives frpm one.. ~litical I!~..L"!.~f_e_ . be prosecuted to the fullest.extent of
snoojiing on the OlliCr.
the law" if caught at Cremeans ConCould a possible sequel, 24 years crete &amp; Supply Co. Inc.
later, be brewing in southern Ohio? - . Strickland's side of the story:
Cementgate, maybe?
.
There w~s no tr~spassmg, but there
. "You were spotte~ trespassmg on was a dnve-by vtewmg. ·
t~e grounds of my family business
. Field coordinator Greg Hargett
well after business hours," Republi- satd he and Stnckland found themcan Rep. Frank Cremeans wrote selves in Gallipolis while driving to
Monday in a letter to his Democrat· a county fair and decided to go past
ic rival , former Rep. Ted Strickland. the Cremeans property, just in case
"l\vo individuals, independent of earlier allegations of unsanitary rental
each other, both have issued state· conditions might be visible from the
ments to me that you entered the road .
.
plant after 7 p.m. on August I.
Campatgn spokesman Jess Goode
1996, " the letter said. "I am furious said, "They drove by to see the illethat you would stoop to such a low gaily run, polluting trailer park that
as to trespass ... I will not tolerate we 'vc heard so much about. At no
such actions."

Enterprises of Pomeroy for the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
East Letan Water Project.
Mid-Atlantic Storage Systems of
Washington .Court House submitted
the sole bid for a water storage tank
for $92,900, which was approved.
• Paid weekly bills of$39.~36.26,
consisting of 100 entries.
• Appointed Robert W. Crow of
Syracuse to the Meigs County
Library Board following the resignation of board member Don Mullen.
• Agreed to hold a public meeting
to consider closing Edwards Road
(Chester Township Road 413) off of
State Route 248. The dead-end road
runs along the west side of Kennedy
Cemetery and is approximately 3,000
feet long.
• Changed the time of the next
meeting to Monday at 2:45p.m.
Present were Hoffman, Howard,
Commissioner Robert Hartenbach.
Clerk of Commission Gloria Kloes
and Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes.

Vandallam In downtown
Pomeroy contlnuea to be a
problem -luat at a time whan
time did they get out of their car and
the merchants, through reviat no time did they trespass on private
talization projects, are making
property."
.. . "This.bas .gouo be the only road · · 'tllil area more attractive. Overthe weekend, a tell planter
in Ohio where someone can drive
filled
with flower• in front of
down a public road and be guiliy of
the
Victorian
Parlor was over·
trespassing," he said, adding that the
turned
and
broken.
Sarah Fllh·
Strickland vehicle never passed
OM*, conferred with Pollee
er,
through the gates of the concrete
Officer Jamea Stacy about the
plant " unless there's an invisible gate
damage, above. A faw doora
on the public road."
above the Parlor In the Hartley
"It is a bizarre statement," the
building, 1 front gl111 plate
spokesman said. "All he can do is
window has been broken, right,
make these delusional claims. Next
and two merchant• In the can·
he's going to be accusing the mailtar block report aome vandal·
man of trespassing."
lem ovar the pa1t couple of
Strickland was campaigning in
weeka. One merchant pro·
Athens County and could not be
poled enforcement of the cur·
lew as a po11ible IOlullon.
immediately reached, Goode said
Pomeroy's curfew calls for streata by dusk unleas accom·
from campaign headquarters in
everyone under 18 to be off the panled by a parent or gu1rdlan.
Portsmouth.

VINTON - An 18-year-old
Vinton area man died Monday
from injuries suffered in a one-car
accident earlier in the day on State
Route 325 near Vinton.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Sta~ighway Patrol said Brian K.
Lonk:-£8ull Run Road, was pronounced dead at 8:30 p.m. by
physicians at Ohio State University Hospitals. Columbus.
' Long was transported from the
· scene of the wreck by l,he Medflight air ambulance from Columbus-based Grant Medical Center.
The 330 p.m. wreck injured tbe
dnver of tbe car in which long was
ai?assenger, and another occupant,
ll'oopers said.
Driver Gary W. Woodrow, 23,
460 Hartsook Road, Vinton, and
passenger Thomas L. Switzer, 19,
8071 Bull Run Road, were transported to Holzer Medical Center by
the Gallia County EMS with minor
ioj~ries. Both were later treated
and released, the patrol reported .
Troopers said Woodrow was
SO\Ithbound, about one mile west
of Vinton." when the car he drove
topPed a hillcrest. Woodrow reportedly lost control of the car, went off
the right side of the road and suuck
an embankment.
The car came back onto the
roadway and ovenumed, ejecting
long and Switzer, troOpers said.
The EMS rescue squad and
Vinton Volunteer Fire Depanment
responded to the scene, and assisted in clearing the section of highway and a field where the MedFlight helicopter landed.
Troopers said the cause of
.(Continued on P~~ge 3)

(Sentinel photos by Charlene
Hoaflich)

Pomeroy Council seeks answers
to residents' flooding concerns

Gallia County
crash leaves
1 dead, 2 hurt

.,.
•

en tine

Strickland's 'drive-by viewing' spurs no
trespassing directive from Cremeans

Pancakes .. ·-~------------Cook about I minute on one side
until pancake is speckled with
brown. Remove from skillet, wrap
in a clean, dry towel and place in a
bread basket.
Just ~fore serving, separate each
pancake into 2 pancakes, gently
pulling apart from edges. Serve

Virgil McElroy, Opal Wickham, all
of Meigs County; Betty Davisson •.
Mechanicsburg; Mildred Collins,
Canton. · Teachers attending were
Bertha Smith and Earl Knight.
Guests were Lora and Owe'n Damewood, Henrietta Bailey, June and
Janet Ridenour, Martha and Will
Poole, Mildred Caldwell, Mae Vineyard, Thelma Hayes. Mary Lou
Maxey, all local; Kenneth Davisson,
Mechanicsburg; and Bob and Janice
Parker. Marietta.
•
Next year's reunion will be held
on the last Sunday in July at the firehouse.

_,

•

\

The Rockford Reglater Ster

Continued from page 6

Fair tonight, /atchy
danae fog towar morn·
lng . Lowa In the lOa .
Wednndl!ty, hot, hazy,
humid. Highs In the 901.

IIIla:~~~~~:;,~ aherlff'l deputiea put
~
to
torch Monday after·

noon when the plants ware
in ea1tern Melg1 County on
July 29. Sheriff Jamee M. Souleby uld the eradlcitlon progr1m
will continue. Special Deputy Thome• Werry, above, 11 sh-n
Igniting the 1ta1h.

Marijuana eradication
effort off to 'big start'
Officers seized 2,500 marijuana plants in eastern Meigs County last week
in what has become an annual summertime event - marijuana eradication.
The finds were the result of a joint opetation between the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department and the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The sweeps also resulted in two arrests.
Ozzie Blair and Abby Rockhold of Durst Ridge Road, Portland, face
charges of felony drug cultivation, Soulsby said.
,
A total of 132 marijuana pillnts were found in Blair's house and in a nearby cornfield, be said.
The plants in the cornfield had grown taller than the com surrounding
them, be explained, addiqg thai thl!y were visible from the road. • •
Monday afternoon, deputies burned tbe plants - comprising two pickup uuck loads - with diesel fuel a1 a location in Salisbury Township.
"We're off to a big stan," Souisby said.
Soulsby said the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency customarily gives each
plant a street value of $1,000, meaning the stash would be worth about $2.5
million by DEA figum, but iJC added that $1.5 million would probably be
more realistic.

..

\

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
They came looking for answers.
About a dozen residents of the
Union and Mulberry avenue area of
Pomeroy met with Pomeroy Village
Council members Monday night to
hear what progress has been made
toward solving sewer and drainage
problems in their neighborhood.
Vill•ge Administrator John Anderson explained what work needs to be
done, but the largest question remaining is how will the projects be funded.
On Union Avenue, plans call to
replace a section of sanitary sewer
washed out in a nash flood, according to Anderson . The portion of sewer runs adjacent the creek comong
down from Union Avenue, and was
undennincd and broken in recent
Oooding - resulting in an odor problem in the area ..
The project, which also includes
cleaning out the creek channel and
qplacing stone along the banks to prevent additional erosion, has received
approval for funding by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
with work to begin soon. With FEMA
assistance, the project will cost the
village about $1,700.
The large st project will cost
$374,815.98 with the village paying
12.5 percent, if approved by FEMA.
The project includes sidewalk
removal and installation, new curbs
and gutters, larger catch basins and
conduits, asphalt grading and road
paving along Union Avenue from
Prospect Hill to M11lberry Avenue
and up Mulberry Avenue to Pomeroy
Elementary School.
"This would make the streets act
as a son of viaduct," Andenon
explained. "It would appear we have

suflicient sewer ~apacity if we ~an
get water into the catch basins and
out of people's yards."
However. Anderson said the system would not be able to handle all
lloods.
"Designing a system to handle a
50-year nood borders on the realm of
impossibility," he said. explaining
thai to handle a 50-year Oood, a
drainage system would have to handle 15.000 cubic feet of water a second.
If approved , work on the drainage
improvements would not stan llcfore
next year.
Residents of the Vi II age Green
Apartments plagued hy II&lt;XKling the
last two years will not likely lind any
relief from the village.
Anderson sa id Oooding at the
apartment&lt; stems from a problem
with the huilding's design. adding
·there is not much the village ~an do
to correct the prohlem there .
"This happens once every 50
years. it can't llc helped," said May or Frank Vaughan . "Sometimes we
have que stion s we .aren't able to
answer .. . we 're doing the best we
can."

Union Avenue resident Dave
Edwards asked Anderson if there wa.&lt;
anyone the residents could write to
promote funding of tbe drainage proJect.
"If they turn us dowri, that would
be the time for citizens to react and
see of they would change their
minds," said Anderson, who added
that it never hurts to lobby officials.
Councilman George Wright said
residents of those areas need to keep
an eye on the creeks to make sure
they are kept clean.
Vaocblilm arowin1
Pomeroy businesswoman Sanh

•

Fisher complained to council ahout a
series of problems surrounding her ·
Main Street estahlishment.
.
Her business has been targeted hy
vandals several times including must
recently when a planter wa.• knocked
over in front of her store, presumably
hy juvenile delinquents.
She accused poli~e of not enforcing laws m the village, adding that
people have no respect for the law in
Pomeroy with people riding bicycles
on the stdewalks and youths loitering
tn lron1 ol stores, hara.&lt;&gt;ing hu,iness
owners.
"We have a serious prohlem
downtown. Police have got to crack
down and enforce the laws we have,"
she said. "We have lost this town ."
Council President John Musser
agreed . "We've got a problem," he
said.
In addition, Robert Burton and
other residents of the Monkey Run
area oodrcs..:d council concerning
establishment of a park in that area.
Vaughan said the village docs not
own the property in question but said
the village would support the rc~i­
dents if the property owner approved.
Burton s~ggestcd the site would
be a nice place for a walking path and
a safe place for chi ldren to play.
Othtr business
Clerk Kathy Hysell reported the
following balance~ for July: general,
$57,683.07; safety, $4.391 .89; stnect,
$18,299.96;
~tate
highway,
SI4,751.'78; fire, 526,726.94; cemetery, $10, 782.42; wawr. $48,135.24;
sewer, SSI,928.16; guaranty IIIClct'
$18,583.75; utility, $17,411 .43; n~
truck, no balance; PCrpetual care
cemetery, $7,284 . ~5; cemetery
endowmen~ $38, 118.S7; police pens ton , $1,542.05; buildina fund
(Contlnllld on Patel)
'

.I

1

'

�.

Commentary

Tueaday, A~uat 6,1996

seems like a done deal, but can't we
nip it in the bud somehow?
At the time he appeared on the
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
cover of Vanity Fair, remember, he
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
hadn' t actually done anything yet.
Well, OK, he was the guy who
bought the beer for the keg party in
"Dazed and Confused," and he was
the good dead policeman in "Lone
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Star." But in "Lone Star," he was
only seen in flashback and only had
ROBERT L. WINGETT
two lines, which were (if I recall corPublisher
rectly) "Don't shoot!" and "You git
on
home now!" (He was also Drew
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
Barrymore's
love interest in " Boys
General Manager
Controller
on the Side"; there's a recipe for stardom.)
But he had the media swooning
L..,.,._ to the «&lt;ltor are ltfllcCHM. nt.y mu•t 1M,... than 300 worda. AIJ,.,..,...,.
like Fay Wray in the monkey's paw.
oubjoct 10 - · - muot beolgn«&lt; otldlnclude - · otld loltp/loMnumi&gt;M.
Now, I haven't seen "A Time to
No . , . , , _ NfloiW will l&gt;e publlohod. L.,.,. ohoukl 1&gt;e In good IHN, - • l n g
Kill."lt sounds like a combination of
"To Kill a Mockingbird" and
"Intruder in the Dust" jacked up to
70 millimeter with Dolby Sound, and
all the Vanity Fair articles that marketing can summon. I don't doubt
that
Mr. McConaughey is cute as a
•
bug's ear, looks good in a close· UJ?.
and can portray the proper amount of
Excerpis of editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio newsmoral fervor that sweaty courtroom
papers:
,dramas require, but that's not the
.point.
Dayton Dally News, Aug. S
The point is, somebody should
Bob Dole's latest speech in Hollywood is hard to disagree with. He said
have
talked to us about it first. It's the
that by his lights Hollywood does some good stuff and some bad stuff principle
of the thing.
meaning some stuff that celebrates morals and character and some that doesPersonally, I plan to ignore him for
n't. And he said that it ought to do more of the good stuff.
as long as possible. I realize that's
Well , by anybody's lights Hollywood does good stuff and bad stuff and
like placing a peanut in the path of a
ought to do more of the good.
juggernau~
but if enough of us ignore
1be underlying problem in Hollywood, most seem to agree, is that-a mar'
him,
maybe
we could send a clear
. ket exists for the kind of stuff that Mr. Dole derides.
message to Hollywood: You must
This presents a dilemma for a candidate who wants to be seen as the chaminvolve us in the fame-making
pion of free enterprise.
process.
So we seem to be down to rhetoric. Until a candidate or president proJoin me, America! Change our
poses a communications system that is not built around market econo'llics,
moviegoing cry from "What a
it's hard to imagine him having any more than rnarginal1mpact.
dreamboat!" to "Matthew who?" We
did it with David Caruso. I know we
can do it again.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Aug. 5
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Scientists blame the recent return of toxic algae in Lake Erie on those
Shoales
newsletter, call 1·800-989pesky zebra mussels, Foreign invaders that have latched onto intake pipes
~
DUCK
or
write Duck's Breath, 408
in the Great Lakes.
~
Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.)
Finally, a group is going to take a look at this problem at the source. The
~/
Ian Sboales is a syndicated
g6vernors of the Great Lakes states - Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Pennsyl\
/
writer
for Newspaper enterprise
vania, New York, Wisconsin and Minnesota- drew down $1 million f r o ' : : t ' " L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ J
Association.
. the joint Greal Lakes Protection Fund they set up in 1989. 1be million will
· be used to sponsor experiments to filter ballast water and keep it·free of pests.
The ballast water, held in tanks on ships, is tbe primary ..(ransportation
mode for biological invaders.
The governors' million-dollar grant will go to the Lake Carriers' Association and the Northeast-Midwest Institute for a ship:borne experiment to
test several filtration systems. ~hips now have no such system, but there is By Sara Eckel
the anniversary came and went -- to vote for half the population lack and its opponents in the House have
some thought that a good system would screen pests out.
For reasons unfathomable to any- marked by a bittersweet celebration historical significance? Excuse me? taken notice. A new committee of
A better solution, if it is possible and practical, would be to bar them from one but themselves, some members in the Capitol basement -- while the
Finally, they pulled out what they well-behaved Republican women
visiting the Great Lakes in the first place.
of the U.S. House of Representatives proposal collected dust on Speaker thought was the trump card: It's too recently tried to cut a deal with the
are hellbent on denying a small but
expensive.
statue committee. They fell back on
symbolic victory to American
Never mind that contractors had their old excuse -- that the statue is
_
The Columbus Dispatch, Aug. 4 ~ .
women .
already volunteered to donate labor ugly -- and suggested that it go in the
President Clinton's promised signature on legislation to remake the
After all the fights on abortion and
costs. Never mind that Capitol Rotuqda for a year and then be
nation's welfare system will represent the most significant accomplishment affinnative action. After all the strug- Gingrich's desk.
Preservation Commission had $27 replaced with an apparently betterof his term - and of this congressional term .
.
gles on welfare, gun control and the
" I guess they just thought we'd go million in privately raised funds for looking statue of a Wyoming sufAs alJresidential candidate in 1992, Clinton accurately gauged the depth minimum wage . And certainly after away, " says Karen Stilcer of the such projects. Three Republican good fragette .
of Americans' frustration with a welfare system that had failed to make all the talk about the gender gap, you Women 's Suffrage Statue Campaign. girls .. Sue Myrick of North CaroliWhat are they thinking? Anthony,
progress against poverty and had spawned generation upon generation of would think House Republicans
But the issue did not go away. na, Helen Chenoweth of Idaho and ·stanton and Moll were no beauty
people more dependent than ever on the government handout.
would be eager for a freebie .
Press attention and public awareness Linda Smith of Washington .. queens, certainly. At the time they
Polilically, the decision is a master stroke. It removed from the campaign
And that's exactly what the pro- of the statue put pressure on the blocked the measure, explaining that were depicted, they were old women
debate the most potent issue that presumptive GOP presidential candidate posal to move a statue of three suf- speaker and his cohorts.
they could not abide the use of pub- with funny hairstyles. But since when
Bob Dole hoped to exploit.
fragettes is. The statue -- which
That's when they started rolling lic funds for the project.
is personal sexiness a requirement for
Although Clinton's re-election motives surely provided the stimulus, the bears the likenesses of Elizabeth out the excuses.
The Women's Suffrage Statue this honor? I mean. is Abc Lincoln
agreement ·between a Republican Congress and a Democratic president to Cady Stanton. Susan B. Anthony and
It's too heavy, was the first one. So Campaign didn't feel like arguing. really breaking any hearts in there?
overhaul the nation's welfare system still represents a historic achievement Lucretia Moll-- was given to the U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, ordered " We knew that money was not the
1be statue committee is collecting
of bipartisan cooperation.
government 75 years ago. shortly an engineering report , which found issue," says Stacer. "They just fig- its dollars. They hope to have t~
after women gained the right to vote. that the base of the statue could be ured it would be an effective way to money raised by October. Let's hope
However, the marble bust was soon replaced to make it an acceptable stop us."
that by then the anti-statue crowd wiU
banished to the Capitol 's basemen~. weight.
The Lima News, July 30
So the statue campaign set out to have realized how dopey they've
Terrorism poses a vexing problem for a democratic untry. We're learn- where it has lang~ished ever since.
It lacks artistic and historic merit, raise the $75,000 needed for the (iro- been. let's hope they realize that,
ing that, in a free and open nation, it 's not all that diffi ult for malcontents
Last summer. members of .the they said on the next go-round. 1be ject by asking Americans to send in while America has a lot of problem~
Senale ·voted unanimously to move "artistic merit" argument was expect· $1 each. This is another thing that the the suffrage statue is not one of them.
to blow their way onto the front pages.
the statue to thC Capitol's Rotunda, ed -- that's the time-honored excuse suffrage statue has in common with
Short of placing metal detectors and federal age on every street corFor more information, write to the
ner and at every event, there 's only so much the government can do. Pre- which houses II statues of great men that was used to put off the Stat~e of the Statue of Liberty, which was Women's Suffrage Statue Campaign,
such as George Washington, Abe Lin- Liberty. (Congress delayed Lady Lib- erected in pan on the dimes and nick· 303 West Glendale Ave .•Alexandria,
cautions can be taken. Investigations of suspects must proceed. But no one
coln, Roger Williams and Martin erty's rise for eight years, in defer- els of schoolchildren, who sent in VA 22301.
should conclude that terrorism can be completely defeated.
,•
Luther King, Jr. The hope was that ence to the millionaires who didn't money after Congress refused to
More laws, expanded federal powers and public-relations gimmicks won't
Send comments to the author In
the House would affirm the measure want this freedom-for-huddled-mass- fund it.
make anyone more safe.
care of this newspaper or send her
in time for tbe 75th anniversary of es idea carried too far.) But historic
We must distinguish between domestic and international terrorism . If a
Thus far, the campaign has raised e-maU at saraeumaol.com.
women's suffrage. last Aug. 26. But merit? 1l1e women who won the right about $45,000ofthe needed $75,000,
foreign nation trains and encourages thugs to blow up U.S. buildings, then
swift military reprisals are called for. If the terrorists come from our shores,'
our justice system offers sufficient legal means to apprehend and puni sh
them.
Clearly, the human spirit is triumphing over the Olympic Park explosion.
Likewise, the spirit of democracy can triumph over terrorism . Protecting our
freedoms in the wake of evil is the best way to defeat our foes.
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
"I haven't hit enough home runs latest setback for their team. Now the the wrong message to those who look
Gannett News Service
in my career to suggest that I use word "cheaters" would become one up to them.
WASHINGlUN - It was his one," Sabo said of the cork-filled bats more burden the team would have to
In today's pop culture, athletes
impish grin - an annoying smile and that some ballplayers believe make a bear. But instead they laughed. Not,
like Sabo have a lot of innuence ore
devilish twinkle in his eyes - that
I suspect, a nervous, embarrassed youngsters. Often more than parents:
caused the churning in my g"t.
laughter but the side-splitting kind.lt lbey are product endorsers, spokesWhen Chris Sabo, a baseball playseems that only the team's general men and social activists whose per~
er with the Cincinnati Reds, got batted ball go farther.
manager found little humor in what suasive powers exlend to many.
caught using an illegal bat last week
Maybe he didn't intentionally use happened.
·
adults. lbey use a celebrity gained on
he showed no remorse . Instead of a the illegal bat. Maybe what he says
"I don't think it's funny," Jim
look of embarrassment as an umpire ·is true: that he found it in a stadium ·Bowden said tartly. "It's not a funny the playing fields of our dreams to
influence what he think about real-·
threw him out of the game, he flashed supply room and added it to his col· matter," he told reporters.
life
issues. For using an illegal bat,.
ii childish grin. But far from a way- lection without knowing that it had
And that's the point. CheatingSabo
was given a seven-day suspen- .
ward schoolboy, Sabo is a profes- been altered by someone. We cer- intentional or otherwise - should
sional athlete whose gritty play afield tainly should give him the benefit of never be treated lightly. For Sabo to sion without pay, an action the play- .
ers' union says it will appeal.
.
has made him a hero and role model the doubt.
walk off the field grinning and his
·
But
for
that
shameless
grin
he
·
for many impre'ssionable youngsters.
1be issue for me is not his guilt or teammates to yuck it up over his evicHe is by the standards of base- innocence. It's his impish grb - and tion from the game, is just the latest sported as he made his way off the :
ball's glory days a player of average his apparent lack of shame - that proof of this society's growing loss of field that day, he deserves the scorn ;
of all those who think cheating is no ;
ability who has risen to stardom in a bothers me.
shame. When role models delight
'
game whose quality has been depreChris Sabo plays for one of the publicly in their misdeeds they send laughing matter.
ciated by the growing number of most troubled teams in Major League
teams and an appalling shortage of Baseball. Attendance is low. Its
0
truly exceptionally talented players. finances are shaky. Marge Schott, the
But by the standards of today's game, team's owner, has been suspended for
0
Sabo is a star - one who got caught her insensitive talk about everybody
By Ttie AaaociltH Press
cheating.
from Adolf Hitler to John McSherry,
Today is Tuesday, August 6, the 219th day of 1996. There are 147 days
• I I II
Sabo says it was all a big mistake. the umpire who dropped dead of a
left in the year.
The illegal bat he used belonged to heart attack in Cincinnati's Riverfront
someone else. He dido 't know it was stadium on the first day of this base- Today'sHighli&amp;htinHistory:
On August 6, 1945, during World W11II, the United States dropped an
filled with cork until it ruprured in his ball season.
atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killins an estimated 140,000 people in
hands as he hit a pitch and its forGive,n all of this, when the illegal
'
bidden contents spilled onto the bat he was wieldin&amp; split open you the first use of a nuclear weapon in warfare.
On
this
date:
·
ground. He says be 's innocent of any would think Sabo and his teammates
In 1787, the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia began to debal,e '
wrongdoing.
would le! l0011e a mishty groan at this
the articles contained in a draft of the U.S. Constitution.
·!

.2.

1-.---

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

I had a nightmare once. I was
standing at the altar in full tuxedo
mode , watching my bride · come
marching up the aisle. Who was this
woman? Had I proposed to her?
Shouldn't someone have informed
me that I was to become a groom?
Shouldn't I have been involved in the
experience somehow?
The sudden fame of Matthew
McConaughey reminds me of that
dream . I don't have anything against
the guy, but is there any way we can
stop him from becoming famous? He
was turned into a poster boy before
we had a poster. We were asked to put
him in our sandwich, before we'd
even bought the bread. His name has
been placed firmly on our lips, and
we don 't even know how to pronounce it.
I'm willing to admit another matinee idol into my overstuffed pan-

• IColurnbusl94" l

94°

,.

•

·.
·'
•

Grey 0. Robinson

·.

Silo we"' T·stonns Rain

1

Via Auoci.!ted P~IS Graphic$Net

'

Ice

Sunny Pl. Clgudy Cloudy

.Hazy days ar~ expected
:to produce foggy nights
•~y The Associated Press
Hazy. hot and humid conditions
will continue in Ohio for at least the
~neKI few days. Southerly winds associated with a high pressure System are
,pumping warm and moist air from
.the Gulf of Mexico into the Great
Lakes region.
: Because ofthe moisture in the air,
,fog is possible in Ohio the neKt cou;pie of nights, forecasters said.
, Lows tonight will be in the upper
"60s to low 70s. H; ghs on Wednesday
,)"ill rilnge from the upper 80s to the
low 90s.
~ The record-high temperature for
.)his date at the Columbus weather
station was 102 degrees in 1918
-while the record low was 48 in 1948.
.Sunset tonight will be at 8:40 p.m.
;and sunrise Wednesday at 6:36a.m.

A

The following land transfers were
recently in the office of
Meigs County Re~order Emmog,ene
.Hamilton:
Deed, Louise and Roger D. Brown
to GeJ'ald and Brenda H. Moore, Salisbury, 85.48 acres;
·
1· Deed, Ellswortlo J. and Ann F.
Holden to Lisshire Ltd., Columbia
~&lt;COrded

·-p\Viftt't;

ll ~:,l:; ;, :1 . :.,..c.1! ~ '-' ''' .~j ,,

.. :,,

· Deed, Kenneth E.f.lewland to Roy
F. and Pat:line ~ - Plll'ker, Chester pareel ;
Deed, Arthur CldTollto Jack CarToll, Olive;
· Deed, Stephen R. Tatterson to Victor C. Young IV, Pomeroy parce!;
Deed, William Morris, deceased,
10 John and Shirley Stoban, Racine
parcel; · ·
.
.. Deed, Richard Sargent to Guy R.
·and Gail H. Sargent, Bedford parcel;
: Deed, Roberta M. and J.B .
'O'Brien to Harold R. and Dolores F.
Hysell, Pomeroy pRrcel;
• Deed, Wenda Williamson to
'Suzanne M. Greif, Orange parcels;
" Deed, Farmtrs Bank and Savings
Company to Donald E. and Peggy S.
Casto, Pomeroy;
·Deed, Erma Cleland to Jerry R.
Cleland, Chester parcels;
Deed, · Q.orge and Ramona
:Yonker to Olga A. Yonker, Cheste•·:
Right of way, James R. and Connie J. Quivey to Buckeye Rural Eloctric Cooperative, Bedford:
• Rigltt of way, Charles and Paulc,tc
F. Cuildifflo BREC, Bedford;
Right of way, Paul and Maudic
Spry to Btu:C, Columbia;
Right of way, Belva Mill er I~&gt;
BREC, Rutland;
Right of way. raula Ahcl and
Williiiiii Rife to BREC, Salem;
Right of way, Paul and Alice
Robinson to BREC, kutland ;

Sara Eckel

Laughing at misdeed sends wrong message

Berry's World

The 'Daily Sentinel

DeWayne Wickham

(USPS 21J.MJ
1

Publ ished every a(lem~ n, Monday throuj h
· Friday, Ill Coun SL, l'omoroy, Ohio, by !he
Ohio Valley Publiahlna COf!IPIIyiQaM&lt;II Co..
l'oltlcf'ly, Ohio 4!769, Ph. 992-2156. Second
• &lt;losJ J&gt;OOIIC" pold .. ~- Ohio.
Mn.liltr. The ANOcilled ~AA. and 1he Ohio

....

~POSTMASTII&gt;
-t actcnsa ootreetion~
The Doily • •

10

O..n So .. Pdmeroy.

Ohio45769.
SIJIISCRII'TION IATI!S

., c.m.r .. -

-·

s~·::·:·::::::::::: :::::::: : . . ::.~;E~
\

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Doily .........................................,_ ....... l5Ce~
s..bocrit.en ... deli nne oo poy 111e &lt;Mi&lt;t .,.,
ranll ht ldvMCC direciiO ne Oiily SCiiti~el
oa a tine. aix « 12 mondt-L ()edit wiD be

·-----

'

No ••bt&lt;ripdoo by moil -"""' I!' .,...
- - - - llt¥1111oble.

MAIL SIIISCRIPTIONI

ll _

t-Moip~

_...... ,_ .........,_.......... _....,_._.$27.30

~_
,_._,,__ ,,••.--·-·-----··53.82
n - ........... .......................:......suu-'6

-~ ..... c.-,

~ =:::::::::~::::::::::::::::::.-~::::::fi::~-

52 Wootis........:..............:..J...:.......sl09.n

II

'

Grey 0 . Robinson , 83, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died Monday, Aug. S, 1996
at his nephew's residence.
Born April II, 1913 in Gallipolis Ferry, son of the late George H. and Mary
C. Hughes Robinson, he was a former employee of the West Virginia State
Department of Highways, and a farmer.
He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and a member of the College
Hill Church of Gallipolis Ferry.
'
·
' He was al so preceded in death by two infant sisters; three brothers, John,
Ashabell and James Robinson ; and a half-brother. Marvin Hughes.
Surviving are a sister, Dorothy Me31lows of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; a brother, Leon Robinson of Southside, W.Va.; and several nephews and nieces.
Service will be held II a.m. Thursday in the Concord Baptist Church,
Henderson , W.Va., with the Rev. Fred McCallister and the Rev. William "Bud"
Hatfield officiating. Burial will be in the Concord Cemetery, Henderson.
Friends may call at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, from
6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
The body will be taken to the church one hour prior to the service.

.Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .Fair. Patchy fog far
south and southeast. Lows from the
upper 60s to the lower 70s.
Wednesday .. .Partly cloudy. A ·
chance of afternoon thunderstorms ... Mainly north. Continued.
hazy, hot and humid with highs from
the upper 80s northeast to 90 to 95
west.
Extended forecast:
Thursday ... A chance of thunderstorms. Lows ill the lower 70s. Highs ·
in the upper 80s to lower 90s.
.
Friday...Scattered thunderstorms.
Lows from the upper 60s to lower
70s. Highs 85 to 90.
Saturday... A chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the mid to upper 60s.
Highs in the mid to upper 80s.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Jury recommends death
for killer of Polly Klaas

Mason County,Fair schedule
.

'fuesday, Aug. 6

5 p.m. - Wahama HJgh School Band Concert
·
Classic tractor p!JlJ
.
· 6 p.m. - Junior ~et an!f Open SWine Show
6:30 p.m. - Fair Queen 'C ontest
·
Farm tractor pull
9 p.m. - Biyan White

Wednesday, Aug. 7 ·

10 a.m. - Open sheep sbow
11 a.m. - Pte eating corltest
1 p.m. - Commerdal feeder calf show
2 p.m. • "Harvest•
3 p.m. · Connie Smith
4:30 p.m. · HlllliUUl Band concert
5 p.m. - Up Sync contest
Market Lamb show

BEF·closes 14 survi~ing
Cantina del Rio outlets
COLUMBUS (AI&gt;) - Bob Evans
Farms Inc. has decided to close its 14
remaining Cantina del Rict restaurants, less than five years after introducing the·Mexican food chain.
The Colull)bus-based company
announced on Monday that seven of
the locations are being leased to
Applebee's International for conversion to Rio Bravo restaurants, while
the other seven are available for sale
or lease. ·
While the company doesn ' t
release financial results that pinpoint
Cantina's sales or losses, the closings
are believed to be the result of nagging sales.
Bob Evans combines the Cantina
financial results with th9se of Bob
Evans Restaurants, located throughout the Midwest and East, and Owens

Family Res.taurants, located in Texas.
The combined restaurant group
had sales of $590 million in the year
.ending April 26, up from $550 million a year earlier.
Bob ·Evans spokeswoman Mary
Cusick said Cantina del Rio "really
didn' t jx:rform to our expectations,
and what closing them is going to
enable us to do is to focus on our
family 1restaurants."
·
The'tlosed Cantina restaurant&lt; are
in Columbus (two), Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Centerville, Mayfield
Heights and North Canton, Ohio;
Indianapolis and Merrillville, Ind.;
Livonia, Mich .; Lisle. Ill.; Bloomington, Minn .; Oakton, Vu., and
Rochester. Minn.
The closings leave Bob Evans
with 376 restaurants in 18 states.

-Local News in Brief; L
....._,

change the sentence to life without
By MICHELLE LOCKE
parole. However, California judges
Associated Press Writer
SAN JOSE, Calif. - Polly Klaas' almost always uphold the jury's recfather smiled broadly, pumped his fi st ommendation.
A Middleport man arrested apdjailed Friday on suspicion of rape w ~s
and let out a triumphant "Yes!" as a
Formal sentencing was set For
released
Mond.ay after the supposed victim recanted her story.
jury recommended death for the man Sept. 26 . An appeal is automatic and
Released
was Dewayne Fisher, who was arrested by Meigs County
who snatched 'he 12-year-old girl prosecutors said the process could
Sheriffs
Department
deputies on a·warrant charging rape -: a charge that
from a slumber party and strangled take several years.
was
dismissed
after
the
complainant said she consented to sc K. said Meigs
her.
Davi s, 42, strangled Polly with a
County
Prosecuting
Attorney
John R. Lentcs.
,
The celebration was short-lived. piece of cloth after abducting her at
"She
made
charges
against
an
innocent
man,"
he
said
.
For Polly's family, Richard Allen knife-point from her Petaluma bed- .
Lentes
said
the
woman
would
be
charged
with
fabricatin
g the report .
Davis' sentence Monday did little to room as she played with two other
ease the heartache of the 1993 mur- girls during a slumber party on Oct.
der, said Marc Klaas, the girl's father. 1; 1993. Polly's mother was asleep at
A Bashan woman an&lt;f'child escaped injury when their mobile home
"None of this realfy changes any- the time.
was gutted by a structure f1re early Monday afternoon, according to oflithing for us," Klaas said. "This does
Two months later, after being
ciars with the Chester Volunteer Fire Department.
Deed, Howard 0 ., Ella Francis, not bring Polly back into our lives. It picked up on a drunken driving
The fire destroyed much of the interior of the Serena Robinson resi John R. and Crystal Lynn Jeffers to ooly gets one monster off of the charge and parole violations, Davis •
dence on Bashan Road. leaving one room with serious smoke and water
John R. and Crystal Lynn 1effers, streets."
confessed when he learned that police
damage . The trailer was estimated to be a total loss, according to fire
Rutland parcels;
Added Joe Klaas, Polly 's grand- had di scovered his palm print in Poldepartment officials.
Deed, Gorden and Jill L. Holterto father: "The pain will always be ly's bedroom. Davis, who said he
Emergency crews responding to the scene included the Bashan, Racine
Lyle J. Swain, Orange;
the,re. We've j&gt;een going to hell with killed the girl 10 try to avoid going
and Chester volunteer lire departments. and Syracuse Squad 33 of the
Deed, Jeanette Baldwin to Diana Davis. He can go the rest of the way back to prison, led investigators to the
Meigs Coumy Emergency Medical Services.
'
.
L. Bauserman and James T. Them, alone ."
body.
Oflicials indicated in preliminary findings thal'lhc lire \11as likely caused
Pom~roy parcel;
.. , .
·.
The crime shocked Petaluma. just
Davis. ?'~~ring a black shirt ,
by an electrical problem. The fire remains under investigati on.
. ' . Deed, Tho"las M: and Doj oihy L. smirked as the jury was polled to con - nor:th of San Francisco, and bmught
McClure to Brian E. and Rebecca R. finn ·the sentence. He sppke quietly sympathy and support from people
- Durh;tm, Sutton;
,.
to his lawyer. afterwa,~ did not across the country, including movie
Deed, Robert H. Dorn to Carol L. repeat the obscene gesture he made .stars and politicians.
Dom, Columbia parcels;·
•
in front of a TV camera when he was
The arrest of Davis, who had spent
Deed, Lenora V. Hall to W. Hoyt convicted June 18.
most of his'life behind bars and was
Hall, .Lebanon;
Jurors had found "special cir- paroled just three months before the
CLEVELAND (AP) - If a refer- posal.
Deed, Viola V. and Eugene Long cumstanc~s " of kidnapp,ing, burglary, murder, also fueled the drive for Cal·
Lcrtzman said he had talked with
to Ricky and Argyle Deeter, 4banon robbery and attempted lewd act on a ifornia's "three-strikes" law, which endum to bring casino gambling to
Spit zer's group several times and
Ohio
makes
the
statewide
ballot
Nov.
child when they convicted Davis. can lead to longer sentences for
parcel :
5, it will bC opposed by the backer of there was one sticking point : Spitzer
Deed, Sara E. Roush to Randall T. That left two possible sentences, repeat offenders.
backers would not support a casino at
and Melissa Roush , Sutton ;
death or life in prison without parole.
During the penalty phase of the a rival casino plan.
the Fairport Harbor location owned
That
could
hun
the
odds
of
Alan
Deed, M~!J!g!o_n ln~orp. to ,Water- 1l1e panel deliberated about 20 hours trial, prosecutors went over Davis '
long clri(ninal history and called Pol - Spitzer gaining voter approval for up by Lertzman 's Buckeye Extravaganloo Coal Co. lilc., Sahsbury;,,, .
before recommending death .
7.a Inc., hascd in Pepper Pike. a
Deed, Lyne B..ard Linda S. JohnThe verdict will be reviewed by ly's murder an "affront to humanity " to eight riverboat casinos. His 1990
Cleveland
suburb.
son to Waterloo Coal Co. Inc., Rut- Superior Court Judge Thomas Hast- that demanded a punishment of CKC· proposal was opposed by 62 percent
Lcrt7.man
said he would ask Fraof Ohioans voting on the issue.
land;
ings of Santa Clara Cour.ty. who can cut ion.
Spitzer personally delivered his ternal and veterans' groups that
Right of way.~harles P. and Ruth
577,666
petition signatures to state helped his petition dri ve to oppose
A. Rifnc to Columbus Sourjlern
officials Monday. He refused to get lhc Spil zer-hackc~ referendum .
Power, Salisbury ;
·
drawn into an early debate with Rick
Right of way. Dolores and Jack B.
Lcrtzman, who put his own cas ino
Freeman to CSP, Salisbury ;
Plains VFW hall, .8 p.m. Saturday,
Reunion set
plans on hold.
Deed, Peter W. and Doris B.
The annual reunion ofi~e descen- J.B. Wilson calling.
Spitzer was unaware when he was
Elickcir to Rober1 F. Vas 011 Jr.• dants of Martin and Eiliina Roush
iContlnued lrom Plge 1)
delivering
the petitions that Lcrtzman
Lebanon;
Sayre will bc , hcld· S~nday, ,Aug . 18, Trustees to meet
had decided to hold niT filing his peti- · Long 's dcmh remains unknown,
De~d . Robert F. Vason Jr. .to C.
Salisbury Township Trustees will tions until next year. Later, he said
pcndmg an autopsy by the Franklin
at Star Mill Park.in Racine.
1'Ye and Lori A. Brinager. Lebanon.
meet Thursday, 6 p.m., at the town- through a spokesman that he would- County coroner's office .
ship hall, Rock Springs.
The crash remains under invesCookout planned
n't comment on Lcrt7.man 's decision
tigation
and trooperM said no
· Burfingham Modern Woodmen
or his criticism of the Spitt.cr procharges have been filed yet.
will host a cookout, Saturd@y, .7 p.m. Meeting, set
Veterai'IS Memorial
Rutland Township Trustees will
. The accident markJ the founh
at the hall. Those attendmg are to take
Monday admissions - 'none.
lraflic fatality of the year in Gulli a
a covered dish. There will be a fam- meet Thursday, 6:15 p.m. at the RutMonday discharges - none.
IContinued from Page 1)
County.
ily door prize drawing. Members arc land Fire Station.
Holur Medleal Center
$4,159.03; recreation, $4,960.15; perwelcome to take guests.
Dillcharges Aug. 5 - Aoyd Neal ,
Meeting changed
.
missive tax, $4,205 .44; law cnfor"· •
June Hudson, Kay William son, Mol- DAV to meet
The meeting date for Racine Vii- ment, $2,112.91; COPS FAST grant.
SPRIIIG VAILEV ClrH f~ A
lie Logan, Fran~ Johnson, Marion
Disabled American , Veterans lage Council has been rescheduled $764.69; FEMA, $30,466; down •46·4524
.
Arose, Wiiliam Speers.
Chapter 53 will have a covered dish from Aug. 12 to Aug. 19 at 7 p.m. at town revitali7.ation, $89,500; total of
.,..
(Published with permission)
all fund s, $451,808.03.
picnic Aug. 12, 6 p.m at the new ~
Star M1ll Park.
In other business:
chapter home, the old Kings Arms on
• Vaughan said those with unpaid
State Route 7.
·
Te m to meet
outhern Golf Team will meet at parking tickets ;will be cited to ~liy ­
.
the Pomeroy Golf Club at 5:05 p.m or's court next week unless the 11ck·
Dance set
The Happy Hollow Boys will Wednesday.
ets are paid.
.
Am Ele Power ...................42 ~
• Accepted the mayor's report of
play for a square dance at tbe Tuppers
Akzo ................... ............... 5~112
$3,588 and approved the minutes of
Aahlanc! Oil ..............,.....,..37 518
the July 10 meeting.
AT&amp;T ....................,............ 53 718
• Approved a resolution granting
Bank One ..........................35 314
pay raises 10 part-time employees
Bob Evan• ........................ 14 1/4
Borg-Warnar ..................... 36 1/4
depending on their years' service to
SYRACUSE
Units of the Meigs C!Junty Emer-,
C111mplon Ind.........................11
v
6:34 a.m., volunteer fire depart- the village.
gency Medical Service recorded eight
Charming Shop ..................&amp; 1/4
. Present were Vaughan, Hysell,
ment
and
squad
to
Minersville
Hill
,
calls
for
w.sistance
Monday.
Units
City Holding ..................22 15116
Anderson and council members
electrical fire , no injuries;
responding included: ·
Fadarll Mogul .........................17
9:41 a.m., State Route 124 . Musser, Wright, Geri Walton, Scott
Oanl'llllt .............................116 318
MIDDLEPORT
Dillon, Bill Young and Larry
Goodyear ..........................44 718
3:59 p.m., Shon Fourth Avenue, Charles Curfman, HMC.
K-mart ............................... 10 ~4
Wehrung .
~
Lillian Demosky, Holzer Medical
Landa End ......................, ..2l ll4
., ,
Umltecl ...........................-:...11718 . Center; ·
7:06 p.m., Soi!th Fourth Avenue,
Ohio Vahy llr1k ....... ~•• ;........ .31~
loving host tamtlllli
William Fultz, Veterons Memorial
Oni Vatlty ....................:........, :j5
IOUght tor high IChool foreign
Paoplft Bancorp.............21 518
'
·
Hospital.
Pram Flnl .........,..................12112
POMEROY
"
,
exch111ge ·~ ll'l'lvlng In
RockWall ...........................54 318
9:24a.m., Rocksprings RehabiliAuglllt. Clll AJSE'ilt ·
Roval Dutch.'Shall .......... 150 7/i
tation
Center,
Jbhn
Ord,
VMH:
•
c
1....SIBUNG,
orlnlll'nlt It
Shoney'l ....:................':•••.; &amp; 314
II tiAIINIS. OIL
REEDSVtLLE
Star Blink ........................... 4 318
htlp;/lilsww.com'l~bnl
2 p.m., Rye Road, Andrew
195 Upper
Wenclv'a ............................191/8
and E-mili AISinfoOIIOI.com
Worthlngton ......................1.9 318
Rollins, St. Joseph's Hospital;
R·iver Rd.
Amlt1cln lntlrcullurll
II: 12 p.m., Lickskillet Ro~,
· Stock raporta ara the '10:30 .Mary Catron, treated at the ~ne.
Student
a.m. quotas proylcfecl by Adwsl
SALEM
TWP.
VFD
NOtt-ptollt
tu mmpt
of Galllpolla.
II : II p.m., Meigs Mine 31, brush
ICIUcltiOn folindlllon
fine.

Rape story recanted; man freed

Blaze levels mobile home

Rival~plan

clouds ballot
issue on casino gambling

-Meigs announcements

Gal/is County

Hospital news

Po01eroy Council

7

Stocks

Squads answer 8 calls

·warm,

-·-·-

·•

•

__ -- --·

Meigs land transfers posted

It's Round No. 2.for suffragettes _ _ __

&lt;at···

'-"_.._

Jlrian Keith Long, 18, Vinton, died Monday, Aug. 5, 1996 in the Ohio State
University Hospitals, Columbus, from oinjuries suffered in an auto accident
near Vinton. ·
·
Born April 9, 11178 in Athens, he was a junior at Buckeye Hills Career
Center and a student volunteer on the Vinton Volunteer Fire Department.
Surviving are his mother and stepfather, Phyllis and Harry Smathers of
Vinton; his father and stepmother, Terry and Kathy Pyles of McArthur; two
stepbrothers, Wayne (Cindy) Smathers of Hornell, N.Y., and Charles (Kourt·
ney) Smathers ofVinton; maternal grandparents, Emmett and Geraldine Long
of Wilkesville; step-paternal grandparents, Gus and Bernice Kaaz of
McArthur; and step-maternal grandmother, Jean Cannavo of Akron .
Services will be II a.m. Friday in the Vinton Baptist Church, with the Rev.
Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial will be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends
may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, from 2-4 and·?-9 p.m.
Thursday.

')

SOUP?

-' v....

....

I'C 8$.

:,

... AND HOW
WAS THE

.. ~-_._

-----· --..

__ __

. . ....

IND.

/an Shoa/es

Today in history

.,.

Brian Keith Long

theon, but you ean'tjust cram him in his companion could reply, "Ale.x~­
there. You' ve got to ask pennission. der, stupid." Anybody truly desmng
I have to shuffle some celebrities to know who's on first base can make
!iround to make room, maybe even a quick trip to the comedy section of
his local video store to learn the
answer: "Of coune."
This was a very sensible approach
to the granting of celebrityhood.
remove some, a Tarantino or Philbin.
Then,allofasudden,famous~
Fame is a two-way street. You pie became famous simply for being
shouldn't be adored in a vacuum.
famous. Some, like Elizabeth Taylor,
And it used to be that a person rose to higher fame by coasting on a
would become famous for actually former fame. Others, like Fabio ...
doing something. Albert Einstein well, I don't know, you tell me.
discovered relativity, for example;
, Then Andy Warhol, Timothy
Alexander the Great conquered the Leary and Newt Gingrich made selfworld; and Abbott and Costello promotion an end unto itself. I can
developed the "Who's on Fi)'st?" barely tolerate all this.
routine.
But this McConaughey guy was
Those frustrated by the inability to turned into a star just because he was
go faster than the speed oflight could about to become a star. Does that
point a finger at Albert. A Punjabi make sense? Can you now become
could ask another, ' 'Say, who was it famous because you're about to
that sacked our village again?" And become famous? Sure. his fame

By lan Shoales

--

. OHIO Weather

The Daily Sentinel This is a retransmission. The fame game
'E.stll6fisfid in 1948

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tu.aday, Auguat6, 1996
PageA2

.

•J

..

Exclllrlte

I

'

�I

"'

,.

Sports

. Tuesday, August 6, 1996

.

The Daily . Sent$~}

'

........... Gianct

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sport1 WrHar
The Orioles and Indians won't
play each other again this season thank goodness.
Some of the characteristics of
well-played baseball - good pitching, solid defense, and heads-up
baserunning - were nowhere to be
seen in Cleveland for four days as the
teams locked up in a forgettable
series.
The Orioles built a 10-run lead
Monday night, then held on for a 1310 victory over the Indians to earn a
series spilt. An ugly recap: the Indians won the series opener Il-l, Baltimore took the next game 9-4. and
Cleveland was a 14c2 winner on Sunday.
Another sellout crowd at Jacobs
Field booed the home team Monday
night after Baltimore scored four runs
in the seventh and six more in the
eighth. Those who stayed around for
the finish saw Cleveland score six
times in the ninth to make it interesting.
Or was it?
"It was boring," Cleveland shonstop Omar Vizquel said. "Who wants
to watch that? !like 3-2, 2-1 games."
Elsewhere in the American
League, it was: Milwaukee 13, Oakland 3; Boston 3, Toronto I; New
York 5, Kansas City 2; and Chicago
15. Texas 5.
The Indians scqred II runs with
two outs in he eighth inning on Sunday, and as they rallied in the ninth
on Monday, Baltimore staner David
Wells (9-10) began to get nervous.
"I was just saying. 'Come on.
guys,"' Wells said. "After watching
the game (Sunday). I didn 'tthink it
. could happen twice."
Chris Hoiles homered and drove
in four runs, and Robeno Alomar
went 4-for-6 to raise his average to
.355 for the Orioles, who tied a sellson high with 21 hits.
There were 16 home runs in the
four-game series- IOby Cleveland
and six by Baltimore. The two teams
had played eight times in 12 days.
" It was probably just bad pitching," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said. "Not bad pitchers. bad
pttching."
Well s gave up three runs on 12
hits in six innings with no walks and
two strikeouts.
Paul Assenmacher (2-2) took the
loss.
Baltimore reliever Anhur Rhodes
reinjured his ·s'\oul&lt;ifr in the game
and is li~ely to miss the rest of the
season. )
, RhOdes, who just missed 21 days
' with the injury, allowed two runs on
; two hits and retired only two bauers
. before leaving in the ninth.
" I don't know what's wrong with
; it. The doctors don't know what 's
wrong with it," Rhodes said. "I'll
: probably sit out the rest of the season
and get it better."
Rhodes was 9-1 with a 4.13 ERA
in 271AJC8!8nces. He had surgery on

i

the shoulder last season and has spent
time on the d~ list for various
injuries in each of tile last four seasons.
Brewers 13, Athletics 3
At Oakland, Calif., Mike Matheny hit a grand slam and four other
Brewers homered as Milwaukee did
its best imitation of the Athletics.
Mark McGwire and Terry Steinbach picked up on the theme for Oakland, too, McGwlre with his major
league-leading 39th homer and Steinbach l-ith his 27th. The A's lead the
majors with 183 homers and are on
pace to break the majar le!.gtie record
of240 set by the New York 'Yankees
in 1961.
Jeff Cirillo, Mare Newfield, Mark
Loretta and Jose Valentin alsa homered as the Brewers scored six times
in the second and six more in the seventh.
Brewers staner Cal Eldred (2-1)
got the win. Willie Adams (0-1) gave
up Matheny 's first career slam in the
second.
Red Sox 3, Blue,Jays I
At Boston, 11m Wakefield pitched
a six-hiner for his third complete
game and Boston scored three
unearned runs off Juan Guzman.
Wakefield (9-10) retired the first
I0 batters and had a two-hit shutout
until the seventh, when John Olerud
hit a solo hamer.
Guzman (9-7) improved his
league-leading ERA to 2.73, gelling
the loss on three unearned runs and
seven hits in seven innings.
Yankees S, Royals 2
At Kansas City, Mo., Jimmy Key
won for the seventh time in nine decisions and Derek Jeter had four hits
for New York.
Key (9-8) gave up two runs - one
earned - in six. innings. Mariano
Rivera pitched two innings and John
Welleland fini shed for his 38th save
in 41 chances .
Wade Boggs. in a 2-for-20 slump,
had a pinch-single with one out in the
seventh and the score 2-2 . Jeter singled him to third and Joe Girardi's
safety squeeze drove in Boggs with
the go-ahead run .
Hipolito Pichardo (3-4) was the
loser.
White Sox IS, Rangers S
At Arlington, Texas, Wilson
Alvarez won for the 12th time in his
last 17 starts and Robin Ventura hit a
three-run homer for Chicago, which
took three of the four-game series.
Alvarez (14-5) won his fourth
straight decision, surviving a founhinning grand slam by Kevin Elster.
The White Sox finished the season
8-4 against the Rangers.
Texas, which has lost five of its
last eight. now leads the AL West by
just one game over Seattle. The
Rangers gave up 40 runs in the fourgame set.
Norberta Manin went 3-for-4 with
his lint homer of the season for
Chicago.
Dan-en Oliver (9-5) took the loss.

--Sports briefs-: OLYMPICS
A1t.ANTA (AP) - In the first
coaft'imcd dnlg cases of the Atlanta
two women track and field
llflleiel from Bulsaria and Russia
tested pilsitive for steroids and face
possible four-year bans.
'The IOC said Bulgarian triple
jumper Iva l'rlalbheva, who finished
founh, teated. positive for metdlienone Uld wu disqualified. Russ-

o--.

ian hurdler Natalya Shelcodanova
tested positive for stanozolol.
The JOC lifted the expulsions of
five athletes and two team officials
from the fonner Soviet Union
involved in the use of the controversial dnlg bromantan, after it was ruled
there was no proof it is a stimulant
A Lithuanian cyclist and two
Lithuanian team offtcials also were
cleared.

By The Aaaoclated Preaa
If Gary Sheffield spent more time
at Coors Field, Roger Maris' home
run record might become a distant
memory.
"Play him 81 games in this ballpark, Fen way Park or Wrigley Field,
you are tallcing big numbers," Florida manager John Boles said Monday
night after Sheffield homered twice in
the Marlins' 16-9 victory at Colorado.
"He probably would be closins in on
the home run record."
Sheffield drove in four runs with
the two homers, which raised his. season total to 31 . It was his third multihomer game this season, the lOth in
his career.
" I don't have a lot to say about
what I could do here, " Sheffield said.
"I just lei my bat do the talking."
Sheffield hit a three-run homer in ·
a five-run first, then put Florida
ahead I0-8 with a solo homer in the
sixth.

against Houston on July 15.
Cardinals 8, Padres 2
Andy Benes ( 11-8) won his eighth
White doubled'three times to tie a
team record and had three RBis as the straight decision, overcoming Greg ·
Vaughn 's first NL homer.
Marlins out-hit Colorado 22-11 .
Benes. pitching on three days' rest
Mark Hutton (1 -0), obtained
Wednesday from the New York Yan- for the first time this season, becam~
kees. got his first NL win . Rockies the first St. Louis pitcher to win eig~t
starter Marvin Freeman (7-8) was straight since John Tudor won II "in
pounded for eight runs in two a row in 1985. He allowed two runs
innings.
and four hits in 6 2-3 innings.
PbWies J, Pirates 0
Danny Jackson. making his first
Cun Schilling (5-4) pitched a appearance since breaking his right
four-hitter at Veterans Stadium for his ankle last Aug . II. pitched a perfect
fU"Sl shutout since April23, 1993, and ninth.
Padres starter Bob Tewksbury (9Benito Santiago hit his career-high
7), who won seven straight with the
19th homer.
Schilling. who started the season Cardinals two years ago, gave up six
on the disabled li st after arthroscop- runs and 10 hits in four innings at
ic surgery on his right shoulder last Busch Stadium.
August, struck out a season-high 10 Cubs 7, Mets 3
Mark Grace and Sammy Sosa hit
and walked two in his seventh career
consecutive homers at Wrigley Field
shutout.
Denny Neagle (12-5) allowed all and Steve Trachsel reached I 0 wjns
three run s and nine hits in 6 J-3 for the first time in his career.
innings.

" Ken Griffey Jr., Juan Gonzalez
and a handful other flyball hitters
would have a shot at the. home run
record playing half their games here.
You can include Gary Sheffield In
that group," said Jeff Conine, who hit
his 20th homer of the season in the
first.
Not that the Rockies ' power hitters
were silent. Vinny Castilla, Ellis
Burks, Eric Young and Eric Anthony
homered for Colorado.
"The scoreboard in left kept flashing, 'It's never over at Coors Field,'
"Conine said. "We knew that and we
reacted by swinging the bats arfd not
letting up. "
In other games, Philadelphia beat
Pittsburgh 3-0, St. Louis routed San
Diego 8-2, Chicago beat New York 73 and Cincinnati beat San Francisco
4-3.
Devon White had four hits as the
Marlins scored their most runs this
season, topping the 15 they scored

Ben gals
sign top
draft pick
CINCINNATI (AP) - Willie
Anderson, the Cincinnati Bengals'
top draft pick, has ended his threeweek holdout after agreeing to a contract reportedly wonh $7.5 million.
Anderson arrived at the team 's
training camp at nearby Wilmington
College on Monday and signed the
five-year pact which the Dayton Daily News said was valued at $7.5 million.
The team also signed fourth-round
pick Jevon Langford, a defensive end
from Oklahoma State, to a three-year
deal.
It wasn't long after Anderson 's
signing that he was out on the field
practicing drills with offensive line
coach Paul Alexander. The Bengals
intend to compensate for the practice
and study lime he missed. .
"We' re going to be relentless,"
coach Dave Shula said. "'Life will
just be a blur to him."
Alexander said there will be no
free time for Anderson, an offensive
lineman from Auburn.
" It's going to be work, work,
work. And he has to be ready for it,''
Alexander said.
Anderson wasn 't surprised. His
holdout was the longest by a Bengal
first-round pick since quarterback
David Klingler in 1992. He verbally
agreed Friday to a deal with a $3.575
million signing bonus, the only guaranteed part.
"Coach Alexander is a work-aholic, so I knew I'd be in camp the
first day putting the pads _on," said
Anderson, IOth pick overall in April's
NFL draft. "When ~ came in while
I signed the contract, he was like,
'Hurry up."'
· · The delay hinged on the length of
Anderson's contract.
He_admitted the holdout probably
cost him a,chance to land the startina
right tackle job from 12-year veteran
Joe Walter at the season opener Sept
I in St Louis.
has a ton of experience, and
he's a ~ of a player," Anderson
said. "Htte I am, aroolcie. I have talent, but Joe knows the tricks of the
ttade.''

"Joe

less dancers and that he threatened to
harm her and Hernandez if she cooperated with prosecutors.

Irvin's attorney has denied his
client made any threats.
In an interview aired Monday by

t2

JO

22

23
13
12
32
19
16
20

Citadel coach suspended for
year after second DUI arrest ·

Cincinnati

1

Houston

I

0
0
0
I

Ctnlnl
0
0
0
0

LOCO
LOCO
LOCO
.SOO

17
28
31
26

I

0

.000

l7

20
32
19
60
40

Pittsburgh

1

JacksonviiJc

0

West

N.Y. Giants

I

Washington

I

Dallas
Arizona
Philadelphia

I
0

Detroit

Tamp.a Bay

0

0

I.OCO

0
0

0
0

1.000

! oco

I
0
.SOO
I
0
.SOO
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eut
L
T
Pet.
PF
0
0
I.OCO
24
0
0
I.OCO
17
I
0
.500
41

0

I
I

I
I
0
0
0

0
I
I
I

0
0
Ctntnl
0
0
0
0
0

0

10

PA
10
31
31
17
24
9

2S
13
30
24
17
6

17
38

33

PA
17

7

West
Carat ina

I

0

0

New Orleans

I

t

Atlanta
St. Louis

0
0
0

I
I
I

{)

San Frnncisco

I.OCO
.500
.000
.000
.000

0

Friday's ....utts

30
26
17
10
t7

Washington 17. Buffalo 7
Green Bay 24. New England 7
New Orleans 23, Detroit 22
Oakland 26. AlizollJ 3
Saturday's ftSUIIi
Denver 20, San Francisco 17

Pittsburgh 16, St. Louis 10
Miami 13. Tampa Bay 10
Cincinnati 28;-lndill!lapolis 2S
Carolina 30, Chicqo t2
Baltimore 17. Philadelphia 9
Houston 31 , New York Jets 13
Minnesota 23, San Diego.20. OT
Seattle 19. AIIIIIJtB 17
Monda(• result
Kansas City 32. DaiiBS 6

·.
•.

..
•.

...
.

Thunday'o Games
New York Jets ot Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 8 p.m.
Buffalo at Minaesota. 8 p.m. (TNT)
Frklly'o Gomes
Washihgtoo at Detroit. 7:30p.m.
Jacksonvitie 01 St. Louis, 8 p.m.
Satunloy'a GilDa
Bal&lt;imore 01 New Yorl&lt; Giants, t p.m. (NBC)
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
San Die&amp;o at San Francisco. 8 p.m. (FOX)
Carolina 01 Denver;&amp; p.m.
Indianapolis at Houston, 8 p.m.
New Orleans at Kansas Cily, 8 p.m.
Cin&gt;iJ!nati at Arizona. 10:30 p.m.

--

Miami at Chicago. I p.m. (NBC)
Pittsburgh Ill Gt«n Bay, 8 p.m. (TNt)
Mond.ly'oGame
New England at Dallas, 8 p.m. (ESPN)

Atlanta
Montreal
New York
Florida
Philadelphia

RACINE

Houston
·St. Louis

REACH OVER 1.8,500
HOMES -'WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

SUDdlly's G1111a

Cincinnati
Chicago
PittsburJh
San Diogo
Los Anaetes
Colorado
Son Francisco

National Leapt SIIDdlnp
Eat Dl•loloo
L
Pet.
w
42
.618
68
49
.5S5
61
. 60
.469
53
60
.464
S2
47
6S
.420
Central DIYIIIon
w
L
Pet.
S2
.536
60
S2
.S36
60
S4
.500
S4
S7
.486
S4
62
446
so
West Dt.lslon
L
Pet.
w
S4
.S26
60
S4
.SIS
sa

51
46

ss

64

Gl
7

161/2
17

22
GB

4

s 112
10

GB

I

.S09

2

.418

12

ations, overseeing the football staff.
Taaffe, 55-'41-1 with one Southern
Conference championship in nine
seasons at The Citadel, recorded a
0.()9 percent blood-alcohol level on a
breath test, according to a police
report from last month's arrest.
Someone with a blood-alcohol
level of more than 0.10 percent may
be inferred to be under the influence
under South Carolina law.
Staning tight end George Hampton said the players are shocked.
"We don' t want to lose him. He's
a great coach .and a great man, "
Hampton said. "But he's also human.
You can't fault him."
Fall drills begin next week. The
Citadel, which went 2-9 last season,
opens Sept. 7 at Miami.

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) The allorney for Citadel football
coach Charlie Taaffe says there 's
been no decision on whether the
coach might sue to get his job back.
School officials benched Taaffe
for the season on Monday because of
his second drunken-driven arrest in
three years.
Taaffe's
lawyer,
Akim
Anastopoulo, said neither he nor
Taaffe had seen anything in writing.
"Our position is Charlie wants to
coach football, he has a contract to
coach football, and that is what he
wants to do," Anastopoulo said. "We
have requested more specifics on
what The Citadel plans to do, and we
will evaluate those options at the
(pTQPCr) time."
Athletic director Walt Nadzak
said Taaffe has been suspended from
coaching indefinitely, but will teach
classes in the college's physical education department.
"Coach Taaffe will not coach the
football team this season," Nadzak
said. ·:we will evaluate things at the
appropriate time."
Nadzak, a close friend of Taaffe 's
who hired the coach almost I0 years
ago at the military college, fought
back tears as he made the announcement.
"Our coaches in all spons arc held
to a higher degree of responsibility
and a•hisher standard of behavior, "
he said. I
Taaffe Was an-ested July 27 and
charged with driving under the influence after allegedly running a red
light. He was acquitted of a DUI
charge in 1993 after he was stopped
on Interstate 26.
Assistant coach and defensive
coordinator Don Powers. a Taaffe
· assistant for eight seasons, was
named acting head coach. Nadzak
will serve as director of football oper·

New York Giants' 24, Jacksonville 17

949·3210

Dallas dropped to 1-1 in the exhibition season. Cowboys coach Barry
Switzer played down the defeat.
"The statistics mean nothing in
this ballgame," he said. "The SCI\ond
half was a bunch of players who
won't make our team and probably
won't make their team. Simple as
that. These games really mean nothing, statistically and score wise."

HORN TACKLED· Kln111 Qlty'l wide receiver, Joe Horn (11),
Ia tackled by Dall81' Jim SchWintz (52) during flrtt quartar action
of Mondity night'• exhlbHion game In Montarrey, Maxlco. The
Chiefs romped, 32-6. (AP)

1996 FOO'fBALL PREVIEW
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28TH
FEATURING

• MEIGS MAUUDERS
• SOUTHERN TORNADOES
• WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS
• EASTERN EAGLES
• OHIO UNIVERSITY
• OHIO STATE
• CLEVELAND
• CINCINNATI
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE

I •

t

MondaJ'I results

•

''

"

-••
••
••
••
TV TIMES ••
ADVERTISING IN THE

1

Philodclphia 3, Pinsburgh 0
St. Louis 8, Son Diego 2
Chicago 7. New Yorl&lt; 3
Florida 16. Colorado 9
Cincinnati 4, San Francisco 3
Only games scheduled
l'Utsday's Games
New Yorl&lt; (Ciort 10-8) at Chicago (Navarro 9 -9). 2:20p.m.
Cincinnati (Smiley 10-9) •• San f&lt;ancisco (Watson 7-9). 3:3S p.m.
Los Anaetes (Aitacio S-7) at Pittsbuf1h (Parris 0-1). 7:3S p:m.
1'1\iladdphia (R.Sprin1er J-9) at Atlanta (Wade 3-0). 7:40p.m.
San Dieao (TI.Womii6-S) 11 St. Louis (Osborne 9-7). 8:0S p.m.
· Montreit (Ptwero I t-7) at Houston (Kite 9-S), 8:0S p.m.
Florida (Burl&lt;en 6-9) at Colorado (Thompson 4-8). 9:05p.m.
Wedneld.oy'• G New York (Jones9-7) 111 Cbicoao (TeleiJIII&lt;O 4-6), 2:20p.m.
Florida (Leiter 11 ·9) Ill Colorado (Ritz 12·7). 3:05 p.m.
Cincinoali (Jarvisol--4) at San ft:111&lt;i1&lt;0 (Gardner 9-4), 3:3S p.m.
Los Anaeles (Martine• 8-S) ot PittsbtttJit (Lieber 4-4), 7:3S p.m.
Philadelphia (Munoz 0-2) Ill Atlanta (Smoltz 17-6). 7:40p.m.
San Dieco (StOIIIemyre 10-7) 01 St. Louis (Hamilton 10-6). 8:0S p.m.
Montral (M .Lciter 4-10) at Houston (Woll6-3), 8:05p.m.
Adcrlam Lcquc Standlnp
Eut Dtvlslan
GB
L
Pet.
w
44
.600
66
New York
10
S4
.S09
S6
Baltimore
IS
60
.464
S2
Toronlo
15 112
60
.4S9
Sl
Boston
2a1n
73
342
38
Detroit
CcntraiDt.lllea
Gl
L
Pet.
w
4S
.598
67
Clevehtnd
~
.SS4
s
62
Qlicoao
12
S7
.49t
Mf'wnukee
141/2
S9
.468
52
MinneiOlll
16 1/2
62
.451
Sl
KansuCity
, WtstDIGB
L
Pet.
w
~
.554
62
Texos
t
~
.54S
60
Sca11le
6 1/2
S7
.496
S6
Oakland
9 1/2
S9
.468
52
cat.ilomia
Monday's noults
Milwauee 13, Ooklllftd 3
Bootoo 3, Toronto I
. Bottimore 13, Cleveland 10
New Yorl&lt; S. Kllllll City 2
Chicqo IS. Texu S
Onty ...,... scheduled
. 1\loldly'o G Tonxllo (Hanson 10-12) II Booton
0-1), 7:05p.m.
Tew(Hillll-6) II Oeuoit (Lir16-8), 7:05p.m. ·
Chicqo (Tipuli tO-S) Ill New YOtt (ROICR 8-S). 7:35p.m.
. Boltimoro (MUIIilta 12-A) II Mi!WIIIkeo (lolcDoaald 10-S), 1:05 p.m.
Oaldarld (Woodin 6-4) 111 Kllllll City (llekhor t0-6). 8:05p.m.
MI-. (Radb 6-1 3) II Colifomia (Srn- t~). 10:05 p.m.
Cleveland (IApei t-3) 11 Sallie 0\'db lt·3), 10:05 p.m.

..

ss

'

I

.1

'

CAI.I, NOW·•••

The Light
~
Bj

Dave
Grate

of
Rlflcnl
furniture
What
makes
resisting
temptation difficult for many
people is that they don't want
to dscourage Hcompletely.
•••
Shoe department manager:
"Yes, we have a selection of
loafers. I'll see if I can get one
of them to wan
you."

an

•••

II it takes brain waves to be
legally alive, a lot of folks
should quit paying their life
insurance premiums.
• • •
Jfll be fun to watch and see
how long the meek can keep
the eaith after they Inherit "·

•••

Credit carda: buy passes.

•••

~ Advertising Deadline

&lt;Ma.!d••

'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

.000
.000
.000

1

Chicago

CREMEENS
FUNERAL
HOME 1
•

.675-1333

7
20

Baltimore

MinnesOla

One day either family may
need our help. ..and each will
receive the same thof11U9h
service.
~

446-2342

24
23

7
7

Green Bay

·Another lamlly Jives on a
close budget. Like IT1081
families they have to place a
lim" on what they spend.

PT._PLEASANT, WV

I.OCO
lOCO

.000
.000

w

One family has always lived in
luxury. Money is no object to
them.

GALLIPOLIS

66
26
17

0
0

San Diego

ATale of
1Wo Families

AREA TELEViSION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

3
9

I
I

0
0

Kansas City
Seaule
Ookland

Fort Wonh television station KXAS,
Hernandez said the death plot was
conceived when two police officers
introduced him to a man who turned
out to be a drug infonnant.

MEMORIAL WINNER • Scott WoHe of Racine, In the McDonald'IIVIrgll Hill F1rm111Priclllon Automotive If 4 cl1lmed the Earl
Hill Memorial Race Ch1mplonahlp at Skyline Speedway Friday
night, defeating Ohio Valley Champion Kenny Johnson, Mike
McDaniel, Chris Stotts, and Todd Smith.

.000
.000

o

l
l

,

MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) fans of the Vaqueros"- as the Cow- Indianapolis with three missed field
While the outcome of the American boys are universally known here.
goals. Bjom Nittmo banged home
Bowl meant little to the teams
Most of the 45,2 18 fans 1n the kicks of 48 and 50 yards, with room
involved, the full-house crowd hung sold-out stadium plainly sided with to spare. And Roman Anderson was
on every moment.
the Stiper Bowl champions. But it good from 19 and 29 yards.
After all, Monday nlght's presea- was the Chiefs. tn their preseason
"I was delighted with the perforson game between the Dallas Cow- opener, who provided the most mances of each of them, " Chiefs
boys and Kansas City Chiefs was pyrotechnics in a game both teams coach Marty Schouenheimer said,
only the second time in two years that dismissed immediately afterward.
then quickly added: "The competi the NFL had brought "futbol ameriBefore wholesale substitutions tion continues."
cana" south of the border.
began, the Chiefs gained a 13-3 lead
So, Eduardo Elizondo sprung $24 at halftime on a touchdown pass from
for two tickets in the nosebleed seats No. 2 quanerback Rich Gannon to
of Monterrey's University Stadium. running back Todd McNair, and two
In a country where the minimum field goals.
wage is about $3 a day, that's a lot of
For the game, Gannon completed
money.
an impressive I 0 of II for 143 yards.
"This is a luxury for us," Starting quarterback Steve Bono
acknowledged Elizondo, 42, a med- looked rusty during three series, finical worker, as he watched the Chiefs ishing with four completions in 10
defeat Dallas 32-6. He sat next to his auempts and one interception, by
14cyear-old daughter Karla, who had Cowboys safety Darren Woodson.
stamped a Cowboys helmet in blue
Two kickers had successful audiink on her cheek.
tions for a job vacated when the
"But this is something that rarely · Chiefs released Lin Elliou, the goat
comes here. And we've always been of last season's 10-7 playoff Joss to

Miami
Indianapolis
N.Y. leu
Buffalo
New Enatand

Denver

Ex-cop headed for prison in Irvin murder plot
DALLAS (AP) - A fonner Dallas policeman who put out a contract
on Cowboys star Michael Irvin says
he ' ll pursue a master's degree while
he spends what could be six years
behind bars.
Johnnie Hernandez, accompanied
by his auomey, Frank Perez, turned
himself in to the Lew Sterrett Justice
Center at I0 p.m. Monday. He was
wearing plain clothes and carrying a
notebook and a Bible.
After pleading guilty last week to
solicitation of capital murder and an
unrelated bribery charge, Hernandez
said he was ready to go to prison and
accept responsibility for his actions.
"I'm mentally prepared to do it,''
he said. " I'm the one who did it. I
take full responsibility for what I
did."
Hernandez, 28, was sentenced to
two six-year prison terms that he will
serve simultaneously. With good
behavior, the time could be shonened
to about two years.
Hernandez claimed he was upset
with Irvin because of alleged threats
the Dallas receiver made against his
girlfriend, Rachelle Smith, who testified against Irvin at his trial. She
told the judge that Irvin provided
drugs for several sex parties with top-

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eut
L
T
Pet.
PF
0
0
LOCO
13
t
0
.500
3S
I
0
.000
13

I'

Chiefs maul Cowboys 32-6

NalloDal FoolbiU Lape

Sheffield belts 31st homer i_n
Marlins 16-9 win over Rockies

Orioles outlast
Indians 13-10

,,

· Tuesday, August 6,1996

w

The Dally Sentinel • Pige 5

Before full house in Monterrey, Mexico

Scoreboard

Reds edge Giant~ 4·3

lett, tumble• over Baltimore'• B. J. Surhoff lfter throwing to flr1t
to complete a double play on BaHimore batblr C.l Rlpken to end
third Inning play Monday In Cleveland. The Orioles outlasted the
Indiana, 13-10. (AP)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Augut 21st
Call Dave or Bob At
992-2155 For More Information

,.,G_

w........

'

Ton&gt;nto (lkoltp 13-6) 11 Bootoa (Gordon 1-5), 7:05p.m.
Texu (Pavlik 12-S) II Detroit (&amp;.Williams l-1), 7:05p.m.
Chicqo (l'erunder lt-7) 11 New Yort (Ooodoa 10-S), 7:35p.m.
Blltimore (Ericltlon 5-10) II Milwaukee (KIIII0-5), A:OS p.m.
OoltiMd (Priolo l-4) II KwM City (Appier 9-7), I:OS p.m.
M'-eoota (Roba110114-10) II Colifonia (Jiolkif 10-Sl 10:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Henbioft 11 -7) .. ~ (~ 1-1). 10:35 p.m.

•

992-2156

lt. 124, •• t •

.

742-2211

.r

-·I

I'
I '

...•

The Dail Sentinel

Rutland Famltare

I.

•

II

�.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -,. - - - - ..-. ...
. ....-.. -. -----~~~.,....,...~~·.,...,-- .--:,··- : ..,.--~- . ~- "'- ...._,.....__ _..."""'l1,__..
..
. _ _...._,_,~~--------. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . -....III!IIIIII!J!III...IIIII!IIIIIIIII!II!!"'"''!!!IIIIIIWI!IIJI!II'!'l""!'!!!""!"!~!l!l!"''!'!!'l"!!l!!ll!'!-,~!llll!l"'I"""II'!II!III,_.!!JI!!'ll'l!,_~

.. .

II.

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

T~ay,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~

Auguat 6, 1996

..

·.=.operation Joint Endeavor
ing on the USS Guam in the Adr1atic Sea off the coast of Bosnia. This is
my fO!Jrt&amp;l overseas deployment. We
have really enjoyed reading the letters that we have received from your
readers, Ann. None of us had ever
seen anything like it. Our ship
received so much mail that hundreds
of letters were passed out throughout the ship to each department.
Eighty percent of the letters are from
people who said they wrote because
they read in your column that it was
the patriotic thing to do.
I have received letters from a college student in Sacramento, a professional woman in Lansing, Mich.,
whose letters are really funny, and
an avid skier from Vail, Colo., and I

Ann
Landers
1995, Lol: Aa&amp;des

n-s-

-~-

... c...

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I want tQ
thank you for publishing the address
last February for "Any Service
Member" serving in Bosnia in support of Operation Joint Endeavor.
The response has been overwhelmmg.
I am •a Marine Corps helicopter
pilot, 38 and single, presently serv-

have been "adopted" by a secondgrade class in Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
'There are so many letters that
responding to all of them is going to
be impossible, but I intend to write
to those with whom I feel a common
tie. Despite having lots of family
and friends to write and send treats,
it has been fun reading thr)lugh all
these letters and becoming acquainted with new people. And it's wonderful that so many folks have such
kind hearts in the right place and are
so supponive of us.
;
In short, Ann, I wanted to thank
you for printing the address in your
column and let you know it has
brought lots of smiles to our faces.
When you are at sea for weeks (or

monthS), a little mail can mue a big from "Palm oesen" . prompted me
difference. -- Major Oreg Mislick, to write. She was upset because her
USMC
husband had propositioned her
Dear Maj. Mislick: Thank you daughter (his stepdaughter) after
for a very generous letter. And now, he'd had a sligjtt stroke.
several readers have asked me to
Ann, I've been there. When my
husband
had a stroke and began to
repeat the address, so here it is
agam:
behave strangely, my neurologist
For Army, Navy, Air Force and .recognized that the sexual center
had been affected and was causing
Marine Cdfps land forces, write to:
his
uncharacteristic behavior.
Any Service Member
Of
course. such behavior should
Operation Joint Endeavor
not
be
tolerated , but it needs to be
APOAE09397
For Navy and Marine Corps per- understood. The man know s what he
is doing, but he has trouble controlsonnel aboard ship, write to:
ling himself. His wife should conAny Service Member
front him and let him know it is
Operation Joint Endeavor
inappropriate. But she will have to
APOAE09398
Dear Ann Landers: The letter wa~ch him like a hawk. He will still

'

The Dally Sentinel • ,... 7

~

r he
gets the chance. Her friends.nUd to
put him in his place if this happens,
but they should understand that be's
not himself. I put up with this for 12
years and wish "Palm Desen" lots
of luck. She will ne,ed it. -- Chicago
Reader
try to touch women w~

6

Nt;,M6 Net.&amp;

IIISILL BUILDERS, INC.

AulhoriZid AQA .Dlatrlbt.ttor
Welding Suppllea •lndutltrial
Machine ShOp
SeiYk:el• Sleet Sales &amp; Fabrication • Replllr Weklng
• Alunilnum/Stalnlees • Tool Oreulllfl• Omamentlll
Stepa-Staira, Aallngs, Pallo Fumitura, Arepllcl
ltemt1, Planter hange,., Trwlllet &amp; lo4s of other atullll

,.,w Homes • Vlnyr Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions' • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

"No Job Too LMfle or Too Small"

(No Sunda) Calls)

.. ,

---tCommunity calendar-The Community Calendar is
published as a free servlc:e to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space pennitS
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
TUESDAY
CHESTER -- Chester Township
Trustees, regular meeting, Tuesday.
township hall. 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT -- Middlepon
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, 7:30
Thursday
·
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.

School. All athletes. parents invited.
Cross Country open to all Meigs
Local girls and boys, grades 7
through 12 . Questions contact
Kennedy at 992-7552.
CHESTER -- Chester Courthouse
Restoration Committee, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. to plan future events.
Mugs ordered, now available.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Bloodmobile at
Senior Citizens Center, I to 6 p.m.
Wednesday. Donors neejled, particularly those with A negative and positive and B positive.

POMEROY -- Chester Garden
POMEROY -- Eagles Auxiliary Club, family picnic, 6:30 p.m
2171 , Tuesday, potluck dinner at 7 Wednesday. Dorothy Karr residence,
p.m., meeting at 7:30p.m.
State Route 7. Members to take articles for fund-raising auction.

EASY
MATCH MAKING
IS IIADY
NO Will

Pains VFW, Post 90S3, regular meting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.; rPfreshments at 6:30p.m.

'•
f~

The Big Bend Cloggers will perform Satur·
day at the Ohio State Fair. The group will per·
form twice at the Meigs Fair, Aug. 15 and 17, at
1 p.m. on the hill stage. They will also be clogging at the Sternwheel Festlvat In PO{I'Ieroy at
6:30 p.m., Oct. 4. The Christmas program ..._
son for the group starts on Nov. 26 and enc1a
Dar.. 18, according to VIvian May, director. The
young adults In the group pictured here are
front, Lesfle Thomas, and back, right to left,

Jackie Scarberry, Danlefle Hackn4, Michelle
McCoy, Donnie May, Tammy WoHe, and Mella·
sa Bre-r. Others In the group are Rae Gwlazdowaky, Shirley Simmons, Kellllt Nease, VIvian
May, Pooch Brewer, Mary Hoffman, Carcil Scat·
berry, Dena Dugan, Non! Hoffman, Kylen King,
Sheena Morris, Shawna Manley, Amanda Hoyt,
Erica Haning, Terri Carsey, Linda Jones, Max·
Ina Little, ·Christl Collina and Sheila Curtis. •

Public Notice

CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge
453, F&amp;AM, Chester, 8 p.m. Thursday.

Your

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Pauline Kennedy has returned
: home following one of those "sentimental journeys."
.. Pauline was in St. Lewis, Mo.,
: .where she attended the high school
graduation of her granddaughter,
.· ~tie Loftis.
Katie is the daughter of Barbara
Kennedy Loftis and the late Ivan
· boftis. James Spencer is her greatgrandfather, by the way.
She graduated from Francis How: ell High School with honors. Her
" awards included accomplishments in
·• ~olastic achievement, a college
preparatory certificate, Golden Helmet awards and Girl Scout Silver and
: 'Qold awards which entitle her to a
v• $5~00 scholarship for four years at
·. J.:indenwood College. Katie is listed
~ hi "Who's Who in America" and is a
member of the First Christian Church
in Missouri.
This month Katie will start stud; i~s 11 the University of Missouri ,
' when: she will major in biology with
alsoal of eventually becoming a veten narian

•

The Meigs County Fair will open
"' flir its first full day of activities on
-!Jonday. I hope you got registened in
· ClJc the competition okay.
;-; They tell me you•may have a lit'• tre difficulty in "finding" the Rock
Springs Fajrgrounds what with all the
n.\ld i:hailses that have taken place in
~. 'tliat .-. Onu you know the ropes,
• ~C41 should be okaY,. It's that first b;ip

-~ ~ t1111 P.tAY ·se~eha".

·,...j,M
•TI;M.,.
County Diabetes Sup0roup will be nieeting next

" Tllesdly ovepins. Aus. 13, so you

.: .Uy have to miss the county fair that
C"ettifll.
· However, !be meeting will 'offer
scxne good infontUIIiaa on diet management for diOIC ~~ from the
: disease. VUJlllia ~k, R.D., of

the St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, will explain how a new system
of counting carbohydrates can help
dtabetes victims in g~tting their sugar under control. She will also answer
any questions those attending have
about dietary problems.
Tuesday evening's session will be
at 7 p.m. in the cafeteria of Veterans
· Memorial Hospital and is open not
only to residents with diabetes but to
their relatives and friends.
The Rutland Fire Depanment and
its Auxiliary is planning a big publ ic
splash Jn Saturday, Aug. 31 , a couple of days before Lahor Day.
The activity will be a fish fry
going from 12 noon to 9:30 p.m.
Now that's a long.fish fry but the two
groups are going to see that you're
entenained. There will be singers,
dancers and bands on hand and
among these will be Jane Wise, the
Freewill Baptist Church Choir, the
Big Bend Cloggcrs, Henry and Hes·
ter Eblin, John Newell's gospel
group, 1he Dazzling Dolls, David
Stiffler, and the Renegades and
there'll probably be more addC!f as
well as other features as the event
. draws closer.
Besides entertainment at the event
to be held at the firemen 's park, there
will be a craft show and sale and bingo will be a dive..Sion. Those wishing to have craft tables during the day
may contact Marie Birchfield at 7422178 or Kim Willford at 742-2i03.

' to
The City of Nelsonville is going
do something about pollution--noise
pollution from loud music, that is.
The poli~ chief there has ordened an
end to lm.id music coming from a party, car or any other source . Offenders
will be cited to mayor's court. And I
thought loud was a sign of the times
or that the listeners were losing their
hearing. Do keep smiling.

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.
Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home ownerli have
fewer and less costiy iosses than
other age groups. So It's only fair
to charge you less lor your
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us and save even more
with our special mutti-pollcy
discounts.

OGAN~

NER~

Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687
Auto-Ownen l111umnce
Ute Horne Car Business

PUBUC NOTICE
The
following
application• and/or v~rlllad
complelnta were received
and )ha following draft,
propoaad, or final actlona
were laauad, by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (OEPA) L.at Weak.
"ACTIONS" Include the
edoptlon, modlflcetlon, or
revocation of ordara (other
han amtl'llancy ordera); the
laauanca,
denial,
r.1odlflcatlon or revocaUon
ofllcenaaa, permlta, leaHI,
v~rlancll, or cartlllcataa;
end the approval or
dloopproval of plana and
apactflcatlona. • Draft
Action•• are written
ahtemanta of the Director
of
Environmental
rotectlon'a (Diractor'a)
ntant with raapaot to the
laauanca, cfanlaJ; ·ate. of •
pemilt, ·Ucanaa, .,Wr, 118.
lntaraatad paraona ·. may
aubmlt written eomfMIIh or
raquaat 1 public meeting
rag1rdlng dreft ectlona.
commanta or public
m11tlng raquaatio muet be
aubmltted within 30 daya of
notice of the drelt aotlon.
"Propoald Acllona• are
written atetamanh of the
director'• Intent with
raapect tci ihe laauanca,
denial, modlflcttlon,
1-"ocatlon, or rantWal of a
parmlt, llcanH, or vartenca.
Written comment• 1nd
raquaeta lor a public
meeting regarding I'
propoaed action may be
aubmlttad within 30 daya of
notice of the propoaed
ectlon. An ldludlcatlon
haartng mey be held on 1
propOold action Ha helrlng
requaot or obJection Ia
racalvld by the OEPA within
30 daya of leauanca of the
propoaad action. Written
commanta, raquaata for
public mutinga, end
adJudication hearing
requaata muat be aant, to:
Hearing Clark; , Ohio
Envlronmen1411 Prt~tactlon
Agency, P.O . .loll t04t,
Columbua, Ohio 43211-1041
{Talaphona: lt...,.._~tll).
"Final 4ctlolla: 'era ,tCtioM
of the director whloh lfl
~ upon laauanea or •
alated allactlva dtta.
Purauent to Ohio Ravlald
Coda Section 3741.04, a'
final lotion may be
appuled
to
the
anvlront..ntal boartl of
revllw (EIII) by 1 ,.,.on
who w11 1 peny to 1
proceeding before the
dlractcK by filing 1111 IIIPIII

r.

011005

Thia final action not
preceded by propoaad
IICIIon and Ia appealable to
EBR. Renewal Cartlllcata.

(I) I; tTC

Public Notice
Sherlff'a Sale of R•l EtThe S1IM of Ohio, Mllga
County
Common PIMtaurt
Natlonlll City Mortgaga
Company, Plalnllff
,.,
Raybon R. Wal*a, Jr.
Executor oldie Et- of
Rlybon fl Wlllaee, lkl
Raybon R. Wal*a, Sr., at
al., Dlfandlm.
No. 15 CY 107
In pUFiutnCI of tn Order
of 8111 from Hid Coun.to.
me dlrectld, In lhl eboYI'nllllld county, on tile 5111
day of September, 111116, 11
10:00 o'clook e.m., the
fqllpwlng d11crlbed real
elt~tif . eltulititt !n the
Town•lriP "Of Sll!lbury,
County of Malga, and 81111
of Ohio, daacrlbad 11

c..-

followa: ·

Baing 86 f/2 rode - • of
,the 1 outhwalt corner of
Ft'ICtlon 31; IIIIIICll nortll86
112 rocla; thanca ••t 54
rodl; thence aouth 42 112
rodli theiiCI - • 8 rocll;
thence north 14 rode;

t~t~noe.-t20rodl· llld18

without-~ to iha

au"-.
It Ia the lntantlon 01 th.
former ar•ntor herein io
convey to the gnniM, 1.52
acrH, a11ceptjng 1111 coal
and the right to mine the

.
=

11 aqlciiO S.D. Horton
1nc1 racorcllclln Vol- 54

813, of the Daad
• of ......., courd
0hlo.
-...
.....

followa• ~ngllbout..

1/2 rodl 111\, of thl
aouthwiet qorner of
Frectlon No. 31; thence
nortll 114 fell lq the .of ~Oicl No. T 71; thanol
lOUth 11'30' 1111117 flat to
a point In the 011111r of Hid

\

•

•

.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

H&amp;H

GUYSill

Gutters

SAWMILL

Downlpoutl
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2188

,,.,JIW
.

~1W.TFN

know??

1-900-255·0500
Ext 5266

What-nota

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Vrs.
Serv·U 619 645-8434
Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
Common ,.._ Court,
1i111111 County, Olllo
· , C.. lfun!Mr: IICV-4J74
lltf,.tlclalllortgagt Co. of
Ohio, ,.,
PW'ntiH,
Charlie H. lllrtall, 1111,
Dlifwndanta.

In purauetiCI of M1 Orellr
of 8111 dlracted to me from
aald court, In the above
antltlacl action, I will on.r
far 1111 11 publlo auction at
the front lhpe of thllttalgl
County Courthoun,
Pomeroy, Ohio on Frldly,
lleptenJbar 8, 11111, It ~0:00
a.m.thltollowlngdalorlbad
1'1111Situate In Cheater
Townahlp, Melga County,
..... of Olllo and baing In
llctlon 5, Town 2 North,
Range 13 Wilt of the Ohio
Company'• Purchau and
bouncllcl and dllcrlbad 11
followt:

Btglnnlng at 1 point
South 25 rode (412.5
and North Ill" 511'42"
1041.07 1111; lhanoa loutll
5-41'11" Eeat 181.4 feat;
lhanoa South 7' 211' WIIIM
fill; thence South 4' 08'
Wilt 121 flit; thanoaloulh
7' 41' IEalt 1 1111; thence
South 40'08' Wilt 121 fell;
thanol South ?- 48' EaiiiO
flit; thanoa South 40"
08'03"Ealt 231.33 lllllrom
till mid point of aald
llctlon a. North 11111, IIIII
point of beginning bllng
markad by an Iron rod on
the lloulharl) aide of a e.o
fool wkll atrllt; " ' -

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

a.

13111' Weal 121.07 feat
llongllle 8outharty 1idl of
aatd 40 loot wide atrlll to

JONES' TREE SERVICE

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
I MACHINE SHOP, INC.

To ..ICI II ••, cell
992"2156

KIT 'N' CARLVL'E $by Larry Wrfaht

1"o~""'

l

• ' ' (:,_.,"'.~ .

. RUMMAGE SALE
' Church of God
ld the Rutland
Thursday, Aug. 8, 1996
9 A.M.-4 P.M.
Sponsored the Senior s8ints
Tomato pickers and experienced
pee~~.,._ $4.25 per hour. W~l
p1ck linllftnt froaL Loll of houri
QUIIIWIIMCI. Serioul inquiriee .

"

Only. For~ Information,
contact lye Brinager &amp; Sons
Produce 614-843-5280
014-378-8194 614-37a-&amp;373

I

,_

....l1tt11111
elti!Gtnps
eSt.. Doan &amp;••••••

Ext. 5843
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Vrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-6434

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricktea
614-742-2193

.,.....

713111111 mo.

HOllON
TIUCIIII

IDIICD
Rollback - Wedge

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Open - EncloHd
Indoor/Outdoor

Storage

Llmeltone • Gravel

Day or Night

Dirt. S.Od

......

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0268-1-800-950-3359
8. ·L~"!"'"~Fi_;,rH:;:,.:E:;:S:,:t:#tnll=:,;te:S;...,____...;.._,

St1tlal Classlfltds

Ill Soulaby,
Jollnaon,

WI•••••

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yea11 E:rperience • lmwed

Rill lite lltst ..,.Illite

•
chlolt

537 BRYAN P~CE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-DII2·2772
8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.

an Iron roll; thence
13'32'14" Eall213.13 flat to •
an Iron rod; thence South
E11t 240 flit;
J. E,.DIDDLE, OWNER
MHS12
34"411'20" Wilt
to the point of
:~~~=~~containing
1.0t
or Ieee.
btl- Ia tha
centerline .of an acoeaa
CHEAPER RATES
right of WI) to II* 1*011 of
WELDING &amp; FAIIICAII.OI
rill Illite: Btalnnlng II a
point North 14'34'14" Wilt
UO.OO/HL
20.4 fwt from the point of
beginning of • 1.0 acre lot;
21583 BAIHAN RD.
tharice North 13'118' Eaat
Racine, Olllo 41771
445.82 feat and North
Ml-3013 Phone
40'1111'03" Wilt 2t0.1 fell
Mll-2018 FAX
(40 loot Wide RIW to .thll
point); · thence North ~=~~=====~=:;:::;::;~=;:=
t5"14'35" Wall 25.22 fall 1·
(changing to aiO fool wide
Public Notice
C.rd of Thinks
11/W on thla courae); 1---...:-...:-.;_;_;;.;;.;;....__
thence South 12'11' Wilt
Excepting and l'lllfYing
I would like to
470.4 1111 (10 loot wkll RIW unto the former grantor•
on thla courea); thence herein, their halra end
thank everyone
South 15-38'13" W•t 85.1, 111lgne, Ill the Cilll, oil,
fall (chellfllngto a 40 foot and an and other mlnanla
who helped make
wide R/W on thla cour11); unellrlylllfl aald rill • the Harrisonville
thence South 12'11' Will tolllthar with 11M right to
88.4 feat and Southj mrna, drill end remove the
Len~•Handa
58'01'30" Wilt 2111.1 fMt Ia! - · It Ia uncllratood that
the cantarllna of County lhlrl will b1 no Clrtlllng on
aucceul
Road c-28.
the r111 aahll deecrlbld
From the Lend-•
&amp;lid rtght of way Ia to bl herein, and furthermore,
u11d In common with all that no tlr ahafll will be
Hand Hllrrllvonvllle
adJ-1 property OWMrl,' located on real aatata
Preabytlt'IM
lhllr hllrl 1nci/D19'11 end ~herein.
.. , . , . _ far the banlllt of. Propert) ttldren: 43323
Church
the ed)ecent proper!) frank Hold, PCIIMt'Oy, Ohio
owner• bordering or 417111
Public Notice
connecting etld right of' I t - ' numblr: OU0088
ny.
. Prior
lnatrumant aaldaall.
Bald real Illata Ia eubjlol Rlflranoe; Volume 210,
J - SoulabV, Shlrlfl
to
ell
covanenta, · ~1
Nor111an M. Frank Co.,
r11trlotlona, building1
at: $88,330.00
L.P.A., Norman 11. Frank,
raatrlctlona, ••••manta, • T 118 OF SAL£: To be Attorney for· Plaintiff, 33
roed and lllghwaya of 'aoh1dd for no hllla thlt l-d Nonh High Str11t, 8ulta
record In dead raeordld In ' 1r • o1 I • appra aa
181, Columbtll, Olllo 43215;
Vol. 270, paga 861, of the !"atua. The purch••'!j~~ Telaphonl: 114-221·1852.
Deed Raoorde, llelga •hall dapollt 85,000.00
county,
the aherlfl at 1111 time of. (7) 30 (8) 8, 13 3TC

I

1·900-446-2626

TFN

Psychic tells you
things you may not
even want to

Public Notice

Gir1s are waiting to
talk to you
LIVE II

Portable
MJ

Gutter Cleaning

UNEXPLAINED
POWER II

W111-

,_

Howard L. Wrlteul

985,4473

10:00 til?
Clothe. a:
992-3051

Kanti.tb c.

~~.

FREE ESnMATES

45833 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Oh. 45771

:'Y~t-:1':~
dllya llfllr
1
II "

•

Stop &amp; Compare

HI Tllere,
F&amp;J Curio larn
Is lack!

=,:;·::.:::J._,.,,:;.mllttmll1•lm.aoo.
:1,t m: •

tlnila• 111enoa aout11 '12 rode
enclt8 Hna; tltlnM . - t
rode· thanoiiOIIIII 21 rode the center of "
rOICI;
1ncl i Jlnkato the IOUIII Una thlnCI - t 211.4 .... to
of aitld freotlon; thence the pl101 of blglnnlllfl,

'

•

=

•Compittl
Remodeling

~Junibrng

011 Chlnga, Wu,
Butllng
Long St., Rutland, 011.
742·21135, Aak for

7m1moM

II the tlmt of 1111.
lalence ceahlera ohlofc

/

·G•raoe•

~11

WPENTER SERVICE

Tun.upa,

• Tilt-in
• Double Hung
•Insulated ·
Limited Time Offer
Call today with
your window sizes
for a free quotel

•New Homes

$3.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs.
SERV-U (619) 645-8434

·

'1"
..... -~~~tr~
onlY

.co1naum0r1

1-800-27W147

985-4422

Remodeling
&amp; Roofing
Siding &amp; Some

~kWork

F

Eatlmatea

9 -2768
992·3274
7/12/1-pd.

Howard hcavatin
Trucking·
Umestone
· Bulldo7.lng and
eackhpe
Services
House Sites end
Utllltlea

of
-All Hinds
992·3838

Eorlh Wor~

Melg8 Refrlgaratlon

Air CondHionlng,
Hell Pump, Furnaces,
Refrlgeratora,
lnatalllllon end
Servlca.
!neurad
We have tbe new FRll
Low Coot Replaoemont
ror Automotive Rll.

DOll SMITH
992•2735
Psychic Tells you
about your financial
future, love,
success and your
healthlll

1-900-868-41 00
ext. 6495
3.99 per min.
must be 1B yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-6434

WICKS
HIULIIG

lurn l~ra .

eloctl.l, gold, 1 ver,

lby

WltChll , e1111e1.

- · 8t&lt;f-9V2·7441 .

.

Wanted To Bur-: Junk Aulot iWith

FACtORY
SALI

Or Without

Motor~.

C•ll L'arry

Llvaly. 11+:1111 8)D]

LIVE I

EMPL OVMr NT

PSYCHICS
1 ON 1

30%·40%0FF

:;r HVIC LS

Mini Blinds,
Verticals,

1-900-868-41 00

Pleated Shades
and much morel

Ext. 5489

Politlont. Pwrmanent full timf lor
c:lerklaorten. Full Benellta.:For

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs
SetV-U (619) 645 8434

cell: (70ft)t05-2350Ext.3170.

J1ly 16, 1996 lo
?nn?

exam. applic:atlon and

aa~ Jnlo

8af1tolpm.

•

AVON I All Aroao I Shl}loy
~

714/ft ' mo. pd.

Drapes By Design

30&lt;-875-1•20.

I

Able Avon Aepresentatlvet
nuded . Earn money lor Chriat·
maa bill at home/at work. 1-800·

48 State Street
Galllpolll, Ohio 45831
614 448 4199
800-441.()399

gg2.e35e or !10•·882-28•5. )nd.
Rep.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

i

Ambroalo Machine Inc. Looking
tor machinill. Syr1 eaptrle.,ce.
Call !104-875·1722. llonday·:Fri·

Giveaway

day 7:)D·3:00.

I

HARTWELL
HOUSE
Adorable klttena, calico I tiger
oulped, mother long halrld. 81•·

Open Monday
nights until

448-3703

Education, the llelgl Ulcat

School DIIUict lo polling the to~
lowing vacancw for Ita ttguter

ttachlng otttl : Title I Reeding
Teacher at Meloa Junior Ftloh
School IEtem,ntary Clftlflcitlon
. - . et+U112·!i0311.
with ANding Vlldotlon preflfrecl),
Vocal/General mu ale teach~r 7·
Full Blooded Auauallan Healer
12. Jr. HIQII foclbllt Coach I At ·
51+3711-21135.
lillflnt HIQII School Tfldl Coach.
Fr....
good
- children
,..,ng
-IIYt·
·
ctog,
good
with
and

7:00p.m.

Gifts • Folkart
• Antiques

992-7696

LINDA'S
PAINTING
IIIIIIOHmiiOI 1

..,...

FREE ESTIMATES

IRelh ........
,... , .... let •• lie It

Found· BHote dog with collar 1
pink nel collar, black I while 1

~HII"IIU

UVIIIfiiiiCU
614-tiHIIO

LOST: llata Chocola1e lab. in vi·

At Cardlnel Oryc:lnnert, 18 Ohio
River PIIIZI, Galllpolil. Th,uaday

clnity or M•ton

30H73·5202.

4131 mo.

Let a Psrchlc
Answer rour
Questlonsl

browiiMr, cal 81+1182-&amp;120.

Counter Help Wanled For Dry ·
cleaners , Mutt Be Per sonable,
Courteout &amp; Oependabte. Apply

70

•r•.Child:l pet .

August 8th, Friday Augu st Gth,' D·

12.

Ylld Sale
Due To Elpantiont And Promo-

Gallipolis

dono, We Nood e ~ To Hold
e Prwioully Hold A&gt;liliono:

&amp; Vlc;lnlty

'NoE---ry·
8 Family Yard Sale: Au01111 Slh,
~=.!':.:t-"'1.:
8th, 7th, 112 WWf a.- Fbrlet
And Chnhlre SR 154 Baalde
'EJOCellorl.,_
'The Owtbeck Grocery• Nice
' GrMI Clppo&lt;1Uni1y For
• Ctoohlng /1/A 8izH, Lota Of lilac.
llclv---1
All The Above For Those Who
g.1 1111111. 1111. , _, Thurt), 243 Owollty. Mwt1 Bo Nu1 In Ap·
Roll Road Str..J. Kanougo. 2 pearenct And Willing To S\art
Blkeo, Boyo Ctotheo, Tobit, e trnrnodla1tfy. lnlarvlewa lr ApChalta, Storm Door, Ctotheo For polnlmenl ony. Calf Monday· And
All , Toya, Hoto, Shoat, llanr Tutaday Only Only For ~I

In

·.

'

1·90().868-4900 :
Ext. 7625
$3.99per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (81t) t45 8434

Other ....... Allin

c-

LIVE PSYHICS·
•;:.~e~,

_:.."'::::1

Umllt0f1!t,
1·to0 •• 4100
Gravel, Sand,
Ext. 2411
Top Sol~ Fill Dirt
:::.::.
814-892-3470
:w-U~(Bt~.,~!'·~·~a;"U
· .;;..,;;.,;.,;,;, ....
,. ~;.;..,;,;

•.!..

In

All Yllrd SaiH lluot Ba Pakt
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad lo to run.

S..rodiJ edlllon • 2:00

(Liml ~
LowRalll)

~_hinl,

.,

: 814-11112·7074

FREE

H&amp;H

dollar· antlqu81,

Mu: 8t4-247-41111
Juetln: 114-247-4411

Cheater, Ohio

Plck·up dlscanlld,
eppllancaa, batlerlll,
manymetala.
614-992-4025
Sam ·8

s-In

to bllck It up
Wilt Vlrglnllt

•Ropllng
•lntlrtor • Exterior
Piloting
Alao Conc:ttte Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)'
V.C. YOUNG Ill
llt2.t2111
Pomeroy, Otllo

Full line or t;:istcm, Septic &amp;: WMer storage tanks.

IO,endaW..,tlllleendchalra,
dlohu, houaehotd tlllnea. tittle
tlket ) oye, tone of children'•
ctothH 0.1•., 1ols ol m1111., end of
Salem
Rutland.

. , . _ Addltlonl

Body wor1c, car truck I
truck painting, minor
tiiiChanlcal rtpelr.

Replacement
Windo.ws

Huge&lt;ll!i.I,--AuQ.I

YOUIIG'S

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

4" SAD - perf. - !J(liid pipe
4" A 6" F~x pipe
4" 1: 6" Sch 35 pipe
ill" A314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" A I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (iOO' roll's thru I ,000' roll'~)
314" U.L. appco&gt;Cd Conduit
8" Oraveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" . Fillings : Regutaton- Risers

101111 IISSill

Ext. 1985

Commencing at . the
Southwaat corner of
Frflctlon 31 lhanoa E•t 86
112 roOi (t0117.25 fell)"the aouth line of aaltl
fraction; thence North 184.0
flit to • rellroed aplu
found In the centerline of
T9WftahiP Road .75 and the
place ol beginning of thla
tract; !hanOI H 0' 04'48" w
508.23 feet; thence S
38'24'04" E 287.911 lilt;
thlnCI 881"40'08" E247.77
flit to 1 corner of· the
Catholic Cemetery; thence
S '811'68'31" E 148.211 feat
with the lint of· etld
Ollhllaf; thanca S 0'04'411"
W 3511.15 11111101111 the line
Of ..ld CIIMIIry; lhlnoe
lilt' 58'3t" W 335.54 feet
leaving aeld cemetery line
to the centerline of the
Townellip Road; thanoe N
44• .21'08: W 128.13 fnt;
lhlnoa N115"311'34" W157,10
feat to the place . of
blgiMing contelnlllg5.1338
a-. lneandlnil to convey
68.07-"'-convayad
In Malp Counay O..d
Ranrda Vvl. at , ~, 758
llld YOt. 2111 page t01. _•
8lld pramllll lotlllld II
.33780 Hiland Aoed,
'-Of, Ohio, . A~ ..
Parcel Numlier 1401530 000.
'
S..ld Pramlen epprtllld
It $11,867.00, lncl-1101 be
lofclfar lila thin two-4111n1a
of that _...._
· Tamil of lila: To be lOki
far not 1111 that two-tlllrda
Of the lppriiHd VIIUI

Further axcapUng from
the above rHI 111111 the
folt0wln1:· Tfie foiiCillllng
,.., ...... bllngln Fl*ltlon
31 , Satlaburr T~
' co unty, · 0111O, ' Ill c1
lilllgl
bounded end dMcrlbld • '

Serving S.E. Ohio
Toll Ff"'I1-8CJ0.872.5187

.

Buement
aat•· ""Y,::.,~e,
_
_.,..Ad.,
.

"""' 1M,.,. •..me.
a

Tuppers Pllllrw, 01110 45783

lklua4 ~!':':"...

Call
1-900-484-1515

Public Notice
con181nlng .45ac:ra.
j:xcaptlng ' from the
lbova-deacrlbld treat of
lind the mlnerela which
prevlollllly lofcl.
PHd reference: Volume
2511, pege 755, Malga
County Aacorcll.
It Ia the Intention of the
grantora to convey Ill their
.right, title end lntar•t to
the lboVI deacrlbld 8.52
tern. A flald aurvey of
Hid property lndl- the
property daacrlbld tohla
only $.1338 acraa. Said
fllkl aurvay deacrlpdon Ia

fotlowa:

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

10% off all quaUIIng blda

Find out about their
gifted PowerU

SATURDAY
DANVILLE -- Weekend services,
Danville Church of Christ, Saturday,
7 p.m., Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Denver Hill of Foster, W. Va. to
speak.

D

114 et2-271J

Fridey.

IWY010212

FIIIIUIOI'Iment ofP.V.C. &amp;: Flc• fillings a: Water fillings

1-8G0-47G-2559

EVEN POLICE
USE
PSYCHICSII

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- The Widows
Fellowship, Friday noon potluck at
the Middlepon Church of Christ.

Public Notice
weal to the place of
beginning, containing 17
acrea, mora or llaa.
EXCEPTING · from tha
above 17 ecrea, mora ,or
1111, the following
daaorlbed real eatate
altuatad In Sallebury
Townahlp, County of Mtlga,
and s- of Ohio, bllng In
Fraction 31, Town 2, R!lnga
13, of the Ohio Comptny'a
Purchau; beginning to a
poll with 3 notchaa, baing
the corner of the Guy F.
Martlnlnd Drulllla F. M8rtln
and Oren Jonn tarma on
the - t IIIII of the Rlehlrd
Wllllamaon farm; thence
••t 880 t/2 flit; thence
aouth 2-3/4• _ , rot fell;
lhanoa - t 1&amp;0 1111 to the
line of the Catholic
Ctmatlly; thence nort1J 231
f11t; thence - • 342 1111;
thane- aouth 2118 flit;
thane;• north 68-314• 241 1111 to a loculi atakl;
thence nonh 36 1/2" Wtlt
218 fell to a alike In the
Oren~ and Martin tine;
thence nortll408112 fell to
•llle place of beginning,
conhlnlng 11-181100 acrn
tl
I rid 01 h
tr
axcap ng coa a
mlnartla aold by Jemaa
Martin and J.J. Martin, hla
wife, to S.D. Horton by dead
datad January 30, 1882 111C1
recorded In Volume' 54, .
Page 813, of the R-rda of
Metga Coun~ Ohio with all •
rlghtl nacueiry or
convenllnt to the mining
and -king of till ,.._

Garage's, Deck's,
Painting, Siding

mtn-

senior author of Campus Trendi part time and not eligible for federal
1996, the higher education umbrell aid, so they tum to schools to cover
group's annual report.
. their aid requirements. Since 1985,
Only 40 percent of college admin- 88 percent of schools have reported
istrators rate their schools' financial an increase in aid recipients.
health excellent or very good, down
Schools also face a growing noed
16 percent from 1989.
to bankroll new computer technoloColleges have raised tuition rates. gy, El-Khawas say's. Though 90 perbut at the same time student need for cent of schools have increased techfinanoi11l ·!id ~ shot up, panially due •noiOgy spehdin'g,' fewtlr tllai'i Haf(tqld
to changing demographics, further ACE their computing systems are as
pressuring college spending. Over the advanced as they should be.
last decade, 77 percent of schools
The new financial environment
took more students over 25 years old, has forced schoqls to set priorities,
the report shows. Most of these are El-Khawas says.

Public Notice
within 30 daya of notici of
the final action. Purauant to
Ohio Rovloed Coda Section
3745.07, a final action
Iuulng, denying, modifying,
revoking, . or renewing a
parmlt, llcenae, or verlance
which Ia not preceded by a
propoaad action, may be
appealed to the EBR by
filing en appeal within 30
daya ofluuanca of thlllnal
action. EBII. appaale muat
be Iliad wlllif EnvflontMIIhl
Boerd of Review, 238 Eaat
Town Street, Room 300,
Columbua, Ohio 43215. A
copy of the appaal muat be
aarvad on the director
within 3 daya after filing the
fiPIIIII with the EIR.
Final laauanca of
RaglatraUon Car11flcata 11 a
generator of lnfactlouo
Woata
Vetarana Mamortal Hoap.
11 S E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, OH, '•clllty
Daecrlptlon: lntactioua
wuta, Application No 53-Q.

RemodeUng
Room addltioDS
Rooftog ·

Ext. 3124
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

Financial hardships changing education ·

..• '
•• •

Construction Inc.

1·900-945-4400

POMEROY -- Rock Springs
Grange, Thursday 7:435 p.m. to
vacate building for fair.

ALFRED -- Board of Orange THURSDAY
RACINE -- Delberi Teaford
Township Trustees, Tuesday, home of
POMEROY -- Meigs Loc~l Board reunion, Star Mill Park, Racine, Satclerk, Osie Follrod, 7:30p.m.
of Education meeting Thursday, 7 urday, 2 p.m. with evening meal .
p.m. at the district's central office io
POMEROY -- Meigs Cross Coun- the Pomeroy Municipal Building.
POMEROY -- Burlingham Modlry Team, organizational meeting,
em Woodmen, cookout, 7 p.m. SatTuesday, 6:30 p.m Meigs High
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers urday, at the hall . Take covered dish,
visitors welcome, door prize.

By MIKE MADDEN
USA TODAY
Mounting financial pressures have
reshaped almost every aspect of
higher education in the United States,
from student recruitment to faculty
hiring, a report out Monday says.
While government funding of colleges declined.over the past decade,
the American Council on Education
report says, costs jumped in areas
sucp as faculty salaries and campus
mamtenance. To cope, schools pursued other support and restructured
operations, says Elaine El-Khawas,

BENNETTS

Ff"'l Eatlmltas

814 185-3113or814-867~
Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"

Tammera

All Yard S.teo llwat 8a Paid In
Amnce. 0Hdtlne: 1:oopm the
&lt;lor ......,. the ICI Ia 11 run, Sun·
day I llontlay edition· 1:OOpm

•Addltlona
•New Olragea
•ReniodellrJO
•Siding
•Roofing
•Piloting
FAll! I!STIIIATEI
(814)11e2.UU

I &amp; W PW11CS liD IIPPLY
St. Rt. 7

Performing at state fair

C...... lllldlng 6 Aemollll t
•NiwHomta

614-992-7643

We will worlt within your budget
Pll. 77M173
FAX~
108
Street
wv

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

Pomeroy,
MlddltpOrt
&amp; VIcinity

COinRUCIIOI

'.

a- •

Dear Reader: Thank you fQI' a
new spin on the subject. Your letter
will be a great gift to the wives who
are living with this nightmare.

SIIITII'S .

p.m. Friday.

mm.w.

··-.am. ·.

NEEDEO -DtATILYI

Sef'f'lct Man For Vacuym CIMn-

tr Compan~. Muet

Be Ntal' ln

Appearance And Hove Erpor lllonday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sat- ence Wllh Electric llotero. Wilt
urday.
Train The Right " " -· Cal 814·
441·1815.

Nurae Aide Training Prcg:;;
Cora IIMI Road, Look For Slttno. ~Ret tbltltaaion
Wed Thura, 1 10 1 CtolintL llerNmonthof
' .~
fllt toyo, BIIIJ llemo, Sii llo· wll
...
dent .,. now Mint ecceptlffl at
c:~~~na, e.,.. .. a
31711 Ra Cltl~ i11ti JW.. ~.
Friday, Auo"'l lth, l-4: Saturday Ctaao alu ta liolllted, Thraa (S)
tlltOfl, t.S, 701 s-od A....,., relwenca pa,_., are requlr..S
with~- f~Wtr . l~~
RllnAit'o •To-O.,.
~10al!llllm,~
llondar -Widneatlay I ·? 112
.... Otl Uttle ...... RoiCI, Johnoono Road, Something For
-.. -~~. Alllolullty 1111 . . . .
Ewrycret
catta.~OE

"""''=--In

:.•rg:'c:::t.-'::'.--~

•

�The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

PHfiJ,JP
ALDER

ACROII
1 Eaelllfllll • at

......

4--.....

• LNW---

Child Cart Provider Opening
Soon In Local Area. 2• Hours A
7
A Weak, Cotr'fiOthMI
Prlon. 814-25&amp;-8342.

o.r. o.ra

9222 Fvr o..aa.

Experienced Will Babyolt My
Home, 61 ...... 1.o603.
Georgta Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the min iust call
304·675-1957.

EARN tiOO -MOO fW FT OR PT
Duo To Expanalon, Thla Cable Prolollianal Trae Sonrlco. Stump
Giant Is Seeking Surveyora To RemoYal, Free Eatlm11111 In·
Ohio. 814·388·
Work In Their Own Neighbor· ouronca,
hoods. Auto I Phana A Muatl - · 6t4-367-70t0.
Call Paul Tall Froo 1·88S-432· Spill. Soooanad Hartlwoad, 6 t 4·
7378"""' ~ -ga.
441-1651 Far Roglr,
Experienced Body Men Send
Reaumn To CLA 382, CJO Galli\ Sun Valley Nursery . School.
polis Dalty lbune. 825 Third Chlldcaro M.f 8am-5:30pm A811
2·K, Young School Ago During
Averue,
OH 4S83t .
Sum-. 3 Dayo par Wook Mini·
111111181...-3857.
OASEL TRA
J.
UNES, INC. II
Will Do Babyoltting In Cheohlro
Araa, 814-317·1042.
Gasol Trar.poratiO!)
n:.
is eX1*11!fro 11'1- and,.,_
W~l Do ~byalnlng In My Home
hiring drtoora. W. ora looking lot
Centenary Area, Elptrltnce Day·
...,.. ,afnGjoa, c:oauall. Drlwlng
care Provided With CPR 614·
448-3047 Groan School Olotrict.
apply lotaur-llledl'linong Gaaot O!foro: PaJd
FINANCIAL
mileage, lolded and '"11ty. F,..,,.,... Iller 110 dayo, 401K
Profit sharing. Wt- modo!
210
Business
equipment lllltad l o t - com·
Iori. walk-ln and -bunk. Our
Opportunity
drivera are home moll week·
'lumber Price Upr SiMI Build·
ends. Call JoanarOzzioal6t4·
lnga Dealer Profita Ato UPIII Coot
373-8479 "'800-333-6479.
~~ low As 13.00 Sq. Foot. Nt·
HELP WANTED: Immediate tional Manufacturer Awarding lo·
Opening For Full Time Main- cal DEALERSHIP. 303·759·3200
tenance Poaidon. Send Resume Ext 2200.
To; CLA 391, CIO GaUipolio Dally
!NOTICE I
Tribune. 825 Third Avenue, Gall•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
poli' OH ~S831 .
recommend• lhat you dO busi·
HOME TYPIST, PC uoors need- nell with people you know, ancl
ed. •4s.ooo lnc:ome potential. NOT 10 HOd money through tne
c.n t-800·513-4343 E" B-11368.
mail until you have investigated
the olforing.

-11.

u-

"""'"'""'*'"....- ..

Opening For Part- Time Tempo·
rary Secretary II In The ROTC
Program For The University or
Rio Grande. Reaponsibllitiea Include Gen.,al Secretariat Skilla
With Proficiencr On Word Pro·
cessor. Must Have High School
Diploma Or Equivalent. Associate
~- Prelorred. Knowledge 01
Military Pro~edurea Helpful. 20
Houra Per Week, No Benefits.
Send Reoumts By August 9,
t996 To Mo. Phyllis Mason. PHR.
Oire,tor Of Human Resources,
University 01 Rio Grande, P.O.
Box F27, Rio GranGe, OH 4567-4.
EEOIAAE~er.

Overbrook Canter has part time
lPN, RN and STNA positions
availabfe lor all shifts. For mare
information please contact Jackie
Cremeans at 614-092-6472.

Businesapetaan or Builder : Nallonll Manulacturer seeking to
qualify DEALERS in aome uleca
open areas. Steel buildings 11
low •• $3.00 oq. loot. Call (303)
758-.135, EXT. 1503
Bustnlaaper10n, small size Cantractor, Nallonal Manufacturer
awarding local DEALERSHIP lor
at-* buUdinga. Big Profil Potanlial
on sales and construction. (303)
7511-3200, ... 2300.
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Moll Elllcient
Arid loweat Emlaaians Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market.
Central Soller Ia Currently looking far A Oualily Dealer In Thlo
lmllltdiate Area. For Information
On Becoming A O.aler Or Fot A
Free Brochure Call 1·800-248·
4861 Or t-21S.n2·2575.

--- ·· ·-·--·

Part·Time Cuotomor Service RopresentaltYe. Ftrr.. Gas A LNder
In Propane G•s Industry 11
Seekin" A Part-Time Cuaamttr
Service Repreaentallvt. Applic:anl NHd1 2 + Yftra E1ptrlenc::a
In Office WOrk.
En~ Excllllent Phone Skilll &amp; Compuler
Skllla A Plual Avf&gt;ly In l'waan At
Ferrell Gas, 8255 State Route
566, Gallipollo, Ohio.

Resplralary ThOraplots
an acute care facility.
certified and llconaed In
of Wv. Competitive
cellent benelita. Send
Sue Hussetl, Coordln1tot
piratory Therapy, Plaa11nt
Hospilal, 2520 Valley Drlvt,
Pteeun' WV 25550. MIEOE.

All real eslate advertising In
thla n&amp;W8j)llpar Is oubject to
the Fedarel Fair Housing Act
olt968 which makes HIllegal
to advertloe "any preference,
llrrO!a!.f!ln_., di8crlmlnatlon
baled on race, color, nlllglon,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or Olscnmlnatian.•

Our readers are hereby
lnlormed that aH dwellings
advelllsed In this newspeper
are available on an equal
opporturJiy basis.

;,...l ..llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll..l

StOp Looking For A Job And Apply Today For A Career! Rental
Kong Is Looking For Tho Soli Mo.
t1vated Person To Fill An Open Ing, We Have Here In Our local
Store. We Ollar Good Pay, Medi·
cal Insurance, Paid TrlininO. Paid
Vacations, Profita Sharing, And
-401K . You Uuat Have A Valid
Drivers Ucenae And Be Abkt To
Work Fuii·Time. Apply In Poroan
AT Either location: 5 Ohio RiiMr
Pla&gt;a. Or 216 SR 17, s;l\otr Bridge
Plala, Galipolit.
Styli1t Wanted: No Clintlle Necn·
sary apply at Fines! Hair and
TaM"!~ Salon 1390 Eoaltrn INI,
Gan;poli, Ohio 45831 448-81122
The University 01 Ria
Seeking ~~J·~;~:
~~I~·~:.~c~~,;:
English,
M
Communlcarions
1stry, Art Educations, liuoslnooao,
Businen Education, life
Anel Swimming. Bachelors
quirecl. Maslef'a Prtlerred. lnteretttd Candidate• Pleut Sand
RHume lntertll Len• And Copy
Of TranKripta To Phyllis Mlaon,
PHR, Olteclor Of Human Resource•. University Of Rio
Grande, Cempul Boa F27, Rio
Grande, OH 45874. EEO 1M Em.
ployer.

t
l

!

WANTED: Positions Available To
AniiJ Individual~ With learning
Limitations At A Community
Group Home I n -: (I) 40 Hrs
/Wk : t .g P.M .. Sun: 3:45 ·11:15
P.M . Man -Thura; Ylcalion, Sid!,
Holiday And lnaur~~nce Benefits:
(2) 35 Hra /Wk: 10 ~.II . · a P.M.,
SUn; 2 ·10 P.M., lion ITueo; 2 ·8
P.M., F~: Vacation And Sick 8ar&gt;
alto:
BOTH : Attendance AI 2 ·Hour
WHklr St•H MMting; Or Haurs
AI Otherwlao Scheduled. High
SchoOl Dagraa. valid Drivtr'a u.
cen11. Th11e Y11n Ucenald
Driving E1perlence, And Good
Dt1v1ng - r d Required. Training
Provided. SAlary: 15.00 tHr, To
S•rl. Sand Aaeulni .Ta: P.O. Box
1104. Jaclooon, OH 4Y40: ATTN:
Cecilia. Ooodllnt For Applicants:
1/tlllf. Equal Opportunily Em·

t

•

bedroom, new ga1 lurnace, include• akirting, 10x20 porcl'1 and
~ $5,500. 304-773-5738.
14170, 3 bedroom, 2 lull bath,
canlnll air, $8,000. 30oi-67S..2382
"'~70-2921.

1984 12xeo. two bedroom, one
bath, remodeled , partially fur nished, must move, $4500 , call
614-992-&amp;134.
1g88 12x60 Detroiter, 2 Bed rooms. AJI Gas, 614-446--4292.
197Q Plantation Trailer 12x05 2
Bedrooms, furnlstled &amp; Appliancaa, 614-379·9216.
107t\ GrancNille 2 Bedrooma, All
Electric, 12x60 12,800 Must Sell
814-446·8172814-25H251.
1978 Mobile Home, 2 badroom,
good cond. New carpet, new water heater, stave &amp; refrigerator.
$8,100, 080. 304-67!'&gt;-5706.

REAL ESTATE

limited Offer! 1997 doublewide,
3br~ 2bath, S1790 down, $27Q/
month. Free delivery &amp; setyp:
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
WV. :l04-75s..5665.
Mobile Home loans Purchase Or
Refinance For Bill Consolidation
24 Hour Approva l. 1-800 -484 1731 Ext 9706.
New t4x80 Only make 2 pay·
menta &amp; mow-in. no payment art&amp;r 4 years, free set-up &amp; delivery.
304-755·5685.
New Bonk Repa's, only 3 lelt. lree
Itt-up &amp; delivery. 304·755-7191.
New Bonk Repoo. On~ 3 leh. Still
in warranty. 304-755-7191 .
Older Schultz home, owner occu·
pied, 2 bedroom, ercellent for
young or retired couple, priced on
lnspaction. ~4-675-53114.
Price Buster. 1997 3bedroom.
$825 down, $159/ma. Free delivery &amp; aetup. Only at Oakwood
Homes. Nitro WV :lOol-755-5685.

340

Business and

Commercial Building On Route 7
Crown City, 100 Ft. xeo Ft 2
Baths With Heat Pump, 614·256·
1270.
Crown City Village: Triple, Commercial Or Residen~al. Corner lot
On Route 7 With lnc;ome,
$54,900, 614-255· t .26.
ProlesaionaVBusineas building lor
suble&amp;se. Located at 509 S. Third
S~ee- Middlepor' Ohio. Excotlent
lor physician office or real earate
apace. Ample street parking.
Available immediately. Contact
Rl. Kunz, 614-593-3375 collect.

350

LOIS

&amp; Acreage

13,500
2 Loti 1
$6,000 Each, 614·448·0130, 814368-9128.
14 parcels, from 1.2., 11.6 acres,
some overlooking Racine, partial
linanclng, 614·992·7104 alter

3 lota in Oakridge Subdivision
over 13 acres. about one mile
from Toyota Plant, $33,000. Write
2872 Third Street. Syracuse, 2 ~0. Box 9573, SOulh Charleston
lots 112 acre total, 4 BR, lR, FR. IW.25308.
OR, kitchen, utility, new bath, new
plumbing, oVerlooking Ohio River, 4 + Acres Off Bulavil\e Road FacIng Rou~ 35, t-614-443·5366.
availollle Seplembar ' ' ' $45,000,
614·992-5006 or 814·992·7496.
5 Acree For Sale $10,000, locat3 Bedmon&gt;Gretf
&amp; Rt 2. t 112 ed On S~ller Road Botwee~ VI,...
baths, full ba&amp;ement, carport, 112 ton And Rio Grande. 814· 388·
acre lol, call ror appl. Asking 8521 .
$52,500. ~70-3847.
lots tor sate. Close to Pt Pleas3beclraom, completely nawfy re- ant. Some restrictions . 30o4· ti75modeled, Mt Alto area, 1acre klt, Zl85.
wlpOOI &amp; ullllke, asking $59,900. Patetls on Rayburn Rd. Waitt,
304-8115-32n.
paved road. reasona6te reslrictions. 304 -675-5253. (no single• Bedroom Ranch. Red Brick.
Newly Remodeled _State Routt wide inquirea please)
218, Mercerville, Ohio. 614·446· Scenic 16-A c:amp, housing, or
0416.
farm alta, wa1er, electric, gravel
road . Ideal lake site. 10 milea
Can~al ~lr. Garage, 3 Bedrooms,
oouth ol wv. z. $2g,5oo. No
1 112 Batho, large Fenced Lot. rlooding . Hunling and boat s!rta,
t8'x38' lngrouncl Pool, Corweni - $2,500. eo t-748-5445.
ent Location, 112 Milo From SR 1
On Georg11 Creek Roacl. 014· Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
446·3108, Or 61 ...... 1-!ili58.
beautilul 2ac lots. public water,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-576·2336.
3bedroom, bath, living room w/
" " r - lloafa, khchan &amp; dining
RENTALS
area togechtr, new roof, gar•ge,
on At 2. 304·875· 4139 or 3D4·
875-7326 after 6:30.
410 Houses for Rent
Homa For Solo By Owner: 3 fled.
room• Wilh G•ragt, New Dtck 2 Bedroom House, Garfield Ave1ex24 1 Ac,e MIL In Country, f'IJe, $300/Ua., S200 Deposit, Ref·
814·2415-5000.
trances Required, D14·44&amp;·406i
No Calls After 9.
Meadowhilla Subdiviaion : New
Conl!ruction :3 BR, 2 Bathl, 3 Bedmom, ac, uti~tiel nOt inckidLarge Kit, Sep. Dining Room, ed, 350trno, ,ererenc:es &amp; 18Curily
Thermopane Windows, Plush dtpotitrequired. 304·773-5898.
Sop. Dining Room. Thtrmopant
Windows, Pluoh Carpel, Oak 6 Room Houat &amp; Sath for Rent &amp;
Cabinets, Heat Pump, ~ Front 0 Room Apartment &amp; Bath,
Porch, f'otio, On Large, Cor,... Washer, Dryer Room Cl~. Apple
ar Lot 3 MIIH Out send Hill Rd. MotlohanCarpeto, 614-448-7444.
Cal French City Homn, 614-448- Five room l-ouie with booth In Po8340:::.::.·:.__________________ 1 meroy, orr IIIHI parking ror ant
::
car. etlan, depolil and reterenc·
M,.dewhllls Subdivitllan: 3 DR. •• reqUirtd, no pets, e U-Q82-

310 Homes for Sale

Ad

:mo.

Rnr Dedi On Private lot Ntar
Pt. Plaoutnl, wv Oil 5enctoll R&lt;l
Call frlnclt City Harnn. 814-448-

11340.

JllolrOt.

180 Wlnttd To Do

Sl1 room, betl1 &amp; laundry, 2 112
•.,., bit rod boom, aoma 1enco
l nl&lt;a Qardan area, 814· 742·
Arrt
OddJolla.
· 2757.
~ ...
. :oointinl.
»ttfS-1112.

llr

Babyaltdng In
Homo. All Sl1 rooma, new kitchen/ b•th .
Houro. Cnaalllro Ataa. 114-317· Petri Soaet. lliddloport.
814-882·3748, Uoyd Grimm, no 420 Mobile Homes
lid.
SUnday call
for
Babyolnlng. expe/lencllf,
T.... - m homo In countrJ
home In . _ , lf.f. 51!11
2
Bedroam
llatilla
Kriner
6pm. 304·M2·3270 or :104-ut• Whltaa HI Rd., R--.ct, .,.
RoaoUtl 148 tsaa.
ln9ound
pool,
61
~5087.
3731 .

aau.ooo:

R1111

l&gt;lf\

•

pliances, large Yard, $320/ Mo.,

614-878-5532.
2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms. Stove, Regri·
gerator, Water, Trash Furnished
$275 -1300 Near Vinton, Deposit,
614-368-9666.
2 Bedroom Mabile Home located
In M11on WV All UUiitias Included, 614·258·1489.
2 Bedroom tr.tabl1t Home , $2501
Mo., $250 Depoair, Green School

Disrlc' 814-387-0832.

2 Bedroom Trailer For Rent. 614·
446-6318.
2 Bedroom Trailer, 8 Miles Route
216, $2201Mo + Deposit, Reier·
ences. 61•·446·8172, 814·256·
8251 .

1995 ShuiQ 14x70. 3 bedrooms, 2 2 Bedrooms, Water, Tra1h Inlull baths, vinyl siding, shingled cluded, S2S!illlo.. No Pats, Do·
roof, all electric, quners, 8xt0 poal' 61 ...... 1.0000.
deck~ new 8x10 building, perfect
Two and three bedroom mobile
COndlllOn. Call 304-875-3124.
homes, ataning at U40·t300,
2 Bedroom Trailer 1/2 Acre ~ewer, water and traoh Included,
Scenic Road, Vinton. $15,000 No 814-992·2187.
land Cortrac' 614-448-0785.
Two bedroom tralaer on quiet lot
20•56 loloboe Home 311 F.R. O.R. on Bradbury Rd .. l3001ma. pluo
112 Ac:re, $18,800 $4,500 Down utiMIIat and depoll' ,.., pt11, etol11112·5030.
OWner Fi1111r1Cing. 614-446-6591 .

6pm .

-.c-..
- Flool.Front-Hoot
Pump, Hew Corpe~
Porch,

1993 14x70 Scenic tOO Acre
Farm On Rac:c0&lt;1n Creek, Near
Cora. Scrooned Porch, St-op, ~I&gt;

2 bedroom trailer, Condor Street,
1250 per rronth, $ t 00 deposit no
1966 Richardson 12x65. $3,500. pets inside, call 614·067·3083 al·
304-458- I 546.
ter5pm.

3 Roam office suite an 2nd "oor,
central air/heat, 1at lloor, conference room available. e10 Main St
Pl. Pleasant. 304 ·675-2669 or
304-&amp;7!'&gt;-6269.

This newspaper wHI not
kna.-lngly accept
advertisements far real estate
which Is in violation ol tho law.

Scenic: Hilla Nursing Canter Ia
Currenny Accepting APf)llcatlana
FM Tho Fa-ng Politlona: Ptut·
Time IC•II-In For STNA'a - All 3
Shilts; Part-Time ICall·ln For
LPN'a · AI 3 Sl\lfto. lrnerHIIICI
dlvidualo Should Apply M·F AI ·
3t 1 Buckrldgo Rd., Bidwell, OH.
No PI-one Ca"• Pleaoe. EOE.

12X70 Gregory on rented lot, 2

Buildings

oa•

Postal Jabo 3 Pooltlona Avail·
able, No Experience Necessary,
For Information, Call1·818-78!4·
901 6Eil 4054.

'811 Ttw..-d SC. two door, 3.S

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apar'IIMnfa. furnished and unfurnished, HCurity
deposit requlrtd, no pell, 814·
GG2·2218.

o•·

1 bedroom apartment ovtr
raga, an utilldaa paid, 1300. 1100
deposit, Tuppera Plains araa, no
peL81-7·3083 alii&lt; 5pm.
1 bedroom 1p11rtmtnt In Middle·
port, call 814·448·30g1 or 814· .
GG2·2178 or 81 4.a92·!5304.
1 Badtoom Apartment Acroat
From Univtraity or Rio Grandt,
$295/Mo., All Utilities Paid, Pluo
Dash~- 614-388-GG48.
1 Bedroom Apartment living
Room Eol·ln Kitchen, Large Bock
Porch, Newly Decorated, 458
Second Avenue, 5ecurity Oapoo·
II. Roiafenco, 814-446-2561 .

Three bedroom, urpetecl, garage, pond and trHI, 1275/mo.
plua $275 oocurity deposit, 814·

1102-&lt;4218.
Twin Riv&lt;lro Tower, ,_ acoepdng
applications lor tbr. HUD aubaid·
lzed apt. lor elderly and handl·
capped. EOH ~75-8679.
Up·atalre Apartment For Rent In
Gallipolia, Oepoait, References
Requlrod, $235/Ma., 814·448·
7130,814-448-2131 .

450

Furnished

Rooms

Roama for rani - WHk or mont!.
Starting 11 $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.
614-448-85811.
Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Al1o trailer apace on river. All
hook-upa. Call attar 2:00 p.m.,
304·173-5851, lla"'"WV.

460 Space for Rent

litre, V-8, elite model turbo, PS,
Concrete a Plaotlc Septic
PB, AC, 5 speed, power atltl
300 Thru 2.000 Gallono
Evant Enterptlaes,' Jackson, OH and locka, ·or11t Car,· $5200
614·GG2·7478 or 814-D49·
t-6Q0.537-9S2e.

Dreaaing table, baby bed, car
Ita' otrolltf, owing, walker, high· 1974 Corvette New Tires, Ea ·
hauat And Tune Up, Rtd Wlth
chair. ~75-4548.
Interior, $6,500, Or Trade,
I Size Blazer 01 Equal VII ..
·Electric
s,aoters
And
Wheelchairs, New /Used, Van I ut 14-U1 ·1975 Or 8U-U8·
Car lift Installed, Stairvlides, Lih , --------------------Chairs, Call For Brochure, 814 · •·1880 Pontiac Trans -Am Au·
446·7263.
tomatlc. 2 Doon, Sunroof 455,
Full Size a\d Frame With Ma · Goad Shape. a Parts Car. $1,500
tren And Bo1 Springs, Good 304-&amp;75-4841 AFTER6 P.M.
Condition, $100 ; Full Size Bed
1983 Jaguar, 4 dr., 6 ely.. $8,500,
Frame. Good Condition. 140: e14·982-4111.
Brand New Walker Never Uaed,
ISO : Bedside Commode With 1984 Buick Park Avenue Good
Bucket And lid U5; 6 t 4· 379· Condition. $90 614-446·7928.
2721 Or 304·937·3363
191W Olclsmoble Cutlau, • doot.
Refrigerators, Stoves, Waahera Automatlc, air, radio. F\uns well,
And Dryers, All Rtcondltloned $800, phone6t4-388-8303.
And Gaurontndl $100 And Up,
t 985 Buick Some rut, loaded, Z
WI Dallvor. 814 688 8441.
Door, Motor Completely Rebuilt.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon Uany New Parta S1,SOO, euUpright, Ron Evant Enttrpritll, 448-0211.
Jod&lt;oon, Ohio, t-6Q0.537·11528.
1985 New Yorker. new tirea &amp;

Commercial Spact Approx. BOO
Square Feet Localld Corner 01
Stata Strool &amp; Third Avenue, Qai.
llpolia. Tht Former licenH Bu - 'TReK
1200Ping Bike:
Ping+ Mort I
l Waelge,
Punoro
raau LocatiOn. Cal 614"'48-4e38.
614·448·3213. Daya: 614·448·
Mobile Home lot In country 2 8223 Evening~, AU FOf' Jim.
milao from Shall wlm Ohio River Water Wells Drilled, Flit Rea·
OCC8II. 304-578-2183.
.....,. Servioo 614-868-7311
Trailer bt for rttnt. 112 acre, bNu- Wedding dresa tlze I, $150. 4
lifulaeclwded aree., Sr. 7, Chelttr, Brldls,.ld Clralltl, $40ta. 304deposit &amp; references, 11001 773-6188.
month, 814·992-llltlt.
Whl~lold Advontago Pallet Stove
Trailer lot lor rent In Middleport. inllrt 3 Yaaro Old Exc:otlorlt Co,...
814-992-7367.
dillon, Cerami~ lags Included
Traiter lot In Middleport for rent, $1,100 614-448-7417.
willac:c:ept eo· trailer, 014·882·
-TtMing3184.
TAN AT HOME
buy DIRECT and SAVEl
Trail• Speca FarRen~ 814·4411ContnerdaVHome t.nhl from
3984, 614-3117·7438.
1199.
low montl'oly
MERCHANDISE
FREE color catalog.
Ca!TODAY t-6Q0.842·1305.

Coppor~~~~~~~n=lc~e~c:ar~.:*'~·:500:.

Ad

P8Y"""'"

510

Household

550

Goods
2 largo Window Fana, t Small
Window Fan, 1 Daublo Brown
Ki1chon Sink, 3 Eloc•ic Blankoto
Regular Bed Size; One Slalnlell
Steel Home Water Dlsliller Midi
Still ; One 3 light Chand~er: T.V.
Stand. 9ullting Dosl8na: Upright
Kirb\1 s-par, 814-446·2543

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, oawer plpaa, wind·

owe, Umell, etc. Claude Wintatt,

Rio Grondo, OH Coli 614 . 245 .
5121.

560

Pets for

Sale

AKC Chihuahua 41111D6 Malo,
White &amp; Fawn $100 614·258·

Appliances:
Reconditioned e,'lQ8.
Washers~ Df}era. Rllngea, Rllri·
graton . .110 Day Guarantee! AKC lab Retrelver Pups, Wattr
1 bedroom apartment, Spring French City Maytag, eu-•4&amp;- Rattlt'le Plus ~nt Upland Garno
S. Dakota Sllick Grao1 Hunting lnAvenue, Pomeroy, tuo per 7795.
slicts Good Companion For
month, $100 clepoall, no pets,
8t4-667-3083afll&lt; 5pm.
Carpal a Vinyl Sale On Room Young Hunters S225, 614·258Size I S10c:k Mollohan Carpets, 6038.
1 Bedroom apt, lurnlahed, nlco 81·448-7444.
AKC Registered Yorkshka Terrier
nelghlxlrnood. l&gt;'iYata, no pa11, rol
Country Furniture. 30•-675-e820. Puppioo, $250, 814·2•5-9107.
&amp; depooit 304-t70-2151 .
Rt 2 N, Smilea, Pt Pleaoan' WV.
tank 111 up specials. Fish
1 Bedroom, Super Nlc:e, 12651 Tu... Sot 9-6, SUn t 1·5.
a Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Mo., Plus Utilities, Usually
Point Pleuanl, 30-4·875Something Availablol Sun Valley GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahers. dryers. refrigerators,
Apartment I, 6I 4-448-2957.
rangaa. Skaggs Appllancea, 76
2 Bedroom Apartman~ All Utilidto Vine Street, Call 814·446·7398,
CFA Registered s;amtia Kinens,
Pole!. $425/lola: 2 llcom I Bath All 1-6Q0.-.34aa.
Wormed, Uu8r Trained, Alao A
Utilitin Paid $225/lolo.. 513-574·
2539.
Kenmore Air Conditioner, 14,000 Codl.atlel «!1 1""307·7705.
2bdrm. apts., total tlactric, ap- BTU, 4 Vearo Okl, $200, 81•·368- CFA raglottred, 3 Himoloyan le·
males, one Blue Point. 2 Seal
pliances furn ..had, laundry room 9838.
fKIUtl11, doat to school In town. Refrigerator, Freezer. Wuhtr, l-p,.:."-'~c~ai-I_B1_4_·GG_:.2_
·386.:.:..7.;..----~
Applications available 11: Village Dryer,
va. Air Conditioner, $50
CHRISTY'S PETS
Groan Apto. 149 or call 814·GG2· Each 614·258-1238
271 North Sacond Avanuo,
3711 . EOH.
Ultd Furniture 130 Bulavilo Pilto,
lllddllpo~,OH . .
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT CoiiOti Tablet, Tablll, Typawrll· Grooming 8:00am·8:00pm by apBUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON era, Bids, CoiJchea, Relrigera- poinlment, kennel care 7 days a
week, seed &amp; feed, AKC miniature
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
Wuhera, 0 asks, 81 •-••e- Schnauzers, AKC miniature male
from $24• to $315. Walk to ohop tars.
4782.
Poodle, and other misc . ifems.
&amp; moviea. Call SU-.,6-2588.
S1ore hours 1Oam -6pm, Mon-day
Equal Housing Oppartaonity.
VI'RA FURNITURE
through Saturday. 614·992-4514,
6 t 4-448-3156
Etliciency Apartment Ac:ron
alter...,,.._ 614-GG2·2617.
Quaity Hou- Furniture And
From The University Of Rio
Thank you, Christy.
Appllancao. Great llools On
Granda. $225/Mo.. Plus Deposit,
Calh And Carry I RENf.2·0WN
Groom St-op ·Pot Grooming. Fat·
All UWitin Pakl, 614-368-9946.
And layaway o\110 AvoNable.
turing Hydro Bath . Don Sheets.
Fraa Dali'lery wtfin 25 Mlltl
Cai 814-4~231 .
Furnished Apartment $285/Uo., 1
Bedroom, Utilitiea Paid. 920 Washers and drytn for sale,
H1ppy Tracke·Oroom a Hrdro
Fourlh Avenue, Gallipolla, 614· 614·GG2· 7853.
Bath GrHt lor Fits Probiafnl, Pt.
446·3844 After 7 P.M.
Pleasant,
Central location. 304520
Sporting
Furnished Apartment, 1 Bedroom.
S7S..2196 ValorOt Taylor.
Goods
$295/Mo., Utiities Peid, AC, 607
Puppy Polace Kannolo, Batrding,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 614·
llolley's Bow Sha&lt;l&lt;
Stud Service Puppiea. Grooming,
446-3844 Alter 7P.M.
Buy, Sell a Trade, All Bretdl.
Arclttry and lhcit SUi&gt;
Furnish&amp;d eff, all u~lities paid, Pt. plias. 9:00 • 8:00 lloioy. MOtgon
Payments Welcome, 61•·388Center Rd. Vinton, Oh. 814-:JD.
Pleasant. 304-875-7783.
0429.
0454
Furniahed Efficiency Share Bath,
570
Musical
St 65/Mo., Utr~1ieo Paid, 607 sec. Set of women't golf c:luba, good
Instruments
cand.
304-e75-811M.
ond, Gallipolio, 614·446·3844 AI·
tor 7 P.M.
Selmer Bundy Clarintt. S200 WI
530
Antiques
case &amp; muaic stand . 304·675·
Furnithed Eflieclency Apartment.
Cenual Heat I Air Conditioning, Buy or sell. Rtverine Antiqu11, 6485.
All Utililift Paid, Private Parking, 1124 E. Main Strati, on RL 124,
Fruits &amp;
Pomeroy. Houro : M.T.W. 10 :00 580
814·446·2602.
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., SUnday 1:00 tD
Vegetables
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom 6:00p.m. 814 ·992·2526, Ru11
apartments 11 Village Manor and t.toore owner.
Riverside Apartments In Middleport From $232·$355 . Coil 814·
992-5064 . Equal Houalnv Oppor.
tunidn.

s..

large Bedroom, Front Porch,
Back Balcony, You Pay Utilltlu,
614·446·2108,814-446.t0t8.

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

5 Piece Maple Dining
With BuHat &amp; Hutch, $200;
DrHsar With Night Stand.
814·245-9154.

Nice 2 bedroom, WfO tlook·up,
ground lloor. References a de·
poall, ra pata. 304-t7S..5t62.

BAH~MA

Llvtatoek

~~~ 2 bed·
room, IUmllhad "P' alao, t room
officlancy. llopaolt I roforoncaa.

Small , -

"" .,_,.,

ac.

1&amp;89 Buick LeSabre, excellent
running condition, V-6, PB, PS,
~c. power windovra, $3800, 8 t •·
9411·2045 or 814-9411·2302.
1989 Dodge Daytona Auto, Air,
Title, Sunrool, 55,000 Miles,
S3.ooo0806t4·258-Bt69.
1989 Dodge Shadow. Air, Tilt.
Ctuise, PS, AulOmlltic, 4 Cylinder,
Good Shape $1,600, 614·44e·
9552.
1969 Ford Tempo GL, look·
ing Garage Kept, SilvfH' With Maroon Interior, 79,500 J,mea,
$3,500 814·379·2728 Or 304·
937·3383.

1980 Dodge Ram Von B·25;i,~
72,000 Mlleo, $4,000, OBO . C~
Sa Soon At: Galllpollo Daily Tri~
une, 825 Third. Avenue, Gallipolia,

•

•

D.:

1993 s-1 0, 4x4, Tahoe 4.3, au
topper, hit~h. 25,500 miles.•
111.000 lirm. Call t'lenlngs 304~·
SOS-3803.
.:

+

•

t996 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
door, loaded. keyless tnrry, Allo)l•
wheels, automatic, 12,000 milts~
$18,400 080, 6,.·992·3085 alte•
4pm.

Vulnerable:

Weal

goo ~

Pau
Pau
Pan

BARNEY
A ROYAL CROWN
FORTH'

19QO Honda 300 $2,350, 614 -:
258-1754, Aher8P.M.
•

By

~~~~~~~~·

1994 CBR900RR 7,000 Miles,:
$6,500, 614·24!'&gt;-0401 .
' I

1871 Ford Camptr Van Good
Condidon, Witl 2 Burnet Stoves.
Rtfri~a!or, Water Supply And
Bad.
:614-256·1158.

.,_

ttea Dodge Van 15 Pnsenger,

Goad Condition, $3,000 Or Trade
Fer Farm Trac.,r Of Equal Value,

I

1g94 Yamaha YZ 125 Looks ~4
Runs Goad Asking $2,000 CJf :
Trade, 614-448.021 t.
·•
1995 Kawasaki KOX 80 dirt
014·992-6311.

bik~

-;

.

IF I STAND

I

llERE, I CAN
BE CLOSER
TO '{0\.IR
CATCilER ..

68 'lllmaha V1rago 1100. ••cal· · ',
lent condition, under 18,000 miles: ~
two·tone dark marooo, everythlng,j ,
chrome, new front &amp; rear tires, its · •
a Hartey look·a-li_ke, $3500 abO, • t
614·949·2181l"' 614·367.0323 :
~----~~•-v_e_m_•_•~~~~·--____ :
Harley FLSTN Herritage Nosalgia t
1994 Excellent Many Extras, SIJ'l:
pel Sl1arp $18,900, Call Ray 614·'
388-0411 _
t
Boats

&amp; Motors

for Sllle

WHV DON'T '{OU 6ET BACK
OUT THERE IN RI61-1T FIELD

IF I FALL OFF.
TELL 't'OIIR CATCilER
I WAS THINKIN6
OF I-IlM !

WHEI~E 'I'OU'LL SE CLOSER TO

EPEiE OF TME WORLD?

..
~

'-i

18ft. Tri -Haul bass boat 40hp.,...
motor, trailer &amp; accessorie's, vert~t
aoocl condition. $1 ,500. 304·576·
2683.
' ....

Oll~ UTI~MtNT

PP.06,AM
1$ TtfAT YOU
GP.Al&gt;U~L#,.Y

IEGOMf ,414
E~t4111T.

1988 21Ft. Century Boat With ~
Cuddy Cabin. Camper Top With •
New Windows, Trim Tabs, 350 ~
Mercruiser, 614·-441·1803 Days; '
6t4-4~:!!i88 E.vJ111Ji1&amp;_ • ........

,

AA! lH~I~M.
~T I'UT·LON"

I €.VU. ~TE ! .

ttee Ford Ranger 4 WD 814 ·
448 0352
.

Raptirad. Now &amp; Rtbul. ~ Stock.
ca11 Ron e..... 1-6Q0.537.f1521.

t8S7 Oo4ga Dakate 4x4, V-6, II·
collent condilion, $8,200, eu .
11411-2217.

Kenmore Air Conditioner, 28,000
BTU, like - . 304-t7S.1714.

ttea 1lodg~ Caravan LE PW,
POL, Auto, 130,000 Mllao, $3,000
8t.....a731.
tGGS Extended Cab, Silverado,
Chaoy 4x4, ·
304-

17So4075.

123,500.

I'!'

TELL

YOII
SCIYI"fl Y011'll Find In the

. CIGssl(led S«llon.

ITUESDAY

111111 Dodge 314 Tort 414, Laaded.
.... Trltdt, St4-868-7311. •

\

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

DRYW~L

Hang firtilh. ..... r.
Ceilings teJtured, platter repair .
Call Tom 30ol-87f&gt;.418e. 20 years
tlll*'-"ce.

Ron'a TV Service, ~P~Cilllzing inZtMh also servtcing moat other
brands. House calls, 1-800· '1i7·
OOL, WV 304-578-23118.
Electrtcilend

Refrlgtratlon
Gntatar ....reliancl il IndiCated lor 1111
year aheed. You wlft fend for yoursatf
auccenfufly In lltuatiOna In which you

Ulld to depend on olhltl'l.
LID

CJI!Ir 21-AIIf. 221

You won't get

much eympathy today " you paint your·
... m a oonw and try to bllml one

etaa

for your mlatake. Leo. treat

yourNif to • bir1hday gift. 510111 lor your
Aatro·Graph prediction• tor the year

c/o
newapaper,
Box
1758, Murray Hll Station. New Yorlt. NY
10156. Make sure lo alale your zodiac

CJan. ..,._.•.

eherad with olheno. Selllth expectationt
wil be tltwalled.
ICOAPIO lOci. 24-Now. 22) YOY mighl
do welt In compttltlVI ei!Uatlona toUy.

mtJII take CMt not to uae lhe aame 18C·
tiel with lhe people you menage.

--"'!!

However, If you brag to athara, they
might do II tilly cen 10 tum your YiCiory

CXMr ~

not pr018C1 yoor inlerests
, a com·
patilor mighiiYy 10 claim lhe rewards you
sign.
blve earned.
VIRGO (Aug. D-Sept. 2211n a competi· PISCES (Fob. 20.11trch 201 Proceed
tlva, lun aclivlly wllh friends Ieday, lhe · cauliously today In regard Ia a new
1inal score mu61 not take precedence friendship. h wll take more time to deler·
over your relelionaNp wl1h a friend. Try 10 mine whether lhil peqon is awrything he
be a good aport.
or she appe11a 10 be.
UIRA Cllept. 21o()ct. Dl Yoo can lullill ARIES CltWch 21-Aprillt) Aulhority figyour ambitions 10dey, provided lhat whllt urae whO lhrow \heir weigttl around will
you hope to gain lor yourae11 can a1ao be nol impreea you loday. However, you

nto • humbling expeltollooe.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23·01C. 211

to lou your temper to
your teac of corupoehenlion. Do

fMI compelled

not ill your agodclmin* ~ ·
0EMH Clllr 21-olune 2011ri a corlwl•·
cial-ngemt~C today, you miWtt lett u
I~·~~~ doing Ill 1111 gMng ll1d 1111 other

grade lor mlf1liiling your own d8ino.

, may,_. IIIIIMII ny.
CIMCIR (.Nne 21-.lulr 12) Toclaj your
11H1n1 oll1ll •toltlj» Ioiiey, Mwl be your oompellllon mighl try to lllar your pdl
INPOholllly 10 Ill . . Iotti. N~ lrN1 · wlh ~upodlmoula. llowlill, I~ don,
people will oouoidltltlliou, !hey wll oe1um ' gllltlllllli:l. ,au cen ptllh h dollrio aolde ,

llhlad by mailng S2 and .SASE to A1t10- . lhe mor.

,,

TAURUS CApri.._ 201 When con·
wlh uaocl ' Ioiiey, ~ miWtt

Sorting out complicated altuatlona for
friends could win you pralae today .
However, yOY mlghl not get a paatllng . 'PI II doing Ill lllllaldng. Yoor paMel'

CAPRICOfiN (Doc. 12..,_

OTJIIRV
T R. •

0 C P F,

H T P

RIIK

IA K

I 8 Y ,K A D M

OIZTV·SKVHTACAH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ,t's amazing hOW many people beat yoo at
lha1 you're no longer preaidtnl.• -- (F"onner praeidentl George Bush.

goH now

wo••
tAM I

I=..',

rI

I

-..1.--.J-.l'--L-....L.......J

G Complete

ohe chiKkle quolod •

by foll;n~ ;n tho m;u;ng -d•
you develop from lfep No. 3 below.

UNSCIAMilf ABOVE UTTERS
TO GET ANSWER

l'rl 1 rl.
I I I I· I I
5

4

SCRAMUTS ANSWIRS

...."')}""

l

c

OKOTAK.

•

~

C&amp;S High Praoourt Waohing.
Spoclollzlnt In: Mabile Homoo;HouoH, Dtckl, Patiot, EIC. 814256·1502, 614-2!i8o0012.

)&gt;/'

I A 0 N

LKC VV

CZRIIIVI

L
·

't AM!

113ZJ..

•

E II I

I

HIM, JENNY! TELL
THI!» UUY WHO

C&amp;C General Home Main·
l&amp;ntnce- Painting, vinyl siding.
carpentry, doora, windows, .. ~s. ,
mobile 1-omo r011111r and more. lrM ftdmare c:11t Chet, 814·9i,2r"'

Rooldonual Or Commercial Wlr· ~
ing, Now Sonrlco Or Ropalro. U!"
censad Electrklen. Wetsh Elec: "'c.
trlc 614·44e.gg5o, Gallipolis
Otio.
•

lilT Oil

TV

8 PRINT
NUM6EREO lETIERS IN
THESE sgYAIES

Applian~e 'Parts And Service: At
Name Brands OVer 25 Years Ext,
periepet All Work Gulrtntaed.•
French City Uaytag, e 14-4-46·{
7795.

Residential or cammtrclal wtrlng".t.
new service or r&amp;Pairs. Mtsttr u,.~~t
censed electrician . Ridenou'f
Eloctricol, WV000308, 304·675· co
1781.
· '¥'

'KWFKYTKADK

~-T,-,,sr,,,~,,.,.,-1

'

W~O Ml

and.,.......

r-,. ..

II I

~~~·L--c:~---~~~~~

1------------------...:(

;r('.

by Lula Campoa

c...tly ClpNr Cl=.,.. . . CfHtld trom qyolltiOnl ~ llft'IOW peotpl, pllt
Eacft
n Nolphef IWIGIIof8f'Ohf.
'*-:N tqUM V

A .colleague received a
promotion. Someone quipped,
. . _ .
"Men can withstand adversity
.----~--':"'-:.,.----. but whal happens when you
WE U S I N
give them -- • • • ?"

•t~~~~

!'

RSES CERrFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heot Pumpa, Air Conditioning,
'lbu Don't Call Us Wo Both lo10P..
FrH Estimates, 1·800-211·0098. ....;.
81 4"'48-8308, wv 002D45.
'I''.!

CELEBRITY CIPHER

L I T E N

---------------------,.)
810
Home
•
Improvements
•

840

I oobaiiiO,
__ ..,., .....

Pllllllp Alder

Last May we went to see the so ·
called Ice Maiden, the young Peruvian
girl wbo was mwnmlfied and buried In
ice after being made a human IICI'ilice
eome 500 yean ago. She was rascinal·
ing, but more interesting was the
Mongolian exhibition, also at the
National Geographic Museum in
Washin&amp;ton, D.C. We learned a lot, in·
eluding that it Ia thought the correct
pronunciation isn't Ghengia Khan but
Chinggis Khan.
Old you llnow that Mon11o11a even has
a stock market? It began trading In the
capital, Ulan Bator, last August. On the
first day, there were bicla on 430 stock!
and trading in 16, with a ttl1110Ver worth
2.2 miUion tugriks, or $4.850.
Do they play bridge In Mongolia? Not
to my kno~e. But they certainly do
to the south, tn China, where many
leading politicians are keen competi·
tors. While in Beijing lor the world
championships last year, I played in a
match between 8 team that included
Ding Guan11en, the Minister of
lnfonnatlon, and five Britlih-bom jour·
nallsts. Ding played extremely well,
earning a slam swing on this deal.
Leading the diamond ace would
have killed the contract. but West opl·
ed for the spade five. Ding made short
. work of the play. After winning with
the spade ace, Ding correctly drew
only one round of trumps before un·
blocking his two heart bonors. A trump
over to the dummy pennitled declarer
to discard his diamond on the heart
ace. Ding. gave up 8 spade and claimed
the remainder on a CI'OIIrulf.
In the other room, North-South
stopped in three no-trump, so the
Chinese gained 13 International
matehpointa en route to victory.

1

1070 Chevy ..,, Stepside, 350
automttlc. tuns &amp; looks good .
$3.CIOO'lrm .. lot .... truck
OEV. 304-t75-67511.

.~,

s•
P8u

1992 Honda 4 Wheeler 300 ~
Wheel Drive, $2 ,500 : Nordict
Tract\ Excel $300 614-446-7912. "'#

0
BASEMENT
1877 Ferd FtOO, 8 cyl. automadc,
WATERPROOFING
':
PS, PB, runa great, good tires,
Unconditional tifelime guarantee~•
814·992·2886.
local releren,es furnished . Es· :
t975 . Call 1614) 446' 1
1880 Madel 150 Standard 4
Speed, Runa Groot St,200 080, 0870 Or 1·800-287·0576 Rogers'\
Watetproofing.
Stol-448·7515.

1871 Chevy 4x4, 4 apaed. 304 ·
874-4856.

.....

3-Loud ......

NorUi
II

Ministerial skill

l

SERVICES

tGG6 Chevy 111 cab, 4·wd, 350
engine, auto ., over·drlve, loadad. 1,800 miiH. 304-67S.5332.

311WWI3111'laJfarlllnl
37 CllciMa
31 Peychlc Gellr
41 -.,!hi

1 W,CoaotDOfl.
2 lnllllliOn

Opening lead: 4 5

KINe !I

,.,

1Zl3.

~·ICIIII)

DOWN

Both

~990 Vahama Warrier 4 Wheeler, ~
i1ke newl CBII 304-4575-2217. Price,
$1 ,850.

-·

288e.

21 Malanll

Dealer: Weal

1982 CB 900 Custom, fult}:
dreased, very good cond, muS?
181 $1,000. 304-675-3531.
~

toea.

.........

24~.

Motorcycles

'87 Honda XR 80, runs
$700 080, 614·992·6046.

750

.,.....ea .....

12o\g111Mt

"

10

A - hili

ftefd ·
11 CowRI·-·
11 ClrUIIn......
··~
COII!IIIAI
12.118w
.......
11 Pottlori ou1
a ,..., Deal prog20 lnicl¥mlnl
14 WCirdl at· .
21 Olilllar
dltilfal

•

.. A Q J 10 6 5

41

17 loulllliiR
tolatdnt pi

m111ary c11vtce
30 Lei---

8

41Gun ....

..

21 '1
t1111

14 CliiM

• '8 5 3
llolsth
• At 7 2
• K Q

1.'

1875 314 ton Ford pick up, V-8,
Pl. pb. euto, runs good, 614·992·

• QJ 84

• J t 65

10 ? 4 3
A Q 8 Z

t
... 3

1HO Coralc:a 4 Door, V-0, Auto,
AC, Blcket SealS, Tiret, Ex· Starcroll 19 ft . With Tr.ailer 7~
calltnl Condllion, S3.295; Cook Horse Evenrude Ercellent Condi.-..
tian, Till, Trim $2,500, 614 ·388 -•'
llolor1, 814-448-0103.
9466, 61-4·367-7071 .
~
1GG1 Oklo Daha 8e Royoie, actual
r
,.
mllea e0,-424. loaded. red. 4dr. 760
Auto Parts &amp;
Y'
Loan volut S6,225, lrado value
Accessories
•
$8,900, retail value $S,850. Ask·
lng $8,900. 304·675·5523 Leave ~B::ludg':':':e7
1 ;-Tr7an":'s_m+_s_s""io-n-s,"'u.,.s""ed""'IR:--e. :
built. All Types, Accessible TQ.J
1g92 Dodge Sha- ES, 2 Door, O'Jer 10,000 Transmission, Alsp (
~~tomtic, AC, Reor SPQIIer. AMI OYerhual K1ts, (114-245-5677
FM Cuaetta, 69,000 Mllea.
.••
790 Campers &amp;
S4,500 080, 814·2S8-6189.
Motor Homes
-&lt;
1GG2 Uncaln Mark 7 Red $11,000
7t7t -;F7t.-:T;-ru""c::-k-:C::-a":'m":'p_e_r-:S;-e-:II-:
·C:-o-=n1
814·582-4111 .
tained, Excellent Shape! 614 -446- r
1993 Grand Prix SE, Show Roam 2583.
. •·
Condition, low Mites. loaded,
Every Option, 81 ·44EI·1749 Alter 1980 Nomad 24' self·containe&amp;
3:00.
camper, excellent condition r$3000. 614·742·2181 .
. ....
1994 Tempo Gl, Red, 2 Oo&lt;r, PS, :--~---~~-------~·\
PS. o\lr, ~tamotlc, 34,000 lllloa 20 Fl. Prowler Camper Sell-Con,. :•
15,800, 614-24S..S877.
lained With Air, $4,500 : 9 112 F1 I
Coachman Truck Camper Self~ ~
77 Ford Muatanu Cobra II, 302 Con!ained Also With Air, S2,500,,....t
mota&lt; ,....y rebuilt. Holly 4 bolrrot, Balh In Very Good Condition . t
many new parts, body needs SU-367-7512.
'\:
wort price nag., 814-992-5368.
2911. Ledge-rwood, loaded, s1ove.~ :
Auto loanL Dealer will arrange fi. thower, to1le1. Call Mon-Thur be·:"'
n1ncing even il you have been tore 12pm, Fn-Sun anytime. 304· ~
turned dawn elsewhere. Upton
675-2798.
'
Equipment Used Cars. 304·458·

720 lhlcks for Sale

Eut

• K6 5

1993 Chwy S·IO, 4x4. low mile•
&amp; loadod, $8,200, 614·9•9-2217. ' ',

va.

1889 Toyota Carollo Deluxe, AC,
PS, PB, High lotilalgo, Runo Goad,
looks Sharpl $4,000 Firm Or
Trade F0&lt; Von, 814-258-6800.

K 7 t 2

Wnt

Ohio.

740

01-01-M

• 10 3
• A 82
I K J 74

1989 Grande Am LE Burgundy. 2 ~~~~~~--~:·
Doors, Auto, New Tires, 117,000 17 Ft. Aluminum Canoe, $225:
Milea, Very Good Condition, 614-4-46-9476.
..
$3,000,814-4411-3737.
196-4 Star Cralt, 181 Runabout \
1989 Olds Cutlass Citra Body 75hp Johnson, $2.0.00. 304-675:~
Damage, Good Motor, 4 Door, 5332.
~
AC, PB, PS, PW, $650, 61 4-446·
t984
Bandit
Bass
Boat
50
HP
t
1815, Aitef Sl• 814-448-1244.
Uercury Motor, Good Condi tion ~
1989 Pontiac Formula, loaded, $3600 Call Belween 1 pm and 5 f
pm(304)675·5t3t
=
305
304-875-6269.

JET

AERATtON MOTORS

all!llltncao, water, garbage In·
cltidad. $1to/mo I oacurlty dopoUt. 304-t7WI7S -*'gL

1968 ford Tempo GLS 2 Door, 5
Speed, Red, AMIFM Cusette.
New Brekea, E•haust, Tires, 32
MPG, $1,850, OBO, 814·379·
2845
.
t 988 Mud a 323SE 4 Door. 5
Speed, Groot Gas Mileage, Nice
Clean Car.$1900614·379-2568.

1871 Cnovy 4WD, 350, ••Pd .
12.500. 304-773-5113.

Bathtub, used, good condition, wtl Wented- vintage Barbit dolls.
accept reaaonabte offet". Cell :J04. clothta 'and acclaaorlea (105187f&gt;.Z8tt .

Narl1 3rd Aw,

One Ndroom •partrnent In Pt.
P1tuwtl.114-092-5881.

galloo pllollllc ..,... oaltanl, on alii 11088, 175.
6t•lll9-3ot03

CRUISE I 5 dayl/4 Hydraulic Ho-, Made To Onlar.
nights, Underbookedl Must s.lll Sidofl Equlpmtnt Co. 304·87S.
$2991Couplo. limited Ticketo. 7421 .
Some Restriction•. 1·800 ·835·
9999 ext 6589.
·
620 Wantlcl to Buy

"""'--"'pall, 814-l1112-5158.

---

1.:.;.==-:---'.:.....,==---

730 VIM &amp; 4-WDs

Nice 2 Bedroom Furniahed
Apartment, Galilpollo. Laundry
Room. Air, No Pota, $3851Mo ..
Pkrallopoai1. 814,o148-2100.

two bedroom apartmenrln

t986 Z·24 Cavalier, 2.a V6 ""lti·
port Fl, toacled, nice car, $2,600
Of trade for 4x4. :J&gt;4-e7S.2074.

11g4 Full Slzo 2 WD, Dodge
Truck, 318 ~to, Loaded. 32.000
llilll, $12,500, 080 614·256·

Newly Remodled furniahed 3
Roam Aparlmtnl At 851 Second
~venue Noll To Bos11rd library,
$35lllloto.. Ptuo $350 Deposit Requ ired . No Pets Allowed, Reference Required. can Jucly Or Debbie 814·448-7323.

Nl~•

I~~~~~~---------­

tGG2 iluzu pickup, 5 apaed, ni&lt;o,
$5000, 614·11112·25i4 ahar &amp;pm.

New Haven. 2bedroom, lumilhecl
apartment Deposit. Rtferencla.
304·682·2568.

Hlca CIHn 2 Bedroom ~II Elac·
trlc, Furnllhod Kitchen, Cialt To
Spring Volley, No Pata, 1350111o..
• D.O.-.. - . 614-44H157.

Cavalier station wag·

N

.1tl

111 CMine..,

15 A......,.o

1988 Dodge CaraWln Whitt, AlP-,;:
AMIFM 3.0 V-e, Good Condition,:.
$2. tOO, ~70-4054.
, ·

G Ia

a- -1111

12 ...... --

11 ,.,._at 1ty
Do You love To YAK On The
Phone? Wa Do &amp; Wo Got Paid
Well To Do ltl Wo'ro Sooklnt
Penonable People To Work
From Their Homes Conducting
SUrwyo DurinG Late Aft•noon &amp;
Evening Haura. No Long 01'!tanco Calla Or Sotllnt Involved.
CaH Joan Toll Froo At tM-185-

-415=--

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

BIUDOK

11) In -

•, IIIII come 0111 on tap.

Invest · Quest : Omege - Onwerd - UNSAID
I was told to speak kindly toward people and the kind-

est word is the unkind word left UNSAID.

AUGUSTS I

�•• ,

··~· - ··· · ~·

..

·~

••• , .. , _,, ••• , . •• , . . .

,.,,

t

. . . .' • •

,..., • • • •

· ···~~~-

. . ·, .... .

'* ' •.

'

.· ...

~ ;.

-· '

•

P-.ge 1() • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, August 6, 1996 '

Feedback has all the answers Area veterans take advantage of

Ohio Lottery

'

~IE

ANIU • RAil .

a.

By ANNE ADAMS Mel
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
·· Our desks are piled high with
FEEDBACK, so here it is!
WHAT MY FAMU..Y SHOULD
KNOW ··.A reader was looking for
thts boo~. It provides a place for
mformauon on assets, obligations,
personal information, etc.lt's a valuable resource for relatives of an ill or
deceased person. Thanks to many of
you, we now have a compendium of
family record-keeping books.
"What My Family Should Know"
is available from the Harriet Carter
catalog. It's item E6323 tllld is $7 .98,
plus tax and shipping. To order or for
more information, call: 215-361·
5122 or write: -Harriet Carter, Dept.
26, North Wales, PA 19455.
The Walter Drake catalog carries
"The Handy Record Keeper." It's
item Sl233 aad is $4.99, plus shipping. To order, call: 1·8CJ0.525·9291
or write: Walter Drake &amp; Sons,
. Prake Building, Colorado Springs,
co 8094().0002.

The Joa~~ Cook catalog carries 11
book called "LifeMate Info Center."
It featum easy-io-read type. It's
divided into sections with color-axled tabs. It's item 2000E-4218 and is
$19.95, plus. shipping. To 9,rder. call:
1-80()..935-0971 or write Joan Cook,
P.O. Box 6038, Peabody, MA 01961.
Donna McMillan is a professional organizer. Her fmn, McMiUan &amp;
Co., developed the "Personal Assets
Inventory Workbook" in 1994 following the fires, Doods and earth·
quake in Lo' Angeles. They also offer
a computer-mventory program called
"AssetCommander," available in
both MAC and Windows versions.
The "AsGt Inventory Package,"
which includes both the workbook
aad the computer software, is $29.95,
plus $1.50 for shipping and handling.
California residents add $2.47 sales
tax. The "Personal Assets Inventory
Workbook" is available for $9, plus
$1 for shipping. California residents
add 75 cents sales tax. To order, send
a check or money order to: McMil·
Jan and Co., 12021 Wilshire Blvd.,
Suite 670, West Lost Angeles, CA
90025.
"Getting Your Affairs in Order"
by Elmo A. Petterle is available
from Shelter Publications. It sells for
$12.95, plus $3 shipping and han·
dling, from Shelter Publications, P.O.
Box 279, Bolinas, CA 94924 or from
your local bookstore.
Many of our readers wrote to tell

us about a similar book called
"Answers" by BeckY Barker. It's
published by Harper &amp; Row. It's
available at your local bookstore.
Some state agencies on aging as
well as university extension services
have free publications to assist people in compiling personal and finan·
cial information. Call your locJll
agencies to find out if they are avail·
able.
An Indiana funeral director wrote
to suggest contacting a local funeral
home. They mtiy have a booklet to
help compile personal and legal
information.
V-NECK SLEEVELESS SHIRTS
•• Thanks to an anonymous reader in
Bloomington, Dl., we found a source,
The International Male Catalog. The
shirts come in white, black, red and
blue. They are $19 (plus shipping)
item D332, and available in small,
medium, large and extra-large. To
order, call: 1-8()().293·9333.
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048 . •
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the vol·
ume of mail, personal replies cannot
be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-authors of
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and
"Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Baniam). To order, call I·
8()().888-1220.

----Family reunion·- - - - · VINING
"f!te annual reunion of the Vining
. farntly was held recently at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly camp- ·
grounds.
Attending were Des Jeffers who
had prayer, his wife, Joni, children.
Katie, Nathan and Ryan, Pomeroy;
Bernice Vining Jeffers, Middleport;
Brenda and George Profitt. Eaton;

Melvin Milliron and Linda Jeffers of Rutland; Junior and Rita Vining
Milliron and Jason, Long Bottom; Smith, Whitney and Megan, Middle·
Troy and Melissa Wisecup, Justin and pon; Joe, Brian and Misty Overholts
Jessica. Xenia; Greg, Brenda Vining. of Eaton; Frank and Beverly Halley,
Jennifer, Amber, and Patti of Mid· Joshua and Tinell of Eaton; Roger
dleport; Bud and Wanda Vining of Vining and son, Sam, Syracuse; SherRutland; Teri Vining Smith, of Mid- ri Vining Darst and sons, Corey and 1
dleport; Jerry Harper of Minersville; Cllllstopher, Laurel Cliff Road;
Phyllis Vining and Angie Lucas of Christian Welker of Institute. W.Va ..
the county home; Frances Vining and Elizabeth Wicker.
Overholts of Eaton; Goldie Graham

Program teaches how to pick, dry flowers
A program on picking, drying and
arranging Dowers was given by Janet
Bolin, past president of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs, at a
recent meeting of the Meigs County
County Churches of Christ Women's
Fellowship held at the Dexter
Church.
Bolin showed two arrangements

of dried Dowers in baskets which
were awarded in a d111wing to Eileen
Bowers and Marge Wilt.
A son and prayer by Ann Lambert
opened the meeting. Wilt gave devotions and Joann Connant had a solo.
Reports were given and plans dis·
cussed by Sabra Ash for the Meigs
County Fair booth. Churches were

asked to help in planning the ladies
rally in April.
Cards were signed for Paula Pick·
ens and Peggy Bole. A hymn sing at
the Rutland Church of Christ was
. noted. Meeting closed with Linda
Bates, Charldene Alkire aad Bolin
singing "Where Could I Go But to the
Lord." Prayer by Ash closed the
meeting.

Society scrapbook-HARRISONVILLE NEWS

~ecent vtsttors of Mrs. Stella

Atkms were Mrs. Dorothy Wells and
daughter. Steubenville, Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Atkins, Mercer Island,
Wash., and Mrs. Linda McConnell
of Fairbanks, Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gilkey of
Columbus, Mrs. Alice Whaley of
Lancaster, Mr. .and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey of Albany were weekend vis·
itors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop were

- Thursday guests of Mrs. Sue Ferro
Norris is the daughter of Gary
in Kentucky.
and Donna Norris of Racine.
SCHOOL REUNION
DEAN'S LIST
The Silver Run Grade School
Kendra Norris, Racine, was will have its annual reunion on Sept.
named to the spring quarter dean's I on the school grounds flat from I
list at Otterbein College in Wester· to 4 p.m. Former students, their fam·
ville.
ilies and friends are invited to attend.
She was also inducted in the Those coming are asked to take lawn
Otterbein chapter of Alpha Lambda chairs and memorabilia. A light lun·
Delta, a national society that honors cheon will be provided. The Big
academic excellence during a stu· Bend Cloggers will perform about 2
dent's first year at college.
p.m.

Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop: Four
decades of entertaining children

"
•

By KAREN TESTA
off the air, she conducted symphony
Aaaoclatecl PreH Writer
orchestras.
BRANSON, Mo. (AP) - A
It took three decades to come full
woman approached the diminutive, circle.
redheaded children's entertainer with
In 1992, she returned to children's
great skepticism.
television. This year, she captured her
"Are ,YOU the original Shari fifth consecutive Emmy Award as the
Lewis?" she asked.
outstanding performer in a children's
"I had to tell her I was the origi· series for "Lamb Chop's Playnal Shari Lewis, with almost all the Along" on PBS.
Lewis and her friends Lamb Chop.
original parts," Lewis ICC&amp;IIed on
stage, drawing confused smiles from Hush Puppy and Charlie Horse doeschildren and knowing laughter from n't want to entertain only children.
"I don't tend to favor an all-chil·
their parents.
Four decades after she first dren 's audience," she said. "They
appeared on television with her pup- have been exposed to so much that's
pet Lamb Chop, Lewis continues to stupid that when children are all
get international recognition as a per- together they expect nothing but stu·
former and innovator-in children's pidity.
programming.
"There's an unnecessary coarsen·
While children's programming . ins of children's shows that feature
has changed drtiiJiatically, Lewis • characters that constantly pass wind,
themes have been remarkably con· mean-spirited, hostile &gt;relationships.
ststent. The lessons of sharing, cheat· And, of course, those things attract
ing, se~aration have managed to per· attention. But I don't think that's what
severe tn the age of the Mighty Mor· our children should he exposed to."
phin Power Ranger.
· There's no vulgarity, violence or
"I think there's a simplicity to prottlllity during any of Lewis' per·
Lamb Chop that is an important part formances.
of her appeal," Lewis said before a
Nor are there in-depth discussions
recent show at Andy Williams' Moon of tough issues like family break-ups
River Thea~. "But I don't really or death.
know wbat tt ts that ts the continuing
'"Sesame Street,' which does
element. I know that I don't like to wonderful research. has never been
.~ that cenainly is an ele· able to deal with divorce because
--~-~
there's too many questions that need
She 1......... her own television to be answered and can't he answered
show in 1957 after a single appear. on a one-way medium, .. Lewis said.
81fCC with Lamb Chop. a white sock "I
·
fixed up to look like a lamb, on the
·take my lead from 'Sesame'
"Capllin Kansaroo Show." That because I don't have the minions they
.Ldo 10 invest in research and I respect
Show went off the air in 1963 .•......
8
their research. ..
111051 children's ~g went to·
She does address cheltins, lying
mimalion.
11111 stalin&amp;_ "thole a.e tbinp that
Lewis then became a Las Vegas every child does at least oace. Those
performer. When Vep went rock Ire things from which we all recovand country. she did dte celebrity er."
game-show circuit~ thole went .

I ::i.
•

The boldest of her shows carne on
a theme Lewis had always avoided:
religion. PBS asked her last year to
do a special on Hanukkah. With nonJewish guests Pat Morita and Alan
Thicke, she stressed the similarities in
how Jewish and non:-Jewish families
celebrate holidays.
Lewis, who is Jewish, is in pre·
production this summer for another
PBS special. "Shari's Passover Surprise," to feature Dom DeLuise.
"It's going to be a question
whether he ends up cooking matzo
balls or meatballs," she said.
At 62, Lewis said her biggest
struggle in entertainment is staying
current in musical styles and !an·
guage. To keep up. she is constantly
interviewing young children to pick
up the latest vocabulary.
, "It's tricky because you have to be
carefl!l," she said. "Certain words
that the' kids were using a year ago
tllat they're not using now. But Lamb
Chop talks about something being
'awesome,' and Charlie Horse uses
'rad' and the other words the kids are
using."
There a.e some folks who still
think Lewis is pretty groovy.
"You know all the songs." Pat
Cantwell, 41, of Louisville, Ky., said
after seeing Lewis in Branson. "I wos
probably a participlll!t more than my
daughter was."
"As far as I'm concerned, she has·
n't changed," said Gene Kramer, 44,
of FreebWJ,III. "She's gotten better
- if that's possible."
Lewis said she's not bothered by
the gray-haired audience memheJS
remembering her from their child-

hood.
"I think it's wonderful," she said.
"I'm waitiiJI for the nut genera-

tion ...

new health care screening clinic
By MINDY KEARNS,
OVP Newt Staff

Reds nip Giants
3-2 in league
play on the road

Pick 3:
8-5-2
Pick 4:
3-8-0-4
Buckeye 5:
1-8-13-17-34

Sports on Page 4

POINT PLEASANT, W. VA..
Local veterans will not have to
travel as far to receive health
screenings by the Huntington Veterans Administration Medical Ccn·
ter, thanks to a new program begun
at the Mason County Action Center
in Point Pleasant.
The VA medical center staned a
health screening clinic at the Point
Pleasant location two weeks ago,
and nearly 100 veterans have
a~r~ady taken advantage of the serVI~e.

•

en tine

.

J.B. Finlay of the Veterans
Administration said the clinic is a
community outreach effort to promote health. The program offers a
free health screening and risk
assessment clinic for all area veter·
ans. The clinic, located at 10 I Sec·
ond Street, includes a limited physical examination, basic blood and
lab tests, and prostate cancer
screening.
Finlay said during the 15·
minute appointment. the veteran's
medical history and lifestyle is
noted, along with any medication
the veteran is on. A laboratory
technician then takes a blood sam·
pie and urinalysis. After the screen·
ing is completed, the veteran will
receive written test results to tell
them if any follow-up care is need·
ed.
"It's aimed at early intervention," Finlay said. He noted that
two recent participants of the program were surprised to find that
they had high blood sugar and a
cancerous lesion.
"It's difficult for many veterans
to go to Huntington. Access is a
real problem, so instead of veterans
going to Huntington, we're coming
to them," Finlay continued.
Steven R. Swords, service offi.
cer with the G,allia County Veter·
ans Service Office, said many vet·
erans don't even know they are eli·
gible for services. "It's for any vet·
eran, not only war-time vets," he
said.
Finlay said there are more
advantages for the outreach pro·
gram, in addition to access. "Some
people just don't like going into
hospitals. This way they can feel
more comfortable going into the
action center," he said.
The program is in its second
week, and the VA Me&lt;lical Center
has committed to keeping the pro·
gram going for at least two months,
although Finlay said it will remain
open as long as there are patients.
The health screening clinic is
open two days per week, but the
days alternate. Appointments are
encouraged, and those wishing to
set up a screening can call 1-800·
827-8244, extension 34,51.
Following the screening, if the
veteran needs follow-up care, a
new transportation program will
see that the veteran gets to Hunt·
ington, W.Va.
Finlay said beginning Sept. 3, a
transportation van will depart each
Tuesday and Friday at 8 a.m. from
the Point Pleasant McDonald's to

Vol. 47, NO. 67
2 Sectlone, 12 P-an

DRAWING BLOOD· Charles Angell, MLT, with the Huntington
Veterans Administration Medical Center, Is pictured drawing
blood from veteran Carroll Burnette of Gallipolis. Included In the
health screening at the new program In Point Pleasant, W.Va. Is
a limited physical examination, baaic blood and lab tests and
pro1tate cancer acreenlng.
•

A Gennett Co. Newepeper

HEALTH SCREENING • Gwen Skidmore with the Huntington
Veteran• Admlniatratlon Medical Center, left, Ia shown as she
questions veteran Kenneth Davis of· Long Bottom, on his medical
history. A health screening clinic has begun aa an outreach program of the madical center at the Mason County Action Center,
101 Second St., !Joint Pleasant, W.Va.
take veterans to the Huntington VA
Medical Center. The van will then
return veterans in the afternoon .
Transpon'luion will be provided by
the Disabled American Veterans
Transportation Service. To schedule a ride, call 1·800·827-8244,
e~tension 2979.
Finlay said the transportation
program will continue even if the
screening clinic is ended.
Swords emphasized that trans·
portation for Gallia County vcter·
ans will continue from Gallia
County on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Transportation can be sched·
uled there by calling Swords at
446-2005.
When a veteran goes to the VA

Medical Center for follow' up treat·
ment, services may be free or at a
reduced fee. based on income and
if the patient is service connected.
Also, if a veteran goes to the health
screening clinic and follow-up is
needed, he or she may also take the
report to his family physician. By
laking advantage of the blood tests
at the clinic, the veteran can still
realize a savings.
Finlay said the quick success of
the local program can be attributed
to people like Bill Nibert, who was
instrumental in securing the clinic
for Mason County, Gene Salem,
Mason County Action Group
director and the community.

27 Month Premium CD

6.27

A benefit fundraiser dinner will be
held for Rusty Marshall, Pomeroy,
•
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
The youth underwent brain
Minimum deposit to open an account is $5.000.00. Rates indicate annual percentage yiek:l
surgery in Jun~. He is now recuper· and
... eflecllve ror IICCOI.&lt;Its opened from August t. t9961hrough August 7, t996. lntetelt to
be capitaliZed or direct deposled. Oepos~s ol StOO.OOO or mora are subject to dally rata
ating at home.
quotations. A penalty for oarty withdrawal may be omposed. Above rates available at all
Marshall has been an active part of Peoples
Bani&lt; Jocatlons FDIC Insured.
God's N.E.T. and Friday evening vis·
ited the youth center and participat· .
ed in some of the games.
:
The fundraiser will he a spaghet·j
ti dinner with entertainment by local
groups. Those 21 and under can eat
free while all others are asked to con·
tributeS I. A free. will offering will be
taken and all proceeds will go to the
Marshall family to help with Oltpe!IS·
es incurred dllring the youth's illness.

I

a...-----

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News StaH
The Meigs County Special
Food and Nutrition Program for
Women, Infants and Children better known as the WIC Program
- has an all-time high number of
openings for pregnant women, new
mothers, infants and children up to
5 years of age.
Part of the reason for the high
number of openings, according to
Deborah L. Babbitt, is that resi·
dents tend to think that WIC is only
for the poor.
"It's not," says Babbitt, the pro·
gra. 's director, who pointed out that
"it is designed to help families who
are in the low and middle income
categories."
While income does come into :
~ play when determining eligibility, ·
the allowable income figures are
relatively high to qualify, she said.
Babbitt used the example of a
single and pregnant woman with
no other children. She said that
counts as a family of two, which
·qualifies her for WIC if her income
is not higher than $19,166 a year.
A family of four can gross $28,800
a year and be financially eligible
for the benefits. said the WIC
director.
She funher explained that the
program goes by current income. If
a woman goes on maternity leave
and the family receives a reduction
in .income, that .reduced income is
what is considered to determine eli·
gibility.
Presently, Meigs County WIC is
serving 69 percent of the poten·
tially income-eligible residents.
said Babbitt, less than the state

A 28-year-old Rocksprings Road man was listed in fair condition this
morning at Ohio State University Medical Center in Columbus after his ultra·
light airplane crashed Tuesday evening.
Keith Allen was operating a Hurricane Ultralight aircraft around 8 p.m.
and ran intCY complications when the craft began banking to the left. accord·
ing to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
"He Cried to land the craft - he released the emergency chute - but the
craft crfi~hed in the George Thomp•on hayfield on Rocksprings Road ," said
Soulsby. "Allen reponed that he fell approximately 200 feet, which would
account for the emergency chute not working."
Allen walked approximately a mile to the home of Shirley Friend. who
transported him to Veterans Memorial Hospital, according to the sheriffs
report. He was then transported by helicopter to OSU .
Soulsby said Allen had a broken foot, head injuries and possible internal
injuries. The a1rcraft was destroyed.

Arr l=orce piinis.lles
16 for Brown's death

WIC ENROLLMENT OPEN- There are now opening• for pregnant woman, Infanta and chll·
dren up to 5 years of age at Melga County'• WIC program. Baud on lncoma guideline•, food
coupons and health aervlcae are provided free 11 a part of the federally-funded program to
Improve the health care of children. Krl1ten Torrea, above at right, summer outreach worker,
•poke with cllenta, from left, April Hall; her daughter, Tiffany; and son, Zachary.
average of 72 percent.
In early July. 946 residents
were provided assistance through
the program. The enrollment
increased significantly more during
the month as the department
moved toward the 1.000 figure projected as optimal for service
through the federally-funded pro·

gram. considering Meigs County's
demographics.
In discussing the figures, Nor·
ma Torres, R.N .. nursing director
for the Meigs County Health
Department, which administers the
program. said that it has been "statistically proven that at-risk chi!·
drcn who arc on the WIC progrdm

brighter. do better in school and
have the greatest brain growth
during those early years resulting
in the highest potential for learn·
ing."
"It's a wonderful program. it's
free for those who fall within the
income guidelines, it provides car(Contlnued on Page 3)
1t'C

Rising costs of food

-Nation's strange weather
sends food prices upward
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
AP Bualneaa Writer
A nickel here. a dime there . Some·
times a whole dollar. Americans are
watching !heir grocery bills creep
upward because of storms and
drought in the nation's rarm regions.
Still, smart shoppers will be able
to find sales and specials .on some of
the very items that have been going
up~n price. Moreover. supermarkets
say the increases are being offset by
falling prices on other products.
A spot check by The Associated
Press in·several big U.S. cities found
prices inching up..,..ard between late
June and early August on bread, pas·
ta and meat. These increases come on
top of a'surge over the past year.
But the surv~y also found stores
putting meat, cereal and bread on
sale, in the expectation of making up ·
the discounts from other items.
"It seems like everything you buy
is too high," said Ann Thoren, shopping at Aldi Foods in De, Moines,
Iowa. But she added: "I usually go ·
ahead and buy it anyway."
· ·
The government and many ccon· omists are warning that food prices :
will continue to rise into next year. ·
The failure of the winter wheat crop .
in parts of the Midwest is expected to .
push prices for bread and pasta high·
er ....:. according to some estimates, as

- including the Home National Bank, whi ch agreed to pay the costs of the
special election.
"I would like to thank the voters who almost made it happen ," he said.
"We will now just have to see what hurdles arc ahead for Southern Local."
But this time, building supporters arc throwing in the towel.
"This is the end of the building committee - it's basically over with,"
said Chairman Dave Spencer. "I really feel it's the beginning of the end for
the Southern School District."
Although disappointed, Spencer said he was not surprised by the election
results.
"I really had anticipated this. The ones I really feel sorry for arc the kids,"
he added.
.
Unofficial results by precinct were (for/against): Racine - 164/131; Letart
- 101/141; Lebanon- 101/138; Racine Village - 162/122; Minersville
- 1201135: Syracuse - 1351171; total - 783/838.

Pomeroy man injured
in crash of ultralight

I

5.7

to benefit
Marshall

The state, through its school building assistance program, had agreed to
By JIM FREEMAN
pay ' appro~imately half of the cost of the $7.4 million project which would
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Southern Local School District proved a four-time loser Tuesday in have included a combined elementary/junior high school and renovations to
its bid for a new district-wide elementary school and other building improve- the existing high school.
Along with the state money, the district's hopes of getting a new build·
ments. ·
A 5.42-mill, 23-year bond levy issue went down in defeat by 55 votes (783· ing anytime in the foreseeable future are gone. Southern Superintendent James
838), according to unofficial results from the Meigs County Board of Elec- Lawrence said.
"The State Department of Education had given us one last chance and the
tions.
In the six precincts comprising the district, 1,645 of the 3,535 voters, or citizens decided it was not worth the sacrifices they would have to make,"
46.53 percent, turned out to vote. Included in the total count were 152 absen· said Lawrence.
"It will be many years before the state is willing to provide us building
tee ballots.
The issue passed in two precincts, Racine and Racine Village,'by 33 and assistance again," he added. ''I'm sorry the children of Southern Local missed
out on this opportunity."
40 unofficial votes, respectively.
Lawrence thanked the members of the Southern Local Building Com·
Tuesday's election marked the founh time since 1985 the b•ilding issue
mittee.
which had been working on the issue since December, area businesses
has failed in the district.

Health Department notes record
number of openings for WIC aid

11 Month Premium CD

(Fund raiser

35cenl8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 7, 1996

55 votes doom Southern's school bond issue

There's always
strong interest in
first-rate banking.
RUSTY MARSHALL

Partly cloudy an
muggy tonight, Iowa In
70s. Thursday, ICIIttltrectl
thunderstorms. H
near90.

Food prices have been clinbing over lhe pasl year, in part because of drought
and storms that have reduced the nation's food supply. Farmers are getting
higher prices lor their crops, and in lum, consumers have been paying more
at the grocery store.
·

much as 8 percent.
Consumers arc coping with the
increases by adjusting their shopping
lists.
"' I always look at the ads before 1
go to to the store. I find out what is
on sale and tunc my menu to what's
on salc.lf chicken is on sale, I'll cook
chicken." said Celeste Nip. a shopper
in Honolulu.
In South Portland. Maine, Theresa Kent said she's been buying more
store-brand items.
So far prices for bread seem to be
rising slightly. A loaf of Wonder
bread that cost $1:59 in two Columbus. Ohio, stores in late June now
goes for SI .M. In Shaw's in Ponland,
Maine, bread was up 10 cents to
·SI.39. AtaDallasTomThumbstore,
Wonder rose -20 cents to $1.49.
Meat and poultry prices also
showed signs of rising. although
supermarkets are continually putting
a variety of cuts on sale, as they·tra·
ditionally do. In Kansas City, Mo.,
Marsh's SunFresh store charged
$1 .99 a pound for TYson split chick·
en breasts, up 20 cents from late June.
For the time being, a shopper's
overall food bill may not rise that
much, said Paul Bernish, .a
spokesman for kroger Co., one of the
nation's biggest supermarket chains.
Bernish noted that coff?ces,

WASHINGTON (AP) - An Air The actions arc considered ruinous lo
Force general and colonel have been their careers. However. criminal
reprimanded for . "dereliction of charges wi II not be brought and the
duty·· in connection with the April reprimands dose their cases. Air
crash that killed Commerce Secretary Force officials said.
A two-star general also received a
Ron Brown and 34 others in Croatletter of reprimand . He was identifted
ia.
In all. 16 officers were given pun· as Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Cliver, the lor·
ishmcnts ranging from letters of rep· mer director of operations for U.S.
rimand to counseling in connection Air Forces in Europe. He was fault·
with the crash of the CT-43 aimaft cd for '"failing to exercise effective
oversight ' ' over his organization.
ncar Dubrovnik on April 3.
In an announcement, the Air Fon:c
Such a letter is also considered a
said Brig. Gen. William E. Stevens, significant form nf punishment to
the commander of the H6th Airlift such a senior oflicer.
Wmg at Ramstein Air Base in Gcr·
In June. the Air Force said its
many. and his operations commander. investigation of the crash determined
Col. John E. Mawrowski. were giv- several causes. including pilot error.
en lcners of reprimand u~dcr Ankle II found Air Force commanders in ·
15 of the Uniform Code of Military Europe had violated re!!ulutions in
Justice. Brown's plane was under the allowing Brown's plane to land at the
command, of that wing .
·
iDuhrovnik aitpan. Also. even though
It is the most serious punishment the A1r Force headquarters had issued
that can he meted out hy the service an order against landing at foreign
shor1 of a c.:ounmartial.
airports without first wnducting ''
The men had already hecn safety review, that order was ignored.
stripped of their commands in June . the report found .

Personnel matters get nod
from Southern Local Board

The Southern Local Board ol' Education took care of routine personnel
matters at its Monday night meeting at Southern Local High School in Racine.
Consumer prices JIJI!fl r995 1
The board approved the resignation of bus driver Roger E. Hill due to
Polk chop
Chicken breast White bread
health
reasons. and the resignation of bus driver Ernest "Ike" Spencer due
{11one-/JV center cuV
(per p&lt;!IKld)
to
his
accepting
another position as a custodian.
$.781$.89
Hired as substitute teachers were Michelle Frazier, kindcrgart~nlclcmcn·
tary ; Bethany Mayer. elementary: and Carin Taylor. elementary.
Jim Anderson was unanimously approved as volunteer golf coach for the
1996-97 school year, and Todd Cummins was accepted as junior high school
girls' basketball coach. with board member Bob Collins voting against.
Also attending were Southern High School Princ1pal Gordon F1shcr, whu
presented
the 1996-97 student handbook for approval. The board approved
Cettle
the
handbook
3-0. with the newest board members. David Kucsma and
_ (11/1/::~.J.~r-1
Collins.' abstaining. They said they had not yet read 1hc handbook .
Junior High School Principal Michaela Kucsma presented the new junior
high student handbook, which was also approved .
• In other business, the board:
·
• Approved the tuition rate of S1,825.18 for the 1996-97 school ycur.
• Accepted the following foreign ex change students at the high school for
the upcoming school year: Cornelia Horst of Germqny. Euclina Gtowack:t
of Poland and Joao Cales Karg of Brazil. Their host families will be, rcspcc·
tivcly. Jim and Patsy Warner. Pete and Roma Sayre and Rex and Cathy Cum-·
mings.
• Approved a motion to leave lunchroom prices for the 1996-97 school
year the same as last year.
• Held an executive session to.di .c uss personnel matters.
The following bids for supplies were approved for the 1996-97 sch{)()l yctll':
Heiner's Bakery. Charleston. W.Va .. bread; Michael's Icc Cream Inc .. icc
cream; Snouffer's Fire and Safety, Middleport. fire extinguishers; Best Office
Supply, Belpre, copier and typewriters ; Warehouse lire. Athens, hus tires and
tubes; G &amp; M Fuel Co., Minersville. fuel and oil ; Burlile Oil Co.. GallipoSource: ~StltlltiCIBaelll.au...oll.aborend&amp;llti*l
- m.J.CIlis, antifreeze; Broughton, Marietta, milk; Standard Foods. Hurricane, W.Va.,
food.
which shot hiJher last year because Corp. and Procter &amp; Gamble Co.
Present were Superintendtnt James Lawrence. Treasurer ~nnie Hill,
Brazil's crop was reduced by about have cut prices on things like toilet
Board
President Susie Grueser, and board members David Kucsma, Collin$
half, have come back down. And paper.
C.T.
Chapman
and Marty Morarity.
'
companies like Kimberly-Clark
I

J-••

--------------~~-----------------~-----

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="390">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9762">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29859">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29858">
              <text>August 6, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="660">
      <name>long</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="415">
      <name>robinson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
