<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9551" 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/9551?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-17T03:14:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19986">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/489e6d003eea0b845c1f93a9ed0a8b68.pdf</src>
      <authentication>64c5875b5c4d890a4645d3627a585b8c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30626">
                  <text>..

.l
~mtroy !

P • 10 •l'M-Oally Sentinel- - •

-

-·

•

Tuesday, May 23, 1*

Mld.rbport, Ohio

~·-

Community
calendar .

Meigs High students
granted scholarship

The C-Ditr C.lendiU' II
ship of $750 each. Todd McDade
received tbe FHA scholarship, a
publlalled •• a free .. utca to
non-proftt aroaps wl•lllaa to
SSO savings bond.
The Army Reserve National
annouace meetiDa aad apeclal
eve.a ts. Tbe caleadar 11 not
. Scholar Athlete Awards went to
desi1ned to promote tales or
Mandy Jones and Walt Williams,
rund ralnrs or anr type. liewilb Jason Taylor and Kim Janey
are printed u space permlb 111111
receiving tbe Air Force Math and
cannot be 1uaranteed to raa a
Science Award, and Heidi Huff.
spedflc number of da)'l.
man and Becky Meier being given
TUESDAY
tbe Marine Corps Scholastic ExceiPOMEROY
- · Meigs Athletic
Jence/Distingulshed
Athlete
Boosters
spring
banquet, 6:30 p.m.
Awards. Presented tbe OHSAA
Tuesday
in
the
Meig~
High Scbool'
Scholar Athlete AWards were Ben
cafeteria.
Meat,
rolls,
drinks furEwing and Bobbie Butcher. Kevin
nished.
Logan and Jaclyn Swartz received
tbe Archie Griffm Sportsmanship
WEDNESDAY
Wilfong; second row, Todd McDade, Sarah
Award. The Holzer Science Awaid
cl!~.~~~~~~~~~!!~~~
WINNERS
Presented
Anderson,
Crystal
Vaughan,
Beckie
Elliott,
MIDDLEPORT
- The centens•
awards totallnt! more than $46,000
went 10 ShUo Moore.
Tara
Erwin
and
Becky
Meier;
and
third
row,
nial
luncheon
of
the
Middleport
during lbe anaual awards assembly at Meigs
Selected as the outstanding
Juon
Taylor,
Adam
Krawsczyn,
Reggie
Prall
Literary
Club
will
be
held
at 12:30
High School Monday momlaa were left to right,
juniors at Meigs High and Jll)lsenland
Brent
Smith.
a.m.
at
the
Middleport
Church
of
front, Klm.Juey, Heidi Huffman, Mandy Jones,
ed diclionari~ by the Ohio Univer·Christ.
Response,
an
original
poem.
Sheri Ramsburg, Amanda
Well and Melissa
sity Alumni Association were Ali.
son Gerlach and Adam Sheets.
POMEROY - Wildwood GarDanforth Award winners were
den Club, home of Juanita Will,
Dorothy Leifheit and Ryan Crisp.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
They were selected on tbe basis of
academic achievement and leaderTHURSDAY
ship potential.
POMEROYPreceptor Beta
American Legion Americanism
Beta
Sigma Phi
Beta
Chapter,
Awards of $50 savings bonds went
Sorority,
picnic,
Joan
Corder, 6
to Travis Grate and Mandy Jones.
p.m.,
Thursday
Middlepon.
Other recognitions included
Jason Taylor and Libby King as
POMEROY - Parish Grace
runner-up on the TVC champion
Church will celebrate lbe
Episcopal
quiz team; Michael Leifheit aS tbe
Feast
of
the
Ascension with a ser- .
best American history student and
vice
of
Holy
Eucharist at 6 p.m.
the top student in algebra II; Walt
The
community
is invited to jom in
Williams as the best advanced
the
celebration.
American History student; Crystal
Vaughan, speech and drama highSATURDAY
est average; Amy Smith, top stuPOMEROYPomeroy Class
dent in algebrn.
of
1960,
reunion,
Pomeroy
Legion
Other outslanding students rechall,
2
to
6
p.m.
Saturday.
ognized and the subject for which
they were recognized included:
Michael Leifheit and Sandra
DANFORTH AWARD WINNERS -Using
juniors, as recipients of the Danforth Award.
Young, earth science; George criteria of academic achievement and leadership
Here ClifT Kennedy, left, presents the "I Dare
Miller, general science; Sabrina potentia~ a Meigs High School staff committee
You" books to the students.
Smith, general English I; Sandra selected Dorothy Leifheit and Ryan Crisp,
Young and Michael Leifheit, college preparatory English I; Libby Ewing, Daniclle Smith, and Matt man, power mechanics; Pat Young, were Shilo Moore, president; CrysIn an effort 10 provide our read· King, Erin Kraw.sczyn and Bea 0' Bryant, citizenship.
student of the year in m"arketing lal Vaughan, vice president; Heidi ership witb current news, the GalHuffman, secretary; Sarah AnderStewan, EngUsh 2.
Drama awards went to .Shannon students.
lipolis Daily Tribune and ~Daily
son,
treasurer; Kelley Grueser, Sentinel will not accept weddings
Walt Williams, Shilo Moore, Staats, special assistance; Adam
Presidential Fitness Awards
Heidi Huffman, Jason Taylor, Sheets and. Heidi Huffman, best went to Sar~b Anderson, Heidi Mandy Jones, KimiJaney, Jamie after 60 days from the date of tbe. ·
Cryslal Vaughan, and ~arab Ander- performance; S.arn Cowan and Kel- Huffman, Kim Janey, Shilo Moore, Ord, Stephanie Thomas, and Jason event"
·
son, A average, with Kim Janey, ley Grueser, best music perfor- Jason Tavlor. Crvstal Vaughan, Taylor.
All club meetings and other
Roses were presented to the news articles in the society section
the highest average, English 4; Kim mance; Vanessa Compston, best Mandy Jones, Lisa Yeauget, and
senior
class officers in recognition must be submitted within .30 days
Janey and Kelley Grueser, top four- actress and Jcrod Cook, best actor;
Kelley Grueser; and work study
of
lheir
leadership in activities dur- of occurrence. All birthdays must
year French students; Alison GerOther top students recognized awards to April Snider, Shannon
lach, Dorothy Leifheit, Adams were Scott Dodson, wood techno!- Wheeler, Bryan Lambert, Larry ing the year and to 1he junior class be submitted witbin 42 days of tbe .
Sheets, and Cindi Stewart, chem- . ogy; B. J. Workman, mechanical Rutter, Keith Friend, and Darrell officers for work on the junior occurence.
prom. Also recognized were lhe top
. istry; Jason Taylor and Walt drawing; Jared King, wood tech 2; Lee.
All material submitted for publiWilliams, government; Billy Jo James Kopszinsky, crafts; J. D.
, National Honor Society mem- 10 in the freshman, sophomore and cation is subject to editting.
Bentley, American History; Ben Keesee, wood tech 3; .B. J. Work- bers recognized and presented pins junior classes.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Sentinel Slalf
Scbolanhips exceedins $46.000
were awarded to 22 graduates in
tbe Meigs Hish School class of
1995 and other academic and athletic achievers were recognized at
the annual awards assembly held
Monday morning at lbe school.
Jason Taylor was the recipient
of die Albert B. Vatlees Memorial
Scholarship, a .$16,000 four-year
scholarship to the University of
Cincinnati.
Awarded tbe Ohio Board of
Regents Scholarship of $1,000 for
each or four years of college was
Kim Janey. She also received a
four year honors scholarship valued
at $6,000 from lhe University of
Rio Grande.
Heidi Huffman was awarded a
renewable scholarship of $2,400
per year by the Philadelphia College of Bible, along wilh a second
leadersbip scholarship, also renewable, of $1,000 a year. She was also
presented tbe Who Who's Among
American High School Students of
$1,000 and the Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative Scholarship of
$300.
Awarded tbe University of Rio
Grande Trustees Scholarship of
$4,000 over a' four year period \)'as
Mandy Jones.
Other scholarships awarded
Included Reggie·Prau, $1,000, Veterans Memorial Hospital Auxiliary;
Robby Balcer, $1,000 from lhe Peoples Bank Scholarship to the University of Rio Grande; Sherry
Ramsburg, Racine Home National
Bank Scholarship, University of
Rio Grande; Jared Cook and Adam
Krawsczyn, $200 each from the
Mary Roush Memorial Scholarship; Becky Meier and Melissa
Wilfong, $750 each, Louise
Morhart Scholarship; Rachael
Blaine, $800, Fred G. Frowfelter
Memorial Scholarship; Tara Erwin
and Becky Meier, Student Council
Scholarship, $125 each.
Becky E!liott, $200, Hocking
College Principal's Scholarship;
Walt Williams and Sarah Ander•
son; $200 Senior Class Scholarships; Brent Smith, Meigs Local
Teachers Association Scholarship
of $250; Sarah Anderson, Ohio
State University Alumni Scholarship, $500; Adam Krawsczyn,
$500, Parker Long Scholarship;
and Erica Meadows and Amanda
Well, Bedford Township Scholar-

hio Lottery

Meigs
athletes
honored

Pick 3:
982
Pick 4:
4505
Buckeye 5:
3-11-19-23-31

Sports, Pages 4-5

a1

News policy

AMultimedia Inc. N-apoper

I

.

'

2 Seetlona, 14 PaQH 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 24, 1995

!

IIOL

•

•

Vol. 46, NO. 18
Cqpvrlght1995

Low toalgllt 111 60s. Ram.
Tllunday, rain. Hlp ID low-

·Meigs board OKs 19 pay hikes

COMMUNITY SPIRIT -Middleport's Jeremy Ross selflessly
donated time to help clean up a home thai caught fire last week.
Ross Is pictured wilb Pam Fi12patrkk, wbo was displaced from her
home by tbe fire.
,

Middleport teen shows
community spirit
Whoever says all youtbs are lazy, selfish and not. committed bas·
missed lbe mark.
One area youlb - Jeremy Ross - donated more !ban 15 hours
cif labor to help clean a Pomeroy apartment that burnt last week.
Ross said be offered to help work because he knows lhe Taylor
family welL .
"Plus, my bouse burnt down and I know what it's like," Ross
said. Tbe ·l4-year-old's home was consumed by nrc several months
ago.
Ross shoveled insulation and carried boards, clothes and boxes
up and down three flights Of stairs at this 217 E. Second St.
Pomeroy apartment.
"It was fun. I got to ~ with my uncle all the time," be added.
Ross saidhe didn't want 10 get.paid for his work.
·
Ross, a sevenih grader at Meigs Junior High School, said be
worked nearly eight hours Friday, seven hours Saturday and about
1
three hours Sunday.
·
Later, Ross said be wiD help tear out the old walls, inslall new
drywall, paint walls, and work on the floors.
"It was easy," Ross said. "It's better than school."
Ross said he hopes to become a professional football player witb
lhe Buffalo Bills. ·
"Hard work does pay off," Ross said.

,.

'

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Slalr
Tbe Meigs l.ocal Boon! of Edu~
cation acted on numerous personnel matters at its monthly meeting
Wednesday night
The board passed a $35,000
raise for 19 employees - administrators, supervisors and secretaries
of the district - following an exec-.
utive session, Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley said.
Tbe raise marks tbe first pay
increase for the non-union employ·
ees in more tban five years, Buckley said.
"When in lbe loan fund we can't
give pay raises to administrators,"
Buckley said.

The district bad been in the loan
fund for more tban two years. The
district removed itself from lhe
fund last June, he added.
The raises will begin next year
and will be built into next year's
budget, Buckley said.
·
According 10 tbe superintendeD~
. those employees still remain below
tile state pay levels for Ohio Association of Public School Employees.
Last year, district voters
approved a five-mill permanent
improvements levy for school
busses and books.
"Even though local taxes have
increased state revenues have
decreased in basic aid," Buckley

pointed out.
In other personnel matters, the
board rehired Melissa Howard as a
fifth grade teacher at Bradbury Elementary for a one-year contract
The board accepted the resigna·
lion of Karlita Stump, a substitute ·
teacher.
The board hired:
- James Holman, as custodian
at Meigs Junior High School effective May 29.
- Cindy Fields, as high school
cheerlcading advisor for ·the next
school year.
The board did not renew the
contracts of the following subsTitutes since they accepted other
positions or did not work enough in
'

the district Ibis year: teacher, Joe
Hemsley; aides, Linda Bates and
Rose Mary Eskew; bus drivers,
Greg Garr~n. Gary Canterbury,
Harold Adams, Patricia Marcum
and Jeff Stone; CO?ks· Joyce Jacks,
Judy Parsons, Loutse Slaats, Donna
Bentley and Racheal Smilb; custodians, Jerry Bentley and Albert
Pelkey; mechanics, Dan Buffll!giOD
and Bryan Reeves; and secretaries,
Deborah Karns, Rebecca Newell
and Stephanie See.
The board hired tbe following ·
substitUtes for this school year:
- aides, Connie Halley, Josie
Morton, JoAnn Wildman, Peggy
Carpenter and Phyllis Witherell.
Continued on·page 3

New bill targets repeat drunken drivers
COLUMBUS - . When Sen.
BJUce Johnson was a prosecutor, be
handled enough dmnken driving
caSes to spot defendants who would
wind up back in court. Now he
wants to slaP. four-time violators
with a felony.'
Johnson, R-Westerville, outlined a Senate bill Tuesday that
would elevate a fourth or subsequent offense for driving.ullder the
influence from a misdemeanor to a
felony.
Johnson said he personally handled scores of drunken driving
cases when be was·a Columbus city
prosecutor a decade ago.
"You oould always tell !be people lhat would be back, that they ·

weren't really willing to reform
1heir behavior. Today we're saying
enough is enough," Johnson said at
a news oonference.
• "U you won't stop drinking and
driving we're going to talce you out
of Society. We're not going to wait
until you kUl somebody to get serious about drunk driving in Ohio,"
be said.
Johnson's bill introduction came
the same day tbe Ohio Depanment
of Public Safety said state uaffic
deaths in 1994 dropped to their
lowest level in 50 years.
"Ohio's roads are the safest
they.' ve ever · been,'' Director
Charles Shipley said in a news
release.
•
- ·

"Increased enforcement efforts
"Other states have imposed
in the area of DUI, public awaresimilar penalties," Johnson said.
A fourth-time offense now is a
ness on tbe benefits of safety belts,
misdemeanor with a mllltimum senand quicker response time by emertence of six monlbs in jail. Under
gency medical service providers
the bil.l, a fourth-time or subsequent
have helped save lives," he said.
vtolauon
would become a felony
·
The 1,368 deaths in traffic
crashes last year represented a 7.5 y.'ilb .a sentence of two to five years
mpnson.
percent drop from 1993 levels.
Johnson was unsure bow many
Alcohol -related crashes were
responsible for 330 of those deaths !"ore people his biU would place
in 1994, a 24 percent reduction . mto an already crowded state
prison syster!l.
from the previous year.
"I think the.number will be less
.j,obnson said although tbe stale
than 3,500," be said.
·
bad made progress, offenders wilb
"The idea of the bill was not
multiple convictions remain a problem. He said more than half the necessarily to punish but to encourage them not 10 do it. I think this
number o( DUI convictiOns in Ohio
will get !heir attention," Jobnson
involved repeat violatdrs.
.
said.

Intruder, Secret
Service officer wounded in scuffle
.
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Just
days after an increasingly wary
White House .imposed extraordinary new security precautions, a
man with a pistol raced to witbin
30 to 50 yards of the presidential
mansion before being shot in a
scuffle with the Seeret Scivice.
Leland William Modjeski, 37,
was subdued not far from ·where
President Clinton had stepped from
his limousine just a half hour earli-

er.
A Secret Service officer also
was shot in tbe incident late Tues-.
day nigh~ which occurred after the
suspect scaled a 10-foot fence in
the third breach of security at tbe

White House in the past e"igbt ton Hospital just after II p.m. The
monlhs.
·
two men underwent surgery and
Modjeski, of surburban Falls each was resting in. stable condition
Church, Va., was to face charges · in a regular hospital room this
today lhat could include trespassing morning.
at tbe White House, assaulting an
officer and carrying a firearm, said
Clinton and his family were
Secret Service officials who spoke "never in any danger" and were in
on lhe condition of anonymity. !he living quarters of the White
' The uniformed Secret Service House at the time of the inciden~· a
officer who frrst confronted him, Treasury Department statement
Scott Giambaltista, 35, also was said. The Secret Service is pan ·of
wounded during tbe struggle, Treasury.
apparently from the same Secret
Treasury and Secret Service
SerYlce bullet, Treasury .Undersec- officials said they had no immediretary Ron Noble said.
ate indication of possible motivaBoth were hit in the arm and tion ~ Secret.Service spokesman
takep to nearby George Washing- Dave Adams said Modjeski's

revolver was not loade!l at the lime
of the incident
The episode occurred despite a ·
succession of increasingly stringent
security measures; culminating in
the closing of Pennsylvania
Avenue to cars and trucks .in front
of the White House just three days
ago.
·
The closing of the avenue were
intended to protect the White
House rrom car or truck bombs.
Tbe Tuesday night incident
occurred on the other side of the
White House from Pennsylvania
Avenue. Modjes,ki's car was parked
nearby, bur was not used in tbe
intrusion.

Rotary Club donates to flood
relief, soap box derby projects

$17,988
Nll 0oc Fees Oelivenll'

Isave $5000 I
BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN
• E•tended Chass1s
• Or1ver Sloe A1r Bag .
·Anti· loci&lt; Bcakes
• Air Condrt10n
• AutomatiC Overdn11e

• V1sta Bay Wtndows

• PIS, PIB

"r

AU New 1194 conversion Vans
Discounted Sfi o

• Cru1se Cootr~
•·AMIFM Cas sene
• Gapta1n ChairS
• Sola/Bed

• Aarsed Root
·Color 1V
• Orillei S1de Air Bag
• AnHoci&lt; Brakes

~arctS
• Loaded 1

• Rear Air/Heat

• Air Cond~10fl.
• Automat1c Overdnve

$12,930

UstPr~~:e

ilcol"&lt;&lt; -

.. 5600
. 5600

Tom Peden b~SCWJ~ . ·St ,046

S.le $10
Pnce

RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN

REAR AIR &amp; HEAT-fiBERGLASS RUNNING BOARDS

• Prem1um Wood Pkg
• Full Convers1on
. • A1um1num Runn11g

• T1H Steenng

F9CIOty Reba1e
awe ht TliN! Bvyer
Alow\trx:e To

No Do;: F~ IJiiliMY!It'

BRAND NEW '95 G·20 314 TON

;(,

• lnd1rect l1Qh1~g

• Power Wmdows
• Power Locks

'

888

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY S.SERIES
lS EXTENDED CAB PI~P
• Onver Sde &gt;\Arbag
·Power Brakes
• P205175R 15' Tires
• Rear Ann-Loci&lt; Brakes • Custom Cloth lntenor • Well Equtpped!
• Powe&lt; Steenng

Ll&amp;l Pra!
' 113,599
Factory Rebale
• SSOO
Tom Peden 01SCOUIW . -S\,41 1

lJsl ""' ........... $21 ,3(19
lllid&lt;Oualdaj$

S.lePriC&lt;!

Tom Peden Otscoln . . • $2,421

$11,688

Sale Price

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC GRAND AM
·16 Valve Po..r
• Driver Side Airbag
• 4 Wile~ An~Lod&lt; Brakes
• Power Sleenng.

jSave'1911j

• Power Brakes
• Power lloo&lt; \;leks

• Styled Whe~s

• Well Equtpped!

c.mt&lt;a• . .

$18
·Automat&lt;
• Dual AlrbagS
•4 wr.et Afli.Lod&lt;

• AM/Ft.t"St&amp;f!o
• Ste~ Betted Tires
No Doc Fees ~ed· ,

488
' .

Brakes

• Pow~ smerir9
• Power Brakes
• Pow~ Door lod&lt;s
• PQW!I Wirdows
• AM!Ft.t Ste&lt;eo

·T~Siee&lt;ifg
•Custom Cto~ lntenor

· S~Odwtoets

.

·Well Eqlipped'

• V1sta Bay W1nclows
• P/S, P/B
• Power Windows
• Power locks
• Tilt Steering/Cruise
• AMIFM cas!ette
• 4 Captain Cha1rs

• Sola/Be&lt;l
• Indirect Ughtmg

Factory orders down

• Premium Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Fiberglass Running
Boards
• Loooedt

\'·

WASHJNGTO~

l.Jsl Poce ............$24,458

OJ&lt;on P&gt;g. Do&lt; . . . . . . • 1100

. $400

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK lESABRE
• Air CoiQtion

SOAP BOX DERBY DONATION- The MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club has made a contribution to lhe Ohio Valley
Soap Box Derby Association for lbe derby to be held In Middleport
Ibis summer. From left, memben of the local soap box derby association Steve Dunfee and Mike Canan, accept the check from Jon
Perrin•.Jim Pape, at right, is •lso nf the soap box derby associa.tion.

ISave $5000 I

TomPeoen Dt9cou"t ... ·SU70
Pnc1

Sale

.___~__..... $2"J ,48Q
BRAND NEW '95 K-1500 EXTENDED CAB 414 PICKUP
• 4x4

AUTOMAnC/350 V.. POWER

• PSIPB
• Chrome Rear
• Exlended Cab
• AMIFM cassehe .· Step Bumper
• Au1omalc
• Till/Cruise
• LT 265175R 16' Steel
• A1r Condi11on
• Custom Cloth
Belted Tires
• Onve&lt; Side Alrbag
lnteriOf
• Aluminum Wheels
• Rear Ani·Loci&lt; Brakes
• W~l Equipped!

NoO!xFees. ~·

•

TOLL FREE 1-800-82t·D411 • 372.;2844
344~5947"- if22·0756

J_Mion.t~ay .~. ~at.ur~_ay:

9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm
•

,.

(AP)
Orders to U.S. factories for bigticket durable goods plunged 4 percent in April, the third straight
decline and the biggest drop in
more than three years.
Today' s surprising decrease, far
larger than most analysts expected,
is furtber evidence of an economic
slowdown as consumers scale back
purchases of interest-sensitive
items expected 10 last at least three
years.
The Commerce Depanment said
that the steep decline- the biggest
since a 5.4 percent decrease in
December 1991 -was led by a 9.3
percent drop in· transportal ion
orders as demand for new cars
dwindled.
·
The Federal Reserve left rates
unchanged Tuesday amid mounting
data.showing that economi~; growth
is casing . The central bank bas
doubled its benchmark short-term
interest rate, from 3 percent to 6
percent, but has left the rate
unchanged now for nearly four
months.
·
Orders for d\lfllble goods tolaled
a seasonally adjusted $156.5 billion, down $6 .5 billion from
March. Still, new orders are 10 per-

•

cent higher than the same period a
year ago.
Durable goods orders fell 0.2
percent in March - revised downward trorti a previously estimated
0.6 perce nt gain. In February,
orders fell 0.7 percent after climbing for three straight monlhs.
Durable goods include such
items as ears, computers and appliances that often su,ffer a drop in
sales as interest rates climb. They
are particularly sensitive to inter·
est•rate changes because they often
are purchased on credit.
Consumer spending has slowed .
dramatically from last year's peak.
And even business investment In
factories and equipment tailed off
in April, as orders fell 4.2 percent
for the first decline since December.
·
A drop in aircraft demand also
contributed to lhe fall-off in highly
volatile transportation goods in
April, tbe Commerc;e Department
said. Excl uding transportation,
durable goods ormits fell 2.3 per-.
cent after gai ning 0.7 percent in
March.
Orders-for defense equipment
fell 24.6 percent in April.
I'

.

-

The
Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club made donations to the
Meigs Cooperative Parish Relief
Fund and the Ohio Valley Soap
Box Derby Association at its Monday night meeting held at Heatb
United Melbodist Church.
Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz of the
Sacred Hean Church said lhat nearly $78,500 will be .needed to help
victims of last week's flash flooding.
Heinz, the president of the
Meigs County Ministerial Association. said 1he Red Cross bas provided all the help it can. No outside
relief is expected, be added.
The ministerial association bas
decided all funds should be channeled through lhe Meigs Cooperative Parish Relief Fund. Six
trustees will administer tbe fund,
Heinz said.

Donations may be left at tbe
Farmers Bank in Pomeroy, the ·
Home National Bank in Racine or
sent through churches across the
county. Any funds· the Red Cross
receives will be returned to the
cooperative "parish relief fund.
In other business, tbe Rotary
Club presented a check to the Ohio
Valley Soap Box Derby Association.
This association needs S1,100 to
meet its national association fran.chisc fee and a tolal of $3,100 to
carry on the derby, said Mike
Canan, local soap box derby director. This sum includes trophies,
insurance and funds used to send
the local winners 10 Akron national
trials in August
Boys and girls must be between
II and 16 years old to participate.
(Continued on Page J) ·

I

FLOOD ·RELIEF DONATION- Members of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club donated a check to the .Meigs Cooperative Parish rell•r rund for Oood assistance. From ten, the Rotary's
Hal Kneen and Jon Perrin present a check to Rev. Fr. Walter
Heinz.

Summer program approved by Southern board
A summer school program at bersbip "or Southern Local and ·Young, Teresa Miller. and Melissa
Smith, Carin Taylor, Melanie Van
Soulbem High School for students Junior High into Ohio High School Grueser,
Meier, Donna Wolf, Craig Wright,
who ne ed makeup work was Athletic Association fo&lt; 1995-96
Substitute teachers. Nancy . Kelly Henry, Janelle Hindman
approved at the request of Principal school year was approved.
Aldridge, Carissa Bailey, John BarMelissa Howard, Christa Johnsoo:
Gordon Fisher when the Soutbem
Otber personnel hired for next cus, Alicia Bauer, Jennings Beegle,
Lmda Johmon, Me !iss~ Justice,
Dorothy Bentz. James Bradbury,
R1chard King~ Teresa Kmg, Mary .
Local Board of Education met year were:
SubsTitute custodians: Tom Eileen Buck. Mary Bush, David
L~acb, Fanme L~e, Vinas Lee,
Mondaynightatthescbool.'
Four sessions, June 5 through Blaine, Linda Adkins, Patricia Curfman, Jody Dailey, Sharon
Rtchard Nease, Dtane Rice, Jody
16, June 19 through 30, July 10 Brown, Becky Bradford, Wallace Edmonds, Rachel Eskey, Henry
Shipley, Margaret Smith, Gene
through July 21, and July 24 Morris, Judy Parsons, Worthy Lewis, Beth Mayer, David Ramey,
Smitbern, and Kimberly Vao
tbrougb Aug. 4, 5 IO 8 p.m. each Stanley, Jeff Beaver, Anthony ·and Nathan Robinette, Heather
Meter.
weekend, will be conducted. The Frederick, Lawrence Ebersbach, Skinner, Wesley Smith, Michelle
Tbe board approved a contract
emphasis will be on making up DavidSmitb,andTeresaMiller.
Starcher, Llsa Thornton, Tricia
with SEOVEC for computer softincomplete work and tackling subSubstitute bus drivers, Bill McNichol, Keith Eubanks. ·uoda
ware services for next year, supplcjects not passed.
Downie, Scott Hill, Jerry Smith, Faulk. Mary Felts, Sheryl Fergumental contracts for bus drivers, .
Wesley David Smith was hired Delbert Smilh, Charles Lawrence, son, Beth Fenis, Michelle Frazier,
Dan Sm1th, Roger Hill, Thomas
as a substitute teacher for remain- William Justice, and C. P. Chap- , Elizabeth E~ee, W.illiam Egee,
~ill and Lru:rr Smith, and lhrecder of this school year.
man, volunteer.
Michelle GiiiUUl, Luctlle .Haggerty,
ntntbs ume dunng the ·summer
Hired for next year were
Substitute cooks, Judy Parsons, Joseph If all , Valeiie Hanstine,
months for Aaron Sayre.
Howard Caldwell III, bead volley- Sharon Harris, Linda Adkins, Janet Robin Hawks, Karen Lyons, Tonya
A motion to lay off Donna
· ball coach, and Tricia McNichol, . Manuel, Shirley· Dugan, Becky Meadows, Herbert Redm:ln. Kalby
Wolfe from the position of junior
juni&lt;I high volleyhallcoacb.Mem· /'lradford, Linda Harman, Tina Sargent, Rita Slavin. Charlene'
Contlni!«Jonpag•tl
•

�-----

Commentar

--

-..---

-----

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 24,1995

•

Rotarians donate.&lt;':'.nunu•d rrom Page 1)

OHIO Weather

.•

Thursday, May 2S

Wednesday, May 24, 1995

They must build the car with the
The Youngs visiled a twiit cities
help of parents or other Individuals, club located on both sides of the
Canan said . This basic kit costs Danube River. They flew 10,000
$300.
· miles and walked ·many miles to
The soap box derby - wbicb retrace Joe Young's journeys durhas existed since 1934 - teaches ing World War 11.
youths about skills of bard work,
Also, three area couples attend·
competition and perseverance, ed the Rotary District Conference
Canan said.
at Jackson last week. No meeting
Donations and volunteers are will be held Monday due lo MemostiU needed for this year's soap box rial Day celebrations.
derby, Canan added.
The next regular meeting will be
In other business, Joe Young held June S at the Heath United
presented a Rotary Club flag from Methodist Cburcb.
Linz-Arfabr, Austria. Young and
The Rotary Club will host the
his son, Joe Young, Jr., went on a Adult Basic I,.iteracy Education
pilgrimage to Europe to mark the banquet at 6:30 p.m. June 12 at
end of World War II in Europe.
Meigs High School cafeteria.

Accu-Weather" forecast
MICH.

The Daily Sentillel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General~anager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEI I ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
W&lt;Jrds long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
. should be in good taste, addressing issues, 001 personalities.

Expanding surveillance powers is dangerous
WASHINGTON ,..- As the
wrecking baU prepared 10 awiDa
tbrouJb the bombed-out allelebl ot
the Oklahoma City fcdelal bulldinl, the Clinton adminiatratioD aDd
Congress were drafting blueprints
for what coold lead to the undermining of civil liberties.
The most destructive aspect of
legislation under consideration Is
the part that amends the 117-year·
old l'osse Comitatus Act, wbicb
sharply curtails the rights of the
military to set involved in domestic
law enforcement. This law passed in the wake of the Civil War
- bas worked well since its inception.
President Clinton also wants to
broaden the· rights of federal law
enforcement agencies to use wiretaps and other electtonic surveillance methods to monitor suspecta.

This Ia another iDIIIIICC. boWC'IU, 1993, the last year for which
where the dleiOric r. c:oxceeds n::al- records are available, federal aDd
lty. Tbe government, In fact, state judges approved 976 applica·
already bas t.be ri&amp;bt to monitor lions for electronic eavesdropping.
Not a single one was for investigating arson, explosives or ftrearma.
By Jack Anderson Nearly all were for organized
crime, gamb~ng or drug investigaand
tions. There·IS little to suggest that
this would change if the· "and-ler·
Michael Binstein rorism"
plan Is approved.
suspected criminal organizations if
The federal government~ s recent
they can provide suftlcient cause to assault on our freedoms is merely
a judge. Clinton would expand this an extension of a trend that's been
ri&amp;bt, allowing law enforcement sweeping the private sector for
agencies to go on the type of "fisb· rears. With the rapid growth or
ing expeditions" that gained Ill mformation technology - ill
repute during tbc reign of J. Edgar everything from banking to grocery
Hoover at the FBI. .
shopping - our privacy is increasA revie~ of federal eavesdrop- ingly at the men:y of corporations,
ping records, however, round that advertising agencies and anyone
such devices are rarely used In else interested in our tastes and
investigating domestic terrorism. In preferences.

Letters to the editor
'·

Leave wreaths on.graves

Dear Editor:
. I own a lot at tbe Riverview
Cemetery.
Every time I put two wrealbs on
this lot, wbcn I come back they are

not tbere.
Whoever does .tbat is in trouble.
l hope my wreaths won't be
gone tbis time.
Ellen Smith
Newark

Drinking drivers hazardous .
Dear Editor.
· I am writing concerning the Ann
Landers article in the ~ay t'1 Daily
Sentinel about lthe "Lax licensing
laws making hazardous drivers
deadly".
The drinking drivers are a lot
more hazardous than the elderly.
Note, I said "drinking drivers" .
It is a proven fact tbat one can
of beer slows down the average
person's reactions one-fifth of a
second.
You may say what is·one-fifth
of a second? I can tell you, it
means if a person is driving down
the road at 60 miles pet hour in
one-fifth of a second a person b'av-

•

els 17 112 feet.
Just think what that 17 112 feet
would mean. Many times it. would
mean the difference between life
and death.
I beard a woman say, "Sbe
opened 12 cans of beer for ber busband as be drove from Charleston,
W.Va., to Ravenswood, W.Va."
That's 47 miles.
If there bad been an emergency,
his reactions would have been
slowed down more than two seconds or about 200 feet of driving
1
·
distance.
OpieCobb
Middleport

LimitS on Congress
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
·
WASHINGTON - As an Issue and a symbol, the term limits
Congress couldn't approve and the Supreme Court wouldn't sanction
could be bolstered politically by those inside-the-Beltway defeats.
It is an idea with a movement beb_ind it, approved, usually by wide
margins, in every state tbat bas put it on the ballot. The poUs register support at 70 percent and up. And limits in W.asblngton fit the premise of
people who are pushing to shake the esmbbsbment, congressiOnal newcomers among them.
·
But the Supreme Court ruled S-4 ~onday that states cannot limit ser·
vice in ~ongress without amending the Constitution.
. ·
· ·
~ House and Senate candidates, esF.ialiY incumbents_up for re-election,
wiU have to deal with the question m 1996. And term limits will figure in
the campaign for the White House, too. President Clinton opposes them;
his most likely Republican challengers are supjlorters.
·
Tbe lines already are set. When the term limits amendment was
blocked in the Republican House, GOP leaders blamed Democrats,
although 40 votes agains! it came f~pm their side.
•
Rep. Dick Armey of Texas, the majtll;ity leader, said people who want
• term limits ought to elect more Rewblicans next year. Sttel£hing for an
: issue, the party chairman, Haley Barbour, noted that Clinton's two
Supreme Court appointees sided against term limits. Then again, so did·
three justices chosen by Republican presidents.
Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, the majority leader and leadin~ GOP presidential hopeful, bas promised Senate action on term llmtts soon, but
hasn 'I said when.
Action doesn't mean approval. There's no real prospect that 67 sena' t?rs. are going to line up for a constitutional amendment to set a .two-term
• lumt on Senate servtce.
No matter that the limit is prospective - it wouldn't apply to terms
:
: already serVed. Even if it did, by the time a constitutional amen&lt;!ment
• could be ratified by 38 states, most of the senior people now in Congress
would be gone or ready to go. And many of the new arrivals from the past
: two elections already have promised to limit their own tenure, some to
six, some to 12 years.
In the Ho_nse, a !X)nstitutional amendment tbat would have imposed a
-· 12-year limit failed, the on~ feature of the Republican ~o~tract With
' America to be defeated outr1ght. House Speaker Newl Gmgncb, R-Ga., ·
: vowed the issue would be back.
•
That.was guaranteed even before the court ruling. Voters in 22 stales
bave approved congressional term limits, and a 23rd just adopted term
limits by legislation.
·
.
Republicans could manage the llll!jority vote. required to pass ~ law,
. , but a constitutional amendment requtres two-thtrds - 290 votes m the
House, where the vote was 227.-204 wben limits lost on March 29.
The court ruling puts it up to Congre!'S again, with 1erm limit activ_ists
1 watching and taking names. 1bere are no new arguments on etther stde.
:, To the opponents of~ amendment, elec~ons are the way to limit temis,
i and capping tenure will only cost expenence and savvy. To advocates,
limits are the only way back to a citizen legislature in close touch with the
voters the only way to crack the power or incublbency.
Ea~h side has numbers to go with the case it makes. The average
House tenure is two years short of the 12 the amendment would set as the
ceiling. On the other band, incumbents who run almost always get·new
1
' tenns. Even in a ll!fllaround election like the 1994 Republican landslide,
~ the re-election rate was 91 percent.
i
In the Supreme Court ruling, Justice John Paul Stevens noted that the
merits
of term limits or rotation in office have been debated since the
1
. Constitution was written. Debaled but never imposed, despite such advo·: cates as President Truman, .who once said limits would cure two congresi sional diseases -seniority and se!lility.
·
\
The current campaign to limit tenure really began five years ago with a
• winning referendum that set the pattern. and spread through the states that
• allow ballot initiatives. Each of them voted to set limits, but none had ·
• applied to Congress. Term limits voted for state legislators and other Offi·
i cials are not affected by the court ruling.
)
;
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·: · nlst ror The Assodated Press, has repor-ted on Washington and
; nat\onal politics ror more than~ years.
.
'

•

i. Today .in history
I

'

·: By The AMoclated Prus .
:
Today is Wi:dnesday, May 24, the 144th day of 1995. There are 221
, daya left in the year. '
.
•
Today's Highlight in' History: ~
·:
·, On May 24, 1844, Samuel F.B. ~orse transmined the mes5age, "What
:: bath God wrought!'' from Was!Jington to Baltimore as .be formally
i opened America's fU'St telegrapb line.
I
0n this date:
In 1819, Queen Victoria was boot In London.

.

WEll ;Tt-lf'f'S Tl-\E WHOLE
i'OINT-Atf1'B0t1Y COUL9
~OSAi!L'!' I)() IT USING
T~E ii6HTROPE. ...........,.

_A;

'I

C:TrA-

~~·---~ro..,. -... ~,.fi.·'TELEG,.•y HULME'

•

..
"

When Pat Buchanan on.the religious right tbinks it's too moderate,
when the religious left thinks it's
too extreme, when liberal columnist Richard Cohen says it's
innocuous but tricky - then the
Christian Coalition's new "Contract With the American Family"
is probably a political ten-strike. In
fact, by presenting moderate views,
and particularly a more moderate
stand on abortion, the Contract can
help remove what may be tbe
biggest barrier to the election of a
Republican president in 1996.
If that sounds overstated, listen
to the deafening silence from the
big political Democrats; They're
not playing. Last autumn Rep. Vic
Fazio, D-Calif., said Republicans
were victims of a "gradual stealth
takeover" by the religious right.
This time be bas no statement.
And listen to President Clinton's
press spokesman, Mike ~cCurry,
who, while noting some presidential disagreement on prayer and
abortion, applauded the "language
and the tone, . of the manifesto.
McCurry added, "Mr. (Ralph)
Reed said that the purpose of his
conttact is not to legislate family
values, it is ·to ensure that Washington values families .... I think the
president agrees with that 100 per-

cent."
Tbat's a change. Recall that the
Democrats made hay in 1992 when

the GOP convention in Houston
was described as exclusive,
extremist, right-wing, hyper-conservative, zealous and culturally
nutty - a covert plan to put Uncle

Ben Wattenberg

,

Sam in your bedroom as an abortion gendarme. For the first time
the social values issues became a
minus for the Republicans and a
plus for the Democrats. I didn't
think that's what happened In
Houston at all, but once a media
ftrestorm ignites it cannot easily be
extinguished.
But the Christian Coalition Contract (CCC) is bard to demonize:
self-described as ten suggestions
not ten commandments, general not
specific, without deadline, and ~ith
many items keyed to legislation
with existing congressional spon·
sorsbip, som1; from leading
Democrats. .
The CCC stand on abortion is a
potential breakthrough. Gone is the
controversial demand for a Human
Life Amendment to illegalize abor·
lion, which bas been in Republican
platforms since 1980. ln its place is
a call to limit (not even end) "late
term" abortions. As it happens,
third trimester abortions are not
even a protected right under Roe v.

-•

'

-.

..

11 W.VA.

..lin\

~

....... "

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - none
Tuesday discharges - none
(Published with permission)

Meigs board..~ontlniHid from page 1

-bus drivers, Delores Surface, ·
Donald R. Hall, Kim Pauley, Patti
SillilY Pl. Claud( Cloudy
., Showers T-stotms R8in
Johnson, Vonda George. William
C111115Aa:u-Woalher, Inc.
•· VIB Associated Pr•" GtaphicsNGI
Capehart
Jr., Dorsel Thomas ,
.
.
Roger Cotterill, Joe Hall, Jo
Gilmore, Brady Sayre, Larry
cent.
Drake, Gary ~cKnight and CarSouth-Central Ohio
Extended
forecastolyn Rickard.
Today .. .Partly sunny and warm.
Friday
...
Fair
north
...
And
a
-cooks, Brenda Erwin, Donna
; High in the mid 80s. Southwest chance of showers south . Lows in
Vance,
Mabel Ramsburg, Edna
·winds 10 to 15 mph.
the
upper
40s
north
tO
the
mid
50s
Will,
Robin
Bulcher, Carolyn
': Tonigbt... Partly cloudy with a
south.
Highs
in
the
mid
and
upper
Chapman
and
Colleen
Whaley.
, chance of thunderstorms. Low in 60s nortb ... And in the low to mid
custodians,
Charles
Hysell.
'the mid 60s. Chance of rain 40 per70s
south.
Ricky
Birchfield,
Greg
Browning,
···cent. Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph.
Saturday ... Fair.Lows in the 50s. · Doug Jenkins, Bob Johnson, Anna
·· Tbursday ... Sbowers likely and a
Higbs
upper 60&amp; to upper 70s.
Welsh, Max Wilson, Carroll John_chance of thunderstorms. High
Sund;ty.,.Fair. Lows in the 50s. son. Dennis Tillis; ·
· around. 80. Chance of rain. 60 per· Highs in the·70s.
- mechanics, Steven Cotterill.
Dennis Tillis, Gary King Jr., and
Ronald Mullins:
- · secretaries, Lilly Kennedy,
Mona Frecker, Kay Hemsley, Julia
Sayre, Deloris Shepard and Charlene Thomas.
Tbe board hired the following·
substitute teachers for the 1995-9.6
Mary Elizabeth Bloxton, 63, of Ravenswood, W.Va., died Tuesday, school year: Carissa Bailey, Alicia
~ay 23, 1995, at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospilal in Parkersburg.
' W.Va.
Bauer, Dorothy
Jeanne
Bowen,
Linda Bentz
Dye, ,' Sharon
• I Born April 5. 1932. in Oak Hill, W.Va., the daughter of the late Edmonds, Keith Eubanks; Rhonda
Bernard and Verna Owens Tincher, she was a homemaker. She was a Facemire, Linda Faulk, Mary Felts,
' member of the Second Baptist Church in Ravenswood.
Beth Ferris, Michelle Frazier, Eliz·
She is survived by her husband, James Bloxton of Ravenswood; sons, abeth Gee, Williaijl Gee, Michelle
James and Danny Bloxton, both of Ravenswood; and several nieces and Gillilan, Randall Goldsberry.
' nephews.
Lucille Haggerty, Joseph Hall Jr.,
She was preceded in death by three sisters and one brother.
Valerie Hanstine·, Robyn Hawk,
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Second Baptist Church in Joseph Hemsley, Janelle Hineman,
Ravenswood. Burial will follow in the Ravenswood Cemetery.
Sandra Holcomb, Toni Hudson ,
Friends may call between 6-9 p.m. Thursday at the Straigh~ Tucker &amp;
Debra Jackson, Krista Johnson ,
. Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood.
Linda Johnson •. J.R. Kennedy,
Teresa King. Kelly Kinser, Mary
Jane Leach, Karen Lyons, Methany
Mayer, Tanya Meadows, Lisa
Miller,
Emalcnc Pratt, Herbert
• Edwin E. Safrced, 85 ; of Ravenswood, W.Va., died Monday, May 22.
:i995, in Jac!&lt;son General Hospital in Ripley, W.Va.
.
.
· Born May 22, 1910, in Shennan, W.Va., he retired as a mtllwng~t
·rrom Kaiser Aluminum COil'· He was a member of the Independent U~•t- .
.!(d Brethren Church and operated the Ravenswood Novelty Works for 25
years.
. ·
.
• He is survived by his daughter, Faye Mtlboan of Ripley, W.Va.; five
]randcbildren; seven great-grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews.
Units of the Meigs County
· He was preceded in death by his wife, Jane Matics Safrccd: daughter,
Emergency
Medical Service
Terry Flinn; three sisters; and two brothers.
responded
to
nine
calls for assis' ~ Services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Independent United
tance
Tuesday,
with
one transfer
'Dretl1rcn Church in Ravenswood, with the Rev. ltubert Groves official·
call.
in g. Burial will follow in the Ravenswood Cemetery.
POMEROY
: Friends may call between 6-9 p.m. Wednesday and 10-12 p.m. ThursI :38 a.m., Rocksprings Road,
llay at U1e Straigh~ Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood.
Susan Bootes, Holzer Medical
Center.
8: 11 p.m., Pomcroy · CJiffs
Apartm ents. smoke odor, no
. The following cases .were filed Linda L Darst of Middleport and injuries.
·
. recently in the Meigs County Clerk Robert R. Darst or Cheshire, filed
RACINE
May 19; and Laren M. Riffle of
of Courts.
7:25 a.m ., Fourth Street, Ruby
Dissolution with minor children: Racine and Anthony B. Rime of Lyons. Velcrans Memorial HospiDaisy Mac Satterfield of Rutland, Syracuse, filed May 19. ·
lal.
Divorced without minor chil·Gregory Todd Satterfield of RutMJI)DLEPORT
_land, filed May 12; Angela D. dren: Christy M. Martin and Don10:04 a.m., Gen . Hartinger
Tillis of Middleport and Gary E . ald L. Martin, both of Syracuse, Parkway, Robin Roberts, VMH .
.Tillis of Pomeroy, filed May 12: filed May 19 .
9 p.m., Nortl1 Second Avenue,
Della Milliron, VMII.
10:5S p.m.. Brownell Avenue,
Herman Kincaid, refused treat '

Weather

--Area ·Deaths--

;Mary Elizabeth Bloxfon

Pomeroy theft reported

A Rock Springs man reported someone stole 11 12-borsepower
riding mower from his !!OI!CfiY sometime Sabtrday night, according
to Meigs County Sheriffs Departnient reports.
Earl Gilkey, Rock$prings Road, reported this theft from his property, records show.

Sheriff probes accidents
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department responded to two non·
injury accidents, according to reports.
At 3 p.m. Tuesday, Earl M. Johnson, State Route 7, Pomeroy,
reported someone backed into b* 1985 Pontiac while be was pumping gas at the Five Points Express, records show.
Steve Donaldson, Long Bottom, backed his 1974 GMC truck
into his car. No damage was listed lo Donaldson's truck. records
show.
•
At 12:35 p.m. Tuesday, Jim Lucas, Pomeroy, struck a deer while
driving so uth on Hemlock Grove Road Road in bis 1990 Ford Bronco.

Pomeroy man faces charges

----Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, May 23 - Mrs.
Jeffery Nance and son, David
Omena, Pamela Warren and Susan
McGrath.

....---Local briefs.-____,

Redman, ·Nathan Robinette, . Rita
Slavin, Charlene Smith. Wesley
.David Sinith, John Snediker,
Michele St.archer, John Taylor,
Carin Taylor, Lisa Thornton,
Melanie V~eter, Elizabeth Webster, Martha Wheeler, Helen
Williams, Kay· Wilson and Donna
Wolf.
In other action, the board:
- hired Rick Edwards work at
high school to mow athletic fields
for summer.
- requested an extension for
the state department of eddcation
for inventory purposes. .
- set the schedule for elcmen'
tary secretaries ror the 1995-96
school.
.
· - joined the Ohio High School
Association for the 1995-96 school
year.
-named student make-up days
for May 26, 30 and 31 for this
school year, except Harrisonville
Elementary. June I will be teacher
work day.

A Pomeroy man was arrested Tuesday evening on charges or
domestic violence, criminal mischief and menacing, according to
Meigs County Sheriffs Department reports.
Robert Boling, Vance Road, Pomeroy was jailed overnight pend·
ing a hearing Wednesday morning in Meigs County Court.
Also, a Rutland man was arrested on charges of disorderly conduct 'Tuesday night. Roger Denny, Jr., of Rutland, was released
after posting bond. He bas been se1 for an appearance in Meigs
County Court.
i

Summer program... _ __
Continued from page 1
high secretarial aide was rescinded,
and the board approv ed using
Pedro Luis Castillo as an unpaid
intern in the tteasurer's office ftrst
semester next filii.
Attending were Susie Grueser.

president; Pete Thon:n, Don Smith,
C. T. Chapman, Many Mor:irity,
board members; Supt. James' Ray
Lawrence, and Treasurer Dennie
Hill.
'

USE THIS SUPER SAVINGS
COUPON THURSDAY,
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

~::::::::=~

.., ... --.,

r-----

I
I
I
.I

I
I
I
I

I

1
:

1
I

I·

UP TO ANY SITEMS
Excludes Tobacco llems &amp; Prescriptions
Good Through 5-27-95
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

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

:Edwin E. Safreed

Meigs EMS
logs nine cails

Kenneth McCullough , A. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 6:00a.m. lo 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p .m.

PRESCRIPTION

:

1

I
.J

.,

PH . 992·2955

E. Main Friendlv

Divorces, dissolutions

Marriage licenses

persons, especially those with divl·
dend income, while the average
working family continues to be
hard-pressed.
Clinton bas tried to counter the
trend - which bas been running
for 20 years - by improving edti•
cation and training programs for
workers. Those are among the pro'
grams that the GOP Congresi ·
wants to cui and for which Clintori
plans to fight.
At the sa me time, however;
Clinton ought to be working foi
long-term economic growth -·and
bis own re-election - by proposing a budget that continues tht!
trend toward b;llanced budgets and
lower interest rates.
·
Tyson says that be will do so
after the public is "educated"
about the pain the Republican proposals will inflict on variou~
groups.
The danger, though, is that Clin ~
ton and Congress will fall Into a.
game of budgetary "cblcl::en," dar··
ing and threatening vetoes, and that:
various agencies or the whole fed·'
era! .sovernment will be shut down
for a period this fall when a new:
dc;bt ceiling must be voted on.
·
That could knock everyone's:
growth projections into a cocked:
hat, not to mention discrediting:
both parties for 1996.
(Morton Kondracke is execu.:
Uve editor or Roll CaD,, the news-:
paper or Capliol WU.)
,
·
Dlstrlbutecl .by United Feature:
Syndicate, Inc,

.

• IColumbus 172". l

,,,,,

The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Sulaiman Morray Dangura. 35,
_and Toyia Lynn Johnson, 31, both
or Middleport: Cory Brandon
Lewis, 19, of Jacksonville. an d
Heather Jean Pauley, 20 of
Coolville; Keiti1 i\nUmny Jones Jr.,
20, and Ginger Marie Curti s, 20,

In '96, economy may go Clinton's way

1

,,,,,

.,

Wade. And according to pro-choice and sports events." That's hardly
activist Kate Micbelman, only language that can lead a moderate
"one-hundredth or 1 percent of all to the barricades.
abortions" are performed in the
And so it goes: a $500 tax credit
for children, allowing bomemakc{s
last trimester.
Hardly "extremism." It doesn't to contri~ute a full $2,000 share to
even much bother this pro-choice Individual Retirement Accounts
columnist. And it sets up ground · (co-sponsored by liberal Sen. Barwhere pro-life and pro-choice bara Mikulski, D-~d.), a restricRepublicans may come up with a tion on Internet pornography, an
compromise abortion platform . encouragement of donations to priplank. A unified, or semi-unified, vate charities. These items make
Republican Party is dangerous to sense.
Democrats.
Others don't. I have no problem
Moderation is apparent tbroitgb- with the Legal Services Corporaout the document. There is a call lion helping poor people seek legal
for private school choice, but it's divorce. I don't favor privatization
for 20 demonsb'ation projects, and - of PBS (it could create a conscrvaits existing Senatorial Cl?·sponsors live nightmare - a liberal network
are Dan Coats, D-Ind. , and Joe developed with public monies). 1
.Lieberman, D-Conn., who is chair- like the idea of outcome-based eduman of the Democratic Leadership cation; the Coalitioneers don't, but
Council. It's a good idea. On the I sense they are misinterpreting or
crime front, the keystone proposal mis-stating its purpose.
·
concerns literacy and work proThe CCC is a smart and useful
grams for prisoners. Who's against piece of political work. It puts forth
that?
an agenda and shrinks the target.
Prayer in the school is bandied
Ben Wattenberg, a senior reiby a Religious Equality Amend- low at the American Enterprise
ment. This, say the Christian Coati- Institute, is the host of the weekly
tioneers, "would not restore com- public television program
pulsory, sectarian prayer or Bible- "Think Tank."
'
reading dictated by government
(For Information on how to
officials." What they seek is "vol- communicate electronically With
untary, student and citizen-initiated this colinnnist and others confree speech in non-compulsory set· tact America Online by caliing I. lings such as courthouse lawns , 800·827-6364, exL 8317.)
high school graduation ceremonies,
·

Republicans undoubtedly are plan would ~uce a recession by should be able to.
right to say thJit their budget-bat- 1994. ''Tbts ·is the Democratic
Administration officials say
ancing will be good for the U.S. machine's recession," be said, there are three factors at work tbat
economy in the long run, but they "and each of them will be held . may make economic performance
were clearly wrong to .argue in
next year even beuer than currently
1993 that President Clinton's poll
anticipated: The dollar's decline
cies would "tank" the economy. · Morton
_
"''
"" 1\1
will improve U.S. export growth,
"ondr.·""c"e
Who will · be able to claim the
the rising stock market will put
additional money into people's
economic upper band In 1996 pres· personally respoosible:"
· And Rep. Diet Armey, R.· .pockets, and long-tetm interest
idential politics?
Barring unforeseen .events, Texas, now tbe House majority ratesareagainbeading lower.
according to chief Clinton econom- leader, said back then that "the
so· far, according to the Comic coordinator Laura Tyson, tbe impact on job creation is going to . merce Departmenl, Clinton also
can show improvement in what is
president can run for re-election be devastatinJ!."
saying that his policies produced a
But instead of sinking into supposedly the most politically
"broad-based, robust, Investment- recession, the economy grew by important .single economic indicaled expansion" and created the 8 4.1 percent in 1994, with most tor. per capita disposable income.
million jobs be promised in the forecasters anticipating around 2.5
During the Bush years, after-lax
1992 crunpaign.
percent for the year - a "soft income grew by just 0.2 percent,
Operating against Clinton, she · landing."
from $14,090 to $14,222. During
acknowledges, is a continued stagAnd, says Tyson, the adminis- the Clinton years, so far it bas risen
nation or wages, wbicb be's been tration will have ·cut the federal by 2.6 percent to $15,057.
unable to alter despite attempts to deficit·by at least $600 billion,
Despite the disposable income
be an "education president"
increased the national savings rate, improvement, there has been a 1
And other White House aides and presided over low in!lation and ·percent decline since 1989 in medi·
fear the economic consequences of rising productivity.
an household incomes as reported
a congressional-presidential '"train
Ec(!nomists are split on tbe by the Labor Department, from
wreck". that•could shut down the short-term effect of deep GOP $35,900doWII toS33,600.
government this fall.
spending cuts now being consldAlso, during the past year mooiBarring such a disaster, admin- . ered by Congress. On the plus side, an weekly earnings for full-time
isb'ation and private blue-chip eco- there may be 1 percent to 2 percent workers have declined 11Y 0:9 pernomic forecasters expect that the reduction in long-term interest cent, or $478. And Labor's
economic·growth rate for 1996 will rates. On the oiinus side, tl!ere JIUIY employment cost index, wblcb
be between 2. percent and 2.5 per- be a contraction of spending and measures both wages ~~Dd benefits,
cent - s)ower-thao in ' 1994 or incomes as programs are cut
Increased only 3 percent in 1994,
1995, but still wen above the ·
In the longer run, lower interest barely matching inflation.
"reces~i
n" level predicted by rates may help spur economic .
For per capita disposable
Republi · s.
•
growth, but Tyson does not !hint ·. Income to be rising while family
.On Au ust 1993, then-House that the GOP will be able to claim Income· is falling an!l wages are
Minority.
ip Newt Gingrich, R· credit for the likely healthy econo- stagnant suggests that prospects are
Ga., declared that Clinton's budget ( my of 1996. Clinton, she says, improvingforbigOO,r-incomesingle

,,,,,,

..

Christian Coalition shrinks target

'

....

Practically 111yone with a computer and modem can delve into the
private pages of your personal life
without your knowledge. A
detailed profile of your financial
status, credit history, purcbaslns
.patterns, tastes and pref~ can
be collected from bits of penonal
data such as your ZIP code, Social
Security number, and records of
cn:dit and bank card usage.
Every time you use a bank card
or give your address or Social
Security niDilber a record is created. The sum of all those records
can be used to paint a detailed
dossier of your life. Even more
information will become available
soon with the growth of online servioes, especially sbop-at-bome servioes.
What most people don't realize,
our sources say, is tbat information
wbicb many Americans would consider sensitive Is not covered by
any federal laws or regulations .
"There's little a person can do,"
one privacy expert told us. ·"For
$200, I could get every conceivable
piece of information on you.''
Computer databases across the
nation are loaded with millions of
pieces of personal data ready for
sale. With the help or several privacy experts, we have compUed a list
of some ways tbat private companies - and iodivtduals - can
meddle in your personal life:
- Martetlng firms make fortunes by compiling and selling
blocks of data about individuals
within certain· income brackets,
spending patterns or other personal
characteristics.
- Strangers can obtain your
medical records without your
knowledge.
Many people may not realize
that their medical history could be
stored in the Medical lnfonnation
Bureau (MIB), which keeps
records on about 15 million Ameri·
cans for use by the insurance industry.
Jack Anderson and Michael ·
Blnsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

)

The Daily Sentinel
iUSI'S 113·960)
· l'ubli~hcd every nfternmm. Mondn}' throu,llh
Fntl;Jy, Ill Cuurt St .. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Pubh~hmg Cu mpany/Muhinll.&gt;din

In c.. Puuu:wy. Olun 4nfl9. Ph. 992 -2156 .
rlnu pmtuge pnid nt Pomeroy, Ohiu.

·s~ond

Mfmt~r:

·n1c Ah~I~&gt;.'Hl!Cd

Pre~s. nnd

the Ohio

Ncw ~paf'('r A~~oc•ttt1pn

.POSTMASTitR : Semi addrc'~ .:n rre ~ ti on~ to
Tilt' Dally St•ntlllcL Ill Coun St : Pomeroy.
OhiO 4Si6Q
SUUSCRIIYfiON NA'rES

1\y Carrii'r or Motor

H o ur~

. ~1.75

One Wcck
One Mnnth ..

17 60

One Year ...

59100'

SINGLE CO P'r' I' RICE
D:.Uiy .......
•...... l~ Ccmc:
Subo:cnbcrs not dctlnng

pny the .carrier rna)'
' remit Ill adv~nt:e direct 10 ntc Dati)' Scnlin~l
rin o three,~~~ 01 12 month hM•~- Credit will be
, tvven cnrncr enl'h week.

•

1o

Nn .~ H~&lt;aipunn by m:lil fX:rmttlcd 111 area~
where home earner ~erY1ct " nvml:1ble

MAIL SUPSCR lft'TIONS
ln~klr Mri111 County

~ 1 WL'Ck~
26 Week~ .
'i2 Wn:-k~'

.....
$23.92

· ·· S41l06
.$92.56

Raid: Outsldf' MtiAS Counl}
l3 W(!t'..k~
.•
S25.61

·

2b Week•• . . .. .

5l Woek.l . .. .

............. .. .

.. .$49.66 ·
S%. 20

ment.

both of Pomeroy;
Ernesl William Dixon, 25, and
Melissa Sprouse, 26, 9f Middle port ; Mark Allen Stanley, 20, and
Melissa Grace Jacks, 19, both of
Pomeroy; Donaid Chase Cleland ,
22. or Racine, and Shannon Marie
Newsome, 23, of Middleport;
·Jason Lee Wright, 22. of
Pomeroy, and Kristen Ayne
Slaw1er, 21. of Middleport; Charles
Bradley Holsin ger, 27, of Long
Douom . and S1aci Lyn Simpson,
23.. of New Haven, W.Va.; Douglas
Edward Cri tes, 30, and Julie Ann
Hawk, 25, both of Reedsville;
Wilbur Leo Ward. 43, and
Christy Kay Jones Ward, 35, bOth
of L~ngsvi ll c; Virgil Brian Hudson,
23, of Syracuse, and Heather Lynn
Proff.'in, 20, of Rutland: and·Ronnie
Eugene Powell, 37, and Patricia
. Kay Hawley, 26, both of ShadC.

SYRACUSE

10:39 a.m., Fourth Strcet, .Oma
Hysell , VMH .
REEDSVILLE
7:25p.m .. State Route 124,
structure fire, Bob Dailey residence
no injuries.

10:47 p.m., Fire hall. Brady
Darbcr.Tamdcn-Ciark Memorial
llospik11.

STATE THEATRE

523 Main St., Pt. Pleasant
Now thru Thur.

The Lowest Cellular
Rate Plan Available!
Our $14.95 plan features low per-minute
rates of just $.30 peak/$ .20 off-peak with, 20 .
free minutes each month. To experience the.
savings of Wireless One Network service,
clip the coupon and bring it to your nearest
Wireless One Network location.

"TOMMY BOY"";"
Starting Friday

"MAJOR PAYNE" I'GIJ .
7:30 dai iX&amp; 2 p.m. Sun.
Adm. $2.00 675-6575

rr---------------------~
1 = 1

~~

IV

~~~

'f

!9
:

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
This WeeJr' SpeciAl:

HICKEN NUGGET

$1 14 ;.$1.8~

~1

l!9:

~1

tl
I~
I
Il;
992· 556
I
'• ··~11 '111''1'1 1 '~ r 1 1' r'l 1 'r• J
~~---~---------------WI--TH FRIES ....

suN.-SAT. 10:oo AM-10:bo PM •

1

1

Huntinglon West, WV
406 Adams Ave .
(3Q4) 529-2355

Ashland, WV

925 Winche1ter Ave
(606) 324•4426

..

I

'' Russell, WV
1440 D1ednch Blvd.
(606) 833-2355

,
.

�I

,
[

~~:-sports

'I,De -Daily Sentinel-

Pom..-oy • Middleport, Ohio

-- Wednesday, May 24, 1995
Page4

Athletes honored. !~ontinued from Page 4
honorable mention.
BUJie Butcher was ielected tbe
Conference's Most Valuable Player..
She won 11 games, struck out 179
batters and pitched two no bitters
and lhree one hitters.
Boys' track coach Mike
Kennedy introduced members of
the track team. They included Chris
Chapman, Jacob Davis, T.J. Davis.
Phil Edmonds, Monty Hunter,
Craig Knight, Mike Parker. Tim
Peavley, Collin Rousb, Crocket
Roush, Jason Rousb, Shannon
Staats, Adam Thomas, A.J. Vaugb1111 and Matt Williams. Edmonds.
tbe district champion i11 tbe 800
meters, and Williams, wbo was
third. 'in lhe disbict 400-meter dash '
will take place·in the regional track
meet
Ibis week in Lancaster.
Brett Newsome, Cass Cleland, Gary Stanley and
Crocket
Rousb also was the TVC
Chad Burton.
champion in the 3,200 meter run.
Girls' track coach Laura Miller
then introduced members of her
team. They included Lauren
Anderson, Michelle Bissell, Anne

)

'

MHS honors spring athlete~ at banquet
By DAVE HARRIS
land. Brett Newsome got honorable and Raeni wood ..
19·3 record and won the TVC'
Se11tlnel Conespondenl
mention and all-ilisuict bQ1101'S. He.
Head varsity softball coach Jolin championship and sectional crown.
Meigs Hlgb Scbool beld Its · will play in tbe District 13 ali·Siar Amott lhen introduced members of The team which. featured oaly fOil!'
81Uluai spring spons banquet :rues- game Saturday at Ohio Universi· the TVC champion team. Team seniors posted a S8·9 retord, hi
' day night in tbe bigh school calcte- ty's Trautwein Field.
members include Amber Black- those players career and posted
, ria. Atbletic booster president Jim
Reserve softball coach Mary weD. Billie Butcher, Bobbie Butcb· three different TVC crowns.
" Soulsby was lbe master of cere- Grinun introduced members of ber er, Cynthia Cotterill, Emily FackAll-conference awards wq~t to
monies.
team. Grimm introduced Melissa ler, Julie King, Jessica McElroy, fml-leamers Billie Butcber, Bobbie
Reserve baseball coacb Pete Barrett, Jerrica Clark, Brandi Stacey Novak, Melissa Ramsburg. Butcher, Cynthia Cotterill and ·
Woods introduced members of bis Hysell, Shannon Jenkins, Sara Lee, Ashley Roach. Stephanie Stewart Emily Fackler. Blackwell received
P reserve baseball team lbat fmisbcd
Brandi Meadows, Amber Slavin, and Melissa Vance.
(See AmLETES on PaRe 5)
: with a 2-10 mark. Team members Patricia Smith, Allison Williams
Tbis year· s team finished with a
)
• Included Matt Ault, Cha.4 Blount, •
Brad Davenport, Tony Dugan, Jeff
, Fowler, Nathan Halfhill, Chad
• Hanspn. Aaron Hockman. Steve
' McCullougb. Jason Mullen. Roy
Powell, Roben Qualls, Chris Rousb
and Jason Wray.
Varsity baseball coach Scou :
Gbeen presented members of bls
varsity baseball team lhat finished
with a 14-7 mark overall and a 10.
•• 3 mark in lhe Tri· Valley Confer,
ence . Team members included
Cbad Bunon, Cass Cleland, Dave
~ Felly, Mike Franckowiak, Scott
u· George, Israel Grimm, Brent Han·
son, Jarred Holman, Ricky Hoover,
Breu Newsome, Paul Pullins, Gary
.· Stanley, Ricbie Wamsley and
• Bradley Whitlatch.
Gheen lhen introduced members
SOFTBALL HONOREES - These girls
; of the TVC's all-conference team.
1
received aii-TVC honors In softball at Tuesday's
~, That included first-teamen Chad
Meigs sports banquet. From left to right are BIUie
·, Bunon, Gary Slallley and Cass Cle·

ALL-TVC BASEBALL HONOREES -Baseball players-receiving all-TVC honors at Tues·
day's Meigs spring sports banquet were (L-R)
)

I

Barr takes Wellston
grid coaching post

.. ·./.

'.

M~or

6-Weat.ervute North (1)22·$ .............. 147
7-M•illoa Pmy 1&amp;-3 ....................... 122

I.Cio. Oak IIJIIa (3) 22-J .................... IOI
9-Euclld (1)2:2·4.................................... 92
10-Tokdo Cent. cam. 18-2 ................... 74

leagues
£-ten IJhoWon

I::f.'... . .:. . . . . . .tf
NeW Y(l'k , ............. .t2
DeuoJL. .................. Il
TOJODI.o .................. IJ
Baltimore ...............IO

...

~ .14'
~

"'
2.5

10

13

.410 ·

14

,44(1

13

.435

C•tr .. DIYWM
CLEVELAND ....... 16 7 .69&lt;1
Milwaukee ............ .1 2 I 3 .480
Kaow C!ty .......... .10 14 .417

'

Chicaao ..............,.: ... s

14

.364

Mia~ota ................ B

17

.J20

I

4
5
5

9

ll
Ten • ..................... 13 12
Seattle .,.................. l2 12

4
.U
1.5
9

.640

.SlO
. 3
.S:ZO
3
.SOO . 3.,

Tuesday's scores
nx.aa lit Olicago (ppd .• rain)
CLEVEU.ND S, MUwaube 3
Detroit 6, Minni!SOIA 4 (6.l hm .. nin)
Toronto 10, Kawu11City 6
B OiiOn 5, Seallle 4 ( 10 in:n .)

Dll: Teu• (Groa 1-J and Pavlik 2-J)
at 01ica go (Alvarez 1-2 and f~nandez 2·
2). 2:0.5 p.m.
Milwaukee (Minmdl 1· 1) 11t CLEVE·

..••

LAND (CI"" 2· 1), 7,05 p.m.
Minn etolllo (Radke 2-1) at Detroit
(Moorol·2), 7oOS p.m.
'

•

Kllnslll City (Oordoll 1-1) ,al Toronto
(Co ne 2-2),7:3.5 p.m.
Boaton (Eihelman 3·0).111 Seattle lT.
Davis 2· 1), 10:3.5 p.m.
Bnltimore (Muulaa 3-1) at Oakland
(Stewlllt 2·3), 10:3S p.m.
New York (McDowell1 ·1) Ill Calirornia (Boskie 2-0), 10:35 p.m.

.••

•

•

•
•

•

•
••
•

.

.

•••
•
•

••'
••
••
~

••'
•••
•

•

•••

i

'..·
~

••
••
•
•

6-Mowneo (I) 19·l ...... ....................... 121
7-t..uw:. Fairfield UDion (1 ) 21· 3 ........ 11 J
8-AVOII Lab 17-6 .................................87
9-Butey ( I) 16-1 .·................................. 75
tO-Franklin (I) 23-4 ............... ...............69

Secoftd 10: ll ·MiUitua Cre~ twood 6ti.,
12-WaUICOII 46 . 13-Bryao 43. 14-Jiom. ;
Roa: (l) 40. 1.5-Panna Padua JSI, 16-Ham.
Badin 32, 11 -Beilevue 29. 18 (t!c) ·
- Marynille, Poland Semillll)' '27. 20-Coi.
DeSaiell21 . .

.

S..:o1ul 101 I 1-Ch!l. Uoioto 57. 120enoa 38 ." 13-il loom -Ca rroll 37 . 14 ·
Toronto 27 . 1$--Cin. Mariemont (1 ) 21. 17
(tie)-Cia. lndlllll Hill, Col. Ready 14. J 9
(lie)·GDad. Jndim Valley, Barneavllle 12.

Tram
Pt1.
1-Falfpttt Harbor l-latdi na {IS) 23-3..31 4

:.!: L

Ptu!adelphia ........... U 6
AUanta ..l................. lll&lt; 1 02
Mow.. ................
New Yort .............. IO 1!1
!-l orida .....................6 19

'

Tuesday's scora

Detroit 6, San Jose 2; Detroit leadl~e­
rie. 2-o
Cbicn&amp;o 2, Va11couver 0; Chica&amp;o
I~ series 2.0

=,,,,,,,
•••
,.,,,,,,,,
==
a
.
$19
=
=
.
.
$15 =
=
=
-=
=
-=
=
=
=
Tuesday's score

SPRING SAI.E

.

FRONT END ALIGNMENT..............

•

OIL CHANGE • LUBE &amp; FILTER.......

95 •
95

'ALL WORK GUARANTEED.

&amp;;!

RECEIVE TRACK AWARDS ·- Receiving
track awards at Meigs High School's spring
sports banquet were (front row, L·R) Stacie Reed,

Becky Meier and Anne Brown (these three also
received aii·TVC academic honors). Behind lbem
are Crockett Roush and Pbll Edmonds.

E.astern b 3Se ba· 11 team beatS N•Y 12•1
Eastern's baseball team concluded its season with a 12·1
trouncing of Nelsonville-York on
the Buckeyes home turf.
Eddie Friend picked up lhe win
with another well-pitcbed game.
He bad five strikeouts and two
walks for Dan Thomas' Eagles.
Reeves suffered the rosil with five
innings of work am! S. Collins
pitched IWO innings. N·Y pitching
fanned six and walked four.
Eastern billers were freshman
Steve Durst a single, Eddie Friend
two singles and a double. Chris
Bailey a single, Malt Bowen two

singles, Ryan Buckley two singles
and a double; Eric Hill a single,
Jeremy Kehl two doubles and
Michael Barnell a single.
N-Y bitters were Collins, Stold·
er and Hall.
Eastern's game with Southern
has been canceled as it made 001
difference in the outcome of lhe
TYCrace.
Inning totals
Eastern
0(1 0)2-000-0= 12-14-2
N-Y
I 00.000-Q= 1-3.()
WP-Friend
LP-Reeves

Eastern softballers share TVC crown ·
Eastern's softball team (16-5)
ended its regular season wilh a 15-

0 romp of Vinton County, a game
in which Rebecca Evans pitched a
no-hitter and came just one batter
away from a perfect game.
Evans walked none, but bad one
runner reach on an error. That runner was retired on a double play, as
all other innings she retired lhe side
in order. Evans struck out lhe last
two batters of lhe &amp;!ID'e.
That decision gave lhe Eagles
(16-5) the Tri· Valley Conference
co-championship.
Evans was recently chosen to
all-District 13, first -team all- 'I'Ve!
and second-team· all-state. Sbonstop Nicole Nelson was also an alldistrict and all-TVC selection.
Collecting three bits eacb were
Mindy Sampson and Jessica· Karr,
while other hiuers were Jessica
Radford, Nicole Nelson, Patsy ·
Aeiker and Rebecca Evans. Karr
led lhe learn wilh six RBis, while
Radford. Nelson. Sampson and
Tmcy White each had two.

Hawk suffered the loss for Vinton County .
Inning totals .
Eastern
364-011-0=15-11-1
Vinton Co.
000.()()()..0=0~8
WP-Evans
LP-Hawk

SEED
From OHIO SEED
Company
Bulk or Packaged

Garden Seed &amp;
Grass Seed

PICKENS

SMALL
WANT ADS

HARDWARE

PACK

773-5583

MASON, W. VA.

· ABIG PUNCH!

-

.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES &amp; SERVICE
742-3088

-

RUTLAND, OH.

c'''''''•••m•'''~'''::

.

lill

&amp;1.

.150
.600
SJI

l .S
S

. .
.400
.240

&amp;.S
12..5

CentraiiM•Won
8 .667

cruca~o .. ................ l 6

CINCINNATI ....... 13

II

.l&lt;2

~ . . L~~.Hll[lllHUllU

3

~:E:~:: : : : : : :J! ~~ : H ~ ].~
We.C:t"' IM•IIMm

~::F:~i~·::::::::g
Loa Ang~lt.a ........... ll
San Oiego .............. ll

n J~ ·
14
14

.440
.440

2
3..5
J.S

Tuesday' s scores

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN

Montteai 6, Sat~ Dieao 4

P111!adelphia 6, SaD fraoeisea j

ONCINNATI 10, HouitO D 5

Aorida 6, Pittsbt.l'gh I

Los· Ange!ea6. New Yort 4
Allanu 1, St Looil 1
Chka~

7, Col~ado 6

Today•&amp;: games
Ch1ca,o (CII.slillo 2·1) at Colorado
(Ritz2· l }, ~OS Y. m.
San Diego OfWHoll ~2) at Mo111JUJ
(P. Martmu 3·1), 7:3S p.m.
San Frncl1co (Wilaoll 2· 1) at

Get Cable Installed
fo.- Just •••

Philade!ptna(Quaotn113- l), 7:3S p.m.
Houstoll (R.e:ynold.J l-2) at CINCIN· ·
NATI (Schourtll: 1-2). 7:35 p.m.
'
Florida (Witt 1-2) at PittshurJtl (Lieber
1·3), 7 ~ 35 p.m.
.
.
Atlan111 (Oiavine 4-1) at St. Lou at
( Fra&amp;~;atore Hl), '7: 35 p.m.
· Lo1 Anr;elet (AIIItlo 0-1) at New
Yor~ (B i rk.b~k 0-0), 7:.0 p.m.

T•-

Ord~r HBO

and get
your 2nd month FREE •••

Row a

Beards
• Loaded!

~fiedBuye~

Tom Peden tksooiSll

S.lo$1 0

Order

No Oox Fees

Pnee

'

I

. $1,046

888

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY S.sERIES
lS EXTENDED CAB PICKUP

Today.~.

(304) 675-3398 •
1-800-766-0553

~ed'

!500

·•

• Driver Side Alr!Jag
• Power Brakes
• P 205175R 15" T11es
• Rear Anll-loclc Brakes · Custom C~ lh lntenor • Well Equ•pped'
• Power Steenng

... '

1994 Conversion Vans
Disco
sa 0

JSave$5000 J

BRAND NEW '95 G-20 3/4 TON
RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN

REAR AIR &amp; HEAT!fiBERGlASS RUNNING BOARliS

VR~ llLUHlh nuuuuHw lL~tlilulilu~
Ll$1 Pnce .

Fury Rebate

• • $13 ,599
. $500

liSt Prw::e
SW.Qw/d!ys

TomPedtr\OISC(Iun1 : .- S I.~ll

Cen•fica• ..

Sale Price

Tom P«&lt;&amp;n 0«0111

$11,688
BRAND NEW-'95 PONTIAC GRAND AM
• 16 Valwe Power
• Power Brakes
• Drwer Srde Arrbag
• Power Door Locks
; 4 Wheel Anl1-t.ocll8rakes • AMIFM S1ereo
• Power Sleermg
• Sleel Betted T~res

; Slyled-s
· Well Equtpped!

No Doc Fees o~·

• Ra1sed Roof

· COlor TV
·• [}nver Side A1r Bag
• Antr·Lock Brakes
• Rear A1r!Heat
• Alr Cond1!1on
• Automat1c Overcnve

S21.309

.$400
. $2.42'

Sale Pnce

$18,488
BRAND NEW '95 BIIICII LfSABRE
• A&lt; CoodobOn
, A""""'l&lt;

·Dual AllbiliW
·4-AnJJ.locll
Brakes

• Power Sleen"J
• Power (!rakes
•Po.., llilor l&lt;&gt;::ts
•Power Wllldoos
·AMII'MS"'""

• TflSIOOnr&gt;J
• Cuslom Clo~ lnl~a
··SljiedW~s

·Wei Eqt.OWedl
!'«l[D:~~ec:l'

•

~.lllrlslo.'!.L•• --.,.. i -"-fl·· "'·'~

'

· SolaiBed

• Full Conversron
• Arummum Run nlflg

UilUU~f lL I H!

and, we' ll send you o.coupon IQ re&lt;eive a
FREE copy ol HBO's orlginot movie
""White Mile" storring Alan Aida.

TOLL FREE 1·800-822·0411 • 372·2844

I.CU.ton GlenOU (17J 21-2 ..............325

-

• PIS, PIB

•lndrrect Lrg hilng
··Premrum WOOO P~g.

l.J$1 Pr-::e
Sll.936
F8C1uy Rebata
·!500
GMAC 1st T~ Buyer
Allowarce To

From lhe be,t in sports on ESPf\1; late-breold~ news on CNN; great lt~ m ily ptogromming on The Discovery Channel; ond
shows for k;ds of all agea on Tho Disney Channel, Nickelodeon and The Family Channel- Cable hos so.,..ihing for evoryonel

If you order HBO during our 1¢ instoUotion
a~, you'll gel HllO Free your 2nd monlh

2-Piqua (9)23-2 ..................................215
).IIJIHrd (6) 22·L ........................ 260

• Power Wrndows
• Power Locks
• Trlt Steerrng
· Crurse Control
• AM/FM Ci:lsSetle
· Capta . n Cbarrs

. .'..you'll hove the chance to hove cable Installed for only 1 &lt;•
It'• the belt deal in the nelghbott.ood, filled with entertainment volue to losl oil m-th long.

Atlan1a (A very 1·1) at St lou1• (K.
Sail Oieao (SaDden 2-0) at Montreal
·(Heory 0.2), 7 :3.5 p.m.
San Francisco (Leiter 1-1) .II Aliladel·
phla (Green ).1),7;3$ p.m.
f-1t.11ida (Rapp 0-3) 11 PituiNr'lb (Waa·
nu 0.~). 7:15p.m.
Loa Anfelr..l (Ca lldiotU 1·3) t1 New
Y011C (Harnuch 0-l), 7:40p.m.
·
· ONCINNATI (Smiley 1.0) .. Chica&amp;o
(Bulli~ itt J-0), B·ds p.rn.

• Extended Chassrs
· Drwer Side Arr Bag
• Anlt-Lock Brakes
· Air Condltron
• AutomatiCOverdnve
• Vrsta Bay W1naows

ORDER By Friday, May 26 ...

Thursd ay'• games

COLUMBUS, 'Ohio (AP) -

All

·1 Save $5000 J

5tale panel of coaches ratu Ohio blah
Jdlool b•eball twnliQ the firth lid fiOil
reaulaNeOIOD poll (or The AlloCllted
p,..., (by 01tio IIJJII&gt; S&lt;hool Alhl"" A&gt;·
aoc1alton divillou, wltb fint·pltce. "'tel
Ia pwclllbC~e~):

•

NHL playoffs

NBA playoffs

RT•.124

Division IV

Oftio H.S. poll

•

Ptr..

1-0ran¥\lle {24) 22·1 ........................351
2-JohnatoWn-Monroe (9) 2.S-2 ............ 334
3-Cc.lldwater 22-ot ......,, .. ,. ............... ,,... 17 3
4-Zolrviltr Tuac. Valley (2) 22-3 ....... 173
5-Pen'Y 21-41 ...................... ,................. 171
6-Rockrord Parkway 20·3 ................... 148
7-Bioomdale Elmwood 21·2 .............. 145
!·PORT. WEST (I \ II·&gt; .. ...........:.... 126
9-Spnog. Kenton Ridge (l)122·.5 ..........93
10-Broohille ( 1) 20-3 ...........~ ...............66

Hill 2·0), I ·35 p m.

'•
•

Hockey

Brown, -c=-a-s-s-id_y_C::_o_ff_e_y_
. -S-a-ra--Jane--15-pe-ncer-.------Craig, Stephanie Davis, Jennifer
Miller also introduced Stacie
Ervin, Carrie Glaze, Danielle Reed, Anne Brown and Becky
Grueser, Susan Grueser. Whitney Meier; the Marauders' representaHaptonslall. Jenny Hayman, Heidi lives on the TVC's all-academic
Legar, Becky Meier, Stacie Reed , team.

Eulr.m DI~IMDft

!&lt;.om

•
•

•
••
••
•••

Thursday's game
Indiana at OrlandD, 8 p.m. (TNI)

&gt;

NATIONAL LEAGUE

••
•

Thursday's games

Min naota (Ericb.on 1·4) al Detro ll
(D uhiiDOD0-0),.1; 15 p.m. '
Baltimore (Rhodu l ·l ) at Oatlaod
(Dar ling 1· 1), J: IS p.m.
·
Oosto n (Z. Smi th 0- 0) at Seaule
(Belcher 1-0), 3:3S p.m.
.
IUnsu Ci! Y(J-Ianey 1-1) at MilwaUkee
{Roberson 0-0) , 8:0S p.m.
New Y1.1rk (Perc&amp; 2·0) at Califon !•
(LanR:ston 2·0), IO:OS p. m.

Houatoll at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
(1m)

Basketball

2- Dellefont.ai~~e {4) 21 ·.S ........ .'............. 227
3-St.eubtnvllle (4). 11-6 ........... ~ .......... 221
4-l.alrowOod (5)22-4 .......................... 203
5-Lewillown Indian Lake (3) 19-6 ..... 131

T•-

Today's IJ:&amp;mes

Tonight's game

Pl1.

Division Ill

Baltimore 8, Oakland 1
Cali!ornia lO, New Yoik.O:

••
•
•'
'•

Division U

I

Orlando lOS, l11.dlana 101; Ortaado
leadl aeries 1-0

Set::o.d 10! 11 -Cuyahoia HtJ:. 92. 12Cra;Uine 72. 13-Kalida 22. 14-Cin. Country Day (1) 17. IS-Creatvlew, 11 . 16-Find.
Ubeny-Benton 10. 17-Jcwen-Scio 8. 11Saud. St. Mar)'l 6. 19 (tie)-Arcanum, N.
Baltimore s.
·

1-Col. Wattenoa (15) 23-4................. 306

w........ ~l'Woll

Call£ornia...... ......... J6
Oak.land ................. 13

Serond: lO s I i-Wad•worlh 50. 12
(Ue)-Worth. Kilbour11e, Cia. LaSalle 40.
14-Cin. Coltrain 29. 1.5-Cle. St. Ianatlua
27, 16-Wt.at Cheater Lakota 24. 17-Bar·
bcrtoa 22. 18-Mt. Vernoo 21. 19 (tle)Madilon, Cin. Elder 17.
TeiiPI

r

Cllh. CcnL (9) I H-4 ..............261
l-Oalioa Norlhroor (2) 19-4................174
4-Lciptic {1) IS-I ............................ ... 159
5-Fremoa1 SL Jo~eph (I ) 16-4 ............ ! 5 I
6-Ctda.-vllle (2) 16-5... ........................ 126
7-Co\umbialla (1) 16-4........................ 124
I-Newto11 19-6 ..... ,............. ,. .... .......... 118
Edaertcn 14-3 .................................. 118
I 0-St. Henry 15-7... ............ :...... ........... ! 01

l ·Tol. Wbilma'20.4 ...........................1l0

AMERICAN LEAGUE

••

~ner
19asseu~ air (assette .... ........!!!~;;;~~~::1

2- Sta~h.

4-Cin. St Xavier (2) 22-4 ................ .. .196

Baseball

Eastern football coach Dave
Barr bas been named lhe bead football coach at Wellston.
The board approved a one year
contract for Barr . Supt. Frank
Vostatek said Barr would most
likely be teaching in the high
school science deparunent.
Barr is a 1984 graduate of
Meigs High School, where he was
a star lineman for Charlie
Chancey's Marauders. He· was
selected one of lhe Most Valuable
Players in lhc TVC his senior season.
He has been coach or lhe Eastem Eagles since 1992. leading the
Eagles to a 6-4 record in 1993 and
1994. Before coming to EHS, be
taught at Lillie Miami High School
and Mechanicsburg Junior High
School. He also served as assistaitt
coach at Urbana University in
1988.
1
.
"I appreciate the support from
the community and kids the last
two y'ears," Barr said. "It hjiS been
a good three years (at Eastern) I'm
going to miss ·everyone, bur I'm
looking forward to moving on."

991 (.beVfO\et
1
)Ct

Scoreboard

•

•'

The Dally .Sentinel • Pge s~

•

~

- ·m~,_.. t~22-ti756·-~~

• 4x4

· E~ended Cab

• Automa~

• All cdmil~n

· 0""' Sde A11bag

• Rear Anb-loct: Brakes

• Vrsta Bay WmOOws

· PIS. P/8
• Power WrhdoWs
• Power locks
• Trlt Sreenng/Crwse
• AMfFM Cassene
• 4 .C~ptam ChMs

· Solil!Beo
• lnd1reciLrghlmg

• Premrum Wood Pkg
• Full ConverSion

• Fiberglass Runmn-g
Boaras
·Loaded'

�.,
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Otilo

Plige 6-"-The Daily Sentinel

Wedn.-eday, May ~4, 1995

Beat of the Bend ...

Tbe Community Calendar k
pabllahed as a free aenlce to
non-profit group• wla..na to
announce meetlna and •pedal
events. Tbe calendu 11 not
designed to promote 1ale1 or
fund nllero of uy type. Ite-

by Bob Hoeflich

ue printed Mlp8ce permitiiUIII

This must be a busy bUt delight- Anyways, it's a nice experience
ful spring for Tuni and John Redo- wbicb I enjoy. Of course, I gain a
vian who will see both of their liWe weight arter each trip-but
wbllt the beck.
.
.
: lovely daughters ~uate.
The older, Letgh Anne, will. be
And speaking of Middleport, tbe
graduating from Ohio University. I .
believe she is a communications other day I noted a lady walking
major and Is currently looldng at near Johnson's. I thought she
• some excellent employment oppor- looked like Dorqtby Gardner
' tUDities. Sbe worked at The Dally · Rou&amp;b-but then sbe bad been bavSentinel for a short wbile during ing seiious baclc: problems when I
• here college years-she's a whiz. had last heard about ber so I figThe younger, Amy Beth, will grad- ured I bad to be wrong. However,
uate from Eastern High School this as she moved up the street. it
. weekend and undoubtedly i,s look- turned out thai it was, indeed,
Dorothy. Sbe seemed so "at home"
ing towards going on to collel!e.
Yep-it's goua be a happy time walking along tbe sueet. Small
wonder since she was a resident of'
• for the Redovians.
tbe Middleport community for
And with Memorial Day coming many years. We chatted a l!it and
up it's time to make those visits to she's doing well. I can't remember
the cemetery or .with some of us to yesterday but I can still remember
the cemeteries with your floral Dorothy in ber senior play at Midofferings to place on the graves of . dlejxJtt High.
your loved ones.
• I made my trips on Monday and
. And speaking of old acquainexperienced a bit of an eye opener tances, how nice is was to visit
at the Riverview Cemetery in Mid- with Mary Lou Hawkins at a recep. dleport when I noted on one of tbe tion SJ)eed and Sharon Pratt held
markers that a nepbew of mine bad for their son, Reggie, at Royal Oak
• died in 1962. He was 14 at the time Resort Sunday in honor of Reg· of his unexpected death. A little gie's graduation.
quick math brought me to the realMary Lou bas been through a
' ization that bad be lived be would terrible onjeal over the past months
· today be 47 years old. I left the · but sbe looks wonderful. She is
cemetery wondering wondering now a double amputee but is
where all of those years have gone. accepting it well. She maintains a
You may find yourselves wonder- terrific positive attitude and
, ing the same thing as you make appears to be surrounded and sup: your cemetery visits this spring.
ported by a very loving family.
Actually, Mary Lou is lucky to
, I love nostalgia and that's·one bave survived all of the problems
' reason I visit the Johnson Variety sbe faced over those months. Many
: Store in Middlepon quite often. I of you will remember ber an
: stop especially to buy candy. The employee of tbe Meigs Local
various kinds are housed in bins School District.
behind a glass-closed frontAs we parted company Sunday
reminds of when there used to be a Mary Lou's last words-and I'm
: lot of stores like that. The bulle: sure she means them for you also: candy always seems fresh and tasty were: ·
: and 0ot expensive when you con"Keep Smiling." ·
sider the prices of candy today.

---

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 631
AN ORDINANCE GRANTING
TO
RIFKIN
COMMUNICATIONS
PARTNERS, t:.P.,
ITS
SUC.CESSORS
AND
ASSIGNS, THE RIGHT TO
ERECT, MAINTAIN, AND
OPERATE
A CABLE
'TELEVISION SYSTEM IN
THE STREETS, HIGHWAYS,
•AND OTI1ER PUBLIC
:PLACES IN THE VILLAGE
•OF POMEROY, OHIO, FOR
THE
RECEPTION,
TRANSMISSION
AND
DISTRIB.UTION
.OF
TELEVISION AND OTHER
SIGNALS
TO
THE
INHABITANTS OF SAID
•VILLAGE, AND OTHER
PURPOSES, FOR A PERIOD
OF FIFTEEN {15) VEARS.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO:
SECTION 1 - DEFINITIONS
Far the purpose of lhls
Ordinance, the following
terms, phrases, words, ·and
their derivations shall have
the meanings given herein,
unless the conteJ~:t clearly
Indicates that another,
meaning is intended. The
word "shall" is· always
mandatory, .and r1ot merely
directory:
1.1 Access Channels •
"Access Channels" sholl
mean those channels set
aside for specific access
purposes, as described in
Sections 611 and 612 of the
Cable Act.
·
1.2 Annual
Gross
· Revenue • "Annual GrOss
Revenue" shall mean all
groaa raven ues received by
the Franchisee from the
operation of the Cable
Television System pursuant
to this Franchise, but shall
not include any amount; of
(I) taw:; fee ; assessment; or
charge olany kind collected
by the Franchisee on behalf
of any govern~ental
authority or (II) any amount
aaae1eed to satisfy any
requlrtment Imposed upon
Franchisee to support
pubJIQ, educational, or
governmental channels or
the uae of such channels.
1.3 Application "AppliCation" shall Include
all written communications,

uDDot be guaranteed to rua a
spedftc number of daya.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - 11le canmnial luncheon of the Middleport
Literary Club willl)\1 beld at 12:30
a.m. at tbe Middleport Cburcb or
'Christ. Response, an original poem.
POMEROY - Wildwood Gat-

POMEROY - At-Anon meet,
ing, Thursday, 7 p.m.. Sacred Heart
Catholic Church.
.

and love me for wbat I am.

Because you care
Because you feel
Because you love

For wbat I feel
For what I see
For wbat I say

Tbe way I care
Tbe way I feel
The way I love

I love you ti-om within
and ft:tim without,

Is reason for our being.
Your smile g\ves me bope:
a promise for a brighter day.
Your being gives me strength
to talc:e another step.
Come wallc: with me

POMEROY - Parish Grace
Episcopal Cburcb will celebrale tbe
Feast of the Ascension with a ser·
vice of Holy Eucharist at 6 p.m.
Thursday. The community is invited to join in the celebration.
POMEROY- Big Bend Girl

~Abusive relationship~ signal a aeeper personal problem

"Say Love With
Rowers From!"

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, tbe Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from tbe date of tbe
event.
All club meetings and other
news articles in tbe society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted witbin 42 days of tbe
occurence.
All material submiited for publi·
cation .is subject to edi.tting.

Vine Ripe ·
TOMATOES

in whatever, form, made by
the Franchisee to the
VIllage concerning the
construction, rendition of

responsible lor cable
television regulation on a
national level, or Ito lawful
successor.
2.0 Franchise
. "Franchise" shall mean the
permlulor, lcense or
authortza,Uon
given
hereunder to , construct,
operate and maintain a
Cable Television Syatem In
the VIllage of Pomeroy.
2.1 Franchisee
"FranchI see" shall mean
any grantee under this
Ordlnanca receiving a
lranchlse granted herein; or
the sucCessors, transferees
or assignees of such
grantee.
2.2 Good Cause • "Good
Cause" shall represent that
set
of
facta ·. and
circumstances which, In an
Individual
case,
a
reasonable person would
adjudge to be beyond
Franchisee's r.eaeonable
control and which would,
therefore, represent a
justifiable excuse of
nonperformance.
Depending on the facta and
circumstances, good cause
may ' Include, but shall not
be limited to, delays or
inlerruptions arl&amp;:ing from .
necessary, utility changes,
rearrangements, power
outages, damage to the
equipment of Franchisee by
the V.lllage or a third party,
the fulfillment of any
Federal, state and/or local
governmental or regulatory
restrictions
or
requirements, national
emergency, uncontrollable
material shortages, fire,
earlhqua~es
or
the
elements and acts of 'God.
· 2.3 Normal Service
Interval • "Norma l Service '
lnter.val" shall mean the
period between the time
that Franchisee will begin
working
on
service
problema as specllled In
Section 76.309(c){2){11) of
the Rules an reguletlo~s of.
the
Federal
Communication•
Commission as It may be
amended from time to time.
2.4 Ordinance
"OrdinanCe" as used t"lereln
shall Include this Ordinance
and eo the some from time

to lime may be amended.
2.5 Person • .. Person''
shall mean any person,
firm,
partnerohlp,
aaaoclation, corporation,
company or otganl..llon of
any kind.

2.6 Mayor • "Mayor"
shall mean the existing or
succeeding Chief Executive
OHicer of lhe VIllage, or
hlllher designee.
2.7 Stale - "Stale" shall
mean the Stele of Ohio.
2.8 Street - "Street"
shall mean the surface of
and the space above and
between any public street,
road, highway, freeway,
lane, path, public way or
place, alley, court, sidewalk,
boulevard, parkway, drive or
other easement now or
hereafter held by the VIllage
for the purpose of public
travel and ahall Include
such ·other easements or
rlghta•of-way as shall be
now held or hereafter held
by the VIllage which shalt,
within their proper use and
meaning, entitle the VIllage
and Its Franchisee to the
use the(eollor the purpose
ol Installing or ttensmlnlng
Cable Television System
transmissions over poles,
wires, cables, conductors,
ducts, conduits, vaults,
men!)Qlea, ~inp[iflero,
appliances, attachments,
and other property as may
ordinarily necessary and
pertinent to a Cable
Television System.
2.9 Subscriber
"Subscriber" shall mean a
purchaser of any service
delivered over the system
to an Individual dwelling .
unit or of service to be
utilized In connection with a
bullneaa,
trade
or
professi on.
3..0 VIllage • "Village"
shall mean the VIllage of
Pomeroy.
3.1 VIllage Engineer "VIllage Engineer" shall
mean the existing or
succeeding Director of the
Engineering .Department of
the VIllage,- or his/her
{Continued on Page B)

$119
HD.

$249

Large Green
PEPPERS .

repeatedly in punishing 1nd school.
He bas a wonderful teacher who
unrewarding relationships suffer
from low self-esteem. -- FORT spends countless hours al'ter school·
and on weekends preparing for his
WORTH. TEXAS
.
education.
I know she spends
DEAR FORT WORTH: Thanks
hundredsofdollarsof'herownmoney
for the assist. Yotr are right on.
Invariably when a relationship hits to enrich his education •• I can see it.
the rocks, the woman asks herself, wben I visit his room and notice all
"What did I do wrong?" I'm pleased the things she provides that the school
to print a letter that points out that in district doesn't.
l was trying to think of some way
some failed couplings, it is the man
to
thank ber at the end of the school
who was self·destructive in .the
year,
so I called my sister, who
relationship. You are riRht -- tbese
men need to examine the pauem with teaches in another city. She told me
to skip the coffee mugs and key
a professional counselot
Dear Ann Landers: You've cbains that say "teacher" on them.
printed many columns about Most teachers have collected a closet
teachers, and they made me think full of them. But she gave me some
about how lucky my children have terrific ideas. I hope you have room
been this year. We live in California, · for them:
I. Write the teacher a thank-you
where public schools are rea II y
letter,
and tben send a copy to the
hurting financially, but every
principal,
the superintendent and
morning, my son is excited to go to

Bedding Plants, Vegetable
~
Plants, Hanging Baskets,
"
4 in Geraniums,
•~'
Shrubs &amp; Trees, Rose
": Bushes, Strawberry Plants

Now Open
SPRING SEASON
Planters of AII .Kini:ls ·
• Be'dding Plants
• Herbs • Perennials ·

VALLEY BELL

2°/o Milk

LARGE SELECTION OF POflED AND
BEDDING GERANIUMS.

$ .49

'

MEIGS FARM MKT.

gal.
Limit 2 please ,

614;949-2682

Save 804 lb.

ON LAWN &amp; GARDEN
BAG PRODUCTS
.
•Lunar Stone · .
•50 Lb. Marble Chips
•40 Lb. Potting Soil ·
· •40 Lbs. Top Soil
•40 Lb. Peat Moss
•40 Lb. Post Manure
•20 Lb•.Potting Soil

C!J

~

Pomeroy
992·2136

-

~

State Route 1
Tuppers Plains"'

9ss-33ss ~

Prices In Effect While
Quantities Last

MEADOW GOLD

(oca·Cola Products
c

Ice Cream.

$ 69

5 qt.
\ pail ·

2 LITERS

ECKRICH

Bologna

c

lb. pk.

NEW TEXAS

·Maxwell House Master Blend

Onions

~Coffee
' 34.5 oz.

$ 69

CHEF BOY R DEE

MR. BEE

2·Cheese Pizzas

Potato Chips

Net Cost

$1.89 less 55¢ coupon
28 oz.

Bleach
gal.

Reg. $1.49
6

$134

CLOROX

c

.

•

c

,

oz.

ARMOUR VIENNA

STOKELY

Sausage

Tomato Juice

5 oz .

. 3

$

1

•

46oz•

298 SEC.OND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

RACINE AMERICAN LEGION HALL

8:00·1 1:00
,

PRICES EFFECTIVE APRIL 26, 1995 ONLV
'

QUESTIONS: CALL 949·2216 or 247·2684 ·

~-

·~

"
'

a

v .• • .

Classmate and .Friends Post Banquet Get·together.

---~-~- - BRIN;:~.r:::~::~ENJS"·-·-~-·-~- ~~· · -~- ·

Farmers

69

$

.

SOUTHERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
.CLASS OF 1970
25th Reunion - Banquet 6:00 P.M.

"
~.

JOI9.L19{mx :Pu9.L

3# bag

SAVE

ATTENTION

See Oftf !FriendS and Cfassmates

Eckrich S~oked Sausag·e, Fresh
Bratwurst, l,talian Sausage

41300
Laurel CliH Road
Pomeroy
9:00 am until 9:00 pm

~-t;:~"?:~

"

J,

THURSDAY, 'MAY 25, 1995 ONLY

The Ohfo Valle'

'\0 ~~ -

"

!from 11:00 Jll.U. f{lnti[ 5:00P.M.
![orCa~, Puncli ana Coffee.

ONE DAY SALE

nowersln

"~~

~

Bank .
"'
;,..,..:JI'" :JI'":JI'":JI'"~;;..;,11'11'11'11'11'~

Syracuse
992·5776
Open Dally 9 am-5 pm
Sunday 12 noon-S pm

One Of The Largest
· Seleeti-.n Of ·
Memorial Da,

'

DEAR SAN JOSE: Thanks for a
letter that a latge number of teachers
will be happy to see. I hope it makes
a dent

~ · WE£COM'E:HOM'EJU/UM9{]! ~
~ :Farmers tJJanl( Is !J{aving .91. !Rgunion ~
~
Stop In On fritfay, May26tli
J,

~

$5 :A~ .2;$1 0

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203.

special tbank-yous, which will mean
a lot to tbem. ··A GRATEFUL PAR·
ENTIN SAN JOSE, CAl.IF.

~..~~~1'11'1"1' ..~~~~~~~ ­

"'
;,

:; Hubbards Greenhouse
HANGING BASKETS
.
MARKET BASKETS

classroom.)
4. Give a classroom donation. In
California. as in other states, many
teachers are buying basic supplies,
such as paper and pencils, out of their
own pockets.
·
I'm mre· Plirents can think of other
ideas, and I'll bet there are teachers
out there wbo witt remember these

~21 West Second St. Your :aank fo-t~...

•~

3/$1

members of the school board. (They
may not have any idea of the ell'orts .
put out by their teachers.)
2. Write a letter to the editor of the
local newspaper'. Lots of people in tbe
community only hear the negatives.
3. Give a gift certificate to a
bookstore. (Chances are it will go
.toward buying books for the

a

::- llew Ope11 Fer Tha Suun

On The Cob

106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9~5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3 1/2 miles past Southern
High School, St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio

..;:. Dear An Luders: This is for all
: those men who write to you and
~COmplain that women don't want men
- who ueat them well.
::: Walc:e up! If a woman seeks out or
: returns to a man who abuses her,
:;physically or otherwise, it means she
:11as a problem. If a man is repeatedly
:;attracted to women who are abusive
"'llld/or unfaithful, it means he bas a
: problem.
.
: Women who allow tbemselves to
,:;be mistreated by men do so because
;:they lack self-esteem and are afraid
:of being alone. They believe if they
;am change tbemselves and be good
~nOUI!h or preuy enough, the man
:Will love them and stick around.
:; And now, Ann, why. do men keep
:fmding women who will abuse them?
1las it ever occurred to these men that
; they are also screwed up? Both males
; ahd females who find themselves

CORN

PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE

Ann
Landers

RACINE - Southern High
School class of 198S reunion, 2 to
S p.m. at the borne of Alan Crisp,
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road.

HEAD ,
LETTUCE

From now to forever.
For you
So beautiful
So alive
So much loved by me.
Teresa Hill Miller
Letart Falls

service

Scout
unit meeting, 7 p.m.
Thursday, Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. All end of year reports
are due.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Class
of 1960, reunion, Pomeroy Lel!i~
ball, 2 to 6 p.m. Saturday. ,

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAlS .-

News policy

Public Notice

number of non·vld~o
signals.
1.8 Chief Admlnlstrqtlve
Officer
"Chief
Administrative Officer"
shall mean the existing or
succeeding Clerk of the
VIllage of Pomeroy, Ohio, or
such other Village official aa
the council may designate
as Chief Administrative
Officer.
1.9
Federal
Comrriunicatlona,
Commission,
FCC
" Federal Communications
Commlaslon" or "FCC"
shall
mean
lh .a t
adminlatralive agency of
the Federal govern':"ent

TJRJRSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Palins VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30 meeting. ,Vote to be taken on
building addition ..

Because

Public Notice

Syat411m contemplated
herein.
Cable
1.4 Basic
Subscriber Services: Basic
Cable Service:
" Basic
Cable Subscriber Services"
or "Basic Cable Service"
shall mean the lowest
priced tier of service which
includes the retransmission
of local television broadcast
signals as defined in· the
Cable Act.
1.5 Cable Act - "Cable
Act" shall mean the Cable
Communications Polley Act
of 1984 es amended by the
Cable Television Consumer
Protection and Competition
Act of 1992.
1.6 Cable
Television
System" Cable
Television System" shall
mean any facility which
consists of a set of closed
iransmloslon paths and
associated
signal
generation, reception, and
control equipment that Is
designed to provide cable
service which Includes
video programming and
which provides other
communications services.
1.7 Channel~ "Channel "
shall mean a band of
frequencies
In
the
electromagnetic spectrum
which Is capable of carrying
either one {1) audio-video
telev ision signal andlor il

POMEROY Narcotics
Anonymous 1 p.m. Wednesday,
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, picnic, Joan Corder, 6
p.m., Thursday Middleport.

---Poet's corner---

Public Notice

services, maintenance, or
any other matter pertaining
to the Cable Television

den Club, home of Juanita Will,
Wednesday. 7:30p.m.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

,_--------~~--------------------------------~--~----------------------~----~~

Wednesday, May 24, 1995

------Community calendar-----I

.. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

.• •
-.

'

•

...... ---

'

•

'.

�hae 8 • The Dally Sentinel
Public Nodce

r_. '

1

• - ' llu;s
~Mia-...
U VIllage Clark
"VU. . . Clert" ahall tile . . . . . . ar euaoudlng
Vll. . . Cterll al lila V....
al ,_..., OhiD.
s.a VIllage Attorney •
"VIllage Attorney• ahall
mean the nlating ar
--'lng r-1--~ 1...1
.uc
cou;:.'i or tt.:'
or
-·h.....,........,.,C
3.4
ounc 11 ;
Council - • 11.... Co-tr
or n
"Council"
t _ ,ahallmaan
, _ bodythe
at
~...::.-or·-...;"'!.,~-_'7,!." ~ ~po_.-of
vn.;;jj.11Council
tile
$EC110N ·_
2
FRANCHISE AOAEEME.,.. ,
.. ,
2.1 Frene hi at Tarm •

Viii'-

VIII•JI•

;'...

::::'~11=~P=~: ~!
Rifkin

Communlcatlona
L •P•
P• r t netI •
("Franchlue"),
Ita
eucc8leore and au tons,

the right, privilege and
Frenchlee to conetruct,
operate, maintain and
upgntda a Cable Telavlelon
Syetarn within tile franchlea
- ae herein defined. for •
DW!od of llflaen (15) yearo
!rom the llffacttve date ol
"•dinan-, eubjectto
thl. ""'
the
conditione
and
I
t
I
II
h
rea r c one aa ere naIter
provided. Bald controct
may be renewed by the
VIllage lor eub. .quent
additional flltaan (15) year
period ol iuch renewal 11
raqueatad In writing and Ia
In compllonca with the
Cable ACt.
SECTION 3- AUTHORITY
NOT EXCLUSIVE
3.1 Franchlla
Nonexclualve 7 The right to
uee .and occupy oald
fran chloe Territory aa
defined In Section 4 herein
for the purpoeaa herein oat
forth ahall not lie excluelve,
and the VIllage raaarvee the
right to grant a almllar uoe
ol 11ld franchlee area to
any paraon or entity ateny
time during the period of
thle
Franchlee,
In
accorchlnce with atate and
f-ret law.
The VIllage
lhlll not authortze or parmi!
another Cable! Television
Syatem to operate within
the franchise territory on
terms or conditione mora
favorable
or
leu
burdensome to auch
operator than those applied
to Franchisee purauant to
this Franchlaa. If the Village
authorizes or perm ita
another Cable Television
System to oparate within
the Franchise territory, It
ahall do so on condition
that ouch Cable Television
Syatem Indemnity and hold
harmlesa the Franchlaee lor
and again II all coato and
expenses lncurrect In
atrengthenlng
polea,
.r earranging ailechmenl8,
placing
underground
facllltlea, and all other coats
IJ1cludlng
thoae
of
Franchisee, the Village, and
utilities, Incident to
lnspactlona, make ready,
aad conatructlon of an
addiUonal Cable Television
S,yatem In the Franchlae
territory, and Franchlaee
shall be llesignated a third
party beneficiary ol such
condl'tlbns
are
88
Incorporated ln'o the
authorlzatlono(a) granted to
another Cable Television
Syatem.
SECTION 4. FRANCHISE
TERRITORY
4.1 Entire Village. This
Franchise is for the present
terrltqrlal limits of the
Vlllag• ol Pomeroy, Ohio,
and lor any area hence forth
adda&lt;l thereto during the
'term of this Franchise.
SECTION 5. OPERATIONAL
·
STANDARDS
•·
5.1 Technical Operations
and Line Extensions. The
Cable Televlolon System as
contemplated herein shall
be lnatalled and maintained
In accordtru:l! with thtc
accepted
lnduetry
atahdorda and will meet all
applicable . technical
atandardo of the Federal
CommunlcaUons
Commlaalon. Tho Cable
Televlalon System will be
built In all areas of the
VIlla!!" having 1 denolty of
40 occ:upled dwelling unity
per cable rplle. the number
ol miles will be calculated
atertl~g anhe cloaeat point
of the actl.vated cable
!tYStefll where the extenelon
muat be connected and will
continue until reaching 300
feet of the dwelling uniL
5.2 Acceaa
lor
Framihlted Cable Telavlolon
Syatem • In cue of new
conatructlon or property
development where uUIItles
a·r e
to
be
PIa cad
the developer
Under.,round,
•
own.ar shall give
Or pro......,
,.... ,
Franahlaee reeaonable
notice of notleeo thin thirty
(30) days prior to ouch
or
C 0 n • t r u c fi on
development, and of the
I I
d
hi h
part cu or ahte on lwll bel
open Irene 11 w
available lor Franchloee'e
tnetallatlon of cable,
condul), pedeotala. and
latarell to be prov lded at
Franchllee'l
axpenu.
h II al.o
F ran cdhi aea tl'tca•tlona
11
1 • apec
prov
~"' 1
hi
Coot
n--" or trenc "II· nla
of Irenehi ng an d eaeeme ·
ed
b1
1 to
raqudlr trl r no •~ ~ 8 be
1
1
the eve1opmen I
borne by the developer or
property owner.
5.3 Community Outletl
•
Ill prov tda, at
Franc hi " " w
th. Written •••queat ollha,
. ••
•ntla!lilrm"' ·•• (8) locations
·"'"Tii:Pu
~owned la.:HIIIH;one outlet each of Bnlc
Cable Service eo lang a•
IUCh location 11 plll!d by

•

PubliC Notice

Public Nollcl

,._ ., _, . . _ - 1,

•Vt

tl

~ Unea, lliiCI

the lnatallatlon If auch
outlet will nat ploca an
u - -amlc herdahlp
on Franchta. ., I.a. coat
more than tha average

••ioe~

•-

r.qulr-ta ol·6.1 tlvough
1.5 above ahall ba waived
by"--VIIII
1 howl
ol ~ ..::..upon
ng
SECTION 7 • CONDmONS
OF STREET OCCUPANCY

c-~Complll
71
·•
.....,.
nce •

SECTION .,

or

publications mentioned

wires

tlereln ahould become
obeolete or should expire,
then Franchisee shall be
required to comply with the
latelt set ol published
atandardo available at ouch
time of obeolescence or
expiration to the axtent
p r a c t1 c a II y
end
economically feaalble.
6.4.1 Franchlaee shall
·d
h
conatruct .sn operate t e
ey11em and related facilities
In accordance
with
generolly accepted related

Franchisee shall obtain
from lhe VIllage, 11 required,
8 permit to conduct iny
such trimming and the
same shall be conducted In
strict obeyance ol all local
1awo and ordl nancea an d a1
the expense of Franchisee.
·
St
1
76 R
·
opaor 0 1 ree1s- ·n
ac"n'y~ roofaadn, Yd~tlcshturobranocteheo:
area within the Village right•
b.Y
o 1-way
cause d
Franc hi see, F ranc hi sea
8h811 ' 81 It 8 own cos1 8 ·0 d
expense and In a manner
approved by the" Village.
replace and restore such
s t rae1 or old owa lk 1o ·o1o
previous
condition
reasonable wear .and lear
excepted.
·

lndu;!:,Vo;.::'::.:,.~~~:~~~~
,ap~~~~:::\~;e~now

or that
become

Placement
- All conductoro, cablao,
towert, poleo and other
h
componanta o1 t • system
a hall be located and
clad
by
the
FranchiiM In back of the
atreet curbe, except lntofar
•• such component• croaa
alrHta and public rlghll of
wa·y, 00 aa to provllla
minimum Interference with
accan by adjoining
::;~r.~,;t~ own era to the
end public ways,
and no pole or other fixture
of the Franchlaaa ahall be

I

and

cables.

· 7.7 Repairs -Franchisee
•hall maintain, repair and
keep In good condition lor a
period . of one ( 1) yaar
following such dla1urbanca
all portions of 8 sidewalk or
· or 1ta
street dl atur bod b y tl
agents, provided such
d
ma 1ntenance an
repa 1r
shall be made necessary
becauaa of defective
workman ahip or mater1a1a
auppllod by Franchisee.
7.8 Wire A a 1e 1ng
Franc til aee s haII , upon 1h e

The npan.. al
tomparory ramovol or
railing or Ia-Ing al the
wlrM ahall ba paid by the
paraon requeatlng the
11me, and the Franchlaee
th 1ty
ahall hove the au or
to

McuidaythnSIIMiay
IAM·lOPM

be given not •••• than
eaventy-two , (72) houre'
advance notice to arrange
lor euch temporory wire
chengee.
.
7.9 Emergency
Procedure•. II at any llmt,

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

lne~~~offlreordlaaetarln

the lranchlaa area, II aha II
be come neceaaary In the
judgment ol the Chief
Admlnlatrallve Ofllcer or
the Head of the Department
ol Public Safety, Fire
Department' Division or like
department, to cut or move
any of the wire cabl81,
ampllflero, applloncee or
other lbrturea of Franchleaa,
this may be done and the
repairs thereby rendered
noceaoary ahall be mode by ·
Franchisee, which expense
shall be reimbursed by the
Village.
· 7.10 Warnlng ·-Davlceo Franchisee'• work, while In
progresa, ahall be properly
executed at all tlmeo with
suitable barricades, llags,
lights, flares or other
devices as are reasonably
required to protect all
members of the public
having occasion to use the
portion of the street
Involved or the adjacent
property.
SECTION 8 •
FRANCHISE FEES
8.1 Payment to Village Franchisee herein ehall pay
to the VIllage for tho uoe of
the streets and other
laollltles ofthe Village In the
operation of the Cable
Television System and for
the Village supervlelon
thereof a sum equal to three
percent (3%) of the Annual
Gross Revenues, as defined
herein from operations
within the Village. Said fee
shall be paid on a oemlannual baalo within sixty
(60) days aller ' lhe end of
June and December of each
year. With ouch payment
the Franchisee shall lite
with the Village a statement
showing the Annual Gross
Revenues received by the
Franchisee during the
preceding payment period.
8.2 Payment
upon
Termination - In the event
this Franchise should be
terminated of forfeited prior
to the end oltha Franchise
term, as defined herein,
Franc h Is e e
a hall
Immediately submit to the
Village a financial statement
prepared by a certified
public accountant or the
chief flnanelal ofllcer of
Franchisee showing , the
Annual Groaa Revenuea of
Franchisee for the time
elapsed since the last fiscal
year report. Franchisee
shall pay to the Village not
later than alxty (60) days
lollowing the termination of
this Funchiae a like
percentage of such Annual '
Gross Revenues and any
other sums legal due and
owing the Village.
8.3 Penalties - In the
event that any payment Is
not made on or bofora the
applicable chlte fixed herein,
Franchisee shall be subject
to the penalty provided for
hereinafter.
8.4 Right to Inspect
·Books · The Village shall
have the right to Inspect the
· Franchisee's
records
showing the Annual Gross
Revenues from · which Its
franchise payments are
computed. The right ol
audit and computation ol
any and all amounts paid
under this Franchise shall
always be accorded to the
Village. Should the Village
notify Franchisee in writing
of Its desire to Inspect
and/or audit Franchisee's
record·a, Franchisee shall
be obligated "to produce
such .records and make
lhem available to the Village
of Pomeroy within twenty
(20) working days of such
notification.
SECTION 9 •
SERVICE MAINTENANCE
STANDARDS
9.1 Personnel

WI RESERVE THE RIGHT. TO'LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1995

the conduct of Ita buolneos;
(Continued on Page10)
lower Ita

'

•

'dii!MUI.,..._.toN,_Y

.... ID ......... Ihotlllucll J,_lt ... iii _ _ _ IDcliiYLGnY . .
wndcr-.-. . . be
; ted PI' Min~
. -. . . .,

59

COPYRIGHT 111M • THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD
SUIIIDAV,IIAY 21, THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1tt5 IN POMEROY &amp;

GALUPOUS.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TD LIMIT QUANTITIES. IIOHE SOLD TO

.

PEPSI COLA ·~
PRODUaS ;
'

s

49

VAN CAMPS:

-•

PORK&amp;

·BEANS

••

i

16oz.

SUPERIOR F

KIE

.

s

C

Weiners•••••1!.~;f.~••••••• 79

OR BEEF •••
'
BAR BEQUE
10 oz.

19

•
l
•
•

DUNCAN 1
HINES CAKE
MIXES
•

.,

•

I

••

18-18.5 oz.

(
•

MAXWELL
HOUSE INSTAMT
.•
COFFEE
I

••

I

'

12 oz.

s

jar of

on ONE32 oz.
any MIRACLE WHIP•

.
,.
••

49

•
•

•

BRAWNY
PAPER
TOWELS

•

WID If IIJLD, TIWISFEIIRED, Gil REPIIODUCED

······-···

•

~
~

::
...
,.."

...r

.,.,.. .

~
:;

•••
~

""
~-..
-.
~
~

s
•,'"

'"

.·-,_
·-

.·••.
."

-~'
-.'
~

1

MEAT, LITE MEAT OR BJG N JUICY

SUGAR SWEET

·1/2Gallon

1-l..b. Pkg•

Each

PolarPak oscarMayer
Texas
Ice cream Wieners cantaloupes

.'

.. .....'•
.
i1
•I

I

.
.
.
•
-'

ASSORTED FLAVORS

:

Buy One
·Get One

.

9Size

••
••

..••

(

'I

•

•••
•••

Wml COUPON

i

LAYS POTATO!
CHIPS

(anJYI~)
IIETWR: Mali to Kraft, Inc.. CMS Deot. -211199, 1 Fmn .
Or., Del Flo, 1X 78840. cash value 1/100$.

••
••

•

••
•

P17-{JS-20

"

'

.

...

r
r

•

l

;~ _ .. -~-- ~--

F5-5 -

.

HOTDOGOR

Kroger
II/$~ Kroger
. S/$2
Pork N' Beans..... ts-()z.
~ Hamburger Buns......s-ct.
.

..
=~
..I

ASSORTED FLAVORS

~:

·..,••

snackwell's
Sf8S
cereal Bars............ 7.8-()z.

~

...
Lay's

•••
'•• •

'
. ,...J

• • • • • • •
•
. .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - -. .~---••••••••..j

..

'

,,

Coodonly

Potato Chips...... 6-oz.

I

(
sa, 11 WAOUIIB

·

90Z.

20C '

s

California
Peaches...............,... Paund

l

Tom's Super Valy, Powell's Supeo Valu

on ONE (1) 18 Oz. boltle of KftAF14 Barbect•
Sauce OR THICK 'N SPICye Barbecue Sauce

"PREMIUM• SUGAR SWEET

••

Good only at Foodfair, Pennington's, Ralph's, Konova Big Valu.

...,"'

""i'

Jumbo

ROLL

•••••••••• ••••

411

Roasts

],],"18

5

59e

Into Chops

~­
~

~

IIETM.ER: Malllo KroH,Inc. CMS [)opt.
121999. t F . - Or., pel Flo, TX
78840.Caoh \ll!luo tttDOt.

5oc

FREE

.~

I

lledeemabll at

up to·

Sliced

~

~

VIETTI PORI

s

...-

....~
....
....
."". .
••

Franchisee shall maintain
sufficient repair and
maintenance crews capabiB"
of responding to subscriber
complaints or requests lor
service within the normal
service Interval as dollned·
herein.
9.2 ServIce
to
Subscribers - Service to
Subscribers shall be as
follows:
921 A
b 1
. .
nY
vor a '
telephonic or written
complaint relating to the
quality or continuity· of
service shall be anended to
within the normal service
interval as defined herein. •
9.2.2 The provisions
contained
In
this
Subsection shall not apply
if the discontinuation of
service Ia occasioned
because of an ecl ol God,
strike, hatlonal emergency,
or any other circumstance
beyond the control of
Frahchlsee. similarly, this
provision shall not apply to
tervlce requests
or
complaints pertaining to
tolevlolon ·set malfunctions
or other breakdown• not
related to the operation of
the
Cable
Television
System.
9.2.3 Franchise ahall

s

._,._...!M:hOIChMedll•

llf CCII,_ ..... Mdl.,.... 1tore. except • ~y notlld In tNIId. If we
CIO,_..DUtOftnadM 2 td...._we . . oHiityouYOU"cholotOI•CCIII- til
tc:.m, whirl av • t't, • afCw~tt tM .,_. ..,.,._ 01 • r*tchlck wf*tl wll entttt.

24 pl12oz. Ca1s

..l~rv~"n a pu c
ao
~?.o~j~~~F:pJe~~·~•:o~n~t~:;::;f.::i;~~!
~~~:~~~~~~~r~·r~~;~--~j~~~fr,i'
have the right
to preecrtbe
and
rateoi''f.;&lt;;-&lt;t-l:el-- · __
The

I

12 PL 12 OL &lt;ANS

STORE HOURS

~:~~:e.•u;r~n~~r.=~th!~

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

SUUI

p c

wo6.y8
. Waiver

- ...Wednesctay, May 24, 1995

•

RCCOLA
PRODUOS

Public Nolle»

~~m~ov;;itng;;g"o;;;;;ci;'t~;ift:~

All tranomlaalona and
C~
dletrlbutlon atructurea,
6.1 Aaaaonabla cere
llnae and equipment
erected by Franchleaa
Franohl... ohall, ot all within the fronchiM area
tlmea, employ rNeonabla shill be located 10 .. to not
care and ahall lnetell and cauu
unrauonebht
maintain devtc.. or lntarlarance
with the
ayatama lor p~aventlng proper uaa of llrHte,alleye
fall
•· pu btl c waya an d
h urea and accident• 1 nc1 ot.~r
w lch are likely to cauee place• and to cauae
damage,
lnjurl.. or mlnl'mum Interference with
nulaa- to the public.
the rlghll and reaaonablt
6.2 Interference
·convenience of property
Franchi- ahllllnatell and ownere who adjoin any of
mtlntlln Ill wlrea, cablei, aald atraeta, alleya or other
flxtur..
and
other public way 1 and plecoa.
equipment 10 •• not to The
Cable
Televlaion
lnterftrt with tile equipment S yatem
a halt
be
of any utility aarvlng the conetruclld and operated In
realdentl of the VIllage or comp 11ance 1n a11 me1era
11
• nyhtluothatlly an tlty lawfully ancl reapecta with all adopted
r 1II
ua1ng the condu 1t, local, ltete a nil national
pole or other part of thl c~tructlon and electrical
right way.
•
c •• which are In elfecl 88
8.3 Conetructlon and 0
the date of thla
Malnt•nance Standerda - Ordinance.
The
Cable
Televlelon
7•2 Mapo • Prior 10
Syetem ehall at aU llmaa commencing any now
conform to the conetructlon conetructlon, Franchisee
and maintenance etandarda
h
b It 1 lh VIII
~ t·- ~tow·.
a a11 au m o e
age
...
"'w• e
upon r queat d• telled mapa
6.3.1 Methoda
of showing
proposed
conelructlon, lnatellallon construction locations.
and maintenance ol the Theae mapa 'shall show the
Cable Televlalon ayatem proposed placement of
ahell comply with tho Franchlaee;a cablea 0 the
Notional Electrical Safety Village right of way, poles
Code 1975 (ANSI Cl-1975), that are to be erected by
and
anY
I u t u re Franchisee aa required for
amendrnanll, modlflcatlona conotructlon, and locations
or rapllcamente thereof, to where FranchlsH proposes
the extant that euch Code Ia to attach to existing utility
conalotent with tha local poles. Fr.anchlaee shall ·
law ·
affecting the cooperate with the Village
conatructlon, lnatallatlo,n and any ollto agents during
and maintenance of any new conotruction
elactrlcol aupply an.d period and throughout tho
communications llneo. ·To lull term ol the Franchise In
the extent that ouch Code Is regardo to conotructlon
lnconelstent with the other procedures, practlcea and
provlelone of thla Franchlae location e.
All cable
or with local law, the latter construction
and
ahall govem.
lnllallatlons located within
6.3.2 Any
tower VIllage property ol Village
conotructed or molnlllned rlghts-ol-woy ohall be
In the VIllage ol uoe In the Installed and maintained at
Cable Television System ouch locations and deptho
ahall comply with the so as to not lnterlisre with
etandardo contained In any VIllage road or rlght·ofStructured Standard• for way maintenance.
Steel Antenna Tower• and
7.3 Relocation
of
Antenna
Supporting Facllltlaa • Whenever the
Structurea, EIE Standards VIllage or State of Ohio
RS-222-A, ·~ publlahed by shall require the relocation
the Englnaa~lng Department or reinstallation Qf any
of the Electronic lnduatrles property of Franclileeo In
aaooclatlon, and as the any ol the streets of the
same may be, from time to franchise area, It shall be
time, modified, amended or the obligation ol the
replaced.
Franchisee, upon notice of
6.3.3 lnttellatlono and ouch requirements, to
phyelcal dlmanolono of any cooperate In the timely
tower conatructad In the removal and relocation or
VIllage for uae In the Ceble reinstallation ol said
Televlelon Syltam aha II property so as not to cause
comply with all appropriate unreasonable delay. Such
Federal Aviation Agency relocations, removal . or
Regulations Including, but reinstallations
by
no limited to, Objectives Franchisee shall be et the
Affecting
Navlgat&gt;le
cost of Franchisee unless
Atropaca, 14 C.F.R. Section fun do are otherwise
77.1 et seq., a the eame may available to partially or
be, from time to limo,
wholly
reimburse
modllled,, amended or
lranchlaee.
replaced.
7.4 Facilities Placement
6.3.4 Any antenna
- Whenever In any place
·structure In the Cable
within the franchise area, all
Television System shall
or any part of both the
comply with Construction,
electric and telephone
Marking and Lighting of utilities shall be located
Antenna Structure, 47 C.F.A. underground, 11 shall be the
&amp;action 77. I at aeq., as the obligation of the Franchisee
same may be, from time to · to locate or to cause Its
time, modified, amended or property 10 be located
replaced.
underground within such
6.3.5 All
working places. 11 the electric and
fecllltlea and conditions telephone utilities shall be
used during conatructlon, relocated underground In
Installation
and
any place . within the
maintenance ol the Cable franchise area after
Televlalon Syaiem shall Franchisee . shall· have
comply with the standards ,previously Installed Its
of the Occupational Safety property, Franchisee shall,
and Hellth A~mlnlltratlon.
noverlholeso, at the soma
6.3.6 Franchisee shall lime or In a limely manner
at all times uoe reasonable thereafter, remove and
care and aha II lnolsll and relocate Its property also
maintain In uee commonly
d
d 1
h
un ergroun
n soc
accepted methods and places. Any facilities of
davlcea lor preventing Franchisee
placed
fall urea and accidents underground at the property
which are likely to cause owner's request, in an area
damage, InJuries or where electric or telephone
nulscancos to tho public.
facilities are aerial; shall be
'8.4 Published standards installed with tho additional
, As stated above, expense being paid by the
Franchisee a hall .be property owner.
required to reasonable
7.5 Tree Trimming •
comply with standards as Franchisee shall hove the
setlorth In the publications authority to trim trees upon
recited above, this to and ·overhanging streets of
Include any modifications, the franchise area so as 10
replacements
and/or prevent the branches of
amendmenta
thereto. such trees from coming Into
However, In the event any contact with Franchlsee•s

~~

May

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

GET 4 PIECES FREE WHEN YOU PURCHASE

. Mustartt
POtato Salad

------at Kroger

~-"'!""""-----

Single Bags,.........1D-Lb. $2.50

MARSHALL ALLEN

Deli Fried
12" Table Top IJ99
~!!!!!!!!!:~C~ft~lc~lc~e~n~....=··..·:.::.::··:·=... ==~~:::=:!-=-:=..:~~~;:;;;;88:;;0;;;;;0;::;:~~:=11=.... E=ach::;;;;:::::::!.l ..~.... --- __

[l

•

••

=:1
.

•

'

·i·~
· ' -------------~·--------------------------~------------------------------------------------~----------------------------~-------------J

.
'

�....•

..
Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pubic Natlce
'

Public Natlce

PubliC Nollce

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

thirty
dayo any
damager coolloro_...
w hie h the Village Ia
compelled to PlY by filiOn
ol the acto ol default of
FronchleH In connection
with thlo .franchiSe, and
folio altar racolpt ol thirty
(301 dayo wrltlen notice of
euch lollure by the Village
to comply with any
provlolon ol lhiS Fronchlll
whIch
the
V lllage
reaoonably determine• can
be remedied by demand on
the performance bond, the
Village may aub1ecf to
Suboeclton herem demand
payment of the amount
thereof, with Interest and
any penalties, from the
performance bond Upon
such demand lor payment,
the VIllage shall notify
Franchisee of the amount
and dote thereof
11 3 A P Pea I
Notwithstanding Subsection
12 2 hereinabove In the
caoe ol a bcna fide dispute
regarding compliance
Franchisee may request a
hearing before the VIllages
Chlel Administrative Offtcer
within thirty (30) days altar
wrltlen nolll•catlon of non·
compliance an penalty by
the VIllage
At such
hearing all parties may fila
evidence and the merits ol
the dispute will be decided
The Chlal Administrative
Officer shall make public
his/her decision, along wllh
a statement reciting the
boola therefore
Within
thirty (30) days Franchisee
may appeal to the Council
In writing the decision
rendered by the Chlel
Administrative Onlcer
At
the
appeal hearing
Franchisee may contest the
findings ol fact or
Interpretation ol controlling
law at which time the
council may affirm retect or
modify the decision ollha
Chlel Administrative Officer
The aHirmance rejection or
modification ol said
decision by the Counc 11
shall ba final subject 10
judicial review upon request
01 Franchisee
SECTION 12 ·LIABILITY
INSURANCE
121 Maintenance of
Insurance Franchise shall
maintain
and by Its
acceptance
ol
this
Franchise specifically
agrees that It will mamtaln
throughoutthe term ol this
Franchise
liability
Insurance Insuring the
Village and Franchisee with
regard to any and all
damages for the following
12 I 1 A
gena ra I
comprehensive public
liability insurance policy
lndemntlylng defending
and saving harmless the
Village
Its ofllcers
Councils comm•ss1ons
agents or employees from
any and all claims by any
peroonorentltywhatsoever

INDEMNIFICAT10N
131 Liability
and
Indemnification Prooedur11
By llleccep.. nce ol thle
Franchise the Franchllle
egr111 thet It
and hold thl
all Ita
and
ogelnat
any and ell clelma by third
portlea arlolng out ol the
Fronchlseee erercloe of 111
and obligations undo!r
Fronchlee and tho
FrenchleHI negligence
with respect to the
operation ol Ito Coble
Television Syetem
13 2 Coot ol Delenee
Franchleee shall pay all
reuonable
erpenaee
Incurred by the Village In
defending 111111 agalnel ell
claim• Including all out -ol·
pocket expenoee euch . .
attorney Ieee, provided
Fronchloee had written
notice ol ouch claim and
has declined to defend the
VIllage
SECTION 14
ASSIGNMENT OF
FRANCHISE
141 Consent Nacasaary
No assignment of this
Franchloe shall lake place
whether by forced or
voluntary 1118 lease, or
asolgnment, without prior
written notice 10 and
approval by the Council
which approval aha II not be
unreasonably withheld The
notice shall Include full
Identifying partlculara olthe
proposed transaction and
the Council shall act by
resolution
The Council
shall have forty-live (45)
days within which to
approve or disapprove an
assignment If no action Ia
.. ken within such lorty·flve
(45) day period approval
shall be deemed to have
been given
14 2 Hypothecation •
Franchisee shall have the
rlghtto mortgage, pledge or
otherwise hypothecat the
aaaets of Ita Cable
Television Syahlm Including
the rights granted under
thla Franchise
SECTION 15
REVIEW &amp; RENEWAL
151 Compliance with
Cable Act
The Council
shall not make a decision
involving the renewal
cancellation or erplration ol
Franchisees
Franchise
unless the Villages Chief
Administrative on leer has
advlaad Franchlaee In
writing atlelll thirty (30)
days prlorto such meeting
as to Its time place and
purpose
Such renewal
procedures
will
be
conducted pursuant to
Section 626 of tho Cable
Act
15 2 New Developments
It shall be the policy of t~e
VIllage to amend this
Franchise upon application
of the Franchisee when
necessary to enable
Franchlllee
to
take

Act • Notwltlletendlng the
ground• tor termination
herein no termlnltlon
procedure ehell be held
except In compl..nce with
FCC reguletlone end the
Clble Act.
18.4 Judicial Review •
Fronchllle ohall not bo
declerod In deloult nor be
oubjoct to ony 11 nction
under any provlolon o1 IIIII
Section In any 0110 In
which the performance ol
such provlelon lo prevented
for 11110na of good caueo
Any llnal delermlnation on
revocation shall be eubject
to judicial review upon
requeot ollhe FronchiiH
SECTION 17 REMOVAL OF
FACIUT1ES
171 Requlremante • In
the event ol revocation ol
this Franchlae as provided
lor In Section 15 herein or
In the event thlo Franchlae
11 not renewed 11 provldld
lor In Section 16 herein the
Village shall hove the option
either
requiring
01
Franchllle 10 remove from
the public slreltl where 111
properties are locotod all or
any part of 111 equipment
and facilities so·located
within ninety (901 days 01
the enectlve data ol ouch
revocation or non·renewal
or of requiring FranchlsH
to leave all 01 Ita equipment
and lacllltlas In place within
the Franchise area
SECTION 17
REMOVAL OF FACILITIES
171 Requirements In
the event ol revocation of
this Franchise as prGvldad
for In Section 15 herein or
In the event thla Franchise
Ia not renewed aa provided
lor In Section 16 herein, the
VIllage shall have the option
ol
either
requiring
Franchisee to remove from
the public streets where Its
properties are located all or
any part ol Its equipment
and facllilles so located
wtthin ninety (90) days ol
the effective date ol auch
revocation or non renewal
or of requiring Franchisee
to leave all or Ita equipment
and factlltloaln place within
the Franchise area
17 2 Enforcement • The
Choef Administrative Officer
Is hereby authorized to
enforce the provlolona of
this Section 88 hereinafter
prov•ded
173 Notification
The
Chief Admtnlstrallva Officer
shall Immediately notify
Franchisee In writing of
such revocation or non
renewal Within ninety (90)
d
1 II 1
1t 1
ays o ow ng rece p o
such notice Franchisee
shall 1t required remove
from the streets of the
VIllage upon over and
under which Its properties
are located all ol said
properties
17 4 Manner of Removal
such removal 11 required
shall be performed by
Franehtsee In such a

181.3 For failure to
teet, enalyza and report on
the performance of lhl
oyotem following the
re..onoble request of tile
Vlllege FrenahiHe ohell
forfeit FHty Dol..,. (150) per
day or pert thereof that tile
violation continue• unlasa
01 u11 can be ahown lor
Hid delay
18.14 For fellure to
pay thelranehlae 111 when
duo pureuant to Section 8
herein, Franchi lie ohall
lortell one Hundred Dollare
($100) par day or part
thereof that the violation
continues alter twenty (201
day1 written notice oleuch
violation
18.2 Separate Rlghlt •
Tho rlghll In thll Section
are 11p1rate dletlnct ond In
addition
to
thoee
enumerated el11where In
thil Ordlnonce
18.3 Force Majeur. Any
liquidated
dlltllgeo
lmpolld by the VIllage In
accordance with thlt
Franchise may be reduced
the VIllage lilt linda that
!allure ol the FranchiiH
resulted from conditione
beyond the Franchisees
control and/or Acll of God
18 4 Judicio! Review
Any damages a11aosed
under thla Section 18 ahall
be eubject to judicial review
at the raqueat of the
Franchisee
SECTION 19. RIGHTS
RESERVED TO THE
VILLAGE
19 1 VIllage
Pollee
Powers and Regulations
The Franchisee shall, at all
times during the life ol thla
FranchisH be aublectto all
lawful exercise ol lhe pollee
power by the VIllage and to
such roaaonabla regulation
aa
the VIllage ahall
hereafter provide provided
that ouch pollee power and
reaaonable regulation shall
not alter the FranchisH a
rlghto or obligations undar
this franchise
SECTION 20 COMPUANCE
WITH FEDERAL LAWS
RULES AND REGULATIONS
20 1 FCC
Rulea
Franchisee and Village
agree that each ahall be
subject to the Cable Act,
and all applicable rules and
regulations which lrom
time to time may be
promulgated by the Federal
Communications
Commission
SECTION 21 NOTICES TO
FRANCHISEE
211 Prior Notice Any
time the Villages Chlel
Adm lnlstralive Olllcer
Mayor, Council membera or
resident ol the VIllage
brings en Issue regarding
this Ordinance agreements
or applications thereunder,
or the activities of any
Franchisee to a meeting or
work session of the
Co u n c II,
ChI e I
Administrative Officer will
notlly Franchisee
Such
notlllcatlonshalltakeplace

ro~,,~~~~~~~~.euch
:fc~y
.

(Continued from Pege I)
provldldhOwe-111111
urvlc.
rulea
end
reguletlono, 11 well ••
eubuquent emendmanll or
modHicotlone thereof ehlll
be made nallable upon
roquoet for inepoetlon by
the Village
SECT10N 10 ·COMPLAINT
PROCEDURES
101 Procedural and
Loge • FranchloH ehall
elloblleh procodureo tor
raMivlng acting upon and
reeolvlng aubecrlbor
complaints
Franchloea
ohall lurnleh a notice ol
ouch procedure• to eech
oulltcrtbe&lt; at the time ol tho
lnltlel eubecrlptlon to the
eyltem
In addition
Frenchllll thoU malnlltn a
wrlltan record or log
lletlng the date and time of
each
customer •
complelnll ldentHylng the
oubecrlber describing the
nature of the complaints
ond when and what action
wae linn by FrenchlaHin
reeponse thereto
Such
recorda shall be kept lor a
period ol one (1) year
reflecting the operations to
date and ohall be available
lor Inspection during
normal buolne11 hours
10 2 Village Complaint
Oil leer
The Chlel
Admlnlatratlva Office or
his/her authorized designee
II hereby deolgneted as the
'VIllage Complaint Officer
and shall have the primary
reoponelblllty for the
continuing administration of
the complaint procedures
hereunder
10.21 Any subscriber
l.ea• programmer or other
Interested peraon who has
0 complaint regarding the
quality ol cable television
oervlce,
equipment
mallunctlons bllllnga or
any other matters which
remain unaolved lor thirty
(301 days alter same have
been
brought
to
Franchisee a attention may
file a complaint In writing
with the Vtllage Complaint
ontcer
10 2 2 Upon the llhng
ol euch a complaint ouch
VIllage Complaint Officer
shall notify Franchisee and
make an Investigation to
determine whether or not
there Is probable cauae to
credit the allegations II he
determines alter ouch
InvestigatiOn that there Ia
probable cousa to credit the
allegations
ol
the
complaint heshallsonotlly
Franc h 1see
and
11 t 1
11
d
comp a,n,an ndwrt ng an,
promp y en eavor
o
raaolve the matter
10 2 3 In the eventthat
the
VIllage complaint
Officer Is unable 10 obtain
conciliation wlth•n 8
raeaonable time he shall
promptly set the matter lor
a hearing where ail parties
may give e•ldence and the
merits of the dispute Will be
A
ld d
Th
VIII
.,oc 8
e
age
Complaint Officer shall
make public hts dec•slon
.long with a statement
reciting the basis therefore
10 2 4 Within thirty
(30) days thereafter lither
Franchisee
or
the
complalria'nt may appeal '"
writIng '2the dec is ton
rendered by the Village
complaint Ofllcer to the
Council
AI the appeal
hearing the aggneved party
may contest the fmdmgs of
fact or Interpretation of
controlling law at which
lime the Counc11 may efflrm
reject or modify the
deCiston of the Vtllage
Comp Ia1n I on ICer
10 2 5 The affirmance
Or modll •catlon of
Clio"
reje
aald dec 1810 n by the
Council shall be fmal
subJect to judicial review
1 0 1 lh 8
upon reques
Franchisee
tO 3 Subscrtber
Notit!catlon
Franchisee
h
s ubsc " ber
ah0 II nolily eac
at the 11me ol mltlal
Installation
and
all
I
I
t
Subser ib era 8 888 once 8
year of the name and
address of the VIllage
Complaint Officer and of the
t I d
proce d ures eon a ne m
ance
accord
In
lh I8 .ecllon
with Sectton 76 607 ol the
Fcc Ru Ies an d Roguiatlons
SECTION 11
PERFORMANCE BOND
111 Bond Amount
Wtlhln thirty (30) days alter
accoptanca
of
thia
Franchise Franch•see shall
depoolt with the Village
Clark of the Village of
Pomeroy a performance
bond
I rom
surety
authorized to do business
In the State ol Ohio In the
minimum amount ol Five
Thou a and
Do I Ia r a
($5 000 00) The lorm and
content
of
auch
performance bond aha II be
acceptable to the Village
The' Performance Bond
shall be uoed to ensure the
fait h,u I per I ormanca b Y
Fr1nchi see of aII pr&lt;»v I• Iona
ol
this
Ordinance
compIIanca w lth aII or den
~mlftand d~rectton of any
ogency II codmmlat slonl
counc
a par men
dlv IaIon, or oIll ce o I lh e
Village having jurisdiction
over It s .ct. Or del.ult.
under t hi s Franc hi •• an d
the payment oI Franc hi see
o I any c Ialm. lien. and
taxes due the VIllage which
arlee by reeeon of the
con•t rue II on, op e r.lion Or
mo Int enance oI th e Ca ble
e ev • n yo am
11.2 Use ol Bond • II
Fronchlsee'1alla-to"f))l}4he

~Za~~co~f' ~I p'"J~~~~o ~~ ~:~~:~/!~eo~;~~:~~:~~~~
persons or denvatlve lrom
any Injury to or death or a
person or persona (I e
including but not llmtled to
cmlaelmdlscfaolr losasnodlserovl•cheesr

will alford It an opportunity
to
more
elfecllvely
elftclenlly or economically
serve Its Subscribers no
such amendment shall
create eny rights '"
expenses) occas1oned by Franchisee other than those
the
operations
ol specifically set out 1n such
Franchisee under this amendments
~~~n."h~s: o~aa~l=~~d ~,t;;'v: SECTION 16 REVOCATION
OF FRANCHISE
minimum liability of Five
161 Revocation
In
Hundred Thousand Dollar~ addition to all other nghts
($500 000 00) per personal and pow ere reserved or
injury or death of any one pertainmg to the Village the
(I) parson and One Mtllion Vtllage reserves as en
Oollars ($1 000 000 00) per additional and as a separate
peraonal •ntury or death of and distinct remedy the
any two (2) or more persons right to revoke this
in any one (I) occurrence
Franch•se and all rights and
121 2 Property
pnv1leges ol Franchisee
damage
Insurance hereunder In any of the
lndemntlymg defending following enumerated
and saving harmless the events or tor any of the
VIllage
1ls olftcers
following reasons
Counctls commtsstons
1611 Franch 15ee
agents and employees from violates a matenal or
and agalntrl all claims by substantial term r condition
any person or enlity of this Ordinance and falls
whatsoever lor property within sixty (60) days
damage Including loss of lollowlng written notice by
use and all consequential the VIllage to effect
d
d b
amages occas 1one
Y compliance
unless
the operation of Franchisee enacting compliance within
under this Fraf1chtse or the sixth (60) ijays Is not
h
b
alleged to ave een so reasonable pracllcable In
caused With a mimmum
which case Franchtsee fa tis
liability of Two Hundred 10 make a good lallh effort
Ftlty Thousand Dollars to enect compliance wlthm
($250 000 OO) lor property thatsl•ty (60) day penod or
damage to any one (1)
1612 Franchtsee
~~~~ns =~~ Ftve oHC:I~~r:: attempta to or does practice
any fraud or deceit or
($500 000 00) lor property pattern of
material
damage to any two (2) misrepresentation '" Its
persons In any one (1) conduct or retatlons with
o&lt;:cu;~~n~a One Million :~~chYs'ellage under this
Dollars ($1 000 000 00) lor
all other types ofllabtllty
12 1 4 All Insurance
shall be kept in full Ioree
and effect by Franchtsee
throughoutthetermolthls
Franchise and until alter the
removal of all poles wires
cables
Onderground
conduits, manholes and
other conductors and
fixtures Incident to the
maintenance and operation
ol tile Cable Television
System as defined In this
Fr~~~hla~ertlllcate
of
lhsurance
An insurance
certificate obtained by
Franchisee In cQmnliance
"
with this Section shall be
flied and maintained with
the VIllage Clark during the
term of this Franchise
12 3 No Llmitotlon
Neither the provlolon ol this
Section nor any damagea
llsmh • •.•,, be
11 1
the

16 2 Council Action No
such revocation shall be
enective unless or until the
Council shall have adopted
an Ordinance setting forth
hecauseandreaaonlorthe
revocation and the elfifctlve
date
thereof
which
Ordinance shall not be
adopted without thirty (301
days prior written notice
thereof to Franchisee and
an opportunity lor the
Franchisee to be heard
upon
the
proposed
adoption ol llld Ordinance
FranchiSee shaillurnlah to
Village a w rltten
atallem,ant at least ten (10)
to the data on
'•tilch
"
convenes t o
sue h propoao d
setting out Its
relative to the
)
ol
ouch
1n the eve nt the
as proposed In
depends
of fact such
made

compenaartl~~o~n-~1~~~~~~~~~ii~~~r.j~~~::~~.~~

within
lime ilxed ha,relt1,
VIllagethe
any
an_d lallo alter thirty
dey-' written notice to pay
to the Village any lees due
r

•

•

13 GENERAL

16 3 Compliance with

10

manner so as
not
permanently destroy mer or
damage
areas
In
whichthe
such removal
Is

Fra~chlse

~~ !~~s~!~~g(30) days prior

SECTION 22
SEVERABILITY
being conducted
The
VIllage Engineer shall make
22 I Validity
II any
an Inspection ol the areas section
subsection
'" whtch the removal Is sentence clause phrase or
betng or has been portton of the Ordinance Is
conducted and should II be lor any reason held Invalid
found that Franchisee has or unconatltultonai by any
unreasonably destroyed
court ol
competent
marred or damaged such jurisdiction such portion
areas Franchisee shall be shall be deemed a separate
held responsible lor the distinct and Independent
expenses of repairing such provision
and such
areas to the reasonable holdings shall not anectthe
satislactlon of the Village
validity ol the remaining
17 5 Sale of Facilities
portlonalhereol
In the event Franchisee has
SECTION 23
not removed Its facilities
ACCEPTANCE
E
withm n1nety (9) days as
231 Written recution
described herein or In the This Ordinance shall upon
event the Village elects not adoption ol the Council of
to requtre Franchisee to the VIllage ol Pomeroy and
remove Its lecllltles
Its execution by the proper
Franchisee shall be muntt)pal olllctals and
obligated to sell1ts facilities further acceptance by the
n place within the Franchisee be and become
FranchiSee area to either a valid and binding contract
the Village or to any new between the .Vtllage of
lranchtse operator
Any Pomeroy and Rifkin
sale of facilities are Communications Partners
q•· r d b this subsection L P Its successors and
~~al: ~e py ursuant to the assigns
valuatiOn requirements of
All ordinances or parts or
Sectton 627 of the Cable ordinances In conflict
Act
herewith are hereby
SECTION 18
repealed Th1a 17 day of
April 1995
LIQUIDATED DAMAGES
Vtllage
of Pomeroy Ohio
18 1 Procedures and
Damages
Should It be By
John W Blaettnar
found after written notice Mayor
and
a
reasonable Attest Kathy Hysell Village
opportunity to cure and g~~k VIllage ol Pomeroy
alter conducting the
heartng
and
appeal Passed on final reading
procedure provided for 4/17/95
If I
herein and after written ~~~~~ntl:a~lona :artn~r~
receipt by Franchisee ol a 1- ~ by Dave 0 Wagner
lmdlng of violation by the
Chief Administrative ontcer Vice Prealdent ol the
or his/her designee, t~at General Partner
1
Franchisee Is In violation of Date 25th day ol April 995
the terms ol this Ordinance
(5) 24 1TC
the liquidated damages
chargeable
the
PubliC Notice
10
perform 8 nee
B 0 nd
provided lor under Section
Sheriff • Sale of
11 herein shall be a
Real Estate
follows
The State ol Ohio
Mego
1 c oun ty
181 1 For failure to
Fl ralApoet o 11 c Ch urc h o1
provide or maintain data ad
reports as request db th
Eaot Baton Rouge Inc
e Y •
PI ant
1 Iff
Vtllage or as required
herein Franchisee ohall
va
forfeit One Hundred Oollara OMhll ZUion Propertlea Ill an
($100) per pay or part
o mltad Partnership, at
thereof thai the violation
al , Oelendanto
continues II alter twenty
Cue No 94 CV 281
(20 ) days written notice
1n purauanca to an 0 rder
such data orreports are not ot Sole dated Feb 2111,
supplied
1995 1n the above entitled
tl
1 111 ff 1
1 1
181 2 For failure to ac on w o er or •• • a
comply with the operation public auction, at tho door
atandarda aa opecllled in of the Sheri II e Office
Section 5 thereof following B ulldl ng pomeroy Ohl o 1n
t he c ouncll a Ordlhance th • • bove name d c oun1y,
Franchisee to
uro ay e
ay o
within
at 10 00 o clock
- f.oUowlng1
situate In the
described
real

e

Wednesday, May 24,1995

Wednesday, May 24, 1981

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

PubiC Natlce
PARCEL ONE fl'arcell17
00638) SltuattdlnSactlo"
30, Town 7, Renge14, Ohio
Company a
Purchue,
Scipio Townehlp Meigs
County, Ohio end being
more particularly deocrlbed
11 tollowe -commencing at
tho Southe ..t corner of
Section 30, thonco elong
tho E11t line ol section 30,
North 5'30 Eaot. 3,830 00
taellothe Northlollcomor
ol 1 55 o acre trfCI, tlloneo
along the North line ol 11ld
55 0 ocretract North 84'30
W11t, 1,544 01111 to a eplke
In the conttrltne of the
public road ond tho
Northwllt corner ol on
1171ecrolract dole-In
Volumo198, Pogo 662 oltho
Mel go
County
Oood
Rocordo thence along the
centerline ol the public
roed South 16'45 Wool
IK 28 fHI to • point tho
true point ol beginning lor
tho following doocrlbed
troct, thence lonlng tho
public road Soulh 84'00
Eeat, 329 50 feet to • point
thonco South 28'00 Well
29192 feel to I point
thence North 84' 00 Weot
258 76 leet to • point In the
cantor line ol the public
road
along lho
oald rood
North 11'21 Ellt (palling
1 oplko at 151 71 loot) lor a
total dlotance of 234 80 lee!
to 1 oplke, thence North
16'45 Eoot 70 lllaet to the
paint
of
beginning
contolnlng2 00 acreo
DEED REFERENCE Volume
237, Page 721 and Volume
232 Page 935 Deed
Recordo of Malga County
Ohio '
The above deocrlptlon was
furnlohed by Harold D
Whaley
Regletared
Surveyor No 4986 par
aurvey of May, 1972
Being the oame pramlsea
as described in deed 01
record In Volume 250 • Page
247 ond Volume 250 Page
S30 Dead Recordo ol Meigs
County Ohio
PARCEL TWO (Parcel
Nos 17·00973 17 00974)
Situate In the Township ol
Scipio County of Meigs and
s ..te ol Ohio to·wit
Being 110 roda North lrom
the Southeast corner of
Section 30 Town 7 Range
14 ol the Ohio Company s
Purchue, thence North ItO
roda thence Weot80 rodli
or 1/4 lho distance across
the Section thence South
110 rode tllonco Eastto the
place
ol beginning
containing 55 acres, more
or leu
ALSO the following
doocrlbed tract Situate in

DEED
REFERENCE
Volume 232, Page 131-IH
Melgl
County
D11d
Records
Seld Preml111 AppNIIId
at 1145,000 00 and canna!
be eold tor loll than lhlnle ottlllt emount.
ALL SHERIFFS SALES
OPERATED UNDER THI!
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR
THE MEIGS
COUNTY SHERIFF MAKES
NO GUARANTEE AS TO
STATUS OF TITLE PRIOR
TO SALE
Terme of 1110 Ten Percent
(10%) caeh or cortlllad
chock on doy of eale Any
daley In dopoell will not be
permitted beyond 2 00 PM
The remaining bolonce of
purchau price thlll be pold
within thirty (30) dayl lrom
thl gte olulo
JameoM Souleby Sherlfl
Melgo County, Ohio
Fredorlck L Oromuo,
AHorney
(5) 24,31 (I) 7, 3TC

'•

........

11&amp;1

..,

Public Natlce

1

South ol the Northeast
corner of said Section
thence North soo West 4 75
chalna South 59o West 3 75
chains South 85 o West 2 99
chains South 6 795 chains
Eaat 10 245 chains to the
Eaat line 01 said Section
North 6 66 chains to the
place
of beginning
containing 7 95 acres more
or leas
SAVING EXCEPTING AND
RESERVING unto the said
Grantors
their heirs
executors, administrators
and aoalnns all the oil gas
and oth:r mlneralo In and
under I he aforesaid

I;;T~h~e~llM~o~IUg~s~tlCUolllu~n t~y~(~5~2~3~

0

llltttlttUmntltttlJl!i

Get Your Message Across
BULLETIN BOARD

1600 column inch weekdays
18°0 column inch Sunday

---:

OUR

OFFICE AT

992·2155

BUut: un DUAKU ut:AULmt::
premises with the right to
drill and operate thereon
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
And the right to enter upon
111!11\11~
· ~-, ~~'v.'--._...,_~,"'-&lt;r'"' ,.. _,"~""y--"·""~---····.
aald pramlses at any time
.P:i'"'1~&gt;:~E4:S't
-&gt;,.;:·;~&gt;_:;~\::
---!:-- :Zt;:_:_~~~if~~'-'; ,
for the purpose of drilling or 1 .:• ,· . .'f: *:«:·:Li4'
.JI!P'"'·""'- -~-ii;'
mining The Right-of way to
d
Tuppers Platns VFW Post
an 1rom the place of
9053 wtll meet Thursday even
mining or drilling sufficient
water gas and oil for 1!-IE•t'
mg at 7 30 All members are
operating thereon The right
urged to attend Wtll be voting
to lay pipe line for the
purpose of conveying water
on the addttton to the butldtng
steam ga• or oil over an.ll
acro01 said premlaeo Tho
right to erect and maintain
tanks and other necesaary
equipment tor conducting
said bualness with the right

---

~­

llllttst- lAw Rites)

WICKS
HAULING

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

CAB CO. INC.
Owners Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992 9949 992 6471
Mon FnBam 6pm
Sat Bpm

Spm

Sun by appt only
Serv•ng Pomeroy M ddleport
&amp; surrounding area
Call for rate schedule
Mtn $2 00

.Laure[.Limo
Service
Rent a
Limousine for
Weddings, Proms
and Speelal
Oceaslons
(614) 992--4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
&lt;1/21195

GUYS!
We want to hear
from youlll We're
live and waiting ttl

1·900-388-7000
Ext. 9970
$3 99 per min
Must be 18 yrs
Procall Co

(602) 954-7420
~·

1·900·884·7800
Ext. 4466
$2 gg per m1n
Must be 18 yrs
Procall Co
(602) 954-7420

..,._

0.

who lett us 7
years ago to llve
with .his Lord
Glen had loving,
,.,.,,.,,. ways through
his Sickness and
his kindness to all
twho passed hiS sick
bed
No matter how
sick he was, he
always had a carmg
for other people s
needs Many friends
and relatives came
to cheer him up and
left his side lifted up
themselves He left
us a legacy of fa1th
1n God that we II
remember forever
We all thank God
He allowed us to
have and hold h1m
as our very own
Husband , Father
and Grandfather
Sadly missed by

Middleport Ohoo
Presents

'WHITE RAVEN"
In thetr debut show
Saturday, May 27 and Fnday,
June 2 9 30 pm ttl1 30 am
WHITE RAVEN IS
LONNIE MAYES Lead Vocals
MELANIE DUDDING Lead Vocals
PHIL SIMMONS Lead Guitar/
Vocals
ADGER DENT Guolars/Keyboards
KIM FRENCH Bass
RICK HICKMAN Drums
OO~I.MISSIHIS EXCITING
NEWBANO
$200 Cover

wile Doris,

d=:~g~~~:-J

c:t!-,--·--,-~-1~-·- Glenda~nd

grandchildren,
Rlchte,Kelth, Betty
+--~r- ~-----ihm"" Andy-and Kay

"[11UJ4~IU.IIU.IWIIUJil

•

1·800·486·1590
(614) 446-9971

Bus

10/ltn

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

One Stop Complete Auto Bodf Repair

S. R. 7 Five Points

PRECISION AUTOMOT.VE

-New Garages

Pomeroy, Ohio

AB&amp;T AUTO
3RD

614-992-6223

Chuck StoHs

Open For Business

Insurance Work Welcome

•ALIGNMENTS •lUKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES

992-5251 -""

Lookmg forward lo seerng old friend&amp;
511tltln
and mal£1ng new 1

1/12/lfn

PAINTING

&amp; CO.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repa1r &amp;
Remodeling
Kotchen &amp; Bath Remodeling
Room Add1t1ons
S1d1ng Roofing Pallos
Reasonable
Insured - Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992 4405
For Free Esltmates

New Homes • Vmyl Stdmg New

Interior &amp;
Exterior

Garages • Replacement Wmdows
Room Additions • Roofing

Take the pain out of
painting Let us do It lor
you Very reasonable
Free Estimates
Before 6 p m leave
meBSage
After 6 p m
614-985-4180 3124104

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
2J 219211 n

1995
Reumon and Dance
Assoctat10n

Saturday
May 27, 1995
Meogs Hogh
School Gym
Doors open
at700pm
Dance from
900pm tolOOam
'5 per person

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Cuslom Bu ldlng &amp; Remodeling
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992 5535
(614) 992 2753

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Dnveways

POMEROY, OHIO
Sepllc tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented
Dally weekly &amp; monthly rental rates
sltesf Cam!i Sties • Faml!f Reunions &amp; Parties

i

OW OFFERING GENERAL HAULIN

~ t

;

:,,, . ,

..

$2 99/Mon Must Be 18 Yrs

-TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

(602)

954

HAULING

&amp;

EXCAVATION

• Lots of Fun and

Limestone

&amp; Gravel,

Sept1c Systems, Tratler

&amp;

House Sties

992·3265

311Sitfn

4/2Q/95

Reasonable Roles
Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-7138

HIO

H&amp;H SAWMILL

1 900-945-6200
Ext 2579

Hollow Rd
Middleport Ohto 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brtckles

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIODLEPORT 992 2772
Office Hours Mon Fn
800am 330pm
Vinyl &amp; Alum Stdtng
Roofmg Vonyl
Replacement
Wmdows Blown
Insulation Storm
Doors Slorm
Wmdows Garages

614·742·2193

Free Estimates

32124 Happy

Must be 16 yrs
Procell Co
(602) 954 7420
4125/ttn

TREE TRIMMING

HOME
IMPROVEMENT

COMPARTMENTS

AND REMOVAL

Tomghtl

ROOFING

L1ght Hauling,

1-900-726-0033
Ext 8878
$2 99 Per Mm
Must be 18 yrs
Procall Co
(602) 954-7420

NEW-REPAIR

Roolmg Sodln.g, Room
Addtlions Concrele etc
PO Box220
Bidwell, Oh 45614
(614) 3811-9865
24 Hour Pager
Anserlng Servic

in Chester across from

Shru'bs Shaped

lhe Dairy Queen. Size

and Removed

1Ox 28 ·$tore cars,

MISC Jobs

1 600-215 2023

Call992-3961

~18/ltn

Announcements
The publiC IS InVIted
to attend C P R
classes to be gtven at
Fraternal Order of
Eagles #2171
Classes wtll be
given Sat
June 10 from
900am 100pm
Sun June 11 from
100pm 500pm
Must attend both
classes to be certified
To regtster for classes
call

boats, furniture, or
whal ever you wanl.

PSYCHICS
Advise on future
opportunoty
decosion makong love,
success money
LIVE 24 HOURS
1·900·868·
3800/Ext. 4741
$3 99 min Must be 18 yrs
Procall Co
(602) 954-7420

,,,... ""

Bill Slack

992·2269

Call

GRAY'S

Howard L Wntesel

WELDING

Downspouts

Mobtle Welding

Gutter Cleanmg

Dtesel Injector SVC

Pamtmg

InJector Pump SVC

FREE ESTIMATES

Tune ups

949·2168

985·3879

Radtator Repatr
Servtce Portable
alum1num weldtng
New radtalors
avatlable
recores also

614·742·3212

DAVE'S

Ch p Repatr In Tubs Or S nks
Res ur!aa: 0 d C~ am c 1 le And
f berglass Shower Cracks Or Sags

BA...HTUB

11120

c,_

1 l'llpplel. 112
onc1 112 eot•• To Good Hon-. 81.._11187

Chlclceno 10 glvo o.way 814 0854288
Female Regltlarad Bo•er lyre
old to good homo 304-1175-7410
or 304.a7S-7407

e?S-1to:t
Free puppiol, 351180
PoollltO~ ()No,
Of 814-Q82 172lJ

Ad

Rock":

814-t82

Laroe Con10le TV Nuda Minor
Repair Cabinol In Excellent Candltton lnqultt at gzg Evergreen
Ad Off 011 OON.

" " - a&gt;• colllo. 1 poll - . 2
112 monoho old 8 u

a"((lme.

••e

4132

Small pan Oalmetlon pup 114
992 1918

To good home only YoiiOWigold
small female kinen 2 angora

- - ~nono. 304.a75-4850

60

Lost and Found

Femole puppy lound oft Rocky
fofk Road 304-57&amp;-21133

Loll April 2• -

111Bty dopclil

box keys on same
ca~ 81+985-4192.

70

ring If found

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

&amp; Vlclnhy
ALL Yatd Sales Mull Bt Paid

tn

the day before the ad Is to run
Sundoy edlllan 2 00 p.m. FridJir
loloftday edlllon 2:00 p.m. Salur

day

Pomeroy,
Middleport

day beloto lho ld 11 to run, Sunday ldil.., 1 oopm Friday lolon
day od1110n 10:00o.m Soou~
t.lovmg tale Ua~ &amp; 27th
23&lt;111ulbotry ,.,
Thuraday May 25 Main StrHt
Coolv ill e Waterbed TV cenwr
baby ciolheo Iota mtac g DOamJ:OOpm. 814-887.0050

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

SWAP SHOP

FULl. WIIRRANTI' UKf NEW

ewk old whi .. klnena 304.. 51-

All Yard Soltl lluot 8o Poid In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the

Gutters

FREE
~I MATES

5 Klnent Wale And Female I
Weeki Old Long Holr Groy l
Whlto To Coring ~~~
0311

&amp; Vlclnhy

51&amp;94 TFN

TONY'S PORTABLE

Giveaway

Advance DEADLINE 2 00 p m.

1119ftfn

41211/tfn

STORAGE

7

J&amp;L INSULATION

Bandsaw Mill

$2 99 per mm

Lonely?

Open 9 00-2 00
5 00 11 00
16 for 25 00
12 for 20 00
Call 992 2487
Owners Pete &amp;
D1ane Hendncks

Portable

MANLEY'S

Now renling on S.R.

SUMMER
IMAGES

AUCTIONEER
SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auclloneer
Anttques

Your
Sweetheart Is
As Close As
Your Phone

"'40

Female apayed GlrfN.n Shepete~. 14mol c*l 304-a75-2881 or

Bulldozmg, Backhoe,

992-3338

7420

PARTS
Spec ahz1ng 1n Custom
Frame Repa1r
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992 7013 OR
992 5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1 800 848.007
DARWIN OHIO

Ask for Mike

Servoces
Home S•tcs Land
Clearmg, Septtc
Systems &amp; Droveways

dlu,.llc: Mlilblt Frulll Phlrmo

hon'&amp;81t . . . .59

WHALEY'S AUTO

614·742·2165 or
304·882·3704

FARMS

lallllbloll
"!'iiJJW lut
like
01'1\L
and ' E- Yap

t8 llonth Spaded Yellow Lob
Good -ICh dog Good country

Reroofmg, etc

RACINE

new

Experience the ultimate in
OQI dating I

BQ2.1164-743)

mo

Porches, Decks,

EXCA\'ATIN(;

1100-13-1000 Ul
11211. t 2 . - 1&amp;. ~Co.

$6.00

Free Estimates

949 2192

Hangong Basbls
Roger &amp; Tom Hill

Carpenter Work

IIOW.\111&gt;

005

&amp; Flafs

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION

4125/tfn

Perlonlla

Flowers &amp;
Vegefalole Plaelis-tl:

49534 State Route 338
Falls Ohio
241'·2!115 daytime

51t&amp;'1

Truckmg Lomeslone,
Top Sml, Fill Dort

7 Days A Week 24 Hours A Day
Procall Co

Must be 18 yrs
Procall Co
602-954-7 420

(602) 954 7420

Call 1-900-656-3000 Ext 5752

Produee

1-900-945-6100
Ext. 1327,
12 99 per mm.

CALL 1 900·945-6100

,. , .. ,

Ltslen to vmce matl messages left by mt&amp;:reslmg
smgles of all ages Leave messa ges for smgles
that mteresl you or open your own vooce mao I
box It s fun excllong and can lead lo new
fnendshops and mcanongful relltoon ships

Experience
Mon. thru Fri 7 00
AM t1l1600PM
992·5388

•Slabs

• t

Meet Interesting Smgles
Safely And Privately

• Lots of

•Porches

• • .,-: ·. 1·

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Learnmg

•PatiOS

I

NEVER
BE LONELY
AGAIN

MJNOUN CE TAENTS

Just Call

Ext 8587
S2 gg per min
Must be 18 yrs
Procall Co

Gravel
: 1

ABirHur
Could Be Toursf

411:W5

MODERN SANITATION

MetgsAiumm

&amp; Rtchard Moore

14 Years Expenence in Area

Rt 33
Darwtn, Ohto

I

949-2882

RACINE, OHIO

Owners Ed Chaney

State

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

ST I

Free Estimates

Call for all of your storage needs

!i/2311 mo

DEETER

NO JUNK"

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

LINDA'S

Gravel, Sand,

REV. GLEN

773·5785 or n3-5447 or
contact Kevtn Meadows
(304) 743-3955

264 Upper Rtver Rd
Galli ohs, OH 45631

COMMUNITY

Limestone,

In Loving Memory
of

#66

Kenny's Auto Center

614-992·3470

(Specialize In
driveway spreading)

•

We H11ve C1rs 11nll V11nsl

•Electrical&amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
olntertor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
VC YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

In Memory

Mason Co Fatrgrounds
Taktng Constgnments
9 AM-5 PM Mon May 29
&amp; Tues , May 30 or call
for other arrangements
Rtck Pearson Auction Co

r

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

•Room Additions

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparable Stzcs &amp; Prtccs
New Haven WV
304 882 2996

WED,MAY31,10AM

recorded March
In
Luvorna
Roll by1947
deed

··.II I

STD-A·WAY

FARM EQUIPMENT
AUCTION

to remove at any time any
and all machinery oil and
ga• well supplies or
appurtenances of any kind
ALSO the following real
ootate being In Section 30
Town 7 Range 14 Scipio
Township Meigs County
Ohio and described as
loll ow a to wit Beginning
North 220 rods and Wast 80
rodo lrom the Southeast
corner ol Section 3D, (The
Northwest corner of 55 acre
tract) lhence North 84oWesl
223 4 feet to the canter ol
the public road. lhence
along the center ol the
public road North 9o45
Weal 259 lee! thence South
6'30 Wast 3151eet, thence
South 51 o30 West 2043
lao! thence South 26 o40
Eaot 315 leal 111onca South
31 • Eaat 222 Sleet thence
South 32o3D Eaat 341 feat
thence Eaot 246 loot to the
Southeast corner thence
North 0'45 1815 foot to the
place
ol beginning,
containing 18 78 acres
more or loss but aubjectto
all lanai hlnhways Aa
• by E
• w Hysell
eurvayad
Registration #994 January
31 1ft•7 Being a part ol the
pramloes
conveyed 10 A c
Dailey by w s Hart Auditor
of Maigo County Ohio by
Auditor 1
Deed dated
February 24 1913 and
recorded In v-ume 109
Pago 253 Dttd vo
Rocorde ol
Melgo County Ohio
Being the 81 me realaotota
conveyedtoTrV!ii1!aso and

I

EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!

With A Dally Sentinel

CALL

0

uadong Creek, lben to
Pauhns Holl Just 2 1/2
moles from Rulland or 4
1{2 mtles from SR 7
OptnMon Fn lOam 5pm
Weekends Coll614-742 2772

0 1 1 11 0

~~:~~ss :n~·~ 6 a1b1 ~uJ1 n::

I

I '',lie.
(Depot St ) Rulland to

PUBUC NOTICE
'
Tho RACINE, VILLAGE a~
not monitor lor thf.
pruonco of totol alphil
rediOactlvlty In the publici
drinking water eyotem ••
required by the Ohlci EP.t,~
owner• ol the wote~
Public Notice
eu~1ply did not monitor en
anelytlcel roeuite o
ADVERSTISEMENT FOR
drinking wottr for lhil
BIDS
pruence of total elph~.:t
Malg• County Council on
radioactivity lrom thl ent
Aging Inc
point dtolgnllod 001 durin
Mulberry Heighto
the required July 1 1
PO Box 722
December 31, 1994 lim"'
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
period
•
Soporeto ooaled lido lor
Upon being notified of.
the conotructlan ol the
violation byPrt h e co h i~n•
Acceeolbillty Renovatlono
at the Meigs County
the water eupply_
Multipurpooo Senior Center
the drinking watt'=
will be received by the anolyzod lor tho obOVI'
Melgo County Council an mentioned porameters Thr
Aging Inc at the office al
euppller will tokO:
Sueen Oliver, Executlvel::~~:;:~:l;o ensure lha 11•
Director until 12 00 noon
monitoring will b\(
June 12 1995 and then at
In tho future
eald office publicly opened
•:,;lur'!o_i~~:~~~~~
and read aloud
I Ar'OIIllc, B1
The work covered by the
Contract
Documento l~l~·k~~~~l~a~:~~~~.e+l~~~:[~~~i
lncludtl the following
II
New llrlplng lor hondlcap
parking epace and now
I
parking olgn automatic
Public Notice
door oponero II entry
vestibule I pair ol new
entry doore renovation ~r
PUBUC NOTICE
y
ThallACINE VILLAGE o''
public and Iliff roetroome
and mlocellaneous elgnage did not monitor for th~
together with the necaaury preunca ol
Malate•,
appertaining work
nitrate, In the public
The
e lf1tl mat 1 d drinking wotar oysllm •i
conatrucllon 1 cool Is required by the Ohio EPAc
$32 800 oo ao ol May 1995
The ownare ol the water
The Bidding Documents aupply did not monitor an~
may be examined at
report analytical roaulta o'J
Mel g a
Co u n I y
tllelr drinking water tor lhf
MultipurpooaSenlorCenter
preaenceofmatalo* nitre~
Mulberry Helghtl
lrom the entry poln}
PO Box 722
dealgnated DOl during the
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
required July 1 December
or
31 1994Umeperlod
Burgosa and Nlpla LTD
Upon being notified af
4424 Emerson Avenue
lhla violation by the Ohio
Parkaroburn WV 26104
Environmental Protactloo
•
A •
h
Copies of the Bidding
gvncy I a water aupply
Documents
may
be haa had the drinking water
purchaud at
analyzed lor the above
Burgoaa and Nlpla LTD
mentioned porametaro Th•
4424 Emeroon Avenue
water ouppllar will laki
Parkaraburg WV 28105 IIepa to anoure that
upon payment of $25 00 adequate monitoring will b.
NONE OF WHICH WILL BE pe.":m;•~ In thel~u~ •
&gt;
REFUNDED
e a •
n monJ~
Prospective BIDDERS Areonlc Barium Beryllium
may address Inquiries to Cadmium,
Clromluml
Cyanide Fluoride Mercurj,
Burgeaa and Nlp)a, LTD
Nickel, Selenium Thallium
24 25, 3TC
on Aging Inc

the Northeaol quarter ol
Section 30 Town 7 Range
14 of tho Ohio Company a
Purchase Meigs County
Ohio and beginning In tho
center of the Pomeroy and

n

Kenny's Auto Rental

Huge garage Mle ra1n or .tine

• New Homes

•

One m1le out
143from Rt 7
Tues -Wed -Fn Sat
1·6
•Craft$man Tools
•Toys
-Glassware
Loads of Mtsc
Buy-Sell·Trade

lt'lur Frl Uay 25 21 8 DOam
Sandy H911. loilow ligna. lniBnt,

• Garages

t&amp;ddler maternity clolhlno
nur11ry lurnlture ac.ceaaonee
men &amp; 'MimOn clolhlng. lob boyo
LevJa attlrta etc. gu gnll

• Complete
Remodeling
Stop

hou-mtoc

&amp; Compare

80

Public Sale
and Auction

FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

....,_

7/22/94

Auc.rJana wary Fr'dap Saturday
7pm Mt Alta Auction Rt 2 33

Ctauroada· New

~NJChandlM

or-neo I loll '"'"" Ed Fruior

83:1

MERIT

Rick - . . n Aucllon Company,
full time auc;tloneer compte&amp;e
1uct1on Hrvk:e
Ucenaecl

tee Ohio l WtoOI Ylrglnl&amp;, :104773-6785 Or 304-773-6'47

992 2201 992 7275
Regtstratton ends
June 3 1995

t

i

90

Wanted to Buy

Clooli Lilt llodoi Cora Or
Tr~ckl 1087 lolodolo Or Smllll 8uk:l&lt; Pvndoc, 11100 Eollleln -.ru., O.,Ep 'r

Struts And Shocks
Tires\ Ttresl Tires'

REFINANCE
PURCHASE
CONSOLIDATE
,

Oocaroled oiDilftllrt wall • •
......... old '"""" old ..... _
. . . old ............... - Riworlno Andquee. Ruu IIOOie
own., su 9g2 2521 We buy

--

Bankruptcy, Judgements Slow Credtt
___ Our SpE:_zalry

J l Do Auto Porto and Selvogo.
buying wrocko lunk au101 &amp;

1-800-MERIT-98

trUCIII. -~ ..... mmta•

'

•,

�•

;

"

Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Mlddl•port, Ohio

Wednesc:ley, May 24, 1tsl5

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, .Ohio
·--·~·--r

OOP

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.

ACROSS

1-,_

PHILUP .
ALDER
REA TTIE BLVD.® by Bnu:\' Beattie
1181 ChiVY AIWO En

31172.

u,.

&amp;'MEEK

1884 Suzuki
111111 Honda CR500
075-33211.

nm

WaniM: Llnle T1k•• Ou1door

et•·

,.

Ef.1PLOYMENT
SERVICES

\\~

Mull s .. l TAX 256X Four.:
Whoftlor, Garage Kept E - 1
Condldon 114·2A-f931 Cal AI·

.- ....... ...

~··

180 Wanted To Do

·-

560

Pets for Sale

71

o

SITS IN

A CHAIR ..

DO ..

Lawn Bo7. Mowtr 175.00 Gao
Fired Grli. 150.00 Cd e1 .. ol48·
2S57
Loaded, Now Corpell et•·378·

2120 Allar eP.M.

lloglc Chtl waohar &amp; dryer, like
brand now, 1500 firm. 304-0751712.
All rea l estate advenislng in
thiS newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fair Housir,g Act
ol1 968 which makes It mega I
to advertise "any preference.
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any intenlion to
make any such pralerence,
limhaflon or discrimination:

Ate Near In

Ap~arance,

do -hoe work, p11ono 81 ..

llll2·3173 or 81oi-Uil2·6851l

Will Haul Waler, Fill Swlmmln11
Poolt &amp; M~w Lawn•·· 814·258·
1977 Allar 7 P.ll.
Will ln11all Wlndohleido I 100 &amp;

Able Up, 81•·388·9062. Or 614-446·

FINANCIAL

Ot 3 O!IYI And Earn A Weeki
Pay. All Shi«l Are Available For
Columbus Work. Starling Wage
11 $7.PO An Hour. For Furlher

450

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

·Bt•-446·9580.

Oolllill Coil 1-jli)0-508-i773.

.

Business
Opponunlty

INOTICEI
PART· TIME JOBS AVAILABLE·
FOR VETERANS. The Well Vir· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
!llnla Almy Nationol Guard nooda recommenda that you do bull·
priot NMU locltw'lduala who wnt

ness with people you know, and

to ..., .... rheir •tate and country.
Our job• come with benefits like

mail until w-ou have lnveatfgated

llfu Insurance. educational aaait·
tanc;e, retirement, and a monthly
paycheck. You may be able to
keep lhe rank you were dlt·

Scenic Valle~. Apple Grave,
beautiful 2ac lota, pYbllc water,

Clydlllowon "'·· :Jl4.576-Zl311.

21 0

NOT to IOfld money lhrouoh lhe
lhe oflarlng.

&amp;413
• • POSTAL JOBS
s"''" 2.()8/IY. For
ond .,.
plk:aliofl lnh call 2111-7611-11301

.,..m

•XI WV648, llam-Gpm, SUn-Fri.

Pt. Pleaaant area phYtlclan
leek a part time medicaf a..iatantJLPN, Doctor'• offlc;a expert.
ence preferred. Send rttume :
Bol R-20, &lt;lo Pl Pleuan! Reg·
Iller, 200 Main St, Pl. Ploaoant

wv 25550.

Great Opporrunlty For The Righi
Petaon. Send ReipOnHa to Cdl·

lplio Dally Tribu,, CLA 353, 825
Third Avo., Gall&gt;dil. OH 45631.

""y PHONE ROUTE

RENTALS

410 Houses tor Rent
2·3bedroom In town, e11c cond.,
$450 plu1 ulllillotl. 30«75-8897.
lie~

REAL ESTATE

_,.. ...... lor_,....,.

Someane nteded evenlngt and

an In her home near Pomeroy.
Apply ily wriUng Tho Dally Sind·
net. C/o Boll 721k0, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788, giving ex~lence,
_,......,... &amp; waoo Nq~~iromont

WLDUFE CONSERVATION

J08S ~ oocurily, ·
malnllfWlOI. etc. No..,.,.. 11»
' lf*lllt')'. Nawhmg, fotlnlo
bll2tll-784-0010 tl8218.1lomttpm 7daya.

180 Wanted To Do
Al:e TrH SonriCI. Complt.. liM
· care, 20yr1. exp. &amp; lnaured, frH

eatlmaraa.

~- ..... . ..... .800

814 ~ 44

•• 1887• .-.

t -1111 or 1·
--- '

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1•xeo Treller To Rent. 2 BR, Air,
F.P., Wa~har &amp; Dryer, FurRahed,
2br trail«. Refarelltfl I Dapoalt.

VENDING: .Won'l Gel Rich O.lck.
Will Gat A Sl•dy, Cuh Income,
Pri&lt;ld To Sol. 1-J100.821H1782.

31

o Home11 for Sale ~

No pall. AIIO trailer lot R.t 82N,
Lacuat Rd on right, Pt Pleasant

304-875-1078.
3bedroom, all electric, Galllpolll

Ferry, l250mo, 1100 depoall.
:1)4.675-4088.

440

ApaMmeQts
• for Rent

I and 2 bedloorn ~ lur·
nilhed ·ond unlurnllhed, ooeurity
depoalt required, no pata, 81 • ·

882-2218.

1 Bedroom, llllchon Appliancaa

2·t1Dry oarage, beakle New Ha~ Furnlahed, Nice lacatla!'l For
wen Supetmarket, boltam lloor Shopping I Entorlllnmonl 814·
complelaly romedolo&lt;l. 2 bayo: 4411o21l&amp;7.
(lront boy 40'121', roar bay
32'123'), 100'140' lo~ $1 8,500. 1bedroom oparunon~ elton, nleo,

--27113.

AAVE. YOU :£E.N
~!'» TilE. c.t\OCOlATE.
CHIP (.()()!( IE.S,

matnt. Maditon Ave. WJWithaur
e•n PI, 40 lot Reduct To Sa'-.
et4-31e-28el
...

.,
00... l Tf\CXJ6HT

'I

least nine tricks via one

I Menlll worker
9 McNIIIIy'o

20 First-rate

plrll'lllf

(2 wda.)
22 Dolley and

10s..d

cover!~

Dury..

28 Companion
of oddo

29
31
34
37
38

animal

spad~ ,

YOU Hf&gt;.D

cQ\T(.JI~.C.':. I

Phillip Alder 's new book, " Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
autographed upon request , for
$14.95 from P .O. Box 169, Roslyn
H!s. , NY 11577-0169.

RXFDEVOW

MOUG

CLWZ

R J R L U R S U V
L p

WM

KDW

MO

MJVXTMRW.'

GMDX

B REV P

XDPPVUU

I

UMCVUU.
•
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ·eureaucrals are lhe only people in lhe
can say absolutely nothing and mean it.• - James H. Boren ..

wo~d

who

WOlD
,::~;~~~! S©~Q{lltA-"t.tfS"
GUll
E4;tod
I . POLLAN------~.CLAY

Rearrano!IJ leners , of
0 four
scrambled words

the
be·

low ro form four words

llCOCLUT

I I

I

2

I 1 I

GREEV

I' I I I

I

.r·-·..:,U~N,_H_Ar-M"r'-liN.·:,;':

Our neighoors daughter em·
t&gt;roidered a cute plaque for her
L-...Jt....-J._·;...l.......J_'...J
future husoand. It read: "Laugh
, - - - - - - - -"'--.and The World Laughs With
F I R T ,A y
You Snore and You Sleep . . .. ·!"

I I I I

Complele tke ckud le q uoted

.
•
_
.
.
.
b y l 1ll1ng 1n the m1U1ng words
L..__..l_..J..._L_..!_..L.....J . you develop from step No. 3 be low.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET . ANSWER ,

WHEN 'IOU
5TMTED

CO\.LECTINu
DUE!&gt; .

5TRIKE

CLON

NUMBER ED LETTER~ IN
THE ~E SQUARES

THEM

'-'"NT
TO BE
ON

VRPW

RO

f9 PRINT

I THINI&lt;.
YOU LD.ST

WE

Carpet &amp; Vinyl In Stock $5.00 Yd

SCRAM.tETS ANSWERS
Hourly· Torch · Quota ·Nutmeg. THOUGHT

&amp; Up 60 Panama 01 Kitchen Car·
pet In Stock. Over 35 Pattarna

Vinyl in Stocl&lt;. Mollohan Carpeil,
Country Furniture -Furniture lor
Every Room Bml., At 2 Norlh, PL

STRI(f A8WN H Tl-f. W\11 ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CL.ASSfiEO,S.

Ploo..nL 304~75-8820 .
dr~era,

tit z v

.

DON'T

Waahara,

by Luis Campos
c.t.brity Cipneor crypto;rrams ar• &lt;:nt•tMI !rom QUOfl110nS b'f tamout people, put 1WKi pr.,_,l
,
EIK:tllen&lt;~~r tn ~ ciphef stands lof anott'lef" TOlXIIy's clue T «~U~~II C

I
If.-:,.~~5.:.,lr-TI..L-fl;_'l"-1 O

304-773-5651, Mason WV.

GOOD USED

CELEBRITY CIPHER

one

Sleeping room• with coooklng,
Alao trailer apace on river. All
hook-upa. Call after 2:00 p.m.,

510 , Household
Goods .

Extinct bird
Bring&amp; about
Thicken
Of the Ieeth
African

39 Break IWIY
h-om
41 Mede of
.cereal
42 Clutch
43 Tiniest bit
44 Author Jean
M.45 Type of bolt
46 Regarding
(2. Wdl.)
47 Utenall
. 48 Deviate&amp;
"-....1.."-"-....l........l 50 - ·Broodwoy

Roomt for rent - week or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Hotel.

MERCHANDISE

11 -noire
19 Campau pt.

23 Flnt
24 C.pable of
(2 wdo.)
25 Leave-Beaver
26 Jokea
27 Writer
Anita-

heart, five diamonds and two clubs.
Watch those spots.

Furnished
Rooms

I

Young people always think they are smarter than the
older people they know. I've concluded that real maturity -·
comes when wt: realize wedon 'l know all we THOUGHT
we did .

APP~IANCES

S~Ht

Call 814·448' 73118,

alngt. occupancy, na pela. no
HUD. I Oopolll. 30..

lampe, KeroaceM Heater, Small

T111mpolono, Venation Blind' Ra·
dioa, Bowing Machin&amp;, T.V. Travlo
Rodl, CIOihtl Rack, Miac. 8 t•·
446-4094.

1 Ouarter Hone Perfect For

Team Work And For Riding
Hoi'&amp;&amp; 814-4o46-ot-11 0.

'

10-12 week old pigs, $25; 814-

LAI'NE'S FURNIT\JRE

942017.

Compltte ·home rurnl1hlnga.
Houta : Mon -Sar, 8·5. 814· 448·
0322, 3 mllea out Bulavllle Pike

Free OoliYory.
LMng room clloir, geOcl condition.
$65. 814 446 8030

, O~r old

Wedding goWn, Ivory, $150., Prom
dr- .... It. 135. Baby IWing '
auorted

bab~

llema. 614·-4-41-

1887.

PICKENS FURNITURE

WHITFS METAl DETECTORS
Ron AlliiOI'l, 1210 Secondnlohlng. 112 mi. Jerrlcho Rd. Pl. ...... Gallloplio, Ohio, 81o1-416.4338.
Ple111n~ WV, coli 30&lt;H75-1450,
81-H*6448.
Wood Swing Sol •so, 2 Dwarf
Rocking Chair, 2 Oak Slrolght Robblll ItO etoHI711-21199.
Bac:k Chalra &amp; Hoateu Chair
Now/Uoed
No appllancea, Houaehold fur-

614-446-i292.

550

·Building
Supplies

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82 28 Ga. PainiOd Melli Roofing And
Olive SL, Glilipoilo. Now &amp; Uaed SldlnO, Cui To ~Ink. 814·3811furnitUre, heaten, Western &amp; 8314
Work boo1o. 81._._1!iG.
All Slooi Building Silo: 3G To 80
VI'RA FURNmJRE
Wldo, 20 Fl a· 25 FL Soya, 6t•·
61-H*3158
381H1314
O.aiiJr Hou-ld Fumlu.ro And
. Appllancol. Greet Ooall On
Block, brick, oower plpoo, wind·calh And Ctrryl RENT·2-0WN
OWl, linlel' otc. Claude Wlntera,
Rio Orondo, OH Call 11•·245·
And.._AIIO5121 .
fr• Deliwry- 251111eo

530

Antiques

Gra.. uou -pipe &amp; drainpipe
now In oiOCk. Sldtr1 Equlpmon~
304.f75-7421.
. .

Buy or sell. Rlvorlne Antlquoo,
2.000 Sq, Fl Homo 875-21151.
1124 E. Maln .s-..., on RL 124,
And Pay No T&amp;IOI On 11 For Tho
Po-roy.
II .T.W. 10:00 Steel Bldg Super Sate. 301148,
Ntllt 14 Yeart. 3 Bedroomt, 2 2 8A. G11age Apt Gal HeaL No a.m. ID UlOHouro:
•e1ea, 561110, 601120. Savo
p.m.,
Sundar
Both&amp;, Owner Flnonco&lt;l To Quail· Petti l300.oo Month. Dtpoalt, 6:00p.m. 014-8112·25211. 1:00 I&gt; Thouaanda. Some At Low Aa
llod Buy.- 01-H*21l&amp;7.
61.....,_2300 or B1&lt;H«H17B7
$3.00 P,r Sq. Ft. Fu1 Delivery.
e1.-a1 10. End 541.
•
540
Miscellaneous
By 0wntr 3 Bedroom, Full Ball· 2bdrm. aptl., lOIII tlectrlcr, lp·

Buy Thll -

2 Norte poem
3 S.nd llurd
4 Provldod with
equipment
5 Group olei9hl
5 Good
7 fiCO part

1-801l-4111l-348.

Houii,Colll~

Plen· ono ptoduef • gold and oil·
ver colna paid weeki)', $200016000 poulbla, grvund ftoor opporlunlty. Call Mark al (Bt•lllll27&amp;41.
-

. ~()RN LOSER

CJ11U&gt; 7

Vlno

30H75-8897.

&amp;14'256-t0ol4 N1JK 5P,m

U1Jima1• Uulti-LeYtl Marketing

'

retrigeratara,
Appliances.
78
rangaa.
Skaggs
2bedroem In town, $350 pluo udU· ·

SO ·local And EatabUihed Slits,

Earn $1,500 Wookly, Opon 2•

33-l't
llel34 Foolt (11.)
35 FNiklth
36Aimleu
dr-inga

614-448·7444.

EOUIPIIENT LEASING. START One bedroom house In New HaYOUR OWN BUSINESS. Com· ven, 1100 depoalt, 1150 month
charged wilh. ANNUAL TRAIN· pae1e Training-High Income. Tollll ren~ 30+882·21 eo.
lNG lf'l GERMANY IN AUGUSTII Coli $7950. Mr. Parker, ""RKER Small 1 Bedroom Houae near
Call toda~ lO find out if you can LEASING SERVICE 1·800·•58· KMart, w/~r. 1300.00 Plua Gaa &amp;
enlist and enjoy aR ol theM benft. 3234, 1· 800 444 1930.
Eltc. I0 &amp;lei&lt; Lane. o-a Open.
ftti and more. 304-875-5837 or 1· For Rent. Cua1om Slaughter ou-•48· ,822. &amp;1•-us-2038 ,
1100~42· 3619.
Hou11 Doing a Good bualne11. A 61 .. ol46-9591
Pett a" to clean houie 1day 1
wool&lt;. Col b e - 11·3. 81 .. 258-

This newspaper will not
knowllng!y accept
adver11sements lor real estate
which is in violation ol the law.
Our readers are hereby
informed that all dw~ lfings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opponunity basis.

OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO.
RECT FACTORY OUTLET,
MIDDLEMAN, SAVE SIOOOo,
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SETUP,
LARGE SELECTION OF SINGLE
a DOUBLEWIDES. WE OWN
THEM, WE'LL FINANCE THEil.
304-755-5886.

To Handle Roopbnaiblllty And FMT.
ll~!o Home Lol lor Rent. Elec~~
Willing To Work Hard, Thio Could
·or
GaoBt4-367·7o438.
Would
like
To
Watch
School
BoForVOu.
CAlll\JE~Y &amp;
Age Children During The Sum- REMOTE, beoulllul, ridge-lop
WEDNESDAY ONLY.
mer. Ha'l4t Many References 814· land; three mlla1 aouth ol CarINTERVII;WS BY APPT. ONLY
3117-0466.
ponlor, -Ohio, ML Unlen Rd. (Col·
61....,1· tS70
umbla
TR 14,: 7.8_.5 acru,
You are gelling moi'e than you
On Duty Medical 11 Ploaoed To pay .for· from janitor tO m11nag• $7000; 5.047 ..,., $4542; (olher
AMounee Our Now Ollieo At 995 ment Olef.50 )'lAta In work ace. parcel• avaitabte,. Owner financJackson Pll&lt;o SullO 1210, Galli po- Need a job, call Bob, 614·g92· Ing. Call for good map. 81-4-5938545..
lio, Ohio 45631 . Co""' Spend A 7504.
Nlghl Or Two In Our Furnlal'led
Aparlmenr Wllh A Pool. Work 2

1 'MJ/44

31 S.nd hill

32Yako- .

At the bridge table, somelimes it
would be helpful to X-ray an opponent's
hand to learn the cards he is holding.
At other times, it shouldn't be neces.
sary.
West led his fourth -highest spade:
After winning 1\jth the ace, East might
have switched to a heart or a club. !Not.
that either helps here.l But he opted to
relurn his remaining spade. South -fi ·
nessed his nine, losing to West's 10.
Knowing South had the remaining
spades, West guessed well to switch 10
the diamond queen.
South won with the ace and returned
the diamond IO. 'fhen West covered
with the jack. South happily won with
dummy 's king . He was just about to
elaim when he noticed the diamond
blockage. In desperation, declarer tried
the club.finesse , but it lost. West safely
returned a club and South couldn 't find
nine tricks.
As you have noticed, the key play is
to let West win the fourth trick with his
diamond jack. South must score at

(814)992~151.

Will haul away left over yard lilt
ll8ml. 304-578-21181l.

DOWN

dent

sures when in search of a mate.

coal $1200 originally, S500 now,

NO EXPI:RENCE
NECESSARY
Complelo Training For All Pool·
dono. Exctllonl SlarUng E11nlng1
AI p., Wrlnen Agteemem. tr 'lbu

80Cho0u

doesn't need to resort to such mea -

Kirby vacuum and ahampao kit,
lull three ~ear complets war111nty,

rry.

•A 4
•Q 9 8 3
8 4
.109743

As C.C. Wei, the inventor of the
Precision Club bidding system, once
said, "You learn far more by listening
than by talking." I do some of my learning by watching the excellent nature
and science programs on The
Discovery Channel. For example, I dis·
covered that the only way to detennine
the sex of a perentie, an Australian
lizard, is ·to X-ray it. However, as I
didn't spot a perentie carrying X-ray
equipment on its back, I assume it

60T A REAL VULTURE NEVER

I DON'T
CARE WI-IAT VOLI

King Wood Burning Stove, $300,

lm111edlarely For Local Disulbulor

EAST

Autos for Sale

814-4111-0518.

01 Large Uanuf~ctu ring Compa·

57 Morlya.

21Liu-

By Phillip Alder

SliRE,

Will Do lrnarlor, E1111rlor Painting,
Reatonable Ratea. E•P«Ianua,
Raletencee, For FrM Eatln.tet,
Coli 61 ~45-5756.

Z2 Hound
23 01rec1

•• -

55
boring
56 RODier

Learn by watching

310 Homes tor Sale

·-U358.

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
S120QIMONTH
~ PER WRITTEN AGREEMENT
21 People Needed To Starl Work

14

OpeniQg lead: • 5

AVON 10· buy or Mil, Ma&lt;llyn, lndtperidtnt &lt;tP. 30•·882·20•5

W~l

20 ConiuM
21 Noun tulltx

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South
West North East
2 NT
Pass 3 NT
Ail pass

S·JIIo

750 Boats &amp; Motors ..:
•
for Sale
••

'

41 De'a r •
50 T-ocrop
51 C.kiM ox
52 Vi~ll

•A K J

·

we~

~

Slwmlll Work 1100
a1 ..3S8-11354.

1~7·2~738

·

2

SOUTH
•K J 9 7
•A J 10
eA I0 9

"We must be tracking a dance instructor.'

61-Ho0&amp;-3358

•o

s •

Wontad To Buy: Junk Au too With
Or Without Motora. ca.l l lanr

Need 3 People . To Sell. Avon.

4 2

oK76532

...... Wllbuy ... ploce Of ......
!HIO Ntalol. Olby llarUn, et,..
882-7ol41.

AVON SELLS AT WORK·HOME
NIOC Addld..,..lneoma?
-.go IH151Hr. Borlefilll
T.mtlirY 0!&gt;4lonol incl'rop.

·~

PDIKk&gt;nl

42 Flif'y45 ~

11=" 53=
eec-

•6 3

Wonlod 10 bur· ontiquO ond uood
furnl11,., no ,.,. DO llrgo or 100

Colllo In Good Condldon,
246-111117.
.

12- ranch
13 Sob
ta Unuauel
IS'Timll--hall
IS si- part
. 17 l'lud

5·24·95

po- locka, eruioo, till whttl,

""" 1, v.e. 112.000• ., ...

t1•381

1 ~

,

113 PlymDulh Voyager mini ..n.

41 CttcUI

I U11cloee (poet.)

ean:;;

lion von. I.Ooded. o18K, 110,
811 111 13!0, 114 Ul • 11

31-o!P-

40 Dtwn

rurnflhld,

rvom

--;.;;~;;;;

,!l&lt;I,GI~ j..l&lt;?!!OO-

Merchandise

560

Pets tor Sale

Aco Vinyl Siding 20% 011 Salt,

'78 Chev. 1/2 ton pickup truck, VInyl Siding IRoP!&amp;eomont Wind·
new Urea, oood ahape, $1 BOO, owo, Roofing, 25 Yeora Expaieince, 614-367.q813.
'
(614) G92- 7242.

Hi81 Datsun truck. CIJI 30-4-G75- Barnen'a Hame.lmporYemtnta:

Room Addlliono -Doeka, An~
Porchea. E1perloncod, Fteo Eo!·
1983 F150, aull!lad, 300 8ql, oo, IMIOt, 61 ..ol48-f568.

2237.
APpalooaa gelding

$1 ,000. •yr old palnl gelding,

$1,000, 30«75-11912.
Chatolala Slmmentai, 11,., polled
bull, gonlio. 304-875-.'3034.

76,000 act mllee. new tlrea,
wheels, brakes, paint, aherp.
$4,500. :Jl4.578-2998 Ollar Clpm.

CIC General

Home Malft.
tentnct· Painting, vinyl aldlno,

eorpenlry, doorl, win-. bail&gt;~
1988 Ford Ranger, 4 cyl, 5 apood, ,.,bllo home -lr and more. foi
limoutin bulla- registered year - I'IOWIIr whillt leiter drtl - · - froe ••d. .llt coli Cho~ a , .. llll:Z.
ings l one 2 yr. old. 31• linau~n wheel•, AM -FM ca11ene, excel· 6323.
yearling bulls, 31• Umouain hell· lonl condiUon, 13,250, 814·742·
Cullom Cleaning, Poporing l
era &amp; cowl w/3/4 llmouain 2357.
Palnllru, e14-448-3645.
CIIYoo, 61 H98-2785.
1991 Ford F-150 .XlT Lilla! Fully
One 6yr old AmeriCan Alpine Loaded, AC, E1coilant Candltionl Joe's Home Ualnt'enenca, vln~l
Doe, 1mo old Doe, two tmo old 40,000 Milol, Allor 5:00, 814-4411- lliding, roofing, Ollorlor pelndng,
3559.
power washing, free lllimt1t11,
Wellhora. 304-f95.3373.
REGISTERED ANGUS And Chi·
Angua Bulla And Haifeta $750 •
Up. Excellent Bloodlines, Slate

Run Forma, 814·288· 53115 Joel&lt;·
ton.

RoGillorod Poled 51""""""" Bull,

3 V8ar1 Old, Ptav•n Herd Sire,
Dark Red &amp; Whlre, Ready For

-

814-3N-2131l.

Sllurday, llay 27111, Spedal can•lw!mont Silo. Soi ling I P.M. 17
Haada Preconditioned Hereford
Canit, to Stoera, 1 Helfora, All
Sholl, Sll 01 Geod Quliily Ca~t,

To Bo Soldi All Conolgnmen11
Welcome, Hauling Available.

1995 C'-"lei 5-10, .... off lho

.
ASTRO·GRAPH

,

road auapenalon, black. 304-875- Ron'l TV Sonrleo, ~lllzl"''ln
5306.
Zenith &amp;lao Mt'vlclng moat other
brands. Houae calla, 1·800-78793 Che.vrolet. Silverodo, 35,000 0015, WI/ 304-578-23118,
niles. Iota ot extru. $14,000 11.._

BERNICE
BEDE OSOt

992-3801 .

Trac10r ITroiiOr1'arklng Available
in Cllr Llmilo, Daily !Wtokly r
Muol Sell. 1110g Chovy S· IO , Moolhly, et .. U6 311.46•
5apd, 82,ooon;, ••• eend, 13800.
304.f75-7981.
820 Plumbing &amp;

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

'Your

Heating

'Birthday

lnatallatlon And Service. EPA

Certlftod. . . . _, Commerclli.
HJ83 Ford Econollne van. verr 114-258-1811.
nic;e, t2000; hand toala, power
IDOla. ext ladder, guna, 814-002· 840 Electrical

ASir o·G raph Mal c hmaker •nSianl iy SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
mus tn 't gr ve up on what you hope to
achieve today. The indivrduat wrth ambi11ous d reams is often more powerfu l than

reveals whrc h signs are romantically per ...
feet tor you . Marl $2.75 to Matchmaker ,
c/o thr s newspaper, P.O. Box 4465 , New
York . NY 10163.

the on e wilh aUthe Know-how.

CANCER (June 21.July 22) II you wanl CAPRICORN (Dec . 22.Jan, 19) Some·
10 add emphas•s and imp acl to yo ur one who has assisted you pnfvrously may
words today, speak tn a straightf orward be helpful 10 you agar n today. Thrs mdt~
manner. ListenerS WllJ reSpect yOU more If VIdU a l ~tght pre Sen t y' OU Wit h a b1g
you don't beat about the bush.
opportunity.in a small package.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)1n Iough compe ti· AQUARit:IS (Jan : 20-Feb. 19) An author·
. . . . . . . . . . ....
•

Fr-n'a Hoadng And Cooling.

Athono livtlloek Saloa, 814· 82&lt;2.
.
.
- · · 61..592-2322.
Young block &amp; while Ia•• h*lltr 1980 Jeep Camanche piCkup
caw Willi call. 1575. 814·448· II'Ucl&lt;, · - drive, 4opd, 12,800.
304-458-1971.
•
40SI.

TRANSPORTATION

81HGI2-445t.

'•

.

Thursday, May 25. 1995

and

An end e av'o r yo u've gr.v en t ime and

Refrlgerstlon

lund s, bul ha s yel 10 prove lucralive ,
~ghl take a surprising turn. in the year
.atlead. The garns you've been hoping lor
. Will come about.

ttve developmenls today, use wha tever
ethical edge ymJ have at your dtsppsal . If
you restram yowselt. you m ight come tn
second.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) An old lnend
who now restd es tn a d•s tan l pla ce is
eager to know how you are do1ng. Just

because he/she is oul ol sighi . doesn'l

f ig ure mi g h t test vou today with an
iflsign tfrcant assrgn ment 10 see if yo u're
worthy of handhng somethrng_latger . The
ball 1s tn your court.

1ty

PISCES (Feb . 20· March 20) As k a
friendly nerghbOr to pick up your mall and
newspapers tf you plan on goi.ng out of
1own lhis weekend. Do' nol tempi lnlrud-

• ers by adVeriiStng that you're gone.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23 ·0ct. 23) You mighl ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Focus you r
have to shift your positron on an impor- ment al ert ort s and en er g1e s on you r

mean they can't be on your mmd

·tant busrness matte r today . The alteratton
may be difficult to make, but rt could be

frnancial a ffai rs t oday . Your business
acumen is at a htgh potnt and you could

GEMINI (May 21-,luna 20) Give grealer

your best move .

make bolll dimes a,nd dolla rs .

than , -wt~s· 1o ' pro fil 1o dav

otll"eff Cl!Uid· be yoor best ~et t~Q.aV-.pt"ollelol\&lt; .be.JJ:I. ~
mood
You can gui~ them to wo_rk for the com· y e t this m ight .
·
..
man good wrthput maktng then1 feel group of very close fnends.

. ·

.

0
-~·-~~ ~·~~~~~- ~-n)M~i ~TAUR~IA~I~~M~·~oy~2~0~)~Y~o~uiw~tl~l~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~q~~~~~1~~]~~l~~~~~~
,Enhancing your seft-est~em will ~rove

·fnortt valuable than sil \/er. Know where to
rorm!nt8'&amp;fl&lt;l-y&lt;&gt;ll' il~ill&lt;IJLT be.~mampula18(j.

r--,.,'l&lt;.-llr&lt;r

•. _

. __

•

�J••

•

Wednesday, May 24, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page14 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Reas·
sweep
Astros

Ohio Lottery

Sports, Page 5

Kicker:

Pick 3:

145
Pick 4:
0429
Super Lotto:

6·9·13·18-21·24
056590

Looo loll!pt Ia 50s. Cloud7.
Frlda7, parti1•DII1· Hicbo Ia
upper 70s.

••

·a t

A Cardinal • Affiliated Supermarket

lol. 46, NO. 19
Copyright 11195

r--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 25, 1995

Environmental education__,

'

~

"' .

"'~~-~-

. '"' ....

2 Sectlona, 12 Pages 35 centa •
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper ;

GOP .says new law
will slow spending
COLUMBUS (AP) - Republicans said a new campaign fmance
reform law will slow spending, but
Democrats and others suggested
the new Jaw may be full or boles.
Gov. George Voinovicb on
Wednesday signed into law the
reform bill that sets limits on contributions and strengthens some
reporting requirements.
At the same time, Sen. Leigh
Herrington, D-Kent, said he would
introduce legislation that would
close loopholes be sees in lhe law:
Voinovich, a Republican, and
others involved in the four-year
process of passing reform legislation admitted that the bill was less
than they sought. Voinovicb said it
did not include campaign spending
limits, which be proposed in 1989.
The bill does not set limits on
cash transfers between county and
state political parties to candidates
and there are no limits on donations
of in-kind services, such as phone
banks, Herrington said.
He said he would seek a limit on
the purchase of television ads and
to stop the transfer of money to

•
:~t~:· ~-=..~'l!t t:~:::............. ~-.
---~-~

.

'

candidates through special committees.
David Zanotti, spokesman for
the Northeast Round Table, a citizens group that pushed for reform,
said he ex peered many of the provisions to be legally challenged.
"1' m not sure it will all work,"
Zanotti said of the bill.
The Round Table and Common
Cause had threatened to put the
reform issue on the baliotlhrougb a
voter petition drive if legislators
did not act .
"This is not perfect, but we
have to keep going. It's a start,"
said Janet Lewis, executive director
of Common Cause/Ohio.
The bill limits individuals, political action committees, and campaign committees to contributions
of $2,500 per election to slate candidates. Contributions from individuals and PACs to campaign
committees would have the same
limit.
"Senate Bill 8 is the first and
most comprehensive reform of
financing campaigns passed in
Ohio," Voinovich said before sign-

•

ing the biD: It will become law in :
90 days.
· :
Contributions from Slate poiiti- ;
cal parties wiD be held to $500,000 •
for slatewide candidates, $100,000 for Senate candidares and $50,000
for House candidates, per election.
The law also includes increased
protection from solicitation for :
public employees, income taX cred- ·
its for small campaign contribu- :
lions and computerized finance :
information gathered by the secretary of slate.
"We are bringing law and order
to tbe wild west of campaign .
spending," Secretary of Slate Bob :
Taft said.
Voinovicb said the legislation :
"would bring the slaggering costs :
of campaigns under control."
He said refo rm legislation
would not have passed without a
Republican majority in the General
Assembly , mostly because of the .
opposition of organized .labor.
,
The biU requires labor groups lo ·
form political action committees,'
the same as corporations, in order
to make contribuUons.

Storms, high winds down trees, power lines

Ohio man killed by lightning

More than t,lOO students
from Meigs and Athens ~un·
ties participated In a series of
hands-on learning activities at
Forked Run ·State Park
Wednesday, park mana11er
Randy Wachter said. (Above),
Tuppers Plains Elementary
students learn about IOJ! cabin
construction and trees from' the Ohio Department of Natural Resources' Lynn Boydelatour. (Right), Racine sixth
Brader Steve Smith learns bow
ponds and streams are cleaned
after oil spills from Joe
Hoerst, district supervisor of
the ODNR oil and gas division. (Sentinel photos hy
George Abate)
I

VAN CAMP'S
P-ORK &amp; BEANS

3$ aa
FOR

IN TOMATO SAUCE
16 OUNCE CAN

By The Associated Press
Thunders,torms that rolled·\
through Ohio apparently caused at
·least one death, authorities said.
Storms also knocked down farm
buildings, damaged homes, uprooted trees and flooded roadways.
There were also several power outages. .
.
The Summit County coroner's
office reported that Brian Chafe,
20, of Portage County in northeastem Ohio apparently wa.S struck by
lightning Wednesday afternoon
outside his home.
The University of Aleron student
bad gone out to help his sister and
her boyfriend push a go-cart into ·
tbe garage when lightning hit lbe
ground near them.
··
Chafe died at 4:25 p .m. at
Akron City Hospital, about I 1/2
hours after being bit. The coroner's
office said an autopsy would be
perfonned.
.
The National Weather Service
reponed several sigbtings of funnel
clouds and tornadoos, but meteo-

/

R#14205
Assorted Varieties
I
1Bounce bottle
I
1
KRAFT
I
1 BARBECUE SAUCE 1

~•·a-=

I

-----

LIMIT 1

• l oroe·Coi.IX)n P~ rami~

Good Or'llv nt Catdlrml Svpernw1&lt;l'l5

I
.J

R#14205l
mfr. 1119610
'

SHURFRESH

BUNS

2$ aa
FOR
HAMBURGER OR HOT DOG
8 COUNT PACKAGE

'.

Roads, bridges repaired
as National Guard leaves
By GEORGE ABATE ·
Sentinel News Stair
Meigs County and township
officials continue to work on
repairing roads following last
week's Oasb flooding, said Bob
Eason, Meigs County Engineer.
More than S~~ nu·u·ton ·m damage
has been attributed to this flooding,
officials slated. The couhl)i roads,
bridges and culvert estimated darnage was ,more than $68·6 ,493,
Eason sar'd. .
On Wednesday, the 30 members
of the Ohio National Guard left the
county after six days of work,
· 'd .
Eason sat
.
"Tb ey very deft"nt"te~made a
tremendous difference,"
on said ·
of the guard and other volunteers.
"We would stiU have roads impas"'
"bl "tbo tthem"
St e wt u
.
G'
The Ohio Army National uanJ
activated about 30 members to
Meigs County Friday to help clear
debris and roads and townships
assess damage.
The guard members were from
the 216tb Engineer Battalion with

Chillicothe and Portsmouth, along
with the 112th Engineer Battalion
in Columbus.
On Tuesday, members of the
Civilian Conservation Corps left,
Eason added. Qn Monday and
Tuesday, the CCC worked with
1ownsh"tp offitct"al s.
The CCC unit is stationed out of
Zaleski and represents the only
group in Southeast Ohio between
Portsmouth and Zanesville. Tbe
group be gao working in the county
Thursday.
.
,
The Ohio Deparunent of Transporlation crews sto~ped working
on the road clean -up aturday . c ·
In other news • the Obt"o Pubit"c
Works Commission bas made
$60,000 available through a line of
credit for the replacement of one
b "d and four culvert pipes
n ge
'
Eason said.
County Road 25 bridge -north
of County Road 26 about one-half
mile - will be installed by Slate
workers, Eason said. ·
The Ohio Bridge Co. contractors informed Eason they wiD be in

' Jobless figure .
hits highest level
in 10 months

the area in about two weeks. be
added.
The company will remove the
old bridge first, Eason said. .
"It's not a big job for iliem with
their crews," Eason said. "It's not
nearly as big as out at Keno."
AIso th e $60000
1 pay
,
wt'II be1p
10 replace culverts including Connty Roads 28, 352, 174, 36. Most
culverts will be installed by county
crews, be added.
Th e coun tY an d towns h.1p o ffi•cials continue to assess damage and
regroup, Eason said.
"We're trying to restock materia 1s be r·ore th e next one comes," ·
Eason
·
sat'd . "W e d on •1 have a.nv
major bangups. We're still assessing things. We 're trying to get
moreinfO!Ulation."
Abo 50 ·
·
d
ut
ptpes on county an
township roads have been replaced,
be added.
·
"We don't have all roads and
ditches back to shape," Eason said.
Stones need to be restocked that· .
were was bed away and used on
pipes, be added.

I pro
.1·nt ru d er has h I"sto·r y. .o·f menta
.
. b"lem s .

~----~

f\SSORTED VAJUEliE..-..S~
2412-bUNCE CANS

. WASHINGTON (AP) _ Tbe
number of Americans filing new
claims for jobless benefits shot up
by 13,000 last week 10 the highest
level in 10 months as the economy
continued to show signs of weakening.
The Labor Department said
today that first-time applications
for unemployment insur-ance
totaled a seasonally adjusted
380,000 during the week' ended
May ·20, !be highest since 385,000
during the week ended July 16.
Many analysts bad predicted
that claims bad fallen slightly last
week.
The report a 1so s bowe d t b at
claims during the week ended May
13 were higher than originally esti·
mated_ 367,000 rather tban
000
365, . Some analysts are expressing
concern over the vigor of an economy whose growth bas slowed from
a 5. 1 percent annual rate in tbe
final three months of 1994 to just
2.8 percent in the ftrsl three months
of this year.
b
bee
S
incc !ben, there ave
n COli·
tinuing reports of economic sluggishncss, including falling factory
orders, declining industrial produclion and rising unemployment. The
deparnnent says tbe jobless rate in
May .umped to 5_8 percent
1

rologists had not confirmed the
reports.
J
Customers inside a Sprin.gfteld
mail huddled in the center of the
building after a ftrefighrer reported
seeing a ·tornado touch down a few
miles away.
Diana Geiselman, a firefighter
in Clark County's Bethel Township, said she saw a tornado touch
down shortly before 5 p.m. north of
Donnelsville.
o
· "lltc clouds were coming down
in a circle," she said. "It was prctty low and close to us.. It was
windy but we managed to control
our vehicle."
In the Dayton suburb of OakWood, police diverted all emergency calls tu nearby Ketlering after a
power outage- probably caused
by a lightning strike - cut off
radio and telephone communicalion at the station just before 7 p.m.
· Lightning also bit a hom e in
Centerville, authorities said.
Tr.ces were blown down and
uprooted in MiddleiOwn, Eaton and

. otlter parts of Butler, Preble, Shel"by and Logan counti.es. ]iigh winds
. also damaged a barn north ,of
Oxford in .Butler County.
Two barns, a silo and a combine
were reponed blown over in Summerford Township in northwesrem
Madison County, said sheriff's
Dispatcher Christine Reed. A resident also reponed that bigb winds
had blown out some of his borne's
windows and some trees were
uprooted .
·
About 28,000 Columbus Southern Power ·customers in Franklin,
Delaware and Licking counties
were without power, company
spokesman Barrie Brandt said.
.
About 10.000 Ohio Edison Co.
customers in the Springfield area
lost power after high winds
snapped four laue transmission ·
poles. said utility spokesman Tim
Richan1.
Another 6,000 Ohio Edison enstomers in Medina. Summit, Stark
and Portage counties also were
without electricity.

Defense 'argues remark
'opens door' forjurors to
hear in Simpson case
LOS ANGELES (AP) - After nearly two weeks of sleep-indueing DNA testimony, the OJ. Simpson trial came back 10 life with a
spirited debate over whether jurors should bear Simpson's tape·
recorded slalement to wtice.
The defense insistCdc~at police criminalist Collin Yamauchi' s
comment Wednesday th 'be once thought Simpson bad ''an airtight alibi" cleared the way for jurors to bear the slatement. That
would allow Simpson's story to be told without bim taking the
stand and opening himself up to hostile cross-examination.
Prosecutor Marcia Clark argued that Yamauchi's remarl&lt; was
based on media repons, not any lmowledge of the interview Simpson gave to police the day after his ex-wife and her friend were
murdered.
One law
$ professor said the dispute could ultimately determine
whether impson takes the stand. Judue
o Lance Ito asked both parties to present arguments on the subjecl today.
- . .
"I think it means we have a good opponunity to get his Statet;llent in now," defense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. said outside
court. "Everybody wants the truth. I don't know why the proseculion wants to keep his slatement out"
An 311swer was provided by law professor Robert Pugsley of
Southwestern University: "You would hear OJ,'s voice making a
pitch for his innocence."
The debate centers on a section of the state evidence code that
says if part of a slatement is introduced, the opposing party bas the
right to bring in the entire thing. '
·
Pugsley said it seemed unlikllly that !10 would allow the slatementto be admitted without further evidence that it was the alibi to
which Yamauchi referred. "It seems to me lhe defense is making a
very strained. overreaching kind oC claim. " he said.
A ruling for the defense "would be a plum," he said.
Stan Goldman, a Jaw professor at Loyola University, said the
important factor isn't what Yamauchi mcanl- only what he said in
front of the jury.
·
"They heard a descriptioo of an alibi," Goldman said. The right
to establish the context of thai remark is wh~t the evidence law is
supposed to uphold, be said.
"This little bitty issue could decide whether O.J. Simr,son testilies at the.J!iai,;,:_Q!&gt;.!,drnan said. "It could be a real f~_l9,!, ~... _ ...·
·-stmpson voluntanly giVe-the ,3~minllle-"Stllteinent to pollee on -·
June 13, the day after the knife murders of Nicole Brown Simpson

wASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
He must have lmown mat carry- irying to make a determination of
man who was shot by a Secret Ser- ing an empty gun onto White what his motivation was," Dubelivice officer aftet be scrambled over House grounds would provoke the er said today on AD C' s ''Good
the White House fence carrying an president's security team, the offi- Morning America."
.
unloaded gun may bave been trying cials said.
Susan Lloyd, spokeswoman for
to commit suicide, officials say. He
':There is some indication of a the FBI, said, "At this time, there No paper -Monday
bad a history of mental prnblc:m_s.
· m:ntat bist?IY," federal prosecutor is nothing to i~di~ate,,il was an
The Dail Seritinel will not pubLaw enforcement offlctals Eric Dubetier told reporters after a attempred assassmauon. .
ii b M day May 29 in order to
speaking \Y~Y on con~tion bri&lt;;!&lt;:lJ~bearlng Wednesday.
. Modjeski, 37, of ne!"'bY Falls ~~ Ohic?'Valiey Publishing Co.
of anonyQUI)I· satd they were mves, •
- W~f&amp;-ttl--lbc-pcocess..oC.I.Qolr;....~ Ghurcb;-·Ya.;"WM· shot.-tn . tlt~JI!flt_.~o--- oosen'ell!e Memorial
ligating the' po~si_biilty that tb_e -ing into his background_ cb~king laui Tuesday night afrerile climbed Da~ h~~~ Normal office hours
man, Leland Wilham ModJeSkt, out p~pie w_ho knew btm, mter- over tbe_10-foot blac~ tron fen.ee and publication will resume Tueswas d~ndent ·and was trymg. IO ~vtew.ms -l~dtvtdu~ who ~ew . ~~pAnted toward-the ,Wbtt~Y _ .
--~ _ ~ -·-L~a•~td:,:R~.?";,;
· ;;:a;,:ld:,:Go:.:l~==
·
gei himself bun.
·
·
him, gathermg medical reCO«lS and · House.
·
·

--·-------=...:·:·=::.·:-_=:::::=:;;..:
;,
-:J

•

l

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="374">
    <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="9746">
                <text>05. May</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="30628">
            <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="30627">
              <text>May 24, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6237">
      <name>bloxton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6239">
      <name>safreed</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6238">
      <name>tincher</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
