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                  <text>Monday,August21,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel
•

Blue-blood girlfriend embarrassed of blue-collar boyfriend
" 1995, Los Angeles
Tunn Syndtc•l• And
CrM!ots..Syndlcat•"

Dear Ann LaDders: Ever since I
read that leut:r in your column from

• Awkward in Seattle," I have been '
iiChingtorespond. "Awkward" wasn't
comfortable introducing her auto- '
me~hanicboyfriend to her professiOnal friends. I hope you will print
my answer. Hen: it is:
DEAR AWKWARD : four letter
couldhavebeen wriuenaboutmeand
my fiancee back in 1968. "Mary" was

DEAR SAN DIEGO: Here is your
lelltZ. I hope "Mary" sees il Let this
be a lesson tD all the "Marys" in the
world. (Oh, ye of Ii!lle faith .)
The letter that follows poses a
provOCIIive question on a kindred
subject, and it makes the point far
better than anything I could say:
Dear Ann Lander's: You recently
printed a letter from someone whose
close friends had postponed their
daughter's wedding.
· The person wrote: "The groom
comes from a fine family. The mother
is a judge, and the father is a doctot"
So often we hear this kind of
comment, which seems to imply that
if you come from a family of
professionals, you are OK.

the girl I really cared about., but she
couldn't marry me, she said, because
I was "just a mechanic."
1 chose to be a mechanic and am
proud thai choice. I lmew what I
wanted tD be when I started tD fix
things in my father's driveway. I was
just al::id.
,
I built a successful business that
has eight locations and minions of
dollars in ISSeiS. I am well known and
respected in the comJilunity. 1 still
identify myself as an "auto
mechanic,.- and I don't put the word
"just" in 'front of iL
I would like to see this letter in the
paper, Ann, because I speak for a lot
of people . Thank you . -- SAN
DIEGO

of

rocks. I would say your clan is quite
are in reasonably good health. and we exll'liOfdinary.
Far be it from me to rain on your
keep active and busy. The eldest is
parade,
but I would be willing to bet
84. and the youngest is 64.
that
your
grandchildren and greatOur parents were married for 56
grandchildren
will not have the
vears. and bOlh died at the a~e of 82.
All II of us have married, and theR: divorce-free record thai you and your
have been no divorces. One brother siblings ·have. With fingers crossed,
and one sister, so far, have been I send best wishes to all the members
married over 50 years. There have of your remarkable uibe.
P/IJIIIIing a wtdding? What's right?
been 16 grandchildren.
Our friends seem to think this is What's wrong? 'TM Ann Landers
R:markable. Is it? If you print my. Guide for Brides" wi//re/iew your
letter, please don't use my name or anJ:iety. Send a stlfaddrtssed,long,
city. Sign me ·· NUMBER NlNE IN business·siu tnw/ope and a c}!(ck
or monty order for $3 .75 (this
THE LINEUP
DEAR
NUMBER NINE: includu postage and handling) to:
Considering the enormous number of Brides , c/o Ann Lantkrs, 1'.0. Box
marriages today that end up on the /1562 , Chicago,///. 606JJ.0562 . (In

Does this mean if your mother is a union produced 11 children. All of us

waitress and your father drives i
lruCk, you are not OK because your
family is working-class?
I'd like to hear your views on this.
--LONGTIME READER
DEAR LONGTIME READER:
This country was built lmgely by
the sons and daughters of worlcing.
class people. Hapjlily,today there is
a great deal less snobbery auached
to blue-collar jobs. The new
generation is much more inclined to
get into fields they enjoy or feel
strongly about (running a recycling
center or building homes for the
homeless), which bodes well for the
futon:.
Dear Ann Landers: My parents'

Canada, send $455.)

Truck pull, draft horse, dairy show judging results posted from fair
TRUCK PULL
Trophies and premiums in · several places were awarded to the
wen-attended truck pull staged Friday night at the Meigs County Fair.
Placing, first;- second and third
in their respective classes .were:
5500 pound factory stock: Jerry
Saunders, Spencer, W. Va., a 1978
Ford; Kevin Cowdery, -Reedsville,
a 1977 Ford ; and Tim Conley,
Spencer W. Va .. a 1979 Chevy.
5500 pound local yokel: Dicky

Oxley; Charleston, W. Va. 1977
Ford; Jerry Saunders, Spencer, W.
Va., a 1978 Ford; and Keith Hunt,
Tuppers Plains, 1977 Ford.
6000 pound, 4/W drive stock:
Curtis Clarke, Letart, W. Va.1 1971
Dodge; Wayne Bell, Parkersburg,
W. Va. , 1982 Chevy; and Paul
Will, Pomeroy, 1978 Ford.
5800 pound, 4/W drive modified: Rich Looby, West Jefferson,
1974 Chevy; Leonard Wogan,
Hebron, 1985 Chevy; and Jeff

Woods, Ashville, 1964, Chevy.
5800 pound 4/W drive. super
stock: Jobn Swinehart, Somerset,
1987 GMC; Dave Howell, Athens,
I983 Cbevy; and Donnie Brown,
Eleanor W. Va., 1986 Chevy
DRAFT HORSE
Results of Thursday night's
draft horse and mule judging bave
been announced.
Dale and Wanda Teaford of
Racine showed both tbe junior

champion mare and the grand
champion mare with Ronald Whittington showing the junior champion stallion in the Percberon draft
horse competition
In Belgiums the grand champion
stallion was shown by Lester
Manuel and Bob Harris showed the
grand champion mare.
Wh-ittington was awarded
rosettes for displaying the three
best of breed and the best matched
pair, and also took blue ribbons in

the cart class and the farmers bitch . top awards in senior yearling heifer
contests. Debbie Lewis took the top and get of sire; and Leland Parker
award for her three year old mule walked away with the blues in four
year old cow, five year old cow,
in the-exhibit.
aged
cow, best three females, dam
DAIRY SHOW
and
daughter,
and produce of (jjun.
Jerseys from the Leland Parker
The
other
blue
ribbon wim!'er in
farm, Pomeroy, took all but one
blue ribbon in the dairy cattle com· I erseys was Rachel Chapman, in
petition at the Meigs County Fair. . the class for junior two year olds. 1
T&lt;X!d Tripp, Pomeroy, took the
Chris Parker took first in summer yearling heifer, senior two year blue ribbons in the two classes of
old, aged dry cow. and dam and the show for Brown Swiss, yearling
daughter; Margaret Parker captured bull and five year old cow.

Archaeologists stumble upon .centuries-old re/ics _of ordinary lives
PIIILADELPHIA (AP) - A ters from the 18th century, as well
sbon walk from the spot where lien :;,; iuundations and relics from the
Franklin' s bouse once s tood, 19tl&gt; century.
"We know a lot about tbe
archaeologists have stumbled upon
relics that may offer a glimpse into famou$ people wbo lived in
the lives of 18Lh- and 19th-century Philadelphia in the 18th and I 9th
Philadelphians who didn't make century," said Joe Dent, associate
professor of archaeology at Amerit~e history books.
Pi ve weeks ago, a crew Of can University and senior archaeolarchaeologists staned· digging for ogist on the project. "This is
artifacts on a piece of land where everybody else."
With backhoes , shovels and
construction of.a $50 million federal prison will get under way this brushes, tbe archaeologists are
working just blocks from Indepen·winter.
After awhile, serendipity: toi- dence Hall and other sites wber~
lets, cisterns, back rooms and gut-· the likes of Franldin, Thomas Ief-

Beat ofthe Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

ferson and Alexander Hamilton
once lived.
The digging, wbicb federal law
requires before prison construction
can start., is expected to last several
more weeks.
"When you find something that
dates to Revolutionary America,
it's a big deal," said Mark ShafTer,
a state historic preservationist.
Shaffer noted that while written

records sbed light on the lives of
powerful and well-lrnown people,
"The only way to find out about
(ordinary people's lives) is to look
at their garb;lge."
On tbe property of Civil War
photographer Frederick Gutekunst.,
the crew discovered a toilet filled
with green sludge, pottery bits,
oxen hooves, cattle horns and
molds for sugar.

By PETER H. GOTI, M.D. .. , .
DEAR DR. GOTT: I am always
very cold. In a 75-degree room I
wear a stocking cap, sweatshirt,
quilted flannel shirt with an Afghan
over my lap and am stiU cold. I'm
53 and, except for having bigb
• cholesterol, healthy. Can you help?

Page4

Vol. 46, NO. 81
Copyright 1995

DEAR READER: The extent to
which any of us withstands beat or
cold is largely a function of accommodation. People adapt to their
envirolJlllents.
·
In general, persons living In
warm climates have more blood
than those ihdi vi duals who live in
chilly surroundings. This is
because an increased blood volwne
is nece~sary to supply additional
blood to the skin, where heat is lost
through perspiration .. People in
cold climates have less need to lose
extra body beat, hence Lhey have
less blood.

-~---~-Alfred
Kate and Ray Rodehaver, Wellborn. Fla.• visited Kate's son, Fred
Honacber and other relatives and
friends in the area. They anended
Sunday school and worship services at Alfred liMe:
Martha and Will Poole and Nellie Parker visited Howard and

news

Wilma Parker. Otber guests were
Gary, Kathy and Alisha Parker,
Wheaton Ill.; Helen and Edson
Parker, Albany, and Dennis Parker,
Alfred.
Clara Folliod was returned from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to the

notes~------

Pomeroy J:olursing and Rehabilita- . guests of ber parents, Doris anci
Floyd Avis and attended worship
tion Center.
Betty Lou Springer, Porta·ge, services at Alfred UMC.
Ind. is visiting Nina Robinson and
Dave and Linda Williams, BelClara Follrod.
pre, were recent visitors of Thelma
Kay and Larry Spencer .were Henderson.

Missionary Society plans projects at meeting
Mission projects were planned
when the Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society of Racine Baptist
Church met recently at the church.
Lillian Hayman, White Cross
cflairman, read the mission quota
{or the coming year, which was
voted on and accepted. A $50
donation will be given to Bacone
College for the items needed there
and money will be sent to Zaire,

Carribean. India and Mymar. Five
jackets will also be purchased to
belp filf the mission quot;l.
Mary K. Yost. president, read .
articles concerning hymns for
devotions.
Those attending were Florence
Adams. Dorothy Badgley, Mildred
Hart and Lillian Hayman of tbe
Esther Circle; Emma Adams,
Martha Lou Beegle, Marjorie

Fry family reunion held
The Aaron Fry reunion was held
Aug. 13 at the West Virginia Farm
Museum.
The children played games and
the adults attended a short business
tneeting. Evalee Fry was selected
as president, while Rosanna Manley will be secretary-treasurer.
Attending were Eileen and
.Chuck Lyons; Crystal, Candace
and Chastity Marks; Evalee Wolfe;
Jay and Ernestine Y~rian; Nellie

-

and Ralph Durst; Millie Gilbert;
Laycd Fry; Brandon, Jolene and
Krista Rocchi; Beverly and
Megban Mooney; Joe an~ Eleim&lt;ir
West: Kayla Griffitb; Cindy and ·.
Bill Cape bart; Gloria and Toney
Manley; Cathy, Shauna and Rachel
Elliott; and Rosanna Manley.
Meghan Mooney, Shauna Elliott
and Eileen Lyons won door prizes.
Next year's reunion will be held
at I p.m., Aug. 11 at Krodel Park.

Community calendar-

The Community Calendar Is
published as .a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote ·sales or ·
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guar!lnteed to run a .
specific .I!.,umber of days.

TUESDAY
RACINE- RACO, Tuesday,
6:30, Star Mill Park.

, RIJ'JLAND- The Rutland Fire
Department Auxiliary will meet at
6 p.m. Tuesday to finish plans for
the Fish Festival.
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters, 7 p.m. Tuesday at bigb
school.

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE - Bible school,
Eden Ulnited Brethren Cburcb, 6 to
8 p.m. Monday through Friday.

POMEROY American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 39 will meet
at I p.m. Tuesday at Pomeroy
legion 'ball. Girl staters wiU be present for reports.

LETART- Letart Township
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the office building.
•

Grimm, Geral&lt;line Cleland, Barbara Gheen, Mary K. Yost, Naomi
Stobart and Nondus Hendricks of
tbc Ruth Circle. Also attending
were the pastor's wife, Rita Haley,
and a guest, Frances Cady.
The program was entitled "Fight
for Life." A skit was performed by
Mrs. Yost, Mrs. Gheen, Mrs. Hayman, and Mrs. Haley.
A love gift program was given

by Nondus Hendricks using the
theme, "God loves a cheerful
giver." She compared a crocheted
doily witb the missionary circles.
with each row symbolizing the way
the circles reach out to the county,
state, nation and world. Tbe love
gift was $235.40.
·
Refreshments were served by
Esther Circle and prayer by Florence Adams closed the meeting.

·THANKS!!!

.

.

Once again, another Fair Week has ended, despite
the hot, humid, sultry temperatures.
To ensure the safety and health care of the many
persons aUending the fair a team of professionals
sometimes goes unnoticed. These being the
EMT's, law enforcement, and firefighters.
From the beginning to the end of their fair
. they are thereAn time of need.
It is very difficult for them but yet the job gets
done; There is a possibility, as in the past,
no one will say thank you.
At this time we would like to
say thank you to each and
everyone of these people
and say we appreciate their
time, efforts and service.
Sincerely,
Meigs County
Emeraenc:v Service
Director

Low tonight In Stls, clear.
Wednesday, sunny. Hlg lu In mid
80s.

1 Section, 10, Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 22, 1995

Cqntractor O~'d for pomeroy water project
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News SlaiT
Pomeroy Village Council Monday night approved a contractor fa
the next phase of the village'•
ongoing water line replacement
project.
Council accepted the lowest bid
of $157,229 .60 submitted by
Enyart and Son Construction of
South Point for phase two of the
water line replacement project.
The village reCeiv.ed a $211,000
grant in June for replacing an 80·

plus-year-old cast iron water line · was pleased with tbe Enyart bid
between the Riverside Food Mart because it came in under engineerMarathon Station and Butternut ing cost estimates.
Avenue with a ·12-inch polyvinyl
The next step is to solicit nlinorchloride or PVC line. The project ity business enterprise bids for the
also includes Legion Terrace.
project No MBE bids have been
Earlier, workers replaced water received, Blaettnar said.
lines from the Middleport corporaDuring open discussion, council
tion limit to the Marathon station.
members asked wby owners of
Also submitting bids were I.C. . junked cars in the village were not
Bosley Construction and Weber being cited or forced to remove the
Construction for $184,747 and cars.
$190,572.80, respectively.
CouncilmanGeorge Wright proMayor lobo Blaettnar said.• be posed that officers on foot patrol
1

leave a slip of paper at businesses to transfer $30,000 froin the generindicating they have been checked al fund to the street fund to correct
for security. Wright said the slips a defi cit in the street fund;
would let merchants know officers
- Authorized Blacunar to initiare checking their businesses.
ate legal action against a village
Money collected from parking prop erty owner wbo allegedly
meters for the first half of the n:placed a drain line with a smaller
month totaled $676.50, it was line and damaged a sanitary sewer
reported.
line;
In other business. council:
- Agreed to close o{f Court
- Passed emergency resolu- Streetlbe morning of Sept. 7 for a
lions authorizing Clerk Kathy Meigs County Motorcycle AssociaHysell to transfer $3,000 from the lion event in conjunction with tl1e
rue fund to the fire truck fund and annual Big Bend Stemwbeel Fcsti..
val;

- Approved setting up a flashing light near the elementary
school and to purchase blacktop for
paving projects;
- Approved the minutes of the
AugustS meeting;
- Agreed to meet August 29 at
7 p.m. instead of the regularly
scheduled date which falls on
Labor Dav.
Present were Blaettnar, Hysell
and councilmen Scott Dillon, Bill
Haptonstall, Larry Wehrung and
Wright. Absent were councilmen
John Musser and William Young.

Judge Crow sentences Lucasville inmate to death
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News starr
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III
ordered the most severe punish·
·meot- the death penalty - Mooday in LaWR:nce County.
Keith Lamar, an inmate
involved in tbe death of five
inmates during the 1993 Lucasville
. prison riots, wiD be executed Dec.
31 if Crow' s order is carried out.
Lamar's trial began June 20 and
the jury retqmed a guilty verdict
June 30 for nine counts of aggramurder, records show.
He origilially was sent to prison
from Cuyahoga County for: murder
at 19 years old.
Lamar was sentenced to death
for the deaths of Darrell Depina,
William Svette and Bruce Vitale.
He was sentenced to life in prison
for the death of Albert Staiano.

The adaptatiOn process takes a
Finally, diseases · such as
week or two, during which persons hypothyroidism and anemia cause
DR. GOTT
may experience symptoms as their patients to be unduly chilly.
bodies adjust tD the changing ambiYour discomfort in a well-heatent temperature. For example, ed room suggests that you may be
PETER
"spring fever" (the temporary las- suffering from a physical malady.
GOTT,M.D.
situde that affects many of us annu- You should ba ve an examination
ally in the temperate climates) is and blood tests by your family docbelieved to be caused by the body's tor. If everything checks ou~ you'll
sudden effort to produce more simply bave to bundle up and wait
blood, in preparation for warmer for spring -or consider a move to
weather.
.
Arizona.
C,onversely, we commonly
DEAR DR . GOTT: Recently serious when be advised you as be
"feel" the cold more acutely dur- my urologist recommended that .I did.
ing ·tbe first cold snap in the have more sex to help with a
On the other hand, some author·
autumn than we do later in the ·win- prostate infection. Was he serious?
ities
who believe that extended ·
ter, when we have become physioDEAR READER: Possibly. celibacy is not a common facta in
logically acclimatized.
Although prostatitis is usually
Resistance to extremes of tem- treated with antibiotics, some types prostate infection pqint to the fact
perature also depends on ·body of iilfection appear to be caused by tbat such infection is also prevalel!t
build (stout people are more toler- congestion of the prostate gland. in sexually active men.
Therefore, if you already enjoy
ant of cold), level of activity (exer- Such congestion can often be
sex
once a week or more - or if
cise increases body beat), and gen- released by sexual activity. Thus, if .
you
are in your 80s and aren't pareral health (ill patients are more you enjoy sex rather infrequently,
ticularly
inclined - your urologist
intolerant of cold).
· your urologist may well have been may have been pulling your leg.

,.

•

Pick 3:
228
Pick 4:
2289
BuckeyeS:
10-24-25-27 ·30

Reader asks why are some people always cold?

The 132nd Meigs County Fair members of the Women's Auxilhas wound down and the serenity iary assisted. They are Abbie Stmtof tbe unique Rock Springs Fair- ton, Libby Fisher and Jessie
White-all such loyal•members of
grounds is returning.
"Whadda" job that fair is for a tbe or~anization and such Rood
lot of people. This year' s beat · workers.
Having "been there; .done that,"
didn't do much to enhance the ·
chore. Actually, I'm pleasantly sur- I always feel sorry for the Sentinel
prised that more people weren't Newspaper staff during fair week.
overcome by the beat on the You know, in reality, here in Meigs
grounds and in the buildings . I County we have two fairs underway simultaneously-the junior
think we got lucky.
I thought the congregation of fair and the senior fair-and newsthe United Pentecostal Church in paper persmmel are expected to be
Middleport ag:iin did a good job in at everything taking· place-and
handling traffic and parking at the tru!\1 me,' there's lot's cookin' for
fair. The group is under the leader- the'ln. Yep, the fair really keeps
. ship of the Rev. Clark Baker and he them on the fast track-! think a ·
sets a shining example for mem- check of your newspaper and the
bers of his group in his work. It fair coverage provided will reveal
isn't a case of "Don't Do As I Do, that they handle it all pretty well.
Do As I Say" with Rev. Baker. It's You really can't say those people
"don't get around much any"Do As I Do."
I thank the congregation for all more"~espccially during fair
of the kindness extended to me dur- week.
Personnel of the Meigs Extening the fair. I had to be there twice
sion
Office also arc close to my
a day for several hours eacb VISit ·
heart
during fair week. They face a
and I doubt if I could have survived
very
heavy schedule of activities
having been parKed in tbe
for
the
young people and handle
"boonies." I know ''exercise is
them
well.
However, I did notice ·
good for us" but enough is.enough.
one
day
at
tbe fair Hal Kneen
. I'm still tryilig to figure out bow
membeci of the church bandied all appeared to be making three tracks
of that heat for such long hours. when be walked. Tbat' s a little
Could be they have "someone spe- humor-maybe you'll have to
think about it.
cial" on their side.
And once again I did the phoAt any rate, the group took
good care of me and especially tography for the livestock sale and
Kathy Dougan wbo seemed always I have to commend the junior fair
sale workers wbo got the animals
to be on duty. I'm real fond of ber.
You see, sbe made the comment into PQsition for the photos. Tbey
that she's been seeing me at the fair did a great job. That certainly profor years and I don' 1 seem tp get vided me with a lift. This was a
any older. Now bow can one do record year in the number of anianything but especially like some- mals to be sold but Auctioneer Dan
one wbo makes comments like Soiith, also a fair board member,
tbat? My self esteem- yeah, I have kept the ball rolling. I did notice
one to~ould ·even use more of the animals didn't seem to be feel'em. Meantime. I probably should ing their Cbeerios as much this
1 try to arrange for Kathy to undergo
year, probably due to the heat.
an eye examination.
. However, Buddy Ervin, a fair "
For the first time. this year's fair board member and also an active
converted me into a "shorts per- participant of the sale group, proson." Perhaps, I should clarify that. vided· excellent protection for me
I'm talking about walking shorts. from behind since I had my back to
On the flfst day of the fair I report- the animals being sold. I'm too old
ed for duty at the Veterans Memo- to be run down by a steer--&lt;lr a
rial Hospital booth really chicken, for that matter.
I was surprised Lhat the "detour"
"dressed"-tbe lo~g trousers, lined
ones at that, and a nice "warm" route to the grounds due to the road
shirt. An hour later, I was ready to construction didn't create a lot of
melt into a big blob. My co-work- problems with fair traffie: It wasn't
ers mentioned that if I were to sur- nearly the ordeal that I bad antici·
vive the week, I:d better try some pated. I hope you got along all right
with it too.
lighter clothes.
.
What with the fair behind them,
I did Lhat and the attire for the
the
Meigs Senior and Junior Fair
rest of the week included shons-Boards
must feel a lot of relief and
walking shorts, that is. Now basican
point
with pride to a successful
cally I'm not a shorts person-and
venture.
This year's fair ended
most everyone knows .that. As the
with
a
real
"upper"- the biggest
week moved along 1 did get a lot of
ewer
on a Saturday night
crowd
laughs-but that's okay I was coolover
at
least
the
past five years. So
er and surviving. By the way, I als&lt;i
as
tbe
boards
sit
down to tbeir
got a few whistles- very few, but
now
to
begin
plans for the
tables
thank heavens for· a sprinkle of
I
33rd
fair,
they
should
find it nQ
kind people. And about the hospital
booth, for Lhe ,first time several trouble to keep smiling.

•

Lowly Cards
rally, slip by
Reds 8-6

jewels also means destroying their
age-old se.tting. The 19th-century
sites will be wrecked to dig for earlier remains, and the entire site will
be plowed when prison construction starts.
. "It's hard to get a good site
where you find all kinds of neat
stuff and you !mow it's going to get
blitzed out," said field archaeologist Lisa Adams. "But that's bow
it is."

Dent believes a butcher may
bave worked there, a suga~·pro­
cessing plant may have operated on
the site and that one resident bad
enough money to order china.
The crew hopes to open tbe
earth over another property this
week . After analyzing tbe relics
they uncover, the archaeologists
will tum them over to the state.
Digging up the arcbaeologic;ll

Ohio Lottery

vated

according to court records.
On April 12, 1993, Lamar led a
group of five inmates wbo attacked ·
an inmate known as Bowling.
Bowling was accused of being an
informant
After beating up Bowling,
Lamar gave llowling the option to
kill a known informant, inmate
Dennis Weaver, or be killed himself, according to court records .
Weaver was bung from a noose
in acen.
Earlier, Lamar bad struck a 69year-old inmate William Svelte
three a four times bard enough so
that bis skull bad been cracked so
one could put their hand through
and touch his brain, Crow wrote.
Also, Lamar and another irunate
went into the cell of Darren Depina
and savagely beat and killed
Depina despite pleas for mercy,
tears and screams of fear. Depina

bad also been branded an informant.
Another alleged informant
Bruce Vitale waited fearfully in bis
cell. Vitale refused to come out of
bis cell, so Lamar and the other
inmate went into the cell struck
him repeatedly and then threw him
out of the cell.
Before Vitale died. Lamar
stopped and addressed the six or
seven other members of the "death
squad". Lamar said he did not bring
them along to just watch and they
joined in the fatal assault, records
sbowCf!.
·
During sentencing testimony
was beard of Lamar's youth. Lamar
never knew his natural father, bis
mother was an alcoholic and his
step-father severely abused him.
Lamar testified be lived in
extremely poor conditions in "the
projects". At 15 ·years old, Lamar

moved out of his house, quit school
and turned to Lhe life of a thief and
drug dealer.
According to coun transcripts,
Lamar had purposely killed the oth·
ers. His discussions in the yard
made it clear be wanted to kill
Weaver - one of the inmates be
did not kill with his own hands. ·
Also, talks with other individuals, his use of a disguise and his
fien:e lflllguage toward the victims
helped secure the barsb punishment, the court wrote.
Lamar did not regard pleas from
each victim and the careful calculation and premeditation, cruelty, and
deviousness show his vicious
regard for human life, Crow wrote .
action s. "were · plolled '
. His
.
v1cwus . gratuitously cruel and
utterly callous," Crow wrote. • An
innocent life was maliciously
wiped out of existence to satisfy
the deH:odant's personal feelings."

Five die in comnJuter plane crash

STRAINING TRACTOR - Kevin Butcher strains to puB the .·
full length of the course Saturday at the kiddie tractor puU championships. Butch·er went on to win the heavyweight division.

Racine Fall Festival
will be held Sept. 9
Plans are underway for the
Racine Fall Festival which will he
beld Sept. 9 at Star Mill Park.
The annual event will be from
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Scheduled entertainers for the
day-long event are the Larkin Family from Church Hill, Tenn., the
Rarely Herd from Albany. the
River Valley lloys from Lancaster
and C.J. and the Country Gentlemen from Meigs County.
There will ~ a parade at 11 a.m.
with line-up at !0:30a.m. at the
fire department annex. Trophies
and money will be awarded to tbe
fust three place 'entries. There will
also be a special award trophy with
winners to be announced at noon.
For information on the .parade,
contact Marilyn Powell at 9492676.
. The fall festival queen, to .be
selected from the Soutbem High
School senior class. will be
'crowned at noon. .

There will he a kiddie tractor
pull. Ted and Chris Smith will be
in charge of the pull and will also
sponsor the trophies this year.
A j&gt;umpkin growing contest wUI.
be held and trophies will be awarded to the flfst three places in classes 0-18 years and 19 and over.
· Weigh-in will be from 10-2 p.m. I
and winners will be announced at 3
p.m.
Craft, food and game booths
will be set up. Reservations for a
space can be made with Chris
Smith at the Home National Bank
after Wednesday. There will be a
$10 fee for a 10-foot space and a
$15 fee for a 20-foot space. Set up
time for the spaces will be between
8 and 10 a.m.
In the event of rain, all activities
will be beld at Southern High
School. For more information, call
Kathryn Hart at 949-2656 after 6
p.m.
..

New York doctors sue
Aetna over HMO policies
NEW YORK (AP) - A group fair." Spokesman Sal Foti said the
of hospital anesthesiologists has liMO also "categorically rejects
:s ued Aetna Life and Casualty tbe charge that any patient is
Insurance, claiming the company's 'endangered by its contracting pracNew York HMO threatened to tices."
have them flfed if they didn ' t give
The dispute IUustrates the growthe insurer final say on patient care. ing tension between doctors whose
: Tbe doctors claim that rather discretion over medical treatments
than negotiate over changes, Aetna for their patients is increasingly
ibreatened to stop doing ·business · being restricted by cost-conscious
with the hospitals wbere the-anes- managed health care companies
thesiologists worked, thus putting such as HMOs.
·
their jobs in jeopardy.
Aetna is tbe nation's third
"Aetna was in effect saying larges t health insun:r and one of the
'We'll see to it that you lose all larges t operators of HMOs. Tbe
rour patients," ' said the doctors'
lawsuit is the first in which doctors
attorney, Whitney North Seymour . have challenged an HMO's efforts
Jr.
.
.
to dictate patient care standards,
• Aetna said its review process for Seymour said.
treatment decisions was "full and

CARROLLTON, Ga. (AP)- A
survivor of a fiery commuter plane
crash says be owes bis life to the
pilo~ who was killed after maneuvering over houses, trees and
power lines to the relative safety of
a bayfield.
Pilot Ed Gannaway and four ·
passengers died after the Atlantic
Southeast Airlines turboprop, possibly with engine trouble, crashed
into the field Monday and broke
into three large pieces. But the 24
other people aboard the plane survived.
"The pilot seemed to do an outstaJI!Iing job of bringing that plane
down as best be could and I think
that's what saved most-of us," said
passenger Chuck Pftsterer.
"He missed the wires and landing on the houses, and found an
opening," said Frances Boone,
wbo lives near the crash site, He
"had to be a marvelous pilot."·
' The plane left a scarred path in
the bayfield, indicating it barely
cleared trees before bitting the
ground. Some of tbe passengers
fled the wreckage with their clothes
ablaze.
The flight data recorder and the
cockpit voice recorder have been
recovered from the crash site and
sent by plane to a laboratory in
Washington, D.C., National Transportation Safety Board spokesman
Alan Pollock said today.
.
"We hope to find some usable
data on them," Pollock said. "We
also want to look at the radar.data
An eyewitness said there was an
engine problem and the radar data
should help us to determine bow
factual this is." He stressed that
''everything is preliminary at this
point." NTSB investigators met
this morning at a CarroUton motel
and planned to visit the crash site
later today.
There were 26 passengers on the
flight from Atlanta to Gulfport,
Miss. One was dead at the scene, a
married couple died later at sepa- ·

X

I

f

~

71''""';' J,
q~,
3

l

I

·

..

,•

PASSENGERS RESCUED- With wreckage
of the Atlantic Airlines commuter airplane in
the background, rescue workers remove Injured
passengers. Authorities said the crash killed
four people and the pilot. Several others were
rate hospitals, and a fourth passenger died today. At least eight people were in critical condition today
at burn centers.
Passenger Kevin Bubier of
Waterboro, Maine, said he found
himself hanging upside down after

tile crash.

.

'"My clothes caught fire . It

injured. The aircraft went down about ftve miles
southeast of Carrollton, Ga. The flight de.parted
Atlanta'~ Horsfield International Airport for
Gulfport, Mio;s. (AP)

must have been the fuel because
my one pants leg was burning and I
couldn 't put it out I was trying to
take off my shoes and my pant~.
"There were other people who
were worse. They were totally
engulfed (in flames)," said Bubier,
37 .

P.olona Jeter,' who lives nearby
said she saw the front of the plan~
"rolling and tumbling and on fire"
as the aircraft came apart.
. "I could sec about 10 people
getting out," she said. "Some were
burning. They were running. People were trying to get them down
ar1d get it ou t."

Pulp mill opponents now focus on meaning of zero
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (AP) River.
-The state says there' s nothing ' The new permit would allow no
more it can do to ensure a proposed emissions of dioxin, a byproduct of
SI billion Mason County pulp mill paper bleaching that studies have
emits no toxic dioxin. Environmen- indicated can cause cimcer.
talists say there is.
The state can do no more than
The state Division of Environ- allow no emissions, said agency
mental Protection agreed last week spokesman Brian Farkas.
to modify the permit it gave to Par"There are always going to be
sons &amp; .Whittemore Inc . of Rye those people wbo will respond negBrook, N.Y., in August 1994 to atively," be said
discharge waste into ibe Obio
But Janet Fout, project coordi-

.

nat or for the Obio Valley Environ- tion Director Eli McCoy recently.
mental Coalition, said the state
"When we asked bim directly
could revoke the company's he said zero meant 'nondetect' .:
wastewater permit
she said. "Nothing is really diffe~­
"If they don't have what it takes, ent."
then they dnn't get a permit," she
Perry McDanie~ a lawyer chalsaid.
lenging the permit for tbe Ohio
C. Kenneth Goddard, a vice Valley Environmental Coalition
president of the company , didn ' t said the companY. should build ~
respond to requests for comment.
mill that produces no dioxin.
Ms . Foul said she met with
. Tbe mill is supported by Gov.
Division of Environmental Protec- Gaston Caperton.

'

I

�Tuesday,August22, 1995

-C ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETfERS O.F OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long . All lcucrs are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned \euers will be published. Le!rers
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities .

Spin machine

'
Page2
Tuesday,August22,1995

By Jll.L LAWRENCE \
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A day wilbout a public relations barrage from the
Republican National Committee is a day that almost never happens.
DiU Clinton is "the do-nothing presidenL •· Democrats engage in "a
conspiracy of deception" about Medicare finances. The GOP Congress,
meanwhile, "has kept its promises'' and is "well on its way to restoring
the American Dream.·'
The ruling party on Capitol Hii}As one big happy family . Or so it
would seem from the relentless Republican persuasion machine run by
party Chairman Haley Barbour.
.
.
·
From fax fixtures like "Them Dems" and "Haley's Comment" to
"Rising Tide'' the TV show and "Rising Tide" the o;&gt;agazine, Republicans are exploiting their new dominance in Congress and governors' mansions with audacity and sweep that Democrats can only envy. ·
"You need two things - money and discipline,'.' says Paul Begala, a
White House slnltegist who is departing for a new life in Austin, Texas.
" Republicans have lots of both. We have neither."
Some contend Democrats don' t have a message, either. "If you have
exciting things to say, you will fmd ways to get them ou~" says Allan
Lichonan, a political analyst at American University.
Laura Quinn, who is exploring computer communications technology
for Senate Democrats, says there is a message: "This party works for
working people, to make sure they get a fair shake."
Alas for the Democrats, Republicans are making the same claim with more decibels.
.
The current PR fusillades center on Medicare, whic~DemoCrats bave
seized as the Achilles' heel of the Republican revolution. Via TV ads, the
Jntemet. radio shows and fax netwmks, they accuse Republicans of deliberate distortions and claim Democrats will save the program from
"Republican attempts to dismantle it."
Republicans, tr&gt;:ing to S9,Ueeze $270 billion from ':II~ giant bealth-care
plan for seniors, vtew Medtcare as thetr greatest polttical and budgetary
challenge.
·
Over the past two weeks they issued radio ads ("The Medicare debate
is about leadership"), their version of the Democrats' TV ad ("changed
to protect the facts"), several Barbour attacks on Democrats, and a few
"fact vs. fiction" broadsides.
.Over the years, I have asked
. Fax machines, meanwhile, continued to spit out the regular RNC Monday briefing, a potpourri of upcoming events, Hill achievements, poll many knowledgeable people in
Washington to clarify where our
results, policy points and Democrat-bashin~.
,.
.
Both parties have fa;~~ networks, actuality servtces, Intemet Sties and, . leaders stand on ·the matter or danbookings on talk radio. The Democrats also have "NewtGram" - a gerdus drugs and to explain the
logic of their reasoning.
weekly collection of unflattering comments about the House speaker. . .
What I wiD attempt to do in my
But in volume, substance and response speed. the GOP operauon ts m
a class by itself. And only Republicans bave a cable TV program avail- allolled space today is to recon- .
struct a typical conversation on this
able in half the country's TV botisebolds.
subject. The person I will speak
The Democratic National Committee is considering a TY. show and
with is a composite of many. I will
slowly recovering from what observers in both parties agree was a damagcall
him Fred.
ing two years of virtual captivity to the Ointon White House. .
Fred,
I say, explain to me once
. Money ·was eaten up not just by traditional expenses such as White
again
why
politicians are so enthuHouse Christmas .cards but also by divisive projects such as TV spots to
siastic
about
the war on drugs.
browbeat congressiona' Democrats into supporting Clinton's bealtbIt's
simple,
Fred says. Drugs are·
reTollD plan.
.
.
.
.
a
drain
on
the
economy and a
. Veteran strategist Ann Lewts, commg aboard as the Clinton campwgn
blight
on
our
youth.
Kids become
communications director, says the party will .speak as one next year on
addicted.
Drugs
ruin
their health.
Medicare and other high priorities .. "What we have in common is so
They
commit
crimes
to support
important that we can work together on this," sbe said.
their-habits.
Even if they manage to renounce their customary anarchy, Democrats
So, I" say, the war on drugs is
will Qc: playing catch-up.
designed
to prevent tbaL
GOP moderates and conservatives disagree profoundly over abonion,
Right,
Fred says.
taxes and the environmenL Senate and House leaders have differing goals.
OK,
I
say,
explain this: In 1981,
The Senate hasn •t delivered on much or what the House bas wrougbL The
we
spent
$1.5
billion to light drugs.
party's 30 governors have their own ideas about welfare.
Nearly
15
years
later, the anti-drug
y ~t Barbour, through shuttle diplomacy and sheer moxie, bas built an
budget
bas
soared
to $14 billion.
image or a unified GOP juggernaut.
· '
· .
During
that
15
years,
governments
"He's creating very effective propaganda," says Kathleen Hall Jamion
all
levels
have
spent
an estimatson, dean of the Annenberg School of &lt;;omm~nicatio~. "He's. advancing
ed
$250
billion
in
the
war
on drugs.
the notion that RepublU:ans are standmg uruted bebmd a pbtlosophtcal
Really?
Fred
says.
That
shows
goal that they will ultimately achieve if tl:iey're in power long enough."
commitment.
But Fred, I say, this so-called
EDITOR'S NOTE - Jill Lawrence coven politics and Congress ·
war is a complete busi. Young pco' ror The Associated Press.

can as "cherry pie." The Times Packwood is still in trouble. The
conclusions on Waro? David Koreprobably regrets the error.
Steven Radford or Los Angeles sb was insane and the fcdernl govhas spent $20,000 on plastic ernment is incompetent How much
surgery so be can look like Tom did that cost the taxpayer? This forArnold. He hopes to land a job as a mer sexy dilettante could )lave told
bodyguard for Arnold, or as a you that for nothing.
fan Shoales
A new poll reveals that Americelebrity look-alike. A little advice,
cans
don't have much faith in the
line, Jane. Jerry Garcia has gone to buddy? Slay away from Roseanne.
.
political
process. (Stop the pressIn prison, Charles Manson has
that place where strings never
es!)
We
should take heart from
break, instruments slay in tune and become a clothing designer. His
J.F.K.
Jr.
He retired as sexy diletthe jams go on · forever. The ftrst outfit is called a "hobo suiL"
tante
to
start
a magazine called
Ramones are calling it quits after You never need to take it off. Just
George,
which
will allempt to
20 years, with their final album, hop in the shower, drip yourself
"Adios Amigos." Adios Jerry, dry and you're ready for any social make Beltway politicos cool. I'm
occasion. Good luck in your new afraid they'll all have to look as
adieu Ramones.
good with their shirts orr as he does
British chemist Nigel Packham career, Charlie.
' Meanwhile in Washington, before that little venture will fly.
spent 15 days in a sealed chamber
with 30.0QO wheat plants. (Kids, Congress approved the "V-chip,'' Godspeed. John-John.
Looking good with his shin off
don't try this at home.) Jamil to be installed in televisions sci' parAbdullah Al-Amin. the former H. ents can screen what their children is not one of Newt Gingrich's
Rap Brown, on trial for assault in watch. That this technology does assets, but that didn't stop hi~
Atlanta, corrected the New York· not now exist did not deter our bold from having an adulterous affatr
Times when it quoted him as hav- legislators . The Whitewater probe .back in the '70s (according to the
ing said, "Violence is as American is still being blocked by somebody current'Vanity Fair). Say, maybe
as apple pie." He insists that be or other in its ongoing effort to J.F.K. Jr. should start a dating ser·
actually said violence is as Ameri- prove something or other. Robert vice for lecherous politit;.os!
Speaking or pols, Gov. Pete ·
Wilson, not content with abandoning California to run for presiden~
is suing his own state in order to
stop affl!lllative action. Good luck
in your new career, Pete.
.
Windows 95 is about to ship,
airport security is being tightened,
and J. Howard Marshall, the 90ycar-old husband or 27-year-old
model Anna Nicole Smith, bas
gone to that place where strings
never break, instruments stay in
tune and the jams go on forever.
Finally, a Moscow fast-food
joint called Russkoye Bistro is tak~
ing on McDonald's, offering pirogi, borscht, blini and vodka to go.
On second thought, I' II cat it:
here. It's way too hot to go out
(To receive a complimentary
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1800-989-DUCK or write Duck's:
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada.
City, CA 95959.) .
·
· Ian Shoales Is a syndicated
writer ro Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For inrormatloil on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, COD•
tact America Online by calling I·
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

bly important!
Jane Roe of Roe vs. Wade fame
bas changed her mind and is now
anti-abonion. See you on the picket

Why we are losing the war on .drugs

.

Berry's World

pie are using more drugs than ever.
They're smoking more marijuana.
They're taking more LSD. They
are popping more Mllucinogens,

Joseph Spear
more stimulants, more barbiturates.
And now, authorities say, there's a
new heroin epidemic coming.
· Well, Fred says, people gonna
do what people gonna do.
Wait a minute, I say. There's
much more. The truth is, the prohibition of drugs creates more victims than the drugs themselves.
Prohibition begets the black market, which begets huge profits ·$150 billion a year some experts
say- which beget robbery, burglary. murder, drive-by shootings,
the slaying of innocent bystanders.
And I'm not even considering corruption. The arrest of three former
federal prosecutors in Florida for
their alleged involvement with the
drug cartels says it all.
.
Are you another one of those
legalization freaks?
I am, Fred, I say. I believe that
soft drugs should be legalized and
regulated -just like alcobpl,
which is five times deadlier. I
believe we should prohibit the sale

Loc;»k for highest return rate on
DEAR BRUCE: I am thinking
about buying a new borne. I have
an opportunity to borrow $47,000
through my employer against my
retirement savings. The loan payback goes directly into my plan. In
essence, I am borrowing from

myself.. The rate would be prime ·
plus I percent. which is currently
about 10 percent. The local mortgage rates are 7 percent. The attraction is tbatl would be paying interest back 1o myself, not a bank.
Other than not ·being able to

Today in ·history

·~

~Sby

NEA. Inc

A GADFLY IN THE OINTMENT

of drugs to minors -just like alco- other drugs c.ombined." A coupl~
hoi. I believe we should tax drugs of weeks ago, Bill Clinton
heavily -just like alcohol . I announced that the Food and Drug·
believe we should control the Administration would be sumdosage - just like alcohol. I mooed to the front lines to do battle:
believe we spould decriminalize against teen-age tobacco consumplhe bard drugs and !real addi~ as tion; and mostly what be got from
medical patients - just like alco- his fellow pols is grief. N~wt Ginhoi.
grich says the FDA is "out of its
Fred says something unintelligi- mind" for attempting to regulate
tobacco.
ble.
You know what I think, Fred? 1
What the tobacco companies
think politicians like the war on fear, Fred says, is that the governdrugs because it is a crowd-pleas- .· ment will unleash its massive
. ing issue that lends itse.l f to tub- enforcement machinery to regula~
·thumping. It is a taxpayer-funded everybody's God-given right to :
stump for jackasses to bray from. smoke. The teen-age market is just
We need leaders; we get dema- · the ftrsl step. Nex~ it'll be the adult '
gogues.
·
market.
Ob, I get it, I say, drugs are a ·
What are you, Fred says. some
kind of communist?
market issue. Tbe pols want free·
Fred, I say, what Is the most markets, including blaek markets in
dangerous drug in America?
illegal drugs.
·
"~·;ne?
h
Joe,
says
Fred,
you
J'ust
don't
Ab , Crack ~ . esays.
.
Try tobacco, Fred. Illegal drugs get it.
kiD 20,000 people a year. Tobacco
. You·~ rigb~ Fred. I say. I don't ·
kiDs 400,000. In 1988, the surgeon get it.
general said nicotine is as addictive
J osepb Spear Is a syndicated
as heroin and cocaine, and recent writer ror Newspaper Enterprise '
experiments confirm it. Last Association.
month, a top researcher for the
(For i_nformatlon on bow to :
National Institute on Drug Abuse commumcate electronically with
said that· "cigarettes will kill far this columnist and others, con- :
more of today's children than all · , tact America OnUne by caiUng 1·
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 22, the 234tb day of 1995. There are 131 days
left in the yeat.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Aug. 22, 1485, England's King Richard Ill was killed in the Battle
of Bosworth Field, en~ng the War of the Roses.
On this date:
In 1762, Ann Franklin became the ftrst female editor of an American
newspaper, the Newport, R.I., Mercury. .
1
.
In 1775, England's King George Ill proclaimed the American colonies
in a slate of open rebeUion. .
In 1787, inventor John Fitcb demonstrated his steamboat on the
Delaware River to delegates of the Continental Congress.
In 1846, the United States annexed New Mexico.
In 1851, the schooner America outraced the Aurora off the English
coast to win a trophy that became known as the America's Cup.
In 1902, President Theodore Roosevelt beaune the ftrst U.S. chief
executive to ride in an automobile, in Hartford, Conn.
In !911, it' was announced in Paris that Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona
Lisa" ·bad been stolen from the Louvre Museum the night before. (The
painting turned up twp years later, in ll{lly.)
In 1956, President Eisenhower and ·Vice President Nixon were nominated for second terms in office by the·Republican national convention in
·San Francisco.
In 1978, President Jomo Kenr.tttB. a leading figure in Kenya's struggle
for independence, died; Vice President Daniel Arap Moi was sworn in as
.acting president

deduct the interest on my income
tax and not drawing a full return of
the money over the life of the loan,
are there any disadvanlages to this

Bruce Williams
route? It sounds almost too good.
-D. H., Bristol. Tenn.
DEAR D.H.·: Your final words
about not being able to deduct the
interest and not getting a full return
are not throwaways. While you
dido 't indicate your tax bracket.
you can figure a minimum of 15
percent of the interest could be
deductible, and it could be as much
as 40 percent depending on your
income.
In addition, you neglected to say
what the retirement savings were
currently earning. If they are outpet:forming the 10 percent and you
can borrow money at 7 percent and
deduct it, that would be the way to
go.
The idea of paying interest to
yourself is misleading. What's
most important is to fmd the highest rate of return . Over the long
term, it would seem to me that you
could do better than 10 percent in a
retirement account and even more
to the point, I know of few places
where you can borrow at 7 percent.
Given that, I wouldn't mix and
match. I'd leave the .retirement
account where it is, and borrow the

loan~
money for your home through a·
traditional source.
.
DEAR BRUCE: My daughter
recently married, but would like to:
keep her maiden name for all legal.
matters. Some of her friends and :
mine have said that is absolutely :
improper and that she must call;
herself Mrs. and take his last name. •
Is this true? - B.F., Paloma, Ill. '
•
DEAR B.F.: It is absolutely ;
untrue. You can adopt any name •
you wish, as long as you don't do it i
to defraud anyone. She has every l
right to keep her maiden name or to :
hyphenate her name (Mary Jones ;
would bec001e Mary Jones-Smith). •
Many limes .when one partner ;.
has poor credi~ to avoid any ronfu- ~
sion and intermingling, the other ;
partner keeps a separate. identity •
and a Separate legal name. There is ~
nothing to prevent her (rom doing ~
this. The choice is clearly hers.
~
(Send your. questions to: ~
Smart Mo.ney, P.O. Box 503, •·
Elrers, Jo'L 34680. Questions or ~
general l"nterest will be answered ~
in ruture columns. Owing to the :
volume or mall, personal replies ~
cannot be provided.)
&lt;
Bruce WIUiams Is a syndicated ;
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise ,
Association.
·:
(For information on bow to ~
communicate electronically with •
this columnist and albers, con· :
tact America OnUne by caiUng 1· :·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

--r---Area Deaths__,...-

OHIO Weather
Wedn~day, Aug.

23

Accu-Weather• forecast for dayume conditions and high temperatures

Rosalee V. Doerfer

MICH

Reading the papers, crazy from heat
The dog days of summer are
digging up the back yard again. I
hale to look.
The Aug. 21 issue of The New
Republic tantalized me with this
item: "X-rays of Russian President
Boris Yeltsin revealed that he had
swallowed a swizzle stick." I have
no idea how The New Republic
oblained this information.
Nor do I know what dirt
Newsweek dug up to run Ibis headline. "l.F.K. Jr.: He is tired of
being a sexy dilettante." I know
where he's coming from, though. I
bad to give up being a sexy dilettante myself, in order to become
the annoying middle-aged crank I
am today. It was not an easy decision.
SWI, times change and we must
change with them, Last week we
worried about the Serbs, this week
·we worry about the Croats. We're
still not doing anything about
Bosnia, but we have achieved a
majm shift in focus. That's proba-

Pomeroy ~ Middleport, Ohio

•

I Toledo I 87' I
•

•

IMansfield ls2' I• ·
INO

PA.

Youngstown

{){){)
•

C-o-lu-m-bu-s..-IB-4-,--.,

rl

Rosalee V. Doerfer, 78, of Middleport, died Monday, Aug. 21, 1995. at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born Aug. 27: 1916. in Meigs County, the daughter of the late Lewis
and Ida Russell Manley. she was a homemaker.
Sbe is survived_ by her daughters, Darlene Ritchie or Middleport and
Ida Roush ?f Racme; granddaughters, Sherry Eagle and Julia Nichols,
both of Racme; grandsons, Bobby Ritchie of Racine, John Roush, Jr., of
Huntington, W.Va., ~d Bill 0. Roush of Zanesville; bro!Mz, Leon Manley of Columbus; nme great-grandchildren; and seversd nieces and
·
·
•
nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Olen G. Doerfer; brothers
Lewis and Ira Manley; and sister, Ella Airoway.
'
Graveside services wiD be atlO a.m. Friday at Rock Springs Cemetery
with Pasta~ Lawrence F~:ueman officiating.
Nu callmg hours wtll be held. Arrangements are being bandied by
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport.

Edward Orem
W. VA.
KY.

~~.,.~~~~~4
,, ... ,,~ . ~ .......... ---Showers T-storms Rain

Fl~,;ies $~·,:_;

Vi.!! ASSO(;iafed Prsss GraphicsNot

Ice

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C 1995 Accu-Weather, Inc

Today's weather forecast
South-Central Ohio
Today ... Sunny and less humid
with a high 80 to 85. North winds 5
to 15 mph.
Tonigbt..Ciear with a low 55 to
60. Light winds.
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny with
a high in the mid 80s.

Extended forecast
Thursday ... Fair. Lows 60 to 65.
Highs in the 80s.
Friday ... Fair. Lows in the 60s .
Highs from the mid 80s to lower
90s.
Saturday ... Fair. Lows 65 to 70.
Highs in the upper 80s and lower
90s.

Edward Jackson Orem, 77 of the V.A. Center in Tucson, Ariz. died
Saturday, August 19, 1995, at the center.
Born February 14, 1918 in Akron, he was the son of the late Emmeu
Orem and J~sephine Jackson. He grew up in Ravenswood, W.Va. and
attended Ohio Wesleyan College. Arter joining the Marine Corps. be was
stationed in the Pacific in World War II and the Korean War.
·
While ~ the ~arines, be helped to develop the Hawk guided missile
system ~btle SlaUoned at Headqu3flers Marine Corp in Arlington, Va.
Arter retlnng from the Marines as a major, he worked for the Raytbeoo
Corporntion and Bibbin 's and Rice Electonics.
. During retirement be enjoyed fishing, boating and square dance calling
m Guaymas, Mextco.
He is survived by t~o..daugbters, Kathy Campbell, Minden, Nev. and
Maxine Wilson. Denver, Colo.; four sons, Edward J. Orem Jr., Millville.
Calif.; Robert A. Orcm, Louisville, Ky.; Jack Orem, Beaufort, S.C. and
William Orem, Gulfport. Miss.; one sister, Maxine Ritchie, N. Little
. Rock, Ark.; 17 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.
Graveside services will be held on Thursday, August 24 at 10 a.m. at
the Ravenswood Cemetery by Rev. Walter Morgan.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday at Straight-Tucker and
Roush Funeral Home to Ravenswood, W.Va.
·

·
·
WINNERS - Six youths competed In the
lightweight division, representing the winnen during each day or
the week. From left are first, Patrick Johnson or Racine; second,
Samantha Jones of AmesviU!'; thlnl, Jenna Hupp of Long Bottom;
and back, event c:oonlinalor'Brent Zirkle.

Southern district schools
to open for classes Monday

School wiD start Monday for all points by 7:45 a.m. the ftrst mornSouthern Local School District stu- ing, lle added.
Registration for students new to
dents.
·•
Lunch prices are the same as the Southern Local School District
last year and all bus routes are the will be held at their respective
same, according to James schools from 9-11 :30 a.m. through
· · Goldie Mae Pyles Rice, 87, Gallipolis, died Monday, Aug. 21 1995 in
Friday.
'
Lawrence, district superintendent.
Holzer Medical Center.
·
'
Daniel Riffle will pick up stu- . New kindergarten students reg. Born April 28, 1908 in Lawrence County, daughter of the late Jesse . dents in the Racine area that do not ister at the junior high school build:
and Emma Stewart Pyles, she was a former teacher in Gallia and
live near the junior high school or ing in Racine.
Lawrence counties, and a homemaker.
Parents, need to bring their
high school. He will run on Sixth
She was a member or the Ftrst Church or the Nazarene and taught the
child's
birth certificate, Social
Street: Broadway from Vine Street
Adult Ladies' Sunday Scllool class for 25 years.
to Main Street: and Third Street Security card, shot records and any
Sbe was also preceded in death by her husband, Glen William Rice, on
.
from the ftre house to Elm Stree~ legal papers in divorce cases.
Aug. 30, 1968. They were married Nov. 24, 1928. Also preceding her
For
more
information,
call
949,
Lawrence said.
.
were two sisters, Mary Heiton and Ruth Drummond; and two brothers,
Students should be at those 2611.
Eiben Pyles and Gordon Pyles.
Surviving are a daughter, Ruth (Norm) Snyder of Gallipolis; a son,
David (Josephine) Rice of Gallipolis; four grandchildren, Lynn Rice
(Terry) Foster, David (Denise) Rice, Ttana (Mike) Dayton and Tammy
(Bill) Gardner: five great-grandchildren, Tony George, Beth Rice,
Editor's note: A lawsuit out- and VMH .
. Zachary Rice. Allison Dayton and Nicholas Dayton; and a sister, Sarah
lines the grievances or one p~rty
In her complaint, she alleges
Ly.dic or Springfield.
against
another.
It
does
not
that
she was on the CT scanner at
. Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the First Church or the Nazarene
establish
gullt
or
Innocence.
the
hospital
when the table support.'
with the Rev. Michael Bearden, the Rev. Eugene Harmon and the Rev:
ing
the
machine
broke, causing her
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
of
Audrey Davis officiating. Burial will be in the Pine Street Cemetery.
to
fall
and
break
her
right arm.
Pomeroy
was
among
the
parties
Friends may call at the church from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Shi{Dadzu
company
pro.'
The
named
in
a
product
liability
lawsuit
The body wiU lie in state in the church one hour prior to the service.
duced
the
table
supporting
the;"
filed
Friday
in
the
Meigs
County
Arrangements are by the Waugb-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
scanner
while
Amis
Systems
Court
of
Common
Pleas.
.
Pallbearers will be Ray Hawk, Bill Co"'ey, Bob Cox, Otip Young, Bill
Sarah Lee Boyers of Middleport installed and serviced the L1ble, the
Barr and Chauncey Houck.
is
seeking
a total nf $200,000 plus suit claims.
In lieu or flower~. contributions may be made to the First &lt;;:burch of
She seeks $100.000 from Amis,
costs
from
Amis Systems or Hunttb_e Nazarene Buildin~ .Fund, 1110 "First Ave., Gallipolis, .or to the .·
$75,000
from · Shimadzu and
ington,
W.Va.,
the
Shimadzu
CorGtde_ons lntemauonal, m care of Norm Snyder, 369 Martin Drive, Gal$25,000
from
VMH. A jury trial is·
poration
of
Japan,
Shimadzu
Medilipohs, or Don Brown, 9 Portsmouth Road, Gallipolis.
cal Systems of Torrance. Calif., requested.

School districts announce , Goldie Mae Rice
free lunch programs for '95

. Eastern, Meigs and Southern cants who deliberately give misinlocal school districts today formation, may be subject to proseannounced their 1995-96 school cution underslate and federallaws.
year policy for free and reducedHouseholds will be notified of
price lunch for children who are the approval or denial or benefits.
unable to pay the full price of If a child is approved, the school
lunches served under the National must be informed when a houseSchool Lunch and School Break· bold's income increases by more
fast Program. Breakfast will be free than $50 per month, wheo bouseto all students.
bold size decreases or wben the
Income levels range from household stops receiving food
$9,7Il lfor a one-child household to stamps or ADC funds, if funds are
receive a free lunch to $46,972 for currently received.
a home with eight children to
Foster children may be eligible
receive reduced-price meals.
for benefits regardless of the
Application fonns are being dis- household's income. Tbe school
tributed in a leller to parents and can be contacted for more informaguardians. To apply for free and tion.
.
reduced-price benefits, househol~
The scbool principal will review
should ftll out the application com- applications and determine eligibilpletely and return it to the school. ity. If a parent or guardian is dissatAdditional copies are available in isfied with the decision it may be
principal's offices.
discussed informally with the prinHousebolds which currently cipal. If a formal appeal is desired,
receive food stamps or ADC funds the bousehold can request a fair
for a child must provide the child's bearing from William L. Buckley,
name, the food stamp or ADC case Superintendent, 320 E. Main
number and signature of an adull - Stree~ Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or by
household member on the ajlplica- phone at 992-2153. Fo~ an Eastern
lion.
hearing, cootact Ron Minard 38900
Ira Cornelious Smith, 67, of Route 2, Box in, Ravenswood, W.Va.
All other households must pro- State Route 7, Reedsville, Ohio
26164. died Monday, August21, 1995 in Camden-Clark Hospital, Park- EHS football preview
vide the names of all household 45772 or ·calling 985-4292. For ersburg, W.Va.
Eastern High School will host
members, the social security num- Southern, contact James Lawrence,
Born June 6, 1928 in Whiteville, W.Va., he was the son of the late Fort Frye at a football preview Friber of the adult signing the applica- Elm Stree~ Racine, Ohio 45771 or Philip McKinley Smith and Amy Caldwell.
day, 7:30p.m. at the lligb schooL
tion or state "none" if t)J.e adult calling 949-2611.
He worked as a building contractor and part-time farmer and was a Admission is $3 for adults and $2
does not bave a number, the
The policy, available in the prin- member of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in MurraysviDe, W.Va.
forstudents.
mon.t hly amount and source of cipal's office and available upon
He is survived by his wife Thelma Jean Atlderson Smith, Ravenswood;
income received by each household request: conlains an outline of the l}VO &lt;!&amp;ughters, Iris Jean Casto, Murraysville, and Linda Kathryn Warden, · TP VFW to meet
member, and the signature of an hearing procedure.
Huntington, W.Va.; one son, Darrell Keith Smith, Myrtle Beach, S.C.;
Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foradult household member, If any of
Households may apply for bene· four brothers, Fr:!illk Smith, Pearisburg, Va; Edward Smith, Wilmington, eign Wars Post 905.3 will meet
this information is missing, the fits anytime during the school year. Del.; Alford Smtih, S_weet Springs, W.Va. and Eugene Smith, Waiteville,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the post
school cannot process the applica- ·If a household size increases or W.Va.; etght grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
home.
tion.
income decreases the family·shon1d
Aside from his parents, he was preceded in death by one sisler, three
This information is confidential, contact the school to file a new brothers, one infant brother and one infant sister.
Group to meet
wiU be used only to determine eli- application . Such changes may
Services will be held Thursday, August 24 at 2 p.m. at Straigb~ Tucker
Alzheimer's and related disorgibilily and may be venfied at any affect eligibility.
and Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood by Rev. Darrell Johnson. He ders support group will meet
time during the school year by the
No child can be discriminated wiU be buried in Ravenswood Cemetery.
·
Thursday, 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs
school or a program official. To against because of race, sex, color,
Visitation hours wiD be held from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. on WednesCounty Multipurpose Center. Dr.
t\iscourage misrepresentation , the national origin, age or hantlicap. If day at Straigb~ Tucker and Roush Funeral Home.
James E. Altbof will be the guest
application forms contain a slate- discriminatio.n is suspected, a
. speaker.
ment certifying that all information household should write to the Sec- ,.,
, is true. School or other officials retary of Agriculture, Washington,
11
may check the infm:mation at any D.C. 20250..
·
·tifne during the school year. AppliCOLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana38.50; ~()().650 lbs. 34.()().40.50.
\
Obio direct hog prices at selected
Boars: 29.00-32.00
Six classes featuring tractors
buying points Tu~y by the U.S.
Estimated receipts 31,000. .
from
1939 and before, and those
Department of Agnculture Market
Prices from The Producers
1939
to
1959 were included in the
Livestock Association:
Th'e following couples received 26, and Debbie Kay Willis, 24, ··News:
antique
tractor
puD action Saturday
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
Cattle: steady to l.OO·Iower.
marriage licenses recently in the both of Syracuse;
morning
at
the
Meigs
County Fair.
Slaughter steers: choice 61.00Seth Daniel Held, 23, Lancaster, cents higher; demand moderate.
Meigs County Probate Court of
Cash
prizes
were
awarded in
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 ibs., country 67.00; select50.50-63.00.
and Bethany Elaine Cohee, 17,
Judge Robert Buck:
five
places
ranging
from
$75 to
49.50-51.00, few 49.00 and
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.()().
Howard Lynn Lockhart. 4 I, and Syracuse; Phillip Clarence Green, points
$10.
The
flfsl
three
place
winners
64.50; select38.Q0.61.00.
Tracy Lynn Sharp, 32, both of 19, and Kelly Denise Phelps, 20, 51.50; plants 50.50-52.00.
U.S.
2-3,
230-260
lbs.,
country
Cows: steady to strong; ali cows in each weight class were as rot· Pomeroy; Timothy William Willis, both or Pomeroy.
lows: :
•
points 44.50-51.00
46.25 and down.
4500,
Blair
Windon.
Brian WinSows: steady to 50 cents higher
Bulls: weak; all buDs 47.75 and
don,
James
Dean.
\W CAN'T ESCAPE 'rt£ GII.E.AT
U.S . 1-3 300-500 lbs. 34.00· down.
The Daily Sentinel
IIUYS N flo£ CLASSFEOS.
3800, J.C. Glassburn, Jim Glassburn,
BiD Burbridge.
(USPS l13·960)
5500, Jack Shaw, George Stou~
Publi!ihed every ·aflernoon , Monday throUgh ,
POMEROY
Larry
Hollon.
Units of the Meigs County
Friday. I I 1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Blair Windon, Bob Jew•·
6500,
Ohio Valley Publishing Comp.nnyfMultimedia
12 : 50 p.m ., Anne S treet, eD, Dallas Weber.
Emergency Medical Service logged
InC., Pnmemy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156.
Am Ele Power ........................34 112
12 calls for assistance including Michael Remy, VMH.
3500, J .C. Glassburn, Jt'm
~cond clas.~ postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Abo ._ .........................:.................59
SYRACUSE
five
transfer
calls.
Units
responding
Glen Kennedy.
Ashland OU ........................... .33 112
12:40 p.m., Adam 5 Road' Fred Sheets,
Mtmbe~ : The Auociated Press. and lhe Ohio
included:
38 and under, Keith Bentz.
·AT AT .........- ••• " ....................53 314
New§papet Auodmlon.
MIDDLEPORT
Bonk One................................3l JIB
: 17Sr.,p.m.
, II en' S treet, Roy
YMHA;
' ~ to
POSTMASTER : Send addreu corn=ction
7:50 a.m., Pomeroy Cliffs Mil2ler
Bob E..111 ...............................18 518.
The Daily Sentinel. I 11 Court St.. Pomeroy,
Christy,
VMH;
Champion lad....................... .lJ 1/4
Apartments , John Laudermill,
·Ohio 4S769.
8:35 p.m., Carman Road, Edna
Charming Shop .......................Cll/16
Holzer Medical Center;
Carman,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
City
Holding
................................
.15
SUBSCRIP"TION RATES
2:09 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Fedenl Mogul ........................llJ/4 · Center •. Opal Hook. Veterans
8)',Cnrltr or Motor Routt
TUPPERS PLAINS
Onoe Week .............. ................. .................. SI.75
Goodyear T&amp;R .......................40 7/B
9:57 p.m., Slate Route 7, CbrisMemorial Hospital.
One Month.......... ..........
. ... $7.ti0
K-mart
....................................
l4
7/B
tine
Cline, VMH.
One Year ,..
.. ..... ... ........... ........ $91.00

Hospital named in suit

Ira Smith

..

Meigs announcements

Today 'S 1"1 VeStOC k rep0 rt

Antique tractor
pui.J results at fair

Jeffers reunion

The descendents of the late ·
Albert and Rosa Pritty Jeffers wjlj
have their annual rcuni&lt;HJ at Meig~ ·
County Fairgrounds on Sunday;
August 27 at I p.m. in the Grange
Hall. Bring a covered di sh and
table service:
'
Lelarl Fall~ open bouse ·
· There will be an open house for
all Letart Falls Elementary School ·
parents and children Friday from 13 p.m. Refreshments will be pro- ·
vidcd.
Gilmore reunion
The family and friends of the- ·
late Walter (Squib) and Edna Oiler
Gilmore will gather for their annual· .
reunion Saturday, August 26 at 1. ·
p.m. at Meigs County Fairgrounds
at t11e Grange Hall. Bring a covered
dish and !able service.

co-...pleS iSSUed marriage licenSeS

Stocks

Meigs EMS logs 12 calls

\ ,.

'
204 'J{ 2mf., Mirftffeport, OJ{
992-40551().59vfon. tliruSat.

;~og~e:r~T~.T~a~y~lo:r,~R~o~g=er~T~a~y~lo:r·;.._!::::::::::~

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

Lands End .................................... 17

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Paily ."::"..--::.....

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

.. ... 3S Cents

Subs,cribers not desiring to pliy the clUTier may
remit in advllflce direct to The Daily Senunel
011 a three. m br 12 month bos\g_ Crrdit will be:
given corrier each week.
No subscription by mai l perm11ted 111 orr:as
where home carrier service i~ avai lable.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
................................... $2~ . 92
26 Week s........................................... i47.1)6
52 Weeks ................ ....
.. ........... S92 56
Ratu OuL'Iklt: Melp County
13 Week~ .......... ....................................... $25.61
26 Week! .................................... ............ 549.66
52 Weeks.. ... ..... ..........
.. ........ S%.20

Limited Inc. ............................ l8 314
Multimedia Inc..................... Al112
People'• ................................. .lllll
Ohio VaUey Bank .........................J5
One Valley ....................:........ .30 112
RockweU ............................... A3 l/4
RobbiDI &amp; Myen .................. .l7 1/4
Royal Dulch.........:................lt7 718
Shoaey'o lnc........................... ll 112
Star Balik .............................. .50 l/4
Wendy lnt't............................ 19 1/4
Worthington lnd ................... .lO 118

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30 Lm.
quoteo provided by Advut o
GaUlpolls.

HARRIS FARMS
NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
DOING BUSINESS AS

Hosoital news
VETf.:RANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Fred
Miller, Racine.
Monday discharges - Winifred
Marcinko, Reedsville.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. 21 -Mrs.
Doug Hugbes and daughter,
Eugene Himlerick, Mildred Bonzo.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Board, daughter, Clifton, W.Va.;·
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Sheets, daughter, Bidwell.
,
(PubUsbed with permission)

•

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Maoon Bridge
992-2588

VINTON
Gallla County Display Vat'il

155 Main St. ·
3118-8603

KAREN'S
COUNTRY MARKET
KAREN &amp; DALE HILL, OWNERS

WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING
IN SEPTEMBER!

.'
'

�Tuesday,August22,1995

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

.

: On the NFL exhibition scene,

Broncos hand Cowboys 20-171oss

Tuesday, August 22, 1995
Page4

By JOHN MOSSMAN
line protected Troy and Wade very
DENVER (AP) - The Denver well. On special teams, we blocked
Broncos' new offense _is a lot like a field .¥oal and bad some good
the old one- pcssessmg pleoty of returns .
firepower. Last year's porous
On his first series, Musgrave
defense, however, bas yet to prove drove the Broncos 76 yards in 13
it bas improved.
plays for a 17-17 tie with 7:17 left
In their fourth pre-season game in the third quarter. He completed
- the ftrst in which they worked seven passes on the drive, includfrom a game plan- the Broncos ing a :Z2-yarder to Evans . On secgenerated 455 yards, a pre-season ond-and-goal from the one, Mushigh in the NFL this season, and grave faked to a back into the line,
beat the Dallas Cowboys 20-17 then hit a wide-open Evans in the
end zone.
Monday night
"We really fooled them on the
Denver (3-1) had 233 yards at
the half against the Cowboys' quarterback keeps," Musgrave
defense, No.I intheNFLiastyear. said. "The fake plays worked
Denver's first-string defense, on because we ran the ball so well. We
the other hand, yielded 237 yards called some pretty basic plays
in the fust half, and Troy Aikman because we didn 't want to sbow
and Michael Irvin booked up them everything since we play
almost at will. Irvin, finding gaping them in a couple of weeks (Sept.
holes in the secondary, liauled in 10)."
six passes for 135 yards and two
Early in the third quarter, Mus.touchdowns in the half, then sat out · grave completed five straight pass·
the second half, as did Aikman.
es and Elam kicked the deciding
The Aikman -to-Irvin combina- field goal.
.
Both Elam and Dallas' Cbns
tion helped stake Dallas (1-3) to a
17-10 halftime lead. ·
Boniol missed short field goals in
.
Denver reserve quarterback Bill the second half.
Musgrave outdueled his counterIn the final two mmutes, Wade
part Wade Wilson in the second · Wilson led Dallas to the Denver
half:
'
38. But cornerback Ronnie BradMusgrave, battling Hugh Millen ford stepped in front of _intended
for the No .2 spot behind John receiver Jeff Thomas and mtcrceptElway, completed 14 of 23 passes ed with 17 seconds left, preservmg
.
for 155 yards, including a third· . the win .
quarter touchdown pass to tight end
The Broncos ~cored o~ tbeu
Jerry Evarts.
.
first two possesstons._ wbtle the
Rookie Terrell Davis helped the Cowboys scored on thetr last ~
Broncos maintain ball control, car- of the balf. The 1D passes to Irvm
rying 10 times for 73 yards, includ· covered 36 and 18 yards_.
ing a 38-yard romp in the fourth
Bengals: Surgery ts the best
quarter.
·
way to handle the knee injury that
"This kind of ~arne makes our apparently wtll cost top draft
job very difficult,' Shanahan said, choice K!·Jan~ &lt;;arte~ his roo~ie
referring to today' s mandatory season w1th Cmcmnau, accordmg
NFL cutdown to 60 players. to Dr. James Andrews, an orthope"We've got 80 guys wbo have die surgeon who examined Carter
really been committed. It's the best on Monday in Birmingham. Ala.
group I've been around. It appears
Bengals spokesman Jack Brenthere are some players who made nan said Andrews agreed wi~ the
the team tonight based on what we opinion of Bengals team pbystclllll
Dr. Robert Heidt that surgery was
saw.
"One game is not the fmal teSt, necessary to repair a tom anterior
but .Bill didn't burt himself. We cruciate ligament in Carter's left
have two excellent backup quarter· 'knee.
. backs. We're not going to make a
Chargers: San Diego said
· decision until after the Jacksonville goodbye to
Araguz, thus giv: game (final pre-season game on ing the punting job to Darren Ben: Aug. 25)."
,
nett, a former Australian Rules
Musgrave's one-yard TO throw player. Sennett, 6-foot-5 and 235
to Evans produced a 17-17 tie, and pcunds, averaged 45.8 yards on six
Jason Elam • s 27 -yard field goal punts in two exhibition gameS, with
with 9:37 left accounted for the dif· a long of 63 yards. Araguz was
ference.
among 13 players waived Monday.
Steelers: Piusburgb signed 14Aikman and Elway, who both
. played only the first half with the year veteran Norm Johnson to help
other starters, bad identical 12-for· their ailing kicking game: The sign17 passing statistics, with Aikman ing casts doubt on the status of
throwing for 194 yards and Elway Dean Biasucc~ wbo missed all four
for I65.
kicks he tried in last weekend's
"We accomplished what we exhibition loss to Tampa Bay.
Jets: Stevie Anderson and
: wanted to tonight," Cowboys
· coach Barry Switzer said. "We . Orlando Parker, expected to be
. went out and played hard and woo
down field .threats, were cut. The
. the fll'St half, and we carne out of Jets got down to 59 players, one
the game healthy. The offensive
under the league limit New York

Jordan's three-run homer helps Cardinals beat Reds 8-6
By R.B. FALLSTROM
ST. LOUIS (AP)- A steady
diet of post-season hopefuls is
bringing the best out of the St.
Louis Cardinals. the worst team in
. the National League.
Brian Jordan hit a three-run
homer with two outs in the ninth

inning off Mike Jackson to give the
Cardinals an 8-6 victory over the
NL-Central leading Cincinnati
Reds on Monday night
The Cardinals have won three of
their last four against division leaders. They took l wo of three from
Atlanta during the weekend.

''We're playing well against the
good teams and losing against the
bad teams," Jordan said. "Winning three of four, this bas been a
great bomestand.''
St. Louis, last in the NL Central,
played the fourth of 19 consecutive
games against division-leading
teams. On Sunday, they lost I-0 to
Greg Maddux and the Braves.
"I like the schedule the rest of
the way," Cardinals manager Mike
Jorgensen said. "lt give us something to play for. It puts some spirit
in the guy~"
The Reds bad a four-game winning streak stopped despite reaching double figures in bits for the
seventh consecutive night, including home runs from Reggie
Sanders and Hal Morris. St Louis
. beat the Reds for only the second
time in seven meetings.
Be~nard Gilkey doubled off ·

Jackson (5-1) with one out in the
ninth and Ray Lankford walked
with two outs before Jordan bit his
17th home run on a 1-2 pitch.
"I love that spct," Jordan said.
"I want to be in tbat.situallon all of
the time. He bung it up there and I
hit it on the sweet spct of the bat"
Jackson said he tl)oughl be
could retire Jordan with a slider.
''Obviously, it was not a good
pitch because he hit it out of the
ballpark," Jackson said. "I took
my &lt;;hances with Jordan and be
beat me."

In the eighth, Jordan extended
his bitting streak to a career-high
12 games with a double.
Rookie T.J. Mathews (1 - 1)
pitched a scoreless ninth for his
fll'St major league victory.
Reds starter John Smile)'
worked -seven innings and allowed

Sorrento's hitting
helps Tribe notch
7-3 win over Jays
of

BOONE SCORES - Taking advantage
teammate Jerr Branson's tbird·lnnlng single, tbe Cincinnati Reds' Bret Boone (len)
scores aner St. Louis backstop Danny Sbealrer drops tbe boll at the
plate during Monday night's National League game In St. Louis.
Despite tbls, tbe Cardinals came back to win 8-6. (AP)

Scoreboard
Tonight's games

Baseball

Loa Allgelca' {TapaDi 1·1) at Mootm.l
(Pu&lt;2IO.l), 7o35 p.m
S111 Dieao (8. Willlima 2·9) at
Philadelphia (GruDe 0-2), 7:35p.m.
San Francisco (leiter 8·7) at New
York: (C&lt;nelius 1-2), 7:40p.m.
Florida (Rapp 7·7) at Chlcaao
(Bullinger 10-3), 1:05 p.m. ·
AUaola (Avery 5·9) at Houlton (Bro~J -4--l), 8:05p.m
CNCINNATI (Schourek: 13-6) at St
Louil (Barber 0-0), 1:35 p.m.
PittJburah (Loaiza 1·5) at Colorado
(Rey~~t)IO 5-4), 9:0.5 p.m.

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulua Di•iiKHI

l&lt;D

ll': L l&lt;l.

.GI

. ~00

.458
.434

12.5
17
19.5

.421

21

Ba&amp;too .................... 66 41
New Yort .............. SJ S3
Baltimore ...............49 51
Toronto .................. 46 60
I&gt;Woit ................... -45 62

.617

· Ceatnl DI•Won
Cl.EVELANIL. ....72 34 .679
Milwaukee .... .........Sl 54 .495
K.a.D.sa:1 City ........... j: L S.. .-486
Chicago ................ AS 60 ,429
Min.GC~ota .............. 38

67

Wednesday's gam..

19.5
20.S
26.5

Sao Flllncilco (Mulbollud 2·10) at
New Y(J't (Joaea 7-8), 1:40 p.m
Florida (Weathen 3·4) at Cbicaao
(Navarro 10-5), 2:20p.m.
Loa Anaelel (R. Martinez 12-7) at
Montreal (Fauero 12-9), 7:3S p.m.
Sllll Dieao (Dilbmlla 4-S) at Phillldel·
phia (Gtua 8-8), 7:35p.m.
Atlanta (Mercker 6·8) at Houaton
(Hampton &amp;-S), 8:05p.m.
CINCINNATI (Wellt 2-1) •St Louis
(Wahoo S-4), 8:35p.m.
PiU&amp;burah (Ncaale I J·5) 11 Colorado
(Bailey 4-5), 9:05p.m.

:u.s

.162

Wucern DiTIIIIon
Californla ............... 66
Te111 ..................... ,51

42

SO · .533
SeatUe ..... ,.............. 54 53 .505

1.5
H .5

oatJand ................ ll

ll .468

ll.l

.611

Monday's scores
DH: Milwaukee 3, Kanus City I' ;
Kanial City 11. Milwaukee 9
Olic&amp;go 7, Detroit 3
CLEVELAND 7. TQ"onfu 3
Texas 12, Minnesota 5
Boaoo 6, CalifDmia 4
Oakland 13, New York 4
SeanJe 6, Ballimwe 0

Transactions
BasebaD
Amcrkan Leque

BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Placed Cur-

Today's games

til Ooodwin, outfleldu. on the IS-day
diaabled lilt. Rec::a.Jied Mark: Smith, outfielder, !rom Rochelter of the Imeruional Lt&gt;guo.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Waind
Atlce 'Harnmater, pitch«, fot the purpoae
of BiviDI hil uDCOnditiolllll rcleuc.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: AcliYatcd
Bob Scanlan, pitcher, from the IS-day
diaablcd l_ist. Optioned Sid Roberaon ,
pitcher, to New Orlc&amp;DI or lhe American
Alaocillion.

New York (.Kamielliec:D l-4) at Oa.lland (V&amp;D Poppell·•'). 3:15p.m.
Cbicaao (RI&amp;heUi 3- 1) at Detroit

(Umo 1·4• 7o0l p.m.

CLEVELAND (Martinez 9-4) at
Toronto (~ilef 8-1). 7:35 p.m.
Mione~~ora (Rodrlauez 2-4) at Tuu
(Pavlik 6--1), &amp;:OS p.m.
Kan&amp;M City (Gordon 8-8) at Milwau t.N (McAndRw 1-2). B:O!i p.nt
Baltimore (Musaina 13-7) at Scallle
(Belcher 8-7), IO:OS·p.m
Bosloa (Clemen• 4· 4) at California
(Harby7·7), 10:05 p.m

NollonolLo,..,
PmLADELPmA PHILUES : Eurcised the option on the contract of Jim
Frepi, m.anaser, (or Dell aeuon. An OOWiced the retirement or Michael Ryan,
bullpen coach, effective ll the ead ofUle

, Wednesday's gam,es

.....,.

New York (McDowell 11· 1) it Oak·
' laad (Prieto 2-6), 3: IS p.m
ChiCIJO (Alvarez 5-7) at Detro1l

FuotbaU

(Bergman 5·8), 7:0!i .m.
CLEVELAND
k 7-5) at Toronto
• (Carara 1·2), 7:35p.m.
Minnesota (Paml 1~1) Tex• (Witt
•
H). BoOS p.m.

NallonaJ Football L111ue
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Waived Si·
mon Shanki.lineback:et: Jerry Drake, d.fea~ive tackle; Kevin Kao1, wide receiv·
er; aod Eric Floyd ud Mlk:e Oentry. o'fl'lliivc linemen. Placed Gabriel Oladipo
aD Bryan HooD. 11cifeutve tactls: ud
C chua TUtll
wide recei•er, on In·
jured
.
ATLANTA FALC S: Sisned Jim
Rltchcr, offensive · line .........~l~ced
Leonard HarriJ, wide ~ivcr, on,.YLW'td
rcaerve. Relealed Prea\oa Jooct, q..-tcrback; Georae Brewer, defenalve tackle;
Mario Bailey aad Corey Diaon, wide "'"
ceiven; Riety Ceuu aad Stacy Evau,
defensive eDda; Mark: Di~oa 111.d Nate
Miller, auardl; Erie Jona11en, tackle;
Toby Milia, center; Blair Tbomu aod
Toay ViaJOn, ruaaina bacb: aad Scott
TyDCr, ticbr. Waived Nata Bolton, wide
receiver, ud Mitdl Donahue a.nd AIOIIZCI
Etheridae, deleosive coda,
BUFFALO BILLS: Releut.d Steve
Kratz, k:ick.er; Tra•i• Colquitt, punter;
Randall EYanl and &amp;ic Green, wide receivers; Le-Lo Lias, cornerback:; Peter
Tuffo, linebacker: Andre Hewitt, orrenaive linemllD; and Chuctie Johaaon aod
Eric Coonta, ncae tacllel.
.
.

Balli more (Xrivda 1·2 I Seattle
(Wolcott 1-0),lQ::'IS p.m. .
..,_ _...
Boston (Wakefield 14-l) at Cali'o
(AbboU9-6),10:3S p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eulem 01..-l»lon

Iua

ll': L l'&lt;l.

Atla.nta ................... 67

Philaddphia ...........ss ·
MoDtteal ,.,..............52
Florida ................. .. 46
New Yort.. ............46
c~ntrel

llll

39

.632

53
55
58
60

.509
.486
,442
,434

lJ
15 5
20
21

39 .629
SO .533
SJ .500
60 .434
64 .402

10
13.5
20.S
24

Dl..-llllon

CJNCINNATL ..... 66
Houatoa .. ............... S7
Chicaao .................. S3
Pitt.liburgh .............. 46
St. Louis ................ 43

Wuaern 01..-ldon

Loa ADgelca ........... S7 51
Colorado .............. .. S6 Sl
sa.o oie11-o ..............sJ SJ
San Franciico ....... .48 59

·

TORONTO (AP) - Paul Sor- er Mike Hargrove said alter Sorrento knows the Cleveland Indians . rento homere·d and drove in four
want him to bit higher than .244. · runs on Monday night, powering
There's no problem, though, with the Indians past the Toronto Blue
Jays. 7-3 for their fourth straight
his RBI total.
"He· doesn't have, the average · victory.
we'd like "to see, but be'$ driven in
Sorrento bad an RBI double
something like 60 or 70 runs. during a four-run second inning
That's not bad production out of and made it 6-0 in the third with a
your No. 8 hitter," Indians manag- two-run homer, his 20th of the season.
"I was struggling coming into
this series," said Sorrento, who
broke an 0-for-18 skid with a
game-tying, two-run double in
Cleveland's 8-5 win over the MilDoii.Dy .,rady, defeuive back.; Grea DeLooa. tiaht ead; Pulo Poumele, 1uard;
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

.528
.523

.soo

.449

.5
3
8.5

CLEVELAND BROWNS o Roloued

Toby Cllea and A. C. Tellilon, wide receivers; and Andre Royal aod Vuhone
Adama, linebactera. Traded Roanie
Dixon, defeaaive tackle, to the Philadel·
phia Eagla for a conditional 1996 draft
pick. Traded Ray Ethridj;e, tick: returner,
to the CarollnJ Panthers ror an uodlacloscd dnJl pick.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Releucd
RcaJi:ie Holt and Rickey Di~on, ufeties:
Jerry Crat\J, tackle; J•y Barker, quarter·
bact; Jamea: Roberaon, linebacker; and
Charlie Sinunona, line-biK:br. Placed Pal.ll
Hutchins and Jerr Miller, llctlea: Brian
Satterfield, fullback.; Jerrol WiiHaffil ,
linebacker; Tommie Stowers, tiaflt end;
and Sammy Walter, coraerback:, on in·
jured rrsetVe..
·
·
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Waind Dou11
Ptdenon. quartr:rbact; Mark: Caciar, defeDii~ lac~; tvhlvin Crawford, aa[ety;
Seth Dittman, tacltlc; JuDn Jllllll:ll, center:
Burt 'nlorntoll. wide ~civltf; ~d Rodney
Wilk.eraon, linebacker. Placed Scott
Miller, wide receivet, on the physically·
unable-to.perl'onn list. ,
MINN'E.SOT A VIKINGS: Releued
Jay Kirchoff, kicker; JeH BufCaloe,
punter; Paul Burmeister, quarterback;
Mosel Ware and Ken Grace, wide re·
ceiven; Sean Crocker, defecaive bact;
Oril Roe aod Michael Titley, tiaht ends;
Joe Burch, cenlor; Royce Nel10n, tactl~
Jot 'O' Briu, defensive tac~le; Robert
Jacbon, runoina bac~ and Jimmy Cuaain&amp;t!am. wide receiver.
NEW YORK JETS : Waived Stevie
ADdenon, OriiiJido Parker a.nd Tom Garlick::. wide receiver&amp;; Pat Turell, safety;
Bryan Wagner, punter; Paul Burk:e aDd
LeVar Bali, tighl end; John Sacca, quar·
terbact; Fmd later and Erik: Marah, runDina baci.a; Todd Baczek: aod Celia
Cronin, guards; Marc Lamb, center; Elton
R.hoadea aod Vauahn Bryaot, comerbacks; John Koullon, lioebacker; aod
Wilky- Bazile, deCeosi ve tackle. Reached
ioju.ry settlemeota with Eric Oaol, full·
back, and Jerold Jeffcoat, defeasive tackle. Placed Da'l'e Alelaoder, center, on in·
jured r~e. Placed Melvin Hayct. tackle. on the physie~~lly-unablt&gt;to-per(or m
till
OAKLAND RAIDERS: Traded Grea
Robinaon. running back, to the Green Bay
Paci.en Cor an uodiad01ed draft choice.
Releucd Cecil Gray, tackle; Jeff Gntham,
quarta"biCt; Tom Aetcber, center; David
Janca, liJht end; Tom Robsoct, auard;
Jon Baker, defeo&amp;ive end; and Chrh
Croon, •l!ety.
PHILADELPI-UA EAGLES: Waived
Jelf Bectley, puoter; Eric Fontenot, deCeuive tacltle; Marvin Goodwin, aafety;
Jamca Jdfcnon, dc(easive back:: Reainald
Lee,lineba,cker; ud Rq11 Schulte, tiCiw ,

four runs on six hits. He left an ·out
after being hit in the side by
Gilkey's grounder in U1e Cardinal''
two-run s.c venth. He gal Ozzie
Smith to pep up for the third out,
but was replaced by !lector Carrasco in lhe eighth.
Carrasco lhrew two wild pitches
in two-thirds of an inning to give
the Cardinals a run in the eighth.
narrowmg the gap to b-5.
·
In the third, Sanders hit his 22nd
homer, a two-run sbot, off Mark
Pelkovsek and the Reds added two
runs on close plays at the plate
after throws by Gilkey from left
field . Morris slid around the tag of
catcher Danny Sheaffer on Brct
Boone's RBI single, and Sheaffer
dropped Gilkey's low relay for an
error on Jeff Branson's single,
allowing Boone to score.
Morris bit his eighth home run
and Branson added an RBI single

&gt;~

in the fifth .
The Cardinals ended a 13-inning
scoreless slump in the third on
Lankford's two-run double. Lankford bad struck out, his previous
four at-bats and had only one RBI
in his previous 15 games. Sheaffer
added a run-scoring double in the
seventh.
Notes: Cincinnati's Barry
Larkin bad two bits and is 16-for31 during an eight-game hitting
streak... . Ozzie Smith is 2-for-17
since returning from arthroscopic
shoulder surgery, although be's
showed off a much stronger arm at
sbonstop .... The Cardinals added
to their league-high double play
count with Nos. 117 and 118 ....
Scott Cooper is 12-for-79 (.152)
since the All-Star break.... Rich
DeLucia, who bad allowed runs in
six consecutive outings, worked
two scoreless innings. .

• ' (.; •

....

·~·

·,;~

.

'.
,.

STATE PLACERS- A men's team from tbe Mason Bowling
Center placed lOth during the West Virginia State Bowling Tour·
nament In Parkersburg. Members of the team include, from len,
Chuck Burton, Larry Morgan, Bob Haggy and Cbet Wigal. Not
pictured is K!p Grueser.

Leo

1995 FOOTBALL PREVIEW

• '"'~ j.

.,

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30TH
FEATURING

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

waukee Brewers on Sunday.
"I was hiUing the ball decently,
· just not having much luck. Tonight
was my night.''
• Twenty homers is a ~er high
for Sorrento, who bit 18 in 1992
and 1993. He now has .68 RBis this
season, also a career high. Sorrento
finished off his 3-for-4 night with
an RBI single in the ninth.
Orcl Hershiser (11-5) pitched
seven innings, allowing three runs
while striking out eight and wallcing none. He is 4-0 in his last five
starts and 6-2 since coming off the
disabled list July 7.
"We get psyched up for every
game,'' Hershiser said. "I think
there's a lot of competition
between individuals on this team as
far as stats are concerned. And the
pitching staff is trying to get its act
get read)' for the playtogether
offs."
Alan Embree pitched two scoreless innings for his first major
league save.
. Edwin Hurtado (5-2) gave up
six runs on just four bits in five
· innings. He walked seven.
· Albert Belle extended his hitting
. streak to a career-high 15 games
for the Indians.
Jim Thome and Manny
: Ramirez, who walked four times,
-drew leadoff wallcs in the second.
: Sorrento followed with a double,
: Sandy Aloinar hit an RBI single
·and Kenny Lofton bit a ball
: through shortl;top Alex Gonzalez's
· legs, scoring Sorrento. Carlos Baerga added a sacrifice fly, making it
4-0.
Ramirez drew a one-out walk in
tbe third and Sorrento followed
with a drive into the second deck in
right just inside the foul pcle.
"It was a fastball Hurtado just

io

Norm Johnson, lt.iclttf, Waived Ed Robin·
IOD and Kidcr Ptlillipl, lioeback:cn; Vincent Diokilll; center; Anthony:Inarauia,
orreuive tackle: William Lotlon, ddeoJive tact.Je; .,..im Patillo~Wety; F.d Toner,
fullback; Kenny McEntr.e, cornerback;
aod Craig Tbompaoa, t pt end. Placed
, Darmn M&amp;YJ, wide receiver, and BmOD
Miles. ddeuive back, on injured rewve;
Siulag:i Palelei, tuard. oa the reaerve-fto&amp;rOOI:baJI-in.jury lilt; and Tracy Smith, corDetback:, on the r~Jett CllJ11) lilt
SAN FRANCISCO o49ERS: Sian.ed
Toi Coot, cornerback. Waived Forey
Duckett and Michael WilliamJ, cornet·
Qa&lt;b.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS : ReleNed
XeiC Bryant, defellli\'e end; Del Speer, .
aafcty; Erae&amp;t Allen. defenaive taclr.le;
Kelvu• AndenOn, run nina back; Bryan
Heath, ce~ter ; Jamea McKeehan, 'tight
end; Joe PtckcDJ, quarterback;. KriJ Pollack:, a:uard: Child Wilson, cornerback;
and ManJeyWoods, wide receiver.

&gt;"'P-~~o~=--~~=A

GOOD "OnEST PEOPLE
FINEST IQUIPMINT AVAilABLE

Advertising Deadline
August 23rd
Call Dave or Bob At
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g.~

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"'''*

..

Falcons: Atlanta signed offensive lineman Jim Ritcher, placed
yeteran receiver Leonard Harris on
IDJured reserve and cut former
Georgia quarterback Preston Jones
as they pared their roster to 60.
Ritcber, a 16-year veteran and twotime Pro Bowler, played 14 seasons
with Buffalo before signing with
the Falcons last year. Harris broke
his band against Cleveland on Saturday night.
_..;....;;__ _ _ _ _ _ __
Rogers Hornsby, the legendary
rigbt-banded bitter, batted better
than .400 three times.
BLOCKED - Dallas defen·
sive tackle Chad Hennings (len)
blocks Denver quarterback John
Elway's pass in the second quarter of Monday night's NFL exbl·
bit ion In Denver, where the
Broncos won 20-17. (AP)

•

WINNER - Saturday night at the Meigs
County •' air was a good one for COnard Hudson
of Gallipolis .. He took first in the 11,000# field
stock with turbo pull, and second places In the

6,000# field stock and the 8,000# .field stock
classes. He is shown here as his p!llled.hls 2255
Oliver tractor to a first place win.• (Sentinel
photo by Charlene HoeDich)
· ·
·

Top winners listed in fair's tractor pull
Hundreds of f;lirgoers crowded
the infield area Saturday night to
watch the tractor and semi truck
pull, the concluding event of the
132nd Meigs County Fair.
Premiums were awarded in five
places in each of the tractor and
truck classes.
The top three winners in each
class were:
6,000# field siDCk: Dick Rhoades, Mount Perry, first; Conard Hud-·

son, Gallipclis, second, and Lester
St. Clair, New Straitsville, third.
8,000# field stock: Earl St.
Clair, Logan, first; Hudson, second; and Dick Rhoades, third.
~ 9,000# field stock, turbo: Hud·
son, Dick Rhoades, second, and
Tom Fox, Columbus, third.
8,500# pro stock: John Ces·
pedes, Louisville, first; Jimmy
Stacker, Zanesville, second, and
Susan Battrell, third.

10,000# pro stock: Richard ·
Manzey, Pomeroy, first; Jimmjo
Stacker, second, and John Ces-pedes, third.
·
19,500# semi-truck: EvereO.
Gilmore, Pomeroy, first ; David
Trout, Albany, second; and Bo£
Williams, Rutland, third.
,
24,500# semi truck: l.B·.
Church, Kerr, first; David Trou~
Albany, second, and Dwayne Cal~
well, Porter, third.

4.,;_)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

PITTSBURGH STEELERS oSionod

2 and 4 Wheel Alignments (Computer)
•Brakes •Shocks •Struts •Tires
•Oil Changes •Lube Jobs •TL!ne-ups
•Engine Diagnosis

also waived another wide receiver,
Tom Garlick, as well as safety Pat
~errell, punter Bryan Wagner and
ugbt end Paul Burke.
Cardinals: Arizona waived five
players and put three on injured
reserve in getting down to the 6(}.
player limit a day early. "Several
of those guys have a chance to be
on the practice squad, or even
come back on the regular squad
after we cut down for economic
reasons," coach Buddy Ryan said.
Eagles: Philadelphia acquired
defensive tackle Ronnie Dixon
from Cleveland in exchange for a
1996 draft choice . The Eagles
waived six players, but stiJI faced
11 more cuts to get down to the
required 60.
Redsklns: Eighteen players
were scheduled to get the BJt, none
of them expected to be household
names. Coach Norv Turner said
be's made up his mind already on
who'll go. One would appear to be
quarterback Brad ~retz, ~hQ didn't
even get a snap m an mtrasquad
scrimmage, much less a game.
Buccaneers: Fullback_Anthony
McDowell ~w he was m trouble
when the ught ends ran the ball
more than he did in an exhibition
game. Sure enou~h, the fourth-year
fuUback was wruved Monday, one
of 13 let go as Tampa B_ay moved
to meet the 60-man deadline.
Panthers: Eleven playe.:s were
cut and one added as Carolm~ g~t
closer to the 6~ -player h~ll
allowed to expanston teams. Wtde
receiver Ray Etheridge, wbo has .
played m both the NFL and the
CFL, was obtained from Cle~eland
m exchange for future constderalions.
.
Rams: St. Lows got down to 66
players by cutting nine on Monday.
Defensive lineman Ernest Jones, a
second-year player from Oregon,
was the only veteran in the group.
Bea~s: Amid the tumult over
who w1ll start at quarte~back, the
Bears have to reduce theu roster to
60 and get ready for an exhibition
game on Thursday. Coach Dave
Wannstedt said that, ideally, the
starter on Thursday would be .the
No. I quarterback when the season
begins. For now, neither Erik
Kramer nor Steve Walsh knows
which will get the call.
Dolphins: Quarterback- Dan
McGwire won the No. 3 job with
Miami when the team ,waived
Doug Pederson, who bad been with
the Dolphins off and on since 1991.
Packers: Jay Barker, wbo quar·
terbacked Alabama to more victo·
ries than any player in T1de history.
was cut by Green Bay. Barker was
35·2-1 as a starter in his career at
Alabama, including 12-llast year.
Bills: Buffalo released nine
players and announced that wide
receiver Bucky Brooks would likely be traded before the deadline
when teams must reduce rosters

Indians win. ~son_ti_nu_ed_f_ro_m_Pa-=g_e

Monday's scores
Philadelphia 3, San Otego I
Pinsbu.rJh 5, Florida J
Loa Aogelea 7, Montteal2
New York 5, San Frucilco 4 (11)
AUanta S, HoUlton o4
St. Louil 8, CINClNNA116

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
OWners Special
Savings.
Our statistics show that mature dri·
vers and home owners have fewer and '
less ·easily losses than oth~ ,. age
groups. So 1t's only ta1r to·charge you
Jess for your insurance. Insure you'
home and car wrth us and save ever, ·
more with our special multi-policy
discounts.

first run with a single in the fourth.
Gonzalez led off the ftfth with his
ninth homer and Roberto Alomar
bit an RBI single later in the·
inning. AJomar bas a 16-game hitting streak.

Send Us llour

ravorite Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY
SENTINEL
•
•will be publishing a

flOLIDLJll
COOKl)OOK

By
Dave
Grate

of

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

Rutland
Furniture ..._......;....:.==---"
To achieve a great goal, two
things are necessary: a definite
plan, and not quite enough time.

*-*
Nothing is really work unless
you'd rather be doing something
else.

***

Tact is the ability to see others
as they wish to be seen.

Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:
Holiday Cookbook
c/o The Daily Se'ntinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh .45769
Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.

***
A pessimist can hardly wait for
the luture, so he can look back
with regret.

***

They say dollar bills carry germs.
That's ridiculous. Even a germ
couldn't live on a dollar now·
adays.

Deadline for all recipes
is October 20, 1995

Eastern-Southern
volleyball preview
set for Wednesday . ~AN

Hey, Friends and
Family! Place An Ad
Wishing Your Favorite
Player, Cheerleader, or
Band Member
"Best Wishes, too!"

The Daily Sentinel

got up and the wind was blowing
out ionigbt,'' Sorrento said. "Even
my first bit, the wind seemed to
take it"
'
Hurtado knew he'd bun himself
with control trouble.
"A lot of walks. I. think I was
trying to be too fine," be said.
"I've .got to throw strikes. Tonight
I didn't do that"
Ed Sprague drove in

.:t;
RNE~~'?

I.

Southern's volleyball teams will
host Eastern in a preview at South·
ern High School Wedne~y.
The junior high teams will play
at 6 p.m. The reserve and varsity
teams will play each other after
that.
Admission for the matches will
be $2 for adults and $1 for students.

[naurance

Se~vice~

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

.Aulo-Or#!trn7 ~
L•le H()rl'lf! Ci• Bu&amp;•nes.s
TI.J.'No~'f!or,&amp;~

7.SHOWROOMS

11 WARIHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rl. 124, Rutland, Oh.

742·2211

'

..

�·.

~River

Tuesday,August22,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

l?age 6 • The Dally Sentinel

phosphoric acid content. Nasturtiums are a natural antibiotic
wbicb, unlike orthodox antibiotics,
does no damage to intestines.
Connie Hill repooed on the drying of herbs and everlastings. Julia
Given won the doll' prize of a Germander Tree plant
The 6th annual Herb Fest is
coming up Saturday. September 30

Herb-of-lhe-montb Nasturtiums or
Indian Cress which are mainly used
in hair rinses, bakmg and salads as
a substitute for capers. They can
also be used 10 treat bronchitis and
urinary infestions.
The nasturtium was inuoduced
to Europe from Peru by tile conquistallores. It is said tllat on a bot
day. sparks are emitted from tile
bean of !he flower due 10 its high

·couple bets the farm on organic milk
By ANNE WALLACE
·
Associated Press Writer
CABOT, Vt. (AP) -For Caleb
Pilldn an d Mary carpenter, organ1c
·
milk is more than just a natural
product !hat fits neatly inm their
lifestyle. It al~o could bring some
finanaal secur1ty IO_thelfhves. .
After a slump m milk pnces
drove many da~ry farms out of
p 1t
· k 1n
' an d C arpenter
.
b usmess,
dec1ded n~t to wrut and see what
the next sh1ft m the economy m1gbt
· ..Th'
b rmg
. IS .summer th ey ~PP l'ed
I
for cerufi~auon as an org~c f!lfm,
to formalize the farmmg pnnc1ples
towhI'cb the Yha ve 1ong adbered -

an_d sell their milk for a higher
pn~~.
We want to be _certified now
so we. can.lk..
sell our.drrulk
Pilkias certified
37
org~IC ~ : s~.
~ · cb was
d eslgn~don, a~ extra
~~1a000 ~ ~~~ P~ets annually,
with little chang~ the way they
have been farming their 330 hilltop
and .. · •h . 20 Jerseys
acres
werr
.
"Also ra~smg
it's kind
of a larger issue
than that, .. Pitkin said ...1 think
f
. .
a of 1.,e that conanmng
IS
a
w.
"'
·
tributes a lot toYa community,
I
b 1' v in agriculture as a viable
e le e . d el mcnt suategy
economic cv op
.
We also think it's a great way to

t

J

raise kids."
In 1994, about 0.1 percent of
total U.S. farmland was being used
.
. producuon,
. according to
10 organ1c
the U.S. Agriculture Depanmenl.
Some 0.2 percent - 4.050 - of
U.S. fann;; were. certified, prod~cmg organ1c versiOns of everythmg
from fruit, vegetables and meat 10
cotton and tobacco.
In Verma~~ 100 , or 5 percent,
of the st.ate ~ 2,000 farms h~ve
been certified as orgaruc. mcludmg
13 milk producers: Th'IS ~~ans they
do ~ot use syn[betic pestictdes, herbiCHies or fertilizers on theu: crops
and b
. 'eed, •h-·
lives~kon1Y organiC,.
.or ....,u:

McDonald's Day---,

BICYCLE WINNER - Four bicycles were awarded Saturday
morning during the annual McDonald's Day at the Meigs County.
Fair. Nine-year-old Truman Harmon of Rutland Is seen with the
bicycle be won and "Hamburgler" or McDonald's, who participat·
ed in the all-morning program with games and prizes. Other bicycle winners were Clayton Moore of Racine, Morgan Howard or
Pomeroy, and Char~e Eblin, Pomeroy. The bicycles were provided by the Fair Board, Bates Brothers Amusement Co., and
· McDonald's or

Fair reports
sheep results

from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
Ravenswood Riverfront Part. Featured speakers will be Myra Hale
or La Paix Farm in Lewis County,
W.Va.; Edelene Wood on Wi!foods
and Hal Kneen, Meigs CQunty
Extension Agent, on the park's gardens.
Demonstrations will i.nclude
·Public Notice
RESOLUTION 6.95
AGREMENT FOR MUTUAL
AID FOR ADDITIONAL FIRE
PROTECTION

Public Notice
responding to any fire alarm
or fire call or other
emergency from any chief
or officer In Charge, or other

duly constituted public
official which Is a party of
505.44 and 717.02 of the thlo Agreement, with its or
Revised Code of Ohio and their fireflghllng equipment

Pursuant
to
the
provisions of Sections

pursuant to the laws of the
State of Ohio, this
Agreement is entered Into

this 8th of August, 1995, by
and between tho City of

Gallipolis, Ohio, a municipal
corporation or .g anized

or other emergency
vehicles and firemen, and
shall render like services In
combating fires or other
emergencies as it renders

to Itself and Its own

Inhabitants;

provided,

under tho laws of tho Stale however, that at no time
of Ohio, and tho Village of shall the party or parties

Pomeroy,

a

political

subdivision of the State of
Ohio, witnesseth:
THAT, WHEREAS, the
respective
political
subdivisions herlnabove
named have certain

upon which the request Is
made be required to
respond with more than one
piece of fire apparatus upon
first alarm; and provided
further, that in no case shall

Public Notice
hereof, provided, however,
that any party may
upon thirty (30) days notice,
In wrltlng 1 to all the other

may be inadequate to afford
full and complete protection
to
said
.respective

other party hereto or any of
Ita
inhabitants,
or
contractors obligees, tor
failure to answer any fire
call or other emergency, or

shall assist the party hereto

CONSTRUCJION
Cuslom Building &amp; Remodeling

bid

A

guar•nty,

required by Section 153.54
of tho Rovlaod Codt oif
followe:

have hereunto caused this
agreement to be executed
as provided by ordinance or

cashier'• check. or letter of

subdlvlalona parties hereto

resolution duly adopted for
that purpose, a copy of
which is hereto appended,

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

11

said respective political

propoatl submitted, at
1) A certified check\

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

crodH equal to 10 percent &lt;#
lhe bid. A Iotter of credit
moy be revocablo only bt

Interior &amp;
Exterior

the owner. Upon enterlnl
Into a contract with tht
owner, the contractor muat

Witnesses:

contract Ia executed.

Kathy Hysell

;

.

OR
l
2) A bond lor the luff
The loregolng Agreement amount of this bld. Th.
Is hereby approved as lo owner will retain tho bond ol
Douglas Cowles
Gallipolis City Solicitor

(B) 15,22 2tc

fire or other emergency

made by a subdivision
legally responsible far such

primary response."

3. This contract shall be

made and remain In full
force and effect for a period

of five (5) years from date

band of each unsuccessful
bidder aHar a contract ha•
· been executed.

Attention of bidders It

called to all requirement~

contained In the bid packe~
particularly the Fedora

VILLAGE OF POMEROY
SEPARATE SEALED BIDS
FOR:
For River Front Parking
Area Project Including

312-

J&amp;L INSU~TION

the successful bidder but
the owner will return the

Public Notice

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh ..
992-4081
Week Day 8:00.5:00
Open Saturday
9:00.3:00 8/1/Ho

Labor Standards Provision

and Davis-Bacon Wagel)

various Insurance require{
menta, various equat
opportunity provielona.
:
sidewalks. electrical service
Successful bidder toand lighting, shelter struc- provide an OSHA approvect
ture, and related work.
safety plan for proposedi ·
Will be received by the work before work can start. '

VIllage of Pomeroy at the
No bidder may wllhdra.,l
office of the Mayor, VIllage his bid within sixty (60} dayoj
Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 after the actual date o~
until 11 O'clock AM Friday, opening thereof.
1
September .Bih, 1995 and
All bids ohall be proparl)!
then at the o.fflce of the signed by an authorize((
Mayor the bids will be representative of the bidder. •
publicly opened and read
All bids oholl be oeale"
aloud.
.
and
plainly marked "Seale&lt;(
Contract apeclficatlons Bid for Rlvar Front Parkln110
and bidding documents may ProJect, Pomeroy, Ohio". '

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
· Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
· Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Stonn
· Doora, Storm
Windows,' Garages.
Free EoUm8tes
111Wtrn

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUCTION
• Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling
• New Addilions &amp;
Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Free Estimates

843·5124

be viewed at the office of

The owner reserves th~
SBA Consultants, Inc. at right
to reject any or all bid
10247 Chillicothe Pike. P.O. submitted,
Box 730, Jackson, OH. Irregularities..1nd wave an
45640 (Ph: 614·286-2155) or
By the Owne,
may be picked up or
Tho
VIllage
ordered by mall for $35 (B) B, 15, 22, 3tc of Pomero,{&gt;
which Is non-refundable. ·
'•
This project Ia baing
partially funded by Federal
1
ACR and CDBG.

AND MIXED

BAILED

•i

~

•
·'•

"•
~

110\\ \IW
E\C: \\ \TI\(;
Bulldming, Backhoe,
Services.
Homa Sites, Land
· Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
. Top Soil, Fill Dirt ·

()t)•l
.,.,.,.,
..:.-,)(),)()

-.,
•

:&gt;

•

"•
::l"
-'
·•

...
"".

Experienced

Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
For Free Estimates

BULLETIN BOARD
1600 column Inch weekdays
1800 coJumn Inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE 11992·2155

Alzeheimers &amp;Related
,Discorders Support Group
Meeting Thursday, Augusl
24th, 1:00 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center .
Speaker: Terry Cunningham
President, Board of Directors,
Southern WV Chapter of the
Aizheimers Asoc.
Refreshments will be served.

Membership
#F0308, Royal Oak
Resort Club, Meigs
. County, Ohio.

BRAND NEW '95 CHM 314 TON LONG
WHEELBASE CONVERSION VAN

BRAND NEW '95 CHM'ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN
• Extended ChasSis
• Dnver S1cle A1r Bag
• Ant1·Lock Brakes

• Power W1ndows
• Power Lodes
·Till Steenng

• Air CondlUOO

• Cru1se ContrOl

• AutomatiCCNerdnve
• V1sta Ba~ W1ndows

• PiS. PiB

• Captam ChaJrs
• Sola/Bed

350 V·B Power

• lnd1rect L1ghtmg
• Prem1um WOOd Pkg.
·Full Convers1on
• Aluml[lum Runmng

· AMIFM CasseMe

Warren F. Sheets, Executor of
Estate of Iris F. Tate,
deceased,
19 Locus lSI., Gallipolis, OH
61

Isave $5000 I

Boards

·long Wheelbase

• PiS, PIB

•Indirect L1ghlin&lt;j

• 350 V-8 Powe&lt;
·Color T.V.
• ll!iver Side Air Bag

• Power W1ndows

• Prem•um Wood Pkg.

• AnHocl&lt;

• ~oaded!

Bral&lt;es

• Power Locl&lt;s

· T•n Steenng

• Alummum Running Boards

· AMJFM CasseMe

·Loaded'

• Cru1se Control

• A1r Condrt1011
• AutomatiC Overdnve

. • VISta BaV WindoWS

EUCHRE
TOURNAMENT
TUESDAY NIGHT 7:30
COURT STREET GRILL

• Full ConverSIOn

• 4 Caplao Ch~rs
• Sola/Bed

. _.!1
..,

..:

LetPnce
. $10,219
Foctory Rebate
· S300
GMAC 1s1 Tune Buye1
Alowance To
OwWiied &amp;r,'efs
- $500

~-·.

$8'788

Tom Peden Dtsccoot

SatePnce

• Oriver Side AlrOag
• Rear Anli·lock Brakes

• Power Steering

•• Power Brakes
·Custom Cloth lntenor
• W~l Equ,pped' ·
No Doc FilM~-

Liol Price .. . .. ... $11 PIS
Facto1y Rebate --~ . :. -$1 ,500
Tom Peden Disccu1l .. ·$1 ,688

Sale Price

Sale Price

BRAND NEW '95 PlllfTlAC GRAND AM
• 16 VaNe Power
• Dnver Side A•rbag
• 4 Wheel Ant&gt;lock Brakes
• Power Steenng

• Power Brakes

• Power Door Locks

· Af.l'fM Stereo
• Sleet Belted Tires

• St)'ed Whee~
• Well Equ•pped'

BRAIII NEW '95 BUICK CEIITIIW SEDAN
• Power lilakes
• Rear Defogger
• POW!I Ooor Locks
· Coslam Cloth Bel&lt;h Seab
• Aui&gt;matK:
• DrNel Side Airbag • PllWfil Wrwws ' ·Wei Equpped•
• 4WheO Anti-lock • Power Trorl&lt; Release
• AM/FM S~reo
Brakes
• ~~ Stee&lt;i'g
• Power Steen 'II
• A1r Cordlion

larn

For e
1

Prio .......... .'. $21,:109
F"""Y ltebale ....... • $1 ,000

l&gt;;t

Tom''""'~...,.

... · 12,&lt;21

·"''-'
-~

"'

- ~

;,

$13,.

$11,688

· $631

11RA111 NEW '95 CHEVY S-sERI~ PICKUP

LisiPnce ....
$13,599
Faciofy Rebate . . . . . . • $500
Tom Peden Oi3coiJlt .. -51 ,411

~ u•pmt

'l".S .f

u 'I'!

TOU FREE 1·808·822~0417 • 372-'2844
344·5947. 422·0756

·.-.
-:-.

ISave '34211
BRAND NEW '95 BUICK LESABRE
• A&lt; Corolion

• PONer Steeri'll

• Automalc
• Dual Airbags
• 4Wheel Anli·Locl

• Power Brakes

Bral&lt;es

• PONer 0oor Locls
• Power Wirw;X)ws

· Al.t/FM Stereo

• Tilt Steering
: Cus~m Ck&gt;~ lnteri«
• Slyled WhOOs
• WelEqui:Jped!
~Doc

Fees. DeiNnd'

h,r more

4113195 f

L1v N'1•·

Nil,~

\1 H•
';hen•,
f·.11Xr'('

rn!.:'Jrlll.JltCI'

304·273·44 75
or Hers h e l &amp; Donn a
304-273·3285

MEET YOUR
COMPANION!
1-900-388-0400
Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.

i

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

MIKE MARCUM'S

COMMERCIAL and RESIDEN'I'lAL
'FREE ESTIMATES

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES

9:

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

28 Years Experience
1-800-377-44 77

TREE TRIMMING

PHONE
614-245-0437

WICKS

AND REMOVAL

HAULING

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

RrsurfAa: Old Cer.mlc lilt, And
fiberglass Shower Cracks Or Sip

BATHTUB'
. Chrta

Racine, Oh. 45771

~ Scherllll

James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, undergroun~ bores.

(Specialize In
drilleway spreading)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
005
Personals
Top Soil, FiH Dirt
For Free estimate call 949-2512
Help Needed- wanung •o adopt.
REASONABLE
RATES
'''"'"
Please help us liod a baby oo
614-992-3470
L_ _ _ _..,.:;::;.:.;;;.:.;.:.;.:.;;.;:,.:,:.:.:_=.:____...J 1ch il d, ca II any t1me, call collec 1 1
L.-------....1;
needed. 6t4-742-3705

Bill Slack
992·2269 or
304·773·5960
PSYCHICS

H&amp;H SAWMILL

know

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

•Septic Tanks
•Plumbing
., •Water Lines - etc.
•Concrete Work
•Gravel Hauling
•Welding/Fabrication
Certlfled
···
Licensed/Bonded
25 Years Experience
614-992·2834
992·7821 712011 mo.

P.O. Box 587

FULL WARRANT)' UKE NEW

Chip Repair In Tubs Or Sinks,

J.D. Drilling Company

(Umestone Low Rates)

FREE
ESTIMATES

,&lt;&gt;
,,·

jooiiiOoooo___.._...,. r - - - - - - - - - - . 1 1

81B/1 mo.

All
8110f1 mo.

612f 1 mo.

Please help, tov1ng fam1ly waming
to adopt a baby, call anyt1mu. col·

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special ·

S p ect~ l

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

CALL
1-900-820-6500
Ext. 2809
$3,g9 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

lect1! needed, 614 -643·5385 .

30 Announcements
MTN STATE MY STERv.l RAIN

offer 1ncludes:

1 CleRn motor
2. Grease roller bearings
3. ·C lean &amp; check agit ator

5 Clean &amp; check filter system
6. Check belts
7 Check elec:: ln Lal system

Fall Fol1ago Train Trips . See
WV's New River Gorge Nationat

River, Oct. 6, 8, t3, t5, 20. &amp; 22~
1•800..347-1231
.

4. Clean all

mov1ng part s e Replace filter bag
All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts ..
· One year warranly on work performed .
,.
Valid on all nal1onally advertised brands.

~~

No Huntmg . No Fishing. No Trespassing, on my farm on County
Road 14 olf Sandhill Road
·
Rabocca (Becky) Randolpt\
All violators will be prClsecuted to
the fullest extent of the law.

W e se rvi ce most makes &amp; models

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

304·372-6144

368 W. Main Sl., Ripley, WV

40

Giveaway

1/2 Basseu~urd. 304-675-5492.

Help Wanted

· ~

WANTED: COMMUNITY
SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
position available to
teach community and
personalsklllsto adults
with learning limitations
in ·Me/gs County. Houra:
18 hrs/Wk: 11 am-7 pm,
Sat./Sun.; 2-hour weekly
staff meeting; or as
otf)81Wisa scheduled.
High school degree, valid

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
- '

Limestone &amp; Gmnl,
Sepli&lt; Systems, TraHer &amp;
House, Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. S•r!'8 "

SAYRE TRUCKING
.614-742-2138

Tony's Portable
Welding
Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recores Ayailable
Call for Low Prices
742-3212
Turn on Depot St. In
Rutland 1.2 miles .
81t011 mo.

driver's license, good

driving record, three
years licensed driving
experience and adequate
automobile insurance

coverage required.
, Training provided.
Salary; $5.00/hr., to start.
Send resume to: P.O.
Box 604, Jackson OH
45640; ATTN: Cecilia.
Deadline for applicants:
8/29195.
Equal Opportunity
Employer
30 Announcements

110

Help Wanted

WANTEO: Part-lime
INSTRUCTOR needed
to teach community
;and personal skills to
an adult with learning
limitations In Meigs .
County. Hours: 8 am
Sal. thru 8 am Mon.;
must be able to stay
overnights. High
school degree, valid
driver's license, good
driving record, three
licensed years driving
experience, and

adequate automobile

IT'S COMING
ANNUAL BLOCK
· YARD SALE
,WILDWOOD
ESTATES
FLATWOODS RD.

AUGUST 26
9 A.M.

A Trio League is now
forming at Mason Bowling
Center, Tuesday, Aug.29th,
12 noon. Come bring a
friend &amp; enjoy the fun.
More info call
1-614-992-5551
992-2400
Come Celebrate

s~¥-~,r.

mo.

11

lnsuranc~ coverage

required. II Interested,
contact Cecifla al1·
800-531-2302. Equal
Opportunity Employer.
In Loving Memory
Of
TODD
GRINDSTAFF
Sept. 18, 1972Aug.22,1993

• ATIENTION
.WOMENBOWLERS

.~!:::!

o~t~~' ~

B11ott

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Window&amp;
Room Additions • Roofing

2112!92/lln

(602) 954-7420

110

.

( No Sunday Calls)

PROCALLCO.

WILLIAMS
'I'RENCBING

E.O.E.

o\\1\\

614-992-7643

C oli R aven Lanes

House Repair &amp;

~

.t

rlltac,fl(l~· ~JiltJ

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
Remactellng
Kitchen &amp; ljath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reaaonable

ltu~:,•

~-'J+'d:l""'•'lily- Yu.ltlt ,~~

949-2512

:!

..;!

1\

P.O. Box 464, Coolville, Ohio 45723

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

1NrHill'll',

YOUR NEEDS

•

I

To

·r1iJ~I'.'

S.r·1r!:rv

Insures~

-

ALL-BRITE
CLEANING SERVICES '
Tlle Floor Strip,
Wax, &amp; Maintenance.
Carpet Cleaning,
Complete Facility
Cleaning, Periodic
or one time
Free Estimates
Call 992-7272 or
1-8()()-990.7272

If you are energetic and looking for rewarding
opportunities, send your resume and salary history to:
Director

16'2111Mmn

l; -l'jlH ':&gt; N(.'.". h·III'H"

1.1;

Competitive salaries and e)(cellent benefits.

_,

Rave n Lanes

FOR SALE

AggressiVe grocery wholesaler seeking experienced
meat dept. managers and journeyman meat cutters to
manage and merchandise meat departments in their
corporate stores located In Southeastern Ohio

Chuck Stotts
614-992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
""""~
State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

ATTENT ION ALL
BOWLERS

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eanlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2,168

MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS
JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTIERS

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Rave nswood. WV

Gel Your Message Across
With A DaiiJ Sentinel

.

Isave $5500 I

One Sto• Complete Auto Body Repair

We will inslail carpet
and floor coverings.
Give us a call at
614-992-3379.
18 Years Experience.
Hours ·
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

ALFALFA

992·2984

-i

I

Buzz's Cal])et
Installing, fnc.

HAY

Take tho pain out of
painting. Lot us do It for •
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180
.

John Musser

form.

DAYS
CAR WASH
Complete
Detailing

,

this 8th day of August,
1995.
then file a bond lor th4
City of Gallipolis, Oh.io amount of the contract, anti
By Manhew W. Coppler, City the chock or Iotter of cred~
·
Manager will then be returned to tht
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio successful and unauccesa,
By John Blaenner lui blddero when th'

The Meigs County Junior Fair inhabitants therof and their answering any such call, or
for any inadequacy of
recently reponed the winners of the respective prop8rtlas; and
.
·wHEREAS,
It
Is
desirable
equipment, negligent
Suffolk sheep winners.
that In ca$e of such operation of equipment,
Tbe I year and under ram cate- emergency said respBctive failure to extinguish any
gory was won by Rex Robinson of parties hereto may have the fire, or for any cause
West Robinson Road, Tuppers additional fire protection whatsoever growing out of
which may be afforded by such use of said fire · or
Plains. .
The top lamb ram was entered the flreflghtlng equipment other equipment and
by Robinson, with !he second in and personal of others of firemen; nor shall the party
the respective parties hereto, which issued such
this category Aaron Yost, Route 2,
hereto as may then, In the call, be liable in any manner
also of Tuppers Plains.
opinion of the chief or of event, for damages or
The top ewe more than 2 years · officer in charge, of such loss of equipment or
old was exhibited by Michele Scott other party or parties hereto personnel suffered by the
as are called upon:
party or parties answering
of LangsviUe.
IT
IS
MUTUA:I,.LY
ouch cell.
, Aaron Yost of Tuppers Plains
AGREED
BY
'AND
2. That for the purpose of
showed lop ewe between 1 and 2 BETWEEN SAID PARTIES this
Agreement, mutual aid
yeru:s old.
AS FOLLOWS: to-wit:
Is hereby defined as "The
The fu:st and second place lamb
1. That for the purpose of aid rendered by or between
ewe was presented by Rex Robin- affording additional Subdivisions of government
son of Tuppers Plains. Yost protection to thGmaelvea, owning and operating
their contractyal obligees flrellghtlng or other
showed lbe third place winner. ln
and
their lnhe'bltants, the emergency equipment and
fourth place was Tom Drake of parties
hereto do mutually shall not include primary
Racine.
agree to Interchange the re.s ponse to . any alarm of

primarily responsible and

SMITH'S

Ohio, shall accompany eacl

subdivision,
their
contractual obligee, the for leek of speed ln

services of fire departments
and use of fire apparatus
and other emergency
equipment: and to that end,
it is hereby agreed that they,
or any one or more of them,

NEW-REPAIR ·

partleo.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF,

the party hereto called upon
!!refighting equipment and or tendering such services
firemen to operate the same be liable In damages to any
but which, In emergencies,

ROOFING

Public Notice
Engineer's estimate lor
thla project is $94,940.
:

terminate thil contract

7.

Howard L. Wrltesef

den angel and a live herb baslt:el :
Doa prizes will be given away.
all day and WCEF radio will be'
t.oadcasting Uve from I0 a.m. 10 2
p.m. Herbal refreshments will be
served all day. ·
For more information, call Deb-.
bill Young at 304/ 273-Z2S4 or
Denise Arnold at 992-7573.
'

basketweaving, by Verla Shafer;
garden rocks. by Karen Showalter;
flower arranging by, Sheila Curtis;
Herbal Chrislmas trees. by Denise
Arnold and cinnamofuCut-outs by
Sharon Tuttle.
Dulcimer music will be provided by Sharon Yencha. Raffle prizes
include a bird hath, birdhouse, gar-

The Daily Sentinel • Page

I•

Valley ·Herbalists·plan for upcoming annual herb festival

Fifteen members of !he River
:valley Herbalists met at Karen
:Werry's bouse at their most recent
·meeting.
: Sheila Curtis reponed on cook·
"book sales. Karen Showalter and
:connie Hill reported on the
:Biennerbasseu Island garden and
: ~ebbie Young reported on the
·RavenswOod Garden.
Ginger Cummings reported on

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

112 Beagle &amp; 1f2 Rat T'mier pup -•
p1us to g1ve away, 614·985·43 16. •

AB&amp;TAUTO
JRD ST.

Male Orange Tiger Smped 4~
Month Old Klnen, To Good Homt .
614~367-0283.
·•

949·2682
RACINE, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00 hr.

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

Housobrok.on, To A

614-388-8559 .
Female 6 Months Old,
lneYer M1xed, 614 -446· 3769
6 PM . Or leave Message

Check Out Our Tire Prices
Most major credit cards accepted.
Owners: Richard Moore &amp; Ed Chaney

8/2Jilo

rour Free KiTtens 1o a goon'
Home 614·256-1793

&lt;

RACINE
GUN CLUB

~uU blooded female•whlle Pers1a~·

, dectawod &amp; spade, 614-7 42, •

A Good Home 2 Female Pup&lt;-.
Gold lab Mu~ed, Colli··
614· 367- 9389.
••

TRAP SHOOT
Every .
Wednesday Nile
5:30p.m.
Everyone
Welcome

house In Syracuse· ra•
lor wood and wood&lt; :

.

I
Wnh B1own
e Dog, Vi Cinllv : Raccoon :
Ca ll l o ldent1ly 614 ·44t -·

8/&lt;llltn

YOUNG'S
CUPEN,.ER
SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New O•rages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior

Painting
Also Concrete Work

(FREE ESTIMATES}
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 Pomeroy, Oh.

CoU1e Typo Dog. VICJntty •
850, Oldwotl, Call To ldent1fy1 :

5 00 614 -368-8201

Scuba Classes Now Forming
·Open Water
·Advanced Open Wa1er .
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Mas~er
'Assistanl Instructor
• Specialty Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuba Instructor
614-992-3314

(?4L&gt;r

1121/tfn

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985·4473
7/22194

'

8-11- 1 mo pd

Blue Healer Puppy, In 'Cen- '
•r Area, Grey \With Brown :
Over 1 Eye, Ch1ldrens Pet, .
LOST Blue Heeler, mate, w"!lealh :
er collar. v1cmny ol Rt 2 paal ,
Moose, answfus to "F=udge· 304 •
6751~1

•

r---..,..----------------""·

Someone slole my. dog I Reward •

SSOO lor m!ormahon teadmg to the :

MODERN SANITATION

POMEROY, CHief
Sl!ptlc tanks Gleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
wettklv &amp; monthly rental rates.
r

I arrest &amp; conv1C110n

ot !hal per son or persons. Someone hu
shown up With a new dog, look ar·
ound. Female, Aottwe1ler , black &amp;

tan o·n lace &amp; paw s, emos old .
Contact or answer1ng machine
Rera Roush, New Hori zon Green~

I3626. .

houses, Hartlord , WV. 304 -882·

70

.•. ,;:,, •.•

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

1 · . · .····-

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Yard Sale

4867 State Rou1e 850 , B1dWel1 ,
OH, August 23 - ~6th , 9-?

All Yard Sales Mu st Be P.a1d In
Advance DEAOLIN F , 00 p m.

CLASSIFIEDS

TONIGHT
AI WAYNE'S PLACE

REAL

Middleport, Ohio
u
1 Year Anniversary
Customer Appreciation
Guest OJ, "Brady"
Free Food,
Drink Specials &amp; Prizes.
7 p.m. - Closing.
. No Gover charge.

TIME

•·
CALL

992-2156

tomorrow and know
life goes on.
When someone you
loved so dear Is
gone.
His memory lingers
on within the hearts
of those who care.
Todd will always be
in our hearts and on
our minds.
Only hope it may get
easier with the
passing of time.
Sadly missed,
Mom and Family.

Abiding Concrete
·Construction
CtJmmcrciul nm.1 Bc!'lidt•nliul
Driveways . Patios. Slabs. Parking lot,, Cur h&lt;&amp;
Gutters Sidewalk&gt;, Porche;. Tear-out and

the day betore the ad 1s to run
Sunday M1110n - 2·00 p m Fnday:
MondaY ed111on . 10·oo am. Sat urday.

Thur~, . g · 3, G1rts 3· 5; Rors 8-12
(Some New) Toys , In fant - Up,
Most .50¢ 2 Miles Georges Cree

Road.

Pomeroy, ·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Rcplacc nicnt

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville, OH 45772

•

Duu~

Crites
614if&gt;67 ·6H2S

Shop Classifieds

2 !am11v. Augu st 21-25.

9~6

aQuanum, book s. ctoth1f'lg, much
more, Marson's 47440 Morn•no
Star Rct, Rac1ne, ra1n carv;e1s
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

Advance Deadlme t .OOpm the
day belore the ad IS to ri.m, Sunday &amp;d1!10n - 1;OOpm Fr~da y, Monda~ edition 10 :00a.m. Saturday

I

.

.
•

'
:
,
,
'
~

.

�Tuesday,August22, 1995
Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

·ALLEYOOP

. ·~

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
1 and 2 bedroom apartm&amp;nts. lur·
n1shed and unturn1 shed secunly
depos tt reqUifed, no pets 614·
992·22te

Mov mo Sa1e Aug 21 3i Top of
h1fl near Leon scr.oot or call 304

;.tss 11ts

80
R

1 Bedroom New Extra N1ce A1r
Condl!loned Near Ho lzer S259t
Mo ..- U! llr tres No Pets 614
446- 2957

Public Sare
and Auction

c~

Pearson Auct Ol"' Co·r\Oan y
l~
ll"fle auctoneer compete
n.;cl or
selv ceo
l cens ed
Wtit.i On1o 8 West V1rQ!n1 a 304

2 Bedroom Apa rtment Trash
Water Sewage Pa 1d $ 295 1 ~0 t
DepoSII 614 446 2481

73 5765 Or 304 773 54.!17

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths 2 M1les
~orltl Of Vtnton $300!Mo • $300
Oeposrt • Electnclly No Pets
Avatlable &amp;'16195, 61.t.·388-9080

&lt;;a Yagc By tne S~ 1 o Toys By
T"e P ck Up Ttuc; k Loa d 6 1 ~
;'1'56-1270

7tl19

2bdrm apts 1o1a1 eleclr tc , ap
plrance s furNshed laundry room
lacilllle5, close to school m town
Applrca\rons avarlable at Vtllage
Green Apts 149 or call 614 992
3711 EOH

C ean Late Model Cars Or
lruc lo.s 1967 Models Or Newer

2bedroom apartment, lurn1s~d.
t.llllitl&amp;s mcluded ac 304 - 773

90

Wanted to Buy

955 Fore' co nvef1 101e 614 385

Sm ttl Bu ck Pont ac
ern Ave!XIe Gall1pohs

~:::~~~;:'

l 900 East·

Oec.orato o stoneware wall rate
pnores "•d lames old Thermome
'L"S ola c1oc:ks ant que furniture
Rver ne Ant cues Russ Moore
o w ner 6' 4 992 2526 We buy

up the

COnditiOner .. we're pUtting

80 candles on Dad's birthday cake!"

estates

110

Don t Junk It I Sail Us Yo ur Non
Wo rk1ng Relngerators Freezers
Washers Dryers M1crowaves
Color TV sVCRs Au Condition
ers Computers Off1ce Machmes

Owner Operators Needed Top
percentage patd haulrng wrthm a
7 to 8 state area No Northeast
loads Call 1 1:00·598-6790

De 614 256 1238

J &amp; D s Auto Pans and Salvage
buy ng wrecks junk autos &amp;
trucks Also pans lor sale 304
773 5343 Or 773 5033

Top Pr tces Pard Old U S Coins
Silver Gold D1amonds All Ol d
Collecttbles Paperwe•ghts Etc
M TS Co1n Shop, 151 Second

Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy Jun~ Autos Wnh
Or Without Motors Call Larry
L111ely 614 388 Q303

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 0

Help Wanted

1\ppltcatlons Are Now Bemg Ac
cepted At Pmecrcst Care Center
170 Prn ecrest Dr 11e Gall1pol1s
01110 45631 For Full Ttme And
Part Trme State Tested Nu1srn g
Ass slants Cornoetrttve Wages
01ffcrent1al W1th Experience, S1gn
On Bonus Av ailable Equal Op
portufllly Employer
AVON I All Areas
Spears 304 675 1429

I Shuley

AVON SELLS AT WORK HOME
Allorage $8 $15/Hr Benehtsl
No lrwentory Or Door lo Door
lndtrep 1 BOO 742 4736
AVON EARN $$$ at home at
wo rk All areas 304 882 2645 t
BOO 992 6356 INDIREP
Drr11er w1th Class A CDL wanted
We haul wrthn a 7 to 8 state area
No Northeast loads Hometrme
par d 1/aca!lon &amp; holr days Call 1

BOO 598 6790
DrtlltHS Drspatchers Needed
French Crry Ta~ r 614 446 834 1

Earn $1000 s weekly stullrng en
vela pes a 1 home
Star t now No exp
rnlo no obl1gat10n
to Prestrge Un1t
195609
Wmter
32719

Be your boss
lree suppltes.
Send SA S E
#L P 0 Box
Sprrngs
Fl

Experrenced tobacco workers
needed 304 675 2443 alter 4pm
GENERAL HElP Wanted Inter
vrews Now Berng Accepted On
1s1 Come .1St Ser11e Bas rs Grow
mg Company Needs 30 People
fo Frll lmmedral e Openmgs No
Strrkes No Layoffs E~pandtng
Gall1pol1s Drstrrbutron Ce11ter For
Large 80 Year Old Electr1cal Ap
pllance Company Has Opemngs
In Several Departments For D1s
play Work To Ma'hagement Can
Oo Al l Work Eas llv, No Experr
e11ce Necessary As We W111 Pro
vrde Tra rnrng That Can lead To
Very Secure Pos1t1ons Wtlh H1gh
Sta.rt1ng Income ln1erv1ews By
Appotntment Only Call For Inter
v1cw Monday &amp; Tuesday Only
6144411975 95
Mother Lookrng ror Responsrbte
Nurtunng Babysrtter To Care For
7 Year O ld Daugh1er Mus! L 1\/e
In Rro Grande Elementary Area
Or Able To Pro111de Trans porta
tron To And From S&lt;;hool If Inter
osled 61 4-245-0622
Nurse A1de Trarnrng Program
Pomeroy Nurs1ng ll RehaDd ltaiiOn
Cen ter wrll De oflermg tramrng
classes 1n the month of October
AppliC8!1onS arc now be1ng ac
cepted at 36759 Rocksprmgs Ad
Pomeroy Class SIZe s lrmrted
Three (3) reference papers are
requrred wrth appl1catron Apply m
person berween 1Oam 3pm M F
Students that successfully com
plete the TCE class wrll be elr91ble
for employment Absolutely No
PhOne Calls EOE
F\lmeroy Nufsmg &amp; Rehab Center
rs accepnnQ applicat ions for Cer
trlre d Nursmg Assrstants Apply
at 36759 Rockspr ngs Rd Po
mercy No Phone Calls EOE
Someone needed to mil k. cows
hourly wage pa1d 11acatron Send
name phone number &amp; e•pen
ence P 0 Box 312 Henderson,
wv 25106

N1ce 3bedroom 2bath. basement
ln·ground pool, large lot Call
Somer11ille Realty 304· 675·3030
or 304 675·3431

Part Trme logrSIICS Clerk EMT
Ceruhcatlon Prelerfed General
Computer Knowledge Requrred
Recetvtng And Sh1pprng Supplies
General Otl1ce Dut1es Send Ae
sume To SEOEMS 3240 State
Route 160 Galtrpolrs OH 45631
Or For M ore tnlorma11on 614
446-9840

Avenue GallipoliS 614-446 2842
Wanted to buy ~ "1ll~ue and used
furniture no 1tem too large or too
smnll W1ll buy one p1ece or com
ptete estates Osby Mart1n, 614
992 7441

310 Homes for Sale

WANTED Part -t1me INSTRUC
TOR Needed To Teach Commun
It~ A.nd Persona l SkillS To An
Adulr Wrtn Learnrng Lrmrtattons
In Mergs County Hours 8 AM
Sat Thru 8 AM Mon Must Be
Able To Stay 011ernrghts Hrgh
School Degree Valid Drrver s Lr
cense Good Onvrng Record,
Three LrcenSed Years Drrvrn9
Experrence And Adequate A.uro
mobile Insurance Coverage Re
qu1 red II Interested Comact Cecilia At 1 800 531 2302 Equal
Oppor!unrty Employer

160

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree S&amp;v1ce Complete tree
care 20yrs exp &amp; rnsured free
est1mares 614 441·1191 or 1
BOO 508-8687
General Marn tenance. Patntmg
Yard Work Wrndows Washed
Guners Cleaned Light Hauling
Commertcal Res rdentrat Steve
614 446 8861

All real estate advertising In
thts newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whlcM makes 11111ega1
to advert1se •any preference
!1mitatton or dtscnmlnat1on
based on race color, religiOn,
sex lam1llal status or national
ongtn, or any Intention to
make any such prererence,
hmttatlon or discrlm1nation •
This newspaper wtll not
knowhngly accept
advertisements for real estate
whrch Is tn VIOlatiOn of the taw
Our readers are hereby
lnlonnea rhat all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper,
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

~~~~~~~~~~~~

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sate
1---~------­

14x70 Wtndsor Deluxe Excellent
Con(htton, Large K1tchen Living
Room, 2 Bedrooms 1 Baths.
Georges Portable Sawmill don 1 $12 000,614 245-9431
haul your logs to the mJII lUSt call
304 675 1957
ltmlled Oiled 1996 douDiewrde,
3br 2bath $1695 down, $2591
Proless1onal Tree Servtce, Com
month Free del1very &amp; setup
pl ete Tree Ca re , Bucket Truck Only at Oakwood Homes Nrtro
Servrce 50 F t Reach, Stump Re- wv 304-755-5885
mollal
Free Es11mates1 In
surance 24 Hr Emergoncy Sel\1
New 1996 t4ll:70 tncludes skrrt
1ce ·Call And Savel No Tree Too rng steps blocks one year
Brg Or loo SmaiU B1dwel\ Ohro
homeowners rnsurance and s1x
614·388 9643,614 367 7010
months FREE lot rent Only $1025
down and $207 17 per month Call
Sun Val ley Nursery School
1 600.837 3238
Ch11dcare M F Bam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Ourmg Pr1ce Buster! New 14x70 2 or
Summer 3 Davs per Week Mrnr
3br Only $995 down $195/month
mum 614 446 3657
Free delrvery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes , N11ro WV 304
Wtll babys1t rn my home rn M1d
755 5885
dleport, 10 yrs e~petrenc&amp; reler·
ences &amp; close to school. 614
330 Farms for Sare
992 7965
46 Acres Pond, House Complete
Wou td L1ke To Babystl 1 Chtld Remodled, Barn, Garage Outbull ·
Infant Or Toddler In My Home, 1ng Trarler Hook- Up, 614 446
Relarences 614 245 5887
1098
Wrll Clean Houses at $5 00 Per
Hour Call 614·256 6052

350 lots &amp; Acreage

Wtll Do lmerror Erterror Pamtrng
Reasonable Rates Erperrenced
References For Free Esumates
Call 614 245-5755

FINANCIAL
21 o

Business
Opportunity
INQTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ness wrth people you know, and
NOT 10 sene money through the
ma11 until you have rn\lest1gated
the ollerrng
Re tar l Bus1ness For Sale, Aro
Grande lmmed•ate Possession
Greal Potenllal, Low lnve$1ment
For More InformatiOn, 614 245·
9109
TRAVEl AGENCY Own your
own travel agency have a great
rncome travel lree 1 800 860
4492

REAL ESTATE
31 o Homes tor Sale

:3

Bedrooms 2 Baths Hear Pump
Gas Furnace 1 Acre Garage
Add1son Area Pr1ce Reduced To
$57,000 614 367·7267

3 Bedrooms Bath &amp; 112, L•vmg
Room Famtly Room F1n l shed
Basement CA In Ground Pool
614 446 4895 Please Lea11e
Mess;Jge
5 Rooms Bath Basement Docks
Pool 1 1110 Mtles Rom Gallipolis
At 141,614 446·1026

WANT ED COMMUNITY SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR Posmon A11a1lable
To T-each Commumty And Per
Commercrat Bu 1ldmg, 6400 sq It
sonal Skt ll.s To Adu lts Wrth floor space 2ac land wtsecurrty
Lea rnmg Ltmltatrons In Mergs fence W1ll sel l lease or rent Call
Coumy Hours 18 Hrs I W'rf. 11 Somervil le Realty 304·675 3030
AM • 7 PM , Sat tSu n 2 Hour or 304 675•343 t
Weekly Stall Meetmg , Or As
Otherwrse Scheduled
Hrgh Mtedteporl, close to store &amp;
School Degree Valid Onver s Lr
school 2 srory, 1 112 barh 3 10 5
cense Good Dr1vtng Record
bedrooms 3 lots fenced yard
.
Tnree Years Ltccnsed Drr11rng 614 992 7423
E•perrence And AdeQuate Au to
Ou1et country home two bedmobrle Insurance Coverage Re
our red Tramtng Pro111ded Salary rooms and bath basement gas
and furnace, satel!tte dish 38
$5 00 /Hr. To Start Send Resume
'
To PO eo~ 604 , Jackson, OH acres call614 985-4243
45640 ATTN Cecrha Deadlrne
For Applrcants 6126195 Equal Ranch style on 33996 New Lima
Rd Rutland, as~ 1 ng $2 2 000 pnce
OpPOrtunity Employer
negottabte 614 742 2225

Beauty ShOp equrpment, 1 station
Xl4 773-9123

Ver~ clean one bedroom rur

ntshed apartment 1n Middleport
614 4116 3091 or 614 992 5304

450

Furnished
Rooms

Crrcle Mote! lowest Rates In
Town! Da1ly Wee~ l~ Monthly
614 446 2501

RENTALS
410 Houses tor Rent
2 or 3 bedroom house rn Pornet
oy w1th optron to buy deposrt re
qurred no pets 614 698 1244

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

470 Wanted to Rent

MERCHANDISE
510

Household
Goods

Applrances
Recondrttoned
Washers , Dryers Ranges Refrr
graters 90 Day Guaranteet
French Crty Maytag 614 446

7795
Country Furniture Furnrture lor
Every Room 6m1, Rt 2 North PI
Pleasant 314 675-6820

3 Bedrooms Full Basement , 7
M rles North 160 From Holzer
Hospital Ava•lable 9/15195 Can
Show 9/5/95 Oeposrt, Refe rence
Requtred 614 446-0595

LAYNE S FURNITURE
House For Rent In Country 2
mplete home lurn1Sh1ngs
Bedrooms Garage Gas Hea t 1
u .. .. . c . Mon Sar, 9-5 614 -446
$300 /Mo Oeposl! References
0322 3 mrles out Bulavrlle P1ke
614 ~26 6926
FrOO Delr11ery
Nic'e three bedroom ho-ust.t rn
Sle eper couch, loveseat large
Mtddlepon no pets 614 992
charr antique \lanrty color TV,
5B5B
glass end tables small entertarn
Ntce clean, 1br, C ltfton double men! center, bed 304·67&gt;2895
lot $2751mo 1200 deposit, no
Solrd maple dresser w/hutch, wh/
pets 304 773·9192
gold French Pro11rnctal desk, set
ol walnut end tables (3) couch w/
Small House Near K·Mart, Unlur
n1shed, $300/Mo ... Gas Electric, malchtng love seat matchtn9
See At 10 B1rch Lane, Gatlrpoll s dresser &amp; ches t drawers all hke
new 614 985 3595
614 446·1822, Keep Trying

2 Bedroom Home Wnh F1reptace
In 19 Acres Sowards Rtdge
Road, Crown C1ty $350/Mo 614
256-1559
2bedroom You pay uttl!ltes De
pos1t No pels. 304-675 2535

430 Farms lor Rent

Electnc Wheelchatrs /Scooters
New fUsed. Scooter /Wheelchatr
lrlts Statrway Elevators. l1ft
Chans, Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7263
For sale used Frigidaire SfO\Ie &amp;
relngerator also Maytag washer
&amp; dryer phone 614-992 5281
Grbson relngerator top freezer,
gooe coneuron, whtte $250, 614
992 6131
G1rl's clothes a:tze 14, wtnter &amp;
summer 1 large Ford transmrsSIOn 304-675 1484
H1 Ellecrency L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU
$1,250 Installed, 1·800 287 63081
614 446 6308 Duct Systems And
Arr Condrttoners Free Esbmates.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1r&amp;d New &amp; RebUilt In Stoc~
Cart Ron E11ans, 1 800 537 9528

Sleeprng rooms wrth cookrng
Also trarler space on filler All
hook ups Call alte r 2 oo p m,
304 773 5851 Mason WV

Kenmore washer &amp; dryer, 4yrs
old $395 Kelvrnator elec 40"
range $100 OBO 30.4 576 4510
days or 304 882 2035 alter 6pm,
leave message

2 Bedroom $2251Mo $200 De
posll Water Pard Bellomy Lane
614 388 9267

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enrerpr1ses, Jackson, OH
1 800 537 9528

lazy Boy rockerlrecllner Orand
nuw never used. blue, $200 814

3 Bedroom Home Located In
Centenary On 141, $450/Mo Se
currry Deposit 614 446-6566

12.1:65 2bedroom 1 bath, on Rt 2
Crab Creek, 2 Horsel 1 c~ Ad
$300/mo Oepos•t &amp; references
304 369 6447

Chest Freezer $100 3 Pc Kmg
Stze BedroGm Sutte, $200 A.n·
trque Dresser Vantty W1th Mrrror
SSO , 2 Sw1vel Charrs Wtth Sofa
$125 Otltce Desks $15 &amp; Up Ttll
er $45 614 379-2720

Ladre s d1amond nng, appra1sed
St
w1ll sell $750 Have ap r
I papers 304-875 7541

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refr1gersrors
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vrne Street, Call 514-446 7398
1 800·499 3499

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

9780

Rooms lor rent week or month
Srartmg at $120;mo Gall1a Ho tel
614 446 9580

Four lots Mar Aacme appro~ 1
1/2 acres each start1ng at $5000
call614 949-2025

Scen1c Valley Apple Grove
beautr!ul 2ac lots p[lblrc water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

386 SX Laser Compu1er, Wmd
ows 3 1 IBM Comp, Includes
Prrnter $600, 6U.· 446·9278

Furmshed Eff1c1ency Share Bath
$195/Mo Utrht1es Pa1d P07 Sec
ond Gall1polls 614 446 4416 AI
ter 7 PM

Twrn R1\lers Tower now accepung
appl rcatrons lor 1br HUD suDs1d
rzed apt tor elderly and hand1
capped EOH 304 675 6679

Sunrav gas coo~stove a11a ca do
color $150 304-773 9192
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St, Galht)olrs New &amp; Used
furnrture heater5, Western &amp;
WOI"k boots 61 .t.-«6 31 59
VI11A FURNITURE
614-44&amp;3158
Quality Household Furn11ure And
Apphances. Great Deals On
Gash And Carryl RENT2 OWN
And layaway Also Avat lable
Free Oeltvet'y Wtth1n 25 Mrles

520

Sporting
Goods

Remrngton 7600 30 06 With 3x9
Redlreld scope 40th annrversary
Fender Stratocaster wtth acceso
rtes 614 94g 2467

•At 0987

tA 6 3
11oK965 2
SOUTH
• K 4 2
wA K J 3 2
tl0742

lloQ

3•J&amp;,.

Wtt.l"""f

o 1tM!IffoeA.II'IC

245 .. ob

lrft cha1r, $15(1, 1 year old 614
992 6772 or 614-742·1301
Ntce General Electric Stove,
$125 614 446-8627
Now avartable at Parnt Plus for
your log home, ce&lt;lar stdtng, deck
or outdoor furnuure AKZO NOBEL SIKKENS ::OATINGS 304·

675 4llB4

Pizza oven Blodgen gas oven 2
stone decks, $950 lrrm May help
With mov1ng and delrvery 614·
992 2478 days or lea11e mes
RCA Camcorder Full S1ze Color
Vrew 24 Power Sum 4 Months,
Used 3 T1mes $500 614 446
7139
Re lrrQerators Sto11es, Washers
And Dryers All Recondrtroned
And Gauranteedt $1 00 And Up,
W1ll Dehver 614-669 644 t
Septrc Tank Jet Aerauon Motors
New &amp; Rebuilt flnstalled, Call
Johns John 614 446 4782
Srx electr ic exerc:•se tonrng ta
Dies, !hey do all the work lor you
very ellectNe 304 67S.7541
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallo 11
Upr1ght Ron Evans Enterprrses
Jacl\son, Oh10, 1 800 S37 95_,.
SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEDS
Commercial Home untts from
$199 Buy lacrory direct and
SAVE! Call TODAY for NEW
FREE color catalog 1 800·462·
9197
We Wrll Be Selhng The Timber
On Th1s 100 Acre Farm In V1nron
County 16w And Up At The
Stump, 614 685-3064

1---------.;,..SSO
Building
Supplies
1-----...;_;_____
Block, brick, sewer p1pes,
ows llnlals etc Claude Wrnters
Arc Grande, OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Pets lor Sale

Groom Shop Pel Groommg Fee.turrng Hydro Bath .,lutre Webb
Call 61 4·446-0231
2 male AKC Cocker Spantel
pups black &amp; blacklwhrte, ChampiOn bloodlines, S150ea 304 937

2733
5 Black. Lab pups, AKC Reg t&amp;·
tered 304-675-6359
AKC Ak tta female puppy, 6wks
old, PICk of lhe ltlter, sable/white
w/black mask, shots, wormed, &amp;
pedrgree 304-675-6253.
A KC Oalmat1on puppy, sho1s &amp;
wormed, $150 3)4-937·2929
AKC Aegtstered Oa'th&amp;hunds,
shots &amp; wormed 304-675-2193.

56~_::.o__
P..:et.::s::....::fo::.:r_S:.a:.l:.::e__

_

AKC Aegrs1ered1Oalma1tan ~up
ptes 12wks old' vet checked,
shots &amp; wormed 2 mates liver
spot $225ea 2 females blackl
whtte $20088. very soctal, great
w/chtlclren 304 875 3738 alter
4pm

1

610 Farm Equipment

s

AKC Regtstered male Pomera
nran whtte. 614 992 3085
4pm

H&amp;S V Tank Spreader $7,950
New 50 60. 85 100 HP Tractors
In Stock Low Rate Frnancrng
New Rakes Bater Mowers, Ted
ders Wrappers In Stock Car
m.chael's Farm &amp; Lawn 614 446
24120r 1 8005941111

AKC Aeg1stered Rottwerler Pups
1st Shots, Wormed Tarls Ooc~e&lt;l
Excellent Marktngs 614 446-

,no

AKC ReQI:!IIered German Short
hatred Potnter Pupptes, $75 00
614 245 5697
AKC Aegtstered S1bertan Husky
Puppies, Black &amp; Whrte, Wtth
Blue Eyes $150, 614·446-3889
Akita Pupptes, 6 Weeks Old,
AKC Ltke Ntcole S1mpson s Dog,
Champ1on Bloodhne Pedrgree

$300 614 367 9389
AKC Reg1stered Cocker Spamel
Puppy Male, Bull &amp; While
Wormed Vacc1na1ee Champion
Bloodlrne, 0 0 B 312195 $200,
614 379 2728
Birds, Iguanas Tarantulas mrce
Ftsh Tank &amp; Pet Shop 2413
Jackson Ave Potnt Pleasant

304 675 2()63

New :r potato plow S80 3 pt 6
brush hoQ $485 614 843-5216
Wanted to buy good used srlage
wagon 304-6 75-2443 aher 4pm

630

4 Year Old RegiStered Sullo I~
Ram $250 614 446-1947 Alter
4 30PM

Hoi stern Cow On DHI Test JD
Corn Planter Cultrvalor 514 245-0610
Pheasant&amp;OuBII614 446 7410

Tennessee Moumatn Kerr pup
ptes ready to go 304-675-7911

570

Musical
Instruments

Hay &amp; Gral n

Hay rolls S20 Oelt11ery storage
available Morgans Farm Rt 35
304 937 2018.
Square Dales $1 $2 RoUnd bales
S 1Sea Taktng orders ror 2nd cut
trng unt1l Sept 1 304 675-3960

1981 Crtallon , Runs Good, $700.
614 643-{1012

Cannrng tomatoes for sale $4
prck~d, $3 you p1ck hot peppers
$8/0u Marshall A:dams, 48060
Adams Rd letart Falls Oh10,
614 247 2055

I&gt;E,MITT, Pfi.ENTICE. $MAI-j,.
WtiiTT A~t,, Wil-SON, BAj,.L
PATT~$0111. tMYU
GAI!FINICLE, BAY$
BDL. TON, tiA;C:.ov,r ' tlALL

Jor~es

ANt&gt;

wH~I..r~

A L-Aw
fl~M
.,

Q

0

A t.IMEJltC:I:

Obi

WHY, M~~ VWi.EFBlU. I
f-V.l\..1 NIC£ TO':££ YQIJI
J.JE f\1\'IE: I&lt;'J~ YOJ I

~

_ r-----------------~

YOU NO~ cw.E..If-.1
~YroR.~ ..
I~ Til£

P'

r 00 i'IOT Flt-ID YOOR fi.E.N.5

...

one spade and one dtamond

Phillip Alder's book, "Get Smarter
at Bridge," ts availuble, auto ·
graphed upon request, for $14 95
from P 0 Box 169, Roslyn Hts , NY

f:E.DOCTm£ AAY~.

11517-0169

590

For Sale
orltade

Royal Oaks Resort Membershtp
tor sell S 1800 or trade lor any
th in g of equal value 304 343
0451

Motor Homes

s
s

500

Ftnanang lor 3 -4, or 5yrs at 4 9%
or tak.e cash reQate Keefer s
Servlce Center StAt 87 , p 1
Pleasant &amp; Rtpley Ad 30 4 99 5.
3874
Corn Pickers Wagons Hay Brn
d&amp;rs Rak&amp;s. Square Bal&amp;rs Mow
ers Tedders, Gravely Tractors
Elevators, Manure Spreaders
Plows, D1sks Other Fteld Ready
Equrpment, Howes Farm Mach•nery Route 32. Jack.sor OH Jack·
son Ohrc 614 ')(1 .. _5944
'gog
D1scount farm tractor parts lor
Massey Ford IH, &amp; others
S1der s Equtpment Co Hender
son WV 304·675·7421 or 1 800
277 39 17

1983 1611 Scamper tra1let ex~
cond, $3,500 304-675 6621

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Clpl'ler Bryplograms ere created from quota!I(J(II by tamous people pa.tand present
• EllCh lener rn lhe c.,twr afandllol another TodeJis clue K toqua~r F

' F H

J

OM

sc

G

IHG MC

UGV

cs

XGA

YHBHDNHV
G.O

L G J

CF H

K YS l

0 F S

YSHM

K Z C Z Y H

LZBF

G .M

G M

F H

CFH

GC

FGM

X G M C . '

XSIIGYV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Anyone casting a golf movte musl constder Jeremy
Ann Wedgeworth and Mr T ~ - {Colummsl) Allan

Irons, James Woods
Malamud

I

DULMED

1

I.

I I

I I'

I

KABNL

I' I .

Y E MA B

I I I I" I
.

5

1

I

IHESE

10U !&gt;HOULP 8E 0\lniDIE
ENJOYING 'fOUl!. SUMMER

j :ro:;:
,':

·::

Our
ad fm1shed
a computer class He com·
piamed to h1s w1le . In th1s
·day and age 1t's d1sturbmg to

I

16

I

C)

Complete

the

has

chuck le quoted

.by fdlrng m the mr~~ r ng words

you 'Be ... elop Irom step Ng 3 below

SQUARES

UNSCRAMBlE ABOvE LETTERS
TO GEl ANSWER

IN~TEA.I&gt;,
'l'OU'RE SITTING liERE

VA.CA.TION 1

REAOIMC.! tn

rn

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Pnnce- Stung· Gnef- Bounty - OUR FEET
,986 Doege Daytona 4 Cyltndet"
Automatrc, New T1res 1E1haust
Good Shapet $2 BOO 614 2455946, After 5

'

57RI&lt;E ABJ.INI N M Will ON

IAj;pji;,;;;e;~;;-;i;;ds;;;;;-;;Aij

HIGH l'ftiCE! lHoP M CLASSFED$.

1986 Grand Am Auto PS PB
Crurse Trlt, 109 000 Mrles $2 000
Firm 614-256 6543

WtLL 1 I G~SS
~OU'RS NOT 'f1.IE.
ONLY

ONe 11UM&amp;

otJOVGfi TO PROP
STlifF '1'IIS

m

AQUARIUM ..• LOOK I
GOMEOfJErS VI SA

CAI&lt;D1 DRIVI:iR'S
LICENS6 AAIP·" ?I lf&lt;.L&lt;l....

I&gt;EII1'1

•COROS ··

1988 Olds 98 Broughan, above
average $6500 neg 304 6 75

C&amp;C General Home Marn •
tenence Patntrng v1nyl srerng~:
caro•rllrv. doors wmdows baths.
1989 Ford Taurus wagon runs ~~::~~"~,;h,:~
ome~7ereparr and more Fo~
great good cond, 2 900 304 11
call Chet 614 992·:
675-6376

2563

s

1989 Ol ds Toronado Ol,OOO
M1les loaded EJCcellent Condt
lion, se,ooo 614-379-2238
1990 Cadt!lac Sedan Oev111e
sharp cond. hiQh mileage 8500
neg 304-675 2563

s

1990 Lumtna Sedan, 'V6 looks &amp;
runs. excellent, $4,000 1986 Pen
toonboat$5500 304882-3288

. .«STRO-GRAPH

Ho me Mamtenance vtny l
1
rooltng extenor patn!lng
power washrng, Free Est1mates
614 992 4451 or 614 992 4232
Ron s TV Serv1ce, specrahzrng tn
Zen1th also serv1crng most olher
brands House calls, 1 800- 797
0015, VN 304 576 2398

1::--c'---..,.-------

'\

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Roo,1ng and gutters commercral
and res1dentral mmor repairs 35

Cy·~~~!!c~~~~B~&amp;~B~R:O~O~F

1992 4 Door Chev CorSJca, 6
hnder Auto A1r Ttl! Cruise
38 000 Miles S7 000 F1rm excell'
cond 614 446 7127
1992 Ford Festrva am-lm stereo
59pd, ac, 71 000 rnterstate mtles,
great gas mil eage S4 ,300 30 4
882 3435 or 304 882 3348

1992 Plymouth Laser 41 000
mi les, e;~~cellent condttlon great
gas mrleage, $8600 614 992
6725

Farmell Cub Wtth Cultrvator, No
Sunday Calls. 614·25e·1 139

1992 Plymouth Sundance 4 Cyltn
der 5 Speed lm, 48 ,000 Mtles
Warranty, $4 900 OBO, 614 256
1539 614 256 1233

Massey~ Ferguson 16 5 Tractor
S5350 New Holland Mowtng MaChine, $895 Vermeer Round Bal-

1995 Dodge Caravan $19 000 Or
Take Over Payments. 614 367
7346, Be1ween 8 A M 2 p M

er $2,500 T020 Ferguson Wuh
Bush Hog &amp; Blade $2,550 61-4
286-6522

149
Crate on
50 Glide
snow

POINI NlJMBERED !EllERS IN

BIG NATE

610 Farm Equipment

Augus t Trac10r Sale
Agco Alhs tractors wllh world
lamous arr cooled dresel ongmes
41 &amp; 52hp, all come standard wt
radral ttres, Hyd spool valve
ropes &amp; canopy 4yr or 4,QOOhr
drl\le trarn warra,ty, warranty best
tn the lnduS!I'Y
,..
4650 2wd 4 1hp 13,900
46602wd52hp$15,900
4650 4wd 41 hp 17 goo
4660 4wd S2hp $20

CIPH ER

r

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

All1s Chalmers Tractor 170 Gas
Engme Good Parn1 Fa1r CondJ·
!ton With 6 Ft Ktng Kunet Brush
Hog (Used 1 Season) $4 600
614 24S-1401,late Evenmgs

--L;:;:i;j~;;;~~;;-:;!:;~:;;:::';:.J

L-.l._..l...- . l.....:...l..._ _j__...J.

Volkswagen RaDbtt 4 1::39::33::..:o:.r.:.1.::Billl=.2:;:7.:3.:9:::3:;;29:.c.__ _....;
Speed, 4 Door $700 Good Run 790
C
&amp;
nmg Condtloon Good Body 614
ampers

Cann1ng tomatoes for sale brtng
con1arners p1ck your own or al
ready ptc:ked, 614·247 2961
Red Raspbelnes Ta~ l or's Berry
Pa1ch 6 14 245-9047

,...+--+-+--J

29 lluddhlol
t11rtne
31 Taunt
35 Jamea Bond,
e.g
37 Singer
Lily40 Surmloe
41 Close
42- Malar
43 Poet
Ogden 44 Pallo
46 -Domini
48 Literary
mlliCellany

--.LT-U-rR-.V_A-.G~,..-4/ ~g~~ _t~~~- ~ .. mach me

1982

1983 Cutlass Supreme. auto. AIC .
T lops black wlgray mtertor
$2000 not 614 992 3739

action
22 Comp. pt
23 Planlll
Brubeck
24 Troubletomt
25 Sand tturd
26Metat
27 Abyoolntan
28 Llkooome

Ieana

three clubs and e1ther two spades or

~

New gas tanks, one ton trucf
wt1eels radralors lloormats,etc
•
0 &amp; R Auto Rrpley, WV 304 372-

2s• 1242

19 Proteaterl'

,.-+--+-t---J

South's mne lr1cks are four hearts,

BORN LOSER

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Rowlands Keyboard FP8 Drgrtal
Prano 1994 Full Stze Wtlh 88
Keys Wetted l&lt;eys, In ternal
Speakers With External Jack
S!atned Pedal, 614 256 - 1421

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1995 Kawasaki 750 ZXI Jet s~•
With cover four year extended
warranty and trarler askm~
$5950 6t4-992-6026

GM 350 turbo automanc tran S:
m~ssron professiOnally rebuilt
s2so e 14 992 6ooe

580

-

1993 Larson 1811 open bow 4 3~
sport mtenor wtsu n deck 6 141441 1084 alter 7pr1'1
'

1977 Cor\lette Manne Blue 350
Barrel, 46,000 Actual Miles Very
Good Cond111on r $9 000 614 446·

1098

ALWAVS STANDING
IN I=RONT 01= ME
IN T~E LINE AT
T~E HOT D06
STAND.

THE C~OWD5
BOT~E~ YOV?

4pm

For Sale Console Plano Wanted,
responsible party to make low
monthly payments on plano See
locally Call1 800 268-6218

• llluatratO&lt;
11 Run Into
17 Cereal graoo

2 ..
Pass
JNT
Pass
All pass

Yestenlay's deal was shown to me by
Englishman Tony Priday He IS one of
the best bndge players ever, but stnce
he tS a reserved person, he ts not as
well -known or highly rated as some
more extroverted but less able players.
Followmg that wnte-up, no doubt you
are expectmg a deal where Priday
played or defended brilliantly Wrong'
Priday also showed me thts deal, whtch
he mtsplayed durmg a rubber bndge
galne m London's Cafe Royal But he
spotted 1mmedtately how he should
have made the contract
Aggressive b1ddmg led to three no·
trump, wh1ch West doubled because he
had the hearts held and 11 was polen
llally the end of the rubber
West led the spade queen five, tO,
king Pnday finessed the club queen,
wh•ch held Then declarer opllm•sllcal
ly played a dtamond toward the durn ·
my, covered by the )8Ck, king and ace
East returned a diamond to his part·
ner's queen, and a second spade gave
East four tncks m that slut The con·
tract was two down 500 to East-West
Priday had overlooked the Inference
about the heart su1t If West had five or
stx hearts, the wmmng lme, after the
club queen held tnck two, was to play a
heart lo dummy's queen and contmue
With the ace and Jack of clubs
Unless w1ilmg to sacnf1ce a club
trick, East must gtve the lead to the
dummy in either spades or dtamonds

't'E5, THEV'RE

PLA'(ING IN A
TOURNAMENT. DO

cru1ser rntout trailer all e•~
cond $4900 304 675 3485 alter

710 Autos tor sare

TRANSPORTATION

'
,WHEN VOli~E

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale -

Budget Transmtsstons Used &amp;
Rebuilt All Types. Accessible To
Over 10 000 TransmiSSIOn, Also
Parts Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates 6 t4 379 2935

Conn Student Trumpet For Sale,
txcellent Condt!ron, $275 614
446-3132

levee
6 Biblical
character

Why did
he double?

Yamaha Wave Runner E~cellet1j
Cond1tron Trarler Included 61.(;
388 8009

760

7 Swindle

8 Chem auff
II College YIP
10 Art dtco

lead •

PEANUTS

1995 Yamaha Warrror lour wheel
er 350cc 6 speed w11h reve1se.
e•cellent cond11ron $3800 0601'
614 gg2 6977

17h S1arcralt m hulL 140hp Met

a mlaalon
(2 wds.)
4 Sault - Marte
5 Strengthen a

By Phillip Alder

1994 Honda Magna $4 500 614l'
256 6920

8366

Pass

TREED A

'POSSUM?!!

tron, $550 1979 Kawasakr 65{)
$500 080 614 379 2313

14 aluminum f1shrnf11 boat deep
V with 1ra11er. 6hp Ev1nrud~
electric rrollrng motor, l1sh lrnde"
S700 614 949-2698 alter 3pm

2NT

Pass
Pass

2W

Dodge Ram Van B -25 0,
72 000 Mtles $6,000 Can Be
Seen At Galhpolts Datly Tnbune,
825 Th1rd Avenue Ga ll tpoln~
OhiO
~

Crossbred Ch1-Angus. Mame
Angus Ch1 Ma1ne Cows 22 Pas
ture Bre(:l He1fers Approx 1000
10 Should Calf In FeD ~arch,
Trade Feeder Calves 614 388

640
Jack Russell temers puppres tor
sale, $250 each 10# lull grown,
614 742 2050

Livestock

aatlsflad
23 Kannel dweller
25 Lack of muscle
tone
26 Slllletl
DOWN
30 Order ""
32 Boxing-victory
1 Church part
abb&lt;
2 Public
·
33 12th mo.
services
34 State of
3 Group with

1 ..

,

MY OL' BULLET

MF 231 218 Hrs $10 200 JD
1
2640 $11 900 JO 2640 $10 900 '--------~-....;.
'
JD 2940 $1 1 900 MF 135 a·
$4 950 JO 375 R Baler $8 500 740
MotorcycleS
NH 853 $8
NH 565; ~·:~f~: ·liim~i;;';d,;""'j;if;;;;;w~~:
Baler 17 950
H
1973 Ho nda 350 motorcycle.
$5 950 JO ;19
good condrtron $500 OBO 304·
7' 01sk Mower
675-7350
7 Haybrne $1.- ·.o·~ .~1981 1100 Ho nda lnterstat~~
1 500 NH 256
FBB Drrll $2 500 614 446~543
18 Hoe Drill 11050
$500 JO 3800 Chopper $2 ,500 1982 Honda FTSOO Good Condr·

AK_f: regtstered Dalmattan pup
pres, 7 wks, female $75, male
$125, rrrSI shots and checked,
614·985-4 40 1

' ·'

BARNEY

1989 Astra Mark Ill Conversion
Van Loaded 1982 Red Mustartg
EXP. E:u:ellenl Cond111on AIC,
New Trres $1 t95 Most Trade·
Ins Possrble, Cook MOIO(S, 514
446 0003
~

t."liltR'"\

An1wer to Prevtous Puzzte

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer East
South
West North East

~:; t-:::::::::::r:::::::::::~ 1990

8 Ft Truck Topper F ber9lass
Slrd1ng Wu'ldows , $275 51 4·388·

Stonewood Apartmen1s I"'OW ac
cep trng applrcat1ons lor apart
ments all electrrc lor elder!~ and
drsabrliry FmHA subsrdrzed EOH
611\ 992 3055

. ...

HAIJ(k):;

A SUMMIT
MEETIOO

1988 Toyota 4x4 Short Bed
107 000 Mrtes Clean PB :&amp;
Steenn9 Ausr Free, Runs ltke
New $5 500 614 256- 1540, Alter
6PM

top, $50
approx
srzesequ1ns
6 1 Dlue
SIZe
6 1 black
wi red
sequined SIZe 4 304 675-6518

Furntshed Apartment All Uulrttes
Pard Downsta!fs, $ f 851Mo 919
Second A'JOrfue, 614 448 3945

N1ce Ono BR Unlurmshed Apart
ment Range &amp; Relr1g Prov•ded
Water &amp; Garbage Pard A1r Con
dt!ron Deposil ReqUired Call 614
446-4345 Alter 6 PM

~£'R€

lloAJt087
EAST

1980 CJ5 Jeep Soft Top 304 En
g1ne \/·8 Body Good Condrtrol'l,
$3 000 614 441-0202

16 HP Ford Lawn Trac10r 42" Cut
$365, 18 HP Ranch Kmg Lawn
'Tractor 48. Cut, 14 Speed $975,
614 446 0008

Execurrve apt 1br lull kl!chen
dishwasher washerldryer central
arr &amp; heat water lurnrshed p11
11ate entrance references de
post! 304-675-5733

Newly parn ted &amp; rcdecora1ed
20BdrOOfTI 'urn1shed apartment
carpet throughout
1ncludes
washertdrver 2 car garage 304
675 2884

EEK&amp;MEEK

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

10ton Porta Power set brand
used 304 875-5358, If
no answer leave meuage wtl l
return calls

42 Inch Brg Screen Stereo TV
Wuh Surrounding Sound Capab1l
II)' L1k.e New Trade For Farm
Trac tor 4~4 Ptck. Up 4 Wheeler
Wtth PTO e 14 256 6114 Any
trme

GJ3Cious hv1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
R1vers1de Apartments rn Mrddle
port From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5859 Equal Hous1ng Opper
tunmes

WQ 7
oK 9 B

nuw, never

3 formal dresses 1 purple, $30

trom $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614 &lt;146 2568
Equal Hous1ng Opportunity

•

1993 Chevy hall T W T truck
Leer topper Ssp rear posruve
!ractron 21 000 mrles e•cellcnt
condt\IOn . 6 14 949 268 1

79 PT Round Dramond Solrta1re
HSt3 14K Ye llow Gol d Pa rd
$2,192 January Repo Item
Ame11can General Frnance, 614
-4464113 ..

Apartment &amp; Trarler Ut1htres Pa1d

lmmedraret~

Lot For Sale 90•172, On Kr~st 1
DriVe 614 446 0418

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1993 Down East Hot Tub E•cet
lent Condtt ron l Holds 5 People
E~cellent Quality, Cedar Wood
Wrth Cover 614 446-1096

ESTATES 52 Westwood Dnve

8 22 95

•J 6 5

1974 Cttev~ V 8, Std $600 614-

2Rooms Plu s Bath Lafa.yene
fwtall No K1tchen l All Uuilbes paid
$175 00 Monltl DepoSit Required
614 446 -7733

30 4 675 25 79
- - - - - - -----BEAUTtFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

1966 Chevy short-bed Fleet Sic'•,
ongtnal VB, runs great, !'lew seatt~
extra set of all new glass oaK
stnps 1n bed, hke new $3 sooneq.
304-675-6001

446--4999

9009

Famtly 01 3 ..- 2 Outsrde Pets
Needs Large 3 BR Home Wt!h
Storage Space And Good Stzed
Yard Reasonably Prtced Wrll Do
lmpro11ements For Rent Cons1d
era11ons 614 441 0805 Needed

Wrll Do Babysllltng In My Home
Mercer11rlle Area 614 256-1006
614 256 9301

Buy or sell Rtver1ne Ant1ques
1124 E Mam Streel, on Rt 124
Po meroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm, Sunday 100 to
6 00 p m 614 992·2526

18 000 btu Fedders a1r cond1t1on
er, used less than three months
$400 614-742·2178

r-----------...,----------..-.l -----------

ALDER

720 Trucks for Sale

1 Pecana, e.g.
5 Hurry
9 Rep.a
counterpart
12 Rat·-.13 Black
14 .. - I aaw Elba
15 Holding
device
16 Reapect deeply
18 Fraternal
member
19 Barbara Gaddee
20 0111 aeed
21 Money back

36 Free from
bacteria
38 Believe
39 Baseball'•
Mel40 Seamount
41 Senator
Sam44 Gloomy one
45 Ingrid
Bergman'•
daughter
47 Nol
Indelible
50 Indication
51 Horse
rotative
52 Entre53 Actress
Madeline54 Stadium cheer
55 Cutting toots
56 Division word

:::-::-~------1 ~1995
Gran Pr••. low m11eage, eJCc:

5 00

cond 304 675 4066

820

Plumbing &amp;

Heating

Freeman s Heattng And Coolmg
lnstallaltDn And Serv1ce EPA
Certllted Aes1den11a1 Commercral
614 256 1611

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER '
LAWRE NCE ENTERPRISES
H~al Pumps, Arr CondrtlOnrng II
You Dent Call Us We Bath Los~l 1
Free Estimates, 1 800 -287 -6308
614
6308
002945
•

:we

wv

Res1denttal or commerctal Wlrtng,..
new servtce or repatrs Master lt
censed electrtctan Rtdenout
Electrical WV000306, 304 675· ,

171!6

Wednesday, Aug 23, t 995
The year ahead could be an extremely
busy one for you wtlh a number of new
trons tn the ftre Success ts IndiCated after
you sort out the productiVe projects from
the unproductiVe ones

1ng Virgo, treat yourself Ia a btrthday gtH
Send for your Astro-Graph Pfedtcttons for

the year ahead by mailing $2 and SASE
to Astro·Graph, c/o thts newspaper P 0
Box 4465 New Yqrk, NY t0t63 Make
sur~ to state your zodtac stgn
LIBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) Make an effort
to help others today. but be senstble
regardtng whom you help. Avoto:l assum·
mg the burdens of goldbrlcker
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You are

yourself to be m1sused
PISCES (Feb. 2G-Morch 20) Progress IS
tndtcated today tf you serve as your own
counselor If you bnng In outs1de actv1sers
the qualtty of your deciSions wtll drop

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Extra
respons1bihtles m~ght be fotsled upon you
today If you have a negat1ve attttude tt
may cause them to appear awesome and
unmanageable

TAURUS (Aprii2G-Iolloy 20) For lhe sake

ltkely lo get your fatr share of opportunt·
ttes today, but you mtght not recogntze
thetr true worth and fatl to capttaltze on

of your tmage and relahonshtp wtth close
fnends stay on your best behavtOf today
Thoughtless acttons could wound sev-eral

them property
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) Half

pals

measures won't count for much today 11
you're faced with a chaUengtng development The only way lo score a true success wtll be to go all out

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Guard

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) Do not make

agatnst seetng Sttuattons today as you
would ltke them to be tnstead of as they
are Wtshtul thtnktng wtll dtstort the ptcture and work aga1nst you

sent No m"atter how hard you try , what
you say could seem unfan and unflatter·

held accountable for the mrstakes of olh·
ers tf you're nol careful Do not allow

compansons today between a frtend AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) Condtt!Ons
you're w tth and a fnand who ts not pre- . wtll be unusual today and you could be

at once

GEMINI (May 21-JUM 20) If you launch
an endeavor only to let rt fend for tlself
later , the results will be undestrable
Instead, see H lhrough to a satisfactory
concluston
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Rematn
realtshc today. If

you

vtew maners

from

a

distorted perspecttve, H could cause you
to take acttons that don t serve your best
Interests

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You must exercise
practiCality and diSCtpline tn your ftnanclal
affatrs today. If yoo get careless, you may
wipe oota portiOn of your accumulatiOn

,

Granny always taught us that 1f our head and heart
were headed 1n the nght direction , we wouldn't have
to worry about OUR FEET

�•
I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,August22,1995

Renewal of driving privilege may endanger father's safety
permitted to drive day or night on the
extremely busy four-lane highway
adjaccntiO his house.
Why was his license renewed?
Surely
it must have Peen apparentw
.. 199S. Lol Angeles
Ttmft Synd1~e and
the
license
clerk that Dad has very
Crutor• S~a·
little use of his legs and is quite deaf.
Dtar ADo Landers: Your "tough Although he is mentally alen, it will
love" recommendation for elderly not help him hear police or
ambulance vehicles as they approach
~IS who drive is very hard to put
tnto practice. My father is 98 and still from behind. Nor. is he going to be
driving . Why? Because just last able to jam his foot on the brake
week, he hobbled (with the aid of a quickly in an crne&gt;gency. His reflexes
walker) into his local office of the have been very slow for the last IS
Department of Motor Vehicles, years. The thought Qf his driving
passed his test and renewed his frightens everyone who knows him .
On the plus side, he has never had
license. Four years ago. his license
an
auto accident in his life, but that
had a "daytime only" stipulation, but
is
negated
by his dangerously erratic
-that was removed. He is now

Ann
Landers

blood pressure, w.hich at times
reaches 240 over 140 - crilical sll'Okc

98-year~ld

father can continue to
drive if he chooses.! know of no state
aml.
that has a law !illying a person can be
Several times when I've asked him denied driving privileges based on
not io drive, he's become extremely age. All you can do is hope he will
hostile. I live 25 miles away and am hand over the car keys on his own
his closest relative. He lives in his before something tenrible happens.
Dear Ann Landers: You were
own home and would never consent
to live anywhere else. Twice a week, right on in your reply to "Ohio
I run his errands and do the grocery Heanache," whose sister committed
shopping. There is no need for him suicide. She thought her brother-into drive, but he refuses to stay olf the law should tell his two young
road.
children, "Mommy killed herself.'
He is a kind, nunuring father, and You said they should be told that
I'm at a loss to find a solution to this Mommy took the wrong medicine.
dangerous dilemma. Can you come (She died from an overdose of pills.)
up with something? -- FRUSTNineteen years ago, my mother
RATED IN NEW YORK
tiDed herself with a drug overdose, I
DEAR N.Y.: Unfonunately, your was 13. I was ~old the truth and

blamed myself for .her death . I
thought for yean that the police were
coming to get me for killing het
Mother was pill-dependenL My
family tried everything to help het
S~e was in and out of several
trtatment programs.Years later, when
I became very depressed myself, I got
the counseling that! needed and put
my mother's death in proper focus. I
know now that she didn't mean to kill
~rself. She loved her children very
much and never would have wanted
to leave us for someone else to raise.
She toak diose pills to escape the pain
"temporarily."
I hope "OhiO's" brother-in-law gets
his children into counseling as
quickly as possible. The sooner the

better. I also pray that be does 001
blame himsdf. No one is r:sponsiblc
for a suicide except the person who
cbose death over life. --TAMMY IN
SPOKANE
DEAR TAMMY: Thanks for a
leaei- that should help absolve many
~ers of unearned guilt. Your last
sentence says it beautifully.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
life of a loved one? "Alcoholism:
How to Recognize It, How to Deal

RU'ILAND- Tbe Rutland Fire
·Department Auxiliary will meet at
. 6 p.m. Tuesday to finish plans for ·
· the Fish Festival.
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters, 7 p.m. ·Tuesday at high
·school.
POMEROY American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 39 will meet
ill I p.m. Tuesday at Pomeroy
· legioo hall. Girl staters will be present for reports.

for incoming seventh graders and
new eighth graders at Meigs Junior
High School Tuesday from 6 to
7:30p.m. Refreshments will be
served.
WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Revival at
Mount Olive Community Church
in Long Bottom 7 p.m. tbrough
Sunday with the Rev. James Hobbs
of Ponsmouth.
POMEROY
Narcotics
Anonymous meeting Wednesday, 7
p.m. in the basement of Sacred
Hean Catholic Church in Pomeroy.
1-8()()..766-4442 help line.

MIDDLEPORT - Open bouse

Eckrich
Bologna$

Ground Beef
lb.

Grade A

$

CHEF BOY R DEE

Double Cheese Pizzas

09

Net Cost

$1.84 less 55¢ coupon
28

24 pk. 12 01 cans

doz.

MISTER BEE

US#l

Potato Chips,

oz.

$ '79

c ~

10 lb.

Ch.icken Noodle Soup
~

.

.

10.5 oz.

I

Pure Sweet Blended

Morton

Bounty Paper

Sugar

·Salt

Towels

please

c

CAMPBELL'S

Bleach

limit I

c

1)

26 oz.

roll

59

limit 2
please

Low tonight lo 60s, clear.
Thursday, sunny. Highs Ln 80s.

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 23, 1995

-----American Queen-------.

Meigs Local
Board hires
personnel

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Personnel mailers domina.ted
Tuesday's meeting of.thc Meigs
Local Doard of Education held at
Bradbury Elementary School.
The board bired Krista Johnson
. as Title I teacher at Meigs Junior
High School and Connie Halley as
a teacher aide at Bradbury/Salisbury elementary schools on oneyear contracts.
at the dock to watch the largest ste~nwheeler in servjce on lhe
Brenda Erwin was hired as a
river. The multi-nilllion dollar vessel made its maiden cruise earlifull-time cook at Harrisonville Eleer this ,summer.
•
mentary with Donna Vance and
Mabel Ramsburg being hired liS
three-hour cooks at Harrisonville
and Middleport clcmentaries.
respectively. Greg Drowning was
hired as a custodian at the junior
high on a one-year conlract
The following were hired as
substitute teachers to serve on an
as-needed basis: Deborah Barber,
Craig Butz, Kathy Garrison, Belly
Hutchinson, David Ramey, Carand Mona Frecker as a substitute
Riftle and Delbert Smith.
olyn G. Robinson, Chris Stout and
Minutes for the July 13 meeting secretary for the same time.
Pamela L. Zirkle . David Deem,
Esther Barkat's resignation as
were approved with one change. A
Billy
Danson Druce and Jonathan .
school
psychologist
was
accepted.
bus driver certificate for Jean
Vance
Merritt were hired as assisWood was listed as approved, but The position is stiU open. Anyone
tant band directors with their salary
bad not been .
interested· in applying should call
to be'detennined later.
. Also approved were the pay- 992-3883 for information or send a
Hired as substitute secretaries
ment of August bills, the use"' fee resume to John D. Riebel Sr., P.O.
were
Alice Jean Buckley, Bonnie
imposed by the Meigs County Box 684, Pomeroy, OH 45769. .
Denny,
Margo Aorian, Jacqueline
Commissioners on all agencies parIn other business, a penmanent
Hoover, Jacqueline Justice. Pam
ticipating in the Meigs County budget was adopted for the 1995Napper, Gail Sargent, Jennifer
Health Plan and tbe health insur- 96 fiscal year, Riebel reponed on
Upton,
Jennie Williamson and
ance premium increase on the plan county office legislation and vacan'
Rosemary
E.&lt;kew.
for the 1995-96 school yeat.
cies in the county.
In
other
personnel matters, the
The board will pay 100 percent
A non-vocational business
board
granted
a medical leave of
of a single plan and 80 percent of a course. and social studies course
absence
to
Faye
Manley and
farnil y plan. The motion will be were approved.
'
· 'lbe next meeting is scheduled
reviewed at the end of the school
year when the board may request for Wednesday. September 6.
Present were board President
employees to contribu-te more
Jeff Harris, Vice-president Robert
toward their health insurance.
Approved employments were Banon and board members Howard
Tricia McNickle as a substitute CaldweU, 1.0. McCoy and Jeanette
teacher for the 1995-96 school ye~ Thomas.

The Meigs County Board of
Education, as of Monday evening,
bas a new name: the Governing
Board of the Meigs County Educational Service Center.
In addition, the county school
district is now called the Meigs
County Educational Service Center.
The board voted on the change
Monday night at its regular meeting. Superintendeiit John D. Riebel
Sr. and Carole' Gilkey, treasurer, ·
will be in charge of putting the new
titles into effect
The name change was mandated
by !21st Ohio General Assembly
on July I.
"It's something some of the
members of the state legislature
have talked about. .. doing away
with county offices," said Riebel.
'The natne change sets the stage
for the future trend of moving

toward regional education centers,"
he added.
The board also approved certificates for the following bus drivers:
In the Eastern Local district,
Edward Holter, Carolyn Ritchie,
Nita Jean Ritchie, Archie Rose,
Don Smith and Keitha Whitlatch;
In Carleton, Eric Diddle, Williatn
Justis and Brady Sayre;
In Meigs Local, William Capebart. Ro~er Cottrill, Teresa Cre. means, Donna Daniels, Katherine
Deskins, Yanda George, Evelyn
Hobbs, Patti Johnson, Juanita Lambert, Ida Martin, Linda Morris,
Kimbley Pauley, Debbie Shuler,
Donna Stacy, Jim Vanaman,
Charles Williamson, Dorsel
Thomas, Larry Drake, Jo Gilmore,
Joseph Hall Jr., Gary McKnight,
Carolyn Rickard and Brady Sayre;
In Southern Local, William
Justis, Charles Lawrence, Daniel.

JAMESTOWN (AP) - The
second fire in three years to destroy
several downtown businesses has
residents wondering whether Ibis
southwest Ohio village will
become a ghost town.
.
"This pretty much does it for
downlown Jamestown," said Jim
Sutton, 59, a resident of the village
25 miles east of Dayton. "I don't
see how It wiD recover."
Four businesses burned down
and two others on the same downtown block were damaged during a
fire Tuesday afternoon that took
ftrefigilters nearly four hours to put
out \
· The ftre also left families living
in four aparanents over one of the
burned-out building homeless, offtcials said. It also will leave about
20 people who worked in the buildings without jobs, residents said.
'"It's going to be a ghost
town," said resident Mildred Priser, 45. "They'll have to build a
new everything. it looks like.''
A firefighter suffered a minor
foot injury while battling the ftre.

He continued working, however,
and no other injuries were reponed.
Tuesday's blaze carne just 21
months after four buildings on the
SatRe block burned down in 1993.
Five other businesses were displaced when a building collapsed
on the block's nonheast comer in
1989.
In all, the three events have ·
wiped out about half of the two ·
dozen husine,es rlnwnrown. Vii~
lage Councilman Larry Everett
said. '
"I'm waiting for locusts," said
Pat Kolesru:, whose doll shop was
displaced during !he 1989 building
collapse. "I just don't know how
much devastation a town.can have
without losing hean."
About 50 ftrefighters from eight
volunteer departments battled
Tuesday's ftre, which begari in an
historic carriage factory being used
for storage behind Jessie's Hair
Fashions.
·The ftre crept up to the attic of
the fout buildings and spread, said
Dave Millboan, ftre chief for Silvercreek Township/Jamestown.

I

"'n ,• ri-- n.- .·
.• ,( ~ · a'

BUSINESSES BURN - Residents watch several businesses
burn Tuesday in downtown Jamestown, near Dayton. AI least
three firms were damaged in the blaze, a restaurant, florist and
beauty shop. No Injuries were reported. (AP)
'

.Key tp school success: Parental invovement

4

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE AUGUST 23, 1995 ONLY

\..
•

CLEVELAND (AP)- No matter how well funded a school district may be, no matter ]ow well
equipped are the classrooms or how
competent the teachers, tbe most
important factor in a student's success may-be parental motivation.
The Plain Dealer reponed today
that an analysis of state records and
census data showed tbat factors
outside of school have a bigger
impact .on student performance
than the amount of money a district
spends in the classroom.
Those factors include poveny,
parents' education level and
whetber a fatnily rents or owns a
home, the newspaper said.
However, many educators also
agreed that tbe value parents place
on education, along with their atlility to teach their child the value of

hard work and responsibility, can
overcome almost anyll)ing.
As pan of its ftve-part series,
The Plain Dealer conducted a computer-assisted analysis of 600 Obio

23.45
25.09

20.65
t2.49

superintendent of public instruction, said the expectations parents
have for their children are the most
imponant factor in a child's school
perfonitance.
·
"If I had to pick one thing, it
would have to be borne life and the
expectations mom and dad set,'.'
Goff said. "How much they value
or believe in education. And what
they hold in terms of e~pectations
for their child.··
Linda Matthews,. a single mother in Cleveland, has pushed her
children, Steven, 16, and Daniel,
13. to work and study hard. When
the boys have homework, she
makes sure the television is turned
off.
"If you do everything and fix

19.99

25.16

Continued on paga 3

districts based on 1993 and 19"94
achievement and proficiency test
scores from the Ohio Deparanent
of Education.
,
John M. Goff, Ohio's new

How school districts in Meigs County ranked ___
How local school districts lared In an analysis by The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer. The newspaper analyzed U.S. Census Bureau dala,
school district reports and other Information.
The rank, school district name Is followed by the following categories: Percentage of chttdren In the district on Aid to Families Wllh
Dependent Children; percentage of parenls who attended college;
percentage of renters In the district.

Rink ··"'"
(~gf ;~ ;.:::1i:
496. Southern
567. Eastern
570. Meigs

..

%on· % of parents
I',,,. if, ~) ' .Itt• ~··ge
26.79
22.62
33.21

accepted the resignalion of Amy
Allison as developmcnlal handicapped teacher at Pomeroy Elemcn~-u-Y School.
The board hired Lee Henderson,
with board member Randy
llumphrcys abstaining, as assistant
junior high volleyball coach for the
1995-96 school year.
·
After communications by Treasurer Jane Pry, the hoard agreed to
a contract with the state auditor's
office for assistance in general
accounling principles and 'procedures (GAPP) for a sum not to ·
exceed $3,500. The board also
approved principals' budgets for
Pomeroy, Rulland and Bradbury
clcmcntaries or $13,500, $2,500
and $2,000. respectively.
In addition, the board accepted
Farmers Dank as the district's
depository of record.
The board also awarded bids to .
the following for the 1995-96
school year: W archouse Tire for
tires and tubes, United Dairy
lnc.Nalley Bell for dairy products
and Davis-Quickcl Agency Inc. for
fleet insurance.
In other business, the board
renewed a service contract wiUt the
Ohio School Board Association for
tbe services of a labor relations ·
consultant and met in executive
session to discuss negotiations and
the hiring of personnel.
Pre.sent were Superintendent
Bill Buckley, Fry and hoard members Larry Rupe , Humphreys, Scott
Walton and Roger Abbott. Absent
was hoard member John Hood.

Six ·Rutland residents
confer with council on
storm drainage problems

Jamestown hit by second major fire in three years

ITE

Potatoes

Clorox

41b.

Vol. 46, NO. 82
Copyright 1995

County board .changes na~e; its
now educational service center

RC COLA, DIET RITE, KICK
CITRUS, A&amp; WROOT BEER,
SUNKIST ORANGE

Large Eggs

· gal.

Page4

The American Queen passed silently up tbe Ohio River yesterday evening. Her!', it moves past Racine. A few spectators gathered

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, ·1995 ONLY

Reg. $1.49
6 01.

Pick 3:
492
Pick 4:
8409
Buckeye 5:
9-20-25-26-36

THURSDAY
·
Tbe Board of Trustees of tbe an applicatio11 for an Appalachi~ tor
of
the
POMEROY _ Alcoholics Ohio Valley Libraries held tbeir ·Infrastructure Grant from the Ohto Gallia/JacksoniMeigsNinton Solid
Anonymous and AJ-Anon meetings regular board meeting at system Deparanent of Development 'The Waste Management Dtstnct bead7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catbolic headquaners in Wellston Thursday. grant will be used to re~odel !he .quartered in Wellston, the tons of
Church in Pomeroy.
Director Eric S. Anderson space used for Bookrnobtle opera- · paper OVAL used to send to a
updated tbe board on the disposal lions.
landfill are now being placed in the
of the 1972 GerstenslagcrBookmoTbe board also approved, on the recycling stream. The mere recyRACINE - The Racine Ameri- bile. Ads will appear in local recommendation of Roxie Under- c~ng of unused Books By Mail catcan Legion Auxiliary will host a papers at the end of August and a wood representing Jackson City alogs and discarded books from
picnic at 6 p.m. Thursday at Star special mailing detailing the equip- Libr~y •.a "Born to Read" grant this y~ cre~ted three 'loads on the
.
Mill Park. Bring table service and a ment on the vehicle bas been pre- a[lphcauon to _the A~encan .rccychn_g trailer.
ftfty
businesses
that
Ltbrary
Assoctatton.
Thts
grant,
A
bnef
update
on
tbe
OhiO
Pubpared
for
about
covered dish.
might be interested. The board will developed by Member Services lie Library Information Network
open seated bids for the vehicle at Librarian Gail ~hariah, is a revi- was provided by Anderson .. The
MIDDLEPORT Meigs their regular meeting on September ston of the appltcatton made last ,OPLIN Board has been appomted
year.
and includes Queen Lester of lbe
County Churches of Christ 21.
On the recommendation of Roy
. Anderson reported on a recy- Chillicothe and Ross.County Public
Women's Fellowship will meet at
Bradford Church of Christ at 7:30 E "Dusty" Rhoades representing cltng program started wtthm the Ltbrary Board and former OVAL
p.m. Thursday.
the Chillicothe &amp; Ross County - headquarters building. With the board member.
Public Library, the board approved assistance of Mike Massie. Direc-

ONE DAY SALE

lb.

St. Louis
Cards dump
Reds again

Wllh It, How to COIJI/IU!r II" can turn

rhingsarollnd. Send a self~ssed,
long, busintss' size envelo~ and a
check or nwnry olfkr for $3.75 (this
includu postage and handling) to :
Alcohol, cloAnn Landers, P.O . Box
/1562. Chicago,lll. 6061].{)562. (In
Canada, .send $4.55.)
'

---Community calendar--- ·OVAL disposes of bookmobile
TUESDAY
RACINE- RACO, Tuesday,
6:30p.m. at Star Mill Park.

Ohio Lottery

%Of
rantflt'8

By GEORGE ABATE
Dale Hart said he would Jill in one
Senlinel News SlafT
hole ncar the elementary school.
Rutland Village Council heard with gravel. This will prevent chilfrom six residents about problems dren and other individu~ls from:
with storm drainage at its special falling in and getting hurt.
meeting Tuesday night
In other business, the board lisLast week's torrential down- tened to a resident who complained.
pour, which dropped as much as about ' the marshal telling his
four inches of rain ·in one hour, left daughter not to drive a four-wheel -'
streets flooded and homes mud- • er on the school propen y.
died. This marked the second time
llis daughter wa' left upset and·
this ¥Car that propeny was heavily did not cat or sleep well for more
damaged by flash flood waters.
than a day.
.
One resident complained that
Councilman Steve Jenkins said
water stood for three days after the he urlkcd with Meigs Local S&amp;per-:
rain. The resident said that various
intendcnt Dill Oucklcy today about
crews have shoved gravel and other the situation. For liability reasons,
debris into tire stonn sewers and Buckley docs n&lt;&gt;t want any fourthey arc clogged up. ·
wheelers riding on school propeny;
Mayor JoAnn Eads asked resi- Jenkins said.
dents sp,ecifics about the now of
In other action, the council
the water.
agreed )o charge Shelly Construe-.
"Do you think if the storm tion Co. $5 per 1,000 gallons of
sewer was cleaned. out it would water used. Shelly Co. is paving
help?" Eads 3Skcd.
State Route 124 between State
Council president Duane Weber ·Route 7 and Langsville and has·
said the village will try to clean out installed near catch basins in the.
the catch basins .
village.
"Bu~ we're short on manpow Councilman Dick Fcuy said the ·
er," Weber said. "We'll do it We village is relying oil the honor sys- '
don't know bow soon it will be. tern for Shelly to report the accu- .
though."
rate usage of wi!lcf levels.
Maintenance worker Dave
In· two weeks, the construction
Davis fractured his arm earlier crews used 22.400' gallons.
while working with a piece of vii- ·
In another construction issue,
lage equipment
Fetty received an estimate from
Councilman Danny Davis vol - Shelly on the price of laying con• untecrcd to use fire department crete sidewalks.
equipment attached with a special
Shelly will charge $1.35 per
nozzle to clean out the sewer lines square·foot to remove old concrete
and catch basins. and $3.14 per square foot to lay
Councilwoman Judy Denney new concrete.
said anything from sticks to trash
The village needs 381 feet of
have filled the .!lrains.
concrete at least three feet wide,
Before scbc*l' starts next week, Fetty said. At Shelly's quotes, the
village maintenance supervisor project would total more than
$7,200.

Plane crash probe continues
CARROLLTON, Ga. (AP)- A
commuter plane that crashed in a
hayfteld after the left engine failed
should' have been able (o fly with
only one engine, investigators say .
Tbe search for. the cause of the
engine failure focused on a snapped
propeller blade. A 16-inch piece of
the ftve-foot blade was discove(ed

stuck in the left engine's propeller
bub, but it wru; unclear if it broke
before or after tbc crash.
Investigators were searching for
the rest of the broken blade,
National Transportation . Safety
Board officials said at a bri~ftng
Tuesday night.
.

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