<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9671" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9671?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T01:15:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20108">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e1ef84b0ae6cfb91d971369dcc7be865.pdf</src>
      <authentication>83be7a9703f448b0b644b20c60c506ed</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30988">
                  <text>.·

.

Page DB • -'unbag 11limu--'entintl

•

Sunday, October 1, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Bengals
lose tilt in
final minutes

Last year

E

Pick 3:

274

Vol. 46, NO. 109
Copyright 1995

SICXXI- JU,!II Pl')'!1ll!llt. seariy depoelt, 1aJt. tile Mel licenle. 15,000 mill pet
re-. IOC few eecll~mlt, 24 monlh dolod tlld lelle. M rebllniJid lnc;ientim
nlncllded, Uljee:l:ll CI\Wlgt • mntaclt.. PW'Imlc:f'lqt on 91'll~­
*Opllon to purchase $9171, total payments $4799.76. WAC.

ero

115083, 6 way power seat. keyless entry, floor mats, pow·
er windows &amp; locks, tilt &amp; crUtse, 3.8 V6 engine, aluminum
wheels, AM/FM cassette. Was $23,286.

cassette, chrome bumper, slidflg rear
window, driver side air bag, aluminum wheels, tach, cloth
60/40 seat MSRP $12,097.

185296, AM/FM

$1000 oown plus 1st~ setlflf'l depostl.lal. ktle lnllooenM. 15,000 miles per
)'0111. 10c lor oad'lldditlonal !!We. 24 ~dosoden61ease. "' IObalesa'ld~
.ve llduO«&lt;, JUI:If8t:lll 11\Mge II lTiinrliltUnprogrwn~ d1arVe on 9/V$5.
•OptiOn to purchase $13,505.68, total payments 58585.76, W.A.C.

StiXXJ down plus tst paymert. MW'ily depoll tal. Iilia lnd licne. 15,1m mills per
ye~~, t()ebeactlilltlitionalmle. 241'1101'1fllblldendleae. AI r'lba!elan:l~
n n::b:ll!ld.lltltkt 1o chqe
fii'OIP'1"M Change on 9fl1/f15.
•Opuon to purchase $7750.29,total payment~ $3599.76, W.A.C.

ilminutacutn

95 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LE

145070, 84 V sport appearance pacl&lt;age, remote keyless entry,
rear spoiler, dual air bags, special alloy wheels, anli·lock brakes,
AMtFM cassette, powe1 windows &amp; locks. Was $19,300.
$1(0) dcMn pU 1st paymn, -=urilydepmrl. tal, lllleard lamt 15.0CKl I'YIIes I*
,_, IOC 1Dt MdiiCkMia'lll mte. 24 mon1t1 dosed encllealt. U reiN\81 a'ICI ~
. . ii'Ckdlld, . _ . ., ct.ve il miWlUfJclurers ~iiTII ci1af9 on 91271'15.

•Option IOpurct\ase $11 ,001 , t0181payments $8669.76, W.A.C .

95 CADILLAC SEVILLE SLS

175220, AM/FM cassette, air conditioning, power steering,
carpeted floor mats, dual air bags. Was $14,582.

185228, Automatic, 5.0 V8· engine, till &amp; cruise, air condru&lt;ln·
ing, power windows &amp; locks, aluminum wheels, chrome rear
step bumper, driver side air bag, loaded. Was $18,820,

StotO downf:U lit PI'J""''N, .~ depoel. laX. title and liarlse. 12.000 m1e1 pe~
year, tOC lor NCh ldditionll mil, 24 moolh ctosed end lease. AI rebaltls .-.3 i1C81tiYe1
•• ncuted. aAJ;ett ll ctw19t II m.nJtactt11n IJit9MIS ~ oo 9fl1195.
•Option to purchate $9139.20, Ictal payments $5074.56, WAC.

$\COO~ ,U111 ptymert. MO.dy~ tax. tle~lona IS.IXIOmlell*
.,.., 10.: b' ..tiiiiiiMionll mil, 24 t'l'll:dldolld ll'ldleMe. ......... Md horilel
nRbled.lltJildiOa-. 11 nwWctnr~ ~ tt.~g~on 9127/96.
•OptiOn 10 putctlase $12-,458.20, loud~ $5999.76, WAC.

95 TOYOTA TACOMA XTRACAB 4x4

$10C&lt;l down plus lSI payment, ~ oepwt. tal. ~lie ar&lt;IIICertSe 15.000 rndes per
'lfJII. IOC b 8idl ~mile, 24 rTOOt1 dosed end lease All rebates Mid R:et~trves
n nct.ded. !l.qa::t D ~ ~ rnorolaalr'en PI'OIJimS d\aroflon 9r'27/95
•Optioo to purchaSft S28,123 20. total paymunts St4,7t6.80, W.A.C.

175215, On 4x4 demand, liH wheel, chrome bumer, AM/FM ster·
eo, sliding rear window, air cond~K&gt;ning, tach &amp; clock, ftoor mats,
driver side air bag, tinted glass, power steering. Was $20,105.

185424, 7 passenger seaOOg. lllise &amp; ti~ igll group, rea defrost, ,1,1,\fM
cassette, pow91 Yindows, locks &amp; ninors, cargo net,lloor mats, k.ggage rad!,
~ooinun o!ieels, privacf glass, remoo ki)1ess eriry. Was $23,1 00. ,

$1000 ClOwn plu! IS1 payment. 5eCLrity deposit, tax. title Wid license. 12,000 m1es pa
year. tOC b eltch additimal mie. 2• trmlh dosed end lease. ,l,lrebalfl8 Wid iR:aD.'Is

$1000 down

•• included. subjecl _, cNnge • maAllacM$rS ~ ~ 0'1 sm.&amp;.
•Option topurdlase $14,563.53, IOtal payrr.ents $5864.64, WAC.

95 G~IC VANDURA AUTOFORN CONVERSION VAN

95 TOYOTA T I 00 PICKUP

$
155033, 5.71itre VB engine, 3/4too chassis, central air &amp; h~at, 1V prep, power
windows &amp; locks with cruise &amp;cassette. Was $26,280.
/
LOADED!
~

175185, AM/FM cassette, floor mats, rear step bumper,
power steering, driver side air bag, anti-chip paint, tinted
glass. delay wipers, gauge package. Was $15,066.
$1000 down plus lsl paymen~ ll!tVI!y depo$11, tax, tide a'1d ~Come. 12,000 mles per
.,_, toe b' sad'~ illl:libcnal nile, 24 rnorm OOsed end laase. q rebalas and ilcerCIYel
n nc:b:led, SlOt«;! b d'IWlQe W/TiallUacUtn PftiOrMS dllrlge oo 91'l1196

•Option to purchase S9039.69,total payments $8119.76, WAC.

DON
WOOD
AUTOMOTIVE, INC.
900 East State Street,
Athens, Ohio

I

,j

JU tal paymert. MQdy depoSit. ta:c. .. .., lieenll. 15,(0) mill per
yew, tOe b eacfl addilional mile. 24 ~doled end 111M. M 11b11e1 nllncriYII
wt incU:ted, Ujed loc:hanQe wf11MiacVn JV0P111 d\lngton Vfi7l'*k
•OpUon to purchase I14,B55.22, total payments 17679.78, WAC.

I' •
'

Rain
Low tonight In 50s, doudy.
Tuesday, roln. High In 70..

'On the curve, we're~ doing great,'
Voinovich says on meeting goals
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A new report card gives Ohio mixed gradeS-Jta'ifW'ay
through a decade-long drive to reach eight national education goals.
Still, Gov. George Voinovicb said Friday tbe results were enco=ging
at tbe midway point toward a target achievement date of the year 2000.
"We are moving forward and efforts undertaken over tbe last few
years are beginning to bear fruit." Voinovicb said at a news conference.
The latest report card showed advances in some areas, including a
boost from 51 percent last year to 66 percent tbis year in the percentage of
fully immunized 2-year-olds.
Anotber improvement: an increase from 58 percent to 60 percent in tbe
1994-95 school y.ear in students who passed all sections of !be nintb-grade
proficiency test after two attempts.
But tbe percentage of Ohio ninth-graders who graduate from bigb
school in four years fell from 77.2 percent in 1993 to 74.8 percent in
19~
•
In at least one otber area there was no change. Cbildren ages 3 and 4
living in poverty and participating in Head Sta11 or public preschool programs was at64 percent for 1994-95, the same as in 1993-94.
State School Superintendent John Goff s:iid parental involvement was

Radiation sites
prompt Ohioans
to call for action

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 2, 1995

Schools get mixed grades
SliXXl dalwn plus 1s1 payment. secunty 11ep)$11. tax. troe a'ld IICeOSe. 15.000 !!Illes per
yew, 1Df lor t\ad1 ~ mlle. 24 rronl'l t:tosed
lease AI rebates lnCl i'lOentM!s
are ondudetl. !ll.bffd to chlv1gB II~ prOQfams dla1ge on 9/27f95.
.-OpiiOil iO pO rchase $8910, total payments $6350, WAC

••

en tine

•

I

'

•

1- -•

185419, pjr conditioning,. power mirror, AMJFM cassette,
cruise control, dual air bags, micron filtration system, load·
ed. MSRP $14,888.

• •• I '

r;;;: ;;:

6936 '
Super Lotto:
2-14-25-26-41-42
Klc:ker:
974322

•

145019, 2 door, dnver side air bag, power windows &amp;
locks, au condiliontng. cruise control, till wheel.

..,•.~
I IIIli!:

. Pick 4:

Sports, Page 4

11ft General

~-~ ~ Motors

Ohio Lottery

\

'.

critical to make additional progress.
"I'm fumly of !be belief tbat if we're going to really improve education, and if we're going to have an opportunity to reach tbe goals, we've
got to have mom and dad and citizens of a community involved," Goff
s:iid.
"I don't think it's a great !bought, but it is absolute uutb tbat if you do
not have mother and father and community involved in the process, !bose
of us as educators are not going to be able to pull it off by ourselves,'' be
s:iid.
'
.
The fifth annual report measured progress since 1991 toward meeting a
package of national education goals.
Fonner President Bush and the nation's governors set the original six
goals with a target date of 2000 for reaching them. Congress made the
goals law and expanded the listtweight.
The goals, in brief:
.
• I. All children ready to learn.
• 2. 90 percent graduation rate.
• 3. All Ohio children competent in core subjects.
• 4. Professional development for educators.
• 5. First in the world in math and science.
• 6. Every Ohio adult literate and able to compete in th'e work force.
• 7. Safe, disciplined. drug-free schools.
• 8. Increased parental involvement in learning.
Voinovicb declined to assign a letter grade to the state's performance.
"On the curve, we're doing great. On international standards we still
have a long way to go,'' be s:iid.

Regents' plan calls
for colleges to help
pay improvements
TOLEDO (AP) - Slarting next year, Ohio's public colleges and
umvers•t•cs w1ll pay for capital improvements out of tbe money
they have available for operations.
The change was introduced Friday to nort.bwest Ohio college
uustccs and college presidents during a session with tbc Ohio Board
of Regents. "'
In the pasl universities have competed for capital funds, lypically askmg for much more !ban !be regents, the governor and the LegIslature were likely to g•ve tbem. ~equests from universities totaled
$1 billion in the last two-year budget.
Matthew Filipic, the regents' vice chancellor for administration
said the board is trying to return to a process that is similar to th~
way decisions arc made in homes and businesses.
''lbe system tile state bas created is artificiill and unreal and has
produced some bad results," Filipic s:iid. "The key decisions are
made centrally and bureaucratically."
. In tbc sprin.g . colleges and universities will begin using their
operatmg subsidies to pay for capital improvements. The amount
will equal tO percent of the capital expense for 15 years.

·Posthumous recognition--. Deputies
checking'
leads on
suspects

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio bas 50 documented radioactive sites, the
most in the country, The Columbus Dispatch reported on Sunday.
In some cases, the public bas been exposed unknowingly. And residents now want doctors and public officials to determine whether there is
a link between bealtb problems and radiation exposure, !be newspaper
s:iid.
. - -- .. . Officials said the contamination levels often are low, so health problems are unlilcely. State and federal officials have not acknowledged one
case l!f illness because of exposures..ll!e newspaper reported.
Scientists said radiation exposure poses at least a slight chance of
health problems such as cancer, birth defects and suppressed immune systems.
Responsibility for the· sites is not clear, the newspaper reported. Tbe
U.S. Department of Energy oversees sites that !be federal government
accepts responsibility for. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission governs most of the rest.
Tile otber sites are the responsibility of tbe Ohio Department of Health
and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, two groups that say they
lack the resollfl:CS to do much more than advise federal agencies.
"We really don't have enough staff to go around," said Robert Owen
of the Ohio Department of Hcait.b.
·
The report comes as Ohioans debate whether a low-level radioactive
waste storage center can be safe. At issue is a proposed long-term depository for radioactive wastes from Ohio and five other states.
While refusing to be specific, federal officials acknowledge there are
hundreds more sites nationally that they need to investigate.
In tbe past year or two, tbe NRC bas begun to Investigate possible
sites, sometimes based mlty on an indication that radioactive materials
were buried, tbe newspaper reported.
"It's somelbing we 're .trying to gel a handle on. We've made some
progress," s:iid Paul Goldberg, wbo is overseeing !be agency's review of
its records.
·
Tbe NRC has declined to release a list of suspected burials and olber
potentially contaminated sites.
The Department of Energy also bas started ltviewing its records to
determine what else might have been lost or overlooked.
The department acknowledges that it may bave lostlrack of equipment
and buildings used for nuclear materials research and processing. The
items apparently were sold or desuoyed witbout recotd, tbe newspaper
said.
A Uniontown group called Concerned Citizens of Lake Township is
among tbose fighting about what !be group s:iid is a waste site.
The group bas been trying for 12 years to gel federal agencies or
responsible companies to acknowledge tbat radioactive wastes were
dumped at the Induslriill Excess Landfill in 1969 and 1970. The companies and the U.S. EPA 'deny any waste exists there.
"What keeps driving me?'' asked Chris BoreUo, tbe group's leader.
"Isn't it obvious? To me, tbe bealtb of the families, my family, my neighbors and friends, the community is Lbe most important thing,'' be s:iid.

In recognizing the late Meigs County Auditor BID Wickline, the Meigs County Board of Commissioners presented bh family with a plaque at the board's regular meeting F'riday afternoon.
Wickline served as auditor from 1983 until his death on Jan. 3, 1993. From left are County Commissioners Robert Hartenbach, Janet Tackett and Fred Hoffman; Wickline's wife, Bever lee; his
parents, Inez and Doug Wickline; and sons Kyle and Scott Wickline. Tbe plaque will be placed in
tbe hallway of the courthouse nearest the auditor's office. (Sentinel photo)

Despite new campaign reform
action, state parties stiiJ benefit
C.OLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovicb is inviting peo ple to a gala tbis week that asks for
donations of up to $25,000 for the
state Republican Party, just months
after signing a campaign finance
reform bill.
The Ohio Refublican Party is
hoping to raise 1.2 million from
Thursday's event in honor of a visit
by U.S. Ho11se Speaker Newt Gingrich.
Allhougb the new campaign
fi11311ce law limits tbe amount tbat
individuals, political action committees and campaign committees
can contribute to candidates for
state office, it allows unlimited
contributions to state parties.
Janet Lewis, executive director
of Common Cause-Ohio, calls
$25,000 contributions outrageous
and said tbey violate !be spirit of

the law.
"It is an extraordinary amount
of money that promotes elitism and
feeds the public's cynicism about
government," she s:iid.
.
Robert Bennett. chainnan of the
state Republican Party, said there is
no contradiction between the idea
of campaign finance refonn and the
contributions . For $25,000, tbe
donor gets several tickets for meetings with Voinovicb and Gingrich.
''1, too, have been a supporter of
campaign financl! refonn, and I'd
like to push it fu~er," Bennett
said. "But until the rules are
changed, we have to abide by tbe
rules tbat exist, and we are doing
tbat."
·
Bennett said tbe money would
be used for Lbe party's operating
account, 1996 congressional campaigns and statewide races.

"People who arc making tbesc
contributions ask for notbing for
themselves," Benne It said. "They
arc simply interested in tbc conservative viewpoint and in good government."
David Leland, chairman of the
state Democratic Party, said
Voinovich is being hypocritical.
"We had him and Republicans
like (Secretary of SUite) Bob Taft
ballyhooing campaign finance
rc(orm," be s:iid. "Then Bob Taft
asks people to give him more
money tban tbe limits he supposedly supported, and now the governor
violates !be spirit of a law designed
to take big money out or Ohio's
elections:·' Taft bas denied any
wrongdoing.
Voinovicb spokesman Michael
Dawson said the donations are
legal.

Nullification worries O.J. prosecutors
LOS ANGELES (AP) - They ... Jury nullification sometimes bas began.
Simpson, 48, faces a.~~~~~- ..
have been asked by tbe judge to been known as payback."
Should tbe jury talce Ibis route, tenD of life in prison wit.bout
forget "tbe world is watching,"
and now jurors cons.idering OJ. deliberations could be swift. Other- if convicted of Lbe June 12.
Simpson's fate must decide if tbey wise, it may take some time for knife murders of ex-wife Nicole
jurors in tbe yearlong trial to weigb Brown Simpson, 35, and ber 25really can.
.
·
· Jurors were to begin deliberat- 50,000 pages of transcripts, 857 year-old friend, Ronald Goldman.
ing today, and lead prosecutor Mar- pieces of evidence Wid testimony . Hanunering home tbc defense's
view that Simpson was framed,
cia Clark already bas expressed · from more thWI I 00 witnesses.
The jurors already have proved Johnnie Cochran Jr. urged jurors to
fear they would follow the
be "the consciences of the commudefense's emotional appeal and they can wmt quicltly.
On
Friday,
~
in
the
jury
box
nity,"
implying Lbey sbotild turn
acquit Simpson to send a message
were
still
warm
when
pWlelists
tbeir
attention
away from Simpson
about police racism and misconsounded
a
buzzer
tbree
times
to
to
tbe
racist
views
and possible
duct.
signal
that
they
bad
selected
a
foremisconduct
of
Detective
Mark
The controversial practice is
man.
The
identity
of
the
foreman
Fuhrman
and
others.
~led jury nullification: nullifying
"Maybe you are tbe. right peothe law and going outside Lbe evi- will be revealed at tbe first open
dence to render a verdict based on court session; to be held for jury ple at tbe right time in tbe rigbt
place to say: 'No more!"' Cochran
questions or testimony readbacks.
( llie panel's own sense of justice.
Simpson has asked to be present told jurors in his Lbundcring sum"It's contrary 10 everything you
learned 'in civics class,'' said Loy- for all sucb coun sessions. But in mation.
CASHING IN - Japanese tourists passed a souvenir salesman
Cladt was furious after bearing
ola University law professor Laurie Lbe meantime, be will remain by
hawking
a T-sblrt making Ugbt of tbe OJ. Simpson double-murbimself
in
his
cell
for
what
could
Cochran's
closing
argument,
. L~venson . "And yet it's very
der
trial
Sunday along Hollywood Boulevard. Tbe jury began
be
the
first
lengtby
stretches
of
denouncing
it
as
an
"outrageous"
American. It says, 'No immoral
deUbentlon
In tbe celebrated tase today In Los· Angeles. (AP)
,
solitary
confinement
since
Lbe
bial
demand
for
jury
nullification.
law conuols us. We're Americans.'
v

PO!Nf PLEASANT, W.Va The . Mason County Sheriff's
Department and Lbc MidWestern
Drug and Violent Crime Task
Force are working .on leads in 1be
searcb of a Hartford couple wanted
for murder.
Deputy C. C. McConihay reported today thai Timothy Gibbs and
Risa Leonard may have been seen
at I a.m. Thursday in South Point,
Ohio. A man called l11e sheriffs
department to report tbe sighting
Saturday morning . The caller said
· the couple told him they were
going to South Carolina.
Gibbs and Leonard are suspects
in tbe murder of Jack L. Roush, 52,
of Hartford. Roush's body was
found Wednesday in a lrailer occupied by Roush, his wife, Gibbs and
Leonard. Roush was shot twice
with a small caliber gun eitber late
Sunday, Sept 24, or early Monday
Sept. 25.
·
'
Murder warrants for tbe couple
were issued Friday by Magistrate
J unc Sovine of Putnam CountrMcConibay said Gibbs and
LeOnard's decriptions, as weD as a
description of the last known vehicle the couple was driving, have
been entered into tbe NCIC nationwide computer network.
The two were last seen Monday
and are believed.to be traveling in a
1988 Ford Escort station wagon.
The vehicle is dingy white/gray in
color with dark tint on the hatch,
front driver's and passenger win'dows. The other windows are not
tinted. lbe vehicle bas blue interior
and a black bra.
Gibbs is five feet, II inches tall,
175 pounds witb brown hair and
eyes. He has several tattoos on his ·
arms and should be considered
armed and dangerous, authorities
s:iid. Leonard is five feel, five inch- ·
es tall, 120 pounds witb green eyes ·
and dishwater blonde hair.
McConibay s:iid autborities are
continuing to follow leads and
check tips tbat are being reported
both inside and outside of tbe area.
Anyone with infonnation on the
. vchic le or tbe whereabouts of the
couple should contact Lbe sheriffs
deparoncnt at675-3810 or the task
force at 562-1070 or 562-7498.

Coolville group
told to push fight
COOL VILLE (AI;') - The ·
author of a law setting site restrictions for infectious medical waste ·
incinerators bas encouraged residents to continue opposing a prop&lt;iscd facility.
·
Rep. Tom Johnson, R-New
Concord, met Friday with tbe Concerned Citizens of tbe Coolville
Area to discuss tbe developments
between the Obio Environmental
Protection Agency and a Ml\rieua
company that wants to build a $7.5
million incinerator near Coolville.

�_,

c mmentary
D~y

Sentinel

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oliio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be les&gt; than 300
words long All leiters are subject to editmg and mu st be s1gned w1th name,
addres&gt; and telephone number No unstgned letters w111 be published. Letters
should be m good taste, addressmg issues, not personalities.

:L awmakers get
taste of D. C.
•

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
· COLUMBUS - State lawmakers got a look at the btg leagues last
week when three members of Ohto's congressiOnal delegation ventured
outside the Beltway to give an update on fed eral budget talks
· U.S. Reps. John Kasich, David Hobson and Sherrod Brown traveled to
Columpus to bncf the state House Finance and Appropnat10ns Commlllee
on how efforts to trim the federal deficit mtght affect Oh10.
· In the process, the state lawmakers got an up close lesson m the ways
of Washmgton. where facts can be nutd and conclusiOns often are subject
lo political imcrpretauon.
· In many congressional debates - or those at the Statehouse, for that
matter - parusa ns haggle over pohcy dtrecuon but bastcally agree on the
facts. But the budget baule 1s filled w11h mstances where the two s•des can
look at the same numbers and see somethmg oppostte.
: Nowhere is that glass half-full , half-empty thinkmg more cv•dentthan
m the disc usston about turnmg over federal fundmg of health, welfare, JOb
trainmg and other programs to the states m the form of block grams.
: Kasich, a Columbus Republtcan and chwrman of the powerful House
~udgel Commmce. sees an mcrcasc m lundmg
· Brown, a Democrat from Elyna, sees a cut.
: Kasich says look at plans for Medicaid.
.
: The federal government's share of the health care program for the flOOr
or disabled IS ristng by an annual rate of 10 percent. Under the proposed
Tonnula, Ohio would gel a 7.2 percent increase next year, 9 percent the
following year and 4 percent m each of the next three years.
Souhd like a cut?
Not so, K·astch satd.
First states wtll be able to design thw ow n verstons of Medicaid to
~~ m~l thetr residents' needs. Second, sav mgs from consolidation and
the streamlining of bureaucmcy wtll free up money that can be spent on
benefits.
'
Smoke and mmors. countered Brown.
"It's pretty clear that if the cost of medical tnllation IS S percent and
there' s more people on Medicaid every year, &lt;Ill increase of 1.4 percent whtch is what the mcrease is in the seventh year - or even tf tt's 3 or 4
percent, doesn't keep up," Brown said._
.
Kasich accused the Democrats of usmg scare taellcs.
· Overall. Medicaid spending will tow! $773 mtllton ovcr.thenext seven
years. he satd. That's compared wnh S44 1 billion over the previOus seve~;
"Only m Washmgton ts slow mg d&lt;}wn the growth of spcndmg a cut,
Kastch added.

Today in history
tJ.y The Associated Press

·
· . Today is Monday, Oct. 2, the 275th day of 1995. There are 90 days left
ill the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
. On Oct. 2, 1944, Nazi troops crushed the two-month-old Warsaw
Uprising. during which 250.000 people were killed.
· On this date:
: In 1780, Britisn spy John Andre was hanged in Tappan, N.Y.
· ··In 1835, the fust battle of the Texas Revolution took place as Amerisettlers defeated a MeKiCan cavalry near the Guadalppe River.
..
: In 1869. political and spiritual leader Mohrul(las K. Gandht was born m
f'orbandar, India. .
· In 1890 comedian Groucho Marx was boll\ in New York.
: In 1919·. President Wilson suffered a stroke that left him partly paralr.zed
·
. .. . ·H
..
. In I939,the Benny Goodman Sextet recori:led Aymg orne.
.
: In 1941, German armies began Operation Typhoon- an all-out dnve
against Moscow.
In 1950, the comic strip "Peanuts," created by Charles M. Schulz, was
fust published in nine newspapers.
In 1958, the former French colony of Guinea in west Africa proclaimed its independence.
·
..
In 1959, "The Twilight Zone" made its debut on CBS televtston.
In 1967, Thurgood Marshall was sworn in a~ an assoctale JUShc~ of the
U.S. Supreme Coun; he wa' the first black appomted to the nauon s htghest court.
. .
In 1975, Presillent Ford welcomed Japan's Emperor Htrohno to the
United States.

can

· Berry's. World

..

"The value of Bill Gates' stock holdings is
now $13 billion- well, SMELL ME!"

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Oct. 3

1--------7-0:::::~~-.;__

"

Viguerie h·as close ties to seniors' groups
WASHINGTON - The battle
to refonn Medicare still has a long
way to go on Capitol Hill, but it's
already clea r who one of~h
btgges t winners will be: Rtc d
Viguerie, the conservat•ve km of
dtrect-matl fund raising.
Three ·groups found ed by
Vtguenc - the Sen•ors Coaht10n.
the Unlled Scn•or. A»ouauon and
&amp;0 -Pius - have teamed wnh the
· House Republican leadershtp to
gather pubhc support for Its contro·
verstal Medtcare reforms. The
Coalition to Save Medicare was
launched in July and includes all
three semors' groups, m addition to
leadmg indlj.Stry groups ltke the
National .Assoctation of M~ufac ­
turers and the Alhance fC)f Man aged Care.
1.,
But according to documents
uncovered by the Democrauc staff
of the Senaie Agmg Commtuee,
much of the money that 's betng
raised by two of the three semors'
groups is going stratght to
Vtguerie ·s for-proftt company.
Although the Seniors Coalition
IS no longer assoctated wtth

Viguerie, having severed its ties
with him in 1993, the other two
groups remain dependent- on
Vtguerie's fund-rat stng prowess.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
United Sen10rs Assoctat•on , for
example , signed a contract with
Vtguene 's for-prof1t dtrect -ma•l
finn. Amencan Target Adveru smg ,
that calls for ATA to rece1ve as
much as SO percent of gross revenue from direct mat! until July 30.
1996. After that, AT A wtll get 25
percent of the take.
In Viguerie' s contract wtth 60Pius, Viguerie &amp; Assoc iates whtch was later reorgamzed to
become AT A - ts slated to own
70 percent of the 1ncomc for the
life of the maihng hsts. Accordmg
to dtrect-matl experts, tht s means
Viguerie actually " owns" 70 percent of the orgamzat10n, mcludmg
1ts entire fund-r~1 s ing operation.

Some direct-mail experts wonder if
60-Plus should be allowed to retain
us non-profit status, which lets it
mail solicttattons at taxpayer-subsidtzed rates.
,
"I've never seen anythmg like
this (contract) ," Sen. David Pryor,
D-Ark .. told our assoetat.e Jan
Moller. Pryor, the rankmg Dtmocrat on the Agmg Commtuce, has
been direcung th e comm tile~ ' s
mvesttgauon. " I' vc never seen one
thiS Oagranl. The WQrsl part Ol II IS
the real deccpuon They're cullectmg the dollars from the scnlllrs and
usmg those dollars to reduce these
programs that arc so necessary for
their quality of hfe." .
.
The Vtguerie style ol fund-ratsmg is as familiar as 11 is cffecttve:
It starts wtth a "scare" lcucr warning semors of the imminent col lapse of Medtcare unless somethmg
ts done. It ends with :i request for
money, often accompanied by a
petition to stgn or some other
device so respondents can get thetr
"voice" heard in Washington.
Vigueri c did not respond to our
telephone calls.

THAT'S ODD...
NO DIALTONE

CO~PUfER DIVISION

complete thaljob.
. $30,000 a year - all ol whose
The House has so It mned a con· clients arc on death row . In addivicted defendant' s constitutional tion. they rccrutt and tram pnvatc
right to federal judicial rcv1ew of auorneys from establishment firms
who volunteer to take cases.
Esther Lardcnt of the American
NatHentoff
Bar Association has told the
state sentences that extenstve addi - National Law Journal about the
tions to death rows will be neces- tmpact of regular resource center
sary. The Senate will also soon lawyers:
bury this habeas corpus right. \. ·-- 1
"For the ftrst time tn many
The omntbus cnme htll on the cases you have a htghly spcctahzcd
Senate's agenda allows expanded l~wyclUP agamst a htghly spec tal·
wiretapping by the FBI, whose izcd prosecutor, both of whom uo
judicious usc of tl s powers has this work all the time. It's a level
again been scanly docu.memed 111 playmg 11cld that some prosecutors
recent months.
arc not used to."
And Congress IS about to ctther
Not surprisingly, the National
abolish the Legal Services Corp. Assoctation of Attorneys General
entirely or - whtle eulltng liS has been striving mightily to confunds -prevent these lawyers for vmce Congress to remove funds
the poor from filing any class from the resource centers. Without
acuon suits or protecting various federal money , some of the centers
constitutional rights of their clients. wi II have 10 cut staff as cascloads
In the law, the poor will remam keep incrcasmg because of
separate and immovably unequal Congress' chrome del1ghtm addmg
- as the Christian Coalitton , an new death sentences. Other
enthusiastic lobby•st for the bill, resource centers will die , along
applauds. Has Ralph Reed revtsed wtth thw former clients.
the Sermon on tlie Mount~
I have reported on cases taken
This is also the Congress that ' IS by lawyers for the centers, and a
so eager to speed executions that 11 stgnificant number have resulted m
· is about to end fcdem l fmancing for longtime residents of death rows the 20 death penalty resource cen- eight, 10, 12 years - bemg saved .
ters - Post·Conv•ctton Defender from their last meal as evtdence ts
Orgamzauons - around the coun- found of their innocence or of ram try. These centers arc composed of pantly unconstitutional behavior by
anorneys - earning an average of prosecutors before and during their

But when Aging Committee
staffers called a sampling of
ArLm sas seniors whose names
appeared on a " telegram" sent to
Pryor's olltcc by USA. they got a
suprise: Fewer than I 5 percent of
the sentors satd they supported the
Republtc&lt;tn effort to cut Mctl!carc
spendmg by $270 bilhon. And only
4 7 percent acknowledged bcmg
members of USA.
UNION SCANDAL - Federal
employees may be surprised to
learn that the man who wants to
lead thctr l~bor unton was once
Investigated by the md!lary for
hom1C1de and adultery, among
other allegatl[)ns. ,
Thomas Ray . v tc~ prcs 1dcnt of
the 22.000-mcmber NatiOnal Fedcratton of Federal Employees, ts
the leading candidate in today's
eleCtion to replace a man he helped
oust former President Louts Jasmme. Ray helped force Jasmine out
of office by filing petty ethtcs
charges, including allegations that
Jasmmc charged the union for a
$32 person al meal and a SI0 cab
ride.
There 's a more serious cloud
over Ruy 's own record. Whtlc Ray
work ed as u c•v•ilan for the Atr
Force '" 1990, a background check
reveal ed that he was accused of
homtcide (1969) and adultery
( 1973) durtng ht s servtce in the
Na vy. Ray was also charged wtlh
possession of a fraudulent rettrcd
milttary 1D ( 1983).
Ac cordtng to an Atr Force
memo we've obWtned, each case
was "coded (/F), indicating subst:tnliauon of the charges." But a
court martml found Ray not guilty
of th~ homtctde, whtch occurred
while he served m Vietnam. The
adultery ftndtng resulted · tn u
reductton tn Ray 's rank , and he
·'left the local area (Subtc Bay in
the Phthppines) before action could
be taken" on the fraudulent ID
charge. Ray was also given a letter
of rcprimanq for a 1938 Atr Force
mvcsugation o( time card fmud .
Ray acknowledged that the allegauons have been tnvesugatcd by
the union, but he satd there Wtts
"no ment to 11." He also claimed
the Atr Force memo IS a lake But
we tracked down Maj. Karl J.
Fluscbe - the spectal tnves11gator ·
who stgnetlthc Apnl 19, 1990, Atr
Force memo -- and he confirmed
that11 is a genu me document.
United Feature Syndteate. Inc.

The government will save. says
Congressman Inglis, S20 million a
year by stopping the I unds. A hravc
move to ba lance the budget.
Has Co hn Powell anything to ·
say about the present Congress'
wide·rangmg assaults on the Btl! of
Rtght s? President Clinton has
voiced no objections. And much of
the press - especiully telcviston
news - has allowed the twiltght of
freedom to darken.
Nat Uenlnff is a natinnallx
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest nf the
II ill nf Rights.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1- :
K00-827-6364, ext. K317.)

Congressional Republicans plot·
ting Medicare strategy have successfully dodged the public scruti·
ny that killed off President Clinton's 1994 ,health care plan, but
they are repeating another of his
mistakes: refusal to compromise.
Just as Clinton and his wife
insisted on comprehensive health
care reform ami disdained incremental change last year until no
agree~ent wtth Republicans was
possible, the GOP is demanding
$270 billion worth of Medicare
spending reductions - plus a draconian $182 billion in Medicaid
cuts - guaranteeing a presidential
veto of Congress' budget reconcili·
.) ation bill.
Senate Democrats are working
on a good compromise: _slopgap
reductions of $89 billion designed
to keep Medicare solvent over the·
nex1 seven years and ·creation of a
national commission to study long•
term reforms. This would require
Republ~cans either to stretch out
their budget-balancing plans
beyond 2002 ot cut back on llleir
wished-for $240 billion in tax cuts.
A new proposal for a marketbased overhaul of Medicare which"Republicaits once promised

but seemingly have abandoned to
avoid political trouble - will be,
unveilell by the Demomuic Lead·
' ership Council, headed lly Sen. Joe

Morton Kondracke
Liebennan, D-Conn.
Meanwhile. until recently
details of both the House and Senate GOP Medicare plans were
being so tightly held that staffers
rcponedly were forbidden to carry
written material out of strategy sessions.
The Settate plan is to be
revealed ar a meeting of the Senate
Finance Committee ·and voted on
beginni11g two business days later
without any hearings.
The House Ways and Means
Committee is planning to release
details, haiti a hearing llle next day.
and mark up !I bill the following
weeli. Ways and Means .Republicans are under orders lo defeat
Democratic amendments and propose none of their own.
The Republic~ns clearly have
overleamed the lessons they '!lug~t
Clinton m 1994: tl)at a plan lymg m
the open for months will be shot to
pieces and that intraparty squab- .

\,

bling aids the opposition . As a
result, the GOP is now open to
charges of conducting health c:ue
refonn by stealth.
Republicans also have suppressed outside opposition with
promises tmd threats. Lobbies representing seniors, such as the
American Association of Retired ,
Persons, have been quieted by GOP
promises to put the heaviest burden
of Medicare reductions - S190
billion in tlte House mea.,ure - on
doctors and hospitals and to go relatively easy on beneficiaries. ·
Seniors won't be pushed into
HMOs, for instance.
Undoubtedly, there will be a
drop in the quality of care provided
by many hospitals as nurses are
fired and setVices curtailed, but the
American Hospital Association and
other provider groups have been
threatened, health"lobbyists say,
with toss of access to Speaker
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and the
Republican leadership if they
repeat a shl)rP advertisin!l call!·
paign they mounted earlter thts
year protesting the cuts.
The hospitals also have been
wooed with a proposal allowing
them to directly market setVices to

I
"I

~I

Medicare recipients. This is being '
furiously fought by insurance com. :
panics and HMOs.
' ;
So far. secrecy, skillful politics, •
and PR have given Republicans an l
edge on Medicare and Medicaid, l
but that's like\y to stop as Clinton !
becomes fully engaged. lie threat- j
ened to veto ' proposed GOP Medi- ,
care reductions, and his recent :
speec~ in Colorado contained a ;
blistering attack on the planned 30 :
percent Medicaid reductions for the 1
poor and disabled.
l
Republicans think they can
force Clinton to swallow a budget i
reconciliation Jlackage containing l
$450 billion in health reductions, •
plus tax cuts skewed to the :
wealthy, by attaching to it a "must· :
sign" debt-ceiling extension per- •
milling the government to borrow :
money to pay its bills.
!
In between Clinton's proposal
and that of the Republicans, one :
health care group has proposed a ,
postponement of $80 billion in the :
cuts to be imposed on hospitals.
;

I

!

.

•

PA.

WVA

J. Chapman

.
Martin J. Chapman, 79 •. Pomeroy, died Sunday, Oct. 1, 1995

at

Local News in Brief:
Voter registtation deadline nears

·
Pleas-

The Meigs County Board of Elections reminds everyone that
Tuesday, Oct. 10 is the deadline to register to vote in the Nov. 7
general election.
•
·
•
.
According to Secretary of State Bob Taft, there are nearly _2 nul·
lion Ohioans who are eligible to vote but bava..not taken the ttme to
register.
.
.
You can register to vole at the Metgs _County Board or Eleeuons,
motor vehicle license agency, public high schools, public hbrary,
and county treasurer's office.
Mail-in registtation forms are available t!lrough this Wednesday
by calling 1·800-753-VOTE.

Ellis 'Sandy' Clonch
Ellis Sanfool "Sandy" Qonch, Sl . Pomeroy. died SIDiday, Oct. I, 1995
at his brother~ s home in Pomeroy.
Born Nov. 7, 1943 in Middlepon, son of Robert R. and Kathleen G.
Little Clonch of Middleport, be was a carpenter with Pomeroy Local 650
and attended 'Hillside Baptist Church in Pomeroy.
He is survived by three daugb~rs and two s~ns·in-law, Kathy and
Bruce Rey of Emmet, Mich., SonJa and Jeff Stiffler of Pomeroy, and
Delilah Dawn Durst of Gallipolis; two sons and daugbters-in-law, Rodney
"Joe and Delcie Clonch of Middleport, and Robbie Russell and Sherry
Clonch of Cheshire· sjx grandchildren; three brothers and on~: sister-inlaw Dale Clonch of Middleport. Ron and Debbie Clonch of Pomeroy.
with whom be made his borne, and Tony. Little of Columbus; a sister,
Sandra Sue Larkins of Lancaster; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in the Hillside Baptist Church,
with Dr. James R. Acree officiating. Burial will follow in Riveryiew
Cemetery, Middlepm. Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. at the FISher
Funeral Home, Middleoon.

Breaking and entering probed
Law enforcement officials are investigating the weekend burglary of the Forest Run Block Co. , off Forest Run Road near
Pomeroy.
(
.
Tools, equipment and an undisclosed amount of cash were
reported stolen, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Burglars entered the business either Saturday e~ening or Sunday
morning, when the burglary was dtscovened, he satd. The office and
other buildings were ransacked, he added.
The incident remains under investigation, Soulsby said.

Woman cited in Pomeroy accident

Dale E. Wolfe
Chance of rain predicted
for Ohio through Friday
By The Associated Press
1946. Sunset tonight will be at 7:13
There's a chance ofrain in Ohio p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:29
every day the rest of this week, a.m.
Weather forecast:
forecasters said. In addition to proTonight.
..lncreasing cloudiness.
viding much-needed moisture, the
A
chance
of
rain late across the
rain should cool temperatures to
seasonable levels, the National southwest. Lows from around 50
nonheast to near 60 southwest.
Weather Service said.
Tuesday ... Occasional rain
The· cloudy skies and rain are
being produced by a low pressure spreading from southwest to northsystem approaching from the west. east. Thunderstonns also possible.
Highs on Tuesday will range Highs from the upper 60s north·
from the upper 60s in the nonb to westto the mid 70s southeast.
Extended forecast:
the mid-70 in the south.
Wednesday ...A chance ofrain in
Early today, fog developed
across southern Ohio. Visibilities the morning ... Then fair. Lows in
in "some place were less than half a the 50s. Highs around 70.
Thursday ... A chance of rain .
mile.
The record-high temperature for Lows in the 50s. Highs in the 70s.
Friday ... A chance ofrain. Lows
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 88 degrees in 1919 in the 50s. Highs in the 60s.
wbile the record low was 31 in

County court cases ended

None of thiS recQ,rd of restoring
snnplc JUSttce. ami hfc. to some of
the condemned has had any noticeabl e tmpact on most members of
Congress. Bob Inglis (R-S .C.). the
mam sponsor ol the bill to cttl off
resource center lunds. insisL~:
"We should not be spcndmg
lederal dollars to subsidize think
tanks run hy people whose sole
purpose is to concoct legal thcones
to frustrate the implementation of
the demh penalty ." ·
, Such legal theortcs as due process''

•

IMansfield .17o• I•

Lrials .

GOP repeats Clinton's '94 health errors

_...::..........:.-:::;o--1

~ Martin

Deaths~-

ant Valley Hospital.
Arrangemen\5 will he annmlnced later by the Fisher Funeral Home,
Middleport.

The most radical Congress of our time In a September 1976 letter to a
group of young lawyers, Justice
William 0. Douglas cautioned
them that the Constttulton and the
Bill of Rights are not self-executmg.
"As mghtfall docs not come all
at once, " he wrote, " neither docs
oppress1on. In both mstanccs, there
ts a twilight. And it is m such twi1ight that we all must be aware of
change m the atr - however shght
- lest we become unwming victims of the darkness."
The current Congress is creating
more than slight changes in the air
of Amcn ca n hberty and JUStice.
More than any other. Congress m
th e nauon' s ht story, the radi cal
Republican majority - untmpeded
by the largely passive DemocratiC
mmonty - has been subvertmg
the Btil of RtghLs. The 17Q8 Federah st Congress (the Alten and Sedilton Acts). the 1918 Congress (the
Sedttton Act) and the Congresses
which encouraged the Red Scare
from the 1920s on have been
dwarfed by this 104th Congress.
The present damage ts wider and
. deeper.
The House has made the Fourth
Amendment meaningless by
rcmov•ng the rule that tllegally
obtamed evidence cannot be admittOO at lrlal. After the first of the
year, the Senate, under the leadershtp of Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), wtll

--Area

OHIO Weather

Page2
Monday, ·Octob8r 2, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

•

The following cases were
resolved last week in the Meigs
County Coun of Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien.
Fined were:· James F. Goody,
Middlepon. speed, $30 plus costs;
Elizabeth Jenkins, Racine, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Paul E. Wilson Sbade, fictitious tags, $15 plus
cosis; Jimmy A. Graham, Middleport, passing bad checks, two
counts, $25 plus costs on each,
restitution; Jeanette Lunsford,
!'Omeroy, passing bad checks, $2)
plus costs, restillltion;
Michael A. Lee, Clifton, W.Va.
underage consumption, $50 plus
costs, three days jail suspended,
probation IDitil 21; Roger L. Roush,
Pomeroy, underage consumption,
$50 plus costs, three days jail sus·
pended, probation until21; Bridget
D. Council, Rutland, underage con·
sumption, $50 plus costs. three
days jail suspended, probation until
21; Carl B. Heil, Middleport,
underage consumption, $50 plus
costs, three days jail suspended,
probation until21;
William C. Rotert, Gallipolis,
no operator's license, $150 plus
costs, three days jail and $75 of the
fine suspended if valid OL presented within 60 days, one year probation; speeding, $22 plus ,costs;
Valerie Swingo, Rutland, diSorderJy while intoxicated, $100 suspended, costs one year probation; Rod·
ney W. Sloan, Pomeroy, failure to
control, $20 suspended and costs:
John L. Jeffers, Syracuse, driving under the influence, $750 plus
costs 30 days jail suspended to 10
daysi one year OL suspension, _two
years probation, 90-day vebtcle
immobilization; Billy W. Blackbum, Live Oak, Fla., speed, $30
plus costs; Leticia D. Hart,
Guysville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Robert H. Weisman, Dublin, speed,

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·9!50)
Pubh ~ hed

every l}ftemoon. Monday through

Fndlly. I ll Collrt St, Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Oh•o Valley Pubhhmg CampanyiMuhimedio

Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph ~2-2156 .
SecO{'d clau postage paid m Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member' The Asooc;oted """· ondlhe Oluo
News_ . AnodPioo•.

POSTMASTER: Send address

COfl'eCIIORS

to

The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St . Pomeroy,
Ohio.t5769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATIIS

$30 plus costs;
Gary L. Carr, Albany, failure to
display valid registtation, $20 plus
costs; Benny D. Carter, Colmes·
neil, Texas, speed, $30 plus costs;
Brenda J. Davis, Sy,(.lciise, speed,
$30 plus costs; Nancy A. Hensley,
Lexington, Ky ., speed, $30 plus
costs; Daniel F. Rajt, Westerville,
speed, $30 plus costs; William R.
Mallett, Red House, W.Va., speed,
$30 plus costs;
Scott A. Blower, Lancaste1.
· speed, $30 pl~s costs; Mary Beth
Rogers, Dubhn, speed, $30 ~Ius
costs; Dantel R. Smnh. Salu1sa.
Ky., speed, $30 plus costs; seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Kenneth E.
Speegle. Akron, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Rodney A. Tripp, Pomeroy,
stop sign, $20 plus costs; Walter D.
Arnold, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
costs;
Alberto Doctolero. Huber
Heights, speed, $30 plus co~ts;
William E. Morgan, Shade, expired
plates. $30 plus costs; Dav1d L.
BlackbUill, Fairborn, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Gregory E. Buchanan,
Reedsville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Daniel D. Carsner. Little Hockino.
sPI'&amp;d, $30 plus costs;
- kenny A. Casperson, Orlando,
Fla., speed. $30 plus costs; John R.
Edwards, Athens, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Howard Gene Foster,
Dobbins, Tenn., speed, $30 plus
costs; Matthew L. Kempf, Canal
Win~hester, s~, $30 plus ~nsts; .
Davtd K. Kosuval, ~ens, speed.
$30 plus costs; Leslte L. Phares II,
Pickerin~ton, seal belt, $25 ~Ius
costs; Ke1th A. Putman, ~lville,
seat belt, $1~ pl~s costs; Milton E.
Bowen, Galhpolts, speed. $30 plus
costs;
Gary L. Elowe, .Sugar ~rove,
seat bel~ S_2~ plus co~ts; Bnan A.
Diaz, V~rgmta Beach, Va., speed,
$30 plus costs; Davtd T. Faulkner:
Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs,
Brenda A. Harper, Racine, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Craig A.
Phillips, Ganhersburg, Md, speed,
$30 plus costs;
Charles H. Taylor, Parkersburg,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
Jo5epb L. Wilson, Pomeroy, speed,
$30 plus costs; Robert P. Barnes,
Herrick, Ill., speed, $30 plus costs;
Timothy W. Roark, Moores Hill,
Ind., speed. $30 p)US COSts; Ed~enJ
F. Wettengel, Belpre, stop s1gn,
$20 plus costs; Steven F. Wettengel, Belpre, seat belt, $1S plus
"'SIS.

a, Carrier or Motor Route

o.. ~k .............. ................ s2oo

g: ~:~ : : :·. . :.:. ·: : :·.: .: : : :::·::::::s-i:: ~
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily ......................................... 1 ••••• J!i Cents

Sublcriben no1 dellrins to pay the .canicr may
remit in advance direct to 1\e Da~ly Sentinel
on 0 three, sax or 12 month bo!h Credit will be
&amp;~vtn carrier each week.

No subacription by m&amp;JI pemulted 1n areas
where home carrier service is available.

Stemwheel yard sale
The Pomeroy Onited Metbodist
Church will bQid a yard Sale Ffk!aY
and Saturday oo t1!e church parking
lot, beginning at 9 a.m. each day.
On Saturday there will also be a
chicken barbecue with sei"YiDg to
begin at 11 8.111.

sY..use PI'O' announced

(Morton Konclracke II execu· ~
live editor or Roll Call, the ne- ~
paper or Capitol Hill.)

••

Middleport accidents probed

Elmer R. Conley
Elmer Ray Conley, 44, ofPonland, died Sunday Oct. I, 1995 at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy. ·
Born Oct. 24, 1950 in Jaclcson County, W.Va., be_ v.:as the son of Molly
Ann Myers Mitchell of Liverpool, and the late W1lliam Conley Sr. He
was a laborer.
M" b 1
He is survived by his wife, Charlotte of Portland: two sons: tc ae
and Joseph Conley, of Portland; two daug~te.rs·m-l_aw: Cmdy_and
Stephanie Conley of Portland; one brother, W111iam Mttchell_ of LIVerpool; one sister, Wilma Berner of Bebe, Ark.; ~d three_gran~chlldren.
Graveside services will be 3 p.m. Tuesday m the Pine Hill Cemetery,
Ripley, W.Va. with the Rev. Mike Norris officiating.
Calling hours for friends and family will be Monday, 7·9 p.m., at the
Vail Funeral Home, Ripley.

Middleport Police investigated two accidents over the weekend.
Sunday at 3:32 am., Scott E. Pe~~n. 19, of MidJieport, was
ttaveling east on Powell Street when he Stated lbat be fell asleep at
the wheel, according to a police repon.
Peterson's 1984 Chevy Camaro went over an embankment, causing moderate damage to th_e front driver's _side of the vehicle. He
was cited on charges of drivmg under the mfluencc and fatlure to
control.
At I a.m. Friday, Karen Roush, 442 Grant St., reported ber vehicle had been struck some time Friday night while parked in front of
her residence.
,
Roush's 1986 Ford Bronco received light damage to the drivers
side front fender. Police are still investigating the accident.

Deer/car collision reported
No injuries were reponed following a deer/car accident on State
Route 143 in Salisbury Townsbtp Saturday atound 9:05p.m.
James R. Acree, 51, Pomeroy, was southbound when be struck
and killed a deer that ran into the path of hts 1992 Butck. Ltght
damage was listed to the car. according to a Meigs Cow!ly Sheriffs
Department repon.

Feds stepping up anti-terrorism measures
at the White House, with pedestrians blocked from Pennsylvania
Avenue:
"We always review the security
envirorunent both for U.S. installations abroad and U.S. government
facilities here at home wlien the
envirorunent suggests it's smart to
do that," presidential spokesman
Mike McCurry said.
He said the Middle East peace
signing at the White House, as well
as the New York verdict and other
events, "legitimately cause the
United States to look at the status
of its security."
The stepped up security mea·

WASHINGTON (AP) - Air·
ports nationwide are stepping up
precautions against terrorist attacks
to the bigbest,level since the Persian Gulf War. No specific threats
were cited, but one FBI official
said today: "We're planning for
the worst."
· Transportation Secretary Federi·
co Pena issued the order Sundaythe same day a group of militant
Muslims were found guilty in a
New York terrorism trial. "Based
on several current and future
events, more security measures are
now warranted," Pena said.
.
Security was noticeably lighter

sures were evident at suburban
Dulles International Airpon where
travelers on a New York·bound
flight were asked to produce pic-

EMS units record 13 calls
2:17p.m. Saturday, Barringer
Ridge Road, Kathryn Evans, VMH;
11:13 p.m. Saturday, Elm Street,
Elmer Conley, VMH;
10:53 p.m. Sunday, McNichols
Road, Darlene Tillis, refused treatment
•
SALEMTWP.
3:20 p.m. Saturday, volunteer
fm: department to Parker Run, hay·
bale and brush ftre on Larry Montgomery propeny.
SYRACUSE
II: 14 p.m., Melissa Downing,
VMH pending transfer to Grant
Medical Center via MedAigbt II
helicopter.
TUPPERS PLAINS
· 4:10 p.m. Saturday, State Route ·
7. Mary Longeneue. treated at the
scene.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
13 calls for assistance SauuJay and
Sunday, including two transfer
calls. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
10:15 a.m. Saturday, South Seventh Avenue, Mary Lyon, Holzer
Medical Center;
2:03 am. SIDiday, volunteer fire
depanment to Powell Street, fuel
wasbdown.
POMEROY
8:50 a.m. Sunday, Frank Road,
Ellis Clonch, dead upon arrival;
8:56 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department and squad to State
Route 143, brush rue.
RACINE
1:31 p.m. Saturday, Adams
Road, Pearl Adams, VMH;

--Hospital news-VETERANS MEMORIAL
"Dist:harg~ SepL 30 - .Jasinine
Saturday admissions- none.
Gibeaut, Mrs. Larry Harrtson and
Saturday discbai"ges- none.
daug_hter, Derek Lucas, Coranna
Sunday admissions- none.
Atcbtson.
Sunday discharges -none.
Discharges Oct.,1 - Mrs.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Douglas Beaver and daughter.
Discharges Sept. 29 - Nina
(Published with permbslon)
Shobe, Chester Boster, Mrs. Bri~
Corbin and daughter, Mrs. Arhe
Curtis and daughter, Mrs. Joey
Wyant and son, Cassie Keefer, Am Ele Power ....................... .36 118
Charlotte Green, Cynthia Sanders, A~ ....................................... .591/l
Mrs. Trent Nash and son, Mrs. IA bland OU ............................33 1/l
Mark Hudson and son, James Ar&amp;cT .................;...................~5 JIB
Bo k One ............................... .36 1/l
Davis, Lloyd Owens.
· Births - Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Bob YIDI ...............................18 718
Beaver, daughter, ~omeroy; Mr. Cllamp Olf hd ........................lllll
and Mrs. Larry Hamson, daugbtet, Cll..mlng Sbop ........................3 1/l
City Holdlng ...........................lS 1/4
Oak Hill.
Federal Mocui .............................. 19
Goodye.. T&amp;:R ..................... .39 1/l
K-mart ....................................14 JIB
Landa End ..............................15 314
Llmlled lnc. ............................19 1/4
Syracuse PTO will meet at 7
r,Julllmedl,a IDe ......................43 1/l
p.m Thursday at the grade school.
People'• ................................. .24 1/4
Parents asked to attend.
Oblo Valley Bank.........................36
One V oU.y ..............................31 314
I
RO.:kweU ................................46 314
Homecoming set
,
Robhlno a Myen .........................31
Homecoming wiil be beld at the
Royal Dutcb.......................... 12llll
Carleton Church, Kingsblli'Y. Road,
Sboney'olnc
........................... 10 718
Pomeroy, Sunday. SIDiday school,
Star
Bank
..............................
.53 1/l
9:30 am.; worship service, 10:30 Wendy lnt'l............................lll/4
a.m. dinner at noon. program at 2 Worthington lnd .................... l8 JIB
(l.m. featuring the gospel tones of
Charleston, W.Va.; Randall and
Stock reports are the 10:30 Lm.
Peggy Carpenter, Middleport; and
quotes proYided by Adnot o.
GoWpollo.
other sp,ecial singers from Ashton,

w.va·

·

1

COLUMBUS (AP)- Indiana·
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gills: 50 cents to
1.00 lower; demand moderate to
light
U.S. 1-3. 230·260 lbs .. country
points 45.50-46.50, few 45.00 and
46.75;, plants 46.50-47 .75, few
46.25.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 40.5045 00.
Sows: 1.00 to 1.50 higher.
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 32.0036.50; 5()().650 lbs. 36.00-40.50.
Boars: 30.00-34.00
Estimated receipts 33.000.
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Cattle: uneven. 1.00 lower to
1.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 59.0066.75; select 54.00·62.85.
Slaughter heifers: choice 56.()().
64.50; select 37.00-61.00.

ONE
LESS
THING
FOR YOU

;p
&amp;

Cows: uneven, 3.00 lower to"
I .00 higher; all cows 42.50 and
down.
Bulls: steady to 5.00 lower; all
bulls 53.00 and down.

J!lt;~
·

lil~\

~

-

.

TO
JuGGLE

Stocks

_._._

ture identification when checking·
bags at the curb and again when.
they picked up their seat assign-·
ments.

Today's livestock report

You 've got a lot on your m.nd . You ' re building
your world and your insurance need s are
real. But you don't need to add th rs worry
to your list.
Talk to your tndependent agent. lnstst on long term. expenence, communtty presence, and
someone who ts wtth you both before and
after thtngs happen. Just do this one thing,
and leave the juggling act to us.

Meigs announcements

Pl'Otomeet
Letart Falls Elementary PTO
will meet at 7 p.m tonight (Mon·
day).

I

Pomeroy Police cited one person in a Sunday afternoon accident
at the Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments.
Arlene Scarberry, 34, of Middleport, was driving her 1992
Chevy Cavalier, when she backed into a vehicle owned by Paul
Richard Quails. 43, of Bidwell. according to a police repon.
Scarberry backed into the left front bumper or Qualls' 1991 Pontiac GrandAm, causing light damage to Qualls' vehicle, police said
She was cited on a charge of improper backing.

Dale E. Wolfe, 72, Reedsville, died Saturday, Sept 30, 1995 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Padtersburg, W.Va
Born in West Columbia, W.Va. son of the late Ira and Maggie Hoff·
man Wolfe, be was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II and was fOIUier·
Iy employed by Eaton Axle as a machinist.
.
Surviving are his wife, Cora Cox Wolfe; four sons, Mtchael Wolfe,
David Wolfe, Phillip Wolfe and Sheldon Wolfe, all of Reedsvtll~; ~d
three sisters, Alice Slay of Glouster, Mary Parker of Chester, and Vugmta
Thomas of Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death by one son, Danny Dale Wolfe; two daughters, Francis Wolfe and Brenda Sue Wolfe; and two brothers, Theodore
Wolfe :md Fred Wolfe.
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the White Funeral Home.
Coolville, with the Rev. George Homer officiating. ~urial will be in the
Hiney Cemetery, with military rites by Tuppers Piau!!&gt; Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9053. Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 p.m.. at the funeral
borne.

Your Independent Agents
Serving Meigs County Since 1868
&lt;

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSUUNCE
111 Second St.

@
WH~RE

Pomeroy

992·3381

representing the

The Ohio Casualty Group
of Insurance Companies
EXTRA EFFORT

IS

OUR

POLICY

�•

sports

The Daily Sentinel
· .

.

STOP AND TURN - Eastern running back Travis Curtis (Car
left) cuts back against the grain in a change-or-direction move against
. Wirt County's Clint McFee (35) while an unidentified Eagle tries to
get in McFee's way ring Friday night's gridiron contest in Elizabeth, W.Va., where t Eagles lost 17-14. The Eagles will spend the
next five days pre a ng .ror Saturday night's battle with archriva1
Southern In Ra · •

:

In theAL,

_Angels' win &amp; Seattle
·loss set up playoff
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
On a day when there were three
teams fighting for AL playoff
spots. the only pennant-like cele- bratioo toOk place outside tbe United States.
The New York Yankees were
the only team to wrap up a postseason berth, beating the Toronto
Blue Jays 6-1 in Canada on Sunday
to clinch their rust trip to the playoffs since 1981.
"It's a good feeling , a good
feeling," said Don Mattingly,
· whose string of 1,785 non-playoff
games will come to an end Tuesday
night. "It feels great, but I know
it's just a beginning."
• New York was the only team
eelebrating because the other playoff spot was not clinched. Seattle
needed a victory to be crowned AL
West winners, but the Mariners lost
lf.-3 at Texas.
And when California beat Oakland 8-2 some 90 minutes later, it
set up a one-game playoff this
afternoon (4:35 p.m. EDT) for the
AL West qtle. ·Randy Johnson (172) will pitch against Mark

Langston (15-6).
"It will be nice to win it in front
of the borne folks, " Mariners manager Lou Pinieila said. " We've got
·a dam good pitcher and a team that
plays darn good base balL We're
still in great shape."
California's win was its ftfth in
a row . After the Angels blew a 13·
game lead in the f mal two months
of the season and fell behind Seattle by three games last Wednesday,
they managed to make up that
ground and force baseball's first
one-game playoff since 1980.
"We've had to win games for
four or five days now, and we need
to win one more," Angels manager
Marcel Lachemann said. "Person·
ally , I think this (coming back to
catch Seattl e) was a lot tougher
than it was building !bat big lead
we had . To lose a bi g lead and
eome back, that's tough ."
In other games on the fmal day
of the season, Cleveland won its
IOO!b by beating Kansas City 17-7,.
Baltimore had its fifth straight
shutout, 4-0 over Detroit, Milwaukee beat Boston 8-1 and Chicago .
(See AL on Page 5)

Southern· varsity spikers
beat Belpre and Miller
Southern's varsity volleyball est teams in the state over the past
team lifted its overall recilrd to 10· several years. and Southern rose to
3 with two big Tri-Valley Confer- the challenge, gaining a big, hardence wins over Belpre and Miller fought 18-16 win in the opening
last week. Southern split in four game. Ang1c Mcrckic had eight for
games, losing non-conference Mtllcr, Curie Cook had seven and
matches to Gallipolis and Oak Hill.
Halley Berry bad three .
.
In the Belpre ~arne, Amber
· Against Gal lipolis, Southern lost
Thomas and Jenn1fer Cummins 15-11 and IS-I in its lowest scorshared top scoring honors with nine ing output of the season. Tbe winpoints each as Thomas was 9-13 ners were led by April Donnaliy's
serving with three aces and beaded nme pomt s and five -point effons
the setting department with 37 =47 by Kristi Carter and Valerie
sets. Cummins was also 9-13 with Spence.
two aces, five blocks,~ 12-19 spikSouthern was led by Kcri Cald·
ing night, seven kills and 2-2 set- well and Jennifer Cummius with
ting. Keri Caldwell had four , four eacb, while Tassi Cummins
Sarnmi Sisson two and Bea Lisle and Bea Lisle each added two.
five. Sisson was 7-8 serving, 8-9
Cummins, Proffitt, Caldwell and
spiking alid 21-22 setting with four Lisle had aces while Proffitt and
kills. Brianne Proffitt was 10·19 Cummins had blocks and one kill a
spiking with seven Jilts and lonna piece. Jennifer Lawrence bad a kill.
Manuel was 7-13 with seven kills.
Southern gave Oak Hill a good
Southern defeated Belpre 15-8 fight, but dropped the match 15-12,
12-15, 12·15 after winning tbe rmt
and 15-12.
Against Miller, Sobtbern game.)epnifer Cummins led the
claimed an 18-16, 4-15, 15-9 win. way with 14 points, Lislelbad nine,
Bea Lisle led with II points and Sammi Sisson seven, Tassi Cumtwo aces. Thomas had 10 with two min s five and Brianne Proffitt
aoes. J. Cummins eight with an ace, three.
. Cilldweli. eight with two aces,
l Cummins bad two aces. three
Proiffitt four and Sis.son five. Cum- blocks and three kills; while
mins bad 14 blocks and nine kills Lawrence had three blocks and a
with a great front line play, while kill. Sisson was 9-15 spiking and
Caldwell bad four kills, Proffitt six Lisle was 12-12 in the last game.
blocks, 10 kills and two aces. SisSoutbern continues its fmes season bad a kill and Jennifer . son with another full slate of games
Lliwre~ bad t.bi'ee kills.
I.bis week.
MiUer bas bad one of the tough·

Page4 .

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- More
drama, same ending for the Shula
vs. Shula sequel: Dad bugs son at
midfield and walks off a winner.
Dan Marino threw a 16-yard
touchdown pass to OJ. McDuffie
with 1:03 left Sunday, keeping the
Don Shula's Miami Dolphins
unbeaten with a 26-23 victory over
Dave's Ci ncinnati Ben gals. ·
Unlike the rlfst father-son head
coaching match-up~ a dreary 237 Dolphins win last year - this
one pulsated with four lead
changes in the rmal19 minutes.
And there was a chance for
more, but Doug Pelfrey's 45-yard
field-goal attempt s.ailed a few feet
wide left in the closing seconds.
Moments later, a crestfallen Dave
Shula got a ten£1er cheek-to-cheek
bug from his father at midfield.
Don beaded to the locker room
with a 4-0 record and career win
No. 340, adding to his NFL record.
Dave jogged off still stuck on 13
wins.
"It was a tough loss for Dave,
,about as tough as you can get when you get into a situation like
that when you seemingly have the
game won and then you lose it
right at the end,'' Don said, sounding more like a father !ban a win·
ning coach.
Don bas one huge advantage Marino . Dave bas the Bengals'
woeful defense. Cincinnati (2·3)
has giv~n up more than 400 yards
each of the last three games.
"I was proud of my football
team," Dave Shu Ia said, his voice
strained. "I !bought this was just a
drag-down battle right to the very
end, and they threw one more
punch than we did. They showed
why they're the great team that
they are. and why Marino will be in
the Hall of Fame when be's done."
Marino was brilliant in the
clutch; leading the Dolphins back
twice in the fourth quarter to keep
them the NFL 's only unbeaten
team. Miami is.4·0 for the fifth
time in club history and the first
since 1992.
Marino completed 33 of 48 for
450 yards - the fourth-highest
yardage total of his career. His best
moments were in the rmal 91-yard
drive .
Marino came onto the field with
the ball on the Miami ' nine-yard
line and 3:29 left, and completed
eight of 10 for 76 yards and the
touchdown . It was the 30th. time

In the ·AIL

NL games..

edged Minnesota 2·1 .
after two innings and later got solo
Yankees 6, Blue Jaysl
homers fr(lll Mattingly and Randy
At SkyDome, the Yankees com·; 'Velarde. Sterling Hitchcock (11·
IJieted a three-game sweep, woo for 10) combined with four relievers
the 11th time in 12 games and post· on a seven-hitter
C:d their 12th straight victory over
New York w~o 22 of its last 28
Toronto.
to overcome a 5 1/2-game deficit in
The Yankees opened. a 4-0 lead the wild-card race on Aug. 26.

''Swe, you've ~ot be bappy. All cbance in as ID!IDY days to clinch
Y~ee fans. ~· .' owner -George . tbe West
MUckeyTeWetonhlta~run
Stembreooer said m the clubhouse
"It's been wbat, nine ytl\II'S? 1981? bom~r in the first inning, Mike
Pagliarulo and Benji Gil had run·
Fourteen yean."
scoring hits in .the fourth• and Juan
Rangen 9, Marlnen 3
Gonzalez
had a two-run double in
At The Ballpark in Arlington
tbelefifth
as
the Rangers opened a 7.
the Mariners blew their second
I ad.
·

(Continued frhm Page 4)

concluded tbe season with its club- loser.
Pirates 10, Cardinals 4
•
record 67th victory.
Visiting Phlladelphia fell into a
Midre Cummings drove in foUr
second· place lie with the Mets. The runs for visiting Pittsburgh.
:
Phillies, 19 games above ·.500 on •
Rick White (2-3) won for the!
June 25, rmished 69· 75.. ·
first time in five starts and Briall'
Paul Quantrill (11-12) was the Barber (2·1) lost.
·

Scoreboard

bas directed a fourlb-quar·
ter comeback.
''He was outstan&lt;!ing on that
drive," Don said. "Dan in his
career has been the best there is at
moving the football when you've
got to move it. This was another
examoie of what Marirni means to
our football team."
The touchdown was vintage
Marino: a quick pump fake as
McDuffie curled towards the sidelines, then a perfectly thrown pass
that allowed the receiver to go up
and pull it in over Roger Jones.
"He played very' good
defense," McDuffie said. "He had
pre_tty good position, but Danny put
.u nght there. Danny put it in a spot
where I could go get it"
"Dan Marino. ·John Elway .
That's their specialty," Jones said.
Marino bit four passes of more
than 10 yards against a zone
defense that barely missed knock·
ing the ball down a couple of times.
The.Jlengals also were flagged for
a personal foul on the drive.
"It really comes down to just
knowing that you've done it many
umes and that you've got people
who can make plays for you,"
Marino said.
Jeff Blake kept Cincin11ati in it
until the end by throwing three
touchdown pas.ses to Carl Pickens,
the last a 10-yarder with 3:39 left
for a 23-19 lead. Blake completed
18 of 34 ove~l for 213 yards.
After Marino's 1)naltouchdown
Cincinnati got the ball back and
drove to the 27-yard line on three
Blake completions. But Pelfrey
who missed a chance to send ~
game to ovenime against Seattle
two weeks ago, was off again.
"I don't know what to say,"
Pelfrey said. "It was just a couple
of feet to the left. When I bit it, I
thought I'd made it. I looked up,
and it sailed left"
By contrast, Pete Stoyanovich
tied his career high with four field
goals - of 21, 46, 36 and 35 yards
- to save the Dolphins. His last
kick put Miami up 19·17 with 10
minutes le(l
Dave Sbula emptied bis bag of
tricks to keep tbe Bengals closerunning back Eric Bieniemy and
receiver David Dunn threw option
passes on one drive, and Blake
faked a draw and threw a lateral on
another.
In the end, be couldn' t overcome Marino or hls father.

"&lt;'!' 'k'leS
• get Wild-card
•
oc
R
dS t op Expos
S I~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

omeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AL action ... &lt;Continued from Page 4)

~arino

·

8 lead in the fifth off Mark Leiter
(10-12).
Lance Painter (3-0) got the victory, going one-third of an inning
in the fifth.
Astros 8, Cubs 7
Houston trailed 6-0, then went
ahead on Tony Eusebio's eighth·
inning sacrifice fly at Wrigley
Field. Derrick May h'omered,
tripled and singled twice for the ·
Astros, who last reached the NL
playoffs in 1986.
"We can just kick ourselves
about the games we should have
woo,:· Craig Biggio said. "We
fought back from adversity again ·
today, ·but'it wasn't enough. It's
very sad."
Dave Veres (5-1) pitched two
innings of shutout relief. Todd
Jones got three outs for his 15th
save despite loading the bases in
the ninth. He retired pinch-hitter
Ozzie Timmons on a popup to end
the game.
Dodgers 4, Padres 1
To11y Gwynn went 1-for-3 and
wrappe_d up his sixth NL batting
tale wllh a .368 average. Mike
Busch hit a tiebreaking three-run
homer off Brian Williams (3-10) in
the seventh at Jack Murphy Stadi-

10.T...................... 4-I.O
ll . Auburo ................. l-1.()
12.!'oDD SL. ................ l-1.0
13. KaDNI SL .............. 4-0-0
14.0tlllhoma ........... ... l-1·0
U . WllllliD&amp;WD ...........).!.()
16. Alabllllll ................ ).].()
17.0n!aoa .................. 3-I-O
II. Arlwllal ................ 4-l·O
19. Staorord ............... :!.().!
20. Tcua ..................... l-1-0
21.LSU ....................... 3-l-l
22. WiJcoDiin ..............l-1·1
23.NoUeOarne ........... 3-2·0
24.Kaoau ................... 440
25.Northwcatero ......... l-1-0

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE
E•tcrn DIYI.ao.

,N\ 1.. ~ u)'
(;:':4"·: ~ "'
~~

'

"

CASS CLELAND
PAUL PULLINS
Paul Pullins and Cass Cleland are members or the 1995 Meigs
Marauder rootball team. Pullins is a six-root, 165-pound senior end
and sarety. Cleland is a 6-root·:Z, 185-pound senior rutlback, wingback
and linebacker.

Marshall warriors edge
UT-Chattanooga 35-32
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP)
- Marshall football coach Jim
Donnan said his team was itlilly to
escape with a 35-32 win at Tennessee-Chattanooga.
The Thundering Herd (3·1, 2-0
Southern Conference) withstood a
. below-average performance by
running back Chris Parker and six
interceptions by Chad Pennington
to beat Tennessee-Chattanooga (23, 0·2) Saturday.
·
"I'm just glad we won ' tbe
game, especially when we played
that poorly on offense," Donnan
said. "This is a tough aunosphere
to play in."
.
Parker, w!10 rushed for 318
yards in his iao;t two games against
the Moccasins, was held to 84
yards on 26 carries.
"It looks like the league is not
going to let us run the ball," Don·
nan said. "They're going to make
us throw the ball."
Pennington, a freshman 111aking
his rust career start, completed 23
of 36 passes for 283 yards and four
touchdowns. But 11is six intercep·
lions proved costly, as two were
returned for touchdowns.

The game was (uii of big plays
and wild plays. Marshall fell
behind twice in the first half before
taking a 14-10 lead at the break.
Pennington threw for two touchdowns in the final 6:03, a 9-yard
strike to Tim Martin to make it 2824 in the llerd' s favor and the other
on a broken play.
Pennington connected with
lavon Jenkins, who fumbled the
ball when hit at !be iwo. Marshall's
Ricky Carter recovered in the end
zone to give the Herd its biggest
lead at 35-24 with 3:44 remaining.
Tennessee·ChattaQooga made it
35.32 when quarterback Jeff Peters
hit Brian Davenpon with a 19-yard
scoring pass and Derek Hall on a
two-point conversion with 1:37
remaining.
But the Herd recovered the ·
ensuing onside Ieick and ran off ali
but 15 seconds from the game
clock.
Peters. content to go long early
and often against the Herd sec·
ondary, wound up 11 of 28 for 185
yallls without any interceptions.
Marshall is scheduled Saturday
to host VMI.

Mart"In -~ ..•!1~ Hoily Farms 400 .

By MIKE HARRIS
emoilons uilder .contr(i[but was:
NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. ?bviousiy thrilled by his first ride:
(AP) - After winning the race, m a Raben Yates Racing Ford in
Mark Martin gladly watched Ernie nearly 14 months.
·
get most or the attention.
"I didn'tlmow if I could do it. 1·
The best friends easily shared thought I could; but it's just some· :
the glory Sunday as Martin ran off thing have to go out and tlo. And 1:
with the Holly Farms 400 and lrvan think today took a lot of doubt out·
!ea~ back ~nto Winston. Cup rae· of people 's mind," said the 36-:
mg wtth an IDlpresstve s1xth-place year-old !lrlver who sustained criti- ·
finish in his first stock car. race · cal bead and chest injuries in the
since_a near-fatal crash on Au.g. 20, crash at Michigan International
Speedway and was initially given
1994
''I'm real proud of what Ernie only a 10 percent chance of sur..
did today," Mljrtin said. "Ernie's viva!.
been about as patient as anybody
Martin, who remains fourth in
can be. He's been ready for a while the Winston Cup points, has fallen
and be proved that today."
out of contention for the cham piAmong his accomplishments, onship with rmishes of 33rd, 15th,
Irvan started seventh, led 31 laps 8th and 12th in his previous four
during the rlfst half of the 400-iap starts. And North Wilkesboro bad
race on North Wilkesboro Speed- n?t been a very good track for him,
way's half-mile oval and never fell e1ther. But Sunday's .win was a
out of the lead lap on a day when healing experience for the driver
only two caution flags for a total of and his Roush Racing team.
.
tO.iaps slowed the race.
"Sure, I've run bad here in the ;
"I thought be'd' pass me there past," Martin said. "But, now I'm ·
one time when we were running J. going to expect to run good ~ben :
2, and I was going to get over and we come back .... We ran fifth in :
let him go. so later on, when I get the spring race here and we were ·
old, I'd be able to say, 'Ernie real proud of bow we ran today." :
passed me that rust race after comMeanwhile, series leader Jeff :
ing back from being hurt.' But I Gordon won maybe the biggest :
decided I'd make bim.eam it and bat~e m .the championship war, fin· .
he did," Martin said.
tshmg !btrd while Dale Earnhardt :
lrv:an, whose comebaclc official· wound up a lap down in ninth los· ·
ly began on. Saturday when be ing 27 points and falling' 302 :
drove in a NASCAR SuperTruck behmd Gordon with four races :
race on the same track, bad his remaining.

Held Over By Popular Demand

GLAMOUR PHOTOGRAPHY
IS RETURNING TO ...

MANE IMAGE

um.

. ~m~ .DBl:'l (4-0) pitched three
mtungs m relief for the win.
Mets 1, Braves 0
·
Brad Woodall · walked Tim
Bogar with the bases loaded in the
II th inning as New York beat visit·
ing Atlanta and completed a sea- ·
son-ending sweep. Tbe Mets
stretched their winning streak to six
and tied a club record by winning
their 11th consecutive b!Die game.
Pete Walker (1-0) was the winner and Terrell Wade (0-1) was the .•
loser.
Reds S, Expos 1
Tim Pugh (6-5) pitched one-hlt
ball over five· innings and Bret
B.oone hll a three-run homer off
JeffFassero (13-14) to lead visiting
Cincinnati.
_..
Montreal (66· 78) had its first
losing season since 1991, when the
Expos also finished last in the NL
Easl
· Marlins II, PhUiies l
Ryan· Bowen (2-0) won for the
third time in two years and florida
(See NL on Page 5)

I. TeU&amp;.AitM ............ 2·Hl
9. Vifaiaia ................... 5-l.()

Baseball

h:an

•

By The Associated Press "
J usl three years after the fran·
chise started play, the Colorado
Rockies are in the playoffs.
Colorado rallied from a six-run
deficit Sunday, beat San Francisco
10-9 and advanced to a rust·round
matchup against the Atlanta
Braves.
" We knew we weren't out of
it," said Larry Walker, who bit a
two-run homer. "This is extra special for me, espe~ialiy because of
the strike last year. With M.ontreal,
we were sjx' games up and had to
spend the winter on the golf course
instead of celebrating . This is my
first one. and I love it."
·
Eric Young also bit a two-run
homer as Colorado claimed the
NL' s rlfst wild-card berth. HoustOn
had kept on the pressure, overcoming.its own six-run deficit in an 8-7
win at Cbicago. If the Rockies had
lost, Houston and Colorado would
have had a one-game playoff today.
"It's an empty feeling ," said
Houston's Jeff Bagwell said.
''When you put your heart and soul
into this thing and then don't win
it, it's empty."
Cincinnati, the NL Central
champion, will start the playoffs on
Tuesday in Los Angeles, which
clinched the West on Saturday
night. Tbe Braves ' will open up
Tuesday night at Coors Field.
"This is a dream come true,"
said Cunis Leskanic, who pitched·
the ninth for Colorado and got hls
lOth save . " You watch it every
year as a kid growing up - teams
celebrating when !bey clinch and now I'm going to uncork some
champagne myself.''
In other games, Los Angeles
beat San Diego 4·1, New York beat
Atlanta 1-0 in II innings, Cincin·
nau beat Montreal 5-1, Aorida beilt
Philadelphia 8-2 and Pittsburgh
beat St. Louis 10-4.
· At Coors Fiel·d, the Rockies
trailed 8-2 in the third after Bret
Saber~ag~n was rocked for eight
runs - s1x earned - and seven
hits in two-plus innings.
"You know, 8-2 did not bother
us one bit," Rockies manager Don
Baylor said . "I wouldn't trade
. places with anybody today."
Colorado scored four runs in the
bottom of the third, then toOk a 1(}.

1995

ar~uders

Meet the.

Dolphins ·edge
Bengals 26-23

.

·

Monday, October

After Pelfrey's off-target kick,

JETIING AWAY rrom an Alexander's Ben Riley is Meigs tail·
: back Matt Williams during one of his runs in Friday night's home: coming game against Alexander, which saw the Marauders win i\3-6
. in part because or his 87-yard, three-touchdown effort. He and his
: teammates will put their rour·game winning streak on the line Friday
, in Wellston against the Golden Rockets. (Sentinel photo by Dave Har·

·

Monday, October 2, 1995

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4

.1:1: ' L lsi.

Iii

y-New Yort........... 79 65 .549
Ba!Umore ...............7t 73 .493
Delroit.. .................60 84 .417

7
15

liaql

l ·BOIIOD .. ... ........... 86

.591

S8

TorontG .................. S6 II

.319

26
30

Centnl DI•W.

a-CLEVELAND .100 44 .694
KaDNI Oty ...........70 74 .416
C!icqo .................61 76 .472
Mllw..,U. .............65 79 4SI
Mioneaola .............. S6 Ill

:319

)()
32

Oatl..d.................6J.

.465

77

t:-clincbed division title
y-clinched wild card

3l
44

•

II

MAC standings
Coni.

I.cam

· Saturday's Kores
CLEVELAND 3,1Caoau City 2 (to)
New Yort6,Toronto I
Baltimore 12, Detroit 0
Bo5toD 9, Milwaukee 1
Minneaota 7, CWcaa.o 6
Texu 9, Seattle 2
Cal!foru1a 9, Oakland)

Sunday's
regular ..eason n........
CLEVELAND 17. lCaow Ctty 7

1

Milwaukee 8, Botton I
New Yort6, Toronto I
Cbicqo 2, Minncsc:u 1 (ll)
Te.ua 9, Seau.le 3

,625
.479
.479
.469
.4SI

21
21
22 ..5
24

No~t-conl'erence

Keot at S. Carolina

Big Ten standings

l·CINCINNATL.I5 59 .590
Howtoo .................76 68 .528 · 9
C!icaao ................. 73 7t .507 12
St.louis ................ 62 It .434 22 .5
PiiUbwab .............. 51 86 .403
27
Weetcrn Dl.-leloa
l· Lot Anaelet .......7B 66 .542
y·Colorado .............17 61 .SJS

Sao Dicao .............70

1

.46S

II

Cont

Michi&amp;.. SL .... 0 , 0
Purdue .............. O 0
OIUO ST......... O 0
Iowa ............0 0
Mlaaeoota ........o o
PeDDSt.............O l
lodiana .............o I
lllinoil .............. o 1

Saturday's Kores
New York B. Atlanta 4
Sti.Duia S, Pitlliburah 1
Houttoa 9, Olicqo 8
Cokndo 9, San Fraociaco 3
Philrdelphi• 3, F1orida 2
Mooueal6, CJNCJNNAn 1
Lot ADaelct7, San Dieao 2

II

CLEVELAND.. 3 I 0 .750 15 47
Pitllburah ......... l 2 0 .600 122 llll
CINCINNATI .. 2 3 0 .400 120 126
Houotoo ........ .... 2 3 0 .400 88 96
I 4 0 .200 61 101

Wellcra DI•J.Ioa

l 0 .100
1 o .too
2 0 .600
2 0 .SOO
3 0 .400

111 82
t49 65
81 1~
71 79
97 Ill

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eulera Dt•blon

.1:1: L I lsi. J!E fA

DaiiM................ 4 t o .too 146 15 .
1'1\iladelphla...... 2 3 0 .400 90 tl5
WullioaJOD ...... 2 l 0 .400 99 102
Ari%oaa............. I 4 0 .200 69 l3l
N
. .Y.Glaab... I 4 0 .200 74 lt8
Cntral DiNioa

0 .750
0 .600
0 .500
0 .500
0 .250

79 61
67 72
101 II
95 II
74 17

MiiJenvUie41, Ca.ior:a 3S.
Monvlao 32, OeiiWite Val. 0

Muhleaberatl, w. Mlf)'l..d ll (tie)
NewHamplltilo 35. Lehilh 14
Poco 21, Auuq&lt;ioD 20
PenD 20, Bucknell 19
· Plyn1011th SL 52, M..... Lowdl 3
Prl•~.lh eotaoto 23
lU1ode Ia~ :U. Muaadl..... 0
Rice 21. AtinY 21 (tie)

W..tcrnOI-.Woa

4 I 0 .100 103 105

SL Louia ........... 4 I 0 .BOO 1t7
Sao Frucilco ... 4 1 o .100 137
Carolina............ 0 4 0 .000 l2
New Or!- ..... 0 5 0 .000 98

16
68

105
121

Alilldelpbia 15, New Orlea.nt 10

' .

Session Includes: Make-Up Artistry, Wardrobe Changes

Call For Appointment, 992-3233

MANE IMAGE

in p•eatha-, current

or IMt Saturday, total pgiaU

Hied 'oa 2j poloU for a fltlt place vote

l!:L

14

Carey 48, Fofitor ia St. Weodelin 6
Olardon ND-CL 37, Chanel21
Cln Wtthrow4J ,Day. White0
Oe. Rhodes 20.Cie. Lincoln· West IS
Cle. St. Ignatius I 0, Boardman 6
Cle Uoi versity 26, Gilmcur 22
Oeveland Hts. 12, Normandy 15
Coal Grove 36, Ootario 12
Delta 22, Oregoo Strit~::h 20
E. Cleveland Shaw 14, Garfield 0
Elida 22. Van Wert 6
Federal Hoc kina 26. Belpre 6
lDdeper:adeact 14, Beachwood II
lakewood St. Edward 35, F.W. Ballou

Teu.35, Southern Meth . 10
Te•u A&amp;M-KJnpville ~ l . Tarleton
Utah 34, Te~tas- EI Paso 21

Far West
Air For~ 27 , New Melico 24

N. Iowa 38. W. UllnoiJ 1
N. Michiaan 28 , St. Joseph'1, IM. 1-4
NW Miuo11ri St. 33, CeDI. Miuouri 23
Ncbrulu 3S, WashiD~toa St. 21
Nebrub.On.tla 31 , Morainpide 14
North CeuuaJ 21 . Elrrllur~t3
N0!1h Dakota 14, S. Dakota St. J

Arizona 20
ifornia 1j
Azus1Pac Jc l4,Cil .Uithennl 4(tie)
BriJ)wn
CSU~

Northwutern . Iowa 26 . Nebraska
Wesleyan 2S
Ohio Wealeyan 62, Oberlin 6
Olivet 23, Dcfiaocc 10
Ottawa, KID. 26, Bethel, Kan. 7
Pitubllrg St..~~ NE Miuouri 7
Quincy
~i~nville 19
Ripon S3,111in~ Col.13
S.DakotaT#I3, Dai:otaSt12
SW Min~e10ta 8, Bemidji SL6
Sao Diego' 35, Valparailo 18
Simp~on , Iowa )4, Loru 12
Sioux Falll46, HI.I'OD 7
South Dakota 12, St. Cloud St. 1

21, SooomaSt. 21 (tie)
, eta, Colo. 19
Olapman 47,
idental6
Hawaii SB,
V :lO
HuDloldt SL 38, St. Mary'•· Cal . 37

St. Ambr01e. 31. Grace.lud 20
SL John'a , Miaa. 3S, Ham.lioc 20
St. Olafl8, Gwtav AdolphU122

0

Ledgermot 40, Kirtland 26

Idaho SL 26,1daho 21
LaVeroe 69. Pormoa-Pilur 14

16

22

l2

Miami Trace 46, Cheshire River Vii .

Newark Cath . 14, Dear Fork 13
Newcomerstown 28. Malvern 12
NorwaU: St. Paul20. S. Centra.l6
Padua 19,Cie. VA/SJ 14
Petry 34, Hawken 30
S11.11dusky StMary·, 21, Pcrk.ini 17
Shadyside 26, Bellaire St. Jotm'l\9
Tol. Rogm 42, To!. Scott 14
Trenton Edgewood 42. Middletown
Fenwick 0
Twcarawas Cath. 24, Strasbura 21
Wuren llardina 14, Erie (Pa.) Ce ntral

Lewis&amp;CiarklO, W. Oreaon IS
Moatana ~n, UC O.vil 20
Montana Tech 38, Rocky MouDtain 6
N. Arizona Y7, MontaDa St. 0
N . Me~t.ffiahJudl 41, Colorado Mine~

n.

Soothw....,.D. IW. 42. Tabor 6

ouoa 21. Colorado St. 21

Cbadron St.

N0!1hwd. Mich. t S, lulttand 9

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
Regular
6.4

oz.

Of

NW Loui&amp;iaaa 22, Boile St. 17
Pac. Luthenn 3S,'Ceut. Wuhinaton
Portland St. S4, Sacramento St. 16
Red Iandi •1 ,Clarcmoot-Mudd 27
S. Ortaoo 23, Willamette 1S
Su Jose St. 32, Utah SL 30
Sirnoo FniSer 27. Puaet Sound 14
Southern Cal 31, Arizona St . 0

12

You. Mooney 27, You. Rayen \3
Z.anenille Ro5ta'alll 34, Marion Cath.

.6

IREBATI

Gel

==-__!!!!!~~

Bakmg Soda Gel
. 6 .]

oz.

~ ~,............--....,

.....
111.1¥1*

I. fkrida 5I. (1'/) ........4-0-0 1,$22

2.-(17) .......... 5-«HH !,&lt;119
3. fkrida(2) ...............440 1,314
4. Cot&lt;ndo (6~ ........... 5-CHI -1.311
S. OHIO ST.. ;..............440 !,292
tio.SooilllniCat .......... 440 1,292
7. Jotlt:blpa .......,.........5-«HH \,Ill

I

2
3
4

7
5
I

IALE499

PRICE
C~IROL

NICE 'N EASY
HAIR COLOR

Auoned

snactes

YOUR
FINAL

COST

·~
299

HAUOWEEN499
COSTUME
ASSORTMENT

Indian Com.

Crtme Pumpkin

EA.
(Selections may vary by store)

CANDYCDRN
BROCK
or Harwst Ml11
14.4 oz. 8of1US lag

79!

WERTHER'S
ORIGINAL
CANDY

HALLO.W
CHILD'S
OREEN
TODDLERS

699

COSTUME

7 oz. Bag

EA.

~A.

ASSORTMENT

'four Choicl!' - Pre-priced S9.99

.

SPECIAL

Coke or
Diet Coke

,

23
'
f

Alablaa AAM 26. Mon111kowt1 6
Appalrii.. St. lO, B. Teznseuee St

~ SOME mMS MAY fll()l ~ AVAILA81.E IN All STOii:S •I«)T~1111.£ RIA

BUY

2 liters

Prices Effective October 2 thru October 8, 1995

TYf!lGJWitiiC4l ffHIORS.

QUANTITIES LIMitED
BEVf.RAGE' PRICES ARf FOR
NON-REFRIGERATeD ~OOUCfS ONLy

~l5,Vaodelb1117

Aul&gt;n42,Eiai*21 .
Bowie St 23, V
Uoloo 12
l'lllallllln2l
c--Nowt111141. Calawbl 21
CaiQ)IIollnlllo

a.teokiD _ , . 34, Morol1old SL

22 Clatt Allaoll30, Mlloa ~ .
C11m1oa 43, N. C..UU St. 22
Clldl VllllaJ S3, Mlf)'olllo, Teoo.17
DollwlnSt. 20, NarfollSL 14

.

PHARMACY

.

!O.."..thf! ll,~~f! Aid :Pharmacy
near you, calll-800-4-DRUGSTORES.
... ....
....... .. .............
.
'"

•,,

13

SWTelaSSt6S , S. Utah 1.5
Sam Houston St. 24, Tu.u Sou thern

South
-31, OeorJja 0

..,_.., .,. poiot few a 251h pl- wte.
Ira

SE Oklahoma lS , Midwu tern St ,

Tuas 28

N. Dakota St. 5l, AUKUSialla.S.D. t4

Dakota Wealeyao 40, Black Hill.t St.

Akron Fire5tone 21, Akron Kenrrore 6
Akron Garfield 21. Akron North 7
Cao,tpo Cath. lO, Elyria Cath 7
Canloo McKinley 48, Cle -Glenville

St.O

Mount Ullion 33, John Caroll7
M111iingum 20, O!Uo Northern 18
N. Colondo 3l,Maabto St. 1

StooyBroot44,Saaed Heart 17
SwMhri'rlre 25, Urslnus 24
Syracuoe27,Rill"'l7
TowaoD St 31, MoDJDOUtb,NJ. IS
T\dll &lt;40, a.... 21
Uoloo, N.Y.lll,Dictlaaoo 7
VU11Dovt21,Bullalo 3 .
Viralllil Tecll26, PilllbUrll&gt; 16
w.\'L Wrtaleyao 33, Sb&lt;p&amp;erd 1
Wll!lb. ltleiUI, Bedwly,W.Vo 0
Wa)'lletb\lrl 36, Orove City 7
Wealey 21,1-y CUy St. 14
WOilmh•tcr, Pa. 35 , UDdcnwood 7
Widell« 56, J\utlD 21
WW!amt 50, TriDJty, CoDA. 2t
W - St. 40, Mla·B ..tDD2l
W-Tecll2t, RPI20

11ao . ..tho Top 25"'"""' iD !he ,._.
cJ1114---Pr•• collqe football poll, with

aadlaal-\ !iDal raoldq:

14

Robert Morri1 45, Cent Connecticut
St.!
Rowu31, Trenton St 10
Slippay Rock 42, Califomia, Pa. 14
Spriaafidd 21 ,llhacll24
SL lohD filii« 52, Al~od 3l
Stoodlill21, MIT 14

Sunday'• oeoru
. AtliDII )(),New EnaJ..d l7
Miaml26, CINCINNATI 23
T...,a Bay 20. c..u.. t3

fint~ •otel

Richrmnd 21, 801tnn Uolv. 6
Samford 36, Nicholls St. 20
South Caroliu 20, LSU 20 (tie)
Southeru Mi&amp;t. 4S, Tulane 0
Sou1ltero44, Miu. Valley St. 6
Uf-Martir:a 36, Teonease.e Tech 31
Tennessee 31, Oklahoma St. 0
Tenneasee St. IS. S. Caroli11a St. 14
Troy St. 56, W. Kentucky 39
Union, Ky . 51 , Bethel, Tenn . 6
Virginia 3j, Wake ForCit 17
Virginia St 28, Livinastone 24
Wabh 39, Sue Beniiett 13
Welt Georgia 20, Delli SLI4
William It Mary 27, VMJ 7
Winston-Salem 17. Fayetteville St. 17

Saturday's action

S. Alkansa&amp;1, Artanlu Tech l

.667
.667
1.00
1.00
.667
.750
.SilO
o .soo

17, Cbeyoey 7
l.alaydte 10, Columl&gt;taiO (tie)
Leboooa Val. II, Kiop, Po. II
Mw. Maritime 17. Maine M•itlme
10
.
Mlddlobwy 41, Colby 24

.

rec01dl M

Mid·Am. NIDI'clle 32, Cutvcr-Stockton7
M111ikJn l4, North Part 1
Mo. SouthctD :S6, Miuouri-Rolla 17
Mo. Watem 45, SW Baplilt 0
Moorhead SL 35, Nmhern St..S.D. 13
Mouat Senario 19, Marutha Baptiat

KulzloWD

. AP Thp 25 college poll

$9.95

3S

Ohio H.S. scores

Fairmont St. 46, W. ViraJDia St. 32
Fordham24, H.-vard 21
Frottbura St. 20, Chowan 9
Glenville St 37, Welt Uba'ty7
Hamilton 34, We~ lcyau 3
llartwlct 54, Rociloal« 20
Hot.t 20, St. Lawrence 16
IDdlaaa. Pa. 62. Shlppeoab\lrg 21
lou II, Siena 6
Junet M.U.on 21, Maine 17
JohD1llookl91ll, Geltylburl 16
Kc:aD 24, Wm. Ptaaaoa 6
JCi1p FoiDl20, C.UCaie-Mellon 19

Tonight'• game
Duf!alo al CLEVELAND. 9p.m.

•

•

.

E. Te~ St. 17. Cent. Oklahoma 9
6-4, Prairie View o
Hardur-Sunmon&amp; 38, Sui Rou St. 23
Howard Payne l 3, AustiD Col. 7
G~bhn_g St.

Mariel1126, Hiram Col 1
Mary 14, Mioot St. 7
Michigan Tech 37, Saainaw Val St.

Edioboro 52. Loctllaveol2

Open date: Chlc•ao. Detroit, Oreen

Session Fee !.19.1)9'
NOW O~LY
Fun For All Ages!

NE LouiJiana ~. Miui&amp;sippi St. 32
Navv 30, Du.t.e 9
North Alabarrw, 41, Mila1uippi Col. 3
Randolph· Macon 24, WMhinatoo a

t
I
0
0
o
0
0

Delaware 37, NortheutcrD 10
DuquetDe44, OlllDon IS
Eut SttoudlbUrl 34, Weot Clleater 26

II)', Mtuctota ·

lm.mediately

I
I
0
0
t
I
2
2

DulrotoSO. 5I,Dro&lt;lrport SL 17
C.W.l'l&gt;at 31, AmcricuiDtL 22
OaoiliUI 13, OP"aatowa, D.C. 7
Cout Guard 27, Norwicll6
Coocord 42, W. Vlrainia Teclll2
Coooecti"'fl9, YO!• 20
Coroell24, DartmoUth t9
Curry 33, Nicllolo 14

Seolllt27,Deovort0
Pltllbur_, 31. S.. oteco 16
S..Ftaocil&lt;o lll,N.Y. GiaD116
Oatlud 47, N.Y. Jda tO

Call

7

Mllll&lt;heQcr 31, Wlbu1129

AJiejheny SO. Cue Western 0
Ohio Wes\eyu 62,0beflio 6
Wittenberg 42 , Kenyon 14
Wooiter ~0. Denison 7

Brown 17, Holy Crou 14

IDdiaDapolla 21, St. Louia II
Kaioal City 24, Arirx&gt;aa 3
Jacbonville 17,HOUIIOD16

Only 10
appointments
remaining

Middle Teao. 21, Ala.·Binninpam 13

Mordlouoe 14, Savaooall SL 9
Murray St. 45. AuotiD !Uy 17

N. Coast Athletic Conference

Alcorn St. 44, Ark.- Pine Bluff 28
)
Ark.-Monticello 41 , NE Oldaboma 19
BaY,Iot' 9. Te~asTech 7
Cent. Arkansu 30, Valdosta St. 24
Colot?.do 38, Oklahoma 17 · _______ ..
E New Mexico 11 , Abileoe Chrislian

East

Central DI•Won

Atlaoll , .............

Southwest

•t.

McNcac SL 49, Celli... Florida 7

Northwood 1S, A$hlaod 9

Albricht 10, Wilkes 7
AlleJh.eny SO, Cue Wettero 0
Bloomabw'J S6, Mwfield 13
Bluffton 28 , Thiel o ·
ota
Bridaew•tcr.Mua. S6, Fitchbura St.

.1:1: L I fd. J![ fA

I
2
2
2
l

Dliooil Waleyan 28 , Auptu~,DI. 12
lodiiDI St. n , s. llliooll l
Kan.ul St. 44, N. JlliDoiJ 0
K.anau:Wsleyan
Colorado Col.l
Kno1 3-l, SL Norbert 30
Lawrence 29, Grianelll
Mac M~~~Tay 15, CoDCa'dia, lll. 0
Malooe .56, Urbaoa 6

Marlhoii3S, l!f·Chauaaooaa 32

Lee21

.

(&lt;11')

Mld.,est
Intercollegiate Conference

Wittenbera42. Kenyoo 14
Wo01ter·1o. Dt:rllsoa 7

NCAA Division I scores

Miomi ............... 4 0 0 1.00 121 50
Bulralo... ... ..... 2 I 0 .667 5I 45
lodiaoapot~ .. .... 2 2 0 .SOO 13
86
New EllaJand ... I l 0 .250 &lt;40 92
N.Y.Jet&amp; ........... I 4 0 .200 71 149

3
3
2
2
t

2
2
4
3
2
3
2
o 2

Northwettel'D at Mldnpn
llliooit at1ndiaoa
Iowa at MichipD St.
Purdue at Minneaota
omo ST. at PenD st.

Eutera IH•Won

Gr,.o Day.........
Tampa Bay .......
Chicqo ............
Mloae&amp;OII.........
Delrolt ..............

t
I
0
0
o
0
0

Saf'ud.,.B.. Te•

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Iala

OnraU

Tbli.Week'l slate

NFL standings

4
4
3
2
2

Lane 46, J00nJOD C. Smith 20
l.oui&amp;iau Tech 27, Tulsa 23
Loui&amp;ville 17, Memphia 1

l5

Cornell, Iowa 36. Carroll. Wia. 18

NorthwctterD. 31,'rndla.na 1
Iowa 59, New Mexico St. 21
MichipD 31, Miomi (Ohio) t9
MichiPJ\,St. 2S, Bolton Colle1e21
OIBO ST. 45, Notre Dame 26
Punlue 35. Ball Slll
WilcoD&amp;In 17, Penn St 9
Miaoeaota SS, Arkanl• St. 1

Football

IWW Cky ......
Oatlaod ............
sao Di&lt;ao .........
SeatUe..... .
Deaver .............

Lambuth 4), Cu-laad, Teno.

12

Other Ohio
college scores

Saturday's soores

Sunday'•
regular-oeason n........
CINCINNATI 5, Moo~eal t
Ne• Yort t, Atlama 0(11)
l'illlbllrJlliO, St. Loulo 4
HOUlton 8, Olieqo 7
Cohnk&gt;IO, Sao Fraocil&lt;:o 9
Loa AIIJelca 4, San Oieao 1
Florida a. l'hitodelphia 2

Jacboaville.....

.~

Jacboo St. 24, Alabama St 22
Jacbooville St S6, JC.aoJVille 6

UCLA 4S, Freno St. 21
W. Monwa 37, Carroll, Moot. 33
W. W•hio[iton 36, Whitworth 1
Wuhington 26, Oregon St. 16
Weber SL40. E. Washington 30
W5tern St.,Colo. 42, Adams St. 21
Whinier 35, Menlo 7

Michigan ....... .1 0 0 .5 .0 0 1.00
Nor1hwe~tml .. .l 0 0 3 I 0 .750
WilooDiin ........ l 0 0 2 1 1 .667

•-clinched divi&amp;ion title
y-c:liuched wikl card

Ialll

Hampton Univ . 3S, Bethuno-Cootman

Stcrlinf 23, McPhenoo 6
Upper owa 26, William Penn 6
Valley City St. 20, JI.Jlleltowo 11
Wartbw-&amp;69,Coocordil , St.P. 7
Wuhingtoa, Mo. 28, Rhodell
Wayne, Mich. 9, St. Fraooia. 111 . 8
WCII:mar 66. Trinity Bible 22
~eaton 47, Carthage 1
Wtnona St.14, MLDD.-Mom..6
Wia.-UterO&amp;se 4&lt;4, Wii.·Oshkolh 0
W!s.-Riv. Fallt 2~. Wii.·Stout 1
W&amp;s.·Stcvcma Pl. 17, Wis -Eau Oalre 0
Wls.· Wbitewater 17, Wi.J.-Piatteville

.l:l:LI.l:l:L[hl

Iota

1

74 .486

San Fnnciaco ........67 . n

Frank.liD 23, DePauw U
Gcncvt48, Tiffin 28
Hano\lct 44, MoWJt St. J01eph 3J
Hill&amp;dale.IO.IodilrbapoliaO
Hope 40, AIUOn 6
llliooil St. 20, SW Miuouri St. 17

Ben~ctine)Can . 34,Evanael7

Miami a1 Bowlina Green

C.ntnl Dl•blloA

rindlay 42, Olivet Nazaruc 10

llampdea-Sydoey 3S. Brida~ter.V•

Bethany, Kao. n, Frieodl 23
Bethel, Minn. 27, Aupbura 7
Buena Vista 20, Dubuque 7
Capital 51', Heidelbeta SO
Carleton lfi, MICI.Ima-13
Cent. Iowa SO; Luther 7
Cent. Methodiat ~.Baker 28
OJ.icago 29, Kllamazoo 2S
eo. 52, Latt Forcat 20

Akron at W. Mlcblp.o
Bill Sl. at Toledo
tent. Michiaan It E. Michiaan

Iii

Eurell:a 19,Concordia, Wll. l7
.jerril St. 30, Grud Valley St. 21

Adrian 41, Wilm.inJI:on, Ohio 31
Alma 35, Ill. Benedictioe 0
Anderson 42, ROI&amp;-Hulman 14
Baldwin-Wallace 32, Otterbein 7
Beloit 40, Mownou.th, IU. 0

S•lunhy·MAC

.1:1: L lsi.

1-4

SS, Georaetown, Xy. 30
DickiDIOil SL 42, May't'illt SL 0
Dote 29, Bullet I
Earlham 73 , Priocipia 6
Emporia St. 25, WuhbW1124

Midwest

This week '• slate

(llnolo.....Unp)
E•tern Di1'teloa

14

~fl?D

E.l1Uooil3), CeDL St, Ohio 27
E. Keotucky 42. SE MiuOUji 24

F&lt;mun36.N~Newa0

Aorida 28, Miuauippi 10
Aorida A&amp;M 29, Howard U. 18
Furnen 31, W. C.olioa 21
Oard.uc:r-Webb 14, Wlqat.e 10
Oeorail Mill lit)' j6, Benedict 1 j
GuiUord 31, Davidaon 21

Wofford 21, Pre5byteriu 20

Tolodo .,, CinciD.Uili 31

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Elizabdh City SL 21, N.C. CeDiral 27
Elon 31, Lenoit-Rhyuc 0
Em&lt;&gt;-y It Hetlf} :U. Mii!Jopol7

(tie)

Michlpo 38, Miami 19
N. C.olioa 62, mno o
P\lnlue 35, Ball SL 13

Today'• playoll' game
California (Lanptoo IS.(;) at Seattle
(RJDhuloo 17-2), 4:35p.m. ·

54
75
75
76
78

3 I 0 .750
3 2 0 .600
0 4 0 0 1.00
I 0 3 2 0 .600
I 0 3. 2 0 .600
I 0 2 2 0 .SilO
2 0 2 3 0 .400
2 0 I 3 0 .250
I I I 3 I .300
2 I "I 3 I .300
0
0

Noa-ctaferenre ertLma
Bowlloa Green 37, TeJ111le 31

California I, OatJand 2

l·AUanll...............90
New Yor( ........ :.....69
PhHadelphla ...........69
Aotida ......... ........61
Moao.al ................66

0
0
0

Saturday'• scores
MACMiioa
AkroD !6, CetiL MlchipD ll
W. MiclllpD 52, Ke.. 6

Baltimore 4, Detroil 0

I.cam

OnraU

.l:l: L I .1:1: L I fd.

E. Micll. ........... 2
Ball St. ............. 2
Toledo .............. !
Bowilo&amp; GreeD I
Miami .... .......!
C. Mich ............ !
W.Mich ........... !
Mroa .. .... &gt;....... t
OIUO .............
0
1
Keat... .............
0

Wa~hllatoD 27, n.ll11 23

12-16 Pose
Selection!

12
ll
6
16
10
579
II
545
ll)
470 19
431
2l
41S 22
371 21
3S9 14
308
258 IS
22) 25
147

31

Eul CaroliDII23, Welt Virainla 20

9
II

Othne nuh·l111 -.otuJ low• H.
Baylor Sl, Marrtand 45, Jlliaoil 3S ,
UCLA 30, Wult1DJ1.0n SL 16, SyrtC\llc
13, VirgiDil Tccll 6, Arizona S, Mia.m! S,
TOLEIXJ 4, Eut C.-oliDI 2, Tew Tech
2. Brigham Youna1. Michipn St.1 ,Milliuippi I.

WnknDhflkte.

Ca!Uorola. ..............78 66 .542
Sutlle.................... 71 66 .542
Texu H""""""""'"74 70 .514

!,061
1,027
97t
961
lOt
7!7
654

. .

.. .

.

,.

.

�•
Monday, October 2, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 2, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

-Nelsonville tO host Paul BUnyan show·oct. 6, 7, 8
. -Lumb.e rjacks who chop ancJ
·. · ~aw, chainsaw artists who carve
: . i~_ttril** sbapes from logs and
llisles O't demonstrations and dis·
· · plays of forestry equipment, all are
: part of tbe Paul Bunyan Show Oct
· 6, 7 and 8 on Hocking College's
• campus at Nelsonville.
· From lumberjacks competing at
7' lhe international, national, state and

student levels ·to compet_itions
between professional loader and
skidder operators. pallet makers.
guitar players and ·pretty girls, the
show is filled with action · some!bing to fit everyone's taste.
Five ·top lumberjacks from
regional events across tbe country
will compete in tbe Forest Sports
Nationals Sunday morning.

Professional loggers will com·
pete in tbe Game of Logging
national finals, a competition
encouraging environmentally
sound and safe logging practices,
on Saturday for $20,000 prize
money and students from 12 col·
leges offering forestry programs
will compete at tbe student level

for a tuition scholarship. Game of ·
Logging events are sponsored by
Husqvama Forest and Garden Co.
The Poulan lumberjack water
sbow features log birling and canoe
jousting along witb demonstrations
ofcbainsaw artistry by TIDI Kuen·
ning of New Breman, prior to tbe
water sbow.
More tban 100 exbjbitors will

__Society to hold .120th annual meeting Oct. 8
The Meigs County. Pioneer and
_llistorical Society will hold its
·. !20th annual meeting on Oct. 8 at
the Meigs County Museum.
. · The evening program begins at
5 p.m. with selections by the Meigs
. County Historical Society Singers.,
· Michael Struble, guest spea"ker.
will discuss "The Lockbouses and
·Powerhouses of Meigs County: An
- Architectural Legacy of an Act of
•Congress in 1910."
•
· • Since 1988, Struble, a Syracuse
resident, bas been constructing a
detailed s1udy of the built land. ·scape in southern Obio involving
. industrial archeology and tbe reli •
· gious architecture in the Gallia·
Jackson County Welsb seulements.
The study has resulted in several

scholarly journal publications as
well as co-authorship of a book.
His presentation and current
research is entitled "The Lockbouses and Powerhouses of Meigs
Cou nty: An Architectural Legacy
of an Act of Congress in 1910."
This is his first study that deals
entirely wilh the buill landscape in
Meigs County and looks at the
architeclural contributions of tbe
old locks and dams that were built
along the Ohio River and their
impact upon the society, culture
and economics of the area.
He is a frequent speaker at
national conferences of the Pioneer
America Society, the Society for
Industrial Archeology, the Society
for Archi_tectural Historians and is

..--Boy Scout grant-----.

a guest lecturer at Ohio University
on the subject of immigrant groups
in Ohio.
He serves on the hoard ·of direc·
tors of the Pioneer America Society
and is also pursuing graduate stud·
ies at Goucher College in Ballimore. Md. in the fields of architcc·
ture and preservation. He resides in
Syracuse with his wife, Patricia
(lhle) Struble. who is a teacher at

New officer.; were insL1lled in·a
candlelight ceremony at the recent
meeting of the Middleport Child
Conservation League al the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Installed by District President
Panic Bodimer were Kiuy Darst

Fall planting of.

.,

. CONTRffiUTION MADE- From the left Vernon Criss, presi·
dent or the Allobak Council or the Boy Scouts of America, and
. Mike Jones, ""out executive, accept a check rrom Tom Thompson
' local McDonald's owner/operator. Ronald McDonald Children'~
Charities (RMCC) of Charleston/Huntington s&lt;rving the Tri-State
:.area, and the national organization or RMCC, recently awarded a
total of $3,300 to the Allohak Council of the Boy Scouts or Ameri·
ca. The grants were provided to purchase tables,chairs,trainlhg
and audio-visual equipment for the council's dining halVtraining
,center at Camp Kootaga, located near Parkersburg, W.Va. The
Allobak Council serves more than 8,7110 scout&lt; from 18 counties In
West Virginia and Ohio.
'

Fall planting of bulbs was dis·
cussed wben the Wildwood Garden
Club met recently at the Kountry
Kitchen in Racine . The meeting
was hostell hy Evelyn Holler.
Mrs. Holter talked about gladi·
oli, their wide variety of color and
use, and lhe need fo{ sun and well
drained soil. The bulhs need to be
plantcd about 10 days ap!lrtto give
a long season of bloom, Mrs.
Holler said. She suggested that the
plants· be staked to prevent them
from drooping or working loose al
the roots.
It w:L' noted during the meeting
th~t Mrs. llollon received I 8 ribhons and Janet Theiss wa.' awarded
five blue ribhons in the shows at
the Meigs Co unty f'air flower

and Linda Broderick, co-president;
Patti Arnold, vice president; •
Nancy Morris, secretary and bisto·
rian; Linda Broderick, treasurer·
Peggy Harris, reported.
'
For roll call members answered
with ~ommentaries on plans for
the1r golden years. Theme for the
program was "Golden Years" ibis
being the Middleport League's
50th year in the Ohio Child Conservation League.
Programs for the coming year
were dis~ussed. The Middleport
League wtll host lhe district spring
conference to be held on Aprill3.
The annual Halloween party
will be held for members and their
children and grandchildren on Oct
26 at 6:30 p.m at tl1e Rock Springs
Church. Mony Wood, Meigs County deputy sheriff, will have a pro·
gram on DARE.
Plans were made to. assist a
needy family again this year at
Christmas time.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses Mrs. Broderick and
Mrs. Darst The trnveling prize W!L~
won by mrs. Bodimer and Nancy
Moms won tbe hostess gift.

will be perform Saturday at S p.m.
prior to the Obio Oat picking guitar
contest at6 p.m.
Robbins Crossing, a littl~ lo~
cabin settlement on Hur.king' s
campus wbere interpreters tell tbe.
story of life h1 tbe Hocking Valley
in the mid-1850s, will open its
doors to visitors with a variety of
activities. A borse log skidding
competition will be beld tbere,
also.
Admission to the Paul Bunyan
Show, sponsored by the Ohio
Forestry Association and Hocking
College, is $5 fo;· adults, $2 for stu·
dents and $3 for seniors witb Golden Buckeye cards. Children under
six are admitted free.

Kiuens- male and female, black
and while wilh black mustact1e,
yellow. shols and wormed, 614·
992-3!165
•

SMITH'$·..
CONSTRUGION
•New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
614 992·2753

Ill&lt;"'

Names in
the .news

LOUISVILLE, ~y. (AP) - A
~ade after the first Farm Aid COD·
cert, Willie Nelson opened this
year's event with tbe hymn
"Amazing Grace" and a grim pic·
ture of America's family farms.
: Nelson said more tban 500
rarm~rs go out of business eacb
Weelc.
. ''This problem is a black eye on
A!Derica," be said at a news con·
ference prior to tbe sbow. "Tbis
problem is not only bere, but worse
!han it was" to years ago.
· · Wbile Farm Aid hasn't reversed
tbe trend of dwindling family
(arms, tbe series of coocerts bas led
ui grants of more tban $12 million
10 more than I 00 farm organiza·
tions, cburcbes and service agencies in 44 states.
The 1Oth anniversary concen at
Cardinal Stadium attracted a sellout
crowd of 50,000 with sucb acts as
Hootie and tbe Blowfish and
l)lackbawk joining Farm Aid regu·
Iars Nelson, Neil Young and John

Warners to observe 55th
cnts of a daughter, Marlene Price,
of Reynoldshurg . They have two
grandchildren and one great-grand·
daughter.
Mr. Warnc·r retired from Ohio
Uniwrsity.
It is re4ucslccl that gifts be omitted.

MeUencamp.
'

•

LUMBER

. ~. ' . - (

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985·4473

Emergency Phone 985-3418

Sport~

Connect

NHL-NBA-NFL

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

1-900-378-1800
• Ext. 3140

1-900-255-8585

$2.!!.9/minute
18 ~r older
Touch-tone phone
required
Serv·U(619)654-s434

'2.99 per min.
Must be 1B yrs.
Touch-lone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

9f2811 mo.

Live 24 Hours/Day
Talk to ~eautiful
GIRLS! 1·900-378·
2500 Ext. 6557
$3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs .
Touch-tone Phone
Required S~rv-U
(619) 645·8434

Ext 7969

H&amp;H

SAWMILL
Portable
Randsaw Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614·742-2193
t/12/1 m().

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additionsremodelingroofing - siding plumbing, etc.
lnsured 1
call Bill Orrick

614-992-5183

9114195 2 mo. pd.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
5J 1619-4 TFN

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

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

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

15" LARGE
PEPPERONI
Only •6.99
992-6344
Dine-In or Carry-Out
0122/1 rna.

Chris
Scherfel
614-992-4236

When your boat
serviced •••
Come See The Boat Professionals!
Check with us lor details.
Will I"

E· I

! 11.'1(

f

ll,

Hi l•l 1il

1

NE SERVICES
K.-r St• .hlst elf Rt. 124, SyriCISt, OH
Pllole 992-6520 Hn. M·S 8:110-6:00

In Memory
IN LOVING MEMORY
OF LEONA WISE
WHO PASSED AWAY
Ocr. 2, 1988.
The rolling stream of
time flows on
But still the vacant
chair
Recalls the Jove, the
voice, the smile,
Of a loved one who
once sat there,
The flowers we lay
upon your·grave
May wither and
decay,
But the love we have
for you, dear,
Will never lade away.
Sadly missed by,
Cecil Wise and
Rosalee; Phil, Shirley,
&amp; Don Wise

30 Announcements

Middleport
American Legion
Announces 2
Nights of Bingo
Beginning Tues.,
Oct. 3, 1995.
There will be
Bingo Tuesday &amp;
'Saturday Nights.
doors Open at 4.
p.m. Bingo startS

at 6:30p.m.

Bill Slack
992·2269
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
12 Guage
Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building,
9127/9511n

710 Autos for Sate·

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

949·2512

RACINE HYDRAULH.: REPAIR'
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

v9:

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$2 0.00/HR
28553 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(514) 949·3013 Phone
(514) 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594·2008 NIGHT

DAII.Y

Will Clean Small

HOROSCOPE

experience. Call
for estimate Karen

at 614-843·5327
or 614·949-2632
· after

10· 10·95

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
Limestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Siles.
Reasonable Roles
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING

Up-To-Date
Soap Results
CAll NOWH!
1-900-378-1800
Ext. 6315
$2.99 per min. Must be 18
yrs. Touch-ton• phonl! r•q .

s.... u (619)

Mason, W.V.
304· 773-5533
-September SpecialWith t~e purchase of
a set of struts or
s hocks get FREE
installation.

Bet zing's
Computer
repair/Service, se'"tups,
Installations,
•
Upgrades.
Will write programs
and databases.
Kevin 614·541-1630
:~

II•

RACINE
GU.N CLUB
TRAP SHOOT
Every
Wednesday Nire
S:30 p.m.
E11eryon.e
Welcome

Meet Your

CARPENJ£R SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• ln1erior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FRE E ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-62 15
Pomeroy, Ohio

Special
Someone

8/4/tfn

Today!!

Call the dateline
1-900-255-1515
Ext 9789
S2.99/min. 16+
Touch-Tone
Required .Serv-U
(619)645-8434

112/tfn

DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.

rorked Run
Sportsman Club

Estab. OV.er 25 Years
Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Installation
304·982·2996

Gun Shoot
Starting Sept. 17

NEFF REMODELING

86 944, White , 65.173
miles, 5 sp. power
everything, right front
damage, very clean car.
$4650.00 0.8.0. parts
available.
86 930 Turbo, red
w/black interior 26,000
miles, bumper, hood and

SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Balh
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers· Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992·

right front fender
For Fr:~:tlmates
damage $26,000 0 .8.0 . ,L...,...,----'::;";:;
:l/9:::s.J
Parts available.
'
74 914-6 6 cylinder 2.4
110\\ \1111
L1 C.LS. 916 flares ; 911
E\4 : \\ \TI'I;
Suspenion,
Tuchs
wheels. black on black
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
$7500. Also: 68 A.M.X.
Services.
390, auto, air 101 ,000
Home Sites, Land
miles. Bought from
Clearing, Septic
Texas, no rust, complete
Systems
&amp; Driveways.
original car. Needs
Trucking· Limestone,
$3700. O.B.O.
614-949·2311 . days or
Fill Dirt
614·949·2644 evenings
&amp; weekends,

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

260 112 Four\h Ave Oct 2· 4 ·g.?
Clolhes All S1zes. Glass~.ar~:
Shoes, Home lnter1or, Cancel II
Ran1.

2nd -4th. Spru ce St. Ekt.. Camp1ng
Equ1pmen1, Glassware, Jewelry,
12k14 Rug, Matenal, Ant1que s.
Potted Flowers. Mi se

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

PHONE
614·245-0437

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

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic

systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512

2nd -4Th, Spru ce S1: Ext ., Lg:ian
Women's Clothing, S1ze 11 W&lt;Jn
en·s ShOeSIGol! Stze 1D.

'

4 Famtly Garage Sale Th urs - ~1 .
An11qu es. Crafts , CIO!IltnQ, M1jC.
922 Je11ct1o Rd., Cl'leSIIIfe, Oh10.•
4 Family Yard Sale. 2 112 M11ies
From Chesh1re, Out 554 On Ojyer Rd., Sept 30·0cl 4. Clothes .All
Stzes. Toys, Lots or Mtsc. ltems. •
4 Fam1ly, 1012 Thru 1015, 9-5,. N2
lower Garl1eld, W1nter Clolh6s.
Ho me lntenor, Large Mmor. eedspreads, Small Aquar1um , G~ose
Outfits, lots Misc.
••

All Yard Sales Mu st Be Paid~ In
Advance . DEADLINE 2 00
the day before !he ad 1s to r .. n
Sunday edtl1on · 2.00 p.r-1 . Fr!aay
Monoay ed1tton . 10:00 am o6).1 urday.
•

I p.m.
Factory Choke
guns only.
Wi II shoo t throug h
March '96

3·J) ARCHERY
SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportsman's Club
Every Sunday
Starting
Septe11ber 10th
8:30am to
1.1:30 am
$7 sign up, children
9.&amp; under $4.
50% pay back.
Chlldren must be
accompanied by adult.

Spec1al offe r oncludes
1. Clean rnotor
2. Grea se roller beJr:ngs
3 C:ean &amp; check agttatc r
4 Clean all mov1ng parts

S Clc;m &amp; check filt e r sy::.lem
6 Check hr ts
7 Check clcctrlcJI sys tcr1
8 Roo loce lol!o1 bag

All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts
One year W&lt;'irrJ'lty on w:;rk prrtormed
Vn hd en all nalt01JIIy advcrt1sed bra nels
We service most makes &amp; models.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
366 W. Main St. Ripley, WV

304·372·6144

Ca ll your date now

1-900-255 - I 515
Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be I 8 yrs.
Touch -lone
phone required
Serv-U

(6 19) 645 -8434

Tony's Portable
Welding
Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recores Available
Call for Low Prices

742·3212
Turn on Depot St. in
Rutland 1.2 miles.
6'10/1 mo

ALFALFA
AND MIXED
HAY
FOR SALE
BAILED To
YOUR NEEDS

949-2512

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning
Sept. 17 917/tln

.......
DATES

ROMANCE

Companionship
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 8583
$2.99 pi!r min . Must be 18

rn. Touch·tone phone req .
s.,..u (619)645-84H

STO-A-WAY
STORAGE
304·882-2996
Comparable Prices
&amp; Sizes 1118/t mo.

005

Easy Payment
Auto Insurance

Personals

LIVE GIRLS! CALL NOW'
1·900·376·2500 Ext 6325.
$3.99 /Min . Mu st Re \8 Yrs
Serv-U (619)645-8434.

30 Announcements

Accidents/
Violations

Etleen's Personal Ca re lor elderly.
We specialize in Alzheimers care
gi11ing. 304· 762-2544.

DUI- SR-22
DISCOUNTS

1 112 Year Old Male Keeshound
M1x, Outside Dog ; 1 Year Old, Female Fok Temer M11C:, To Good
Homes! 614 · 446· 3769, Please
l eave Message On Macl1ine!

40

Best Rates
(614) 992-7040
Pomeroy

.'

Giveaway

1yr old black ina.le cat w/'tNht!e mittens, gentle, litter Trained, to goOd
home only. ~4 - 773-5097.
3 Month Old PUppies, 614 - 367 0539.
ti Puppies

9/811 mo

Garage Sale, Monday &amp; Tu es$y,
Oct 2&amp;3, 69 Fiurheld Lane Cen tenary Rd., Boy's. Women's: Msc
9-4.
•

.

Oct 4-5, Misc ., Wm1er Cloth!!Tg,
3986 Georges Creek, II Rain (fiside, Abo11e B Church
Oct. 2--4, 9 -5, 1096 SA 141 K~s
~inter Clothes, Boys&amp; Gtrt's,
D1shes. Many Misc. Items.
.•

;g.

Oct 2nd -3rd Clay Townhouse
5 Mens, womens , childret~s
Clothes all stzes Also Plus srzes
Mtsc.

Tucs 1013, 9-S. One M~ e on Gr,.aham School Rd. On Atgnl. Ftsh1r1g
Supplies. Cralfsmen Topls,
Houseplants, Speakers, Btk'e,
Toys, Cloth1ng A" Sizes.
Vtnlon Acros s From Baptist
Church, Mon &amp; Tues. Hot Bfast
Coal Or Wood Furnace, 81cy,c1es.
Anttques, Mt sc . . Hou se ho~d
l!ems. Bedspreads. Currains.
•

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yar d Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Advance _Oeadlme · 1:OO pm rn~
day before the ad IS to ru n Sun
day ed1hon- 1·oopm Fnday,' Mci'n day edt tto n 10:00a.m. Saturday. •
Ba sement sale - St. Pau l UM
Church, Tuppers Plams, Oct. 6 -7 .
9am- 4pm. Clotn tng . lurntture,
glassware. mtsc. ttems
Buck.town Rd ., letafl Falls, Sept
30, Oct . 2. 3, furn11ure. msc., applmnces
Cra fts &amp; barn sale- two m;l es
Ravenswood Br1dge on 338. ~ots
of d1tferem ttems. 6l4·B43-S327.:
Ftrst lime garage sale- Syracustl&gt;
Oh1o. res1dence ol Mrs.. Bob Je.jr:
ers, across from Larry 's Grocery
ott Thtrd Street. Tuesday. W'ed nesday and Thursday. Ocrobe~ 3·
5, 9am -5pm Lois or new i!IJd
useo ct oth 1ng, s1zes 12 to 18.
toys. h1gh cha1r, car sea l , lo l ~ or
m1sc.
Garage sale Oc 1ot&gt;er 2·3 n11 crowave. furnnure . 44644 F~MS.t
Run Rd , ram or shu"'e
Garage sa te . langsv1 11 e a rfta .
Tues. Oct. 3rd. 2 m1les on Sr 325
dishwasher, 1oys, nice clo1h1ng &amp;
m1sc. pr1ced to sel l
•

ANNOUNCEMENTS

All Ohio

B1g Yard Sale 1St ltliS ye-ar 'Oct
3rd · 4tn . 1 O:am . S:pm. T&amp;dns
Run Ad 1m1le ott RL 7. Lawn M4wer-Tools. Jewelery, Books . w1hfer
clothes, other clothes Furru ture.Toys. Mise
•

813/lfn

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special

Computer Servi'e

YOUNG'S

"Porsches"

70

~~11--J'c MIKE MARCUM'S

REASONABLE RATES

6~5-s~n

614·742-2138

Imperial Tire
Service

Lost : 2 lernale red &amp; while Bea -

pi&gt;;

KP's CLEANING
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
Have 4 years

Leadmg To The Whereabouts 01
These Dog s 614 -256 -9333 Lea11e

tall . lame lron1 leo. Chase Rd
!lrea, $150 reward, 614 - 698 - ~806
or 614-992·2168
1

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

28 Years Experience
1-800-377-4477

Reward For Return Or lnlormatJOn

Losl. small black lemale dog;:no

Middleport. Oh io 45760
992·4546

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

Cheaper Rates

HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

Alluring Scents

o\\P..\.

ChapeiiFrrendly Rrdge Rd . .(rea.

gles. Jerrcho area . Reward I ;104 ~
675-5931 or 304 -675-5464.

271 No rth Second A venue

1)~~~~\ ~

Years Black/Tan Mued 10
Months. loca ted In The Clay

rnrx, black, Lasley Streel, Pomeroy
614 ·992-5990
'

'fresli ·Sill( 'f[owers
yijt 1Jask._ets for a[[ occasions
Stujf-it -1Ja!Toorts .'/{ot 5lir 1Ja((ons
Sirzging 'fefegrams
J"ree Loca [tfefivery
Satisfactiort uaranteetf

·.·····

Lost and Found

Lost or Stolen. Male Dalmatron 3

VICinity,

211219:?/lfn

:

60

Los!: 2 112 mo. old male RonWeiler

( No Sunday Calls)

R

to grveaway, 6 14 -Q92 ·

Message.-

614-992-7643

7/22/94

····~=·····
··~
992·3954

614-992-3470

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Remodeling

~

ro ~;ker

2541

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages· • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

• Complete

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates .
Job sites •
Sites •
Reunions &amp; Parties

Tan recliner and green padded

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

• New Homes
• Garages

MODERN SANITATION

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MOREl!!
1-900-884-9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 1B yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

"

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

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

1/19/tln

Scoresl!! Spreads! II

s

J&amp;L INSULATION

Free Estimates

(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)

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

,.

......"'

WICKS
HAULING

Complete
Detailing

°

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

(Lime Stone Low Rein)

DAYS
CARWASB

BULLETIN BOARD
6° column Inch weekdays
column inch Sunday

EUREKA ·

---

..,

31241114

1---------

:~~~:~r.~~G~:en::e~r•r::I~B~ua~iln;~eoo

1 •

.

. . ~ -"'t _---;--

Take the poln out of
painting. Let us do it for
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Alters p.m.
614-985-4180

WILBUR AND DOROTHY WARNER

:.

:J~--~
.'-""""' ,.,. ...

Interior &amp;
Exterior

°

$129

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

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

·.Manley reunion held '
. The Manley reunion was held
recently at the Royal Oak Resort.
l)dell Manl ey gave the dinner
blessing.
Prizes awarded were: oldest
. man, Walt Manley; oldest woman,
Ruth Smith; traveled farthest, Vir·
gin "Jim" Manley ;
children
present, R&lt;!!immc Manley; youngest
· cbild, Devan Dugan.
Wes Manley received an
"award" for keeping tl1e family tree
simple.
: Those aHending were: Emogene
and Bob Gilmore; Ruth and Angie
Smith; Lucille King; Charles Manley; Wesley M~nley; Walt M;mlcy:
Eddie and Francis Manley: Rose ·
mary Hysell ; Lacey and Maranda
Bamene; Sherri, Jaimec, and Tyler
Liule; Charlie. Penny. Charla. and
.Chmming Burge.
Crystal Leach: Nancy Neut·
. z_ling; Bill Gi lmore; Katie :ulll
. Heidi Gi~norc; Lisa Gilmore; Josh
·and Jessica Hooten (Gilmmc); Vir·
gil "Jim" Manle y; Kay M:ntlcy ;
Phy;liss Manley; Vivi;m May: Anna
Marie H&lt;U1enhach; Cindy Capehart
(Manley); Bill Ca pehart; Kathy
Elias; Leah and Maggie Baile y;
· Erica Dowell; Angie, Kyle . Vicky.
and Short Ru"ell; Odell and Beny
Manley; Jack and Ccbe Ambrose:
)'forman ami Sis VanMatre: Rose
Manley Caldwell.
Yolanda B:L"; Grace Westlake:
:Uill Manley ; ·Tris h To hias: Don

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Custom Building I Remodeling

1·900·255-1515
Ext 1515
2.99 per min. Must
be 18 yrs. or older
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

shows.
Peggy Moore presented devo- r==;~:;;:::;;,:;:::===lr==~~::::~;::==r-=~=;:::::=::::::==:-r=========
Public Notice
p
· N
ublic Notice
Pubhc otice
Public Notice
lions using· poems, "In a Garden"
and "Do Somctl1ing." For roll call
PUBLIC NOTICE
Roger C. Peace, One Rock· Samples, Complimentary,
All bids will Include a cool
I((
Sc
G
members d1' spl·.1yed unusual rocks The Meigs Metropolitan I29607
ng ham Ad
1or each residential unit
G·• reenv
I
Le, k and Other Free Copt·es·. 39.
which ClUI be used in arrangemen•s. Housing Authority, located
; enev ve eo e · E. Total Distribution :
1
1
r the prllgram members ga"ve at 39350 Union Avenue, Sakeo, 201 Chapman Rd., 5,066.
a ong w th a resume
F c I N D' 'b d showing the company's
Fo
Pomeroy' Ohio. Will no Greenville, SC 29605.
· h'
l' h d · k'
. opes ol 1str1 ute : exp 1
gardemng mts or an pte mg longer accept applications
8. Holders of 1% or more
1. Olllce Use Lett Over,
wor=~ ence 1n t hIs type of
garden pests. For an organic gar· for Section 8 Rental ofTotal Debtas of August 31, Unaccounted, Spoiled After
A
proposed
for"
dener picking individual insects by · Aselstan ce effective 1995: Bank ol America, Bank p r1ntlng: 95.
this service
willcontract
be avolloble
I C8 Illorn I8 • N·A.. Bon k I
hand may seem slow and tedious October 31,1995
2. Ret urns from News
but is better than using chemical (10)2, 9,16 3TC
Hawaii, Bank of Montreal, Agents : 417.
at the mayor's office upon
Bank of New York, Bank of
G T
request at no charge during
5 600
insecticides which kill not only the
Nova Scotia, Bankers Trust
·
otal:
·
business hours.
•
1 Certify that the slale·
bad insects, hut &lt;~so those that ben·
Public Notice
Company, Bonque Parlbas, menlsmadebymeabo\leare
. All bids
must be good for
1d f 1
8
eficial to phml s.
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., correct and complete.
per o o 20 d_ays and
Members noted that insects are
Reference·.·5715.17
Cltibank, N.A., .CoreStates
Robert Winget!, a!'y
which
the
vtllagecontract
enters Into
fo"r this
· Dailey; Gail Dailey: Roher! Gene
Philade IPhi 8 Nail ona1 Ban k;
heat
activated
.
lila!
cool
mornings
Ohlo
Revised
Code
Publisher
Manley : Mich ell e M.. Manley·:
••
· T M
C
B d C&lt;edlt Lyonnais, Crestar (101 2, 1995 ; lTC
service will be lor a period
he e1gs ounty oar
Bank, First National Bank ol
ofoneyeor.
Bobby Manl ey. Jr.; William R. and evenitig temperature make
them
sluggish
:mel
easier
to
catch.
ol
Revision
has
completed
Chlcago,FlrstUnlonNalionol
The village reserves the
Gilmore, Jr.; Cathy Manley Elliou;
It
was
noted
lh
'
,
l
l
hlister
beetles
Ita work of equalization. The B k 1 N h c
Public
Notice
right
lax returns for tax yaar 1995
an
or! arolina, In·
bid to reJect any and oil
Frank Ellioll; Shauna Ellioll:
that can have been revised ond the dustrtal Bank of Japan, Ltd.,
PUBLIC NOTICE
I I • and to waive any
Racheal Elliou; Rosanna Manley: release· a11caustic secretion
k'm. Killmg
·
LTCB Trust Com pany, Me1·
n ormalltles
bidding,
the
s
valuations
completed
and
Th
VIII
1
M
.'d
1
Dewey M.InHonon,
c
lemtca
y
burn
l
0
0
Harley McDonalu: Carol Sou them:
·
·
be d
b
·
lon Bank, Mltsublshl Trust &amp;
age
' deport
Mayor
one y weanng are open for public Banking Corporation, Na· will be receiving bids otthe
VIllage of Middleport
Marcia Manley ; Rehccca Rohm: tJ1e msects can
Dedra Nigliftngale; Roher! and gloves as you squash them between Inspection In the ofllce ol . tiona! Westminsler Bank office of . lhe Mayor, 237 (10) 2, 8, 15; 3TC
Kyle Nightingale: Ronald Manley your lingers or dropping ·them into · the Meigs County Auditor, · USA, NatlonsBank of Geor· Race St., Mlddlepon, Ohio
a bucket of sonpy water.
Second Floor, Courthouse, gla, N.A.,NationsBank of until 4 p.m., October 23,
and Ronald Manley. II: Jason Man·
Second Street, Pomeroy, . T
1995 from contractors
arrangement
of
the
Ohio 45 ~,.69 .
exao, Lid
N.A.,PNC
Nippon
Credit interested in providing
For
the
ley; William Cas tk : Kcllie ai1d
Bank,
9 k NA
Complaints against the
·•
an • · ·· trash pickup service to
Austin Cas tle : Tony. Juli e, and moth, Mrs. Hollon used pink gladi·
oli, zinni:L', :u1d Japanese holly on valuations, as established RoyaiBankofCanada,Sakura
Bank,
Ltd.,
Shawmut
Bank approximately
975
C:uneron Leach
wood
accented
with
a
fossil
for
tax
year
199d5,
must
lbhe
Connectlcut,N.A.,Sumitomo
residents.
Bids
will
be
dried
Next yc:u·'s reunion will be held rock . Refreshmcms were served to made 1n accor a nco w 1 B
Tokal Bonk, Ltd., opened at the regular at
ank,
Ltd.,
Sept. 7, 1996. S p.m.. at Royal Oak
the memhcrs and a guest, Janet Section 5715·19 of the Ohio Toronto-Dominion Bank, 7 =30 p.m.
Resort.
McKee.
Revised Code. These Union Bank, Wachovfa Bank
complaints must be filed on of North Carolina, N.A .,
forms which will be Wachovla Bank of South
furnished by tho County Carollna,N.A.;AmericanGen·
Get Your Message Across
Auditor and must be filed In eral Corporation, CIGNA In·
the County Auditor's Office vestmento, Inc., Equllable
With A Daily Sentinel
on or before the 3151 day ol Life, etal; lOS Life Insurance
March, 1996. All complaints Compay, John Hsncock Muliled wllh the County tuaiUielnsuranceCompany,
1 0
Auditor will be heard by the Maosachuselts Mutual Life In·
Board of Revision in the surance Company, Morgan
1 00
8
manner provided by Section Guaranty Trust Company of
5715.19 of tho Ohio Revised New York, New York Life In·
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155
Code.
auranceCompany, The North·
Nancy Parker Campbell , western Mutual Life lnsur·
Meigs County Audllor ance Company, The Pruden·
(9) 26, 27, 28, 29;
tlal Insurance Company of
(10) 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6; 10TC
America, Teacher'slrisurance
&amp; Annuity Association of
America; The Travelers lnsur·
Public Notice
Yard/Bake Sale
ance Company, National
Oct.
7th, 8 a .m.-4 p.m.
Broadcasting Company, Inc.
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,
Harrisonville
Average No. Copies Each
MANAGEMENT
Presbyterian Ch~rch
Issue During Preceding 12
AND
Months:
Sponsored
by "The Lend a
CIRCULATION
10. Extent ~nd nature of
1. Tille of Publication: The Circulation.
Dally Sentinel, Publication
· A. Total No, Copies
No. 145-960.
Printed: 5,600.
Model .1934
Giant Yard Sale
2. Date of Filing: October
B. Paid Circulation:
' 2, 1995.
At the Pomeroy United
Sales through Dealers
3. Frequency of l10ue: and1.Carriers,
Street Vendors
• Power!ul molar
• Triple lUter dus! bog syslem
Methodist Church on Second
Dally Monday through Friday. and Counter Sales: 4,727.
• Oiren air flow system • Ouol ed~ deoning
A. No. of laaues Published
2. Mall Subscriptions: 323.
St. Friday, Oct 6 and
Annuolly:255
C. Total Paid Circulation:,
B. Annual Subocrlption 5,050.
Saturday, Oct 7, 1995 time
Price: $104.00 'Home Dellv·
0. Free Dlstr(butlon by Mall
9:00
a .m. each day. Saturday,
ered.
Carrier
or
Other
Meant,
4. Location ot Known Of·
Oct.?, Bar-b-que Chicken
Complimentary,
lice of Publication: 111 Court Samples,
and
Other
Free
Copies:
39.
99
Dinner, 11 :00 a .m. at the
St, Pomeroy, Ohio, Melga
E. Total Distribution:
County 45169.
Pomeroy United Methodist
· 5. Location of the Head· 5,089.
F. Copies Not Distributed:
Church on Second St.
1. OIIJce Use Lell Over,
11 Unaccounted,
!Court St.,'
Ohio, Printing: 57 Spoiled After
'•Melga County
2. Returns from News
· 6. Publisher: Robert L.
The RSVP (Retired and
454.
·Wingett, Syrecuae, Ohio Agents:
Senior Volunteer Program)
Total:
5,600.
G.
.45779. Editor: Charlene
Actual No. Copies of
will sponsor a
. Hoeflich, Pomeroy, Ohio
Single
looue Published Near·
45789.
Health
Information Fair.
to Filing Date:
, Ohio Volley Publlohlng est 10.
Extent
and
nature
ol
The event will be held
'Co., 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Clrcula lion.
Ohio, Multimedia Inc., 305 S.
Thursday, Oct. 5, 1995
A. Total No. Cop leo
Main St., P.O. Box 1688, Printed:
5,600.
from10:00
a .m.-12 noon at
Greenville, S.C. 29602.
B. Paid Circulation:
Perlorman's You Expect
7. Partleo holding .1 per·
the Meigs MultipurJ)ose
1, Sales through Dealers
Quality You Demand.'
cent or more of outelandlng
and
Carriers,
Street
Vendors
Senior Center
1harea of CommOn Stock ;
Sales: 4,734.
e &amp; Co., c/o tho Depool· and2.Counter
Call
992-2161 for
Ma11Subscrlptlons:315.
VACIJWQEN.ERS
t y Truat Co., P.O. Box 20,
C. Total Paid Circulation :
information.
B ling Green Station, Now 5,049.
Y
k,
NY
10274;
Dorothy
P.
634 E. Main
D. Free Dlotrlbution by Mall
Pomeroy, OH
992-5500
R oau·r, Truotoea UIW Carrier
or Other Means,

°

O.ne Stop Complete ~uto Body Repair

ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE

TUPPERS PLAINS - Dorothy
(Gillilan) and Wilbur Warner of
Tuppers Plains will celebrate their
55th wedding anniversary from 12
to 3 p.m., Oct 8, with a card shower and open house at the Bethel
Methodist Church.
Mr. and Mr.;. Wainer were mar·
ried Oct. 5, 1940 and are the par·

Giveaway

Console TV, Washer, . Dryer &amp;
Dishwasher. Need Repa ir 304 675-4J52.

New CCL officers installed

bUlbS CIUb tOpiC

I "LU

Syracuse Elementary, and cbildre'l
Evan and Erin Struble.
Dinner will be at 6:30pm. followed by the business meeting at
7:30p.m. Reservations for the din·
ner may be made by phoni.ng tbe
museum at 992-3810 or mailing
requests to tbe Meigs County His·
torical Society, PO Box 145,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769, no tater
than Oct. 4. Cost of tbe meal is $7.

be featured at the Paul Bunyan
Sbow and carvers representing four
cbainsaw exhibitors will c9mpete
to be tbe best cbainsaw artist as
they carve in Stibl Arena one bour
before tbe chainsaw auction. The
winner. will be determined by tbe
largest bid when items are auctinned.
A stock saw c;ompetition on Sat·
urday and Sunday, sponsored by
Bryan Equipment and Stihl, is open
to the public.
Other activities include climbing demonstrations and steam and
antique logging equipment displays
and Miss Paul Bunyan will be
crowned Saturday at noon. Tbe
country band , The Ran;ly Herd,

40

Garage sale. Oc1 1·2. CollegP
A11e . Ru~and. Oh1o.
•
Garage sale · 212 Mam St. Ru, tland, kid's clothes. m1sc .. o'l tder.
Oct 2-3.
Garage sale - 3 112 mtles ei.~t
Chester on 246, J"ierald Osborne.
10·5. Oct. 2-3. Baby swmo. mlaot
car seat, ba tht ub, girl 's cloth'es
newborn to 2 toddler, rruch more ' ·
Garage sale - Oct. 2-4. 9:00ani 3:00pm_ The Grate res idence
48240 Eagle Ridge Rd . F11"i 11 ;
store quatny at garage sate Pr.rces. phone 614 -949-2399_
·
Garage sale - October 2-6 SR
33W. CR 19 . Watch lor s1'gns.
9am-4pm
Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 2·3,
1Oam -3pm . 732 Sycamore, MtC dleport. Wrnter clothing . recli ner
and_m1sc_
. •
Monday and Tuesday, 9am. bEtside Pomeroy Elementary SchocifHo{lle In terior. curtains, bedspreads, blanke1s, wmter clothiQg,
btcycles.
•
Moving sale - Saturday- 30 th,
Monday and Tuesday · 2-3, 124
Nelson Ad ., Rutland . Tools a·rtel
m1sc. items.
Oct ~-3, SR 248, Chester acros~
1rom pos1 office. Lo-ts o1 kids
cl othes. boys and gtrls, rnanre,ss
i .et full, twtn frames, bathroem
stnk, _kitchen table, misc.
•·

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 2, 1995

''

Monday, October 2, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILl iP

ALD~R

Baby s uer Needed ~venmg Shift
Ho zer Hosptlal Ar ea 614 44tl
7556

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VICinity

Babysitter needed call 614 992
5995 or 614 992 7511
Da m nos Przza ot Pomeroy now
h ngd vers 6 14 9922124

Get 3 9arn 4pm June St ee
Mu:su c Htll:&gt; Jeane Connoll y

Oc Iober 1 2 3 Sam P ckens and
l?e

:1

Lee Tyree Blvd Rae ne

Octo ber 2 3 bell nd Card na Gro
ce ~ n Mason ran date 5th 6th
9Gm 4pm

Oct ooer 2 &amp; 3 l Oam 4pm 918
Sou th Th1 d M ddleporl Reel ner
ca pe c ossbow N ntendo d sh
e s amps base ba ll cards com

dol s ga sses books

Sept 30 Oct 2 3 9am

D ve rs Needed Ret ree s Wei
comed To Apply Good Onvmg
Record Requ rred Ot1 10 &amp; WV
Area Company Van Provided No
CDLs Requ red 1 800 685 9556
Loca l Garbage Co Needs Drrver
W th CO L s Fo r Pari I me Or Full
t me Pos! on6 143889686 95

t ranors'1ne

;&gt;L re

lurn

?

u e Home lnte o basM.e s d sh
es cook wa e drapes bedd ng

oys w nter ctolll ng

tad es

11en s boys (new 1eans) on At 7
Easle n an cancels

c~.oove

::s x lam ly S11.a te A Way Ch ester
Octobe r 2 3 9am 5pm Furn lu re
n ~e c se mach ne drapes coats

tans games Raw c- gh po tab e

Ma u e Babys tter Needed In Our
Home For l nl~nt lw ns &amp; 2 112
Year Old Boys Send Reply W th
References To CLA 359 Gall po
I s Oa11y Tr t&gt;une 625 Third Ave
Gall po ls OH 45631
Ne ed 5 Lad es To Sa le Avon

614 446 3358
Ne ed someone to t n sn tea nng
down old ba n and hau away for
wood or d scuss paymen l Call
304 6 75 56 4 belween noon
11pm oease
No e~perrence necessa ry I $500
to $900 week lyl pprentral process
ng mortgage refunds Own hours
Ca 1 909 715 2378 exl 1377 (24
hou rs)
No Expe ence Necessary I $500
To $900 we ekiV 1Pote nt1a l Pro
cess ng Morrgage Refun ds Own
Hours Cal (909) 715 2300 Ext
782 (24 Hours)

d snwashe m sc

P11ee tam1y Oct 4 ran cancels
u '1 1 Oct 5 CR 19 Eb l n res
de ne e Ch ld ens co hes s ze 3
1 d up 9 00 :1 00

Overbrook Ce nter 333 Page
Street M ddleport has full t me
po s 1 ons lor C NA s AN s &amp;
LPN s all sh Its Call Jan Elias or
Shell P ckens tor more nform a
rona 614 9926472 EOE
POSTAL JOBS
Sta t $1 2 08/hr For exam and ap
pi cat on nfo call 219 769 83C 1
ex! WV548 9am 9pm Sun Fn

Yard &amp; shed sale Oct 2 til ?
9 ooam 5 OOpm 38400 SA 24W

one mr e oft SR 7 Clothes crafts
Ya d sale 2 2 1C m !es our 143
Hende sons Monday through
Thursday 9am 3pm

P1

way p ana avon collec hon range
d shwasher c atts all srze cloth
ng 1nens &amp; miSC
Yard Sale 2 112m out Redmond
R dge Rd Donn e Sergent Res
dence Man Thur 9am ?? Sa t
9am ?? Guns Kn ves new Shp
1'110wer cloth ng etc
Yard Sale Rt 2 N across from
Poplar He1ghts wa ch tor s gns
Tue Wed &amp; Thur Old 1\'o'on bo t
11es k d s do hrng and mr sc

Answenng and Foreward1ng a I
Telephone cal s G eel ng Guests
and V strtors to Facrl ry Ass s1
With Admmr strat ve Dut1es as 01
rected Create an atomosphere ol
warmth and personal nterest wrth
Aesujents V1s11ors and Stall
Computer expef1ence needed
good com'Tlun eaton and math
mahcaf skrll Apply at Seen c H lis
Nur s1ng Center 311 Buckr dge
Rd BdweU
RN Cl1n cal Superv1sor P ogres
s ve Home Healt h Agency Re
qwes Htghly Motivated lnd v1du
al Home Heallh Experref"'re WV
Oho Lcense Preferred 614 44 1

1n9

Public Sale
and Auction

R ck Pearson Au won Company
l ull 1 me auctioneer co mpe te
LICensed
au ct on
serv ce
#66 Omo &amp; Wes V~rg ma 3C4
773 5785 Or 304 773 544 7

90

Pt Pleasant area need someone
10 help w/1ghl housewo k &amp; able
to hang sheer draw cu rta ns
Must have own trans ponat on &amp;
references Sen d resume to 910
Mossman Cr P1 Pleasant WI/
25550
Recept1on st
A Pos liOn rs ava1table for a Fu 1
T me Recept onrst Preferred Ap
pi cants Will have E,penence 1n a
Med ca!Cierca Poston Dut es
w II nclude

Pleasant

&amp; VIcinity

60

Seen c Valley Apple Grove
beau trflJI 2ac;; lots pubhc;; water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

Wanted to Buy

Chu en wan rrng to tluy a 15 pas
614 992 7956 or
C ean La e Model Cars Or
Truc ks 1987 Models Or Newer
Sm th Buck Pont ac 19CC East
err Averue Gall pols
Dec ora ted stoneware wa ll tele
phone&lt;&gt; old lamps old thermome
e s old clo lo.s ant que Iurn lure
Rver ne Ar l que s Rus s Moo e
owne 614 99 2 2526 We buy
esm tes

WANTED Mecha nrc eng1 ne re
bu1ldmg ali types assembly ol
molars Call 304 372 8633 Hrs 6

5

180

All real estate advertiSing m
this newspaper 1s subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whiCh makes It Illegal
to advantse ~any preference
1mtlation or drscnmtnatlon
based on race color religion
sex lamthal status or nattonal
orig1n or any rntentlon to
make any such preference
llm1tallon or dtscr1mlnatlon •
Th1s newspaper wUI not
knowllngly accept
advertisements for real estate
wtlrch Is In violation of the taw
Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are ava1lable on an equal
opportunity bass

General Ma ntenance Pa ntmg
Yard WorK Windows Washed
Gullers Cleaned l ght Ha ul ng
Comme r~ cal Res den! al Steve
614 446 8861
Georges Port able Sawm II don t
haul your iogs to the m1ll JUSt call
304 675 957
M sc eltaneous Home Wmdows
Oil ca Cleaned Ask For Anne
Al so Srove Fo r Sale 6,4 446
1358

3 bedroom house n BradblJry 2
t&gt;ath above gro un d poo l hea t
pump ap prox 2 acres pr ce to
sell 614 992 6 190
36 a&lt;:res house 2 bedroom s
bath gas--wei furnace good hunt
ng 52155 Sr 24 8 614 985 4243
3bed ooms ! 1 Master) 2baths
basement sc eened 1n porch/
breezeway lam ly room double
garage 12 54acres 304 675
4575
4 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 Car Garage
Above Ground Pool Porch &amp; Pa
to Gr een Townsh p 6 14 446
2072
5 Rooms Bath Basement Decks
Pool 1 1110 M les From Gall pohs
Rt 14 1 614 446 1026
House For Sa le By ONner 3 Bed
rooms App ro x mately 1600 Sq
Ft Rural Water 3 Acres $48 500
6 4 379 2240
PI Pleasant 3bedroo m Ranch
large lam ly com w buck stove
new Trane heat pump srd ng
large deck &amp; exr a 101 2 ca r ga
rage 304 6 75 8864
Three bedroom home n coun try
Wh es H1ll Ad Ru1 and one bath
n g ound POOl 614 g92 5067
Wanled to rent pro less on~l lam
Jy would Ike to lease lo ur bed
room home n Me gs County ca 1
614 992 7272or614 992-6503
320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

wanted To Buy Junk Autos W rh
Or VV 1thou t Motors Call Lar ry
L vely 614 388 9303
We Would L1ke To Pur chase
Small T ash Routes In Gatlla A'1 d
Surroun d ng Count es AB &amp; R
Serv ce 614 388-9686

Sun Valley Nursery School
Ch ldcare M F Gam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Yo un g Sc hool Age Du ng
Summer 3 Days per Week M n
mum614 446 3657

t 970 t2k60 good co nd ton new
w ndows doors new outs d e
pa nlltr m undersk rung $2 800
304 6 75 7585 alter 7pm
1972 Concord 12x65 2bedroom
1balh gas stove &amp; lurnace 1r p
out un n I v ng room 304 372
3400
1g73 2bedroom T2x65 Krkwood
$6 OCC or t ade lor Ha ley Dav d
son motorcycle 86 up 304 6 75
6102

110

1974 Academy 12x5S 2bedroom
1barn electrrc new lurnace wrnd
ow ac 304 3 72 3400
1977 12•65 Federa l 3bc-dro om
Call304 675 1954 ahe Spm

1993 Cayton 14x70 3bedrooms
all elect c heat pump wtd range
lr dge d shwashe m1crowave
Skrtng 30-46755129
2 Bedroom 12x60 Houset Tra ler
W lh 3 Room Edt on In Back
Ou tbu ld ng 1 Ac e Lot M l
$ 1 500 61.4 388 8236 614 388
9002

New 1996 14x7C nc lu des sk rl
ng steps blocks one ye ar
homeowners nsurance and s x
months FREE lor ren1 Ony $1025
down and $207 17 pe mon h Ca 1
1 800 83 7 3238

SERVICES

Help Wanted

New Bank Repos Only 4 tell 304
755 7191

AID ASSOC IATION
FOR LUTHERANS
Is look ng For A Career Mmded
tnd v dua l To " Prov de F na nc al
Serv ces And Fra terna l Benef ts
In The Galhpolts Area San ng
Inco me Up To S2 6K Complete
Tra n ng And Fu ll Bene f f Pack
age Send Resu me To AAl 811 1
T mberlodge Tr a11 Dayton OH
45-'158 Or Call 513 433 7706
(Colect}
AVO N r All Areas
Spears 304 675-1429

Sh rley

AVON HOLIDAY SALES
Earn $8 $15/Hr a1 Wor ~ Home
D1scounts• No 1nven10ry or Door
doo lnd!Rep 1 800 742 4738
AVON EARN S$$ a! home at
worll. A I areas 304 882 2645 1
800 992 6356 INO/REP
Earn S OCOs weekly slufhng en
velopes ar home Be your boss
Smrf now No exp free supplieS
1nlo no obtrgat10n Send S A S E
10 Prestige Unrt WL P 0 Box
19560 9 W n1 er Sprmgs F l
32719
E xpene nced Medrcal Secretary
To Apply P, t The Medrc al Plaza
936 SA 160 Gall pots OH 614
446 9620
Hel p needed for deer process1ng
Cra wford s Grocery 304 675

5404
Home Typrsls PC users needed
$45 000 mcome potenrtal Call 1
800 513 43fl Ext B 9368

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

LUMBE R COSTS UP? S eel
bu ld ngs as low as $3 CO sq lao\
Buy fac to ry d rec I om NaTon a
Manufacturer as au tnor zed dea
er W II tra n Some Ma kets tak
En 303 759 3200 ex 2200
INOTICE
OHIO VALLE Y PUBLISHING CO
recom mends th at you do bus r
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money through 1t1e
ma11 unnl you nave rnvest1gated
the alter ng
Excellem Reta I Space Ava la ble
la!ayene Ma 1 513 922 0294
VE NDING JJon t Get R ch Ou ck
Wrll Get A Steady Cash Income
Pr1ce To Sell 1 BOQ-820 6782
REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
2bedroom 1bath home n Hen
derson 75x113ft tot N ce starter
home rx rental 004-6 75 4298
3 Bedrooms State Route 141 tC
M11es Our Gall1pohs 24x32 Ga
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace
In Ground Pool New Sa!e ll ne
D sh Gall a Cownty Local School
Olstrct 614 379-2410

3 BedroOm House For Ren1
$ 32 5/Mo • Deposll 6 14 256
1472
3 BR House n Cou ntry two m les
from R o G1a nd e Oepos t $300
OOPer Month 614 245 5439
House for re nt on Mu lbe~ry
He ghts Pomeroy $330/mo plus
deposll and references no pets
304 862 2945
Maso n large 3bedroom w1 1h car
port son e appl ances ncluded
304 675-7783

N ce two house Pomeroy Rooms
recently repa1nted new wrndows
seno r c rzen d scounl call 6 14
992 2304
Rental houses one two bedroom
and one three bedroom n Pamer
oy rwo bed oom house n M ddle
port Send responses c o The
Oa y Sent net P 0 Box 729 14
Pomeroy Oh•o 45769
Small 2 Bedroom Rear 239 F rst
Ave W1th S ove &amp; Relr gerator
$275/Month Oepos t &amp; Relerenc
es No Pets 614 446 4926
Small house one bedroom
room k1tc hen ut lty roo m
gas forced a r tu nace 614
2734 or 614 949 2635 No
day cans
420

v ng
t&gt;ath
949
Sun

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12,65 2 Bed ooms 2 Ba ths
Cathedral Beamed l v ng Room
Large Bedrooms L arge Bath
W th Sun ken Tub
AC
In
Cheshrre 614 367 76 71

Pr ce Bu ste New 14x70 2 or
3Dr On y $995 down $195 month
Free del ver y &amp; se up On y at
Oakwood Homes N tro WI/ 304
755 5885
Two 2 Bed oom 1972 Mob le
Homes 12K50 &amp; 12x60 $3500 &amp;
$5500 614 388 9686 9 5
Two Bedroom One ~ath On A 7 a
Ac e lo W th Two Bu ld n9s
Ca port 30 M es Ou1s de Ga
nesv I e At Hawt no rne Fl a 1
904 481 3379
350 lots

&amp; Acreage

63 Acres Wood ed land County
Water &amp; Eiectr c On Properly
$3C000614 256 1412
Ct1arola1s L ake Beau tiful 2 25
Acre Lot Ou1et Desrrable Ne1gh
borhood Reslncted $24 SOD 304
273 0136 304 273 2940

Mod er n 1 Bedroom Apartment
614 446 0390
N Th rd Ave Mtddleport 1bed
room !urn shed Depos1t &amp; refer
ences 304 882 2566
One bedroom apa r tment 1n Mrd
dleport all ulllt as pad $27Cimo
$1 CO depos t 614 992 7806 Bam
6pm
One bedroom apartm ent 125
Cole St M dd eport thee bed
room apa lment m Pomeroy 614
992 7511
PLEASANT VALLEY APART
MENTS are ac cep ttng applrca
trans for 2BR 3BR and 48R Ap
pl cat rons are taken Monday thru
Fr day !rom 9 CO 10 4 00 Olfrce IS
ocated at 11 51 Evergreen Dnve
Pi Pleasanl WV 304 675 5806
EO H
Three bedroom apartment wash
erl dryer hookup b g k tchen ltv
1ng room Th rd Stceet Ra ctne
S295tmo plus utrllt es $100 de
pos 1 614 247 4292
Twrn R vet's Tower now acceptrng
apphcatrons for 1br HUD subs1d
ze d apt lor elder y and handr
capped EOH 304 675 6679
Two bedroom wa 1er and trash
pa1d $250/mo plu s $250 depos1t
rnqu re at 215 Spnng Avenue
Unlurnrs hed 2 Bedroom Carport
Stove R e fr~gerator Drshwasher
$275tMo $275 Depos1t 614 446
3888 614 446 4491
450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms for rent week or monrh
Snr t ng a1 S120/mo Gall a Hotel
614 446 9580
ng rooms w Hh cookrng
Al so Ira le r space on rver All
hook ups Call alt er 2 00 p m
3C4 773 5651 Mason WV
460

Space for Rent

po Sit &amp; Utht es 614 388 9162

Mob le Home Space For Rent In
Cen1enary 614-446 4053

21ledroom 2bath 14x70 all el£r
tr c part ally ~u n shed c ty water
n Me1gs $325/mo No pets Ref
erences 304 773 5165

Tra1ler lot for Rent located Ev
ergreen Ad Route 160 $tOO 00
Per Month 614 446 7157 after
6prn

59 Schu tz 10x50 excellent con
d 1on needs p umbtng must sell
614 949 2823

Tra1ler lor on Braod Run Ad New
Haven $60/mo 304 773-5881

2 Bedroom In Pon er Area De

MERCHANDISE

Mob1le Home For Rent 6 14 446
1279
510

Household
Goods

---------------------- 1 2 I v1ng
N ce Mobile Home 2 Bedrooms
M les Out SA 218 GallipoliS
$235 Mo • Oeposrt Need Rete
ences 614 446 81 72 614 256
6251

room chars 2 end lables
console stereo and 19 TV t&gt;oth
need repa1rs 304-6751264
App ranees
Recondruoned
Washers D yers Ra nges Aefr1
graters 90 Day Gua ran tee •
French C1ty Maytag 614 446
7795

Two Bedroom $250/Mo Pu s Ut i
t es Depo s 1 References Re
qu red At 218 After 6 PM 614
Carpet &amp; V nyl In Stock $5 00 Yd
983 4607
"";_;;;.;.;_;____________,I &amp; Up 60 Pattern s Of Kitchen Car
440

Apartments
for Rent

Ne w 1996 Ooub ew de s 0 s
coun\s up to $5 000 nclud ng free
t1ea1 pump del very and more 1
800 251 5070ext11

EMPLOYMENT

2 Bedroom Basement Galhpohs
L mrts $395/Month Deposit
&amp; References No Pets 614 446
0796 leave Message

C ly

1968 PMC Br cemey er 12.116C
304 372 3400

Pr ofess1ona l Tee Sen1 ce Com
ple te Tree Care Buckel Truck
Sew ce 50 F 1 Reach Stump Re
moval
Free E s1 rna e~
In
surance 24 Hr Emergenq Ser,.
ce Call And Save No Tree Too
B g Or Too Smal B dw ell Oh o
61.4 388 9643 614 367 7010
Rub &amp; Scrub Clean ng Serv ce
du~t ng mopp ng w ndows and
mo e Com ple te sei"IIICe or touch
ups References on request ca ll
Te rry at 61 4 99 2 4232 or 614
992 4451

41 0 Houses for Rent

4 Room Small Cottage On Corner
0 1 554 &amp; Bulavlle P1lo.e No Pels
614 388-1100

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Serv ce Complete 1ree
care 20yrs exp &amp; 1nsured lree
esr mates 614 441 191 or 1
800 506 8887

RENTALS

In Pont Pleasant 3 Bedrooms
Unfurn shed Apartment Must
Have Reference &amp; Oepostt 614
446 0041

pet In S1ock Ove&gt; 35 Pauerns
V ny In S1ock Mollohan Carpets

------~------------1~61=4=«=6-7~4~~~~~~----1 and 2 bedroom apartmen(s fur
n shed and unlu nrs hed secur11y
deposit r equ~red no pet s 614
992 221 8

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa shers drye r s efnge ra1o rs
ranges Skaggs App liances 76
V1ne Street Call 614 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

1 Bedroom Aparlm ent Applranc
LAYNE S FURNITURE
es Furnished 1 Block From
Do wn lawn Ga ll pols 614 446- Complere home furn1shrngs
Hou rs Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
4639
03 22 3 m les out Bu lav lie Prke
I Bedroom Oownstalfs Apart Free Delivery
ment In Ga lhpol s l arge l v1ng
Fam lyl[) n ng And K tchen Areas Now open Oualrty Furniture Plus
Also Ha s Ut lily Ro om $300/ SR 7 Tuppers Pta ns Several op
Month Inc ludes Water Depos11 tons ol f nanc ng a11arlable laya
And References Requ red 614 ways and maJor credit cards 614
667 7388
446 3963
1 lg bedroom apar lment $250/mo
Depos1t re qurred 304 675 3100
days or alter Spm 304 67S-5sog

Queen s ze wa erbed waveless
man ess headboard wtgla ss m r
ror roses lighted door s on each
end $400 304 675 7297

1bedroom E~tra clean utrhtres
garbage p1ckup ac ce111ng fans Sto ve Freeze r Washer Dryer
garbage d1spos al relrtgerator &amp; Relrrgerator 614 256 1238
stove furnrsh ed No pe ts 30 4
SWA IN
773 5352 or 304 88 2 2827 even
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
ngs
Ohve St Ga lhpol s New &amp; Uset~
2 Bedroom Apartm en t Tras h turn tur e heate rs West ern &amp;
Wafer Sewage Pa1d $295/Mo + Work boots 614 446 3159
Depos1~ 614 44&amp;2481
VrRA FURNITURE
614 446 ~158
2 Bedrooms 2 Baths V1ew 01
Oual ty Hou sehold Furniture And
Park &amp; Rrver Kttchen W tM Stove
ApPI ances Great beals On
,Relrrgerator 15 Court St eet Gal
Cash And Carry I AENT 2 OWN
1polls $4 75/Mo • Depos1t Rete
And Layaway Also Availa ble
ence No Pets, 614 446-4926
F1ee Del ..ery W th n 25M les
2bdrm apts total electr c ap
p ram;es furn1shed laundrv room 520
Sporting
tac•ll t1es close to schoo l m town
Goods
Appl cat1ons ava lab e at V ljage
Green Apt s ,49 or call 614 992 Sta mtess steel Ruger new model
3711 EOH
22 lA I WMR combo srng le s x
$150 614992 2088
2Rooms Plus Bath lafayette
Ma I No K tchenl All Ut1l 11es pard
Antiques
$175 CO Month Depos t Requned
614 446 7733
Buy or se ll Rrverrne A.nt que s
661 1664 Th l d Galhpohs 2 Bed 1124 E Man S1ree1 on Ri 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
rooms New Appliances Ca rpet
$300 tMo 1 Month Depos11 No am to 600 pm Sunda~ 1 00 to
ltOO pm 614 992 2526
Pets 614 245-9595

530

Emp re ven1 less na1ura gas w1
blower
used
very
lit tle
30 OOOBTU ask ng $300 304
875 7•79
Exerctse Mach ne $125 614
388 8293
Hea thmaster 750 Dual Acton Ex
erc1se 8 1cycte Ju st lrke New
Hardly Ever Used• $6C 614 247
2032 Even1ngs Or l eave Mes
sage

Adu t Mov 1es over 500 lllles Sell
as package make otter 81!1 614
245.0311 aft&amp;r 4pm.
Babybed dress ng rable carseat
stroller SWing 304675-4548

H1dden Bu ld mg S te W11h Dnve
way 5 5 Acres (Old 35) 314 M•les
F om Foodland Blacklop Road
61 4 446-7278 614 388-9062

Gallipolis Share Bath $195/UIIh
res Pa rd 614 446 4 416 Al ter
7prn

Campground MembershiP Camp
Gall1a Manor Apartments Now From Coast To Coast uS Cana
Accepting Appl1ca uons For 1 da $4 oo Per N ght API Alhhated
Bedroom HUO Subs1d1sed Apart Pd $3 600 Sacraf1ce $425 1 800
men ts For Elderly And Hand • 236.0328
capped Equal Hous1ng Oppor
Concrete &amp; Plas r c Sep11c Tan ks
runty au 446 4639
300 ThrlJ 2 OOC Gallons Ro n
Grac ous hvrng 1 and 2 bedroom Evans Enter pm es Jackson OH
apartments at V11lage Manor and 1 800 53 7 9526
Rtverstde Apartments m M1ddle
por1 From $232 $355 Call 614 Dark p1('1e dresser wtm~rror full
992 5064 Equal Housmg OJ;&gt;por stze manress &amp; box sprrngs wa
terbed headboard Xl4 773-5626
lunrbes

r

580

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
Beans lor sa e p ck your own
Blue lake and ha I runners 614
247 2142

590

For Sale
or Trade

1968 Dodge 1 1on lruck 73 000
actual m1les iJ 8 4 speed trans
m SSIOn With 2 Jipeed rear axle
II at stee! tled w11h racks heavy
duty 5 hydrauh' I It on rea~ good
cond ton $15CO or trade or besl
olfer Ca I 614 949 2368

&amp;

61 0 Farm Equlpment

Krng S ze Waterbed Mawess
And Heater Included S100 Call
Between 3 00 PM 6 OC PM
614 441 19 18
K ng wood &amp; coal stove
and metal Bestes p pe $250 304
6 75 4285
Krng wood &amp; coal stove wJblower
$200 El Cam no topper $50 304
675 4006
K ng Woo d Coal Srove Wrth
Blower Pla s11C Tr ucll. Too Bo x
C&amp;rner Cab ne! W th Counrertop
614 245 9179
l ke new 4C ga lon wa ter heater
one year old enrerta1nment cen
ter twrr'l bed w rh mattress and
box spr ngs 614 992 3085
Montgomery Wa rd uprrgh t l reez
er very good cond1 10n 614 992
3950
MU ST SELL DU E TO Ill
HEALTH hou sehold goods car
pa ts lawn mower parts an1ques
som e g veaway r1 ems McGrat h
Ad Pome roy to low s gns Well
also take otter s on home and
ac reage Sale starts Oct 2 614
992 4271
New ~rregu ia r 1eans all srzes $51
pr &amp; up 132 Bunernut Pomeroy
Oh ro AU week
Norttc Track Sk1 Type 614 446
7315 Alter 5 30prn
Old Oak Bullet $250 614 446
7838

Queen Stze Wat erb ed
Wood Frame Headboard
Cab1ners M1rror l1near
less Mattress $225 6
072 7

/Sof1d
M rror
Wave
4 446

Refrigerato rs Sto'o'es Was hers
And Dryers All Recon d1 t oned
And Gauranteedl S 100 And Up
W1ll Deliver 614 669 644 1
Shopsm th wood work ng tool s
304 675-1090
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gal lon
Upnght Ron E'&gt;'ans Enterpnses
Jackson Oh1o 1 800 537 0528
Wood Burrer Stove wnh 2 Bun
ers used 2 w eeks $50 00 614
379 9381
Woodburncr Ne'o'cr Use d You
Need To See It To A.pprec ate
The Pme 01 $350 614 2455713
Woodburner Stove S 125 61 4
256 9391
550

Building
Supplies

Block br1ck sewer p pes w nd
ows lintels e1c Claude Wrmers
RIO Grande OH Call 614 245
5121
Metal Roofrng &amp; S1drng Geo Tex
t1te Fabnc For Dnveways &amp; E tc
Typar For House Co\ler Or Tem
porary Sto rage Cover Alt 1zer
Fa1m Supply 6141 245 5193
560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pet G oom ng Fea
turrng Hydro Bath Juhe Webb
Call 614 446 0231
AKC bea utrlu Chow Chow pup
pes black blue and whrte $20C/
ea 6149927574

1991 MF 231 21b Hrs 1978 JO
2940 270C Hrs MF 135 Gas
1988 JD 2355 23 00 Hrs 2 Nl
Corn Prckers 11 Ft Brush Culler
3 Y sOld H&amp; S V Tank Spread
er U sed 3 Montn s New Hay
Wra
r S5 500 Used Gran
Dr Its
ew 3
111 zer
Spreade
Used 3 PI 1sk
Mower Con 111oner S2 g95 JD
24T Baler $995 New JD 40 50
60 75 100 HP Traclors Grear
Pr ces 7 9".41 F1nancmg Year End
Sale On Hey Equtpmenr low
Ra te Frna ncrng Vea r End Sale
On lawn Tractors No Paymems
Or Interest Til March 1 1996
Carm chael s Farm &amp; lawn
1800 5941111
614 4416 2412
2 en S lage wagons w/ 12ton tan
dem runnrng gear $2 5001both 2
1500 bushel corn w re cr bs
\0001bo1h 304 6 75-5950
D1scount farm tractor parts for
Massey Ford IH &amp; oth ers
Srder s Equ pmem Co Hender
son WV 304 675 742 1 or 1 800
277 3917
l nlernat onal 756 Dreset Tractor
$4 995 964 D ese PS LIVe PTO
$3 995 Sears 12 HP lawn Trac
tor $295 Case Lawn Tracror
$295 614 286 6522
Wamed Small Mtlk Cooter Tank
Under 150 Gallons Musr Be In
Good Cond ton 614 965 1922
614 9651266
630

Livestock

Reg bl ack angus bulls 7months
to 3yrs of age Reg black angu s
bred hetlers and yearling hetfers
304 675 2098
RegiStered Quarter Horse Yearl y
F1lly Out Of May B Doc Incentive
Fund Should Make Excellenr Ev
ent 01' Cow Horse S t 500 614
379 2932
Two regiStered Angus bulls 22
24 months old also 8 year tng
regrstered Angus bulls pnced to
sale 614 742 3033
640

Hay

&amp;

Grain

710

Autos for Sale

Porsches
88 944 wh te 65 173 m es 5
sp power every1hmg nght front
damage very clean car $4650 00
0 B 0 parts available
88 930 TurbO red wlblack mien
or 26 000 mrles bumper hood
and rrght front fender dam age
$26 000 0 B 0 Parts available
74 9146 6cylnder 2 4L C IS
916 fl are s 91 1 Suspens on
Tuc hs wheels bla ck on black
$7500 also 68 AM )( 390 auto
a r 101 000 mrles bought from
Te~ as no rust co mplele ortgmal
car needs restored $3700
0 B 0 614 949 2644 e,.en1ngs
and weekends 614 949 2311
days
86 Toyota Corolla Super N ce
$2700 OBO 614 4" 1151 or
6 14 245 5592 Aher 5001'!'
1974 Muslang II V 8 aula one
owner retitled good cond1 t on
as~mg $12CO must sell 614 992

5407

1984 ChQvrolel Monte Carlo SS
Texas Car 82 000 M1tes Ne w
Trres Has Small Dent In R ght
Fender S3 800 1984 S 1C PU
K1ng Cab 4 WO New T1res v 6
Automatic low Miles KC Auto
Sates 614 446 815 2 614 256
6251

Musical

Buf'l(ly II a to sax used IWO years
ex ce llent cond•t•on S550 614
985 3997
ludwrg Snare Drum &amp; Srand For
Sale One Year Old But Played
Very lmte 614 388 8815
Older model Baldwrn p1ano good
mus ca l shape 411 h•gh $600
080 304 57!&gt;4()68

1g94 N ssan 50th Ann1ve sary
300ZX Turbo V 6 T Top N ce
$2,800 OBO 614 367 0138

Wanted to buy good used flute
614 742 2633 after 6 pm

WIU.

1988 Caval er Z 24 5s pd a r
loaded extra clean 3C4 6 7 5
1226

10

e£ "THE:

fiGHT

\01'6"

~IG OIJ&amp;.

FOR

•to

EAST

• 9 2
• K 9 8 3

• KJ 7
•A J 4 2

8 3

SOUTH
•AKQ875

go Sunb rd SE standa d p s ale
mags spoler 1n 80k $4 200
61 4 992 5986 aher Spm

" 6 4
t A I0
.. 9 7 6

Trucks for Sale

1964 Dodg e P ck Up Run s Good
$350 00 Roll Ba I L ghts $1 25 00
Pot Belly P1gs Daddy Baby E ~ '•
peel ng Momm e S75 00 Wood
Bruner w th Blower $65 CO 614
"
256 1424

BARNEY
PAW II

I

Vans

4~4

$700 61 4

PF,:ANUTS

~~,

BUT 'f'OU \oiAVE
TO WEAR ONE
OF THOSE ~I~GS
ON 'f'OUR HEAD

1990 Do dge Ra m Va n B 250
72 000 M les $6 000 Can 8e
Seen At Gall1pohs Da ly Tr bune
825 Th1 rd Av enue Gall pots
Oh10

WELL

OF

'f'ES SORT
THAT

LIKE

Motorcycles

1989 Polar1s 250 tra 1 bo ss
$1 500 1987 Yamaha 225 $r 500
3C4 773 5109
1991 Yamaha Blas ter $1 500
304 675 1272
750 Boats

&amp;

Motors

1969 Cobra F1sh &amp; Sk Boa 15C
HP Outboard Motor Dep h F nd
er Bu Itin CB &amp; AMIFM Ste eo
lots 01 Extras I $6 000 61 4 256
6095

'

\

'

&amp;

Accessories
Budg eT Transm ss ons Used &amp;
Rebu It All Types Access ble to
Ove 0 OCO Tran smrss on also
Pans C utc hes &amp; Pressure
Plates 614 379-2935

MILK
BORN J

New ga s tanks one 1on tru ck
wheel s rad ato s I ocr ma ts e1c
0 &amp; A Au1o A1pley WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

O~li'V

5 16H

Campers

11""'"'1!1'-,'m'"TT'r"'l

.....-+--+---1f---l

"'3

mate

When you lead a low card m a smt
you should hav$ an honor m that sutt
I unless, of course you are trymg to fool
declarer! But should the 10 be treated
as an honor? Usually yes
East drew the correct mferences m
th1s deal to defeat a game that m1ght
otherw~se have made And West found
a cructal play so that h1s partner s good
early work didn' t go to waste
Perhaps South should have reb1d
three no trump especially as that-ron
tract 1s easy to make w1th the s pades
breakmg 3 2 However he went w1th
hiS long SUI!
West guessed well to lead the club
three Because East could see the two
h e knew that West had led from three
lour cards mcluding the 10 Without
the 10, West would have led h1s second

R •. ;rlno " IS available
grapht~d upon request, for

1", .,.,,

48 Unsuccessful
car
50 1!41ehove State
51 Small combo
52 Org&lt;tna of
hearing
54 Biblical ktng
56 Hawaiian
feast
57 Australian
birds
58 Gaba
60 July hrs
61 Languish

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher crypCograms are created lrom quot81100S by famous people past and prtsenl
Each Miner .., fle ciphef stands tor aoother Today's Clue A 9q0111s P

·w

CXL

J X S S

GN

WY

C XL

X
X

(FXUXHMO)

LEW S S

LYMUHMS

I XL M K

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The basi lhtng about animals IS lhal lhey don I lalk
much " - Thornton Wtlder
C ,WS byNEA loc

-:,~::~~~~~.;;;~'~S~©~\\~-~~~-:--_-"~£~?}:--s-·-:-:-::
_ _ _ ___;_:;::. Edlto~ by CLAT • ,OILAN

0 Rearrange

letters of tl-le
four scrambled words be
low to form four words

I s u I N0 N

auto

$14 95
P 0 Box 169, Roslyn Hts , NY
~

&amp;

R I V E I;,'
1-I;-,.--,,.--,,6-.1--4···
•

•

•

_

The greatest reward for
do1ng good the humamtanan

•

told our group

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

Motor Homes

IS the chance

I

to do

Mu D T I E
l--r:,7
:--r,-r,-=-r,;__jr•-1 Q

I

1986 Sunl gh l Pop Up Truck
Camper Sleeps 4 Furnace S nk
Good Cond !on $2 5CO 614 245
9109
SERVICES

810

wFIATS
THAT
SUPPOSED

.t:ro

"

I"'EAN~

8

EVER'&lt;' YEAR 11Y
PIC.TVRE COI'\ES OUT

.

.

ABLOW H 1l£ YoM ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP M CIJ.SSfiEO$.

add lion s remodel1ng ro ot ng
s d ng p umb ng etc Insured call
BtiiOrrck 614 9925 83

'

ROBOTMAN
I~0801rMm.I'S

ACUT€

COTE ·A·Pf\?81A HAS

TO ~ UN

Cli~ LiFf~rVLE

'
(

'

DRYWALL
..,
Hang fm sh repa r
Ce1hngs lextu red p asrer repa ...
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 years """
exper1ence

!
ASTRO-GRAPH

Ear l s Home Ma1n,tenance v nyl
Sldrng rooftng exter or parnttng
power wash n9 F.ree Estimates
614 992 4451

up a broken romance? The Aslro Graph
Malc hmaker can help you undersland
whal to do 10 make lhe relatJonsbtp work
Mail $2 75 lo Malchmaker c/o lh•s news
paper P 0 Box 1758 Murray H•ll
S1a110n New York NY 10150
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) Th1s IS one
of lhose days when you wdl probably be
both resourceful and mventrve Grve
proper attenlton lo any bnghl tdeas lhal

pop; tnlo

your mmd
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23- Dec 21) AI

1991 Mercury Capr1 well ma1n
tatned low mileage pr co teduced
for qu1ck sale 3CM-675 4683

COI.4FORT ASSUREO DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heal Pu mps A1r Condu onlng 11
You Don 1 Call Us We Both lose •
Free Est1ma1es t 800 281 6308
614 446 6306. wv 002945

though 11 mtghl JUSt be temporary you
have a good chance of eslabllshmg a
new soctal tnleresl al lhts ltme II could
prov1de welcome changes Introduc ed

Tuesday Oct 3 1995

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Restdentlal or commerc at w r ng
new serv ce or repa rs Master ll
censed elec tr~ c ra n AIQenour
Electrrcal WV 000306 304 6 75
1786

ANSWER~

Ocelot - Cloak - Enact- Weekly- ALLOWANCE
seen 1n counselors office that I found very amus-

~~------------------811 Orr ck s Home Improvements

840

Como le1e 1he chuckle quoted
by I llrng 1n ttre m U•ng words
y ou develop from step No 3 below

S1gn

'
:

1991 Chevy Cavaler 5 Spd Trnt
ed W ndowa Alum nlJm R ms
$4100 61&lt; 388 6575

.

AN

'

-;

Freeman s Heat ng And Cooling
ln stallat on And Servrce EPA
Cert1f1ed Resrdent1al Commercrar.
614 256 1611

_

SCRAM-LETS

Appl ance Pan s And Ser,. ce AU "~
Name B ands Over 25 Years E 1
per ence AI Wor K Guaramee d
French C ;y Maytag 6 14 446
f
7795

C&amp;C Genera! Home Ma n
tenence Pa nr ng vmyl s drn 9
carpentry doo rs w ndows ba hs
mobt e home repa r ana more For
I ee est mate call Chet 614 992
6323

_

AWFUL! I ALWA'&lt;S
EN!)

Home

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond anal I ferne gu aran1ee
lo cal references turn she d Ca lf
(614) 446 0870 0 1614) 237
0488 Rogers Wat erp oo f ng Es
tab! shed 1975

_

PR INT NUMBEUD
LETTER S IN SQUARES

Improvements

1989 N1ssan Sen11a • ely 4 sp
good work car $1000 obo 614
742 2357

1990 Plymouth Sundance 2 Ooor
Au10 76 000 M•les $3 200 080
614 256 1539 614 256 1233

XL

ASXKMO

HXFM

XL

LBIIMLLNBS

UGY

D

1989 Chevy Corstca N1ce Car
loaded $3400 080 1986 Ford
Escort Auto $1 200 080 til4
441 0584

1992 P1yrnou1h Sundance • Ooor
70 oo mtlea S5 000 080 614

29 Stumble
31 Pr•erveo
{food)
32 Motion
picture
33 Troptcal fruit
36 Repetltoon
39 Dine
41 Tendency to
bluncler
44 Factual
46 Jackie s 2nd

PhiUin AlcleT's book "Get Smarter

Partng ou 79 Fo d F1 00 p ckup
excellen1 cab 3C2 eng ne C 6
uansm ss on sel ol tour d rec11on
al whee ls w l h 31x!O 5 General
Grabber 1r es many good parts
614 7-42 2192

790

Pass
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

not hts lowest So, after
dummy s queen With h1s ace
East returned the club Jack
Declarer won wtth dummy s ktng
drew trumps and led a low h eart
Now West made the second cnt1cal
play puttmg up the queen After wm
mng With th e ace South contmued With
dummy s Jack but East won w1th the
king and returned a club to Wests 10 A
moment later the defenders took a d1a
mood tnck to defeat the contract
Note Utat 11 East ducks the first tnck
womed that South has the club I 0 and
that dummy s king Will become an en
try, South can get home by maneuver
mg an endplay agamst East And 11
West doesn't play the heart queen on
the first round of the su1t, declarer gets
two heart tncks to make h1s contract

1988 Rtnker Capt va 181! open
bow 4 3 L very good cond w rh
llq,lier $6 200 304 675 7791
Auto Parts

I •
4•

North
1 •
I NT
Pass

19 Highlander's
cap
23 - - even
keel
25 Warm mo
26 Newto
27 Novelli! Ur'28 Finnish flrot

name

l ~~~~;~~~c\ub

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

for Sale

760

9 Work llke - 10 Toke-oul-order
words
11 Freshwaler
tortotse

By Ph1l11p Alder

614 4L06 .,:

1987 Chevy S 10 4WD B azer
V6 auto pw pi 3o4 675 6404

740

Rio

'

1948 Wrllys Jeep C J 3A $2000.;:
lrm Sonny 614 992 341 1
'
198&lt;::' AM C Eagle
446 6958

8 Dolores -

Low promises
an honor

CAN GIT ON WITH

"

"

West

Opemng lead

••

&amp; 4-WDs

South

ROCK

MY CHURN IN I

::-:-""::::'---:--.,-..,.....-- &gt;

264~ 5~~~v?or~~1ovan

WILL YOU

THIS YOUNG - UN SO

I

995 Che11y S lC 9 000 M es
614 446 2706 Alter 6 PM

7.30

t 7 Wild party

7 Bleck lea

Vulnerable East West
Dealer North

86 Chevrolel C 10 P1c11.up 614
446 2445 Ask For Paul

t988 Honda Auto 12fl 000 M tes
Good School Car S1 300 OBO
1990 Cavalier Dri ves Good
107 000 M1les S3 250 OBO 614
&lt;441 1151 61 4 245 5592 Or Alter
5PM

256 1539 8 U-256 1233
Wanted Good Upnght P1ano 614
441 1013

ST&lt;XJC.fJ()Lc::ER

WEST
eJ I 0 6
•Q 7 2
• 9 4 3 2

.

AKC Reg Black lab pups sno1s
&amp; wormed 3C4 675 6359 or 304
675 6577

Instruments

SO PRE.TTY SOOIJ "THE:

TRANSPORTATION

1978 Nova 4 Door Runs Good
Many New Pats $950 614 4461995

570

• Q 8 6 5

•K Q 5

1986 Mon te Carlo ac pw p
blJcket seats w e whoel covers
new ures good cond ton 304
675 6256

Square bales $1 $2 Round bales
$15ea 304 67!&gt;3960

AKC Cocker Spanrel Pups $50
Each H Ser1es Farmall $700
Brush Hog $200 Bo1h $800 614
367 7901

AKC Registered Rottwe1le r pup

1986 Chevrolet Ceiebr ty $800
196301dsCulass $1200 614
446 6958

1984 Toyota 4 x4 N1ce Tru ck
614 441 1151 or 614 245 5592
Af!Of Spm
f987 F250 Ford d18Sel 72,00Cml
new pump new nJ&amp;Ctors 2 ton
pant $18 000 304 675 1487 from
12 12

10- 2 95

•4 3
.A J 10 5

- - - - - - - - - :'

JET

K.ng S ze Waterbed Maltr ess
W th Hearer No F ame $50 614
446 2539

NORTH

LIVESTOCK

Ingersoll Rand 10 t'lp tndus tr a
3 Cyl.nde Electrrc A r Compres
sor $50C614 367 7047
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red New &amp; Aebu11! In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

~

1g85 Cu tlass Su preme 307 HO
Aula Loaded $2 900 1989 Cut
tass CalaiS 2 5 Auto A11 PS PB
PO $3 900 614 388--$575

720
FARM SUPPLIES

H1 Ellec ency l P Or Natural Gas
92".4 Furnaces 1CO 000 BTU
$1 250 lns&lt;alled 1 600 28 7 6308
614 446 6308 Duct Systems And
A r Cond1 oners Free Esuma es

01

Clean No Pels Reference De
posll Reqtmed 614-446-1519
FurniShed EffiCiency 60 7 Second

LAKE
And Acrea ge Excellent For
Bu1ldmg Campslles Etc Appr 10
Acre Spr~ng Fed Stocked lake
W th Island 3 BedrOO !ljiS 2 1/2
Bath Mobtle Home Wrth Add On
10 Mtles
From Gall polls
$125 000 614 388 8678

Electnc Wheelcha1ts /Sc ooters
New /Used Scooter /Whetelcharr
Lift s Starrway Elevator s Ltl l
ChaHs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

Fu n sh&amp;d EIIICiency $235 Mo 540 Miscellaneous
pes bam 815195 $300 had I rst
Ut 111es Pad 920 FolJ rth Avenue
M h
shot s AKC lema e ! mo the r)
Gall poliS 6
Aller
ere and\Se
lhree years old good wllh ch1ld
14 446 4416
7
PM
1 .~~~~1~50~6~1~4~7~42~~=:2:______
:-::--------------------- 125~ Panasontc color TV remote •
BEAUT IFUL APARTMENTS AT oak $125 Stern &amp; Foster full SIZe At&lt;C Registered Cocker Span1el
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON man ress set Ike new $150 61 4
Puppres $150 614 379 2728
ESTATES 52 Wesrwood Dr1ve 992 5651
Fu ll B coded German Prahtha,ar
from $226 to $291 Wa lk !o shop 25 0 Gallon Fuel Orl Tank Used 3 B1rd Dog 2 Yea rs Old $200 614
&amp; moves Call6144462568 Vears 6144460595
2561671Aiter4pm
Equal Hous1ng Oppor!Unlty
:::""----:-:---=-.::::.:...:.:_::::._____. 1386SX 15 MG PRM 18M c
German Shepherd Pure While
Beech S1 M1ddlepor1 1 &amp; ~'bed pa1 bl e DO S &amp; WINerUGA " om
AKC Born 8117 19 5 $375 614
1
r oo ms utlllt1ea pa1d Oepo s t &amp;
..... on1
references 30
tor Mou se $800 614 256 1312
286 8753 614 523 8965
4 882 2566
"F-u-rn-I-Sh_e.:.d.:..:...:.R=o:.o=m=s.::;_&amp;__B_a_l_h l75 Gallon F1 sh Tank Complete Reg Arabtan Geld 9 years old
2
Downst ai rS Utih ll es Furnished Wth Stand $300614 388 9842
~~~~~ ~~od broke ttall horse

Four lots near Racme approx 1
1/2 acres each starnng al $5000
call 614 949 2025

OWN YOUR OWN

D1sney area Sday/4 hotel n1ghts
use any lim• Pa1d $31 0 sel l
$100 304 343 9•55

Wur mer P1ano Lrke New 614
388 8225

poet
49 Hockey'•
1 Actrus Haslen
Bobby4 Smear
50 Shoshonean
8 Palm fruit
lndlsn
12 Fe-11-fo-53 Glnoeng plant
13 -Domini
55 Dancer Alvin14 Esau s country 59 Male merchant
1t 5 - - Clear Day 62 Actreos
16 Study of
Thurman
legends
63 Assumed
18 Mr Cleus
manner
1 20 Above to a
64 Journallal
poet
Sevaretd
21 Objecl of
65 Diving bird
worship
66 Horcle
22 In the past
67 Fleur-cle-lls
1 24 - Khan
68 Navy ship pre!
26 Con$lltuent
part
DOWN
30 Agave plant
Flytng saucers
34 Fixed charge
(abbr)
35 Venture
2 Casserole
37 Gallop eg
Ingredient
38 Craggy hills
3 - -lor All
40 Pleasanl
Seasons
42 Compass pi
4 Injured
43 Long nose
5 One or more
45 Catchwords
6 Do- others
47 Opposite of

' '

lhrough new people
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Some
thtng lhat has diSiurbed you looks like 11
mrghl work out 10 your saltsfactton Ieday

lnvolvemenls w~h clubs or soctal orgen" In feel It may even produce a few unex
zattons could prove good tnvestmenls 1n peeled fringe benefitS
lime and money 1n lhe year ahead The AQUARIUS (~•n ZO.,feb 19) If some
lnends you re capable of maktng mtght one brrngs a proposal lo you loday
1nvolv1ng the 1mport or export bus1ness
help you 1n 'vanous areas of your lrte
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Be open mtnd- hear lhe person oul II could be ,very
ed Wyou need lo make an 1mportant dec" wotthwhile
ston Ieday 11 you we1gh 1ne ahemaltves PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Today you
carefully and w1lhout bias you mtght ftnd might be subJected to some unanttetpated
more than one solul1on Trytng to patch shifting condtllons Try not to let ~ rattle

you lhey could be for your ulltmale good
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Today you
might requ~re several acttve Interests to
keep you busy conslructtve and conlent
The more you have 10 have to handle lhe
more efftctenlly you re ltkely lo funcltOn
TAURUS (Aprtt 20-May 20) In tmportanl
dtscuss1ons today use lhe oblique
approach sprtnkled wtlh humor 10 gel
your potnls across Avotd unwtlltngly
offending or bonng your l•sleners
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You musln I
neglect your responslbiltltes Ieday bul
also remember to allocate some t1me for
pleasurable Involvements Recreational
breaks W111 keep you from g&lt;ttt1ng upltghl
CANCER (June 21-July 22) An objecltve
lhal ts personally stgntflcant can be
achteved today p~vtded you re fleXIble
and able to change tactiCS as condiltons
demand
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) Feel free to
experrmenl wHh new methods or procedures today you feel you need 10 boost
' your producttvity atlhe workplace
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) You might be
much more fortunate today 11 you budd

n

upon somelhtng someone else has estal&gt;
hshed tnslead of trying lo construe\ an
endeavor of your own from lhe ground up

I

Ing

One Sure Way To Recapture Your Youth Is To Stop

HIS ALLOWANCE

�:~!»age 10 • The Dally Sentinel

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 2, 1995

Browns

:lips can be a big part of your future
By ED PETERSON
. Social Security
· Manager in Athens
If you're a member of the service industry. tips are probably an
important part of your income. For
example, the cash tips you get for
providing service to customen may
help pay the rent, buy a car, or provide money to help you continue
your education. And, because your
tips are subject to Social Sec urity
taxes, they also are helpin g yo u
earn valuable Social Security toverage that will protec t you fro m
loss of income if you become disabled and when you retire.

If you're a young adult. 1:1" even
a teenager, the thought of disability
probably hasn't crossed your mipd.
You may be surprised to learn,
however, that. according to recent
studies, a iO-year-old worker
stands nearly a one-in-tbree chance
of becoming disabled before reach;,
ing age 65 . More than 4 million
disabled workers under 65 and 1.6
million dependents including more
than a miUion children) are currently receiving Social Security benefits.
And if you're a young person,
you probably aren't thinking about
retirement either. Although retirement may nO! now be one of your

Community calendar
The Community Calendar i&lt;
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is n~t
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
MONDAY
CARPEN TER - Columbia
Township Trustees. Monday, 7:30
p.m. al the fire station.
RA CIN E - Rac in e Village
Council , regular session, 7 p.m.
Monday at Star Mill Park.
RACINE - Meeting for parenrs
of kindcrgancn through 12 studenrs
in Southern Local regarding financial aid for college, Monday night
at 7 p.m. Jim Wayne, financial
planner will attend. The program is
sponsored by Home National Bank.
Shirley Sayre, counselor, may be
contacted for more information,
949-2166.
POM EROY - Meigs High
School Band Boosters, 7 p.m.
Monday at the Meigs High School
band room.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the home of the clerk.
CHESTER - Chester PTO ,
Monday, 7 p.m at the school. Carnival plans m be fmalized ..
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees will meet at the office
building, Monday at6 p.m.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees meeting Monday,
7:30p.m. in the Syracuse Municipal Building.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council , Monday, 7 p.m at Star
Mill Park.
TUESDAY
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Township Trustees meeting Tuesday.
6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Township Building.
POMEROY - Eagles Auxil iary, Tuesday, 7 p.m. potluck, 7:30
p.m. meeting.
POMEROY - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department
Commiuee , Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
Bedford Town hall.

concerns, the Social Security taxes
you're paying now and throughout
your working life, will mate it possible for you to receive monthly
benefits. Remember, Social Security is not intended to be your entire
retirement income. You'll want to
have savings, investments, or
another pension, as well.
Your Social S'ecwity protection
also includes survivors benefits,
which are paid to a deceased worter' s dependents. The value of
Social Security survivors benefits
for a worker with an average
income who dies and leaves a
spouse and two children is equivalent to. a $295,000 life insurance
policy. Of course, Social Security
benefits are paid monthly and not
in a lump-sum payments.
Because your Social Security
benefits will be based on your
reported earnings, we suggest you
check your record at least every
three years to mate sure your earnings have been reported accurately.
If there is an error, it's much easier
to correct it now than years from
now. To check on your -record and
get an estimate of the benefits you
may be eligible f~ow and in the ·
future, just call o visit the Athens
Social Security of e to ask for an
SSA Form-700lli
uest for Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement). Or call our toll-free number
1-800-772-1213. The form is also
available from Social Security's
Internet server. The address is
http:l/www.ssa.gov.

Vol. 46, NO. 110

•
WHS ROYALTY· Wahama senior Sarah Roush was crowned 1995 Homecoming Queen during half·
time activities of the Bend Area football game Friday night. Pictured abol£• in front. are Kayanna Sayre,
daughter of Mike and Rhonda Sayre, and Gabe Roush, son of Ti111 and Tel\'y Roush, who served as flower
and crown bearer. Back row, from left, are senior attendant Amanda Broadwater and escort Wes Lieving;
Queen Sarah and escort Ryan Keller; 1994 Queen Missy Smith; and senior attendant Michelle Oldaker and
escort Josh Miller. Other attendants and escorts were junior Wendi King and escort Danny VanMeter; sophomore Lori Bumgarner and escort J.R. Varian;.freshman Tonya Grimm and escort Kevin Newell; eighth grader Kacyndra Johnson and escort Jeremiah Alison; and seventh grader Kelly Block and escort Chris Shamblin.

Weiner roast set

WINNING TWIRLERS • There baton
twirling students of Nan Swartz, Middleport,
and members of lhe Dazzling Dolls were trophy
winners In the Little Majorette competition held
at lhe Jackson County Apple Festival. The two
grups twirled to Grant Funk Railroad's "Loco
Motion" and Gloria Estevan's "Turn the Beat
Around" This was. their first year to participate

in lhe competition. The classes arre taught at lhe
Rlverbend Arts Council. Pictured left to right,
front are, Heather Fink, Ashley King Codi
Turner, Jill Jenkins, Jobeth Rodehaver, Heidi
DeLong, and Katie Rodehaver, and rear, Emily
Hill, Amy Frecker, Hannah Woolard, and Codi
Davis.

GINIA'S IARGIST CUSTOM VAN DIAlER!

ISave $6400 I

o

• Full Con,ers10n

: Atr Condition

Tilt Steenng
• Cruise Centro!

• AutomatiC Overdnve

• AM/FM Casse~e

• VISta Bay WindOWS
• Power Steenng

· CaptainChars

• Alum1num Running •
Boards
• LoaOed!

• Power Brakes

• SolaiBad

!Save $6100I

BRAND NEW '95 CHM G·20 3/4 TON
LONG WIEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN

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

350 V.S POWER
• Power Wi ~OOws
• Power Locks
• nt Steering
• Cru1se Cootrol
• A~IFIA Cassette
• 4 Capt&lt;jn Chairs
• &amp;&gt;fa/Bed

• Indirect Ughbng
• PremiUm Wood Pkg.
· f~l Conversion
·Aluminum Running Boards

• Ra•se&lt;l Roof
• Color TV

• Or1ver Side Air Bag
• Anti-loci Brill&lt;es
o Air Condition
• 350 v.a Power
• AutomatiC Overdr1ve
• VISta Ba1 W.ndows
• Power Steenng

• loaded'

Power Brakes
o Power WmOows
• Power Locks
• Tilt Steenng
o Cru1
se Control
o

• AMIF~ Cassene
• 4 Captam Chm
·Sola/Bed

• Prem1um WOOd Pkg.
• Full ConversKlll
• Alummum Runmng Boards
· Loaded'

No Doc Fees

DeiiY(Jtl! '

;

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844

344·5947. 422·0756
• Tues. Tags, Tille Faes exll'a. Rebate ltduded "' sale prce at I"W' vetEie ~sted wt'lere ~· On approved credit. Not responslble lor lypographical errors

I

By The Associated Press •
LOS ANGELES- OJ. Simpson w;15 acquitted today of the double murders of his wife Nicole
llrown Simpson and her friend,
Ronald Goldman.
Acquittal, a unanimous decision
of the jury, means that the former
gridiron star and media celebrity
will go free and cannot be tried
again on the charges, unless new
evidence is entered.
Reading of the verdict at 10 a.m.
(I p.m. local time) ended the suspense banging over the Los Angeles Courthouse since Monday af~r­
noon when the jury announced it
had reached a verdict.
There was no warning. When
the Simpson jurors returned with a
verdict less than four hours after

Mon1day • Saturday:

am • 9 pm

Noon ·6 pm

they began deliberating, two-thirds
of the hottest courtroom seats in the
nation were empty.
Two of the leading attorneys in
the case weren't even present, and
most of the media -not expecting
such a swift verdict - were
upstairs in the press room.
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito
scheduled the verdict 10 be read at
10 a.m. today to give attorneys for
both sides time to get to the courtbouse.
Ito announced the startling news
Monday afternoon, saying his court
clerk told him the panel had made
its decision.
"Is that correct?" Ito asked the
forewoman, a black woman in her
early 50s who was chosen by her
colleagues last week after just three

minutes.
''Yes,'' she said.

Jaws dropped. There were gas"ps
in the courtroom. Simpson
appeared stunned, as did his attorney, Carl Douglas, a secondstringer on the legal team assigned
the mundane task of sitting next to
Simpson during testimony readbacks.
"Surprise· doesn ' 1 begin to
describe my feelings," Douglas
said afterward.
Prosecutor Christopher Darden
was there; but Marcia Clark wasn't.
Darden, asked if be could
believe the rapid end to deliberations, said, "I think I have to
believe it. It's happening. Nothing
shocks me anymore.· ·
No members of Simpson's fami-

Pomeroy Council accepts
bid for grand promenade
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
· The Pomeroy grand promenade
project moved Closer to becoming a
reality Monday night·as Pomeroy
Village Council accepted a ccinttactor for the project.
. Council approved the sole bid of
$87,114 from Eldon "Whitey"
Walburn ofMiddlepon to construct
• grand promenade, or ,walkway,along the inside of both upper and
lower ~arldng lot walls.
Tbe promenade will also include
permanent electrical -hookups for
festivals, period lighting and
benches. _
Councilman John Musser, who
is administering the project, said
Walburn would probably begin
construction next week following
the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival.
While the promenade is under
construction, the parking lot may
be without lighting for eight to 10
weeks and some parts of the parking lot may be closed, Musser
added.
"It can't be avoided," he said.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Local
reaction

'•

Prior to release
of verdict, area
attorneys startled
by swift decision .

The village received a $70,000 reports of their visits to local busigrant from the Appalachian nesses.
"We find they bave been there
Regional Commission for the project, which is part of the overall every night," he said·. "It's a
scheme in the village's ongoing tremendous idea ... a real comfort
revitalization project, which for the business owners."
Mayor John W. Blaeunar told
includes 'building and facade renovalion and a proposed riverfront Stroth the villagf'lfllihS 'fo rontinue
the service and said the police
amphitheater.
department
bas received several,
In addition, council approved
"thank
you"
cards since imple-SB~ Consullanls of Jackson to
provtde the engmeenng for the pro- menting the riruaJ:
"It has been extremely well
posed amphitbeal«:" for S18,000.
SBA owner Mike Stroth satd he received," be said.
Blaettnar commended -Council·
will work with boaters and .local
sternwheel owners to destgn a man George Wright and Police
riverfront area suited to their needs. Chief Gerald Rought for the busiFor the amphitheater, the village ness checks.
has received $103,750 from the
"(lbey) deserve the credit and
Federal Land and Water Conserva- applause -George for bringing up
lion Fund, $100,000 from an "as- the idea and Jerry for putting it in
yet unnamed benefactor" and an action," be said.
,
additional $5,000 from Big Bend
Jim Davis, president of the Big
Sternwbeel Committee for electri- Bend Sternwbeel Association,
advised council that people throwcal upgrades.
Stroth, owner of Your Neigh- ing old pipes, wheels and other
borhood Lender on Second Street, items into the river at the levee
thanked council for police checks could face substantial state and fedin which officers arc now leaving
(Continued on Page 3)

ly or the families of sla}-ing victims
Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
Goldman were in court.
Ito suggested jurors use their
time before the verdict's announcement to pack and bid farewell to
nearly nine months of sequestration.
"Ladies and gentlemen, have
your last pleasant evening,'' he told
them.
Jurors spent about an hour of
their brief deliberations listening to
a court reporter read back testimony from a limousine driver who
gave Simpson a ride to the airport
on the night Simpson's ex-wife and
her friend were slain.
The jurors beard oniy testimony
that prosecutors suggested they
review: Allan Park's descriptions

O,J. SIMPSON
of phone calls be rriade to his boss
and mother and his efforts to summon a response from Simpson by
ringing a liell at the gate to his
Rockingham Avenue estate.
The verdict capped a legal journey as surreal - and at times as
slow - as Simpson's bizarre Bronco flight from justice.
As the Simpson case moved
onto one side street after another, it
often seemed irrelevant that two
young people were slashed to death

--History afloat____,

l

A replica of lhe Nina, one of three ships used in Christopher
Columbus' famed 1492 voyage, passed Meigs County Monday
on Its way to Pittsburgh; This look-alike of the 15th century vessel contains at least one feature not found in the original - a
diesel engine. The reproduction of one. of the ships that Jed to
the discovery of the Americas also made a stop In GaiHpolis and
was toured by ·schoolchildren before continuing Its journey
upriver.

Congressional battle over Medicare turns theatrical

COLUMBUS (AP) - .First,
Gov. George Voinovicb was "the
education governor." Then he was
"the agriculture governor," and so
on. Now maybe his list of titles
now should include "the sports
governor.''

• Indirect L1ghtmg

1 Section , 10 Pages 35 cents

After four hours of deliberation, jury acquits Simpson

Voinovich
gets pumped
on playoffs
ISave $6500 I

Ul

•

WASHINGTON (AP)- Angry
words, flashy props, a staged walkout It's all part or the congressional battle over who b;ls .the best plan
to save Medicare.
In the Senate, Majority Leader
Bob Dole rejected a new Democratic Medicare proposal out of
hand. Over in the House, most
Democrats walked out of a Com- .
merce Committee meeting because
of the Republicans' refusal to bold

UYou're Planning On Buying A New Automobile This Year, Do RNow!
Tom Peden's lowest Sale Prices Of The Year!
Hurry While SeleCUon Is Good! When They're Gone..•They're Gone!

• Oroer Sde Atr Bag
• Anti-Loci Brai&lt;es
• Atr Condit~n
• 350 V.a Power
• Automabc 0, .ve
• V•sta Bay Windows
• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

Low tonight In 50s, rain .
W&lt;tlnesday, cloudy. High In 70s. '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 3, 1995

•

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

• Power l ocks

Buckeye 5:
4-5-16-30-35

Copyright t 995

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

• Indirect L1gh11ng
• Prem1um WOCtJ Pkg.

8388

en tine

Plus $500 to $2(0) cash back or 1.'JI/o APR financing
available (lease UP. to 24 months) oo selected models
on approved credit. Terms available up to 84 months!

• Power Wtndows

Pick 4:

•

CertHied used car buyers will be on hand to give highest 1rade-in Value for your automobile. Please bring
your tiUe1 regisb'ation card, and payment book if
applicable.

· Extended Chass1s
• Onver Side Atr Bag
• Anli·Locl Brill&lt;es

..

Sports,Page4

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

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN

356

Bills 22-19

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 1WJ BRAND
NEW CHEVR~L OLDSMOBILES, PONTIACS, BUICKS,
GEOS AND CUSTOm VANS.
·
All will be sold at substantial discounts!

WIST

Pick 3:

beaten by

Members allll guests of the
Bradbury Church of Christ held a
POMEROY- Pomeroy PTO, weiner roa~l at U1e church Sept. 23
7 p.m. Tuesday, school gymnasi- to welcome Rick anti Cindy Snyder
and family from Beverly who are
um.
POMEROY - Drew Webster ministering here.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Post 39, American Legion, meet- Snyder,
Jeremy, Sara and A.J.;
ing, Tuesday, dues payable. Dinner Sam, Betty,
Ken and Clark Vanat 7 p.m. meting at 8 p.m.
Malre ; lla Darnell; Carol and
CHESTER - Chester Council Stacey Brewer; Delbert and
323, Daughters of America, Tues- Katherine Mitchell; Ben and Alex
day, 7 p.m. at the hall. Shower for Mitchell; Dale and Marlene Harrison; Olen and Louise Harrison;
Elizabeth Bryant Lawrence.
Dave , Jolli and Emalee Glass;
Greta Rifne; Julie and Adam
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Momlispaugh; James Hart ; J.R .
County Senior Citizens Center will Rife; Bill and Naomi King; Katl1y,
host the American Red Cross Jessica and Derek Johnson.
Following the meal, Olen HarriBloodmobile on Wednesday, from
I to 6 p.m. Tbe Red Cross is expe- son recited an original poem entiriencing a large shortage of blood, tled "One Room Schoolhouse ."
and asks that all area residents Youths played football and a table
come to donate during this time of tennis tournament was held for
both young and old.
urgency.

~

Ohio Lottery

Consider what bas happened:
• Voinovicb on Monday raised
pennants on flagpoles in front of
the Statehouse to honor the Cleveland Indians and Cincinnati Reds
as baseball divisional champs.
• Tonight he was scheduled
!brow out the opening pitch as the
Indians take on the Boston Red Sox
in Game I of the American League
Divisional playoffs atJacobs Field.
• Voinovich tried his band Mon·
day at college football analysis
with a prediction that Ohio State
University would reach the Rose
Bowl. But he shied away from
·mating any bets with gubernatorial
colleagues in other stares. ''It's too·
early in the season. I'd be betting
on all the games."
Tbere were other matters on the
governor's mind besides baseball

public bearirigs on the GOP Medicare overhaul.
"Everybody lmows that Medi- ·
care is going bankrupt. And after
the Democrars unveiled their Medicare plan today. everyone knows
Democrats are bankrupt of any
reform ideas," said Dole, R-Kan.
But Senate Democrats promised
to give America's elderly new
choices in Medicare without the
pain of the Republicans' major

surgery on the program . They
offered only a bare outline on Mon·
day, saying it would include new
Medicare coverage arrangements
and managed care programs.
Senate Minority Leader Tom
Dascble, D-S.D., said tbe plan
would save $89 billion by holding
down the growth of payments to
hospitals and other care-givers much as the controversial Republican plan would do:

But the GOP is seeking to save
three times as much- $270 billion
over seven yearS- including more
than $71 billion in higher premiums from Medicare's 37 million
elderly or disabled beneficiaries.
The Democrats said they also
would seek to change the way
Medicare pays health maintenance
organizations. They now get 95
percent of average fee-for-service
payments, although liMOs tend to

auract healthier seniors who
require less care.
In the House, the war over
Medicare produced angry word&amp;
and theatrics. The GOP,- Grand
Old Party - ''now stands for 'Get
Old People.' Tip 'em upside down
and shake money out of their pockets," Rep. Edward Markey, DMass .. said before stomping out of
the Commerce Committee meeting.

Assistance
for victims
gets funded
i

The Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office rccentl y received a grant in
excess of $18,000 to assist its Victims Assistance Program.
The Victims Assistance Program, which bas been in existence
for approximately three years , is
designed to assure that victi,ms'
rights are protected before, dwing
and after any criminal proceedings.
The program focuses on assuring that the victim's wishes in sentencing matters are communicated
to the judge, that counseling and
support services are made available
to limit the mental and emotional
damage of being a crime vicLim,
and assisting victims in getting
.compensation from the state
REDS PRIDE - Pomeroy resident Loube Avenue hnme ilnce the days of the Big Red
through the O,bio Court of Claims,
Gilmore Is continuing the tradition of decorating Machine championship seasons In the mldexplained Prosecuting Attorney
her home with Clnc:lnnatl ·Reds memorabiUa. 1970.. The Reds bel!ln National League divisionJohn R. Lentes.
Gilmore, a devoted Reds fan since 1939, bas al playoff action at Los Angeles tonight, with
Lentes said the grant was needbeen decorating the outside. of her Union ftrst pitch at 8:07 p.DL
ed because funding for tbe victims
program has been solely lhrougb
· dent's doing around the country forfeitures taken from criminals in
and football Monday.
Speaker Newt Gingrich.
" I think most of the tickets are raising. money for the Democratic the Meigs County Court and Meigs
He defended an Ohio Republican ~arty fund-raiser on Thursday well in line. This is a several-tiered Party," Voinovicb said at an County Common Pleas Court.
in which donors may pay up to event, the same thing· that the presi· impromptu news conferenCe.
(Continued on Page 3)
$25,000 to rub elbows with House

From AP, Staff Reoo~ts
The O.J. Simpson double-murder trial's close this afternoon surprised the entire country, with the
jury deliberating less than four
hours Monday to reach a verdict
Local auorneys with murder
trial experience were especially
intrigued by the deliberations process in the trial.
"I've been on both sides of trying life and death penalty murder
trials, and I cannot imagine a verdict coming back that quickly,"
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes said.
"With aU the evidence, particularly the complex DNA evidence,
the jury needC(Ito spend a couple
of days examin)~Jg all the evidence
and testimony," he added.
Simpson, apparently as surprised as anyone by the swift resolution, s10od biting his lip as the
jury filed into the court at 2:55p.m.
Monday. He stared at them, but
none looked his way and throughout the brief court session the
jurors kept their eyes on the judge. .
Announcement of reaching a
verdict by Superior Court Judge
Lance Ito came after jurors asked
for and heard a repetition of testimony from a limousine driver that
concerned the time when Simpoon·
was picked up for a ride to the airport on the night of the murders of
Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
Goldman.
Ito. who had sent jurors from
the courtroom after the reading,
seemed startled when three loud
buzzes sounded in the courtroom.
. signaling jurors had reached a ver-.
diet in the case.
- Pomeroy attorney Ch~rles ·
Knight said that the quick decision
did not necessarily mean that the
jury did not give proper lime to the .
evidence and testimony in deliberations.
''My speculation is that the
members of the jury bad been evaluating the evidence, piece by piece,
all the way through this trial,"
Knight said.
"I feel the vast majority of the
jury members were of the same
opinion when they walked into that
jury room yesterday. My experi ence has been that it is hard for I 2
people to agree on a verdict that
(Continued on Page 3)

Nation's daily
habit is ended
By FRED BAYLES
AP National Writer
LOS ANGELE~ - After grip·
ping tl!e nation with a mix of soap
opera and social issue, the trial of
O.J. Simpson reached its end with
the same mix of suspense, drama
and touch of the absurd with which
it beg8J! IS months ago.
·
Up to the very end, the case
exerted a mesmerizing influence ·
over the American experience.
In Atlanta, Sen. Sam Nunn postIJ9ned today's announcement about
his political future to avoid a con-.
flict with the verdict. In Los Ange-·
les, a reunion of the original
Mouseketcers was canceled. So
was the debut of the Los Angeles
Zoo's tapir and the announcement
of who wouid be Grnnd Marshal of
the Rose Bowl parade.
Jack Levin, a Northeastern University sociologist and author of
books on media and racial issues, ,
said the case held public attention
hostage "because it bad everything."
"There was celebrity, blood and
gore, a marriage gone bad, an interracial relationship gone sour," he
said. "You put it all together it
might as well be Days Of Our

Lives."

Most of all, it was there. All the
time.
It became a fixture on CNN,
Court TV and ABC's Nigh/line. It
proved the lifeblood of tabloid TV
from A Curr!nr Affair to Hard
Copy.

.

(Continued on Page 3)

••

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="379">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9751">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30990">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30989">
              <text>October 2, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="240">
      <name>chapman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="834">
      <name>clonch</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="324">
      <name>conley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="14">
      <name>wolfe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
