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Page 08 • ;lunbav Gfimes-;lantinel

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

Questions on IRAs
are asked frequently

Computers haven't weakened
newspapers, Times editor says
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)- The
•ncreased use of computers for
information has not meant the
death of newspaper.;, the managing
editoc of The New York Times said
Friday.
''Computerized news sources
are creating more demand for journalism, not less," Gene Roberts
told the annual convemion of the
Society of Professional Journalists.
People need newspapers to add
perspective and depth to the information they get from their comput·
ers, be said, adding that the danger
comes from those tending dollars
and cents, not bits and bytes.
"The biggest threat to journalism comes from within our profession," Roberts said. "We strangle
our newsrooms with meager budgets."
Roberts was executive editor of
The Philadelphia Inquirer from
1972 to 1990, a journalism profes·

sor at the University of Maryland
from 1991 to 1994, and became
managing editor at the Times in
April1994.
During other convention ses·
sions Friday, members debated
revisions to tile SPJ ethics code.
One bogged down when participants tried to reword the proposal.
" It was a group editing effon,
and those never work," said Lou
Hodges, -chai rman of the ethics
ccJe task force.
Members are divided on
whether the code to guide professional journalists should have an
enforcement clause.
The society decided a year ago
to update the 1987 code and make
it more positive, said Kevin Z.
Smith, ethics committee chairman.
Delegates will be presented with
t.he proposed revision on Saturday
for possible action.

answers.

NEW BUSINESS • French City Maytag Home Appliance
Center recently completed a two-week grand opening at 1704 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis. The new business is owned by Mark and
Kim Hupp, Proctorville. It is stalled by three people. Store hours
are 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday and Friday; 9 a.m. until S p.m. on Saturday and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday

Coffee prices
rise sharply

More banks..c.ontinuedtromo-1
house.
Meanwhile , International
Paper Co., PJ~ine Webber Group
Inc. and J.P. Morgan &amp; Co. were
among the other companies with
healthy profit gains. That didn't
impress investors nearly as much.
But Chrysler reponed a 47 percent
drop in quarterly results, slightly
better than expected, and its stock
ended the week bigber. So did the
broader market.
The only !bing you can be sure
of is this: You're only as good as
your last earnings repon. Or maybe
your next one.
MOVING ON
There are many working stiffs
out there envying Michael Steinhardt right now. With good reason:
At tbe age of 54, Steinhardt is clos·
ing bis hedge fund business, Steinhardt Management Co.. and returnin~ investors their capital. He says
be s going to pursue other interests,
including philanthropy.
After a quarter-century of solid
gains, Steinhardt's funds fell
sharply in 1994, along with the rest
of tbe hedge fund business.
They've recovered considerably,
but not completely this year.
Still, Steinhardt has done what
most of us want to do: make money
In his youth, and quit w!lile there's
still time to enjoy it.
WINNERS, LOSER:;·, IN
BETWEEN

By JAY CALDWELL
GALLIPOLIS -Questions about
IRA's and Rollover IRA 's arc asked
of me frequently.
B c I ow
arc some most
commo nl y
asked qu estion s and th eir

Winners: Ford Motor Co.
shareholders, after the mmpany
announced it's raising their dividend for the fourth time in seven
quaners.
Losers: Jim P. Manzi, CEO of By DAVID DISHNEAU
Lot~ Development Corp., dissatAP Business Writer
isfled with his role at InternationRaw coffee prices leaped more
al Business Machines Corp. four than 3 cents a pound Friday after
montbs after IBM bought bis com- the U.S. Agriculture Department
pany.
trimmed its estimale of this year's
In Between: Drugmaker Fisons Brazilian crop by 5 percent.
PLC, which searched for a white
The unexpected revision, to 16.8
knight with deep pockets and million 132-pound bags from a
couldn't fmd one, finally agreeing June prediction or 17.6 million,
to a $2.9 billion hostile takeover reinforced perceptions of sharply
bid from rival Rbone-Poulenc reduced supplies fmm the world's
Rorer Inc.
biggest coffee producer.
TICKER:
"A lot of people did not even
• Wholesale prices rose 0.3 per- think a statistical release would be
cent and consumer prices rose 0.1 made, never miqd that it would be
percent in September. The con- below the previous figure," said
sumer inflation increase means analyst Arthur Stevenson of PruSocial Security recipients will get a dential Securities Inc.
2.6 percent benefits increase in JanGreen arabica coffee beans for
uary .. . Retail sales picked up 0.3 December delivery rose 3.4 cents
percent last month, another sign of to $1.2205 a pound on New York's
an economic "soft landing."
Coffee, Sugar &amp; Cocoa Exchange.
COMING UP:
The new USDA estimate was
MONDAY: The Commerce released .after the close of trading
Deparunent issues August business Thur.&gt;day.
inventory and sales figures.
On other commodity markets,
TUESDAY: International wheat, com and crude oil posted
Business Machines Corp. and substantial gains. The Commodity
General Motors Corp. announce Research Bureau's index or 21
third-quarter earnings, while the commodities rose 1.07 points to
Federal Reserve releases Septem- 241.31.
ber industrial production nwnbers.
Coffee futures have been flail-

Q. Arc there
sull ta.x benefits available from an IRA ''
A. An IRA will stiII prov tile most
people wit.h a federal in come ta..x
deduction for the money they con li! b·
utc each year. In addiuon, all th e
earnings am\ ga ins ear ned on th ~ ~

money contnbutcd accumulates free
of fede ral am! state inco me tax unul
withdmwn. This provide&gt; t;.tx ·deiCrrcd
compounding and remains the s1 ngk

greates t hcnefit of your IRA whether
or not you receive a dcducuon l'or th e·
comribution.
Q.Ifl receive a distribution from
my employer's qualified retirement
plan 40I(k) or 403(b) plan, can I
rollover the funds imo an IRA and
a void current taxes''
A. Yes. if you arc eligible to
ing near rour-montb lows amid a
receive
a distribution from your
lack of the buying that normally
employer's
qualified retirement "plan
surfaces at this time of year as U.S.
roasters build inventories for win- or403(b) plan, you may rollover part
ter, tile peak consumption period.
or all of the eligible portion of the
"This is all we needed to get it distribution into an IRA or other eligoing again," coffee broker gible plan.
·
Stephen Smith of Lamborn Futures
Generally, any distribution you
in Miami said of the new USDA are eligible to receive from your
estimate.
employer's 401 (K) or 403(b) plan is
The figure remains rae above an cltgible rollover di stribution unestimates of II million ·to 13 million bags circulated by Brazilian less it is (I) a nontaxable distrihulions
growers and producers, but it rein- (2) a distribution paid in a se ries of
forced ideas Brazil' s production distributions over life cx(Jettancy, or
capacity was severely burt by two for a specified period of ten j'Cars or
freezes in June and July 1993. Last more , or (3) a distribution reqUired to
year's harvest totaled 26 million be made after auammcnt of age 70X.
bags.
·
Q. Arc the new "20% Mandatory
Withholding
Rules" applicu blc to all
" People in the producing coun ..
rollovers
&amp;
transfers''
tries always believe the USDA
overstates their crop sizes," Smith
A. No, the20% mandatory with ·
said. "So when you see a down- holding rules only apply to eligible
ward revision in the USDA num- · rollover di stribution s from qualil1 ed
ber, people take it as pretty signifi .. · retircmentplansand403(b) plans . not
cant.••
IRA 's.lf you arc sc heduled to receive
On Wednesday, the Brazilian an eligible rollover distrib.ution, your
National Coffee Council reponed cqtploycr must allow you to have t.hc
that 630,000 bags of coffee were assets sent dircctly from the em ·
delivert:ct to warehouses in Septem- player's plan to the IRA or other
ber, 65 percem below the 1.8 million reported for the same month a eligible plan of your chotec.
If you do not choose to have
year ago.
your assets directly rolled over to an

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Boaras

State official says
Issue 2 opponents
don't understand
highway needs

.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Oppo·
nents of state Issue 2 favor renewal
of the capilal improvements program but object to an amendment
that would allow transportation
planner.; to borrow more money.
Tbe piggyback amendm~nt
would raise the debt ceiling for the
Ohio Department of Transponation
rrom $500 million to S1.2 billion. It
would allow ODOT to borrow
$220 million a year - an increase
of $120 million over current borrowing power - to pay for highway projects.
The debt would be paid back by

and accu mulated carnmgs. You will
not have to pay fcd cralt,L.xes on the

portion of your wi thdra wa l that rep ·
rcsenLs an y non-dcduct ihie contribu tions. In addition . withdrawa ls prior
to age 59 l/2, dc:nh.or disabi lity may
he subJCCttoa IO'ii. pcnalt y ta ..x. Please
sec the IR A DISclosure s ~ncmc nt !O
dctcrm inc the nontaxable ponion of
. a di stnbution .
·
Q. Is it possible to make Withdrawals from my IRA pnur to age 59
112 and and avoid the 10% early
withdrawa l penalty' 1
A. Yes, recen t legiS lation pro·
vides an exception to the 1oc;, penalty rule. In order to qualify, a taxpayer must cswblish a withdrawal
program over hi s/her lifecxpecwncy
or. the com bined life expecwncy of
the panicipant and hi s/her beneficiary. Withdrawals must be at least
annually and no charges ca n be made
for five years or before the attainment of age 59 f. whichever is longer.
Please sec IRS Notice 89-25 for more
information regarding penalty-free
withdrawals.
(Jay Cald\vell is an Investment
llroker rorThe Ohio Company in its
Gallipolis office.)

the slate's fuel tall.
He said the need of local governJanis Purdy, executive director ments should be enough for voter.&gt;
of the Citizens League of Greater to approve the issue on Nov. 7.
Cleveland, said the combination of
Renewal of the capital impj'Oveissues was bad lax policy and is ments program would allow the
unfair to volers.
state to borrow $120 million each
•'This attempt to combine a year for 10 more years by issuing
large-scale, unproven proposal witll obligation bonds.
a popular and successful program
The money would be distributed
i.s not only unwise, it makes for bad to local governments for repairing
govemmen~" she told The (Cleveand upgrading roads, sewers,
land) Plain Dealer for a story Sun- bridges, water treatment plants and
day,
other types of infrastructure. Most
On the other hand, she said the of the money is provided through
capital improvements program pro- nonrepayable grants or zero-intervides financial aid to local govern· est loans.
ments that would otherwise be
''It is the only program like it in
unable to afford repair and con- the United States with local construction.
trol," Whitmire said. "It allows
Daniel Whitmire, chairman of the community to do projects they
the Ohio Public Works Commis· normally would not be allowed to
sion, said opponents do not under- do.'
stand ODOT' s needs, especially
State Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, Rwith looming federal budget cuts. :lillsboro, sees the value of the pro1

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- In a mood
of celebration tinged with anger,
tens of thousands of black men
gatllered at tile Capitol today to
afftrm their self-respect and prolest
the conditions beselling much of
black America
The demonstration, a "Million
Man March'' called by Nation of
. ..;Jam leader Louis Farrakhan;promised to be the largest assemblage of black Americans in the
national capital since the 1963
March on Washington, where tile
Rev, Martin Luther King Jr. spoke
of his dream.
African drums beat, a recording
played the late Marvin Gaye
singing "What's Going On," IIJ!d
stranger embraced stranger 10
brotherhood. Yet an undertone of
anger was evident
" The powers here have not
wished us well,". the Rev.Roben
Smtih called out m a mo.mmg sermon. "They look our wtves, took
our children, enslaved us to the
point. we adopted a st.ave mentality.
In spne of what they ve done to us
ov~. the_rears, we~ ~c;re today."
Cbtcago Poltce, read one
banner, "Natural Born Killer.&gt;."
Another banner, in white, red
and green and stretching 10 feet,
carried portraits of O.J. Simpson
and Mumia Abu-Jamal, the death
row inmate in Phil!ldelphia who
has become a rallymg figure for
many blocks who say be was railroaded.
Heeding Farrakhan' s call for
withholding bl~c~ econo~ic
power, some paructpants earned
lunch bags or a bag of apples and
bottles of water so they would not

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·Loaded'

Number ol months 24. Monthl/lease payment $348.88 • Refundable securrty depos1t $350.
Total cash dL!e at begmn1ng o lease. 5798.88' . Total of monthly payments $8,373.12'.
Purchase ophCJl price $15,304.25". Total mileage alowed 30.000. Mileage charge over

30.000 mrtes. 10¢ per m11e

Number of months 24: Monthl/lease payment $378.68' . Relur~da~e security dePOS~ $400.
Total cash. du.eat ~mn.1ng o lease. $778.66'. Total ol monthly pa.yments S9.(J13.12'.
Purchase op11on pnce $16,526.20''. Total mileage allov.·ed 30,000.M1leage charge over
30.000 m1les. 10¢ per m1le.

· Does not rrctude tCense aoo title fees. salesJuse tax, rnsurance or personal property tax
" Vanes by vehiCle model. usage and lenglh ol lease. Lease rs subject to a~rovat by ·
GMAC. Leassee IS responsible for excess wear and use and has an option to purchase the
vehiCle at lease end.

Number of months 24. Monthl/lease pa~ment $588.88' . Refundable secunty depos1t $600
Total cash due at beginnmg o lease. Sll88.88' . Total of monthly Jymcnts S14 133 12 • ·
Purchase optton pnce $21,817.62 " . Total m1leage allowed 30.000 M1leag echar'~e a'ver
30,000 mles, 10~ per m1le.

:.Doe~ not1nC1u&lt;le license and title lees, sales.'use tax, insurance or personal ProJJerty tax.
Vanes by veh1de model, usage and length of tease. lease •s subject to approval by
GM:"C-Leassee IS re,tPOns ible lor excess wear and use and has an option to purchase the
vehiCleat lease end.

:.Doe~ nat include license and title lees, sales/use taJI, msurance or personal prq&gt;eny tax.
Vanes by vehtcle model, usage and length or lease. Lease 15 sut&gt;)eCt lo appro~al by
G~C. Leassee IS responsible lor excess wear and use and has an OfiiOn to purchase the

pa.

vehide at lease end.

' .

Mo~1day

• Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Noon -6

By The Associated Press
The Akron Beacon Journal urged voters in tbe Nov. 7 election tu
appmve Issue 2, the infrastructure bonding program to suppon local
proJects.
Some opponents of the issue accept the capital improvements
program but object to an amendment that would allow the Ohio
Depanment of Transponation to borrow money.
..."Infrastructure isn't glamor~s. but Ohio's prosperity is built on
·~ the newspaper satd Sunday m its witorial. ''It is akin to a bouse
or a car - essential but expensive. Families build those debts into
thetr budgets; so should Ohio. Both parts of Issue 2 support Ohio's
masstve mfrastructure needs."
Tbe newspaper ~so said it supponed Issue I, which would limit
the governor s abiltty to commute prison sentences.
The. amendment would require tbe governor to seek the advice of
lhe.?bio Adult Parole Authority before a commutation.
. The. amendment would prev.ent governors from acting rashly
wttbout Jeop~IZLng theu authonty to serve as essential safeguard
tn the system, the Beacon Journal said.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer endorsed Issue 5, which will ask
Cuyahoga County voters lo extend a tax on tobacco and alcohol in
order to re_novate Cleveland Stadium.

have to spend money.
It seemed certain tile •'Million
Man March" could not live up to
its name. Co-organizer Ben Chavis,
ousted former bead of the NAACP,
said to the ftrst arrivals, "We are
not going to let anyone play the
numbers game with us today."
Chavis put tbe figure at
300,000, then raised that number,
as the crow4 swelled, to 500,000.
, I:or a million to take part would
require the presence of more than
one out of every 10 of America's
black adult men. No Washington
demonstration bas ever drawn that
many.
The weather was clear, chilly,
breezy.
Farrakban invited black men
only - asking women to stay a1
borne and care 'for their families on
this "holy day," an exclusionary
step that brought an outburst of
criticism last week from onetime
radical leader Angela Davis.
The vast majority of early participants were men, but some
women ignored Farrakhan' s
ground rules:
Graphics designer Claudia
Moran. of Brooklyn. N.Y., rode to
town on a special train from New
York that was filled with men.
"Everyone has been very very
pleasant," she said.
'
Sbe called Farrakhan a bate .
monger but said the rally was much ·
larger than him. "I feel it's time
America and the world realize not
all black men are in jail or on
dru s."
told, women constituted a
tiny fraction of those on hand.
"I'm bere as a single, professional black woman to show my
support for our black men," said

ln

They're
scared
enough
Twin homicides
chill enthusiasm
for Halloween

JEERS FOR FARRAKHAN- Unidentified
protesters denounced Nation of Islam leader
Louis Farrakhan at a rally In New York Sunday
sponsored by the Jewish Defense Organization,
a militant group. Around the city, black communities were preparing for the Million Man
one woman, Phillippa Braxton, 31,
of suburban Laurel, Md. "They
have it harder Ulan a lot of black
women do in terms of job opponunities and education . Tbts will
show America that the black man
isn't some gun-toting, drag-selling
slereotype that's portrayed in the
media. I took off from my federal
job to be here because black men
should know that their women are
behind them."
Colin Powell, the retired chair·
m311 of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
one of the nation's most prominent
blacks, stayed away. He said in an

Social health In decline
Even though the economy improved
in the first year of the Clinton
administration, lhe social heallh of
the United States declined.

March, which also bas been called '.'A Holy Day
of Atonement and Reconciliation." Some 800
buses carrying 38,400 men left New York at
midnight Sunday for today'• rally in Washington. (AP)

interview on CBS·TV that he had a the scourges of drugs, violence and
scheduling conflict but would not unemployment.
The crowd assembled on a plaza
have joined forces witb Farrakllan
in front of the Capitol.
in any event.
"I was concerned my presence
Ray Clemons of Flint, Mich.,
on tile stage with Farrakhan would one of several hundred men who
give him a level of credibility ... I arrived on buses in the"middle of
would not like to bave seen," Pow- the chilly, windy night, talked of
ell said.
what brought him here: ''I'm hoir
The purpose of the rally - "a ing we take back a sense of Ullity
day of atonement and reconcilia- that will last more than a
tion" - was to give black men a moment.''
platform on wbicb to take responsi·
The event presented local offibility ror their lives and families cials with a sizable logistical chaland to make a commitment to fight lenge.

State reconsidering rule
on industrial pollution

By MITCHELL LANDSBERG
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio
an Index of Social Health for the
• Jnctex of
Gross Domestic · '
Product ~·
Social Health
AP National Writer
Environmental
Protection Agency
past nine years. using data , _.. billloos)
NEW YORK - Tbe social mainly government statistics is informing environmentalists and
120
6000
health of the United States declined that go back to 1970. The index
representatives of industry and
in the first year of tbe Clinton . tracks bow well American society
government
about its new proposal
100
5000
administration, even f1S the econo- is doing in 16 areas, including
to balance surface water protection
4000
my improved, according to an infant mortality, drug abuse, unemand industrial growth.
index of government data on social ployment, access to affordable
The EPA hopes to avoid the
3000
problems.
widespread opposition the last prohousing and the gap between ricb
~""'.......-'* 2000
Researcher.; at Focdham Univer- and poor.
posed change to. its "anti-degradasity say lheir index reveals a
tion rule" received almost two
After a brief upswing in 1992 1000
20
years ago, when it was tbe state's
startling trend over the past 20 an election year, Miringoff points
0
0
years: The nation's quality of life out~ tbe index dropped in 1993.
hottest clean-water issue.
'70 '73 '76 '79 '82 '85 '88 '91 '93
has come unhinged from its eco- the ftrst year of the Clinton presiThe rule would change bow the
lQ/"":
1995
Econan~
Report
ol
the
President.
AP
nomic growtb.
state
consider.&gt; requests from busi,
dency and the latest year for wbicb
. "We really have to begin to figures are available. The drop con- . Fonhm l.lnivolli~ lnatilute lof """"'lion ~ SocieJ Policy nesses and cities that want to
release more pollution into rivers,
reassess this notion that the gross . tinues a trend that dates to the mid between rich and poor.
domestic product - the overall 1970s.
For instance, Miringoff said, 22 streams and lakes, usually through
growth of the society - necessariThe index charts social health percent of the nation's children municipal sewage treatment plants .
ly is going to produce im~rove· on a scale of 0 to 100. For 1993, it were living below the poveny line
The revision was drawn up afler
ments in the quality of life, ' said dropped two points to 41. Its lqw- in 1993, up from 14.9 percent in the agency sifted through hundreds
Mare Miringoff, director of Ford- est point was 38 in 1991; the high 1970. Avei'B8e weekly wages, cal- of public comments, said EPA
ham's Institute for Innovation in point was 77.5 in 1973.
culated in 1987 dollars, were $255, spokeswoman Carol Hester.
Social Policy at Tarrytown, N.Y.
"We think we have addressed
In six calegories, the index bit down from $299 in 1970.
"Becanse if we look at this data, its lowest point ever in 1993: chil"It is :he fU'St social health read· some of their concerns," Ms. Hes·
particularly over time ... it's kind of . dren in poverty, child abuse, health ing of the Clinton administration, ter said. '·'We're working with a
ljke a crocodile's jaw opening insurance coverage, avei'B8e week- and I think we can say with certain- rule where there is a wide variety
the two lines, one going up and one ly earnings (adjusted for inflation). ly that this is not gelling betler of opinion, and we've got concerns
going down."
out-of-pocket heallb costs for under this particular administra- . from a 'lot of different interested
panics."
Miringofr s institute has lssut:d senior citizens, and the gap lion," Miringoff said.
~

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gram but says it would be· a mis·
lake to allow ODOT to borrow
more money.
"It puts the stale so deeply in
debt on state highway porjects that
we literally depend on the next
generation to pay for it,'' be said.
Pieter Wykoff, an ODOT
spokesman, said the department's
current debt limits were set in 1968
and have never been adjusted for
inflation.
ODOT bas promised legislators
it will improve efficiency and scale
back operations by $50 million to
repay bond debts. But the future
will require more cuts, he said.
"We admit this only buys us
three or four years," Wykoff said.
"Then we may 'have lo curtail
major projects or come up with
more revenue or stop building new
projects.''

Newspapers come out
in favor of state issues

Self-respect, anger
tfnge controversial
march on capitol

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 16, 1995

Borrowing vexes citizens

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Vol. 46, NO. 119
Copyrightt995

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IRA or eligible plan , your employer is
required 10 wit.hhold 20% of t.he taX·
able amount of th e eligib le clistribu·
uon for fedeml income ta., and puy
the balance of the assets to you.
You may then rollover any portion or all of the amount you receive,
ot~cr than amounts not eli gible for
rollover as noted previous!). within
60 days of the date received and defer
taxation amounts rolled over. You
may al so rollover a~ amount eq ual to
the amount withheld for federal income wxcs.
Q. When am I permitted to withdraw funds from my IRA account''
A. In general. you may with·
draw any portion of your IRA ac wunt at any time. However, yo umay
he subJCCltoordinary in come tax on
the puniun wtthdrawn . In acld ilion.
withdrawals prior to age 59 1/2 dis·
abdtty or death may be subJCCl lo u
10 '~ penalt y tax on the t:Lxah lc por·
11011 ol' the wtthdrawal.
Q. How wi ll my Wtihd ralv;tl s he
lJ .\~d ·.l

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IndianS
edge Seattle
nine, 3-2 ·

Sunday, October 15, 1995

Cities and industries complain
the current rule restricts growth,
while Thomas P. Behlen, chief of
the EPA's Division of Surface
Water. said it is too brier and
vague.
"What the (proposed) rule really tries to do is make a distinction
between those things we really
shouldn't toucb at all," Behlen
said, "and those streams where the
water quality is such that we really
don't need to do much analysis.
And it sets up the process of what
you do for everything in between."
Agency officials today will privately brief environmental and conservation groups tllat criticized the
earlier draft.
.The new proposal would place
all 61,000 miles of Ohio's rivers
and creeks into six categories based
on their current condition.
The very best streams essentially would be protected from any
new pollution; tile rest would be
classified under the other five calegories, with decreasing restrictions
on future pollution.

BELLAIRE (AP) - Clergy
members say trick or treating
should be skipped in this communi·
ty, where investigators found satan·
ic literature in the borne of a slain
couple.
The eastern Ohio city is seared
enough without the Halloween tra·
. dition, a pastor said.
"We've got teen-ager.; sleeping
with their parents, adults who
won't go out after dark and parents
who never leave tlleir children,"
said the Rev. Mick Fosler. of West
Bellaire United Methodist Church.
"I've never seen fear overcome
a community like this," he told
The Columbus Dispatch for a story
printed Sunday.
The bodies or Terry N. Brooks,
53, and Marilynn J. Brooks, 52,
were found in their home last
month. Brooks had been shot and
decapitated. His wife was stabbw
at least I 0 times.
Their 17-year-old son, Nathan
Broolcs, has been charged with
delinquency aggravated murder. He
bas denied the accusation.
Authorities bave said they found
satanic literature and diagrams, a
book about serial lciller Jeffrey
Dahmer and a list of names in
Nathan's· bedroom. Investigators
have said the list included names of
other potential victims .
Mayor Tino Esposito said he
agreed lo suggest that the city drop
trick or treating this year. But he
said he must let parents use their .
own judgment.
He said the city is helping to
sponsor a supervised gathering. A
party, featuring a costume parade
and treats. will be held for children
Oct. 31 in the city's park.
Sponsors are suggesting that
children avoid horror costumes,
such as witches and vampires, said
Glenda Guthrie. president or the
Bellaire PTA Council.
The Rev . Joe Byrne, pastor at
Belmont Presbyterian Church, said
Halloween becomes a problem
when children start looking for
other meanings iii the observance,
he said.
"They're interested in power.
The positive doesn't excite tbem as
mucb as the negative."
But James Farrelly, a University
of Dayton professor who studies
literature of the occult, cautioned
against making connections
between Satanism and Halloween.
"I suppose ):OU can argue that it
was a pagan ritual, but the way
Americans celebrate Halloween
has nothing to do with good and
evil,'':he said.
Farrelly said taking Halloween
Iaway .from the children would not
affect Satanism.
"To tie it into belief systems is
a mistake,'' be said.

• Taxes. T~s. Trlle Fees exira. Rebate irdJd8d in sale pnce ol new vehicle l1sted where appliCable. On approved credit. Not responsible lOt lypOgraphlcal em:n.

•

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•

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�..·.1

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·commentar

Monday, October 16, 1995

-

OHIO Weather

·page2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

--Area Deaths-- Local News in Brief:

Tuesday, Oct. 17

Monday, October 16, 1995

A£cu-Wea ther•

ror daytime wnditions and high temperatures

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio

Powell's battle plan has plenty of options
.I

WASHINGTON- Colin Powell bas virtually ruled out running
as an independent candidate for
. president, according to sources
close to tbe retired general.
Powell , who publicly bas
appeared
intrigued by the idea or
ROBERT L. WINGETI
'
an
iii
dependent
candidacy. remains
Publisher
undecided whether to seek lhe
While House as a Republican and
is described by one intimate as
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
''really agonizing this thing
General Manager
Controller
through." This source said Powell
bas decided not to wait beyond
early November .to announce his
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
plans and is discussing his political
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
options on a daily basis.
address and telephone number. No unsigned leiters will be published. Letters
Tbe former chairman or the
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not r rsonalities.
Joint Cbii:rs of Staff has often
taken a pox-on-both-your-houses
attitude toward Refublicans and
Democrats.
He s
derided
Democrats for intellectual
bankruptcy and for botcbin~ foreign policy. But be's also ridiculed
Republican orthodoxy on affl111l3tive action, abortion and school
prayer.
The Dally Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 7 general
Powell's advisers , however,
eledlon. However, in the interest of fairness, no eledion letters will be .....- - - - - - - accepted after U noon on Wednesday, Nov. 1.
r
Individuals should address Issues and uol personalities.
Letter-. purely endorsing Cllndldates wUI not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less, preferably typed. AU letters
are subject to editing and and must be signed with name, address 1\l~"RAC.\:
and telephone number. Telephone numbers wUI not be published. No
unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be iD good taste.

Deadline forpublication
of election letters Nov. 1

believe there is room for detente
with Republicans, and believe be
would portray himself as the candidate who could recapture the party

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
or Lincoln from extremists. This
would be done by accentuating a
litany of values be shares with conservatives - personal responsibility, self-discipline, moral leadership, strong foreign policy and
small government - tber.eby
enabling Powell 10 win the nomination despite flunking the far-right
libnus lests.
PoweU's current soul-searching
is focused on what one Iop adviser
told us was the "Cuomo-Kennedy
question : Why do I want Io be
president, and what do I wani to do
with the presidency." Powell
understands how this seemingly
simple question doomed Sen. Ted

I

Kennedy's primary challenge to
Jimmy Carter in 1980, and deterred
former New York Gov . Mario
Cuomo from throwing his hat in
the ring in 1988 and 1992. Unlilcc
both men, however. Powell is " not
consumed by ambition,'' which bas
almost become a prerequisile for a
presidential run, says a family
friend who is arguing against a
Powell candidacy.
While Powell ponders hi s
future, be apparently has a rou gh
draft of the speecll he'll eventually
deliver announcing his decision.
Sources say he is drawing inspiration from a 1993 speech by Tere·
sa Heinz explaining her decision
not to seek the Senate seat or her
!ale husband, Sen. John Heinz, RPa. PoweU bad just left his post at
the Pentagon when Teresa Heinz
made her speech, wbich struck an
emotional cord with Powell and
· moved him to tout it to friends .
·
Heinz helped Powell realize that
there were many routes to public
service and many - even most did noi lead to WashingtQll. One

~w~
t:AQ()1

I WIN NO •

MAttt;R WIAAT

Why don't we save?

\'Olf~ lkJLDIN'

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP BusineS!l Analyst
NEW YORK -The subject is savings and Ibe question is wby Amer- .
icans don't save more.
It is a boring question, made so by many years of public rhetoric,
lamentation and hand wringing, and because you bave to believe it.is
made insincerely. Everyone knows why Americans don't save more. Why
ask?
They don't save because they can't save, a !bey Iblnk.!bey can't save.
That's one reason. The other: There's more of an incentive to spend than
to save. Spend and you gel. Save and you pay taxes.
This is a eonsumer society, and consumers live in a radiation field of
stimuli, bombarded every minute by advertising !bat makes !bern restless
with !be feeling that Ibey're missing something now.
Those who have money beyond the essentials of life are sold on the
idea that they should have the "good life," defmed by variously by individual choice as good food, clothing, entertainment or electronic gad-

ge~ other reason - that tbe financial and laX incentives fail to excite
- might be far more important While things are slowly changing, the
battle between spending and saving is sliD being won by the former.
It has long been so. For three decades after World War II those who
borrowed and spent received tax deductions on the inlerest incurred, while
those who saved paid taxes on the interest earned.
Economic mismanagement also contributed in the form of inflation.
Why save when to save meant lo~ing money every day, while to spend
meant converting cash to assets that might rise in value? That was the
story or the 1970s.
- .
Seeking 10 correct an illogical situation, Congress in the 1980s lnstinned individual retirement accounts, allowing millions of Americans to save
free of taxes. The incentive worked. It might have waiced too well.
Faced with this scary situation- people saving money to escape sending it to Washington - Congress soon afler lessened the benefits. True, it
then allowed 40l(k)s and other tax-avoiding savings plans, but the battle
was lost
Spending and debt, that is, gained further ascendancy. The personal
savings rales plunged from 8 percent of disposable income (what's left
afler essentials) in 1970 to just 4 percent in 1994, one-third the Japanese
rale.
As !bey chose spending and the immediale acquisition or goods, Americans were eroding their chances of living the good life they craved so
much. With insufficient savings, economic growth slowed.
Savings are the fuel of economic growth and productivity increases,
and grealer productivity is bow you bake a bigger economic pie, one that
can provide more jobs. bigber wages and more affordable goods.
The savings shortfalls are directly related to some of today's most
urgent problems.
·
On a family or personal level, low savings mean sttess with medical
bills and retirement. Nationally, they mean subpar growth of less than 3
percent a year rather than 4 percent, meaning biDions or dollars lost each
year.
An analysis of American household finances for Merrill Lynch,
released less than a year ago. showed half of all families bave less than
$1,000 in net financial assets. Not mentioned were those with negative
''assets.''

While problems such as this bave more than one cause, the matter of
incentives can't be unjlerestimated. In 1986, before limitations were
placed on IRAs, contributions totaled $50 biDion. In 1994, they were $8
billion.
In shon, savings incentives were too weak to compele with the genius
or merchandisers. It seems to say that if you raise the incentives to save
- market the notion of saving -you can compele for the dollar.
Americans recognize a good deal.

Berry•s World

,..

•

~ source crediled her with helping :
·Powell 10 ' 'break out of the cocoon .

~ NIGllT WIT" JOONNlt; COCIIQAN JR.

•

Svnny Pl. Clovdy

Clovdy

John E. F!OCndt Jr., 36, of West Columbi:i. W.Va. died Friday, Ocl
13, I995 at Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
Born June 15, 1959 at Fat Belvoir. Va, be was the son of Mary E.
Zuspan Froendt and the lale Sgl Ftrst Class John E. Froendt Sr.
He was a ¥ymnastics instructor, coaching and judging 8ymnastics at
state and nauonal levc:ls. He was a 1977 graduate or Wahama Higb
School, and atlended Faumont State CoUege and Marshall University. He
was a four-year varsity cheerleader at Marshall, and a member of Pi
· Kappa ~pha. He was a life-member of 4-H All Stars, a certified instructor and Judge of the National Cheerleading Association.
~addition to his mother, be is survived by three sislers and two·!Jrotbers-1!1-law: Carla Wallace of Reynoldsburg, Karen L. and Les Facemyer
of Ripley, and Sharon A. and Randy Gough of Nokesville Va· and several nieces and nephews.
.
'
'
Services were bel~ ~onday aflernoon in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
M;lSOn, W.Va. Offic1aung were the Revs. Nancy Mayes and Mike Lambert. Burial followed in the Zuspan Cemetery, Mason.

Frost on the pumpkins Harold R. Kiser
likely for area tonight
13,

Harold R. Kiser, 51, of Liberty Cenler, formerly of Meigs County. died
Fnday, Oct.
1995 as the result of an auiomobile accident.
. . Born June: I, 1944, son or the !ale Fre~ie Ervin and Thelma Gladys
Kiser of Rac1ne, he was a graduale of Racme High School and bad been
employed by the Campbell's Soup Co. of Napoleon for the past28 years.
Survivors include bis wife, Brenda; a son. Jason, and daughler Angie
all of Liberty Center; brothers, Charles Kiser of Pomeroy, James Kiser of
Racine, Roy Kiser of Underwood, Minn., and David Ki'!Cr or Big Rock,
Va.; and sislers, Marie Norris or Syracuse. Mattie Rippetoe or Dunbar
W.Va., Phyllis Randolph of Prescott, Ariz., Bonnie Wamsley of Ne~
Haven, W.Va. and Barbara HyseDofMason, W.Va
He was preceded in death by brothers, Okey Edward Kiser and
Howard Ervm Kiser, and by a sisler, Doris Jean Kiser, all of Racine.
No services will be observed.

a.m.
Weather forecast:
By Tbe Associated Press
Tonight..Clear and cold. Patchy
The National Weather Service
issued a frost warning tonight for frost west-central and soutball of Ohio except the southwest west...Oiberwise frost likely. Lows
quadrant of the state. Lows will be from 30 to 35 except 35 to 40
30-35. except 35-40 in the south- southwest and west central.
west.
Tuesday .. .Increasing high
Clear skies over the frost warn~ clouds northwe~t and north cening areas will allow the warm air to tral. .. Otberwi ~ e mostly sunny .
escape rapidly into the abnosphere. Highs from the lower 60s northeast
But temperatures should recover to the lower 70s southwest.
Extended foreCllst:
quickly on Ttiesday to highs in the
Wednesday .. .Cloudy with a
low 60s to low 70s.
No more rain is likely before chance of showers nortb ... OtherPaul R. Swisher, Middleport, died Sunday Oct. 15, I99S at St. Mary's
wise partly cloudy. Lows 45 to SO.
mid-week, the NWS said.
Hospital,
Huntington, W.Va
The record-high temperature for Highs 65 oorth to near 75 south.
Arrangements
will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, MiddleThursday and Friday .. .Partly
this dale at the Columbus weather
port
station was 88 degrees in 1897 cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
while the record low was 30 in in tbe low 10 mid 60s.
~
1944. Sunset tonight will be at 6:51
p.m: and sunrise Tuesday at 7:44

Pomeroy Police probe accidents
Pomeroy Police investigaled two auto accidents over the weekend, according to Chief Gerald Rought.
Friday at 1:47 p.m., Michelle Cundiff, 39. of Rulland. was backing out o~ a parldng space in the Big Bend Foodiand parking lo~
when Dons E. Thomas. 79, of Rutland, failed to see Cundiff backing, striking Cundifr s vehicle in the driver's side according to
police reports.
'
Damage to Cundiffs 1983 Olds and Thomas' 1985 Olds Cutlass
was light. No citati.ons were issued.
Sa~urday at 11 :'50 a.m., Virginia M. Lee, 46, of Chesler, was
travelmg north on West Mam Street when she stopped in traffic
and was struck from behind by a 1985 Olds driven by Julie King'
16, of Pomeroy, according 10 police repons.
'
Damage to Lee's 1985 Dodge was moderate to the back bumper.
King was ciled for failure 10 assure clear distance.

Crisp case continued
The founder of the Leading Creek Conservancy District, Jack
Crisp, remains out of jail due following a bearing last week in
Meigs County Court, according to Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Jobn Leoth
A status conference was held last week on the case, with the
judge reviewing Crisp' s current medical condition as well as all of
his medical records, Lentes staled.
Crisp, 64, of Ashland, Ky., was senlenced to serve 18 months in
jail for five misdemeanor counts or receiving improper compensation in February 1994. Crisp has not begun his jail time due to
numerous medical problems.
During last week's bearing, the judge ordered Crisp's attorney to
give the prosecution Crisp's medical records. The prosecution will
now contact Crisp's doctors for updales on his condition prior to a
pretrial hearing, according to Lenles.
The pretrial bearing bas been set for Nov. 8 at noon, concerning
the execution of Crisp· s sentence.

Wax cylinder contains
early recording of Edison

WEST ORANGE, NJ. (AP) Tucked away for more than a century, a wax cylinder bas yielded the
earliest known recording of
Thomas Alva Edison's voice. •
Edison talks about an aroundthe-world trip beginning and ending in New York:, ticking off cities,
ships and trains and joldng about
being "a little off on my geography."
.
' Curators cataloging the millions
or documents and devices the
inventor left bebind Iurned up the
!54-second recording, one of many
Edison used to demonstrate the
new technology to prominent people.
orders supportgroup will meet
Wednesday, 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs
County Multipurpose Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy . David
Snyder will speak about an
Alzbeimers Unit.

Paul R. Swisher

.
M

e1gs announcements

CBS unveils new format
for No. 3 morning show
NEW YORK (AP) - In what it
hopes is tbe start of a new era, CBS
This Morning today unveiled a format with a studio audience and a
full bour devoled 10 a single guest.
On today's broadcas~ that audience F.ted and asked 'questions
of rettred Gen. Colin Powell the
former chairman of the Joint chief&amp;of Staff, who decried racism and
government waste and once again
didn't declare plans to run for the
White House.
The redesign is an auempt 10 set
the 8-year-old CBS This Morning
apart from its better-established
and higher-rated rivals, ABC's
Good Morning America and NBC's
Today.
It was to tbe latter program that
anchor Harry Smith referred wben
be told viewers, "Other shows
have you wait outside in the cold."
Since June 1994, Today bas
originated from a storefront studio
in Rockefeller Center, whose windows allow observers to peek in at

.'

many viewers who stayed the .
course have maligned tbe jury's :"
conclusions.
:
I could have done without most . ~
of the commentary - Ray Brown ,,
and Jay Monahan excepted - and
would s·uggest that from now on, at .·,
least one network should use a C- ...
SPAN approach to covering trials. :,
No opinion shapers. Just the voices .·
in the courtroom. Just what the jury ':
hears.
Barry Scbeck, a brilliant illwni- .,.
nator of reasonable doubt, summed •
it up: "The case taught us a lot :~
about race, about the p(Jlice, about ··
science and its limitations, and ,,.
maybe it taught us a lot about eacb ..
other."
· ~
It taught us, for example, about ···
bow litlle respect many wbites .
have for the thinking capacity of a ~·
predominantly black jury. That .!
Andy Rooney and Rusb Limbaugh
should share such a canard tells us
a lot about bow commonplace this ·"'
fonn of dinner table race prejUdice · ~~
is.
Nat Hentoff is a nationally ~:
renowned authority on the First ·'"
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of Rights.
Copyrightl!l95 NEWSPAPER .'
1 •·
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on how to
communlCllle electronically with ·:
this coll!mnist and others, con•
tact America Online by calUng J.
800-827-6364, ext. 8317,)
'·

the show in progress.
Noted Smith's partner, Paula
Zahn, "We bring you inside."
With Smith·and Zabn inside the
studio at CBS's Broadcast Center
on West 57th Stree~ the audience
or about 100 applauded warmly.
The program's first bour stuck
_to the traditional formula of news
and features .
Shortly after 8 a.m. EDT, Powell was introduced, bounded on
stage. and t~k bls place beside
Zahn and South.
.
.
A member of th~ stud1o. audlence got to ask the B1g Question: Is
Powell, wbose app~arance was
officially pegged to bis newly published memoir, planning to run for
the .rresid_ency? .
. That s a decision I ~Ill make
m ~e next few weeks, Powell
rephed.
.
Harry Smith lOOk Ibis opponunity to poll the assem~led: "Au&lt;J!;
ence, do you want b1m to run?
People applauded.

EMS units answer 12 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 12 calls for assistance,
including three transfer calls Saturday and Surlday. Units responding
. included:
MIDDLEPORT
10:18 a.m. Saturday,-Stonewood
Apartments, Alva Reed, Ve1erans
Memorial Hospital;
10:40 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Opal Hook, VMH.
POMEROY
.
10:43 a.m. Saturday, Lakewood
Road, Sharon Perry, Holzer Medi-

The Daily Sentinel
jUSPS 113-9110)
I

involved is templed to make ju~t · l
the required payment eacb month, .. i
as contrasled with enough to retire !
it in .36 months, there are two
downsides.
'
'·
One is that' the overall interest · :
paid will be greater. When the lam , ' :
1~ out for such a long period of .' , :
lime, the net cost will be higher t'
even though the interest has been I
deductible.
., , •
I
. The second, and perhaps more ·' :
lDlportant, drawback is that you'd •
be paying for the proverbial dead :
horse. What happens at the end of ; :
four years when you still bave a 1
substantial balance and the car ,, I
either just gives out or is ·;,; I
desiroyed?
~:
· Bruce WIUiams Is a syndicated .,: :
~ writer for Newspaper Enterprise: •·· :
· Association.
1
1 (Send your questions to:
:
:Smart Money, P.O. Box 503,
l
·Elfers, FL 34680. Questlona of '~ i
general Interest will be aJUWtred
I
1
in future columns. Owing to the " :
•volume of mall, personal repl~ . :;
cannot be provided,) .· •
.:;..

l

I

springs Rehabilitation Center.
Born Jan. 16, 1910 in Salisbury Township, Meigs County, sbe was Ibe
daughter of the late Waller and Ellen Mora Carman. Sbe was a retired
employee of Robinson's Laundry and Dry Cleaning, Pomeroy. She
attended Mount Hermon Olurch and was a member of the Meigs County
Senior Citizens.
·
She was survived by several cousins.
Services will be announced at a taler dale by Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemelery, Pomeroy.

John E. Froendt Jr.

(tJ 1995 AccuWeatner . Inc.

Via Assoct819d Press GraphtCSNBt

Flying back-to-back is the ticket _ _ __

I

• IColumbus 168' I

Ice

In defense of the O.J. Simpson jury_ _ _::

finance a car. Since the Iax reform
acts that took: away the deductibility of interest (I iieotize) I can' I
think of any reason wb~tsoever
why I should not get a home equity
loan when I buy my new car thereby making my interest deductible.
If there is something I'm missing,
I'd appreciale knowing about il. _
F.R., Fargo, N.D.
DEAR F.R.: On race. I have no
problem with what you described.
The difficulty, I see, is that many
home equity loans are ror five or
even 10 years and you may be
tempted to stretch out payments for
an automobile over that -period of
time. Obviously, if you can't affonl
to pay for a car in Ihree years, you
can't afford it
If you have the discip~ine to
make the prepaymeilts on a S-year
('
that' th · ·
·1080 m many cases
s e mnumum a home equity loan can be
taken out for) lind there are no prepayment penaltlca - there seldom
Iare-'- then I have absolutely no
quarrel with wbat"you are doing. In
fact. I applaud it!
But where the individual

PA.

IND.

"'

Among the reactions to the OJ.
It was said, as in a mantra. that while st~rcvlyping of blacks that
Simpson verdict was Andy those jurors could not have serious- this assertion bas been so derisively
Rooney's conlemptuous offl:r of a ly considered the evidence in so mocked. Rusb Limbaugh speaks
million dollars to anyone who can short a time. They were either for more whileS, including journallind the real murderer. "I hope,"
ists, than even he may realize.
said a member of the defense leann,
As a believer in the inlegrity and
NatHentoff
"that he bas that money in the
inlelligence of this jury,' I should
bank."
dumb or racists in reverse - or note that I watched all or the trial
Rush Limbaugh, more in sorrow bolb.
as well as the preliminary hearing.
than in anger, told his millions of
Then, forgetting tbeir place, Furthermore, I have reported on
lisleners that from now on, there some of the jurors began to speak many trials - with a particular
will have to be black juries and - on lelevision. Among them were interest in forensic investigations.
black judges for black defendants, Lon Cryer and Sheila Woods. They I've interviewed police crime lab
and black policemen for black spoke in a way that those who sav- specialists in the chain or custody
neighborhoods . .
aged the verdict could not have of evidence as well as experts in
A well-spoken woman. calling imagined. Tbese black jurors latent fingerprints, fiber and glass
in to New York's most popular explained their judgment with clear trace evidence and other lechniques
talk-show host, Bob Grant, said intelligence and attention to the of the trade. And I've spent time
that she bad seen the Simpson jlll}' evidence.
with New York homicide detecon lelevision and tlleir average IQ
They dissected the design of the tives who - unlike some of the
was just aboui 75 . Grant beanily prosecution's timelines (bow could LAPD officers who testified during
agreed.
Simpson have bad the time to com- the trial- are fiercely self-respect. A· reporter, a longtime liberal, mit the murders?) . Tbey were ing professionals.
told me that the verdict proves once aware that the prosecution bad no
Had I been on the jury, I would
again !bat a murderer with enough convincing answer for the effects have come to a verdict in a shorter
money can buy his freedom.
of the astonishing ineptness and time. When vital evidence bas been
On lelevision, black:s iri various carelessness of the police crime so rampantly contaminated and
settings were shown cheering the lab. As for certain parts of the pur- some of the investigating officers
acquittal while whites, in tbeir sep- porledly infallible scientific evi- - not only Mark: Fuhrman - do
arate enclaves, told of their fury dence, jurors said they bad been not have to be in a conspiracy to be
and disgust
greatly impressed by tl)e penetrat- "disbelieved, it is no wonder that the
The nearly all-black jury ing leStimony or Dr. Henry Lee.
jury found many avenues of reaaccording even to usually thoughtLee did indeed deliver a mes- sonable doubt.
ful columnists - had been mes- sage to that jury: "Something
The trial- contrary 10 anummerized by Johnnie Cochran into wrong!"
ber of lawyers and judges who now
"giving a message" to the Los
The jurors who have spoken call for the removal or lelcvision
Angeles Police Department and 10 denied that their being black fore- cameras from courtrooms - was
while justice in general. "Payback ordained the outcome of Ibe case. It an invaluable course of instruction
time.,.
is a measure of the large-scale to those viewers who watched most
of the proceedings. I doubt !bat

·•

IMansfield 164' I•

in which be bad been travelling for .
35 years ... . When be beard the ·
speech be realized that a person .
lilce himself, who does believe in ·
service. can render it in many .
ways. He bad (up to that time)
thought or service to tbe nation as
something through the government
or the military."
Powell clings to the core message of Heinz's 1993 speech: "The
best ideas for cbange unfortunately
no longer rome from political campaigns," which she referred to as
the "graveyards or real ideas and
the birtbplace of empty promises....
It is sad bow often, in pursuing
·public offices, candidaleS are willing 10 sacrifice the very principles
that make politics a noble act"
Inspired in part by Heinz' example, Powell bas begun charting a
course or public service that
doesn't include elective office but
doesn't preclude i1 either. He and _
his wife, Alma, have become ~
involved in Best Friends, a privale- ;
ly funded non-profit foundation 1
devoled to promoting sexual absti- ,
nence and drug-free living among '
teen-agers. Not only bas the experience been gratifying, but it will ·
help gird Powell against attacks
that 6e' s too liberal for GOP primary voters.
Befitting a great military leader, .
Powell's political battle plan is full •
of options.
UNHAPPY WARRIOR Someone might want to remind .
Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S.D., that he is one or the most powerful mem- .
bers of the Republican Congress. .,
Pressler bombed recently at a
New York: fund-raiser when, rather
than boasting about his power, he ...
ticked off a litany of reasons why
be might lose in 1996. The perfor- ~'
mance distressed Sen. Alfonse .
D' Amato. R-N. Y.. who eventually
rose to buck up Pressler and to ·
remind !be audience of Pressler's
power as chairman of the Commerce Committee. Pressler told us ••
that it was part of the "Mutt &amp; -•
Jeff' routine that oflen accompa- •
nies sucb events. Olhers believe he ':
~... needs a crasb course in polilical
- - self-esteem.
Jack: Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

••

DEAR BRUCE: I travel a good airlines, the answer is pretty simdeal and I try save some money by ple: Buy one ticket with airline A
purchasing back:-to-back tickets. and the second wilb airline B. You
Simply put, this means I buy two are trl)veling in the appropriate
round,lrip tickets and use Ibem in a
way that allows me to travel in the
Bruce Williams
same week while benefi ling from
the overnight-stay fare reduction.
direction in eacb case, and in that
Tbe airline I use has recently way, violating no rules. How you
told my travel agent 'that if she con- got 10 the city of your depanure is
tinues to do this, she will be penal- of absolutely no concern of the airized. Is there something I can do lines.
about this? Since I spend a good
It occurs to me that the airlines
deal of money traveling, any sav- that say you can't do this are _cbasings are importan~ and I don't see ing away your business and tba~ in
why I should be penalized. I am my opinion, bas never been a good
buying the ticlcets, ~ying for them, practice. When you can take advanand using them as I choose. What's tage of a lower fare, why should
improper about lbat? - T.L., you be prohibited from doing so?
Franklin Park, NJ.
It's like going 10 a restaurant and
DEAR TL .: I never understood . asking fa a bam and cheese sandwhy airlines got all uptight about wich and they say you must eat the
this back:-to-back thing. Like you, I . cheese. If you only wantiO eat the
the cheese on the
have done it on many occasions. bam and leave
.
?
You are paying for the tickets and plate, why IS that wrong·
using them as you choose. Some of
.
the airlines say go ahead and do it.
. DEA.R BRUCE: A fnend of
One or two are getting a little bit mme satd that you once proposed
testy. but if you really run inio a an argument aga~nst using your
bind wilb your travel agent and the borne as the secunty for a loan 10

•

Edna E. Carman
Edna E. Carman, 85, of Pomeroy, died Sunday Oct IS, 1995 at Rock-

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

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Second clau postnge pa.id at Pomeroy. Ohio.
Mtmber: The Associated Press, ond the Ohio

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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bta Ou- Mdp Counl)13 Weeks .............•................................... S29.2l
26 Weeks •.•........................... ................... $56.611
l2 Weeks .....................•.•...................... $)09.72

,,
•

Trick or treat set
Chester Fire Deparbnent will
sponsor trick or treat night Oct 30,
6 to 7 p.m. in Chester. Whistle will
sound to start and slOp.
Career counseling
David Maze of the Educational
Opportunity Center will be at the
Meigs Public Library on Oct. 25, 7
to 8 p.m. to provide career and educational counseling for residents or
Meigs \County. There is no charge
for the service. Additional information may be obtained by calling
753-3531, Ext. 307.
TP Fall C.rnival
The Tuppers ·Plains Elementary
Booosters will bold their Fall Carnival Saturday, Oct. 21 at Ttippers
Plains Elementary School. There
will be a steak dillller served from
4:30 to ·6 p.m: Dinners are SS for
adults, $2.50 for students, which
includes drink and dessert. Games,
snacks, and activities will occur
between 6 and 9 p.m. Admission
charge for the carnival is 25 cents
per person.
Alzhelmers group
The Alzbeimers and relaied dis-

Hospital news

Chester D of A
Chesler Council 323 Daughters
of America will meet Tuesday, 7
p.m. Inspection will be held. Members asked to bring a wrapped $1
gift for project. Members are to
wear while.
Revival in progress
Revival will be held through
Sunday, 7:30 nightly at the Mount
Hermon U.B . Church on Texas
Road. William "Bud" Hatfield, .
evangelist. Special singing. Robert
Sanders, pastor. invites the public.
Classes beginning
Riverbend Arts Council classes
in Tai Cbi and beginning art will
begin soon. The Tai Chi dasses
under the direction of Eric Chambers will be held Oct 16, 23 and 30
at 8 p.m., and the beginning an
classes taught by Carol Tannehill
will be held Oct. 21 and 28, Nov. 4
and II from I to 3 p.m. at Council
headquarters in Middleport. Further
information may be obtained by
calling Nancy Calc, 992-5438.

cal Center;
VETERANS ~ORIAL
II :35 p.m. 'Saturday, West Maio
Saturda~ admtss1ons - Loyd
Stree~ Cns Rose, VMH;
. .Johnson, M1d~leport.
4:40p.m. Sunday, Nye Avenue,
Saturday~h!!fges-none.
BessieLandaker,)IMC.
Sunday at;lmiss1ons- none.
RACINE .
Sunday discharges- none .
· 11:01 a.m. Sunday, Rowe Road,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENI_"ER
Kathryn Philson, HMC.
DI-!charges Oct, 13 - Tnstan
RUTLAND
Kenms.on, Ruby Meeks, Odessa
7:34 p.m. Saturday, Meigs Mine Blackburn, Noah Fitch. ~rs. Russ
2, Donald Deal, 0' Bleness Memo- Moore and son.
rial Hospital;
Bi.r th - Mr. and Mrs. Terry
12:16 am. Sunday, Slate Route Cunrungbam, daughter, Albany.
124, Jeff Sldnner, YMH;
Discharges Oct. 14 - Joyce
4:18am. Sunday Gibson Ridge Bowen, Carl Muncy,_ Paula Slone,
R d Goldie B · 'OMH
Mrs. Terry Cunnmgbam and
oa •
onng,
.
daughter.
Blrtb- Mr. and Mrs. Merrit
Scott, daughter, Wellston.
Discharges Oct. IS - Christopher Brown, Mrs. Merrit Scott and
Am Ele Power ........................37 V4
daughter, .
Akzo ........................................5!1318
(Published with permission)
Ashland OU .........................- .......33
AT&amp;T .....................................4il !Ill
Bank One.......................! ........37 !Ill
Bob EvaDJ ............................... J7 1/l
Borg-Wal'ller......... _............ -.30 liB
Champion lad .......................n 1/l
Charming Shop.................... ...l !Ill
Clly Hold1Dc .................................25
Federal Mogul .............................. l!l
Gannetl ...................................55 118
Affiliated with
Goodyear TI&lt;R ......................J!I"!/11
RAYMOND
JAMES
&amp; ASSOCIATES, Inc.
K-mart ............. -.....................10 V4
MEMBER
NEW
YORK
STOCK EXCHANGE
Lands End ..............................15 V4
CLIENT
SERVICES
INCLUDE:
Llmlled Inc. ............. :........- ..........21
Mulllmedla Inc:......................43 314
Portfolio Managamanl
l'cople'• ........... __.................n V4
Stocks, Bonde &amp; Mutual Funds
Ohio VaUey Buk.... - ..................36
Tax-Free Inveetmante
One Valley ..............................33718
IRA's
RiM;kweU ,_........ _ .......... - - .46 Ill
Annultlea
• Insurance
Robbl111 a: Myers.. .......................ll
Retirement
Planning
Royal Dutda/SheU ...................... u,l
Sboaey'alnc. ...................... - ...J Ill
Larry Brogan, CIC
Star Bank - ............. _ ........ -.!/1111
Wendy lat'L ~ ..- - ..--.. --.ll !Ill
WorthiD&amp;foii.Jad, .... _ ....._ ....tl V4
or428·2222
1-800-281-7500

Stocks

.

_._.

Stock reporU an tile 10:31 LIIL

quo101 proYided
Galli polio.

•:r Ad .. ot o

417 Grand Park Dr., Suiie 105
PMC Building (beside the Olive Garden) Parkersburg, WV ?6101

Edison addresses someone ·
named Blaine, apparently James :
Gilles_Pie Blaine, a congressman,
two-t1me secretary of state and
perennial presidential candidate • .
He signs off with the words: ·
" Goodbye, Edison."
·
Curators believe Edison made
the recording in 1888, when he was
41. Previously, his earliest known
recording daled to 1906.
Edison, who aecumulated more ·
than 1.300 U.S . and foreign
palents, died in 1931. He invenled
the phonograph in 1877, but
shelved the device for a decade
while perfecting the electric ligbt
bulb and otber contraptions. ·

ONE
LESS
THING

FOR YOU
TO
JuGGLE
You 've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don 't need to add this worry
to your list.
Talk to your independent ag ent. Insist on longterm experience. community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen . Ju5t do thi5 one thing,
and leave the juggling act to us.
Your Independent Agents
Serving Meigs County Since 1868

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
Pomeroy

111 Second St.

®
WHERE

992·3381

representing the

The Ohio Casualty Group
of Insurance Companies
E X TRA

EFFORTIS

,

.\_'
OUR

POLICY

FLU VACCINES
Prevention is your best defense.
As a convenience to our p~tients Holzer
Clinic is offering special Influenza
Clinics.
Friday-October 20 and 27

The Internal Medicine
Department
at Holzer Clinic
'.
No appointment is neccessary.
Please bave insurauc;e iuformation available.

HOLZER CLINIC
90 Jaclcson Pike
Gallipolis. OH
446-5411
Htrt for Ylllll' Htaltlr, Htrr For YOIII' Lifottmt!

I

�Monday, October 16, 1995

Sports

The Daily. Sentinel
Monday, October 16, 1!*15

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveiand Indians have given the
Seattle Manners no other choice.
It's Randy Johnson lime.
Tbe big left-bander will be
pitching with the Mariners' season
on the line once again Tuesday
night now that Cleveland bas taken
· a ~-2 lead in tbe best-of-seven AL
playoffs. The Indians won Sunday
night3-2.
Johnson wlll be working without a net for tbe fourth time Ibis
month; a loss sends the Mariners .

.

Saints edge Dolphins 33-30; Panthers get first-ever wi·n
By BARRY WILNER
AP Football Writer
The Saints found a way to win
and the Panthers discovered bow
not to lose.
New Orleans' formula for ils
first victory of the season was
based on Jim Everett's big day and
Bernie Kosar's mixed results filling
in for the injured Dan Marino.
Everett threw for four touchdowns,
while Kosar passed for three and
ran for one - but also bad three
turnovers in tbe Saints' 33-30 triumr.b Sunday.
'For a change we kept the mistakes low and when we bad to have
it, we got it out there," Everett
said. " It's been bard and it's been
frusuating . It's really good to get a
win. It makes you look forward to
the week again."
Tbe Panthers also ended their
slide of five games with victory
No. I in their history. The expansionists were inept on offense, but
found an opponent !bat was pathetic in every manner in the New
York Jets. Sam Mills intercepted a
shovel pass from Bubby Brister
and scooteu 36 yards for a touchdown in a 26-15 win.
"I told him be looked like he
was 25 again," coach Dom Capers
said of Mills.
"I've never seen anything like
that before,' · Brister lamented. .
Elsewhe re, Steve Young burt
his back and shoulder in San Francisco's 18-17 loss at Indianapolis
and will undergo an MRI today.
. Also, it was Kansas City 31 ,
New England 26; Green Bay 30,
Detroit 2I ; Chicago 30, Jacksonville 27; Dallas. 23, San Diego
9; Tampa Bay 20, Minnesota 17,
OT; Buffalo 27, Seattle 21; Arizona 24, Wasllington 20; and
Philadelphia 17, New York Giants
14.
The weekend began .on TbursJ
day night, when St. Louis edged
Atlanta 21-19. On Sunday, Hous-

yard Held goal on the final play.
champion since 1973.
Cowboys 23, Chargen 9
The last thing San Francisco (4At San Diego, Emmitt Smith
2) needs to worry about is its quarterback, the league's MVP last sea- contributed two touchdown runs
despite a season-low 68 yards rushson.
" It's been a nightmare. I bad !be ing. Smith set a club record for
flu last night," said Young, whose career touchdowns wilb 88, beatiilg
back injury forced bim from the Tony Dorsett's mark of86.
Troy Aikman recovered from a
game for one play after be was
tackled bard on tbe 49ers' last safety on the Cowboys' farst play
drive. But be returned to set up . and bit 21 of 30 passes, including
Doug Brien's 46-yard field goal his flnt 11. for 222 yards. At 6-1,
attempt !bat mlssed
Dallas has the league's best record.
Chiefs 31, Patriots 26
Gale Gilbert, playing for injured
No OT in KC for a change.
quarterback Stan Humphries, yieldThe Chiefs, wbo went into OT ,ed three interceptions and a fumble
for their farst lbree home victories, on the first four drives for San
got two touchdown passes from Diego (3-4).
Steve Bono, who also scored on a
Buccaneers 20, Vlkln~ 17 (OT)
The Bucs, losers of at least 10
run against New England (1-5).
Kansas City went 6-1 for the first games in each of tbe last I 2 years,
lime since its Super Bowl year of have a four-game winning streak,
the second longest in team history.
1969.
Panthers. 26, Jets 15
Drew Bledsoe bad his first two They also bave a bold on farst place
Three close losses in thelr 0-5 touchdown passes of the season for in the NFC Central after Michael
start weren't erased by the Pan- !be Patriots, whose coach, BiU Par- Husted won it with a 51-yard field
thers' initial victory. But host Car- cells, suffered dehydration after !be goal 6:23 into OT.
Martin Mayhew scored on a 78olina wasn't thinking about !be past . game.
yard fumble return and Errict Rhett
after embarrassing the Jets (1-6),
Packers 30, Lions 21
who have not bad a rushing touch·
Detroit (2-4) got 124 yards on bad a six-yard touchdown run for
down all year and gained only 25 18 carries from Barry Sanders. It host Tampa Bay (5-2).
Fuad Reveiz, who kicked three
yards on !be ground and 138 over- didn't help at Green Bay, where
aU.
Brett Favre threw for 342 yards, field goals in regulation, missed a
"These guys bave been doing Edgar Bennett gained 148 yards 53-yarder that would have won it at
all tbe things we've been asking from scrimmage and Chris Jacke the end of the fourth quarter for
them to do," Capers said. "It's ·kicked three field goals for the Minnesota (3-3).
BiUs 27, Seahawks 21
nice to see theiJI get rewarded for Packers (4-2), wbo built a 20-0
Billy
Brooks might not make
their efforts."
halftime lead. Favre, 7-2 against
There have been few rewards Detroi~ completed 23 of 34 passes them forget Andre Reed in Buffalo.
But be can be a hero, too.
for the dismal Jets.
for two touchdowns.
Brooks caught si~ passes for
"This is about as low as you
Bears 30, Jaguars 27
can ~o." said Brister.
At Jacksonville, tbe Bears, an I 09 yards ljlld two touchdowns in
Colts 18, 49ers 17
original member of the NFL, helping the host Bills (5-1) to their
Cary Blanchard kicked four reached 600 victories, a record. fifth straight victory. Jim Kelly
field goals at tbe RCA Dome, Curtis Conway caught lbree touch- completed 21 of 36 passes for 275
including !be winner from 41 yards down passes from Erik Kramer, yards and three touchdowns in 30
with 2:36to go. The Colts (4-2) got helping the Bears moved to 4-2.
mph winds.
their third win over one of tbe
Seattle (2-4) got two touch'f.be Jaguars (2-5) failed to
NFL' s top teams this season. They ·become the rust expansionists to downs from Chris Warren and a
also banded both St. Louis and win three in a row, even though 52-yard scoring catch from rooilie
Miami lbeir first losses of !be year. Mark Brunell threw for a career- Joey Galloway.
It's !be farst lime !be Colts have high 302 yards &amp;Jid three touchCardinals 24, Redsklns 20
beaten a defending Super Bowl downs. Mike Hollis missed 54A one-yard touchdown pass

ton , Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and
Cleveland were idle.
Tonigb~ Oakland is at Denver.
Saints 33, Dolphins 30
At New Orleans, !be Saints led
all tl)e way behind Everett, wbo
was 20 of 32 for 242 yards. It was
the sixth time in his career that
Everett has passed for four touchdowns in a game.
"This is fantastic. It was a great
win ," Everett said. "It was good to
bave a chance for 50 of us to play
weD. I'm sure we made some mistakes, but Ibis sure feels good."
Kosar burt bis right band, but
stiU bad 368 yards in tbe air.
·
''lt .(tbe band) kind of locked up
on me. Tbe doctor said it wasn't
serious ... I bad trouble gripping the
ball. But I don ' t want to use that as
an excuse. ••

a

Defense and special teams
from Dave Krieg io Gar~i~on
accoul)ted
for most of the offense
Hearst with 76 seconds remammg
-two
quarterbacks
each for
as
won it for the Cardinals (2-5), who
and
host
New
Philadelphia
(4-3)
welcomed back star defensive tackYork
(2-5)
were
awful.
le Eric Swann.
.
Mike Zordicb returned a fumble
Swann made bis fust start smce
58
yards for a touchdown and interknee surgery Sept. 12 and was
cepted
Tommy Maddox's pass at
involved in six tackles, wilb 1 1/2
the
Philadelphia
40 to snuff out a
sacks. Washington (2-5) saw top
Omar Douglas
late
Giants
rally.
rookie Michael Westbrook stdescored
on
a
41
-yard
fumble rellgn.
lined with a sprained left knee.
F.?~les 17, Giants. l4

4. OHIO ST. (l) ....... 6-0-0
S. Soulllern Cal ... ...... 6.()-0
6. Tcnneasce ............. 6- 1-0
7. Kauau .................. 6-0·0
8. Kaow St............ ..6.()·0
9. Colorado ............... l·I·O
10. MichiPJI .............S·I·O
ll . Northwestcrn ........ S-1-0
12. Oreaoa ..................S-1·0
13. Allbwtl ................ 4-2.()
14. Virl!ioio ................6-2.()
IS. Oklahona .............4-1-1
16. Te... ...... .. ............ 4-1 -1
I 7. Notte Dame .......... S-2·0
It. Iowa ......................S-0-0
19. !'ton Si.
.......4-2-0
20. Wasllingtoo .........4-2-0
21. AlobanK1 ............... 4-2.()

Major league

playoff action
American League
S81arcb1'•1C01'•
ClEVElAND 1, Sanle 0

Swulq'• K«e
ClEVELAND !, Se11Ue 2; CLEVELAND lcadlscria ~2

Future dates
T.:.tl4by

ClEVELAND (D. Mllttlo,. 12-6) at
Stallle (lolwoo 18·2),1:01 p.m
Wodoada}
Q.EVEL\ND II Setnle, 1:01 p.m. , if
""""""~'

Seturda7, Od. 14

Atla11ta 6, CINCINNATI 0: Atlanla
wiDI acriea 4-0

Football

136 9l .
128 171

69 160
IOJ 204

106 loW

2S. Te xas Tech ........... 3-2-0

144

15

Ima

Cenlral DIYilion

S&lt; Lou~ ..

21

.ll! I. I ld. lY L I
0
0
0
I
I
I

0
0
0
0
0
I

1.00
1.00
1.00
.lOO
.SOO
.lOO

S
6
S
l
3
3

l
0
0
I
2
2

0
0
0
0
0

I
2 2 I
4 2 0
3 3 o
2 3 1
2 4 0

o .m

Southern defeated Trimble twice
and MiUer once to virtually secure ·
a lock on the Tri-Valley Conference's Hocking Division crown or
tbe Tri-Valley Conference. Sou!bern's netters move to 17-3 overall
and 14-1 in the league.
The winning mark comes under
the tutelege of first-year mentor
Howie Caldwell, who said, "I've
really enjoyed this year. It's been
once of my best coaching expe(iences ever. Tbe girls really put
forth a good effort and worked
together weU as a team."
Miller bad dominated the TVC
for the past five years and bas a
good nucleus again this year.
Alexander has also built a good
program under coach Jay Rees, but
this year Southern beat Miller
twice and split with the Spartans,
claiming a crucial win last week
against the latter for what in all
probability was for the league

Dick Goetz shot rounds of 68 on
!be north course at Rancho Murieta
Country Club.
Eight players. including Hale
Irwin , Jim Colbert, Cbi Chi
Rodriguez and Bob Charles, were
_two shots off the pace.

Meet the Marauders

MEIG'S
,..

~" Bullpen

E. Mich. ........... 3 0 0 1.00

4 2 0

Tolodo ............. 2 0 I .Ill

l 0 I

Miami .............. 2 1 1 .625

4 2 1

Boll St .............. ) I 0 .l lO

4
4
J
3

W. Midi .... ..... .3 2 0 .600
C. Mich ........... ! 2 0 .333

2 0 .667 133 116
3 0 .SOO !3S 12S
• o .m 133 m

Bowliaa Green I 3 0 .2SO

3 0
3 0
3 0

4 0

I S 0

Aktoo ............... l 3 0 .2l0
Kent.. ............... O 2 I .167
OHIO ...............O 2 I .167

I 4 I
I 4 1

Allanta ...
• 2 0 .667 122 126
San Fnnctsco .. . 4 2 0 .667 IS&lt; 16
Cwolina ...
I ' 0 .167 lOS 1,1
New Orle101 ..... I S 0 .161 131 I l l

MACadloa
Toledo 28. Miami 28
w. MK:higa.D 34. mno 17 ·
Ball St. 30, Bowlina Green 10
Non·C"unrcrcau Kllon
VirJiniaTcdl71, Akroo T1

· Suad•y'• scores

Tbb week's games

y_. Bay 20, MioJaOta 17 (01/

IDdiiiiiPOiia II, Saa f'nDcilc'l17
O.ic:qo JO,Iacbooville 27
New Orlem~ 33, Mimi J&gt;
Carolioa 26,N .Y. lcla IS
Artwaa 24, Wllhinaton 20
Dallas 23, San Dieao 9
Opeo dote: CINCINNATI, CLEVE·
LAND. HOOIIOn, PitliburJh

Tonight's game
Oat.land • Denver. 9 p.m.

Ha&lt; . . the Top 2S ...,. lAthe,_,.
ctatcd Pru• colleae football poll, with
lint-place votes ia pwenlheau, curran

record• M or l•t Sllurd.ly, total poiDU
bMCd OD 2S poinll (cr I fint pl10e vole
tJvouab ODC poilll for a 2Stb pi1Ce vote_
lllld 1111 weot'l ODIIIIIDliaa:
Lui

lLL:I &amp;.W.U

1. Ficridl St. (31) .......6-Q-0 1)20

2. - ( 1 6 ) .........~0 1,417
3. Ficridl (3) .., .......... 6-Q-0 1,421

Sllunlq-MAC

.

OHIO at Atroo
E. Michiaaa at Ball SL

Toledo ll Bowlioa Orcc11
Kem • Cent. Mich.ipn

•

NCAA Division I scores
East
Air Force 30, Na~y 20

AP Top 25 college poll

.Iaa

Cincinnati 16, Southcn Mia. 13
Daywn 49, BuUcr I 3
Orate 28, ValparaiJo 21
KUIII :J4, Jowa St 1
N. lowa 27, lndilDI St 10
Nc.btasb S7, MUsouri 0
S. llliooU 33, SW Miuouri SL 30
San Dieao 19, Evanntlle 17
W. lllinoi• 25, liliaoil St 22

I
2

3

Brown 21 . Colalle 6
BucknelllO,Condl7
CenL Coa.aectiN SL 24, SieDII7
Coucctk:ut 31, MaiDI 30
Dartrmulh 22, Yale 7
Delaware IS, RldtllllodO
iluqu&lt;Uel6.'Mwlll 14

lhal11

llo&amp;tra 36, Fordham IS
Holy Croa 27, lllr,.d 22
tou29. St. l'ebr'1 0
, . _ Madlloa 23, New Hamphire

LehiiJ! 37' ColumbillS

Shawn Rhodes led Oag to Oag in.
the lights over James Yost, Shane·
Burn gardner and Ron Zerkle. Larry
McComas look the early lead in the'
mediums and held off JimmyGibbs for the win . ShawnRh&lt;XIes'
passe Bill Marlin for third , th en'
Buck Mulford overhauled Martin
for fourth .
'
Dustin Lamar tack the lead and··
held on for a big win over Bob
Robinette in the Heavy's . Robi .'
neue faltered at the end and Mark
Stevens moved into second with '
Ron Bumgardner third and Robinette fourth.
·
The two-cycles were won by ,
Phillip LaComb, who p a.~scd fel -:
low Eastcrn Meigs Countian Ste ve ·'
Milhoan on the last lap . Claude'·
Cornelious passed Mike Hayman. '
for third. In the four-cycle modi- ·
fieds it was Kevin Layne over Ron- .·
nie Wilson and Bob Dolin .
'

_ _ _ _ _ Sports briefs ______:
NEW YORK (AP) - An
employee of Don King's began testimony in the bo~ing promoter's
insurance fraud case after receiving
inununity from prosecution.
Gladys Rosa, who worked as a
U'anslator for the boxing promoter,
is the first of several wimesses the
government plans to offer immunito as it tries to

mitted a fake contractto Lloyd's of..
London in 1991 to recover
$350,000 illegally.
:• • ·
King, 63, one of the most pow-•!!
erful men in boxing, is cbarged l•;
with nine counts of mail fraud. •!',
Each is punishable by up to five
, years in prison and a $250,000 fme.
1He is free on a $250,000 personal
I recognizance bond.

Norlb Coast Atbletk: Conr.

:i•I

'

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Wooater 14. Cue Reaervc J l
Kenyom 14, Earlham ·&amp;
.
WitteDba-115, Ohio Wsle)'ID I J
Dcailoa 30 Obetli11 10

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mM PIDEN SMARRIASIIS THI WAY m GO!

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AI~·Birmingttom 19, Not111 Tew14
Alllbama SL 21. Te111 Soulbonll9
Baylor 47, Houton 7

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•'I

$

Included in the cookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County residents, at no charge.
The recipes wiU be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • BreadJGrains
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
•Soups and Sandwiches
~o...Hrinu your recipe into our office or send it to:
Holiday .Cookbook
c/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
·wtllse, include your name and
pnc)ne # with recipe.

Klwu St 23,01dabomaSt17
NW l.ol.ailiau 24, Sam HoullDD SL 1
Oklahoma 24, Telll24, lie
Slepheo f . Auatln l6, Nldlolll SL 3
TelM AA:M 20, So~Aben Melb. 17
TeiM Chrlatiu 33, R.ice 21
Tc181Tcdl63, ArbmlaiSt. 'l5
Tuba 31, Teuo-EI Paoo 21

FarWett

COUNTY MAPS
IN STATE BOOK
A book containing aU of Weat
Virginia'o 55 county mapa ia available.

Printed on 16x22 inch double ~pread
pageo, eoch county hao a separat.o map.
The book contains 144 pageo.
The alate's 34,242 milea of roads are
shown in detail Towns, cit.iea and

Deadline for aU recipes
is October 20, 1995

'I

:j

For Only
24 Months

For OHly
24 Months

.1
I

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G·20 3/4 TON
RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN
• Driver Side Air Bag
• Anti-Leek Brakes
• Air Condition
• Automatic Overdrive
• Vista Bay Wmdows
• Power Steerrng
• Power Brakes

• Power W1ndows
• Power Locks
• Tilt Sleering
·Cruise Conlr~
• AM/Hoi Cassette
• 4 Captain Charrs
Sola/Bed

• lndrrect L~htrng
• Prem~m Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Aluminum Runnmg Boards
·Loaded!

0

Nurrber of roonlhs 24. Mon~~ lease paj!llenl $348.66 ' . Reli ndab1e securi~ deposit $350.
TotaJ cash due aliJe!inning ol ~ ase. $798.66' . To!al of monthly paymenu Sll,373.12'.
Purchase.oplion pnce $15,30425". Total mi~ge aPowtd 30.000. Mleage Cllarge over
~ .OOOm1les. 10¢ per mile.
• Does not ioclude license and title lees. sales/use lal, ·1nsura~ or.personal property lax.
"Vanes by vehicle model. usage and leng~ ollease. Lease tS w~ec110 'llflroval by
GMAC. Leassee is responsible lor e~~:cess wear and use and has an option to PJrchase tne
vehicle at lease end.

I

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G-20 314 TON
LONG WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN

BRAND NEW '96 BUICK RIVIERA
SUPERCHARGED 3800 V-6 ENGINE

. 350 V-8 POWEMIENI All &amp; IEAT

· A&lt; Concllion

• Dnve• S&lt;de Air Bag
• Anti-Lock Bral&lt;es
• Arr Condilron
• 350 V·S Power
• Rear Air/Heal

• Power Stakes
·Vacuum Cleaner
• Power Windows
• Indirect Ughling
• Power locks
• Premium Wood Pkg.
• Till Steenng
• Full Conversion
• Crt&gt;se Control
Running Boards
· Automatic OverdrNe • AM'FM Cassette •• Lf•berglass
oaded!
'
• Vista Bay Windows
• 4 Capt~n Chairs
• Power Steeling
• Sola/Bed
~mber ol monlhs 24. Monthl/ lease paymenl $378.88' . Relumlable security deposd $400.
Toial cash due al beginning o lease. 5778.88'. Tolal ol monlll~ paymenls $9,093.t 2'.
Purchase opl~n price $16,528.20". Toial mi~ge al~wtd 30,000. t.l~ge charge over
30.000 miles, I 0¢ per mile.
• Does not indu~ license and tiUe fees, sales/use tax, insura~ or.pei'SOnal property tax.
" Varies by veh•cle model, usage and lengJh of lease. Lease •s sulljee1to aooroval by
GMAC. Leassee is mS\)OOsible lor ewcess wear and use and has an opioo lo purchase !he
vehicle allease end.
·

• Dual Airbags
• 4 Wheel AnHock Brakes
• Supercharged 3800 V-6
• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes
• Power Door Locks

• Power Windows
• Power Mirrors
• Power Driver/Passenger Seats
• AM!FM Cassette &amp; CD Player
·Til
• Crur se Control
• Rear Defogger

• Leather lntenor
• Alum1num Wheels
• Tract1 on Control
• Unrversal Transm1tter
• Security Package
• Preslrge Package
• Loaded'

'

Number of months 24. Monthly tease payment $588.88' . Refundable socuntydepos1t $600.
Total cashdue at beginning of lease. $t t8S.88'. Total of mon~ly.Paymenls St4, 133.12 •.
Purchase option pnce $2 ! ,61 7.62". Total mileage allowed 30.000. Mileage charge over
30,000 miles, tO¢ per mi~.
• Does not include license and t1tle rees, sales/use ta ... insurance or personal property t a~.
•• Vanes by veh iC le ·mOOel, usage and ler.gltl of lease. Lease is sub1ec11o approval by

GMAC. Leassee IS responsible lor excess wear and use and has an opbon to purchase the
vehicle al ~ase end.

.(

l

l
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••
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order West Virginia County Map book,
send 114.85 (price includeo delivery).
VISA and MasterCard accepted.
Make checks payable to
County Map•
521 Puetz Place

•t

"

I~

.'I,
.,
j
~

villagea are indued and located, and
there is much additional information. To

OC!Q'aetown, D.c. 31, Prutlla A: M•-

-llleltll3, Butralo9
Monmouth, NJ. 41, Pice &amp;Notre Dame 21. Army 21

Midwest lnten:oUeglale
Saaioaw Valley 32. Ashland 20

Tyler French, Marvin Day,
Shawn Rhodes, Larry McComas,
Dustin Lamar, Phillip La Comb
and Kevin Layne were among !be
winners of the Meigs Competition
Karting Association 1feature races at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds in
Rock Springs.
Middleport's Tyler French led
aU the way to capture the fust place
in !be Rookie Division. On lap two,
Cody Faulk passed Cacy Faulk to
finish second wilb Joshua Hayman
passing for !bird and Cacy Faulk
fourth.
Marvin Day led all the way in
the junior division to defeat Robert
Hart, Chris McGrath and Trent.
Tolliver.
The stock division at the speedway bas really grown-from one
class to three exciting classe$:
Stock Light, Stock Medium and
Stock Heavy.

FINAL DAY TO ENTER
OCTOBER 20th
YOU COULD WIN $25

W. _VIRGINIA

Pltilodelphiai7,N.YOiao1114
Qreeo Bay JO. Detro~ 21

General manager John Scbuerbolz expressed tbe same thought
the day before tbe series began. By
comparison, Cincinnati's bullpen
surrendered 12 earned run, 15 bits,
II walks and three home runs in II
.213 innings.
But it wasn't just the Braves
buUpen !bat gave them !be edge. It
was a combination of all facets: the
offense, the bench, the starters, the
defense.
Tbe Braves bit .282 in the
series, led by Chipper Jones and
Fred McGriff, both at .438, Javier
L~z at .357 and Mike Devereaux
at .308.

French, Day and Rhodes
among MCKA race victors

HOLID(jll
COOKBOOK

Cent. Michigan 46, Youoa,town St. 2S
S yn~Cust: 52. E. Michiaan 24

Butralo21, Seatlle21

Kanau C~y 31 . New EnaiiDd 26

offense like ours," Reds manager
Davey Jobnson said
Mark Wohlers, the hardestthrowing stopper in the league,
saved Game 1, got the victory in
Game 2, mopped up in Game 3 and
finished off Game 4 wilb a strikeout. Greg McMichael got !be Game
1 victory and pitched a dominant
inning in Game 4, and Alejandro
Pena consistently got some of tbe
biggest outs in the toughest situa ..
tions.
"Our bullpen is probably the
best we've bad (in !be 90s)," manager Bobby Cox said.

forTHS .
Southern will play in the Division IV sectional tournament Satur-'
day . See The Daily Sentinel for fur-·
thcr de !ails later this week.

...

THE DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a

Arizooa S&lt; 29, Brij)lam YOUDI 21
BolleS&lt; 40, W- SL 14
Call'oly-SIDS6.-St. 10
Colondo Stl9, Utah 14
ldaho37, E. WMhillatooiO
MoniiOI 24, N. Arizoao 21
MolllaQ.a SL II, Idaho St. 14

Saturday's scores

Ill lOS

college scores

· Southwest

O..eraJI

It doesn't belong to Greg Maddux, Jobn Smoltz or Tom Glavine,
Atlanta's top three starters. It
belongs to the bullpen, accumulated in !be four victories over Cincinnati that gave the Braves the flnt
sweep in NL championship history
since tbe series went to seven
games in 1985.
"Obviously, their pitching was
outstanding. One of the Achilles
heels of the Braves bas been their
bullpen, but they were nearly perfect. We scored only five runs in
four games, and il' s remarkable
they could do that against an

two and Guinther bad one.
Southern won the reserve ·game
in a great battle - 15-5, 9-15, 1715. Jenny Friend led wilb 12 points
and Sayre bad six. B. Lent bad 15

Malone 19, TirfiD 0
Findlay 56. Sl. XIVier 0

Favorite Recipe

Midwest

.ll!Lild.li!LI

came back to win big at 13-15, 155, 15-6. Cynlbia CaldweU bad II,
and Kim Sayre had 10. C. Richards
had eight for Trimble.
In the ne~t Trimble game,
Southern won 15-9, 15-13.
Thomas dominated tbe play
with an II point night, six aces,
and II assists. Her six aces killed
the Trimble momentum and put the
Tomcats in a tailspin. Jenni Cummins also bad a great game as she
poured across eight points, six kills
and two blocks, while Sisson
scored just two, but dominated !be
set-up role with 13 assists and one
kill. Keri Caldwell bad four points,
four kills, and an ace, while Proffitt
bad three points, two kills, and on
block. lonna Manuel bad two,
Cummins two, and Lawrence two
kills.
Petit led THS with seven, Tonya
Trace bad five, Erica Campbell bad
three, Lent bad four, Hardy bad

Send Us llour

SW Louiaiana 43, New Me1ico SL 26
South Carolina 65, Miuiuippi St 39
TeD.D.-Martin 28. Tennessee St. 7
Tennwee 41, Alabama 14
Troy St. 66, Ouwlaton Southern I 3
VMI 17. Uf-Cblltaoooaa12
Vitainia44, Duke 30
Viraio.ia Tec:b 77, Akrou 17
Will\am &amp; M.-y48, Peon 34

I

Pioneer Football League
Daytoa 49, BuUer 13

crown.
Southern came back to win 15-13
Southern defeated MiUer 15-11, and 15-8. Cynthia Caldwell led the
15-6. Sammi Sisson again had a winners with 15 points and Kim
good aU-around game, hammering Sayrebad8.
home six points with three aces and
Angie Lucas b;ld nine for MiUer
II assists, while Amber Thomas and Jennifer Browning bad seven.
continued ber fine play with si~
In the firsl game with Trimble,
points, nine assists and one kill. Keri Caldwell paced !be Tornadoes
Jennifer Cummins had four points, wilb a great all-around game, servone ace, four kills and one block. ing up eight points with two aces
Tassi Cummins had four points and and eight assists. Thomas bad
three aces. Keri CaldweU bad four seven points and two aces. Sisson
points and l.wo kills and Bea Lisle bad six points, one ace, nine assists
bad six points and one ace. Brianne and one kill. and Bea Lisle six
Proffitt bad four kills and one points and one ace. Tassi Cummins
block. Jennifer Lawrence bad two bad two, Emily Duhl one and J.
kiUs, while Jonna Manuel bad one. · Cummins five tills and four
Karen Pompey bad five for blocks. Proffitt bad five kills and
Miller, A. Hughes four, A. Riley one block.
three, Amy Lucas two and one
Kris~Hardy bad four for
each by Mattox, Berry and Merck- Trimbl while Joy Petit, Misty
le.
Lent an
lie M~Cowen each
Southern won the reserve game bad one point.
to finish a fine season at 15-4.
Southern again dropped a close
After losing the first game 7-15, reserve game in the first set, but

Mid-States FootbaU Assoc.

Other Ohio

whose post-season·work is begin: ·
ning to rewrite the record books.
Hersbiser, working on three,
,days' rest for only tbe second ~.
since be bad shoulder surgery m
.1990, improved to 7-0 wilb a 1.47'
'ERA and one save in 11 career
appearances in the playo~fs a~~
World Series. He broke a ue will\
former Yankees great Lefty Gomez
for most wins without a loss in the
post-season, and be matched Bolt:
Gibson for most consecutive post•
season victories.
·

·

gives Braves edge in sweep over Reds

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
ATLANTA (AP) - Everybody
already knew about tbe Atlanta
Braves' strong starting pitching.
You might be able to beat tbe
Bmves, tbe thinking went, by getting to their buUpen.
That may bave been the case a
few years ago when the Braves lost
the 1991 and 1992 World Series,
then dropped tbe 1993 National
League playoffs to Philadelphia.
It's not true anymore. For example, how's Ibis for a nice pitching
line: I 1 IP, 5 H, I ER, 3 BB, 14
SO?

J,T. HUMPHREYS
STEVE THORNTON
Steve Thornton and J.T. Humphreys are members of the 1995
Meigs Marauder football team. Thornton Is a S-foot-8, 160-pound
freshman center. Humphreys Is a S-foot-9, 1St-pound freshman quarterback and end.

W. New Mexico 27, CS Northridae 8
Wuhiaf.On 18, Stan(ord 28
Wyomina 27. Loullville 20

turned a buge double play in the
held on for dear life.
Paul Assenmacber saved them eighth that started wben Luis Sojo
from a farst-and-third, one-otit jam hit a sharp line drive with runners
in the seve}ltb by stsiking out no at first and second. The runner~
less than Ken Griffey Jr. and Jay were moving wilb the pitch, and
bad there been no outs, Vizquel ·
Bohner in succession.
"We didn't want to go back to could bave easily made it an unasSeattle trying to win two games. sisted triple play.
The game ended when Edgar
knowing we bad to face Randy
Johnson in one of those games," Martinez lined out to the warning
Assenmacher said. •'This is playoff uack in center, giving Jose Mesa
lime, and I've never been in a situ- ·his fust post-season save. He bad
ation this big before. I'm glad it's 46 during the regular season.
It all added up to another win
working out."
Shortstop Omar Vizquel then for 37-year-old Orel Hersbiser ,

~

20

27. DllooiJ2l

2 0 .714 106 !OS
2 0 .667 169 135

w"'"'"
Dl.. wS I 0 .Ill

Ark.-PineBiutr 17, Orantllio1 St 14
Aransas 13, Milliuippi 6
Auslio Peoy 20. Tean ..... Tech 11
E. lllinoia 3.S, W. Keo.tud:y 9
E. Kentucky 34, Middle Teua. 21
Florida49, Auburn 38
florida A&amp;.M 24, DeiiWII'e SL 21
FloridaSt.ll, WateFor&lt;at ll
Furman 24, Citadel 3
Georaia 17, Vanderbilt6
Georaia Tech 27, North Carolina25
Hampton UD.i~ . 23, Norfolk St 18
Jacuon St. 16, Southern 14
JacUonvilleSt.l5, Samrord 14
Kentucky 24, LSU 16
Liberty 7, Cent. Aoridll6
MW5hall 42, W. Caroliu3
McN-St21, PortllllldSt. 13
Me~q&gt;h~ 23, Tuluel
Methodist 16, Davidson 14
Miami 56, Rutgers 21
MurnySL 63,Molt'headSt.13
N. Carolina AAT 38, Moraan St. 32
Newbary 17,Wo!ford ll
S. Carohu St. 42, Belhune-Coolrrnan

O.erd

Con£

s

l
4
OtceaBay......... 4
MiD............... 3
Detroil ............. 2

156

MAC standings

o .m

201 111
Pltilldelpbia ...... 4 3 0 .571 I« 1B
2
0 .286 114 180
Arilolll ..
N.Y. Gia.DII ..... .. 2 S 0 .216 liS IS6
WllbiD&amp;iOD ..... . 2 S 0 .216 IS3 163

Chicaao .. .

16

24. Wisconsin .............2·2-l

17

This week's slate

.ll! L I fll. Sif liA

;...,. Boy ...

22

454

Wiac:oaain at Northweatcn
Michipn 11 Indian•
Penn Stat low•
Minnesota at Michigan St.
Purdue at mao ST.

&amp;.tern Ol•lllo11
6 1

«8
· 384
328

11
23
20
24
12

NoMwestern 'I1, Mianesota1 7
Iowa 22,lndiana 13
OIDOST. '1:1, WiJ.couin 16
l'tDD St.26, Purdue 23

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

:r...
Dollaa ...

18

46l

Sallloae S&lt; S2, UNLV 14

Soulbonl Cal U, WaahiJJatoa SL 14
· St. MIO}''I, Cal. 33, UC Da•k 24
UCLA 17, ArizoaoiO
Utm St. 42, N.llllnoil7

Alcorn St 13, Prairie View 2
Appalachi111 St 27, Ge«1ia SoU!hen

Saturday's sanes

WutnnDI•llloa
1 0 .8S7 171 131
I 0 .Ill Ill 19
3 0 .SOO I :1&lt; 116
4 o .429 Ill 1J1

'

S27

217

MichiPASL

4 0 .313 10!1 119

o .m

13

Punlue .............. o 2 1 .167
Indiana ...........0 3 0 .000

2 3 0 .286 101 1.-7

4

611

Nevada !19, NE Lou.ilialll 3.S
New Me1ico 24, Hawaii 10
Oregon 52, catifornia 30
Pacific 47 , Uluiliana Tech 41
S. Utah 28, Nelnlka-K,..ey 21
Sacrameato St. 12, SW Teu~~ SL 3
San Dieao SL 41, Fra~oo SL 24

Soutb

7

19

20l

llll4oii .............. J 2

CINCII'INATI .. 2 4 0 .333 136 I4S

1CaDaM Cily ...... 6
OUiaod ............ S
DeDwr . .......... 3
Su Dieao ... . l
Suttle..
2

14
IS

621

Wiacouia ........ l 1 0 .SOO
PennSL ............ I 2 0 .333

m no

Central Di•bion
ClEVELAND .. J 3 0 .lOO 124 107
PiUab,.oh ......... 3 3 0 .SOO Ill l«l

..

II

22. TeJW AolM .......... l-2·0

Norlllw..lf&lt;ll ... 3
OHIO ST.........2
Jowa .................2
Mi&lt;hl&amp;ID ...... .. .. I
Miooeaoll ........ l
Mi&lt;hlaan Sl ... . I

lY L I fll, Sif liA

J~ebonville ......

9

· 23. S!Joford ................ 4-1·1

ltJII1

Euern Dlwlsloa

HoUiitoD ............ l

8

1,016
! ,Oil
930
917
841
121

Conf.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Buffalo .............. l I 0 .Bll
lodi......li&amp; ...... 4 2 0 .661
MWn! ............... • 2 o .667
New Eolllllld .... I l 0 .161
N.Y. Jeu ........... I 6 0 .143

te

1,087

Big Ten standings

NFL standings
I1a

Princeton 4) , Lafayette 0
Rhode Island 22. Bolton Univ. 19
Robert Morris lB. Waaner 16 ·
St. John's, N.Y. 30, Caniliu. 13
Tc~rflc 29, Pituburah 27
Towaoa St. 34, St Fiucis, Pa. 7
Villanov• 27. Nottheutera 2•
'West Vitainia 31 . Bocton Colleae 19

4
l
6

Othen receiYinl Yote~: Baylor 143,
Artauu 110. SyraoUit 100. UCLA 43,
Maryland 25. Oeorai• Tech· to, San
Dieao St. 10. Virainia Tech &amp;. Wutuna·
ton St S, Colorado SL I, TOLEDO 1.

National League
·

1,3 88
1,310
1,234

ballpark the Mariners' fans have
turned into a nightmare for postseason visitors. Seanlc is 4-1 in the
Kingdome during !be playoffs.
"We can't play scared," Cleveland's Carlos Baerga said. "We
can't be scared of !be fans, and we
can't be scared of !be noise. TbaJ's
why this was such a big game.''
Fear of facing Jobnson with
their own season on tbe line served
as exua motivation for the Indians
on Sunday, when they took tbe lead
on Jim Thorne's two-run homer off
Chris Bosio in the ·sixth inning and

Soutnern varsity spikers close in on Hocking Division crown

Scoreboard
Baseball

packing.
·:we were down two game's
agamst New York (in the first
round) and we came home and
swept them," Johnson said after
watching his teammates come up
short Sunday night "I don't thinlc
anybody projected us to be where
we are right now. But we're going
borne, and we play weU at borne."
Johnson, wbo was 18-2 during
·the regular season, would have
been pushed back to Game 7 if
Seattle bad won Sunday. N9_w, the
Indians get him a day earli~t. in a

By beatini Trimble &amp; Miller,

------Sports briefs------RANCHO MURIETA, Calif.
(AP)- Walt·Zer:ilbriski shot a
bogey-free 5-under-par 67 to grab a
one-stroke lead in the farst round of
!be Raley's Senior 'Gold Rush golf
tournament.
'
J.C. Snead, Grabam Marsh and

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Indians hand Mariners 3-2 loss to lead 3-2 in ALCS

Page4

In NFL Week 7 action,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

Lyadoo Statloa, WI ~
16081 666-3331

Other otates ovailable: AR, IL, IN,

lI
I

.J

KY, Ml, NC, OH, PA. SC. and TN .

,,

I•

•

I

I'

�By The Bend

t

·The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 16, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

I

'

r
.I '

Monday, October 16, 1995 ·
Page&amp;

P:Names
in the news•.•.
•&gt;

NEW YORK (AP)- What a
LONDON (AP) - Colin Pow·
: dAy in the life of a Beatles fan: The ell: Best-selling author and blue
.
'
; iond' s long-awaited reunion has blood?
, tcme together.
His family tree sprawls from
: ·: The three living Beatles have Britain's royal family to several'
• q,mpleted lyrics to an unfinished fonner U.S. presidents, including
: Jehn Lennon song, "Free as a George Bush, some British
! ltird," Newsweek reports in its genealogical records show.
· ~L 23 issue.
Burke's Peerage, which publish·
:; • To prepare psychologically for es books about royal families, said
: 11Je collaboration, Paul McCarmey Powell is descended from the
· ~ed Ringo Starr and George Har· Coote family of Irish military
:t"i6on to imagine Lennon had "just baronets. Powell, whose Jamaicanfling us up and said. 'I'm going on born parents emigrated to America.
;holiday in Spain. There's this one wrote of relatives named Coote in
:little song that I like. Finish it up his autobiography ''My American
:for me. I trust you."· McCartney Journey."
, says in Newsweek. ''Those were
Through that line, the former
ckind of the crucial words: 'I trust chainnan of the U.S. Joint Chiefs
i you ...
of Staff is a direct descendant of
l Lennon, who was shot to death England's King Edward I and Car·
lin 1980 outside his New York Gty oline Stanhope, which means hL~
•apartment building, had been work· lineage can be traced to William
: ing on the song at the time of his the Conqueror. Through the Stan·
;death
hope line, Powell can claim kinship
' The song will be released Nov. witt presidents George Washing: 19 on "Tbe Beatles Antbology."
ton, Thomas Jefferson and Bush.
In
Washington,
Powell
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) spokeAman Bill Smullen said be
:...;. It wasn't a bug that landed " wollllln't put much stock" in tbe
•''Baywatcb" star Pamela Ander· reports.
:ron in the hospital: She's pregnant
; • The actress left a hospital SunRESEARCH
TRIANGLE
rday in the arms of her husband, PARK, N.C. (AP) - When he's ,
lMotley Crue drummer Tommy not acting, :rom Selleck has some
~tee. two days after she was admit· ideas about building character in
lled.
'}
children.
: ·Her exhaustion and flu-like
Parents can help instill it in
'symptoms were related to the preg- youngsters by teaching tbem sim·
:Oancy. said St. John's Hospital pie courtesies, such as saying
:Spokeswoman Lindi Funston. .
"please" and "thank you," Sell·
1 - Anderson suffered a IDlscamage
eck said Sun_da_y.
learlier this year and has said severParents and adults can help by
'al times since that she wants to doing things as simple as driving
a baby.
courteously, Selleck said.

.

Attack on folk dancing uncalled for

DEBORAH HAUBER

Hauber
recognized

Dear Reader~: Brlns on the
orJcdndlllld libeL Somehow I have
manqed 10 oll'cod ICVCIIi thousand
folk dancen In 0110 folliVIOOP, and I
believe I have belnl from Ill of them.
Rcmanbcr my Oem of the Day
c:mlitcd 10 Sir Arnold Bax? He said,
"You lhould llllb a point of trying
everylhins once - except incest and
folk dancina." Two clays afler I
printed that comment, I began to
receive 1et1en lilce this one:
Dear ADD Landen: That quote by
Sir Arnold Bu was insulting. Folk
dancing is wholesome, morally
upHfting, relaxlns. fun, culturally
enjoyable and worthwhile. To equaiC
folk dancing with incest is 10 blacken
the name of all folk dancers. My
nieces and nephews read your
column regularly. They are sure to
ask me, what incest and folk dancing
have in common. Wbat should IICH
them?
I find this attack on folk dancing
totally uncalled fOJ: - MICHAEL

Deborah Hauber of Long Bot·
tom was recognized as a 1995 NORRIS, PRESIDBN1; FRBSNO,
national sales award winner at the CALIF., FOLK DANCE COUNCIL
annual convention of The
So, dear rcaden, consider this an
Longaberger Company in Colum- apology to all folk dancers, their
bus.
nieces and nephews, aunts, uncles
In recognition of annual sales of and cousins. Polk dancing, as Mt
more than $60,000, she was rceog- Norris said, is wholesome, morally
nized as one of only 110 associalcs uplifting, relaxing, culturally
nationwide achieving this level of enjoyable and fun. I may take it up
sales. About 8,000 attended the
myself.
convention.
Dear Ann Landen: A story in the
In addition, on the national level
Fort
Laudetdale Sun-Sentinel upset
Hauber was recognized for being
number one in sales in the Climb· me tmibly. I can't stop thinking about
ing Rose Region and number eigbt IL A 72-year-old woman was locked
in the Hearts and Hands director· inside a closet by robbc:ra who
ship consisting of over 1,800 con- ·burglarized her horne. She died lrying
sultants nationwide. She has been to scratch her way ouL Her body
an independent brancb advisor for ·wasn't found until more dlln a month
two years with a branch of 26 con; lifter she died. The police said lhc
sultants.

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORElli
1·90()-884-9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

Cor Adoption, several difcrentlaws
are in placc.clepcndlng on wblch ue
you live in.
Twenty-sevenstaJeSbavesmuiUII
\1.-"'i:•~nsent registry, which provides
a non-intrusive way for adult
"1995, l...oa A.nae1e1
llmn S'flldieate and
adoptces and birth parents to
C1eators Sylldate•
waive the right topivacy if they want
to be found. The Uniform Adoption
closet door was streaked with blood Act recommends this method of
finding an adopted child or birth
and covered with scratch marks.
This story reinforces my belief that parenL
The 27 states are: Arkansas,
elderly people who Hve alone sbould
California,
Colorado, Delaware,
be: checked on often by relatives,
Florida,
Idaho,
Illinois, Indiana,
friends or neighbors. Maybe if
Iowa,
Louisiana.
Maine, Maryland,
someone had checked on that
Massachuseus,
Michigan,
Monlana,
unfortunate woman, she would be
Nevada,
New
Hampshire,
New
York,
alive today... BETIY IN SUNRISE,
Ohio,
Oregon,
Rhode
Island,
South
FLA.
DEAR BETTY: Thank you for •Carolina. Sotllh Dakota.'ll:us. Utah.
spollighting a problem that rellc:clS Veimont and West Vttginia.
one of the tragedies of our time .. I When piiUIIIillg 11 ~~~tdding, who
indifference to our fellow humans. !PaYs for what? Who s/QIIds where?
This was brought out dramatically [-"the AM Latulers Guide for Brides"
all the answers. SeNJ a selfduring the rceord·breaking heat wave:
in Chicago last August At last count, ·addressed, long, basintss-sizt
733 people died. Some were literslly ·tnvtlopt lllld acheck or 'fiiDMY OldN
cooked. Hundreds of those victims for $].75 (this incladts poslage lllld
lived alone and their bodies were not ! handling) to: Brides. c/o Ann
found for several days because no one Latulers, P.O. Box JI562, Cllicago,
i Ill. 606Jl..()562. (In Cllllllda, send
bothered to check on them.
Something must be done to stem . $4.55.)
this tide of indifference if we are to
remain a humanitarian nation and the
leaders of the free world.
Dear Readers: Ever since the
Baby Richard case, which I consider
an outrageous miscarriage of justice,
I've received a great deal ofmail on
lhc subject oflocating adult adopiCCS
and birth parents.
Many readers rear having their
·Jives disrupted and are concerned that
the law provides no protection.
Now i! tht tillll! (or g·r·r·rAeconling to the National Co~~~~~:il
buys In tht classi(ieds

Ann
Landers

HAULIIIG &amp;
EXCAVATIOII
Umestone &amp;Grave~
Septk Systems,
Trailer &amp;House Sites.
Reasanable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

. W1U95 2 mo. pd.

:
,

:
:

; , Public Notice
: NOTICE OF ELECTION

ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS

:

OF THE TEN MILL
o
LIMITATION
Revised C9de, Sections
3501 .11(0), 5705.19,5705.25
; t~otlce Is hereby given
t•at In pursuance of a
118oolutlon of the Board of
TNsleea olthe Townahlp of
Columbia, Albany, Ohio,
poued on the Slh dey of
Juno, 1995 thoro will be
submitted to a vole of the
people of sold subdlvlston
at a General Election to be
hold In the Township of
Columbia Ohio, at Ihe
ragul11 placea ol voting
therein, on the 7th day of
November, 1995, the
queallon ollevylng a tax, In
uc.eu ol lhe ten mltl
limitation, lor the benelll of
Columbia Township for the
P¥rpooo of Fire protection.
Said tax being,•
A renewal of an existing
111 of 1 mill al a rate not
11ceedlng 1 (one) milia lor
aoch one dollar of
valuelion, which amounta to

Public Notice
submitted to a vole of the
people of oald oubdlvltlon
at a General Election to be
held In the Township of
Sutton Ohio, al the ragular
places of voting therein, on
the 7th day of November,
1995, the question of
levying a tax, In excesi of
lhe ten mill llmllallon, lor
lhe benefit of Sutton
Townsjllp lor the purpooo of
Maintaining and operating
cemeterleo.
Said lax being''
A renewal of an existing
lax of 0.5 mills ala rate not
exceeding 0.5 mlllolor each
one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to Hve canto
($0.05) lor each one.
hundred dollar a of
valuallon, lorllve (5) yeero.
The Poll a lor uld .
Eloclion will open al 6'30
o'clock A.M. and rome In
open until 7,30 o'clock P.M.
of said day.
Doled Sept 11, 1995
By order of lho
Board of Electlono, of
Meiga County, Ohio.

ten cenll ($0.10) lor each
o~e hundred dollars of
vlluatlon,lor llve(S) years.
The Polls lor said
Election will open at e,3o
o'el,ock A.M. and remain
ol(en until 7,30 o'clock P.M.
ot ..ld day.
011ted Sept.11,1995
'
By order of tho
Board ol Elections, ol
·.- Meigs County, Ohio.
wtnry L Hunter, Chairman
• Rllo D. Smith, Dlrecto1
(.:....1..;0r_•_.1_6,_2_3,_30_;_4T_c_ _
_ Public Nott'ce

Henry L Hunter, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
(tO) 9,16, 23, 30; 4TC

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
Revised Code, Sections
3501 .1t(G), 5705.19, 5705.25
Notice is hereby given
thai In purouance of a
Resolution of the VIllage
Council of the VIllage of

NOTICE OF ELECTION
...., TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
.OF THE TEN l!IILL
LIMITATION
Revised Code, Section a
3501 .11(G), 5705.11,5705.25
Notice lo hereby given
thai In purtuence of 1
R._..lutlon of lhe Board of
Townahlp Truolooo of the
Townohlp of Sullon Raclno,
Ohio, paond on the 3rd dey
of ~uly, 11115 lhera will ba

the 15th day of May, 1995
thoro will be oubmltted to 1 ·
vote of the people of aald
oubdlvtalon at a General ·
Election to be held tn the
VIllage of Pomeroy, Ohio, at
the regular placeo of voting
therein, on lhe 7th day of
November, 1995, tho
question ollevylng a tax, In
excou ol tho ton . mill
Mmltallon, lor the benefit of
Pomeroy VIllage lor tho
purpou of current

Public Notice

Pomeroy, Ohl.o, pasaed on

expenses.

Public Notice
7:30 o'clock P.M. of oald
day.
·
Dated Sept. 11, 1995
·
·
By order of the
Board of Elecllono, of
Malga County,.Ohlo.
Henry L. Hunter, Chairmen
Rita D. Smith, Director
(10)·9, 16, 23, 30; 4TC

Said tax being:'
A replacement olo tax of
1 mill at a rate not
e1ceedlng 1 (one) mille lor
each one dollar of valuation,
which amount• to len canto
($0.10) lor ea.ch one
hundred dollaro of
valuation, lor Hvo (5) years.
The Polio lor aald Election
will open at 6'30 o'clock
Public Notice
A.M. and remain opan until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Dated Sept. 11, 1995
By order of the ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL
Board of Election a, of
LIMITATION
Meigs County, Ohio.
Revised
Code, Section a
Henry L. Hunter, Chairman
· Rita D. Smith, Director 3501.11(0), 5705.19, 5705.25
Notice Is hereby given
(10) 9, 16, 23; 30; 4TC
thai In pursuance ol a
- - - - - - - - Reoolutlon of the VIllage
Council of lhe VIllage of
Public Notice
Racine, Ohio, paoaed on the
NOTICE OF ELECTION
19th day of June, 1995there
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS will be aubmlttad to e vote
OF THE TEN MILL
of the people of eald
LIMITATION
aubdlvlslon al a General
Revlood Code, Secllono
Election to be hold In the
3501.11(0), 5705.19, 5705.25 VIllage of Racine, Ohio, at
Notice lo hereby given the regular placeo of voting
that In purouance ol a therein, on the 7th day of
Reaolullon of the VIllage November, 1995, the
Council of the VIllage ol queotlon of levying a lax, In
Pomeroy, OMo, palled on excess of the ten mill
tho 15th day of May, 1995 limitation, lor the benefit of
thoro will be oubmlttod to 1 Racine VIllage lor the
vote of the people of oald purpooe of current
oub.dlvlolon · ol o General .expanaes.
Election to be held In the . Said tax being:'
VIllage ol Pomeroy, Ohio, at
A renewal ol an .e~latlng
the J811Utar pleceo of voting tax of 3 mlllo at 1 rate not
therein, on the 7th day of exceeding 3 (three) mille lor
November, 1915, Ihe each one dollor of voluotlon,
queotlon of levying a 181, In which amounto to thirty
exceoa of the ten mill centa ($0.30) lor each one
llmltedon, lor the benefit of hundred dollaro of
Pomeroy VIllage lor the voluatlon,lor live (5) yearo.
purpoaaolllreprotecllon.
The Polio lor 11ld
Said tn being:'
Election will open at 6:30
A renewol of an exlollng .o'clock A.M. and remain
llx of 2 mille at a rate not !open until 7,30 o'clock P.M.
exceeding 2 (two) mill• lor •of aald day.
each one doUer of valuation, looted Sept. 11, 1995
which omounlo to twenty
By order of tha
Boord of Electlono, of
cent• ($0.20) lor eech one
hundred dollan of
Molge County, Ohio.
valuotlon, for Hva (5) yeero.
Henry L Hunter, Cholrman
The Polio for oald Election
• Rile 0. Smith, Director
will open 11 8:30 o'clock (10) 9, 16, 23, 30; 4TC·
A.M. ond remeln opan until

650-1234

!has

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

17

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

W7/lln

138 N. 2nd, Middleport

15" LARGE
PEPPERONI

W22/1 mo.

lftllftOI
lOW liNTERS
ALL YOUR BOW
HUNTING NEEDS.
.ollows •Arrowo
oOoer ocenta
oOeerCIIIS
.Clothing end much mora
JOE'S .
SPORTING GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL HALL
Antiquity, Oh.
614+19-290611W&amp;'1 mO

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1

BRAMHIINC. ~'
Lump &amp;

~

Stoker Coal

~
~
~

Stole Rt. 124
Wellston, Ohio
Phone

•
•
•
•

Aggressive Growth
Growth
•
Growth and Income
Balanced

lnaperlal Tire
Service
Mason, W.V.
304-n3-5533
-September SpecialWith the purchase of
a set of struts or
shocks get FREE
installation.
Meet Your
Special
Someone
Today!!
Call the dateline

1·900·255·1515
Ext. 9789

I

R e quircd . Sc r v~U

~

~
~
~

HOCKINGPORT

Betzing's

• Fixed Income
• Global

304-882·2996
Comparabl!' Prices

• Utility ·

614-667-3630
1011 1/95 1mo.

••••••
DATES
ROMANCE

Companionship
1-900-25 5-1515
ht. 858J
12.11 per min. Must be18
yrs. ToLKh-tone phOne req.

Sorv·U fi19)

&amp;•s-su•

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

DAYS
CAR WASH
Complete
Detailing

HOROSCOPE

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

Up-To-Date
Soap Results
CALL NOWIU
1-900-HS-1800
Ext. 6335
fl.lt pern~in. Must h18
y,.. Touch-tone phone,...,.
s.,..u f&amp;tg) 54S·B4n

5116194 TfN

110\\ \1:11

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

1-:\ c " \T 1\ (,
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Thucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
()()•)

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Live 24 Hours/Day

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio
10/21/MI'tfn

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Talk to beautiful
GIRLS! 1-900-378·
$3.99 per min.

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone

Misc. Jobs.

Required Serv· U
(619) 645·8434

992·2269

Commercial and Residential
Driveways. Patios, Slabs, Parking lots, Curbs &amp; Gutlers
Sidewalks. Porches, Tear-out and Replacement

•

Bill Slack

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

9126/lmo.

:1

S1

liVIC I h

·.

Touch-tone phon~ :
required. Serv-u::

·.e: :• :

(619) 645-8434 ::
Call your date n :

1 -900-255-151~:\
Ext. 1471

.•
Must be 18 yrs~ :~
TOtJCh·tone •:

6'14-992-7643

phone

( No Sunday Calls)

.:.
(619) 645-843¢.:,
....,,

Alluring Scents
271 North Second Avenue
M1drlteport. Ohio 45760

NEFF REMODELING

992·4548

SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath

'[resli . Sifl( 'Jfowers
(jift 'Bas~ts for a{{ occasions
Stuff-it-'Ba{foons Jlot .9tir 'Bafloons
Singing 'Tef.,rams
"'t/
'free Loca[tfefiVe'!f
Satisfaction guarantee!

PPill.l

MARINE
SERVICES
KilT St• .list off Rr. 124, Syrame, OH

R:::::~~~~~~na
Siding, Roofing, Pat108Reasonable
·
Insurers· Experienced
Call Wa~~:aff 992.' .

~~;~;,~~~~====::::=~, .....,_
For Free Estimates · ·
r J .E. DIDDLE OWNER
949·2512
_ _ _...;";;.;';: ...1
319;;;.
5

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

9:00-3:00

SAWMILL
Porta'ble
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlckles
614-742·2193

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m. -3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Wlndowa, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors. Storm
Windows, Garages.
Fno Eatlmsteo
1119/lfn

mo.

Get Yo•r Meu•g• Across
With ADallr Sentinel

BULLETIN.BOARD
'7" column Inch weekdays
.·- '900 .-lumn inch Sunday
CAll OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

would be entitled to Inherit
from the decandont hed tho
decendant diad Intestate.
An application haa been
flied aoklng to relieve tho
estate from administration.
.A,ny action to conteet tho
validity of the Will muat bo
filed
withCourt
the Melge
Probete
within Countyl
ono (1)'
month ·from the last
publication of lhlo notice.
(10) 9, 16; 2TC
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE •
The Molga Metropolitan
Houolng Alithorlty, located
'at 38350 Union Avenue,
· Po~y. Ohio, will no
·longer ·accept eppllcetlone
for Section. 8 Rental
Aaalotance effective
October 31, 1995
(10) 2, g, 18 3TC

News Hotline

992-2156

required:~:

Serv-U

211 2192/tln

•

·:
::

2 .99/min.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

CiviC

l'llaae 992·6520 Hrs. M-S 8:00-6:00

I

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

(~,lrri~ ILII'--.L~I

Vt)lvn

:•••:•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Check with us lor details.
E \'1 1-YTII II\l,

., :

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985·3418

When your boat needs serviced•••
Come See The Boat Professionals!
W111 HI

ARE YOU
READY FOR::
ROMANCE :;
1-900-255-1515 ::
Ext. 1064 ::
2.99 per min. Mus:
be 18 yrs. or oldet:

Cuotom Building &amp; Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) g92-5535 .
(614\ g92·2753

Ext. 3140
$2.99/minute
18 or older
Touch-tone phone
required
Serv-U(619) 654-8434

'

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp;
rental rates.

·sMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Scores!ll Spreadsll!
1-900-378-1800

614166 7-6825

MODERN SANITATION

-

Sports Connect
NHl·NBA·NFL
.

Doug Criles

41960 Kay lor Road
Reedsville, OH 45772

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements ·
Additionsremodelingroofing • siding •
plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick
614-992-5183

7122/94

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small .
Shops or Office~
and Homes. •
Have 4 years _
experience. Call '
for estimate Karen at 614-843-5327 .
or 614-949-2632:
after 10-1 0-95 .

Abiding Concrete Construction

Light Hauling,

2500 Ext. 6557

......

~.·

Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645 -8434

•) o ·)·o

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. · •

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

Ext 7969
'2.99 per min.
~ust be 18 yrs.

--.)(),)()

Tony's Portable -~
Welding ·

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

1-900·255-8585

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4081 '
Week Day 8:00.5:00
Open Saturday

Public Notice

"

Howard L. Wrltesel

J&amp;L INSULAnON

H&amp;H

I!M/1

/

DAILY

UCINE
GUll CLUB '
TUP SHOOT
:

Cheaper Rates

Additional options include fixed annuities and variable annuities, with diversification in up to 26
professionally managed funcb.

Juuraru:e products, tru:wdtrtgflxed artd varlablt!
armutttes, are rreltber deposits nor obUgattons
of, 1101' are they guaranteed by Tbe Peoplt!s
.Badllfg &amp; 'trust Company or any other
balllr, 1101' are tbey tuuretl by tbe Federal
DeposU /uuraJICe CorpOralirm (FDIC).
/rwesiMftt protlucts are subject to invest·
mnt rlsts, tJICludtrtg tbe posstblt! loss of tbe
prllldpal a-111 invested.
'

1/2/lln

614-949-2512 .

(619)615 -8 ·131

Mobile home
sites for rent

STO·A-WAY
STORAGE

(

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
. Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMA'JIES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Call

Touc 11-Ton c

~ 614-384-6212 ~

Computer ,
repair/Service, Setups,
Installations,
Upgrades.
Will write programs
and databases.
Kevin 614·541·1630
Local moat area.

If you're cono:rned ahoulthc future, turn to our wc ll-trJined profe~'ion~ ls. We offer the full rJnKe of
mutual fund IRA account' listed helow with acce"' to 24 different mutual fund comranies and M&gt;me
of the hesl portfolio manager.; in the muntry.

3/24/IM

--

MOBILE
HOME PARK

Computer Service

These cool-headed professionals could
help lead you to a rosy future.

-·

52. 991!11111 18+

~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,/.

Financial Consulk:lnts Stuan GoldWerry, siM, Highland,
Heidi Xhenz, Colhy Finley and Jill Wilucky

Taka the pain out of
palnlln1. Let us do It for
you. Vary reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Afler6 p.m.
614-985.111.80

I

~

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Interior &amp;
Exterior

·-·· - ··-

992·6344
Dine-In or Carry-Out

~

(Speclllze In driveway
spreadhig)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
-

(ACI'OIIIroon John1011's VIdeo)

I

WICKS
HAULING

91271'95 ttl .

THE REC ROOM
PIZZA • ARCADE

~'I

(lime Stone Low Rates)

12 Guage
Factory Choke Only
lashan ~ulltllng

•--

•

.......

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

1

Philip and Kim Tromm of Cali·
fornia, Ky. are announcing the
birth of a son, Ryan James Aug
31.
•
.
The infant weighed nine
pounds, seven ounces. Paternal
grandparents are Albert and Mar·
jorie Tromm of Rutland, and the
maternal grandparents are Dorotpy
and Jim Haas, Fort Thomas, Ky

Public Notice

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

1

Announces birth

RECOGNIZED • Trophies 111111 t·shlrts were presented to from
the left, Alexa Venoy, Joslab Barkm8n, Mlcbael Ball, Jessica Asbley and Betb Hysell In recognition of tbelr bavlng memorized
books of the Old Testament. Milking tbe presentation wu Angela
Hall their Sunday sc:bool teacher at tbe Victory Baptist Cburcb,
MlddleporL

\

Esllib. Over 25 Years
Sales, Service, Parte
&amp; Installation

RYAN TROMM

'W~

.;

DIN'S WATER
REFINING INC.

LIKE

~

"'~'llk

614·742·2138

..

FREE
ESTIMATES

Finances have you in
a cold sweat?

':----,..

Forked Run
Sportsman's Club
Every Sundar
Starting
Septentbtr 1Olh
8:30 ant to
11:30 am

. SAYRE TRUCKING

Onlr •6.99

)

3·D ARCHERY
SHOOT

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR
HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

Water
Treatment
~ Equipment

Everyone
Welcome

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic

TRI-STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate 1n a free. no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TOS, Mineral Hardnaoo,_lron, PH.
Please call RainSoft at 992-4472 or 1-1100-606·3313 .
to set u our. free water anal sis. 10/SIIIn

systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512

II&amp;UONABLI.R.U'.U

8l3l1ln

~

.. ,1
1

Forked Run •· "
Sportsman Club , ,
Gun Shoot
·. ~
Starting Sept. 17 ; •

I p .m .

BIB ROOnNI aad
COIS,.RUC7101

(614) 992-5041
Residential • Commercial • Industrial

QUALITY WINDOW S'YSTEMS

~
,.

"·

·u
I"
'"

n

~olid Vinyl

Replacement
Windows

ONE CAU DO.UIT AJ.L
•Preasure
•Plumbing
•Tile
Cleaning
-carpentry
oCerpet
•Roofing
•Painting
•Drywall
-Gutters
.Cabinets
oMeaonry
•Eleetrlcal
•Siding
•Deeka
We Have Emergency Servlcea
1 Days A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all wort&lt; gu...nteed.
"Fall Specials" Leav• cleaned up and hauled
away. Moat yarda $49.00
Gutters cleaned end eereaned,
most 1 atory homaa, $4! '0.
OHIO - WEST VIRGINIA - KEN 1uCKY 1!W1 mo.

'

Factory Choke ~
guns only.
• Will shoot through
,
March '96

--------------r----------------- '-------------....;,---,.1
r

~

8l4llin

''t

P.O. Box 587

DU.aribuled by

&gt;'

Wednesday Nile : ~
5:30p.m. ' ..' .

J.D. Drilling Company

• ,,Jr

'

~
"
· ~

Every

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT

I

We have the
best window
and the best
price

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

. )

Princess Video, Gallipolis, OhiQ.
Has Received 3HJ Adult New Re-• ·
: teased Topes, 614-446-2501 .

LIVE GtALSI

'

CALL NOW!

1·900-378·2500 Ext 8325.
S3.W !Min. Must Be 18 Yr~
Serv·U (819) 645-843&gt;1. .

•·!t

REDUCE sale and lasl wilh Go'· o.&gt;
Beselablllll and E·VAP diuretic.•.,
Avaitabla Frulh Pharmacy, Mid·
depclft

.,

;

I

�October 16, 1995

'
Pomeroy • Middleport,
Ohio

.Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER
~untry I ne dane ng every Wed
Misd.ay n ght a Pomeroy Eagles
l$pm beg nners 7pm advanced
i~ m coup les more nlo mat on
Si 4 742 t068

ALZHEIMERS PATIENT S cated
ftw n p vate home Expe enced
304 76 2 2544

cau

Giveaway

40
~

lema e cats I H ma layan 1 t 9

q,. su ped

t&gt;otn spayed 304 67 5

,&lt;l93

Due To Trem enoous Growth We
Are Cu~ren!ly Seektng To Partne r
Wth
t SOUALITY
OWNER OPE RATORS
CONSISTE NCY GOOD$
I 1 000 SIGN ON BONU S
We W II Be In Th e Area !HIA
lNG ) The Week Of 10116 95 Or
Stop B)' Our Open House On 101

19 95
CHEMICAl LEAMAN
CHARLESTON WV TERMINAL
BCO .?58 58 2 Tf. AM NAL

11034

es To Good Homes W 1
OR 304 272 2264
Go oel A aoo 1 Dog s 6 14
367 7300
Ea n $1000s weekly stutl ng en
J~upp
M a~e

ve ooes at home Be vo u boss
Sta

now No eKp

I

ee

su ppl es

no
o obi gat on Send S A S E
o P estge Un t #L P O Box
t95609

Wn-er

Sprngs

Fl

327 19

Wtll Do lnter~or Exter or Pam! ng
Reasonable Rates Expenenced
Relerences For Free Esumates
Call 614 245-5755

We Buy Farms And Acreage 20
Acres And larger No l tmt t 614
775 9 173

FINANCIAL

RENTALS

210

Business
Opportunity

LUMBER COSTS UP ?" Steel
bu 1ld ngs as low as $3 00 sq foot
Buy fa ctory d reel from Nat anal
Manu lac u er as author zed deal
e Will tram Some Markets tak
en 303 759 3200 e1tt 2200
NOTICE!
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommen ds that you do bus
ness w lh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
rna I untl yo u have 1nvest gated
the oller ng

Ea n tnousanas stuff ng envet

Ba oara Sn h At 2 Box 956 Pt
Ea n up to$ 000 weekly Stull ng
envelopes at home S!art now no
e xpe enc e free supples nlor
mat on no obi gat on Send sell
add essed stampe d enve ope 10
F xpress Dept 3S 100 E Wh te
sTone Blvd Su te 148 34 5 Cedar
Parli TX 76613

Lo cal Route For Sale Earn B1g $
Jo1nmg Our In!! Fam11y 01 Ven
dors Call Tod ay 1 800 350
VEND
REAL ESTATE

410 Houses lor Rent
2 Bedroom Basement Gall po ls
C ty L mils $375 /Mo n h Depos t
&amp; Relerences No Pets 6 4 446
0 796 Leave Message

2 Bedrooms Altached Garage
$395/Mo Relerence &amp; Depos t
No Pets 614 446 1358

1f You Are Look ng Fo A Oualty
Home Large House N1ce S1ze
Rooms Eat In Kttchen Ret Ice &amp;
Water In Door Double Oven In
S10ve N1ce Cupboards laund y
Room 0 R F R l R Lots 01
Closets &amp; StQrage Mu st See To
Apprec ate 3 Or 4 Bedrooms
Two Bathrooms 011 Stree t Park
ng Ser•ous lnqu res Please
$600 IMO Depo s 1 &amp; Referen ces
Co mplelely Insulated C A 6 14
446 4559 No Pets
In Pomeroy two bedr oom hard
wood lloors new Window s gas
hea t front and back yard Sen or
Ci tizen d1scoun1 phone 614 992
2304

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper ts subject to
the Federal Fatr Housing Act
ol1969 wh ch makes 1tlllegal
to a!Nertlse Many preference
I mttatlon or d1scnm•nat10n
based on race color religion
sex familial status or naflonal
ongln or any lntenttoA to
make any such preference
limitation or chscnmlna!lon •

S Po me oy • c n l y ca I
5 4 992 5634 to ID

Ml

r ound set ol k.eys V negar
C" reel v c n t~ call 614 992 2155
:Jetween Sam Spm

70
GallipoliS

&amp;

VICinity

All Ya d Sales Must Be Pad In
flcvance DE ADLINE 2 DO p m
11e day be o e the ad s o un
Sunday ed ton 2 00 p m F day
Mo r aay ed 1on 10
am Sal
J day

oo

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VICinity
All Y::~rd Sales Must Be Pad In
o\dvance Deadline 1 OOpm he
day Oelore the ad s to run Sun
day ed 1on 1 OOom Fr day Mon
dayecton 1000am Satuday

BO
R ck Pearson Auc t on Company
full t me au ct oneer complele
auct on
serv ce
l cense d
#66 Oh o &amp; West V rg n a 304
713 5785 Or 304 773-5447

90

Wanted to Buy

Needed to do De lver es paper
wo " ana ma het ng 13k per year
plu s oener sand company veh
cle mus t be espons ble w II 10
ake 24hr serv ce ca I opportun ty
o grow With company Send re,
sume to PO Box 55 Pt Pleasant
WV 25550 Last day lor appl ca
ons 102095
No Exper ence Necessary I
To $900 Weekly 1Po1ent al
cess ng Mortgage Relunds
Hours Call !909) 715 2300
782 (24 Hou rs)

$500
Pro
Own
Ext

On Duly Med cal S1a1e Tes ted
Nursmg Ass stants Needed lm
med ately In Galhpohs Area Full
0 Part T me $7 50 Pe r Hour
W th Benel1 s CaU Sandy Or Deb
bl e 1 800 506 8773
OUTSIDE SALES
We are expand ng and loa~ ng lor
ene get c enthus ast c and mol
vaTed nd v duals to JO n the exc t
ng sale s team at Cellula rONE
We ollet
Compehtlve sa lary plus com
m1ss•on monthly car allowance
complete bcnelts package n
ctud ng aental mmed ate open
ngs Ma I drop orr or fax (61 4
594 4049) to 1100 Eas t Sta te
Street Att1ens Oh o 45 70 AI
Tent on -M t Bryan Butler No
pt1one cal s please
Po s 1 on Ava lab e Fo Early In
terve nt on Pel m nary Serv ces
Coo d nator App cant s Should
Ha11e A Bachelors And Creden
1 als In Educat on Spec•al Educa
1 on Early Ch dhood Educat on
Nurs ng Soc al W01k Or Other
Related F eld Call Gal a County
Local Schools V14 446 7917 For
lnlormat on App11cat on Dead I ne
October 18 1995
POSTAL JOBS
St art $12 08 hr For exam and ap
pi ca l on nfo cat 2t9 769 6301
ext Wo/5&lt;18 9a 1 9pn Sur Fr

Use d lu n lure ant ques one
p ece or comple e estates Osb y
Ma rl n 614 992 7441
Wan tea To Buy Junk Aut os Any
Cond 1 on 614 38 8 9062 61 o1
446 PA.R r
Wamed l o Buy Junk. Autos W lh
Or W thou! Mota s Ca ll La y
LIVely 61 4 388 9303
Wanted l o Buy l tie T k.es Toys
6 4 245-5887
Wanted To Buy Used Mob le
Home 6144460175
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

AID ASSOCIATKJN
FOR LUTHERANS
Is Look ng For A Ca ee M nded
lnd v dua l To P 011 de F nanc al
Se 11 ces And F ate na l Bene! ts
In The Ga ll po l s A ea STart ng
Inco me Uo To $26K Comp lete
Tra n ng A'ld Ful l Ben e It Pa ck
age Seno Resun e To AAL 811t
T mberlodge T a Day on OH
-15458 0 Co:J I 5 13 433 7706
Collect)

AVON PO SITI ONS NOW OPE N
S11:les$8 $1'1 H Fw PanTme
No Doo lo Ooo Benelt 1 800
378 3020 nd S stRep
AVON HOLIDAY SAL ES
[arn $8 $15 H at Wo II Home
[) scounrs No ln,.en o f o Door
door Jnd!Rep \ 800 742 4738
AVON EA RN $$$ at nom e at
work AI a eas 304 88 2 26 45 1
800 992 6356 IN[)IRE P
Babys tter Needed Fo 3 Year
Old Must Have Own T anspo ta
ton 61 4 245-5006
Counselor !The ap sl
An Outpal ent Chern cal Depend
ency Ag ency Is Seell. ng A
ee OC L ISW LSW Ot D1het
Ou a I ed Per son To P 01 de AI
coh o And Omer Drug Counsel
ng Know edge And E ~per ence
Requ red Bache lors Degree M n
1mu m Masters Preferred Send
Resume By October 18 1995 To
FACTS 1770 Jackson P ke B d
wei OH 456 4 EOE M!FI H

PT EMPLOYEES NEEDED
Secur ty Guard Matu e expe n
ence a plus 1keto wok. w1youth
Skate Man tor Weekends re
qu red
Conce ss on C erk. Weekenos re
qu red e•per ence a pius
Ho usekeep ng A de schedu e
llexble
Send resumes and leue ol nter
est o Be nd A ea Commun y
Cente Box 206 New Haven WV
25265
RNs lPNs HHA
New concepts ol Care tnc a
Mar ella based Med care Cen
ted home health agency s seek
ng qua I ed personnel tor hOme
hea Th ass gnments n the r new
oil ce n A !hens Pomeroy and
Ne sonv lie We orre compet t ve
star ng wage healrh lie d sab 1
ty den al and pharmacy n
surance pad malp ac11ce pad
hoi days s ck leave bond ng un
lorms t ra n sporta~on allowance
and pad vacauon Career m1nded
persons encourage1 to apply
E 0 E Call 1 BOO 201 1389 ask
for An ta or Cathy to arrange lor
nterv ew

180

Wanted To Do

General Ma ntenance Pamttng
Yard WorK WindOWS Wash&amp;d
Gurters Cleaned l1ght Haul ng
Cammer cal Res1dent al Sieve
614 446 8861

Ttlls newspaper will not
knowUngly accept
aoventsements ror real --····- ·•
which 1s In v olat1on of the law
OUr reaelers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings

advenlsed m th s newspaper
are available on an equal

opponunlty basis

310

Homes for Sale

3 Bedroom Br 1ck In Gallipolis
laundry Ro om Full Basement
Carport Storage Room Corner
Lot In Ou et Neighborhood lm
modrate Possess1on 614 446
9523 614 446 14413 614 446
1171 614 446 4~5
3bed ro oms (I Master) 2b aths
base me n! sc ree ned 1n po rch/
breezeway !am ly room double
garage 12 54acres 304 E75
4575

Profess onal Tree Serv1ce Com
plete Tree Care Bucket Truck
Serv1ce SO Ft Reach Stump R&amp;
moval
Free Esttma tesl In
surance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
tee Call And Savel No Tree Too
B g 0 Too Small I B dwell Ohto
614 368 9643 614&gt;367 7010
Rub &amp; Scrub Cleantng Serv1 ce
dust ng mopp1ng wrndows and
more Complete servtce or louch
ups References on request call
le rr at 614 992 4232 or 614
992 4451

bedroom cottage
614 992 5858

n Pt Pleasant

Rodney 3 Bedrooms Gas Heat
Central A1 $3501Mo Deposl\
Reference Ca l l After 4 00 614
6~3 2916
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Bedroom 1 M e F om Holzer s
$300 /Mo Plu s Depo s t B dwell
School 0 su ct 6 t4 446 7321 AI
ler630PM
2 Bedroom Wa ll To Wall Carpet
614 446 2003 614 446 1409
2 Tra ter s For Rent Beaut lu R 11
erVew AC fit4 44 1-D181
3 Bedroom 2 Sto1y Crown C ty
Area $275/Mo Plus Oepos t 614
256 6403
N1ce

2 bed oom mob1le home n

M1dd!epor~ Oh

Beau t lui 3 Year 0 d log H«)me In
Charola s lake Lake Prrve leges
Mu st See' P r~ce $169 900 614
446 6800
Three bedroom home tn country
Wh tes H111 Ad Rutland one bath
n ground pool 614 992 5067
320

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1972 14x64 new carpel AJC gas
heat very good cond 1 on $3900
lrm 61499 2 6332
1Q76 12x60 house tra fer all new
ms1de aU electr c 304 6 75 1429
1977 12,;65 Federal 3br ask.mg
$6500 304 S7S.tQS4
1986 Hx70 Nashau house trarler
gas 2bedroom la rg e bath
$13 000 304 675 1429
1968 20edroom m nor remodeled
sell tor payoll 3D4 675 6978 be
tore 2pm
2acres 1984 Spnngb ook mob le
home 3ml At 2 N on At 62 304
675 6986
Excell en t Cond ton 1971 12x 65
Etcona Mob11e Home w th 4x8
Sl1de Out AIC New Gas HeaTer
Wa te r Heate1 Carpet Washer
Dryer lnctuaed 614 245 1216
Aller 5 PM
Goes To H ghes t Olfer 198
Fa11mom Bayv1 ew 14x70 3 Bed
rooms CIA Elec Call Amer can
General F1nance 614 4&lt;16 41 3
Can Stay On lot
New 1996 14x70 ncludes sk r1
ng steps blocks one year
homeowners msurance and s x
months FREE tot ent Only $1025
down and $207 17 per monlh Call
1 BOO B37 3236
350 Lots

&amp;

Two Bed room $250/Mo Plus Ul~
References Re
qu red Rt 21 8 Aher 6 PM 614
983 4007

11 es Oepos11

440

Apartments

t and 2 bedroom apartments fur

n shed and unlu n shed secur y
depos 1 requ red no pet s 614
992 2218

1 BR API In Gall po ls Wa e
F urn shed Gas Pad No Pets
$280 Mo &amp; Depos t 6 14 446
2800
1bedroom lu rushed uti I es pa d
$200 mo pus $10 0 depos t Also
2bedroom !u n shed apt Two re
fr gerator s $25 8. $40 304 675
6512
2 Bedloom Ap artmen t Trash
Water Sewage Pad $295 /Mo +Depos t 614 446 2481

Four lots near Ractne approx 1
112 acres each starlmg at $5000
call 614-949 2025

lol For Sale Below Galltpohs
0 45 Acre 20.:26 Bu fdmg Elec
tr c Waler SeptiC Tank Also Ca
ble TV Ava lable 7 Mtles From
Galltpolts Nrce Area $12 500
Sun Valley Nursery School
Chlldcare M·f 6am 530pm Ages , 614 446 2528
2 K Young School Aga Dur1ng
Scentc Va lley A pp le Grove
Summer 3 Days per Week M101
mum 6"4 446 3657
beau!lful 2ac lois publtc water
- - - - - - - - - - - .1 ClydeBowenJr 304 576 2336

Ren1 l ease Wa ehouse Space
Al so Baal Or Veh cle Sto age In
Ga I pols 304 675 3414 A.fter 6
PM
MERCHANDISE
Household
Goods
Appl anc es
Recond 1 oned
Washers Dryers Ranges Aelrt
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French C Ty Maytag 614 446
7795

+- OeposH
Includes Water And G&lt;J rbagc No
Pets 614 388 6273

2bdrm apts tota electr c ap
pi ances turn shed laundry oom
lac lites close to scnool 1n town
Appl ca t on s ava lable at V Iage
Green Apts tt4 9 o call 614 99 2
3711 EOH
t AdJacent to R o Grande
614 245 5858 or 614
2Rooms Pu s Bath l a layelle
Mall NoKtchen'A!Utltespad
S175 00 Momtt Depos 1 Requ red
7733
3 Room 8 4 Rooms Apar 1ments
Fo Rent 91 Ceoar Street Galt
pols NOPET$161 43881100
BEAUTIFU L APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICE S AT JACKSON
E STATES 52 We stwood Dr ve
from $2 26 to $291 Wa lk to shop
&amp; move s Call 614 446 2568
Equal Hous ng Oppor tun ty
Beech St M dd eport 1 &amp; 2bea
rooms ut 1t1t1es pad Oepos t &amp;
references 304 882 2566
Brooks de Apartments Wa sher
Dryer Hook up 1 B edroom
Equ pped W th Relr gerator &amp;
Sto11e $2571 Mo + Oepos 1 614
446 2959

Car pe t V nyl In Stock $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Patterns 01 K tctlen Car
pet I n Stock 011e r 35 Patte ns
V ny l In S ock Mollohan Car p~ts
614 446 7444
G E Washer ! Dryer Wh te Both
He avy Duty Good Cond ton
$300 Ke nmore Can1s1er Vac
cuum Cleaner $75 Entertainment
Cen1er 50 W X16 D X6S H
Holds Up To 25 TV Dark Wood
$50 Can Be Seen After 1 PM At
57 Buhl Morton Road Apartmenl
#202 Gall pols 614 441 1762
GOOD USE D APPLIANCES
Washe rs drye s re lr 9erators
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
V neSt eet Call614 446 7398
1 800 499 3499
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Compte e home !urn sh ngs
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m les out Bula v lie P ke
Free Deh11ery

Queen S1ze Waterbed Uuror
Cabmen Waveless Mauress
Sol1d Wood Frame $225 61~
446 0727

640

Relr gerators Stoves Washers
An a D yers AU Recond1110ned
And Gau rameedl S1 00 And Up
W uDelver 614 669 6441

Hay

&amp;

Gram

Hay large tlales $10ea 304 6 5
1365

Sam Somerville s regular Army
camouflage by Sandyv lie Pos t
011 ce noon 6pm Fr Sun 304
273 5655 (Camoullage msulated
coveralls $30)

Square bales $1 $2 Round bale•
$1 5ea 304 675 3960

St dtng glass door $150 Wood
doo r 2 8 6 8 &amp; flame $25 Child
play house pl)fwood $1 SO 304
675 6132

710

TRANSPORTATION

85 Mercur y Couga r bad motor
S300 OBO w 1 traae lor good
black powder r t e cal 614 742
150 7 after Spm

Speed Queen washe• G1bson re
lngerator &amp; 14ft Jotmboa t 304
675 6574

87 Beret a front end wrecked
SSOO ltrm call 614 247 4793 alter
Bpm

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upnght Ron Evans Enterpr ses 1974 Monte Carla 305
Jackson Oh1o 1 800 537 9528
$850 OBO 614 256 1368
Super s ngle s tze waterbed ex
cellent condtl on sold wood
frame and headboard askmg
$250 radar and laser detector
$75 radar detector $50 black
outs any Beretta 89 and up $20
614 985 4216 or 614 985 4227

Used t&lt;ltchen Cabtnets W11h
Orshwasher &amp; Range Etc $1 000
Bathroom Van1ty WIIQ, Marble
Top$150 614 3670451
WHITES METAL DETECTORS
Ron Alit son 1210 Second Ave
nue Galllpol s Ohto 614 446
4336
550

Building
Supplies

Block brtck sewer p1pes w nd
ows lintels etc Claude W nters
A10 Grande OH Call 614 245
5121
Metal Roofing &amp; Std ng Geo Tex
hie Fabr~c Fo Dnveways &amp; Etc
Typar For House Cover 01 Tem
pora r y Sto1age Cover Al11ze r
Farm Supply 614 245-5193

560

Auto

1076 Cuttass New T res $350
1966 Yugo Runs $400 Both Need
SomeWok 6144462119 614
245 9060
1978 Porche ResTore s Dreom
New Pa 1nt $ 1 750 5 14 256 67 0

a

1979 Chevy M&lt;JI bu lour door v
6 automauc 741'. m11 es new 1 es
and exhaust other parts runs
good cheap $ 800 614 992 3676
1

19 71 Chevy sho rt wh ee base
350 auto lots of new parts
$11 DBO 3046 756755

•¥AK7643
• 6 5
eA J s 5 4

4 Ford panel truck 460 Ford
tor automat c 1 ansm•ss on 2
112 ton chassy 15 bo• beh1nd
seats $1600 Call 614 992 2143
or 614 992 6373 ask lor M chael

HA1J£ '-rW

~TICED (ATaY

l-10\IJ RJ..mCIAt.J'i ARe

1990 Dodge Dakota V 6 au
toma c low m les clean 614
985 4222 berween 8 OOam
5 OOpm

VJM.rr m

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
01 ve St Gall pol s New &amp; Used
!urn lure heaters We stern &amp;
Work boots 6 14 446 3159
VI RA FURNITURE
61 4 446 3158
Oualty Household Furntture And
App ances Great Deal s On
Ca sh And Carry RENT 2 OWN
And Layoway Also Ava able
Free Del vert W 1h n 25 M 1es
Wh1r pool Washer $95 Match ng
Dryer $95 Wh rl poo Washer
Newer Model $150 Whirlpool
Wa sher $205 1 Year Warranty
Fr ost Free Relr gerator $1 SO
Frv s Free Refr igerat or $165
Harves t Gllld Electnc Range 30
Inch $95 Eteclnc Range Frtgt
dare $95 Wood burner Good
Cond1110n $150 Po table Washer
Wh rlpool $95 Ponable Dryer
Wh rlpool S95 Skagijs Appllanc
es 76 Vne Stree1 Galhpo l1s 614
446 7398 I 800 499 3499
520

Sporting

A&lt;JIJCIPLe

530

Antiques

Buy or sej l R1ver ne Ani ques
11 24 E Ma n Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 DO
am to 600 pm Sunday 10010
6 00 p m 614 992 2526
540

SOUTH

84
•QJI098
+A K 4 3
eQ 3 2

1991 Chevy S 10 Blazer Tahoe
Package Fully l oaded 614 4146
6692

1 QQ3 S 10 Tahoe 5 Speed AC
Excellent Cond 1 on $9 000 OBO
6 4 446 65B7

South

95 F150 10~ $15 750 614 949
3228
730

Vans

&amp;

1982 Subu rban 0 esel Good
Shape 1987 Ford Aerostar XlT
1968 H~unaa 1 Excel 19 85 Cad 1
lac DeV1IIe Call For Pr ce 614
.4 41 1151 614 245 5592 Alt er 5
P:M

AKC German Shepard pupp es
304 675 6639
AKC Pomeraman PlJpp1es StiO ts
Wo r med 614 446 8253 CFA
H malayan Ktnen Shols Wormed
6 14 446 9760
AKC Reg1s1ered Cocker Span el
Puppy S50 614 441 1417
AKC Regtslered Cocker Span el
Pupp1es $150 614 379 2728

GOT A BRAND-NEW
LITTER OF PUPPIES

19 79 4x4 Blazer $1 200 614
379-2720 AFTER HM

N ce la~r steer black and wh te
werght 600 fbs brok e to lea d
S700 OBO 6 14 667 6329
Reg sterad Shetland Sheepdog
[Shelt1e) pups sable &amp; wh11e
$250 each No Checks 614 992
2607
Stud Serv ... e For Boston Terrter
$50 AKC YorkShire Terr er 1
Year Old Fo r Sale 61~ 446 0423
'570

Musical
Instruments

For Sale Console P ano Wanted
Aespons ble Party To Make Low
Monthly Payments On P ano See
Local~ Call 1 BOO 268 62 1B
Lowrey Electr c Organ W1th Stool
$t50 614 379 2720 AFTER 6
~M

580

Fruits

15x30 Above Ground Poof 2
Years Old Patd $3 206 W1ll Sell
For $1 00 Call Amertcan Gener
aiFna e 6144464113

PEANUTS
OKA'dLL ADMIT II

Ri6i-IT TROOPS
8EFORE WE START ARE
T~ERE AN!( QUESTIONS;
ALL

SEten At Ga!tpOIS Da1ly Tnbune
8 25 Th rd Avenu e Ga ll pohs
OhiO
1993 Ford Aeroslar XLT Entend
ed van 40 OOOm1 A 1 cond

IF

Commodore 6-4 compuler disk
dr ve and games 304 S75 4392
Concrete &amp; Pia stre Septrc Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jackson OH
1 600 53 7 9528
Cookware
Reh re d 0 nner Party lady Has
Some Beaut1lul 17 Pc 1 Ply Sur
g~tal Stamless Waterless Sets
Not $1 200 00
Ooly
$39900
Supples llm1ted
Call Am e 1 800 766 8110

Exerc1se Machme $125 &amp;14
388 8293

WE I-lAD i-IORSE$

WE COULD 6AI.I.OP

61 0 Farm Equipment
1990 M1tsub1Sh1 model MT210D
21hp dtesel 4 wheel drtve low
hours Outck detach loader w/ 1
lever contro l Backhoe w/ 13
bucket hyd angle 6 blade for
loader ongmal cost $20 500 sel
for $13 900 Keefe! s Servtce
Cen1er S1 R1 87 304 895-3874

D scaunt farm !rector parts for
Massey Ford IH &amp; olhers
S1der s Equ1pmen1 Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800
277 3917
Ford 800 tractor wtth loader and
7 scraper blade e~tcellen t cond1
uon $3800 hrm 614 6332
JD 450 C Dozer ROP W1nch 6
Wa1 &amp; 1976 tnt TracTor &amp; Cole
man EA 5000 Watt Generator
196Q Ton 1/2 Ford Tolar 2S 000
Pounds Lowboy 614 446 8044
Late Model New Idea Corn P1ck
er Good Cond1t1on 614 3889747
POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30 X40 XQ Pamled Steel S1des
Galvaume Steel Roo! 15 x8" Steel
Slider 3 Man Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Bu ders 1
BOO 352 1045
Salo Tractor Brush Hog Graler
Blade Culltvators. 614 446 0325
Wanted Small M lk Cooler Tank
Under 150 Gallons Must Be In
Good Condtt on 614 965 t922
614 965 1266
630

Livestock

Registered Angus buill lrom 7 24
months old Reasonably prtced
upon 1nspectton E14 742-3033
Regt51&amp;1ed Pure B cod Full Blood
&amp; Polled LliT'(luS n Canle For Sale
614 446 8081

Pass
All pass

at most one spade East s
space-conswrung nuse to five
made 1t tmposs1ble for North
South to continue wtth a sc1entific
~sequc!nc,e. However, after South had

1d;;~bli~a

lack of slam mterest wtth hiS
}•
and North had still cue b1d SIX
clubs, North should have settled for SIX

Pf!fONfiJ-1.

~

/

A~t

You Art..f ro c.oNCENnAre
ON YOU~ wO~tiC7

"

- MY

Z 28

MINI&gt;

A f,.OT

~

'
Om
-3

IJI!!.

&gt;~

l!l"'

1i

FOitTVN ATfL y F ®
IT'S TOO yJf~IC TO ~ ~
GO VtiY FAit{
§

198 7 Buck Century LTD C ean
low M leage Days 614 446
6899 Evenongs 614 446 3939

i

n boat w/hvewe I
Ev onnJde motor pus trol hng
sea ts and motor

0

1987 Chrysler 5th Avenu e V 8 ~~~:;!~~~~,!!~--­
Au1omatc Full Power Extra Ntc&amp; I'
Cond uon 614 256-666 7
Auto Parts &amp;

LOSER
...BORN
Af\,
':Ay

l!i;;;i;;;;;;:;A~c;7icji;e;;s:;sor;-;ri'Z!e;-sro;;;;;;

Tf\~N'I'l£

DO YOJ f.\1&gt;-VE t... F£W

hearts
To play the club su1t for no losers,
had to find West wtth a smgleton
doubleton king or East With a sm
fallotron mne, smgleton 10 or doubleton
one to try?
After ruffing the opemng spade lead
South gambled Immediately playmg off
h1s two top d1amonds whew'
Declarer ruffed a diamond h1gh tn the
dummy ptayed a trump to hand ruffed
last diamond m the dummy and re
!turned to hand wtth a trump
It appeared that East had started
wtth seven spades (for h1s five spade
b1dl, one heart, four d1amonds and
therefore, one club As a smgleton mne
or 10 was twice as likely as a smgleton
king, South led the club queen from h1s
king ace 10 Declarer returned
hand wtth a trump led a club and fi
dummy's etght - success'

TOSP~ 7

1994 Topaz GS exc cond under
warranty ask1ng payoff or take
over paymer~ls 614 742 3074
Park Avenue 1986 Runs like A
Top Good Cond lion lnstde And
Ou1 152 000 M les S1 600 614
379 2932
720

Trucks for Sale

'

1976 Ford Turck F 700 Standard
5 Speed 2 Wheel Axle Ca ll
Even~nos 614 379 2B58 614
245 9165
1983 Ford Ranger 2wd long bed
red good work lruck $1650 614
843 5453

s-

by luis Campos
Celebrty Cipher cryptogram5 are created Irom quola ttons Dy tamous people pasl and present
Eadllet1er 1n the crpner standS IOf another Today s c/116 f. equs.IS u

K

H DYL
AD

NC

UACCJL

N AD N

0

HEUA

AD

AORRX

K

UACKUL

ucc0

K H

R R X

T L

R R X

K

ZKOO

K H

TL

RSLNNX

HKYL

U 0 N

N XJ C P
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Food ts an tmportanl part of
LebowiiZ

a balanced dtel '

-Fran

..\ILY

PIULII

0 Rearrange
leHers of
Krombled words
low

\

four
fo form lour

words

PACSEE

PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS IN

THESE SQUARES

1n

a hotel and hotel serv1ce AT

HOME

STRI&lt;f ABLOWN n£ W\R Qlj

make lhe relaiM&gt;nshtp work Mall $2 75 to who ts a lnfle 1ealous of you mtghl ••peel
Malchmaker, c/o lhts newspaper P 0 1you to make a soctal booboo today
Box 1758 Munay Hill Statton New Vorl&lt; 10ulsmart thiS mdtvldual by putt1ng on a

ASTRO·ORAPH

Carl s Home Matntenance vmy
Sldtng roofmg e1ttenor pa 1nttng
power washtng Free Esttmales
614 992 4451
Ron s TV Serv1ce spec ahztng '"
Zen1th also serv1c1ng most olhel
brands House ca lls 1 BOO 797
0015 WV304 576 2398

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

e

Roohng and guuers commerc al
and resld&amp;nhal m1nor repa 1rs 35
years expenence B&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 992 5041
;

&amp;

'

Heating

1988 N ssan Auta &amp; At r 1986
Jeep PU 4x4 1988 Dodge Dako
840 Electrical and
1a 19B7 Dodge Doko1o Auto Atr
1986 Ford ••• Pu 1987 Chev
Refrigeration
10 Blazer 1983 Chev S 10 Blaz
er 1987 Ford Bronco II 1987
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
Ford Ranger 4x4 1969 Chev S
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
10 PU 1990 M tsubtsht PU 1989 Heat Pumps Atr Condlllonmg If
Ford lanat PU 1990 Ford Ranger You Don I Call Us We Both Lose!
PU 1963 GI.1C PU B&amp;D Au1o Free Es10ma1es 1 600 267-41308
Sales 4 Utles N 01 Holzer Hwy I6:::1_4_44':"6.;.-6.:.308:.:.::.:WV::.:...::00:29::4::5:__ _
160 614-.446-6865
Res1denttal or commercial w~rl ng
1990 Chevy S1lverado hfgh mtles new aerv1ce or repa~rs Master u
lois of opttons good condtiiOn censecJ electrtetan Rtdenour
.$::5.::700:.::.:.6':.:'..:99::::.2_4_":.:'..:even.::::.::.'n:.o•::_-I; Eioctrlcal WV000306 304 675
1786

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Those who travel frequently w111 demand home atmo

6323

Freeman 1 Healing And Coohng
lnsla!lauon And SerVICe EPA
Cernfied Resident1af Commercial
614 258 181t

lli.-1--..1..--J.-

sphere

C&amp;C General Home Mam
1enence Pamt ng v nyl s dmg
carpentry doors w ndows ba ths
mobile home repatr and rT'Ore For
free eshmate ca I Chet 614 992

Plumbillg

~ookad

angrily
40 Phaae
41 ~lghl-leather
42 Examinee
45 Greaay
48 Wide ahoe
alza
50 Label

Shrank - Roomy - Knock - Gentle AT HOME

Apphance Parts And Serv1ce AU
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
perrence All Work Guaranteed
Fr ench Ctty Maytag 614 446
7795

820

39

As a sales rep I ve made observations about people

1993 Chryster lmpenal 27 000m1
mml cond 304 675 4289

1993 Ford Mustang 4 ely auto
tots of op11ons dnver s s de a1r
bag 25 000 m tes vgc $8 000
614 9924111 evenmgs

creature•
35 Fetea
36 ActreaaSidney
38 Japanese
robe

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

PRICES SHOP TI-E CU.SSf£l)S.

I MONDAY

1993 Eagle V sron TSI 40 000
loaded $1 000 OBO
614 256-16 18 614 256 1252

Growe feint
Spanlarda
and
Portugueae
Large aea

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

1-fGH

M les

34

8

1-==----------

1993 Bu1ck Regal Cus tom Wh te
Wtlh Red l ntenor 4 Door 36 000
M les
E xcet ent Condition
S12400 614 4461056 Leave
Message

30

PhiUio Alder's book, ' Get Smarter
RY:;&lt;~n,• ' IS ava1lable auto
l~gr·ap11ea upon request, for $14 95
P 0 Box 169, Roslyn Hts NY

r--.....;..__, /o\1 NOTE~

1988 Bu1ck Regal $2 995 1991 New gas tanks one ton truck
Ponuac Lemans $2 395 1g89 wheels ad a1ors floor mats ale
O!ds Cutlass $2 495 1997 Pon t D &amp; A Auto R ptey WV 304 372
Frreb1rd $1 995 1986 Pont r:tero i;3;.:93;:;:.3.:;0r:_1:..::;
800::::.;2:;;7.:3..:9:;:3::;29::;__ __
$2 295 19R9 Ply Acclaom 11 995 790
C alnpers &amp;
19 88 Chrv New Yorker $1 995
1991 Cod B&amp;D Auto Sales 4
Motor Homes
M es N 01 Hozler Hwy 160 614
446 6865
1973 Travaher camper 16ft new
1 res s pare very clean 1ns1de &amp;
1988 Cava 1er l 24 5spd a
OU1 $1 000 304 662 2970
loaded ex tra c te an 304 675
1226 or 304 675 1660 leave 1993 22 Fl Dulchman Travel
Tra er Used Only 6 T mes Fully
message
Self Con1a ned Loaded Sacra
1968 Ford Escort loaded EXP r ce 614 446 9278
Ask1ng S1 595 1987 Plymouth
Caravdle Ask ng $595 1962
SERVICES
Olds 98 Regency Negouable
61 4 379 2935 614 245 5677
610

1992 l mcoln Continental Moon
Root Keyle ss Entry Loaded
$18 000 614 441 0738

fOOd
29

•A

" ~~~~E~::wtth

FARM SUPPLIES
LIVESTOCK

10- Becan
It GoHer S.m16-Miaerablee
20 Lacquer
Ingredient
23 Before thla
time
25 Breakfeat

EaRl

and was rewarded by landing hts
grand slam
North's three spades was a splinter
showmg at least game values m

Turmps Kale &amp; Muslard Charles
McKean Farm 556 Catenary
Road Gal1pohs 614 446 9442.

&amp;

lob

s•

Paul Getty saul, "If you can actual
ly count your money then you are not
really a nch man A problem we would
all hke to have' In bndge if you cannot
count you won t end a wmner But
sometimes you have to work hard to
count South took a nsk on today s

Vegetables

3 metal ot11ce desks 304 675
2722
Bundy Clarrl8t $175 Boys Cloth
mg S1ze 14 16 Both Items In Ex
eel lent Condit ani Pr1ces Negotr
able 614 245 0237

&amp;

7.,

ordmary

B Mualtlana

9 Mlatak. .

J

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 000 Mr es $6 000 Can Be

Over 10 000 TIBOSrTIISSIOn Al so
Pans Clu tch es &amp; Pressure
Plates 614 379 2935

"

By Ph1lhp Alder

1988 Ford 8 onco XLT full stze
toaded auto 121 000 m1les nrce
&amp; clean $7 000 304 773 5379

1988 Berelta Automat e Tit AC
Cru1se 73 000 Miles $3 800 Hu
md1~er $40 614 446 0924

grass
5 Ktte stabilizer
6 Sea creatures
7 Oul of the

I!

1987 Fo rd Converston 302
Loaded! Extra N ce $3 595 1985
N ssan PU 4x 4 New Eng ne
$2 495 6 4 446-8158

Budget Tran sm ss ons Used &amp;
Rebu1lt All Type s Access ble To

un~a

37 MD chart
5 --fault
40 Rainy
(overmuch)
41 ~opalded
8 Seta
43 Shade of
12--tlme
brown
(never)
44 Grain atorers
1311aheve
46 Ac1reaa Weal
14 011 ••porter
47 ~otlon
15 Musical key
lngredlenl
17 Shudder of
49 Flyers
tear
51 Actor
18 Timber trae
Richard 19 Run away to
52 Nothing
marry
53 Dill seed
21 Football coach 54 EKislence
- Parseghlan 55 UHar
22 Celebrallona
56 Deities
24 Acted as a
guide
DOWN
26- Lingua
Persian Gull
(airline)
emirate
27 the - Comelh
28 Spire ornament 2 Ideal place
3 Inborn
31 Soul (Fr)
4 Kentucky blue
32 S.lza

Risking
the count

OVER
AT OUR
HOUSE

1981 Jeep CJ 7 lberg lass body
4WO $2 500 304 662 3262

1967 Dodge Omno 5 Speed $700
1987 Ford Crown V c $2 500
1984 Palom1no Travel Tra ler
S400 614 367 0106

Pass

WE

4-WDs

1984 Ca11al er S W $ 650 t981
Granada S850 614 245 5523 A!
ler S PM &amp; Weekends

19B7 Chryslet LeBaron G Ts 4
Doo r Automati C l oaded 614
'146 4924 614 446 7992

6•

38
6•

Opemngiead

1982 Suburban 0 esel Good l'--"--'-'-'3.;:.0_4.;:.6_75:..2:.1:..1.;:.8:.__ __
Shape 1987 Ford Ae o Start
XlT 1988 Hyunda 614 441
1151 6142455592Aiter 5 PM

1987 Chevy Astra Van GC
loaded $3 900 6 14 446 9278

North

Obi

West
18
Pass

I¥

_ev_en_•n.;:.g_s_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1989 Ford Bronco lull sze 4spd
1980 Chev r oel Capr ce l oaaed
4~4 ac exc cond $7 000 304
Extra N ce Good Fam ly 0 , Work !6;_7_:5...:5.:.96.:.4....:__ _ _ _ _ __

car $ 1 400 080 6t4 446 6861

a

1 Jell

Vulnerable East West
Dealer South

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Fea
turmg Hydro Bath Julie Webb
Call614 446-0231

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

AIJD WIOJSO 1D
111E ~AMAS

1

He~ '~

Pets for Sale

Goods
Rug er PBS MK II g Mt.A P1stol
Sta nless Steel Two 15 Shot
Mags As New In Box S42S 614
387 9386

IT

HAPPE:I..IE.D 1D

JUST 'Sr/'WIIW Wf-IAT PEa:tE"

EAST
8QJI09873
¥2
•QJ087
810

1lXll&lt; E.t\RI.Y
RETIRE MEJJT

~1-\ATE.VE.R

1993 Ford Splash P ck Up Truck
Load ed l ke New Low Mr les
61 4 25667 53

Autos lor Sale

1986 Camara
61 4 3B8-90B2

Grac ous Jv ng 1 and 2 bedroom l6::7~5:;;6::5.:2:
3.:a:;;lte:;r..::_:;:__ _ _ __
apanments at V llage Manor and
A 1vers 1oe Apartmenls m Mtddle
Electnc Wheelcha~rs /Sc ooters
port From S232 S355 Call 614
New ! Used Scooter IWheelchalf
992 5064 Equal Housng Opper
L1fls Stalfway Elevators ltfl
tunl!es
Cha~rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

N1ce 2 or 3 bedroom apartment 1n
Mtddleporl 614 992 5858

mgs

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Spectal Fall Feeder Call Sale 5at
urday October 21S t At 1 PM
Cattle Accepted Start ng At 4
PM Fr1day Also Hau l ng Ava1 1
able 614 592 232 2 614 698
3531

3 Pups 95% Rot We1fer Parents
On Premests StOO Each 6tA
441 0538

Cryslal 27pcs Pad S15 S16 a
g ass sell all lor $150 Call 304

New haven 1br lum1shed apt
depos11 &amp; references 304 882
2566

111T'(lSOid 304 937 2123

1rundle bed 304 675 5713

2 Bedrooms $285tMo

63 Acres Wooded land County
Water &amp; Electr c On Pro perry
S30 ooo 614 256 1412

Cheshtre Two 60~rt55 Lots Ad
101n ng large Garage 1S1 orage
Wtth M mmal Repa1r Septtc And
Water WHh Two Mobt le Hom e
Hook Ups Current Cash Flowt
Greal Rental Investment Or
HomeSite! Redu ced $19 000 614
387 0415

Mo b le homes spaces w th Oh o
Rv er access Ashto n WV
$125 304 576 2683 oetween
6pm !Opm

Tra 11er lor rent n Rutland $2951
mo 6!4 992 6926

A~;reage

Charola1s Lake Beau!llu l 2 25
Acre lot Outel Des able Ne gh
borhood Restncled S24 500 304
273 0136 304 27'3 2940

S eep ng ooms w th coo to. 'l Q
A so tr &lt;J 1e space on r ve A
hook. ups Cal alte 2 00 p m
30&lt;1 7 73 5651 Mason WV

6t4 992 5858

9 room house 4 br newly remo
deled k tchen &amp; balh new carpel
ng &amp; vmyl on lqrge corner lot
$28 000 614 992 6173 al ter 5
614 992 2015

Georges Ponable Sawm 11 don 1
Centenary locauon W th Gas
haul your logs to !he m II rust call
Water Elec tnc Sept c Idea For
304 675 1957
Mottle Home Or New Home
$11 500 614 446 8038
Housecleanng 614 441 0970
Blown lnsulauon
Mtchaet Thackw &amp; Kev n Bled
soe B&amp;B Enlerpnse- blown tnsu
tanon Free esmnate on house
614 742 2503

N ce 3 bedroom house &amp; one

for Rent
5acres 3bedroom complete
k1 tch en ullhty oom &amp; garage
Call Somerv I e Realty 304 6 75
3030 01 304 675 3131

Rooms lor rent week or month
Starling at S1201mo Gall a Holel
614 446 9580

510

2 pure polled Charola1s bulls
JET
AERATION 1.10TORS
Repa red New &amp; Rebu 11 In SIOck
Call Ron Evans 1 800 S37 9528

Furnished

5 room hou se w1gar age Refer
ences &amp; depos 1 You pay ultll! es
304 675 2535

Newly renovated 2bedroom
basement garage References &amp;
depost No pe ts 304 675 5162
I ound small O l ac~ &amp; Nn te dog

450

Rooms

opes Rush $ 1 and se fad
d esscd stam ped envelope to

Pleasant WV 25550

Tw n A1vers Tower now accepting
appl cations lor 1br HUD subs d
zed apt for elder ly and han d
capped EOH 304 675-6679

33 -Abner

34 Complete

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

I
Tuesday

Oct

17 1995

I

NY 1 ot 50
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) You
shouldn I feel as tf you have lo put on a1rs

Class aCt
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) lnslead ol
waltmg lor helping hands lo ass1s1 you

lo Impress olhers loday Stncerity Will be
aU lite windoW dressing you II need

today do whal needS doing on your own
Your self·esleem w1ll be enhanced

SAGmARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) Do nol
use t1m1d tacl1cs loday 1n developmanls
requmng bold slrokes You may have lo

lhrough your 1ndependence
GEMINI (lilly 21-June 20) You can have
a good time loday wherever you are or

~··-want

. . . . . . . . . . .-.. . .,. ..,

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Treal
Jthers kindly loday especially lhose who
have been cons1sle'IIIY good lo you

fi~&gt;wever,

be caralul not to lei your gen-

1 .eroslly exceed yoiX ~mon sen511

In lhe year ahead you mlghl be unusual· I \AQUARIUS (Jan.

:zd.Feb.

111)

A par1ner

generale nega11ve lhoughls by w1shmg
you were somewhere else
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
deny yourseH somelh1ng you really

m"'''""''L

loday but oonversety you musl be
1careful not to fuH111 your desires al
expense of someone else

ly lucky m crea11ve anlerpnses Ullllze .shtp anangement could get a lillie abra- JLEO (July 23-Aug 22) In snualtons lhel
your g1fts and talents tn lhe moil prof· SIVe loday but K you use l8c:l and charm
compel you to use your authonly loday
nable ma11,ner poea1ble
l h can be smoothed over without ruffhng be firm but tau H you lei your workers gel
LIBRA (sept 23-()ct. 23) Have fun and ' fealhers
away whh lhlngs they may repeat the
enjoy yourseW loday but don'l do anum-, jPISCES (Feb
ber on your credit cards Expensive paa· , not get oul

81

~arch 20)

lunas w111 prove leSS enJOYable than free t qulcldy today, but once you sHp Into gear,
events Trying to patch up a broJ&lt;enl 'your accomplishinenls could 1mprass olh·

as

as

romance? The Astro-Graph Malchmake11era
wei yourself,
can help you understand whal to do 101 ,ARIES (March 21-Aprll 111) Someone

I

lsame

You might '
ollen8e later
the slarlmg blocks too VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept 22) Rela• and

ipld'y n COOl today, exceplin seriouS mat
tars H the situatMlrl seems 1mportant

l1down to business 1mmed1ately

OCTOBER16I

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 16, 1995

. .. "" . "'

•.

Benefits not affected by investment income ·
The earnings test limits the ·living in Meigs County as well as Security measured by a year-old;.'
: amount a person can earn wbile :Athens County.
' customer service pledge showed a
! receiving Social Security benefits
:high degree of satisfaction with lbe
News briefs
i and lhus assures that benefits go to
You may be getting a special ·service Social Security provides:;·
We recently bad Ibis quesiion : workers who are actually retired birthday present from Social Secu- Most people rated the service·
from a caller from Meigs County, . from the work force, Benefits are rity.
"good" or "very good." The pledge·:
"I'm setting ready to retire and I'll reduced when earnings exceed cerIf you were born in 1936, 1937, lists six standards of service based:be drawing my money out or my tain exempted amounts. In 1995, or 1938, and bave earnings posted on customer expectations. It is;
401(k) plan at my job. Will that benefits for a person who is age 65- to your Social Security record, posted in aU Social Security offices·:
money reduce lbe amount of my 69 are reduced $1 for every $3 be Social Security will send you a spe· as a guide to the quality of service:·
monthly Social Security benefit or she earns over S11,280. If lbe cial present sometime between now the public may expect from the :;
check since I' II be over the annual . person is under age 65, the reduc- and October I, 1996. Your present Social Security office.
-~
earnings limit?"
tion is $1 for every $2 of earnings will be a Personal Earnings and
She was pleased to learn that over $8,160. The amoWJt of money i Benefit Estimate Statement showThe elderly are urged to get flu :_
money received from an IRA (indi- a person can earn before benefits ing how much you or your family shots. Medicare may pay.
vidual retirement account) , a are reduced is increased each year would get in retirement, disability,
Older Americans are urged to=:401(k), and most other retirement with increases in average wages. or survivors benefits based on the take precautions against the pneu- ~
income doesn't count under the After reaching age 70, a person's present level or earnings. The state· monia and flu epidemics that come ~
earnings test and will not affect the benefits are not reduced regardless ments are designed to make it easi- with the approach or winter. The :·:
amoWJt of her Social Security ben- of bow much the person earns.
er fQ,r people to use Social Security cost or both pneumonia and flu ;•
efits .. Only wages, salaries, bonusFor more information on how 'in their financial planning as well vaccinations are covered by Medi- .7
es, !Ips, fees and other amounts income after retirement affects as to keep track of the earnings care Part B (MedicallnsU!llllce) for :~
received for services rende.td dur- your benefits, call Social Security's credited to their Social Security those age 65 or older. Statistics:":
ing the year are counted Wider the toll-free number (1-800-7721213) accounts.
show older people are twice as ::;
earnings test. Investment income, and ask: for the leaflet How Work
likely as younger persons to get-:;
sucb as interest, dividends, capital Affects Your Social Security Benepneumonia or flu . The Public:..
Service rated high
gains, and rent on property, also fits.
Health
Service recommends an ·:
A survey or new Social Security
have no effect on a person's Social
By the way, the Athens Social beneficiaries on the quality of ser- annual flu shot between mid-Octo-::
Security benefits.
Security Office serves those people vice they received from Social ber and mid-November for people::
over
65.
By Ed Petenon,
Social Security ·
manacer In Athens

.
I

'

SERVICE AWARDS - Judy Musser, left, and Margaret
Wyatt, were presented plaques and charms In recognition or IS
years or service as nursing assistants at lbe Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center. Potluck refreshments were served In tbelr
honor.

Two more Simpson jurors
are collaborating on book
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two
O.J. Simpson jwors are rushing to
finish a book that reportedly will
jlave "explosive" chapters about
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito and
the police departmenL
• Gina Rosborough and Brenda
Molllll are coUabomting on "Inside
the Simpson Jury (The Parallel
Universe)," Rosborough said Sun-

day.

· "I'm very anxious to get this
~Ul. Some or the things they (the
inedia and commentators) are sayJng is ridiculous. There was no mce
1ssue in lbe decision,' ' she said.
; Asked for a preview, Bud Stew•rt, spokesman for Advanced
Books, said chapters about Ito and
(be LAPD were "going to be

attended a meeting of West Virginia and Ohio Sheep Association
at the home of Alice and Joe Crites,
Coolville.

flood, and Ellen Smithson, enlisting the help of Choice in her quest
for a legendary secret place.
David Keller, associate profes· sor in communications, is director
of lbe production.
Curtain time is 8 p.m. in the .
Elbel Erickson Theater on lbe Ohio
Valley College campus, Oct. 20,
21, 27 and 28.

iary, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. David
Bowen. Sister Fidelis Bell will
review "The Chamber" by John
Grisham.

TO LIMIT THE GOVERNOR'S AUTHORITY TO REDUCE

CRIMINAL SENTENCES BY REQUIRING THE GOVERNOR
TO FOLLOW REGULATIONS PRESCRIBED BY LAW WHEN
GRANTING COMMUTATION TO A PERSON CONVICTED
OF A CRIME.
IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT SHALL TAKE EFFECT
ON JANUARY I, Ill%.

A mB,jorlty yes vote Is necessary for pusage.

YES

Andrionna Renae Pullins,
daughter or Tom and Stacie Pullins
of Long Bottom recently celebmted
her fourth birthday. A Pocahontas
theme was carried out.
Auending besides her parents
were her brother, Kirk Pullins; her
g!lllldparents, Theodore and Becky
Pullins and Nancy Hall, and her
great-grandmother, Sally Bland.
Others there were Ciara, Tammi
and Judy Young, Lisa Hysell,
Jus tin, Terri and Doug Browning,
Wayne and Sue Zurcher, Jean
Spencer and Bill Osborne, Ruth
Bland, Chuckie, Carolyn and Cody
Stewart, Denise Laughery, Stacy,
Megan, Amber and Haley Tripp,
Ryan, Kelly and Todd Tripp, John,
Vanessa and John Michael Miller,
Chuck, Donna, Chuckie, and
Zachary Pullins, Brian, Susie and
Emily Ash and Missy McCourL
Sending gifts were her grandparents, Dave and Susan Hall, her
great-grandmother, Lera Hall,
Davie Hall, Michelle and Michael
Loughery, Tim and Monica
Zurcher, Leigh Ann, Marvin and
Tweedle Bland, Dakota and Jimmy
Young, and Joe Hysell.

Section II of Article III of the Ohio Constitution currently gives the
Governor power to grant commutations (reductions) of criminal sentences
or to grant pardons to persons convicted of crimes. While the Governor's
power to pardon is limited by regulations prescribed by the General
Assembly regarding the manner of applying for a pardon, the commutation power is not subject to such regulations. This amendment would subject the Governor:s commutation power to regulations prescribed by the
General Assembly as to the manner of applying for a commutation.

Coming Event

''•

KAREN'S COUNTRY MA

....

Oct.18-22
7:00 pm Nightly
6:00 Sunday Evening
Evangelist
David Canfield from Russell, KV
Pastor Herbert Grate

RUTLAND- Revival at the
Rutland Free Will Baptist Church,
7 p.m. each evening this week.
Paul Bartrum, evangelisL

•'

October 21 st
Apple Butter Stirrin
Cooked in a copper kettle over an op~~il

Birth of twins
announced

Hr1'

[)1) ~)-.. [~ '111 ~11111·

H

;11 11 111.Hit'

(
, . , . bring
.M)fhing )OIJ lhinlt
~ oe 01 ;,.,.., 10 ut.
au.Hfled J.,.,... JrltOid
~·!liM will bit /)I'NMtf

WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER18
10AMto6 PM

Daggers &amp; Swords
.up to $5.000
Bayonets .
. $5 to $50
Medals &amp; Badges .
$5 to $1000
Helmets &amp; Hats .
$15 lo $800
Nazi Fla~s . . .
. . $!5 to $1 ,000
Nazi Uni orms . . . . . . . . . . . . . $25 to $1,000
Nazi Cloth lnstgna (each) . . . . . . . .$2 to $100
U.S. WW II Leather Flight Jackets ... $50 to $900
Spiked Helmets . . . . . . . . ........ up to $2000
German Lugers . . . . . . . . . .. $200 to $2000
German Steins (especially military)
Need U.S. Flight &amp; Paratrooper Jackets.
Pants, Boots, lnsigna, Gear, etc.

HOLIDAY INN
OH. RT. 7 A US 35
sn ST. RT. 7 N.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.-

PIP &lt;-.:-

D11nk

IN ORDER TO PRESERVE AND EXPAND PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE OF l.OCAL GOVERNMENTS AND THE STATE
INCLUDING mGHWAYS AND TO IMPROVE QHIO'S ECONOMic WELL-'BEING, THIS PROPOSED AMENDMENT
WOULD:

.•,,
•

,.•..

..

I. AUTHORIZE THE STATE TO ISSUE BONDS AND OTHER
OBLIGATIONS TO FINANCE OR ASSIST IN FINANCING (A)
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, BEING ROADS AND BRIDGES,
WASTE WATER TREATMENT SYSTEMS, WATER SUPPLY
SYSTEMS, SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL FACILITIES, AND
STORM WATER AND SANITARY COLLECTION, STORAGE
AND TREATMENT FACILITIES AND (B) HIGHWAY CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS INCLUDING THOSE Oti THE STATE
HIGHWAY SYSTEM AND URBAN EXTENSIONS THEREOF,
THOSE WITHIN OR LEADING TO PUBLIC PARKS OR
RECREATION AREAS, AND THOSE WITHIN OR LEADING
TO MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS.

"'.....,'

.

2. LIMIT THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED F!)R LOCAL PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENTS TO $120 MILLION IN ANY ONE FISCAL
YEAR PLUS ANY AUTHORIZED AMOUNT THAT WAS NOT
ISSUED IN PRIOR FISCAL YEARS, AND LIMIT THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF LOCAL INFRASTRUCTURE OBLIGATIONS ISSUED UNDER THIS AMENDMENT TO $1.2 BIL.LION.

..."•

3. LIMIT THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF OBLIGATIONS

.,

KAREN'S COUNTRY MARKET

&lt;

Route 124
Portland, 0 H
Formerly Harris Farms
Phone 843-5211

·'"'...

Roper
Dryer

Roper
Washer
- Lg. capacity
-Heavy duty
- Perm. Press

- Lg. capacity
-- 4 cycles
-Easy clean
lint

....

-

Reg. '399 6-gun
~eg.

- Corner Hutch

$209

All Dining Room on Sale

ISSUED FOR HIGHWAY CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS TO
$220 MILLION IN ANY FISCAL YEAR PLUS ANY AUTHORIZED AMOUNT THAT WAS NOT ISSUED IN PRIOR FIS..
CAL YEARS, ANQ LIMIT THE TOTAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT
OF HIGHWAY OBLIGATIONS 'mAT MAY BE OUTSTANDING UNDER THIS AMENDMENT TO $1.2 BILLION•

.."'•

~

"
••

'499 8-gun corner

.....
...
...
k.

Reg. '869 10-gun w/pistol
Reg. '699 9-gun pine
Reg. '1419 12-gun corner
Reg. '809 12-gun pine

'699
'559

$1129
'649

SALE
TELEVISIONS

4. PROVIDE THAT THE OBLIGATIONS ISSUED UNDER
THIS AMENDMENT SHALL BE BACKED BY THE FULL
FAITH AND CREDIT OF THE STATE, EXCEPT THAT HIGH·
WAY USE FEES MAY BE PLEDGED ONLY TO THE OBLIGATIONS ISSUED TO FINANCE HIGHWAY CAPITAL
IMPROVEMt:NTS.

~

..-.•
~

....

......
.......
.,..
..t......
..
......
,......

•

13 to 46 inch screens
Portables, Table Models,
Consoles
and Projection TV

ALL ON SALE

ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE I

ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE I

Are you aware that the Governor of Ohio currently has the power to
grant commutations (reductions or sentence) to prison inmates, including convicted murderers facing the death penalty, vinually at will?
Does it surprise you that the Governor is not even required to follow
the release recommendations of the Ohio Adult Parole Authority before
reducing the sentence of a convicted criminal?
If these facts anger or shock you, then your vote should be "YES" on
State Issue I.
A "YES" vote on State Issue I will ensure that the Governor follows
certain regulations when commuting a criminal sentence, and does not
grant a commutation to a convicted criminal solely at his or her uninformed discretion.
State Issue I will simply require the Governor to consult and follow
the release recommendations of the Ohio Adult Parole Authority when
reducing a criminal's sentence, just as when the Governor grants a pardon. The Governor will still retain the ability to glllllt an unconditional
reprieve to delay the execution of a criminal sentence for a shon period
of time.
The passage of Issue I will preclude hasty, "last minute" sentence
reductions and will ensure that any decisions to commute a criminal's
sentence are well-informed and not politically motivated actions carried
out near the end of the Governor's term in office.
If you believe that faith in Ohio's cri~stice system needs to be
restored, and agree that nobody, not even the Governor of Ohio, should
have the unregulated ability to reduce a criminal's sentence at will, then
your vote on State Issue I should be "YES."

The Governor should have the right to reduce a prisoner's sentence
when appropriate facts come to light.
The Governor must retain the power to commute sentences to promote
justice in mre cases.
A "No" vote means the Governor can correct sentences and act to pre·
vent a miscarriage of justice in proper cases. Unfonunately. sometimes
all of the relevant evidence is not available while the case is pending.
Our criminal justice system is good, but not perfect. We do make mistakes. These mistakes are not always readily visible. While the commutation of a sentence rarely occurs, the option of this remedy is still
necessary.
Issue One is a proposed amendment to the Ohio Constitution that
would permit the state legislature to draw up new rules about the
Governor's power to commute criminal sentences.
The framers of the state constitution in their wi sdom decided that il
was preferable to grant the state's chief executive unfettered power to
issue commutations. The Supreme Coun of Ohio decided that the present version of Section II of Anicie Ill of the Ohio Constitution means
that 'the state legislature can draw up regulations about the Governor's
power to pardon, but not the Governor's power to grant commutations
and lo issue reprieves.
We agree. There is no good reason to alter Ibis constitutional principle.

COMMITIEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE 1
Senator Gary Suhadolnik
Senator Bruce Johnson
Senator Robert Burch
Senator Ben Espy
Representative John Garcia
Representative Ed Kasputis
Representative June Lucas
Article III of the Constitution of the State of
Ohio to IUd as follows :
ARTICLE III
Section II . He THE GOVERNOR shall
tlave power, after con\'iction, to grant
reprieves. commutations. and pardons, for
all crimes and offences, c~ccpe treason and
cases of impeachment, upon such conditions

as M THE GOVERNOR may think proper;
subject. however, to such rtgulations, as to
the manner of applying for COMMUTATIONS AND pardons, as may be prescribed
by law. Upon conviction for treason, M'
THE GOVERNOR may suspend the execution of the sentence. and report the case 10
lhc: General Assembly, at its ne11t meeting,
when lhe General Assembly shall either par-

COMMITIEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST ISSUE 1
Representative Betty Sutton
Representative David Hartley

VOTE
don, commute the sentence, direct its eKecution, or grant a funher reprieve. W. THE
GOVERNOR shall commumcale 1o the
General Assembly, at every regular session,
each case: of reprieve, commutation, or pardon granted, stating the name and crime of
the convict lhe sentence. its date. and the
date of the commutation, pardon, or
reprieve, wilh ltio THE GOVERNOR' S rea·

~­

.
...
.,
.,.••..

): I
~;
~

,.#&gt;•

I"

r.

..."'
...
...
"

j~

ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE 2

sons thertfor.
EffECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL

If adopted by a majority of the electors
votins; on this amendment, the amendment
shall talc.e effect on January 1, 1996, and
e11isting Section II of Article Ill of the
Constitution of the State or Ohio shall be
repealed from that effective date.

ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE 2

• the successful State Capital Improvements Program • Borrowing against the future is "the IC§I of tbe story".
Issue Two renews
• A no vote would keep Ohio taxpayers from going deeply in debt.
(SCIP), which won over 70% of voters ' approval in 1987. This
• This issue would force our children to pay off our debt.
local/state government partnership is well developed, with completed
projects in every corner of the stale. SCIP is one of the few government • By 2003 1 interest on the debt will eKceed the dollars spent on new
road construction.
programs with local conttol and decision-making. Its renewal for the
• Pay-as-you-go is the responsible course.
next decade will allow Ohio communities, whose borrowing capacity
for large projects is limited, to address nearly $17 billion in road, bridge, • It's exactly this kind of irresponsible debt that has caused our fedeml
insolvency.
water, wastewater, stormwater, and solid waste needs ..
• Issue 2 more than doubles Ohio's authority lo issue highway bondsA healthy, comprehensive infrastructure system also requires invest!ll~n
it reauthorizes the local infrastructure bonding pmgram of I 9R7
ment at the stale level. Issue Two also provides additional fun~ing for
The original $1.2 billion maximum becomes $2.4 billion.
state highways by raising the debt cap established in 1968. Ohio, the
• The Legislative Budget Office says the Ohio Department of
nation's tenth largest highway system, must provide citizens with safe
Transportation's current debt service to revenue ratioliu: eKceeds the
and convenient travel and with competitive access to goods, services,
recommendation of the general budget (II % for ODOT, 5% for GRF).
and markets worldwide.
Issue 2 will substantial~ increase the ratio to 19% and may well have
Companies (and, therefore, jobs) will not come to or stay in Ohio if
an
adverse impact on Ohio's overall bond rating.
roads are not maintained for the shipment of goods, and the necessary
support systems are not in place. Ohioans must continue infrastructure · • As the debt service liability interest increases over time, money availinvestment to maintain and strengthen the basic foundations upon which able for operations would decrease until interest payments actually
exceed revenues dedicated for this purpose .
our communities are built.
• Issue 2 is not a '"illan" renewal of the Issue 2 that Ohio voters
approved
overwhelmingly in 1987 ror local infrastructure bonding proIssue Two:
gram of 1987. The original $1.2 ,billion maximum becomes $2.4 billion.
• Improves lbe health and safety or Ohioans through better roads,
• Issue 2 has been a popular and successful local infrastructure
safer bridges, and more efficient waste disposal s~stems.
.
improvement program and should be continued. However, the merit of
• Renews the partnership of 1987that has funded over 5,000 SCIP
,
Issue 2, as experienced over the last few years, is eclipsed by this illprojects throughout Ohio.
thought-out "borrow-now-let-the-next-generation -pay" approach.
• Does not raiR taxes.
• Has overwhelming, bipartisan support (87-10 in the House. 27-4 in • Municipalities, villages, and townships, that have been assisted by the
original Issue 2 have vinually nowhere else to tum for assistance to
the Senate).
fund public works projects.
• Retains and creates jobs rebuilding Ohio's infrastructure.
• Don't let your legislators off the hook . Vote.l'!Q on Ibis dual issue
• Keeps Ohio competitive and makes it attractive to expanding and
and
force your elected officials to address a solution.
new businesses.
• Guarantees tbe use or Ohio products, services, and labor whenevCOMMITIEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST ISSUE 2
er possible on infrastructure projects.
Senator H. Cooper Snyder
• Preserves Ohio's credit ratin11, and allows Ohio to achieve the best
Senator Rhine Mclin
interest rates.
Representative Dale Van Vyven
Representative Jack Ford
Voting yes on Issue Two ensures Ohio's health, safety, and economic
well-being.
'
COMMITI'EE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE 2
Senator Karen L. Gillmor
Senator James E. Carnes
Senator Roben J. Boggs
Senator Anthony Latell, Jr.
Representative Edward K. Core Representative Thomas W. Johnson
Representative Raymond E. Sines

ISSUE l
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITU·
TIONAL AMENDMENT
~

Proposing to amend Anicle VIII of the
Constitution of the State of Ohio by adding
thereto Section 2m to authorize the issuance
of general obligations of the Suate of Otlio 10
finance public infrastnu:ture capital
improvements and highways.

ment systems, water supply systems, solid waste disposal facilities, and
Be it resol\led by the General Assembl) of
storm water and sanitary collection, storage, and treatment facilities. In the State of Ohio, th ree-fifths of the mem5. REQUIRE THE USE OF omo PRODUCTS, MATERIALS, addition, this amendment would allow the state to pay for or help local bers elected co each house concurring heregovernments to pay for lbe cost of highway capital improvements includ- in, that there shall be s.ubmitted to the elecSERVICES, AND LABOR FOR PROJECTS FINANCED
ing those on lbe state highway system and urban extensions thereof, those tors of the state in the manner prescribed by
UNDER THIS AMENDMENT TO THE EXTENT PRACTICAlaw at the general election to be held on the
wilbin or leading to public parks or recreation areas, and those within or first Tuesday after the first Monday in
BLE.
leading to municipal corporations.
November 1995, a proposal to amend
Article VIII of the ConSiilulion of Ohio by
2.
The
maximum
amount
the
state
could
borrow
for
local
public
IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT SHALL TAKE IMMEDIadding immediately following Se~;tion 21 a
infrastructure capital improvements under Ibis amendment through the
ATE EFFECT.
new section as follows:
issuance of bonds or other obligations is $120 million in any one year
A mB,Jorlty yes vote Is necessary for passage.
plus any authorized amount lbat was not issued in prior fiscal years and ·
ARTICLE VIll
Section 2m. (AJ IN ADDITION 1'0
$1.2 billion overall. The maximum amount the state could borrow for
THE AUTHORIZATIONS OTHERWISE
highway capital improvements under this section is $220 million in any
YES
SHALL THE PROPOSED
CONTAINED IN "-RTICLE YIU OF THE
one year plus any authorized amount that was not issued in prior fiscal
QHIO CONSTITUTION. THE GENERAL
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?
years
and
$1.2
billion
overall.
ASSEMBLY MAY PROVIDE BY LAW, IN
NO
3. The General Assembly could limit lbe amount of obligations issued ACCORDANCE WITH BUT SUBJECT
TO THE LIMITATIONS OF THIS SECin any year in order to proteetlbe statt's credit rating.
TION, FOR THE ISSUAioiCE OF BONDS
4. Obligations issued under this amendment would be backed by the
EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE 2
AND OTHI!R OBLIGATIONS OF TilE
full faith and credit of the -state, except that highway use fees may be
STATE FOR THE PURPOSE OF ANANC·
(lis prepared by the Oblo Ballot Board)
lNG OR ASSISTING IN THE ANANCpledged only to the obligations issued to finance highway capital
ING OF THE COST OF PUBLIC INFRA1. This amendment authorizes lbe State of Ohio to pay for or belp local improvements.
STRUCfU,RE CAPITAL IMPROVEgovernments to pay for the cost of public infrastructuR capital improve- S. Ohio products, materials, services and labor would be used on proMENTS OF MUNICIPAL CORPORA·
TIONS, COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, AND
ments of local governments, being roads and bridges, waste water treat· jects financed under this amendment to the extent practicable.

H

Magnavox and Curtis Mathis

- Oak Dropleaf, bench,
4 chairs
- Droptable, 2 chairs

.......

Gun Cabinets

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)
To adopt Section 2(m} of Article VIII of lbe Constitution of
the State of Ohio.

~.

'

s479
- Oak Farm Table 4 chairs s599

--.-.....li::::::::~~ CASH PAID FOR:

2

"'·'

- 5 piece sets 3 styles

Reunion held

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

'

R e tres hm e nt s l

ing for a commutation.
Be it resolved by the General Assembly of
lhe State of Ohio. lhree·fiflhs of lhe members ele&lt;:led 10 each hoose conculling herein, lhat !here be submiued to lhe electors of
the state in the manner prescribed by law at
the general electton to be held on the first
Tuesday after the first Monday in November
1995, a proposal to amend Section II of

OHIO CONSTITUTION

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

•.

,.

Pumpkin Painting Contest -Bring your painted pumpkin

Dining Room·Tables &amp;Chairs

POMEROY - Eagles Auxil-

.TEXT OF PROPOSED CONS11'1'tm0NAL
AMENDMENT

Proposing to amend Section II of Anicle
III of tbe Constilution of the State of Ohio to
subject the Governor's authority to grant a
commutation of sentence to any regulations
,proscribed by law as to the manner of apply-

Buy the Pair for s54

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Deparmtnet
Committee, Tuesay, 7 p.m. Bedford town hall.

ISSUE I

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Free
Sample

Mr. and Mrs . Jeff Horton or
Columbus are announcing the birth
of twin boys, born Sept. 26, at
Riverside Hospital, Columbus.
Their names are Jacob Scott,
who weighed four jlounds, eight
ounces; and Nicholas Ryan, four
pounds, six ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Horton, the former
Laum Eichinger of Chester, have a
four-year-old daughter, Elizabeth
Diane.
·
Paternal grandparents are Gene
Horton of Northville, Mich . and
Phyllis Horton of Columbus, and
maternal grandparents are Opal
Eichinger of Chester, and lbe late
Henry Eichinger.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE I
(as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)

Observes birthday

at the
Chester Nazarene Church

RACINE - Racine Village
Council, recessed session, 7 p.m.
Monday, Star Mill Parle.

. . ......

1

(Proposed by Resolution or the General Assembly of Oblo)
To amend Section 11 of Article ill of the Constitution of lbe
State of Ohio.

NO

REVIVAL

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association will
meet ar the Meigs County Museum,
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy, Mon·
day at 7:30 p.m. New officers will
be installed and final plans for the
Christmas flower show to be Dec.
2 and 3 will be discussed. AU garden club members are invited to
attend.

The family of the late W.B.
King and Margetta King of Athens
was held recently at the Ora Carsey
residence a1 PageviUe.
Attending were her twin sister,
' Dora Cooper of Mineral, and
George and Sally Cooper of Mineral; George, Theresa, Steplianie and
Nicole Cooper of Athens; Larry
and Linda Martin, Vivivan Jamison, Virgie and Garnet Lough, all
of McArthur; Nathaniel Allison
and family of Zaleski; Roger,
Michael and Robie Carsey. Angel
Saunders of WcstcrviUe; Terry and
Jason Carsey of Buckeye Lake,
Scott Cooper and son of Shade. .

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

Nutrition labels might
worsen American diets

-Community calendarThe Community Calendar is
published as a free servlc~ to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meellng and spedal
events. The calendar Is not
dealgned to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run 11
specific number or days.

I

I

explosive." The jurors are hoping
for a mid-November release date,
be said.
It will be based on their uial
journals and diaries kept during
nine months of sequestration.
Stewart refused to discuss the
money involved in the deal.
Rosborough and Moran were
part of lbe jury that acquitted SimpBATON ROUGE, La. (AP)- ·choices some of lbe time overcom:.
son Oct. 3 in lbe slayings of his ex- Nutrilio,n labels on food might pensate by eating toO much food at
wife Nicole Brown Simpson and actually be worsening Americans' other times, a researcher said.
her friend Rooald Goldman. The 12 . diets as people wbo make low-fat
•'1bere' s no question people are
jurors deliberated Jess than four
doing that," said Richard Mattes, a
hours.
nutrition professor lit Purdue UniMeanwhile, Simpson prosecutor
versity.
Marcia Clark told The New ·y orker
Low-fat foods are presumed to
she was misquoted in a CNN report
be
potentially beneficial for people
about the makeup of the jury.
trying to lose weight and cut the
risk of disease . However,
researchers have not adequately
studied lhe implications of providing nutrition information, Mattes
said.
Mineral Wells, W. Va
He studied 17 men and women
Nellie Parker visited Irene Parkwho were given a fixed meal at
er, Syracuse, Samuel and Cora
lunch, then asked to keep a record
Michael Stiversville. Mrs. Michael
or what they ate lbe rest of the day.
remains in poor health.
When they were told lbe lunch was
John Taylor reports that his
a low-fat meal, they increased their
daughter, Trishlyn, arrived safely at
consumption during the rest or the
her new assignment in Korea
day, Mattes found. When told it
The church and community
was a normal lunch, they ate less
received word lbat Alma Swartz,
during the rest of the day, though
Williamstown, W. Va. bad a heart
the content of the lunch didn't
attack.
cbange.
Martha, Joe, and Will Poole

·White a cast member
Robin White, son of Robert and
Dove White, Coolville, is a cast
member of "The Secret Place" at
the Ohio Valley College Ibis faU.
Wbite is a senior elementaryeducation major. He graduated
from Eastern High School.
The play is based on the book
by Roy Goodmiller and featured
Choice Bryant, returning home to
reStore a family farm desttoyed by

PROPOSED~ AMENDMENT TO THE

..

Alfred news notes
Alfred UMW will meet OcL 21,
7:45 p.m. at the church
April Neeley and Jeff Noble of
Fairborn are visiting Neely's par·
ents , Marguerite and Delbert
Stearns. Mrs. Stearns is recovering
from recent surgery.
• Marilyn and Wilbur Robinson
celebrated tbe birthday of their
daughter, Lori Harrison wilb a family dinner. Others auending were
AUeo and Codi Harrison and Larry
Ritchie of Caldwell, Lee Ann and
Kirk Fick of Columbus.
Recent guests of Mattie Pullins
and Don were June, Jim and Janet
Ridenour, Chester; Judy Leach,
Richard Leach and a friend, all of

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATIONS, ARGUMENTS AND RESOLUTIONS FOR AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO CONSmUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMinED TO THE VOTERS AT THE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 7, 1995.

OTHER GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES
AS DESIGNATED BY LAW. AND THE
COST Of HIGHWAY CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENTS. AS USED IN THIS
SECTION, PUBLIC INFRASTRUCI\JRE
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS SHALL BE
LIMITED TO ROADS AND BRIDGES .
WASTE WATER TREATMENT SYS·
TEMS, WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS,
SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL FACILITIES,
AND STORM WATER AND SANITARY
COLLECfiON, STORAGE. AND TREATMENT FACILITIES. INCLUDING REAL
PROPERTY. INTERESTS IN REAL
PROPERTY. FACILITIES. AND EQUIPMENT RELATED TO OR INCIDENTAL
THERETO, AND SHALL INCLUDE
WITHOUT LIMITATION THE COST OF
ACQUISITION .
CONSTRUCTION ,
RECONSTRUCTION.
EXPANSION,
IMPROVEMENT, PLANNING, AND
EQUIPPING. AS USID IN THIS SECTION, HIGHWAY CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS SHALL BE LIMITED TO HIGH;
WAYS, INCLUDING THOSE ON THE
STATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM "ND
URBAN EXTENSIONS THEREOF,
THOSE WITHIN OR LEADING TO PUBLIC PARKS OR RECREATION AREAS,
AND THOSE WITHIN OR LEADING TO
MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS, AND
SHALL INCLUDE WITHOIIT LIMITATION THE COST 01' ACQUISmON,
CONSTRUCTION, RECONSTRUCTION,
EXPANSION, IMPROVEMENT, PLANNING, AND EQUIPPING.
IT IS HEREBY DETI!RMINED THAT
SUCH PUBLIC INFR...STRUCI\JRE
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS AND HIOH-

Icon!Wiued nut 1111111

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Ohio Lottery

Denver
blanks
Oakland

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en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 120
Copyright 1995

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 17, 1995

Coming together or apart?
Effectiveness of Million Man March
hailed by organizers, legislators
By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Hundreds
of lhousands of black men returned
home today from a spirited rally for
unity and brotherhood, pledging to
clean up their lives and rebuild a
country portrayed as poisoned by
racism.
"I think what happened yesterday was an explosion of self-confidence," Rep. Charles Rangel, a
New York Democral who represents Harlem, said today.
"This was the biggest revival
that I've ever attended and I hope it
reverberates around the country in
energizing people right where they
are," Joseph Lowery, bead of the
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference said as be, Rangel and
other black leaders recalled the
rally today on the morning televi-

sion shows.
Many of the estimated 400,000
people drawn here Monday by
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan' s Million Man March were
optimistic that one of the outcomes
of the peaceful day of praying,
singing and speecbmaking would
be more understanding between
blacks and whites.
"I hope it acts as a catalyst for
beller relationships with everybody," said Robert Martin, who
grabbed a subway ride to Virginia
during Farrakhan's speech on the
first leg of his trip back to Ohio.
"Mister Farrakhan bas some
positive attributes, but he should be
working to bring people together
instead of pushing them apan,"
said Jean Foster, a University of
Maryland student "That's what a
man of peace would do."

In a sermon lasting nearly 2- In
hours, Farrakban slOOd at the base
of the Capilol building, cajoling,
scolding and Jecluring to a sea of
upturned faces that stretched more
than a mile down the National Mall
to the Washington Monument.
He stood behind bulletproof
· glass, surrounded by stem-faced,
unifonned followers of his ministry
as he denounced "white supremacy" as the "real evil in America."
Farrakhan, whose rhetoric is
crilicized as offensive and anli. Semitic, said the "false idea" that
whites must rule because of their
slcin color has "poisoned the
bloodstream of religion, education,
politics, jurisprudence, economics,
social ethics and morality."
"White supremacy bas to die in
order for humanity to live," be
said.
Farrakhan also dismissed those
who have condemned him, saying
God would not have inspired him
to call for a "day of atonement 300
reconciliation" if his bean were
clouded by hatred.

Toll-free service decision
lies with W.Va. company

WAY CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS ARE
NECESSARY TO PRESERVE AND
EXPAND THE PUBLIC CAPITAL
INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE STATE
AND ITS MUNICIPAL CORPORA TIONS, COUNTIES. TOWNSHIPS. AND
OTHER GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES,
ENSURE THE PUBLIC HEALTH, SAFETY. AND WELFARE, CREATE AND
PRESERVE JOBS, ENHANCE EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES.
AND
IMPROVE THE ·ECONOMIC WELFARE
· OF THE PEOPLE OF THIS STATE.
(1!1 NOT MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED TWENTY MILLION DOLLARS
PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF THE INFRASTRUCTURE OBLIGATIONS AUTHORIZED TO BE ISSUED UNDER THIS
SECTION. PLUS THE PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT OF INFRASTRUCTURE
OBLIGATIONS THAT IN ANY PRIOR
FISCAL YEARS COULD HAVE BEEN
BUT WERE NOT ISSUED WITHIN THE
ONE-HUNDRED-TWENTY-MILLION DOLLAR FISCAL YEAR LIMIT. MAY
BE ISSUED IN ANY FISCAL YEAR.
PROVIDED THAT THE AGGREGATE
TOTAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF
INFRASTRUCTURE OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED UNDER THIS SECTION FOR
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENTS MAY NOT EXCEED
ONE BILLION TWO HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS, AND PROVIDED
FURTHER THAT NO INFRASTRUCTURE OBLIGATIONS SHALL BE
ISSUED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION
UNTIL AT LEAST ONE BILLION ONE
HUNDRED NINETY-NINE MILLION
FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS
AGGREGATE
PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT OF OBLIGATIONS HAVE
BEEN ISSUED PURSUANT TO SECTION 2k OF ARTICLE Ylll NOT MORE
THAN TWO HUNDRED TWENTY MILLON DOLLARS PRINCIPAL AMOUNT
OF HIGHWAY OBLIGATION~AUTHORIZED TO BE ISSUED UNDER THIS
SECTION. PLUS THE PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT OF HIGHWAY OBLIGATIONS THAT IN ANY PRIOR FISCAL
YEARS COULD HAVE BEEN BUT
WERE NOT ISSUED WITHIN THE
TWO-HUNDRED-TWENTY-MILLIONDOLLAR FISCAL YEAR LIMIT, MAY
BE ISSUED IN ANY fiSCAL YEAR.
AND NOT MORE THAN ONE BILLION
TWO HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS
PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF HIGHWAY
OBLIGATIONS ISSUED UNDER THIS
SECTION MAY BE OUTSTANDING AT
ANY ONE TIME. FUIUHER LIMITATIONS MAY BE PROVIDED BY LAW
UPON THE AMOUNT OF INFRASTRUCTURE OBLIGATIONS AND
HIGHWAY OBLIGATIONS, HEREINAFTER COLLECTIVELY CALLED
OBLIGATIONS, THAT MAY BE ISSUED
UNDER THIS SECTION IN ANY FISCAL YEAR IN ORDER THAT THE
TOTAL DEBT CHARGES OF THE

STATE PAYABLE FROM THE GENERAL REVENUE FUND SHALL NOT
EXCEED A PROPORTION OF GENERA'&lt; REVENUE FUND EXPENDITURES
THAT WOULD ADVERSELY AFFECT
THE CREDIT RATING OF THE STATE.
IF OBLIGATIONS ARE ISSUED UNDER
THIS SECTION TO RETIRE OR
REFUND OBLIGATIONS PREVIOUSLY
. ISSUED UNDER THIS SECTION. THE
NEW OBLIGATIONS SHALL NOT BE
COUNTED AGAINST THOSE FISCAL
YEAR OR TOTAL ISSUANCE LIMITATIONS TO THE EXTENT THAT THEIR
PRINCIPAL AMOUNT DOES NOT
- EXCEEDTHEPRINCIPALAMOUNTOF
THE OBLIGATIONS TO BE RETIRED
OR REFUNDED.
PROVISION SHALL BE MADE BY
LAW FOR THE USE TO THE EXTENT
PRACTICABLE OF QHJO PRODUCTS.
MATERIALS, SERVICES, AND LABOR
IN THE MAKING OF ANY PROJECT
FINANCED. IN WHOLE OR IN PART.
UNDER THIS SECTION.
(C)
THE STATE MAY PARTICJ.
PATE IN ANY PUBLIC INFRASTIRUCTURE CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT OR
HIGHWAY CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT
UNDER THIS SECTION WITH MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS. COUNTIES.
TOWNSHIPS, OR OTHER GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES AS DESIGNATED
BY LAW, OR ANY Of'IE OR MORE OF
THEM. SUCH PARTICIPATION MAY
BE BY GRANTS, LOANS, OR CONTRJBUTIONS TO THEM FOR ANY SUCH
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS.
THE
ENTIRE PROCEEDS OF THE INFRA·
STRUCTURE OBLIGATIONS SHALL
BE USED FOR PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS OF
MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS, COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, AND OTHER GOV.
ERNMENTAL ENTITIES. EXCEPT TO
THE EXTENT THAT THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY PROVIDES BY LAW THAT
THE STATE MAY REASONABLY BE
COMPENSATED FROM SUCH MONEYS FOR PLANNING, FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT, OR ADMINISTIRATIVE SERVICES PERFORMED IN
RELATION TO THE ISSUANCE OF
INFRASTRUCTURE OBLIGATIONS.
(J2) EACH ISSUE OF OBLIGATIONS
SHALL MATURE IN NOT MORE THAN
THIRTY YEARS FROM THE DATE OF
ISSUANCE, OR, IF ISSUED TO RETIRE
OR REFUND OTHER OBLIGATIONS,
WITHIN THIRTY YEARS FROM THE
DATE THE DEBT ORIGINAU..Y WAS
CONTRACTED. IF OBLIGATIONS ARE
ISSUED AS NOTES, IN ANTICIPATION
OF THE ISSUANCE OF BONOS, PROVISION SHALL BE MADE BY LAW FOR
THE ESTABLISHMENT AND MAINTENANCE, DURING THE PERIOD IN
WHICH THE NOTES ARE OUTSTANDlNG, OF A SPECIAL FUND OR FUNDS
INTO WHICH SHALL BE PAID, FROM
THE SOURCES AUTHORIZED FOR

THE PAYMENT OF SUCH BONDS, THE
AMOUNT THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN
SUFFICIENT, IF BONDS MATURING
DURING A PERIOD OF THIRTY YEARS
HAD BEEN ISSUED WITHOUT SUCH
PRIOR ISSUANCE OF NOTES, TO PAY
THE PRINCIPAL THAT WOULD HAVE
BEEN PAYABLE ON SUCH BONDS
DURING SUCH PERIOD. SUCH FUND
OR fUNDS SHALL BE USED SOLELY
FOR THE PAYMENT OF PRINCIPAL OF
SUCH NOTES OR BONDS IN ANTICIPATION OF WHICH SUCH NOTES
HAVE BEEN ISSUED.
THE OBLIGATIONS ARE GENERAL
OBLIGATIONS OF THE STATE. THE
FULL FAITH AND CREDIT, REVENUE,
AND TAXING POWER OF THE STATE
SHALL BE PLEDGED TO THE PAYMENT OF THE PRINCIPAL OF AND
PREMIUM AND INTEREST AND
OTHER ACCRETED AMOUNTS ON
OUTSTANDING OBLIGATIONS AS
THEY BECOME DUE, HEREINAFTER
CALLED DEBT SERVICE, AND BOND
RETIREMENT FUND PROVISIONS
SHALL BE MADE FOR PAYMENT OF
DEBT SERVICE. PROVISION SHALL
BE MADE BY LAW FOR THE SUFFICIENCY AND APPROPRIATION, FOR
PURPOSES OF PAYING DEBT SERVICE. OF EXCISES, TAXES, AND REVENUES SO PLEDGED TO DEBT SERVICE, AND FOR COVENANTS TO
CONTINUE THE LEVY, COLLECTION,
AND APPLICATION OF SUFFICIENT
EXCISES, TAXES, AND REVENUES TO
THE EXTENT NEEDED FOR SUCH
PURPOSE. NOTWITHSTANDING SECTION 22 OF ARTICLE ll. QHIO CONSTITUTION, NO FURTHER ACT OF
APPROPRIATION SHALL BE NECESSARY FOR THAT PURPOSE. THE
OBLIGATIONS AND THE PROVISION
FOR THE PAYMENT OF DEBT SERVICE, AND REPAYMENT BY GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES OF ANY LOANS
MADE UNDER THIS SECTION ARE
NOT SUBJECT TO SECTIONS S, 6, AND
II OF 1\.RTICLE XII. QHIO CONSTITUTION.
THE MONEYS REFERRED TO IN
SEqON Sa OF 1\.RTICLE XII. QHIO
COi'!STITUTION MAY BE PLEDGED
TO THE PAYMENT OF DEBT SERVICE
ON HIGHWAY OBLIGATIONS, BUT
MAY NOT BE PLEDGED TO THE PAYMENT OF DEBT SERVICE ON INFRASTIRUtJ'uRE OBLIGATIONS. IN EACH
YEAR THAT MONEYS REFERRED TO
IN SECTION Sa OF I).RTICLE XII. QHIO
CONSTITUTION PLEDGED TO THE
PAYMENT OF DEBT SERVICE ON
HIGHWAY OBLIGATIONS ISSUED
UNDER THIS SECTION ARE AVAILABLE FOR SUCH PURPOSE, SUCH
MONEYS SHALL BE APPROPRIATED
THERETO AND THE REQUIRED
APPLICATION OF ANY OTHER EXCISES AND TAXES SHALL BE REDUCED
IN CORRESPONDING AMOUNT.
THE OBLIGATIONS ISSUED UNDER

By TOM HUNTER
· Sentinel News Staff
Extended area service that
, would allow toll-free telephone 5erv~ ll.e.J.I!teen. the l?omeroy and
Mason/New Haven, W.Va.,
exchanges is not much closer to
becoming a reality, according to 3lt
Ohio Public Utilities Commission
official.
"Because we are dealing with
J,bree different phone companies
and two different slates, it 'takes
longer to get the system into place
because of all the agencies that
musi approve this," said PUCO
spokesman Dick Kimmins.
The original request was for
toll-free calling service beiween the

AUTHORITY OF THIS SECTION, THE
TRANSFER THEREOF, AND THE
INTEREST, iNTEREST EQUIVALENT,
AND OTHER INCOME AND ACCRETED AMOUNTS THEREFROM, INCLUDING ANY PROFIT MADE ON THE
SALE, EXCHANGE, OR OTHER DISPOSITION THEREOF. SHALL AT ALL
TIMES BE FREE FROM TAXATION
WITHIN THE STATE.
(!;) THIS SECTION SHALL OTHERWISE BE IMPLEMENTED IN THE
MANNER AND TO THE EXTENT PROVIDED BY LAW BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY. INU.UDING PROVISION
FOR THE PROCEDURE FOR INCURRING AND ISSUING OBLIGATIONS,
SEPARATELY OR IN COMBINATION
WITH OTHER STATE ,OBLIGATIONS,
AND REFUNDING, RETIRING, AND
EVIDENCING OBLIGATIONS.
(E) THE AUTHORIZATIONS IN THIS
SECTION ARE IN ADDITION TO
AUTHORIZATIONS CONTAINED IN
OTHER SECTIONS OF 1\.RTICLE Ylll.
QHJO CONSTITUTION, ARE IN ADDITION TO AND NOT A LIMITATION
UPON THE AUTHORITY OF THE GEN:
ERAL ASSEMBLY UNDER OTHER
PROVISIONS OF THIS CONSTITUTION, AND DO NOT IMPAIR ANY LAW
PREVIOUSLY ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, EXCEPT THAT
AFTER J2ECEMBER 31, 1996, NO ADDITIONAL HIGHWAY OBLIGATIONS OF
THE STATE MAY BE ISSUED FOR ANY
HIGHWAY PURPOSES UNDER SECTION 2i OF II.RTICLe Ylll. OHIO CONSTITUTION, EXCEPT TO REFUND
HIGHWAY OBLIGATIONS ISSUED
UNDER SECTION 2i ntAT ARE OUTSTANDING ON THAT DATE.

IRVING, Texas (AP) ...., GTE
Corp. said Monday it will cut 4, 700
jobs by year-end, part of a previously announced streamlining of
telephone operations that will cost
a total of 17,000 jobs.
Most of the 4, 700 employees
losing their jobs will start getting
notices Tuesday, the company said.
The biggest concentrations of
layoffs are 594 in California; 465
in Texas, includinB 204 workers at
GTE Telephone Operations beadquarters in the Dallas suburb of Irving; 239 in Illinois; and 1~5 in
Indiana, spokesman Brian Blevins
said.
In January 1994, GTE said it
would cut 17,000 jobs - nearly a

Ground to be
broken for 4lane project

omCE OF THE SECRETARY OF
STATE OF OHIO

IN TESTIMONY WHEREFORE, I have
hereunlo subocribed my name UKI affixed
my ollicill oeaJ 11 Columbus, Ohio lhis
29lh day of AuguSI, 1995.

Bob Taft
SECRETARY OF STATE

with the West Virginia Public-Service Conunission to order the service for the area. Kimmins added.
Where the problem lies in making a fin:ij !]ecision is with Bell
Atlantic of West Virginia.
Because of the breakup and
deregulaiion of the Bell System
companies in 1982, Bell Allantic
and the other "Baby Bell" companies are administered by the Federal District Court in Washington,
D.C.
Bell Atlantic must apply for a
federal waiver in U.S. District
Court in Washington, before they
allow the order for the extended
area service in this area to go into
(Continued on Pa~~:e 3)

TAKING CHARGE- Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakban
gestured Monday. In the fading aflernoon sun while addressing the
Million .Man March on Capitol Hill. Farrakhan scolded, praised
and encouraged the mass raUy of black men and strengthened his
claim to a growing leadership among American blacks. (AP)

Repairing railing-- Medicare
criticism
may force
provision
on fraud
WASHINGTON (AP)- A torrent of criticism from Democrats
and federal law enforcement offi- cials may force Republican leaders
to toughen their approach to fighJing fraud in the Medicare reform
bill.

GTE announces 4,700 job reductions

EFFECTIVE DATE
If adopl&lt;d by a majorily of lhe electors
votin&amp; on this ameDdmcnt. the amendment
Mall rake immediare effect.

I, Bob Tall, Secrelary of Sla\0. do hereby
certify lhallhe foresoin1 is lhe full 10x1 of
cenain constitutional amendm~nls proposed by lhe General Asoembly UKI filed in
lhe office of lhe Secrrtal-y of Sial&lt; pun111111
10 Anicle XVI, Seclion I of lhe
Conslilulion of lhe Slale of Ohio, IOIOiher
wilh lhe boiiOI language UKI expllllllions
certified 10 me by lhe Ohio BIIJ01 BoonJ
UKI qumeniS submitted 10 me by lhe propuneniS and opponc:niS of lhe issues, as prescribed by Jaw.

992 Pomeroy/GTE exchange to the
773 Mason/Bell Atlantic-West Virginia exchange and the 882 New
Haven/Citizens Telecommunications of Wesl Virginia exchange.
GTE Nonh Inc., bad been asked
to provide further cost and revenue
- information relative to the extended
area telephone service in March
1995.
In considering extended area
service requests, the commission
examines a number of factors,
including calling rates, cost factors,
and customers' ability to meet their
day-to-day calling needs within
!heir local exchange, Kimmins
explained.
The PUCO bas mutually agreed

''If my heart was that dark, bow
is the message so brigbJ?''
Rangel was quick Jo say that, "I
don't think anyone challenges the
fact that the language he uses,
especially tbat which refers to the
Jewish community, is repugnant.
But be bas reached ouJ and felt the
sense of hopelessness. especially
among young blacks who have felt
the country has lei them down.' •
The rally was tbe fourth-largest
demonstration in Washington history, and its largest predominantly
black gathering . The crowd surpassed the 250,000 who gathered
here in 1963 for Martin Luiber
King Jr.'s hisloric "I Have a
Dream" speech.
March organizers claimed
upwards of 1.5 million attended.
U.S. Park Police came up with the
400,000 figure, using the same
technique of superimposing aerial
photographs over map grids thai
they use to estimate all such large
crowds. Demonstration organizers
typically complain that the Parle
Service underestimates the number.

'

quarter of its telephone operations customers and investors by driving
workers- over three years, mostly up new revenues and holding down
through layoffs. By the end of th~ operating costs.
·
year, aboul 12,000 of the 17,000
Des~ite the ~utbacks, the comjobs will have been eliminated, the pany S8Jd new JObs have been erecompany said.
ated, partly through new ventures
Employmeni at the segment bas such as video services.
. .
dropped f{om 100,000 in 1988 to
The company also sa1d 11
68,000 today.
expecis about 620 employees to
The cost of the restrucruring was_ accept a voluntary separation proreflected in a one-time, $1.8 billion gram, and that 700 temporary concharge against profits in the f~ tract positions ha~e been eliminatquarter of 1993. GTE bas srud It ed, further reducmg the need for
expects 10 save $1 billion a year in layoffs.
expenses.
GTE Telephone Operations, the
Thomas W. White, president of largest local phone company,
GTE Telephone Operations, said employs 68,000 people and had
the company is hoping to improve $15.7 billion in revenue last year.
its competitive position with both Its parent company, GTE, is based
in Stamford, Conn.

Work continues on Pomeroy's Downtown Revitalization Project. Bill Aleshire, above, owner of A's Remodeling or Pomeroy,
uses a ladder to relnrorce a section .of railing above Your Neighborhood Lender, a Second Street business. Aleshire's work bas
Included repainting t.be rront or the store and replacing a section or sidewalk. Under t.be revitalization program, participatIng business owners can have their establishments rehabUitaled
with a grant pkklng up half the tab. The goal iS to restore an
1890s flavor to the Pomeroy business dlo!trict.

.

Morning
Pomeroy mayor reviews status
wreck
of water wells with councilmen
leaves
95-foot-deep well i's 30 inches Blaettnar said work has been
By JIM FREEMAN
1 innewdiameler
with a 12-inch casing. slalled due to the need for stale
Sentinel News Staff
hampered officially Although test samples from the pcnnit for electrical work. lbe proarea man by Although
the Iaclc of a quorum, Pomeroy well are still in Columbus, is ject includes electrical outiekalong
Village Council members t-fonday hoped the well will have lower wiJb a walkway, 1890s period
dead
night discussed several village mat- amounts of manganese than either lighting, benches and gazebos.
well one or two. according
Hysell presented the financial
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ' ters.

HENDERSON, W.Va -Gov.
Gaston Caperton and U.S. Rep.
Bob Wise wiU break ground Monday, Oct. 23 at I p.m. on a project
to upgrade two miles of U.S. 35 in
Mason County to four lanes.
The ceremony with Department - A Henderson man was killed
of Transportation officials and in a single vehicle accident in the
local dignitaries wiU be at the Hen- 300 block of Viand Street at midderson Community Center on Wil- night today, according to a Point
son Street, off U.S. 35 nonh.
Pleasant Police Department
"When the improvements on spokesman.
.
this highway are complete, travelTimothy A. Jones, 32, of 505
ers will have a safer road that is Holloway St., was .killed when
better able to handle today' s heavy his 1986 Buic.k left Viand Sireet,
traffic demands," Caperton said. traveled onto the sidewalk and
"West Virginia boasts the best struck a power pole.
highways in its history thanks to
Jones' body was taken to
the dedicated efforts of our con- Pleasant Valley Hospital by the
gressional delegation to obtain Point Pleasant EMS.
money and our commitment to
Mason County Coroner Dr.
building a better state."
Breton Morgan said Jones suf· The project will improve U.S. 'fered a blunt trauma to the chest
35 from the Coast Guald Station to and died insiantly, There will be
the existing four-lane approaches no autopsy, acrording to Morgan.
the Silver Memorial Bridge at
The accident is still under
Henderson. The project should be investigation.
completed by mid-1997.

of

a

it

to

Mayor John W. Blaettnar updated those council members present
on water quality in the village. Foc
the last few months, water has been
sup~lied by only one of the village s two operating wells, according
to Blactblar.
I
Well #2, the one currently in
operation, bas significantly lower
levels of manganese than Well # 1
- 2.05 compared to 7 pans per
million.
Though not dangerous, manganese
reacts with chlorine bleach
I'
turning laundry and swimming
pool water brown. Blaettnar said be
I
used Pomeroy water in his swimming pool during the summer without the water turning brown. ·
"It tastes beuer, too," be said.
1 Work
is currendy in progress on
' a third well. labeled Well #4. The

Blacttnar.
Well #3 is no longer operational
and is filled with concrete, said
Blaettnar. Some of the hardware
from the ole~ well will be used with
the new well, be said.
In other business, it was noted
two street department trucks are in
need of new tires. Blaettnar said
that Clerk Kathy Hysell bas the
authority to purchase new tires, but
said she should shop around to ~et
the best possible deal.
Council members also met will!
Union Avenue residents David
Edwards and Patsy Ward.
Ward inquired about work done
on a sink hole next to ber house
while. Blaetblar said work should
begin on a smaller sink hole on
Edwards' property today.
On the promenade project,

slaJement for September. Balances
included: general, $88,061.09;
safety, $994.21; street, $13,480.95;
stale highway, $11,107.86; fire,
$16,931.20; cemetery, $10,152.63;
waJer, $28,332.15; sewer,
$49,833.15; guaranty meter,
$18,292.89; utility, $11,904.50; fu-e
truck, no balance; perpetual care.
$7 ,228.52; cemetery endowment,
$38, I I 8.57; police pension,
$2,034.20; building fund,
$5,083.91; recreation, $3,662.89;
permissive tax, $2,842.48; law
enfoo:ement, $2,382.33; total of all
funds, $310,443.82.
1
' Present were Blacttnar, Hysell
d councilmen Bill Haptonstall,
illiam Young and George
right Absent were John Musser.
cott Dillon and Larry Wehrung.

~

Government auditors have estimated that Medicare loses as much
as $18 billion a year - a dime on
every $1 it spends - lo medical
fraud, waste and billing abuses.
Tbe Congressional Budget
Office bas estimated the GOP plan
for fighting fraud would save just
$2 billion over seven years, while
another provision easing a ban on
physicians' referring patients to
labs they own actually would cost
Medicare $1.1 billion.
What bas worried the inspector
general of Health and Human Services, June Gibbs Brown, and the
Justice Department's special counsel for health care fraud, Gerald M.
Stem, the most is a provision they
say would make ii harder for the
government to obtain convictions
under an anti-kickback statule.
. The law __now requires physiCians and other health care
providers to use "reasonable diligence" to ensure that their Medicare claims are accurate.
Tbe Republicans, saying they
want to leave room for innocent
mislakes, would raise the burden of
proof and hold providers liable
only if they acted "in deliberate
ignorance ... (or) reckless disregard
of the truth."
Rep. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who
tried unsuccessfully in the House
Commerce Conuni ttee last week to
block. Jbe changes, called them
''outrageous.''
"You just cannot afford to l.'lke
the cops off the beat" or let tbe
medical profession police itself,
said Wyden.
Some Republicans, including
Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn.,
want to make healtb care fraud a
federal felony and eslablish a new
section of the criminal code to deal
· with it.
Sbays ''does not think this bill
is nearly strong enough in its fraud
prevention provisions, and be's
told the leadership that," his chief
of slaff, Betsy Hawkings, said.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
R-Ga., said last Thursday that be
would be willing to consider stiffening sanction~ againsl anyone
found guilty of health care fraud.
Bui ."for the moment, I'd rather
lock up the muiderers, the rapists
~ ~i the drug dealer," Gingrich

......

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