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                  <text>_Page 12 • The Dally Senti,nel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,November14,1995

·Most patients aren't getting the·best heart disease treatment
By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
ANAHEIM. Ca lif. (AP\ ·Most patients arc not getting the
newest and best treatments for
heart disease. despite a series of
widely publicized studies demonstrating the treatments' effective·ness, the president of the American
Heart Association says.
Doctors are not doing enough to
encourage adoption of the new
treatments. insurance companies

are not paying for them and
patients are failing to continue riskreduction strategies. said Dr. Sydney Smith Jr., president of the bean
association and chief of cardiology
at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel HiU.
"All our bard-won knowledge,
all the tools we have developed
have little valve unless we can
resolve these issues," be said Mon day in a speech opening the heart
assocjation' s annual scientific scs-

sions.
A study presented at last year's
meeting showed, for example, that
lowerin g cholesterol in patients
with heart disease produced a slriking 42 percent reduction in heartdisease deaths, Smith said.
Drugs known as ACE inhibitors
reduce deaths, hosp italization and
repeat heart attacks in people who
have survived a heart attack , be
said.
Yet nearly two or three patients

with coronary heart disease are stiJI
not being treated with drugs to
lower cholesterol, Smith said. More
than 40 percent of patients who
have had heart attacks are still not
getting ACE inhibitors. Only 28
percent are getting counseling from
their doctors on quitting smoking.
Heart disease and stroke kill
500,000 American men and women
each year. Strokes claim another
140,000. SmiU1 said.
The class of heart drugs known

as beta blockers can reduce mortal- comes at a time when the health
ity by at least 25 percent. but fewer care system is under enormous
than 50 percent of patients are tak- pressure to reduce costs, Smith
ing the drugs when they leave the · said.
· hospital. High blood pressure
Tbe cost of treating heart dis·affects 60 million Americans, ease has risen from $109 billion in
increasing their risk of heart dis- 1992 to $138 billion in 1995.
ease, but 79 percent of Americans
Prevention of bean disease anq •
with bigb blood pressure are not repeat heart attacks could lower
getting adequate treatment, Smith these costs. Smith said, but despite
said.
the economic pressures on the
Tills failure to give proven treat- health care system, the advantages
ments to heart disease patients of prevention are being largely
ignored.

Johnson
topAL
pitcher

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

840
Pick 4:

0619
Buckeye 5

4-12-22-26-36

Page4

•

ent1ne

Ancient seed may hold clues to fending off tim.e

EMPLOYEE OF MONTH - Holzer Medical Center's September Employee or the Month, Joyce Cochran, left, is congratulated
by Charles Adkins, Jr., president and CEO or the hospital.

By JANE E. ALLEN
AP Science Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - An
ancient Chinese lotus seed that
slept I ,288 years before sprouting
into a green seedling may bold
clues to fending off the ravages of
time.
Scientists say a combination of
an anti-aging enzyme. a tough shell
and burial in a dry lake bed, away
from moisture and light, probably
helped to make it the oldest seed
ever geflninatcd.
But there could be still more
special 'properties in its chemistry.
"This sleeping beauty, wbicb
was alrcadv there when Marco
Polo came -to China in the 13th
century, must have a powerful
genetic system to delay its aging,"
Jane Shen-Miller, a plant physiologist at the University of California
at Los Angeles, said Monday.
The research, reported in the
November issue of the American
Journal or Botany. began in 1982,
when Shen-Miller obtained seven
brown, oval-shaped lotus seeds,
each about the size of a large marble. from the Beijing Institute of
Botany.
The seeds carne from a dry lake
bed that had once been Ute site of a
lotus lake cultivated by Buddhist~
who consider the flowering plant a
sacred symbol of purity.
In 1983, Shen-Miller filed

Employee of the
Month named at HMC
Joyce A. Cochran, of the Holzer
Medical Center Administrative
Office, bas been named the
September Employee of the Month.
Cochran joined HMC April 7,
1980 and bas been an administrative secretary for the past 15 years.
A graduate of Meigs High School,
she received her associate degree in
applied business from the University of Rio Grande. From 1976 to
1980, she was employed in the
University of Rio Grande Development Office as executive secretary.
She is the daughter of Mr. and

Mrs. Max 0. Davis of Middlepon.
She and husband, Pat, a security
officer at HMC, have two daughters, Sarah Nicbole, 7, and Megan
Lynn, I.
As September Employee of the
Month, she received a $100 US
Savings Bond, a special parking
place designated in her name, a
complimentary meal in the hospital
cafeteria. her picture in the lobby, .
and her name engraved on the 1995 1
plaque, also displayed in the hospital's main lobby.

Child Conservation League
holds Halloween party
A Halloween party for members brated throughout the year.
and their children was held by the
Patti Arnold introduced ber
Middleport Child Conservation mother, Catherine Wood, who
League at the Rock Springs United talked on different stages of mental
Methodist Church.
and related.disabilities. She said
Games were played with Judy retardation can be caused by birth
Mattea and Mary Harris assisting.. _ trauma which may or may not be
The door prize was won by atuibuted to mothers on drugs and
Matthew Hoskins. A short meeting alcohol. She also spoke of prenatal
opening with the pledge and the treatments which are being effecMother's Prayer was conducted by tive in preventing birth defects.
Kitty Darst.
Following her talk, she was prePlans were made for helping a sented with a gift.
needy family at Christmas time.
Guest were Tina Riffle-Hosken,
Several product materials are being Melanie Daniels, Mary Harris,
saved by the group to redeem for Angie Morris, Jason and Tyson
worthy causes.
Morris, Matthew Hosken, Robert
The spring conference will be Harris, Joey, Clayton and Jeremy
hosted by the Middleport League Blackston, Caleby Zirkle, Caddie
on April 13. The 50th anniversary . Gibbs, Casi Jordon and Justin
as a member of the Ohio Child Arnold, Jeremy and Justin Manley.
Conservation League will be cele-

through the hard shells of four of seed's outer coat. They were dated
The research could help solve
the seeds and watched three of at 416 years, 332 years and 95.
world hunger by improving repair
them sprout. Sbe then dried and
She planted the 332-year-old processes in grain and seed stocks,
burned the seedlings so she could seed in the courtyard of her house, Sben-Miller and Clarke said.
use radiocarbon dating to establish where it sprouted 20 to 30 leaves
"It's not that we don't have
the ages, the oldest of which was and looked pretty much like a mod- enougb crops to feed the world, but
I ,288 years old. The second was em-day lotus.
most of the grains and food are
684 years old and the third 755.
"The only difference was the spoiled before the people get it,"
The fourth could not be dated.
leaf dimension was smaller. Other- Sben-Miller said.
Among the reasons for the wise, it was so vigorous, it's just
She suggested that the lotus'
seeds' longevity is the presence of amazing," she said.
system of repairing age-related '
L-isoaspartyl mcthyllransferase
damage might be transferred one
Tb~ plant survived nine months
enzyme. identified in the 1980s by and died before it bad a chance to day to crops through biotecbnolo.UCLA biochemistry Professor flower in its second year, she said. gy.
.
Steven Clarke as the first protein- Shen-Miller blames her own garCarl Leopold, a plant physiolorepair enzyme.
gist at Cornell University in Ithaca,
dening.
Clarke, a specialist in the chemResearchers ground up part of N.Y .. said that with good dating '
istry of aging, marveled at the the 416-year-old seed for analysis techniques, Shen-Miller "came up
seeds' abi,lity to "fend off all age- and •'what we found was this with a number that represented the
related damage" and attributed it repair enzyme was just as active in oldest seed anybody bad found
to the enzyme. The enzyme is that seed as it was in a modern that's genninable."
found throughout nature, including seed," Clarke said.
in humans.
Clarke said further analysis
could offer clues to plant and animal longevity.
"As you look at these seeds further, my guess is they' ll have other
repair processes," Clarke said.
"This becomes a wonderful way of
finding out about potenti:jlly new
repair processes that may be relevant to aging in other organisms
including humans."
Last year, Shen-MiUer took the
remaining three seeds and subjected them to a newer dating method \.
Paid for by Candidate- 30348 Valley Bell Rd., Racine, OH 4577!J
thai preserves aU but a fraction of .:

Thanks To The Voters Of

- Lebanon Township For
Re-electing Me As Your Clerk.
Your Support Was Greatly
Appreciated.

DOROTHY A. ROSEBERRY

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---Military news---

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Willard E. Wotrord
Navy Seaman recruit WiUard E.
Wolford recently completed U.S .
Navy Bas ic Training at Great
Lakes Naval Station, IUinois.
During the eight-week training
program , Wolford completed a
variety of training which included
classroom study, practical hands-on
instruction. and an emphasis on
physical fimess.
Wolford is a 1995 graduate of
Wabama High School.
Jason E. Sntltb
Marine Lance Cpl. Jason E.
Smith, son of H. Steven and Janet
L. Smith of Albany, bas returned to

Marin e Corp s Air Station, New
River. N.C., after completing a sixmonth overseas deployment with
the aviation combat element of the
24th Marine Expeditionary Unit as
part of the US S Kearsarge
Amphibious Ready Group.
Smith's unit embarked from its
base in North Carolina and traveled
across the Atlantic Ocean to the
Mediterranean Se. . The 24'th
MEV then relieved the 22nd MEV
which had been serving in the
Adriatic Sea off the coast ncar
Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Smith is a 1992 graduate of
Alexander High School. He joined
the Marine Corps in Jan. 1993.
•

he .2e1tirEl News Hot 11 ne

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RUTLAND
MAIN STREET

service
·' -"et me sell"
\VhG "'
dd1

Steve Story.
A main goal of the CIC during
this rebirth is to develop the fonner
Ohio Valley Manufacturing area in
Tuppers Plains, which bas been prioritized among the top development site in the county by the consulting firm Burgess and Niple,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
"This is the are that Burgess and
Niple chose as having the most
infrastructure available in the near
future for business development.
Water, sewer, road frontage, and
very close access to a four-lane
highway are the main drawing
point~ of this site. ·There are others
locations in the county that are very
nice sites also, but they don't bal!e

GATE
CLOSED

742-2211

Members of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce elected five
members to serve on the chamber's
Board of Directors at their annual
dinner and election Tuesday night
at the Tuppers Plains V.F.W. building.
The five members who will
serve three year tenns on the ISmember board are: Horace Karr of
Karr Construction, Paul Reed of
Farmers Bank, Bill Nease of Home
National Bank, Mike Lively of
Southern Ohio Coal Company, and
Roy Jones.
Other members on the Board of
Directors are Jim Anderson, Steve
Dunfee. Sue Maison, Joyce

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ameri- competitive.
In July, AEP said it would elimcan Electric Power Co. will elimiinate
1,200 jobs at 16 power plants
nate 250 jobs here when it moves
as
it
prepares
for increased compeits corporate nuclear generation
tition
in
the
electric
utility industry.
&lt;Jew~ment to Michigan next year.
Those
reductions
include
the loss
AEP said Monday it will move
of
430
jobs
at
five
Ohio
plants.
the jobs to the D,lnald C. Cook
Eugene A. Fitspatrick, AEP
Nuclear Plant in Bridgman. Mich.,
senior
vice president of nuclear
to cut costs.
generations,
said consolidating the
Tbe consolidation will cut about
nuclear
group
will result in sub50 positions from the Columbus
stantial
savings
in payroll, travel
nuclear organization and eliminate
and
other
expenses.
about 70 jobs by early next year at
"These staff reductions will
the power plant on the southeast
bring
our staffmg more in line with
shore of Lake Michigan.
.
other
top
nuclear stations,'' he said.
Employees will be offered volAEP
has
consolidated other
untary severance before any filings
operations
in
recent years, includbegin, the electric utility said.
ing
com,bining
operations of its two
Job cuts and consolidation of
Ohio-based
operating
companies,
the nuclear management and supSouthern
Power
and
Columbus
port functions are part of a large
reorganization to make AEP more Ohio Power companies.

Area dam included ~in energy, water bill
. The fiscal 1996 Energy and

RUTLAND, OHIO
1-800-837-8217

Service Hotline 742-2212

Quillen, Steve Story, Ed Hupp,
Ron McDade, Roland Wildman.
Judy Williams, and Jim Birchfield.
Chamber secretary Patty Calaway spoke to chamber members
on the upcoming sale of personalized bricks to be used in the
Pomeroy revitalization project.
The bricks will be sold for
$30.00 each, and will be personalized with the name of a business.or
a family member. The chamber's
goal is to sell 1,000 bricks, which
will be used in the construction of
Pomeroy's new riverfront
amphitheater, Calaway s_tated.
Personalized S"x S" corner(Contlnued on Page 3)

AEP to move 250
jobs to Michigan

Quality solid wood construction with nosag spring seats and high density foam
cush1ons lor the ultimate gliding comfort.
The sealed ball bearing 9lider mechanism
IS backed by a written hfetlme warranty.

SOLID
OAK

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Improvement Corporation is pushing ahead
with it's reorganization and
attempts to bring business development to Meigs County, after meeting recently to discuss development
and infrastructure in the county.
Tbe corporation, founded in the
early 1960s, helped with development and completion of several
municipal projects in the county
during the 1960s and 1970s.
Tbe group in later years became
dormant and is now attempting to
reorgartize and work to bring business development into the county,
according to Meigs CIC secretary

Meigs Chamber elects
five to board of directors

#1709

call by naming something they dislike about winter.
Officer's reports were given by
Lora Damewood and Betty Young.·
A poem, "Thanksgiving Prayer'
was read by Erma Cleland, and
games were conducted by Thelma
White and Mary K. Holter.
Refreshments were served by
hostesses. Doo;,prizes were won by
Mrs. Young &lt;ffid Thelma White.
Other there were Ada BisseU, Mae
McPeek, Goldie Frederick, Margaret Amberger, Mary Jo Barnnger. Ethel Orr. Marcia Keller
Charlotte Grant, and a guest San:
dra White.
'

CIC moves forward on Tuppers Plains project

GATEs CLOSED- james Bartrum and Bob Bobbit close the
gate on the United States Air Force Museum in Dayton after a fed"enil'bildRit'll6pifte ~S'Iltit"resiilved"lueSiJay. (APJ · · •
·

$23900

2 Sections, 14 Pages 35 canto
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 15, 1995

SOLID

Past Councilors Club make
holiday arrangements
Plans for the annual holiday dinncr party were made when Past
Councilors Club of Chester Council 323, Daughters of America. met
at the hall.
Tbe dinner will be held Dec. 13,
6 p.m. at Crow' s. The meeting and
Christmas party will follow at the
lodge ball. There wi II be a $3 gift
exchange.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Opal Hollon. Jo Ann Baum, and
Cora Beegle.
Laura Mae Ni ce, president,
opened the meeting by reading ,
Chapter 5, St . Matt. The Lord's
Prayer and pledge to the nag were
given, and members answered roll

Vol. 46, NO. f41
Copyrlgh11995

#951

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Most styles available in choice of
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Partly cloudy tonight. Low In
mld-lOs. Thursday, cloudy, snow
nurrles Highs In mld-JOs.

Water ApproJiiations Bill, containing over $46 million sought by
U.S. Senatory Robert C. Byrd (DW.Va.), for Rood control and water
projects in West Virginia, was
signed into law late Monday.
Included in the bill is $10 million for modernization of the
Robert C. Byrd Locks and Dam
below Gallipolis and Point Pleasani, and $11.8 million for work on
tbe Winfield Locks and Dam in
Pumam County, W. Va.

"These locks and darns are key
components to our waterways,
through which millions of dollars
in commerce flow annually. Tbe
ongoing efforts to modernize them
will belp to make shipping more
economicai,",Byrd said.
.
Tbe bill also contains $170 million to continue the programs of the
Appalachian Regional Commission
(ARC), including $109 million for
construction of.ARC Corridor
Highways throughout the 13
Appalachian states.

aU the factors involved at this time
like the Tuppers Plains site has,"
Story explained.
The site is 400 feet from state
Route 7 and 1,000 feet from State
Route 681, west and south of the
Tuppers Plains crossroads. The
nearly 60 acre site has a gently
rolling terrain. The Tuppers Plains
Sewer System should be ready by
the faU of 1996, according to sewer
board officials. Three-phase power
is currently on-site, and it is located
just four miles from a four-lane
highway, state Routes 32 and 50 in
Coolville.
The Meigs CIC and the Tuppers
Plains Sewer District arc currently

involved in applications for a fed- funds would free up money that
eral grant through the Economic was previously allocated out of the
Development Administration, Tuppers Plains Sewer Dislrict prowhich issues loans and grants to ject's budget. The sewer district' s
non-profit corporations and com- funds would then be rediverted to
munity developmental agencies.
allow the sewer district to install
The grant is being pursued to direct line hookups for the system
cover expenses for ex ten sion. of from the street to homes in Tuppers
lines for the Tuppers Plains Sewer Pl:lins, according to Tuppers Plains
Project to the former Ohio Valley Sewer Board attorney John Lcntes.
Manufacturing site.
Story also stated that a new bill
The EDA grants arc design~d to currently being discussed in the
be applied only toward projects Ohio House could al so play a big
that create infrastructure in unde- part in helping to attract industry to
veloped regions, or add a substan- the county.
tial amount of jobs to an area's
"We hope that Jobs Bill 3 will
infrastructure.
be passed by the Ohio House and
If approved, the EDA gra nt Ohio Senate. The bill would allow

up to a 13 percent tax credit that-'~
would he given to distressed areas
in the state for increased business
grow th and spec buildings for
industrial sites. Looking at some of
the latest development figures, I
would say that nearly 80 percent of
the groups thai are looking to
develop industrial sites now are
looking for not only a site, but also
a pre -exis ting building on that
site." Story stated.
Office rs elected to the Meigs
County Improvement Corporation
Board of Directors were Paul Reed,
president; Judy William s, vice
president; Jennifer Sheets, treasur.
cr, and Steve Story, secretary.

Thousands furloughed as shutdown continues
By LISA CORNWELL
Associated Press Writer
Thousands of federal workers
continued their unscheduled layoff
today while government leaders
looked for a way to end their budget impasse.
An estimated 40,000 of the
state's 90,000 federal workers were
expected to be furloughed, the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services said Tuesday after the shutdown began.
Nationwide, about 800,000 federal employees out of 2 million
were expected to be affected.
Tbe shutdown was triggered
Monday night when President Clinton vetoed legislation necessary to
maintain regular government
.s~!J.W!l&amp;. Sl!Yillg .be did so b!:cause
it woiiid have raised Medicare premiums.
Dozens of federal workers at the
Federal Building in Toledo were
among the workers furloughed.
"I have mixed feeling about
this," said Paula Jefferson, who

works in the Social Security office. distance phone calls.
"On one band, I can go home and
"We're open , but we can't do
relax for the rest of the day. But if anything," said Sgt. Dennis
this thing drags on, the work is Williams of the Army's recruiting
going to pile up."
office in Warren in northeast Ohio.
Only a few supervisors "All our assets are closed."
The furlough of 10,000 workers
remained at the Social Security
office Tuesday afternoon. The at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
office handles I ,400 new claims a in Dayton was announced Tuesday.
month, but no claims will be pro- About 22,000 civilian and military
cessed during the shutdown.
employees work at the base.
Workers connected with runway
Federal workers began leaving
the Anthony J. Celebrezze Federal operations, medical support, securiBuilding 'in Cleveland around II ty police, firefighters and employees supporting the Bosnia peace
a.m.
Michael Scott, 43, of Cleveland, talks were exempt from the furwho was fired during the 1983 loughs.
slrike by air traffic controllers and . In Columbus, 175 workers at the
is now a college student, said the Department of Housing and Urban
threat of a shutdown was a regular Development were sent home.
The U.S. Environmental Protecroutine for federal employees.
"It happens every year there is a tion Agency's research lab in
Cincinnati sent 950 people home,
cu~" be said. "Congress will come
but about 15 would remajn for
up with a stopgap bill,'' be said.
All active military personnel security and scientifjc purposes ,
reported to duty Tuesday, but said spokeswoman Pati Cooke. The
recruiters were not allowed to use lab does research on· Superfund
government vehicles or make long- projects, drinking water, pollution

prevention and healtlt risk assessments.
The National Park Service also
was affected by the shutdown. John
Debo, superintendent of the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation
Area in Cleveland, said about 100
workers were sent home and all
park visitor centers were closed. He
said about 18 security and maintenance personnel would remain on
the job.
Federal agencies unaffected by
the shutdown included the U.S.
Postal Service, which isn't funded
with taxpayer money.
Employees at Defense Construction Supply Center in Columbus
also stayed on the job, and federal
courts around the state remained
open.
At the U.S. Department of Energy's Fernald site near Cincinnati,
most of the 2,000 workers cleaning
up radioactive wastes are from the
private sector.
National Weather Service
employees also continued working.

Rutland Council discusses reinstallation of street lights
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
January is when the lights may
come back on in Rutland.
Members of Rutland Village
Council Tuesday night met with
Ohio Power/Columbus Southern
Power representatives about getting
the lights turned back on the village.
On Nov. 7, by a 129-79 margin,
Rutland voters approved a twomill, five-year levy for additional
current expenses with the stipulation that the money will be used for
Street lighting.
,
Ron McDade, Gallipolis area
manager, and Ron Carmichael,
street light coordinator, presented
maps of the viUage showing where
street lights bad been located.
"If you want them back in as
soon as possible, put them back
where they were," said Cannicbael.
The company can move or add
lights later if the need is deter-

mined, he explained.
"We're going to get them
instaUed as soon as we can. That's
why you passed the levy - it's
dark out there," said McDade .
Carmichael said the lights will
cost $225 a month for 38 lights.
Council bas the option of receiving
a cash advance from the levy to
begin relighting the streets, however no action was taken at the meeting.
In addition to getting street
lights turned back on, council will
have to find a replacement for
council President Duane Weber.
who resigned Tuesday night.
Weber cited business reasons for
his resignation. He runs the Quality
Print Shop in Middleport.
It was reported that $1,874 was
raised by the annual Rutland
Haunted House last month. Council
members commended the volunteers and donors who helped with
the event and agreed to publicly

thank them for their asSIStance.
spring," Houdasbelt said.
Theresa Houdashelt met with
Council approved the following
.council in reference to a problem balances for October: general fund,
with her driveway. Since the resur- $1,608.19; civic center, $1,362.QJ;
facing of state Route 124 through police fund, (-$1,262 . 16); law
the village, she bas a hard time get- enforcement fund , $187.33; street
ting into her driveway because a fund, $2,719.12; state highway
portion of the driveway between fund, $3,491.94; water fund,
the curb and the road was removed. $8,441.63; utility department fund,
Village employees Dave Davis $7,007.21: sewer fund, $1,495.93;
and Dale Hart said it is their under- . sewer debt fund, $14,848.41;
standing that driveways should not replacement fund, $18,641.99.
extend beyond the curb into the
In other busin ess, council
street.
approved the monthly mayor 's
Councilwoman Gladys Barker report of $1,203 and met police
said the state agreed to repair drive- officer applicants and agreed to set
ways and alleys when they resur- up a date to interview prospective
faced state Route 124 through the officers.
village, but hasn't kept up with its
Present were Mayor JoAnn
promise.
Eads, council members Weber,
"We're going to get com- Danny Davis, Steve Jenkins, Dick
plaints," she said.
Fetty, Judy Denney and Barker.
Council said it would check into Also present were Hart , Dave
that and other situation s and meet Davis. clerk-elect Cathy Stewart
with state officials at a future date.
and counc ilw oman -e lect Rose
"We don't want to wait until Mary Snowden Eskew.

Consumer prices climb 0.3% in October ·
Energy costs, which had
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices rose 0.3 percent in dropped in the three preceding
October, a modest advance but the months, rose 0.4 percent in Octolargest in five months, due in part ber. Food prices slowed to a OJ
to a big surge in the cost of elec- percent gain after rising 0.5 percent
tricity.
The Labor Department said
today the increase in its c;:onsurner
Price Index was the largest since
prices rose a similar 0.3 percent last
May. II bad advanced a barely per:
ceptible 0.1 percent in both August
and September.

in September, when the summer
drought wilted harvests and cut
supplies.
The core rate of inflation-, which
excludes the volatile food and ener-

gy sectors, was up 0.3 percent after
rising ju st 0.2 percent for five ·
straight mont11s.
For the year so far, inflation at
Continued on page 3

,.....;;...-_,

Jail escapee
back in custody
ATHENS (AP)- An inmate
who escaped last month from the
Athens County Jail is back in custody.
James Ayers was arrested on
Nov. 8 in Pickaway County after
allegedly breaking into a home. He
was identified oq Tuesday through
fmgerprints.
Ayers bad refused to give the
Pickaway County Sheriffs Office
his name when be was arrested. No
other informati6n was available
Tues(lay night, said a displ!-lcber
who would not give her name.
Ayers escaped from the Athens
County Jail on Oct. 30.

STAMP DESIGN WINNERS- Fifth-grader
Trenton Ra!ldolph and sixth-grader Maggie
R111eberry were named winn'n Tt!esday after- n In a postage stamp deslJIIl contest at SaUsbury Elementlll'y Scbool. Randolph desiJIIled a
Batman stamp while Roseberry designed a Pluto
stamp. The two were each a-rded a set or the
new comic strip character stamps. Shown here

are, !'rom left: John Musser, contest judge; Ran- ·
dolph; art teacher Donna' Clark; Roseberry;
Elaine Stewart and Dale Thoene of the Pomeroy
Post Olflce. The contest was held In co~unction
wltb last month's stamp c:oUecting month and aU
designs are on display at tbe Pomeroy P1ut

omce.

·

'

"

�Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Page2

(the GOP convention in) San Diego
and uied to impose (his) agenda,
Republicans would walk out in
droves from that convention,"

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
Buchanan said. " ... The point of
politics is not only winning, it's
winning for sometbing."
That's a strange turn of phrnse
for a candidate whose former boss.
Richard Nixon. used to justify his
dirty uicks by saying that the ends
justified the means.
If Powell became a candidate,
his critics said, the 35 years he
spent in the Army would be
scoured for negative information
and missteps in an attempt to
undermine his status as an American hero. The Pentagon, some predicted. would be Powell's
Arkansas - a reference to the
embarrnssing revelations that have
plagued Bill Clinton's presidency.
The implication was that there

were enough skeletons bidden in
the Pentagon's closets to nuse senous questions about Powell's fitness for the Oval Office.
U that's the case - that Powell
would have been judged against
three decades of Pentagon bluffs
and blunders - then it's only fair
mask the same of Buchanan. Now
that Powell is out of the race, are
the same lTitics honornble enough
to say thai the Nixon White House
- and Buchanan's previous writings- are his Arkansas?
In I 963, for example, Powell
was a young Army officer on his
first of two tours of duty in Vietnam. As an adviser to the South
Vietnamese army. Powell found
himself slogging through the rain
forest near the Laotian border.
After months of facing fire from
the Viet Cong, Powell finally left
the front when a borne-made booby
trnp pierced his foot while be was
on patrol. Once he returned home,
though, be found his veteran status
to be of little use. When he uied to
order a. hamburger at a drive
through restaurant near Fort Benning, Ga. , he was denied service

Where are the low gas prices?

because of his race.
Buchanan, meanwhile, skipped
military service due to a knee
injury and spent the early 1960s
writing editorials for the St. Louis
Globe-Democrat. One of his targets
during· this time was Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Derogatory information about King had been passed
to the paper's publisher by the
henchmen of J. Edgar Hoover, the
late FBI di~tor.
Half a decade later, Buchanan
was one of .the architects behind
Niwn' s political comeback, helping to orchestrate attacks against
the press and Nixon's political enemies. If Buchanan had any qualms
about whether Nixon's ends justified the means. be never voiced
them publicly. In 1969, for example, be starkly warne~ Nixon not to
visit Corella Scott King on the first
anniversary of her husband's death.
Such a visit would "outrage
many, many people who believe
Or. King was a fraud and a demagogue and perhaps worse . ... Others
consider him the devil incarnate,"
Buchanan wrote in a memo.
Four years later, as Nixon was
wilting under the ·pressure of
Watergate, it was Buchanan who
advised Nixon to nip the issue
''from a question of whether the
President 'knew' of the cover-up ...
to a question of whom do you wish
to govern this nation . ... If we have
to drift into demagoguery, so be it
- we owe them a few.''
While Buchanan was sharpening Nixon's fangs, Powell spent the
late 1960s polishing his military
know-how. fust as a student at the
Army Command and General Staff
College in Fort Leavenworth, Kan.,
then as a commander in Viemam.
Although Powell worked mainly
behind a desk on his second tour,
he also had the chance to save the
life of his commanding officer Maj . Gen. Charles M. Gettys when the helicopter they were trnvelling in crashed.
Powell's critics may have been
right in saying tha~ his Pentagon
record deserved thorough scrutiny
bad be become a candidate. But
with Powell back on the sidelines,
they should apply the same standards to Bucbanan.
Jack A·nderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

- Curb inmate lawsuits. Jailhouse lawyers are filing suits like
they're going out of style. Indeed, a
staggering 53.312 made it onto fed-

Joseph Perkins
eral court dockets in 1994, nearly
twice as many as a decade ago. It
would be one thing if most of these
inmate suits were meritorious, but
an overwhelming 97 percent are
thrown out before coming to uial.
That's because most are
frivolous . Like the California
inmate who sued prison officials
because they gave him a broken
cookie. Or the Oklahoma inmate
who sued because be was forced to
listen to country music. Or the New
York prisoner who sued because he
didn't like his haircut.
These suits may seem amusing,
but they cost federal and state taxpayers hundreds of miUions of dollars a year to defend. And at least
some federal lawmakers are ready
to rein in jailhouse lawyers.
They are pushing a bill (modeled after an Arizona law) which.
among other things, would require
thai inmates exhaust administrative
appeals before taking their claims
to court, impose suicter limits on
fees that prisoners' rights lawyers
can collect (from the taxpayers, of
course) when representing inmates,
and take away good-behavior credit
from inmates who file frivolous
suits.
- No profits from crime. One
of the sad commentaries on our
popular culture is that even the
most heinous criminals - like Jeffrey Dahmer, John Wayne Gacy
and Charles Manson - become
celebrity. figures . As su~h they

become marketable commodities.
For instance. an all-too-trendy
boutique in San Francisco actually
had the perversity to sell a line of
"Manson wear ." It featured the
murderer's likeness on hats, dresses. leggings, jackets. shins and
even children's wear.
And the sickest thing of all is
that the cold-blooded killer respon.sible for the stabbing deaths of
actress Sharon Tate and her unborn
baby actually reaped a percentage
of the sales.
Every state should have a law
on its books that prevents convicted felons from enjoying financial
gains from their criminal notoriety.
Whatever money they generate
should be turned over to a public
fund assisting crime victims.
- No government benefits
while in jail. If it were not bad
enough that drug addicts and alcoholics are eligible for federal disability benefits (under the Supplemental Security Income progrnm),
many continue to receive a government check. even . when they're
locked up in county jails around the
country.
No one knows precisely bow
many inmates are "double dipping" at taxpayer expense - having their housing, food and medical
care paid for by county jails while
receiving monthly SSI checks to
cover the same expenses - but
there could be as many as 100,000
throughout the country.
A bill wending its way through
the House would crack down on
double-dipping inmates by having
county jail chiefs throughout the
country routinely communicate
with the Social Security Administration to see whether their inmates

NEA,Inc.

"I LOVE IT!"

•

•

The coterie of fanatics and
wackos who have talc:en over the
Republican Party were sore! y put
out by the possibility that Colin
PoweU might be the GOP presidential candidate. My Heavens, they
told each other, this damn LIBE~­
AL believes in keeping the government out of women's wombs. He
thinks it's acceptable to deny guns
to criminals and certified luna\ics.
And be was more of an armchair
general than a trooper.
So, on Nov . 2, a group of
zealots called a press conference to
denounce Powell's politics and
reveal his alleged pathetic performance as a commanding offteer.
L' ii Ralpb Reed, Parson Pat
Robertson s ptoiOCJJtOr, was
"vacationing" and couldn't make
it, but be sent a resume of previous
statements depicting General Pow-

:·: ..' ·• IColumbusl38' I

W VA

Fl~~ies

Ice

Sunny Pr. Cloudy

Cloudy

r;: 199S AccuWoather. Inc

Via Assoc,flt9d Prs ss GrRph1csNot

Today's weather forecast
South-Central Ohio
Today ... Brisk and cold with a
chance of morning snow showers.
Partial clearing this afternoon.
High in the mid 30s. Northwest
winds I 0 to 15 mplh Chance of
snow 30 percent.
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low 20
to 25. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday ... Variable. cloudiness
with a chance of flurries. High 35

to40.
Extended forecast
Friday ... Partly cloudy. Lows in
the 20s. Highs 40 to 45.
Saturday ...A chance of rain or
snow. Lows near 30. Highs in the
middle to up~ 40s.
Sunday ... A chance of snow
northeast ... Otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s. Highs in
the middle 40s.

Robert H. Harrnh, 79, Lima, died Monday, Nov. 13 , 1995, at Lima
Memorial Hospilai.
·
Born July 20, 1916, in Gallipolis, son of the late E.M. and Roma Gibbs
Harrah, be .was a member of the Masonic Lodge-Antioch Shrine and also
a former member of the Middleport Presbyterian Church.
He was a grnduate of Middleport High School and serviced in the U.S .
Marine Corps in the Pbilippines during World War II . He was retired
from the State Highway Patrol.
·
Surviving are two sisters, J. Maxine Laugban of Tuscon, Ariz., and his
twin, Rowena H. Vaughan of Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Anna Katherine Mescher Har·
rab, and by a sister, W. Marie Watson.
Services will be I p.m. Friday at the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with the Rev . Krisana Robinson officiating. Burial will follow in
MinersviUe Cemetery .
Friends may call Thursday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Most of snow stays
east of Buckeye State
By The Associated Press
The National Weather Service
canceled a winter storm warning
today and tonight for 11 northeast
Ohio counties after a strong low
pressure system stayed to the east
of the state.
Snowfall amounts .in the region
overnight were generally less than
an inch.
.
Northerly winds across Lake
Erie helped to keep temperatures
above freezing with drizzle, rain
1nd snow r~portcd in Cleveland
Jvernigbt. The remmainder of the
;tate had temperntures in the upper
20s to low 30s with generally
cloudy skies and a few flurries.
Ohio,could sec·iOme light snow
or snow showers tonight, th&amp; NWS
said. Lows wiD be in the 20s.

· Light ·snow is lik~ly to contin~e
in the northeast on Thursday, while
the rest of the state sees part! y to
mostly cloudy skies, forecasters
said.
Tbe record-high tempernture for
this date at the Columbus wealher
station was 71 degrees in 197 I
while the record low was 15 in
1883. Sunset tonight will be at 5:16
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7: 17
a.m.
Across the nation
Western New York was shoveling out from under up lD a fool of
snow early today and bracing for
more, while Palm Springs, Calif.,
was a balmy 74 degrees before
daybreak. Washington was 38 and
rainy.

AT&amp;T offers half of its
managers buyouts.
NEW YORK (AP)- AT&amp;T
Corp. is offering buyouts to almost
78,000 managers - about b~f its
supervisory staff- as it plans to
break up into three companies, The
Wall Street Journal reported today.
It was unclear how many managers will accept th·e financialincentive plan the telecommunications giant began distributing
today.
Tbe 77,400 managers have until
Dec. 29 lD decide whether to accept
the buyout package or, starting in
mid-January, be subject to a final
involuntary cut by company planners.
The telecommunications compa-

Hosoital news·
VETkRANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - Gladys
Barrett. Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Nov. 14 -Goldie
Wallbrowo, Lucille Ramsey,
Amanda Fetty, Karla Wbimey.
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Allen, son, Racine.
(Published with permission)

The Daily Sentinel

ny bad previously anuounced that
the breakup would immediately
eliminate 8,500 jobs from its computer manufacturing arm, AT&amp;T
Global Information Solutions in
Dayton, Ohio, the former NCR
Corp.
AT&amp;T, which currently has a
work force of slightly more than
300,000, announced in September
that it is dividing into three companies - a communications services
c001pany, a communications equipment manufacturillg company and
a computer company. There are
currently slightly more than ·
150,000 managerS.
In an electronic message Sl)nt on
Tuesday, AT&amp;T Chairman Robert
Allen told company employees that ·
"at this point we can't teU you bow
many people will be required to
operate the new AT&amp;T and the
new equipment company because
we don't know yet."
AI least 20,000 jobs are expected to be eliminated as part of the
split, the Journal reported, citing
AT&amp;T insiders.
These would not be the first
major cuts in an AT&amp;T breakup.
AT&amp;T bas cut more than 100,000
jobs since the 1984 breakup of the
Bell System.
_,

Stocks

(USPS 113-%0)
Published every afternoon, Monday through l

Consumers..~ontinued rrom page 1
the consumer level has been rising
at an annual rnte of just 2.9 percent,
little changed from the 2.7 percent
increase during 1994.
•
The modest gain in consumer
prices gives lhe Federal Reserve
latitude to lower interest rntes if it
decides lhe economy needs a boost.
Its policy-making Federal Open
Market Committee was meeting
privately today to consider the possibility.
Many observers believe the Fed
will postpone any decision until its
December meeting, in part to avoid
the appearance of. taking sides in
the White House -congressional
budget debate.
The central bank bad rai sed
interest rates seven times over a
year to slow the economy and
avoid any inflation spiral, .hut
reversed course last July and lowered a key shon-term rate a quarter
percentage point. It has not acted
since then.
Except for economic indicators
compiled by the Federal Reserve,
the CPI will be the last repon on
lhe status of the nation' s economy
pending the return of furloughed
data collectors and analysts. The
report was completed prior to lhe

government shutdown Tuesday .
The Federal Reserve is not subject
to congressional appropriations.
Fuel oil prices were down 1.3
percent in October and lhe cost of
natural gas slipped 0.2 percent.
Those drops were offset by a I .9
percent surge in the cost of household electricity, the largest since a
similar increase in March 1993.
Gasoline prices declined 0.5
percent.
The index for fruits and vegetables, which had lleen driven up 2.4
percent by the drought in September, declined 0.2 percent a month
later, more than offsetting larger
increases in most other major grocery store food groups.
The price of tomatoes shot up
11.8 percent, but lettuce costs
plunged 13 percent. Egg prices
increased 4. I percent, the lhird big
jump in four months.
Meat prices were up 1.2 percen~
including a 1.4 percent jump for
pork after a 1.5 percent ad vance a
moo th earlier. Beef rose 0.6 percent; poultry, 0.1 percent.
Housing costs rose 0.4 percent
and apparel prices and medical .care
both rose 0.3 percent. Prices for
new cars dipi'JCd 0.1 percent.

-Meigs announcements ~
Eastern athletic banquet
Tbe Eastern Fall Sports banquet
wiD be held Saturday, 6:30p.m., in
the high school gymnasium. Junior
High and Varsity athletes wtll be
honored in the following sports:
Volleyball, Cheerleading, GoU. and
Football. Each family is asked to
bring two deserts. Drinks and table
service will be provided. For more
information, contact. Pam Doutbitt
at Eastern High School at 9853329.
Library Board to meet
.
The Meigs County L1brary
Board of Trustees will hold their
regular meeting Thursday, I p.m.,
at the Meigs County Ltbrnry.
AA to meet
Pomeroy Group of Alcoholics
Anonymous will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Mulberry Av,e .• Pomeroy.

Services set
Special services will be held at
the Mount Olive Community
Church. Long Bottom. Evangelist
will be William Villers for the 7
p.m. services Saturday and Sunday.
Bazaar announced
Preceptor Beta !leta Sorority of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will hold a
Christmas bazaar Nov. 25 and 26 at
222 E. Main in Pomeroy. Hours
will 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, and
noon to 4 p.m. Sunday.
Services announced
Weekend services at the
Danville Church of Christ will be
held Saturday 7 p.m. ; Sunday
10:30 a.m . and 6 p.m. Denver Hill,
Foster, W. Va. will be lhe speaker.
Committee meeting
The Southern Local Building
Committee will meet Friday, 7 p.m.
at the high school. AU district residents encouraged to attend.

Akzo ........................................ 55518
Allllud OU .......,................... .31114

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls

Member: The Associated Press. and the Ohio
Newspaper Association.

Buk One ............................... .JS 314
Bob Evans .......... ,.................... 17 718
'Jior&amp;-Warner ................................31
Cbamploo lad ........................U 114
Charming Sbop ....................... .l314
City Holdtng ...........................l3 1/l
Fedenl Mogul ........................ 19114
Gannett ...................................S6 1/l
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .40 118
K-mut .....................:...............? 314
Landi End ............................. .15 1/4
Limited lo&lt;- ....... .................... 17 lJB
Multimedia Ine......................44 1/l
People's .............................,....ll 518
Ohio VaUey Buk .........................36
One Valley ..................................JZ
RockweU ...............................47 118
Robbins &amp; Myen.................. .33 1/4
Royal Dutch/Sbell ............... 1l4 718
Sbolley's bic........................... ll 518
Star Bank ..............................56 718
Wendy lat'l.......................... .lO 118
Wortblllglon Ind .......................... 17

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to nine calls for assistance Tuesday including one transfer call. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
2:35 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Hollie Green, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

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-•-•-

Stock reports III'C the 10:30 a.m.

quote~

provided bJ Adn1t ol

G.Wpollll.

·'

'ic developm ent and tourism pro grams.
- Steve Story updated the chamber on the Route 33 Corridor project Story stated that environmental studies on the Athens to Darwin
section have been completed by the
state, and are currently bein g
reviewed by the Federal Highways
Commission.
Th'e chamber will hold their
next board of director's meeting on
Tuesday, Nov. 28, at 7:30a.m.

Am Ele Power ....................... .36 718

By C•rritrorMolor Routt

Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprbe
1 Assodalion.
·

Meigs Chamber (Continued from Page 1)

friday, Ill Coun St:, Pomeroy, Ohio, _by ~
Ohio Valley Publishmg CompanyfMu llimedta
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769, Ph. 992-2156.
Second .clo.ss poSUtge paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

POSTMASTER: Stnd address corrections to
The Doily Sentinel, I I I Coun St., Pomeroy,
Ohio4l769.

'

Samuel J. Holmes, 44, of 67093 State Route 124, Reedsville, died
early Sunday, Nov. 12, 1995, at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
Born July 15, 1951 in Charleston, W.Va. he was the son of lhe late
Clarence "Jake" and lauraine White Holmes. He was a warehouse manager for a furniture store, a member of the Bethel Baptist Church in
Charleston. W. Va. and a member of the Forked Run Sportsman Club.
He is survived by a brother and sister-in-law, Frank and Betty Licblc
of Orlando, Fla.; a sister. Louise Gray. South Charleston, W Va. and a sts·
ter and brother-in-law, Dora (Doraine) and James Keeney of Titusville.
Fla.; special friend s with whom he resided, Ron and Kay Eplin g,
Reedsville; three nieces and six nephews.
Funeral services will be held Saturday at II a.m. at the Eden United
Methodist Church, Reedsville, with Pastor Richard Mahan officiating .
Burial will be held later at the convenience of the family .

stones will also be available for
sale, w'ith a price to be announced
soon, Calaway added.
In other chamber matters:
- The Chamber by-laws were
reviewed and passed in a un ani mous vote by members.
- A letter from Earl Matthews of
Athens concerning the Route 33
Corridor project was read to the
members by chamber president
Horace Karr.
- Members discussed proposals
for funding the chamber' s econom-

OLIVE TOWNSHlP
11 :24 3.m., volunteer fire
department and squad to state
Route 124, motor-vehicle accident,
Dale Smith, Holzer Medical CeoICC, Debbie Treadway. VMH, Tuppers Pla,ins squad assisted; ·
8:33 p.m., state Route 124. Amy
Hall, refused treatment.
POMEROY
1:31 a.m .. Maples ApartrnenJs,
Gladys Barret~ VMH;
.
6:21 p.m., New Haven, W.Va.,
Anna McFarland, HMC.

RACINE
9:20 am .. volunteer

rue depart•·

Local briefs
Pomeroy accident investigated

Samuel J. Holmes

are on lhe SSI. The Congressional
Budget Office estimates lhat this
measure would save the federal
treasury more than $125 million
over five years.
- Government liability for
escapees. If an inmate escapes from
. prison and commi'ts a crime against
an innocent citizen, the victim has
no recourse. That's because prison
officials may not be held responsible, even if their negligence
allowed the escape.
The family of Faye Lamb Vann,
a 44-year-old Aorida woman, discovered this recently when the
Florida·Supreme Court callously
set aside a $150,000 settlement the
family had negotiated with tbe
state. The state justices unanimously ruled that prisons have no special duty to citizens to protect them
"from the criminal acts of an
escaped prisoner.''
In 1990, Vann was sitting in her
car outside a Tallahassee shopping
mall when Donald David Dillbeck
broke in and stabbed her to death.
'lbe previously convicted murderer
bad escaped the day before from a
prison vocational-school work
detail that was catering a banquet
35 miles away from the prison. As
It happens, prison officials bad ntisclassified Dillbeck to minimum
custody.
The irony is that if Dillbeck had
killed a fellow inmate, the state
would have been obliged to pay at
least the funeral expenses and
maybe more. Surely, innocent citizens like Faye Lamb Vann deserve
at least as much considerntion from
the government.
Joseph Perkins is a colunmlst
tor The San Diego Union-Tribune.

ell as a leftie.
Frank Gaffney Jr., a fifth-level ·Pentagon official in the Reagan
administration who bas never
served in uniform, averred that
Powell was obviously possessed of
an inferior military mind because
be expressed a- ''relentless and
parochial skepticism about the ulil·
ity of air power" during lbe war
with Iraq.
•
Paul Weyricb, bead of the Fn:e
Congress Foundation and another
who had the temerity to criticize
Powell despite his own lack of military service, snorted and rooted in
the muck like a porker in searcb of
slop.

PA

~

Gen. Powell dismisses his critics
You want to know bow Colin
It was such an efficient and
PoweU got to be a general, all you impressive performance, in fact,
have to do is take a close look at thai I found myself wishing Generthe way he destroyed the gang of al Powell would change his mind in
ideological guerrillas who sought
to knock him out of the presidelllial
Joseph Spear
raoe the week before be voluntarily
quit it.
the middle of it He was the picture
He was asked during lhe press of discipline and dignity and matucooference in which be declared be rity and sincerity, demonstrating
would "not be a candidate" for precisely why so many people were
any office.in 1996 whether the crit- inuigued by his possible candidaicisms of his cbaracler, politics and cy.
I found myself wishing he
military career bad influenced his
decision not to run.
would stop and say· what the bell,
"No," he said. "I can't get maybe the old soldier ongbl to take
excited when s001ebody who never on one more mission. Maybe he
served in the military jumps up and ought to go ahead and run anyway
attacks me for my 3S years of ser- · and win one more for America by
vice. And so that didn •t bother me.
wiping out these creeps for once
particularly ...
and for all.
Like Samson slaying Pbilistines
For those who missed the event
with the jawbone of an ass.
to which I refer. a review:

•

IMansfield 135° I•

Nation's inmates need a reality check

In the wake of I 0 recent prison
disturbances around the country,
federal officials are looking for
eq&gt;Ianations. At a recent press conference , Deputy Attorney General
Jamie Gorelick offered several
~-~ .
S=~the~~~~~m
Now lets get closer to home. At know that these high prices arc not half-baked theories.
One of the causes, she conjecthis date the price of gas in Belpre a plus for the local economy, but a
tured,
was prisoner ' 'unhappiness
is $1; and in Tuppers Plains the negative one.
over
senlences
for various drug
price is $1.04 per gallon. ConseLet me add one more little tid- '
offenses."
She
also
suggested that
quently. why would anyone in the bit. Pomeroy and Tuppers Plains
proposals
by
the
Republican
Chester area and north ever consid- gas dealers have the same distribuCongress
"td
take
away
weight.. :tir purch asing gas in Pomeroy . tors. Now I don't know what meslifting
and
athletic
equipment"
was
. : -Really, by this time you would be a sage you readers got from that; but
"provocative
lD the inmate popula:: :Complete idiot not to realize there I know what it tells me. Believe
: . :are no gas bargains found in me. it' s·terrible to realize that greed tion."
Gorelick ' s wackiesi notion is
· : .Pomeroy. Also, the distance from is one of the greatest destroyers on
thai
irunates got their dander up by
: - me state highway garage to the gas this planet.
watching
congressional proceed: : :stations in Pomeroy and those in
Earl Young
ings
on
cable
television . "The
: : :Tuppers Plains is almost the same.
Chester
accessibility of C-SPAN to out
prisons," she said, "has made for
kind of an interesting communica·
lion, if you will, between Congress
,.. .
and our current prison population."
·: : ~y The Associated Press
Here's a theory that Gorelick
,· · · Today in History
obviously failed to consider:
.
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 15, the 319th day of 1995. There are 46 · Maybe the prison population bas it
:: : :days left in the year.
too good. They've been coddled so
··. · Today 's Highlight in History:
.
much by toucby-feely types like
·· : · On Nov. 15, 1777, the Continental Congress approved the Articles of
Gorelick that they somehow think
·: · :c:onfederntion. a precursor to the Constitution of the United States.
that they have the same rights as
· · On this date:
p~ople outside the prison walls
: . : In 1806, explorer Zebulon Pike sighted the mountaintop lllat later
who haven't commilled drug
· · became known as Pikes Peak.
crimes, rapes, armed robberies.
·: : In 1889, Brazil 's monarchy was overthrown. A republic was proaggravated assaults and murders.
: c)aimed following lhe ouster of Dom Pedro II, the country's second and
It's time for the nation's inmate
: JIISt emperor.
'·
population to gel a reality check.
And the way to give it to them is
for federal and state lawmakers to
adopt corrections reforms. regardless of whether the inmate popula- ·
lion likes it, no mauer if they're
watching on C-SPAN.
. The following reforms would
enjoy wide support among the lawabiding noninmate population:

&lt;;Ji••
....es;...,..
0 111115111'

Robert H. Harrah

Buchanan deserves close scrutiny

YIP!

Berry's World

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

MICH

Ignores facts

( Today in history

Thursday, Nov. 16
AttuWc~ thcr" for&lt;.-cust for daytime conditions and ltigh

Lette rS to the edl.tOr

but the price is I0 cents per gallon
different.
I do feel that it is time for lhe
bend area gas dealers to consider
the damage their high gas prices
are to the economy of the business
pommunily. These high prices are
forcing the residents to make use of
every opportunity and excuse to
drive OJlt of the area for their gas
purchases. I~ doi~g so they will
· end up shoppmg, dmmg and sometimes taking in a movie. In other
words money that would have been
~pent in the Pomeroy area was not.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

--Area Deaths--

OHIO Weather

Wednesday, ~ovember 15, 1995

WASHINGTON - The rightwing rabble-rousers who helped
keep Colin Powell out of the presidential race should talc:e a second
look at the candidacy of one of
their own- Patrick J. Buchanan.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Like Powell, Buchanan enjoys
Publisher
the luxury of being an empty slate.
Having never held elective office,
there are no vote s to be held
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
accountable fm. no legislative
Controller
General Manager
record to help us judge bow he'd
. behave as president. Unlike his fel, low candidates, Buchanan is free to
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
run on his rhetoric rnther than his
words long. All letters are subjeci to editing and must be signed with name,
record.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
In his news conference last
should be in good taste. addressing issues, not personalities.
week, Powell said be decided not
to seek the GOP nomination
L-----------------------•.; i&gt;~c~~;~~ be lacked tbe requisite
"passion and commitment," and
that 'bis decision to bow out wasn't
motivated by the flak he was getting from the Republican right But
in the weeks leading up to Powell's
announcement right-wing activists
Tourism helps some, but is largely bad made it clear that his candidacy
Dear Editor.
The new highway construction seasonal and relies heavily on gov- would be far from a coronation.
system recently unveiled by . ernment support. With jobs, our Some of the most viuiolic criticism
O.D.O.T. effectively ruled out people could have money and be came from Buchanan himself.
"I think if Colin Powell went to
completion of our highway corridor tourists too.
from central Ohio to Interstate-77
We need, and could have, indusat Ravenswood, W. Va .. It does so try along our 'Corridor 33' if it
by relying heavily on "traffic were in fact, a corridor. It cannot
count" to show lack of need. Tell be until we take the steps lD open it
me, how can you have traffic count up at the Ohio river. Making that
first segment, from the bridge to
when you don' l have a road?
It ignores the fact that commer- state Route 124 Priority #I is absocial and indusuial traffic wanting lutely crucial. The Lancaster-Fairto go north and soulh are forced to field Chamber of Commerce recogtravel east and west from Athens to nized this by publicly stating so.
I urge everyone who reads this
Parkersburg to get to 1-77, adding
at least 25 miles one way to the letter 10 get a map and see what
trip. That 25 miles is an estimate completion of this 33 Corridor
contingent upon a new bridge and could do for us and Ohio. I can
bypass through Belpre and Parkers- assure you that route 35 people
burg. Furthermore, we must rely on have been working hard on their
West Virginia to build these pro- corridor. but they too are stymied
by construction in West Virginia.
jects for us.
I repeat. We have the bridge and
We are constantly reminded of
our high poverty rnte and the lack connection to 77. Let's open 'er up.
of employment opportunities in our
Earl F. Mathews
region . Our Chambers of ComAthens ·
merc e and community leaders
Struggle with this year after year.

· Dear Editor,
· · Isn't it am:lzing that the price of
gas in the Pomeroy area remains in
the stratosphere; while the remainder of the state bas been enjoying
the lowest prices in years. That fact
was noted recently in an article in
lhe Columbus paper. I feel that I
£an back up that article from my
recent trips into the Amish country,
:.Bucyrus, Columbus, and the Day:_
ton-Cincinnati areas. In my travels
through the state I never once paid
more than $1.04 per gallon; and I
saw it printed as low as 97 cents

•.

Wednesday, November 15, 1~95

ment and squad to state Route 338,
motor-vehicle accident, Wanda and
Ari Blinn, Jreated at the scene.
RUTLAND
3:54 p.m., Main Street, Paul
Tope,HMC.
SYRACUSE
9: II a.m., John Street, Andy
Lambert, HMC.

Pomeroy Police investigated one accident in the village on Tues- :
day. ac&amp;lrding tD police chief Gerald Rought.
. :
The accident occured at 7:01 p.m on the Veternns Memonal .
Hospital parking lot.
:
According to reports, Barbara J. Quivey. 44, of Pomeroy was :
backing from a parking space in her 1991 Mercury when she struck .
the front of a parked vehicle owned by George Brickles of :
Pomeroy.
:
Damage to the front of Bricldes' 1986 Ford Van was modern~ .:
It was towed from the scene. Damage to the ngbt rear of Qutvey s.
vehicle was light.
Quivey was cited for improper backing .

Middleport sets final leaf pickup

11UUHS

r·.l0'J.f-F11 &lt;).5 SA T Y-: SUn 1 I

Tuesday crashes leave three hurt
Three people were injured in separate accidents investigated:
Tuesday by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
' Two of the injured were transported to area hospitals following
an 11 :20 a.m. crash on State Route 124 (Main Street) in Racine. the
patrol reported.
Driver Dale E. Smith, 62, Reedsville, was taken to Holzer Medical Center by the Meigs EMS, while Debbie M. Treadway, 39,
Stony Point, N.C. . a passenger in a car driven by Shawn A. Nttz, 18,
Ramseur, N.C. , was taken by the EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Smith was treated and relea~ed for lacerations and a fractured
nose, an HMC spokesperson said, and Treadway was treated and ·
released from VMH 's emergency room. a spokesperson said.
Troopers said Smith was westbound on Third Street when he .
failed to stop for the stop sign. entered Main and collided with
Nitz's southbound car.
Smith' s car was severely damaged and the Nitz vehicle was.
·
slightly tlamagcd. Smith was cited for failure to yield.
In the second accident, Aizi E. Blinn, 17, Ripley. W.Va .. was ·
treated at the scene by lhe EMS following a 9:16 a.m. accident on
SR 338, the patrol said.
She was a passenger in a car driven by Wanda 1. Blinn, 43, Rip- .
ley, that was westbound in Lebanon Township wh~
· t failed to
negotiate a right-hand curve and went off lhe right side lhe road, ·
according to the repon.
The car then struck a ditch and came to rest in a cornfield, troop- ·
ers said.
The car was slighUy damaged and Wanda Blinn was cited for .
speed for conditions.

Former Pomeroy resident
named mayor of Port Clinton
Tom Brown, formerly of
Pomeroy, has been elected mayor
of Port Clinton.
Brown, 55 , is the son of Nellie
Brown, Route 3. Pomeroy, and the
late Virgil Brown. He is the first
Republican to be elected mayor of
the city since the late 1960's.
He captured 54 percent of the
vote wilh 1,161 votes to Democrat
Mark Belknap's 910 and independent Jon Venner's 80.
The new mayor said he will
resign his position as senior disuict
representative for Congressman
Paul Gillmore before Jan. I so lhat
he can be a full -time mayor.

TOM BROWN

Vinton County's courthouse
.
cross will come down in January
McARTHUR (AP) - A cross
atop lhe Vinton County Courthouse
which has drawn complaints from
the American Civil Liberties Union
will come down in January, a county commissioner said Tuesday.
The ACLU bad threatened to
sue the county if the cross was not
removed. It said the cross violates
the First Amendment, which prohibits government from establishing a religion.
Commissioner Joe White said
the cross will be removed during
the first week in January, as long as
the weather does not make it too
hazardous.
The commissioners had initially
said they would fight to keep the
cross, but religious groups con vinced them they would probably
lose a legal batile, White said.
Meanwhile, U.S . Rep. Frank
Cremeans. R-Ohio, has drafted leg-

68~

BUNCH

PINK GRAPEFRUIT

$12'5

40 ·
SIZE

MEIGS FARM MKT

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
h r\'

'i'

J ·

~

1: , i &lt; 1 ' \

'i

:

The village of Middlepon reminds all residents that a final leaf:
pickup in the village will take place on Monday. The ptckup wdl:
begin on North Second Avenue at lhe corporauon ltne. and contmue.
through town . All leaves must be placed in piles by the curb for;
pickup. The trucks will not travel down alleyways.
:

Apple Butter
Now Available
In
Pints &amp; Quarts

:

' . •

,

�I

Sports

The. Daily Sentiriel
:Page 4

Wednesday, November .15, 1995

In the NBA,

1

Johnson receives
AL Cy Young Award

Magic hand Bulls
season's first loss
By The Associated Press
The Magic dido' t have Shaq,
and the Bulls didn't have Dennis
Rodman. No matter.
Anfcmcc Hardaway's duel with
Michael Jordan was more than
enough to keep things interesting
Tuesday night in the NBA's first
marquee game of the season. Hardaway's 36 points beat Jordan's 23,
and Orlando beat Chicago 94-88 in
ibe lirsl meeting between the teams
:\ince the Magic defeated Chicago
)n the Eastem Conference semifi·lials.
· "You figured the ·Bulls would
lie coming in here, looking for a littl e redemption from last 'year's
playoffs," Hardaway said, "and
get a victory since we were without
Shaq. It says a lot lor this team that
we can play without him •·
It was Chicago's first loss of the
season in six games.
Almost as surprising as Orlando's 6-1 stan with O'Neal sidelined with a broken thumb is the
Los Angeles Clippers' 4-3 mark. A
11~-106 win over Golden State put
theln over .500 for the first time
since November 1993.
Hardaway, who made 12 of 18
tleld goals. bit a clutch three-poimer with just over a minute to go,
and Nick Anderson made four free
,throws down the metcb to help tbe
Magic win.
Jord:m sparked Chicago's comeback from a 10-point, fourth-quarter deficit but missed his last two
shots and finished willl just five
points in the second half.
"They've got so much versatility. They've expanded their roles a
lot - from Nick Anderson to
Hardaway to Dennis Scou." Jordan said.
. "When the big guy is in there,
they seem 10 have to go in there
and tben have to get (the ball) back
au~ and the defense has a chance to
set up . Here, they isolate you and
use their ability quite a bi~ which
puts pressure on the defense."
Scottie Pippen had 17 points.
and Toni Kukoc had 16 for the
Bulls.
· Scou's three-point play snapped
an 83-83 tie with I :45 to go. Hardaway's fourth tbree-pointer made it
89-83, while Anderson , who bad
16 points, made four of eight free
throws in the final minute.

In other games, it was Seattle
115, Philadelphia 107; Atlanta Ill.
Charloue 104; Milwaukee 98, San
Antonio 84; Portland 105. New
York 99; and the Los Angeles Lakers 106, Sacramento 100.
SuperSonics 115, 76ers 107
Shawn Kemp made his first 10
shots. scored 29 points and grabbed
12 rebounds, and Seattle bel" off a
late rally at Philadelphia.
Hers ey Hawkins scored 21 .
points and Gary Payton had 19
points and II assists for the Sanies,
who have beaten the 76ers six
straight times.
Jerry Stackhouse had 27 points,
including 14 in the final period. for
the 76ers, while Vernon Maxwell
added 24 points.
Hawks 111, Hornets 104
S lacey Augmon scored five
points in the final I :25 as Atlanta
rallied to score the final nine points
and beat visiting Charloue.
Augmon, who had 20 points,
put Atlanta ahead to stay with a
three-point play, making it 105-104
with 1:25 remaining.
He then added two free throws
19 seconds later for a 107-1041ead,
and the Hawks clinched their
fourth straight victory when
Andrew Lang converted one of two
free throws with 18 seconds left.
Larry Johnson led the Hornets
with 34 points, and Glen Rice
added 25.
Buck$ 98, Spurs 84
Milwaukee snapped an eightgame losing streak to San Antonio
behind Glenn Robinson's 36 points
and a 13-0 fourth-quarter run.
The Bucks also baited their
four-game losing streak, snapped
the visiting Spurs' four-game winning streak and denied coach Bob
Hill his 200th NBA victory.
Vin Baker had only seven points
to go with 15 rebounds, and Terry
Cummings had 10 points and 10
rebounds against his former teammates.
Sean Elliott bad 31 points and
nine rebounds, and David Robinson had 26 points and 15 rebounds
for San Antonio.
Trail Blazers 105, Knicks 99
Clifford Robinson scored 36
points, including a 35-footer at the
third-quarter buzzer to put Portland
ahead for good, as the Trail Blazers
banded New York its first road loss

GETTING ABOVE the Orlando defense offered by Jon Koncak
(45), Horace Grant and Dennis Scott (far right) is Chicago guard
Michael Jordan, whose 23-point effort wasn't enough to keep the
Bulls from a 94-88loss, their first of the season after live sea~on-open·
lng wins. (AP)
of the season.
Robin son scaled the victory
witb four straight points on a 17footer and two free throws that put
Portland ahead 102-95 with I :06
remaining. He also had a big steal
with 34 seconds left.
Rod Strickland added 25 points
and 12 assists for the Blazers after
going scoreless in the first quarter.
Aaron McKie scored 14 and Chris
Dudley had II points and 17
rebounds for tbe Blazers, who outrebounded the Knicks 48-38.
Patrick Ewing had 29 points and
16 rebounds, and Derek Harper
scored 20 points for the Knicks.
Clippers 118, Warriors 106
Lamond Murray scored 13 of
his 22 points in the fourtb period a'
the Los Angeles Clippers won tbeir
tbird straight.
Malik Scaly added 24 point s
and Brian Williams 17 for the visiting Clippers, who have a winning
record for llle first time since Nov.
18, 1993, when they were also 4-3.
Latrell Sprewell's 24 points led
the Warriors.
Two sons of former Warriors
great Rick Barry faced each other

in. the game. Brent Barry, a rookiec,
with the Clippers, played against
Ius brotber, Jon. outscoring him 95.
Lakers 106, Kings 100
Cedric Ceballos scored 31
points to help the Los Angeles Lakers get tbeir first road win of tbe
seas on, beating undermanned
Sacramento.
. The Lakcrs, who snapped a
mne-garne road losing streak dating
back to last season, scored the
game's final five points to pick up
the victory.
The Kings played willl eight
players due to the suspension of
lour players for last week's fight at
Indianapolis, were led by Mitch
Richmond, who scored 28 points.
In the game's final minute, Rich- ·
mood was called for his sixth foul,
argued with the officials, then got
two technicals and was ejected.
In tbc third quarter, Kings coach
liarry St. Jean was thrown oot after
getting two Ts.
Elden Campbell scored 23
points, and Vlade Divac had 19 for
Los Angeles.

--------------Sports briefs------------. Football
_ _ been drinking and injured lwo
. BOULDER, Colo. (AP)- Den- women .
v~r receiver Mike Pritchard pleadPritchard, who will do 100
ed guilty to two misdemeanor hours of community service instead
charges steliUIIing from a car acci- of jail time, already has begun an
dent last month in which be had NFL alcohol program, and soon

will start Alcoholics Anonymous
and submit to tests for alcohol.
Boxing
NEW YORK (AP) - The jury
deliberating tbe fate of Don King in
tbe promoter's federal insurance

fraud trial asked to rehear testimony from bo&lt;er Julio Cesar Chavez
and two other witnesses.
It was the second day of deliberations for the jury

Scoreboard
N.Y. Rangers ... 11 5 2
Philadelphia .. ..... 9 6 4
New Jersey ........ 10 6 I
Washin~ton .......... 9 7 I
Tampa ay ......... .4 9 4
N.Y . h loDdets ...... 3 II 2

Basketball
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl..tklli&gt;blon

»:

X....

Ortando.... .. .. ....... ... .6
Miami ..................... 3
New York .. . .. ........ 5
New Jmey .............. 2
Philadelphia .............2

Washington ........ .. .2
&amp;ston .................. .!

L £d.

lil

1
I

.IS7
.?SO
2 .714
3 .400
3 .400

l.l
I

l

J
J
3.5

3 .400
3 .2j:O

2
4
3
4
6
6

.600
1.5
.429
2.5
.400 . 2.5
.331
J
143
4.5
.000
s

Midwest DMsiOft

»:

Dallas ......... .......... .5
Houston ..................4

lbh ........... ...........5
San Antonio ......... ..4

L £d.
I
I

lil

.83)
.800

VanccU\Iet ... .. .. ...2

2 .714
2 .667
S 2&amp;6

Minne.ota .............. 1
Denver . . ...............0

4
6

.5

.5

Gulden State ........ .2

4

46

J.S
3.S

.200
.000

s

I
1.5

429

2
2

4 .429
S .286

J

49

Hartford ........ ...... 6 8 I

I 3 34

48

Burrato .......... ...... 6 9 1
Onawa
....... 6 9 0
Boston ............... 5 9 2

13 49

S2

12 44
12 54

S4
61

WESTERN CONFERENCE

.»: L I

Detroit.. ........ ..10 5 2
Turuntu ........ .. 8 6 3
ChiCllgo ... ... .....8 1 3
Winaipeg .........8 1 2
St. Loui5 ...... ....... 7 8 2
Dllilii .. .. .. .. .... .. .. 5 6 5

18 65
16 41
IS 47

65
48
51

N.alona.l Lcqut
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Traded Tim

"

Tuesday's scores
PittJburgh 4, Dallu 2
New Jersey I , HarUord 0
Philadelphia 2, Wutlington 2 (tie)
Tampa Bay 5. Bmton 3
Aorida 5, Toronto 2
N.Y. Rangm I, St. louis I (tie)
Winnipeg 6, Clticngo S (0T)
Clllj!aty 4, Edmonton 2
N.Y.lslanders 5, San Jose 3
Detroit 6, Los Angeles .5

Otlawa at Hartford, 7 p.m
Dall11 at Dutralo. 7:30p.m
Montreal at 'Edmonton, 9:30p.- m.
Colo!'ldo at Anaheim. 10:30 p.m.

Thursday's games
New Jeney al Bolton, 7:30p.m

Tonight's games

Baseball

43
53
.57

41
59
57
72

63
64

86

Hockey
National HocktJIA•ue
BUFFALO SABRES: Pl•ced Garry
Ga lley, defenseman, on the injured list.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS: Recalled
Russ RomaJiiuk. left wing. from Hershey
of the MIL Sent Jim Montgomery, center. to Hershey.

Anwrlnn Leque
CJUCAGO WHITE SOX: Agreed to
terms with Dave Martinet, outfielder, on

22 66
19 59
19 65

fiL 1it: liA

Patine DiYbion
Colorado ........... II 3 2 24 64
L,o, Aoge.leJ " ... 8 5 5 21 64
Anaheim ...... ...... 1 lO 0 16 59
VllJlCOUVet " ....... s 7 5
15 64
Edrmnton ..... ..... 5 8 4 14
Calpry . ............. ) I I 4 10 38
San Jose: ............. ! 12 4
6 S2

Fountaine. defensive end. Placed Mike
wide receiver. on injured refierve . Waived Jerone Davison, runnins
boc k: from the practice squ1d. Signed
Darnct Bnn~:h, wide receiver,;, to ttle
practice squad.
Caldw~JI.

Transactions

a two-year oontract.
CLEVELAND INDIANS : Name;
Toby Hamh infield and bench coach.
TEXAS RANGERS: Named Jesse
Barfield minor-league hitlinB irutructor.

Tonight's games

Tuesday'J 1core1
Seattle 115 . Phihtdelphi1107
AUilota Ill, Charlotte I 04
Orlando 94, Chicago ·aa
Milwauiet 98. San Antonio 14
Portland 10.5 , New York 99
LA. Clippers 118, Golden State 106
LA. Lakm 106,Sacramento tOO

Hyers, first baseman, to the Oelrolt Tigers
ror a player to be named or cash.

me. I'll be forever grateful for
lllat '' be said.
Johnson, who led the AL in
walks for three consecutive years,
bas seen his walk total dea'ease for
four straight seasons. His newfound confidence, plus an outstanding curveball, enabled him to win
the pitching award that always
eluded Ryan.
Johnson, 32, set a league 'record
for the best winning percentage by
a pitcher witb at least 20 decisions.
The only pitcher ever to better
Johnson's .900 percentage is Greg
Maddux, who went 19-2 this year
for Atlanta and unanimously won
his fourth straight NL Cy Young on
Monday.
"You can only do so much with
a fastball," be said. "So I studied
the game in the last couple of years
and watched other pitchers. I've
mastered my mechamcs."
Still, Johnson set a major league
mark by averaging 12.35 slrilceouts
per nine innings, breaking Ryan's
record of 11.48 with Houston in
1987. He held AL bitters to a
league-low .201 average, including
.129 by left-banders.
Johnson averaged just 2. 73
walks per nine innings - in 1992,
be averaged 6.16. He also pitched
the first complete game of his
career without a walk, beating
Cleveland while slrilcing out 13 on
July 7.
Already the Mariners' career
win and strikeout leader, be beat
California 9-1 with a three-bitter in
a one-game playoff for the AL
West title on Oct. 2. lbat made the
Mariners 27-3 in games started by
tbe "Big Unit" and marked the
13th time be stopped a Seattle losing streak.
Willi Seattle facing a 0-2 deficit
in the best-of-five AL playoffs
against the wild-card Yankees,
Johnson won Game 3, lllen came·
back on one day of rest in relief to
beat New York in the decisive fifth
game at the Kingdome. He was 0-1
willl a 2.35 ERA in two starts in
the playoffs against Cleveland.
Johnson, who collected a
$200,000 bonus for winning llle
award, finished third in the Cy
Young voting last season after
going 13-6 and was runner-up in
1993 when he went 19-8.
·

•

N•lloolilllulr.dball AIIOd•llon
CI-UCAGO BULLS: Placed Dennis
Rodman, forward, on the injured list . Ac·
ti vated James Edwards . center, from the
injured list

in conjunction with the

MINNESOTA TIMBERWOI.VES
?laced Quislian Laenner, forward, on Uu.·
injured list.
ORLANDO MAGIC : Signed Brian
Hill , coach. to a mulll -year cont ract exten·
sion.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS : Activateil
Carl Herrera. forward, from the injured
, h1t. Placed Dell Demps, guard, on the in jured lis!.

Football
Naliorl•l FOOl ball Ltagu1
INDIANAPOliS COLTS : Waived
Glen Sanders, linebacker. Signed Vince
Workman, running back. Signed Tyronne
Joneli, wide receiver , to the practice
aquad.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES : Signed
Mot: Elr:wonihi . tackle, to a one-year contract . \VaivNt Troy Drake, tackle.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Sig ned

REHABILITATION
DEPARTMENT

•

A

. ,

•
•
•

Including an Exercise Stress Test

Testing is being provided at no cost to the patient. Costs not covered by the patient's insurance will be
offset by the Holzer Clinic Foundation Grant.

Hockey

•
:

CONTACT HOLZER CLINIC AT (614) 446-5137
TO DETERMINE IF YOU ARE A CANDIDATE.

»: L :I &amp; G!
florida .............. .14 • 0 21 67

,

~~~ ~dh~~~~~e~~r~~i~~\~fv~~ ~~

'teyball mentor Cald
' .d ·
"This has been .one ofteh11 sai '
·en]'oyable seasons I've haedmost
as a
coach. I learned a lot from th'
. roup. This ear will be sometht'nts
gthat we allycan reinember Tbg
'work tbey put into UIC am~ wase
'what made t't all poss·'tblc.g
"You lean on your seniors and
:we had a great group to de' end
'on," be added. "They led the ':vay
. ·

.

0

I

entor awatd winners for the
team were lenni Cummins (Most
Kills and TVC Most Valuable
Player), Sisson (Most Assists and
·
0
ISlriCI 13. Division IV Player of
the Year),
Jonna Manuel (110 PerA
cent ward), Lisle (Besl Serving
Percentage ( .R57) ). Jennifer
Lawrence (Most Improved) aiHI
Tassi Cummins.
Other special award winners

. Isson was 167 of 200 (.835)
16 aces, four blocks, 48I of
sets (.647) and was 114 of 160
setung. Those slats, especially m
her specialty field of setting and
h~r .great overall play, earned her
~~v~wn IV D1stnct 13 Player of
e ear.
. .
Manuel was 116-182 sptbng
(.637) w1th 35 kills and a 22-24 settmg percentage of .9l6. Proffitt
was up and commg w1th 75-105
serves and 61 blocks. A great front
lme player. she had 220-384 spikes
;~nand 96 kills, second on the

56?

9}),

"2

·

.

·

then alter they talked 11 over they
said, 'Coach, we want the medalh on ~,to stay on the district trophy.
Caldwell said, "I asked why?
Ant! the girls rephed, 'So when our

for .778 willl 39 aces with 407 ;f
O~erall Southern was 971 tlf
461 successful sets. Caldwell was 1,221 serving for .795 and !54
·181 for224.( .804) with 24 aces and aces. Spiking led to a 865-1472 or
98-174 spikes and two blocks . .59 1 average ·With 337 kills, and
L 1
!56 f 1
IS c was
o 82(.857)with 12 Southern was 1.020 for 1,220 set·
aces and was 85-134 setung. lenni lmg lor .836.
Cummms was 152- 193 for .787
Caldwell. concluded. "We had
WI th 16 aces, was 243 of 4 I4 spik- two extra district medallion s left
m~ (.586) and _was 17-109 selling over when we carne back from Ole
wnh 1
h h 76 bl
.a cam - tg
ocks . She tournament. I asked the girls to
had a team htgh 109 ktlls. She dectde what they wanted to do witl1
excelled as a. great front line player them . They named some special
and the TVC s Player of the Ycar.
people we ought to give them 10.

parents co me by the school and
look at the trophy in the trophy
case, they'll know its for them;,Th~
medalltons are for our parents!
"This is the type of club we had.
They have a lot of character."

SAMMI SISSON

JENNIFER CUMMINS

Cooper says OSU's top goals aren't No. 1 ranking or national title
By RUSTY MILLER .
No. I Nebraska anyway.
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) But Cooper also chastised an
Ohio State coach John Cooper said Ohio State beat writer who bad
his team 's goal in its stretch run · voted Nebraska No. I and Ohio
isn't rankings or a national champi- State No. 2 on bis poll ballot.
onship.
"If you don't know they're bet"I would be perfectly content .to ter, why don' t you put us No. I?"
have a chance to go play Southern be said.
The more immediate concern
Cal in the Rose Bowl. I hope we
get that opponunity," Cooper said for the Buckeyes is Saturday's
Tuesday at his weekly news con- game with Indiana.
Just 2-7 overall and winless in
ference. "I hope we're good
enough to win the next two ball si&lt; Big Ten games, U1e Hoosiers
have had difficulty scoring points
games and go play them."
Second-ranked Ohio State has (13.5 points a game) and holding
waited II years since the last time onto the ball (17 lost fumbles and
it made an appearance in tbc Rose 12 interceptions).
That might not get the blood
Bowl. Since the Big Ten isn't a
part of the bowl alliance and the boiling, but Cooper said he doesn't
conference champion is coliUIIitted anticipate his players having any
to the Rose Bowl, there isn't much problem concentrating on the
sense in worrying about polls or Hoosiers.
" I don't ever worry about that"
be said. "Indiana's played us tough
NEW YORK (AP) - NBA through the years. We've been forcommissioner David Stern accused tunate and we· ve won most of the
locked-out referees of "trying to games. But they played us tough
hold the league hostage" with tbeir and they'll play us tough this year.
salary demands , but stressed he There' s nu question they'll come
was committed to resolving the dis- over.?ere and we'll get their best
shot.
pute.
That may well be true , since
League officials were to meet
Indiana
figures to finally be at full
with leaders of tbe referee.~ union
strength.
Alex Smith, who missed
today.

--Sports briefs-

four games with broken ribs, carried a career-high 44 times for 183
yards last week in a 31-13 loss to'
Michigan State. Quarterback Chris
Diltoe, who missed two games with
a sprained knee. also appears to be
ready to go.
Besides, O,hio State is poised for
one of the greatest seasons in iL~
106 years of footbalL The Buckeyes are 10-0 for only the fifth time
ever and the frrst time since 1979.
They need to win against Indiana
and the following week at Michigan to clinch a Rose Bowl bertb.
In addition, tailback Eddie
George is among a handful of lop
contenders for the Heisman Trophy, particularly because he's coming off a school-record 314-yards
rushing performance in Saturday's
41-3 victory over Illinois.
So there seems to be plenty left
on the Bucke}es' to-do list.
''Overlooking anybody is out of
tbe question now, with only a couple weeks left to stay focused ,"
said nose guard Luke Fickell. "It
shouldn't be as difficult as it was
early in the season.··
Cooper said his team hasn't had
any difficulty dealing with the task
at hand.
"It's been that way all year

long," he said. "I think that's the
be'sI thing about tbis team so far."
Five senior starters will be making their final appearance at Ohio
Stadium, giving the Buckeyes yet
another reason to not daydream
about Ann Arbor or Pasadena.

"It goes by fas~ it really docs,"
said fifth-year senior Bob Hoying.
"On Saturday, I'm going to take a
moment and soak everything in .
It's going to be my last time in the
horseshoe and I just want to go out,
play smart and have a great game."

Ohio State could lock up the Big
Ten's Rose Bowl berth if it wins
Saturday and firtb-ranked Northwestcm were 10 lose at Purdue. The
Buckeyes own the advantage in
any lie-breaker on the basis of a
better non-conference record.

Bench's comments on Rose's alleged bets
on baseball draw rebuttal from 'Charlie Hustle'
CINCINNATI (AP)- Hall of
Fame catcher Johnny Bench said
he believes that ex-teammate Pete
Rose bet on baseball and should be
kept out of the Hall of Fame until
be admits guilt and apologizes.
That prompted an angry
response from Rose that Bench
didn't know the facts and should
keep quiet. Both men, who were
key components of Cincinnati's
"Big Red Machine" teams of the
mid-1970s, made their comments
in separate interviews Tuesday
with .Cincinnati radio station
WLW-AM. which broadcasts Reds
games.
"He created his own problem,"
Bench said. "Nobody wanl~ to say
or believe that he ever did such a
thing, and most of the majority that

that now believe tbat he did do it
still lllink it's all right, still think
it's OK that he bet on the game of
baseball."
Rose again denied that he bet on
baseball. Rose said the late commissioner Bart Giamatti never
IJroved Rose bet on baseball when
he banned Rose in 1989 for gambling on sports.
" Johnny's an intelligent guy, I
thought, but he just don't think
before he talks." Rose said. "If
you don' t know tile facts, you have
to keep your mouth shut. And
Johnny don't know tbe facl~ ...
The dispute started after WLW
talk show host Bill Cunningham
said Rose didn't anend a reunion of
Big Red Machine team players last
week because of a remark by
Bench during Hall of Fame indue-

lions in the summer. Bench was on
tbe stage with other Hall of Farners
when fans chanted, "Pete, Pete.
Pete." Bench replied. "You can
have him."
. Bench called Cunningham on
Tuesday and said that he had been
referring to Rose signing autographs down the street.
When Rose was banned , he
signed an agreement with baseball
tbat made no finding on whether he
had bel on the game. Giarnatti srud
he personally believed Rose bet on
baseball.
Rose. who now broadcasts a
radio show from south Florida, ha'
not applied for rcinstitement. He
served five months in federal
prison al'tcr pleading guilty to two
felony counls of cheating on hi~
income taxes.

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.•••...•...•••.•••.•.••.••.•••..•••••::
:

llA

Ill and Sammi Sisson had

s' .

s·.

were Emily Duhl (·II-TVC
demic) Brian p a ff'
aca1
Award) Amb~~ T~o 111 \~0%
Aces ( 3
Ja me ~~fesr (Most
lm
d)
Y
.
ost
(Mg;lo;~nts S~~re~e~I3 Calrlwell
Sisson will be \ ., ~~ ). i
state All-Star gam~;? Cagnt~n t~e0
Sunday. Nov .'20.
'
Other team me mbers we
Hiller Harris C nthi a C
re
Ranet~ Wheel~r fennifer ~~~~II.
Melissa La 11 ~
,
. _ . ger.
H'll
·
T
Y
•
Jenni
Frtend.
1
K
urley. Ktm Sayre and
ru;.~o~~~ was 144-185 servi n

•
•:
• :

•

Ita

From now on I'll always refer back
to the 1995 club, because now their
banner will be hanging on the wall
Hard work and dedication made fo;
a great year
"In so ~any categories the stats
for each individual were so close,.
he said. ''This club was very co~petitive."
One such instance was in poinll
scored in which Keri Caldwell
claimed the honors . Fewer than 30
points separated the top six candidale s. Keri Caldwell had 13 ~
while Jennifer Cummins had 120·
Bea Lisle had 119. Amber Thorn~

•.

IS OFFERING

-.

.

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The Southern varsity volleyball
team recently wrapped up a very
successfu 1 season in which i 1
claimed its fmt Tri-Valley Conference championship and a sectional
sbampionsbip with a 19-4 record.
Southern ended the season as DiviSIOD IV dlstnct runner-up . The
record stands only second in school
history to the 1984 team , which
was 22-3.
Head coach Howie Caldwell
was recently honored as the TriValley Conference Coach of the

mM PIDEN SMARTliASE IS THI WAY TO GO!

•

l.Ddiana at Orlando. 7:1) p.m.
HOUJton at Milw~kee. 1:30 p.m.
Sacramenlo at PorUaod, 10 p.m.
VaDCouver VI. L.A. Cllppen at Anaheim, Calif., 10:30 p.m.
New York at Ooldea St8tc, 10:30 p.m.

At... li&lt;Diriolott

.;Southern's 1995 volleyball team earns spot in school history .

RANDY JOHNSON

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! CARDIAC SCREENING PROGRAM !
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EASTERN CONFERENCE

I

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BuketbaU

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NHL standings

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

OVER 1-50 CONVERSION VANS MUST ·BE SOLD!

Program eligibility is based upon being a male over the age of 40 and
meeting a minimum of two of the following risk factors with no present
cardiac symptoms:
* Blood pressure greater than or equal to 160/90
* Cholesterol greater than 240
* Diabetes Mellitus
*Smoker
* Family history of cardiac l'!pisodes

Thunday's gama

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:•··································••'
:
HOLZER CLINIC
::
•:
CARDIAC
:

•
•
•

HOU5ton at Torooto,1 p.m.
Utah at Boston, 7:l0 p.m.
Cllarlotte at New Jeney, 7:)()p.m
Philadclph.ia at Wuhinaton, 7:30p.m.
lndiaoa at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Seaaleat Detroit, 7:30p.m.
San Antonio at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Denver at PhoeJiiX, 8 p.m.
CLEVELAND at Chicago, 8:10p.m.
Daihua! LA. Ukers,l0:30p.m.

l

1B

I

Padfic Dhrllion
Sacramento ............. .5 2 .714
Seattle...
.. ......5
2 .714
LA Clipptn: ...........4
J .571
Pboenix .. .. ............ .... 3 3 ..SOO
L.A. Lo.kers ............3
Portland .
...3

Moweal

Iutn

.s

WF..STERN CONFERENCE
Ium .

43

...... 9 7 0

Gi no Torrett.a, quarterback. Waivt(J Jamal

Ottawa at Pbiladel(lhi a. 7:30p.m
Toronto at Tampa Bay,7:30p.m.
Vancouver at Florida, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Chicago, 8:JO p.m.
San Jose at St. Louis, 8:30 p.rn
N.Y. Islanders at Los Angeles. 10:30

p.m.

Norlheua Dlvition
Pillsburgh ............ 9 3 3 21 78

Central Dl't'IJion

Central Di•Won
I .833
Oticaao .................. 5
Allanta ...
.. . .... 5 2 .714

Indiana ...
..3
Olarlolle
........... 3
Detroit
........ 2
Milwaukee ... .......... 2
Toronto ................ .1
CLEVELAND .......0

24 65 Sl
22 65 45
21 48 39
19 48 46
12 49 67
8 43 67

By BEN WALKER
NEW YORK (AP) - Like bis
mentor Nolan Ryan, Randy Johnson wanted to be known as more
than a guy who merely frred 100
mph fastballs. After doing what
Ryan ne.ver did - winning a Cy
Young Award - be just might be.
"My teammates now come up
and ask when I'm filChing, instead
of asking when I m tbrowing,"
Johnson said after his overwhelming victory for the AL honor Tuesday.
"I think there's a big difference
between someone who tries to go
in there and strike everybody out
instead of being a pitcher and
lllinking about the entire game,'' he
said.
Johnson, whose intimidating
fastball and improved control led
Seattle to the playoffs for the fmt
time, became the first Mariners
player to win a major post-season
award in the team's 19-year history.
The 6-foot-10 left-bander carne
within one victory of becoming the
ftrst AL player since Hal Newhouser of Detroit in 1945 to win pitch·
ing' s Triple Crown. Johnson went
18-2, led the majors in strikeouts
for the fourth straight year with 294
and led the league with a 2.48
ERA.
Johnson got all but two of the
28 first-place votes in selections by •
llle Baseball Writers Association of
America. He was the only pitcher
listed on every ballot and finished
with 136 points.
Cleveland reliever Jose Mesa
received the otber two first-place
votes and was runner-up with 54
points. Boston knuckleballer Tim
Wakefield was third witb 29, followed by 1994 winner David Cone,
who finished lbe season with New
York, with 18. Baltimore's Mike
Mussina, who led /be league with
19 wins, was flflll with 14.
Perhaps bad postseason performance counted, Johnson might've
won the award unanimously. Pitching often on three days' rest - be
even worked once after a one-day
layoff - he helped the Mariners
get within two wins of the World
Series.
"I don't have to win an award
to feel good about this year, but
obviously I'm gracious," he said.
Despite his repulation for being
a power pitcher, Jobnson said. be
wanted to be regarded for more
than blowing away batters. That
was tbe same wish that Ryan, the
greatest power pitcher of tbem all,
bad during his 27 seasons.
But like Ryan , Johnson was
seen as a wild thing, a guy who
threw fastballs with no idea of
where they might go. His most .
memorable moment before this
year, in fact, was the time he
.whizzed a fastball over the bead of
Jobn Kruk in the 1993 All-Star
game in Baltimore.
A few years ago, though, Ryan
took Johnson adde.
"Early in my career, I struggled," J obnson said. "I think
Nolan bas said that be saw a little
bit of himself in me.''
"Nolan Ryan and (fexas pitcbing coach) Tom House bave been
very influential in my mechanics.
They talked to me and worked with

)Vednesday,
November 15, 1995
f

•:

' Taxss, Tags. nile Foss extra Re!tate induded in sale pri:e of new veh~le listed v.ltere aJljk:allie. On awroved ctedll. No1 re5!)011~ble lor i)'pOgl'tlphical errors.

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MII.IJ · ·~lhi111J: I •• · I _.

IIIIIIJ: lUI • I ••

�.Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wedne~day,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

November 15, 1995

)vednesday, November 15, 1995

Meigs County·Garden Clubs to hold Christmas flower show
door hangings :u~&lt;J wreaths, gift
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
wrappings. and ('llllC\t J'IIUUS are all
Senlln•l news stall
The holidays wouldn't be com- to be included in til&lt;' &lt;'&gt;.hibits. Hal
plete without tbe annual Cbrisanas Kneen, extension :~~cut. will have
flower show of tbe Meigs County an exhibit on J'nins.:ttia.~ and how
to select the ri~ht ~n-c.ncry for holi·Garden Clubs.
Again Ibis year it will be staged day displays.
1bere is one d:\&lt;.&lt; m the artistic
at tbe Carleton School in Syracuse
·on tbe weekend after Tbanksgiv- anangemenl di\'ision which is open
to exhibits from non -garden club
,in g. Peggy Crane is chainnan.
members
. That class is "Plan a
"Christmas in Our Home Town"
is tbe theme of the show. Not only Party" a mass design.
Classes which are open to only
are residents invited to view the
beautiful arrangemel\ls, holiday garden club members in artistic
wreaths and swags, and gift wrap- arrangeme~ts arc "Look, It's
pings but also to exhibit in several Snowing," an arrangement includ
ing snow; "Last Minute Shopping,"
of tbe classes.
The show will be open from Ito a miniature not over five inches:
4 p.m. on both Saturday, Nov. 25 "Company's coming" a synergistic
and Sunday, Nov. 26. The judging design using three or more containof enlries by an accredited judge of ers; ''The Candles are Lit," includthe Ohio Association of Garden ing a candle; "This is the Reason,"
Clubs will begin at I p.m on Satur- tbe Holy Family included as a part
of tbe design; "The Ageless Story,"
day.
The artistic ammgcment classes flowers using Madonna in modern
range from mass designs to those or traditional styling; "Remembershowing motion. Indoor and out- ing Christmas Past," a still life.

Juniors, those up to 18 years tae, 12 to 24 inches long; board
old, are invited to exhibit in two lead (holly, magnolia and mabonia;
classes. "Christmas Vacation," an and berried branches, pyra cantba,
arrangement showing motion; and barberry, cotonaster and euonymus;
"What Chris\ffias Means to Me," a and potted plants including Christmas cactus with one bloom, foliage
favorite design.
Artistic hanging decorations houseplant, African violet, one
will be another section of the show crown, and blooming houseplant,
which is open for exhibits by the and succulent.
Another class is called "Christpubli c. In the class '' Deck tbe
mas
Brunch" and is for information
Hall," hangings for both inside and
table
settings to include one place
outside will be featured, while
scttiqg
and a full size ammgement
wreaths for indoors and outdoors
staged
on a card table to be fur will be exhibited in the "Hang the
. nished by the designed.
Wreath" class.
Clubs participating included the
Always a nice show feature are
the educational competitive classes Wildwood Garden Club which will
which arc for gift wrappings. All provide the entry decorations; the
must include plant material. There Shade Valley Club to do placeare classes for wrapping packages ment ; the Rutland Garden Club,
for both children and adults. The class signs; the Chester Garilen
class for ornaments using some Club, ribbons; tbe Star Garden
natural material is entitled "Trim Club judges and clerical work;
Middleport Amateur Club, registrathe Tree."
In the horticulture division, also tion; Winding Trail, the photograopen to the public, there are classes phy; the Rutland Friendly Gardenfor nee dled evergreens (pine. ers, publicity, and the Friends and
spruce, hemlock, yew, and arborvi - Flowers Club. hostesses.

---Society scrapbook--BRING A FRIEND
"Bring a Friend Sunday" was
recently observed at the Bradbury
Church of Christ
About 66 members, friends and
family attended tbe morning services and the potluck luncheon
which followed.
Rick Snyder, minister, was
joined by his brothers, Jason and
Mike, for a .sp;:.;ial in song prior to
his message on "Friendship." Also
singing a duet was Paula Haynes
and Kathy Johnson. Olen Harrison
n:cited a poem which be had writlen especially for the occasion. It
was entitled "Friendship Day."
Plans were announced for a
.Thanksgiving dinner to be held
Sunday following the morning
worship service. Family and
friends of the church are invited to
join in the fellowship and worship.

•

SORORITY ACTIVITIES
: \ Members of Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
toured the Lee Middleton Doll Factory in Belpre last week, after
which they enjoyed a luncheon at
tbe Blennerbasset Hotel in Parkersburg.
Making the trip were Joan
Corder, Jane Walton, Ann Rope,
lean Powell, Ruth Ann Riffie, Carolyn Grueser. Martha McPhail.
Clarice Krauuer, Charlotte Elberfeld and Dorothy Sayre.
Next planned evem will be a
Christmas craft sale on the weekend after Thanksgiving.

CRAFT FAIR
The eighth annual Chri stmas
craft fair. "Down on the Farm" will
be held at the Bob Evans Farm on
Saturday and Sunday after Thanksgiving, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day.
More than 50 crafts people will
set up shops in the Homestead.
Craft Barn, Barn Museum . and
Adamsville Log Cabin Village .
Everything from herbal wreaths,
baskets, and old world Santas to
pottery, candles, and dolls will be
offered in the range of handmade
gifts.
Admission is free . As evening
approaches, thousands of Christmas lights will brighten the Farm's
valley.

President of Meigs County
Commissioners, consent to
accept

the jurisdiction of

Federal courts if an action
is brought to enforce
responsibilities in relation
to environmental reviews,

decision-making,

and

action; and that these
responsibilities have beett
satisfied.

Public Notice

is 15 days after It is
of a required decision, anticipated that the State
finding, or step applicable will receive a request fo(
to the project in an release of funds), wttt be
environmental review considered by the State of
Ohio.
process.
The addreu of the chief
Written objections must
be prepared and submitted e..cutive Officer is: Fred
in accordan(:e with the Hoffman, President of
County
required procedure (24 OFR Meigs
Part 58), and must be Commissioners, Meigs
addressed to the: State of County Courthouoe,
Ohio; Environmental Pomeroy, OH 45769.

project indicates omission

Officer;

Community

Development Division; P.O..
Bo• 1001; Columbus, Ohio
43266-Q101.
Objections to the Release

(11) 15 1TC

than those stated above will
The legal effect of the not be considered by ihe
certification Is that upon its State of
Ohio.
No
approval, the Meigs, County objections received after
Commissioners may use December 15, 1995, (which
Classlfieds
'the Federal funds, and the ,__ _....,;._ _.;..._ _.:..,_In
_The
__
_ _ __,
State of Ohio will have
satisfied its responsibilities
&amp;
under the National
Environmental Policy Act of

Open House Nov. 17

1969, as amended.

The State of Ohio witt
accept an objection to its
approval of the release of
funds and acceptance of
the Certification only if It is
on one of the two following
bases: (a) the certification
was not, in fact, executed

by Metgs County's chief
sxecutlve officer or other
officer of Meigs County
approved by the State of
Ohio; or (b) that Meigs

Country Naturals
Gifts &amp; Accessories

317 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, OH .45760

992-4015

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the
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shopping. Christmas Club is so easy to join-and so easy to keep
up because you choose the amount of your regular deposits.
Join the Christmas Club now! Get a free gift and earn interest on
the daily balance in your account. Come in today-it's never too
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992-6661
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MASON, W. VA.

ESTATE
AUCTION

304·773·5583

SATURDAY, NOV. 18, 1995
10:00 A.M.
Located at tha Auction center on Rt. 33 1n

f

-

FOOD LAND

~SUGAR

Miracle
OWhip

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69

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RETAILER Maillo Kratt, Inc .. CMS Dept. M21999. One Fawcett
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.·'

• - • • • • - • • • - • TBf.'i1jFiif'FIIiOJ;IA..f''ifi'QIJ~Eil, • • - -

POMEROY - Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees.
regular meeting, I p.m. Thursday at
the library.

Mason,wv.

Dutro llcll of""*'" 1111.,• tJI CARY nurr1111111

Caiifbrnia
Cau.liflower
..
or..· '
.'· Broccoli ·ea.

.. '

Asst. Varieties

REEDSVILLE- Riverview
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Reedsville Church of Christ
for Christmas workshop. Members
to take finger foods for meeting
and gifts for Pomeroy Nursing
Center.
RACINE - Alpha Epsilon
Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa will
meet Thursday at the Racine Unit- •
ed Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m.
Members are l&lt;1 take a toy for
donation to area ~hildren. Program
will be a make-it, take-it Christmas
· craft.

Del Monte
\'""'""~:':±
Vegetables

3cans$1

11 -15.5

oz. can

RACINE - Racine Post 602,
American Legion, 6:30 p.m. meeting Thursday. Dinner to follow .

Let Us Do
The Work!

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778, annual Thanksgiving
supper, Saturday, 6:30p.m. at ball.
Grange to provide the turkey, those
auending to take covered dish.

Your Choice Turkey,
Ham or Turkey
Breast Dinner! ....__ ....~-..

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans, special meeting. Grange hall on the. Rock
Springs Fairgrounds for the purpose of buying a meeting hall, 7
p.m. Monday.

Asst. Flavors

Eagle Thins
Potato Chips

LET ART - Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday at tbe
omce building.

News policy

Lunch
Mason, WV
Res: 304-773-5785
Audlcn CtrW 304-773-5447
EXECUTOR: PAUL HOWARD ROBERTSON
TERIIS: Calh or Chedl with ID
·

\b;
.. r·

POMEROY - Middleport
Child Conservation League, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Rock Springs United Methodist Church. Mony Wood
ofDARE will speak.

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. I 66

.... proe»dtnct _ . , . prtnllld -

\-

32 oz. Jar Re_gular or Light Kraft

RACINE - Southern FHA
Chapter to host dislrict meeting at
Southern High School Thursday.
6:15 to 9 p.m.

BULLETIN BOARD
7° column inch weekdays
9 column inch Sunday

446-6446 or
1-800-872-2292

5 Lb. Bag

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Ewings Chapter, .
Sons of the American Revolution,
Thursday, Meigs County Museum
in Pomeroy. Dinner by reservation
at 6:30; meeting al 7:30 p.m. Ray
Swick, curator of Blennerhasseu
Mansion will speak. Reservations
to be made at Museum through
Wednesday. Open to public. Further information, call Keith Ashley,
992-7878.

Mon-Sat 9-5; Evenings Mon ., Thurs, Fri. til 8:00 p.m.
Refreshments - Door Prizes
Come in and see what we have for Christmas.

RAYBURN ha bHn mtiWCf from Vllnd St. In
PINSIIII, WV lo 1111 Aucllllll Cfnllt tl 11111111, WV
lnd will bf told.
FURNrTIJRE: Curved Glau China Cabinet; 7pc
Depression DR Suite; Oak Library Table; 3pc. Potter
BR SuRe; Oak Drllssll'; Spinlll Desk; Empire
Dresser; EmPire Chest; Cedar Chest; Blanket Box,
Iron
&amp; Brass Bad; 11130 Running Board (k:e bole);
30 Announcements
Early Small Pantry Cupboard; Mah. Rocker; Wicker
Rocker; Oak Dresser Painted; loveseat; Lilt
Raclinar; Tables; Enamel Top Table, Mada Lib End
Tablas; Sheet Music; Sewing Rocker; 111' GE Color
TV.
GLASSWARE: American Fostoria; Garman P~cher;
American
Cobalt Blue, Salt &amp; Papper Shakers; Cookie Jar;
•
Legion Farm
Glass Basket; Blue Willow Galore; Etch Stemware
Goblets; Cradler Jar (s1rawberry), Collection of
Bailey Run Rd.
P~cher &amp; More.
1 P.M.·?
BOOKS: Lg. Salaction ol Books-Edgar A Guest 5
Vol.
Set; Battle of . Point Pleasant by Virgil Lewis;
Don
'r
ger
stung
by
high
prices
r
SUNDAY,
American Her~age; Long Fallow Complete Poetical
Shop the classified section.
NOY. 19
Works; Autobiography of David Crockett (by
Scribners); Berlin Diary (William l Shirer); 1st.
Edition 6 Vol. Set ol lrvings Works; Rolling Ancient
Get Your Message Across
History (4 Vol.); Outline of History by H. G. Wall's 4
Vol. Sat; The BoOk House 5 Vol. Sat lor Children;
With A Dally Sentinel
McGuffy Readers; Ullkl leather Ubrary Books; Jon
Stoddarts Lectures.
1 0
COLLECTIBLES: Outstanding Silver Set, Very
Ravarse Painting on Glass PHchar Signed
1 00
F.A. Promast; Several Pc. Costume Jawelary, AduH &amp;
Children's Vlnatage Clothing; Brass Candlesticks;
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
Two Old Royal Typewr~ars; Two Old Recipe Boxes;
Sheet Music; Celluloid Dressef Set; Old ·Radio's;
Several Pc. Old lace; Several Old Pictures &amp;
Frames; Vary largo Selacllon of linens; Needlework
Several Pc. Fur Fox (Black Fox); Coffee
I Grind1n;, Mantle Clock; Ftcor Lamp; Westinghouse
Reoord Player Combonatlon; Old Playing
AT
I Cards: Old Cameras; Christmas Deooratlons; Old
Globes; Gas Ught; Cast ..on lamp Holder; RM
THE DRAFT HOUSE
Co. Lamp; Old Podt8t Books; Stone Jars; Iron
1stone Tea Pots; Heaters; ladies Roller Blades; Yard
Garden Hose; Alum. ladder; Wood ladder
Mortt.
AucnONEERS NOTE:
IIRs.
RAYBURN
WAS A SCHOOl. JIACHER IN THE
January 11·14, 1996
COUNTY AND SURROUNDING AREAS FOR
Direct flights from
YEARS. A GREAT SELECTION OF GLASSWARE AND
COLLECnBLES.
Columbus.
HEATED BUILDING AND PLENTY OF PARKING
Riviera Hotel
NJCTION CONDUCTED BY

PLACES TOGO
TRAVEL

o.. . &gt;-

Manufacturer's Valuable Coupon
Effective 11 112-11 /18/95

-

County's environmental
review record for the

Looking for a Pet?

Amold gave a herbal demonstra - told how the plants react to being
moved indoors where temperature,
tion.
Clotine Blackwood had the pro- light and humidity differ !rom outgram using an article on "Fall, the side . She said that plants which
Other Planting Season ." She bloom in the winter need to be ferdescribed fall as the ideal time to tili zed. As for roses, mulching is
es tablish many plants and ge t a best postponed until a good ground
head slaJ:I on next year's garden. freeze occurs.
Members were given handouts
Many perenni als do we ll when
transplanted in the fall, she sai d. on how to make a moss ba~ket. The
particularly peonies and oriental tra velin g prize furnished by Ann
poppie s. Eve rgree n tree s and ' Wch ster wa s won by Doro th y
shrubs. such as pines and spruce all Woodard. There was an exchange
respond well to fall uansplantill g. uf plant slips. The ho ste ss di saccording to Mrs. Blackwood.
played a dried arrangements. Nex t
Betty Lowery reviewed "House- mee ting wil l be at th e home of
pl &lt;mts, Return from ,Vacation." She
Marjorie Rice.

We Bring You Holiday Savings

POMEROY - Fecney-Benncll
Post #128 Veterans Dayffhankssiving Dinner and Meeting, 6 p.m.,
at the Legion Hall in Pomeroy.
Speaker will be Ron Eastman.
Meeting originally scheduled for
Nov. 22 has been changed to
immediately follow the dinner.

18

noted Each club will provide
arrangements and two dozen cookie and a dozen sandwiches for the
food booth. The Rutland club wi ll
inake the class signs.
It was noted that Mrs. Robson
and Mrs. Nicholson attended the
re gio nal · meeting held at Rio
Grande on Oct. 28. Betty Dean bad
a program on madonnas for the
more than a hundred attending.
Mrs . Robson repor!ed on th e
herbal display ard sale at tl1c Stcmwh~cl Festival in Pomeroy and
noted that she and Mrs. Nicholson
had attended the Hemlock Grove
church program where Denise

g ltJl11

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday,
Catholic Rectory with Sister Fidelis
Bell, hostess. Mrs. George Hack:en,
Jr. to revit;w, "The Path to Power"
by Margaret Thatcher.

of Funds on bases other

SHOOTING
MATCH

Get your free gift
ChriStmas '95 and extra
cash for Christmas '96.

PICKENS

Fred Hoffman, in his/her
official
capacity
as

Inn, Worthington, with Regions II
and 12 as hosts . Region I I of
which Meigs County is a part voted
to give $500 toward the convention
expenses.
A report was given on the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association
meeti ng held in October at the
Alice Thompson log hou se.
Installed were Suzy Carpenter.
county contact chainnan and county president; Gladys Cummings,
secretary. and Margaret Edwards.
treasurer.
The Meigs County Christmas
fl ower show to be •held on the
weekend after Thanksgiving was

OF PEACE
A Time For Family and Traditions ... AANDGIFTTHANKSGIVING

· The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non · profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and spechil
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed a• space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Narcotics
Anonymous, Wednesday , 7 p.m.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 161
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Meeting
open to anyone with an alcohol
problem.

.•

said.
"We're changing because consumers really believed food scents
weren't a good idea even though
our research showed they were as
safe as any other Crayola product."
said Sandy Homer.

BOGGAR
By PARIS
PLASTICS

are

certifying to the State of
Ohio, that Meigs county and

Claaelfiedo... your at
home ehopplng center.
Find great buys on pets,
pel accessories, and
services.
CaU for complete details
on placing
ads to sell for you.

EASTON, Pa. (AP)- Your
children's coloring books are in for
big changes. No, not new colors new smells. Ones that the crayon
climpany hopes won't tempt kids to
~ tbe things in their mouths.
Scents sucb as coconut. licorice,
chocolate, cherry and blueberry are
being dropped from Crayola's
sCented crayon line. They· re being
replaced with such aromas as baby
powder, leather jacket, new car and
dirt
The new smells introduced
tOday are in reaction to parents'
rears that children are more likely
to eat food-scented crayons than 10
color with them, company officials

&amp; GLADA-

will

Comm•ssioners

TOPS
Donna Jacks was the best loser
when TOPS 570 (take off pound
se nsibly) met recently at the Carpenter's hall in Pomeroy.
Runner-up was Jeanette
Thomas. Julie Hysell was tbe best
KOPS (keep off pounds sensibly).
Donna Jacks won the fruit basket,
and Bernice Durst the gadget gifts.
Dr. Nick Robinson will be speak
on weight loss at this week's meeting of the group. Members were
asked to take a Thanksgiving poem
to tbc Nov. 21 meeting. Plans were
made to draw names for secret. pals
at the Dec. 5 and the annual Christmas dinner and gift exchange was
SUNDAY SCHOOL
The Golden Rule Sunday set for Dec. 19.
School class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church enjoyed dinner
AUXILIARY ACTIVITIFS
at a Parkersburg, W.Va. restaurant
Veterans at the Southeast Ohio
recently.
. Psychiatric Hospital in Athens
June Kloes hatl grace and were entertained with a party
presided at the business meeting recently by the Auxiliary members
during which time plans were made of Drew Webster Post 39. Amerito decorate tbe interior and exterior can Legion. The party was sponof tbe church for the Christmas hol- sored by Somerset Unit 58.
idays. The December meeting will
Mary Martin and Jan Snouffer,
be a Christmas potluck at the Wal- District Eight chairman for the Vetburn home.
erans at the hospital, staged the
Auending were the Rev. Mark party for the six veterans.
Mora, Vickie Mora. Jack and CorFood was served to the men and
rine Ambrose, Randall and Carolyn games were played with prizes
Davis, Lawrence Eblin, Ray and going to the winners. Halloween
Helen Fields, John and Marilyn decorations were used and candy
Fultz, Manning and June Kloes, com favors were given. Candy bars
John and Glenna Riebel, Norman and cigarettes were given out.
and Sis Van Maue, Dale and MarMembers of Drew Webster Post
'jorie Walburn and Phyllis Young. 39 conlributed three electric razors.

given at the recent meeting of the
Rutland Garden Club held at the
home of Neva Nicholson, Rutland.
In response to roll call at that
meeting, members gave tulip bulbs
to be planted at the mini-park in
Rutland . Mrs . Nicholson gave
devotions. It was announced tbat
the spring regional meeting wiU be
held at Carleton School on April
27. Focus Day bas been set for Feb.
19 with Janet Bolin as the teacher.
Gardeners Day Out will be held on
April 13, and Nature study camp
·
on June 3-7.
The OAGC convention will be
held on July 16-18 at the Holiday

Community
calendar

GOING CREATIVE - Peggy Crano, chairman of the Christmas nower show, demonstrates an arrangement to fit into the
class, "The Ageless Story" using a Madonna a• an ac«ssory. Here
she uses cockscomb, sweet Annie, and driftwood to do a traditional
design on a slab of wood. The show
be held the weekend after
Thanksgiving at Carleton School, Syracuse.
Public Notice

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Cou~ty gard·en cl~b members appointed regional chairmen
Several Meigs County garden
club members were named regional
chairmen of activities at the recent
Region II board meeting held at
Chester.
Pauline Atkins and Eva Robson
attended the meeting. Suzy Carpenter was named county contact
chairman for Meigs County, along
with being selected as flower show
and focus chairman; Pauline Atkins
the nature and beautillcation chairman; Eva Robson, the regional
sales chairman; and Janet Bolin,
the junior garden club cbairrnan,_all
pf tbe Rutland clubs . Maureen
Wooton of Athens is lhe new
regional director.
. A report on the meetmg was

Public Notice
Commissioners at the
address above listed prior
to November 27, 1995.
The
Meigs Count¥

Guesl.l were Ethel Shank and Ken
Young .

Crayola
replaces
food-scented
crayons

60",- 54",
44", &amp; 40"

Public Notice

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..,'
I

In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
event.
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occUrrence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of tbe
occurence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editting.

$199
·

Manufacturer 's Valuable Coupon
Effective 11112-11 /18 '95
11 .5-12 oz. Real or Milk Chocolate

. rBJkcrs

Baker's

I "I ~ I\ I 1 1

1

.

~

~(II

•' '

. ..

- Chocolate Chips

r

99¢

_
_
___
-...
---------.......
...----.....___
-·-··-"..., _
--------------------·
......

C-OII't

- .-.. -..
........
...........______
--·--••••.n __ _

.. ,..

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

. ...,

....

..

.We reserve the

,.

7up, or Shwepps
Ginger Ale
211ter

&amp; SERVE • SERVES 6 TO B PEOPLE • 48 HOURS NOTICE PLEASE
• 10-12 lb. Turkey • 21bs. Cornbread • 4 Lb. Wilson Spiral Sliced
• 5-7 lb. Turkey Breast • 2 lbs. Cornbread
Dressing • 2 lbs. Creamy Mashed
Dressing • 1 Lb. Homestyle Gravy &amp; •
Ham • 2 tbs. Yams
Pot&lt;J!oes • 1 Lb. Homestyle Gravy • 1 lb.
• 2 lbs. Green Beans
2 lbs. Yams or • 2 lbs. Creamy
Cranberry Salad • 2 lbs. Green Beans
Mashed Potatoes &amp; 2 lbs. Green
• 1 lb. Cranberry Salad
• 8 Bakery Frest1 Rolls • Pumpkin Pie
Beans •8 Bakery Fresh Rolls
• 8 Bakery Fresh Rolls

TURKEY
DINNER

·SPIRAL HAM
DINNER

TURKEY BREAST
DINNER

$2495

$2995

$2995
Prices
Good
Thru

Sat.
Nov. 18th

�.

.

Wednesday, November 15, 1995

.

Wednesday, November 15, 1~5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The_Daily Sentinel

,.

·-

.'"

-.

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE
MEl MARAUDER MAR HIN BAND

~

..••

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

.~r-----==-=-=-=-=-~-~==-----====

•-·.

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE

.-

•..

,•

.

..

.

·ON AN OUTSTANDING MARCHING SEASON

-

•

MARCHING BAND ON AN
OUTSTANDING MARCHI-NG SEASON

.

...

...
-

-

'•

....
·-

...-....

..•

.•

••

-

..

-.
-

.--

..
"

~

-·~-

~

·"

.,•··

•

•

·...\o

...

IRONTON BANP FESTIVAL
Rating - I Superior
GROVE CITY BAND COMPETITION
Ratjng I Syperjor

~

MEIGS MARAUDER BAND STAFF

Class A - Outstanding Field Commanders
Class A- Outstanding Auxiliary
Class A - Outstanding 2nd Place Band
Overall Best Auxiliary

•

ATHENS INVITATIONAL
Ratjng I Superjor

Class A - Best Field Commander
Class A - Best Percussion
2nd Place Band

FORT FRYE PAGENT OF BANDS

....•-•••
~

~

Director - Toney Dingess
Drill &amp;Perc. - Dave Deem
Field Commander Coach - Susan Clark
Flag Corp - Joy O'Brien, Billy Bruce
Percussion - John Merritt

.•

.•.

\o

...'•..
~

..."'
-

.~

.•"
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·.-

.

·'••

..

..•
.....
..
.•
.
....•
·-

·"

~

·"

..·'-~

DIRECTOR - SUSAN CLIMER

0

Rating I Superior

Class A- Outstanding Field Commanders
Class A- Outstanding Auxiliary
Class A - Outstanding 1st Place Band
Overall High General Effect
Runner-up Overall Grand Chanmpion

BELPRE INVITATIONAL
Rating I Superjor
Best in Class Percussion
Best of Show - Soloist
Best of Show - Field Commanders

Best in Class - General Effect
Best in Class - Marching &amp; Maneuvering
Best in Class - Music
1s Place Band - Class A

•

The Meigs Band and their Director wish to
thank Dave Deem, Susan Clark, Joy O'Brien,
John Merritt &amp; Billy Bruce for their
contributions in making this competitive
season so successful. Your dedication to the
band program at M.H.S. is an inspiratil)n to us
all.

-~

&lt;

ATHENS INVITATIONAL:

..

Second Place Finish - Class "C"

·..

NELSONviLLE BUCKEYE CLASSIC:
Second Place Finish - Class "C"

'•·

FORT FRYE INVITATIONAL: ·
First Place Finish - Class "C"
Best Overall Marching and Manuevering - All Bands
Best General Effect - Classes "B" and "C"

OMEA STATE FINALS
Flag Corps - I Superior
'
Percussion - 1'swperior
Overall Band - I Superior

With Much Pride
From Your Friends At

BELPRE INVITATIONAL:

SWISHER &amp; LOSHE
PHARMACY

VAUGHANS CARDINAL

CLARKS JEWELRY STORE

. 992-3471

MIDDLEPORT

Scored a II rating at State Finals

992-2955

·1-.~~~~-r~~~~~.---------~

POMEROY

'

MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE
''ON THE T"
992·3148

MIDDLEPORT

.K&amp;( JEWELERS
POMEROY

992·3785

THE SHOE PLACE
AND .LOCKER 219
992·5627

992·5177

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

FISHER FUNERAL HOME

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY :

992-5141

992·2556

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

•

MIDDLEPORT

QUALITY PRINT SHOP
992-3345

992·5525

MIDDLEPORT ·

DOWNING ··CHILDS • MULLEN • :
MUSSER INSURANCE

CROWS FAMILY RESTAURANT
992·2432

POMEROY

OMEA STATE MARCHING BAND FINALS:

.

'

FRUTH PHARMACY WESTERN AUTO .BUTTONS &amp;BOWS ..~
992-6491

Second Place Finish - Class"C"

..,.

992·2342

POMEROY .

.MCDONALDS .

SUGAR RUN MILLS
180 MULBERRY AVE.

~

: POMEROY
•

992·2121

992-2635

PQMEROY

''

MIDDLEPORT "

992·6128

FUNERAL HOME
VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY BIRCHFIELD
742·2333
RUTLAND '
MIDDLEPORT

992·5627

', ..

... ~

. ..

'
. . . .

. :.

.

.. : . . . .

.

INSURANCE

992-5479

MIDDLEPORT .

THE SHOE PLACE .'
AND LOCKER 219

-

'

992-6611

TUPPERS PLAINS

992·2136

985-3385

985-3308

RIDENOUR TV &amp;APPLIANCE ·
985-3307

CHESTER
•

BROGAN WARNER
.INSURANCE

CHESTER

·
BAUM LUMBER

MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES
AND TEES

'

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY : .

992·2115

POMEROY

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

-r---~J~Efr.F.~WWAAIRDINiiECR~---t--~~~~~~~~~~992~-66~87~~~~~~Po~ME~Ro~v

I

EWING FUNERAL HOME

POMEROY

992-5600

·'·..

FARMERS BANK

MIDDL~PORT

985-3301

CHESTER

·VETERANS.MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL .
992-2104

..

PO.MEROY

KINGS SERVISTAR
HARDWARE

992-3748

MIDDLEPORT

·DAIRY QUEEN
MIDDLEPORT

'

992-33~2

FUNERAL HOME
VALLEY LUM~ER &amp;SUPPLY BIRCHFIELD
742·2333
RUTLAND
992·6611

MIDDLEPORT

�,,
Page 10 • The Daily Sent_inel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Reader questions accuracy of AIDS testing at i~tervals
DEAR CONFUSED: I checked
with
one of the country's most
~~-~ Ann
respected
authorities on AIDS,
1
Landers
Jerome Groopman, M.D., Recanati
professor of immunology, Harvard
'' 1995 los Angeles
Medical School. Here is hi s
Tomt&gt;s Synou;a te a.r•~
Crea1ors Syrd•ca le"
response:
"The current tests for HIV arc
Dear Ann Landers: I am in
desperate need of the uuth. Recent!)\ highly accurate. The false ncgati ve
my boyfriend died of AIDS. l took rate is less than I in I ,000.
"More than 90 percent of people
the test. and my results were
who
are infected with the AIDS
negative. I know I have to take the
virus
will test positive three months
test again in six months.
after
exposure,
99.9 percent will test
My question to you is this: If I test
positive
at
six
months and at 12
ncgati vc for one year, is there any
months,
it's
I
00
percent.
There is no
chance of testing positive five or 10
vcar&gt; down the road?
· The counselor advised me that the
test was accurate and that if I tested
negative after a year, it would mean I
hadn 't caught the virus from IllY
boyfriend. However. l have been told
by othclli that the virus can hide in
your system and you will not test
positive for years. That means I must
take the test every year for the rest of
my life.
Please consult yow experts so I can
know the truth and stop torturing
myself about this.-- CONFUSED IN
N.Y.
~

need for yearly testing if an individual
tests negative at I 2 months.
"If the test resu~ts are unclear, seek
consultation with a specialist who can
perform other lCslS for antibodies or
the virus itself."
Dear Ann Landers: I am a ISyear-old girl who needs your advice.
My ll·year-old brother invited his
friend, "Tim," to go with him to my
grandmother's house. Grandma has a
pool table, and there's an old stained·
glass Tiffan y l3mp above it. Tim and
my brother were pl3ying pool when
Tim got rowdy and started tosSing the
pool ball up in the ai r. It hit the $800

. Wednesday, November 15, 1995

Wednesday, November 15, 1995

Tiffany lamp and broke it.
Tim didn't offer to pay fori~ and
even if he had, I'm sure he could not
afford to replace it himself. I don't
know if he told his parents, but I
doubt that he did. His mom would
have said something right away.
It will be difficult to repair the
lamp, and even if Grandma can find
a craftsman who is able to do it, the
lamp will never be the same. My
mother and I disagree on how this
situation should be handled. We
would appreciate your opinion.-OLDER SISTER IN OREGON
DEAR SIS: Tim's mother should

be told about the accidenL Either you

or your mother should call her and
ask if 'rim is OK •• afla all, he may
have cut himself on the broken glass.
If she is a woman of integritr,._~
will offer to pay to have theJ:::;,:P
repaired •• or replace iL In any case,
Tim should not get off scot-free. He
should do chores to earn money
to help pay for the repair or the
replacemenL Or it should come out
of his allowance if he gets one.
Gem of the Day (Credit Bennett
Ccrf): H.L. Mencken, acid-tongued
cwmudgeon, sent rejection slips that
were unique, if nothing else. One of

,.
r
,.

my favoriteS real\ ~ follows: ·~:
Mencken has just entered a TrappiStmonastery in Kenwcky. He left strict
insuuctions that no mail should be
forwarded. We return the enclosed fot
your anchives."
·
Forget to save some of your favol"
ite Ann Landers coiWMS? "Nuggets
and Doozies" is IM llii.!Mier. Send a
self-addressed, long, business·sizt
envelope and a 'cMck or money 01".
der for $5.25 (this includes postage
and handling) to: Nuggets, c/o Anti
Landers, P.O. Box Jl562, Chicago,
Ill. 606JJ.()562 . (In Canada, und

-

K.&amp;W.
GLASS
&amp; WINDOW
REPANE
992·2549

$6.25.)

11f911

"I HAD NO IDEA IT
WAS THIS MUCH
FUN"
Meet new people the
fun way today.
Call1·900·255·5454,
ext. 6694
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.,
Touch· Tone phone
required.
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

For Love And
Affection Dial
1-900-255-5454
Ext 8417
Must be 18 yrs
$2.99 per min

Pound

•

Touch Tone
Phone Required
Serv -U (619)

645-8434
Are you looking for
love?
Longterm
relationship?
1 -900-255-1515
Ext. 1064
$2.99/Min .
Must be 18 Yrs.
Touohtone Phone
Required Ser-U
(619) 645-8434

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd .
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy'Brickles

614-742-2193
11 / 13/95mo

SMITH'S
CONSTRUOION

TROLLY
STATION
HANDMADE
CRAFTS

Custom

992·2549
111911 mo.

anniversaries,

reunions. Special rates
for individuals,
couples, family groups
in the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates .
Call 992-7747.

Commercial and Residential
Dri veways. Palios. Slabs. Parking lot !'. . Curh\ &amp; ( ;utter. .
Sidewalks. Porches. TL'~! r-ou t and Rt·pl:tt:emenl

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsvi lle. OH 45772

Dnu~

Reqt11red

Cnk -.

Ser1-U (619) 645-8434

(J l~/(J6 7 - MQS

., . ~ •5 i'

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAl

COUNTRY TANN

&amp; Remodeling

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. . Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

your date now
1-900-255 - 1515
Ex!. 1471
2.99/min.

Chuck Stotts

614-992·6223

Must be 18 yrs .
Touch -tone
phone required
Serv -U

'

(619) 645-8434

10121194ftfn

.

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
'
Have 4 years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen
at 614·843·5327
or 614-949-2632
after 1 0-1 0·95

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
.Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.

REASONABU .RATES

ATTENTION
BOW HUNTERS

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SIIOP, INC.

P.O. Box 587

ALL VOUR BOW
HUNTING NEED S.

Cheaper Rates

•Bows •Arrows
•Deer scents

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20. 00/HH

•Deer calls
•Ci ething and m uch more

JOE 'S
SPORTING GOODS
WOLFJE'S POOL RALL

28563 BASHAN RD.
HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

For Free estimate call 949-2512

949·2512

8/l/1fo

Racine, Ohto 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phono
(614) 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT

Antiquity. Oh .

614-949-2906 101 ~1 1 rno

1111411 mo.

On Site Dry Cleaning
Now Available
Premier Cleaners
ami Coin Laundry
397 West Main St..
Pom eroy
Under new management
New equipment

992-9923
10 % Discount w/Ad

CALL YOUR
DATE NOW!!!
1900·484·2600
Ext. 6927·
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yealli.
Touch·tone phone
required.
SERV-U (619) 645-8434

1111411 mo.

""J ~\J

Call

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

Will PHOTOGRAPH
ANY SPECIAL
OCCASION
including weddings,
receptions,

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORE!!!
1· 900-884·9204
Ext. 2912
$2 99 pe r m1n
Mu st be 18 yrs.
Touch-lone Phone

• New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Rooting
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614i 992-2753

Local (rafters
American Made

Call
614-949-2512

Buil~ing

Abiding Concrete Construction

LOOKING
FOR LOVE?
1-900·255-4242
Ext. 9106
$2.g9 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone phone
required.
Serve·U
(619) 645-8434
10/26/95

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

PENING NOVEMBER 25tll
Antiques - Gifts - Fo:k Art

HA K.TWELL HOIJSE

FOR SALE
Cut &amp; split
Firewood
All Hardwood
Pick-up or Delivery
Available.
Ball Logging &amp;
Sawmill
992·6142
Call Evenings ..,,,. ~

102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 45769
614-992-7696
Holiday Hours: M-S 9:30 ·4:30p.m.
Sun. 12:00 - 5:00p.m.

DAILY

DOZER
DUMP TRUCK
BACKHOE
SERVICE

HOROSCOPE
Up-To-Date
Soap Results
CALL NOW!!!
1-900-3 7 8-1800
Ext. 6H 5

•Licensed
•Bonded
•Insured
Jim Hawthorne
985·4386

Sl .99 per min . Mu st he 18
yrs. Touch-tone phone req .

Sen&lt;·U (619) G4S-8434

I\.), I "'"

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal · Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented .
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

12 Guage

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

91271951fn

992-3954 or 985-3418

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Giveaw ay
2 FerrJ 'e P~:..:...f· , • : • .. ,To (;ooaHow .. t··. : ~1 ,.,. '

, . '

I

.

•..'

sr•·;f l nliliL·

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers· Experienced
Call Wayne NeH 9924405
For Free Estimates

•

KROGER

Fresh Broccoli
Bunch

200.

This work - like much current
research on the health effect of
eggs - was financed by the Egg
Nutrition 13oard . The researchers
said it was tlesigned :md conducted
independently of the industry
group
.
The researchers recrmted 141
voluntcer.s. They were assigned to
cat two eggs a day. Half got regular
eggs. The rest got on es with the
cholesterol removed. All !be eggs
were put through blenders so that
th e volunteers wouldn ' t know the
difference.
After three months. the people
were sick of eggs. but their total
cholesterol had only edged up only
modestly. to 233. Half the increase
was in go&lt;xl cholesterol, _the HDL.
or high-density hpoprotem cholesterol, which protects people from
heart disease.

(Specilize in driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

11/WI rno

wampler/&amp;ongacre
rurkers

Seedless
Navel Oranges

WICKS
HAULING

mo.

1/2/!ln

U.S. GRADE A (10-16-LB. AVG.) FROZEN

Nov. 17 &amp; 18
Country Naturals
Gifts &amp; Accessories
317 N. 2nd Ave,
Middleport, OH 45760
992-4015
Mon-Sat 9-5; Evenings
Mon. Thurs. Fri. tit 8:00p.m.
Refreshments · Door Prizes
Come in and see what we
have for Christmas.

614-992-3470

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

Maybe eggs
aren't so bad
after all
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
i\Ni\IIEIM, Ca lif. (AP)
Medical opinion on eggs is starting
to tum sunny side up.
The latest evidence is a study
showing that even people with
moderately high cholesterol may be
ahlc to cat two a day without hann
- as lon g as they lay off the
bacon .
Cholesterol in the bloodstream
is bad for the hcan . And since eggs
have lot&gt; of choles terol, experts
have long ass umed they must be
bad, too. However, the reality is
turning out to be more complicated.
It now appears that the cholestero l that people eat has little
impact on the cholesterol in their
bloodstrc;um. Eat ing an egg raises
cholesterol only slightly, if at all.
for most people.
Not ;dl agree. but many expert~
arc CO IIHn g to believe that eggs
have hccn unfairly demonized and
that cholesterol in the diet is much
Jess damaging tJ1an saturated fat.
·'Two eggs a Jay don't make
much difference if you follow a
low-fat diet." saiJ Barbard M. Retzlaff. a Jietician who presen ted the
latest stuJy Tuestlay at a meetin g
of the American IIcari Association.
Most of the evidence on eggs
ha s come from experiments on
healthy people witJ1 normal cholesterol level&gt;. The study presented
Tuesday. ~ y rcscaf(hcrs from the
Umversity of Washington, was different: It was conducted on people
whose hlood dwlcstcrol levels
averaged 227. which is somewhat
above the rew mmcnJed cutoff of

(Lime Stone Low Rates)

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

SUGAR SWEET CALIFORNTA
88 SIZE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

•.

D of A to
observe
birthdays
Plan s for observi ng quarterly
hirthtlays at the Dec . 5 meeting
were maJe when Ches ter Council
32~. Daughters of America. met
recentl y at U1c hall .
The annual Chrisunas party for
di strict deputies and pa&gt;t councilors
was announced for Dec. 2 at Nelso nvtll e. Jean Welsh. councilor,
co nducteJ the meeting which
opened with the pledge, Lord's
prayer anJ the national anthem.
Scripture was taken from The
Psalms.
Deloris Wolfe and f-aye
Kirkhart were reported home from
!be hospiutl.
AttenJing were Mrs . Welsh,
Lora Damewood, Everett Grant,
Laura Nice. Kathryn Baum. Ethel
Orr. Opal Eichinger, Betty Young,
Charlolt e Grant. Erma Cleland,
Go ldie Frederick . Esther Smith,
Mary Holter. Marcia Keller and
Joann Baum .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

California Celery
' Stalk

4/13195

Select Blend
eoHee

Cold Medal
Plour

34.5-0Z.

5-Lb. Bag

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Boneless
English Roast
Pound

Limestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
Reasonable Rales
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138
110\\'AIW
EXCAYATING
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

992-3838

SELECTED VARIETIES

t:reen t:iant
Vegetables

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

Beautiful Girls
Exciting!!!
Passionate!!!
Talk To 'em Live
1-900-526·2500
Ext.6113
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required Serv-U
(619) 645·8434

••••••

.DATES

ROMANCE

Companionship
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 8583
Sl .99 per min. Must be 18
yrs. Touch-lone phone r-eq.
Se...,-U (G19) G4S-84H

New At King Hardware

'•

Licensed

$

&amp;

Insured

1-800
650-1234

Free Estimates
Stump grinding
Gallipolis, OH
614-441-1191

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

Cl~e ~zame

Coznez
405

COMMERCIAL and JU:SIDENTIAL
FREE ESTJI\1ATES

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
North Second Ave., Middleport 992·5020

614-992-7643

6 , ,, 'l :l;' :, : tl

,.

nc

, .•

' ' .:·-·

Sol )f1

ll o~Pll&lt;~

:J•·~. ,., , .,~,

"'"' ·

1

6'~5150

M a(• 21 ;' 1 r

on

: 1;·" ~ 1 1•,

S"'L•or1 1·• n rT•.~ ·~ :·~:.ro•l ··c
fi' •'J 3PJ)

\ •·

f , ' • • ..; , • , • .J
~. I •, . ,
l,!:)t• t.
. I'
\ .. : .'",l

fl ' 1' t1 ,l '1'
H t) r&gt; lt·

U-159

- - -- - -- -s l) · s ·.r y .. :, 1 .., :.. ··~.
,•

r1
cond,l'on . t.: • .: g)··.' h ll

( No Sunday Calls )

Los t and Found

60

'--------------==:.....~ F auna ~,d ,
greC&gt;n

~o.l.o·

\.''J I\H.····\·· .. ,
I .\ P:J n · , ,

·y

61.! 9Q? T1r r

HOCKINGPORT

MOBILE
HOME PARK
Mobile home
sites for rent
614-667-3630
I0/11195 1mo. Pd.

Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Questions
1·g00·255·0200
Ext. 59g3
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch·Tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

Solid Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
We have the
best window
and the best
price

~
Water
~~
~ Tre~tment

Equ1pment

Di.dr·ilmt#•tl hy

TRI·STATE WATER
The

SYSTEMS,

I o~.n n '-)•nJII [j;J(j 1\.n,... .. Pr, ',.,
A rt·;1 H Q'1't •II Y'lf1 [} .;.• 1 · •. lr1d

81.'19

- - - ------ -

L OS. I~ dt~ l.1 .v ,•, · · · C ; .
~IC!il' Gi11 11,1 1\,.·~· ~;,, 1•', :.. · J
•
snfl p,~ (' [J .. . ;•,l· c.~ i l ' ·l i j '

04 45

INC.

water treatment co mpany cordiall y 1nvrtes you to
participa te rn a tree. no obligation. com prehens rv e water

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TOS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH .

Please call R&lt;~inSaft at 992·4472 or 1-800-606-3313
to set up your free water analysis. 1 0/5/tfn

Losr 01 S•o t·r· · 1 ,. l\ .. :·. ,,
Sheoarn , · :' 1 '
O·
1" tl li&lt;~
S,n Ncv
~ _.,. ,, :• .. , ·,:;. ·

neo ta , flewd: (I JU.; , · c1 . , ·.}

losl f3'uf&gt; l Cl'. I •··":t •· Coer• [jv']
L::~ s r Sl'c r C ;;d''l~S C·rJ!&gt;•,•c;u1&lt;.,
A re a . 6 14 446 ilHl]

Los! lhree or to,,• mon,., 0 c. IP
rr.l; (&gt; 0:1 m•:.: v
n o~ ~·.Dr ·)q•. :J.,

. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , 33

B&amp;B ROOFING and
CONSTRUCTION
(614) 992-5041
Residential • Commercial • Indust~ial
ONE CAlL DOES IT ALL
•Pressure
•Plumbing
•Tile
Cleaning
•Carpentry
•Carpet
•Drywall
•Roofing
•Painting
•Gutters
•Cabinets
•Masonry
•Electrical
•Siding
•Decks
We Have Emergency Services
7 Days A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all work guaranteed.
"Fall Specials" Leaves cleaned up and haul~
away. Most yard~$49.00
Gutters cleaned and screened,

most 1 story homes, $49.00.

OHIO- WEST VIRGINIA -KENTUCKY 10/S/1 mo.
.___ _,;,;,;;~..;.;.;;.;;,:,.,;,;;;~;;;.;.....;.;;;;,;,;.;;.,;,;,;,;,._ _...1

'·

,

2/ 12192/!tn

QUALITY .WINDOW SYSTEMS
'·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

c i]'i

J...o • . ;;;.;,

tlr l '&lt;'! ,

3 JOom

61&lt;199241'1

,! ' t"

·

Lo~t ·w o 1 t:•r ';t1~· H&lt;-: ag t" , A -~
~o-, Jo tJnson n .agt: d'&lt;.:&lt;r
l•lo', d·~
t) 14 94~ 25·14

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

ALL Yard Sale!&gt; Mu!:.! 8" P1
Ad vance DEADLINE

;; OC

e1 i"

u ,,

lhe d a ~ Detore 'ne ad '&gt; rc 'L"
Sunday tld t!IQn ? 00 pIll r I .:!:t ~
Mon day QOtl•on 10 00 C\ m s.1;
urday

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Al l Yard Sa les M ust
Advance Deadl rn e

Br P&lt;ud !n

1 OOpm lhe

day oe1o re 10e od " 10 '"' su"
oay edttmn - 1 OOprn t- IIOay, Mon day odrtron 10 OOa m Saturday

�Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

November 15, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
37
39
40
41

Hats
Hlly
1 Spinning toys
That things
5 Type of pesta
Locomotive
9 Salad herb
sound
42 Wolflike animal
12 Lotion
45 Cowboy
Ingredient
t3 Black
Rogers
14- Tin Tin
46 Inhabitant
49 Ref's kin
15 Waistband
t6 - colada
50 Sullen
17 French cotn
52 Former
18 Type ol sauce
Russian ruler
19- and downs 53 Sgt eg
20 Detaches from 54 Level
gradually
55 Mex1can
22- Zumwalt
money
24 Legal matter
56 Car fuel
25 Prophet
57 Young lady
27 Fans ·
58 Interrogates
31 MISS Kett Of

ACROSS

41 0 Houses for Rent

7~.Hn

.:&amp;Oacres + all electrrc 2 story
house 3oedrooms wood burner
Homestead ~ealty Brok.er 304
675 5540

930

Du ple)

Aucr ons every Frtday Saturday

Mt Al!o Auct ton Rt 2 33
Crossroads" New mere nand se
grocer es &amp; lots more Ed Frazer

30earooms oa tn up
sta~rs liv1ng room 01n1ng roam
k1tchen l1rst lloo1 lull basement
furnace heat Oepos1t 8 reterenc
es $300lmo 304 6 75 1180

C"' stmas Sa tes san n~ 11 16
95 at ha n taro Commu n ry B~ ro

Come ana oo

~g

Cn s l"'la S

yo ~.

S"O DP ng A ~C!IO'l9i?
lk dsley nA ~ o

Howa C

New Roomy 2 Bedro oms 1 Bath
Apartments All Electuc Near
Poner $325/Mo Oepos 1t Reier
ences 614 245 5114

R c ~ Pe a so., A..,cr o., Con oa.,r
me a~c r•on ee co,...,o e re
a 1. on
ser 11 ce
L cens eo
nee On a &amp; Wes r V g n a 10J
3 5 85 Or 304 r3 5.!(. 7

90

Wanted to Buy

A

Qyes co ll ectao es es1a•es

~l ~~

Seven room house three bed
rooms upstairs wilh bath !uti
basement $250/mo pus u11111es
$200 depos t Fo1 nlormat on call
Pomeroy Food Shop 6 14 992
5552 9am 3pm ask. Ia Frances
Shown oy ao!X)mtment only

Ant Ques Russ Uoore

'1€

o,.. e 6t A 992 2526
C

t:l.

Late

I

w~ ~s

, 98 7

Mooe r Cars

Or

Mooers Or Newer

. . Bu '"' Pon

s~

Smal 2 Bedroom Rea1 238 f 1rst
Ave K !Chen w tn Save tRelr 1g
erator $325tMonth Depos1!1 Ret
erences No Pets 614 446 4926

ac , 900 Eas

"If I don't feel like QIVlng the full blown wl11z bang pep
talk before a game ltust say pro scouts are commg "

Unturn1shea rwo oeoroom nouse
n ce and clean oepos11 reqUired
no ns1de pets 614 992 3090

420
1 10

Help Wanted

210

Busmess
Opportumty

l ghl de 1verr Cash pad week lv
Need small car 8 know area we 1
Ca l Ctmstan@ 304 675 8756

.,

, J .. , ... A,. tos W tt"
Mo o r s Ca t Larry

_

- - 3&amp;13303

Local F '1anc at tns1 tut on Seek
n9 A Ouatr f1e0 lnd1\ dua To Op
e a1e A P oct Mach1ne ReQu 1r es
Speec And Accur acy On A 10
Key Calc~1a 1o r Full T me Po sri on
M F 1200 9 00 PM For lmme
a ate Cons derat on Send Re
SJme To CLA 364 CI O Gall pols
Da ly Tnt&gt;une 825 Th trd Avenue
Galh oor s OH 45631

recomm~nds that you do bus 1
ness w rt'1 people you know and
NOT to sena mo ney through the
ma11 untl you have nvesl ga ted
lhe offer ng

Investme nt Properly In Gal1pol s
Owner May Be Able To Help W1th
Some F1nanc rng Cal l 614 797
4345 Alter 6 PM

230

LOOoo. tng For MUS ICi ans For A
Bruegrass Band 614 367 7780

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Ma tu•e respons Ole adu lt to care
to se n o c t ze h n h1S home
Room ooa•o an a salary For
110re rto n a on c a n 614 367

.,_ "

s • " g E"•e
Se,..,o Se l t Aa

~

Fo r The Hol roay s Pes Breads
Cookres Call 614 245 9565 Irene
Ho ley

~-~ :
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Ho Jrs Ca ll (909) 715 2300 EKt
782 (24 Hou rs)
No 1: -per ence Neces sary ! $500
To $900 Wee-. ty 1Pot ent1 al Pro
cess rng Monga9e Ref unds Own
Ho urs Call (90g) 715 2300 Ext
135 124 Hours)

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more rn format on
J;1r1 E11as ADON
Center 614 992

6471 EOE
Part T me $9 I Hr Answer Tete
phQr,es F tex t:&gt;te Hours t L oca
Area No E~oer 1 ence Ne cessary
Call 1 809 474 554g Ext 689 1n1
d

Pa 1 T me Fu1 T1me Person W11h
Sew ng AO It ~ Some Sales Ex
Di"r ence A. Plu s Must Be Ab le
To Wo rlo. Ev er y 0 ne ( Satu rday
o 4&lt;:46-4199 Be tween 10 AM
3PM

$,,

POSlAL JOBS

S 11
08fhr Fo r exam ana ap
o cc t on n to call 2 19 769 8301
ex WV'"Jt.8 9'lm 9pm Sun F11
Rec~p1 1 0fl s1 Fast Puced Group

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rds\1. Comp.., rer Dct lil En try Send
Resume &amp; Lener O t In teres I To
CLA 362 co Gatlipo s Oarly Tr~b
;ne 825 Th rd Avenue Gall polis
OH 45631
Rooters Wantea
M n mum 5
Years E 'per ence In Res den11al
Re ~oot ng ~eQ urred Reterences
A Must Ca l! 614 446 45!4 Mon
Fr 6 AM To 5 PM

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,Tu uP lfl &lt;., rtt 149 345 Cedar
1-';J " 1 r ~~ 1J

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Telepnone \a lker s nee&lt;led Cash
pad weelo.ly No ex per ence nee
ess&lt;t y Call Chr 1st Jn@ 304 675
815t:i
Wanted RocK And Roll Base
Playe~ Very Versatile Ser rous In
qUir res Only 614 367 0613 614
446 6160

180

Wanted To Do

1"(. (1

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TE LE MARKETING M uSt Have
Clear Deeo Spea-.•n9 Vo1ce
$6 00 To $9 50 Per Hour Start
lmm ea alely Call 614 446 9905
A ~tr 11 OO AM

n a

f""( t-

• , ~ - " " , sa,,,

SI..PPI IC$

Fu ll I mu t,ttretarv t Recep!IOniSI
Nof.!Oflrl for Hf!:tl Estatfl Agency
Locared tn Dcwntown GallipOliS
Mu st Know All lfpes General Of
!1 Ce wo 11. Exuer ence tn A aver
t smg A Plu~t 1\tl Resumes Strtct
ly Con lrdenrra Send To CLA 363
co Call pots Darty Tr bune e25
fl11 t:l Av f nue Ga r! potrs OH
45631
Help needed tor deer processmg
Crawlord s Groce•y 304 675

5404
Home Typ1s ts PC users neede&lt;l
$45
mcome potenoal Call 1
BOO 513 4343 E•t S-Q~

ooo

HVAC Serv 1c e Techn rc ran &amp;
HVAC Sheet Me!al Installers E..
per enced On y Apply Sen&lt;! Re
sume To J1m Harmon Yates
Hear ng &amp; Coohng 296 West Cot
lege A10 Grande OH 45674 No
PhOne CaliS

o \Is

3 bedroom Iurn sned good c ean
cond1110n porch yard sem 1 p r1
vate lot abo~e New Haven Rl 33
$260 mo 30.:1 882 2466 anytrme
2bedroom mob 1e hom e Orond
Run Ad ne.1 1 New tt;w'" n $240
n1o f,lluS oeposrt 304 ! 13 SH81

N ce tnree 0£1aro:&gt;m moo 1e non1e
m Mrddleport 614 gg2 5858

MS

• ee .. v Year ro u nn

S•

2 bedroom $200 a monw
ut litleS 6\4 992 3750

Appl1ances
Aecondtttoneo
Wasners Dryers Ranges Reln
graters 90 Day Guarantee
French C1ty Maytag 614 446
7795

GOOD

USED

24 Hou r Care For Elde r ly Or
Hane11capped Person In Pnvate
State L1censed Home 614 441
0000

------Babys r!l lng
In
l.rty
Home
CneshreArea 614367 7849

Do ~o u need HELP decoratmg &amp;
ct ean 1ng for the hol 1days? Call
614 gq2 2335
Ge,e •a l Ma nrenance Parnt ng
Varo Work W ndows Wa she d
Gutters Cleaned l1Qhl Haulmg
CofT'mer cal Res1dent1a l Steve
614 448686 1
Geo ges Portable Sawm1\l don t
naut vour rogs to thtJ mil rust call

304 675 1957
Mag1c Years Oaf care Preschool
!.A r 7 30 5 30 State 1 censed
1easonable rates 1nCI\Id1ng ~1nk
uu all ty ca e dependab e car ng
•Hall Let your ChilO expenence a
fama strc Ja ycare With lender lov
1ng care 14yr exper1ence 304
6i'55847
Pro le ss onal Tree Serv1ce Com
plele Tree Care Bucket Truck
Serv ce 50 Ft Reach Slum p Ae
moval
Free Est1mates1 In
surance 24 1-tr Emergency Serv
tee Call And Savel No Tree Too
B1g Or Too Small I Btdwen Oh1o

614 38B 9643 614 367 7010
Rub &amp; Scruo C!eanmg Serv1ce
dust1ng mopp1ng w1ndows and
more Comptere sel\ltce or 1ou ch
ups References on requesl call
Terry at 614 902 4232 or 614
992 4451
Sun Valley Nursery School
Childc are M F sam 5 30pm Age s
2 K Voung School Age Our ng
Summer, 3 Days per Week M1n1
mum614 446 3657
tammy s Oaycare hou r s Man·
day lhrough Fnday 6 30am
6 OOpm Lots of learnmg and TLC

614 gq2 5368

All real estate adverttstng m
thiS newspaper s subJeCt to
the Federal Fatr Houstng Act
ol 1968 whtch makes ll ttlegat
to adverttse any preference
hmttatiOn or dtscnmtnatton
based on race color rel!gton
sex lam hat statu s or nattonat
ongtn or any mtentton to
make any such preference
lmtahon or dtscnmtnallon •
ThiS newspaper wttl not
knowhngly aa::ept
advertisements for real estate
wn1cn s tn V10iatton altha taw
Our readers are hereby
nformed that all dwetl1ngs
advertised mthiS newspaper
are avatlabte on an equal
opportunity basts

Sma I 2Mdroom M dd J?por 1 OH
Re ferences &amp; sccur I( dcpos1t re
qu1red 304 862 3267
Two and tnree bedroom mob1le
names stan rng a t $/40 $300
sewe, wate r and 11ash mcluded
614 949 216 7

440

Apartments
tor Rent

Fur n1shed Elhcenq 607 Second
Gallipolis Sh~re IJ:llh $ 1501U! 11
t es Pad GH 44G 4416 Alter

7pm
1 and 2 Dedroom apar tmen rs tur
n1shed and urdurn shed secJr ty
depos t equ oo no pels G14
992 2218
1 BA Apt In Gil pols Wilte
Fu nrshed Gas PJ d No tJels
$?8C Mo &amp; Dt'POst 61A 446

2800
REAL ESTATE
310 Homes tor Sale
1981 3 Bedrooms Elec triC Fu1
nace Als o Equ 1pped For Wood
ourner $4 900 614 379 9447
614 379 2435
3 Bed oom 8 1ck In Gall pols
Laund r y Room Full Basemen!
Car pan S1orage Roo11 Sunse l
Dr ve lmmedrale Possess1on
614 446 9523 6 14 446 1443
3bedroom house 5ac res lan d
Ci ty wale r new septiC sys1em

304 675 77B5
3bedroom 2 lu11 baths 1 1!4acras
rn Plrny WV 304 937 2782
3beoroom one t:&gt;ath house w 1
2 14acres 2 Smtles out Sandhttl
Ad 3046755171

2borm apts tO'&lt;tl t rec l r c ap
p1r an1..12 S 1u1 n 5'1Ul r c~u HJry uon
lil c, tr 11eS c ose to ~~.- roo n •own
Aoor cat ons avd 13ble l' Vrt age
Groen Apts 11 -19 or cd ll 614 992
3711 EOI I
Furn1sneo Apanmen1 1 Bearcom
$2751Mo U11 11 1es Pa 1d 607 Sec
and A.venue Gallipolis 614 446
4416Aiter 7PM

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Ortle
tram $226 to $291 Wal k 10 shop
8 110v'es CCI I 6 ~ 44G 25GB
Equal Ho u~ n9 Opponun 1y
Beech ~t M dd epa 1 1 roo111 tur
nsned etlc~lCy u tll~CS pl rd 08
posrl 8 re lelfJnces 304 882

25fi6
Country S1de Apartmen t Large 1
Bedroom $325 Mo Oepos11 513

922 0294
Three be droom home 1n country
Wt111es H II Ad Rutland one balh
1n ground pool 614 992 506 7
Three Be&lt;lroom 1 Balh Home On
F11Je Acres tr Nonhup Severa
Outbu1 d ngs GardE:!n Spot 614
446 7812 614 446 6033 Ask ng
$45 000

320

Mobtle Homes
for Sale

19 86

Danv lie Motl1 le Home

14~70

2 Bedrooms 2 Bath s Call

l rm1ted OHerl New 14x80 No pay
menJs alter 4yrs Only make 2
paymen ts &amp; move 1n 3011 755

5566
New ly remode led 12x65 rnob rle
f'IOme wldecll e~c cond $7 500
h1m 304 576 3117
Prrce Buster I New 14x70 2 or
3br Only $995 down $19SIInonth
Fr ee del1very &amp; se tup Only ar
Oakwood Home s N1tro WV 304
755 5885

340

Bus1ness and
Bu1ldmgs

For Sale Or lease 5 000 Sq F1
CommeH.:ral Bu d1ng On State Ro
ute 93 In Oak Hill Fo r me r! )
Known As H 1 gh~:~y Res tau ant
l arge Custome• Pa rkrng Lot Ca \\
614 682 3199 Alter 6 PM

350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

1 Acre Poss um Ttot ~oad Wrt ll
Garage Ready lo Mo~e On 1 No
Contracts $ 18 000 614 386

B97B

N 3 d Ave M dOieport 1be d
ream turn sneo Deoos 1 8 reler
ences 3011 88::&gt; 256G
New Hoomy 2 Bed ooms 1 Ba th
Ap 1 1n en t ~ Il l [ 1€ctr c Near
Po 1er $3 25 Mo Depos 1 Rt-ler
ences 614 !115 5114

N ce 2 upsta r s oedroom ca1pet
ea applrances mcluaed utrl11 es
oa ,Q ac $37Stmo Oepos rt 8 rei
erences reQuueo 304 6 75 6196
N1ce ctean gro un a ll oor 2oea
room W 0 hook up Depos 11 Rei
erences No pets 304 G75 5162
N ce one bed1oon1 apa1 tmenr tor
rE"'I n p r P te;JStln t 6 14 992

Want To Pur chase Older Home
Or Buil&lt;l1ng lot In Or Near Galli
pol1s 304 273 2940 304 273
0136 Ahe16
F1ve ac res
aera tor
near
Rac1ne St6 000 can lnance w1th
hall down 614 94g 2025
Scen1 c Valley Apple Grove
beauulu! 2ac lots put:&gt;llc wa 1er

Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336
RENTALS

5858

One bedroom AP&lt;'Himen t on Bur
ternut A'Venue remoaeted $2001
mo pfus utrlrt es and dapos!l call

614 992 6822
Twrn Hrvers Tower now accep11ng
appt1cat10ns tor 101 HUD subsd
1Zed apt lor elderly and hand1
capped EOH 304 67S-6679

450
410 Houses for Rent

Furnished
Rooms

2 bedroom a1 1 77 N Park Dr
$325/mo References depos11 no
pets 304 675 2749

Rooms tor 1em week or month
S~arung at S1201mo Gatlia Hotel

3be droo m house

Sleep1ng rooms w1th cook1ng
A lso trailer space on nver Al l
hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m

very c lean

304 675 1301
3BR Home lor Ren 1 Spruce Si
$350 00 mon Call614 446 2158

614 446 9560

304 773 5651 Mason wv

1985 fad F 150 112 Ton 302 En
g1ne Aula Overdnve P S 8 PB
Good Ttres Runs Grea 11 614
256 6314

WI\~

Wh 1r lpoot Washer $150 Cu t To
$95 3 To Choose From Wh rrl
pool Dryer Was $95 Cui $75 3 To
Choose From Kenmore EleCtfiC
Ra n ge Wa s 112S Cu t To $95 90
Day Warranty Freeze, Up1 1ght
$150 F1eezer Chesl Type $150
,Jgg s Appl ances 25 Years In
lL ~ n~.:s~ Su rvrn g You 76 V 1ne
Sl eel Gnll1p0 s 614 446 7398

s. .

Sporttng
Goods

Model 70 W nches ter BDM W11h

A -&lt;lx 12 Smmons Scope $525
614 379 2677
Rem1ng ton 760 30 06 Ruger 77 1n
7mm mag "304 882 2457
Sa~age 30 06 Camoltaugeo W1 th
Scope Sl1ng Caffy Case And
Box 01 Shells $400 614 446
0087 614 256 1932

530

Ant1ques

B~y or se !

R1ver rn e An1 1ques
1124 E Mmn Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hou1s M T W 10 00
a m 10 6 00 p r1 Sunday t 00 to
6 00 p m 614 992 2f".J26

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

t9

Panasomc Tl/ a mos1 ne w
$95 304 895 3554
1978 Monw Carlo 1986 Kawa
sak r 185 4 whee e ut l11y 1ype
One par new Car hart coveralls
304 458 1541 alter 6pm
38gal hsh aquar.um l'looa cab1
net st 1nd wn &lt;;p(l J t 1UH homer
thermometer Qltwel $200 304
G75 7580
Amana S1de tly S ae Relngerator
Mnytag Wt~sher DrytH Par 22
Cu Ft Chesl Freezer Sanyo Mi
crowave Dryer Color TV 614
256 123ti

5·4 0 Miscellaneous

640

Merchandise

ExerCISe Mach1ne $125

Warm Morn1ng Wood Stove For
Sate 614 245 5090

Butld1ng
Supplies
br~ck

sewer p1pes wmd
ows I nte ls eTc Claude Wm1ers
R o Grande OH Call 6 14 245
5121
I
Met al Rool 1ng 8 S d ng Gee Tex
t le Fabr 1c For Or1veway s &amp; Etc
Typa r For House Cover Or Tem
porary S1orage Cover AltiZer
Farm S~,.ppty 614 245 5193

560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Fea
lunng Hydro Ba th Julie Webb
Call6t4 446 0231
7rnos old Rottwe1ler lemate had
shots $100 304 675 6046
AKC German She pherd~up es
r1rs1 shots &amp; wormed 3 le
es

304 675 6639

•

BeCJ.gl?,';~onths

AKC Ma(e
Old
Al so Female Beagle E xce tent

Rabl&gt;l Dogs 614 38B 8447
AK C Rollweller Pupp 1es 7
Weeks Old Shots Up To Date
Pnce Reduced I 614 379-91 16
Btg t:&gt;eaut1tu l AKC Chow pu ppes
one blue and one black te
ma(e left S200 614 992 7574

onl~

champron blOOd! nes exc 1em
perment $150 304 937 2133
M1n1a tu re Ptnchers 21emales
8wks old chocnan AKC ~eg
has shots &amp; wor mea
tars
bobbed $250 304 675 7626

JET
AERAT10N MOTORS
Repa1 red New &amp; Rebutlt tn Sloe~
Call Ron Evans t 800 537 9528

K1Ll RATS AND MICE•
ENFORCER&gt;9 rat and mouse k1ll
ers are GUARA NT EED t Avail
able at

CENTRAL SUPPLY
0 DELL TRUEVALUE LUMBER
Now n slack chocota le candy
wafers &amp; moles Fall Harvest Sale
now rn progress ce ll1ng pa1n 1
$10 991gal lon Other sav tngs
lhrough out lhe s1ore Pam! Plus
New loca110n 511 Burdett e St
304 675 4084
Old sword &amp; case made by Pe111
bone Co 1n C1ncmna11 Oh10 tan
cy engraved A 1 6111 992 2563
Papa san charr w1cush on &amp; trame
$55 Full s~e Futon bed wlblack
matlress (convcns from sola to
bed) $150 6~9 bathroom carpet
never used spruce gree n $60
304 675 30 87 (Sandra)
Re !r1 gerators S1oves Washers
And 0 yers All Recond1 110ned
AM Gauranteed t $100 And Up
Will Oehver 614 669 6441
Rem 1ng1on 870 W1ngmast er 12
ga uge $259 Rem ngton 6 70
W1n9master 16 gauge $249
R em1ng1on 870 Express 20
gauge $225 Stevens 30 30
S 1 29 ~em1ng1on 742 Woodmas
rer 243 automatiC $359 New Ha
IJen 12 gauge pump slug barrel
$149 Mo ssberg 12 gauge pump
slug ba rre\ $169 Ruger GP100
starnless s· barrel 357 Magnum
$339 Auger Secunly Snt 6" barrel
357 Magnum $210 Taurus a·
barrel 357 Magnum
$189
Dave s Swa~ Shop 8129 SR 7
Chesh1re

Straw 304 675 5086

710

Autos for Sale

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equ1pment

Farmall cub plow s drsc mowrng
mach1ne cul!lvators corn planTer

$1500 304 458 2233
Ford New Ho lla nd No~J ember
Spec rats For d S6 1OS tractor

2WD 66hp $18 500 00 66t0S
4WO 76hp ~26 000 00 NH 7
4l;&gt; hayb1nd $7900 00 NH 570T
baler w/hyd
bale
ten s1on
$11000 00 NH 900 lo rage har
vester wlmetat alert 2 row head
$23000 00 NH 15 7 9 tedder 3pt
hitch $r 795 00 NH 306 1400gat
tandem axle slurry sp roader
$8500 00 Kee fer Serv1ce Cen ter
St At 6 7 leon WV 304 895

3874

1986 Vo11&lt;.swa9ton Jel!a ps pb
oc 4doo '!800 orm 304 695
355/
191:1 / Ci.lnmro w r11.; L:OIOI I to ps
black louvers on back w ncow
$2 000 304 773 61 lu
138 7 Chrysle• LeBa on ~ O:Jor
Auto AtC 90 000 Miles $2 500

1991 Chevy Cava rer 5 Spd Ttnl
ed W1ndows Alum num Rm1s
$3 400 OBO 61 4 388 6575

1993 Cnrysrer 5!n Avenue While
Wl blue plusn rnteno1 allluxu y op
hO 1s 1mmacuta1e cond 304 773
5722

livestock

3 Bred Ewes Due To l amb Fnst
Of Mar ch 2 Pvreb•ea SuffolK.
Rams 61.11 446 6566
C lub calves for sate lour way
crossbred L1motAngus Char
Stmm Make exce!lem 4 H FFA
prorec1s (reasonably pn ce d)

304 372 5997

Far hogs and baby p1gs lor sale
614 949 2908 or 614 949 2017
Full Blooded Brown Swtss Cow 2
Reg1s18red Holstetn Spnnger He1f
ers 2 Fu l l Blooded Ho tste 1n
Spr1nger f-te1ters One Regrstered
Angus 3 Year Old Bull 1 Yearlrng
Futt Blooded Angus BUtt 6 14 245

9212
Pam1 ~are 614 446 8981

t993 Cougar XII, loadt:a One
Owner L1ke New Cond1ltOn
39 000 Easy M1 tes $11 QOO 614
446 8026 Or 304 675 5349

PEANUTS

,_

1994 Che•v

z 71

toward (3 wds )
9 Celestial bear
10 - and the
Belmonts

Pass

5 •

Pass

Pass

Pa ss

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

wAI'INA tiAVt
FUN1 GO
-ASIC ATt..AS
If ~E
tiAS A

SOM~

MAT··"··-.. .-

success

....

YOJ\J(. GOT m Be. FViJf &gt;JHOI11'0'£
"/ !
DliXRPI\1 N')

I

'KJCKINI

i~--

·~~-----

---~--"

11

i\fter wmmng th e first tnck th e less
able declarer drew trumps and played
a heart to th e JaCk As you can see the
50 percent finesse worked perfectly
When thJS sort of thmg happens you
cannot help feehng down As the lnsh
wnter George Moore observed
Nothmg 1s more depressmg than the
conv1ct1on that one 1s not a hero It
was hard for the unlucky South to feel
hke a hero even though he had playe d
hke one

Thurman

21 Superlative
suffix
23 Meadow
24 - ·poly
25 Ranch
workers

charge
26 Plains Indian
27 Rodents
28 EKtols
29 - and llle
30 Undulate
32 Hastens
35 Stronghold
36 Baking pit
38 Vegetable

E•st

Pass
Pass
Pass

t1 Responsibility
19 Actress

box
39 Bashful
41 Foot
problema
42 Put up
(pictures)
43 Non-profit
org
44 Senes of
heroic events
45 Regrets
47- force
48 Cupid
51 Eggs
52 Numbers pro

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrrty Crphtn

c ryptogram ~

;tre crealed hom quotatons Dy ramous people past and proson\
Each lener 1n Hle C1phe s1arrds lor another Todays crue f equars M

sv

U V0 N V X

U R T Y

MH

S M X X MC V X

R

OVLWZVX

M H

AUU

OMX

A

P Z R YV P KV R XV

EM 0 V G

VJ L U

L p

wzv

XMMW

FVMXFV

SVXORXN
PZ R C
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The world IS an oysler but you don t crack 11 open on
a mattress

-

Arthur Mille r

r::~:t:~' S©R~lA-~£2t'O"

=:!:

Edotod ~y CLAY R 'OLLAN _.::.__ _ _ __

O Rearrange

lotter.s of the
four scrambled words be
low to form four w o rds

I

CEFFET

I I II1
1

~

~
z

!;

~--~~~~!~--------~

10
sit de 1n ca mper
n1cety
equ1 pped good condl!ton $850
614 992 3016

SERVICES
810

WHAT [) 'IOU
GET FOR.
NUMBER
NINE&gt;

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

STRIKE ABlOW IN THE ~R ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP THE CLASS/flfOS

ROBOTMAN
VISCIPllt.IE. 1'&lt;\0s.IL~

CV,RCOI'I\1:.

~~~::J/&amp;~iiilill~~
ASTRO·GRAPH

SAGITIARIUS jNov 23-Dec 21) Try to
be b o th phdosophtca l and r ea li s t 1c
r egard1ng a contenllous tss ue today A
prope r

Heating
And Cooling

1-teat Pump s A1r CondttiOntng If
You Don 1 Cat1 Us We Borh lose!

f ree Es11ma1es 1 BOO 287 6308
614 446 630B WV 002945
Res dent tat or commerctal wtr'lng,
new serv1ce or repatrs Maallr l 1·
::e n se d etectrlctan Ridenour

: 1ee1r cal WV000306 304 675
1766

!ramc o! mmd w 1ll e n su re VICtory 1n

1

e

'Your
'Birthday

Your ca reer

outlook

ca ntly 1n the

year

may tmprove
ahead

A

s tgntft

promotiOn

mcreased earn1ngs are probable
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) Your h1gh
e)( pec tatton s w111 be tustTfTed t oday so
express. yourself Instead of suppressmg
yout feelings You are m a cycle ol fulhll
ment Scorpto treat yourself 10 a blnhday
g11t ' Send 1or your Astro Graph pre d1c
lions for the year ahead by ma111ng $2
and SASE 10 Aslro-Graph c/o lh&lt;s news

and

th1ngs that could dera1l others won I slow

you d own

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) S•lualrons
that have not been sattsractonly conclud
ed can be reworked loday to produce the
results

you

des1re Loosen

!he knots

and

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan t 9) Today 1f

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Try lo

your a 1ms are c lear ly defined you w1U
ha ve an edge ave r co mpe tttors Try to

devote the bulk ol your efforts to sttua-

unde rs tand your mot1vattons

AQUARIUS (Jan 20·Feb 19) You Will
fee l mosl a t ease w 1t h fn e nds who a re

both practical and amb1t1ous today II
poss1ble avotd a1mless types of people

Thursday Nov 16 1995

method1cal and cogn1zant ol deta1ls L11tle

redo them

a Crt SIS

&amp;

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Box 1758 Murray H1ll

Statton New York N Y 10 156 Make sure
to s tat e you r zodtac s1gn

Rooling and guners commerCTBI
and restdenual m1nor repatrs 35
yea1s e•penen ce B&amp;B ROOF

Electrical and
Refrigeration

\

paper P 0

Ron s TV Servtce spectahzTng tn
Zentlh also ser\'tcmg most olhe.brands Hou se calls 1 800 797 #
0015 WV 304 576 2398
-

840

\N I\1~ \T IONS

~/f~

1--------~-----

lns tal lauon And Servtct EP~
Certlfred Resldenhal Commercl3~
61 4 2561 611

I'LL

IN 5£~VAL F\!NCTtONitJ$

v1nyl
mt&amp;rt·
room
614

1994 Ford Mustang Gl Loaded
Low M il es Excellent Condtllon
Call Berween The Hours 01600
9 00 614 441 1879

~C1VA\1.'1 1 1 Al'ii.'OA'OY
S1~\l.ThV "I"ST"Jl-'O~'i

l'M f~WN0 MUCH,
11\U CH Bt.f1J;i2 NOW

Qt; H£LPING •NOI VIOVALS

e~per1ence

s Healing

"~'I 110C.TD~ OLGA '

NOW ro~ T 01; ALMlM~O
IT'S ~ V'i:.ll.'/ SeRiOUS

Ce11ings texlured plaster repau
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 years •

Plumbing

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Gospel - Ax 1om

General Home Matn
tenence Pa1nt1ng v myl s1dlflg
carpenJ ry doors Wtndows baths
mob te home repa1r and more For
tree eshmate call Chel 614 99 2

Earls Home Mam tenance
stdtng roohng extenor and
or pamlmg power washrng
add1t1ons Free Esttmares
992 4451

THREE - FIFTHS 7
THAT THATS
WHAT I GOT'

I,

C&amp;C

Freeman

B :.~y Two Fo1 One Pr ce 1983
Pont 6000 1985 Pom 5000 £14
367 7440

8 Reverent

~

loaded $17 500 304 675-7362

Auto loans Dealer wilt arrange It
nancmg even 1l you have b een
turned down e sew here Upton
Equ pment Used Cars 304 458
1069

AT ATTENTION

I DON ' T
KNOW WHAT
HE'S DOING
HERE.

NO,

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

34 ooom,

304 675-604 7

I HAVE

HE'S M'( DOG
WELL, SORT OF

New gas tanks on e !on !ruck
wheels radtators floor mats etc
D &amp; R Auto A1ptey WI/ 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

820

1995 Toyota Camry Le a1r auto
cru1se am fm casseue pw pi
gold lrtm 13 OOOmt musr sell

HER HOW LON6
TO KEEP THESE
TROOPS STANDING

ASK

1

YES MA AM

1993 Plymouth Sundance 4 Door I.'.:;N::
G:;.;:.6;.;
14:.99;:::::2::;50::,:4_:;
1- - - - Auto AIC 32 000 Mrle s $4 900 I'

000614 379 2726

36 Arm bone

7 Coal umt

West

Bndge can be an extremely fru strat
mg game For example you play a con
tract perfectly yet go down Your oppo
nent at th e other tabl e a less abl e
perform er adopts an mfer1or hne that
wor ks You played better yet fim sh a
loser
Today's deal occurred du~ng a maJor
knockout t ea m event Both North
South pa1rs b1d aggressive ly to seven
spades Both r ece1ve d th e club km g
openmg lead How should the play go?
'I he declarers needed three hea rt
tmks so that they could d1scard th e1r
two club losers but th e1r approaches
d1ffered
Th e better decla r er wo n w1th th e
club ace cashed th e spade ace played
a heart to dummy s king and rufled the
heart two h1gh m h1s hand Then came
a spade to dummy s nme followed by
dummy s heart three When East d1s
carded South let out a loud groan The
contract could no longe r be made If
only the heart s had been 4 3 So uth
would ha&gt; e ruffed h1gh played a spade
to dumm) s Jack and cashed th e heart
ace Jack for hiS essential discards Th1s
!me has about a 65 percent chance of

F'"

1992 Dodge Sha dow 2 Door 6323
Aulo AIC 49 000 Mtles $4 BOO 1-- - -D-R_Y_W_A_L_L_ _ __
OBO 614 379 2726
Hang lm sh repatr
1992 Dodge Sha dow 4 Doo r
Auto Ai C 39 000 M 1les $ 4 500

Boston

F111ng aids
Bread spread
Synthet1c fiber
Matched pa1r
Marx man
Wad~ng bird

There are
days like this

BORN LOSER

1

NH 7h hayb ne Owatonna 7~ nay
b•ne Gehl gr 1n der1m1xer 1211
trans!X)rJ drsc 304 273 421 5

630

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Un condtl\ onal ltlettme guaran1ee
Lo cal references lu r n shed Call
16141 446 OB70 01 (61 4) 237
9B5 3,95
0488 Rogers Wa1erproofmg Es
199 1 PI~ mouth Aceta m 4 Door 1 tabh shed 1975
Owno E~cellent 1OOK Mle s Be
low Whote sule $4 297 03 614
Appliance Part s And Serv1C8 AU
367 7251
Nam e Brands Over 25 Years Ex
1991 Rockel Chass1s race car all penence Al l Wor k Guaranteed
new rn 91 Wtwood best at eve French C ty Uay1ag fi14 446
rythrng weld three wheels trres 7_79_5__________
N ~&lt;:d pedals lue t cell on ooard
l1re system rOlling chaSSIS $5600 Bill Omck s 1-tome Improvements
neg Catt Sco 11 Wolle 5 14 g 49
Jdd1 1 10 n~ remo delmg rooftng
2879 614 949 :&gt;0 45 or 614 992
stdtng plumbtng etc Insured call
6193
B11t Omck 614 9g2 5183
1991 lawn Car Black Wllh Grey
tnter+Or W1th ConiJertab!e Top
lmma cu ate 4g 5K M1les $ 15 750
614 446- 4880

1
2
3
4
5
6

Openm g lead "'K

Budget TransmiSSIOns Used &amp;
Rebutll All Typas Access 1bte To
Over 10 000 r,ans mt SSIOI"' Al so
Pans
C l utches &amp; Pressure
Plates 614 379 2935

790

DOWN

the com1cs

32 F1ny percent
33 Car assemblers assn
34 Cav1ar source
35 Ch1cago or

By Ph1lhp i\ldt•r

1984 ford Bronco 4x4 New Motor
Ma nr NewPa ns 6 14446421 7

199 1 L1ncoln Ma1k Vtt LSC Spe
CIJI Ed t10n t&gt;l&lt;rek sunrool CD
payer leather nter or Cllflutar
afltenna tow mrlt.: s ltke new (i 14

1992 Do dge Shadow ES 2 Door 5
Speed AIC 1/ 6 69 000 M1 les
$5 800 OBO 614 742 2792

800 352 1045

POCKETBOOK ! !

1982 full S1Ze Bro nco 4 x4 302
a\Jtomal•c runs good $2200 614
992 3016

'ngs

OBO 614 379 2726

POLE BUILDING SPEC IAL

&amp; 4· WDs

STAY OUT OF MY

19 79 Bronco 11 x4 35 1 au toma 11 c
uns good good 1 res $1800
614 992 3016

080614 742 2792

Husqvarna cha1n saws now on
sale thru November S1der s
Equtpment 3DA 675 7421 or 1
BOO 277 3917

30 X40 X9 Patnted Steel Srdes
Gatvalume Steel Roof 15 ~ a Steel
Sl 1der 3 Man Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Burlders 1

TATER SMITH ! !
I'VE TOLD YOU
A HUNNERT
TIMES--

1977 Ford 4 WD Nee ds Work
$1800 080614 446 7411

760

1986 Chrysler L ebaron coniJelt
1ble loaded good top &amp; ooot
tooks &amp; runs good $t600 61 c1
247 ?901

1988 Ford Thunderbird Sliver ps
po pw pi 304 895 3420 e... en

2683

BARNEY

1------- -- - -

570

Bundy Saxaphone Excettenr Con
dtl\On Call Alter 4 PM 614 379-

Vulnerable East
Dealer South
West Nor th
Pass 2 ..
Pass 3 .

1---- - - - - - - -

1987 Pon t ac F1ero V6 $2 500
307 773 6166

Musfcal
Instruments

Vans

tJI087
4 J G, 2

Oo AKQ 104J
W4
t A K Q
4A l !

1994 Chevy Srtverado lull S1Ze
short bed V8 au to low miles
Dr ght leal metallic tmted w ndows
a1 r am tm casselle exc cond
must see to apprectate 614 446
6753 leave message 11 not home

730

AB 7 5
'f I 0 7

SOUTH

89 Thunde101rd SC rwo door 3 8
lrtr e V 6 el 11e model IUf bO PS 1985 S 10 Blazer Grea T Shape
PB AC 5 speed power seats $4 800 614 256 9301 Evemn9s
and locks $7300 neg 61 4 992
1997 Chevy Astra Van Great
7478or 614 949 2679
Cond1110n l oaded Tow tng Pkg
1976 Chevy Vega Slf\1 on wagon $3 500 614 446 9278
sharp black new wheels 350
1988 Bronco XL T 4x4 All Power
sma ll block $3 650 304 675
2457
Red &amp; Wh1t e 98K GC $7 800
614 446- 8313
1983 Bu1cK. Sk. f ,lrl\ i! Door On
1988 Ford I t50 4~4 Extended
ven Oatl~ r~uns Goo o $425
Cat&gt; All Opt10ns 106 000 Miles
080 304 675 8870
Eu;et en 1 Sh:~pe $8 500 614
1984 Buck Skylark 4dr body 440 0213
good cond r uns grea t lront 1--.::._:.__.:.._ _ _ _ _ __
wheel drrve PS PB AC amt lm 1990 Dodge Ram van B 250,
cassette 119000ml $1850 304
72 000 Mtles $6 000 Can 80'
675 6287
Seen At Gallipolis Dally Tr tbune
825 Th1rd Avenue Gathpol1s
1985 Chev Celebnty Clenn Ntce Qh1o
$975 1964 Ford B10nco 4~4 Full
SIZe $2 500 OBO N ice 1980 9 4 Ford Aero s tar X LT \'an 7
Ford Van $800 080 Two pass ex tended lully loaded two
Cheapo s Under $300 614 245
tone pa •nl alum1num wheels
5320
1~ 000 m11es $16 995 614 992
2405 senous calls only
1985 Chevttte Excelle nt Runnmg
Condt l10 n $600 080 Alot 01 740
Motorcycles
New Pars 614 388 8375 Bet
ween 12 5 Waekdays
1985 Honda BIQ Red Shall Onven
Reverse L ke N ew Mu st See1
1985 Corvette loaded Aulo $1 150 614 367 0239
H gh M 1es 1969 Nova SS 396
375 HP 4 Speed No Mo10r Dr 750 Boats &amp; Motors
Trans 1969 Bur c k GS 350 4
tor Sale
Speed AC Arrzona Car 614
682 75 12
1g93 201 P ro XL 20 S!ru !o s·
1985 Otds To ronado $1 500 Ne bass bo at 200 XP HP 6 14 667 ·•
7347 or 614 949 2679
got1at:&gt;te Dark A lu P Good Car
614 446 8605

Tr to Of lnd1a B lue Pea Fowl 3
Year Old Ma le 2 Two Year Otd
Females $100 614 388 8879

Fue Oil Tanks 250 8 300 Gallon
CapaCIIy 614 256 12g 1
H E ffec1ency L P Or Na1urat Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU 1
800 287 6308 614 446 6308
Duct Systems And Atr Condt110n
ers Free EsluTetes

Square bales $1 $2 Round bales
$15ca 304 6 75 3960

Bla ~k male AKC Cocke r Span rel

304 675 7740

Fodder Shocks $2 Each 'And In
dan Corn F1ve For $1 00 614
245 5887

6913

TRANSPORTATION

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Ga lon
Up rrght ~on Evans Enter pnse s
Jackson Oh o 1 800 53 7 9528

8 ock

&amp; Gram

614

368 B293

550

Hay

Round Dales of nay $16 304 675

Elec tri C Wheelchairs /S cooters
New t Used Sco01er 1Wheelcha1r
lilt s Sta 1rway Eleva1ors lilt
Cha1rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

Pood les toys also mm1a1Ure
Schnauzers
AKC champ1on
n1ghts Unde rbooked\ Mu s I Sell 1 blood I nes shots 8 wormed pa
$2791coup e l1m1ted TI Cke ts 1
pcrs 8 ped1gree 61 4 66 7 3404
BOO 935 9999 ex t 6589 Man Sa t
Reg1s1ered We1maraner pupp1e s
9am 10pm

Electnc Range Unused Sla uonary
L1ke Other ll ems Al l In Good
Cond111on 614 256 6493 B&amp;tw&amp;en
1 4PM

P1ct&lt;. U p

1993 Fo1d Ra nger Xll e)c
cond $7 600 304 773 5909 or
304 458 1771 aher 5 30pm

BAHAMA CRUI SE' 5 dayS/4

Concrete &amp; Plas t c Sep ttc Tanks
300 Thr u 2 000 Gallons Ron
Ev ans Ente rpmes Jack.so n O H
1 BOO 53 7 9528

v6

1g92 Ford F150 cus10m 4x4 V6
auto
71 OOOmr
exc con d
$10 500 304 895 3685

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62 ' - - : - - - - - - - - - -

6 1114116 3158
Oual ly ll ouseho d Furn1 tu1 e .And
Aop lmnces Great Deals On
Cash A'1d Caryl RE NT 2 OWN
And laya .... ay At so Available
Free Del very W th n 25 M ~s

10 Tano

71 000 M tes 1988 Cu tlass Su
preme SIL FWD Cook Moto rs
614446 003

Mo ll ohan Carpets Rt 7 N 614
446 7444 Fo r Carpel &amp; Vrnyl
Neeos

VI RA FURNITURE

s

EAST

WEST
Oo6
WQ 9 88 5
• 9 6 3
•KQ109

L ke New 1988 VW Fo• AIC

LAfNE S FURNtTUnE
Complete home lurn1~h ngs
Ho urs Men Sa t 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m1les out Bulav 1lle P 1 ~e
Free Delivery

wo,, ooo" 614 «6 3159

HE NSEPS A "OOP.L
fliJ;) PIJ ACQU IHAL

ooo

1991

I I 15 ~b

• 5 4 2
.o. H -

1906 Chevy S'lverado 4114 sh011
oeo $5
304 6 75 6638

4460

F1sher Grandpa Woodburner
SIOve &amp; Accessor~es Excellenl
Cond1!10n $300 614 446- 1168

Modern 2 Bedroom Apcutment
Central Heat &amp; A r 2 Blocks From
Downtown $295t Mo • Deoos11
61 ~ 446 2300

111 ~T')

R r~no Names
low P ces Pont Pleasant Foo
diane Pla N! Open On y 304 6 75

O r ve St Ga lrpo s New &amp; Used 1
furn 1ure he&lt;lle r s Western &amp;

NORTH
OoJ 9 2
w AKJ32

895 3036

Ba ga rns

Furnrsned 2 Bearoon 1\parm enl
Ac1oss From Pa k AC No Pets
Retere.,ce s Oepo s t $350 1Mo
614 446 8235 6 14 446 osn

Gracrous 1v ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at l/1 ll age Manor and
A1vers tde Apartments 1n M10d te
pori From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal Hous1ng Opper
tun 11es

1979 Bronco $1000 f1rm needs
back glass m1nor bodv wo1k 304

MY

GOODWILL STORE
DONATION CENTER

Fuewood $40 Load Or 3 For $ 100
Delivered
Stac~ed 614 388
8624 304 576 3142

Alter 4 00 PM 614 446 3956

£vi~

ouJN '1TVfF1

APPLIANCES

Fat rent 2 bedroom apanmen t
$270t mo p1u':i depos t &amp; u!l li tres
ca u G' 4 992 6822

Furn shed ? r~oon s &amp; Br11r1
Oownst1 rs U t t s rurn sned
Ce1n N oP~.:t
n c:r~.c De
1)0Sr1f1eq u1EO (j11ltlU 15 19

'fo

614

1978 C hevy 4WD p1ckup good
t res and dnve l1ne runs greal
rwo new fe nders $1550 neg 614
992 7478 or 6111 949 2879

s"GM~ I
Do~ · r- WAN\

Washers dr yers ,etngerators
r~nge s Skaggs Appt rances 76
Vrne Street Ca ll 6, 4 446 7390
1 000 499 3499

Moe oance s needod at tne
Sow ofo ~ l1n JO&lt;~ 6 75 5955

6009 Ord Can

,,o

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Me ce
v lie Area Re terence &amp; Depos 1
614 ~46 1158

1974 Chevy Tru ck $500
4&lt;46 2196

Household
Goods

520

-· S .. -o e::: £ ,. ,e tooe To
~

14 x 70 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths Wn
ter tSewer &amp; Ga bage Furn shea
Depos1t Requ reo Ref erence
614 446 2381 614 1146 0268

2bedroom $ 27 ~ rnc Gall pa irs
Ferry 3011 6 75 l ~S 2

nr

Help Wanted
•'•&lt;:: ~ ~ 1

Professional
Services

Mob1le Homes
tor Rent

510

PHILLIP
ALDER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

MERCHANDISE

Puule

Answer to Previous

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Today can
be p leasurab le and pro du c t1v e 1f you
don t

get

tmme rsed

m dtsorganized pro

tects Harmony and solitude Will enhance
your effTcten cy
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19) You have
lhe poten11al to gatn the upper hand today
tn Situ a tions that call tor pragmatiC resolu
l ions Uttltze your supenor IOQTC skills to
solve a problem lor your colleagues

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Th1s can be
an e)( tre mely produ c ltve day d you. a re

-,

tJon s lhal reqUtre menta( rather than mus

cutar output Mmd

exerc1ses should

be a

snapforyoutoday

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) If you re planntng
a soctal even t today I m1t tl to a s mall
group of select lnends lnt1ma1e gather
tngs w1ll produce better res ults

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Feelings ol
self wonh w111 be enhanced today 1f you
utthze your time and talent to serve olh
ars Merely tookmg oul for your own mter
ests will not sa tiate your need for grat1f1

cat1on

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) CollectiVe ben
efrts can be denved Ieday from a relallon
sh1p tha t IS of a mutual ly generous
nature

The more you gtve the more

you II rece1ve

Loose - Balsam

EXAMPLE

Granny a lways told me th a t a truly confusmg person
w1ll g1ve you good adv 1ce wh1le sett1hg a poor EXAMPLE

�•

Page 14 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 15, 19~5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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

Ohio Lottery

Larkln
named NL's

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

.

Pick 3:

0260
Super Lotto:
17-27-29-30-37-43
Kicker:

PageS

8 AM·IO PM
29&amp; SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DEtAILS

.....

311188

Vol. 46, NO. t42
Copyrlght1995

:

:

PARTLY
CLOUDY
l'artly cloudy tonight. Low In
mld-20s. Friday, partly sunny.
Highs In mld-40..

2 Sections, I 6 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 16, 1995

State's pay raise bill put on hold

(

Turkey ••••••••••••••••••••• 69(
LB.

ByPAULSOUHRADA
· Assodaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS - County prosecutors, sheriffs,
, judges and other elected officials likely won'tlrnow
until next year whether they will be getting raise s
after a bid to add legislators to the mix killed the
issue in the Ohio House.
The House, on a 56-38 vote, rejected Senate
amendments to the pay raise bill, sen(ling it to a joint
conference committee where lawmakers almost certainly will eliminate the provision granting raises to
members of the Legislature.
·
. Those negotiations probably won't start until after
the Legislature reconvenes in January, since neither
. Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, nor
House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg,
seemed inclined to call their members back before

7 UP
PRODUCTS
CUBE 24 PACK 12 OZ.

•

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast •••••••••~~...

$

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$

1
Rump Roasts ••••••••••••• · 159_
NUSSELMAR
69
1
59
PLE
SAUCE
Tavern Hams •••••~;...... 1 Baeon •••••••••••• ••••••••••
199
3
$100
Breast Fillets ••••••••••••~·
49

year's end.
"It 'isn't necessary because. with the exception of
judges, the raises would not lake effect until after the
November election,'' Aronoff said.
The judges were due to receive their raises immediately. The state constitution prohibits other elected
officials from receiving pay increases until after their
next elections.
The Senate added the leRislative raises to the bill
on Tuesday before passing it 25-7. The House passed
a version that did not include lawmakers in June .
The bill would have granted raises of 3 percent a
year to elected officials, ranging from the governor to
township trustees. Legislators elected in 1996 would
have received their pay increase s in 1997 through
2000.
Other officials would receive raises over two to

SUPERIOR WHOLE BONELESS

HORMEL

$

$

lb

~

15 oz

FRESH BONELE~S &amp; SKINLESS CHICKEN$

KITCHEN PRIDE

Bacon ••••••••••••••••••~~~·::~
BALL PARK

LB.

Franks••••••••••••••••••••••

NEWT GINGRICH

DOVE LIQUID
DISH
DETERGENT

1

THE HAGUE, Netherland•
(AP) - An international uibunal
today indicted the Bosnian Serbs'
top two political and military leaders for more war crimes, charging
them with genocide in the Muslim
enclave of Srebrenica.
• Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic and army commander
Gen. Ratko Mladic have already
been charged with war crimes
against Bosnia's Muslim and Croat
populations. including attacks on
the capital Sarajevo.
The new indicanents come just
days after Mladic and Karadzic
agreed to relinquish power once a
U.S.-sponsorcd peace deal is
signed, in exchange for not being
handed over to the war crimes tribunal.
The tribunal said today's indictment related to "one of the bloodiest acts of the war in the former
Yugoslavia ... involving crimes of
an unprecedented cruelty against
the Bosnian Muslim population."
· Karadzic and Mladic are
accused of being "directly responsible for the auocities commined in
July 1995 against the Bosnian
Muslim population of the U.N :de~!gnated safe area of Srebrem~a. tnbunal d~uments srud. _
· The latest md1ctments agamst
the two appeared certain to further
1solate the Bosman Serb leadership
at a time where the leaders of Serbia, Bosnia and Croatia are trying
to hammer out a U.S.- brokered
peace accord.
_ _
The Unued States has sa1d 1t
would not send troops to monitor a
peace agreement as long as the two

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Columbus city officials, who still
don't k)low what caused the oul-

GROUND
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_ remained in power.
After the fall of Srebrenica to
Bosnian Serb forces, an estimated
25,000 Muslim refugees fled to the
nearby town of Potocari, headquarters of Dutch peacekeepers.
The Serbs deported thousands of
Muslims to Bosnian government
lines after reportedly separating out
men and boys.
About 8,000 refugees have been
missing ever since, and Western
governments have said evidence,
including satellite photos of alleged
mass graves, suggests mass executions.
"After Srebrenica fell ... a truly
terrible massacre of the Muslim
population appears to have taken
place, '' tribunal documents said.
"The evidence describes scenes
of unimaginable savagery: thousands of men executed and buried
in mass graves, hundreds of men
buried alive, men and women mutiJated and slaughtered, children
killed before their mothers' eyes, a '
grandfather forced to eat the liver
of his own grandson.
"These are truly scenes from
hell. written on thedarkestpagesof
human history," according to a
summary of the indicanent.
.
The indicanent depicts Karadz1c
and Mladic as the architects of
what is perbaps the worst massacre
in Europe since World War II.
U.S. spy photos have indicated
mass graves around Nova Kasaba,
west of Srebrenica. Madeleine
Albright, U.S . ambassador to the
United Nations has told the security council as m'any as 2, 700 people
might he buried there.

C9lumbus r.e ports
another case of E. coli

260Z.

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PRESIDENT CLINTON

·Top two Bosnian Serbs'
leaders are indicted for
additional war crimes

$399

$ 59

five years .
Legislators now make $42.427 a year, with extra
pay going to those in leaders hip positions. Their lasl
raise was in 1992.
In the House, neither Republicans nor Democrats
were willing to provide the decisive margin to ensure
the bill's passage. In the end. 22 Republicans and 16
Democrats voted in favor.
"The votes that I had indicated were there, were
there," said House Speaker JoAnn Davidson, RReynoldsburg. "It was the votcs from the mi'noritv
party that weren't there."
·
Minority Leader Patrick Sweeney. D-Cicvcland,
had a different recollection of his conversations with
Republican leaders .
"We had indication s that they had more votes
than they produced today, " Sweeney said .
"There was no way we were goin g to be the

majority on this," he said.
Swee ney predicted the legislative raises would
come out when the bill goes to conference committee.
"That issue has bumed iL&gt;clf out. I suspect," he
said.
Supporters of the bill argued that the dispute ove r
the legislat tve rai ses was unfairly holding up pay
increases for county sheriffs. township uustees and
other local officials.
But oppo nent s said other officials will sti ll get
llleir raises alter the conference committee takes legislators out of the bill.
Rep. Mike Fox. R-llamilion, said the Legislature
has left too much unfinished work to consider granting themse lves a pay raise.
''The public has been sending a message that they
are nut happy with our job pcrfonnance," Fox said .

Clinton says he will veto latest GOP proposal

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· A 45-year-old woman was conOrmed ill with the bacteria Tuesday, said Ted Strouth, team leader
fQT the food ,Protection program of
the Columbus Health Department.
: She became sick on Oct. 27,
-.llbich is within a week of the other
cases, he said. She did not need to
hospitalized.
• Jbe woman saw a doctor after
calling the health department's botlib~, Tests confirmed her suspiclons.
. The hotJine has received almost
4SO calls sioce the outbreak in late
October, Strouth said. Recently,
ti!OOgh, calls have dropped off.

10 LB.

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Tbe bacteria can cause bloody
diarrhea and occasionally kidney
failure, though Ohio's experience
has not been as serious a&lt; one in
1993 in the Pacific Northwest. In
that case, four children died and
600 others became sick from tbe
'bacteria, which was traced to contaminated and undercooked hamburgers served by the fast-food
chain Jack in the Box.
The only thread connecting the
Columbus-area victims Is some
experience in northwest Columbus,
Strouth said. Beyond that, no links
and have been found.
Strouth said officials are inlerviewing the victims. In addition,
two neighbors and two dining companions of each victim are being
mterviewed.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
defiant President Clinton says he
will veto the latest Republican
attempt to end the three-day-old
federal shutdtlwn because it would
comer him into accepting "highly
objectionable" spending cuts.
The Senate headed for final con- ·
gressional approval today of a bill
Jetting shuttered agencies call
employees back to work. Leon
Panetta, the, White House chief of
staff, said that stopgap measure is
still unacceptable because it would
commit the president to a deep cuts
in Medicare to reach a balanced
budget.
"The president has basically
said we have an approacb to balancing the budget in 10 years and
Congress has an approach to bal -

ancing the budget in seven years,"
Panetta told reporters. "Let's sit
down and negotiate and try to
arrive at a common base here for
balancing the budget.'·
The House approved the stopgap measure early today 277-151
- not far from the 289 votes that
would be needed 10 override a veto.
Forty-eight Democrats voted yes. "
while only three Republicans were
opposed.
The legis lation would keep the
government operating through Dec.
5 while lawmakers and Clinton
continue their struggle over GOP
plans to balance th e budget by
2002. In exchange, it would commit the president to balancing the
budget in seven years - a deadline
to which the adminisualion objects,

but which Republicans feel high- which I lind hi ghly objectionable."
lights the difference between themlie added: ''I'm not going to do
sc'vcs and the While House.
it, even if it's 90 days, 120 days or
"For the purpose of getting the 180 days. If we take it right into the
federal gover nment up to full next election, let the American peospeed, we are prepared to focu s on ple decide. ''
the ccniral question: Will lllc presiThat wasn't a convincing argudent sign a hal:mced budget agree- ment to the 48 Democrats who
ment of seven years," House voted for the temporary spending
Speaker Newt Gingrich . R-Ga .. measure , including conservatives
told reporters . "That's the central and lawmakers representing many
issue, after all . Everything else is civil servants. To avoid the embarsecondary.''
rassmcm of seeing the measure
Clinton said on CBS News on pass with enough suength to overWednesday that he would veto the . tum a Clinton veto, Vice President
measure because the GOP demand AI Gore and other administration
for eliminating deficits in seven officials telephoned wavering
years "re,g uires a level of cu ts in Democrats to keep t.bem Joyal, said
Medicare and Medicaid. in educa- one Democratic lawmaker who
tion. in the environment and a tax spoke on condition of anonymity.
increase on working people, all of
Continued on page 3

Police compare notes on alleged serial killer
RICHMOND, Ky. (AP) Law-enforcement officials from six
states met in Kentucky to compare
notes on a drifter suspected of
killing four women in t.be past two
months.
Authorities on Wednesday dis-

cussed Glen Rogers, a suspect in
the strangling or stabbing deaths of
women in California, Louisiana,
Mississippi and Florida. Investigators from Ohio and Kentucky also
were present.
"I think there was an obligation

Jobs Bi/111/item clears
first legislative hurdle
The Rural Industrial Park Loan
Bill, Ohio House Bill 440, was
passed by members of the Ohio
House of Representatives 93-1 in a
vote earlier this week in Columbus.
Tbe bill, which is just a part of
the Jobs Bill III proposal, would
establish a revolving loan program
for rural economically disuessed
counties that lack infrastructure and
a substantial iDdustrial base.
The bill, sponsored by state representative John Carey (R- Wellston), would create the Rural
Industrial Park Loan program for
the purpose of assisting eligible
applicants in financing ~evelop­
ment of and improvements to
industrial park sites.
The assistance would be provided in the form of loans and loan
guarantees for land acquisition,
construction of industrial park
buildings, and infrastructure
improvements.
"While Ohio in general is pros·

pering, there are some areas in the
state th•t have not recei'ved fully
the benelits of our state's good fortune," Carey stated in a release
Wednesday.
Jobs Bill Ill is an economic
stimulus package containing five
separate proposals. The package
would benefit businesses and communities tluoughout Ohio. Together, House Bill 440 and Jobs Bill
Three could encourage investment,
supporr Ohio's urban core, and
expand Ohio's rural economics.
according to Carey.
"I encourage my colleagues to
help those communities that are
already willing to help themselves.
The public-private partnerships
created by tl1is bill woul~ work to
market and develop industrial sites
for distressed areas of the state,"
Carey added .
House Bill 440 will now move
on to the Ohio Senate for debate
and furthcr consideration.

Reno has Parkinson's disease
WASHINGTON (AP) - Attorney General Janet Reno disclosed
today that she has Parkinso_n' s disease. She said it is not adversely
affecting her work and that she will
remaiJI on the job.
"I'm taking my medicine. I feel
fine now, " the 57-year-old attorney general told her weekly news ,
conference. Her only· symptom so
far bas been trembling in her left
hand, which she first noticed this
summer.
She said she advised the White
House after the diagnosis was
made three weeks ago and chief of
staff Leon Panetta "was very supportive."
Reno· made clear she bad no
intention of resigning and said if
President Clinton wins a second
term and "if be wanted me baek,
this would be no reiiSori not to do
it"
Displaying a steady left band for
reporters, Reno said her symptoms
are now under control as a result of
taking three .Jablets of sinenet a day
before each meal.

Her doctor, Jonathan Pincus.
chairman of the deparunent of neurology at Georgetown University
Medical Center, has told her there
is no reason she cannot continue in
her job, Reno said.
"I first noticed my hand shaking over the summer and I thought
it would go away," Reno said.
"When it didn't I went to see the
doctor.''
An estimated 500,000 to I million Americans have Parkinson's
disease, which robs people of control over their movements. It causes
tremors, shuffling gain and muscular rigidity, and can eventually
incapacitate people who have it.
The disease results from the
death of brain cells that produce a
substance called dopamine and use
it to communicate.
Reno told reporters the disease
itself has no relation to job strain
but that she bad been advised that
stress can exacerbate the symptoms . She added, "During lhe
Waco heruings; I didn · t see il shake
at ali."

of all jurisdictions to coordinate
and see what we have , " Mike
Coblentz, an investigator with the
Los Angeles Police Department,
said at a news conference.
The investigators met for about
five hours at Eastern Kentucky
University.
Rogers, . 33, a native of Hamilton, Ohio, also is, a suspect in other
slayings, including one in Kentucky. He was arrested Monday in
rural eastern Kentucky , where he
has relatives, and is being held
without bond at the Madison County Detention Center.
"My goal is to sit down and see
if there's any co mmon link we
don't know about," said Detective
Chuck Lee of Jackson, Miss.
"Maybe by all the agencies being
here, maybe there is a common link
we haven' 1 discovered yet.
"I wou.ld love to have Glen
Rogers first but if another agency
gets him fmt, we'll wait our tum."
The detectives declined to reveal
details of their conversations.
" The most important thin g is
ge tting the cooperation of everybody involved to determine who
has the strongest case so we can get
the suongest conviction on him."

said Detective Julie Massucci, of
the Tampa Fla., police department.
Madison County Commonwealth's Attorney Tom Smith said
a decision will be made by Monday·
on whether to pursue two counts of
wanton endangerment and receiving stolen property against Rogers,
who led authorities on a I S-mile
chase before his capture.
'!be Kentucky charges could be
dropped or deferred to speed up
Rogers' exttadition to a state where
he faces a more ser~o u s charge,
Smith said.
Smith said a decision would be
made in about 60 days on where to
ex tradite Rogers first. The final
decision rests with the governor's
office .
Madison Disuict Judge William
G. Clouse set preliminary and
extradition hearings for Nov. 21.
Kentucky authorities want to
talk to Rogers about the death of a
73-year-old Ohio man , Mark
Peters, whose body was found last
year in a cabin that Rogers' family
owns ncar· Bcanyville.
Peters' son, Paul, told The Kentucky Post on Wednesday that he
douhts Rogers will confess to his
father's slaying.

Spencer announces
county commission bid
Ernest "Ike" Spencer, Racine,
officially announced Wednesday
his intention to seek the Republican
Party nomination to run for the scat
on the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners commencing Jan.
4. 1997.
Spencer is a Navy veteran of the

Vietnam War, past commander of
the Racine American Legion Post
602, past master of the Shade River
Lodge 453. Ches ter. and has been
active in Meigs County sports for
the last IS years . umpiring baseball
and soflhall and refereeing ba&lt;ketball.
This year he was an assistant
coach for the Southern High
School football team and has
coa&lt;;hed various football teams during the la&lt;l 15 years.
He is employed as a bus driver
for the Southem Local School District.
"I haven't been satislicd by the
work ol the current commission "
Spencer said. ''I'm running to heip
the people of all over Meigs County, not just a certain III'C3."
"I want to help the people in the
county and help with bringing jobs
in the county," he added.

ERNEST 'IKE' SPENCER

He is married to Judy Thornton
Spencer and they have two chi!. dreu, Lisa of Nelsonville and John
'
of the home.

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