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(

f'age 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tod.ay's witches.slowly coming
out of the broom closet

Anybody out there? Receiver
listens for extraterrestrials
By ROBIN ESTRIN
Associated Press Writer
HARVARD, Mass. (AP) Scientists have developed quite
an ear for extraterrestrials: an
84-foot radio telescope with a
billion channels tuned to finding
intelligent life elsewhere in the
universe.
About 250 ph ys icists,
astronomers and curious
stargazers from Harvard University and beyond gathered Monday to waoch and listen as one of
the Earth's largest receivers was
turned on.
" No one knows the likelihood !.hat we will find a civilization," said Paul Horowitz, a
Harvard physics professor who
directs the telescope. •'But we
won't know if we don' t try ."
The
Billion Channel
Extraterrestrial Assay, or BET A,
is a 300-fold upgrade of the frrst
telescope dedicated to listening
in on aliens, activated nearly a
decade ago on the same hilltop
in this rural town 20 miles west
of Boston.
Resembling a huge satellite
dish, Lhe new telescope can best
be thought of as an enormous
radio receiver with millions of
separate channels tuned 10 different stations. It is designed to
pick up outside signals, or beacons, !.hat may be beaming from
hundreds, if not Lhousands, of
light years away.
Horowitz, who along with
some other scientists is driven
by the belief !.hat there is life
else where, said he is hopeful
that tlle stronger BETA system
will be able to detect what its
weaker predecessor could not.

Tuesday, October 31, 1995

By MICHAEL J, MARTINEZ
Associated Press Writer
TROY, N.Y. (AP)- With their
popular Halloween image of snaggletoothed bags in pointy black
bats cackling over bubbling cauldrons, it's no wonder most of
today's witches are staying in the
broom closet.
Yet some have come out on one
of their most sacred of days to say
that the witches of the '90s aren't
so scary, with pagan beliefs turned
into full-blown religions, complete
with services and holidays.
''Even if this is tbe only tilne of
year that anyone pays attention, it's
a chance to tell people there's nothing to fear from us," said Allan
Patnode, who considers himself a
witch (He does not use tbe term
warlock).
Witch Dee Coyle Anderson
added, ''Witches do have other
holidays, you know. People tend to
think we worship just once a
year."

,

These witches, among 50 members of the Hudson Valley Pagan

Network, are contemporary followers of an ancient pagan religion
based on Celtic mythology.
In its most basic form,
witchcraft, or Wicca, is a form of
nature worship. The pagan calender
in most traditions follows the seasons, with the solstices and
equinoxes as holy days.
The core of the Wiccan worship
is belief in a de.ity with male and
female attributes whose psychic
energy can be tapped. Most witches
say they do not use the energy for
desb'Uctive purposes.
But from their traditions come
lc;gends of satanic worship - and a
bad image.
"People who use the word
'witch' in connection with living
sacrifices or satanism or any of mat
nonsense- that's not who we
are." said group member Christine
D' Allaird.
There are about 2 million Americans who adhere to some form of
paganism, said Leo Martello, director of the New York City-based
Witches' Anti-Discrimination

Tyson
fight is
called off

Lobby, an organization that fights
for the iights of pagans to gather in
public places and receive holiday
benefits for such days as Hal -·
loween.
·
Because of fear of losing jobs
and negative perceptions from
friends and family, many pagans
remain solitary, Martello said. But
he said pagans may just be living
next door, coming "from all walks
of life - politicians, waitresses,
computer programmers, you name

UFO TRACKER - About 250 physicists, astronomers from
Harvard University and elsewhere gather underneat.b an 84-foot
radio telescope in Harvard, Mass., Monday. The billlon·channel
machine, the earth's largest receiver, was turned on Monday and
scientists hope is the key to fmdlng Intelligent life elsewhere in tbe
universe. (AP Photo)

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, executive and trustee
meeting, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the ball.
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Garden
Club, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at Lhe
Chester United Methodist Church.
Therapy craft to be carried out and

members to take glue gun and scissors.

Wednesday night 7 p.m . to organize. Questions, call992-3517.

POMEROY Narcotics
Anonymous, 7 p.m. Wednesday at
tlle Sacred Heart Catholic church.
Helpline 1-800-7664442.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday
home of Mrs. Chester Erwin.

SYRACUSE - "Caravan", a
Christian scouting program,

RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees, Wednesday, 6 p.m.
at Rutland Fire Station. Public

invited.

'

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'

"But they don't come out
beci!Jise there's still too much to
lose," he said.
Believers say today' s paganism
evolved from the counterculture
movement of the 1960s. Since
then, the Age of Aquarius bas
become the New Age - the
umbrella term for the thousands of
separate pagan traditions that have
been building steadily over the past
30 years.
On Sunday, the network held a
secret religious ritual to mark Halloween.

Vol. 46, NO. 131

Copyright 1995

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel news staff
Robert Albright, 63, a fugitive
from Alabama where be was serving time on a second-degree murder charge, remains a resident of
the Meigs County lnflfffiary.
Meigs County Commissioners
Fred Hoffman and Janet Tackett
said Tuesday that they relented on
their demands last week to have
Albright removed from Lhe county
home after learning that he had
been released from jail by the
Meigs County Cour1 judge on his
own recognizance.
Both Hoffman and Tackett said
they assume that means "be is not a
danger to anybody."
Hoffman said be told Lentes
tllat it was all right with him if tbey
"keep him up !.here until they ship
him back to Alabama, based on the
judge's releasing him on his own
recognizance."
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes said that it
seems to him !.hat "the commis;, .
sioners now want him (Albright) to
stay there : ·
According to the prosecutor,
Albright's coun appointed attorney
bas threatened to "close down the
jail" if Albright is taken back there.
That threat, said Lentes, has to
do with inadequate facilities to
handle a man in his physical condition. Albright bas alr~ady run up
more than $4,000 in hospital l!lld
doctor bills which the county will
have to pay.
Albright two weeks ago underwent some minor surgery and is scheduled for additional surgery on
Nov. 7, according to the prosecutor.
Lentes said that Albright, since
his release from jail has obtained a
Medicaid card which will take care
of future medical expenses.
If the commissioners bad followed through on their order to
have him removed from the inftrmary and he was put back in jail,
then the release on his own recognizance would have been rescind-

tile prize for the prettiest hat going
10 Mrs. Byer. The ugliest hat award
went to Carol McCullough, while
Velma Rue won the prize for the
most original hat. Carol Adams
won the door prize.
Hostesses were Mrs. Byer and
Mrs. Riffle who gave each member
a plastic jack-o-lantern.Jilled with
candy as a party favor. Refreshments were served to those named
named above and Norma Custer,
Joan Corder, Vera Crow, Rose Si~r
son, Reva Vaughan, Jean Werry,
Jane WaliOn, Clarice Krautter, Carolyn Grueser, Jean Powell and
Martha McPhail.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
POMEROY - AI-Anon, 7 p.m.
School District K -8 building comThursday
at the Sacred Heart
mittee meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at the high school. Public input is Calholic Church, Pomeroy.
sought and all district residents are
SATURDAY
urged to attend.
CHESTER - A hymn sing will
be held at the Chester United
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Ath- Methodist
Church, Sarurday, 7 p.m.

• Ortver S~e A11 Bag
• Anti-Lock Brakes
• Atr Condition
• Automat~ OVerdr•e
• Vista Bay Windows
• Power Steering

• Power Brakes

• Powe&lt; Wtndows

• Power locks
· Tilt Steering
• CrUise Control
• AMIFM Cassette
· Captatn Cha11s

Wage increases
said smallest
on record

•

Tractor mishap
claims Gallia man

BRAND NEW '96 CHEVY BLAZER 4.DOOR 414

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cmpoS~t

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• Aluminum Wheels

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~ ~n11n9

tt.wntw montns
least paymen1i !ae- .,Relut\dabl9 set\llty
5400. To1a1 cash a1
o1
la8se. S2.788.88' Tolal oj mon~ l)llrmenls 511,666.-40. • P~rcn ase q&gt;I!On l:tQ' S\8.290.92" Total m~eage allOwed
lO.OOJ Mieage dlarge 011er Xl.COOmles, let p91 mile

• Sola/Bed

· Does flOt ll'tklde lanse and bte leeS. saesruse w. lllSCJrai\CI!. personal PIOPM'I' or w on ~lal iled oos1 redocOOn
Vcwies by -..ehde mcdel. USi1!J1 W length ol ~- Lease IS Sl.lbfeC110 ~all:¥ GMAC Leassee is resj)lnQ bwear &lt;fl!l IJSe iJ1d IIIII 111 op100 10 purdlase tne YeiiiC1e a1~ ena.
N

PGe$:1

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TOU FREE 1·8DO·B22-tl411 •312·2844
344·~947. 422·0751,
k

' Ta~es. Tags, Til~ Fees e~lta Aebale included In ~le price of

new vehicle listed where applicable. On,~Wft~ved Qlldil. tfot ~~toii'Jpogiapnieal errotS.

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Cloudy
Low tonight In the 50s,
cloudy. Thursday, 50 percent
chance or showen. Highs In the

A Gallipolis man was killed
Tuesday afternoon when a tractor
be was operating apparently over·
turned, authorities said.
Dale M. Beam; 74, 1697 Neighborhood Road, was reported dead
at the scene by the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department after depUtiJ;S
and the Gallia County EMS
responded to ibe accident.
According to information a relative gave to deputies, Beam went
into a wooded anea off Neighborhood at 2:30p.m. to cut frrewood.
Deputies said family members
found Beam undemeatb the uactor
at 7:04p.m.
Apparently, the tractor bad
rolled onto its left side, landing on
the victim's chest area, deputies
said.
Further details on the accident
were unavailable l'rom the sheriffs
deparlment this morning. •

2 Sections, 16 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 1, 1995

-----A ni ht of fun--__,
Fugitive
remains in
infirmary

letic Boosters, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
tlle high school cafeteria.

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Pick 4:
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2-7-9-18-32

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en tine

WASHINGTON (AP)- American workers' wages, salaries and
benefits rose 2.7 percent in the year
ended SepL 30, the tiniest increase.
on record that further eased fears
that inflation would endanger the
economic expansion.
"Without inflation, the economy is encountering no real impediments and can continue on its present growth path indefinitely," said
economist Eugene Sherman of
M.A. Schapiro &amp; Co. in New York.
The Labor Department said
today the increase in its Employment Cost Index was the smallest
since it began tracking costs in
1981. The index is considered one
of the best gauges of wage inflation
pressures since compensation .rep·
resents about two-thirds of the cost
of a producL

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY ASTRO
EXTENDED CONVERSION VAN

• , ;

•

Continued on page 3

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G·20 3/4 TON
CONVERSION VAN

J

::::::::

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mM PIDIN SMARRIASIIS THI WAY m GO!

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70s.

--------.,---Community calendar-----......___ _ __
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to .
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed -to run a
specific number of days.

'• ~- ... ,._.

- . .. . •.

~-:
:::::::: .. :

Pick 3:

Sports, Page 8

Sorority members plan activities
A visit to Middleton Doll Facto- the B iennerhasset Hotel. Arrangery in Belpre on Nov. 9, and a ments will be completed by Ruth
Christmas party at the Elberfeld Ann Riffle.
borne on Dec. 14 were among the
A Sorority cookbook, "Just
activities planned when Preceptor Desserts" was used for a fund raisBeta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma ing project at the meting. Another
Phi Sorority met recently at Grace cookbook, "Hearth to Heart" conEpiscopal Church.
taining a chicken recipe by
Ann Rupe presided at the meet- .Dorothy Sayre, will be used in_
ing during which tilne a thank you another fund raiser at the Christmas
note was read from Maye Mora party.
written on behalf of her dau~bterMrs. Riffle gave a reading on
in-law, Maida Mora, for a yellow the origin of the jack-o-lantern.
. rose which the chapter bad sent to Donna Byer conducted a verbal
her.
games using Lhe name "Jack" in all
It was decided that after the doll the answers. A most decorated Halfactory tour, members will lunch at loween hat contest was held with

Ohio Lottery

- - .,

.. """ 1-· ' ... . . _. " . ...

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper .

Warrin.Q Balkan
leaders gather
for peace talks
terson Air Force Base near Dayton. :
By SLOBODAN LEKIC
' 'I'm an optimist. I believe Lhe
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON - The leaders of talks will succeed," declared Ser-:
Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia were bian President Slobodan Milosevic;
opening peace talks today in a deli- the principal power broker in the
·
cate effort to end four years of vio· region and the first to arrive.
Milosevic and presidents Alija:
lcnce in the fanner Yugoslavia. As
!.hey gat11ered, Lhe chief U.S. medi· lzetbegovic of Bosnia and Franjo
ator said he detected " a distinct Tudjman of Croatia, who arrived
wilhin several hours of each otller,
hardening of !.heir positions."
"They're digging in for tough were spirited away after brief welnegotiation s, and so are we," chief coming ceremonies.
Today, Secretary of State WarU.S. mediator Richard Holbrooke,
who se shuttle mis sions to the ren Christopher will formally open
Balkans laid the groundwork for . Lhe talks at the Midwestern military
the conference, said today on in stallation. Further negotiations
ABC's "Good Morning America." will be conducted by Holbrooke.
The Lhree leaders arnved sepa- No date has been set for conclusion
rately Tuesday night at Wright' Pat- of Lhe meeting.

Rep. Carey urges .
passage of Issue 2

Hundreds or costumed boys and girls took to
the streets In the Pomeroy Bend area HaUoween
night to gather up treats given by residents
wanting to nold tricks. Here left \o right, are

Alison, Corey and Christian Woods, children or
Chris and Alicia Woods. (Photo by Charlene
Hoeflich)

Leading Economic Indicators down
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
government's main forecasting
gauge of future economic activity
fell 0.1 percent in September, its
second decline in the last ·three
months.
The Commerce Department said
today its Index of Leading Economic Indicators, which is about to
be turned over to a private group,
bas advanced only two times this
year.
The index's surprisingly weak
performance seems to contradict
other evidence that the economy is
expanding.
The government reported last
week that gross domestic product,
the broadest measure of economic
activity, advanced at a robust 4.2
percent annual rate in the third
quarter - or more than three times
the increase of the previous three
monlhs.
Many economists said the
·growth in GDP was overstated in

the July-September quarter but still Index o.f Leading Economic Indicaexpect moderate expansion the rest tors soon will be turned over to the
. of Lhe year.
New York -based Conference
"It's really very much on tre!ld Board, a private research group.
and that's wbere you would want to The transfer could take place next
see it," said economist David month, Lhe Conunerce Department
Munro of High Frequency Eco- . said.
nomics, a New York City forecastThe barometer ' s retreat in
ing firm . "The inflation figures September, after a scant 0.1 percent ·
bave been especially benign."
increase in August, carried some
The stock market opened on a more good news on inflation.
positive note, with the Dow Jones
Raw materials, one of It comindustrial average up 4.70 points in ponents of the gauge, made their
early trading . Bond prices rose largest negative contribution to the
sharply after the National Associa- index in 15 years. It also marked
tion of Purchasing Managers the 12Lh time in the last 13 months
reported !.hat prices and orders fell that the compilation of price comin its October index.
ponents of materials exerted a drag
In another report, the Commerce on the index.
Department said construction
Three other components of the
spending jumped 1.2 percent to a index contributed to the September
record h\gh iq September, marking decline: slipping consumer confithe fourlh consecutive advance as dence, rising initial weekly claims
both residential and government for state unemployment insurance
outlays increased.
and slowing factory orders for conIn a cost-cutting move, the sumer goods.

Passage of State Issue 2 next has been infonned by ODOT thlit
week at Lhe polls will impact on Lhe revenue would put tlle Ches~­
highway projects in Lhe area, State pcake bypass and the connector
road between Pomeroy and
Rep. John Carey said.
Carey voiced his support for Lhe Ravenswood, W.Va.. on the list fqr
issue, which if approved will allow final design.
Carey added that tlle money will
the state to sell $1.2 billion in
bonds to pay for infrastructure also finance improvements to U.S.
improvement without increasing 35 from Gallipolis to Dayton and
completion of the Appalachian
taxes, he said.
Passage will provide rural areas Highway.
"These projects cannot be bid
with "much needed assistance,"
for construction until the final
Carey said .
Opponents of Issue 2 object to design is completed," he said. "We
Lhe the pairing of the regular state all know bow important a good
aid the state provides to local gov- lfansportation system is to economernments for improvements and a ic development."
State·seld bonds will not raise
provision allowing Lhe Department
of Transportation to raise the limit taxes, Carey stressed.
"Ohio will still rank behind 40 ·
on bow much it can borrow from
$500 million to more than $1 bil- states in debt, wilh only nine states
having less debt as a percentage of.
lion.
If the issue is approved, ODOT their worth," he said. "Ohio will
plans to sell $750 million in bonds still be below tlle state constitutionfor road consttuction.
al ceiling debt of 5 percent.
.
Gov. George Voinovicb defend··voter approval of Issue 2· will
ed the combination that resulted in not solve all of the funding probLhe ballot issue voters face Nov. 7, lems for loc al governments or
calling it "the only alternative" ODOT. but wilhout it we are in a
because legislators would not go crisis," Carey added.
for increases in the gasoline tax and
In _tlle past, state assistance has
license plate fees.
paid for numerous projects in the
While critics have pointed out 94Lh District, which includes Galthat ODOT has not provided lia, Meigs and Jack~on counties.
specifics on what it will do with the and eastern Lawrence County.
money, Carey, R-Wellston, said he

r-----Canine clown---

Clinton to sign some bills to cut spending
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton is expected to sign
spending biDs for energy and transportation that contain deep cuts in
renewable energy and nuclear
fusion research and for Amtrak and
urban mass transit systems.
The Senate approved the spendIng bills -two of 13 that fund the
federal government's, operationsby wide margins Tuesday, sending
them to the White House.
Clinton has vowed to veto several of the 13 bills for the fiscal
year that began Oct. I because of
disagreement with the Republican- .
led Congress over spending levels
and restrictive provisions involving
some federal programs.
But he bas made known he will

go along with the $37.5 billion
Transportation Department measure and tlle $19.3 billion legislation that provides money for the
Energy Department and an assonment of federal water projects.
The Senate approved the transportation measure, 87-10, on Tuesday; the House passed it 393-29
last week. The bill provides $1 billion more than the administration
requested and allows the Federal
Aviation Administration to streamline its procurement practices and
speed up modernization of the air
traffic control system.
The Iegislatio9 "allows our critical programs to move forward,"
said Transportation Secretary Fed·

erico Pena.
The energy and water bill,
which won 89-6 approval in the
Senate after passing the House
402-24 earlier Tuesday, seiS Energy Department spending at '$1.1
billion below the administration
request. It includes a 30 percent cut
in renewable energy programs such
as solar and wind power research
aild a 35 percent reduction in
spending for nuclear fusion
research.
But it essentially maintains
DOE, including its nuclear
weapons cleanup programs, at levels acceptable to the administration, even though earlier this year
Republican leaders had talked of
dismembering the department.

Sometimes Halloween Isn't just for kids. Sometimes it's for tile
dogs. Here, Amberwood's Dare to Dream ('Dare' ror short)
!pates In Racine's annual trick or treat Tuesday night ac:com.,..
nled by owner Melissa Holsinger. The well-manneted dog, dreaed
as 11 clown, delighted triek or treaters both young and old.

.-rtJc.

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VVednesday,November1,1995

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
addre" and telephone numb&lt;r. No unsigned letters will be publi shed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.

Letters to the editor
Supports West moreland
Dear Editor,
. I'm writing in very much suppon of Dr. Danny Westmoreland.
The way I feel my husband
:Wouldn't be here today if it wasn't
for him. I would have never
thought that there was a doctor in
).he United States .that has as much
feeling for a person that couldn't
afford medical help, until I seen it
put of my own eyes.
Even afu::r hours he showed up

at a hospital he docsn' t practice at
within half an hour after a phone
call.
To me that is a doctor that is
concerned about bi s patients. I
could go into a lot of detail but my
family and I know how he bas
helped us and I don't know now or
ever will have a bad thing to say
about him.
Barbara Phillips
Rutland

Page2
Wednesday, November 1, 199S

Dear Editor,
I am writing in regard to Dr.
Westmoreland. I agree with Barbara Koker . I've signed release
papers more than once to have my
records transferred to my doctor in
Barlow. The thing of it I've never
seen Dr. Westmoreland as a doctor.
When he and Dr. Spencer spli~ Dr.
Westmoreland took mine and my
husband ' s 'r.ecords . They are
records from"Dr. Conde and we've

had him as a doctor for 17 years.
We are in our 60's and retired.
Our doctor now is Dr. James Wiercrick at Barlow. I'm sorry to say if
Dr. Westmoreland doesn't send our
records to him I'll have to take further action. I would never trust him
as my family physician since he
has done us this way.
Judy Elkins
Tuppers Plains

Big hea,th care sues tiny research o~r~tfit
The official charge is libel, but
common sense suggests the real
purpose is to intimidate. So far, .
Weiss claims, the suit bas cost him

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
more than $350,000 in legal fees
- though be has yet to set foot in a
courtroom. Such legal fees can be
petty cash for a giant corpomtion,
but a king ' s ransom for a small
insurance ratings agency whose
chief revenue comes from selling
repons on insurance cornpan~ safety. Weiss bas flied a motion to have
Health Net's case declared a
" slapp" suit - legalese for
harassment - wbicb could make
Health Net liable for a ponion of
Weiss' legal fees.
David Olson, Health Net's vice
president for investor and public
relations, told our associate Jan

Moller that the .company is performing "brilliantly" in the marketplace. "Our basic position is
that Weiss yelled 'fire' in a crowded movie theater and deliberately
sougbt to frighten our members
.. .." Olson said. "(Weiss') numbers were not inaccurate, but the
conclusion was."
Weiss Research pales in size
wben compared 10 its major competitors _ Moody's, Standard &amp;
Poor's, and A.M. Best &amp; Co. But
the other companies receive revenue from the companies they mte,
which creates an inherent conflict
of interest. The other mtings agencies also give companies tbe right
10 suppress any ratings they don't
like. Weiss takes no money from
the industry; his only income
'OIIIes from the customers wbo buy
ts s f ·t• s a strategy
.
hts
repor . o ar, t
that seems to have worked.
Accord' 10 a three-year study
. mg
of the msU1'31_tce mters by the Genera! Accounung, Offi.ce, completed
last f";~l. Wetss r~~ngs rene.cted
financtal vulnerabthty three umes

VJeL.L., Yoli'Re.
MY D.3D···

I

... aND ~SoB~

I LoVe '{oV, MaN !

I~

'{ou'Re NeT GeTTiN&lt;11 .
M'f MeDicaRe ,N@wt

\

Dole delivers
By JILL LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - "Some votes you remember forever," Senate
Majority Leader Bob Dole said just before casting bis in favor of a
Republican budget that aims to erase the deficit by 2002.
It was a sweet moment for tbe Kansas veteran in an institution that so
often bas frustrated bis quest to demonstrate leadership, the very quality
he says he'd bring to the White House.
Unpredictable members, cumbersome procedures, rivalries among
presidential candidates, splits bet~een conservatives and moderates Dole overcame all of these to bold up the .Senate end of the GOP pledge
to balance tbe budget.
In the most imponant statement of Republican values this year, he was
able to stand witb House Speaker Newt Gingrich and say, "We kept our

more often than A.M. Best in insur·ance company failures between
1989 and 1992.ln a majority of the
cases studied, Weiss warned whicb
insurers were financially vulnerable about 15 months before its clo~­
• est compelltor, A.M. Best' And 10
the case of. the largest 10surance
company failure~ - ~uch as Exec~uve Life of California and Execuuve Ltfe of New York_. Wets~ was
far ahead of the others 10 predtcllng
dtsaster.
.
Wbtle there are ~any agenctes
that rate banks and msuran~e compante~. the managed care mdustry
remams relauvely untouched by
regulators and raters more than a
decade. after becomtng a maJor
play7r 10 the health .care field. In
reahty, HMOs are JUSt hke any
other health m~urance.- only
wtthout .the scrutmy that msurance
tes face
com pan
·
.
Although most HMOs are 10
·outstandmg shape today, that was
not the case just seven years ago. In
1988, there were 99 failures and
forced mergers out of 581 operating HMOs _ a rate of financial
flops that rivals anything commercial banks and insurance companies
have seen since the Great Depression.
When a bank. or an S&amp;L fails ,
however, the only loss is financial.
A weak HMO can spell trouble for
patients - as Nelene Fox found
out the hard way.
Fox was a-cancer patient whose
doctors told ber the only chance for
survival was a bone marrow transplant, but Health Net refused to
approve the procedure. When her
family sued after her death,
Newsweek reported, the jurors
found the HMO "guilty of bad
faith, breach of contract and intentional infliction of pain.'' Her family was awarded $89 million ,
though that figure may have been
reduced in a sealed settlement.
Health Net bas a lot at stake in
this fast-growing market, and a
negative rating can be a black eye .
that's bard to recover from . But
Weiss did not create Health Net's
problems; be only reported them . .
And that's a right that should not
be infringed by frivolous law suits.
Jack Anderson and Michael :
Blnstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
h

..

~

Who forgives Robert .McNamara?

What's bugging the body picture only further buttresses the almost kiUed in World War II. His you could to tear Him apan.
politic? The mailbag knows:
bate in your spirit
emotions "understandably becloud
Joe: Tben there are the nice·
C.S., Mt. Vernon, III.: Your outJoe: Like the photo of Betty his logic," I said.
folks. See next letter.
burst over Robert .McNamara's Crocker, tbe picture that many
R.W., Doylestown, Pa.: It's
M.H., Conroe, Texas: Your colconfessional made me sad. I flfllliy
apparent you are jealous of Rush umn is much needed. Please never
opposed Vietnam, yet I feel that
Limbaugh, who is 1,000 times get so discouraged that you start
Joseph Spear
McNamara's book is a cleansing of
smaner than you.
believing most of us no longer
promise.''
Joe: I might not have his mind. care. And, please, never temper·
One Senate Republican bolted, but Ibis time the consequences were not the soul. Sure, there are 58,000
· your comments.
dire as they were when Oregon Sen. Mark Hatfield broke with his pany names on "Tbe Wall," but the newspapers run at the top of this but I've got a better body.
on another defining issue - the balanced budget amendment to the Con- man wbo was largely responsible column is a computer-generated
J.M., America Online: The
Joe: Thanks, M.H. Your note
for putting them there bas now composite, the very best that tech- Christian Right is so goofy, they gives me a chance to say how
stitution.
Tbe amendmen~ a pillar of the House Republican campaign agenda, admitted his faults. I guess you're nology can create. Clearly. the · thi... (Editor's note: Inexplicably, much I appreciate the positive Ictcybersciences have room for J.M.'s dispatch was terminated at ters so many of you send. There are
tbe "Contract Witb America," failed in the Senate by one vote. Earlier, it too bard of bean to forgive. Is that
improvement.
very nice?
)l6d easily garnered the required two-thirds vote in tbe House.
this point by a bolt of ligbming.) fimes when they keep me going. I
R.M., Golden City, Mo.: Ask Ha Ha. I wasn't really struck by wish I bad time to respond to all of
Joe: Former Defense Secretary
. : That defeat was a bitter pill for Dole. In a highly political floor speech
lilat underscored bis darker side, be threatened to raise tbe amendment McNamara, a major architect of the prisoners of war what tbey think of ligbming. You gotta believe God tbem, but I do not. I hope you
Viemam War, now says be private- the flag amendment. You are bas a sense of humor. How else do understand.
i'£ainjust before the 1996 elections as a bludgeon against Democrats.
ly
opposed U.S. involvement but demented to desecrate Senator Bob you explain the duck-billed platy• : There were few flashes of that Dole during the long budget slog.
Keep it coming, friend and foe '
chose
not to speak out. "! never Dole who served his country witb pus?
: • At one point last week, an agitated Democrat sharply asked when be
alike: Joe Spear, Newspaper EnterWt&gt;uld get to see a huge GOP amendment incorporating major changes in thought about .doing it,·' be said, distinction and was · severely
Joe: AJI God's creatures got a prise Association, 200 Madison
because it would bave been wrong wounded, as well as all other veter- role, J.M. But for platypi, Australia Ave .. New York, NY 10016.
..,edicaid.
. ;. "Probably about the time we get to see the list of tier 3 amendments "to subven the policies of the pres- ans who served in WWII. We need would be overrun with worms and
P.S.: I was kidding about the
oil that side,'' Dole retoned equally.sbarply, refening !o nearly four dozen ident." And why was Lyndon the amendment to protect the nag insects.
composite photo. It is genuine, and
Johnson so bent on saving the from you and the hoodlums across
f:lemocratic proposals that hadn't yet been disuibuted on paper.
D.M., Sherman, Texas: Does it further proof that GOd bas a sense
:. Then there was the ume Dole, asked when be would be posing with South Vietnam regime? Because the country.
amaze you that J!!:Ople who dis- of humor.
Joe: It bewilders me bow some . agree with you can rcsoct to calling
£iingrich for a photo opponunity, replied: "As soon as he finishes comb- Republicans might accuse him of
Joseph Spear is a syndicated :,
"losing
"
Vietnam.
Put
another
people
can read simple words and you all sorts of names but still writer for Newspaper Enterprise
iqg his bair."
: . Reports of the Dole-Gingrich rivalry are rife, but the two leaders bave · way, 58,000 Americans died in a not comprehend them. I did argue, think of themselves as Christians in Association.
been meeting amicably every morning in an effort to keep the lid on political game. Yes, I am hard- as did the Supreme Coun, that flag the process?
(For information on how to .
burning is protected speech, and
~use-Senate conflicts - their biggest stumbling block in the weeks . hearted. You may forgive Robert
Joe: Constantly. See next letter.
communicate electronically with ,
McNamara. God may forgive that most politicians wbo favor the
pead.
JJ., Oklahoma City, Okla.: You this columnist and others, con· amendment are phonies looking for are outrageous. Even ifJesus Christ tact America Online by calling t-: The Dole of tbe budget process was a near-perfect model of patience Roben McNamara. I do not.
S.S., Carlsbad, N.M.: You have easy votes . But I specifically was listed as a Conservative or a 800·827-6364, exL 8317.)
i!ld good humor, even as Democrats offered nonstop amendments
·
so
much
bitterness in you, and your exempted Bob Dole. who was Republican, you would do what
~esigned to highlight controversial Republican positions, and his plans for
t311lpaigning Friday in Florida went by the boards.
: · Some of the usual Senate snags and tangles did not materialize. Billions of dollars suddenly became available for appeasing GOP moderates
who wanted more money, for student loans, Medicaid and Medicare. Even
Texas Sen. Phil Gramm. a Dole rival for the Republican presidential nomHow soon they forget . Last seven years, and that transforms noor, it 1nustered· nary a vote, not seven years . But back in May, "
ination, briefly stopped his hectoring.
November, the party of Clinton, welfare into a temporary, rather even from Democmts.
"I'm not going to be critical of those deals," Gramm said of Dole's
when be was still trying to figure :
Daschle and Gephardt suffered an than permanen~ entitlement.
Since the president reneged on out what his best line of political
negotiations with moderates. "We're trying to get the votes."
histo~ic thrashing at the polls.
To President Clinton's mind, the his promise to present a balanced attack ought to be, be dismissed the
The respite was momentary. At the same news conference, Grarrun
Republicans
won control of
budget plan, tbe GOP came up with GOP's seven -year timetable as
pointedly noted that "not everybody is eq•tally committed to tbe Contract
Congress for the first time in four
one of its own. And Clinton's reac- "just a figure picked out of a hat."
With America" and said be wonied that Dole would make a deal with
Joseph
Perkins
decades. They were given a clear
tion was simply to rail against tbc
President ClintJn " that would undercut fundamentally what we're trying
The president has warned that
mandate
from the American people GOP's budget reconciliation bills spending cuts that the GOP pro- the GOP's Medicare spending
to achieve.' '
to change the course in which the amount to "economic blackm'ail, posed and warn of the cataclysm slowdown will have "draconian
The Dole campaign took giddy revenge witb a brief announcement
pure and simple." He threatens to that would result if tbe budget was
government
was beaded.
headlined "Gramm National Chair Praises Dole ." The two-paragraph
consequences" and " dismantle
Clinton and the Democrats veto the entire package, which . balanced in seven years' time.
release featuned remarks by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a close Gramm
Medicare as we know it." But Ibis
made the election of a year ago a could cause the government to shut
Then Clinton did another nip- is tbe same president who said two
ally, at a Fon Lauderdale, Fla., GOP fund-raiser less than 24 hours after
referendum on the GOP's "Con- down and default on its debt obli- flop, deciding that be would pro- years ago tha~ "Today Medicaid
the budget cleared the-Senate.
tract
Witb America." So when the gations.
.pose a balanced budget of his own.
" .I want to tell you that what happened in the United States Senate at
The president" is wiUing to take But the plan be claims to he the and Medicare are going 'up at three ·
electorate
swept the Republicans
t2·30 a.m. this morning was a historic moment. It would not have been ·
into power, they knew precisely that risk, he said, because "I am . "right way" to balance the budget umes the rate of inflation. We prodOOe without the leadership of Sen. Bob Dole. He deserves enormous
not going to let anybody bold would leave a $209 billion deficit pose to let it go up at two times tbe
what tbey were voting for.
credit. His leadership got it done," tbe release quoted McCain as saying.
They were voting to balance the Medicare or education or the envi- in 2005, according to an analysis rate of inflation (wbicb is exactly ·
·Dole w~ buoyant on Monday, or as buoyant as be gets, cheerfully
:
federal bpdget, to cut the most ronment or the future of this coun- by the Congressional Budget what tbe GOP budget calls for).
fielding questions about his wife's career plans and Colin Powell's as
''That
is
not
a
Medicare
or
·
unnecessary federal spending, to try hostage.
Off~,ce.
well. ·
,
Medicaid
cut,"
Clinton
said.
"So
"I have proposed 'a plan," he ·
slow the growth of runaway entitleAnd lest anyone think that the
Regarding Elizabeth Dole, be said it was an excellent idea for her to
added, •'that cuts wasteful govern- CBO is biased against the White when you bear all tbis business '
ment
programs,
to
reduce
the
federreturn to .her job as prcstdent of the American Red Cross if she becomes
al tax burden on families and busi- ment spending and reflects our val- House, President Clinton himself abo~t cuts, let me caution you that .
.I
the first lady.
.
nesses and to reshape the broken- ues. It is the right way to balance bas previously acknowledged that that IS not wbatts going on."
On PoweU, Dole reiterated his hope that if the retired general runs, be
Tben
there's
the
president's
·
the budget. By contras~ the Repub- the CBO '.'is closer to {being) right
down welfare system.
runs as a Republican. But then he added, smiling: "I ~ ve got a better scesomersaults
on
taxes.
For
much
of
'
The Republicans have delivered lican Congress is taking tbe wrong than previous presidents."
nario- that be seUs more books and becomes my fmance chairman."
!iJe
past
few
months,
be's
been
say•
on their mandate. In a series of way."
It seems clear that the president mg that American people dido' t '
But
how
can
Clinton
be
taken
votes
on
tbe
House
and
Senate
really
is not serious about balancEDITOR'S NOTE- Jill Lawrence coven Congress ror The Assonoor, the GOP passed legislation seriously? Back in January, be ing the budget in five, seven or need a $245 billion tax cut. Then,
ciated Press. ·
that whittles the government's promised to "present a five-year even 10 years. He's just looldng for l~t week, he made the startlingly
annual deficit down to zero plan to balance the budget.'' But a way to politically outflank the b~nest concession that "I think I :.
between now and 2002, tbat holds when be unveiled his budget a Repu~licans. That's why be keeps 1111Sed (your taxes) too much."
the growth of Medicare 10 6.5 per- month later, it called for $200 bilThought for Today: "People who bite the band that feeds them usually cent a year (saving $270 biUion in lion a year deficits well into the reversmg field on tbe budget.
Joseph Perkins Is a coluQIIIbt :
Indeed, just this past week, the ror The San Diego Unlon-Trl, ~
lick the hoot that kicks them." - Eric Hoffer, American author and the process), that returns $245 bil- next century. When Republicans
president said tbat be now thought
. ....
philosopher (1902-1983).
lion to American taxpayers over brought Clinton's bill to the Senate it possible to balance tbe budget in ·bune.

GOP cuts through Clinton doubletalk

•

'

'

Thursday, New. 2
MICH

WASHINGTON - Insurance
industry gadfly Manin Weiss bas
made a cancer of beating the system. But now tbe system is fmally
getting the better of him.
Health Net, one of California's
largest health maintenance organizations, is suing Weiss and his
company, Weiss Research, a tiny
outfit based in Palm Beach, Fla.
Health Net is suing because Weiss
had the chutzpah to issue a repon
claiming, in pan, that Health Net
was "far too leveraged in its business operations" and that it didn't
have enough capital to meet its
financial obligations. In a fmat,~cial
review of the nation's 13 largest
HMOs, Health Net was the only
company to receive a ''D" rating
from Weiss.
In reality, the Health Net case
should send a chill up the spine of
anyone who believes in the First
Amendment and the right of the
con sumer to get independent
advice and information before
choosing something as important as
a health care plan.

•

• jColumbus j72'

Ice

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday by the
U.S . Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: 1.00 to 1.50
lower; demand light to moderate.
U.S . 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 38.00-39.50; plants 39.5041.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs,, country
points 33.00-38.00.
Sows: under 500 Ibs. steady;
over 500 lbs. 1.00 to 1.50 lower.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 28.00Sale, sponsored by the Meigs 31.00; 500-550 lbs. 31.00-33.50;
County Associatioll for Retarded
Citizens, will be held at Carleton 550-650 lbs. 33.00-35.50.
Boars: 28.00-31.00.
School on Saturday, from 9 a.m. to
Estimated
receipts 41,000.
4 p.m. Door prizes, food, and
Prices
from
The Producers
refreshments will be available. Livestock Association:
Table space can be rented,for $10 a
Cattle: 50 cents to 1.00 higher.
table. All proceeds from the show
Slaughter
steers: choice 60.00will benefit children and adults 66.10; select 54.00-61.00.
with developmental disabilities livSlaughter heifers: choice 58.00ing in Meigs County. For more
65.00;
select 53.00-60.50.
information, call.992-6681.
Cows: 1.00 to 3.00 lowe~; all

Cloudy

:c 1995 Accu Woather . lnc

·roday's weather forecast
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Moslly cloudy. A
cbance of showers this afternoon.
High 65 to 70. Southeast wind 5 to
10 mpb. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tonight...MosUy cloudy with a
chance of showers. Low in the
upper 50s. South wind S to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent. ·
Thursday ... Mosdy cloudy witb a
chance of showers. High in the
lower 70s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Extended forecast
Thursday night. .. Showers and

thunderstorms likely. Lows from
the upper 40s west to the middle
50s east
Friday .. .Showers likely and
much cooler. Temperatures falling
into the 40s.
Saturday ... A chance of rain or
snow showers nonbeast. Dry elsewhere. Cold with lows in the lower
to mid 30s and highs in the lower
to mid40s.
Sunday ... Dry and continued
cold. Lows 25 to 35 and highs in
the upper 30s to lower 40s.

Meigs EMS logs 12 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged ·
12 calls for assistance Tuesday
inducting two transfer calls. Units
respooding included:
MIDDLEPORT
9:37p.m., Brownell Avenue,
Paul Casei, treated at tbe scene;
9:55 p.m., Broadway Street,
William Brickles, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
OLIVETWP
8: IS a.m., Main Street, Ruby
Miller, VMH;
11:20 a.m., state Route 7, Willie
Jones, Camden-Clark Memorial

Hospital.

POMEROY '
10:55 a.m ., state Route 248,
Latisha Burke, treated at Ui scene;
12:13 p.m., Allen Street, Roy
Christy, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
5:38 p.m .. West Columbia,
W.Va., Rhoda Untalan, PVH.
RUTLAND
8:49 a.m., state Route 143,
Terry Mowery, PVH;
1:41 p.m .. Pear Street, Freda
Carsey, PVH;
9:42 p.m., Rutland Fire Station,
Cindy Lewis, VMH.

Marriage licenses issued
Tbe following couples were
marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Coun ofJudge Raben Buck:
Robert Dean Combs, 26, and
Shelly Ann Hendricks, 19, both of
Pomeroy; Harold Franklin Elliott
II, 18, and Annie May King, 18,
botb of Pomeroy;
Roben Steven Sams, 28, Hockissu~

ingpo~ and Sarah Jane Harris, 20,
Pomeroy; Michael Ray Wolfe, 19,
.Shade. and Monica Beth Holman,
18, Rutland;
Donald Wayne Randolph Jr.,
22, Pomeroy, and Karen Rene
Burns, 20, ·Middleport; Ryan
Charles Foster, 21, and Rhonda
Lyn Spaun, 20, both of Pomeroy.

COrn,·soybeans, wheat . .
push up farm-level prices
WASHINGTON (AP) - Heavy
demand for this fall's com and soybean crop helped push the October
index of farm-level prices up II
percent from last year.
Higher prices for bogs and
wheat also fueled the increase, the
Af,riculture Department reported
• uesday. Gains were offset some-

what by declines for cattle, lettuce,
calves and dry beans.
Compared with September of
this year, the index rose just I percent. Higher prices for com, wbeat,
soybeans imd milk offset declines
for lettuce, broilers, bogs and
peanuts.

FugitiVe..c:"_t_lnued_tro_m_p_au_•_1_ _ __
ed, and the county would again be
responsible for medical bills.
Lentes explained.
Lentes and Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby both contend that
Albright is "a harmless old man."
Lentes reiterated his earlier con- ,
tention -"that be does not present
a threat to the infumary residents."
Albright was convicted of second-degree murder after killing a
man in a fig~t outsid~ a bar 20

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Published every after 1oon, Mond11y lhroush
Fridny. Ill Coun St. Pomeroy. Ohio, by lhe
Ohio Vnlley Publishing Compnny/Multimedio
Inc., P&lt;~meroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-flS6.
Second class poatDge paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associated Press. and the Ohio
Newapaper Auociation.
POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Cour1 Sl., Pomeroy,

Ohio43769.
. SUBSCRimON RATeS
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Wcek ................................................. $2.00
One Month ..................... ..................... $8.70
One Year .........
.. ..... SI04.00

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesdayl admissions - none.
Tuesday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Oct. 31 - Jean
Hamilton, Donna Wolfe, Mrs. Kenneth Baker and daughter, James
Collins, Helen Himelrick.
(Published with permission)

~~igs

Dinner set
An election day dinner will be
served to the Lebanon Township
voters and residents by the Reorganized Church of Jesus ChriSI of
Latter Day Saints, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Tuesday. The church is located on
Lovett Road behind the township
garage.
Craft Show Saturday
·
The MARC Craft Show and

yew ago and was working on an
honor farm in Alabama in 1990
wben be escaped. The prosecutor
said to be put on an honor farm
means tbat the individual is "nonviolent." Albright got to Meigs
County by bitching a ride here with
a truck driver a few weeks ago,
Lentes said.
Sometime after arriving here
Albright sought medical assistance
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Hospital employees contacted tbe
Meigs County Sheriff's department
after their suspicions were raised
wben the inan reportedly gave
them different names and Social
Security numbers.
Lentes said that be anticipates
that Albright will be "shipped back
to Alabama but that be doesn't
have any time frame."
Again the commissioners Tuesday emphatically stated that they
"don't like it" in their reference to
him living at the infumary.
"What we want to happen here
is to get him in a auiser and send
him back to Alabama." said Tackett.

No subacription by mail permitted in anu
where home ccier service ia available.

MAILSVBSCRIPrJONS
1.-M.... C.Unty
I l Wceks ................................................. $27.30
26 Wceks ................................................. $ll.82
52 W&lt;cks ............................................... $105.36
lllfal OuUtdt M&lt;lp Ceanty
13 W&lt;cks ................................................. $29.25
26 Wceks ......................................... ,....... $56.68 I
32 W&lt;cks ............................................... $109.72 ,

Correction:
The story on Ohio' s new financial responsibility law, which
appeared in the Oct. 29 Sunday
Tim!!s-Sentinel incorrectly stated
that the new financial responsibility
law does not require you to have
motor vehicle insurance in the state
ofObio.
The story should have stated
that in the state of Ohio, all drivers
are required by law to have insurance while operating a motor vehicle, according to Meigs County
Sheriff James Soulsby. ·
The Daily Sentinel and Sunday
Times-Sentinel apologize for the
error in the story.

or treat candy from smaller children at two different locations in

Syracuse Tuesday evening, Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed this morning:
Halloween pranksters were throwing cans of com at cars on state
Route .124 above tbe Groundhog Creek Bridge Tuesday evening,
accordmg to a sheriff's repon. One can smashed the windshield of a
1992 Chevrolet Astro van driven by Norma Casto, Sellers Ridge
Road, around 8:50p.m., the report stated.

One-car accident probed
A Bainb~dgc resident's car sustained heavy damage following a
one-car acctdent on state Route 681 west of U.S. 33 Tuesday afternoon.
Jamie Lee Nicholson was westbound in a 1986 Chevrolet station
wagon when the car dropped off the right edge of the pavement,
went over an embankment and rolled over according to a Meigs
County Sheriff's Department repon.
'
No injuries were reponed.

Deer/car collision reported
No injuries were reponed following a deer/car collision on state
Route 681 west of Darwin Tuesday around 10:45 p.m.
Tracy Lee Ballenger, Bradenton, Fla., was westbound driving a
1989 Ponuac and struck and killed one of two deer that ran into the
roadway, according to a Meigs County Sheriff's Department repon.
Damage to the car was listed as heavy.

No hunting reminder issued
Pomeroy Police chief Gerald Rought reminds residents that no
hunting or discharging of firearms is permitled in village limits
'
according to village ordinance.

One cited in Pomeroy accident
One person was cited in a Tuesday night traffic accident on West
Main Street at McDonald's Restaurant, according to Pomeroy
Police Chief Gerald Rought.
According to police repons, Norma A Torres, 51, of Middlepon
was stopped to tum into McDonald"s. when she was struck from
behind by Jerry Tucker, 36 of Mason, W.Va
Light damage was recorded to the rear of Torres' 1994 Olds and
tlte left front ofTucker" s 1986 Chevy .
Tucker was cited for failure to assure clear distance.

--Area Death-Dorothy L. Jenks
Dorothy Louise Jenks. 65, of Louisa, Ky ., died Tuesday, Oct. 31,
1995, at the Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital. Ashland, Ky.
Born Nov. 20, 1929, in Jcncro, Ohio, she was a daughter of William ·
and Anna (Biye) Brown of Syracuse.
She was employed in the testing department at the Louisa Carpet Mill, .
and was a member of lhc First United Methodist Church in Louisa.
Surviving, in addition to her parents. are her husband, Harold Winston
"Tommy" Jenks; daughter and son-in-law, Ann and Derek Wallace of
Indi anapolis, Ind.; two sons and a daughter-in-law, Bruce Jenks ol
Cheshire; Scott and Toni Jenks of Owensboro, Ky.; two brothers~
William D. Brown of Mason, Harry Brown of Chester; and eight grandchildren.
The funeral will be Friday, II a.m., at the Heston Funeral Home, 505
Madison Street, Louisa, Ky ., with the Rev. Julian Hammom! and Rev.
Denick Wallace officiating. Burial will be at the Grabam Cemetery, Gra,
ham Station, where a graveside service will be held.
Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday, 2 to 9 p.m.

Today's livestock report
cows 38.50 and down.
Bulls: 3.00 to 4.00 lower; all
bulls 48.00 and down.
Veal calves;. steady to lower.;
choice 80.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: steady to 25
cents lower; choice wools 70.00'75 .25; feeder lambs 74.50 and
down; aged sheep 33.75 and down.

announcements

·stocks
Am Ete Power ........................38 114
Akm ........................................56SI8
Ashl011d OU ............................313/4
AT&amp;T ....................................:.......64
Bank One................................34 114
Bob Evans ..................................... 18
Borg-War~~er ......................... l9 112
Champion Ind ..............................21
Charming Shop ................... .2 13/16
City Holding .................................23
•'ederal Mogul........................ 18 318
Ganncti ........................... ;.......S4 S/8

Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .37 314
K-mart ......................................8 t/4
Lands End ..............................14 7/8
Llmlled Inc............................. 18 314
Mulllmedg Inc ......................44 114
People's ................................. .lllll
Ohto Valley Bank.........................36
One VaUey ............................. .323/4
RockweU ............................... .44 118
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. .33 Ill
Royal Dutcb/SheU ................ tlJ Ill
Shoney's Inc ........................... 11114
Star Bank ...............................35 314
Wendy lot'I............................20 118
Wo~thlngton lnd .................... 16 Sl8

-·-·-

Stock reports are tho 10:30 a.m.
qu,otes provided by Advesl o
GaUlpolls.

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily ..................................................... 35 C&lt;nu
Subscriben not desiring to pAy the carrier may
n:mit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on atme,sil or 12 monlh basil. Credit will be
aiven carrier each week.

Charges are pending against a Syracuse juvenile for taking trick

Hospital news

PA.

I

Svnny Pt Cloudy

Youngster cited in candy heist

Pomeroy, theft, costs, restitution,
two years probation, six months jail
suspended to 10 days; Charles D.
Millirons, Long Bottom, animals
running at large, $100 suspended
plus costs, one year probation;
Scott L. Nickels, Albany, speed,
$24 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Sherry Wise, Middleport,
DUI, $750 plus costs, six months
jail suspended to 10 days. one year
OL suspension, one year probation;
driving under suspension, $100
plus costs, $400 forfeiture, sbt
months jail .suspended to 10 days
concurrent, one year probation, forfeiture of the vehicle; failure to
show proof of insurance, costs
on! y; marked lanes, costs on! y; disorderly conduct, $50 plus costs;
William R. Gilmore Jr., Middleport, speed, $45 plus costs; seat
belt, $25 plus costs; David G.
Grant, Langsville, DUI, $500 plus
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
three days, 90-day OL suspension,
one rear probation, $250 of fine
and Jail suspended upon completion of residential treatment program; Marlene D. Capehart, Middleport, left of center, $10 plus
costs; Christopher A. Brown,
Pomeroy, disorderly, $100 suspellded, costs;
Lewis V. Johnson, Racine,
speed, $30 plus costs; Robert K.
Hypes, Langsville, left of center,
$20 plus costs; James E. McKinstry, Alliance, speed, $30 plus
costs; Bobby Eugene Williard Jr.,
Dalton, Ga, speed, $30 plus costs;
Garvey E. Strong. Barboursville,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
Joseph W. Montgomery, Newark,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Randy R.
Mills, Syracuse, speed, $30 plus
costs; Jeremiah L. Proctor. Kent,
speed, $30 plus costs;
Derrell Ashley, Peru, Ind .,
speed. $30 plus costs; Ronald L.
Powell, Apple Grove, W.Va .,
speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, $25
plus costs; Cbelsie M. Combs,
Gratis, speed, $30 plus costs;
Valerie J. Hanstine , Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus costs; Matthew A.
Pierce, Rudand, seat belt, $25 plus
costs: Patrick Seal. Pomeroy. seat
belt, $25 plu s costs; Michael
McPeck, Zanesville, seat belt, $25
plus costs;
Larry D. Brown, Jamestown,
Tenn., speed, $30 plus com; James
0. Ward, Russell, Ky., speed, $30
plus costs.

W VA

Flumes

Local·briefs~
· -

The following cases were
resolved last week in the Meigs
County Coun of Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien.
Fined were: Loretta F.
Holsinger, Racine; failllre to yield,
$20 plus costs; Linda L. Powell,
Tuppers Plains, speed, $30 plus
costs; Christopher S. Tatem, Jack·
sonville, Fla., speed, $30 plus
costs; Michael L. Connolly,
Reedsville, driving under the influence, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, 90-day
operator's license suspension, $250
of fine and jail suspended upon
completion of residential treatment
program;
Karen D. Schrock, Rutland, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Ryan L.
Shreves, St. Albans, W.Va., speed,
$30 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Faith J. Rose, Long Bottom,
seat bel~ $15 plus costs: Jason S.
Wells, Reedsville, speed, $30 plus
costs; Mildred A. Singleton,
Millerspo~ speed, $30 plus costs;
Billy R. Gibson, Parkersburg,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Darrell R.
Poole, Marietta, seat belt, $25 plus
costs;
Gary D. Lewis , Columbus,
speed, $30 plus costs; Steven A.
Rowe, Rutland, seat belt, $15 plus
costs: Wilford Hurley, Sissonville,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
Rhonda Zerkle, Letart, W.Va.,
speed, $30 plus costs: Paul R.
Qualls, Bidwell, speed, $22 suspended to $12 plus costs; Bobby E.
McConaha, Shade , no child
restraint, costs only; Mary M. Francis, Shade, seat belt, $15 plus costs:
Connie F. Fields. Mason.
W.Va., seat belt, $15 plus costs;
possession~ $100 suspended to $50
plus costs; Daniel Mublenbeck,
Reynoldsburg, assured clear distance, $25 plus costs: Jeffrey A.
Rife, Dexter, no OL, $150 plus
costs, three days jail and $75 suspended if valid OL presented wilhin 60 days, one year probation; seat
belt, $25 plus costs;
Paul R. Steinmetz Jr., Rutland.
taking a deer with a gun during the
closed season. $500 plus costs,
three years hunting license suspension, 30 days jail suspended, two
years probation, forfeiture of the
firearm; hunting or taking a deer
with an illegal firearm (rifle), $500
concurrent costs, 30 days jail suspended, two years probation; taking a deer from a motor vehicle,
$500 concurrent costs, 30 days jail
suspended, two years probation;
Marie L. Mulford. Gallipolis.
left of center, $20 plus costs; BillyL. Wellman, Athens, speed, $20
plus costs; William E. Kauff,
Pomeroy, failure to control, $30
plus costs; Erik W. Paxton,

INO

Showers f. s/orms Ra,n

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Meigs County Court
cases processed

OHIO Weather
AccuWcathcr10 f'orc~ ast for

Wants medical records released
'

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

VIRGIL

=I
rr---------------------~

.

ADOLPn~s

.1

This Week's Special:

BARBEQUE

~

'

$174

'

SUN. -SAT. 10'00AM -1000 PM•992·2556

•••

.

t:
9!

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. . r•r rp•r rp•r ~")

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

Heat Those
Cooled
Spots
• Kerosene
Heaters
• Gas Heater
Natural &amp; L.P.
• Electric
Heaters

PHILLIPS
MAYOR
FOR

PICKENS
HARDWARE

COMMUNITY BEFORE POLITICS
WRITE-IN

MASON, W.VA.
304·773·5583

Paid for by Candidate Virgil Phillips 736 $. 3rd Ave., Middleport

'.,

�•

-··

j

"'

•
'

The Daily Sentinel
·

In the NHL,

.

Wednesday, November 1, 1995

·

Page4·
Wednesday, NQvember 1, 1995

Hockey

Oilers beat Devils; Islanders win in OT while Flyers &amp; Lightning tie
! By KEN RAPPOPORT
: AP Hockey Writer
The Montreal Canadiens' win: ning streak isn't a surprise any. more. How about the New Jersey
: Devils' losing streak?
: "Hopefully, we're doing it (los: ing streak) now and gening it out
. of the way. We've got to try to take
: tlle rest of our games on tllis west. ern swing," Devils forward Bill
: Guerin said after Tuesday night's
: 2-lloss to the Edmonton Oilers.
It was the third straight loss for
tllc defendin$ Stanley Cup champi-ons, who continue their four-game
road trip Thursday night in San
Jose.
The Devils, who swept the
Detroit Red Wings in last season's
Stanley Cup finals, were unheaten
in the exhibition season and rolled
to a 6-1 record before losses to
Vancouver, Pittsburgh and Edmonton.
Meanwhile, the Canadiens won
tlleir sixth straight witll a 3-1 victory at Boston.
Bill Ranford turned in a
sparkling 39-save performance to
lead the Oilers over New Jersey.
It marked the second win this
season for the rebuilding Oilers
••. ·over the Stanley Cup champions.
:·
Oilers right wing Jason Amott
~ : scored the game-winner ·at·3:05 of
the third period when be stepped
;:• across the New Jersey blue line and
:·. ritled a shot between the open legs
~ · of Devils goaltender Martin
;: Brodeur.
'·
"We talked this morning about
r,
'· only allowing two goals on the
~- road," Brodeur said. "We allowed
r; only two, but we faced a guy who
t: was outstanding in the ne~ and he
f, made the difference. He· s one of
•••, the best in the world."
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
:;
:1 Philadelphia 2, Tampa Bay 2; New
• York Islanders 5, Florida 4 in over;: time: New York Rangers 5. San
-: Jose 3: and Calgary 2, Los Angeles

of Mike Hough was disallowed
with 2:46 left in OT.
The win was just the second of
the season for the Islanders (2-6-2).
Florida (7-4) lost at home for just
the second time in seven games this
season.
Rangers.5, Sharks 3
Luc Robitaille and NikJas Sundstrom scored within a 24-second
span midway through the third
period as New York won at San

Jose.
Sundstrom and Robitaille each
scored two goals, and each bas five
this season. Robitaille increased his
scoring streak to eight games. He
bas four goals and six assists during that stretch.
The Winless Sharks (0-7-3) tied
the game 3-3 at 7:52 of the final
period on a power-play goal from
short range by Owen Nolan, his
fifth of the season. However, tbe

NUL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Rangers quickly retaliated, as
Robitaille put in a rebound shot at
8:49, and Sundstrom scored on a
breakaway at 9:13.
Flames 2, Kings 1
At Los Angeles, Calgary won it£
first game of the season as Cory
Stillman scored the tie-breaking
goal early in the third period and
Rick Tabaracci made 34 saves.
The victory ended a five-game
(See NHL on Page 5)

Adalilie DIYIJion

Philldelphla ......... 7
N.Y. R.anaen ....... 7
Wuhin&amp;ton ........ ?
Ftorida .............. 7
Newleney .......... 6
Tampa Bay .......... 2
N.Y. btand .......... 2

~TERN

3 I

1$

40

21
lO

3 0
4 0

14 31
t4 4)
t2 31
8 27
6 29

23
33
22
32
43

4 0

4 4
6 2

3~

JS
3S
29
21
37
34

29
.6
20

l6
27

CONFERENCE

Central Dl-wlslon

lam

:« L I &amp; !if:
. 6 4 2 14 49

llA

13
12
4 2 -12
S 1 II

43

36

39

39
30

37
26
33

5 I

ll

34

Winnipeg
Olic:aao .............. 6
DalJu:....
.. ... . S
Detroit ......... ...... s
St. Louls .............S
Toronto ..............4

s

1
4 2

Colorado ..............? 3 I
Loa Ansel ea .........4 3 4
VI.IICOUVCI' ..... ...... 4 4 2
Edmonton ............4 l t
A.Diheim .............. l 8 0
Caliarv ................ ! 7 l
San Jose ............... o 7 )

Ha

9

ll 37
i2 4t
10 40
9 2l
6 l2
l 24
3 ll

4S

30
39
42
40

38
40
47

Tuesday's scores
Montreal l, Boston I
Tampa Bay 2, Phitadelphio 2 (Ue)
N.Y. Islaqder&amp; S, Florida 4 (01)
N.Y. R.anaera S, Sao Jose 3
Edmonton l, New Jersey I
Calaary 2. Loa Anaelca I

Tonight's games
Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.
Detroit PI Burfalo, 7:30 p.m.
Montreal at WDShinaton, 7:30 p,m
Chicaao at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Toro11to at Winnipeg, 8:30 p.m.
Calgary at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Edmonton at Vancouvet.10:30 p.m.
St. L.nuis al Anaheim. I 0:30p.m.

Buy Any Item In The S..". .
At Regular Price And Get
Any Second Item Of Equal
Or Lesser Value At ... HALF OF

Thursday's games
Ottawa at Hartrord, 1 p.m.
Aorid.a at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Detrcnt at Boston, 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at San JOile, 10:30 p.m.
N.Y . Rangers al Los Angelea, 10:30
p.m.

Ohio H.S. sports
Football

computer ratings
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The sillh
weekly football com~utcr ratiuas aa released by the Ohio High School Athletic
Alaocialioo, by division aod region, with
averaae Wlevel point&amp; per pme (top rour
teama in each region advance 10 reaional
&amp;emifioals):

Canadiens 3, Bruins 1
Brian Savage, Patrick Roy and
:• the rest of the Canadiens stayed bot
·' as Savage scored his ninth goal in
, six games and Roy stopped 38

Division I

shots.

• .

Montreal opened the season

· ~ with a five-game losing streak that

..

•'l

25.7222. 4-Marioq HardiDilS .J Ill. 5Tol . St. fnocil 21.3333. 6-Fairboro
20.9444.
Reaion 3: 1-Weatenille South

16.llll.
Re&amp;iOD 20: I -Cio. NarlemoDI 22.8333.
2·Amanda-Cie.arcnet. 22.7m . l-Cob.

16.)811. 2-Younp. Boardman 34.0000.
3-Canton McKinley 23.6666. 4-Wutct-

DAWSON-BRYANT 14.1«4. l -CIDoi
Winche&amp;ter 14.1666. 6-Bainbridao Paint

ville North 22.6666. S-Orove City
21.0000. 6-Cutoo OleoOak. 21 .0000.
ReaJon 4: l·OD. Colerain 29.1881. 2W. Cbe&amp;tcr Lakota 29.05SS. J..Ketteriaa
Fairmoot 28.3333. 4-Cio. Elder 28Jt2S.
j.Dayton Dunbar 27 .0000 . 6·Harri&amp;oo

nms.

Dlvblon U
Reaion 5: I· Amhent Steele 26.61ll.
2·Chardon 23.SOOO. 3-Painesville Riverside 21.8888. 4-MO&lt;llioo 2t.llll. S-Parrna Hll: Holy Name 2().0000. 6-Warren
Howll.lld 11.&amp;888.
Reaioo 6: l.ColJ. OeSales 33.16615. 2Dublia Scioto 21.3333. :J..Bowliaa Green
27.0lll. 4-Tiffio CotumbiiD 23.lllS. l Cols. Wattenon 21.6666. 6-Fostoria
2J.6tt J.

.·•

., '

liE llA

Norlhtu l DiYiJion
Montreal .............. 6 S 0 12
Ottowa .......
... l s o to
PlttlburJh . ...........• 2 2 to
ltlrt(oro ............... 4 t
9
Bolloo ................ 3 l 2 8
Bu[ato ............. :.J 7 0 6

.'•., I .
~

:« L1 I3 &amp;11

lam

Storewid

~ ~ost coach Jacques Demers and
· .·general manager Serge Savard their
wbs. But since then, the Canadiens
have not lost.
: Th e six-game winning streak
!\!nee Mario Tremblay took over is
d1e best sta11 for a coach in NHL
history. Marc Crawford won his
first five with Quebec last season
and Bep Guidolin started 5-0 with
the 1973 Bruins. but both lost
Ciame 6.
• Savage was the NHL player of
the week last week with seven
j(oals and two assists in five games,
il!cluding his frrst career bat trick
on Sunday against Chicago.
: "After a couple of wins, the
~tessure comes down and the players sta11 to play better," Tremblay
sl!id. "If Patrick Roy becomes the
l!atrick Roy that we saw a couple
of years ago, it' s going to be a big
show."

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Scoreboard

·

borne this season (4 -0-1) . The
Flyers 2, Lightning 2
Lightning
have just one win in their
Brian Bradley and Petr Klima
scored second-period goals for last six games (1 -2-3).
Islanders 5, Panthers 4 (OT)
Tampa Bay at Philadelphia.
Bob Sweeney's goal with 1:04
Eric Lindros scored his lOth
goal and Legion of Doom linemate left in overtime lifted New York to
John LeClair his ninth to give. the victory at Florida.
Sweeney's second goal of the
Flyers an early 2-0 lead.
night
capped a frantic finish. FloriPhiladelphia, which leads the
NHL with 17 points, is unbeaten in da fought back from a 4-2 deficit in
its last five games against Tampa the third period and was denied
Bay (4-0-1) and is also unbeaten at victory when a puck off the skate

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Reaion 1: I·Cie. St. Ignatius 41.9444.
2·Lakewood 13.7717 . 3-S irongnille
25 .3333 . 4-Stow 21.9444 . S-Euc:lid
21.6111 . 6 - La~ewood St. Edward
20.4444.
RegioD 2: ! ·Troy 30 .0000 . 2·
Brunswick 29.2222 . 3·Tol . St. John's

Southern gets
Shuler &amp; Norris
on aii-TVC
golf squad

Re&amp;ion 7: 1 (lie), Cuy. Fall• Walah Je-auit, Akron Buchtel 24.~000. 3-Atroo
Sprinafield 20.8888. 4 (Uc), Wiotttavillc
IDd ian Creek, Atron Flre~tone 19.0000.
6-N. Canton Hoover 18.2777.
Reiion 8: t-Cio. T111pin 26.Jllt . 2Celina 22.1888 . l ·Be!lefontaine 19.8333.
4·New Carliale Tecumseh 19.7222 . S·
Wash . CH Miami Trace 19.0000. 6IACKSON 17.2222.

Division Ill
Regioa 9: 1-Chaario Falla Kenato n
24.1111. 2·Avon Lake 18.2T17. 3-0im:~t­
cd Fall1 18.0000. 4 (tie), Mentor Lake.
Calh .. Twinsburll Olamberlio 17.6666. 6·
Rich.lie1d Revere I s:nn.
Region 10: l ·Clyde 24.2177. 2-0 ak
Hubor 23.7222. l · Dclawue Olcotanay
21.55:5:5 . 4·Ronrord 19.1666. S-Bryan
I&amp;.SSS.S. 6-Co\1. Beechcron 1&amp;.1111 .
Region ll: I· Polaod SemiDary
27.2777. 2-Corlllod Loteview 2S.3!33.
]-Alliance Marliogton 24.SSSS., 4-Phllo
21.6666. S-Loulsville 20.6666. 6·MillenbWJ W. Holmct\8.7171.
Region p : I-Hami1ton Ro" 2S.S888.
2-Londoo ~4.2771 , l·Hamiltoo Badia
21.9444. 4--HHllboro 20.2222. j .Keuerina
AJter 17.8188. 6·fnnk.lin 11 .T111 .

Division IV
Region 13: ! -Orrville 27.6666. 2·
Newark Lictina Val le/ 23.2222 . JCastalia Marg11et11 22 . 111. 4-Akron
Manchester 19.2222. S·Cle. Benedicti11e
174444. 6-Pony 16.833).
Region 14: 1-Cols. Ready 22.88U. 2Vcrsaillea 21.6111 . 3-0ennantown Valley
View 19.4444 . 4·S~anton 19.3333. S-

B~ l broot

17.9444. 6-Kentoo 14.8818.
Reaion lS : !-Bellaire 31.8313. 2·
Younga. U(luliae 27.SSS.5. 3- Youngs .
Mooney 21.3333. 4-St. CJ.iuville
16 .3333. S-Zoarville Tuac:. Valley
15.3333. 6- Yo\I.Dp. Liberty 14.S.SSS.
Re8ioo 16: I-IRONTON 22.6666. 2IRONTON ROCK HILL 19 .1666 . JWHEELERSBURO 16.8888. 4-LAN CASTER FAIRFIELD UNION tl .SOOO.
FAIRLAND
l-PROCTORVllLE
13 2777. 6-PORTSMOtrrH WEST
I 2.l lll.

Division V

,

ReiiOD 17: t-New Loodoo 19.3333. 2Lorain Cleuview 17.6111 . ].App\eCretk
Wayned~e t6.t666. 4-0rweU Oi-ood Vatley 14.«44. S-Avoa 13.SSSS. 6-Eiyria
Calh. 12.4444 .
ReatoD 11: ·1-Marion Pleanat
21.3888. 2-Etmore Woodmore t 8.4444.
)·Coldwater 17 .~000. 4-Defiance Tinora
16.1313. S-Lafayette Alle11 East 13.2n7.
6-Caroy 12.tttt .
Reaion 19: 1-Steubeo.villc Calh. Cent.
21.6111. 2·Lisbon David A.ndencm
21.4444. 3-Woodanctd MollJ'oe Central
18 .6666. 4·Crooksville 17.3888 . SWellsville 17 .3333. 6·Martin&amp; Ferr~

1), 3:30p.m ClwqlioDihip, 7 p.m

AICtnrenUle

SpriDJfietd Cath. (24- t) VJ. Jame.otown
Gteenevtew (16-S), ~ p.m ; Marion EIJ;in
(23-2) .,, Now Poril Nlliooll Tnt! (221), 3,30 p.D&gt; Clwqlio01hip, 7 p.m.

Hartley 17 .2777 . 4-COAL OROVE

Valley 13.44-44.

Division VI

Division IV

Reaion 21: 1-lndepeadeo.ee, 19.2777.
2-Norwalk St. Paul11.ll33. 3-Mopdorc
17.2717. 4-N. Ba ltimore 1!1 .0000. :5·
Edlilcrtoa 13.:500(). 6·Ddiauce Ayernille
IO.TI77.
Re&amp;iOD 22: I·St. Heory 22.7222. 2Colu.mbU.I Grove 18.2222. 3-DeOraff
Rivenide 17.SSSt 4·Dola Hardin North·
ern 16.8333. S.Sidney Lehmao 14.2177.
6-Mo&lt;:&lt;omb n.nn.
Rea,ion 23: 1-0aoYille l"kOOOO . 2 (tie),
Lowellville, New•t. Cath., 16.1333. 4New Wub. Buckeye Cent 16.0000. , _
Bealllvil fe 15 .0000. 6· Boweratown
Conottoo Valley 14.9444.
Re&amp;ion 24: I-LANCASTER FISHER
CATH. 19.6666. 2-Cio. Country Day
17.6111. 3-Codarvillo 16.0000. 4-Covlnstoo ll.4444. l -PORTSM01JI'JI NOTRE
DAME [4.6666. 6-WIIIiUillbW'&amp;13.8888.

AI Cu7ooloop Flllo

pncticeiC(\IOII.
KANSAS CITY OUEFS: Activated
DoD.lloell Bennett, Nunina back, rrom tbc

AIEUde

tll!Yiically-unable-to-petfonn li1L Waived
l'=nlnk Stam&amp;, linebat:ker.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS ·
Waived Pal O'Neill, punter. Si&amp;ned Bryan
Waaoer, punter.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Signed
Ooua Brien, kicker, to a two·year con-

Ol~iollSILip,

S p.m.
All.aaeUier
Sh.eltin_ab Chriltiu (17-1) va. HEMLOCK·M1ll.ER (14· 11), 11 o.m.; WA·
TERFORD (21-3) n . Lllham Wealtrll

tncL

(20-S), 12:30 p.m Ownj&gt;toDihip,l p.m.
AIV•d•U•
Covinaton (20·4) YJ . Sidaey Lehmu
(ll-2), 11 a.m.; St. Heory (25..0) VI. Sid·

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Plmd

ncy Fairlawn (201), 12:30 p.m Olampl·

Television
NEW YORK (AP) - In a challenge to ES PN. the owner of the
Fox network and the nation's
biggest cable TV system operator

Transactions
BasebaU
Amcrkan Leque
BALTIMORE ORIOlES: Aooouoccd
Gene Harris, pitcher, refused an outright
assignment and bec:ame a rree aaent
BOSTON RED SOX: Dectioed to ex·
ercise their 1996 option on Rick AatJilera,
pitcher.

Division I
At Cuyahoaa falls
Hudson 08·8) n . Mentor (22· 4). 2
p.m.: Wooster (23·2) vs. Stow (20·6).
3:30 p.m. Otat'T'pionship, 1 p.m.

NHL

Mawrield Madi1on (22·3) VI . Elyria
(23-2). 2 p.m.; Tol. Central Catholic (241) va. Rocky Ri.ver ~aanirlcat (22· 5),
3:30p.m. OllflJliODShip, 7 p.m.
At Canal Wlnc:he•ter
Ci11. UrstJiine {20·.5) vs . Chillicothe
(20-4), 2 p.m.; We~tervllle South (20-2)
va. Waneno11 (22 -4), 3:30p.m. Championship, 1 p.m.
AI Vand.alla
Cin. Mt. Notre Dame (20-4) va. Cin.
Princeton (18-6), 2 p.m.; CiD. Seton (23·
2) vs. Day. Chamioade·Julienoe (21·4),
3:30p.m. Otlfllliooshlp, 7 p.m.

action ...

(Continued from Page 4)
losing streak by the two-time
defending Pacific Division champions and left San Jose as the NHL · s
only winless team. The Flames (1 7-3) had three ties during their ftrst
I 0 games, while getting outscored
39-22.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS : An -

nounced the. retirement or Gene M1uch,
bench coach. Fired Jerr Cox, third bue
coach. Named Tim Foli third bale coach.
Named Guy Husen bullpen coach.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Elerciled
their 1996 option on Edgu Martinez, des·
ianated hitter.

AI Willard

Hockey
ANAHEIM MIGIITY DUCKS ' Seot
Bobby Mauh.all. de(enseman, to Balti more or the AHL.
CALGARY FLAMES : Sent Jarr od
St..alde, center, to Saint John or the AJn...
HARTFORD WHALERS: Sent Scott
Daniels, left win&amp;. to Sprin&amp;field or the
AHL.
Plfit.ADELPHIA FLYERS' Sem Dao·
reo Rumble, de(eoseman . and Du JCo.
rdic, left wioa,, to Hershey of the AHL on
conditionin g wig.nments.
ST. LOUIS BLUES : Sent KeYi n
Sawyer, lert wing , to Worce~ter o( th e
AHL. Real led Jamie Rivers, ddeDJCman,
from Worcester.
VANCOINER CANIJCKS: Sent Ywi
Kuznetsov, center. to Syracuu o( lhe
AHL.

- - - - - - Sports briefs----~

ooship, S p.m

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Pairiop
ror Satwday'l regional semifinalJ iD hiab
school volleyball:

Nllllonal Rockt1 Luaue

ClriOI Broob, oomerbr.ck., rrom the prac:·
tlce !Quad.
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Waived
Jamn Loau., linebac~er . Activated
Thomas Bailey, wide receiver, from the

com Hopewell·Louden (23-2), 12:)0 p.m

volleyball pairings

FootbaU

Lt••
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Activated

McComb (2 t-3) vs . Edoo (2! -1), t 1
a.m.; Rockford Parkway (22-2) \11. Bu·

Regional

William Aoyd, ru.ubact, on lujlJred ro~etve. Siaoed Tim Jorden, ti&amp;bt end.

NatkJaal Football

Alblud CreatYiew (lJ·O) n. MlDenl
Ridao (2!-1), t I ~m.; Albtaliuta SL lobo
(t7-6) vs. Loraio Cath. (20-3), 12,l0p.m
Ola.qlioullip, $ p.m.

,

WASIUNOTON BUUJ!TS: Activol·
edDeretSmilh,ptaya--ouilllrltcoodt.

N.aion.. Leq~~t:
,
NL: Rerooved Ryue SandberJ, IOC()IICI
baseman, rrom the voluntary retired till

have formed an alliance to obtllia
sports programming and televise it
worldwide.
Rupert Murdoch's News CorP.
Ltd .. which owns Fox. and the
cable company Tele-Communica•
tions Inc. said they will each own
50 percent of the venture.
Hockey
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(AP) - The New Jersey Devils
and the New Jersey Sports and
Exposition Authority put completed an agreement to keep the Stan':
ley Cup champions at the Meadowlands Arena until 2007.

CIDCAGO CUBS: Atueed to ternu
with Ryne Sandberg, second b111eman, on
I

OD~year

CO!Iltact

Your Best Prevention Is Knowledge.

BasketbaU
National Buketbal1Aa10Ciallon
NBA: Suspended Charles Oakley,
New YCI"k K.oicb rorward, (or ODe prne

Division U
AI StronaniUe

Tallmadge (24-1) VI . Avon Lake (232), 11 a.m.; Jefferson Area (24-0) vs .
Silem (22·3). 12:30 p.m. Championahip,
Sp.m.
At Marufleld Madbon
Holland Sprinsfield (21-4) n . Copley
(21-4), U s.m.; SuDbury Btg Watout (232) vs. Ctyde (23-2), tHO p.m. Clwooplonsbip, S p.m
AI Byuvllle Meaaowbrook
New Concord John Glenn (23-2) n.
MINFORD (2!-0), II a.m.; AntENS
(22-3) vs. CambridB• (23-2), 12:30 p.m.
Champi()nship. 5 p.m.

without pay aad rined him $6,000 ror
Lhrowins a puncb durins an exhibition
&amp;•me a&amp;aiut tho Phillldelphia 76cra on
Oct. 29. Fined Vernon Muwell, 76era
8\llrd, $3,000 for lbU&amp;in&amp; the re[ereel
duriaa the wne aane.
CLEVELAND CAY AUERS: Waived
Tony Beooett, auard. Placed Br.d Daup.
aty, center; Antonio Lans. forward; and
Joe CoW'tney, JU•d, OD the injurulliJt.
INDIANA PACERS: Wtoived Roben
Churchwell, forward, and Kevin Sal·
vadori, cenler .
LOS ANGELES CUPPERS, Watved
Shawn Jamiaon , forward, and Tony
M.-oney, center.
LOS ANGELES LAKERS: Waived
Kurt Rambil and Gerard Kina. ronvlrdl,
and Kareem Townes, SUard.
MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Placed Kevio
Duckworth, center, on the injured liat.
Waived Tate Georae, auard, and Brad
Sellen, forw.,-d.
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES' .
Waived Rich Kina. center,
ORLANDO MAGIC: Waived Ivano
Newbill, rorwanL
PHOENIX SUIIS: P1ac:etJ Daony Moo·
nin1 and Mario Bennett, forwards, and
John Coker, .:enter, on the injwed tilL
SEAITLE SUPERSONICS' Ptoced
Nate McMillan, pard, 011 lhe iojured lilt
Waived Man Othict aod Trevor Wilaon,
tl"udl·

AI Cent«nllle

Bexley (22·3) vs. Cin. St Ursula (22 3), !I a.m.; Lebanon (24-l)' n. Madison
(21·4). 12:30 p.m. 0.B!l1'io1U1hip, S p.m.

Division UI
AI Slronanllle
Elyria Catholic: (18·6) "~ · Omctsville
Gatrield (21-4), 2 p.m.; At:roo St ViD·

cent-St. Mary (14-10) vs. Columbiana
Crestview (2!1-0), 3:30 p.m. Championship, 1 p.m
AI C.Uon

Coldwater (18·8) va. Archbold (2S· l),
2 p.m.; MI. Blanchud Riverdale (19-.S)
n . Orrville (20·6), 3:30 p.m. Champi·
onship, 1 p.m
At Loaan
HeathJ23-0) vs. ROSS SOUTHEASTERN (16'-7). 2 p.m; Chillicoth.e Unioto
(19-6) vs, ~~il!e W. Muskin;wn (1~

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Southern placed two members
cif its golf team - senior. Jason
Shuler and Ryan Norris - on the
'tri-Valley Conference first team.
'teammate Matt Bradford earned
second team honors.
: Shuler was a fmt teamer and the
"I:VC Most Valuable Player. completing a great season and an outstanding golf career at Southern.
5;huler ranked tops among TVC
111embers with a 38.4 scoring aver-

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age.
· Ryan Norris was also a first
uiamer with a 39.6 scoring average
ahd Matt Bradford shot a 40 .9,
gpod enough for second team honors in tlle leatue.
: Other members of the SHS team
with their ave rages were Kevin
f ields, 42 .9; Chris Oall, 44.4; Jason
Lawrence, 48.1 ; Travis Lisle, 49.5,
a11d Donnie Carnahan.
: At tlle sectionals at the Jayoee' s
Course in Chillicothe, Southern
finished seventh out of 16 teams
with a team score of 345. Shuler
shot a 77 (five over par) to advance
to District play as an individual at
Oltbow Country Club in Beverly.
There be shot an 83 and did not
advance.

Meigs football team
to sponsor spaghetti
cUnner today at MHS
The Meigs Marauder football
team will spoosor a spaghetti dinner today at 6:30 p.m. in the Meigs
High ScbOOI cafeteria
The dinner, which is open to all
Marauder football parents and fans,
is free, but donations wiU be appre-

ciated.

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Wednesday, November 1, 1.995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

--Meet the

.-. --Meet tht~ Eagles

Wednesday, NQvember 1, 1995

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tornadoes-~·

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CHRIS BAILEY

ERIC DILLARD

.
Eric Dlllard, Chris Bailey and J.T. White are
· members of the 1995 Eastern Eagles football
: team. Dillard is a 5-9, 165 lb. Junior running

DERRICK SMITH

J.T. Wllfi'E

back/cornerback. Bailey Is a S-10, 250 lb. Junior
tackle. White Is a S-7, 1401b.quaterbacklsafety.

JERODMll..LS

Derrick Smith, Jerod Mills and Kevin Porter
are members of the 1995 §outhem football team.
Smith Is a S-11, J66Jb. sophomore center. Mills Is

KEVIN PORTER

...
..

a S-11, 162 lb. freshman tlgl!t end. Porter Is a S-9,:
1811b. senior guard.
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24 pk. ~uba

•

[Cooper says fourth-ranked Buckeyes are better than AP's top three .
By RUSTY MILLER

day ni gh t at unranked Minnesota,
gained 16 points on Florida, 26 on
Florida State and 12 on Nebraska
in the latest AP poll of sports writers and broadcasters.
That's because Nebraska won at
then-No. 7 Colorado 44-21 to slide
past idle No . I Florida State and
third-ranked Florida bounced Georgia52-17.
"I don't know of any of them
that have played as tough a schedule as we played," Cooper said at
hi s weekly news conference. "I
think that's pretty obvious. We've
played six teams that. at the time
we played them, were ranked in the
top 25 in the country. Obviously,
that's not important to a Jot of people."
Cooper said be is looking forward to watching second-ranked
Florida State on national television
Thursday night against No. 24 Virginia.
"I' U probably look at how good
is this team," be said of Florida
State. "How good are we compared to that team. I'm sure those
thoughts will go through my

: COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP))IIational poll voter John Cooper
doesn't know a lot about the top
ihree teams in the nation. But Ohio
:'&gt;tate coach John Cooper believes
bis fourth-ranked team ts better
lban they are.
· "I put us (at number) one,"
Cooper said Tuesday of his coach~·· poll vote which ranked his team
ahead of Nebraska, Florida State
and Florida. "I don't know they're
J&gt;etter than us . I keep hearing
(Florida State coach) Bobby Bowilen said we played the toughest
~chedule and ought to be No. I.l
think (Florida coach Steve) Spurnmade that comment. I know
{Iowa coach) Hayden (Fry) said
that.
: "Well. put us up !here, then!"
· Despite going 8-0 and beating
i.ix teams ranked in the Associated
Press Top 25, Ohio State lags
behind the top three. Last Saturday,
the Buckeyes shackled Iowa Jben ranked 25th in the nation ~6-0 late in the first half before
holding out their top players and
~ttling for a 56-35 victory.
. The Buckeyes, who play Satur-

er

mind."

Cooper conceded that be bad

Nebrnska, Florida State and Florida
ranked abead of the Buckeyes on
his preseason ballot in the CNNUSA Today coaches poll.
''I imagine they're ranked ahead
of us because in the preseason, they
were ranked abead of us. That's the
only logical reason I can give
you," he said.
Cooper said he knew little about
the three teams ranked ahead of
Ohio State.
"All I would know would be
what I've read and what little bit
I've seen on TV," Cooper said.
Asked if he was knowledgeable
enougl! to vote in the coaches' poll,
Cooper said, "You can ask anyone
that same question. You could ask
the sports writers. You guys are
coming to our games when those
other teams are playing, so how do
you know how good Nebraska is?"
He added with a laugh, "I think
coaches know more about it than
you guys do."
Since teams from the Big Ten
and Pac-t 0 conferences are not a
part of the bowl alliance that
decides the national champion,
Oljio State - as was Penn Stale a

:Jn Saturday encounter,

jMarshall to host East Tennessee
1\y MAIT HARVEY
: HUNTINGTQN, W.Va. (AP)
.... West Virginia in early November usually means hunters will
~ead to the woods and Marshall's
football team will scramble for a
berth in the Division 1-AA playpffs.
. Except for last season, wben
Marshalilosl only one regular-sea=
$On game and advanced to the I·
AA semifinals, coach Jim Donban's Herd has fought hard to make
lbe 16-team field.
. Marshall first went to the play6ffs in 1991, Donnan's second season. The Herd lost twice in midOctober tben closed the regular
~eason with four straight wins to
get a postseason berth. Marshall
finished 1-M runner-up.
· The Herd won the national title
~ 1992, but it was no cakewalk.
Marshall lost to Western Carolina
Qn Oct. 31 of that season, then to
Appalachian State the very next
week. But Marshall beat Tennessee
Tech and East Tennessee State to
JD:ike the playoffs.
: In 1993, Marshall spread out
l'bree regular-season losses, with
tile last coming to Furman with just
game left. But the Herd rallied to
~at Western Carolina in the season finale and make the playoffs,
then finished runner-up.
• "It's no pressure on us," said
junior cornerback Melvin Cunningtlam. "To be a good football team,
Y.OU' ve got to overcome some
obstacles. We're ready for the cball~nge . We've done it every year.
Wby not do it this year?
· "It's going to be nothing new.
Our goal at the beginning of the
year was to win the national title,"
he said. "As far as I'm concerned
we still have a chance to reach that
goal."
Marshall (6-2, 5· I Southern
Conference), ranked seventh in 1-

a

M, can make the playoffs by win- just three times at home since .the
ning its last three games, at borne school opened a new stadium in
against East Tennessee State on 1991 .
Tbe kickoff is 12:30 p.m. The
Saturday, at Furman on Nov. 11
and borne against Hofstra on Nov . game will he televised live on stations that carry the SportsSouth
18.
Although the Herd beat The network.
Citadel last weekend. Marshall ~till
bas been fighting off the after- shocks of a close loss Oct. 21 to
second-ranked Appalachian. Marshall had won five straight before
that loss.
''We're just trying to put the
bits and pieces together after the
Appalachian State game," said
quarterback Chad Pennington .
"We were on a roll there for a
while and we got off track. We're
trying to gel back on. It's a fight to
try to do that.''
East Tennessee State (2·6, 2-3)
is coming off one of its few bright
spots, a home win against Georgia
Southern.
Marshall's
players
are
impressed with the Bucs. It's bard
to get a good read on East Tennessee State since the road has
become borne for the Bucs.
Tbe game at Marshall will be
the seventh in nine contests away
from bome for East Tennessee.

year ago - is all but shut out of
Asked bow that would make
the title picture unless all three !lim feel, Cooper said, "I'll probateams abead of it fall.
If the Buckeyes finish unbeaten,
they still might be eliminated from
being No. I because they cannot
play in the alliance's designated
championship game, tbe Fiesta
Bowl on Jan. 2.

I Paid Too
Much
Income
·Tax Last

Year.
This year I used a new program
for small business owners called
BizPian. They do the work. I

take advantage of pretax
medical deductions I never knew
I had. The result: an extra
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ANNOUNCING

bly feel like coach Paterno felt last
year."
:

At Chapman Shoes

Nov. 16th 7 prn
Holiday Inn
Gallipolis

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November 1st,
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Best Wishes·To All Our
Meigs County
Fall Sports Programs

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"We have just about worn out.
our homecoming float," said East
Tennessee coach Mike cavan. "It
seems like we have been everybody's homecoming game, and this
week is no different
"This schedule has been a real
challenge for our team," Cavan
said. "Before we started the season, I told the kids there is nothing
we can do about the schedule; we
have to play it.
. "To this team's credit, they
have never quit fighting,'' he said.
. They'll need to fight bard
against Marshall, which bas lost

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••

�'

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'In the NBA's Atlantic Division,

•

Wednesday, November 1, 1995

Wednesday, November 1, 1995

•

•

•

Beaver birth
announced

.

:O'Neal tabbed to keep M·aglc on top wh1le Kn1cks keep ag1ng
By HOWARD SINER
get the home-court edge in the
· NEW YORK (NEAl
Boston Garden. New bead coach
Shaquille O'Neal looms large. He's M.L. Carr ought to be worried.
enough to keep Orlando on top. Boston lacks talent, defense and
The grizzled New York Knicks just chemistry.
hope for one last shot.
MlamiHeat
In the NB A Atlantic Division,
Frontcoun: Hot shot Glen Rice
here are the key stars and lhe out- is a high-scoring (22.3 ppg) swinglook for each of the teams in 1995- man. On the inside, Kevin Willis
96:
(17.2 ppg, 10.9 rpg) can be producBoston Celtlcs
tive. But Matt Geiger is far from
Frontcourt: Forward Dino Radja being anything more than an ordican score (17.2 points per game nary pivotman.
last season) and grab the Mil (8.7
Bac~court : Swingman Billy
:rebounds per game). His defense: Owens led NBA guards. in
so-so. Young center Eric Montross rebounding (7 .2 rpg). He bas to
bas more to learn. Rookie forward · step up his defen~e . On .the point.
Eric Williams shoots.
Khalid Reeves 1s com~ng off a
Backcourt: Dana Barros, a free- promising rookie year. He's backed
agent pickup, is Boston's best. He up solidly by Bimbo Coles.
thrived (20.6 ppg) at point guard
Outlook: Vet coach Pat Riley is
last season in Philadelphia. Barros Miami's ne~ MVP. He brings with
joins Dee Brown (15.6 ppg) in one him the best winning percentage
.of the NBA' s most-undersized (.717) of any coach in NBA bistostarting duos.
ry. So the Heat is on? Not yet.
Outlook : The Ccltics have
New Jersey Nets
moved to lhe FleetCenter- so forFrontcourt: Derrick Coleman's

absence due to a "minor heartbeat
irregularity" is a new concern. His
stats: 20.5 ppg; 10.6 rpg. Rookie
forward Ed 0' Bannon bas knee
worries. Forward Armon Gilliam
plays bard. But who's the center?
Backcourt: Kenny Anderson
(17.6 ppg, 9.4 assists per game) is a
rising point guard. He's a great
dribbler. Coming off an Achilles
injury, Kevin Edwards has something to prove - ltlce the entire
team, for that matter.
Outlook: It's dim. Coach Butch
Beard can't get bis disgruntled
players to pay attention. They've
been criticized as greedy, selfishand worse.
New York Knicks
Frontcourt: Center Pat Ewing
(23.9 ppg, II rpg) still bas championship hopes. Forward Anthony
Mason, who earned the NBA's
Sixth Man Award, is now a starter.
Charles Oakley's strength is
defense; Charles Smith's is
offense.

Backcourt: Point guard Derek
Harper, 34, isn't great anymore. So
inexperienced Charlie Ward bas a
chance. Streak shooter John Starks
is often more off lhan on. He bustles, though. If it can, New Yort
will run more.
Outlook: Coach Don Nelson
takes over an aging team. It's now
or never for these Knicks. Before
his (timely?) depanure, Pat ·Riley
had driven them to over-achieve.
They came within one basket of the
1994 NBA title.
Orlando Magic
Frontcourt: At 7-foot-1 and 300
pounds, Sbaq is unstoppable. Mr.
0' Neal was first in the NBA in
scoring (29 .3 ppg) and third in
rebounding (11.4 pg). F Horace
Grant also shoots, rebounds and
defends. Who else? Who cares?
Backcourt: Anfemee "Penny"
Hardaway, wbo's 6-7, is the best
young point guard in the leag11e.
Pis average: 20.9 ppg. Nick Anderson (15.8 ppg) bas emerged as one

In the NBA's Central Division,

1of tbe NBA's 10 top shooting
. guards.
Outlook: Coach Brian Hill
wants another shot at the top.
Orlando was swept by Houston in
the 1995 NBA Finals. The Magic
went 39-2 at home last season, second best in NBA history. Sbaq &amp;
Co. bas reopened. Look out!
Philadelphia 76ers
Frontcourt: The key is the
development of 7 -foot-6 center
Shawn Bradley. He played all 82
games last season . Clarence
Weatherspoon (18.1 ppg) is another young talent Rookie swingman
Jerry Stackhouse hopes to add
scoring.
Bacli:co~rt: Free-agent point
guard Dana Barros. whO led the
76ers in six categories, is gone.
Greg Graham doesn't compare.
Can Jeff Malone, 34, recover from
his heel injury? Another veteran,
Vernon Max weD. also checks in.
Outlook: More scoring is what
Philadelphia coach John Lucas
needs most. Losing Barros hurts.

_

Tbe backcourt is up for grabs. It
will be a long season.
Washington Bullets
Frontcourt: Youthful talent
abounds. Chris Webber (20.1 ppg,
9.6 rpg) and Juwan Howard (17
ppg, 8.4 ppg) can tum into enduring NBA stars. So can 6-foot-10
rookie Rasheed Wallace. What
they lack most is NBA experience.
Backcourt: All-Star point guard
Mark Price, coming off a foot
injury, was acquired ID provide veteran leadership. Swingman Calbert
Cheaney (16.6 ppg) could be ~ rising star. But be bas to begm to
fight bis way to the hoop.
.
Outlook: Coach Jim Lynam
hopes to build a playoff team. It
won't be easy. The injury-plagued
Bullets used 15 different starting
lineups last season.
NBA Atlantic final standings of
1994-95: ORLANDO, 57-25 ;
NEW YORK, 55-27; BOSTON;
35-47; MIAMI, 32-50; NEW lER•
SEY, 30-52; PHILADELPHIA, 245&amp;; WASHINGTON, 21-61.

Doug and Tracy Beaver of
Pomeroy announce the birth of a
daughter, Shandi Danielle, Born
Sept. 29 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
The il)fant weighed seven
pounds, four ounces and was 20
inches long. Sbe bas a. sister,
Cheyenne, two, and ·a brother,
Zachary, six.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. John Beaver, Pomeroy;
and Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Richard Eblin, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs. J obn Ord,
Cheshire.

NEW YORK (NEAl - "Air"
Jordan meets "Air Head" Rodman. Chicago's individualists (add
Scottie Pippen, too) are the _cream
of the crop.
In the NBA Central Division,
here are the key stars and the outlook for each of lhe teams in 1995·
96:
Atlanta Hawks
Frontcourt: Forward Grant Long
scored 11.6 points per game last
season and led Atlanta with 7.5
rebounds per game. Swingman

Stacey Augmon (13.9 ppg) might
be better off in lhe backcourt. Center Andrew Lang bas improved.
Backcourt: Point guard Mookie
Blaylock (17.2 ppg, 7.7 assists per
game) made .the NBA All-Defensive team. Steve Smith (16.3 ppg)
likes to shoot
Outlook: Coach Lenny Wilkens
has taught the Hawks to play
defense. But they need to score a
lot more points. Don't expect much
from them.
Charlotte Hornets
Frontcourt: All-Star center

Broken right thumb
to sideline Tyson
for at least four weeks
By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
LAS VEGAS (AP) - For
$39.95, Mike Tyson can watch the
telecast of lhe Riddick Bowe-Evander Holyfield fight Saturday night.
Or he can attend in person.
Whatever be does, a spectaiDr is
all he can be. A broken right thumb
bas knocked him out of his fight
against Buster Mathis Jr. on free
television at the MGM Grand, a
short cab drive from Caesars
Palace, the site of the Bowe-Holyfieldmatcb.
The injury will keep the former
undisputed heavyweight champion
out of action for from four to si3.
weeks.
' 'This is a really serious setback, •' Tyson said. 'I was really
anticipating Ibis fight."
· Actually it was a reinjury of the
thumb that forced the fight to be
postponed.
Tyson, who maintains a home in
northeast Ohio, broke the thumb
approximately two weeks ago but
hoped he would heal in time. Then
he rebroke it while sparring either
Monday or Tuesday.

He needed only 89 seconds to beat
Peter McNeeley Aug. 19 at the
MGM Grand.
"I feel good, I feel happy," he
said. ''Everybody knows I'm going
to do my thing. I'm looking forward to this. I'm going to burn."
"I'm sorry for Tyson; that's a
tough way to go out," said Rock
Newman, Bowe's manager. "In a
strange kind of way, I was looking
forward to both fights," Newman
said. "I just didn't think we'd be
hurt (financially by Tyson's
appearance on free TV)."
.
If indeed it is a postponement, ll
will be the fourth in Tyson's
· career. He also bas bad one cancellation.
Tyson was ID have defended the
undisputed title against Frank
Bruno in September 1988 but was
in an auto accident. That fight
didn't take place until Feb. 25,
1989, when Tyson stopped Bruno
in the fiflh round.
Tyson was supposed to defend
the title against Razor Rud&lt;lock in
November 1989 in Canada but
pulled out because of illness.

Alonzo Mourning was Charlotte's
best in scoring (21.3 ppg) and
rebounding (9.9 rpg). Forward
Larry Johnson (18.8 ppg) improved
his outside shot. Swingman Scott
Burrell (11.5 ppg) is still recovering from an Achilles .tendon injury.
Backcourt: At 5-toot-3, point
guard Muggsy Bogues is a hustler.
But be isn't a great shooter.
Kendall Gill (13 .7 ppg) was
brought back to score.
Outlook: The Hornets need to
rebound. You can't get points without the ball. Coach Allan Bristow
is on the spot this season.
Chicago BuDs
Frontcourt: Quirky forward
Dennis Rodman (16.8 rpg) was on
the aii-NBA third team and the all'
defensive fii'St team. Scottie Pippen
was also on the all-defensive first
team . Center Luc Longley is
expected ID boost his play.
Backcou rt: Michael Jordan
(26·9 ppg) i.s still the best there is.
Ron Harper has to settle down and
find his game. Like the entire team.
in fact.
Outlook: Jordan, Pippen and

Rodman are talented and volatile.
Backcourt: Future Hall of Farner
Yet coach Phil Jackson says the
Joe
Dumars (18.1 ppg) has aged
real key to winning is improvement
some. Young Allan Houston (14.5
from Longley.
ppg) can also play either guard
Cleveland Cavaliers
Frontcourt: Forward Tyrone Hill position. .
Outlook: Coach Doug Collins
(13 .8 ppg, 10.9 rpg) comes off an
arrives
with high hopes. But the
All-Star season. Chris Mills (12.3
Pistons,
who have averaged just 24
ppg) wants to shoot better. For
wins
a
year
for two seasons, still
what it' s worth, veteran swingman
must
learn
to
win.
Dan Majerle has been brought in.
Indiana
Pacers
Backcourt: Point guard Terrell
Frontcourt:
Rill:
Smits (17 .9
Brandon rejllaces departed Mark
ppg)
bas
become
one
of
the NBA's
Price. Brandon averaged 16.9 ppg
leading
centers.
Forward
Derrick
and 6.6 apg in 36 starts. Rookie McKey (13:3 ppg) has to improve
shooter Bob Sura may contribute his offense to match his defense.
· desperately need points.
Forward Dale Davis led Indiana
Outlook: Coach Mike Fratello with 9.4 rebounds per game.
d
·
d b d
Backcourt: Reggie Miller (19.6
nee s more sconng an re oun ing. Good luck. The loss of ailing ppg) is a go-to shooter who can bit
from up to 30 feeL But point guard
center Brad Daugherty really hurts.
Detroit Pistoris
Mark Jackson isn't one of the best.
Frontcourt: Swingman Grant
Outlook: The Pacers rely on
H'li
)
1 (19 ·9 ppg, 6·4 rpg, 50
coach Larry Brown's substantial
· apg
earned co-Rookie of the Year hon- abilities. But can be think of a way
ors. Forward Otis Thorpe brings to stop Chicago?
championship experience. Rookie
Milwaukee Buc~
center Tbeo Ratliff is known for
Frontcourt: It features Young
blocking shots.
Guns: Forward Glenn Robinson

MIDDLEPORT ALL·ST ARS -The Middleport All-Star Pony League team finished second
In the Middleport All-Star Tournament recently.
In front are (L-R) Roger Wood, Pat Martin, Zach
Meadows, Chuck Murray, Grant Huff, Aaron

Vanlnwagen a11d A.J. Vaughn. Behilld them are
Waylon McKinney, Justin Roush, Shane Leach,
Bobby Rupe, Nathan Hallhill, Jason Fields, Joe
Dillon and J.R. Varian.

Mrs. Audrey Hubbard, Longwood, Florida, bas been visiting
Dorsel Larkins and family.
Mrs. Alta Ballard hosted a get
together of Pythian Sisters at ber
home Monday, Oct. 23. Attending
were : Neva Metz, Geri Long,
Gwen Ne·Nhan, all of Wilkesville; .
Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Judy
Holter, and Melody Roberts.
Mr. and Mrs: Carroll Kimes
were called on recently by Mr. and
Mrs. Scott Miller and family, Belpre, and Becky Hastings and
daughters, Little Hocking.
Mrs. Mae McPeek was a recent
dinner guest of Ruth Stclhcm.
Mrs. Leah Clary of Glenwood,
recently spent a few days with her
sister and brother, Georgia Mount
and Emory Weekley. Also visiting
were: Larry and Jenny Berry,
Fairview, W.Va.; Betty Karr, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny ii:arr and family,
and James Mount, all of CircleviUe:

Savings

OHIO STEAK&amp;
BARBECUE CO.

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L!~.:.::~#_M.=.r~~~J

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&lt;&gt;

"I bad seen Mike eight days
ago 811d it showed signs of healing.'" Higgins said. "He sai~,be
wanted to fight, no matter wbal
"I thought I could sneak
!llrougb," Tyson said when asked
why be didn't call off the fight
wben be fii'SI burt the thumb. "I get
J!ilid to figbL"
.
. At the news conference earlier
iii the day, Tyson appeared rela;xed
gpd ready for the second fight m a
comeback from a four-Ye;lr layoff.

13 -

1

1

ONLY $30.00

TOPS raise
money for
recognition day

L-----------..1

raRi:AKi:'Asr-s"PE'Ci,\q

12 - 2 lbs. FrenQil Toast Sticks
3 - 1 lb. Bacon
1 Ibs. Sausage &amp; Gravy
so
Sausage Patties
120 Hashbrowns

Pomeroy
Marathon
Riverside
Food Mart

10:00 am to 4:00 pm

I

I

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I ONLY $65.00 II
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2 - 11 Fallers Sausage Roll

1

1

1 $10.00 purchase at our trucks. 1
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Coupon good with
1
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November 1995
1

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L~----------.J

It's FREE to Stop By &amp; Look!

Specials End November 30, 1995

FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED OR .. CASH
"NO PERSONAL CHECKS, PLEASE"

•...,,,.

The Community Calendn is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

WEDNESDAY
CliESTER - Chester Garden
Great-grandparents are Mr. and. Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Mrs. John Beaver, Pomeroy, and Chester United Methodist Churcb.
Mrs. Debbie Northup, Clifton, Therapy craft to be carried out and
W.Va., and Mr. and Mrs . Walter members to take glue gun and scissors.
Wears. Pomeroy .
SHANDI BEAVER

POMEROY Narcotics
Anonymous. 7 p.m. Wednesday at
the Sacred Heart Catholic church.
Helpline 1-800-766-4&lt;142.
SYRACUSE - "Caravan", a
Christian scouting program.
Wednesday night 7 p.m. to organize. Questions, call992-3517.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club. 2 p.m. Wednesday
home of Mrs. Chester Erwin.
RUTLAND ~ Rutland Town ship Trustees, Wednesday, 6Jl.m.
at Rutlan!l Fire Station . PUblic
invited.

day, 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Pomeroy.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
School District K-&amp; building committee meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at lhe high school. Public input is
sought and all district residents are
urged to attend.

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athletic Boosters, Thursda;•, 7 p.m. at
the high s.chool cafeteria.

POMEROY - Al-Anon, 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Au xil- Thursday at the · Sacred He art
iary of Tuppers Plains VFW, Post Catholic Church, Pomeroy.
905 3, will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at Lb e hall .
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602, 6:30 p.m. ThursSYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO. day, dinner to follow.
7 p.m. Thursday at Lbe school.
SATURDAY
CHESTER - A hymn sing will
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group · be held at th e Ches ter United
of Alcoholics Anonymous, Thurs- Methodist Church, Saturday, 7 p.m.

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE

Diet Coke or

coea Cola Classie
12-Pack 12-oz. Cans

1

Two 12-packs
per customer
at this price; please.

U.S. GRADE A FAMILY PACK (2-LBS. OR LARGER)

I

Donna Jacks and Brenda Darst
were top losers in the October
meetings of TOPS 570 (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) held at the Carpenters' Union Hall in Pomeroy.
Runners-up were Janice Curry
and Jean Thomas. In KOPS (Keep
off Pounds Sensibly) the top loser
was Linnie Belle Aleshire. Fruit
basket winners were Maggie Biggs,
Bernice Darst, and Maida Long,
while tht; winners of. the gad~et
gifts were Jean Thomas, Tma
Geary and Virginia Dean.
At the meetings programs were
carried out to raise money for the
Area Recognition Day program. At
the Oct. to meeting, reports
showed a total loss of 27 pounds, at
the Oct. 17 meeting total lost
weight was 7 pounds.
Articles on red meat were read
at one of the meetings. Plans were
made foc the Nov. 7 meeting when
lunch bags will be filled with diet
foolls of 300 .to 3509 calories. At
the Nov. 14 meeting, Dr. Nick·
Rollinson will speak on. weight
loss.

•

Boneless
Breast

u.s. #1

Round
Potatoes

Long Bottom
News Notes

__.s....-NOTICE

r----------,

-----Community calendar----

A total of i 3 students from
Meigs County are among the
125,000 students included in the
18th armual edition of The National
Dean's List, just published by Educational Communications, Inc.,
Lake Forest Illinois, who also publish Who's Who Among American
High School Students.
Students are selected for this
honor by their college deans, registrars or honor society advisors and
must be in the upper I 0 percent of
their class, on their school's dean's
list or have earned a comparable
honor.
Listed students are eligible to
compete for $30,000 in scholarship
awards funded by the publisher and
may also use a referral service for
future employment opportunities.
More than 2,500 colleges and
universities nationwide use the
publication to recognize their academically qualified students.
Local students selected and the
colleges they attend include: ·
Middleport: Tara M. Gerlach,
Marietta College; Pamela L. Zirkle,
Kentucky Cluistian College.
Pomeroy: Kevin A. Lambert,
Marietta College; Carrie R. Morrissey, Washington State Community
College; Natasba Szarka, Ohio
University; Sean L. Walton, Washington State Community College;
Jason M. Witherell. Marietta College; Susan R. Wolf, Ohio University.
Portland: Debra J. Tedford,
Washington State Community College.
Racine: Clarence A. Dugan,
Ohio Valley College.
Reedsville: S.teven R. Barnett,
"~bio University; Patricia K. Hay~ _
.an, Washingtoo State Community
~allege; Mark A. Murphy, Ohio
Jniversity.

(21.9 ppg) led all NBA rookies in
scoring. Vin Baker (17 .7 ppg, 10.3
rpg) made the All-Star team for the
first time. But center Eric Mobley
basn' t shown much.
Backcourt: Rookie Shawn Respert is a great outside shooter.
Point guard Eric Murdock (6.4 apg)
is sound. Swingman Todd Day (16
ppg) looks to score.
Outlook: Coach Mike Dunleavy
bas a youthful team on the
upswing. But the Bucks still aren' t
contenders. Yet.
Toronto Raptors
.
Frontcourt: Pivotman Oliver
Miller (280 pounds) is a big prob!J:m. He bas ro lose weight and gain
·mtensity. Carlos Rogers might be
Toronto's most talented (not
smartest) player.
Backcourt: Rookie point guard
Damon Stoudamire has a tough
position ro learn. He can shoot the
ball. Othef'1!uards: Willie Anderson and Jinuny King.
Outlook: Coach Brendan Malone is supposed to be good with
young players. He'd better be. This
expansion team is a pretty ragged
mix.
NBA Central final standings of
1994-95: INDIANA, 52-30;
CHARLOTTE, 50·32; CHICAGO,
47-35; CLEVELAND, 43-39;
ATLANTA, 42-40; MILWAUKEE, 34-48; DETROIT, 28-54.
Copyrigbtl995 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

veryopportunity
upset because
tbis . - - - - - - : - - - - - . . ; _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
was"I'm
a great
for me,"
said Mathis, who was to get
$800,000, by far his biggest paycheck. Tyson was to get $10 million.
"Hopefully, this opportunity
will rise up again and there will be
a Buster Mathis-Mike Tyson
fight."
John Horne, Tyson's co-manager, said lhe contract would be honored and that Tyson would fight on
Fox Network, which was ID telecast
Saturday night' s match.
At a news conference earlier in
the day, Mathis said be thought
Tyson was bluffing when be said
his band was sore. But Tuesday
night, at the annou~cement of the
1
SPECIAL #4
1
I
SPECIAL #1
I
postponement, he was no longer
I 12-4 OZ. Ribeve Steaks
I
skeP.tical.
16 - 8 OZ. T-Bone Steaks I
I
6
_8
oz.
T-Bone
Steaks
I
· 'I think this is real and I hope
18 - 6 oz. New York Strips I
I 10- Hot Do~s
I ~
everything will be all right with
1124 oz. Ribeye Steaks I
I
16aeet
Sizzlers
I
· 1.
this man," Mathis said.
1
32-4
oz
.
Hamburgers
:
I
ONLY
$40.00
I
Tyson's doctors, Gerald Higgins
1
Sibs. French Fries
·!!~"·
and Gary Marrone of Las Vegas,
I
I
· .. ·
L----~-----.1
I
6
~epperoni
Pizzas
I
""'(.
notified the MGM Grand at 4:10
p.m. PST that Tyson would not be
. I 12- Egg Rolls
1 '
able to fight.
I 2 lbs . Hot Wings
1
'
with
S
130.00
ptJIChase.
1 SPECIAL #2
1
. "In all r.torality, we can't let
1 14· Pizza Patties
1
I 8 · 6 oz . N.Y Strips
I
hitp participate in this fight," Hig1 92-Chicken Nuggets
1
I 12-4 oz . Pork Chops
I
gins said.
I 6Q- Sausage Patties
1
"The break is in the thumb
I 10- Mild Polish Sausage I
1 12· 4 oz . Pork Chops
I
!lftween the main joint and the tip
I 5 lb. French Fries
I
I 10- Mild Polish Sausage
I
of the lhumb," Marrone said.
I
I 10-Hot Dogs
I 20- Hash Browns
I
: 12- 4 oz. Ribeye Steaks
1
. Marrone said Tyson injured tbe
I 20- Hash Browns
I
1
12-4
oz.
Pork
Chops
1
thumb about three weeks ago and
:
ONLY $130.00
:
I 6 . Pepperoni Pizza
I
1 92- Chicken Nuggets
1
saw Marrone and H1ggms about
~ --- -- - ----- - -- ----- --- - ---- - ------ --- ---II ONLY $45.00
1 10-Mild Polish Sausage 1
two weeks ago. Marrone said be
Nov. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, &amp; 8th, 1995
: FREE TURKEY :
I 16-4 oz. Hamburgers
I
I -----·-----·----------------------aod Higgins thought the injury posI 5 Ibs. French Fiies
I
sibly could heal in time for the
fight, but X-rays Tuesday ''showed
I 2 lbs. Hot Wings
I
•
that the fracture that had begun to
I 6 - Pepperoni Pizzas
I
Jieal bad refractured.''
I 12- Egg Rolls
I

. T~e Daily Sentinel • Page 9

National
Dean's List
honors area
students

Rodman's arrival expected to spark Bulls; .Cavs get Majerle
BY HOWARD SINER

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

10-Lb. Bag

2/$
(50 Lb. Bag ... $5.99)

U-18 LB. AVO. FKESH "SILVER PtATTER"

Whole Bone-In
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•

�: Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

:Should three-night affair be a lifetime because of pregnancy
·

Ann
Landers

· soloVICationandengasedinldne·
night alfair with a man nine years
younger than me. Although be used
protection, something must have
gone wrong because I became

" 1995. Los Angela
T1tMS Syndicate and
CrM!Q Syndicate•

Dear ADD LaDders: The pressure
· of five years of trying 10 conceive 8
child IUrlled our once-happy marriage
into 8 bauleground. The lension was
so thick you could cut it with a knife.
· After several major squabbles,
"Mack" and I decided we needed
some time apart 10 sat things out We
agreed 10 separate vacations, and
that's when it happened. I had a
temporary lapse of judgment on my
'

..

pregnant.
Mack and I RCOtCiled lriefly when
I returned, but we scparalcd again
when I found out I was expecting.We
discussed gcuing back together and
raising the child (whiclt be knows is
not his), but I am afraid since our
marriage was so shaty before, the
stress of parenthood would be
ovawbclmingforbimandevcntually
we would divorce ..yway. I love
Mack, but we have beeD in
COWiseling for two years, and our
relationship isn' one bit beuet

Hit.tumsoutthatthe21·yeat'Oid · In my opinion, it wu totally
is lbe baby's ~you must tell him. jinapproprille for Elliot 10 have put
He may appreciate being let jmy wife on the spot like that. I •
completely oll" the book, but then ltold Lorcua tball.believe it iS litk
apin, be jtlll might w..t to be part and pc:rvatcd for 1 man 10 take out
my m,outh abut and avoided · of the child's life. In any event, you lbemotberofaWOIIIIIIbeoncedaled.
complicating his life. I 8111 flll8llcially must give him thaloptioll. Good luck. She said I wu aazy. Am !?Ia it not
able 10 raise the child on my own
Dear ADD Laliden: I have been ~fora mother and a daughta"
(even without my husband's support), married to "Loretta" for two ye~~~. to have a romantic relationship with
but I believe a baby deserves a fathel: - Before we met, abc was romantically the same guy?
If my husband and I don't reconcile, involved with 1 man who wu 25
I think my mother-in-law should be
should I expect this young man 10 years Ita senioc She met him when embarrassed taking up with a man
assume patemal responsibility or go abc was a student in law IChoolllld who was almost her son-in-law. I
it on my own? ~ M. IN LOS ANGE· broke up with him five years ago. would like to see your opinion in
LES
Thisman(l1lc:allhimEI!iot)rcoclllly print, Ann. ··MORAL IN MISSDEAR M.: The farst thing you must phoned Loretta and inquired if it OURI
·
do is establish the child's paternil}l would be OK to IISit her mother out.
DEAR MISSOURI: Your mother·
There is an outside chance that it (Her mother bas been widowed for in-law should 1101 be expected to run
could be your husband's.
two years and is quite auracfive.)
her social calendar by you or anyone
DolbavunobligatinniOtellmy ·

VIICilioo (JIItDCr that I 8111 pregDIIIl
with his child? He ia only 2l,llld I
am lrying 10 convillce myaclf tball
would be doin&amp; him a favor if I kept

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Beat of the Bend ...

Family
Medicine.

by Bob Hoeflich

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Avice Frecker of Columbus, a
former Meigs resident, wrote seeking information about a documentary being prepared by a Los Angeles, Calif., producer about the 1935
Ohio State-Notre Dame football
game.
It just happens that Meigs Common Pleas Court Judge Rick Crow
is knowledgeable about the activity
and has handed along some information about the project and so for
Avice and others interested here is
the dope.
As you probably know by this
time, Fred Crow, a member of the
1935 Ohio State team, accompanied by his sons, Rick and Carson,
did get to this year's game between
Ohio State and Notre Dame, the
first in 60 years'.
Fred was on camera for about a
half hour in the Fawcett Center in
quarters assi.gned to Vincent
Gratzer, the Los Angeles producer,
being interviewed about the 1935
contest. Of course, others of the
1935 team were interviewed.
Gratzer is calling his film documenlary, 'The Game of the Century." Whether it will be available for
public consumption. I have no idea.
However, here is Gratzer's address
in case any of you want to drop an
inquiry to him: 917 Larabee St.,
Suite 66, Los Angeles, Calif. ,
90069. His phone number is listed
as 310-657-7701 if any of you are
up to attempting a call through to
him.
Following Fred's interview, be
and his sons were welcomed into
an adjoining room where highlights
of the 1935 contest were being
shown.
_
By ille way. is there anyone who
doesn't admire Fred's fortitude in
plowing ahead with life despite
such se rious illnesses? He has
spent over the past 20 days at University Hospital in Columbus, most
of which were spent in intensive
care. He was placed in room 1084
at that hospital last Friday.

And out Chester way, members
of th e Chester Fire Department
Auxiliary will be staging their
annual steak dinner at the fire sta; tion from 4 to 6:30p.m. this Satur-

day. You can get your complete
meal including dessert for $5. At
that price, there "ain't" no reason
to do a lot of cookin'.
Thank you for remembering
Garnet Ervine on her recent birthday . Garnet received I 00 cards
marking the occasion and was just
delighted. You're nice! You made
her day.
Garnet sent along a cute little
poem. author unknown, from her
collection and I want to pass it
along to you since many of us
probably share the same feelings
about the "house" as the years roll
along.
You Tell Me I Am Getting Old
You tell me I am getting old. I
tell you that's not so.
The "house" I live in is worn
out. and that, of course, I know.
It's been in use a long, long
while; it's weathered many a gale,
rm"really not surprise!! you
think it's getting somewhat frail.
The color changing on the roof,
the windows getting dim,
The walls a bit transparent and
looking rather thin,
The foundation not so steady as
once it used to be,
My "bouse" is getting shaky,
but my "bouse" isn't me.
My few short years can't make
me old. I feel I'm in my youth,
Eternity lies just ahead, a life of
joy and truth,
I'm going to live forever there,
life will go on-it's grand,
You tell me I am getting old.
You just don't understand.
The dweller in my little "bouse"
is young and bright and gay,
Just starting on a life to last
throughout eternal day,
You only see the outside which
is all that most folks see,
You tell me I am getting old.
You've mixed my "house" with
me.
And how's the weather change
affecting your sinuses, Bunky. Not
enough, I hope , to prevent you
keep smiling.

---

'

~ Whoopi Goldberg chosen
~ as
•

1996 Oscars hostess

~
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
• - Whoopi is back on tap for the
•• Oscars.
The actress was selected by
:
• Quincy Jones, who is replacing Gil
~ Cates, the producer of the past six
~ Oscar shows.
•
"I'm back and I'm thrilled,
~ honey," Goldberg said in a state~ ment " Thank you, Quincy."
'
Goldberg, whose film credits
:include "Ghost" and "Sister
: Act." presided over the 1994
: Academy Awards ceremony.

;
Public Notice
; Notice of Election on Tax
• Levy In Exceoe of the Ten
Mill Limitation
Revleed Code, Seclona
: asot.tt(G), 570!' 19, 5705.25
• Notice Is hereby given
' tha4 In pursuance of a
: Resolution of the Board of
·Township Trustees of the
:Townohlp of Olive ,
·Reedsville, Ohio, paeeed on
'the 4th day of August, 1995
:there wllf be eubmlned to a
·vote of the people of uld
:subdivision at a General
·Election to be held In the
:Township of Olive, Ohio, at
.the regular places of voting
" t~ereln, on the 7th day of
: November, 1995 , the
· question of levying 8" tax, In
: eiccees of the ten mill
· llml..tlon, lor the benefit of
·Olive Township for the
: pUrpose of Fire protection.
Slid tax being: Arenewal of
an ~xlsting tax of 1.5 milia.
st a rate not exceedlng 1.5
nillle for each one dollar of
valuation, which amount to
111teen cents {$0.15) lor
eilch one hundred dolla111 of
1111 tu81lon, lor live (5) yeen.
. : The Polls lor uld
Election will open at 6:30
ci'clock a.m. and remain
open unill 7:30 o'clock p.m.
ofalldday.
•
By order of the Board of

Last year, the honor wimt to
David Letterman. who received
mixed reviews and was not asked
to return.
Jeff Margolis will direct the
ABC show for the eighth consecutive year, the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences
announced Tuesday.
Jones, a seven-time Oscar nominee, was awarded the 1994 Jean
Hersholt Humanitarian Award by
the Academy's Board of Governors.

•

'

.else.

' If Elliot is 2S years older than
Loreua. be is far beuer suiaed age.
wile for Ita mother. So wbydol)'t you
keep your oar out of Ita watu and
MYOB?
Gem of the Day: Many people
would have fatter wallets if they
removed all the acdit cards.
When pltutnlng a wedding, wlro
pays for whoJ? Who slalldS" whe1111?
'The AM lAtulers Gaitk for Brides"
1uu all the a~rs. Send a rdf·

addressed, long. b11slness-slze
envelope aNl a checlor ffiOMY Olfkr
for $3.75 (this includes postage twl
handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann
l..andtrs. &lt;P.O. Box 11562, Chicago.
Ill. 6061].()562.

.Study finds fish in diet
'beneficial in preventing
sudden cardiac death

The studies differed in two key
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
ways,
Siscovick said. The Seattle
If D..
0
AP Medical Writer
no,
Jon
h C. '"
study
focused on cardiac arrest
Associate Professor
1
CHICAGO (AP) - The latest
of Family Medicine
study to explore the slippery ques- rather than overall heart disease,
lion of whether eating fisb .reduces which was the chief concern of the
the risk of heart disease found that Harvard study.
Also, the Seattle study explored
Question: I know a number of cal devices tbat warm the blood of it does - in modest quantities at,td
the value of eating some fish compeople that are having stomach and those who have hypothermia by for a certain type of the illness.
The study found that people pared to eating none, rather than
intestinal problems. I suspect that passing it through a special, lowwbo ate the equivalent of three the Harvard report's focus on eat·
this is caused by using microwave intensity microwave oven.
Individuals who are exposed to ounces or salmon a week were only ing more versus eating less.
ovens. Do you think microwave
In the new study, "modest"
very
large amounts of microwave half as likely to be stricken with
ovens are safe?
amounts
of seafood coniaining two
cardiac
arrest
as
those
who
ate
no
can
sustain
eye
damage.
radiation
Answer: Microwave ovens bave
fish.
key
omega-3
oils were sufficient.
This
problem
is
seen
most
often
in
become a standard fixture in most
people
who
worked
with
early
he
said.
Results
are
published
in
American kitchens. Despite their
The oils are unique to fish, and
ubiquitous nature. many people radar units and didn't obey safety Wednesday's issue of The Journal
don't understand the way they heat regulations. The eye is particularly of the American Medical Associa- are especially plentiful in salmon.
herring, mackerel and anchovies.
food. But to give you a short prone to microwave damage tion.
The findings may seem to con· To a lesser degree, they are present
answer, microwave ovens are quite because it has less ability than
safe. In fact, they are responsible · other organs 10 remove excess heat. flict with a well-publicized study in oysters, sardines, rainbow trout,
Let me emphasize that I'm talk· this spring by Harvard researchers, albacore tuna and other fish and
for many fewer injuries than con,
ing
about really huge doses of who found that men who ate fish shellfish.
ventional ovens.
Two three-ounce servings of
Conventional ovens beat our microwave radiation to produce several times a week were just as
likely to have heart trouble as those albacore tuna provide as much of
foOd by raising the temperature of these eye problems.
who ate fish Qnce a month.
.
the oils as one three-ounce serving
the air around it. Gas or electricity
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
"(But) we view these results as , of salmon.
is used to heat the air within the column. To submil questions,
Dr. Alberto Ascherio, who
oven, and then the hot air transfers wrile to John C. Wolr, D.O., complemenwy and not ·in conflict
with earlier findings," said the lead beaded the Harvard study, agreed
beat to the food.
Ohio University College or OsteoMicrowave ovens beat our food pathic Medidne, rosvenor Hall, author of the new study, Dr. David that the Seatt]e research compleS. Siscovick of the University of ments rather than contradicts his
using a totally different method. Athens, Ohio 45701.
Washington
in Seattle.
own.
Electromagnetic energy, such as
radio waves, comes in a variety of
frequencies . It is the variation in
these that allow us to have many
radio and television stations. Obviously, these invisible radio waves
carry energy that easily passes
through the air, but not through
large buildings or through the
earth. In the case of a radio wave.
the variation in its energy is amplified and converted into the sound
we hear.
In microwave ovens the electromagnetic energy is typically gener·
'
ated at the frequency of 2450
megahertz(MHz), or 2450 million
cycles per second, as com pared to
FM radio that uses frequencies
from 88 to I 08 MHz. When electromagnetic energy at this frequency strikes water, the molecules
absorb the energy and become hotter in the process. The microwaves
don't heat the air. Instead, they
pass on through it as radio waves
do . In other words, microwave
ovens cook by selectively heating
Lhe water within the food. This, in
no way. damage s the food or
makes it radioactive.
Since we humans are about 85
percent water, it is reasonable to
question the health risks posed by
exposure to microwave radiation.
Many studies have been done to
look into this question. The early
ones were conducted by the government because microwave frequency radio waves are what
makes radar work. The military
e
application of very powerful
microwave radar can cause harm to
&amp;
humans. Stepping in front of one of
these is proportionally about like
putting a mouse in your kitchen
microwave. Poof! Boiled person or
McBucks For Education is a fundraiser designed to share
mouse. ActuaUy, the beating of the
water within our bodies, when
McDonald's committment to education with Local Youth Groups within
within reasonable limits, poses no
our Schools, Churches, 4-H, FFA, Scout Groups and other Non-Profit
serious risk. In fac~ there are mediYouth Groups.
· ·

....,fM,..,.....,!!l!;;,.,,......,...,.,,........,...,..,,..."""_""""""'

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Elections, of Meigs Counly, mills at a rate not exceeding Cheater, Ohio, at the regular
Ohio 2 (two) mills lor each one places ol vollng therein, on
Henry L. Hunter dollar of valuation, which tho 7th day of November,
Chairman amounts to twenty cent• 1995, the question of
Dated Sept 11, 1995 ($0.20) lor each one levying a tax, In excesa of
Rita D. Smith hundr.,ed dollars of the ton mill limitation, lor
Director valuation, lor flve (5) years. the benefit of Cheater
(10) 11 ,18, 25 (11) 1 41c
The Polio lor oald Townohlp for the purpose of
Election will open at 6:30 maintaining and operating
_ _!P:..;U::b::l.:.:iC:.;N:,:O::.t:.:.iC:::e:__ o•clock A.M. and remaIn c::emeterlea.
1
NOTICE OF ELECTION
open until 7:30 o"olock P.M. Said lax being:'
of said day.
A replacement of a tax ot
ON TAX lEVY IN EXCESS Dated Sept.11: 1995
1 mill at • rate not
OF THE TEN MILL
By order of the exceeqlng
1 (one) milia lor
LIMITATION
Board of Etectlono, of each one dollar of
Revised Code, Sections
Meigs County, Ohio. valuation, which amounta to
3501 .11(G), 5705.19,5705.25
Henry L. Hunter, Chairman ten cento ($0.10) lor. each
Notice Ia hereby given
Blta D. Smith, Director one hundred doltart of
that In purauanco of a
) 4TC
0
11
valuation, lor nve (5) years.
Reoolutlon of tho Village (I ) • 18• 25 ; (! 1 1;
The Polle lor oald
Council of the Village of
Public Notice
Election will open at 6:30,
Rutland, Rutland, Ohjo,
o'clock A.M. and remain
passed on the 11th day 91
NOTICE OF ELECTION
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
1995
July,
there will be ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS oloald day.
submitted to e vole of the
OF THE TEN MIU
Dated Sept. 11, 1995
people of uld subdlvlolon
LIMITATION
By order of the
st a General Election to be
Revloed Code, S.Ctlono
Board of Electlono, of
hold In the Village of 3501 i
Meigs County, Ohio.
Rutland, Ohio, at the regular
· 1(G), 5705.19,5705.25
Notice Ia hereby given
Henry L Hunter, Chairman
places of voting therein, on that In pursuance of a
Rita D. Smith, Director
the 7th day of November, Reootutlon of the Board of (10) 11, 18, 25; (11) 1;4TC
1995, the question of Truoteeo of the Township of
levying a tax, In excees of Ch
Ch
o 1
the ten mill limitation, for • Hter,
eater, h 0 '
paoood on the 8th day of
the benefit of Rutland August, 1995 there will be
\
VIllage lor the purpose of oubmltted to a V\)le of tho
current expenon.
people of laid oubdlvlolon
Said
..
x
being:'
An additional In of 2 at a Genera I EJ-~11
"" on Io. be
held In the Township of
I

.

November 1 1995

Wednesday, November 1, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Everyorte ~ Invited
To ,S upport Your
Local Youth Groups.

:First Presbyterian
~ church marks 125 years
..

More than a hundred persons
tu~ed out Sunday tor the I 25th
; annaversary celebration of the Farst
._: PresbytenanCburcbofSyracuse.
·
The prelude was gtven by
_ il~anor ~cKelv~y. with the Rev.
ns ~obmson gtvmg the call to
worsbap. The welcome from the
host church was presented by ~ar,.. garet Cot~ll. clerk or the Sessaon,
wa.th gr~etmgs from the Presbytery
. bemg gaven by Paul McCalla, mod·
erator of the Presbytery of Scioto
Valley .• ~stber Ha~de~. had an
· anthem, It ts No Secret, and the
"' Syracu.se Church's Choir sang "His
:. Name ts Wonderful."
. · The prayer for illumination was

from

McDonald's

Ripley, Spencer, Ravenswood, WV

Pomeroy, OH

Your local McDonald's R~staurants in R,ipley, Spencer,
Ravenswood, WV &amp; Pomeroy, OH will donate five cents (.05) of each
dollar spent in the restaurants (minimum $3.00 purchase), to any
Educational Youth Group.
The promotion will begin November 1, 1995 and run through
February 29, 1996. Redemption will be accepted in the local
McDonald'!· restaurants March 1-15, 1996. Presentation of checks will
be the week of March 25, 1996.

PARTICIPATION RULES
1. Ask for your McBucks (with arry $3.00 minimum purchase) at your
local McDonald's as you PUCE YOUR ORDER and BEFORE 11fE
REGISTER DRAWER Q.OSES.
2. We invite you to rna!«:' a poster to luJng in your local McDonald's
rest~urant to announce your partic~pation. Encourage your friends,
jam1ly and members of your comnum1ty to share in the fun "and support
your youth group by saving McBucks For FAucation.

3. Wrap your McBucks For Education in bundles of 100 ($5.00 value)
and redeem your McBucks March 1-15, 1996 at your local McDonald's
Restaurant in Ripley, Spefl!;er, Ravenswood, WV and Pomeroy, OH.

Once again,Calvin Klein
.ads are drawing heat ·

given by Marvin McKelvey with
Cindy Burkharner reading a Psalm
Jobn Redovian reading from John.
15 and the Middleport church's
choir sing"Precious Memories"
"Carry Out Your Vision'; was
the sermon topic with Rev. Will
Browne Associate, executive Presbyter making the address to the
congregation. Betty Lowery of the
Harrisionville Church sang, 'The
Love of God."
There was recognition of longtime members, a pastoral prayer,
and prayer of dedication before the
meeting adjourned to a dinner
served on the lawn.

Meigs retired
teachers meet

NEW YORK (AP) - Calvin
Klein is back on the wrong side of
underwear P.R. with a new ad campaign featuring a well-muscled
young man clad only in briefs, his
legs spread wide to show off his
crotch. ,
"This Is nothing more than
pornography," said Donald Wild·
man, head of the American Family
Association. He said Tuesday his
organization wiU ask consumers 10
boycott Klein products.
· The ad is on the back covers of
the November issue of Esqui:e and

EASTMAN'S

Concern about health care was
:, aired at the recent meeting of the
Meigs County Retired Teachers
beld Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
It was noted that the State
Teachers Retirement System is
making changes in their current
offerings~some being HMC''I.
There are limited choices tor
retired teachers in Meigs County, it
was pointed out, with most teachers
in Meigs County feeling they are
'better off with. the State Teacher
Retirement System's plan which
they now have. Various members
expressed concern about Medicare
and what will happen with the new
proposals being discussed by
Congress .
Also discussed was proposed
.legislation which is being sponsored by Ohio Retired Teachers
Association to raise pensions of
long-time retirees . ORTA states
that 25 percent of Ohio's retired
teachers receive a monthly pension
of less than $1,000. Last yeaf's
newly retired teachers receive an
average of slightly over $2,000 per
month.
An additional issue before the
group was a suggestion to raise
local dues from $2 to $3 a year.
This issue will be put to a vote at
the Nov. II meeting.
After the luncheon Martha
Greenaway gave a humorous
monologue, "The Substitute Parson."
c Joe Young. a local World War ll
_veteran, will be speaker at the Nov.
41 meeting to be held at Trinity
t:burcb. There will also be group
:J;inging of World War II songs lead
:J!y two of our members, Maxine
Whitehead and Abbie Stratton.
:Retired teachers are urged to
ltttend. Luncheon reservations are
Jo be made by calling 742-214l.
,.be program will begin at 12:45
p.m.

our

•

Check with us for all of your Holiday Party Tray needs,
Fruit Baskets, gift certifieates and special orders.

FOOD LAND

WESTOVER

SWIFT
Plump NTender

Cottage Cheese

1

Turkey Breast
5lb.Avg.

24oz.
ctn.

LB.

..
'·

Foodland

food\and Vegetables
14.5- 15.25
oz. cans

s

CHIQUITA

Bananas

..
JIP

(

\.

Holly ·
~hic~en Le,g
.:Quar.ter~s'

,f':''
,. •.: '

&lt;

'··~

f.&lt;'

~

Gr~de '

A,

16o~
pkg.

:·
MILITARYNEWS
:: Marine Pvt. Shawn E. Tippie
rt¥ently completed basic training at
Mllrine Corps Recruit Depot, San
Diego, Calif.
: Tippie successfully completed
11 weeks of training designed to
cljarlenge new Marine recruits both
pilysically and mentally.
:. Tippie is a 1992 graduate of
~xander High School. ,

$ 39

MADD MEETING
Jerry and EDen Rought and Pat
Thoma of the Meigs Chapter of
Mothers Against Drunk Driving
attended the fall state representative meeting at the Truman Hotel in
COiombus Satwllay.
• Diana Sparks, stale board memIIU and a legal assistant al the law
fum of Baker and Hosttetler of
Colti!Dbus wlll be present for the
cancileligbt vigil of the Meigs
Chapter to be held Thunday at the
village municipal build!ns in
Pomeroy. The .public invited to

·l

1m

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Boneless Chuck Roasts
Buy One, Get One

Bob Evans
Farm Sausage

.

1 lb.
rolls
We

2°/o Milk
89

Fresh
TAMARACK FARMS
Apple Cider

s .99
Pepsi
99:
s
Products
24 pack
Cube

LB.

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON GOOD THRU 11 /4

'

attend the ~rvance, 7 10 9 p.m.

lbs.

10,1bl!. &amp;

ATTENDS WORKSHOP
:.- Stacie Reed, left, and Bran:dl Meadows attended a rour·
•day Josten's yearbook camp
:at DenlsoD University in
:GranvUie. They are co-editors
:or the 19911 Marauder year·
•book. During the camp tbey
:learned how to design covers,
'urange layouts and plan
:sports, student and activity
;pages. The 19911 Marauder
· ,-earboob can be ordered at
Meigs High School rrom N9v.
. :CS to Nov. lO ror $l0. After the
')ale ·the yearbook will be $25.
Name engraving is $3 extra
and plastic covers are u
extra.

. Society
~ scrapbook

the December issue of Playboy.
The designer. long known for
risque ads, did not return calls for
comment
In August, a farestorm of criticism from Wildman and other
groups forced Klein to cancel a
jeans campaign that featured
unknown models, some as young
as 15, in provocative poses and set.
tings.
'
The Justice Department is investigating whether the ads broke
child pornography laws .

ea uarters

Plastic
Gallon

Over $22,000 Raised In The Past
3 Years For Local Youth Groups.
MeBueks
For
Education

The

EASTMAN~s

Herr's

(

Assorted Pretzels
and
9-11 oz.
Asst. Tortillas bag

Fresh Baked

Apple Pies
BIG BEND

~~S
pkgs.

�.

•••
~

•
•

·~

Wedn~sday, November 1, 1995

'"

: ~P-ag_e_1_2_•_T_h_e_D_a~i~ly~S~e=n~tl~n~ei~------------------~-----------P-o_m_e_ro~y_•_M_I_dd_l~e~po=rt~,~O=h~lo~------------------~~~ed~n~es=d~a~y~,N-o_v_e_m_be
__
r_1~,1-9_9~5:,
'

.

•

..-..

·:

-

'.

'

T~e Dally Sentinel • Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport,. Ohio

..

Quan ti')' Rights Reserved

EHectlv~

Thru Saturday November

4~:

1995

Day·

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Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Blade or
7 Bone Beef

Computer Service

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

.

- ~--------------------------------------~~------------------------------------------------------------------------,

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERY

MODERN SANITATION

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

•• • We Redeem Federal food Stamps ·

Prices

Betzing's

·,J:,Ml,. 1m&lt;

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

15" LARGE
PEPPERONI
Only $6.99
992-6344
Dine-In or Carry-out

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418

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

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.

992-9923
10% Discount w/Ad

Howard L. Writesel

11 0

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts

Jresfr. - Si{f;_]fowers
[jift 'Bas~ts for a{{ occasions
Stujfit-'Ba[foons Jfot Jtir 'Ba[{oons
Singing 'Tefegrams
Jree U!ca[ i elivery
Satisf action guarantee/

~

State Rt. 33 .
Darwin , Ohio

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
( No

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior

Take the pain out of
painting. Let us do it lor
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After6 p.m.
614-985-4180

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions
~ New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exlerior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Phio

Sunday Calls)

Starlmg November 6, 1995
5 1/2 Week Course
Prepare for State Nurse
Aide Certification Test
The Adult Education
Center
Tri·County Vocational SchOOl
Nelsonville. OH 45764
Call (614) 753·3511 or
1-800-637 ·6508

Spread

~-·

~diapp¥ t6th
Bizthda¥
;Jessica
Mom, Dad, &amp; Wesley

51b.Bag

Using ll~r Clnssi/itd'
Is as Easy as .. .

BUY ONE - GET ONE

~~
CLASSIFIEDS

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

Limit 1 Pkg. Free

liu.t &amp;: 1'1Ji.u Urt1~LUm
'A. 0.. r3.o4 443
&amp;iland, (JAW. 45775

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recores Available

(614) 742-2630

Call for Low Prices
742·3212
Turn on Depot St. In

1-900-255-8585
Ext. 7969
'2. 99 per min.
Mu sl be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Sery U (61 9) 645·8434

ARE YOU
READY FOR .
ROMANCE •

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,

1-900-255- 1515
Ext. I064
.
2. 99 per min. Must .
be 18 yrs. or older •

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

Bill Slack

Call or write for a
free price guide.

8/1 011 mo.

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

Misc. Jobs.

• 95 Varieties

Rullend 1.2 miles.

Beautiful Girls
Exciting!!!
Passionate!!!
Talk ITo '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

Tou ch-tone phone •
required. Se rv -U

992·2269

(6 19) 645-8434

Help Wanted
Happy Ad

u.s. No. 1• Idaho Baking

Tony's Portable
Welding

......

Insurance Work Welcome

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-6223

Free Estimates

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

J&amp;L INSULATION

Nurse Aide/ Home Care
Provider

BULLETIN BOARD
17° column Inch weekdays
1900 column Inch Sunday
0

651).1234

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

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
Umeslone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
• Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138
Are you looking for
, love;
Longterm
relationship?
1-900-255,1515
Ext. 1064
$2.99/Min .
Must be 18Yrs.
Touchtone Phone
Required Ser-U
(61g) 645-8434

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

10-10-95

Abiding Concrete Construction
Commercial and Residential
Dri veways, Patios, Slabs. Parking lots, Curbs &amp; Guuers
Side walks, Porches, Tear-out and Replacement

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville, OH 45772

When your boat needs servi,ed...

Come See The Boat Professionals!
Check with us lor detaHs.
8EF1VIC[ IS
EVERYTHI\IG

y.... Touc:h·tone pltone req .

s..,.u (619) "S·B4l4

LJISCr

VnlvJ

Pent&lt;J

Oh1C

!'hoe 992·6520 Hrs. M·S S:D0-6:00

Ext. 9106
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone phone
required.
Serve-U

Today!!
Call the dateline

1-900·255-1515
Ext. 9789

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

Touch -t one

~.Jj- Tre~tment

rv .

Equ1pment

· Di3tributed by

participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH. .
Please call RainSofl at 992-4472 or HI00-606·3313
to set u our free water anal sis. 101!111n

phon e required
Serv -U

(6 19) 645 -8434

t. Top Pies

Craft Fair Nov. 3rd

-P umpkin, Cherry,
, Apple or Peach

9-5 Pm At
Rejoicing Life Church
Middleport

Sponsored by ··
Rejoicing Life School
Refreshments provided
by R.L.C.S.
· Prizes iven away
every houri

26 oz. Box

BUY ONE - GET ONE

3rd Annual Beauty Control
Cosmetics

Holiday Open House
Nov. 4th, 12 noon-6 pm

I'

Kyger Creek Employee Club House
SR 7 North,Cheshlre, Ohio

Limit 1 Pie Free

I
•I

Roun·d
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.
Call
614-949-2512

HOCKINGPORT

MOBILE
-HOME PARK

We have the
best window
and the best
price

ALLVOURBOW
HUNTING NEEDS.
•Bows •Arrows
•Deer scents

Mobile home
sites for rent
614-667-3630
1G'11195 1mo. 1)(1.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Solid Vinyl
Replacement
Windows

AftEN'riOII
BOWBDNTERS

•Deer calls
.Clothing and much more
JOE'S .
SpORTING GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL HALL
Anllqulty, Oh.

RO.BERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Gl!rages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

614·949-2906 101511 mo

712'2194

BIB ROOnND and
-: CONSTRUCftON
(614) 992·5041
Residential • Commercial • Industrial

ONE CAIJ. DOES IT A.LI.
•Pressure
•Plumbing
•Tile
Cleaning
-carpentry
-carpet
•Roofing
•Painting
•Drywall
-Gutters
•Cabinets
-Masonry
•Electrical
•Siding ,
•Decks
We Have Emergency Services
7 Days A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all worlc guaranteed.
"Fall Spaclals" Leaves cleaned up and haulad
away. Moat yards $49.00
GuHera cleaned and aeraenad,
most 1 story homes, $49.00.
OHIO- WEST VIRGINIA - KENTUCKY t0/511 mo.

Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Questions •
1-900-255-0200
Ext. 6993
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

..

9f1 4195 2 mo. pc(

Meet Your
Special

Someone

.

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434 :

10126/95

The water treatment company cordially invites you to

•

1·900-884-9204
Ext. 2912

(619) 645·8434

Call your date now
1-900-255- 151 5
Ex t. 147 1
2.99/min .
Must be 18 y rs.

Water

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORE!!!

1-900-255-4242

52.99/min. 18+
Touch -Tone
ReqUtred.Serv·U
(61 9)64 5·8434

SERVICES
Ktn Sr• .list off Rt. 124, Syr-e, OH

ROMANCE

$2.99 per min. Mult be 18

Mere

WHERF

••••••
DATES
Companionship
1-900-255-1515
ht. 8583

Doug Crites
614/667-6825

LOOKING
FOR LOVE?

(Lime Stone Low Rates) .
.

'.

WICKS .
HAULING .

..
...

(Speclllze In driveway:
spreading)
Limestone,
.
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil,

Fill Dirt:•

614-992-3470 :

.

•
NEFF REMODELING •

..
..•

SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath .
Remodeling
•
•
Room Addlllons
Siding, Roofing, Patios :•
Reasonable
Insurers· Experienced •
Call Wayne Neff 9924405
For Free Estimates •

..
.
..

...

4113195 •

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

•

•

•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

ROOFING ·
NEW-REPAIR

1121tln

BUY ONE - GET ONE

""""

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Allu ring Sc ents
:?71 Nor th Second Avenue
M1ddlcport. Oh 1o -l5760
992-4548

21 12192/tln

397 West Main St.,
Pomeroy
Under new management
New equipment

18 oz. Box

949·2512

REASONABLE RATES

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

HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

5/16194 TFN

Premier Cleaners
and Coin Laundry

Post

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

949-2168 '
On Site Dry Cleaning
Now Available

BUY ONE - GET ONE

Cheaper Rates

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

For Free estimate call

949-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

NOW OFFERING GEN ERAL HAULING

012211 mo.

1 lb. Bag

lb. Qtrs.

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

DAILY
HOROSCOPE :
· Up-To-Date :
Soap Results :

CALL NOW!!! :
1-900-3 78-180it
Ext. 6H5
$2.99 per min. Must be 18 :
yr.. Touch-tone phone req. •

S.~V·U

(6t9) 64S·84H •

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M~
12 GUI!t•

faclory Choke Only
Bashan Bulldlnt
9.'.27195

..•

I

�r: ·Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

~ wednesday, November 1t 1995

·~ ALLEY"()()~ ·
"'

~

......
...

''t.::

BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

ANNOUNCEMENTS

:Tr........................--.1
t•

Personals

•~

..

~andsome We ll Bu ilt 0 B M 43

• •S 1 ,~

190 lbs IS 0 A!! ract1Ve

~emale

} :

Shm To Med1um Bwld For

'.Fnendsh1p Pos s, ble More Race

, .()pen 614 36 7 0559
f

~ .. ~tve grhed psy ch1c answers yo ur
• ·personal gueS! iOOs Sensahona l
r .•esull5 1 900 255 0100 e• r
4
6755 $3 99 m1n 1 1B~ To uch tone
• ·~hone requ 1rea SERV U 619
• ~ 645 8434

Charotars Lake Beautrful 2 25
Acre Lot Ou1et DeSifabte Ne1gh
borhood Aestr~cted $24 500 304

273 0136 304 273 2940

N 3rd Ave M rddlepor¥•1 bed
room tur n shed Depos 1 8 refer
ences 304 682 2566

FrOJe acres
aerator near
Rac1ne $16 000 can lrnance Wllh
hall down 614 949 2025

New Haven ! bedroo m !urn1shed
wlwasher &amp; dryer Depo s• t &amp; rei
erences 304 B82 2566

lot s No 368 &amp; 37B 22 Plum St
Make An Oller B12 247 3985

Nrce ctean ground lloor 2bed
room W10 hookup Oeposrt Rei
erences No pets 304 675 5162

Me1gs County Co lumtlra Town
sh1p Mt Unron Rd !TownShiP Rd
141 3 m1les south of Ca r penter
31 acres loJ $23 970 Owner lr
nanc1ng Call lor good map 614

.... Meet You r M arco 1 900 255
1515 $299M n Ex t 7777 Mu sr
• Be 18 Yea rs Touch Tore Phone
ReqUired Serv U 619 645 6434

593 8545

Scen1c Valley Apple Grove
beauulut 2ac tots , public water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

Announcements

ALZHEIMEAS PATIENTS ca ed

RENTALS

lor m pnvate nome Experenced

Call Xl4 762 2544

40

410 Houses for Rent

Giveaway

a ma le yell ow 1ong

ha1rea ktltens
] wks old hUe• tra1ne-d 304 458

"We're a week too late. The only way we'll see
leaves now 1s dr1v1ng to the c1ty dumpl"

2439
Female Husky 10 gooa nor"lc omy
WICO!Idren 614 24 7 3 l 01

90

Frrcwood To G vcaway Needs To
Be Sa wee Trees Is Al ready
Down 6t4 37~9061

Wanted to Buy

Waml:'d To Buy L1 11e Trkes TOf S
614 245~ 5887

Kr11ens 614 36 7 0500
Mr)(ed Beag le 1yr old Shots &amp;
spaved fema le to good home on
farm onlv 304 675 4650

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Par! Germa ~ Shepherd Golden
Ret,eoer &amp; Lao m"eo pupp•es
!o goodhome 614 367 7251

110

pas !I ons Hrr rng men wo men
Free room board W II tra rn Call
24hrs
40 7 875 20 22
e~T

0505C43

Wood 1Coa l Furnace Oe srgned
Fo r Ba sement Used Ro ohng
Shrngtes 614 441 0558

60

$35 000 IYR IN CO ME Pote ntrat
Readrng Books Tolt Free ( 1) 000
898 9778 A 2814 For Dera ls

Lost and Found

AVON 1 All Area s • Sh !ley
Spears 304 6 75 1429

Female Black MelCrcan en nua
hua lost Wed 101251gs V1crnrty
Graham School Road ~eward For
Retu1n1 6l&lt;l 441 0534 Leave
Message

AVON HOLIDAY SALES

Earn $8 $151Hr at Wor~ Hom e
Drscounts r No l n"Yentory or Door
door tndiRep 1 800 742 4738

FOUND Hunt rng dog female on
Jerrcho Ad 304 675-6781

AVON EARN $$$ al home at
work All areas 304 882 2645 1

Lost cnocotate Lab 10 months
old Alfred area childre n s pet
Reward 614 985 3475

800 992 6356 INDIRE P
Chrld care needed tor 4yr old
Mon Thur 1pm dark Fr o 8 Sat all

Y dS I

0

7=====a=r==a=e===:l
=

GallipOliS

&amp; Vicinity

____;_...,:_..;.:;___.1
s

1111 1112,1 113195 5MI
21B
From At 7 Children Clothes
Some Mrsc 9?

4 Family Nov 3rd 4th BrONetl On
SR 1 60 , Washer Table Clotnes
01 All Srzes Most Lrke New Eve

o

All Yard Sales Must Be Pa rd In
Advance DEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day before rne ad 1s to run
Sunday ed 1rron 2 00 p m Fnday
Monday edrlton 1000 am Sat
urday
:....:~---------1
Garage Sale 1s1 T1me 1 3 Family
Ctothos Cards Book.s Crafrs
Etc Thurs Sat Nov 2nd 3rd 4th
11600 SR 160 Belore Old School
Rarn Or Shrne Thurs Frr Child
rens Clothes 6 Mo s • Up Mer1
&amp; Womens M1sc Car Seat Babv
Etc Toys campa 1gn Road 011 Rt
554 E 2 Miles From Porter To
wards Cheshire

=.::::.:::;::::::::;______

Dancers GoGo •mus1 tre 18 o r
older to apply Tile Soutt'rlork Inn
ShOwnar Pr Plea sant WV

Pvrchasm9 Budge!tng And Man
agement tnlormatron D~rectly Su
perOJrses All Support Stall Ouahl1
cat1ons Mast4:trS Degree Desrred
Or 4 r Years Attl a ted Publi c &amp;

ryt1'11ng Cheapl

Proless ana l Tree Se v ce Com
ple!e Tree Care Buck.et Truck
Servrce 50 Ft Reach Stump Re
moval
Free Eslrmatesl In
sura'lce 24 Hr Emergency Serv
rce Ca ll And SaiJe r No lree Too
Brg Or Too Small I Brdwe ll Oh a
614 388 9643 6 14 367 7010
Rub &amp; Scrub Cleanmg Servrce
dustrng mopprng, wrndows and
more Complete serv1ce or touch
lJ PS References on request call
Te rr y at 614 992 4232 or 614
992 4451

Prrvare Agency E)(per1ence Send
Resume &amp; Lener 01 Interest To
Access To Human Resource De
"Yelopment PO Bo~ 910 Ga 1t1 po
li s OH 45631 Access Is An
Equal OPpOrtufllly. Employer Par
!!ally Fu nded By The Gallia Jack
son MeHJS Board Of Alcohol
Drug Add 1ctron &amp; Mental Hea lth
Servrces
Help needed for deer processmg
Craw fo rd s Grocery 304 675
5404

Writ Do lntenor ElCterror Pa1ntmg
Reasonable Rales E)(peflenced.
References For Free Esumates.

Call614 245-5755
FINANCIAL
210

Busines_s
Opportunity
!NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re c ommends that you do bus1
ness wr •h people you know, and
NOT to send money th rough the
marl un1rl you have rn"West 1ga1ed
the offenng
Investment Property In Gat11p0hs
Owner May Be Able To Help Wtth
Some Fmancmg Call 6U 797
4345 Alter 6 P M
Metal Burldrng Manufacturer Se
lee11ng Small Or Large Builder I
Dealer In Some Open Areas
Hrgh Profit Potential Accepting
Only The Best"Oual1hed Call 303
758 4135 Ext 1500

New GroNrng Busrness On Aro
Grande College Campus Ex
presso Capp uccmo Bar Senous
lnqurrres Only Please I 614 245

:d:::ay~ed:.::'"::o~n_'O;_:OO::a::.m~S::a::.tu::.'::da::.y~- l Worker Computer And Phone

Hug e ba sement sa le 4 7095 Ea
gle Rrdge Rd N ovember 2 4
9am 4pm Baby clo!hes c;nd
rtems aoult crotne s toys brkes
furtHture and a var 1e ' v ol other
rtems
Large garage sa!e Nov 1 4 o"Yer
$1 00 25% oil 33140 Sr 12.t!
Langsv• lle

80

Public Sale
and Auct1on

Auc110ns every Frrday Saturoay
7pm Mt Alto Auct ron At 2 33
~ crossroads ~ New nrercha nd1se
grocenes &amp; tots more Ed Fraz1er

930
Christmas Sales s art ng 11 2 95
at Hartford Communi!~ Bur ld rng
Come and do your Chrrstmas
shopprng Auct roneer Howard
Beasley #4 70
Rrck Pearson Auct 1on Company
full t1me auct o nJ er complete
auct10n
servrce
l rcenseo
1166 Oh o &amp; Wes t Vorg1nra 304
773 5765 Or 304 773 5447

90

Wanted to Buy

Clean Late Mode l Cars Or
Trucks 1987 Mod els Or Newer
Sm1th Bu rck Pont 1ac 1900 East
ern Avenue Galltpohs
Decorated stoneware wall tete
phones old lamps oJd tnermome
ters old clocks antrque furniture
A verrne Anttques Russ Moore
owne r 6t4 992 2526 We truy
estates
J &amp; 0 s Auto Parts Buyrng sal
vage vehrcles Seltrng parts 304

773 5033
Top Proces Pa 1d Old US Co1ns
S1tver Go ld 01amofldS All Old
Collectibles Paperwerghts Etc
M T S Co rn Sh op 151 Second
Avenue Gatlrpolrs 614 446 2842
Used lurnl!ure an ti Ques one
p1ece or com plete esuues Osby
Marnn 614 992 7441
Wanted To Buy Jun k Autos Any
C ond1110n 6 14 388 9062 614

446 PART
Wanted To Bu y Junk Autos W11h
Or Without Motors Call larry
LIVely 614 388 9303

Sk1lls Requ rred Send Resume To
SCCS PO BolC 538 Kerr OH
45643
Ma 1n tenance man needed Mus t
nave own too l s tor all types ot
wor~ 304 882 3626
Mature babys ner to bab~Sil lour
year old 1n my home Rae ne area
Prefer ladv over 30 years old rei
erences &amp; experrence a must
Prefer knowledge at l 1rst ad &amp;
CPR schedUle varres mus1 have
own transportaTion Salary negot r
able Send resume w11h re lerenc
es to PO Box 1 16 Rac1ne Oh 10
45771
McDonald s of Henderson1Po n1
Pleasant full &amp; pan 11me pos rtrons
avartabte tor all sh1lts Start mo
rate $4 50Jhr wrth regular revrews
and growth potent ial Pard v~ca
!!on plan Heatth 1nsurance avarl
able Free unrforms Food d s
counu App ly n person at Me
Oonat&lt;ts or Henderson
Need 5 Lad1es To Sa le Avon
614 446 3358
No Experrence Nece ssary $500
To 1900 Weekly 1Potent1a 1 Pro
cess1ng Mortgage Refunds Own
Hours Call (909) 715 2300 Ellt
7B2 (24 Hours)
Person to netp pu t 1tn root on
house ca ll 614 992 5777 bet
ween 2 5pm

POSTAL JOBS
Start"$1208thr For exan1 and ap
p11cauon rnto call l19 769 8301
ext WV548 9am 9pm Sun Fn
Sales As srstant &amp; Tetemarketer
Part T1me Salary Plus Commrs
s10n Apply In Person Thurs Nov
2nd Only 9 A M 4 PM Bellone
Hea nng Arde Center 1312 East
ern Averue Gall1pohs

180

Wanted To Do

Don 1 Ju st w1SI'1 that dirt away catl
the J eann1e tor home or ollrce
c:leanmg 614 992 6507
General f.Aa 1ntenance. Parnllng,
Yard Work W 1ndows Washed
GutTe rs Cleaned Lrght Hauling,
Commencal Res1denua1 Steve
614 446 8861
Georges Portable Sawm11t, don't
naul you r togs 10 !he m111 iUS! call
304 67~ 1957
Lown Care &amp; Fall Cteamng, Free
Esumates Good Rates' No Jobs
Too Small Or Too 81g1 Call Don
614 379- 2847

o

Household
Goods

Applran ces
Recond1!1oncd
Washers Dry ers Ranges Relrr
graters 90 D ay Guarantee!
French Crty Maytag 614 446

Three bedroom house 1n Chester
many updates housrng relerenc
es and deposrt requrred 614
445 9921 alter Spm

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

14ll70 al l electr,1c 2bedroom
2bath lurn rshed, located 1n
Me1gs No pets references re
qurred $3251mo 304 773-5165
2 bedroom trarter rn country $200
deposit, $200 per month rnctudmg
water 6 14 992 3486

2 Bedroom Tra rter Washer Dryer
Full~ Carperea

In GallipoliS No
Pets Re fer ences Requ1red 6 14
446--0893

2 bedroom furnrshed good clean
cono1t ron porch yard sem1 prr
vale lot above New Haven Rt 33
$260 mo , 304. 8B2 2466 anytrme

3499
GE relflgerator 18 cu It $400
Tappan gas cook stove $350
Both used only 5mos lr~e new
304 675 6544

GOOD USED

Washers dryers re trrgerators
ranges Skaggs Applrances 76
Vme Street Call 614 446 ngo
1 800 499 3499

GOODWILL STORE
DONATION CENTER

2 Bedroom, Wal t To Wall Carpet
614 446 2003 6t4 446 1409
N1ce 2 bedroom mobrle home 1n
Mtddleport Oh 614 992 5858
Small 2bedroom M ddleport OH
References &amp; securrty deposrt re
qu red 304 862 326 7

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apar tments fur
mshed and unfurn ished secJr r t~
deposr t requrred no pe ts 614

APPLIANCES

Bargarn s Brand Names
Low Prrces Po1n1Pleasant ! Foo
dland Ptaza Open Darty 304 675
4460
Hotpornt Hea"Vy Duty E~tra Large
Capac rty 2 Speed Washer $175
Writ Negotra te 614 441---0763

LAYNE S FURN ITURE
Complete home furniShings
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m1tes out Butavrlle P11&lt;.e
Free Delivery
S1de by s de relr rg erator runs
good $t50 304 5762444
Stove 8. relr ,gerator 304 576

3202

2 Bedr oom Apartment Trash

adwrttsements for real estate'
which Is m VIOlation of the taw
Our readers are hereby

lnlormed lhat all dwellings
advertised 1n this newspaper
are &amp;'lallable on an equal

oppollunlty basis

Water Sewage Pa 1d, $2951Mo •
Deposrl 6 14 446 6656

Stove Freezer Washer Dryer
Retr ,gerator 614 256 1236

2 Bedroom s, 2 Baths K1tchen

SWAIN
AUCTI ON &amp; FURNITURE 62

Wrth Stove, Refrrgerator 15 Cou rt
Street $4 75/Mo • Deposit Ref
erence No Pets 614 446-4926

2 Bedrooms

Newt~ Remodeled

Crown Ctty 614 256 6495 614

VI RA FURNITURE

2bedr oom lurnrshed or unlur
nrshed apt 304 675 6512

614 446 3158
Oualrty Household Furnrture And
Applrances Great Deats On
Cash And Ca rry' RENl2 OWN
And Layaway Also Avarlable
Free Delr very W thrn 25 Miles

256 1249

BEAUTIFUL APARTM ENTS AT
BUDG ET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 WeSiwood Dr~ve 520
!rom $226 to $29t Walk to shop
8 mOOJieS Ca!l 614 446 2568
EQual Hou s1ng Opporll.Jnuy
Beech St Middleport 1 room fur
n1shed elfrc1encv ~;till!les pard De
pos!l &amp; references 304 8B 2

2566
BrookS ide Apanments Washer
Dryer Hook up 1 Bedroom
Equrpped Wrth Retr rgerator 8
StoiJe S257 1Mo .. Deposrt 614

310 Homes for Sale

446 2959

3 Bedroom Br ck tn Gallrpolts

Count1v Srde Apartment Large 1
Bed,oom S325tMo Oeposr t 513
922 0294

La un dry Room Full Basement
Carport Sto rage Room Sunset
Dr•ve lmmed1ate Posse ssron
61 4 446 , 71 614 446 \ 443
Newry Aemoeleted 3 4 Betlrooms.

6 g Acres Land V1nton Area

E )Ira N ce 2 Bedroom Garage
Unlur 'liShe a Apartme nt
54t
Fourth Avenue Gallrpot1s No
Pets $3001Mo 614 446~2300

$45000 614 3880407
Three bedroom nome 1n country,
Whrtes Hrll Rd Rutland one bath
rn ground pool 614 992 5067

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12lC65 Mob1te Home On 112 Acre
Lot Loca ted On Scrence Road
V1nton $15 000 Neg 614 446

0785
1969 Clean 2 Bedroom, A1r Con
d lronmg $3000 614 446 B038
1994 Mobile Home 14~60 2 Bed
r ooms Total ElectriC Unlur
nrshed Never l1"¥ed In 14 388

9803
Lrmrted Offer' 1996 doublew1de,
3br 2bath $1695 down, $259/
month Free det rvery &amp; sefup
Only at Oakwood Ho mes N1 tro

wv 304 755 5885
umuea Ollerl New 14x60 No pay
ments af ter 4yrs Only make 2
payments &amp; move 1n 30• 755

5566

2 or
31&gt;' Only $995 down, $1 951month

Pnce Busrert New t4x70

Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes N1tr0 WV 304

755 5885

Reducedll 1977 3bedroom Fed

eral Call304 675-1954 a~er 5pm

0 11ve St Ga11rpo11s New &amp; used
furniture heaters We s tern &amp;
Work boots 614 446 3159

Extra N1ce 2 BR All Elec Furn
K11 Close To Spnrrg Valley Area
No Pets $355/Mo • D D • Rei
614 446---6157 Alter 5 PM
Furnrshed 2 Bedroom Apanment
Across From Park AC No Pets
~eferences DeposiT S350 1Mo
6t4 446 B235 614 446 0577
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downsta~rs Util1 tres Furn 1shed
Clean No Pets Relerence De
posit ReqUired 614 446-1519
Furn1shed Apr One Bedroom
$295 00 Mo nth Utrlily Pard 920
Fourth Ave GalliPOlis 614 446
4416 alter 7PM
Furnrshed Elf1crency 607 Second
Galhpotrs Share Bath it9StUtrh
11es Pa1d 614 446 4416 Alter

7pm

Grac1ous lrv,ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V111age Manor and
R1vers1de Apartments 1n Mrddte
port From $232 S355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal Housmg Opper
tunrttes

Rem
$300
scope
ltmrted

Sportrng
Goods
742 BOL 30 06 wlsco pe
Ruger model 77 270 WI
$400 Rem 870 ducks un
new $500 304 675 2663

Ruger 1Or22 w1four powe' scope
Ithaca model 66 super smgle 12
gauge &amp; 20 gauge 22cat srngte
shot rrlre 20 g,iluge smgte shot
shotgun W 1lt take 22mag ove r
410 on trade 304 675 1564

520

Antiques

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Fr1 ewoo d $40 A Prck Up load
Delrvered $30 A Load P1cked Up
614 379 2758
Fodder Shoc ks $2 Each And In
d ran Corn F1ve For $1 00 614
245 5BB7
Gas Furnaces Drop tn 62 000
BTU and Lulla rrhl 133 000 BTU
L1 ke New Woodbu r ner 7,000

BOO 2B7 63DB 614 446 6308

560

730

Pets for Sale

Call Ron Evans, 1BOO 537 9528

KICKER car stereo equ1pment 3
amps [200SI 2 SOs1) 2 Solobanc
12" su bs NO 25 tweeter s Brand
new strtt rn bolCes 304 895 3386

570

1 800 291 0098

Mrlled hardwood 4")(6"ll. vanous
tengt1'1s S20 per p1ckup toad
Ohro Patte ' Company 614 992
6461 , 7 30am 4 OOpm Monday
Frrday
Now 1n stock choco lat e ca ndy
waters &amp; molds Fall Harve st Sale
now rn progress cellrng pa rm
$ 10 99/gallon Other sa "¥ rrgs
through out the store Parnt Plus
New locatton 511 Bu rde tte St

304 675 4084

Oak tree tops ,&amp;as1ly acc&amp;SSible
cut yo u1 own , $15 prck up toad

614 9B5 3595
One cof lee table 2 end tables
Mershon $100 , one double
dressef wuh m1rror $90 one coto
n1af end table $35 one delure
floor model Zemth stereo $50 Joe
Struble 614 992 3424

Re frigerato rs Stoves Washers
And Drye rs All Recond1110ned
And Gauranreedr $100 And Up
Wilt Deliver 614 669 6441
Sam Somerville's regular Army
camouflage by Sandyv1 lle Post
Ofhce noon-6pm Fn SlJn 304
273 5S 55 (Camouflage 1nsufated

coveralls 1351

Monthly Payments On Prano See
Loc~ly

Call I BOD 268 6218

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
D1s cou nt !a rm tractor pans lor
Mas sey Ford rH &amp; others
S1 der s Equ1pment Co Hender
son, WV 304 675 7421 or 1 BOO
27739 t 7

PpLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30 X-40 X9 Pam ted Steel Srdes
Galvatume Steel Roof 15 ~B Steel
St1der 3 M an Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Burlders 1
800 352 1045
Wanted Small Milk Cooter Tank
Under 150 Gallons Mus t Be In
Good Cond1tron 614 965 1922
614 965 1266

630

Livestock

Ar ab1an Ge ld1ng &amp; Sma ll Buck
Skrn Mare 6t4 3B8 8356
Draft Horse team Regrstered Bel
g1an mare half Belgrafl' half
Percheron mare $3500 6t4 669
5t5 t or 6 14 66g 4853
Santa Gertrudes Bu lls Fo r Sate
614 867 3221

Hay &amp; Grain

640

304·882 2744
Ear corn lor sale call 614 247
250 1 or 614·247 4793

Las! years ear corn lor sate 6 14

1978 Olds Delta 8B h1gh mrfeage
runs good, $200 6t4 949 2495

07B5
550

Building
Supplies

4 All Sleet Bl dgs Factory Spe
c1ats Save You Thousands BOO
To tO 000' S F Act Now Saun
ders Contr 6111 ·441 021 Q

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pel Groommg Fea
ruung H~dro Bath JL1 I1e Webb

cyl, 5 speed $750 OBO 614
992 5777

t980 Che"Yrolet Capr ce Class c

4 Door v 8 Auro Body ICiotll In
tenor Good' Loaded' Spoke
Wh eels Good T res 614 446
1980 Toyota Runs Great Rea li~
AGoodCar $750 6143792566
1

1981 Mustang 4 Cylrnder, 4
Speed New T ~res YelloW ! Black
N 1c~ $1 000 614 388 9147
1982 28 0ZX Turbo new clutch
$2500 304 675 3100 or alter Spm

675 5509
1983 Ford LTD Squrre Wagon
79 000 mt les 6 cyl good cond1
tiOI'l $1 450 614 949 2249
1g84 Cad !lac Crmnmro n av
tomatrc 4 door Orand new motor
$1995 614 6694 853 lea"We m es
sage
1985 Honda Prelude Sunroof 5
Speed 2 Door , Great Co ndlflon'
S2 995 6 14 446-0706 614-446
4051

30 30 SteiJens nlte $135 Moss
berg 12 ga pump With slug barrel
St 75 410 Stevens pump gun,
$169 12 ga smgle $59 several
pump guns and r1ftes Daves
Swap Shop B129 SA 7 Cheshrre
Tues day Wednesday, F r~da y 8
SatlJ rday

AKC Bo xer Puppt es, Three Bnn
die, Two Fawn All Female, Ftrst
Shots and Wormed Call 304 675
6335 Aher 5 pm

245 9375

330 board teet ol red oak lumber
krln drred mostly clear mostl y
Wide $2 25 per toot Must take all

304-675 6639

Concrete &amp; Plas11c Sephc: Tanks
300 T hr u 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses Jackson OH
1

BOO s:J7 952B

01sney area, 5dayt4 hOtel mghts,
use any ttme Pa1d $310 sell

$100 304 343 9455
Etectnc WheelchairS /Sc ooters ,
New /Used, Scooter I Wheelcha~r
L1hs Starrway Elevators, l1fl
Cha1rs, Bowman's Homecare,
614 446· 7283

M odern 1 Bedroom Apartment

ExEH C1Se M ac hine. $ 125, 614 -

388 8293

AKC Oatmat1an pupp•es, shots &amp;
wormed Pnced to setttl 304 675

Cocker Spanl81 pups, full blooded,
not Registered 1s t shots &amp;
wormed $100 OBO 304 675

7398

Dalmauon Pupp1es

3221

6t4 86 7

M1n1ature Pmchers, AKC Rag1 s
rered, 2 chocOitan females, shots
&amp; wormed ta tls bobbed $300
SatiCus 1nqumes onl~ 304 675

7826

Llf, ~'M lrJ Jl(j

1993 20 1 Pro XL 20 Srrutos
bass boat 200 XPHP 614667
734 7 or 614 949 2879

T!tOUBLt/

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

e'"'"'"'u' \,..J:&gt;.ves
~

19B9 Plymouth Sundance 2 2
Motor 66 000 Mtle s $250 614
256 1233

~

TO lff YOUR ANf--L~Y, MY f!IJY
IF THIS C.~Y j..(Rf: f&gt;.. &amp;:':£·
EN...L.

Buaget Transmrssrons Used &amp;
Reburll All Types Access1ble To
Over 10 000 Transmrss1on Also
Pafls Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates 6t 4 37g 2935

II-

Pass

Pass

,.

'

..,

YOU WOULD e£ THE ~CRDTOP
1-li-\0 R:.AY) &amp;AINDCAL.RIPKE.N I

l

•'
\

t99 t Do dge Dynasty lo aded

$5 200 614 245 5863
1993 Ford Thundc•brrd LX tow
mrles, excet1en1 cOndrtron all elec
trlc ttnted w1ndows $ 10 900 trrm

614 992 5347

PM

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrty Ciph&amp;r cryptograms are creal ad !rom quotatiOnS by famous people paat and presenl
Each let1er tn the crphflr stands !01 another Today s ciV* D equals K

' 'v

BC

J X0

BS S

RZN

TVNFX,

T A J

TNVKLVKL
ZKSM

BIASJG

FZKGOKJVKL

TBFD

TOJPOOK
L Z N 0

E VI 8 S .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "MilliOns ol sp1r1tual Creatures walk the Earth unseen.
both when we wake , and when we sleep • - I Poet) John Milton

WOII
IAMI

I

N I N0 T E

I

pHTE

H
II I I
MU R A
4

Myststercouldn'tdecrdewhal
to wear for her dale Mom came
'
1nto lhe roam and lold her, "What
. - - - - - - - - - - , I S more 1mportant than what you
I 0 M E Erlear, IS the • • • • •• weartng 11 '
· ~-~~..:.:....:;.~...:~,r--TIS....: ~ t) Complete tho chuckle quoted
.
•
.
•
~ ~
by f•llmg m the m1ssmg words
L-'-....l-....L-~-..L--1 you develop from step No 3 below

'

S

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

1989 Wrnnebago 22 Ft Mot or
Home loaded L 1k&amp; New 17
Mt lest Galton Take Over Pay
ments 614 388 8678

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

...

.-"'

SERVICES

Home

Gtbbon · Leech · Husky · Legume · ENEMIES

Improvements

1----..;...,..,...,______

STRIKE ABLOWN Tl-£ WIR ON

The old ltmer gave a speech at hts retrrement party
"I never tolerated foolishness," he gnnned, "so my friends
came and went. bull accumulated ENEMIES I"

HGH PRICES. SHOP TI-E CLASSIEDS.

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING

"· ' .
.....
"

'

Uncondl\IOnal hle11me guarantee
loc al rele rences lurnrshed Catt
(614) 446 0870 Or [6 14 ) 237
0488 Rogers Waterproofing Es
tabllshed 19 75
Appliance Parts And Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
per1ence All Work Guaranteed
French CITy Mayt ag 614 446

7795
9,11 Orrrck s Home Improvements
add1 t1ons remodehng roolrng,
S1d1ng , ptumbmg etc Insured call
8tll Omck 614 9g2 51 83

Lwe (CCt

C&amp;C General Hom e Mam
tenence Pa1 n\lnQ vrnyt srd 1ng
ca rpentry doors wrndows baths
mobrle home reparr 1nd more For
tree estrmare cau C et 614 g92

Wesl (CC)

(CCI

6323
Earls Home Marntenance v1nyt
std1ng roolmg, exterror pa1mrng
pow~r washrng Fr ee Es11ma1es
614 9g2 4451

ASTRO·GRAPH
love The Aslro · Graph Matchma ke r
rnstantly reveals wh1ch s tgns are romanlt·

ca lly perlecl for you Matl $2 75 to
Matchmaker, c/o th1s newspaper, P 0
Box t758, Murray Htll Statton, New York,
NY 10150
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Expect·

Rootrng and gutters commercn:at
and res1dentral, mrnor reparrs 35
year s expenence, B&amp;B ROOF

lNG 614 992 5041

820

Freeman s Heet1ng And Coohng
l nstatta\lon And Sefv1ce EPA
Certdred Resrden11at Commercrat
614 256 t61 1

840

tng

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps Alf Cond1ttontng, 11

You Don 1Call Us We Bolh Losal

Free Est1mates, 1 800·287 6308,

614 446·6308, WI 002945
1993 Mercury Topaz Teat Green
Cru1se A1r AMIFM Cassene
AutomatiC
Good Condrtron,
$7,500, 6t4 441-0235 Alter 5

a-••

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
1HESE SQUARES

1977 Vega camper 23ft exc
cond $3 500 304 576 28go alter

080 614 4410534 leave Mes

1989 Grand Pnx Ellcellent Condt
11on $4 850 1988 S 10 Tahoe V
6 Automat iC $3 650 Cook Mo
tors, Centenary fi14 44fi 0103

(obbr.)
·
9 Afl•ntk: and
Pac:lflc
I 0 NRA co,_,
11 Diner
17 Workero'

19 Metal for
cane
22 Musical stvn
23Do-Rio
25 Selport In
AIUkll
26 OnngellavONCI
liqueur
30 Move
32 - Vega1
34 Human IMI"9
35 Point holder
36 Ulce a
champlo,..
ship llfllllll
37 Capital of
Canada 36 Sarcoetlc
39
41 Cry of
ourprl"
43 Bus. abbf.
46 12 o'clock
47--boyl
50 Actress
Joanne51 Club-

I

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

00 15 wv 304 576 239B

1988 Dodge 011Ylr 2 2 L a1r am
fm cassene auto B7 000m1 exc
cond. $2.800 304 773 6062

4 BRe
5 Moved
6 E plurlbua 7 Organ of smell
8 Fall aircraft

•K

West continued wtth the spade ace
and a thir d spade to East's queen
That was three tr.cks m for lhe de·
fense - but where was number four
commg from' Looking at the dummy,
clearly not from the mmors If South
dtdn't have the club king, the finesse
• was working As the only chance was
r from hearts, East led his last spade
This worked beautifully, promotmg
West's heart queen as a guaranteed
tnck
'

I

D &amp; R Auto Hptey wv 304 372

810

dteSalng
2 Knock from a
steed
3 Coldnell

est, was encouragmg

E·marl FandEBobT@AOL COM

1967 Che"Yrote r 327 c r Engtne
Block SHlO 614 441 0459

1986 TA Automatrc Good Cond1·

198 7 Chrysler 5th Avenue V 8
Automat iC 73 000 Miles Full
Power E•tra Nrce Condrt ron
S3 700 614 256-6867 Evenrng~

male leh, $200,614 992 7574

~ Nfel&gt;

lf ~ tVf~ ~Off:
MY AIII,ITY TO

304 8B2 3273

I on lnterror NeN lnsrde $3 ,500 ,

AKC German Shepherd pups

81g beautiful AKC Chow pupp•es,
only one blue and one black te

WEIRD ..

IS
I, I AI I LITY lrJSV, ANCf:·-

t21t alumrnum John boat $250

Ron s TV Serv 1ce spec1ahz1 ng 1n
Zenith also serv1ctn g most other
brands House c:alls, 1 BOO 797

sage

AKC Reglstered Cocker Span1el
Puppres, $150, 614 379 2728

,.,,__ _....,.. i

vltMT

1986 Olds Delta 88 St 600 J14

5553

AKC Reg1stered Golden RetmNer
pupp1es, 7wks old to good hom o
only 304·675 2897 alter 1pm

~
~

THERE'S NO DOliBf
IN M'{ MIND,
MARCIE, THAT '(OU
ME EXCESSIVEL'f

•

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

750 Boals &amp; Motors
for Sale

686 1

1986 Chrysler converubte 4 cvt
automatiC alt power looks and
tuns good, $ 1800 614 247 296 1

304 675-454B

Pass
Pass

84 Pont1ac Sunbrrd, two door 4

Call6t4·446-0231

BaD~ bed s troller sw1ng car
seat front to back rwtn stroller

2¥

7pm

Stokers Stove $700 E xceltenl
Cond1tron 614 379 2923

Wolff s Sunquest Tan nmg Bed
l rke New$ 1500 Neg 614446

SO f
CAN SEE WHAT
I'M DREAMING
SURE,

Motorcycles

,ggs Yamaha Brg Bear 4 Wheel
er 4~4 614 446 7123

760

DOWN
TIJpa of

aaan.

W R loge, who was the Dean of St
Paul 's School m London, sa1d ,
"Expenence 1s a good teacher, but her
fees are very h1gh "
Well, at th e rubber bndge table
that 1s true But m duphcate bndge,
the cost 1s less In theory. one learns
the same lessons m both form s of the
game Yet most remember the expen
s1ve errors m rubber-brtdge more
readily than those made tn duplicate
1 where the loss 1s measured only m
matchpomts, not money
East m today's deal learned early m
h1s bndge career to s1gnal encourage
ment w1th the h1ghest card he could
afford There should be no half mea
sures He contmued h1s good ea rly
work wt!h the krlhng defense
South's JUmp to four hearts sug
gests at lea st a hve card su1t As
North m•ght have ra1sed w1th only
• three card support I for example, w1th
I 3 4·5 shape) , When South has only
four hearts he w11l probably make a
low level mvesllgatory rebid
Under West's lead of the spade kmg,
East carefully s1gnaled w1th the mne
as he wanted h1s partner to contmue
spades West m1ght not have reahzed
that the four though not East's low

I

$7500080 614 446-3841

.TRANSPORTATION

90 Grand Pm SE Sport Coupe
loaded low m1tes 614 742 2554

Supe r S1ngle Waterbed 2 Sheet
Sets $45 Sears Di shwasher Un
dercounter $30 , Black ! Almond
Panels 61 4-446·4336

'1'0ll WEAR

~

t9g1 Harley Dav 1dson Sportster
8B3 Sport Bob Gas Tank Many
E xtras• Ellceltent Condrtron•

790

Autos for Sale

DO

'1'0liR GLASSES
WilEN '&lt;OlJ'RE
SLEEPING?

1995 Jeep Wrang ler R1o Grande
Ed. hghr gold hard rop brk1n1 top
and more auto 4c~t 22 OOOmt
askrng $14 900 080 304 675
3129 leave messa ge

393:-i Of 1 000 273 9329

Round bales

READING

1991 Jeep Wrangler 4cyt Sspd
3 lrlt 32 M ck.ey Thompson 11res
w1atum dlr 59 OOOm1 sof t top
$7 600 ::104 675 7514

S 1 $2
l15ea 304·675-3960

710

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

1

New gas ta nk.s one ton truck
wheels radtalOrs ltoor mats etc

Square bates

JUST LYING
IN BED

o:."_'o=--:---------

740

(ptef.)
49 Short narrative
51 Glove for
Rlpken
52 Gr..n Bay's at.
53 Painter
Bonhaur
54 Miss Kelt of
the comics
55 Play dlvl1lon
56 SlOth
57 Antlered
animal

By Phillip Alder

1987 S 10 Blaze, V6 auto 4
wheel drrve trlt arr crurse pw pi

992 2623 or 614 992 27B3

Sears Dryer $50 Mag rcChe t
Etec Range $100 31~ Marble
Srnkrop $50 Used K•tchen Cab1
nets WITh Butcher Block Counter
top $150 Set Or Wrtl Sell Sepa
rattil~ 6t4 367 7756 AherSPM

Upnght Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson Ohro, 1 BOO 537 9528

1985 Chevy Convers1on van 305
engrne runs great $2795 614
367 7106

1

Allatla hay tor sate never wet
Oreck vacu um cleaner rnctudes
separate handheld camster vac
used tess than 3mos 304 675
3850 1 t am-9pm

1984 Toyota 4 WD 1980 Toyota
Tercel Alter 4 PM 614 446 8667

Musical
Instruments

De-

46 lntel1118dlllle

.Signal as clearly
as possible

'

For Sale Console P1ano Wanted
responstble party to make tow 3::0~4..:6::.7:.5..:6_40::.4_______
monthly paym ents on p1ano See
locally Call 1800 26862 18
1990 Dodge Ram Vnn B 250
72 000 Mrles $G 000 Can Be
For Sate Console P1ano Wanted Seen At Ga1trpo1 1S Oarl v Trrbune
Responsible Party To Make Low 825 Th rrd Av enue Gat lr polrs

Mrnotta Photo Cop1er Enlarges &amp;
Reduces Cop1es 6141 446 - 6308

560

304 B95 3390

Pass
Pass

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

379-2720 AFTER 6 PM

Two full blooded Beag le pups
$35 1ea two AKC Reg Beagle
pups $50 tea 614 742 1700

Reparred, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock

540

18hp rrdmg lawn mower MTO 46~
cut $1 000 ~4 675-2074

4.

1g79 4ll.4 Blazer $1 200 6 14

Registered Weimaraner puppres

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Block, bnck. sewer p1pes w1nd
ows, lrntels, etc Claude Wmters,
R10 Grande OH Call 614·245
5121

3 Bedroom Apartment For Rent In
Pomt Pleasant Fu ll y Carpeted
References &amp; Oeposll ReQurred
Cal l Aft er 6 00 PM 6 14 446
0041

614·446 0390

BTU 614 245-9375

Buy or sell R1ver1ne Antr ques
1124 E Mam Street on At 124
Pomero~ Hours M T w 10 00
a m to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to
600 pm 614 992 2526

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

I¥

lead

Dryer Wllrrtpool $75

Washer
Whlflpoot $95 Dryer Ma ytag
$1 SO Dryer G E He3"¥ Y Duty L1k.c
New 1 Year Warranty $205 G E
Washer L1ke New 1 Year War
ranty $205 Dryer Mayra g t Year
Warranty $205 30 Inch Range
Gas Tappan N1ce $175 30 tnch
Range Electrrc Harvest Gold ClJt
To $95 30 Inch Range Etectr~c
Kenmore Almond $125 Wood
burn1ng Hea ter Ellcellenl Cond1
tron $150 Retr gerator Whrrlpool
Frost Free Wh1te S195 Aefr~ge r a
tor Whulpoot N•ce $t50 Retng
erator Whrrlpoo l Almond Lrke New
1 Year Warranty $325 Range
Elec tnc Double Oven Top &amp; Bor
tom Ha rvest Gold $1 75 Skaggs
Appl ances 76 \lrne Street GAlli
poll s 614 446 7398 1 8oo 499

I.

BARNEY

080 304 372 9319 or BOO 273
9329

40 N...l·toned
42 une, deux,44 Slivery
45CIIY
46 Acfor Robert

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer North
South
West North East

It -I

Wrecker true~ 1988 ChAv/' lton
tw1n cable nydrauloc 'h ' tOw slrng
new parn1 reaoy tO work $8 000

Duct Systems And A1r Co nd1110n
ers Free Estrmates

2 Bed room Apartment For Rent

knowllngly accepl

Ford
Rnnger
XLT
14 OOOmr tonneau cover $9 500
OBO 304 675 '643

304 675 7740
51

t K 5 4
•K 2

199~

H1 fffec 1encv L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furna ces 100 000 BTU 1

614 992 5858

614 446 8221

This newspaper will not

1980 Chev,o l et 1 Ton Dual
Wheels 350 Auto Runs Good
614 742 2457 Alter 6 PM

Carpet &amp; Vmvl In Srock S5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Pauerns 0! Kr1chen Car
pet In Stock Over 35 Pa tterns
Vrnvt tn Stock Mo nonan C&lt;11 pets
614 446 7444

992 22 1B

All real dstate adven 1slng In
thrs newspaper 1s subject to
the Fedtual Fatr Housing Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes 1t Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
hmttalion or dtscnmmat1on
based on race, color, religion,
seJC famtlral status or naJ:tonal
\ • ong.n, or any lntentrolil to
make any such preference,
limitation or dlsc,riminatlon •

304 882 3273

N rce 3 bedroom house &amp; one
bedroom conage m Pt Pleasant

56B2
REAL ESTATE

1978 ma1l Jeep runs good $€00

7795

Wrll Sr t Wr!h The Eloerty Please
Call 614 441 0265
W II Babys1t In My Home Mon
Frr Days References ElCpen
enced 614 446 8910

1958 Fotd tton w111 sell cheap
304 458 1727

2661

Small 2 Bedroom Rear 238 Fus1
Ave K11cnen w11h StoiJe /Retng
erator $325/Month Oepos111 Ref
erences No Pets 614 446 4g26

AM No Phone Calls Please
Pomeroy,
Middleport
Home Typ sts PC users needed
&amp; VICinity
$45 000 1ncome potentra t Call 1
_______.:.____ I 800 513 4343 Ext B 936B

Garage sate 9am Spm Oc tooer
31 thru Nove rn tJer 4 38400 SR
t24 W Pomeroy New and used
clothes new 1ewel ry and crafts
lots ol mrsc rtems

Hou se 1n Au !land lor rent rwo or
three bedroom no pets deposn
references and lease requrred
avarlable 1mmeorately 614 742

8B Kenswo1th 42 5 Car
13
speed 60~ walk rn steepe r vrrg1n
rubber all the way &lt;\round
$30 000 614 592 4762

MERCHA~DISE

PM

Rodney 3 Bedrooms Gas Heat
Cent r al AH $350 t Mo Depos11
Reference Call Alter 4 00 614
643 2916

Front Desk ClerK Even1ng Hours
5 P M TO 11 PM Appy rn person
at Best Western W H1am Ann
1Ga Ill po lr s Week days 9 to 1 1

All Yard Sa les Must
d In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the Managrng cosmetologtsl needed
rmmed1ately 614 992 4103
day betore the ad rs to run Sun
day edrtron 1 OOpm Fr rday Mon tmme d1a 1e Qpen rng For Olf1Ce

2 Bed room House In Gall rpol1s
NoPets DepasrtReqwed 614
446 8849
4 Bed room H ome tn Ne1ghDor
hood Near Holzer Recently Rero
"Yaled Centra l Arr Etectrrc Heat
Carpet Throughout No Indoo r
Pe ts Av ar labl e November 1sr
9575/Mo 614 446 2055 Alter 6

720 Trucks for Sale

C11cle Motel Gallrpolis OH 614
t46 2501 E!lec enc v Rooms Ca
ble Atr Phone M·er owave &amp; Re
tngerator

Sleep rng rooms wr!h coo~rn g
Also t•ade• space on 11ver All
hoo~ y ps C&lt;J il a lter 2 00 p nr
304 773 5651 Ma son WV

1

78 Bu1ck V-6 3 8 liter motor &amp;
transmrsston runs great 94 000
m1tes $300 fum 614 742 3151

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms- for rent week or morrth
Startrng at $1 20,mo Galha Hotel
614 446 9580

Sun Valley Nursery School
Ch ddcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young Schoo l Age Dur~ng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mm1
mum 614 446 3657

day Relerences a mus1 304 675
2291

Oorector Of Fmancra l Admrnrstra
tron As A Member Of Ellecurrve
Stall 01rects F1nancral Act1v rt1eS
OtThe Agency Respons1ble For
Development In Admrn1stratron Of
Standard s &amp; Proceoures Related
To Personnel Physrcal Facrlt es

11 12
1113
9 3 PM
Adult
Clothes Krds Clothes Claw Foot
'ea;htub M1sc Item s 2 Mrles Out
Bulavrtte Pike Fro,m 160

Wanted To Do

Help Wanted

$200 $900 week ly Year ro un d

Two beau1 1lu l lo ng harred lema le
k1uens to good homes 7 month s
(514 843 5445

180

'1E1' 1"o I$ SVIi A
?E:P..IoiJ'&gt; p~ lloL.t;M?

lwrn R1vers Tower now acceptong
apoltcauons lor 1Or HUD subsrd
rzed apt tor el derly a'ld handr
capped EOH 304 6 75 66 79

2 Bedroom Basement Ga lhpolls
City lrm1ts $375tMonth Deposit
&amp; References No Pets 614 446
0 796 Leave Message

1 Bankrupl
5 aa ..ball
ecorea
ALDER
9 Unclo" {poet.)
12 Hookllke parts
t 3 Adorn's
grandson
14 Espionage org.
15 Boat
r -----.;;i\ii'Tiil--;;::;-::;;;--11 1&amp; Most robust
18 Male oHsprlng
• J 76
19 Heavy volume
• J 9 8 4
20 Tordy
21 Peaceful
tA
23 G1ver
•A Q J I 0 8
24 Rhyming of
EAST
vowels only
•A K 8
27 Stallone, to
•Q 9 4 2
his pals
¥7 3
•Q 2
28 Robin 'a home
•J 8 i 2
tQI0963
29 Hardware
• 7 4
•9 6 5 3
31 Resin
Ingredient
SOUTH
33 Bark cloth
•t 0 5 3
37 Heating
¥AKI06 5
material

PHILLIP

682 3199 Aher 6 PM

N1ce two Dearoom ap artment •n
Pomerov 61 4 gg2 5858

450

ACROSS

1gg3 Plymo uth Grand Voyager
Extended, C lean, 1 Owner 614

W~'/ I? 1"'1' oufl.. ~ov"

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Wll\l AN OLD I='OGeV 1..11(£ MEl

--

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

&amp; Acreage

REMOTE BEAUTIFUL LAND

...

3o

350 Lots

BRIDGE

'III"T'Lt. TeA(.H V0U TO M!S1! AIIOUNO

.,-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Resrdent1a1 or commercial wtrtng, '
new serv1ce or repa~rs Mastet ltcensed e tecrnctan Rrdenour

EleC1rtCal, WVDD0306. 304·675·
1786

I

too much from you r soctal contacts

TAURUS IAprll 20-May 20) II you mSist
on betng nosy today , you mtghl lind your
self mvolved

tn

a development

that ts

loaded with hidden complications
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you are
chatnng a soetal event today, avotd seatIng people who do not gel along well al
the same !able You wtll be ask1ng
trouble
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Procrasttna·
lion m1ght result m a lost opporluntly
today tf you mcorrectly assume lhat a
prorect can be developed at a tl.ter date
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It would
unwtse to lake flnanc1al gambles today
Even though you may be In a pos1t1on to
hve w1th your losses, don't let w1ld expec·
tat10ns govern your act1ons
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sapl. 22) Today, you
may take a pos1tton that IS d1ametncally
opposed to your mate's view of lhe stlua·
t10n Inflexibility will result 1n a no·w1n

wtll be unw1se today Much of what Will be
dtscussed may never be realized
• CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If you're
not carelul Ieday assoaates m1ght try to
dump thetr respons&gt;b1ht1es on you You
should be helplul, but do your part wtlh·
out be1ng a chump
Thursday. Nov 2, 1995
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) SeW·dtsc•·
In the year ahead, you may f1nd add1t1on· phne may not be your strongest anrtbute
• al ways to eam extra money Th11.4umu· today Stnve for the middle of the road
lattve ga 1n from these ahematlve sources and avmd all forms of excess
could surpass the money you rece1ve PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You may
from the usual channels
unwttltngly be the focus of everyone's
,. SCORPIO (OCI. 24-Nov. 22) Ma1ntam a, anenllon today Guard your emot1ons and
alton
'
professional demeanor In your bustness , make a good tmpress1on.
• dealings today, especially 1f you're pariiC· : ARIES (Moren 21·Aprfl 19) You Will not LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your 1deas
• 1pat 1ng 10 a 1ransact10n Involving a large 1 be successful today 11 you treal asSOCI· may lack thetr usual crispness today
· amount of money Knowtng whera to look 1 ates 1n an arrogant or condescending Try1ng to be realls11c and avo1ding w1shlul
' for romance will help you to f1nd your true !!'ann,er Try to be grac1ous at all times
rthmk1ng Will speed your success

'

I

�~Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 1, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

!County recorder posts recent Meigs land transfers
: The following land transfers Buckeye Rural Electric Coopera·
: ~recorded recently in the office live, Rutland;
Right of way, Ann Dater to
· of Meigs County Recorder Emmo: gene Hamilton:
BREC, Rutland:
Right of way, Gary and Char·
Sherirr s deed. Clarence and
: Rose Ellen Lee to Mid State Jncor- lotte A. Harper to BREC. RuUand;
Deed. Charles and Paulette F.
: JXIrated, Salisbury parcels;
· Deed, Janice L., Darryl O'Dell Cundiff to Rodney R. and Bonnie
: and Joan M. Danner to Charles T. Roush. Middleport, .148 acres;
Deed, Jerry L. and Darlene
: and Cynthia F Young, Sutton, 10
. Tillis to Edmund T. Giles, Scipio,
· llcres·
· Iked, Sue and Harold E. Hager 16.56 acres;
Deed, Darrell and Arlene F.
: to Teresa L. Johnson , Sutton par. eel;
Krautter, Benjamin L. Jr. and Kim·
·: · Deed, Ferrel W. and Patricia K. berly S. Dowell to Roger T. and
: Day to Elby Nye and Mary Green, Erica J. Dowell, Salisbury lot;
Affidavit. Louise Gloeckner,
· ~uUand tracts;
Deed, Robert E. and Judy M. deceased, to Joe Gloeckner.
· Miller, Betty E. Dill , Audrey Pomeroy;
Deed, Abbie W. Stratton Living
Miller, Lois Jean and Thomas
Trust
to Abbie W. Stratton. termi·
Schoonover, Evelyn and Frank
Leach, Donald H. and Violet J. nation of trust;
Affidavit, Abbie W. Stratton
Miller to James R. Frecker, Mid·
Living Trust to Abbie W. Stratton;
dleJXIrt, .14 acres;
Deed, James B. Arthurs to Pomeroy;
Deed, Carol Jean McKenzie to
George J. and Willard L. Moore,
Charles and Paulette F. Cundiff,
Lebanon, 1.333 acres;
Deed, James B. Arthurs to Billy Bedford;
Certificate, Edith Louis~
Joe VanCooney Jr., Lebanon, 3.031
Gloeckner,
deceased, to Joseph C.
acres;
Right of way, Bruce Krone to Gloeckner. Pomeroy;

Desk

Right of way, Margaret Smith to
Tuppe~ Plains-Chester Water District. Sutton, .41 acre;
Right of way, Larry J. and Aim
Wiles to TPCWD, Sutton, .6772
acre;
Right of way, Jerry M. Jr. and
Dorothy Johnson to TPCWD, Sut·
ton. 1.25 acres;
Right of way, Emma J. and
Howard C. Robinson to TPCWD,
Sutton, 2.5478 acres;
Right of way, Pauline Wolfe to
TPCWD, Letart, 61.65 acres;
Right of way, Argyle Deeter to
TPCWD, Lebanon, 6. 70 acres;
Right of way, Donald E. and Jo
Ellen Roush to TPCWD, Sutton,
2.935 acres;
Right of way, James R. Frecker
and TPCWD, Salisbury, 29.166
acres;
Right of way, Vernon, William
R. and Doris Swartz to TPCWD.
Orange, 59.56 acres;
Right of way, Charlotte Hess
and James Crank to TPCWD, Salisbury, 10 acres;
Deed, Maxine. T. and Henry W.
Benson to Laverne G. and Gail J.
Chase, Bedford parcels;

Deed, Clair A. Turner to Larry
W. and Cynthia D. Parsons, Rut·
land;
Deed, James P. and Rhonda L.
Conde to Gary G. and Deanna D.
Hines, Salisbury;
Deed, Andrea Jo Wise, Andrea
Jo Batey to Danny Joe Wise, Mid·
dleport;
Deed, Danny Joe and Sherry
Wise to Larry M. Smith, Middleport 1/3 acre parcel;
Deed, Henry C. and Nara E.
Hartman to Randy L. and Carla S.
Kimes, Chester parcels;
Deed, Argyle L. and Florence

Power outage disrupts college schedule
KENT (AP) - Classes were for today.
canceled again today at Kent State
Although the outage affected
University because of a pow.er out· dormitories, no one was evacuated,
age caused by an underground fue unive~ity spokeswoman Paula Sli·
at a construction site.
.
mak said. About 6,000 students
Power was lost on the 824-acre live in residence halls.
campus about 5:30a.m. Tuesday.
By Tuesday afternoon, power
No injuries were reported, but was restored to residence halls and
classes were canceled Tuesday at many other buildings, but connec·
the 23,000.student main campus in lions still were out to 14 main aca·
northeast Ohio. Day and night demic buildings, said Slimak.
classes have also been called off
"They are going to work around

REG.

5

239
5479
5389

399

ONLY

5239

Roll • Top Secretary
Knee-hole Desk
Cherry Roll· Top Desk
Oak Flat·Top Desk

the clock to get it done," she said
of university and Ohio Edison
crews replacing damaged power
cables.
No people or buildings were
ever in danger from the fire, which
was in an "open manhole," Slimak
said. Cables at the site of the fire
will be underground once construelion is complete.
Classes were expected to reopen
Thursday .

SALE

5189
5379
5309

6 Gun Hackberry

SERTA II

Special gro_up of Furniture at
Tremendous Savings
'499
'899
'1869

$79.00
$119.00

Full Mattress or Box Springs

249
5
499

'5

Loveseat
Sofa
Reclining Sofa &amp;
Matching Recliner

'1819
S1349

Sofa and Chair

$1169

Sofa and Glider LoveSeat

1349

Sofa and Chair

5

Twin Mattress or Box Springs

SALE

.REG.

Sofa and Chair

$299.00

SERTA Perfect Sleeper

$899
$899
S699
$599
5
799

Twin Set

$299.00
$399.00
00

Full Set
Queen Set

Dining Room
Sets
OUR
PRICE

REG.

'389 Oval Table/4 Chairs

469
5309

'639 Trestle Table/4 Ch.Bench

sso9

'929 Oak Farm TAble/4 Chairs

s739

APPLIANCE SPECIALS

5

'579 Table/4 Chairs

* 30" Range gas or Electric

$329
$289
$399
$289
$379

* Dishwasher
* Roper Heavy duty Washer
* Roper He• IY d4ty Dryer
* 1s·cu/ft. Che.st Freezer'

Glider Rockers
DAY BED
SPECIAL

.~--

r '

REG.

OUR '

PR.ICE

J

~

1

?'

'

$109
White or Almond
OPEN
Mondays til 8
Tues - Sat til 5
• To Qualifies Applicants

o~s

'free 'Defivery
for Cliristmas

Pick 3:

season
to begin

430
Pick 4:

6565
Super Lotto:

8·18-21-23·40-43

Sports,Page7

Kicker:

201554

Low toolgbtlo the 40s, show·

ers. Friday, cooler. Hlghs In the
40s.

•

ent1ne
Vol. 46, NO. 132
Copyrlght1995

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 2, 1995

Roberts looking forward to 'one big strike'
HUNTINGTON, W.Va (AP)- The acting presi·
dent of the United Mine Workers says he's looking
forward to "one big strike" by labor now that a new
team has taken leadership of the AFL-CIO.
The UMW's 1989 strike against The Pittston Co.
"wasn't big enough," Cecil Roberts said Wednesday
in a telephone news conference.
"I'm not talking about the Mine Workers walking
off a cliff by themselves," Roberts said. "We are
willing to participate in a general strike ... by every- ·
body who works for a living.

"If we're going to make a change, working class
people are going to have to stand up. And a general
strike that would send a loud, clear message to
Congress, is something that working people have to
think about," Roberts said.
He sees several issues that are critical enough to
prompt labor leaders to call such a strike: revising the
nation's labor laws, establishing unive~al health care
and ending racial and gender discrimination.
Roberts said be has been calling for a general
suike in speeches around the counuy. After the
UMW's convention in September, in which Roberts

advocated a general strike, " we bad a lot of people
from other unions call here and ask, 'Where do we
sign up?'," Roberts said.
Roberts, as vioe president of the UMW, became
acting president after Richard Trumka was elected
AFL-CIO secretary-treasurer last week on a slate
with new President John Sweeney. Except for burning off some unused vacation time, Trumka bas
already left the UMW' s payroll for AFL-CIO headquaners, Roberts said.
He will continue as acting president until late
December or early January, when a new vice presi-

dent will be named. An inauguration ceremony will
be held in Charleston at that time.
As for who might be the new vice presidem,
Roberts said, "I have a short li~t (of nominees) that 1
will keep to myself.''
He said, however, that he is talking with UMW
Secretary-Treasurer Jerry Jones "about what he
would like to do." He said Jones "will still be pan of
the team."
Roberts also said he intends to run for re-election
in 1997, at the end of the five-year term that be,
Trumka and Jones were elected to in 1992.

to Athens

By TOM HUNTER
with higher minimum temperature
Sentinel News Staff
requirements for materials. If bad
With the arrival of November, weather continues into next wee!&amp;
Meigs County residents could be as is forecasted, it could caus~
marking the final countdown some major problems for the contoward completion of two lanes of tractor," stated Brown.
the four lane 2.6 mile State Route 7
Brown added that overall, the
connector project, linking State project is ahead of schedule. Pre·
Route 7 at Five Points with the dieted completion date was origi·
Rock Springs Route 7 bypass, nally June, 1996. Kokosing already
according to officials from the has 28 compensated working days
Ohio Department of Transporta- coming to them because of bad
tion.
weather that hindered work on the
According to Charlie Brown, project during the month of May.
Ohio Department of TransJXIrtation
"Kokosing wants to get two way
project supervisor, the project con- uaffic on the southbound ramp at
uactor, Kokosing Construction, is Route 7 so they can close existing
still shooting at a Thanksgiving Route 7 to begin slip repair work.
date for having the road open for A good amount of the total excavatwo lane traffic. The main obstacle tion work remaining on the project
in the way of the contractor is on Route 7 slip repair. The
Thanksgiving completion date is
Mother Nature.
"As we get closer to what we only a goal of Kokosing, and not a
need to do to finish the project, state mandated date," Brown
we're coming into cooler weather
Continued on page 3

Entire Stock on Sale
SOFA, LOVESEAT,
CHAIR CLEARANCE

NBA

Thanksgiving still target
..----Headed to state finals---., Fugitive to
date for completion of two
be moved
lanes of highway project

5

319
5499
8 • Gun Corner Cabinet 5399
5699
5559
9 ·Gun Pine
5)4)9
12· Gun Corner Cabinet 51129
5

$299

Mon Power, Olive, 15 acres;
Easement, Tim Williams and
Deborah Van Sickle to Mon Power,
Olive, 6 acres;
Easement, Cleora Shumway to
Omega JV5, Chester;
Easement, Vernon Ray and
Mary Lee Maxey to Omega JV5,
Olive;
Deed, Robert B. and Judith A.
Gibbs to Larry G. and Deloris G.
Sayre, Syracu~ . .30 acre;
Easement, Howard H. and
Eleanor H. Knight to Omega JV5,
Chester.

GUN CABINETS

ale

Reg.

Eloise Deeter to Ricky Lee Deeter,
Lebanon;
Deed, Homer W. and Shirley
Belt to Robert J. Lawrence and
Julie Thompson, Lebanon, 8.302
acres·
~. Laura Krebs to Charles E.
Krebs, Columbia, corrective deed;
Easement, Charles and Marie
Black to Monongahela Power
Company, Olive, 7 acres;
Easement, Chester and Nancy
Buckley to Mon Power, Olive, 38
acres;
Easemen~ Norma J. Coleman to

Ohio Lottery

~~~-~
992-3671

Welfare forum to be
held at MHS tonight'
A forum on welfare reform will
be held tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. in
the Meigs High School vocal music
room.
State Rep. John Carey will host
the forum on the newly-adopted
welfare reform JXIlicies, including
provisions which limit the amount
of time a family may receive assistance.
Members of the state legislature
will be on hand to receive input
from c011nty human services work-.
e~. welfare recipients, and the general public regarding what changes
are needed in the welfare system to
belp families become independent.
One such change hl).s already
taken place, Carey said. On August
16, Governor Voinovicb signed
into law the Welfare Reform Bill
passed by the Ohio General
Assembly.
House Bill 167 includes provi·
sions to encourage family (orma•
tion, education, and job training.
For the first time through this bill,
recipients of Aid to Dependent
Children (ADC) will be limited to
monthly cash benefits for 36
months over a 60 month period.
Ohio is one of only a few states

that bas adopted statewide time
limits on cash tx:nefits. ·
In addition to its focus on
change, Carey's legislative forum
will also address the Reform BiD. It
is open to the public.
"I would encourage anyone
with an interest in the welfare system in Ohio to attend," said Carey.
He went on to state that people
would be given an opportunity to

!~d~u~~~:t~et~::s~~r~i~~a~~

A

fSOn fU

Wolf, Eric Hollon, Nicole White. Row three:
Aaron Will, Amber Fortney, Molly Heines,
Christy Grossnickle. Row four: band director
Susan Climer, Cinda Clifford, Joe Weeks, Judy
West, Brandon Buckley, Seva Cline. Back:
Lamar Lyons. Absent were Melissa Dempsey,
Jeannie NeweU, Laura Brown, and Heath Prof·
fitt. (See story on page 12).

l d •

e

}j
d '
In · UeS ay S

t • ,6•
Ire 1lfe

Peace talks get
down to business

DAYTON (AP) - With the
presentation of the first elements of
In May, tJ.Je EPA met with Jack- a possible peace treaty, internationand Dennis Kelley, the Ashland
Resident who owns the property, to son and asked him to store the tires al mediators and the leaders of warhave the ~usiness comply with in piles of no more than 2,500 ring factions in the former
Yugoslavia moved from rhetoric to
solid waste standards.
square feet each with 50-foot aisles bard negotiations on bow to
Hundreds of residents between between them, the Huntington Her- •
peace in Bosnia and Croatthe Lawrence County communities ald-Dispalch reported. Ironically, achieve
ia.
.
of Athalia and Miller were forced on Monday Jackson received a let·
After
discussions
Wednesday
out of their homes Tuesday after a tcr from Clint Shuff, a state EPA
evening among U.S. Secretary of
pile of scrap tires at the Tire specialist, informing Jackson that State
Warren ChrisiOpher and Pres·
Express on State Route 7 caught he had violated both standards.
idents
Slobodan Milosevic of Ser-·
fire.
bia
and
Franjo Tudjman of Croatia,
Fire departments from Rome,
The Rome Township Volunteer
the
two
Balkan leaders agreed to
Fife Department dispatched to a Gallipolis, .Ashland Petroleum, peacefully
resolve the issue of the
call at around I a.m. when two Crown City, Guyan Township, last sliver of
Croatian territory still
Proctorville, Chesapeake, Burling·
piles of tilts were reported ablaze.
controlled
by
Serb rebels.
The fire, which drew 11 area ton, Fayette No. 2, Windsor TownAt
Christopher's
urging, Milofirelighling units from Lawrence ship and Perry Township joined
sevic
and
Tudjman
promised to
and Gallia counties, was brought forces to fight the ftre.
work
on
normalizing
relations
Foam, some of it provided by
under conuol by daylight, Rome
between
Serbia
and
Croatia
by proTownship Capt. Joe Edwards said. the Gallipolis VFD, was a major
viding
for
the
return
of
all
refugees
Volunteers from the Rome unit asset to fighting the lire, officials
. and by respecting human rights.
remained on the scene until Tues- said.
Only a few hours earlier
day night.
· · Around sunrise, firefl"gbters
Christopher
formally convened th~
The fire brought to the forefront brought the fire under control by
meeting
at
Wright-Patterson
Air
tensions between the owner of the spreading the burning fire into an
~orc_e
B~se
near
Da7ton,
saying,
.
tire shop and neighbors, according adjoining field and onto another
Tbts
wtll
be
a
loog
JOurney,
but
it
to published reports.
pe~on' s property.
all starts here."

wishing to express their views
t.
come prepared for an approKimate
ATHALIA- The Ohio State
three-minute time slot.
Fire Marshal's Office says the ftre
"I am proud to host an event that burned for more than six hours
.which encourages open communi· Tuesday morning at Tire Express
cation between government offi- w~ deh~rately _set.
cials and the people who are affect. Our 1nvesugator bas dete~­
ed by their decisions," Carey said. · -mmed ,that the cause of ~e ru:e ts
"I hope everyone, including tax- ar~on, spokesman Denms Gmty
payers, elected officials, and ,those SaJd.
.
working in tb\l welfare system, talce
No ~ests _have b~en. made m
full advantage of this opportunity c~nnectton wtth _the mctdent, be
to work together toward positive saJd Wednesday mgbL
change." Questions about the weiAbout 1 a.~. Tuesday, t_he
fare reform forum can be directed Rome Townshtp Volunteer F~re
to Carey's office at (614) 466· ~partment ~ot the call that a ure
. (
ptle was bummg.
1366, or by contacting 614&gt;466For almost six months, the Ohio
0892.
Environmental Protection Agency
bad been urging the owner of the
property and the owner of Tire
Express to comply with state regulations on storage, including those
making lighting ftres easier.
The Ohio EPA released documents Tuesday showing it had been
in contact since May with Dave
on the October employment situa- Jackson, owner -of the Tire Express,
tion on Friday. The unemployment
rate is expected to remain at 5.6
percent for the third straight month.
The four-week moving average
.
'
of new weekly jobless claims rose
COLUMBUS
(AP)If
Gov.
nications
with
legal
researchers.
by 5,500 to 359,750 during the
as predecisional memos are con·
The County Commissioners cerned," Oelslager said in an interperiod ended last week, bigbe$t Geofge Voinovich wins an exempsince 360,250 during the period tion from an open-records bill, Association of Ohio proposed an view.
local elected officials want the expansion of tbe disclosure break.
ended Aug. 5. .
"You'd be shutting down hunMany analysts prefer to uack same break. To which the sponsor
"Predecisional communications dreds and hundreds of governmenthe less-volatile four-week average of the bill replies: no way.
between any elected or apJXIinted tal entities from predecisional
Debate over Voinovicb' s official and staff should be exempt information that the public bas a
because it smooths out the spikes in
the weekly reports. .
reques~ to exempt memos, notes
from disclosure," said Jerry Col· right to know," be said:
In. the data repor-ted by states and staff reports surfaced Wednes· Iamore, assistant director.
Committee Chairman Bruce
and territories for the week ended day as the Senate Judiciary Com·
"At the very least, if the com- Johnson, R-Westerville, appeared
Oct. 21, 34 reported increases in mittee heard testimony for and mittee decides to exelllpt such com- to agree with local officials about
claims and 19 bad declines. The. against the legislation.
,
munications of the governor or leg· ·equal application of the exemption.
state data is reJXIrted a week later
At issue: a bill Sen. Scott Oel· islators, the same exemption should
"I think it's bard to argue that
than national totals.
stager, R-Canton, sponsored to be extended to local elected offi· the principle - which is difficult
States with the largest increases ensure that public records were cials," Collamore said in testimony decisions should be made witb
were California. 7,303; Michigan, acoessible at reasonable cost
prepared for the committee.
unfettered information and open2,558; Alabama, 1,938; New York,
. 'voinovfch bas proposed an
Oetslager rejected the idea.
ness internally regarding advioe 1.813; and Missouri, 1,736.
amendment thal would shield what · "In essence what we would be isn't equally as applicable to other
States with the largest declines · were described as "predecisional doing if we extended it to local levels of government than it is to
were North Carolina, 2.425; Texas. communications" among the gov- government officials is closing the governor," Johnson said.
1,983; Tennessee, 1.700; Mary- ernor and his staff from disclosure. ~ost the entire state government
Sen. Nancy ~x. R-Newark, said
land, 986: and Mississippi, 976.
Also exempt: legislators' commu- of Ohio ... to public sautiny as far loeal government also was worried

Initial jobless claims
hit six-week high
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
number of American worke~ filing
first-time claims for jobless benefits rose by 6,000 last week to a
six-week bigb.
The Labor Department said
today tbat new applications for
unemployment insurance totaled a
seasonally adjusted 365,000, up
from 359,000 during the week
ended Oct 21.
It was the highest since claims
totaled 366,000 during the week
ended Sept. 16. New claims have
not declined since Sept. 23, when
they dropped 31,000 to 335,000,
although they were unchanged during the week ended Oct. 21.
Many analysts, who had expected a slight drop last week, say the
current cl8ims level reflects slug·
gish job growth.
.
· Analysts predict only 125,000
jobs were created in October, up
slightly from 121,000 in Septem·
ber, but just half the 249,000 pay·
roll additions in August.
The Labor Department reports

The Eastern High Marching Band, under the
direction or Susan Climer, will compete In tbe
OMEA State Marching Band Finals, 8:45 a.m.
this Saturday, at Cooper Stadium In Columbus.
The band members are (L to R): Row one: Jessl·
ca Grueser, Steve Weeks, Lisa Stetbem, Tracy
Heines, Meredith Crow, Jennirer Mora, Christy
Drake. Row two: Heather Well, Blllee Pooler,
Nicole Parker, Amy Baker, Josh Wlll, Anna

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
A fugitive residing in the Meigs
County ltlfumary will have another
place to live after today.
Robert Albrigh~ 63, a fugitive
from Alabama where be was serving time on a second-degree murder charge, was plaoed in the infumary due to the jail's having inade·
quate facilities to deal with his
medical problems.
This afternoon, he will be
moved to a shelter in Athens County, according to Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
He was convicted of seconddegree murder after killing a man
in a light outside a bar 20 years ago
and was working on an honor farm
in Alabama in 1990 when he
escaped, Lentes said earlier.
Albright got to Meigs County by
hitching a ride here with a truck
driver a few weeks ago, he said.
Albright sought medical assistance at Veterans Memorial Hospital where hospital employees contacted the Meigs County Sherifrs
department after he reportedly gave
them conflicting names and Social
Sccuriry numbers.
· Albright has already run up
more than $4,000 in hospital and
doctor bills which the county will
have to pay, underwent minor
surgery two weeks ago and is
Continued on page 3

Local officials· want same break as Voinovich

;l

•

..

·,,

about JX1tential costs of compliance
with the bill.
"Some of us are starting to get a
lot of phone calls from local levels
of gox~rnment. This is a tremen dous unfunded mandate to local
governmen~" Dix said.
Frank Deaner, executive director
of the Ohio Newspaper Association, said the bill would allow
agencies to charge actual costs or
up to a maximum of 25 cents per
page for routine requests that existing employees could handle. Agencies could charge more for special
requests.
The commissioners association
said the bill should let agencies
charge fees for the cost of a ICCOids
search, duplication, review, clectroDic transmission and mailing.

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