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Dl Sunday llme• Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

•

wv

July 11, 1913

Ohio Lottery

P~!!~!!all !?_!!!!ies becoming big business
"The faster the ~tion the more
dd ' · · · . ..
.
a ~ctlve It . 15 • said .H~nry
;.es~eur, ~bauman of C~lmmal
JUStice mences at Ilhno1s State
University in Norinal •IIl "The
lotleri
. . '.
b'
inane ~.arc gctnng mto It t 5 lg

AP Baod=• Writer
NEW YORK- Powerball and
·b ·
. like . ·
1.oumes
and ltarcapower USJness
mmore
more states.
Thirly· four states plus the
Dislrict of Columbia have legalized
lotteries·. Some have interstate
games, sue.h as th e 14 ·State
Powerball drawing that yielded one
· ·
·k
rth $110 ill'
~~pasm~ !~ wo
m 1on
·
The. types ~f games a.lso are
evolvmg,
of
d
'
· makmg the busmess
Iotte.rt~s , more an . more
sophlsttcated- and the ~u.re for
players ~ven greate~, cnucs of
state·spon,sored gamblmg contend.
KNcb~ska rece:tlh began "1!u~
~no
- w IC ~very t~
mmutes offers a new keno game, 111
which players try to match up 10
numbers . from a pool of numbers
displayed on a screen. A handful of
states allow citizens to buy debit
cards to play video lotteries that

i,

Y•

States generally take in about
half thi!' total revenue in lottery
games, typically dedicating the
money to general e~pend1tures,
.though some have earmarked
lottery proceeds for. """"ific areas
States are movmg away fro111
cledicatcd lotteries that require
predicting revenue; if proceeds fall
short, programs suffer, whether
education bhudgets, as !n somf c
states, or t e const~uct10n o a
baseball stadmmr as m Maryland
two years ago.
In tight economic times, lotteries,
ironically, are viewed as a way for
states to generate more revenue
from citizens without raising ~es.

·r-

·

Acc~rdtng to Gamirag and
Wagmng BusiMss magazine, net

•

rarely questioning the process. .

lottery income to states in fiscal
It's a simple equation, but as with
1992 was $8.07 .billion, up from all forms of gi!IJlbling, lose" far
S7 70 biUion the vious car
outnumber winners. Press reports
1 D
· pre d' y r·
au
worm, e 1tor o the touted the $109,999,999 return on
~agazine•. said sta~ hope for big the winning Powerball ticket, but
Jackpots; m lottO-like games such typically didri't discuss how much
p
rball til · kpo
as how~... ' e Jac ttlacc~~~ the states raked in. The Multi-State
cac w.,..., no one corrcc y p1c..., Lottery Association, which runs
the six chosen numbers. That way, Powerball, refused to release the
more players join from in and out figure.
of stale.
"The lottery is regressive, the
Am1'd the hoop1a, .ew
, ' cnt1cosms
.. ·
· instant
games and numbers are
arc heard of the . u s 1
more regressive;" Lesieuuaid.
tradition dating to ' th~ i80~~~~ That means lower income people
which stales s nsor amblin
play lotteries . Sot as jackpots
Every time~ big j~kpot ~~mes increase above $20 million or so,
· due, the popular media focus on the he said, more people play, raising
Horatio Alger aspect of lottcries
the average income of players.
•
'
·

.,,,

-a I

'·

Vol. 44, NO. 52
: Multimedia Inc.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 12, 1993 ·

.

Sunday afternoon.
By Jila FreelllliD
The storm which struck the
Sentiael NeWII Staff
•
"I was downright ·disgusted.I felt Letart Falls bottoms destroyed
thousands of tomato and pepper
ready to hang it up."
·
That was how Letart Falls farmer plants and damaged other crops of
· Don Richard Hill described his farmers in that area.
The storm hit'an area about two
: feelings afier his tomato crop was
damaged by hail and heavy rains miles wide starting near Manuel

-----·· --.--

Rock of Ages oflera you a cholca of 6 dHferent colol:ed granites. Whatever your requil'llfllenta may be, complate satlafac·
tlon Ia assured with Rock of . a .
Hours: 9:011-4:00 M-T·Th-F. Others by appointment.
583-658&amp; or 446-2327
·

.Ph. 446·2327

t•ipolls, OH•

Crossword Puzzle on Page B-5
0-T.~~~

•.

than I 1(2 inches of rain in about
15 minutes.
"It's been a sad day for us," said
Adams who operates the Adams'
family farm.

He said the damage came at the
worst possible time --at the height
of the shipping season.
While a. few of the fanners have
Continued on Page 3

Bu11!lary charges filed

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 n.irtl Ave.

Road, just below the Racine Locks damage, fanner Jim Adams said.
At the Don Richard HiU Farm,
and Dam, and extending towards
'Heath
Hill and Kevin Dugan
Apple Grove at about 3:30.
It was all over in less than an showed a rain gauge which they
hour leaving behind heavy crop explained registered slightly more

...---Local briefs--

~~~~

•

Burgliry charges have been fired against Michael Huddleston arid
Rev a Stafford, Point Pleasant, W.Va., according to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
.
.
.
The subjects are charged with entering the residence of Tom and
Carla D8Weese on Roiite 7 at Pity Me on Saturday morning
between the hours of 1 a.m. and 6 a.m. They reportedly took a 27·
inch color television.
Mason County authorities were notified and were able to recover
the television and arrest the two individuals. Both subjects are being
held in the Mason County Jail on disposing of stlllen propeny
charges.
It is not known if they wiU willingly return to Meigs County to ..
face the charges here when fmisbed in Mason County.

Deer
accident
. Oscar T. Smith, Pomeroy, reported to the Meigs County Sheriffs
- Department that at 3:15 a.m. on Saturday he struck a deer on
County Road 39.
·
Smith was operating his 1989 Volkswagon Rabbit Damage to his
vehicle was listed as light

Trailer
entered
Canil Tripplett, Ross Road. Portland, reported Saturday afternoon
to the Mcip County Sheriff's Department that her trailer had been
entered sometime Thursday night...
·
She rep&lt;l1ed 80100 doshes and quilt we~ missing.

a

~____;:;__Taking

HAIL i&gt;AMAGE .:... Letart Falls farmer Don Richard Hill
displays a tomato damage by ball Sunday llfternoon. Tbe Impact
spUl tbe tomato's surface and dented it in three places. Farmen
may not know the extent or tbe damage for several days, Hill
t!&lt;)llained. (Sent'inel
photo by.Jim Freeman)
··
.,.,

DAMAGED ON THE VINE- Paul HiD Jr. examines tomatoes
damaged on the viae by bail that struck his Letart Falls farm
Sunday afternoon. Hlll and other. farmers without hail insurance
stand to lose a lot or money due to the storm. (Sentinel photo by
· Jim Freeman)
·

'

inventory-----. Volunteers call Ri~er Sweep successful;
already planning. next year's expansion

KEEP COOL AND $AVE··
• Pumps hot air out and cool air
in during the summer.
·•

zoned programmed
control to heat (!)r cool
specific areas at different times
of day-Or night

Columbus Southern Power's energy
consultation services are available free of
charge to businesses needing assistance with
heating/cooling, water heating, lighting or
cooking facilities and equipment.
(

Call441-4681 for 1 free consultation.

COLUMBUS
SOUTHIRN
POWIR .
'

CINCINNA Tl - Volunteer as we did last year, but we had 60
coordinators say the res11lts of the percent more collection sites. That
fifth annual Ohio River Sweep, means the sites we've cleaned for
held June 19, show the project is several years arc staying cleaner, so
resulting in a cleaner environment. we're moving on. And, our
They also agree the program needs volunteer county coordinators
to be expanded to more locations already are discussing how we can
along the river to continue the · make an even bigger impact next
year."
positive impact.
·
Volunteer coordinators organize
The Ohio River Sweep is a oneSweep efforts in each of 72
the
day, six-state cleanup which
counties
bordering the Ohio River
encompasses nearly 2,000 miles of
shoreline from Pittsburgh ,to Cairo, in si~ states-Kentucky, lllinois,
Ill. .It is conducted by the Ohio Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania and
River Valley Water Sanitation West Virginia
In the three years he has been
Commission (ORSANCO) in
involved with the Sweep, Clark
partnership with Ashland Oil, Inc.
The 1993 Sweep registered about County, Ind., coordinator Troy
the same totals as last year, with McConnick has seen a significant
more than 17,000 volunteers reduction in trash that's ~ashed up
collected in e~cess of 13,000 tons on the banks at the Falls of the
·
of trash. There were 335 sites Ohio State Park.
designated as starting points this - 'Three years ago we coUected 26
year, compared with 210 in 1992. · tons of trash," McCormick said.
·''This really shows the Sweep is "Last year we collected only 12
working,'' said Jeanne lson, project tons in the same locations. And,
director .for ORSANCO. "We this year the amount was reduced
collected the same amount of trash to a single truckload. This is
evidence that the Sweep is
effective and we will be adding
three new locations here next
year."
A directive on how to handle
Pennsylvania state coordinator
claims reports on items which have Betsy Mallison said the attitude of
been pawned with Fife's 'in volunteeJS toward litter is one of
Mid.dleport was issued this anger.
morning by Meigs County
"People gladly give their time to
Prosecuting Attorney John R. clean the riverbanks," she said.
·Lentes.
"But, I hear more commeniS each
Lentes said that persons who year that they are angry with
believe they have items pawned people who continually abuse our
with Robert D. Fife should go to natural resources by trashing them.
the office of Meigs County sheriff We're seeing more people dumping
·James M. Souls by and pick up a along the riverbanks because of
voluntary sfatement form.
landfiU costs:
"It's inexcusable," she continued.
Forms should be taken home by
the claimant and filled out noting "Yes, I've seen an improvement in .
what was pawned, when it was five years in what the Sweep has
pawned, serial numbers, other accomplished. But, 1'!11 afraid
identifying information and . we're a long way from being put
provide copies of receipts and then out of businesS."
·
return the information to the
~ve KesseU of Jackson County,
sheriff's department.
· W.Va., said they also experienced
The claim fonns will be reviewed increased litter this year primarily
by the prosecuting attorney and due to illegal dumping,
con~ts w.ill ~ made with those
"Until this year, I felt the amount
making claims.
of debris collected each year was
'"'bis process," said Lentes, "will on a steady decline," he said. ''We
take at leastlwo weeks."
had .a lot more in our area, but a
Operation of the used rainy season and floods have
merchandise store was shut down · washed out tributaries from
Friday in cc;mjunction with the hollows where there wer~ illegal
arrest of F~fe on a charge of dumps. As the Sweep continues, it
allegedly buymg food stamps.
. will grow because we , must

Directive issued

P~ovides

• Heats efficiently ilt all winter
temperatures reducing energy
use and operating costs.

(NOW IN STOCK!)

•

1 $ec:tion. 10 Page• 35 cenbo
AMultimodlolnc. Newspaper

Storm destroys Letart Falls area crops

percent. Stocks held finn in Paris
and rose in Franlcfun.
Gold · stocks, whicJI have
peppered the most-active lists-in
recent days, again traded heavily.
The inflation worries had pushed
up the stocks, which .along with .
g~ld are often considered a hedge
against cost-of-living increases.

New dual-fuel heat pump system
keeps your customers and employees
comfortable year-round while saving
energy - and money.

A N~WFORD
TURBO DIESEL

80s.

.

'

I

"' 244 S. Church Street, Ripley
Phone: 1-800-964-3673

cloudy Tul!!day, sunny, blxb In

•

••

TRAIL WINS FUNDING • Lieutenant Governor Mlcllael
DeWIDe came to GaUia Couty Tuadayto aWIJ'd a $1.3 mlWDD
grant to the 0. 0. Mcintyre Park ·District lor the "Ralls to Trails"
project. Ronnie Halley, 1ecretary ol.tile park dl1trlet, Judie
Thomas 'Moulton, president of the pat!!; dlstrkt, Josette Baker,
Gallla County parlul and tecreatlon director, Dr. WIDlam Thomas,
park board member, and Dewlne (left tcrri&amp;bt) were OD band at
the Gallla-Melp lteatooal airport lor lbe pn!lentallon. Only three .
other part~ Ill Ohio-all of them lrom larae metropoUtaa ar,_
rw;elved more money lbaa Ga~la County.,

.

\a~o

Low tolllght In 60s. partly

Kicker:
943564

. Physiatrist joins clinic staff
GALLIPOLIS - Ron Bonfiglio,
M.D., Physiatrist, joined the Holzer
Clinic Medical SUiff on July I.
Dr. Bonfiglio is Board eligible in
Physical
Medicine
and
Rehabilitation by the American
Board of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation. ·
Dr. Bonfigilio will be working
with Daniel R. Black, D.O., in the
Physical
Medicine
and
Rehabilitation Depanment on the
second floor of the Main Clinic. He
will also be seeing patients at the
Inpatient Rehabilitation Center; the
Holzer Clinic Rehabilitation
Center; 4th and Sycamore Streets
in Gallipolis and at Holzer's
satellite clinics.

10-13-15-29-40..41

Page4

Market
tra'dJ"ng h·ea·ds upward
·

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock
market edged higher in sul&gt;dued
trading Friday, with many investors
choosing to sit out the session
Boosiers Club. Hennesy also has ahead of the weekend and key data
been a successful fund-raiser for on inflation.
The Dow Jones industrial
organizations such as the Lions
average
rose 6.64 points to
Club, Boy Scouts of America, and
3,521.06.
the American Cancer Society.
Advancing issues outnumbered
declines by about 9 to 7 on the
New York Stock ~change.
Volume on the floor of the Big
Board came to 233 .52 million
shares as of 4 p.m., down from
282.88 million in the previous ·
session.
Bond prices ended mostly higher,
also in light ttading, and helped to
lift stocks, analysts said. Stocks
. often Jake their cue from bonds
because low interest rates make
returns from stocks more atttaetive.
But the market moved higher
with little conviction aftcr its twosession rally of more than 64
points. That more than erased the
60·point drop on Tuesday and last
Friday, mostly on worry about
inflation.
Tuesday's decline in stock prices
was attributed mostly to fear of
inflation, prompted by a surge in
ROBERT T. HENNESY
commodity prices.
Although a closer look showed
much of the Increase could be
attributed to heavy rains in key
Dr. Bonfiglio is a native of crop growing regions and
Greenville, Ohio. He received his floooding of the Mississippi River,
undergraduate degree from Ohio investors were still concerned,
Nonhero University in 1984. He · analysts said.
But overaJ.I, investors were
received his Medical Degree from
gaining
confidence about the shape
the Medical College of Toledo in
of President Clinton's tax bill and
1989'
His residency training h~· been at health-care package and that was
Merqy Hospital in Toledo, 1989- helping stocks.
Uncertainty about the economy
1990; Schwab Rehabilitation
Center, Chicago, 1990 ·1991; and and the president's measures has
Marianjoy Rehabilitation Center helped depress stock prices
·
and Loyola Medical Cen1er, 1991- recently.
ended
mixed
abroad.
In
Stocks
1993.
Tokyo,
the
225:issue
Nikkei
Stock
Dr.l!onfigilio and his wife Patty,
have two children, Ryan, 7, and, Average gained 0.96 percent. In
Amy, I tn. They will' reside in London, the Financial Times-Stock
E~change tOO-share inde~ fell 0.1
Gallipolis.

. Pick 3: ·
367
Pick 4~
0144

Super: Lotto:

p

llennesy promoted at OVB
GALLIPOLIS - Robert T.
(Bob) Hennesy has been promoted
to assistant vice president at Ohio
Valle'y Bank in Gallipolis,
according til president and chief
exec~tive officer James L. Dailey.
Hennesy will continue in his
· position as manager of the
in~taUmemlending department.
Hennesy has an extensive
background in banking and has
graduated from Ohio Bankers
Association schools in consumer
credil and marketing at Kent Stale
University and Miami l)niversity,
respectively. The Middlepon High
School graduate in addition has
stu.died accounting at the Gallipolis
Business College.
He has been active in numerous
community activities over the years
·includi~g serving as president of
the Gallipolis Lions Club and
belonging to the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce, Gallia
County Improvement Corporation,
Gallipolis Elks Club, Gallia
Academy 'Boosters Club, and the \
Gallipolis City Schools Academic

Reds lose
heartbreaker

-

Each or the lbotgullll, rines,
and
handguns
wtre
iaventorled (top p~oto) as they
were removed from the
residence and : business
buildings of Robert D. Fife.
Here Meigs County Sheriff's
Deputy Robert Beegle looks
over one or the nearly 3,000
paseelzeclln Friday's raid to
aet the ldeatllyiDI material
aeeded for tbe Inventory.
Carol Soutbera was clerk ror
Uoe operation. Tbe aear.l y
3'; 000 IDDI con(!acated Ia
Friday's raid (bottom photo) ·
at tile· South Third Street,
Middleport huslneu and
residence or Robert D. Fife
were loaded lato a truck and .
pat Into lilt ltorlp over the
weekead. Here Melp County
Sberlll Jame~ M. Soulsby
amutaes some of the guu Ia
the truck. (Seatlael pbotoe by
Charlene Hoefllcll)

•

maintain previous sites and add
new ones. We're making a
difference.at more than 200 sites up
and down the Dhio River. I can't
wait for the day that it impacts the
entire river."
"The Sweep definitely is making
a difference," said Terry Johnson,
coordinator for Massac County, Ill.
"This year, we clea11ed the same
area as last year in less time and
with fewer people. I'm already
thinking about going ne~t year into
areas we haven't touched. But we
can;t get safe access to some of the
areas that need cleaning., In some
cases, the shoreline is so steep that
we can only get to it by boat. Other
areas are private and we need
. permission. That's something we
can worlc on."
Sherri Allen from McCracken
County, Ky., a~.
"The S.weep has improved the
areas we've cleaned for· the past
few years. But, we have to expand.
There are islands and sandbars that
have been trashed, and we're using
boats to reach them. And, we've
Continued on Page 3

Underground
work suspended .
at Meigs Mine 31
Underground work at Meigs
Mine No. 31 has been temporarily
suspended due to significant water
problems in the mine B. 1. Smith
American Electric Power publi~
relations director said this morning.
She said as yet, the extent of the
problem has not yet been
determined. The water was
discovered about 8 p.m. Sunday
-and employees whd work
underground were advised not to
report to work until otherwise
notified.
.· The office and surface o~tion
employees of Meigs Meigs Mine
31 are worldng today, Smith said.
Smith said water levels are being
monitored
today .· Further
information will be provided onec
ihe source of the problem is
determined, Smith added.
She said the problem at Meigs
Mine 31 in no way way ·affects
o!Jerations at Meigs Mine 2.

�•

:

Mo~y.

,.

.

Tuesday, July 13
Accu· Wealber• forecast ror

conditi0111

MICH.

High court undermines voting rights

The Dally Sentinel

The U.S. Supreme Court last given point, old tools should be
week rendered an atrocious S-4 abandoned in the face of new
· decision that raises legitimate fears undcntandings .
DEVOTED TO Till: III'I'Zila'I'S OJ' THE IIEIOS-IIASOM AIIKA
Fust, however, it is necessary 10
it could weaken the 196S Voting
Rights Act Nevertheless, though
the ruling ;.vas based on faulty logic
Cart~r
. and bad law, it had the perversely
useful effect of reinvigorating an
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
unsettled debate about the proper reiterate two basic truths. One is
remedies in today's world for that race has been the great
Publisher
American dilemma and its angry
yesterday's racist discrimination.
wound from colonial days to the
Specifically.
the
court-4eeided
MARGARET
LEHEW
CHARL~ HOEFLICH
that
geographically"bi~arre"
present. The Constitution was
Contmller
General Manager
written
by men who cxpliciliy
redistricting plans drawn solely 10
l.ET11lltS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be tess than 300
guarantee success for min11rity refused to abolish slavery and
wonll. All lollers ""' &amp;ubject 10 ediling aoo ·must be signed witb o\IIJIC,
cand1dates can be challenged as a counted slaves as less. than fully
addra1 llld t&lt;:lephone number. No unsigned leu.n will be publilbed. Lcu.n
possible deprivation of 1he rights of human for purposes of political
.."'..;·_addre
__
.._in.;.&amp;_iu_ue_•_·no_.:tpeno~-"-ali-·l_io_•·-----.1: · white voters to equal proteciion repr!lsentation from ,the states.
L -•-bo-uld_be_iD...;.'oocl-,.w
Those who piously renounce raceunder the Constitution.
In doing so, the narrow majority based remedies for racially
effectively repudiated what inflicted inequalities turn a blind
Congress, the executive branch and eye w history:
The
second
is
that
the courts had all long ago decided
Wl!S settled law. It also guaranteed gerrymandering has historically
a
lengthy period of legal created weird and wonderful
By MARGARET SCHERF
lines-hence
the
uncertainty
in that handful of district
Allodated Press Writer
congressional
districts
that
would
designation,
a
combination
of
the
WASHINGTON - Agriculture Department scien,tists have developed
appear
to
fit
the
extraordinarily
name
of
one
nowrious
district's
a speedy new .test 10 detect disease-causing overseas viJoids, viTuslike
vague prOscription written for tl)e creator, Elbridge Gerry, and the
micro-organisms that can devastate apple and pear ttees.
"Now new apple and pear ttees coming inw 1he U.S. can be grown in a majority by Justice Sandra Day salamander it was said 10 resemble.
Perhaps nooe was quite as long and
greenhouse for just two monlhs. And ~n scfeening diem for apple scar O'Connor.
narrow as the new 12th
But
some
of
the
initial
reaction
skin viroid takes just about a day or two using our new test," said plant
was knee jerk and overwrought, Congressional District in North
pathologist Ahmed Hadidi of 1he Agricultural Research service.
Nowhere
is it written that the best Carolina. the object of the lawsuit
Viroids are the world's smallest infectious agents and some of the
way
ti:&gt;
achieve
full equality in this that the Supreme Court sent back
toughest 10 identify. They were discovered by an Agriculture Department .
country
is
through
the continuing, for rehearing last week but many
scientist in 1971. ~diseases can mask symp10ms of viroids. ·
self·conscious
and
deliberate were equa,lly tortured in design.
Hadidi said the new. test is three 10 five years faster than the current
practice of waiting for the tree to bear fruit and then looking for segregation of its politics. At a Their intention was w advance or
symPIOms of apple scar skin viToids such as sponing and scarring of fruit.
Apple scar skin viToid takes the longest time 10 identify and confum,
Hadidi said.
Hadidi Said a faster test could mean that growers and consumers may
not have 10 wait as long for a new fruit variety that owes its flavor 10 an
imported species.
"We've seen prime candidates for new species, such as Chinese pears
of superior flavOI\ and market value, that must spend years in quarantine,"
he said.
'
NUMERICALTAXalloM~T
After USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service approves the
new technique, it will be used to screen plants at federal quarantine
centers, Hadidi sai&lt;l,
·
IIADAVERVTAXIN~
"A foreign species - in fact, all incoming plants - undergo
quarantine so no viToids or other disease&lt;ausing pathogens accidenlally
PI~USSION
enter 1he country,'' said research associate Edward V. Podleckis, who .is
working with Hadidi at the National Gennplasm Resources Laborawry in
Beltsville, Md.
·
Apple scar skin viroid, which infects some fruit trees in China and
Japan, is spread by grafting from infected cuttings. Podleckis spent
several months developing and perfecting a tissue blot test for the viroid.
The test stans with a viroid-free plant. Podleckis gralts 01110 it a piece of
the quarantined plant.
Wheilthe plant has grown for two months, he takes a twig or lea'f from
its new growth and presses it down on a wet filter so some sap sticks 10 iL
Then he uses a non·radioactive probe to produce light that, when placed
next to the filter, exposes a piece of photographic film. A dark spot
appears wherever apple scar skin viToid is present.

111 Coart Street
POmenJT, Oblo

.

Hodding

·.

Ill

·USDA scientists develop new
test for fruit tree viroids

'

retard number of special intereStS,
often of party, sometimes of
factions, incumbents and utb~ or
rural voters. In the South, they
were frequently drawn 10 minimize
or eliminate the potential strength
of minority voters, and in
panicular, black voterS.
That is why the Voting Rights
Act of 1965 and its amendments 10
years ago required that race be·
taken into account " in order to
avoid dilution of· minority voting
strength," as Justice David Souter
wrote for the dissenting court
minority. The Supreme Court
agreed as recently as 1977.
Affll1!lative action to open doors
was required to undo what
affirmative action to keep them
shut had produced.
The resul!S have been gratifying.
Blacks in the formerly repressive
South now vote in proportional
numbers nearly equal 10 whites.
There are more black officeholders
in 1he South than in the rest Or the
·' couinry put together. Tllere all\
'black congressmen from every
· Southern state eicep~kansas.
Six new Hispanic cong essmen
were elected in 1992
10 the
creation of dis'tricts tailored to
create Hispanic majorities.
But there is another side 10 this,
best exemplified by something a
decent
white
ReJYiblican
congressman from a Southern stale

I HAD AN ATAAtC
TAXICAB RIDE WITH A
AND ATAXIDERA\I;T,

WE

ABOUT

PHO'IDTAXONOMY.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. Feed Grains Council is celebrating
the 201!1 anniversary of its Taiwan office, which it says has resulted in
more than 5 million metric IOns of grain being shipped 10 that country
annually for 1he past four years.
"From 1he beginning of our joint endeavors in 1973, with the opening
of the offiCial USFGC office in Taipei, a trade relationship of trust and
commiunent has served to benefit both our countries," said Charles
Ottem, council chairman.
,
Agriculwre Secretary Mike Espy sent a letter congratulating the council
on the anniversary.

&lt;9i-·..
e:5'1:r1:
e 111a.., MEA. a

&gt; •
·

TJ.IINK OF
ANYTHIN(; ELSE?

One· hand clapping fo~ Ju~ge Ginsburg :
During the biparusan chorus of
praise for the president's first
·nomination to the high court, a
dissonant chord was.struck by Lyle
Denniston, the trenchant Supreme
Court reporter for the Baltimore
Sun .and American Lawyer
mag~~ne. . ..
.
On N1ghthne, Denmswn took
note of the two different Ruth
Bader Ginsburgs. The fmt was the
counterpart of atiOmey Thurgood
~arsha\!· who made . b~ac~s
persons under the Consutuuon m
a senes of landm.~k cases. She •. as
a lawyer, rna~~. equal protection
under the laws_ mclude warne~.
But, Denniston a~de~. ~1n ~ e
bemg a!)pomted to the D1stnct of
Columb1a Court of ~ppeals 10
1980•. Judg7 Gmsburg looks upon
the JUdiCiary ~~ a somewhat
secondarr, playe~ m_our system ?f
JU~Uce . I don t thmk that sh~ s
gomg .to .leave a very. substantial
depos1t 10 the con~utuuo.?al or
statutory law of th1s country.
To be sure, judges and lawyers
play differe~t roles. Judges are not
supposed to be advocates for. one
s1~e or an~ther. Furtherrnore,Judge
Gmsburg s supporters say-:-as she
has - that a lower court JUdge IS
constrained by the rulings of the

:

IXJN'T YOU

said to me recently. "Before 1990,
my district was 25 percent
minority. When I voted for the
Martin Luther Sing national
holiday, it made a lot of my white
constituents mad as hell, but I had
that other group on my side. Now,
they' ve stripped my black VQJers
out, along with those from an~r
• district, to create a safe black
dislricL If you think I'd vote for 1he .
holiday again. you're crazy."
It !s sue~ racial ~ization .~ ·
Justice 0 Connor Cited, and 11 IS
not a · ~oncern rese~ved . ~or :
conservatives alone. Lam Gmmer,
dro~ped as President Clinto~·s
chOice to ,head _the Ju.s ttce ,
D~~artment s C1v1l R.•ghts ·
DIVISion, wrote that the creation of
majority-black districts may isolate
"blac~ constituents from the white
maJonty, f~ ~blacks who do
not res1de m the distnct and from
potential legislative allies." Or, 10
put it another way, the less
responsive that white legislators
feel to black concerns, the 'less
significant it is that the
Congressional Black Caucus has .
doubled in size. Impotence with
over 40 members is no different
from impotence with half as many.
You still need allies to get a
majority, and unfortunately it is
hard to attract. allies when their
constituents have little or nothing ·
in common with yours.
There is one other point 10 add 10
the debate. It is simply no longer·
true that blacks cannot be elected in
white majority districts. Virginia,'
*"'here blacks are less than 20
percent of the electorate, elected·
Douglas Wilder, a black man, asgovernor. Ditto Los Angeles,'
where Tom Bradley presided as
mayor for two decades in a city
with an Anglo majority. The fml
blacks elected to the Florida ·.
legislature came from whitemajority districts.
None of this is 10 argue that it'
would be safe 10 repeal the Voting ·
Rights Act. It is to suggest,'
however, that there ·are valid
reasons 10 re-examfne some of the .
assumptions behind 1he prevailing·
orthodoxy. The point of the
exercise is not 10 provide jobs for
black and Hispanic politicians. It is
to empower as fully as possible
eac·h and every citizen in this
country; 8nd there. is more than one:
acceptable road 10 that goal.
Hodding Carter Ill, rormer
State Depar~ment spokesman·
and award-winnin1 reporter;
.editor and publisber, is president
or MainStreel, a Washington,
D.C.·based television production
com.pany.

Supreme Court and the precedents
of her circuit.
Accordingly, J11,dge Ginsburg
considers it quite in order that she

Nat Bento~'~'
'JJ

writes no more than a "few
separate opinions a year."
Furthermore, she much prizes
civility among her colleagues and
indeed among all judges. She
prefers a . Supreme Court, for
instance that operates with a
"temperate · brand of decisionmaking, one that (is) not
extravagant or divisive." And she
said during a lecture earlier this
year at New York University Law
School: "In writing for the court,
one must be sensitive to the
sen.sibilities and mindsets of one's
colleagues, which . may mean
avoiding certain arguments and
authorities, even certain words."
She is not, then, a forceful
dispenser of justice or an incisive
critic of colleagues who deny
justice. In this respect, she does not
at ·all reFesent Judge-and then·
Justice-Thurgood Marshall. On
the Second Circuit and then the
Supreme Court, he dil\ not temper

his disagreements with colleagues
on issues that meant a,great deal 10
him-schO()l segregation, the death
penalty, due p~ocess in criminal
cases.
To Thurgood .Marshall, being a
judge did not require him to
moderate his insistence on justice.
And though he lost many of his
battles 00 the bench he becamefor many lawyers, future lawyers
and large numbers of nonlawycrsa model of 1he life force in the law:
1once sat behind him on a train and
watched lawyer after lawyer come
over so that afterward they could
. tell
their
children
and
grandchildrenlheyshookhishand.
Marshall was far from the only
circuit judge who has not felt
rigidly confmed because he or she
might be overruled. Among a good
many others there are Richard
Posner, John Noonan, Frank
Easterbrook, James Oakes, Amalya
K~arse, Alex Kozinski; and on
Ginsburg'!!'· own circuit Patricia
W..d. Among state judg~ dealing
with constitutional issues, Hans
Linde, Sol Wachtler and Judith
Kaye have often challenged the
high court rather than genuflect
before il
With regard w'Judge Ginsburg's
judicial philosoPhy she has tieen

on what is genemlly regarded as
the liberal side in a few key
cases-norably bel: vote, in dissent.:
for the constitutionality of the
statute authorizing independent
prosecuwrs 10 investigate alleged ,
misdeeds by the executi~e branch.
On the ot~e~ hand, as_ law
professor Wtlham Kovac1c of
George Mason University has IOld
the Wall Stree.~ Journal, ~insburg
has bee~
as consistently
conser~auve as any B~sh. or .
Reagan J~dge ~the D.C. CU'CW~ m
cas.es mvolvmg .su~stant•ve
antitrust s~~s, bab1hty rules· ·
and reiiJedi~. .
.
And m cnmmal cases, she-like
~any of her future ~olleag~es on : ·
h1gh ~ost often s1de~ w1th _th~ ·
pro~~ullon, hardly a centrist, ·.
pos111on.
_ .
Also troublesome IS ~e ~ay she ·
looks at the system of JUStice as a··
rather uneven tnalogue bet_ween the ·
execut1ve branches, leg1slat~res
and the courts. Her tendency IS 10 •
yi,el~ too often 10 lhe decisions of :
legiSlatures because .they are ·
popu.larly elec~ed. Or, as her ·
paladin,.S~n. Patnck MaY'!~· D· :
N.Y., sa1d on her nommauon: ,
"She's highly interested in courts :
moving_with public '!Pinion and ;
not gelling 100 far out m front." So ·
muchJor James Madison's warning ·

'
D.i d closure b·ow to p. ressure ------------------ :~a;e!~~ra~~:r~!,:.~~t" ~:a;~·s~· :
. WASHINGTON (IIIEA)-In finance more base closures. "We calcujati~-~ •:: ..Mak~; too.many
public appearances, BaSe Closure already · have too much on our changes-on that hst, he warned, and
Commission Chairman) im Courter plates," Aspin . told the panel. he might not "have enough time to
wuted the panel as tieing "hercely "Don't give us more than we can consider and certify" their work. In
independent." Looking at the final
other words, he hinted he might
results, it appears the commission
derail the whole process.
was independent- but only up to a
Both Aspin and Powell said they
c()u)d live with a few
point. ·
·
A few days before the seven handle."
subst·i tutions- the commission
commissioners began their 9nal
Powell was more blunt. Under exchanging one base in a category
deliberations. they received final the complex rules of the base- for another - or "changes at the
testimony from Defense Secretary closing process, the commission's margin." Reportedly, Aspin
Les Aspin and Joint . Chiefs· decisions are sent 10 the president repeated this to several of the
Chairman Gen. Colin Powell. What who has twQ weeks to a~cept or commissioners
in
phone
they heard from the two was a reject the list in its entirety. Owing conversations during their final
combination plea and a not- that tim~;, Powell must certify the deliberations. Basically, that is
sothinly·veiled threat.
list does not compromise national exactly what occurred.
Don't change the Pentagon,"s . security.. Powell . t?ld . the
The headlines have focused on
closure list very much, Aspm said, commiSSioners t~at h1s .!1~t as the large numbers 'llf bases being
because the Defense Department ap~roved by Aspm, was fmely closed (about 30 major
simply ~s qat have 1he budget 10 . ba1anced a product of complex installations), and the economic

Robert}. Wagman

•

.

.

~

impact oq , Wc.al...wmmunities, commissiim members was retired
whic'li -ranges from severe ·to Air Force Gen. H.T. Johnson, who
devastating. What has been lost in spent his career in military airlift
most of the reporting on the final and was in charge of airlift for
closure list is that, for the most Descn Storm. He is 1he man many,
part, the Pentagon's list has been both Inside and outside the
left intact.
·
·Pentagon, believe should now be
In only one inajor case did the Air Force chief of staff In 1he end,
commissio.n override a Pentagon the debate came down to which
decision and substitute one major base he would rather run a major
base for another. The Air Force has · troop from. He said McGuire, and
been trying to mate up its mind his fellow commissioners~ .
what ait base to use for its new
Robert . Waaman Is a
East Coast air-mobility wing. The syndleated writer for Newsp1per
choice was among three: Enterprllle Asllodallon.
Plattsburgh and Griffis~ in New
York state, and .McGuire in New
The song " It's All in the Game" was
·Jersey. The Air Force choice was based.on a melOdy written by Charles
Plattsburgh, and it ordered H. .Dawes, who went on to· serve as
~ice president o( the United States
McGuire Flosed. .
·
under Calvin Coolidge.
One of the more active

'I . '

legislatures that assume 100 much. :
.J.!te R~~nquist court is very :
seldom concerned with the
outsiders in this society,..--except 10
keep them there. Ruth Bader .
Ginsburg-who has markedly '
diminished herself from the lawyer
she was-is unlikely, even in her
ra(e dissents, to ignite in he·r
colleagueS or 1he citizenry at large .:
a sen.se of \\'hat Justice Brennan .
!'lean,t, when ~e said that "ugly ·
mequ111es conllnue 10 mar 1he face ..
of our nation. We are surely nearer ·
the beginning than the .end of the".
scruggle."
,
Nat Bentorr is a nationally
renowned au tborlty on the · :
FlrstAmendment and the rest or : :
the )Ill! of Rlgbts and a ·
syndicated writer ror Newspaper
Enterprise AIIOCiation.

'·

•

Plt..

By Tbe AuodiH Prell
A cold front will push the heal
and humidity out of Ohio today,
but both are expected to return
Wednelday.
.
I.Dws tonight will be in 1he upper
SO. in 1he notlh to lower 60s in the
"illlUih- Highs Tuesday will be in 1he

80s.

.

The rccorct&lt;high 1empcraturc for
this date at the Col11111bus weather
· station was 103 in 1936. The reCord
low was.47 in 1940.
Swtset IOday will be at 9:01 p.m.
Sunrise Tuesday will be .at 6:14

IND.

lLIO.
1:0.::.

W.VA.

Around the .nalloa
A weak storm that caused

Storm ...
Continued from Page 1

South-Central Oblo
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the low 60s. Tuesday, mostly
Sullny. High in 1he I!PJICf 805.
Extended rorecast:

--Area deaths-Andria Arnold
Audria Marie Jeffers Arnold, 70,
of Pomeroy, died Sunday, July 11,
1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born on March 18, 1923 at
Middleport. she was the daughter
of the laiC Ben and Pearl Sullivan
Kesterson. She was a homemaker
and a member of 1he Meigs County
senior Citizens Center. •
She is survived by a daughter,
Carol Ann Bachtel, Battle Creek,
Mich.·;
·
three daug~ters and sons-in:law,
Bea and Jerry Davis, Goldsboro,
N.C.; Delores and Mike Beach of
Xenia, Susie and Ronnie CasiO of
Pomeroy with whom Mrs. Arnold
resided; a son, Bill Jeffers ofXenia
and a son and daughter-in-law,
Ronnie and Diane Bachtel,
Chester; two sislers, Gladys Fife of
Middleport and Beaulah Dodderer
or Swanton; and a brother, Richard
Kesterson, Willard; seven
grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded by her husband, Wil~
Ray Davis, a sister, Lucille
Kesterson. and a brother, Benny
Kesterson.
Funeral services wiU be held It I
p.m. Tuesday at 1he Ewing Funeral
Home, Pomeroy. Bennie SIevens
will offiCiate and burial will be in
Rock Springs Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Monday from 2 to 4 and 7 10 9 p.m.

(USPS ZU.MI)

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l'lldly. Ill ~ St., Po111«0y, Ohio by die
Ohio Valley l'llblilllill Co-y.t.Mtlmodla
IJH:., Pomoroy, O!tlo 45769, I'll. !llll-2156.
Socolld • • poobp plid .. Pomeroy, Olllo.
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Preu/ 111&lt;1 lllc Olllo

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RepraeDliiJn, Brubam Ne...,.,.. Salel.

733 Third AYeaue, New York. New Yort
10017.
POSThiASTER: Sead ICiclteol clioapo 10 The
o-ily Sentinel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio

4.5769.
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\.

Livestock
report ,
Prices

The Daily Sentinel

was I'CipOIIIible for large hail and
Temperatures today were
damlging winds Sunday' ni&amp;ht
forecast 10 rellch the !OOs in the ·
A torna,do was reJ)Ortcd near extreme Southwett; the 901 a10111
Ponncllson. Iowa. Windl gusltd 10 the Eut Coa~t aa far nor~ u
101 miles acrols Kansas. Trees ,Boston, and Kross much of lhe
were downed in several staleS.
soutbera tier; 1he 80s ICIOSS IIIOil
Strong. 10 severe thundeniOrms or lhc nation's midsection and
also devel.oped in the bot 1nd northern New ~gllnd; and the 601
humid air mass along 1he middle and 70s from the northern Great ·
Atlantic COist, providing some l..aW, across lbe nonhem P1lins' to
relief from 1he persisletlt heat.
the i'ICific Nonhwesa.
The Great Lakes region was
The bigh temperature for the
expecting sun today, as 1liJIS much Lower 48 States on Suaday wu
of Texas and from California to 111 degrees at lake Havasu City;
~.
. .
western Utah and Arizona.

Highway contract awarded to Ohio firm
A contract for 1he fust of several
high priority highway projects in
Southeastern Ohio, the constructioo
· of an interchange It die junction of
US-33 and SR-180 in Hocking
County, was awarded Thursday.
·The $4.2 million contract went 10
E.S. Wagner Co.~ Inc. of Oregon,
Ohio. The project's sale is the
result of combined effortS 6y Gov.
George
Voinovich,
Ohio
Department of Transportation ~
Director Jerry Wray, and District
10,0DOT.
Although the contract letting is
not offil;_ial until 10 days after
yesterday~!llile, District 10 Deputy
Director John Dowler said that he
does not anticipate any problems
with the Wagner Company's bid.
Six other companieS submitted bids
on the project. All bids were
benealh ODOT's project estimate
with Wagner being the apparent
low bidder.
Because 1he intersection at SR·
180 has a long accident history, 1he
proposed SR·IBO interchange has
long been a desire of Hocking
County residents, Dowler said.
Plans for the interchange were
designed many years ago and
rights..Qf,way for the project were
purchased in 1963, explained
Dowler. However, when traffic
lights were · installed at · the
intersection, it appeared that the
project would never be constructed,
even though the safety factor
remained a concern.
The project has also been a
priority with 1he Soulheastern Ohio
Regional Council's Highway
Users' Committee which is headed
by Kenner Bush of Athens.
Regional Significance
Any prpjects involved in the
upgrading of US-33 through
M~igs, Athens, Hocking, and
Fairfield Counties· meets with
approval of government, business
and community leaders up and
down the US-33 COITidor, no matter
in which couniy the particular
improvement happens to be

located.
Support for improvcmcniB 10 US33 11ven cross state boundaries 10 177 in Jackson and Kanawha
Counties in West Virginia.
In addition to the SR-180
Interchange, District IO's other
priority projeciS for US-33 include
the Haydenville Bypass. and SR·
595 interchange in Hocking
County, a four-lane from Athens to
Darwin in Meigs County, and a
four lane connector road from
Pomeroy 10 the Ohio River Bridge
and I·77 at Ravenswood.
Completion of the US-33
corridor would create a direct link
from Ohio's capital of Columbus 10
West Virginia's capital of
CharlesiOn.

Knowing
the
·re.Rional
significance of US-33, Deputy
Director Dowler revived 1he ...ojed
.two years ago with the full t.:ldng
of Gov. Voinovich. The project
was programmed lhrough ODOT's
Central Office in Columbus 8lid the
project's design plans and rightsof-way were updated soon after
that.

'

Once the contract from .
Thursday's sale become offiCials. a
pR&lt;OIIJIIUCtion confezmce wiD be
held. At that time the cootractor
will probably state wllen
construction will begin. Dowler
expects a formal ground braking.
The pi'CilOSet1 completion date for
1he SR-180 ~hange is Aug. 31,

1994.

Squads respond to 16 calls
Units of the Meigs County East Main for Kathy Cox to
Emergency Medical Service Vetmns; 9:55 a.m., Middleport 10
respcnded 10 16 calls for assistance Overbrook Center for Helena
over the weekend.
Daniels 10 Veterans; 10:15 a.m.,
· SATURDAY: 9:01 a.m. Tuppers Racine to Trouble Creek. Road,
Plains 10 Silver Ridge~ Leo!la James Hincldey to VeiCrBIIS; 10:45
Myers, Veterans Memorial; 1:49 a.m., Olive Township firu
p.m., Ruiland unit to Salem StRet responders 8lid Tuppers Plains unit
for Edward Martin to Holzer Ia Reedsville, Leone Catlett to
Medical Ceillu. 2:57 p.m., Racine Camden ClaJt Memorial Hospital;
Fire Department to Route 124, 11:57 a.m., Syracuse to "Cherry
motorcycle accident, Ressie Davis StRJet, Judy Lee to Pleasant Valley
10 Veterans; 4:56p.m .. Racine Fire .·.Hospital; 12:27 p.m., Pomeroy to
Department, Route 338, motor Ebenezer Street, Margaret W!Ute 10
vehicle accident, Jim Gergotigh, Holzer; 4:10 p.m., Racine w·Fifth
Jackson Gener~il Hospital; 6:59 and Vine, Jenna Knotts 10 Pleasant
p.m., Tuppers Plains transported Valley; 4:12 p.m., Middleport to
John White from the stauon to General Hartinger Parkway, Paul
Veterans.
Hale to Veterans; 9:43 p.m.,
SUNDAY: 12 a.m. (midoight) Syracuse to Dusky Street, Bill
Rutland Fire Department, County Hendricks 10 Veterans;,. and 10:12
·Road I (Pick and Shovel), mawr p.m., Rolland to Meigs Mine No.
vehicle accident, Ralph ~ogers to 31, Jim Reed to O'Bleness
Veterans: 12:59 a.ni., Pomeroy 10 Hospital.

Meigs'ilnn~uncements

purchase of carillons for the
&lt;:hurc,h. The carillons will be
enjoyed by the community by the
Westminster chimes and 1he tolling
of the boor dwing the daytime and
special bells arnoon and 6 p.m.
Lealw to meet Bible school
American Legion Feeney Bennett
Vacation Bible School at the
Asbury United Methodist Church Post No. 128, Middleport, will
Veterans Memorial
in Syracuse will be July 19·23 from meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. aldie
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS· 9:30-11:30 a.m. for ages two post home. All merilbers are ~qed
Twila ClaJt, Pomeroy
·through junior high. A nunery will 10 attend.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES· be provided and everyone is
Tent revival
Kenneth Mohler.
welcome.
There
_
will
be a Holy Ghost tent
. SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
revival July 16-22 It 7:30 p.m. on
James Hincldey, Portland.
Luncheon planned
Route 124 between Syracuse and
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Trinity Chuich senior choir will Racine. There will be Southern.
Richard Finlaw.
have a chicken and noodles Gilspel Music and Gary Clull' is
luncheon on Friday from 10:30
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER a.m. to 5 p.m. or until food is sold. evangelist.
Chicken and noodles, ham salad,
July 9 discharges - Pamela hot chicken sandwich, cole slaw,
Preddy, Nina Rose, William hot dogs, desserts and beverages
Continued from l'ale 1
Guinther, John Bartels, Sherri will be available for eating m or
Storms, Jacquelin Scarberry, carry WI. The ciJicken and noodles encouraged river industries to
Joseph Giles, Ernest Thompson will also be available for sale by panicipate, so maybe next year we
and Barbara Fields.
1he quart for $2.50. Prccecds from can expand on that and increase our
July 9 births • Mr. and Mrs. Jack the luncheon will go toward the effectiveness.
Corder, !hu!ghter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. James Cremeens, daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Ferguson, son, Athens; and Mr. and
Mrs. Rk:ky Jfootoit, son, Bidwell.
is pl~as~d to announce ·
July 10 discharges • Della
Johnson, Ashley Clagg, Eunice
Patterson, Mrs. Clyde Gauss and
the REOPENING of the
son, Mrs. Ricky Hooton and son,
Mrs. Steven Crilow and daughter,
Mrs. Christopher Harrison and
daughter, Beulah Swimller adn
Kalherine Hanson.
·
July 11 dlscliarges - Beverly
on Thursday, July 15, 1993
Rothgeb, Judith Patterson, Shawn
Snyder, Charla Whobrey, Mrs. Jeff
Ophthalmologists Howard Greene, M.D., and N. Bozkir, M.D., are
Ferguson and son, Mrs. James
• joined by Optician Kent Saunders to offer you
Cremeens and daughter, J)erric:k
on~ stop ~ye-c•r~ s~rvice.
Shadwick, Rickie Harrath and John
Engle.
Deals to meet

.
The Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Carpenters Hall.

·Hospital news

·Police probe several
weekend incidents
Three ·weekend incidents,
including the lheft of a billfold, a
• · breaking and entering, and another
office entering are under
investigation by Pomeroy Police.
At 9:44 p.m. Friday, Charles E.
Fry repOrted 10 police that while he
was in a local business
establishment in Pomeroy, his
wallet came up missing . He
reported that it had about $1 ,220 in
cash in il, along with his driver's
license, pictures, and credit cards.
Fry 11M offered a reward 10 anyone
turning the black billfold into
Pomeroy Police.
Michael Chambers reported at

showers in the norihcrn Rockies
early today was · moying cast,
bringing hope that it would break
1he Jllllern of rain in the Mldweat
and heat in the Eut by midweek.
Record temperatures were
expected again tod1y on •the
Atlantic seabo1rd. Afternoon
thunderstmns wae forecast in 1he
sultry Soum and from the lower
Ohio Valley to the northwest
Plains.
A severe thunderstorm watcll was
in effect early IOday for much of
southern Ohio. The same storm
front - extending from the Great
Lakes to the central Rockies -

their crops inaured, Adams said
insurance won't mate up for the
loss.
' Most of the farmers in the Letart
area started picking tomatoes
Sunny Pt. Cl:::dy Cloudy
/ca
around the first of Jply, but the
production so· far has been light
compared 10 what Was expected for
the resa or the season.
''We expected this to be our fust
big week," said Adams, who for
Wednrsday throuali Friday:
Partly cloudy Wedncsday. the most part lost his entire crop &lt;;&gt;f
Chance of showers and SS,OOO wmato plants, and 25 acres
lhundcnlorms Thursday and partly of pepperS.
Don Richard Hill said he stalled
cloudy on Friday. Highs in 1he 80s
picldng about two weeks ago.
and 91k. Lows in the 60s and 70s.
"This' would have been our big
week," he said
Adams explained how the hail
d3mages 1he pJ.a:nts:
Thrri Nutter
Whar happens, according 10 the
long-time crqp farmer, Is that the
Terri~. Nutter, 28, of Reedsville,
hail damages 1he topS of the plants
died Saturday,July 10, 1993 II the and pits and bruises tl}e fruit While·
Cleveland Clinic after an extended Adams expects that some wmaroes
illness.
on 1he underside of the plants can
She was born in Pomeroy, a be salvaged, he says he knows that
daughter of Larry Curtis of he will !lOt be able to get top
Pomeroy, and Alice Walker · money when lhey go 10 market
Haslunan of St Marys. She was a
Don Richard Hill pointed out a
homemaker and a member of The tomato hit hy hail. The surface was
tittle Country Church, Guysville.
dim11led in three places.
Surviving in addition to her
He explained the affected
parents are her husband, William farmerS may not 1cnow 1he ex&amp;ent of
Nutter; two sonst Anthony Nutter the storm's damage for several
and Jesse Nutter, botll at home; a days - during which time bruises
daughter, Kelly Nutter, at home; and rotting may appear on
one stepson, Willi8111 Nutter, Jr.. tomatoes which had earlier
Parkersburg, W. Va.; stepmother, appeared normal.
Julie Curtis, Pomeroy; stepfather,
Walking between two damaged
George Hashman of St. Marys; ftelds, he explained that in addition
three brothers, J ! D. Curtis of 10 the hail, water from heavy rain
~acine, Tim · Curtis of Long
fills 1he tomaiOeS possibly causing
Bottom, and Tobby Curtis of them 10 rot in 1he baslceL
Tuppers Plains; one sister, Tammy
.Whj!e the Letart an:a fanners are
Babic of Syracuse; maternal affected financially in a big way,
grandfather·, Marvin Walker of several hundred young people who
Tuppers Plains; and paternal work p~cking IOmawes and other
grandfather, Denver Curtis, address crops and working in the packing
unlcnown, several nieces, nephew, houses will also feel the pinch aunts and uncles.
tlieiT jobs will be gone,
Funelll services will be held at
Adams has 38 boys and girls on
II a.m. Tuesday at the White his payroll, and many of 1he other
Funeral Home in Coolville. The farmers use about that many, some
Rev. Bill Murphy will officiate and more. Don Richard Hill said today
burial will ·be in Sand Hill he has about 26 people working in
Cemetery, Loog Bottom. Friends the field and approximately II
may call at the funeral home _ others in the packing house.
Monday from 6 10 9 p.m.
We had 44 working in the field
Saturday, he said.
Adams said that because of the
damage, he will probably finish up
his crop farming this summer
within the next week ot so. The
season usually extends into mid·
AugusL
"It's a bad year for the farmer,"
farmer Paul Hill Jr. commented
12:55 p.m. Saturday that his horne, while supervising his field workers.
106 Brick Street had been broken ''We're gbnna have it rough."
I shipped about 20,000 baskets of
inw and enrered sometime between
9 p.m. Friday wben 1he family left 10mawes last summer, be said. This
year I'll probably ship about S,OOO.
10 go on a camping trip, and noon
Like most of the farmers in the
Saturday when they returned.
Letart
Falls atta who did not have
Entrance was pined by removing a
screen from a window, The family insurance covering hail damage,
Paul Hill Jr. said the largest
found nothing missing.
Sunday morning about 10:30 problem Will be affording 10 farm
a.m. Dr. Harold Brown ·reported next year after losing mtmey this
that his office had been entered and year.
that while nothing appeared 10 he
missing, papers and other items
were strewn all over 1he place.
He also told police that there was
no evidence of forced entry iniO 1he
building but that the pins on the ~ COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) and receipts
door of the safe h~ been pulled · Direct livestoclc
oul, but the door would not open.
at selected buying points Monday
by the Ohio Department of
Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: SO cents
lOW«; demand lighL
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lb~ .• country
Am Ele Powet....................37 5/8 poiniS 43. 75-44.50; plants 44.75·
Ashland Oil•...
26
45.75. a few 46.50.
AT&amp;T......... o ......................61 7/8
Sorted U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs.,
Bank ()nc, .......................... 57 718
country points 44.75-45.50.
Bob Evans ......................... I8 1/4
Receipts Friday 6,700. Estimated Own Induslrics................ .13 1(1.
receipts Monday 5,000.
Charming Shop.................. l21/4
Prices from The Producers
City Holding ......................25 1(1. LiveSIIJCk Association:
Fcclcral Mojul....................20 1/4
Caale: steady to 2.50 lower.
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................40 7/8
Slaughter steers: choice 70.00Lands ~
..........................28 318
78.25; select 63.()(). 73.00.
Limited ....................... 20
Slaughter heifers: choice 68.00·
Mukinl
Inc................. .35 3/4
77.25;
select 61.()().72.00.
PointB
.................... 14
Cows: uneven; all cows 64.00
Rax Resiaunnt. .................. 1/8
Reliapce Electric............... .19 318
anddQwn.
Bulls: si,Cidy 10 2.00 lower; all
Robbins&amp;Myers ...:............ 17
Shoney's Inc. :...... ;............. 19 518
bulls 71.00 and down:
Star Blllk ...........................36 112
Veal .calves: steady; choice
Wendy Int'L....................... 14 5/8
118.00 and down.
Wonhington Ind................29
Sheep and lambs: uneven: choice
Stcx:k reportl are the 10:30
wools 43.00-60.00; choice clips
a.m. quotei provided by
45.00·57.50; feeder lambs 72.00
Ke•per
Secarltlea,
o
and down; aged sheep 35.50 and
GaDipolll,
dOwn.

------Weather-----

Memb«: The Allo&lt;IIIOCI

.

.

Heat, huniidity moving out f9r ~a day

OHIO Weather

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.Monday, July 12, 1993

The Dally Sentlnei Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

July 12,1993

Stocks

00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1\

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'

Sweep ...

H'O LZER CLINIC

Holzer Clinic Optical Department

Check us Out!
0 ·Complete eye.eumllllllon
0 Full line of frl11111 and 1tn111 ·
0 Conlacl LeniM
[:J R11101111ble prices
0 · OnHtop c:Onvenlence
The Optical Department is conveni~ntly located in Ophthalmology
"on the Second Floor of Htllzer Clinic.
·
'
Open 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mond,!IY throuah Friday
Call446-5421 for an appointment

HOLZER CLINIC
.

'

I

.

· 90 JKicsoa Pike

�The Daily_S~!!~~J

Sports
~,,.,....._w..-

Maa W'dliams is on the disabled
list aad Robby Thompson and
Willie McGee have been bolhertd
by injuria.
Did lhll bother the San Ftancisco
Oianu over the weekend? Not at

aU.

The GiMu. playing withoul the
three regalara, humbled the
Philadelphia Pbillics in a matchup
of finl-place lelims by lilting lluee
of four games ll VelelliiiS Sladium
by a lopsided margin of 41-20.
Sunday's SCXR was 10-2.
"We did llave a good series,"
said San Franr;isc:o manager Dusly
Bater,
master
of
the
undl:ntalemcnt.
In winning for the seventh time
in nine p1ics and the 24th in their
last ~2. tbe Gilnu were helped by
surs IIICiaab. alitc.
·
Barry Bonds hit a two-run
double, giving him nine RBis in
the series. Srtvc Scarsone, subbing
for the injured Williams, was 10for-20, including four bias and two
RBis Sunday. Royce ClaylOll and
Dave Manincz each drove in 1wo
runs in the series fmalc.
Wbi1c tbe Gianu' bot suetch bas
givco them a nille-game lead in the
NL West over the Atlanu Braves,
the Plli11ies reached the blat with
a five-game lead over the SL Louis
Canlinals in the East. Philadelphia
is 12-12 in.ils last 24 games.
"We just didn't play well,"
Pbillies manager Jim Fregosi said.
"They beat up on us pretty good in
tbreC oftbe four pncs."
In other~ Sunday. Monlreal
beat ·San Diego S-4, Piusburgh
defeafell Cincinnati 3-2, Colorado

· beal St. Louis 4-1, Houston
defeated Chicago 10-1, Atlantl
defeated Florida 6·3, an.d Los
Angeles beat New York 2-1.
Bryan Hickerson (3-1) allowed
1wo runs and eight hits in six
innings for tbe Giants, SUiting out
four .and waiting one. Cun
Schilling (8-6) lost bis fifth straight
Slart. giving up six runs and II hilS
in 3 2/3 inninu. In those fivr.
losses, Schilling's ERA is 11.76.
Espos.5, Padres 4
Monll'eal raUied against reliever
Gene Harris {4-2) for the second
straight game to win its fifth in a
row. Marquis Griss!:m drove home
the go-ahead IUD with an infield hit
in lhc eighth as the hosl Expos
complclcd lbc four-game sweep.
John Wcucland (4·0) pitched
two,thirds of an inning, and Dennis
Martinez got .lbc final out for his
fii'St save since Oct. 1; 1980.
Rob Dibble walked pinch-hitter
its fourth victory in six games.
Dave Clark and Jeff King singled ·
off Jeff Reardon {2-2), Kevin
Young struck out trying 10 bunt,
and pinch-bitter Tom ·Foley
reached on Reardon's fielding
error, loading the bases. Dibble
relieved and walked Slaugh! on
five pitches.
Bias Minor {5-3) struck out
Reggie Sanders to end the eighth
with two runners on.
Rockies 4, Clrdina!s 1
Colorado moved OUl of last place
for the fi.rst time since May 7 in
winning for the seventh lime in 10
games. Armando Reynoso {7-4)
allowed five hits in seven-plus

Adams, Smith among local
Skyline Speedway winners
t)

Bruce Dennis from Lowell drove
to victory in the UMP Modified
Invitational race at Skyline
Speedway Friday night, while Bob
Adams Jr. of Racine claimed the
Late Model main.
In the UMP modified action,
Adams led the· early going, but
faded 10 ftfth at the end. Dennis
built up a commanding lead late in
the race, but several late race .
cautions buncbed up the field.
Allen Hibbard passed several cars
on lbc inside of lbc last few circuits
to clsim a strong second, followed
by Bill Bocook, Mark Dickson and
Adams.
The dash was won by Bocook
and DoiJl! Henry took lbc heaL
In lbc late model action, Adams
made a great move at the start of
the race to 1a1tc lbc lead and lead
from Oag 10 flag. Following were
Andy Bond, Bill Childers, Larzy
Bond and Bobby Mossor. Larry
Bond had a grea1 drive to fourth
afler being scnl 10 the tail on lap

·

Scoreboard
- • Baseball • -

•
•

five.
Roger Cozad picked up lbc win
in the Limiled Late Model feature.
It was Cozad's first limited win,
producing a big victory celcbralion
in victory lane. ~zad was
followed by Aaron Aeming, Kevin
Haught, Don Casto and Jim Amick.
Heats went to Ed Vcnham and
Cozad.
Todd Smith of Pomeroy beat a
field of 30 Pure Street Stocks,
holding off the challcnges of Ginny
Adkins, Richie Winder, Dwight
Henry and Ed House. Smith, Don
Ross and Richie Winder claimed
the heats,· while House took the
consy ahead of Mark Davis and
Rick Blate of Reedsville.
.Bert Flora claimed the four·
cylinder feature over Middleport's
George Adkins, Brian Balcer, Doug
Sams and Reedsville's Brian
Bailey. Heats went to Flora,
Braley and Brian Baker.
Next week will be a regular show
forall five classes.

--

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Pd.
-~~~- .5!1

NATIONAL LEAGUE
T-

W L
~ .......... .57 32
81. Lew. ..... ......... .51 36

................41 «l

-

CliooiJO..... :............41 -0
l'lnobuiJio .............. 42 -16
Florida ................... 37 so
NowYadt ............. .27 60

T.W L
T - ..................49 «l

Pd.
.600

GB

.516

5

.SIS
.4TI
.4TI
.4:15
.310

1.5
14.5
14.5
19

2'J

w-.30 .663

s.. Fnadooo .......59

.562
.!2'!
.!2'!

Cdondo ................33 54

.379 • l5

S..IMao ..............]] 56 .371
1

9
12
12
14.5
26

Saturday'ascor..

1&lt;owY... 7,.._An_6

~···San
Floridl5,
Allo!U 2 ~col
-],Sonllqo2

Dou&lt;ML .................. .41 .. .S4S
NewVIIII&lt; .:............41
B . -.............. .47
Ba&amp;tm. ... -........ ......4S
CleYelon4 ...............40
Mil•aukcc .............37

41
41
42

.!
I
I.S
]

.!39
.!34
.517

41

.455

1.!

49

.430

10..5

wlllerft Di-llion

cmca1o................. .4S

41

Tu. .....................44
Seaale ................... M
Califomia .....,. .•.......•&amp;3
Ook1and ................. 31
Minnoooll ..............l6

42
44
43
-16
49

.523

.

C5ncimoti 10, Pl........ 7

Tuu ll, Toronto6

· Sullday's ~~:ores
Mon""" 5, Son !Ms• 4

Otiuiao lt, Baltimcn s·

· Tllelda(~~
.-a- at · 1:.40 p.m.

AD.·Scar

No ....... Wednad.oy
DllrldaJ'IIAIIIH

PtnlM•lphia (Jackloa 7·6) et San
-~lloala ..,),4,0S p.m.
lllow Yodl ~ 0.3) a Son Plan·

cioootsi!IA ll·S),4mp.m.

, fJaridl (ll:laDCIMilo-4) II Cinc:innlli
(llolobw7·l). 7:35 p.aL
2·5) at Atlanta

(IJIIYtnoi0-4), 7:-40p.m.
Co1Groolo (llw 3'6) " Cloialao (Mor·
... 6-9), 1:05 p.m.
Hooo..., (Drabek 7-9) •• S• Louio
(Aooolli 6-J). J:lS_~m..
.

Fishe·r wins F.reedom 40 race

The fourth annual Meigs footliall
Camp will be held at Meigs High
School from Monday, July 26 to
Friday, July 30.
All boys entering grades 4-8 this
fall are eligible to attend lbc camp,
which runs from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Fundamentals w.ill be taught
during lbc camp dealing with every
aspect of fOOiball. All boys will be
timed in a 40-yard dash and agility
drill. Campers will also visit the
weight room, lVhere .Meigs High
School varsity players will
dcmonstrale correct weightlifting
exercises.
The special guest speaker this
year will be Tom Ellsworth, new
offensive coordinator at Marieua
College.
To be guarameecl a camp T·shirt,
rcsistration must be rccei ved by
Friday. However, students may
register up to the fii'St day of camp.
Registration forms can be picked
up at the high school.

Volleyball camp
to start Monday
The 1993 Meigs Marauder
Volleyball Camp will be held at
Meigs High School from Monday,
July 12 to Friday,July 16, from 9
a.m. to 11 a.m.
All area girls, ingradcs 7-10 arc
inviled to auend. Applications can
be picked up at the high school.
Cost is S2S for each camper, not to
exceed $40 per fan\ily.
Checks should be made payable
10 Meigs Athletic Boosters and can
be sent to varsicy coach Rick Asb
a1 P.O. Box 126, Syracuse, Ohio
45779. All campers are 10 indicate
T-shirt size. Ash can be contacled
ai 992-5960.

BROKEN UP - Despilf bls being retired at
secood base, Pittsburgh's Tom Priace {left) rolls
under Ciacinnati shortstop Barry Larkin to
keep him from CGIDpletinJI • double play in the

fifth inning or Sunday's National League game
in Pitlsburgb, where the Pirates won 3·2. Both
teams wore 1925 uniforms for their game as
part o~n "Old Time Day" promotion. {AP)

Gallipolis;
Putnam split ~Legion twin bill
.

The Gallipolis Post 27 American Gallipolis {9-22) will host Gallipolis: 134·120-x = 11-10-4
Legion baseball team split its Portsmouth Tuesday at 5:45 p.m.;
WP- Cremeens
Sunday doubleheader against face Wellston Wednesday at 5:45
LP - Albright
visiling Putnam Post 181, p.m. and host Lancaster in a Inning totals-steond game
recording an 11-8 victory in the doubleheader Saturday at noon.
Putnam: 003-150·1 = 10-11-2
fust game before faDing 10-4 in lbc Inning totals·rll'st game
Gallipolis: 000-202.0 = 4-9·0
second contesL
Putnam: 103.013-0= 8-7·3
WP-Smith
Both conlesls were marked by
LP-Tolcr
complete-game efforts by lhe
winning pitchers. Brett Cremeens
{4 Ks, 7 BBs) did it for Gallipolis
in the fii'St game, besting tbe J.C.
Albright•Eric Pinkerton duo that
posted a total of three strikeouts
and three walks. Cremeens also
cracked a three-run homer - he
went 1 for 3 in tbe game - in the · Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
the game open in llieir half of the
third 10 help Post 27 bust a 4-4 tie overcame a 2-0 deficit in the rust
third as they scored seven runs 10
created earlier in the inning.
inning to bliu the Gallijlolis While
lalc:e an 8-2 lead.
Other firsl-game Gallipolis Sox 12-2 Friday in the Bill
Aldridge led off with a wallc.
hitters were Larry Howell {3-4), Hubbard Memorial tournament at Jason Allen walked, Nease walked, .
Ryan Barnes {2-4), Brandon Janey . Syracuse's King Field. '
and Mills walked to force home a
{1 -2), Chris Toler {1-3), Rob
Ryan Nease ·was the winning run . Jamie Buskirk doubled and
Canady and Milce Donnally {both pitcher of record, while Mathew Nance doubled, followed by an
1-4). Putnam's hitters were Paul Bush suffered the loss with relief erroron ·Reiber'shitball.
·
Smith {3~5), TrcVa- San$om {1-1), help from Timmy Side_rs and Joey
Jenod Clay, Chad Hubbard, and
Seth Hanson {1-2), Shan Anthony Dambrough.
Allen singled to round out the
{1-3) and Pinlterton {1-4). .
Gallipolis rook a 2.0 lead when scoring.
The second game saw score.less Bo Shirey reached on an enor, and
The next frame .went scoreless, .
baseball for two innings before Siders walked. An error and run· but Syracuse added four insurance
Putnam exploded in tlie middle down play allowed both runs to runs in the fifth.
three innings and went ahead to score.
Syracuse pitching fanned si&gt;&lt; and
stay. Despile walking more hitters
Syracuse came back to 2-1 in the walked four, while Gallipolis
{six) than gelling slrilceouts (three), second when Jerrod Mills walked, combined for nine strikeouts and
Smith went all the way. Toler and Michael Nance walked, and ten walks.
Bobby Fink, the Gallipolis pitching Russell Reiber singled . Erron
Adam Cumings added a single
combo, fanned five and walked Aldridge walked to load the bases, for Syracuse. Siders added a safety
five.
but Bush pilehcd his way out of the for Gallipolis.
Action will continue today when
Second-game Putnam hitters ·inning.
were Anthony, Carl King {both 2- · Despite a two,out walk to Siders the Racine Rockies inect Chester's
3), Travis Johnson {2-4), David in the third, Nease relired the side Raiders and the Gallipolis Yankees
Francisco {1-2), Smith (1-3) , without incident Syracuse. broke meeNelsonville-York.
Sanson {1-4), Duncan and ~- ,.,.., - - - . . , , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Pinkerton {both 1·5). Post 27's
hillers were Barnes, new
acquisition
Moose Clark,
Cremeens, Donnally (alll·l), Fink,
Chris Sommerville {both 1-2),
Canady (1-3), Howell and Terry
Qualls {both 1-4).
This week's ag,cnda will have
Putnam hosting Ceredo· Kenova
Tuesday at 6 p.m. before hea&lt;!ing
to South Charleston for a
doubleheader Thursday at 6 p.m.
ancf to Wheeling Salurday for a
twinbill Salurday at 1 p.~.

Hubbard.'s Greenhouse hands
Gallipolis White Sox 12-2 loss

THE 1993

D·LOOKING,
QUIET,· EFFICIENT
AND ABOVE ALL,
LOYAL.

Conaplete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Tliroat .

Verser catching croo{cs, notpasses, in Cincinnati
'

John A. Wade, M.D. ·
Suite.112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, wv.

Mi.lwaubeS, Mlmeeota4
KlaAs c;,y 6, Dmu12
8ollori 3, OUland 2
S..lllo !, a...t.nd 4 (II ion.)
Colifocnlo !, Now Yod&lt; 2 (14 inn.)

No 1amu toda7

Tfltld•(:~!,~
.
I :.Op..m.

AU-SWprnalt

No

Call 354·675·1244 for •ppt.
. or Information
.

a-- WedlltldtJ

T~undlly's p Colilocn!o
J'3). Clooo1aM
(Mooa H). 7:05 p.m.

a...-

Micks Barber &amp; Style Center
120 Eaat Main

O.kllftd. (Walch 6-6) at Now York

(Pena H), 7:30 ,_...
~01u

Cily (Cono ·6·1}

1\

Toroato

(Ouzmon 7·2), 7:3S p.m.
(T.,..U :J.II) ot Boltiman
(Muooino 10-4~
p.m.
S.alo
~
4'1)
" - (VM&gt;Ia ••
l ·7), 7::U ,.... .

OUc:oao·(P-10-4) .. Mll• .. ·
k• CN•YII10 S-6~ 1:05pm.
lloonil (Wtllo 9-4)" r .... (B ..... 66), J :]S p.m.

6-l), 10:3.S p.m.

L-~----------------------1
,.
I

·

.

Pomeroy

Annouaces They Have~ Barbera Worl""'

,,:u

-(D. Manina 10-S) at..._

AapooCI'J.-

By The Associated Press
loss at California was its eighth in bealing Toronlo for their eighth
Sofar, callitadraw.
10 games, and Baltimore's 11-5 will in nine games.
• • 'T~ ~meri~ ~gue teams setback against Chicago dropped
"To come from where we came
five m ~h div•s•on - are wtthin ll:te Orioles 10 7.7 over their last 14 to where we are now means ·{\oi:,"
thre.e. galries. of ~irst p!ac·e at 'the ' games. ·
Rangers manager Kevin Kennedy
traditional m1dpom1 of the season.
Boston, which seemed out of the said after his ~ub finished iiS 11Toronto and Detroit have each race a month ago, beat Oalc:1and 3·2· game road trip 11-2.
. .• . .
laken a wm atop lbc AL East, but for its 15th victory in 19 games
The RangerS have Dean Palmer
both went into the All-Star break The Red Sox 13 games out whe~ to thank for some of their recent
playing p~orly. ~he While Sox Roger Clemins got hurt June 21, surge. He returned from an injury
have been 1R fust 1D the West for picked up .IO games without him Saturday and has 14 RBis in his
three weeks, but never by more and get him back Friday.
last four gaiiles. *"'
than three games.
The White Sox lead the Royals
The Angels stayed two out by
"I think_ we're ~!I ~ litlle and Rangers by one game and the beating New York 3·2 in 14
exhausted nl!ilt now. satd Blue Angels and Mariners by two.
innings, and Seattle also remained
Jays'
manager
Cito
Gaston,
whose
"It's
better
than
being
in
second
within two by beating Cleveland 5the lncomlni throw, in the fourth inning or
HASELMAN SCORES - Seattle's Blli
club
stiU
leads
by
a
hall'-game.
or
third,''
said
Chicago
skipper
4 in 11 innings.
.
Sunday's AJ!Ierican League aame in Seattle,
Haselman {left) sUdes into the plate behind
I
!-6
loss
Sunday
to Gene Lamont.
Toronto's
Oh,
by
tbe
way.
Milwaukee
beat
where the Mariners won 5-4 in 11 Innings. (AP)
Cleveland backstop Junior Ortiz,.who waits for
"We've got a chance to do Minnesota 5-4 in a battle of lastTexas was _its lOth in 11 games,
and the Ttge~~· , wh? also lost iOmething special this year, so we place teams.
'
Sunday, :ue st•ll trymg to n~ht have to keep on chugging," said Rangers 11, Blue Jays 6
themselves afler a 10-game losmg Frank Thomas who hit his 19th
AI the Sky Dome, Palmer, Ivan
streak ~dgin!! June and July. .
and 20th home~ Sunday.
Rodriguez and Julio Franco hit
Desptte
thell'
troubles,
the
T1~ers
Kansas
City
remained
a
game
out
two-run homers as Charlie
fast show on the tacky, rain- crew and ,especially my sponsors
By SCOTT WOLFE.
and
Blue
Jays
are
st_1ll
lookmg
with
its
6-2
victory
over
Detroit,
Leibrandt
{9-4) beat Toronto for
spaltered 3/8 milt\ high banks.
and the race sponsors."
.
Sentinel Correspondent
at
the
compeuuon,
largely
and
the
Rangers
did
likewise
by
down
the
rust
time
since May 5, 1987.
At the start of the feature, Harry
Following Wright in third was because New York's 3-2, 14-inning
Like a scene from the "Old
West", hometown hero Charlie Garrett of Waynesville, Ohio got Kelly Kinser, Garrett and Kerry
Fisher of Columbus, Ohio gunned the initial jump, but the start was Norris of Columbus, lndilj!lll,. who
down all the bounty hunters, many aborted when Buckeye champion baltlcd from fourleenth to fifth.
of the nation. s lOp outlaws and tall Rodney Duncan looped il in tum Defending track champion Mike
Texan Gary Wright to claim the four and was nearly T-boned, full Bowling, Jim Nier, AI Hager, Made
$6,000 10 win, Fourth Annual RJ. throttle by Findlay's Dave Freed. Goodfleisch and Tracy Hoover
Reynold's·Winsron "Freedom 40" Freed's mount suffered severe front rounded out lbc rop 1en. Filhcr and
outlaw shoolout for super sprint end damage and flipped onto its Wright lapped all but the top six
.
cars at K-C Raceway Saturday side, while the impai:t sent Duncan cars.
Heat winners were Rodney
nighl, July 10. Jerry Hemming won , inro a series of quick 360's.
Duncan,
Kelly Kinser, Bowling,
At
the
same
time
in
turn
#
1,
the COpipanion, 15-lap Super Street
Bloomington,
Indiana's
Randy
Randy
Kinser
am! Kenny Kimbler. .
Stock A-main. .
Jim
Nier
claimed
lbc B-main over
Kinser, the evening's fastest
Dramatic finish ...
After it had appeared that the qualifier alii :977, limped 10 a halt Greg Foltz, Landon Stover and
Texan, Wright, had gunned down with a broken ef!gine rod. All three Milce Adkins.
An equally exciting Street Stock
local favorile Fisher and was about drivers were finished for the
evening.
.
.
fea(ure
saw Jerry Hemming· ·
10 ride out of rown with the loot, an
On
thci'
restart,
Fisher
jumped
into
overtake Rob Lemaster on the
excitirig seven-lap shoot-out
developed. With Fisher in tow, the lead and quickly built what ninth go-round to claim the win.
honing his Gaerle powered "eight appeared 10 be an unsurmountable Dean Osborne had rome from tenth
shooter", Wright of Hooks, Texru; advantage. Qairett fell into line to take the lead Qn the eighth
packed his loosening mount to the with a strong second, while Jason circuit only to have his lead
Dukes (Findlay, Ohio), Kelly nullified with a caution.
limitiO hold off the challenges.
On the caution, Osborne's mounl
However, with the standing, Kinser {Bloomington, Indiana),
began
10 leak fuel and .he had to
Mark
Keegan
{Fremont,
Ohio)
and
cheering crowd on its feel, Fisher
exit.
On
the restart Hemming got
found a little bit extra for the Clint Gary Wright all baltled for the next
the jump on young Lemasler and
Eastwood-style finale, overtaking positions.
Often
going
three
abreast,
that
powered
to the win. Lemasler was
Wright on tbe 38th circuit Wright
quartet
exchanged
positions
second
ahead
of Carl Coleman,
battled by Fisher again in turns one
KEYNES MILL MAKES NATIONALSBeavercreek, Misty Halley or Loc. . . .d
regularly
for
the
next
fifteen
Steve
Bobo,
Sieve
Day, John
and two on the final rounds, but
The Logan 15-and-under girls' Amateur
Sbawna Daugherty or Marietta. S..ndiac are
Fisher's momenlum carried him to circuits. Wright moved into third Reeser, Butch Owing, up from
by
Athletic
Union
basketball
team,
sponsored
head coach Ron Conner or ~an, Erica Hayes
ahead of a high-flying ·Keegan, 18th, Richard Johnson, Bob Trego
the checkered. and the popular win.
Keynes
Mill
of
LogaJ;~,
took
second
in
the
stltc
of
McArthur, Tara RutberfOI'd or Lucan, Mindy .
Usually
i
soft-spoken, who lwo_ laps later regained the and Rick Owings.
Fusetti
of Orient, Mindy Pope or Gallipolis,
tournament
held
in
early
June
in
Pickerington.
Heat winners were Johnson,
personable driver, Fisher, third plaCe slot as both moved in on
Tbe
team
will
bead
to
Utah
to
compete
Ia
the
Janet
Miller
of Baltimore and assistant coach
Hemming and John Remy.
responding 10 the loud cheerS from Garrett
national tournament. Kueeliag are {L-R) K~lly
Jim Myers or Logan.
'
Meanwhile, Fisher found himself
Action continues at K-C this
the crowd, ,let his emotion show in
Kostohryz_
or
Athens,
Amanda
.
Reese
of_
victory lane, saying, "We just had in heavy traffic as the field began week as UMP modificds and Lace
to get this one for the· homerown to close in on the Gaerte Models again join lbc fl&lt;:ld' of race
fans. I couldn't lei you &lt;lown Engines/Superior Tank and Trailer/ cars.
lonight. He (Wrighl) got me in Engine Rebuildcr's Supply Fisher SUMMARY
OUTLAW SUPER SPRINTS
· lapped traffic and that made mad. Chassis #48.
Both
Keegan
and
Wright
slipped
Fast time: Randy Kinser.
That's what it came down to. I just
past
Garret
as
the
midway
point
Bloomington,
Indiana 11 :977
got mad, a little meaner, and we
approached
with
Wright
nailing
First heat: Randy Kinser, Rodney
came back and got him. I was
Keeglm
with
a
tire-rubbing,
lowDuncan,
AI Hager, Mark Keegan.
pacing m-yself and when he went
riding
bonzai
dive
through
the
third
Second
heat: Mike Bowling,
by that woke me up big lime."
turn.
With
Keegan's
overheating
Gary
Wright,
Hooks, Tx; Dave
The trophy and Wintson Racing
apparel was presented by lC·C mounJ caught up in traffic, Wright Freed,JAson Dukes. ·
Third heal: Kenny Kimbler,
trophy queen, Miss Helen Ramsey, pursued Fisher with a vengeance.
For
three
laps,
the
two
dualed
Kevin
Briscoe, Kerry Norris, Harry
a Computer Analyst with the City
side-by-side
before
Wright
dove
Garreu.
of Columbus and formerly from
under Fisher to lake lbc lead on the
Fourth heat: Kelly Kinser, Mark
Lucasville, Ohio.
Goodfleisch,
Tracy Hoover,
thirty-second
circuit.
Fisher
The win was Fishers's biggest
appeared
to
fade
as
Wright
built
a
·
Charlie
Fisher.
pay-day of his career and kept his
8-Main: Jim Nier, Greg Foltz,
perfcc'Neven-fQt-seven mark at .K· mulit-car length advantage only 10
C intacl, a record that has drawn a have it erode as Landon Stover slid Landon Stover, Milcc Adkins, CJ.
bounty on the local speedster for over the bank before the '33rd Holley, -Dewey Cassell, Wayne
McPeak, Roger Mossbarger.
much of the season. The only races ' circuit could be completed.
Jimmy
Lewis, Brian Benson.
On
the
restart
Fisher
powerd
by
Fisher did not win were lwo All·
Fourth Annual ''Freedom 40"
Star races, and last week's mid· Wright on ·the outside, but a false
A-main: Fisher, Wright, K.
start
put
Fisher
in
two
behind
season championship claimed by
Kinser,
Garren, Kerry Norris.
Wright
Jim Nier of Piketon, while Fisher
Bowling,
Nier, Hager, Ooodfleisch,
The
last
seven
laps
produced
was away running with the All ·
Hoover,
Stover,
Kimbler, Adkins,
some
of.
the
wildest,
side-by-side
SLars.
1hirty·five of the top sprint car open wheel racing 10 ever grace the Keegan, Dukes, Briscoe, Folu, R.
pi)ots in America played 10 a full K-C high banks. Trading positions, Kinser, Duncan, Freed.
house in tribule 10 America and the Fisher and Wright bauled to lhe SUPER STREET STOCKS
First heat: Richard Johnson,
stilr-spangled "Freedom 40", one of finish when~' Fisher colleCted the
Steve Day, Carl Coleman, Rick
th.e richest and fastest growing crown.
Owing
Fisher
added,
"This
is
a
great
independent sprint car shows in the
Second heat: John Remy, Dean
coontry. More than $30,000 in total tribute to my crew and especially
Osborne,
Barry Brisker, Perry
pi.ize money and additional gifts my son James, who is the set-up
and incentives from Winston man on my car. He set the car just sniith.
'Third heat: Jerry Hemming, Rob
Racing was paid out 10 the sprints right and all I did was hang on. I
LeMaster, Steve Bobo, Richard
got
to
the
shop
early
this
morning
alone.
Despite severe weather that and he bad already been there at Johnson.
Feat~re: Hemming, LeMaster,
downed U'CCS just a few miles down least a'! hour before I was. We
Coleman,
Bobo, Day, John Reeser,
worked
very
hard
10
win
this
race.
th,e road, a huge crowd and large
Butch
Owing,
Johnson, Trego,
I'd
like
to
thank
all
the
fans,
my
field of cars assembled for a super
Rick Owing.

Sunday's ~~:ores

Loo"""""'

Noaam.. today

•

Meigs football
camp scheduled
for Ju~y 26

Mil••'*•'·
MiNatM4
S..llle 7. Clovoland 6

... s.OU...02(2Nia-)
Sc. Laoil... C&lt;ll- 3

- 1 0 , 0Uctao I
Allllu 6 . - J .
2, New Y... I

I
1
2
l
6
1.5

In a Friday night Pony League
game played at Middleport,
Middleport defealed Alexander's
Rcds6-2.
G.-y Stanley pilebcd a complete
game and gave up just two hits.
three walks and fanned 14 in
picking up lbc win.
Stanley boosted his own personal
record to S-0 on the season, also
picking up one save.
Jones suffered the ·loss for
Alexander despite a great game. He
. fanned IS and walked three.
Both pitchers .pitched good
games for lbcir teams. Hillirs for
Middleport were Donald Goheen,
who was 2-3 with five RBis, Paul
Pullins 1-2, and Wes McClure 1-3.
The Meu record goes to 13-1
with three games remaining.
Hitters for Alexander were Jones,
1-2, and Fraley with two RBI's.

Tuu 10. Toron\0 7
Balbmooo 6, au..., 0
llooronS,OoldandO
Doaait 9, X...• Cily I

California , , New Yail: 2

Son ......... ,0, Philo&lt;le1piWo 2
_ . . , 3, Cindonlli 2
O&gt;lcn40 4, 81. LoWo I

.512
.SOO
.SOO
.452
.424

.

-Middleport posts 6-2
win over Alexander

Saturday's scor...

-4.CUcoao (lot .....~ llooo·

Pl~wiMarP ('J'oadio

Ga

K&gt;Mu Ci1y ............. 42 .512

Alllall .................. .50 39
.................46 41
.... Antr~oo ...........-16 41
CiociMIII ..............-0 4!

.!00

·

~-.

5

Ten teams within three games
of summit at All- Star holiday
.

Bob Tewksbury {9· 7) allowed
lwo runs and seven hits, matched
-his career high with eight sttiteoul8
and didn't walt a bauer.
Colorado's Andres Galarraga
continues to lead the league in
hilling at .391, 29 points ahead of
PiiiSburgb 's Orlando Merced.

Don Slaught with the bases loaded
in the ninth 10 give host Piusburgh

~ga

In AL action,

inninss as tbc visiting Rockies
moved i ·same in front of San
Die&amp;O.
.

Pirates 3, Reds.2

The Dally Sentinel

.

•

Gjants hammer Phillies·to""2;
Pirates-get 3-2 win over Reds
.u.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

P8gl 4 .;

Ill NL IICtioll, .

By MICHAEL FLAM

Monday, July 12,1993

I

I

1.

·nw Thuw XL 1200 heat pwnp, f'Sireml'd for its •1ui~t tx•rfnrmruu·e, effkient year-round comfort, rutd stately appt•armt&lt;•e
is also renowned for its unPqualled reliability. Equipped wirh
the l&lt;'gendary Climatuff ·· compre;sor and exclusivt' Spine Fin"
n•il, thP XI. 1200 is hac·ked by a IIJ-yl'ar manuf3(:turer's limit.ed
warrnncy. ll pmvidi's elll'fll.V dllciet\(jl up tol!J.O SEER ArKI l'lll'h
u~1it. is t&lt;'sted and rNested to ensure it performs dt'pendably.
Its all part of making a loyal hpal flU IIIII, and
_ .
IZW.
a loyal customer. II!~ Hrml 1h Stop A Trcnic:·

·

• Miek • Freel • Chris
Stop and See Them .
' .
WARNER HEATING
Open 8·5 Mon•Frl. 8·4 Sat.
AND COOLING
CLOS.ED IIUISDIY
•-aoo-767-4223 675·7254
"· Pleasant
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....:__J 19'1 5·42:12
,I

I

CINCINNATI {AP)- .David
Verser used 10 catch passes for a
living. Now, he's getting paid to
catch croolcs.
.
:The former NFL receiver, who
played- most of his career for the
Cincinnati Bengals, began work
last monlh as a Cincinnati police
officer. ·
,The Bengals drafled the fonner
Kansas wide receiver in 1981 in the
fust round, lbc lOth pick overall in
the NFL draft that year.
When ljte Bengals traded him· to .
the Green Bay Packers in 1985,
Verser was due 10 make $310,000.
Rpokie police offteers in Cincinnati
make $33,700 a year.
·
:" 1 just changed money for
S&lt;)metbing I want and like;" Verser
said. "Money's not t&lt;big deal, as
tong as 1can pay the bills."
'Verser, 35, said the change of
jobs isn't diffteult.
·"I wanted 10 be a ftreman when I
was a tid. There was one right next

'

.

,door lo me. I never even thought..
about being a police officer. BuC
I'm gening a chance 10 get out and
meet people, talk to people," he
said.
.
"Sometimes, people wiU talk to
you only because you play football.
They don't lreat you like a real
person ..And, over the years, ydu
don't know who your real friends
are. At least now I'm helping
people out."
He said he was raised in a crimeplagued area. of Kansas City, Mo. ..
. "With all 1he crack and drugs
around, I want to be able to do
so~ething about it. Not that I'm
gomg to go out and bust every
·pusher," he said. ..
1
!'David was a mafvelous athlete.
He had e~erything that you lilce in
a football player," former Bengals •
~.cad coach Forrest Gregg said.
And be was a good person kind of quiet and reserved. But he
was intelligent, and ~e1 had good

character."
Verser was drafted to
complement veteran wide receiver
Isaac Curtis in the Bengals'
offense, but Verser never made it
big in the NFL. Cris Collinswonh,
also a rookie in 1981, went on to
star for lbc Bengals, while Verser
slipped into the background.
Afler Cincinnati, Verser played
one game in Tampa Bay in 1985.
He resurfaced with the Cleveland
Browns as a replacement player for
two games duririg ·1M 1987
players' slrilce.
.
In pans of six seasons, he played .
in '52 games, caught 23 passes for
454 yards and three IOucMowns
and returned 65 kickoffs for 1 371
yards, an average of2I.l yards a
re111m.
"I did some of tbe things I
wanled to do," Verser said. "But
... I never got a chance 10 play like
1 can really play." '

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 13, 1993. ,
Advertising
e Is
Augu_st 5, 1993.
CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS.
YEAR'S EpiTIO.N

' 992·2155
.,

.

\'

�•

•

.

The Daily ·s entinel

By
The
Bend
.
An.

The following students have
recently been named to the honor
roll for Eastern Local School
District for the fourth nine week
grading period.
.
Eastern Hish School
Twelfth 8f8de- Jeremy.Buckley,
Lisa Hoffman, Letitia Holsinser,
Kim Michael, Matt Michael, Mike
Roush, all A's; Charles Francis,
Nancy Gaddis, Sarah Harris, Ed
Miller, Tracy Murphy, Stephaoie
Otto, Eric Powell, Bobbie White,
overall.
Eleventh grade- Andy Wolf, all
A' s; Penny Aeiker, Amanda
Barringer, Kathy Bernard, Jessica
Covert, Cnarlene Dailey, Adria
Frecker, Debra Frost, C~risty
Hawkins, Randy Kaylor, Michelle
Maynard, Tyson Rose, Jaime
Wilson, overall.
Tenth sra·de - Charles Bissell,
Heidi Nelson, aU A's; Julie Brown,
Ryan Buckley, Jessica Chevalier,
Dina Combs, Mary Nally, Jamie
Ord. Jessica Radford, Jeff Stethem,
Staeey Woolard, overall.
Ninth srade - Melissa Dempsey,
Connie Pooler, all A's; Rebecca
Evans, Jessica Karr, Jennifer Mora,
Nicole Nelson , Brand• Reeves,
overall.
, ,
Eighth grade - Meredtth Crow,

'

woadcrfullid wbole maJden 1111J1C

"llummenCGrd.. All the way
throush school, abe wu called
"DUmmy. • Acblally, abe wu ·a
lllliabt-A ......., and beiq callecl ·
"Dummy" didn't bother her a biL
My paronII, however, were
horrified and lnal_, 011 callinc her
"MaryLoui~e"ThltlulllCUorllboul

lhreewecb..Finally,qiUedthcm
IOpiel!lccaJI her"Dunuily," beeaniC
she considered it a term of
endearmenl. So. it Lr II'IIC, dill names
IJICIII nothing - "a lUIIe by 111y Olber
name would smell II tweet."
Alldnow,dearreadcrl,uign-off
from Ann. All those comments · · · .l.U ·
JetDinded me of the borne ~ were
Joshua Spires celebra~ his fifth
raiacd in. Our motba'a name was
birll!dayat.the
home.of his parents,
RebeecL Our fllher'a name wu
John
and
Ang~
Spires of Rutland
Abe,butwe-heardtbolle1811e8
when we were ~ up. It was
Those attending were Pat
always, "Mama," "PPji• "Hooey,"
"Dear" or "Sweethan.• I realize harmon, lWnonl, Gary and Arron
Davis, Raymond Lambert, Arienc
now how ludty we wCre.
Pla1111i11g a wtddi11g? Wltar's Davis, Juanlia, Ray and Adam
· rlglu? Wltar's wro11g? "Tirt AM Lambert, Sieve and ~Y Lambert,
L.alrMrs Gllidt for Brldts" will rf- David, Robin, Shawn, Cindy and
litve yiJru aNdtr,. Sad a stl/-&lt;ld- Megan Lambert, Kathy and Bubby
drtsstd.lo~~g.bruitltu-Jizttllllt/opt Williamson, Pam McKillney, Jenny
and a clrtck or money ordtr for Williamson, Ernie, Mary, ~cbael
S.U5 (rlrU incllldts postage altd Paul and Jennifer Lambert, Edith
ltaN#illg) 10: Bridu, do AM' fAll- Lambert, _Doug, Shirley and
. dtrs, P.O. Boz 1}562, Clricago,/11. Christopher Lambert, and Virginia
60611-0562. (/11 Ca11atla, 1e11d Collette of Michigan.

Spires celeb!ate
ft'f+l... birthday

$4.45.)

Those sending gifts were Mac,
Anita, Nosh and Hope Hajivanili of
Columbus. I
.

Alsoclated Preu Writer
Life imitates art, said Oscar
Wilde. And Ahmed Jibril,
commander of the. Popular Front
for the Liberation of PalestineGeneral Command, has been very .
successful in imitating the
techoothrillers.
Moreover, he has proven that
sometimes, die inventiveness of a
real~life terrorist can surpass ihat of
even the best practitioners of
suspense fiction. '
As depicted by author Samuel M.
Katz in "Israel Versus Jibril"
·(Paragon House, S24.9S), Jibril is a
combination of Dr. ·Strangelove
and a very shrewd negotiator. He is
credited. if not with its invention, at
least with lbe popularization of the
barometric 'bomb, one of which
destroyed Pan Am Flight 103 ·over
Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988. ·He
has also developed some
unconventional means 10 transport
explosives and men to attack Israeli
·· objectives.
For instance, "remote-control
speedboats that could be crammed
with several hundred kilo8f11D111 of
higll explosives and then guided to
their target," and "wind-driven
bang glid~!S and hot-air balloons."
He has also showed what a
powerful weapon sexual attraction
can be , as when some of his
followers used unwiuing European
womenfriends to carry bombs onto
airplanes.
But Jibril can combine
ruthlessness with the patience and
endurance of a seasoned politician.

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received welliil advance
to assure publication in the
calendar.
MONDAY
POMEROY - DAV and Ladies
Auxiliary will .mect Monday at 7
p.m. at the tlall on Buue_rnut
Avenue in Pomeroy. Dmner wtll be
served.
RAC IN E - Racine Village
Counci l will meet Monday at 7

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and mACIQtOE WORK

AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,.
'HOME SITES and

Call 992-2156
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ado ..,.ido ,.. .....,. JOur ad rau ••• he pnpoW

'

I

ru3UJ111•.......
..
0 l'rico o( ad 1.. all tapllalletton lo do•l&gt;lo priee ol ad -

.7,.. u.. .,.,. •.., ....
•

S..~ 1o- ,.,._il&gt;lof..

RIVERFRONT BARBE

INSUUNCE

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'

446-Golllpolla

367-CitooWre
3118-Vialoa

245-RioGnade
256-C.yoa DilL
64~ut· Dlot.
379-'l'ol... t

9')2-MWoiJepoJtl
Pomeroy

675-I'L " ' - " '

. 985° 'M
11-U-Pordoad
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576-Applo c;,....
773-M-

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PLUMBING

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Shade River Saddle Shop·

......

In CustGIII

Plumbing

CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

;a~ .
31904 ua•l•t

Creek Road
Mi••lep.ort, Ohio

36358 SR 7

Words

3/8/tfn

. 4/29/93

HAULING

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UCINE
MOWER CliNIC

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PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hour&amp; 96- M-F 9-3 Sat.
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1
3
6
10
Monthly

15
15
15

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15

15

11\\\(1\1

s .20
$.30
s .42

21- a - Oppar.aity

D- Prof...o•al 8.nM:.

!LI!If.!

$ .60
$.05/day

34-

a...;- Buildiap

35-- Leto a Ac_,.

1 - - - -- -:;:;::;-::-:: ;::;;;;;:;;r;;;:;;;;~;----j

36- BMI Eototo11'oaled

Wooled lo BUJ
U..tock
'
M- Boy 6: Crola
s-1 6: Fertiliur

AutooforSalo

ao-ror

41a-.
41- M..Uo a - for Roat
43- Fanaa for B..l
_A,.......alorR.t
Funtiohed a46-S-IorR••
47- 11'aoled"' a...

·5- Bam Ado
6- Loot .,..1 Foud
7- Loot uod Fouad

11- Bolp 'IV uled
JZ-- Sit...- 11'oialed
13-laoun14-B-T...-..
15- Sclooolo A loo~

6-p,J,JicSaloA

16- Radle; TV 6: CB Repair

~

BISS~LL

v.... a:' wo·.

3-4-93- 1

COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

:-II;\

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
D. A. BOSTON , .

ln.~

,...
1'1.. ... A HMiioJ
•

.

5:1-SportiDcCoodo
SS--Aoliq54- Mil&lt;. Moreheoclioe

(614)
667·6628

Refripontio~

C...erol BoulillfJ
Moh.lle HoMe Repair
Up~olotery
'

55- BulldillfJ Supplieo

1

EXCAVAnNG

~

E-..u.,

614•992·7643

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

Motoroycleo
Boato A Mol&lt;ln for Solo
Auto PUla I: Aoceoooriooj

4-tt-93-tfn

(No SundnJ Calls)
211219Wn

Porches,
Patios,

GREEN-UP
RECLAMATION

Sidewalks
992·7878

Do?• r &amp; U.Jckhflt· w.,rk

Bl'LLETI~ B&lt;&gt;ARD
B•UnN BOARD DEADLINE ,
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

. TRIM and
REMOVAL

UrtVL''.'ll'i""
t!t JI))(·~;i(f•S

•FIREWOOD

Bill SLACK
992·2269
'

MIRACLE CRUSADE
Meigs Jr. High Auditorium
Sat.,July 17th, 2 P.M .
Evangelist Michael Vance
Special Music

Reasonable Rates
Dependable
Service

Phone Evenings

614-985·3373

Ho•••

21 151? Jlt fn

FREE ESTIMAJES

Blf
True 1ng

915-4473

We Haur Gravel, ·

Ro•odoling
Stop &amp; Co•pare

1

.-------,·I

•.

11

ARE-PilE
WITH BARGAINS

Public Notice
5

HappyAds

.

-Room Addition&amp;

Help Wanted

HELP

. WANTED
Tomato Pickers
&amp; Packers
Paul Hill

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Slreets
· Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585
• SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur 5-1o pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

• J&amp;T HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

letart Falls
614-247·2012

From Foundation to
Roof
Inside

anti Out

Frae Eotlmlllee,
lowCooto.

Work ~!Jarenteecl

.COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

At till 1h1 Wll
1waet and thin.
At • 406 I hi II

IWMt and sporty.

Happy 40th Birthday
Rita'S. Mathews
Love Clllarii••J

or
1nltfn

1

.;.Qooftng
-lntarlor I Extwlor
Pointing
(FREE ESniiATES)

V; C. YOUNG Ill

9t2·6.215

Pom~roy,

Ohio

LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591
1

614-698-6500
'

RIVER
CONTRACTORS

~

:

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top
to Bottom

SNODGUSS'
UPHOLSTERY

!

9·10·92-lln :

UCINE,OHIO
"Helping You To

Farm

1--------

-Gu.t llr Wofll
-Citclricaland Plumbing

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND' CLEARING
WATER l SEWER
· LINES
.BI\SEMENTS &amp;
iHOMESITES
H~lJUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravlll and Coal

614-698-3290

CARPENTER SERVICE i

IT'S WOllTH IU!IPB.IU'INO
1'BY CLASSIJ'IJ!ID I

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

Coal, Trash, etc.

YOUNG'S

WANT'ADS

'

CALL 992·61

klulr htfliJ

•LIGHT H~ULIN~

USED RAILROAD

POBUC NOTICE
II for any ruoon
. On June 6, 1H3, at Campbell Tranaporblllon
opproxlmotaly 1:00 A.M., CompMiy, Inc. lalla to IICI on ·
the M/V A.A. V•t.ol your olllim wllhln 110 ~··
IICOidanWiy dloch.rged "" !hall you may oubmlt H ID:
unknown quantity of Unltad S - Co•t Guard
num'* 2 dlellli fllalllt mila Natlonol Po.l lutlon Fund•
pHt237.5 ollhll Ohio AI¥.-. Canter, 4200 W!loon Blvd.,
the aflooctad arNo lncluda Bull• 1000, Arlington, VA
mh 237.5 to lillie 242-lol • 2220).1804.
the Ohio River. Campbell (7) I, I, 7, I, I, 12, 13, 14,
Tranoportatlon Company, 15, 16, 11, 20, 21, 22, 23, H,
Inc letha - - of Ute MN 27• H, 28• 30; (I) 2, 3, 4•
A.A. V•tal, which Ia lha 5, 6, I, 10, 11, 12, 13, 30to
dMignatad oouroa ol lha
PubliC Notice
oplll purauanl to the Oil
Pollution Aol of 1110.
CI•I- orlelng out of IIIII
PUBUC NOncE
oplll may be oubJRIItad to
Tho Board of Truo- of
Campbell TrOMportallon Oranva Townllitlp wll hold a
CompMiy, Inc., P. 0. Bor public h~. July 14 at
'*no of the
124, Ch•larol, Pa. 15022, 7:00 p.m.
for
clark,
Pair
ola
Cai8Way,
Attn.: Don Grlmlll or by
the
Budget
of
Orange
oalllng Campbell TraMpo,tatlon Company at (412) T-hlplor1. . . .
PMrlola Cllaue:z: Clerk
413-4551 , _ 1:00 IJito
.waiGulh " - '
4~ PM, Mon~ through
Coolville, Ohio 41723
Frldlly.
114-.51110
(7) 2, 4, I, .. 7, .. 1,11,
12, II, 10111

P&lt;lltd'-;

Trt&gt;~· f~o:·rnov~ll

CONRRUCTION

•Niw

Middleport,
Pomeroy, Racine,
Rutlaad, Masoa
Areas

~-&gt;~·lll··· Sy·.;lt 'I~ I'&gt;

E · IISSELL &amp; IURKE

SHRUB

LAWN CARE

SERVICE

So_'t'(llll~] .~

I

BUILDERS, INC.

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

Truclu lor S.lo

48- ~:qu~,_,

11,- MioceiJa....,
Ill- 'l'oaled To Do ·

'l'ulod t.o Buy

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR.SALE
Call 614·992· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Choshiro,

qup

1\1.\T \1 .:-

Auctioa

DALTON

8x7 ... ;....... $17
9x7 ........... $1
16x7 ......... $296

LIMESTONE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable
Ratei
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE
614·742·2138

Stone ·

I \l:\1 '-l 1'1'111·~
.\ 1.1\ I .~ J'()(.l,

3:1- Mo~U. Bo- for Solo
33-- F~ for Solo

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day u separate ada.

~Ci'#llllway

WAYNE

Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
Track, LO.Ck, Spring and Hardware.
.
WHILE THEY LAST! .

HAULING .

u- 11..., 1o Lou

,y."'

2-loM-r
3--A...,aee•nll

DO IT YOURSELF
&amp; CONTUCTOR
SPECIAL

These Sizes Only!
Over 15 Words

Rate

Chester, Oh. 45720985-3406
.

614·992·7144

s
Days

215-75R15" ArutonaOWL
235-75R15" Ar11wna OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING 'EXHAUST SAfi: NOW IN PROGRESS' 1121/N

949·2168

882-NewDnen
895-Lotoot
937- Bullolo

742- Rudud
667-Cooi.Wo

;Box 189

HEW-REPAIR

458-U..

949-Rocbte

I

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

111ctl93/l mo. pd

7nf1-.

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

.

..

614·915·4-110

SERVICE

*DRAWINGS- PRIZES *
Come ·Register lor

.

....,n al~arr-do, (•...., .

• A clud(..d od•-• plocod ia ,.. Callipolio Dolly
Tril&gt;u.. (ouopt Cluoiflocl Dioplay, a.. ~a- Card or I..pl
Noticeo) will oleo op_. ia ... Poial Plauaat Rap..,. aad
""'Dailr s..~~ae~, .....w,. o..r 1a,ooo ...~ ·

In the service .

\

992·'3838

GaDla County Melp County . Muon Co., WVAna Code 614 Ana Code 614 Ana Code 3M

• Ado .... _ , he paW Ia od....·...,
Cud ol tu.lu
HappJ Ado
Ia 11-r1aa
Yord SU..

Satu

'
'

.

for ....... r...... , ad ........ popor). c.u ........ 2:00 , ••.
MJ ,.,._ .....icotlolllo .U. - t i o a

.

'

the
folhmins telephone e:rcharage1 ... ·

• r- Ado: Ci-waJ ..d Foopd odo ...W 15 wood. will ..

.

Call 992·6919

Clau~d page• c011er

• 11ooo1.. olioeout for odo palclla ad•-·

for .the .hills

B.eegle named to
BGSU dean's list

Frlclay Paper
SIU\day Paper

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annu ity, IRA • Mortgage

for you.

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. SaiUrday
1:00p.m. MONboy
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100_p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Wednesday Paper .
Thwwdly Paper

MoN. tbru FR1. 8A.M.-SP.M•• SAT.S-12

Racine women meet
Program leader Karen Walker
introduced Dan and Sue Rumano
who presented a prosram on drug
and alcohol prevention at the June
meeting of the Racine United
Methodist Women. The Rumanos
have presented programs at many
school s, beginning in the fourth
grade, in Meigs County. A question
and answer session concluded the
program.
Lee Lee opened the business
meeting with members repeating
the UMW purpose. After the
· welcome, the Lord's P(ayer was
repeated by everyone. The officers
reports were read by Chris Hill and
Clara Mae Sargent. The penny fund
was taken, all sick calls were
reported. and correspondence was
react.
The apple butter making was
discussed again and due to the lack
. of enough help to make it. iI was
voted to cancel the project.
The Festival of Sharing will ,be
held September 18 in Athens, and
all kits are to be turned in before
tl)at date.

COPY DEADLINE
MONboy Paper
T.-!ayPaper

INTERIOR

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

' i/11'12/t

To place an ad

AMERIC!AN
LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

painting. Let me doH

· LANDCLURING
DRIVEWAYS IN&amp;TALieD
UIIESTOIE-TRUCKING
FREE ESlUIATES

The best example, for Katz, is.•.
when in 1985 "he brough~ lsraelto :
its knees" with the POW exchange
of ihrec Israeli soldiers for 1,150j
Palestinians. .
,
It is not surprising, dlen, that ~ ,
military and the Mossad, die ~·:·
intelligence service, have tried on:·
several occasions to shorten Jibril's ·
life.
~
I~ oue of the best chapters of this::·
book - marred only by some '
born bastic remarks · - Katz '
explains the Israeli commando raid ,
and assassination attempt on Jibril, :
a surrealistic fight in which the ;;
combatants .used illuminator •
goggles "designed to turn pitch ,:
~ness into optimum visibility"; :·
laser aiming lights, "a beam of red ;
laser light directed to a target and :.
attached below the barrel of an ·
assault weapon"; silencers :'
attached to their weapons; and, in :.
an unforgivably cruel innovation, ::
dogs carrying high explosives "to .
destroy the inner defenses of '·
Jibril's well-proleCted bunkers." :
The operation was only one in ,
what Katz calls "the deadly cat and ·
mouse retaliation game," with
surely more action 10 follow. Jibril, ·
for his part. is active, trying new ·
weapons, including biological :
agents.
·
:
"As the Stille of Israel nears its '
50th year of existence," says the·
author, "it appears as if Ahmed
Jibril is attempting to escalate die
struggle into one final zenith of
destruction before it is too late.''

liNDA'S
PAINTING
FREE. ESTIMATES
Take lh!l pain out of

TRAILER lfTEB,

Daughters of America district 13 hold picnic

Hea~ing

'

HOWARD
EXCAVATING ·

Maria F&lt;!lCker, Martha Holter, all
Fifth grade - Cassie Rose,
A's; Candace. Bunting, Angela overaU.
Chaney, Lisa Frigiola, Traci
Fourth grade- ·Amber Baker ,
Heines, Erin Sexton, Lisa Sredlem, Renee Barringer, Brandon
District Deputies and Past vice president; Betty Spencer, Phillips, vernie Consffive, Myrtle
Lauren Youns, overall; Amanda Browtiing, Amber Cburch, Nathan Councilor's Club of District 13, Guiding Star Council, secretary; Higgins, Edna Edgar. Donna
Milhoan, aqulemic. . . .
Marcinko, overall. .
Daughters of America, recently Beuy Bigss, Guiding Star Council, Barney, Kathleen Trowbridge,
S~ventli grade - Kel!i Bailey,
Third srade- Nicholas Barber, held the annual picnic and meeting treasurer. JoAnn Baum, Chester Faye Trowbridge, Logan Council
Stephanie Belirhs, Christopher overall; Thomasina White, at the Kachelmackcr Park, Losan. Council, was introduced as Inside No. 120,, Logan; Sandra While ,
Buchanan, Brandon Buckley, academic.
Chesler Council No. 323, Chesler.
with Logan Council No. 120 srthe Stale Sentinel.
'
Michelle Caldwell, Billie Pooler, .
Tuppers l'lllins Elementary
Mary C. Moose, new p~sident,
hosresses.
all A's; Billina Buchanan, Jamie
Sixth srade- Jessica Brannon ,
will check different resi8Ur:IIDIS a5
Erma Cleland gave die blessing.
Drake, Jeremia!\ Kehl, Lamar Stephanie Evans, .all A's; .Lacey
Mildred Lowery, president of to where the club will hold the
Lyons, Jason Parker, Micbael · Buntins, Sarah Householder; Sari Logan Council , presided at the Christmas dinner and meetins. · \
Weeks, Nicole White, overall.
Putman, Mary Styer, Ann Wissins, business meeting. ·The 23rd Psalm,
There were readfri' by Erma
Chester Elementary
overa!l; Jeremy Coleman, J.T. the Lord's Prayer and the Pledge 10 Cleland, JoAnn Baum and ~ldred
Sixth srade - Jacque hall, Vat~e White, academic.
the American flag we~ all ~veil in Lowery.
Karr, Jessica Marcum, Aaron WtU,
Fifth srade - Matthew Bissell, unison.
Those present were Eileen Clark,
Angi Wolfe, overall; Brynn Moss, : Matthew Caldwell, Molly Heines,
Margaret
Cotterill, Janie41 Lawson,
Betty Spencer, secretary of
aca~mic,
.
all A's; MeJ1han Avis, Matthew Guiding Star Council, conducted Betty Spencer, Bette Biggs, all
Ftfth srade - Joshua Brodenck, Boyles, Andrew Rollins, Steven the roll call and the minutes of the from Guiding Star Council No. 124
Chrjs Krawsczyn, Joshua Will, Weeks, overall.
last meeting were read and in Syracuse; Mary C. Moose, Perry
overall; Jessica Pore, academic.
Fourth grade - Dean Alexander, ·approved. Bette Biggs, Guiding Council No. 283, New Lexington;
Fourth grade - Juli Bailey, all Joey Brown, Beth Bunting, Star Council, gave the treasurer's ·Marcia Keller, JoAnn Baum,
A's; Kristen Chevalier, Cinda Matthew Grubb, Dustin Kebler, report
Thelma White, Lora D!UIIewood,
Clifford, John Cooke, Wes Crow, Joshua Kebl, Michelle O'Nail,
New officers were nominated Erma Cleland, Ethel Orr, Opal
overall; Adam SleJ~Iich. academic.
Justin Robertson, Wesley Shafer, and in~talled by the Mildred Hollon, Mary K. Holter, Chester
Third srade - Tammy Bissell, Danielle Spencer, Gary Vierling, Lowery·, president; Mary C. Council No. 323, Cheste.r; Mildred
Holly Broderick, Ben Holler, overall.
Moose, Perry Council president; Lowery, Sylvia Bowens, Ruth
Garrett Karr, Jonathan Louks, Sara
Third grade - Bradley Brannon, Sylvia Bownes, Logan Council, Bunthoff, Faye Bailey, Irene
Mansfield, Michael Taylor. Jake Householder, all A's; Michael
Jonathan WiD, overall.
,
Bennett, ifina DeLaCruz, Tiffany
Riverview Elementary
Kidder, Chris Lyons, Kimberly
Sixth grade - Michael Sobieski, Marcinko, Elaine Pu1111an, Tiffany
TODD.HARRISON
overall; Heath Proffitt, academic.
Spencer, overall; Ashley Hager,
Two
of
countrY.
music's
finest
Martina
McBride,
Darryl
and
Don
•
stars of today will be among the Ellis, I lfiO, special guest emcees
featured performers at the 17th Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase.
Airman Todd M. Harrison has
annual Jamboree In The Hills. U.S . 40 Band, Silverado,
graduated
from Air Force basic ~
Collin Raye and Hal Ketchum will Unwound, Brad Paisley. Dino
'
both perform on the Saturday show Buff, and Teresa.
training here.
.
'1
at the Jamboree in die HiUs July 15
Jamboree In The Hills is
During the six weeks of training · ;,
Monday ai 7 p.m. at the town haD.
p.m. at Star Mill Park.
through 18 at Morristown: ·
accessible by Interstate 70 at exit the airman studied the Air Force !·
·
Though
only
30-ycars-old,
Collin
213 between St. Clairsville and mission, organization and customs ·
TUESDAY
MIDI:&gt;LEPORT - Vacation Bible
has
been
singing
and
entertaining
Morristown, Ohio.
and received special training in ~.
RACINE - Southern High
School at Victory Baptist Church
crowds
for
more
than
half
his
life.
Show
times
are
7-11
p.m.
human relations. '
?:
in Middleport Monday through Athletic Boosters will meet
From his debut album All/ C1111 Thursday and Friday, II a.m .-1~
· In addition, ainnen wbq complcre -::
July 16 from 6:·15-8:45 p.m . Tuesday at 7 p.m. anhe high
Be Collin's latest single releases p.m. Saturday. and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. basic training earn credits toward ~
nightly. Balloons will be released school. Officers will be elected.
are "Every Second" and die Top 10 Sunday.
an associate degree through the ~:
after the worship · service on
"Somebody Else's Moon."
Tickets are available at the box Community College of the air ;:
Sunday. The theme is "Digging for
BURLINGHAM - The Bedford
Hal Ketchum's hits include . office on site durins the week of
God's Truth" and dinosaurs wiU be · Township Volunteer
'
Fire "Small Town Saturday Night," the show or at the Capitol Music Force.
Harrison is the son of Stephen C. ,;:
featured . Transportation will be Department Commillee will meet "Hearts are Gonna Roll," "Sure Hall box office prior to July 12. To
available by calling Dwight Ashley Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the L?ve" and and "Mama Knows The c~arge by phone, call (304)234- and Judith N. Harrison of 47639 ::
~
at 992-6926.
Burlingham Modern Woodmen Highway."
0050, (304)233-3535, TicketMasler Momjng Star Rd., Racine.
He
is
a
1992
graduate
of
;;:
Hall .
Others scheduled ~ pe!form at or toll-free. 800-624-5456.
Soudlem High School, Racine.
~
BURLINGHAM - Bedford
Jamboree In The Htlls mclude:
,
Township Trustees will meet
POMEROY - Norma Torres of Marty Stuart, Travis Tritt, Little
the IVjeigs County Health Te_xa.s, Trisha Yearw~od, H~nk
----------------------~ •~'·
Department will speak at the • Wtlhams.• Jr. , Char.he Daf!•els
••
,•
TOPS meeting on Tuesday.
Band, Mtchelle Wrtght, Rtcky
,f
Skaggs, Brooks and Durm,
·•'
Wynonna,
Exile,
Tammy
Wynetle;
POMEROY - The Meigs County
District United Methodist
Board
of Elections .will meet John Conlee, Mark Collie, Deborah
Women -Annual Day will be held .
ADen, Chris LeDoux, Ricky Lynn
·September. 16 in Marietta. Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at die offiCe.
Gregg, Neal McCoy, Vern Gosdin;
Members should attend.
POMEROY - The Meigs Athletic
It was voted to serve the Delta
'Boosters
will meet Tuesday at 7:30
Kappa Gainma dinner in October,
p.m.
All
parents are urged to
1994.
216 E. Main St.
A welcome party for the new attend.
minister, Reverend Ken Molter and
Melanie Jane Beegle of Racine
POMEROY - Meigs County was
famHy will be held Sunday at 7
•,
on of the 2,467 studenu at
p.m. at the church . Cake and Republican Executive Committee Bowling Green State University to
:
homemade ice cream will be will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the be named to the SJ?ring semester
served. Etta Mac Hill and Martha Meigs County Coorthouse.
dean's list for achteving a grade
Dudding will co-chair the event
.point average of 3.5 or better on a
and Chris Hill and Sharon Hubbard
' WEDNESDAY
4.0 scale.
wiD present the prosram.
· POMEROY · - Pomeroy
Refreshments were s.erved by Merchants. Association will meet
Ruth Steams and Robyn Reiber. Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. at the
DOWNING CHILDS ·
·I'~ meJDberahlp atve away
Gel well cards signed during the conference room of Bank One:
MULUN MOSSER
social boor.
·DIIeount sOps lor supplements
POMEROY
·
Amateur
Attending were Opal Diddle,
·Riverfront Bart.ell T.Shlrtl
Frances Robens, Margery Roush, Gardeners' Qlub meets Wednesday
..
r•
Dorothy McKenzie, Karen Walker, at 6 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
and more
Ill Seconcl St., Po•ny
Martha Dudding, A)ice Wolfe, Etta Charles Blakeslee for a potluck
YOUR INDEPENDENT
Mae Hill, Clara Mae Sargent, garde.o picnic. Spea,k.~r 1will be
'·
Marsie West, Chris Hill, Robyn Harold Knecn, extenston agent, on
,
AGENTS
SER,.NG
'
..
Reiber, Ruth Steatns, and Lee Lee. growing plants and flowers in
For Details
MEIGS COUNTY
The nei l meeling will be July 26 containers.
at 7:30p.m. at the church. New
SINCi 1161
members are con1ially_invited. ·

Community Calendar
.

,

Katz work-qualifies
as technothriller

OBOROB;B.C.
·
. DEAR· PRINCE: Do )'OU !mow
lllyllllll who It .. sood-tllllftd u
1be W0111111 refcmd 10 in the next
leaer'llt C8IDII fron! MiJulclpolil.
OW AniJN'tn: I married I

Eastern Local honor roll announced

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 12, 1993
Page 6

'Babe' can be term of endeamient .
. Our Au Lucien: I've beea
re.dina'your c:olullln for,.,.., but I
ll
clreuned thlll would pick up .
.
I pen lfld write 10 ,0U, It WU tbia
rnomins's column llllt did iL .
That- from ViiJIDia who
complained beciu"' her huablnd
callJ her "Bille" instead m l1ling her
name really btousht back 110111e
tendllr memories.
I was manied for 27 yeara 10 I IICYer ~ me Lizzie after 1bat
wonderful man who called me .....,,. be knew whit wu COiiliJI8.
"Dirlina.".F'rve ycarnft.er he puu ~ - Brie, Pa.
away, I married a llilll who IICWI'
From Madison, Wis.: f wu
Clllod me 111ytbing. l.t WIS, "Hey, anooyect wl!en you aided with Jbe
you ... " That marriage llsled 20 RIID who called his wife "Babe"
months.
after llbe IOld him abe didn't like iL
Now I keep 111 ear qlCR for w1111 Had 1been lilting in your chair dill
llll1'lied people Clll one another. It day, 1would have JOid him 10 rmc1 a
can be a teal clue 10 the way they nicbamc that was ampcable 10 her.
feel about each other. - INDIAN- And if he lnsillcd on c:alling her
APOUSMEMORIES
Babe, (a) she should refuile 10
DEAR MEMORIES: That 1cuer Ins_., (b) if they lie on the phooe,
from "Babe"·generated a s~g qlhould 1uu1g up on him, and (c)
amount of mail. Most of the 1eUen if IIIey lie in bed, she should Jake
very lovillg llld tendllr - IOd her pillow and so sleep oa die
then there were a few that sounded livlns room couch. -- FORTYa lot like theae:
.
BIGHT YEARS WITH "HONEY"
Dell' Ann Landen:: I certainly
DEAR HONEY: What would you
did sympath~ with the woman who say 10 the woman who wrote the
becalne 111110ycd when her huabllld next leuer?
called her "Babe," even though she
Dear Ann Landen: Why Ill)'
told him abe did not like iL
wife would object to being called
My name is Elizabeth, and I hate "Babe" by her husb8nd is a mystery
to be Clllcd Lizzie. Whenever my to me. My husblnd calls me "Fit
husband got mad II me, he would Stuff," "Hippo," "Pea Brain,"
call me Lizzie. Orle day we ran into "Dingbll" and several other names
an old 9Chool chun\, who greeted that you could not set by
my husband with, "Hello, Skeezix. • ' your editors. The woman who
He turned red as a beet. I knew 8l canplaiQcd should be thankful for
oocc be hated the that had 1111111 favon. fd bade plaoes wilb
probably piqued his childhood. He her any day of the year.-- PRINCE

Monday, July 12, 1993

614·949·2911 or
. 614-593·5010

•Painting Services
·Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
FREE ESIIMATES
50734 llll•r Rldio Rd.
Lo•1 lottom, Oh. 45743

5-24-1

WORK
Remodeling 1nd Repair

Painting, Experienced •
Free Eltirn1tt1

985·4181

614-446-8568

6-9-93-tfn
I

Recover Your
lnve1tmenl"

J&amp;L INSULATION
'
Free Eat Imates
Replacement
Windows ·
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Call uo for
Spectal Prlc• on
Siding end Wlndowo

6-30-t mo.

BINGO

UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

EVERY THURSDAY

.

$25.00

EAGLES

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

CLUB
• IN POMEROY

992·2772
Jamea Keeoee, owner
S/20it3

PH. 742·2217

614·742·2996

.'

FOREVER
BRONZE

6:45p.m.
Special E•rly Bird
$100 Payoff

JacktrwHie Rd • .
Radne

Thio ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No.'0051-32

949·2826
1-17-93-,t mo.

.. ··-··- -:-·

Read the Best Seller'
)

••

�·•

a

P~ge

The Dally Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

41 HOUIM for Rent

L..- u.
ProvlcloAHIPPW. ...... Fullft
For Your Child. Cui
de'

'

3

~
II ~Ill PrMi.
...-.. c.ll l'lwlllo l Don Tol
F

M

The Dally

ALLEYOOP

KJT'N' CARL

NEA Crossword Puzzle

--.-.......-........
4411111For -

•n ........

Abottloll

Monday, July 12,1993

IIJwce:..._.._...,_

Announc:.mlllta

3

Monday, July 12, 11113

Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

All I'Niostalt ""'tnlllng In

•

lhll "'"'~ ~ IUI&gt;jtd lo
1ht F-.. Foir liouli'G Ad
ol1988 which ....... lllogal

I'IM1.,...... . . .

to ~.. •any pielorenco,
lmllaiiOn"'baed on....,, color, rolglon,
IU tamllal status or

Dutw· ' -

Or - · 114-

h

ACROSS

t _,.. ......_

__
.........
_
...,..... · _,_
--·=
...

.....

III$So-.alll4
.......
._. 1;aaoon .. -t::IIDpm.

42 Mobile Homu
for Rent

.......

nallonal

11\GGD

qdgin, or any lntenllon to

iMkt 11'1 such prolorenco.

010,

PHILLIP
ALDER

.:0.:

114 Ill! II I ,

lmllollon or discrimination.'

EXGnC I.ADIU LIVE 1100 Ill

71110 $S.SG-mln: UC.VISA 1 11111-1111112""'". 11+. •

NORTH
+KJ42
.Q 8 7 2
1976
+QB

· EEKAND MEEK

Tlis nt"'''aper wll no1
knowing~ aecapt

· AN ILL-oori£tv

adVertisements lor real &amp;Stall
whk:h ts In violatiOn ot lhl
low. Our roado10 are heNby

EAST
+s 3
.Al06l
I KJ3

6AIIoJS 11'1)(

+un

lnlormod lhallll-llngo
· advertised In 1hls newspaper
ara av.dlble on an ~uaJ
11
opportunity basli.

OIRLSII! UVEIII 24 HAS IDAYIII
TOM ONE ON ONE! 1-2811-

P.llllllllll~n.~ll::~~~~:

"I can't wait 10 get back to work ,
so ·1 can rest up from our vacation!"

r========:-t-===========131

Be 11IElll.
YN.
Procall 0
1112
1004
102-131411.
7 '
Lift · 24 Houro !Doy Ttlk To
Bttulllul Olrloll 1-100 810.07'18
Et1. 11164,
Ptr llln. 111111
Bt 18 y,._ Procall Co. (1102) 131-

Yard Sale

.3.11

0011.

.

Gall!polla
&amp; VIcinity

Soulb

Bla VIlli Stlo: On 32S.Pttl Tho
Ccilltgt, JUly lllh •171h..
Otrogt Stir. JulY 121h, 131h,
14th. Good Clolhlna, Iliac.
ftomo, 2 1110.1 0u1 li.R. 854
From · Chahlre, 114 Stingy
~
Rotd, c. HollaiKI

-.t

P l -. . .

Domino'• Plzu In P........, It
now ....pung lppliCOtlont lor

drinr. only. -

,

Etoy w..t.l EHtlltnl Ptyl AlO
ttmblt Producll AI _
_. Ctll
Tall Frw, 1-1011-4174181, Ell.
313.

RBidt-. .

3 Brdroom
Full m.ll 24X44, Z ""r Otrogt,
Abov. QniUnd Pool, tl AU•

SA 110 ¥Inion, Ohio, 114-3if.
1102.

J'NT

THAR'S A

&amp;Auction

Apartment
for Rant

1 beclro;»m, air cond., .tav1 •nd
Nfrlgerator,
n11r
Hoi•

HooPiltl. U4Simonlh, .... ..

qulrod. 114-44WII7.

1jlr, AC, rolrtg. I tlovo, private,
11210/mo. 304-171-1110 or 114-

Ook Pumllln: T - l
Clltq. -hot, CwYtd · Cocktr
motion,
Col!lo,Sptnltl,. .- _
Clllnt Ctblnolt, . Elc. R ' - - Olk ,_..., ~nd,
uoa
Englltll
:1111
c..... ~~ :;: llliilpclog,
-~ 74 . Motorcyclal
Dullund,
=~ Ohio Phont: I
· Hl,..ltyon Klft'!!L.".!!!!!My Ptg: rm
304-441-4404"' .,.,....,,,
cyclo, 11000; II Polnl Ltnt
PICKIHI FURNITURE
(Lincoln Hit~, -oy.
Nlwl' ....
58
FRIHI&amp;
,... ~ 11:1 mi.
'11171 lululd lOOT tcooil Good
.lerrlcho ~ Pt. PI 11111, WY,
Vagatabla~
lltalnnora Blko, Ctll 14-441otll 304-4175-1410.
1411 Afttr 5 P.ll.
Com lar . . . otll: I14-I'IN7III

-n

c.-.

a,..,...

YOU DRY

PEANUTs ··

1171 Harter Dtwfd•on 8port1tw,

304-~7~-~ZM.

11171 Hondo C8710, no. Mnd,
11,285 ICiutl mlltt, z lti
. . alhor - ·
304-ll'MI*4.

CALLING

'' Ti-IANK YOU FOR CALLING ~E BROWN RESIDENCE ..
IF YOU KNOW Tt.IE FOVR DI61T EXTEN510~ OF THE PARTV
YOU ARE TRVIN6 TO REACt.! ,YOU MAY DIAL IT NOW .. IF
YOU ARE CALLING YOUR SISTER. PRESS THREE .IF YOU
~AVE A ROTARV DIAL TELEPI-10NE, PLEASE i-lOLD FOR
T~E NEXT AVAILABLE PERSON ... ''

!-lOME.

Ct.IARLIE BROWN 1

11200.

61 Farm Equipment
1-31 IIF TriCior 11.111. II W
h,IIO, Ill IIF ...faa.' !Ill 11F

II.~ IIF ...710 1,.._.
1122
For..,._ IllS .lahn - 1 0 , I
polnl, PS 11.5 UrN, rtOI-, lt1 . -.... 114 ... 2131:
Fonlllodtl 1 1 8 - E t Condlllon, 3 S l - .'110, IM31Nlll.
.
Hydroullo oiiiiUO lluobl .. so

304-773-5343.

13i0

,.,__ ~~

Employment Services

283•.

Frlondly kltl-. lrtt 1o gooc1 _c1:::1:::O:::H~a~lp~W:.:;a;,n;.:;ted~-­
country h-. Block tnd whllt ;;_VON, ALL AAEASI&amp;htrt your
lomtr., 18 l14-44l-042t.. limo wllh ... You'D love lhe
Kllllno to good homo. 114-4411.-te243151.

om

1 flmala puppy, 114-tu-3383.

Lost &amp; Found

-·-- t , I M - - 3.
11' T~ Hul, . 140

lrtlltr,

l NEtlJ TO
"NO

~eTI·IINI'

PltESS COIW
POLICY.

.'

~

jfl!JRJT'f Of I'..Y ~~~~'('!)
. . DU€. TO ~ DE.(.(.If.llt-1(. VN.JJ€
Of Tll£ DOU.~!

18 ·wanted to Do

lo the m• jutl

Clll 30W'JI.1ll7.

.

c.E£, CJIIEF, llliJJ.IK '1'0011£
WORR't'IN6 Nf£N f'&amp;Y...

~nu.

chaalara /School Age 114-44f.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

w r - .._., vtnMioo, bolh
tube, kftc:lwl •lnka. ImaM ..,.
glnt ...,...,. f01 lltln 81., Polnl
Pl......... wv..........21.

1 milt ou1211 Wtdnotdty, boby

carrltr, walker blth tub, ci&lt;Mhla,

two 30x15 wall.:ablnela, aant.n
hal'\(t tools, Iran lkiiiMt, lOla of

'"' llonlt Ctrlo, thorp .... P8..
PI, V-1, 11310, oalll14-14..ad
or 114-M,.:1171.
11112 Buick LoStbrt,ucond.,tlr. 11,100 010 11111 01dt

Panm~lldlc• Dealrabla achedule

tor home con-

Rayburn Ad,
i'l!aeonab,. r..trictlorw, county
penNI provided, call Gjnerll
hOUia beto,. Jumk'a StAI.141
wat«1 lntormaUon mailed on ,..
Ftnancial
Ambulance, Oak HIM, WY. 304q-. 304-1711-5213, pltttt no
ALL Yard S.laa Mult 81 Ptkt In 41H1115; 304-5101-2147.
olngr. wldtlrolltro.
Advtnco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the city boloro the ..... 19 Nn.
Lo4t .... .... on a.... llotd,
Merchandise
Buai,IMIII
S"'nday .dltlon • 2:00 p.m.
304-17U5111.
Frldoy. llondty td"lon - 2:00
Opponunlly
SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
p.m. Saturdly. lltlat County, Stltm l'wp. 5t
INOTICE!
Household
OHIO VACI:EY PUBUSHINO CO. ~01 ..,.. Rtmolt, booulltiil
Goods
lond; woodo, puluro tnd hlllt.
rocommtndt 1htt you do wllh ptOfllo , ... k..w, tnd CtN lor good mop. 1-114-1122 11" color TVII, ono w1 romott
NOT 10 onont)' llv""tn the 8545, Athtnt,OII.
control!, other lten. 304-871mtll Unlit you han lnVttllgtltd
11011.
lhe ofltrlni.
Rentals
VI'RA FURNITURE
Vtndlng · Roult: For Str..
114-441-31511 Or 114-4411-4421
Strong, Solid Cnh BUll-..
OW DAYSAIIEASCASH
High lrolllo, Locll loco11ont,
OR RENT-2-0WN (NO DEPOIIT)
Ntw Equl_.. ~--3. 41 Housas for Rant
12 room hodae; 1 1 2 bedroom
23 · Professional
opsrtmomo, 114-1112-1333.
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINOS:
Wroughl 1&lt;on Toblo W1c Chelro;
services
2 BA ""- nttr 116- Ftn Btck Rocking Chair Ill;
.Food C -. Ntlulll Foocte AI we1U221mohthrti0ronoo tnt1 Otrdon Arch W.,'tl128.00
Wholooolo tlrlcts. For Info Ctll depoeb.l14 44i' 4124
114-2111-1400.
lltddlng ·l'wln lltllltiSII, Ful
2 BR homo, o-rtl tlr. 11 mLS. till Stl Cluttn ·$141 Stl; 4
Stvo Yt1111 .l Monty On Yooir R- 7. In .-.114-441· DraMr i!l.rO'i MC.II; Ctr - · ·
11117
lunk Btd't, - ... Ful
-Rtflntnclng.
-Ctll
-114-2111-1400
Wkhoul
Lint 01 Soul-om ForDti.U.:
Sltrtl"..l Alt20.00; lncltnalllll)'
ehtpo• I .._ llorllna Al
11.00. 2 loco11ont --11.-o
Auction Or '4 llllot Oul 141.
()pan I A.M. To I P.ll.llon .....
QOOO USED APPLIANCIS
w.-~- drv-, nlllgtrallft,
Real Estate
rongtt • . , . _ """''"~ 'II
'lint StrtOI.piiiiM-441-'1311, 1-

"Sol Planning on roaming the neighborhood wlth
eorne of your buddle.:today?"

CUlloM, nttdt

50MC:TIME.5 I GET THE.

FEEL-INS 'Tl-VIT L-II=E 15
PA5SIN6: ME BY...

11112 Nloan 2001!!• ..,.. .....
SSOO; 1117 ZL ..., Kaw-ld,
low ...,...... 11100; . , . _
20011.

55

2 btdroom homt wtlh 2 - I n
Hillutltul waadld lifting, 3o4-

IIWOII.

441--17.

81

1114 El Ctmlno VI, :1101, PI,
PI, oulo, tlr1 ~~ , _ ln.,

,....

Curt.. Home III¥JWS!l&amp;IIL He
Jolt Too~~-- Ia·

-

~'::'W~:. ~
rod

·

In'

Kllchtnt -

Qftl.

.

St!llnl ... hire Clttntr ......... -

-.................... ..
~~&amp;"~Ron'aTV~ ~I''Jdnt
In z.... ............. ....

-;;;;;;;-;;;;f-i;;o;;i;;i~;p;;t
Groom and Supply lh:r, Pc

~
1032, I
WI.Otoo.

-.a.
-

Pets·tor Sale

=

1NI
lloo&lt; Oldrmolllr.
.,..... . . --, Ea , ,
COftdlllon, Atklnt: 11,711, 1144411-42D, Allar I P.ll.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

='--.ott:.=

56

_

H._ltytn !Ontnt,
"-To Got 114-441-

..

AND THEN I'

THAT ITWPe.
ONLXJERRY

RCAL-IZ5 ...

Bl..CJCMF-IEL-D.

Tuesday, July 13, 1993
:There are indications you might fo rm a
_::dynamic new friendship in the year ahead.
If could be with a person who is extremely
:: enterprising and operates in areas with
::. which yqu're.unfamiliar.

11U Pontile ..............

.........................
11U tnd 1WI l'eyolo T Dtlun, _"!r. ~~~~-. -

::s·

0 X

E. CUHVGKHT
VJC

MW Z T I

KGTTCI

u

G D

M G V J

EGTT

v

SOLUTION:

"My

whole

sentimentality and cornballlam.'' -

I
1

.

BLERAV
2

I I I 1

comedy

YCCFS.

Harold Ramls.

training

"'

g-

agalnsl

J

· A. Words that are pronounced the
same but have different spellings and
meanings are called HOMOPHONES.
You raise a question about specific hDmophones, RAISE c "to build up"l and
RAZE ( "to tear down"l, a pair with
contradictory meanings. That pair of
homophones may be considered an
ANTILOGY, pronounced "an·TIL-oh·
jee." (Some people also use CON·
TRANYM. "KON-truh-nim." to reler to
contradictory meanings.)

I

~

I

NE R

B • ~

Youngster, "Mommy, why
. ' does it rain?" ·wen, dear," 1the
I .1 Is 16 " mom answered, "it gives us
· · · flowers and apples." "Oh," the
boy sighed, "so why does it
T E L K E T
rain on the -------- ?"

I1'"----------,
I
I

~-.,.,,?,.....;:,.1-'e:.,.~-,~-,~-1 G)

Complere the chuckle quoted

.
.
.
.
. 'f
by l1lling in the· miuing III!Ords
L-....1..-.L......I..-.1-.......L--' you develop from :~tep No_ 3 below .

~ PRINT NUMBERED

1

· ~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

-- SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

II

Quinsy - Unwed - uner - Wooden - DETOURS
I'm always glad wnen winter and spring are over.
You can always tell when summer has arrived. It's thetime of year when the regular roads are closed and the
DETOURS
ooen.
.

'THE HP..E.IS ltlE.
HA1 100 toi\KH?

or114-+41-1t10.

lulcl1 ......... i.otdtd.
LN Ill... Eace1tn1 Conctlllon,
f!IIIID,I~.
·•

Electrical' &amp; .
Refrigeration

Matchmaker instantly reveals which signs
are romantically perfect for you . Mail $2
and a long. sell-addressed. stamped envelope to Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper.

P.O. Box 4465. New York, N.Y. 10163.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your f11 a terial
prospects look encouraging today , but in

order to manifest -'themselves they must be
given top priority and focus. Make making
money your prime interests.

others. Take comman.d of the situation and
circumstances. ..

~-.......,wv
OhiDI'M-Mix1111.

oond.~ori7Mm.

:::.J;!,.,-.

LW D V

r;,..1 ?. .. IS 11

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Thtngs should
go satrstact~ly lo r you IOday. provtded you
utilize your initiative instead of wailing on

;

•.'

..

~'

..

•·

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) II some·
one you know on a purely soci al ba s1s
offers to do you a special favor today, be a
gracious recipient. Later you'll be able to
pay this person back
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Somethtng

you've been wanling to .,alt er but lack the
power to do so might be .achieved today
through the goOd auspices of another who
has your best interests at heart .

PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) II is very pos·
sible ~oday that you might be able to utilize
the ideas or suggestions of others in ways
that will be pe(Sonally beneficiaL Howeyer,
be sure to later credit the authors.

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23) You have lhe

ARIES (March 21-Aprill9) This could be

unique ability today to unravel developments others hav~ left tangled. Use your
Qlfts for their good. as weil as for your own.

an eXlremely rewarding day for you materi·
iilly lrom endeayors where you use your

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) You can learn
much tOday by closely observing a person
who operates in a manner you admire .
His/her techniques can be applied lo silua·
: ·~ANCER (June 21-Jul\f ~~ Think pro· tions that presently affect you.
9\'essively today · and .don't be reluctant lo, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Your
test new methods or procedures, because competitive inStincts will be easily aroused
'these are apt lP be the ones that will help. today and this could serve a useful puryou get things done you .couldn't accom· pose, because when you're motivated to
p.li~h otherw.ise . Know where to look" for
be lirst you'll be hard to beat
romance and you'llllnd il. The Astro·Graph

&lt;

0322, 3 mlloo ou1 Bulovllr. lid. Ctlrn Ttrritr f'ulle, AKC
Frtt Dtllvwy. •
lnd - - -

C.oi-

42 'Docka
43 All right
44 lnttale
46 Covered with
molalure
47 GHIIc
41l Bcirn
50 RaOMOf
k•awl"'ge
53 Palm lily

Home

........ 'l'- E t l l - 11W1J.

241112L

llnvut~•

Dfmlntlh
Loc.llan
Floh trop
Aulhor Joyce

Ser v1ces

1114 Oldt Royalo, PI, PI, N:,
cruiM, power wln•wa;1a chi,
Block. brick, olpot, - ·
llowo, Umtlt, - Cloullt Wln- euper ur,· oall 114-14t.2041 •
ltro, Rio 1110(1dt, ON 'Ctll .IM- ~-..2871.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Compltlt . homt fumlthlngo.
Hqul'll: lion ..., .... ·~

In _ ,

a";&amp; .... .-... tiiOO. ,,..

4BTRO-GRAPH
Pllnl, vteor I DIG Nnll'• .......,..

Building
Suppllea

36
37
38
40

led first
tne
the
with the nine and cashed the
!spade ace. Krekorian dropped the 10,
middle remainin'g spade, in an efto . indicate preference for dial m.on&lt;ls,· the middle of the other three

By Jeffrey McQuain
SULLY ( "SUL-ee") soils or dirt·
ies, particularly by disgracing ( "sully
.
reputation"). cclmp)ete the proper
:P~:~~~i~,o~~ff~this verb by changing the
to S for SULLY

MONlY 1\NP 1 PLAN
TO Ti&lt;A~tl.BI\C.K IN
11ME TO 1\lE DAYS
Of PIRAIES liND
'TALL SHIPS!

Wtnt lo IM1y: 111711 Wthamt Hloh
School , _ _ 304-77~-~elll:

- . n d ...............
:114-;.:.:14::;..
::;21,:"'::..;,', - - - - -

cont.lner

30EI.....tlon
35 Celtic

2

-:tt·---·
l'llclory -

21 Cooklnl

-..coo. 010.

call 1M 4tl Dill Anrtlnw

100-4111-3410.

Homu for Sale

ma Fonl LTD, AC, PS, PI,,_
aood, $750. 304-171-11111 "'
111-1421.
117'11 BW 111111111 Doltt128f.-.

25 Y-llld my
27 Slndlllller

WORTH JOO ~

1111 llolldl= homo, .....
Mnd.:II044
111 ft. p - 11171 ...........
II2SOO
7
p.m. 010. - - - -

11224.

z41%u
...
berto-

II:~:;:~~~~~~:~bl&amp;~Kr~;e~k;orian
seven.
won

TOC U6T l HEAA.!&gt; IT W.l6

Transportation
lllot Poulo't Doy Ctro Ctnltr 1
Block Wtt1 Of HIIC On .ltc"Pikt ll.f I A.ll. -1::110 P.ll •. H
O...llly And Exptrlonoe It Tho
11 Concom F01 Yow Chlld'o
Ctrt. Ctll U. For A 'lid. lnlonl
/Toddloro 114-4411-8227. P -

a PelaeCuto
10 Unite of
energr
11 DIIIHid
18 Aclllll being
IBPIMII
22 Polito, e.g.
23 Mlnllture

1

Q. What do you call words such as
RAISE and RAZE' They are pro nounced alike but have opposite
meanings .

C81!1par.&amp;
MotorHomaa

31

Jazz lhamo
Whlta frail
Declare•
Having dull

I have just returned from a memoweek in Turkey, where I played
the First Brie Dunyasi Bridge Tournaonerlt. It was held in Marmaris, a 1' ln--1-'-lbeautuur resort on the Aegean Sea in
southwest corner of the country.
Today's deal is the very first my
!~1,;~ .New'1 played.
York expert Jim KreOur opponents .: ·
a thin game. A diamond lead
made our lives easy, but

do?
When South doesn't cash the spade
he must have a dummy entry rema[ning. That means he must have the
clubs, which, with the heart
and spade ace, add up to 14
·~:::;~~-;r~herefore, he couldn't have the
I&lt;
ace. I should have shot in ·
2---""'~-.k~~·
the heart ace and continued with
king' and jack ol diamonds. With
partner holding the vital diamond
we would have defeated the conand
the tournament oil to a
start.

gte llnb, ·orw 1on lrUck
. . - . ,..._, lllllt,
tiC. Da R AulOJioltr, WV. 304172·3132 or 1
27UIIH.

on

1
2
3
4

I

I

Loll: • acrnge

· ftnloh
5 Not ''qln"
6 .Suppoolng
lhll
7 Mop obbr.
6 Actor Chrlalapher-

DOWN

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

PREVIOUS

n ''"'"

ltruct~

55 D11111
reo mingo
56 Germenfor
'"One"
57 Eye lnlocUan

NCWNTC.'

EloR TREE SERVICE. T.......,
Trimming, Trtt - . , , HOdgio
Trimming. Froo .,..._IHI 114311J-7MTAitr 4p.m.

WIN do bobytllllng In my homt,
12-14
Boya,woman'a and PlY rate, many .,_IH1 In- 114-1112-1311&amp;. .
cluding fno houtlng, mt1or
cloth•mlca.
chah,booka.nlng Ht 111. mtdlctl provldtd, movl!lll tx•

North
2+
2 NT
Pass

ou,

"-....

24 000 1TU t1r oondft\OMr, 1 v-r old, NIO. 114241-1810.

u.t: mecUum. male, blac:klwhlte
apottld dog, wearing n~
arHn collar, an.wtl"l to Cory.

Hema.

54,.,.

$lop (nlut.l
Stop w,_lng
French
etonewere
Dewn
godcllll
Soulhllll
wind
Hullh club
Copper
aymbol
Blrllera Geddeo

I

"

,,..r11. ~I&gt; Aeour me

Wolkt With Limp In Front Ptwl
Lowor Slrttlo 01 Gtlllpollo, Cal
114-441-G214.

ml~e~llaneoua

Mw
Worrlel

tUTTNUZS

. · ~ORNLOSER

01 grgee Pottabllllwmlll, don"t

Yard Sale

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

;,. FRANKAND

_..,.

11W. Slrtloo llthlakJ boo~ - .
Johneon rno1:or, trolling motor,
ftth 1111!1tr. :~yro. otd. moo, 114-

Loll: Lsrgt All Dirk Grey Ctl,

7

comj)llltiJ

cllllonod, lalt of u l - Ctll lor
-Info 304-47~-M~~.

---

113/13. 114-446-1131.

:Jo.t-1711-1223.
Loti: tmlll o/lolt htlrtd1 block,
All .Torrlor dog, _ , IJitndly,
'""'"· chlld'a pet, ·aM-Ii2·
2063.

26

50Guer~n

VJGXP

17 Mlacallanaoua

haul ,.... -

24

32

11&gt;, ..,_

Ex~rrd CertiW HolM
Htinh Aldt, Will Ciro F• El-

Found : Ftmtle Gray Slrlptd Kll·
ten, 12 W..U Old, Parking l.Dt
111 PIMI&gt;Y. Church, Found
Jackton Plkt . . . d o Sttr
Btnk;1 block Alla\iO;· bull,700
Ll&gt;o. ctll 614-4411-~-- . -

Ul
20
21
23

'VJC

~. S!,SOO, E-'np: 114-311J.

=

45 Pronuncllllon 1111111
48 Young c11

llbor
15 More Obell

1Ql2
+A K 10 3

11 Ft. FlbtrtiiUe Flthlng Wllh 7 11:1 HP Mator, -

-""
Oulbotrdo~ti"Cond~
-.
Upholtlory,

In ThO.. -

Good Wllh · Chlldron, 114-379-

6

112.':i. ::'n

1112·7553.

l

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

CuftMilOii Com Plantwi2.JIOj
11414 lnitmtiiOnal Wllh Lotdtr 1112-1082.
lri1orntllontl M,IIO,
1141.112 R. S..rty 111 Merorltlur,

Junk cara. •nr cOfM:IItiOn, 114-

porm'lflt, aid ~ 11-, ...k I
..110. :10W71-M31.
. Tap Pllcli All Old U.S.
Colnt, Qold Ringe II'- Colnt,
Gold Colnt. II.T.S. Coin Shoji,
14-1115•
111 -.!A-ut, OtlltpoiiL
Btsullfull wllftt kltttn. 114-441- W.nltd lo buy: uood mobllt

Marked Uk• Spuda llcKanzl1,

lnltmt1lonol 100 Trocw WHh

tnd Stlvl lruc:kL

=:..:..::.=-----,--.,.
l:r ~..:.. Oht.,."':"1~

FrM PuDI&gt;Ito To Qood HO&lt;nt, 10
Wkl. Ul~. Part Bird Dog, 2

a:.::w.. =--~·

ctr11

2 Cuto Klntna, I Wttkt Old, I
Bl.. k, I Yollow, Notr Woodltnd
D~vt, 814-446-8281 ~ftor. 4:30
P.ll.
4 bttulllul kll~~ Wttnod,
lwkt old. 304-87
a.
I mlxtd betalt puppltt lo
lvttWIIt.:- fo t good homo,

51 Medlclnll
llllnt
52 Summer (Fr.)

Mount.~~~

nrml)h

ATurkish delight,
iter-ally

TH' DISHES

-on--_.,.

T-.

Farm Supplies
&amp; L•vestock

tlto buying junll

17 c-lnlo

43

WILL WHitE

' YARD!!

448-GIIIII.

J .lo D't Auto -

3e hltow
41 Cry of Pain

+A9 6

OpeQing lead: + 7

I SHORE

BEAR IN
OUR FRONT

C1r!1t1t. At. 7.N. 114lxiZ.....
CIIDtl
'IWo btdroom mobiO. homo lar 'llnylln s..;,;k
Yd. 110' AI
llollohln

44

Public Sale

21
3NT

BARNEY

ronl In _.nlry, dtpotll ond
3 bl drDDm, 1 112 blthJ. att.ct.cl ..-..... roqulrod, 114-14..
llttOgt, 113 11111011 Hd, ~~:. 2831.
Conliy1 appllana• lnol
.
J044711-1131.

38
38 Greek 111111

lrM
8Actr-Perlmen
12 Tilly •mount
13 lllwt
14 Acquire b' •

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

Homea for Sale

IWIIIIom Ann, Otlllt&gt;OIIo, ..11
A.M. w-v•. No l'l1ono c.tro

Ben•••

I Balllau-

5 ~·•rtrHn

28
31

.Kg 3

·-· ,

Dotk
Clerk
• -- ·
Apply In
p..-,
Wttltm

.

SOUTH

Help Wanted

11

Hz.tl

AfiMnr .. Pee;' 't ~

33 Exclamltloft

34 Sphere

sktlls. knowledge and talents on behall ol
olhors. Be accommodating.
TAURUS (Aprii2D-May 211) Try nollo lake .
yourself or lite too seriously today .
However. do play to win , but do it In a
gamelike manner in order to lighten your
.outlook and the outlook)of those with whom
you're involved.

'

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Others will be
willing to do your bidding today, provided
they feel what you want 10 do for them IS
not motivated by selfish reasons.
~,

'

�'
I

Ohio Lottery

r

Farewell party held
or Rev. Grace

Davey
....

•

The COilgregations of the Kacme

and E11$t Letart United Methodist
Churches said farwell to their
minister of the past nine y~ with
a potluck dinner and a roast on the
evening of June 25.
Reverend Roger Grace along
with his wife.Sue and three sons
Todd, Scott, and Ryan will be
moving 10 his new appoinlment in
New Lexingron the first of July.
The gathering began at 4 p.m.
with friends, people frpm the
community, and congregation
-.members (!rapping by to .wish
Reverend Grace and his family
well an~ 10 share memories of the
past nine years. The potluck dinner
was served at 6 p:tn. at the church's
new .shelter house located behing
the Racine Church building. MCI!t

for the dinner was furnished by the
Ervin Farms of Oak Grove in
. Rac.ine and was slow cooked
during the day by Howard, Herbie,
and BuddyErvin alo!lg with John
Dudding and Bob HiD.
Followin·g the dinner everyone
gathered around to "roast" the
departing pastor. · Making
presentations at the roast were
several ministers from the area
including Reverend Paul McGuire,
Reverend Keith Rader, Reverend
Kenny Baker, Reverend Sharon
Hausman, and Reverend 'Florence
Smith.
A special award was given to
Reverend Grace by Bud Rose of
Ravenswood Branch of the
Steelworkers Union for his part in
assisting tb.e families .or the

.,
I

•

"

steelworkers through the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish of
which Reverend Grace is the
OUtgOing director.
•
1
Also niaking presentations were
representatives of the Racine
chun:h including Lee Lee, Mariam
Bell, Karen Walker, Fred Smith, ·
Sue Garee, Bob Hill, Jackie
Wagner, and the "Roastmaster"
G(lt)' Walker.
The evening was topped off by
music from Mike and Marce Follin,
long time friends of the Grace
family from the Columbus area
The Reverend Kenneth Molter
wiU become the new pas10r of the
Racine and East Letart United
Methodist Churches effective July

Pick 3:

Allison
killed

247
Pick 4:

8451
BuckeyeS:
6-7-16-34-35

Page4

•

..

.'
..
Vol. 44, NO. 53

'

'

MiddlepQrt adopts $1.7 million operating budget

I.

PARTON MORE THAN A . SINGER· Dolly Tenn~ on Saturday July 10. Partqa ·w~u spend 1
Ryan Terzopplous. .
Misty Puckelt.
Parton, shown In this Mareh 1993 me photo, reported SlO million to turn the town Into a
First grade • Ty Ault, Alisia
Fourth grade • Kendra Cleland,
broke ground r... the ftrst of·ber three planned smaU-!ICale NashviUe. (AP Photo/File)
Burton, Curtis Jewell, Ashley Dustin Erlewine, Roben Johnson,
country
music concert halls In Pigeon Forge,
O'Brien, Kindra Snouffer, Eric Montgomery, Aulllmn Slater,
Matthew Strong, Paul Will, Angela Carl Rickard.
Wilson, Kara Buffington, Brandyn
Fifth grade - Orion Barett, Lisa
Bumgardner. Thurien Carter. Joel Bias, Scott Colwell, Amber
Clelland, Jaynee Davis, Kelly Gardner, Tawny Jones, Stephanie
Freeman, Nicole Harper, Amanda Kopec, Brandy Laudermilt,
Hoyt, Annette Pridemore, Xantha Jeremiah Smith, Laura Payne,
Smith, Brandi Thom11s, Jordan Michelle Fort.
Williams.
Sixth grade • Candy Barnett,
Second grade • Kayle Davis, Beth Call, Lori Kinnison, Jessica
air-conditioning and no bugs."
Marii! Drenner, Michelle Drenner, Priddy, Kim Ritterbeck, Hope Seventh Avenue Shines on Fifth
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Can
Snyder, known for showy Gimme a Break- Noi
Robyn Freeman, Josh Price, N:ea.ce, Rebekah Smith, Bridge~
NEW YORK (AP) - It's a day ;
Seventh Avenue dress a table as costume jewelry, created a
Brandon Ramsburg,Jeremy Roush, Vaughan.
off
10 a bad start when you put on a ;
well as it dresses fashion's elite? "Midsummer·Night's Dream"
Nichole Runyon, Ben See, Chris
Salisbury Elementary
clean
shirt and find that half a '
garden setting with fantasy chairs
Smith, Cody s"mith, · Jennifer
First grade - Jeremy Banks, Tiffany &amp; Co. thin!Cs so.
Isaac Mizrahi, Maria Snyder, and chandelier which ·she had button was left in the laundry. ·
Zielinski, Jassiline Carter, Misty Johnathon Bobb, Nicole Butcher,
Take heart. There's something ·
Clay, Katie Jeffers, Kyle Hannan, Ben Collins, Jesse Gillette, Peter Anna .Sui and Richard Tyler were seulpted. She added table linens
called
the Diamond Z buuon ·that's
Jennifer Stepp.
·
Kling, Pamela Martin, Tia Pratt, invited by the Fifth Avenue , and chair cushions in a red, qrange
virtually unbreakable. A spinoff of
Third grade · Carrie Abbott, Jenny Proffitt, Jessica Rosier, emporium 10 try their hand at. the and fuchsia fabric of her design.
Tyler put a canvas sail on the high-tech applications such as
Tiffany Summer Table Setting
Stephanie Bell, Maggie Roseberry, Felisha Stumbo.
Jessica Roush, Clara Sanders,
Second grade - Marc Barr, Show with a theme of "Fashion floor and built a "Campaign aerospace · and automotive
Matthew Williamson, Jonathan Dawna Brumfield, ]ohnathan and Color" incorporating the Blues" theme atop it with ol(j industries, the ceramic material
Wilson, Emili Payne, Nichole Diddle, Ashley Eblin, Juley Eblin, store's china, silver and 'other table maps, tripod stools, folding cots called TI'Z is supposed 10 have 2
Runyon, Beth ShaJ1er.
Melody Felts, Ashley Fields, Jon accessories. It is on view through and plenty of other nautical 1fl times the strength of steel.
The Diamond Z butiOn is made
paraphernalia.
D.H.2 • Chuck Aeiker, Lester Halar, Chris Haning, Bubby Haye, Sept 4.
by
Coors Ceramicon Designs Ltd.,
Mizrahi's
"Midnight"
teamed
a
Anna Sui, who says her offiCe is
Aeiker, Jennifer Brickles, Jessica Meghan Haynes, Timmy Hubbard,
a
subsidiary
of ACX Technologies
Davis, Dustin Fellure, Jodi Reeves. Josh King, Shawna Manley, black lacquer grand piano with a filled with sunflowers and
Fourth gtll(je. Andy Davis, Mike Jennifer Morgan, Heather Riffle, white linen and silver picnic sunflower motifs, built a "Summer in Golden, Colo. So far, it's on
setting. "I brought the picnic Tea" setting on the theme. The shirts from Ike Behar and
Day, Hollie Griffith, Sarah Houser, Jason Rosier.
Brenna Sisson, Michael Stacy, Third grade· Bobbi Burson, Levi indoors," he said, "because there's patiQ table was covered with a Nordsti'om's private label.
Now, about thread that won't
Adam Shank; Kelly Canan, Tiffany Gillette, Mindy O'Dell, Amber .
crocheted black cloth and set with
Day, Nicholas Dettwiller, Ashley Proffitt, Joey Martin, Chris Rupe.
Whobrey,Jason WithereD.
china in a sunflower design. A ravel ....
Hann,ahs, Curtis Hanstine, Andrea Fourth
grade
April
Twelfth grade - Debbie Alkire, silver tea service on a gigantic
Liz Taylor Calling
Krawsczyn, Chris Pickens, Blankenship, Shandi Bobb, Sarah Tim Baker, Lorri Butnem, Linda silver tray dominated a sideboard.
NEW YORK (AP) - Costume
Shannon Price, Ashley Thomas, Clifford, Sandi Gilkey, Brandy Chapman, Wendy Clark, Leann
Said Sui:
jewelry
isn't new 10 Avon, but a
ChristopberWard.
Graham, Abby Hubbard, Grace Cundiff, Kelly Doidge, Carlton
"Do I have silvet'l No.
collection with design input from
L.D. - Dustin Butcher, J.D. Kitchen, Car~ Midkiff,Heather · Drummer, Ben F11ckler, Kimberly
''Do I cook? No. .
Etizabeth Taylor is.
Fetty, Heather FranckoiVi8lc,
Grueser, Tim Heldreth.
Whaley.
"Do I eat at honie? No.
The upseale pieces, which will
Fifth grade - Amber Blackston,
Fifth grade - Beverly Burdette, Allsion Gannaway, Billy !]laze,
"This is a whole fantasy thing.
sell
for about $40 to $200, are to be
Tod Daniels, Melissa Davis, Sara Marjorie Halar, Tiffany Harder, Autumn Griffith, Traeey Grueser, Who has time for tea?"
available in November through
Fife, Amber Perkins, Ryan Pratt, Morgan Mathews, Kim Peavley, Charles James, Lori Kelly, Gary
Kerr, Kevin Lambert, Kelly Ouchless Shoes
Wes Thoene, Julie Spaun, Mike Anna Story, Marissa Whaley.
Avon sales reps· and its direct-mail
Williamson, C.D. Ellis, Jennifer
Sixth grade ·Lacy Banks, Tricia Marcinko, Billie Marcinko,
catalog.
NEW YORK (AP)- Finally,
Shrimpliil, Adam Thomas, Davis, Meredith Felts, Tamra Michelle McDaniel, Courtney cushioned insoles that help absorb
"We'll look 10 some of her most
Whitney Thomas.
O'Dell, Joel Tremblay, Kelli midkiff, Lorena Oiler, Stephanie the shock of mean city streets memorable film roles, such as
Price, Rick Price, Jennifer Proffitt, without cramping your feet.
Sixth grade - Stoney Day, . Lightfoot.
'Cleopatra,' for inspiration," says
Jennifer Heck, Missy Darnell, Amy
Meigs Junior High School
Tammy Queen, Rachel Reynolds,
Audrey
Yanthis-Lucas, general
They're from Dr. Schons and are
Johnson, Kristina Kennedy, Stefani
Seventh grade- David Anderson, Regina Rider, Angela Searles, made of wafer-thin Poron, a high· manager of Avon's jewelry and
Pickens, B.J. Smith, Kasey Lauren Anderson, Rachel Ashley, Tammy Searles, Emily Shain, tech foam. The styles for high-heel accessories unit.
Williams, Jonathan WyatL
Mick barr, Billi Jo Bentley.• Virginia Shuler, MeliSa Sisson, dress pumps and casual shoes are
Avon is the world ' s largest
Rutland Elementary
Michelle Bissell, Carly Chasteen, Lisa Snyder, Rian Spencer, part of a new line of foot comfort manufacturer and marketer of
First grade · Jessica Anderson, Joe D' Augustino, Ginger Darst, Christopher Swanson, Sheryl products for men and women fashion jewelry. Miss Taylor has
Tyler Barnes, Joanna Bowersock, Brad Davenport, Terra Dowler, Thoma, Rusty Triplett, Katrina available at relail in mid-July. They long been known for•her love and
Heidi Gilmore, Randy Hudson, Crystal Eblin, Jason Frecker, Turner, Michael Vance, Michelle have a suggested relail of $4 to $9 acquisition of precious gems.
Don Hysell, Nicole McDaniel, Danielle Grueser, Jenny Hayman, Young.
each.
Christina
Miller, Melissa. Myca Haynes, Mike Leifheit,
Richmond, Matthew Salser, Steven McCullough, Wendy
Miranda Stewart, Jamitha Willfo.V. Shrlmplin, Zinnia Spears, Charles
Second grade· Kerry Allen , Trader, A.J. Vaughan, Nancy
Ashley Bartrum, Brandon Black, Whaley, Melissa Whaley, Sandra
Brook Bolin, Hollie Ferrell, J.R. Young.
Hawk, Jessica Justice, Mallory
Eighth grade • Jo~n Barnhart,
King, Steven McDaniel, Rachael Lillian Barnhart, Jo.sh Butcher,
Morris, Samantha Tilley, Casey Desiree Clemons, Jenny Clifford,
Tillis, Allison Williamson, Nicki Amy Clonch, Taryn Doidge, Anna
Wines, Kenny Zuspan.
Fink, Whitney Haptonstall, David
Third grade - Bradley Baylor, HeighiOn, Betsy Houdashelt, J..ibby
Announces the Opening of His Medical Practice in
Aaron Bowersock; Erin Bush, King, Aimee Kloes, Erin
Gabriel Jenkins, Ryan Kauff,_ Krawsczyn, Shawn Leach, Tim
Darrick Knapp, 1olin Lentes, Lewis, Josh Marshall, Michelle
Melissa Richmond, Amber Miller, Scott Mitch, Jessica
Snowden.
McElroy, Stacie Price, Stacy Reed,
Fourth grade - Adam Barnett, Cynthia Sandy, Amber Slaven,
Derrick Bolin, Skip Dodson, Randy Smith, Beverly Stewart,
DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF DISEASES OF THE BRAIN AND NERVES
Stephan;~
Stew•n
B
J
Workm
Alison Hays, B.J c Kennedy,
"
.
.,.., . .
an,
Bethany McMillin, Beatnce Allison Williams.
Morgan, Tiffany Priddy. Elizabeth
Meigs High School
Smith, Trish Walker.
·Ninth grade - Amber Bennett,
Fifth grade· Tiffany Halfhill, Anne Brown-, Jake Gannaway,
Sara lhle, Amanda Miller, Joshua Alison Gerlach, Michael Hawley,
Sorden, Adrianne Tilley, Brooke Michael Jarvis; Dorothy Leifheit,
Suite 13
Williams, Shawn Workman.
Lori Russell, Kim Smith, Cynthia ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Office Building
Sixth grade .. Jamie Barrett, Stewart' James D. Wh'te
I •
Robby Diddle, Ben Fowler, Justin
Tenth grade. Sarah E. Anderson,
2520 Valley Drive
Jeffers, Matthew Justice, Alyson Juanita Arthur, D;~vid Feuy, JIIITO&lt;j
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
Patterson, Melissa Priddy, C!ay10n Folmer, Kelley Grueser, Heidi
Office Hours: 9 a.m. • 5 p.m., Monday throu&amp;h Friday
Tromm.
'
Huffman, Kimberly Janey, Mandy
L.D.- James Haning.
Jones, Lisa Montgomery, Shilo
'
D.H. ·Samantha Marshall.
Moore, Adam Sheets, Kelly Smith,
For appointments, call:
Salem Center Elementary
Brent Smith, Brian Smith, Jason ..
First grade - Donald Barnett, Taylor, Stephanie Thomas, Crystal
(304) 675-25.51
Robert Council, Adam Jones, Vaughan, Lisa Yeauger.
Aubrie Kopec, Corey Longstreth,
Eleventh grade - Matthew Clark,
Amanda Priddy, Josh Ray, Jessica Trl!ci Cro.w, Paul Davis, Brian
Smith, Philip Smith.
Devoll, ~rystal Donohue. Dawn
Second grade
Rac!lel Erwin, Tiacy Fife, Jason George,
Argabright, Lindsay Bolin, Ashley Danielle Gray, Meron Grueser,
C::olwell, Austin Cross, Kelly Joan HIJft, David Herdman,
Johns10n, Krista! JohnsOI'l, Shenell Heather Howard, Heather Hudson,
McKnight, Jennifer Priddy, Melissa Jeffers,~ McDonald,
The family of professionals
' ,·
Amanda Smith.
Jason Miller, Charles Parker, Cora
Third grade · Josh Bass, Melissa See, Stephanie See, Shannon
•
Kirk, Josh Napper, Jarrod Ogdi~. Spaun, Tony a Thornton : Jeff
2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340
Jessica Schuler, Kristy Puckett, Tracy, Marlo White, Kevin

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ,
A $1.7 million operating budget
for 1994 was adopted by Middleport Village Council at Monday
night's meeting.
The projected receipts fall
$130,196 short of being enough to
cover anticipated expenditures dur·
ing the year, according 10 the budget figures.
Estimated receipts for 1994 are
$1,528,400 with an expected carryover balance from this year of
$55,104, making a tolal of estimat·
ed funds available for operating the
village next year of $\,583,504.
Al)ticipated expenditures, bow,. ever, IOtaled $1,713,700. · The new
budget is about $9,000' less than
that adopted for the current year. In
1993 that total figure was
$1,722,950.
.
The 1994 budget was described
by Mayor Fred Hoffman as a
"planning mechanism, a wish list"
in prep8111tion for the actual appropriations wbich are made in January.
The budget passed by a vote of
four to one.
Councilman Paul Gerard voted

Comfortable shoes, unbreakable
buttons and Av~n jewelry to come

KRIS

G. MuRTHY, M.D.
NEUROLOGY

.

PLEASANT.VALLEY HOSPITAL

r

1 Section. 10 P•oe• 35 centa
A Multimedlolnc ..Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 13, 1993

Mullln1ecla Inc.

Meigs local honor roll announced
The following students Jiave
recently been named 10 the honor
roll for the Meigs ·Local School
District for the fourth nine week
grading period: .
Bradbury Elementary
Sixth grade - Jenni Howerton,
. Jessica Johnson, Timothy Justice
·King, John Davidson, Jessica Cale,
Austin Carr, Jason Harris, Melissa
Holman, Marc Jones. Becky
Johnson.
Fifth grade • Seth Baker. Staeey
Brewer, Mindy Halley, Renee
Stewart, Bethany Boyles, Sarah
Bniuer, Ashley Burton, Brant
Dixon, Crystal Leach, Nick
Michael.
.L.D. - Jason· Boggess, Lester
Lowery, Crystal Wells, Kim Bush,
Brooke Hart, Daisy Spears.
D.H. • Tammy Pletcher,
Shawnita Johnson, Penny Napper,
Georginia.Spears.
Harrisonville Elementary
First grade • Tasha Boring, Kevin
Butcher, Scott Chapell, Michael
Clark, Maegan Dodson, Erin
Doughty, James Hensley, Courtney
Kennedy, Sarah Lee, Shane Lewis,
Mark Maue, Derek McDaniel,
Bobbi Napper, Billy Reeves,
Matthew Wandling, Holley
Williams, Charley Williamson,
Joshua Yost. Ashelv YounJl.
Second grade· Justin Allen, Ben
Bookman, Wesley Call, Derrick·
Fackler, David Hall, Jami Hayes,
Crystal Jacks, Jessica King,
Christopher McDaniel, Jessica
PreasL
Third grade • J oeline Allen,
Ashley Burbridge, Samuel
Canterbury, Tasha Green. Ben
Haley. Afnber Haning, Jennifer
Reeves, Stacia Sims, Rees Wyant.
Fourth grade - Mark Browning,
·.Christopher Dodson , Amanda
Parsons, Albert Steams.
Fifth grade - Raina Bennett,
Jason Miller, Kyle Smiddie, James
Stanely, Adam Walker.
Sixth grade- Lisa Crawley, Jason
Preast, Franco Romuno.
Middleport Elementary
First grade - David Boyd, Page
Bradbury, Kenny Carsey, Candace
Casey, Jamie Chapman, Katie
Childs, Jeremy Dingey , Jennifer
DuM, Ryan Frazier, Tyler French,
Ashley Halley, Malissa Hoffma~.
Jessica Howell, Kim Johnson, Beth
Landers, Jonathan Larkins. Ashley
Payne, Erica Poole, John Roush,
Angie Smith, Donnie Staggs, Ruby
Sti:wart, Rhonda Wagner.
Second grade - Carrie Darst,
Peter Ditty, Casey Dunfee , Zac
Gilkey, Cole Haggerty, Lucy
Howerton, Andy Hysell, Brooks
Johnson, Will Kauff, Amber Lee,
Tony Martinez. Alisha Mohler,
Heather Phalin, Nikkie phillips,
Abram Sayre, Stephanie Schwab,
Jeremy Selby, Joshua Simpson,
· Carla Smith, Jimmy Smith, Angel
SlOne, Emily SIOry, Sammy Stout,
Beth Wilfong, Hannah Woolard.
· Third grade - Andrew Baker,
Erica Bryan, Trevor Buck, Charle
Eakins, Delana Eichinger, Heather
Fetty; Michelle French, Heather
Fry, Erin Gerard, Joshua Glaze,
Tiffnay Hall, Erin Hartson, Corrie
Hoover, Staesha Kennedy, Joshua
Lynch, Nickolas McLaughlin,
Richard Michael, Monica Moon,
Erin Rals10n, Jacob Smith, Rebecca
Smith, Tyler Stewart, Brandon
Werry, Tara WyatL
Fourth grade - Whitney Ashley,
Jessica Chapman, ,Nicole Evans,
Chasity Fowler, Abby Harris ,
Michael Hawkins, Joshua Hayman,
Derek Johnson, Jeremy Jones,
Jason Knight, Zachery Krautter.
Carrie Lightfoot, Tiffany Qualls,
Justin Robson, Amy Sarver,
Brooke .Smith, Donnie Smith,
· Chasity Stewart. Ian Story, Kathy
Taylor, Rachel Taylor, Stephanie
Wjgal.
Pomeroy Elementary
D.H.l - Melissa Clark, ~mber
Armstrong, . Meagan Gt~ens,
Jessica Gray. Courtney Htcks,
Robbie Johnson, Kathy Jones,
Charlie Richards, Amber Pierce·,

Low toaJabtla 601. PIJ'IIy
clOI!dy. H!p Wedntlday ID 801.

RECOGNIZED FOR WORK ·Middleport
Recreation Committee members, len to right,
Arnold Johnson, Skip Johnson, and Bob
McClure were recognized for their hard work

and interest in developing Hartinger Park by
Middleport ViUage CouncU Monday pight. Here
Mayor Fred Hoffman, right, presents plaques to
the committee members.

About 230 - underground
employees at th' Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Mine 31
are still off the job today as company officials continue to monitor
water levels in the mine.
'
A significant amount of water
was discovered under ground in
Meigs Mine -31 at WilkesviUe Sunday evening. The cause of the
water problem has not yet been
determined, B. J. Smith, American
Electric Power public relations
director, said this morning.
"The water flow has. stabilized

and we should now be able to more
accurately de~ermine what the
problem is at Meigs 31," Smith
said.
.
.
Again ·employees of Meigs 31
who work underground have been
asked not to report to work until
notified, she said. Employees at the
office and surface operation at the
mine are working today.
T.he water problem at Mejgs ·
Mine 31 in no way affects operations at Meigs Mine 2, ~~tcording 10
Smith.
She said that the company is

working 10 determine the extent of
the flooding and to formulate its
plan to bring the mine back into
production.
Meigs No. 31 is working with
officials from the United Mine
Workers of America , the Federal
Mine Safety and Health Administration, the Ohio Division of
Mines, and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, .the public
relations director said.
Meigs Division has a total work
force of 815, according to Smith.

Midwestern flooding: 'We're
in a Third World country'o

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Ne\ts Staff
What was labeled Friday as "the ·
biggest seizure of firearms and
money in this county's history"
ended with a guilty p!ea 72 hours
later in the Meigs County .Court of
Common Pleas.
Robert D. Fife, 67, of Middleport, accused of two counts of
receiving stolen property and one
count of trafficking in food stamps,
pleaded guilty Monday afternoon
in front of Judge Fred W. Crow lll.
Under provisions of the plea
agreement, Fife will forfeit approximately $185,000 and about 3,000
rifles, shotguns and handguns
seized . from his South Third
Avenue home and business to the
Law Enforcement Trust Fund
where they will be distributed to
the Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office and the Meigs County Sheriffs Office.
In addition, Fife forfeited
approximately $60,000 from bank
accounts and all personal propeny
of which he is unable to prove
ownership. He will retain approximately $120,000 from bank
accounts ai\d all real estate includ- ·
ing his home.
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes recommended Fife receive
three consecutive 18-month sentences and that the sentences be
suspended due to Fife's age, lack
of a prior record and his cooperation. Lentes also recommended that
a pre-sentencing investigation be ~
held.
·
Fife' became impatient as Crow
repeatedly asked him if he under- .

upper Midwest as residents and . said. Branstad said he will ask the
National Guardsmen piled sand· government to declare all of Iowa a
bags to tty to save homes and busi, disaster area.
.
nesse.S.
The nooding has caused at least
Des Moines and other cities 19 deaths, 13 in Missouri. The Red
have been brought to a near sland- Cross said more than 7,600 'homes
still. About 250,000 people in and were damaged or destroyed in Minaround Iowa's ·capital were without nesota, Wisconsin, South Dakola,
running water after floodwaters Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri
knocked out a water treatment and Illinois.
plant over the weekend.
No looting has been. reported,
Dama~ across the region will but some residents still feared losfar exceed the $1.2 billion in aid ing their belongings . In West
anl)ounced by President Clinton Alton, Mo., Michael Payeur
last week, Gov. Terry Branstad refused to leave his waterlogged
home and relied on supplies
brought to him by boat by his
daughter.
"'There's looters out here," he
said. :'They can get in and out."
Water Patrolman Don Carnahan
A Racine woman was treated at Veterans Memorial Hospital late
navigated the West A110n area with
Monday night for injuries suffered in a one-car accident on East
care. "You got to watch the road
Main Street, Pomeroy.
signs," he said. "They'll sure cut a
Accordil\8 to Pomeroy police, Kimberly J. Follrod, 29, of
hole in the boat."
Racine, w~ pulling from the.Eag!I:S parking lot onto East Main
Vice President AI Gore visited
when she either went to sleep or lost control and struck a handi·
Lemay, Mo., and Grafton, Ill., on
CALDWELL, Ohio (AP) - A
capped sign and then a ~tility pole. She was taken to the hospital by
Monday. The water was so high he
the Pomeroy squad, was treated and released.
had to duck when his boat passed man sentenced to prison with· no
There was moderate damage to the front end of her 1990 Ponti,
under power lines. He also took a chance of parole for 165 years in
ac. It was towed from the scene.
helicopter tour and said in wonder, the slayings of five outdoorsmen
"You can't even tell where the should have been given the death
Mississippi begins and the farm- penalty, relatives of some of his
victims said.
land ends. '
Michael C. Hnddles10n of Racine is not the person by the same
Thomas Lee Dillon of Magnolia
.Gore talked 10 the president by
name from Point Pleasant who has been charged witll burglary.
phone and then assured residents pleaded guilty Monday to the
thete would be a "forceful, coordi- aggravated murd~r &lt;;Jf the ~en ~ho
were hunting, f1shmg or JOggmg
nated response."
alone
in eastern 'Ohio between
More rain was forecast for today
The budget for 1994 was approved when Pomeroy Village CounApril
1989
and April 19J12.
.
and Wednesday, but the National
cil met in special session Monday evening. r
Dillon,
43,
showed
no
emouon
Weather Service said it was. not
The only other matter of business discussed was a problem with
expected to raise water level~. ·as he entered his pleas before Judge
hig~ grass and weeds in the Union Avenue area from which several
Some Mississippi tributaries were John Nau in Noble County Comcouncil members have received COil) plaints by residents there.
slowly falling. The Des Moines mon Pleas Court. t~au sentenced
Attending the mC~;ting were Council members Beuy Baronick,
River was 7.8 feet above flood Dillon under a plea agreement that
John BIIICUJiar, Scou Dillon, Larry Wehruiig, Thomas Werry, BiD
stage at Des Moines on ·Monday allowed Dillon to avoid the death
Young, Mayor Reed and Cleric Kathy Hysell.
.
. but was down nearly a foot from penalty.. .
Mayor's court followed
the
7
p.m.
meeting
ar'l:30
p.m.
Killed
w&amp;re
Gary
Bradley, 44,
Sunday's reconl'cresL
..
of Williamstown, W.Va.; Claude

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) Residents carrying plastic jugs
lined up for their five-gallon
rations of drinkin(_~ater in the
flood-stricken Des~oines area,
and hundreds of Midwesterners
were inoculated against waterborne ·diseases.
' 'I feel like we're in a Third
World country," said Ed Conlow,
a resear..cher for the Iowa state
House.
The rain -swollen Mississippi
River and its tributaries continued
to swallow up land today in the

..---Local briefs-----~
Racine ma,_ in jured

Clarification

Council approves budget

development fund, $17,050; mini·
golf fund, $8,800; revolving loan
fund, $22,000 and refuse fund,
$114,000.
Hartinger Park
A repon o~"i;;ii;ovements and
activities at Hl~if~ger Park was
given by the Middlepon Recreation .
Committee members, Arnold Johnson, Skip Johnson, and Bob
McClure.
They reported that income so far
is about $10,500 with increases in
every area over the 1992 season.
Last year's season tickets to the
pool brought in only $765 while
this year the sales totaled $3,000.
Concession stand sales are also
under better control this year,
Arnold Johnson said, with proceeds
from those sales being well above
former years.
They reported an average daily
attendance at the pool of 100.
McClure talked about night swimmin$ and proposed extending
evemng hours 10 every night except
Sun_day and Wednesday. He also
talked about lhe .possibilitr of having family nights, and mghts for
adult swimmers only.
Continued on Page 3

Seizure of guns, cash
results in guilty plea

0

230 miners still offjQb

a~inst the budget on the basis that
"1t needs to reflect actual revenue".
He asked, " why should we tell
people we want to spend $130,000
more than we have," to which
Mayor Hoffman replied "it shows
you need more money."
According to tile budget the
major shortfall comes in ·the.general fund where the estimated funds
available total $454,464 and the
anticipated expenditures total
$620,600 , a difference of
$166,136. Other funds with deficit
balances are the water fund with
estimated available funds of
$211,400 and anticipated expenditures of $215,700, a deficit of
$4,300; the sewer fund with estimated funds available of $167,300
and expenditures of $175,600, a
deficit of $8;300.
Other funds in the budget most
showing surpluses were the fire.
truck fund, $61,300; street maintenance fund, $106,500; cemetery
fund, $31,100; recreation fund,
$28, 750; publ fc transportation
fund, $179,800; Arts Council
$6,000; Issue 2 fund, $8,000; meter
deposit fund, $10,000; frre equipment fund, $28,600; econOII)IC

.
. . . r
stood his rights, at one pomt staung·
he wanted to get the plea over with
because he has a sick wife and is
sick himself.
Sentencing was scheduled for
August 23 at 1:15 p.m. following a
pre-sentencing investigation.
Fife was arre3ted Friday on the
charge of trafficking in food
stamps following an investigation .
by the sheriffs department and the
prosecuung atiOrney's office. He is
represented by atiOrney D. Michael
Mullen.

Acting upon a search warrant,
officials recovered some food
stamps along with the frreanns and
money and determined some of the
items were earlier reported stolen.
Other items recovered include
approximately 50 videocassette
recorders, numerous television sets
and other electronic equipment,
about 30 musical instruments and a
couple dozen crossbows.
Upon Lentes' recommendation,
Fife was released on his own recogniZance.

TALKING WITH ATTORNEY- Robert D. Fife, l~ft, meets
witb his attorner; D. Michae.l Mullen, before pleading geilly to
barges of recetving stolen property and trafficking in food
stamps. Fife forfeited almost $250,000 and 3,000 guns as part of
the plea agr~ment. (Sentinel p.hoto by Jim Freeman)
•

Victims' families want
harsher penalty for killer .
Hawkins, 49, of Mansfield; Jamie
Paxton, 21, of Bannock; Donald ·
Welling, 35, of Strasburg; and
Kevin Loring, 30, of Duxbury , ·
Mass.
Sbme family members were
upset that Dillon was allowed to
plea bargain out of a possible death
sentence.
"I still want him dead," said
Bradley's wife, Beth. "Whe~ a
man pleads guilty to murden~g
five people and then plea bargains
for hiS own life, it's not fair."
Jamie Paxton's mother, Jean,
said Dillon was a coward.
"We were ·~ life sentence
the day he decided tolall our son,"
she said. 'l l think he's a pathetic
coward, He hils taken the cow&amp;r\l's
way out of everything.''
Dillon earlier had told reporters
\

that he killed all five men and said
he would plead guilty in exchange
for an agreement by prosecutors
not to seek the death penalty.
Noble County Prosecutor
Lucien Young Ill said the plea
agreement was the most practical
solution, although he would have
preferred Dillon be sentenced to
death.
·
"'I kind of felt like he ought to
die:" he said.
Dillon's attorney, Roger Synenberg ,. said . Dillon felt some
remorse.
"He has some regrets about
this, but he's also got to put it all
behind him," he said.
In a telephone conversation with
an Akron Beacon 1oumal reporter .
in March, Dillon said he had a
compulsion to kill.

I

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