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                  <text>Page-16-The

Sentinel

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•,/

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

e've

~

Wednesday, July 6, 1994

Ohio Lottery

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turn tables
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ott a

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Super Lotto:
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Kicker:
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Pick 3:
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Pick 4:

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Page4

Low tonight n.. r 70, partly
cloudy and baey. Friday, partly
sunny. High In 90s.

~

•

ent1ne
, Vol. 45, NO. 45
Copyrlght1994

Pentagon readies contingency invasion plans

BIG BEND
700 W. MAIN ST
POMEROY, OHIO

By RITA BEAMISH
Associated Press Writer
WA SHINGTON - Although the Clinton administration's latest Haiti
policy blocks Haitian boat people from entering the United States, it will
be relatively easy for them to gain entry to safe havens in Panama and
other countries, U.S. offic1als say.
Haitians intercepted at sea will still be screened before being sent to
safe haven camps. but they will not have to meet the "same son of rigorous" standard - a well-founded fear of persecution - required for U.S.
asylum , said one official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The Pentagon, meanwhile, is proceeding with contingency plans for an
invasion of llaiti should economic sancuons fail to drive its military rulers
from power. A four-ship amphibious group - wilh 2.000 Marines on
board - sailed for Haiti on Wednesday to stand by for the possible evac·
uation of some 3,000 to 4,000 Americans living there.
Two weeks ago, Army Rangers and Navy Seals staged exercises at
Elgin Air Force Base in Florida and on the Gulf of Mexico simulating the
seizure of an airfield such as the one in Haiti 's capital, Pon-au-Prince, and

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By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Nickels and.
dim es. Gov. George Voinovich
knows that is how some peopl e
may respond when he talks about
$125 million in cost savings out of
a $15 billion st.ate budget.
But Voinovich insisted Wednesday that amount the Ohio Depart·
ment of Administrative Services
has saved over the last three years
is significant.
He challenged local school districts statewide to follow the exam·
pie of operating more efficiently.
"I can certainly tell you that the
business community in Ohio feels
that the money they are investing in
education is not paying the divi dends they are entitled to, and are
very anxious to sec us do a beuer
job with the money that we're
investing in schools," Voinovich
said.
His admonition came at a news
conference in which he gave a
"Golden Scissors" award to the
administrative services agency for

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the capture of a pon, The New York rimes reported today. It said Ote
exercises involved about 2.000 uoop s.
The U.S .. Coast Guard intercepted at least 1,537 Haitians in 34 boats on
WedneS£1ay, bringing the total to about 14,000 since President Clinton lib·
cralized U.S. policy on Haitian rcfugres on June 16. The refugee popula·
tion has swelle.d to 7,500 at the U.S. na val base at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba.
A day after unveil ing plans to usc Panama - and eventual ly the
Caribbean islands of Antigua and Dominica - as safe havens fp r fleeing
Haitians, admini stration offi.: ial s were busily clarifying th e po li cy
Wednesday.
Three officials who spoke on condition o nonymity contrad icted
William Gray, President Clinton's special advi er on Haiti, who sai d
Tuesday that safe haven would be granted only those who could meet
the "well-founded fear ' ' standard required for U.S asylum.
dnesday was that boat
The administration's position as of carl
people would be granted safe haven with "no questions asked" beyond
stating a wish for protection, according to one State Department official.

But later in ~~ ~ day, two other oll llial.s s:mJ u had llccn decided some
proccss mg wou ld be used - a li beral11cd version of tl1e asylum screen·
1ng, wnhout the length y intervi ews ~lal asy l11m applicanLs undergo.
The modificat ion apparen tly was 1n1ended to partially answer critics
who compl:uned th at a different st;mdard was be ing used for Haitians,
when rcfugccs from other cou ntr1 ~s such as Rwanda ami Bo&gt;nia can enter
safe ~a vens wah no qu es uons asked.
Randall Robin so n: hcacl of th e lob bying group Tran sAfrica, said
Wednesday thatall Ha•u tms picked up at sea should be granted passage 10
the safe haven m Panama. lie saiCI the administration was clouding the
quesuon of whether refugees would have to meet the same sumdard as for
U.S. asylum.
The admini stration's explanation - on the one hand indicating usc of
the asy lum stan~';l'd and on the other s~.ggestmg a more liberdl processing
- amounted to a nonscns1cal pol1cy, Robmson sa id .
H? renewed his call for a multilateral invasion as the on ly way to ev ict
Ha1t1 s mthtary rulers and St:luneh the flood of refugees.

Voinovich: schools
must cut expenses

YOU CAN'T AFFORD NOT TO

LARGE S

2 Section•, 12 Pageo 35 cenfll
A Multimedia Inc. N-•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 7, 1994

PEANUT BUTTER

COSt savings in State construction ,
telecommunication and employee
health benefit administration.
Voinovich said the $125 million
represe nted a real savings, even
though tot.al state spending rose to
a record high during the same three
years. He said the growth rate was
the lowest in 25 years.
" Because of the savings 01at are
occurring we are able to fund other
things in state government," he
said.
Voinovich said schools should
follow his admini suation's example.
" They arc no better than h1gher
education, or other state agencies
or other services," he sa id .
" They've got to do what everybody else is doing. They've got to
restructure.' '
About 500 of the state's 612
school districts belong to a coalition that is suing the state to overtum the current method of financing primary and secondary educa·
tion.

U.S. seeks
N. Korean
campi iance ·

. '.

..

NEARING COMPLETION - Work at the
site of the rock and land slide at Hobson that
occurred in the spring or 1991 is nearing com·
pletion. Seeding of the 1,800·foot area, which
was affected by the slide, has begun and the

reclamation project is expected to tie completed
in u few weeks. The U.S. Office of Surface Min·
ing, Reclamation and Enforcement in Ashland,
Ky., has charge of the $1 million project, which
got underway
about 18 months ago.
c

Sheriff labels gas fumes, UFO repo/i 'mass hysteria'
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By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
An unsupervised slumber party
apparently wrong when children
called emergency officials early
today claiming they were exposed
to chemicals and wimcssed UFOs,
said Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulsby.
Five emergency crews and sheriff's deputies responded to a call

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AG stops to promote
Clinton crime proposal

Coca Cola Products

By JAMES PRICHARD
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Whil e Janet
Reno spoke out for the federal
crime bill ,. dozens of protesters
spoke out against the U.S. attorney
general.
Reno told a crowd of about 500
people who rallied at the State ·
house Wednesday that they must
put aside politics and pass a compromise version of the bill. The
measure would set aside money for
more police officers, state and local
prisons and crime prevention pro·

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1994

SJ.79

grams.
"People throughout America
have come together to fashion a bill
that ... could have a real im~ct on
crime in America," Reno sa&amp;d.
Different versions of the legislation are pending in Congress.
Those versions include: a $22 bil·
lion, five-year bill passed by the
Senate; a $28 billion, six-year bill
approved by the Hou se; and a
$30.2 billion , six-year bill being
discussed by a conference committee.
The committee's version
includes $10.9 billion for st.ate and
local law enforcement; $8.4 billion
for state and local prisons and $7.6
billion for crime prevention .

Funding would come from
money saved by reductions in fed eral bureaucracy. The conference
committee has not sent the compromise proposal back to the House
and Senate.
The bills all include a "three
strikes" provision that requires
mandatory life sentences for people
convicted of a third violent felony.
She said the bill provides "a
balance of punishment, policing
and prevention that can make a dif·
fercnce."
About 50 people at the rally
protested gun control and the
action federal agents took last year
at the Branch Davidian compound
in Waco, Texas. Others supported
Reno's appearance.
Ohio Attorney General Lee
Fisher admonished the protestors,

some of whom chanted "Murderer," and .. Reno' s got togo." .
Dayton police Lt. Randy Beane
repeatedly was shouted down by
protestors as he recounted the death
of his partner. Steve Whalen.
Whalen was shot about two years
ago by a man with an assauIt rifle.
"As I stand here today listening
to about 12 people show absolutely
no respect for · law enforcement,
I've never been more proud of law
enforcement," Fisher said.
But Reno's speech didn't sway
opponents.
"My fear is that it's just another
way for the federal government to
control the general public," said
Pam Sheets of Columbus.
"What is in the crime bill that's
going to stop crime?" asked Dennis Wallcer of Columbus.

PUSHES CRIME BILL - U.S. Attorney General Janet Re
spoke at a rally Wednesday at the statehouse in Columbus as Oh'!o
Attorney General Lee Fisher listened. Reno was on a five-c't1 t to
to support President Clinton's crime package. (AP)
Y our

Search of O.J.'s estate may cloud future trial

Country Style

LB.

to assist, but it tics up a lot of emerThe children th en went oulsicle whether she was there every 30
gcncy personneL"
and mistook a lightning bolt for a minutes to check on them," SoulsNine children between 6 and 14 UFO, he added.
by said. 'There cou ld have been "
years old were found at the home
Two of the children were trans· real disaster."
of Deborah Roach, but authorities ported to Veterans Memorial HosMeigs County Childrens Sc r·
could not jetect arry unusual odors. . pital because they had hyperventi- vices wilt investigate the incident,
Soulsby said. Tile children were lated, Soulsby said.
he added. No charges will be filed
telling ghost stories and a smoke
Roach had been checking up on against the children or th eir parbomb went off in the basement the children every 30 minutes, he cnts.
which may have caused the chit- added.
·
Columbia, Scipio, Rutland ,
dren's eyes to bum, Soulsby said.
"It doesn't make a d1ffercnce Middleport and Pomeroy emergency crews responded to 01e scene.

Ohio anti-gun control protesters jeer Reno

ASSORTED FLAVORS

c

Armour

that several chiidren had been
knocked unconscious by chemical
or gas fumes around I a.m. at a
Woodyard Road residence in
Columbia Township, Soulsby said.
" What it turned out to be was
mass hysteria," Soulsby said. "I
don't think it was a prank call.
" lf there had been an adult there
that wouldn't have happened," he
added. "It's not that you don't want

WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
ofricials want Nonh Korea to make
an " unambiguous commiunent" to
fully comply with an mtcrnational
treaty barr;ng nuclear weapons
deve lopment.
Stme Dcparuncnt spokeswoman
Chri sti ne Shelly sa id Wednesday
the United States also will insist
Nortll Korea· implem ent a 1991
agreement with South Korea to
denuclearize the Korean peninsula.
Both issues will be rai sed in
ialks beginning Friday in Geneva,
Switzerland, that also will deal
with U.S.-Nor~1 Korean economic
and diplomatic relotions, as well as
No rth Korea's stat ed desire to
replace its nuclear power reactors
with a design that is less well suited to pro duci ng plutonium , an
ingredient in nuclear weapons.
The talks were arranged after
former President Carter vi sited
Nort h Korea last month and got a
promise from President Kim 11
Sung to frcczc hi s nuclear program,
wh1ch Wa shtngton sa ys appears
a1mcd at developing nuclear
weapons .
Sllclly said the talks arc expected to continue on Saturday and
then break before resuming early
nex t week. She stressed that there
was no time limit on the conference
and she declined to speculate on
how long it might last.
The U.S. delegation will be led
by Robert Gallucci, the assis tant
secrct:lry of st.atc for political-military affairs and President Clinton's
coordinator of Korea policy.

/

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The spots on the driveway . Municipal s~owing that there were emergency
decision by police to scale a wall Judge Kathleen Kennedy -Powell ctrcumstances that supponcd scal - injured and lay bleeding while the
offic?~r.s went to get a search war.
and enter O.J. Simpson's estate · said she would rule on the issue ing the wall," Bergman said.
rant. . Deputy District Attorney
raised a thorny legal issue that today.
Detectives testified that they :-:'arc1a Clark asked the judge.
Her decision cannot be immedi- rushed from the crime scene to
could haunt his murder case long
What would we have said? We
after a judge decides if the search ately appealed, legal experts said. Simpson's mansion to left him
would
have 'said they were de.rclict
But it can be appealed during a about the killings.
was legal.
m
fulfilhng
thetr duties.••
.
Simpson's lawyers say police trial, or on appeal if Simpson is
After spying a spot of blood on
Qut
Simpson
lawyer
Gerald
entered the estate without a war· convicted of murdering his ex·wife Simpson's Ford Bronco parked in
rant, then misrepresented the cir- and her friend, said University of the street, detectives testified, they Uelmen warned agamst letting the
cumstances to get one. Prosecutors Southern California law professor feared someone else might be in government break the law, saying it
would encourage citizens to do the
say police had to enter because Erwin Chemerinsky.
danger. When they received no same.
they thought there might be an
Legal experts say motions to answer over the intercom and tefe·
emergency.
exclude evidence are rarely grant· phone, they entered the estale with- . "A~ain and again, we hear the
detectives sav. 'Well, we didn't
The evidence the defense wants ed. Chemerinsky and. Paul out a search warrant.
to exclude from the preliminary · Bergman , an evidence and trial
Police can enter a home or prop· know what we have, we didn't
hearing - which will determine if advocacy professor at the Universi· erty ~ithout a warrant if they are kno~ w~.~t happened on these
Simpson will stand trial ty of California, Los Angeles, pre- pursumg a SIISJleC~ think evidence prem1ses, Uelmen said. "I don't
includes blood found on Simpson's dicted the judge would rule against will be destroyed or believe that know what they had. 1 do know
\Yhat they didn't have. They didn't
car, a bloody glove resembling one the defense.
someone is in jeopardy.
have a semth warrant ..
found at the cljm~ scene and blood
"The prosecution made a strong
"What if someone had been

�j

I

/

Thursday, Jul~7, 1994

Area deaths. ,-

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TH:t MEIGS-MASON AREA

IWREKT L. WINta:rr
l' uhlish•r
CHARLENE HOEHICH
G eneral Manager

I\IAK GARET LEHEW
Controll.r

LEITERS OF OPINION arc wckumc The y should be less than 300
w o rd s All le tte rs are subj ect to cJ 1 l.!n~ and m ust be s1gncd Wit h n ~c.

address and tel ep hone nurn her No uns1gncd !l'Ucrs Y. lll be published Lcncrs
s ho uld t'l c m goo d la sle , address w g 1ss uc s. nu t pc rso naht• cs

Editorial comment
from around Ohio
Ry The Associated Press
Ex cerpts of Ohto cdJtonals of statcw1dc and nat1onal mtcrcst·
The Cincinnati Enquirer, July 2
It ts too large a numb er to ent e r o n a pocket calculator .
$4,250,000,000. And 1t's the largest smgl c product-ltabtltty settlement 1n
U.S. h1 story: $4.25 btllton to be pa1d by the manufacturers of Sili cone
breast 1mplants to the thousands of wom en who say the tmplants have
rUJned thc1r health - and to the lawyers who won them the money. The
whopper-stzed lawsUit came along w1Lh the DA removal of siltcone from
the market and a talk-show-fanned nauonwtde fnght over tmplants.
Then - and incredtbly only then - came three cptdcmwlogtcal studtes that show no proof of dtsease caused from breast tmplants. The large
studrcs rndicate that if rmplants cau se any drseasc at all , 11 must be unusual or rare .
The fact that the lawsuits ran ahead of the medical evrdence rs proof
that tnallawyers are runnmg the show. Thatrs not a healthy sign. We all
eventually pay for inllated lawsull awards through hogher msurance premrums.

Pag~2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepcrt, Ohio
Thursday, July 7, 199~ __

macoon.

Now it appears Congress rs mdeed rousrng rtsclf to move on healthcare reform. The quesuon rcmarns, however, whether IllS ready to move
far enough and in the right directton
Prestdent Clinton has accepted compronllScs on his health-care plan
from the beginnmg. If there is an issue on which he should be ready 10 drg
m hts heels, however, 11 os universal co,erage. G1ve too much on that
1ssuc and you've given away the store. When the president behcvcs he's
betng pushed t.o that point, it's time to say, "No deal"
The (Steubenville) Herald Star, June 30
A recent report from the Nauonal Educatron Commrss10n on Trme and
Learning concluded that a longer school year could be part of the answer
to a better education.
Whtle many educators, busmcsscs, teachers and parents questton the
cffcctrvencss of a longer school year - argumg that we need to improve
the quality of eduqtron before we mcrease the quanuty - rt's an opuon
worth constdcnng if our students are to catch up wtth the academrc
achievements of students from other countries.
,1\ccordrng to the U.S. Department of Educauon, the average U.S. hrgh
school graduate spends only 41 percent of hos or her ume on core academIC work - less than half the amount of ume of students on Japan, France
and Germany
Lcngthcnmg the school year rsn't the only way t.o tmprove academic
performance, butrl ought toe constdered as part of the equation.

w&amp;,Q~ington connection
President Clinton
t 600 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington, D C 20500
(202) 456-1111

u.s. Senate • Sen. John H. Glenn

200 N H1gh St , Room 600
Senate Office Bldg
Columbus Oh10 43215
Washrngton, D.C. 20510
(614J 4ss-6ss7
(202) 224.3121
U.S. Senate • Sen. Howard Metzenbaum
1240 E N1nth St
Senate Office Bldg
Cleveland, OhiO 44199
Washmgton, DC 20510
(216) 522-7272
(202) 224-3121
u.s. House • 6th District • Rep. Ted Strickland
p 0 . Box 580
House Off1ce Bldg
Lucasvtlle, Ohio 45648
Wash1ngton, DC 20515
(800) 777-1833
(202) 225-5705

On Oct 14, 1960. a Brandets scrvoce m t~e way that JFK 's worcl.s
lr ,·shman nam ed Elt Seg al read msptred Segal and so many others
.Jil!lll l ·' sr eech th 3t Democ rati C 1n thctr parents' generation
prc· SJ tk ntJ .ll ca ndid ate John F
Alrc.od y, whtl c ll ~ot now here
K,· nJ k•d y h.lll g1vcn the d:oy before - - - - - - - - - - -'- &gt;::::.
.11 tlw Ll t11 ve rsny of Mrch tgan w1th
\
1111(' \ Jmila r l o th e Inaug ural
Morton Kondracke
theme•, " II sk not what yollf co untry
t .tn tlu l ur you ."

" I remembe r thtnktng , ' He ts
t.J lk1n g ex actl )l,ahout me." · say s
Segal. 1md ll gol Segal started on a
road that kJ Irom work wtth poor
children anti h.JUcred women dur'"b coll ege and Ia,)" sc hool to Lop
roles tn the 1968 McCarthy campat gn anti th e 1972 McGovern
t amra•gn, where he actually htred
Rill Clmt on. •md eventuall y to the
pos t ol ch1 l'l ol slaff of Clmton 's
I~')2 campa1gn
When Cli nton won the prcstdcnl y, Segal was ol fered vanous JObs
111 tlic Wl11tC I louse, but plam1cd to
return lO 111 -; magaz me bu smcss m
MassJc husetts unul Clmton offered
l11m the JOb of head1ng up the new
n,JilDn.d sc rv1 cc progmm

He took ll , hcltcvrng that the
soon -to -h" l.tunchcd AmenCorps
coulcl be for tJ1c Clrnton presrdency
what th e Peace Corp s was for
JFK' s, anti could rn sp1re so-ca lled
" Gcncrauon X " young people to

CHOO~ING

nca r th e pub ltCJty of NAFrA or
Cltnton 's ccon omtc program,
enactment of lcgJ slauon sCltmg up
th e Natrona! Scrv1 ce Corporatton,
wtth three-year fundtng of $1.5 briJ,on , ha s been on e of Cltnton' s
lll3JOr accomrl ishment s
La.st summer, as a pilot, the program put 80 college and pre-col lege student s to work on Texas,
srreadmg the word about chtld hood moculat10n While they were
workm g, the number of mocula !Jons admtnJ stcrcd tn Texas went
up by 1()4,000.
Th1 s summer, as another ptlot,
7,000 young people wtlf be work tog Ill 90 prOjeCtS Ill 70 ClllCS as
rart or the "Summer of Safety"
program, workrng wnh poltce
departments and community
groups to organiZe '~ctghborhood
anu -cnme patrols, make parks safe,
and escort seniors and children in
high-cnmc areas.

The full AmenCorps program ts
sc heduled to be launchet+ ~pt. 12
and put 20 ,000 young people to
work by the end of ns forst year
dorng community serv1ce on public
safety, educauon. the environment,
and "human needs, .. tncludrng
work wtth the aged, poor people,
and the homeless.
In iLs top year of activ1ty, 1966,
the Peace Corps had 15,500 volunteers overseas, toda), that number
ts down to 6.500. AmenCoros is
scheduled to expand to 100.000
volunteers two ybrs from no",
assumtng Congre ss approprratcs
the necessary funds. Publoc scrvocc
ads seekrng rccrurts arc scheduled
to go on telcvr stOn tn August , but
already 60,000 young people have
put thcrr names rnto the program 's
database.
Segal say s that, de sptt e
wtdcspread stereotypes to the conuary, Gcncrauon X already is more
motivated toward volunteer serv1cc
than baby boomers were in th e
early 1960s. He cttcs a UCLA survey of 220,000 college freshmen
showmg that 68 percent reported
domg at least three hours per week
of volunteer work dunng the past
year, and I 0 percent reported doing
more than sox hours every week.

J KNQW..,

THE

I CAN'T DECIDt

RI6HT

BETWEEN A

COLLEGE

LIBERAl. AR~

CAN~E

I

OR PARTY '&gt;C HOOL .

DIFFICULT.

Segal says th e surv ey JUStrftes
Clrnton's hnc, repeated often durtng commenc ement speeches thts
spnng. thai ' 'the myth about the
cyni&gt;rsm and sclf-centeredncss of
Ge neratiOn X rs a b1g bun ch of
bull."
Where cymc1 sm seemm gly docs
prevarlrs m the medoa .
In the nrnc months smce Clrnton
srgned the Natwnal Servrcc Act
mto Jaw last September, the prcsrdent has referred to the program no
fewer than 70 Urnes whtle productng pra cucall) no coverage rn
maJOr newspapers or on tclcvt sJOn ,
according to Segal
On June 24 111 St. Louts, Clrnton
laun ched th e Ctty's Summer or
Safety program and mention ed
AtltJonal scrvrc c two other times,
yet TV and newspaper coverage
concentrated almost cxclustvely on
Cltnton's attack s on radto talkshow hosts and far-nght Chnsuans
Even g1vcn th e medta 's pen
chant for cancenlratrng on bad
news, An0oCorps rs a story of tdcalism dcservrng attenuon.
Volunteers will rcceove the mmJmum wage whtlc they work, plos
health rnsurance, and will get an
education allowance of $4,725 for
cacl1 year of servtce, up to a maximum of two years.
The allowanec could be used
erther to pay college, graduate
school, or vocauonal school tutUon
or, in the case of college graduates,
to pay off loans.
Segal hopes that, unltkc the
Peace Corps, AmcnCOfJlS woll not
be dominated by middle-class
wh1tes but will be made up of all
ethmc groups and socoal classes
That is the record of the Texas project, in whrch 60 percent of volunteers were members of racoal
minonLtcs.
George Bush, tn hts maugural
address, said he hoped that during
his admrnrstrat10n , Americans
wouldn't be abl e to look them selves in the mirror unless they
were involved in volunteer scrvtcc.
His "Points of Loght" program
failed. but Btll Chnton's AmenCorps JUSt moght succeed.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Clinton foreign policy: pick a label
Luckrly for the struggling Clmton mtcrnational affairs team, my
two foretgn policy contests are now
concluded They moght help: In an
attempt 10 go up, rt's always good
to know how far ts down.
Recall the background. I mvited
readers to submtt ideas for a new
rorcign polrcy slogan : ("Containment" died when Soviet communosm collapsed, and we need a new
guodcpost.) But readers have mmds
of therr own. Instead of proposing
what our new slogan (and policy)
should be, most early respondents
put a label on what they thought
the Clmton pohcy actually was. So
I dtd a second column announcing
a double contest one for prcscnpuon, the other for descnption.
Herewrth, I offer the results of
the Descriptions Contest.
Among the first entries (cited
previously). were "The New
World Impotence ," "Symbolic
Gcstunsm," "Wimpism," "Con-

fusoonrsm,'' '"Grandeur Morontsm" and "Stanley Greenberg.sm" (after Clrnton's pollster)
I thought that first small batch
could be a sampling error. But as
the cntrres _poured in it was apparent that something else was going
on. Here arc some samples from
the 120 descriptive entries·
"U nattainf!len l," "Surreal politrk ,'' "Abdrcationrsm," "Chntoncnia,'' "Manifest Waffleism,"
"Ciintonian Superpowerlessness,"
"Global Glibcration ," "High-

School Drplomacy," "EpisodiC
Morahsm," "Bumbleitis" "NeoCartcrism," "The B1g S htock"
(twice), "Vacuumrstic," "Vacu-

Ben Wattenberg
ous Sltckism," "Lrberte'!,
Egahte'! Stuprditct," "Ciintlock,"
~~unhesitating

Indecision,"

"Undulated
Am brvalence,"
"W1IIie Wafne," "Will Willie,
Won't Willrc?" "Backslidism,"
"Mcrcurism," "Big Blatherism,"
"Non-lnhalationism," "Naked
Dtgressron," "Steadfast Vacrllation," "World Wafning," "WeakKnee Warriorism,'' ''Explainmen!" and "Wishywashmgtonianasm.''

The words "nip" and "nop"
appeared many umes, as in "FlipFlop &amp; Flim-Flam," "Fiiplloperacy," "Fiiplomacy," and "Flip
Flopism" (lwtce).
Clinton's usc of the Unrted
Nations, and its Secretary-General
Boutros-Boutros Ghalr, or vice
versa, has not fared very well. Thus
we have . "U.N. - Unemployed
Nincompoops," "Ghalivanung"
"Et tu Boutros," "Ghali Gee,"
and "CiintUNationalism."
A few entrtes may need explanauon: "Speak Bigly and Carry a
Soft Stick" (a Teddy Roosevelt
knock-off), "Vacillanimous"
(Vacillating and Pusillanimous),
"Bungeeism" (hanging and
bouncrng around on end of cord

Dole reforms

Thanks to the parlramentary
statecraft of Senate Mrnonty Leader Robert Dole, the Republican
Party stands on the verge of an histone VICtory over Brg Government
and the Democratic Congress and
admrnistration.
From the outset, Prestdent Chnton made it clear that universal
health care, provided and run by
Btg Brother but paid for by the
American ta•payer, would be the
central zrrcon in the dtadem of hrs
By The Associated Press
admonistration. Along woth
Today rs Thursday, July 7, the I88th day of 1994. There are 177 days Franklm Roosevelt (who supposedleft on the year.
•
ly provided for everybody's old
Today's Htghlight in History:
age through Social Security) and
On July 7, 1865, four people were hanged in Washington, D.C., arter Lyndon Johnson (who allegedly
berng convrcted of consprnng with John Wtlkes Booth to assassmate
tmproved the lot of the poor), Mr.
President Lrncoln.
Clrnton would become the third
On this date:
member or the liberal Democratic
In 1754, King's CoUege in New York City opened. The school was Tnnity: the president who guaranrenamed Columbra College thtrty years later.
teed health care coverage to every
Jn 1846, United States annexatron of Cahfomia was proclaimed at ' American, from the cradle to the
Monterey after the surrender of a Mexican garnson.
grave.
In 1898, the Unoted States annexed Hawau .
At fir st everything appeared to
In 1930, construction began on Boulder Darn, later Hoover Darn .
go well wllh the project. Polls
Jn 1946, Italian-born Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini was canonized as reported that the American people
seemed to agree that our health
the first American sainL
In 1949, the police drama "Dragnet," starring Jack Webb and Barton care system was in ''crisis,''
though on further mquiry it tranYarborough, premiered on NBC radro.
·

Today in history

Carolyn J. Maxey

AmeriCorps deserves more at.t.ent.ion

The (Zanesville) Times Recorder, July 1
Prcsrdent Clinton has shaken up hr s staff once this week, replacing
ch1cf of staff Mack McLarty woth Washmgton veteran Leon Panetta and
movrng David Gergen to the Swte Department.
Perhaps he should cons1dcr another shakeup - replacmg Warren
Christopher as secretary or state The US pohcy on Hruti appears to be
that change is good and should happen as often as possible.
In 1992, candidate Clinton called the rcpatnauon or Hartrans tmmoral.
Shortly af~r taking office, he reversed course and maintained the Bush
adminrstration 's policy of returning refugees to Halu.
Perhaps Chnstopher rs grvmg good :1dv1ce and Clin10n rs not listening
But Haiu has been added to the stack of U.S. foreign poltcy waffles since
Clinton took office, JOining Bosma, Korea and China ,
A change would be popular and ll m1ght well be effective.
Springfield News-Sun, June 30
When President Clinton put h1 s Health Sccunty Act on the table in
October, there was widespread hope that a barncr had been b~ken. Serious health -care reform was on Congress 's agenda and somethmg finally
would be done.
Smcc then rt has been hard to keep hope altve. The work of Congress
on thiS tssue has mostly been a stalemate, rnterrupted only by complete

Pomeroy

orten stretched to hmits), "FLUB"
(Forergn League or Undulatrng
Bureaucrats) "Wrdoid Rt csas"
(An e&lt; -satlor's acronym for
"Wh~;,n in danger, or in doubt, run
in circles, scream and shout"),
"COPOUT" (Consensus Operational Policy Ovemdrng Unilateral
Thinkmg), "Good Talk No Stick,"
(from baseball and Teddy Roosevelt), "Ozark Wtlsonianism"
(anonymously submttted in a
National Security Councrl envelope, with netthcr word used in a
complimentary sense), and "It's
George Bush's Fault" (the problems were mherited).
'
Now, I think all this fs somewhat unfaJr. But of the 120 entries,
most accompanied by short essays,
only one was clearly positive:
"Conciliation" (from Ann Polek
of Salisbury, Md.)
So, the three winners, perforce,
have a negative cast to them. And
the winners are: In third place,
"Atleeism" (from C. Braxton
Valentine of Rrchmond, Va., commemorating Churchtll's emprreshrinking successor); in second
place, "Hesicrastination" (from
WaiJcr Yose Jr. of Labarge, Wyo.);
in firs~~e, "Lax Americana"
(from n i Bogolubov of New
York ·!Y&lt;. They will receive
prizes sufficiently small to avoid
investigation by an independent
prosecutor.
I think the bad-mouthing of the
Clinton-Christopher foretgn policy

nea~

sprred that the great majority were
reasonably well satisfied with their
own medical care. In any case,
there was substantial sentiment for

-William A. Rusher

is val1d but overdone. Yes, he's
nrpped on Haiti, Bosma and China,
but Jt'S better 10 ntp than tO SliCk lO
wrong-headed campargn promises.
We looked bad m Samaha. Yes,
nip-llopping erodes crcdrbility. I
am concerned about the deep
de'ense cuts. But that is not the
whole story. Regarding the Middle
East, Russra, South Arrrca,
NAFTA and GATT, things have
shown promise. And Clrnton has
championed democracy rhetorically; don't think that doesn't count.
North Korea is the big one - and
about that we shall see.
Presidential counselor David
Gergen has just moved over t.o the
Stale Department, where he will
serve as a special adviser to Secretary of Stale Warren Christopher
whrle keeping an office and similar
title in the White House. Part of his
job will be to explain the positive
aspects of Clinton's foreign policy .
He has one great advantage m this
endeavor. When the mail is 120-1
agamst, there's room for rmprovement.

_.,

How to improve, to set a new
course, ts another matter. That wrll
be explained in a subsequent column based on the other contest
responses, the posiuve ones about
what we should be doing.
(Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the host of the forth·
coming weekly public television
program, "Think Tank.")

brink of victory

finesse the system would face a
$10,000 fine, or prison.
When the American people got
wind of what Ms. Rodharn Clinton
had wrought, the polls began
reporting a very different attitude.
Reluctantly, under pressure from
Democratic leaders in Congress,
Mr. Clinton began to jettison one
major feature of his health care
program after another: first the
chain-gangs (or "alliances"), then
the employer mandates. Now, it
appears, he will settle for anything
the Democrats in Congress can
agree to (laSs, if only. it can be
called "univer.~al."
Enter Bob Dole. He knows very
well that the American people want
various improvements in our health
care system - notably "portability" (the assurance that one's health
coverage won't be lost in going
from one job to another) and cover.
age of previously existing condi·
lions. He is also willing lo subsidize health insurance for the genurnely needy who can't afford it.
Dole has now brought forth a
bill embodying these features, and
~bout 40 of the 44 Republicans in

the Senate have lined up 10 support
it. That is a srgmficant figure, for
41 just happens to be the number of
senators who can filibuster to death
any bill they don 'tlike.
That would leave the congressional Democrats in a huge hole.
They would rather die than accept
Dole's bill (which would be an
obvious Republican triumph), but
they know ~ry well that the great
maJority of·voters are now awake
and ftrmly against any gaudy giveaway that guts our present health
care system. There is only one way
out for them: a compromise with
the Republicans which can nevertheless be hailed as a triumph for
President Clinton.
To prevent this, all the Republicans need to do is stand fmn. If the
November congressional elections
can be turned into a referendum on
"the Dole reforms" vs. "the Clinton giveaway," the Republicans
will mop up the noor with every·
Democrat not attached to his seat
with Krazy Glue.
(William A. Rusher is a
columnist ror Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

C rrolyn June Maxcy, 57 , Hart, ford, W.Va., clrcd Tuesday , July 5,
1994 10 Veterans Mcmonal Hospt tal.
Born Nov. 28, 193 6 on Hartford,
daughte r of Evelyn M. Oatley
McMoll10 of Hartford and th e late
Fl oyd C. Mc Milltn , she wa s
c mrJo ycd Ill th e mainte nan ce
dcpattm c nt of th e Phrlop Sporn
r iant. She was a form er employee
of VMI-1 and Pleasant Valley HosplUtl , and a w.r.s a member of Our
Father's House Church 10 Hartford
Sur vt von g 111 addition to her
m01 hcr arc a son and daughter-mla w. J{andal l F. and K. Otane
McMillm of New Haven, W Va .; a
daught er and son -tn -law, Julie
Lynn and James A Wtll of Hartford , a daughter, Mary Susan Jovi ' den of New Haven; S IX grandchil dre n, a SIS ter and brothcr-rn -law ,
Nan'y Ann and Thomas E. Anderson of Hartford , and several mcccs
and nephews.

ScrvJCes will be II am . Saturd,ty on th e Fo gleson g Funeral
Hom e, Ma so n, W.Va ., with th e
Rev Mtkc F10n1c um offJ cta t1ng .
£luflal wrll he rn the Graham
Ce metery. Fncnds may call at the
fun eral home Fnclay from 5-9 p m

Betty Wallace
Betty Ruth Aldrtdg e- Sutton Wallace , 61, of Pedro, a former
resrdcnt of Mcr gs County, drcd

Tite Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-961)

Published every afternoon, Monday through
Fnday, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Oh1o by the:
Ohio Valley f\Jbltshmg Compaoy/Multnned1a
Inc. Pomeroy, Oh10 4~169, Ph 992-2156
Second class p.&gt;slage patd at Pomeroy, Oh to

Member The Al&amp;OCJated Press, and the Obto
Newspaper Assoc1a1Jon, NatJOoal AdvertJsmg
Rc:preac:ntattve , Branham Newipaper Sales,
73J Thtrd Avenue, New York. New York
10017
POSTMASlCR Send address changes to The
Dally SeotJncl, Ill CuW1 St , Pomeroy, Oh1o

Tuesday, July 6, 1994 at her rcsrdcnc e followrng an c~ tendcd til ness.
•
Born June 4, 1933 10 Lawrence
County, she was the daughter of
the late Frank Aldndge and Ida
Hutchinson Aldrtdge. She ltved m
Mc1gs County from 1962 to 1981
and then moved to the Pedro area.
She attended the Etna Mi ssionary
Ba pti st Church and the Deca tur
Washm gton School tn Lawrence
County.
She ts survtved by two chtldrcn,
Mrs James (Vtckte) F10l of Rutland , and Bernard Wa llill c II of
Pedro ; four grandchtldren, a brother. Bobby Moller of Pedro ; her
stepmother, Margaret Aldndgc of
Ironton ; four half-brothers, John
Aldndge and Sonny Aldndge of
Athalia, Brent Aldndge of Pedro,
and Bryan Aldntlge or Ironton: rove
half-srstcrs, Faye Krdd and Nancy
Stapleto n of Ironton, Rebe cca
Snowden of Wadsworth . Frances
Whttc of Kttt s Hlll, and Kath y
Mtllcr ol Ironton
Bestdc s her parents, she was
preceded m death by two husbands,
Forest Eugene Sutton m 1961, and
Thyrean Bernard Wallace 10 1987;
a daughter, Theresa Dawn Wallace;
a stepson, Btl! Wallace, and a halfstster, Gayle Dean Aldridge.
Servrces will be I p.m. Sunday
in the Phlllrps Funeral Home in
Ironton. The Rev Sammy Cooke
will offrcoate and bunal will be 10
the Lawrence Furnace Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funcrifl
home Saturday from 6-9 p.m.
)

45169
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to 95.

Tontght...Partly cloudy wtth a
chance or thunderstorms. Lows m
the lower 70s.
Friday . . Partly cloudy w1th a
continued chance of thunderstorms
Highs upper 80s 10 lower 90s.
Extended forecast:
Friday nrght. .Showers and
thunderstorm s hkcly . Lows 70 to
75 .
Saturday .. A chance of thunderstorms. Htghs 85 to 90.
Sunday ... A chance of thunderstorms. Lows 65 to 70 and htghs
ncar 80
Monday .. .Faor and cooler wnh
lows 55 to 65 and htghs 75 to 80.

Ripley man cited
by state patrol
A Ripley, W.Va ., man was cited
for fatlure to yreld by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State H1ghway
Patrol following a two -vehicle
accident Wednesday at the mterscction of State Route 124 and
Lebanon Townshtp Road 69 (Old
Portland).
The patrol said Joseph M.
Williams, 26. turned left from the
road onto 124 at 3:45 p.m. and colloded with a pickup truck dnven by
James H. Starcher, 45, 35555 Swan
Road, Long BotiOm, that was castbound on 124.
There were no injuries and damage to both vehicles was moderate,
the patrol sard.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ·- -------·.29 I/4
Akzo·--------------.54 318
AshlllDd OU ------ ----.33 318
AT&amp;T

The Dally Sentinel

Page-3

Ex-prisoner decries mistaken surgery

Scattered thunderstorms ·
to continue popping up
Hy The Associated Press
Scattered thunderstorms wtll
contonue Fnday as temperatures
again cl1mb well above normal
Hoghs will be mainly rn the lower
90s across the state, a bll cooler rn
the northwest and possrbly warmer
rn the southeast.
Storms rn northern Ohio h~vc
the capactty for strong wmds, large
hat! and very heavy raJn.
Some thunderstorms moved
through eastern Ohw overntght.
NorthcasJcm Ohro was hrt cspectally hard, with reports of Oood10g
in Mahonong, Trumbull and
Portage counucs. Youngstown
receive&lt;! more than an inch of ram
overnrght Other statrons received
less than a quarter mch of rain.
Some of the storms Dvernight
were severe. Three-quarter rnch
hail was reported rn Mahonrng
County JUSt before modnrght.
Elsewhere around the state,
skies were partly to mostly cloudy
with temperatures generally rn the
lower 70s. Patchy dense fog harl
developed on some areas ot eastern
and southwest Ohro.
Record high temperature 100 m
1988; record low 48 m 1983.
Sunrise Friday at6: 10 a.m., sunset at 9:03p.m
Weather forecast:
Today ... Partly cloudy woth a
chance of thunderstorms. Highs 90

Middleport, Ohio

------------------..54

Bank One.----------·-.34 518
Bob Evans---··-·---·---.21 Ill
Champion Ind. --------·----21
Cbarmlog Sbop.. - .......... _ .....9 3/4
Cit} Hokllog .... _ ....................32 Ill
Federal Mogui ........................JO 718
Goodyear T&amp; R .... - ................ -..36
K-mart ·--- ·---- -·- .. --.15 718
Lands End -------·-----19 3/4
Limited lnc.-..........-----·17 518
Multimedia Joe.
314
Point Bancorp ·----------- --17
Reliance Eledrk: --------18
Robbins&amp;. Myen.--------18
Sboney's Inc. ·---------.15 1/8
Star Bank -----------.37 718
Wendy lot'L -----------15 3/4
Worthington lnd .....------18 Ill
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
qlKites provided by Ad vest of

·-------.28

Hy LI SA CORNWELL
As.sociated Press Writer
CL EVELA ND - A former
state pn so n rnmatc ts surng th e
state over surgery that he says cost
htm a healthy prostate and created
numerous health prohlcms
"I trtcd to tell thel]l they were
ma krng a mt stakc but th ey JU St
wouldn't listcjl ," Claude E. Sm oth
Il l, 43, of Cleveland saod Wedncsday.
Sm1th , who ts wh1t e, satd he

underw ent th e surge ry that was
supposed to be pe rfo rm ed on
Claud e A. Sm 1th , 60, a bla ck
on mate at the M~ns fie ld Correc tiOnallnsutulton.
Smith clanns pmon doc tors not
only removed hos hcaltlly prostat e
gland but al so botched the surgery
The pro swt c secretes mucus whtch
combmes w11h other subsum ccs to
fo rm semen
Claude E Snlllh was JWo lcd on
June 20 and now li ve s Ill · 1 Salva-

t1 o n Arm y hallwa y house 10
Col umbu s He ha s no "pr os tat e
gland , no bl adder control and no
hea nn g '" one ca r He sa1d the
heann g loss was a res ult of ancsth cs m gtvcn 1n th e surgery. The
surge ry aiS&lt;l left hun 1mpotcnt , he
sa1d
Smtth , wh o was se rv1n g an
coght- to 30-year sentence for volunt.Jry manslaughte r an d esc ape,
s~1 111 he told pn SJ ln guards and doc toh 1n 199 2 th a t they had th e

wrong man after they sa1d a btopsy
showe d he had pro s~ll c can cer.
He satd doc tors ope rated even
though he told them he had not had
a b1opsy.
Doc tor s lat er re.Ji11 ctl th ey
removed a healthy prostate gl.rnd.
acco rdt"ng to the Jaw sutt ftl cd m
(k tobcr.
Smith lt lcd a S3 mill lt tn lawsUit
mthc Ohm Court of Clanns aga msl
the Oh1o Department or Kchabii Jt;r
t1011 a nd Corrcctl"J B, Ohro St,Jtc
Umvcrstty llosptwls - now ca lled
Oh 1o Stat e Untvc rsr t y Medt cal

Portion of old state pen wall collapses
COLUMBUS (AP ) - Polt cc
closed off ~1c streets around the old
Oh10 Pcnitcnltary downtown after a
60-foot secuon of the stone wall
collapsed. destroyong two parked
cars
Offtctal s satd the streets would
remam closed unlil ctly engineers
could rnv csugatc tile cau se of the
collapse and dctcrmmc of the rest of
the wall1s safe.
No one was hurt on the collapse
Wednesday but two cars parked at

12- hour meters on Wes t Str eet
were nattcned
Assrstanl Ftre Cl11 cf Carl
La.,.. horn satd 11 was sheer luck tl1al
nobody was InJured or ktll ed
" Ftve mrnutes carhcr of fi-c mm
ute s later and we could have hat!
some deaths, " he sat d.
Lawhorn theom.cd that old age
was responsrble for the coll.rpse of
th e wall that surround s tile 160year -old pmon, whr ch has been
closed Stn CC 19R4 .

Meigs announcements
Roard of Elections to meet
The Mcrg s County Board of
Eleclton s wtll hold tls regular
monthly board meeung on July 12
at4 p.m. at ~1c board offtce.
DAV lu meet
The Dosablcd Amcncan Veteran s and th e Lad1 es Au xoliary woll
meet Monda y at 7 p m at the Carleton School Drnncr wtll he served
followmg the mcetrng.

wtll ]Je th e speaker anti tnvJted to
JOin the local board me mbers ar c
the lund dnve capwm s .trlll work ·
crs .
Ice cream social sd

The Salem Ce nt er Volunte er
Ftre Department wtll holtloLI annu alocc cream socoal July 16, II am
to 8 p.m at the flfehou se . I here
wrll be a full menu along wtth the
ICC cream and ltvc c ntc rt~unm cnt

He salll tt appc,trs the w,tll JUSt
tlctcnorated . " You look JnSJ,Ic anti
the mortar os Jli St sand. " Lawhorn
Sill d.

Ctty Attorn ey Ronald o· Bncn
s.ud he dtdn ' t tlunk the cily wa s
liable for the damages or rcpa11s
The City s1gnetl a lease- purchase
agree ment w1th the state '" I ~YO
and pa1d SI 00,000 for the nght to
bu y the pn son for S5 mtlli on. but
th e cil y has yet to m ~1k c any Jl·'Y
mcnLs

Cent er - dn d the surgeon.
" He ccrt.:.unl y w;:t ..; a pat te n I and

&lt;lid und ergo surgery, but we ha ve
demcd mos t of the all ega tiOn S m
the la ws ui t, · sa1d attorn ey Ka rl
Schedler. wh o rcrrcscnts the unJ ·
verSJt y. He dec lined furth er comment

•

Th e doc tor, Jdlrcy York, now
'" prt vat e practo cc on Portland .
Ma1nc, d11l not retum a phone call
Wednesday se cktng comment

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
THE MIGHTY DUCKS 2 PG

STARTING FRIDAY
Macaulay Culkin
Ted Danaon

THE SHADOW

1 ~ 11

I liJ , 't 10

Y ""-T SAT/9.14 1 ·7.0 j 10 IK;I

BABY 'S DRY OUT

'"'"""'''''""

"'''
"' ~TI ::ll'l 1:00 } 00 JK;I
7 OO, 'J 00 lli'&lt;II
Y M't

I lOU! !ROUBLE
) OO , &lt;J 10 I.»...L.r IYIT ::;1\T / 51.1'1 1 ; 00 , }

Syracuse Board meeting set
The Syracuse Ooard of Publr c
Affarrs wrll meet Moncl1y at 7 r m
at the munictpal bu1ldmg.
Dance to be held
A round and square dance wrll
be held at the VFW Post at Tuprcrs
PlaJns, 8 to II p.m. S~turday.
Campaign kickoff tonight
K1ckoff for the annual fund
dnve of the Mctgs County UOI[ or
the Amencan Cancer Socrcty wrll
take place Thursday (lontght) at the
Sen tor Cltilcns Center John Ray ,
state reprcscnlattvc for rhc ACS ,

EMS logs 2 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medrcal Services
reponed two calls for assrstance
Wednesday.
Unrts respondmg mcluded:
Wednesday - 2:19 p.m Rutland to State Route 692 for Louise
Burbridge who was transported to
Veterans Memonal Hospotal , 3:50
p.m. Racmc to State Route 124 for
a motor vehicle acctdent with Jcrem~ Gordon, Nicholas Dye, Joseph
Wtlltams and James Starcher all
rcfusmg treatment.

Rnival announced
The Hys e ll Run ll o lJnc ss
Church wrll have rcvJVal scrvtccs,
July 11 -17, 7 each c' CnJng Bob
Manley wtll be the speaker, anti
special srngcrs Will be Henry anti
Hester Eblin. Public Jnvttcd

.1()

(~)

liTH! 816 lEAGUE
"" " "..,
1 10 'J 10

rw u

. . . .....

IYIT ~T/ 9.Joii . IO , J . IO ~~~

Dm~EY"!

liON KING

1 10 &lt;J 00 lli.IIY l¥t1' SA'I'/ 'Uol 1 10 , I 00 !C)

One Evenin~ Show 7:30
Admission 52.00
446-0923

WYAIT EARP

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

I .ID lli'&lt;ILY W.TIJ'MI5 SAT / !:Ui 1 , )0 IP('~ Il

,, '" "

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SPEED

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DON TATE·MOTORS, INC.
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Invites You To Help Us
I
I.
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Celebrate Our 3'd Anniversary ~~~~.
Look for Great Seleetions and
Priees All Month

'

GMCTRUCK,

Hospital news
...\.. 1994

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admtssrons Woodrow Hall Sr., Racine; Louise
Burbridge, Albany.
Wednesday doscharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges July 6 - Joseph
Bennett, Mrs. Jack Kelley and son,
Mrs. Stanley Bowman and son, Joy
Canary, Apnl Fought, Jessre
Waters, Albert Baughman, Denise
Phillips, Patncra Slone, Anna Johnson, Mrs. Edgar Atkins and son.
(Published with permission)

ne A '

V6~1~u;o.,
pass.
power
s1de door,
more.

WAS

$22,141

DRIVE~IN
FRL, SAT., SUN.

$19,918

NOW
SAVE 12,223.00

KANAUGA

1991 GMC 1500 Pickup ........ $10,200
LWB, V6, 5 opMd, lir.

1993 Chev. 1500 Pickup ........ $11,400
LWB, V6, 5 opeod, air.

"'

1989 Buick Lesabre ................. $6400
4 door, aJto., air, loaded.

1986 Buick Lesabre ...., ........... $5250
LoMIIII, low milea.

\

1986 Olds Delta 88 ............:...... $4400
Low mltea, 4 door.

1989 Chrysler New Yorker....... $7445
Looded, 4 door.

GaWpolls.

1988 Chevy lroc Camaro ......... $6995
350 V-8, oulo., air, T-top1.

441-1011

1990 Chevy Cavalier ................ $5980
4 Door, air, auto., low milee.

EXTENSIO-N GRANTED

1990 Chevy Lumina Euro ........ $7820
4 Door, air, V..&amp;.

1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Loaded, low miles.

Last Day To Pay Second ·Half Real
Estate Taxes Will Be
July 8, 199~
10% PENALTY Will Be Charged After The
July 8th Date on Real Estate Taxes

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
Howard E. Frank

$15 995°

0

1992 Buick Regal... .................. $8990
Loaded, 4 door, V6.

1993 Nissan 4X4 Ext. Cab .... $13,980
HURRYI

1985 Chevy K10 4X4 ................ $7460
Long bed, •uto., 56,000 mil•

1992 Chevy S-10 Blazer ....... $14,950
Sport Pkg., lollllll, 4 door.

1994 Ford LTD Crown Vict ... $19,994
WAS S24,275.Loaded, IMtt.r, 800 mila.

o,..

_

Swdays
__,

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
lloft..f~

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Sot too-too

5un.1:~:01

�..

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Indians notch 13~4 w.in over Rangers,~
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)-:The hem has helped Jack Morns
stayhm . ,
.
1 he B -ye ar-old r1ght-handcr
won for Ihc seventh lime m eight
deCJSlOns Wednesday n1ght as the
Cleveland lnd1ans beat Ihe Texas
Rangers 13-4. . .
.
It was Morns 252nd career VIC·
tory , and lndJ;Ins manag er M1ke
Hargrove S~Icl Ihe hoi and hum1d
weaiher has a1ded Ll1c 17-year vet·
era~;
.
When the weathers warmer
you persp1rc mor~. and II helps to
~.ct loo;sequ,lck?r, Hargrove sa1d.
You also ge l a beller l!np on Ihc
ball. When you're 2~ Il's ~.ot as
Jm)JOrtant as when you re 39.
Staked to a 6-0 llrst-mmng lead.
Morns ;I !lowed fiv e runs over SIX
mnmgs Io move past Bob Gibson
and mio 37Ih place on the "ll-11me
viCioncs hsi.
Few of Morri s' wins have l&gt;ccn
cas1cr.
"The game got out of hand after
Ihc first couple of innings. Thai 's
like icc cream for a liitle kid," said
Morris of Lhc 10-1 second -inning
lead hi s team provided. "You get
the ball over Ihe plate and gel 'em
out."
Paul Sorrenio's Ihrcc-run homer
highlighted Ihe first-inning uprising
and the Indians won for the sixth
time in seven games.
Morris (8-5), who has the most
viclorie s among acllve majorlcague piichers, allowed three runs
w1lh tbrcc walks and one strikeout
dcspiic being weakened by a chest
cold.
"I d1dn'1 have a lot of
wength," Morris said. "And I've
seen guys who, when they get a big
lcad,they lose concentration."
Morris picked up his 19I.h career
victory against Texas, tying wiih
Dennis Leonard and Bert Blyleven
for the most against Ihe Texas franchise.
Morris was backed by an
offense that sci a season-high for
runs and )JOunded out 15 hits. The
Indians got ai leas! one hit from
every siarter and put 14 of their
firs! 20 hiitcrson base.
Cleveland jumped on rookie
starter John Dettmer (0-3) and got
help from first ba se man Will
Clark's error. which opened the
gate for all six first-inning runs.
The only consolation for Dettmer
was that all six runs were unearned.
Eddie Murray's two-out double
scored Lofton and after Dettmer
walked Jim Thome intcnlionally to
load the bases, Manny Ramirez
delivered a two-run single to push

Marlins slip past Reds 4·3,
but put Harvey on DL again
•

~1 1

HI ! (AP) - Fo llow in g a
'" n. the Flo rida Marlin s
s hare·,! a solJr secrc i: Their siar
clost'f" liurt again .
Fh•nd:~·s 10-innJng. 4-3 viCiory
0v cr Cllle·,nn atJ had barely ended
Wcdne·s,I:Jy when Ih e Marlins
:lfln lllln ~ ,·d th ey were placing pi!Ch'" 13ri:JII ll:nc'y on Ihc 15-day disabkd 1"1 for Ihc .Jhird Iimc Ihi s
ycar .
llarv cy l&gt;:h n ' 1 pitched sin ce
June c'l ~cc ausc of a pulled right
- grom Tile• scvcn iy of the injury
wa.sn·I prcvillusly disC losed.
'·I I' s noi Ihai I'm trying to hide
an ) thmg, ·· manager Rene Lachemann " lid ·· The reason I didn'I
'·'l anyii11ng was thai I didn 't need
to h;~w Ihc op)lOsi tion know aboui
11. · ·
The: rosier move is retroactive to
J unc 10. Harvey, boihcrcd by a
.sirainc·l l righi elbow earlier this
'"'""' · has piichcd only 10 1/3

'w""'

inJ H II~s.

·' i't·s ve ry, very frustrating ,"
sJ Jd 1-Lirvcy. who had 45 saves last
yea r. " I ge l Ihe arm back and
eve ryt hin g Slar!S feeling prelly
good. :tlld then !.his thing stans acting up."
llar vcy said he hopes rest will
help Ihe groin ailment. There's no
IJmctahlc for his return.
Even Wi thout their bullpen ace
for rn osi the year. Ihe Marlins are
4-0 in ex ira-inning gumcs. Pinch
hli!Cr Greg Colbrunn's two-out,
bases-loaded single in !.he lOth bcai
the Red s and snapped Florida's
four-pmc losing slrcak.
"We needed one or lhese," said
Jcrr Con me. who singled home the
Iymg run in u Ihree·run c1ghth.
Cincin nati blew a 3-0 lead on
Ihe way 10 losing the first of Ihe
pas! Slx games.
"This is definiicly one thai we
should have won," Reds manager

I
Davey John son sa1d. I
C hu c k ~a rr rcac·hcd wiih one
oui in the lOth when AII -SlJr shonslop Barry Larkm mi shandled hi s
soft lin er for an error. Carr look
second on a pa.sscd ball. and Hcnor
Carrasco (4 -5) walked Je rry
Browne and Gary Sheffield In load
the hascs.
Aiicr Conine popped out, Chuck
Mc Elroy replaced Carrasco and
gave up (\)lbmnn 's sharp smg lc up
Ihe middle on 1J1e first pile h.
Red s lcfi fi el der Kevin Mllchell
all owed Ihe lyin g run Io score in
Ihe e ighth when he mi splaye d
Coni ne's sofi lly 11110 an RBI sin ·
glc.
·· 1 tlidn 't Ihink ii was goi ng 10
drop,' ' Conine said. The single was
one of five in the inning by Ihc
Marlins, who arc las! in the major
leagues in runs scored.
"We came up wnh some big
hits _ for once," Lachcmann said.
The Reds, who lead thc·National
League in hilling, comp!Cied ~ 6-4
road trip.
"Yo u hav e 10 co nsider Ihi s a
great road trlp ," Johnson sa id .
''I'm noi 100 concerned about Ibi s
one game."
Robb Ncn (3-4), Harvey' s
replacement in the role of closer
goi Ihe victory by facing only on~
bauer. Ncn relired Brei Boone on a
popup wiih runners on first and
third 10 the lop of !.he lOth .
"It was a very nic e win, "
Lachemann said. "Any win is nice
for us at Ihis point. "
Harvey's ailments arc far from
unique. Rich Scheid will become
the Marlins' 20th'! piicher thiS season when he SlarjS tonight against
Colorado. _ "1
In olher games. New York beai
San Francisco 4-1. Houston beat
SI. Louis 7-6; Monircal defeated
Los Angeles 4-2; AIIania split a
doubleheader wilh Pittsburgh, los-

in g 3-1 I hen winning 4.'2; Sa n
Di ego topped Philadelphia 5-2; and
Colorado beat Chicago 7-1.
Mets 4, Giants J.
Welc ome back Io Ihc majors,
Darryl.
All you hav e 10 do now is rescue a team thai' s tied for the worsi
rec~rd in baseball.
Darryl Strawberry, c.&lt;· Met, ex·
Dodger, ex -slugger, was called up
from Triple-A PhoeniX today and
was st:hcduled 10 start in right field
for the San FranCISCO Giants, who
JUS! goi fini shed gelling swepl by
th e New York Me Is in a thrcegame serie s in which they scored
onl y four run s.
Their 4- 1 loss Wednesday night
gave them a record of 35-50, tied
wilh the San Di ego Padres for
worst in the American and Nauonal
Leagues.
"I'm looking a I a ballclub t~I's
slrugglmg n ghi now~ and Il sa
grcai,Uilcntcd ballclub, •. Strawber·
ry sa 1d Wedn esda y. night aficr
gomg 0-for -3 for Ihe mmor-league
FirCbirds.
"Asituaiionlike thisisgood for
me, and hopefully it 's good for the
club . Hopefully , I can step in there
and bring some new life and some
energy to Ihe ballclub. I know
thai' s the Iype of player I am ."
S!rawberry played Ihree games
at PhoeniX, gmng 3-for-10 w1tl1
two homers. .
.. .
.
Earlier. GJanis. ofhc1als sa1d
Strawberry wouldn 1 JOin the team
unlll after Ihe All -Star break. But
their dlfe SituatiOn - . 9 1/2 games
behmd the Dodgers with the season
more than halfway over - apparently necessitated tbc move.
Bobby Jone s (9- 7) pitched
shuioui ball for 7 1/3 mnm~s. Ryan
Thompson homered and Jose Vizcamo had four hils for New York .
The Mets got two runs in the
(See NL on Page 5)

Scoreboard
Friday's game&amp;

Baseball

Soattlo (flcmina 6-10) 11 Bo.ttm (Nab-hoi% Q.Z), 7,01 p.m.

NL standings
f.ulom Dhillon
W L PtL

Tum

Atlanta ... ..... .......... 51

11

.622

MonllU.I.. ............. .SO

l3

.602

JlhJIIddphi.a ........... 4J
New Yort. ............. 38

4J
45

.488
.458

Horida ...... ............. 38

46

GB
1.5

Jl
13.5
.452 ·
14

Cen&amp;raii:Mvlaloft

CINCINNA11. ..... ..49 :l4

.590

HOUitm ........... .... ..48

l6

.571

1.5

SL
.40 41
Pit&lt;obwgh ............ 40 42
Chi.cagG.................. 34 48

.494
.4&amp;8
.41S

8

uw ...............

8.5
14..5

California (Anderton 5-4) at New
Yod: (Pam 1-J), 7:M p.m.
Tu.u {Fajardo 4-4) 11 Detroit Belcher
(6-917~ p.m.
Oakland (Witt 7-7) at Baltimore

(Mullina I 2-4), Hl p.m.
X...n~a~ City (Cone 12-4) at Toi'Oilto
(St.cwlltt 5-1), 7:35p.m.
~ao (Bm: 1-2) at Milwaukee (Mi·
nnda 1-0),1:05 p.m.
Cl.EVEI...AND (Grimale)i !..()) 11 Min ne.ota (l'•p&amp;ni I -5 ),1:0S p.m .

.471

4

San Dieg(} ............. .JS SO

.412

San Fnnciacu ...... .. 35

.412

9.5
'1..5

SO

lin.

Colondo 7, Dlicago 1

San Diego S, Philldclpltia 2
01-t: Pitabuflh J, AllanLI 1; AtlanLI 4,

Pit&lt;obwgh2
Aorid• 4,CINaNNATI 3 (10 inn.)
Haua10n ?, St. L...oW. 6
New Yoli 4, San fflnciloo 1
Mau.re&amp;l 4, Lot Angd.ea 2

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS'
N1n1od Bob lAnic:r •imnt OMCh.
NEW YORK KNICKS' Elatiaed the
opticl'l on the a.ntnct of Anthony Bonner, ·

Baseball
Amtrkan Leape
BOSTON RED SOX: Aa.ivatod Tim
Naoltrina, 10001\d bumt1t1, from the IS·

~W

YORK YANitl!ES' RccaUocl
Rua Davia, infielder. frtm Columbul of
the lnt.em•tional League.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Recalled
A.le1 Rodriauoz, infielder, from Jack·
u:nvillc of the Soulhcm Leap&amp;eN•tlonal Lope

Today's games
Philldt.lphi1 (BoUie 4-4) at San fnnciaoo (Black 1-0), 4:05p.m.
Colando (Nied 7-4) u Aorida (M.thCWI 1· 1), 7:J5 p.m.
Pinaburgh (Cooke l -6) 11 ONCIN(Jlankl

1~).

Ull p.m.
New Yo.ri (hconc 0.1) at Lo. Angclr..~ (CandioW 6-3), 10:0:5 p.m.
MOO.Irctl (Hill 12-3) 11 San [)iego
(Aohby 4-6). I Q,QS pm.

lly JOHN SEEW~~R
COLU MBUS , Ohio (AP) Former heavyweight champion
James " Buster" Douglas will have
10 change his lifcsiylc Io control his
hcaiih now thai he has been diagnosed wiih diabetes.
''He will need 10 follow a diet
the rest of his life, eating Ihe right
proportions of ccrtam food s and Ihe
right amounts." said Janet Gorman, a nurse wiih the Central Ohio
Diabetes Assoc iation said. "He
will need Io exercise and need to
lose sonic weight to keep his sugar
level in a normal range."
Gran! Medical Cenicr sa id
Wednesday that Douglas. 34. was
in serious but stable condiiion. He
was being treated for diabetic ketoacidosis in the hospital's coronary
care unit.
The announcement was the first
statemeni the hospital has released
about the former champion since
he was admitted Monday.
No other dctaliS were released at
the requesi of Douglas' family, l11e
staiemeni said . Messages lcfi ai the
home of hi s faih cr, Bill, and Ihc
office of hi s bu sine ss manager,

'Lawrence Na ll1 c, were noi
rciurncd. No one at a recreation
center Douglas buill on the ciiy' s
cas! side alkr he became champion
had f llflhcr infonnation.
Diabetic kcio-acidosis is a type
of diabcics common in c hildre·n
who arc not . able to produce
insulin, Ms. Gorman said.
"This tells me that his diabcies
is going to be harder to control,"
Gorman said. "He will have to
take insulin tbe rest of hi s l1fe."
She sa id ii is noi lifc- Ihreaiening
if Ihe paiicm follows prescribed
insulin Lrcatmcnts .
Hospiial spoke sman Siephen
Shivinsky could nol confirm ear lier
reports from Douglas' family thai
he had hccn in and out of a diabetic

Southern football
meeting Monday
There will be a meeting for all
parents and players in grades 7- 12
interested in playing football in tbe
Southern Local School District on
Monday, July I I at 7 p.m. in tbe
football building.

forward. Waived Rolando Blad!.man,
4"aod.

Bass tournament
slated for Sunday
The Meigs County Silverado 4H Club will have a buddy bass
tournamcm on Sunday, July 10
from 7 a.m. 10 4 p.m. at the Forked
Run Ohio River Access Ramp at
Long llottom.
The entrance fcc is $50 per boat.
Entries will he accepted until the
drivers' mcciing at 6 a.m., with a
boa! check following at 6:30a.m.
Payback of 80 percenl, based on
30 boats, is $600, first place; $300,
second place; $200, third place,
and $100, fourth place. A big bass
contest will also be held at $5 per
boat with payback of 100 percent.
For more information, co.ntact
John Riley at 9&amp;5-43&amp;3 or Trennia
Harris at843-5249.

Football

CINCINNATI REDS : Plaood Jerome
Wlhon. oud'i.GWa-, on the I s.daJ diaablod
LiA. raroac.ti\re 10 Ju.ly J. Rocdled Steve
Pesum. oW'lCldc:r, 10 lndianapolil ol the
American Auoci.ation.
COLORADO ROCKIES : Rccallod
Trcnidad Hubbard, wUICIIdcr, from Colorado Spri~&amp;l of lhc PIC:ific Coa11
Lcoguo. Optioned Bnocc WaiiOn. pilclter,
to Colondo S .
FLORIDAPMf'RUNs: Placed 8rya11

N•donal FooCball

Leac•

ATUNTA FALCONS' Signod Mitcll
Davia,linr.baa-,10. thrao-ycu coruu:t.

%

Rele11e.d ReRgic Furauon 1nd Keith

Jack. wide reoeiven.

GREEN BAY PACKERS : Sianed

Jamie Dutca, ca1tQ'.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS, Wa;ved
Th"""' 0.., com..t.ad, ond lorold l&lt;if·
COil. deftniYC end.
NEW YORit OIANrS' Namod Emito
Acconi auial.lnt&amp;cncnl ma.naaer. Pro-moted Hany Huhnca lO tpecill ••iatant
ID 1M &amp;CII'IIeDI manaa-.
SEATI1J! SEAHA WitS, Agrcod 1o
tenna with Joe N..b, dett'onaive tukle.
Waived Kevin MurphJ, lineba&lt;:ker.
s;,nod Cuioo.&lt; c ...p... Oalt• ""L

TAMPA BAY

BUCCANEERS,

Aar-d to Wllml wUb 1\u Pic:Pm, offcu-

•iva lactic. oo lhroo-yeu CUIIR&lt;=l

Annual Percentage Yield (APY)

Friday's game•

%

(Morgm 1-6), 3:2:0 p.m.
Color1do (Painter 2-2) at Florida
(Wealhcn 7- 7), 7:35p.m.
PIIUburg.h (Lttber 4·)) 11 CINCIN ·
NATI (Smiley 8-8). Hl pm.
Sl. Louia rrcwlubury 9· 7) II Atlanta
(G . Maddw I I -4), 7:40p.m.
New Yom (Smilh 4-S) 1tl.al Angdca
Ol&lt;nluJa- l-4), IQ,Ql p.m.
Muntrr.a) (Ruekr 3-2) 11 San Diego

10:05 p.m .

Ph.iladclphi1 (Valenzuela 0.1) at San
Franciloo (Porwpl6-6), 10:05 p.m.

AL standings
Eutem DI"Wo.

GB

New Yari ............41 l3
Baltimtn ........... ..48 :l4

PeL
.S93
.l8S

801ton..................40 42

.481

0ctroiL ................... 38

.-451
.-427

1.5
11
135

Team

W

L

45

Toronto .................. 35 47

Interest Rate

.S

Ct:ntrlltiM•Woe
CIEVEL.AND ......49 31
Chicago ................ .41 M

.613
51S

2

Kana.. Cily ...........43 40

.511

7.5

Minnco011 ..............41 41
Milwaukoe .............39 44

j()()

.470

9
IU

tbucan't i more an

w-.111.-

Tea.• .......................0

~3

.482

OUWtd ......•.....•.. 37
Ctlifomia ...... .....~ ..16
S..ule
.)5

46
49

.446
.424

3

41

.422

5

interest ra e this big.

~

Wednesday's !ltORS
. ·--

Oakland 4, New Yari 2
c.lifomiiiO, Bo.toa 6
OU...go 6, I:&gt;olro012

At Bank One, we'll do
"Whatever it takes" to keep
our savings interest rales as
high as possible. And, that
includes our regular savings
account that gives you imme=
diate access to your funds, as
well as medium and longterm
investment options. So you
can choose the plan-or com·
bination of plans-that works

lallimORI ~. Solulc 4
Mimelou 5, ToroniD 4
Milwaukee 4, Kanau Cily l
Cl..EVEI.AND 13. Tuu 4

Today'sgames
c.lifomio (l..anp&lt;m S-4) II New Y oft
(Xoy 12·2), I~ p.m.
· Cbicaa~ (Al.-u;u 9-4) 11 Detroit
(Ma&gt;n:l-7), us p.m.
'
Toronto (Loitcr 3·3) 11 Minae~ota

Air Pound.

(Ooardado ().I), I ,15 p.m.
Soaalc ( - 9-4) II Bao~on (Sclc
H),7,()5p.m.
OrU1Ind (VmPoppa 4-7) 11 lkltimorc

(Mcl)onaLI 1().6). Hl p.m.

Milwaukee (Eldr.d 9-1) II Kant. City
(()onion 1-4) , 1~ p.m.
CLBVELAND {N•IJ 7-4) 11 Teu1
(IAuy ~).1::1:1 p.a

2111 N. Second Ave.

992-5627

Middleport, Oh.

~'·

best for you.
To qualify fort his special
interest rate, just make a minimum initial deposit of$25 in a
Bank One Regular Savings
Account. To open an account.
or to f md out more stop by any
Bank One office in Athens.
Gallia. Hocking, Meigs. or
Perry Counties. Or give us
a call at 614-593-6681 or

1-800-677-4994.
We've got savings·interesl
rates that are just your size.

BANK:ONE.
Whatever it takes:
Member FDIC

©1994 BANC ONE CORPORATION ln!eresl rates sub,teclto chage Fees may reduceearnrngs ln\et"est ra1e and Annual Percentage Yreld

(APY) 1n eMecl as ot 6-24-94. Ava11a01e at Bank One. Alhens. NA oHces only

Cleveland's lead to 3-0.
. .
Dctimcr, suU seekmg his firs!
maJor league VICtory, lasted twoIh1rds of an mnmg, allowmg four
hits with two walks and no stflkeout&lt; .
"De11mcr got behind in the
count and he's tbc Iype of piicher
who can' 1 afford to do that,· ·
Rangers manager Kevin Kennedy
said.
" It was a poor ouiing for me,"
Dctllller said. "To give up six runs
in !.he first inning, I don'I think I've
ever done that in my life.' •
The Ran gers had previou sly
won seven of nine.
Elsewhere in th e ' American
League. it was Chicago 6, Dctroii
2; Baltimore 5, Seattle 4; Milwaukcc 4, Kansas City 3; California 10.
Boston 6; Oakland 4, New York 2;
Minnesota 5, Toronio 4.
ChiSox Orioles win
Ken Griff~y Jr. may soo n be
chasing more !han Roger Maris. He
could be pursuing Frank Thomas.
Griffey, whose early season
homer hiiting prowess has been
baseball 's marquee story thi s season, fai led to homer for the lith
Slraight game Wednesday night as
the Seattle Mariners lost 5-4 in Bal·
timore.
Jusi Iwo weeks ago, Griffey was
not only only on pace to tbreaten
Maris' record of 61 homers in a
season, but there was spcculaiion
that he could hit 70 homers. Well,
that talk has quieted considerably
since Griffey has been at 32
homers and holding since June 24.
Thomas, meanwhile, has closed
inonGriffey.
He hit his 31si homer Wednesday night, a two-run shot in the
ninth inning, that helped Ihe Chicago White Sox rally for a 6-2 victo·
ry in Detroit.
Thomas, second in tbe league in
balling, firs I in runs scored and
now second in homers, has hit four
homers while Griffey has slagnated.
The White Sox were limited to
one run and five hits in eight
innin~s before scoring five runs in
the nmtb off Mike Henneman (I·
3).

Inheriting a 2-1 lead. Henneman
slruck oui Darren Jackson Io open
th e nimh , but walked pinch-hiitcr
Warren Newspn. Mike LaValliere
singled Newson to third , and Ozzic
Guillen lied ai 2 wiih a sac rifi ce
ny.
Afier an infield single by Lance
Johnson. Tim Raines hi I a ball JUSt
over righi fielder Junior Felix's
glove, scoring pinch runner Nor beriO Martin and Johnson.
Thomas. who went 2-for-4 , fol Towed by lining a 2-2 piich illlo L!Ic
lower deck in left field.
·
'.'We knew we had to do ii
agmfist their bullpen, because Gullickson was outstanding,'' Thomas
said. "He kepi us off-balance all
nigh!. The las! Ihree times he h&gt;&lt;
faced us, he has been dominant."
Dane Johnson (2 -1) pitched to
Iw o batters in Ihe eighth for the
win .
In Baltimore. Brady Anderson
hit a tbree- run homer and substitute
siarter Mike Oq uis t pitched six
strong innings as the Orioles com-1
pletcd a three-game sweep of SeatLie.
Brewers 4, Royals 3
At Kansas City, Dave Nilsson's
tJcbrcaking hom er in the e ighih
inning helped Bob Scanlan gel his
first win as a starter since 1991.
Scanlm1 (1·5) allowed four hits
in eight innings - Lhe longest out·
ing of hi s career - for his firsi victory since Sept. 10, 1993 with the
Cubs. It was his fir s! win as a
starter since a 6-2 victory over the
New York Mm on Aug . 10, 1991.
Nilsson hii a two-run homer, hi s
IOth,withtwoouts intheeighLh
off Rusty Meacham (1 -2).
Angels 10, Red Sox 6
At Boston, the Ange ls hit four
homers to score 10 runs for the second straighi game against the Red
Sox.
Greg Myers' two-run shoi in Ihc
seventh gave tbe Angels a 6-S lead
and Rex Hudler added a Ihrec-run
homer in th e five -run inning
against Cory Bailey (0-1) . Chili
Davis and Chad Cunis hit solo
homers earlier.
Tom Brunansky hi I a two -run
homer and Andre Dawson hit a

solo shot for Boston.
Bob Patterson (2 -3) got Ihe win
despiiC allowing three hi Ls, includmg Daw son' s hom er. m 1 2/3
innings.
Athletics 4, Yankees 2
AI New York. Scott Bmsius h1I
a Iwo -run homer and Troy Nee!
added a solo shot.
Brmius hii hissevcmh homer in
the second innin g off Jim Abbou
(7 -6) and Nee! hi I his IOih in the
Ih1rd .
Ron Darling (7 -9) allowed two
runs and nine hils in 6 2/3 innings.
Dennis Eckersley pithed Ihe ninth
for hi s 13Ih save.
Twins 5, Jlluc Jays 4
AI Minneapolis, Scou Ericksor
(8-6) allowed seven hils in 7 2/3
innings and Kirby Puc ken hi 1 a
Iwo-run homer.
Puckeit foll o wed Chu c k
Knoblauch 's single by hi lLing hi s
13th homer, off Todd Sioitlem yrc
(5.6). in Ihe first inning.
'
Carl Willis goi the final out in
Ih e eighth and Rick Aguilera struck
out the side in Ihe ninth for his 18th
save.

I

'

(Coniinued from Page 4)
first against Bryan Hickerson (2-8),
Thompson hit his !Sib homer in tbe
scvenih and Vizcaino scored from
second in tbe ninth when shonstop
Royce Clayton botched a double
play by throwing wildly past first
base.
Astros 7, Cardinals 6
At St. Louis, it didn't take long
for Jeff Bagwell to re-take the
major-league lead in RBis.
Bagwell, who missed three
games witb the nu, drove in runs in
the first and seventh innings wiih
singles to right field . He has 79
RBis and is on pace to break general manager Bob Watson's club
record of 110 RBis set in 1977.
Todd Jones (3-2) got the victory, pitching I 1/3 innin~s. and John
Hudek pitched the mnth for his
14th save. Rich Rodriguez (2-4)
took tbe Joss for St. Louis.
Expos .4, Dodgers 2
At Los Angeles, Darrin Fletcher, a former Dodger heading to his
first All-Star game, hit a two-run
homer in the ninth inning to put
Montreal ahead 3-2. Another run
scored on Freddie Benavides'
groundout - despite Los Angeles
playing its infield in.
Tim Scott (4-2) piiched two
scoreless innings for the victory
and Mel Rojas got the final Ihree
outs for his J4tb save. Todd Worrell (3-4) gave up Fletcher's homer.
Pirates, Draves split DH
At Atlanta, tbe Pirates won tbe
opener with two runs in tbe bottom
of the eighth off Mark Wohlers (51), breaking a I -I lie. ZaQe. Smitb
(9·6) got the victory and is 2-0
against Atlanta this year. He has
allowed tbe Braves only three runs
in tbe last 26 innings.
In the nightcap, Sieve Avery (62) got his first victory in almost
seven weeks and Ryan Klesko
drove in two runs wilh a homer and
a sacrifice fly. Paul Wagner (5 -7)
was the losing pitcher for the
Pirales.
Rockies 7, Cubs 1
At Wrigley Field, tbe wind was
blowing out. That was enough to
convince Andres Galarraga not to
take a day off as previously
planned.
•
Galarraga hit a three-run homer
in a five-run ninth off All-Star
reliever Randy Myers. Curtis
Leskanic (1-0) gave up six hits
over 5 1/3 innings for the win, and
Sto¥e Trachsel (7-6) took the loss.

··

Padres 5, PhiiUes 2

At San Diego, Phil Clark hit a
two-run homer and Bill Krueger
(1-1) became the first Padres lefthanded starter to get a win since
1992. David West (3· 7) gave up
four hits and three runs in six
innings. · ·

\

'·

~

CELEilRA TES HOMER - The Clneland Indian s' Paul Sorrento
prepares to slap hi~h thes to hiswaiting teammates at hom e plate fol lowing his three -run homer - it was nne of five hit by the Tribe off John Dettmer in Ihe first inning of Wednesday night ' s American
league game against the host Texas Rangers, who fell 13--l. (AP)

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·NL games ...

Bank One RegularSavingsSM

Houaton (Swindell 6-6) at Chicago

{lkne.~ 6-9),

coma.
,
Th e ho spital would not co mmem on a rcJlOri Wednesday in The
Columbus Dispaich that said Dou·
glas previously had not been diagnosed as dJabciJC .

Basketball

day dlublod lilt. Sent NalC Minchey,
t::'cr, to Pawtuc:k01. of the lntanalioul

Wednesday's scores

NATI (Hanooo l ·l), 1 '3l p.m.
Houa\on (K.ile 5-J) II Chicago

Olltfielder, from Phoenix of the P1cific

Cout League. Placed Robby ThomJ»&gt;O,
acoood bucman, m tbe 15-day diublcd

Douglas diagnosed with diabetes

One Twardrik, dim;sa of player pram·
ncl. to 1 multi-yew-contract enen.aon.

Transactions

Weatern DI•Won
.524
45

fJClder, fnn Tucaco of the Pacific Coul
Lcoguo.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Pu.rchuod the c:mtnct d DUTy) Stnwben-y,

sacker Dave Magadan in tlie first innin~ of
Wednesday night's National League game in
Miami, Fla., where the Marlins won 4-3 in 10
innings to avoid a sweep by the Reds. (AP)

National Bukt:ltt.ll AllodaUon
CHARLOTfE HORNETS ' Signed

U. Anac.lca ...........44 40
Colon&amp; ................41

Harvey, pitcher, en lhe 15-clay diMblod
li-. n:IUOICllvc to June 30.
HOUSTON ASTROS : Placed Andy
Stankiewia., inflddct, on the 15--day dia-abled liat. R«:allod Orlando Miller, Ln-

HEADING llACK -As first base umpire
Terry Tata watches the play from a distance, the
Cincinnati Reds' Deion Sanders dives back to first
base before the pickofT throw gets to Florida first

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In the AL,

Thursday, July 7, 1994
Page-4

In the NL,

B~· STE\.E\1 WINE

)

Thursday, July 7, 1994

Stock #95006

TOTAL BEFORE
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935.00

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Syracuse, Racine win
in Hubbard LL Tournament
single.
For Pomeroy, Soulsby tripled.
Racine defeated the Gallipolis
Mariners 15-0, taking an 8-0 lead
after the first inning. J. Boso was
the winner witb relief from Kyle
Norris (seven strikeouts, 0 walks)
and Fields and Gregory suffered
Ihe loss (six strikeouts and 5
walks).
.
For Gallipolis, Mahan, Gregory,
Cox and Baker each singled. For
Racine. Baker doubled twice and
singled, Roberts had two doubles,
Rill two singles, Reiber a double
and single. Thorne two doubles and
singles by Boso and Randolph.
Action continues tonight with
the Tuppers Plains Tigers playing
Kyger Creek #2. Bidwell will play
Mason.

Bend Area Gospel Jubilee
July 8th, 9th, 1Oth
Mason County Fairground8

IJ

y

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HOMEWARD BOUND -That' s where Racine pitcher j.B. Boso
delivers this pitch during Wednesday night's Hubbard Memorial Little League Tournament game against the Gallipolis Mariners, who
lost 15-0.
'

Syracuse an&lt;l Racine picked up
big wins in the 17th anual Bill
Hubbard Memorial Little League
Tournament in Syracuse, sponsored
by the The Syracuse Volunleer Fire
Department
Syracuse claimed a one-sided
33-0 win over tbe Pomeroy Reds as
M. Ash pitched a one-hitler.
Syracuse plated 19 runs m tbe
first inning, nearly batting around
the horn three Limes. Ash sbllck out
eight and walked two, while Pickens, Shuler, Soulsby and Glaze
pitched for the Reds.
M. Warner, Ash, Hill and J.
Davis had a single, triple and double; Harmon three doubles, Adam
Cummings a a double and triple,
Hubbard two singles, Pierce a double and three singles and Clay a

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'
Page-6--The Dally Sentinel

Federal probe reveals
inexperience as cause
of Allison's fatal crash
lllRMII\GIIAM, Ala. (APJ ·\ . ,,.,k ral probe into the helicopter
c·rctsh that ktll cd NASCAR star
Davey Allison pointed toward pil ot
tnC.\IWri..._' ncc on hi s part ~ls a cause

cal probl ems with the heli copter,
which crashed while All ison was
all emptin g ro la m! in a narrow,
fenc ed-in parking lot on the in field
of the Talladega Superspcedway .
The report said that wh1le Alli son was auempt111g a clown-wind
I and in ~ in the helico pter, he had

Tour de France gets first
British stage in 20 years
!3RIGHTON, England (AP) U m s !3oardman, JUSt a few yards
ahcaliDf ~1 e pack, raised both arms
1n tn umph as he crossed the finish
I inc to the cheers of thousands.
The crowd treated him as a win ncr. although the British cyclist had
:Jctu:tll y fmi shed fourth in the first
Eng lrsh stage of the Tour de France
111 20 years.
"I Jtlst had to do something for
the crowds. They were gre&lt;~t," said
[loardm an , who broke from th e
rack about four miles from the linish. " I was sure l·woold win, but I
made my break too late_ My only
chance was near th e end when I
realized oth ers would be suffer mg
Boardman's mov e was too late
to ca tch sta ge winner Francisco
Ca bell o of Spa in, who won
Wct! ncsllay' s 122-mi le trek from
Dover to Origh ton in 5 hours, 12
minutcs, 53 seconds_
Cahe llo , was suspended for
three mon ths earlier this year after
tes tin g po sitive for anabolic
steroids dunng the Tour of MaJOrca, broke away from Frenchman
Emmanu el Magnien with four
mile s to go to seal the victory.
Cabello and Magnicn were well
ahead of the pack for more than
two-thirds of the race.
Magnicn held off a late charge
from Flavia Vanzella of Italy to
ta ke sec ond place, 20 seconds
behi nd _Vanzella' s finish, however,
was good enough to claim the yel-

low Jersey from teammate Johan
Musecuw as the overall leader after
four stages.
An estimated one million people
- double the expected num ber lined the route to celebrate only the
second stage north of the English
Channel in the Tour's history .
"I was wrong about the English
people, " Magnicn sa id . "I was
suprised. I thought that the English
didn't like cyc ling. I beli eve the
public today proved olherwise."
The race co-favorites, three -time
defendin g champion Miguel
lndurain of Spain and Switzerland 's Tony Rominger, fini shed
side-by-side in the main pack, 38
seconds back of the winn er.
lndumin remained third overall, 14
seconds behind Vanzella and 10
back of Musccuw, and Rominger
stayed lOth, 42 seconds behind lhe
leader.
American Lance Armstrong also
finished in the pack to stay in fifth
place' overall, 26 seconds behind
Vanzella. Cabello, despite his victory, occupies 99th place, 4: I5 off
the overall pace.
The Tour's only previous visit
to England was one stage on an
unopened bypass ncar Plymouth in
1974.
Today's stage is a I 16-mile circuit bcginnin!f}and ending in
Portsmouth, which applied lO host
the stage as part of the city's 800th
anniversary celebrations. The mce,
which covers 21 stages and of
2,479 miles, lhcn returns to France.

.MJ's average still slipping,
but grounder helps Barons win
fly PAUL NEWBERRY
HOOVER, Ala. (AP)- For a
moment , it see med more like
Chi cago Stadium than a minorleague baseball park. Michael Jordan wa s being mobbed by his
teamm ates, a hero once again_
OK. so it didn't exactly have the
drama of the NBA Finals. This was
a rath er meaningless Double-A
game between Jordan's Birming ham Baro11s and the Huntsville
Stars.
OK, so it wasn't anything as
dramatic as a three-pointer at the
buzzer with an opposing player
draped all over him . Jordan didn 't
even ge t credit for a hit when his
two-out. bases- loaded grounder in
the bottom of the nimh was booted
by the Hunt sville third baseman,
allowing illree runs w score for a 6S Barons victory.
No maner.
"Thi s is l)l y most exciting
moment in baseball," Jordan proclaimed, sipping a celebratory beer
while takin g hi gh-five s from hi s
tea mmates after the game Wednesday night
" I' vc been in championships
before, but for the level it is this is
almo st lik e a championship to
me," sc1id Jordan, who was still 0for -3 for th e ga me and saw hi ~
average drop to .193. "This is the
most excitement I've had."
Th e Barons went to the ninth
trailing S- 0 _ To make mauers
worse, Steve Wojciechowski was
throwing a no-hitter for Huntsville
and had allowed only one baserunner - Jordan on a wallc Most lhe
c rowd had already headed for
home .
By the time Jordan stepped to
lhc plate, however, Wojciechowski
was out of the game and the Barons
-had closed the gap to 5-3_ Every
baSe was occupied.
"ll wa s one shot to win or

Sports brief
Tennis
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -David
Witt upse t top-seeded defending
champion Greg Rusedski of Canada 6-4,6-7 (7-5), 6-3 in the second
round of the Hall of Fame Championships.

lose," Jordan said. "Mentally, I've
been in that situation before on the
basketball court All I had to do
was relax, make something happen,
make sure I hit the ball hard."
He worked the count to 3-2
against reliever Scali Rose, then
grounded sharply down the thirdbase line. Jason Giambi bobbled
the ball, then rushed his throw to
first as Jordan streaked down the
line - "I got down lhcre faaas~"
he pointed out later_ The ball sailed
over Joel Wolfe's head and by lhe
time it was retrieved, all three runners had made it home.

Zwierlein named
Bowling Green
athletic director
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP) _
- A fanner Bowling Green State
University swimming coach wiii
take over as the school's athletics
director, The Blade of Toledo
reported today _
Ron Zwicrlcin will replace Jack
Gregory, who is retiring after 13
years in the job, The Blade said.
A university official did not
return a phone call seeking com ment. Dowling Green planned a
news conference today to announce
its selection.
Zwierlein, the interim vice president for student affairs, declined to
comment but said he would be at
the news conference.
Zwierlein was athletics director
at John Carroll University from
1978 to 1981. He came to Bowling
Green in 198! as men's and
women's head swimming and diving coach. In 1984, he beeamo
associate director of the Student
Recreation Center.
From"July 1991to Augustl992
he oversaw construction of the
BGSU Fieldhouse as its interim
director. Zwicriein was promoted
to director of recreational s~rts in
August 1992 and last year took on
lhc additional duties of lhe interim
student aiTairs post
Zwierlein was a member of lhe
Bowlin~ Green swim team before
graduatmg in 1968.

liE'S RETIRING- The Chicago Bears' Neal Anderson, sbown in
in action against the Green Bay Packers in a 1993 game, announced
his retirement Wednesday, according to the Chicago Tribune. He is
the llears ' second all-time leading rusher. (AP)

who also are interesting people.''
By KEN PETERS
Lalas said: "I think people wi ll
Man y U _s_ soccer players are
stay
interested. People have discov now swaying lO samba drums.
ered
that it's a month -long party,
Eliminated from the World Cup
an
d
th
e party's st ill going on_ It
by Brazil, the Americans wi ll be
was
some
thing against Brazil, all
fans of the Brazilians for the rest of
that
samba,
all those nags, BraziJ,
the tournament.
and
Ame
ri ca n. They really
ian
Should Brazil go on to win, it
appreciated ille game.
will give the U.S. players a sense
"There arc still a lot of good
of sa ti sfaction knowing that they
teams, a lot of exciting players to
lost just l-0 to the eventual cham- watch, some great soccer left. I've
pions. And the Americans came out
of that game as admirers of th e been playing in the World Cup ,
now I'm going to be a fan and
Brazilians.
"They're awesome," defender watch the World Cup."
ABC estima ted th at 32 mtllion
Alcxi Lalas said_ "They come at
peop
le tuned in fo r th e United
you in waves. I'd like to sec the
States-Brazil
game on Monday, but
Brazilians win it."
ratings
for
games
not involvi g the
Goalie Tony Meola said: " I
American
team
have
been s stanthink you usually want the team
ABC'
for its
riall
y
lower.
that beat you to win it."
four
games
no
t
mv
o
lving
the
Asked his pick, midficldcr Mike
Americans
was
3.
77
million
Sorber sai d: ''!like Brazil.''
The players said they hope that homes.
During the first two rounds, a
the American s who backed them,
record
2,952,023 fans attended 44
watched ~1e games in person or on
games
,
an average of 67,091. The
TV, won ' t tunc out on the World
previous
record of 2,517,348 (an
Cup' just because the United States
average
of
48,411) was se t four
is out.
years
ago
in
l~tly . The average for
"Some English people told me
this
year
is
sure
to break the record
that since they wcrcn 't in the
of
60,772
,
set
in
Brazil in 1950.
World Cup, they would be pulling
" I dcfmitely don' t think people
for us," Sorber sa id . "I believe
that will happen now for a lot of will tune out on it," Sorber said.
Americans : th ey' ll pi ck their
Sports brief
favorite team to cheer for.
"There arc so many great playTennis
ers, great personalities to choose Seventh-seeded Richard Fromberg
from, like Ghcor he Hagi (o f of Australia beat Anders Jarryd of
· (o f Brazil),
Romania),
Sweden 6-1,6-4 lO advance to the
who arc wonderful
watch and
third round of the Swedish Open.

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SUPE RIORS IN SCIENCE FAIR- These
students at the Sa li sbury Elementary School
received superior ratings on their projects in the
school recent science fair. They are left to right,
front, Mindy O'Dell, Jonathan Wilson, Shandi

Bobb, Andrea Neutzling, Joseph McCall, 'Grace
Kitchen, and back, Whitney Ashley, Marjorie
Halar, Tiffany Harder, Morgan Mathews,
Mindy Halley, Anna Story, all pictured " 'ith
teacher/coordinator, Karen Walker.

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-Register To Win PrizesWeekly Drawings

---community calendar--Chapter 172. Order of the Eastern
Star, will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at the Middl eport Masonic Temple.
Members are to take cann ed food
for the food pantry.

1st Week

in the district se rved by that fire
department_ Donations from those
not contacted may be sent to Terry
Deem, department president_ Addi tional information mav be obtained
from him at667-39 33.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Republican Executive
CommitiCc will meet Thursday at 7
p_m_in the Meigs County Common
Pleas courtroom.

POINT PLEASANT - Bend
Area Gospel Jubilee , at Mason
County Fairgrounds, R ou t~ 62,
North of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
Friday, 6 to II p.m. Saturday,
beginning at 12:30 and Sunday, 10
a.m. until 5 p.m. Over 40 singing
groups, Free, camping, concession
Stand.

DARWIN - Th e Mode rn
Woodmen of America, Cam p 7230,
will have its annual potluck picnic
and community service recognition
program Sunday, 12:30 p.m. at the
north bound park, Ro ute 33.
Recognition will be given to Ola
SL Clair and Alctha Randolph for
outstanding community serv ice.

POMEROY - The 175th
Anniversary Commiucc will meet
Friday at noon at the Meigs County
Museum.
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Community Association will
again hold a farmer's market,
beginning lhis Saturday. The market will be open from 8 a.m .- 2
p.m., with farmer's allowed to
come and set up at 7:30 a.m. Fee
for the sellin11 space next to Dave
Diles Park w1ll be $5. All vendors
should preregister by 992-5458.

Win~er

of Crystal Decanter Set
Pooch Brewer

*GRAND PRIZE*
Micky Mouse Pocket Watch

CLIFfON - The Rollins Fam ily will be the featured si ngers at a
hymn sinr, Saturday to be held at
the Clifton Tabernacle Church, 7
p.m. Pastor M.E. McDaniel invites
the public to attend.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Darin Smith Will
speak at the ML Moriah Church of
God, Racine, Sunday at 7 p.m. A
revival will be held there July IS17 with the Rev _ Marvin Cannas
speaker. The public is invited.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Youth League wi II hold an end of
year meeting Friday at 6 p.m. at the
baseball field _All coaches and parents are asked to aucnd.

off Retail

0

I

,V')
lc,y

14K Charms
Special Selection

,

/1

5Oo/o off Retail

Visa

Financing
Alia liable

MasterCard

AT

MASONFURN

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Fire Department
will conduct a door to door fund
drive Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.

\•.·
'I

Gal Struts

QUEEN SIZE

Everydey Low Price

Uf£TJME W~RRANTY

UmiME WARRANTY

!llcquisitions 'fine Jewe{ry

Society
scrapbook

59~J

59!!

Phy sician examinations for fam ily planning and reproductive
hea lth arc now being offered by
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio Heal ill Center at i l~ 509 South
Third St., Middleport, offices on
Wedn esday eve nin gs. Appo int ments arc available from 4 to 6
p.m.
Services include cancer screening, Pap tests and breast examinations, screening for diabetes and
anemia_ Tess and treatment for sexually traf}limiued diseases arc avail able lO women and men. Ed ucation
about birth control and preventative
hea lth is also offered to PPSEO
clients_ Birth control methods and
supplies arc provided through the
Health Center.
Women arc advi sed to have an
annual' examination with a Pap test
and breast exam when using any
meth od of birth control. Cancer
prevention through early detection
is an important health issue for all

Anniversary Sale

THURSDAY
EAST MEIGS - The Eas tern
Athletic Boosters will fneet Thurswomen .
day
at 7:30 p.m. at Eastern High
Among the newest methods of
SchooL
birth control available at Planned
Parenthood is Norplant which is
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
implanted under the skin and proGroup of AA will meet at 7 p.m.
vides effective contraception for
five years_ This procedure is done Thursday at th e Sacre d Heart
by the physician in the office wilh Church , Mulberry Avenue.
locaL anesthetic and must be
RACINE - Racine Post 602,
removed by a physician. Another
American
Legion will meet at 7
new method is the injection, Dcpo- p.m. Thursday
at the post ·homc_ A
Provcra which is effectiv e for three
held following the
dinner
will
be
months following each injection.
g.
meetin
Among the contraceptives in usc
for several years, the birth control
MIDDLEPORT- Evangeline
pill continues to be a popular
choice for agen cy clients. The
lower dose pills arc safe and effective when used as dircciCd.
The IUD (intra-uterine device)
is approved to be effective for up to
GOSPEL SING 1
eight years and is a choi ce for
The So uthern Statesmen of
women who arc at low risk for sexRoanoke, Va. will be fe&lt;~tured in a
ually transmiucd disease.
gospel
sin g at th e Pomeroy
The condom , spermicidcs and
Nazarene
Church, 196 Mulberry
diaphragm arc known as barrier
Ave.,
Pomeroy,
on Sunday, July ·
method is the only male method
offered. Wome n and women are 10, at the 9:30 a. m. service. The
educated about the value of using public is invited to attend.
condoms to prevent sexually transCORRECTION
mitted infections between partners,
Josh
Stanley
was the first place
as well as to prevent unintended
winner
in
the
decorated
bicycle
pregnancy, personnel said.
of
contest
at
the
Rutland
Fourth
The PPSEO Middleport Health
July
parade
.
He
was
incorrectly
Center serves 550 Meigs County
residcrtts a year_ Fees arc based on identified in a parade picture cuta sliding scale. Medicaid and pri- line.
vate insurance arc accepted. All
services are confidential.
total of 8,400 clients each year.
Planned parenthood is a private
In addition to family planning
non-profit organization which pro- and related services.. PPSEO offers
mote s the reproductive rights, prenatal care in Athens and Hockresponsibilities and health of area ing counties and anonymous HIV
residents through education, advo- test in the Athens, Gallia, Vinton
cacy and accessible services. The and Hocking Health Center. The
agency opcmtes seven heallh cen- telephone number for an appointters in eight coumies and serves a ment or infonnation is 992-59I2.

UINGS

32'm~

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Planned "'
Parenthood
expands
•
serv1ces

U.S. soccer players
now want Brazil
to win World Cup

tor till' accr dcnL
A 11S-pagc rcpon.rclcascd Tues&lt;Lty lw the Nationa l Transportation
S:~kt y lloartl sJtd Allison had onl y
no t prac ticed the maneuver in the
:'.H hours o f fl yin g inmu ct ion in aircmrt.
his llu!;i&gt;es }(,9!15 before the chopThe in vestigati ve report d1d not
per went dow n la st July 12 with iden tify the probable cause of the
h1111 at the controls.
ace1dcnt. The full board wil l usc
,\Jilson , a lr cc nsc d airp lane th e fi ndin gs to pinpoint a cau se
pr lot. reccrvcd hrs hclr copter rating later.
a year befor e th e cras h. He had
John Corley, a night instructor
acc nnli dated 54 hours of helrmptcr for So uthe:ts te rn Heli cop ters 111
l"li;;ltttllliC cttthc trm e of his death .
Saluda , S.C., told inves ti gators he
~Htt l 4) n l th ose hours we re m gave Allison th e 2.8 hours of night
tit~.· h:\"i - d t.: llt~tnU.Jng Robioso n R-22
instruction on Jun e 21, 1993. Corl~c·ltw p tc' r , s;ud the NTSB report .
Icy said Allison was " about averTit ,• rqlll rt 1ncluded an tn surage" for someo ne who had not
ancc l om pa ny premium estim ate nown a hel icop ter in ,,, month s
thctt s: 11d Allison needed 25 hours and had lim ited experience.
~d- !ligh t lf:tining in Hughes before
Corley sa id Alli so n tended to
so ln 1'11~ht , and he needed 25 hours hover abou t 25 feet in stead of the
ol sol,,· lltf'ht be-fore carryi ng pas- rccom mcnclcd hc1ght of three feet.
"l' ni.!L'r'
lie also said Allison had a tendency
l~ t dtll !! \~ tth Al li son 31 the time to make hi s approaches too fast and
ol-tllc cr:r.slt w•cs racer Red Farmer, too shallow, as a result of having
who lt:1s recovered from hi s trained on the much smaller and
lrlj UrJ &lt;..'S.
slower Robinson R-22.
· lnvcst'"'Jiors fo und no mcchnni -

By JOSEPH WHITE

Thursday, July 7, 1994

1994

SLEEP

Uf£TME W~RRANTY

SOFAS
$1 39 ~ ale p11ce

~~~~~- &amp;4~~

577

40%oFF
5 PIECE

WOOD

DINETTES
110M

$289
LLOYD
FLANDERS
OUTDOOR
FURNITURE

QUEEN ANNE

VELVET
CHAIR

Pennzoll
10W30,
10W40 or
5W30
Motor 011

.,(&gt;

$199

END OF
SUMMER
SALE

SECTIONAL

$988
SERTA

-I•J
.. -·WI ACCEPT
USED OIL

GALLIPOLIS

OPEN ·SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store Hours: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday,
8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sawrday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday
Ptat Oood tllrough WMlnHO';', July 13, 111M.

209 Upper River Road

446·3807

....
•·
h

.-

'

FROM

.,

We're cookin' up afun weekend in Columbus!
Sample delicious ribs from the best barbeque chefs in
the country, and wash it all down with ahealthy dose of
iazz from some of the nation's top artists.
For your free Columbus VISitors Guide and coupons...

U·Z·BOY
FLEISTEEL
CATNAPPER
RECLINERS

CAll 1-800-345-4JU".
POM-m

$71 ..... · - Slltt
...... - ... flsdval

I
I
I
L

OffKial Hotel of the Jazz &amp; Rib Fest

Call614-228-4600 or 1-800-424-2900

QJ~rftk.

I
I
I
I

Siitibld

Ptt Mille, PI' night pb ta SI.Aljld to .vlilabllity. Not vllid with ii'OIIP or oltler offm.

...

"

110M

Wd tt ... Jtsdlll
lldl•eslll Valtt l'altllj

"
Hyatt Regency Columbu~
• Downtown

(all6f4-463-1234 or 800-233-1234

"""'10-.
--·"'....,"' ~l
*"'

Pftsent touponlt chec*.fn.T-. not included Vatid 7f22-7n0t
Not

$279

POM-7/4

Jlst$99

--------- -------

GLIDER
ROCKERS

BEDDING

Cohlnbus Jazz lr Rib Fest. July 22·24 -Downtown on the Riverfront

/

SWIVEl oR

I
I
I

for gtQUp cr with other ofltri

...
)

I

�)

Southern
class• holds
reunton

,,
'

'

TWIRliNG YOUTHS - The Satin &amp; Lace
!laton Corps danle the crowd dudng the Middleport Fourth or July parade .Monday evemng.

The tiny twirlers were chosen as the best walking unit in the annual parade. (Sentinel photo by
George Abate)

Southern Local High School's
class of 1974 celebrated its 20 year
reunion at the recent annual alumni
banquet and at a picnic held the
following day at Star Mill Park.
Auending the banquet were Jill
Warn er Pugh , Nancy Crow
Kovaleski, Cindy Gooch Scott,
Brenda Hayes Davis. Cherri Bass
Rinehart, Mary Congo Berry, Della
Cross. Glenn Collins, Mike Codne r, Dave Shu le r, Susan Yost
Sheppard, Connie Roush McGlothin, Rex Roy, and Caro l Michael
Thei ss, and severa l of their hus bands and wives.
At the picnic were Jill Warner
Pugh, Nancy Cro w Kovaleski,
Cindy Gooch Scou, Brenda Hayes
Davis, Cherri Bass Rinehart, Della
CJO SS, G lenn Co llin s, Connie
Roush McGlothin , Carol Michael
Theiss , 'Mary Ann Walker Shoultz,
Valerie Johnson Hanstine. Beverly
Hart Cunnin gham, Gene Harri s,
Trina Ferrell Davis, Ethan Stearns,
Debbie Cundiff Call , Rodney Allen
and Mike Salser, along with many
spouses. children and grandchil dren.
The group spent the time visiting and reminescing about school
days. Th ey heard notes from the
Rev. Bob Sayre and Connie Smith
Meeks who were unable to attend.
Plans were made for another picnic
in 1997 and banquet gathering and
picnic for the 25th reunion.

t~

~ it

,~
! '

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Congratulations to Michael T.
Struble of Syracuse who has been
advised of his recent appointment
to the National Board of Directors
of the Pioneer America Society.
The society is a non -profit organization dedicated to the research,
recording and preservation of th_e
built American landscape. The pn mary foc us of the group deals with
the study of the vernacular or co mmon architecture found in both the
rural a nd urban areas of North
America.
Struble is a frequent contributor
to the organi7.ation ·s two academic •
journals, The Journal of the Pmneer
America Society and The Journal
of Material Culture. His research
specialty is WelsH church architecture and industrial archeology.
Chosen with Struble to begin
se rv ing the 1995-97 term on the
board were Dr. Keith Sculle, pre sident of the Illinoi s State Historic
Preservation Commission, and Dr.
David Stephens, faculty member of
Youngstown State University.
With the travelers this summer
have bccJl Golda Radcliffe of Syracuse andi~c y Taylor of Racine .
The two recently returned from
a visit with Golda's son and daughter-in-law. Dr. and Mrs. Ronald
Gillilan -in Baltimore, Md. While
on the trip they visited also with
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gillilan and
son in Brooktondale, N. Y., and
attended the wedding of Steven
Gillilan and Theresa Barber ,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Jesse Barber. all residents of Baltimore.
Steven is the youngest son of Dr.
and Mrs. Ronald Gillilan.
Collecting toy trains from
yesteryear is a hobby of several
Meigs Countians and their collec-

.

First birthday
celebrated ·
PATRIOTIC PARADERS- The Middleport parade featured a dozen bicycle riders .
llrandon Dotson was one or the winners ror best

decorated bicycles. (Sentinel photo by George
Abate)

Dr. Lynn Welch, Dean ,
MU School of Nursing, will
be at PVH in the downstairs Conference Room
ITriday, July 8, from 2-4:30
p.m.
RNs interested in pursusing a BSN or MSN should
attend.
To register, call
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 248

And certainly congratulations
are in order for Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
McKenzie of Racine.
Would you believe that the couple rece ntly observed th eir 70th
wedding anniversary? They arc 90
and 91 and both arc active. A family celebration marked th e occa sion.

God gave me a
gift wlaen He
made you.
Happy Birtlulay,
Baby!
Mom.

OFF

Public Notice

CALL-IN, WALK-IN OR BY
APPOINTMENT
Walk-In Houn: 10:00 &amp;m.• 3:00p.m.,
Mm.lo Wtd.

•t,...

413 Beetb Street
from Super America
Middleport, Oblo 45760

lnstallallon • BlrntsO.IIverod Slo 10 days
(614)992-5311 or (800)-BLIND-11

.'

Kleenex for Kids

-Snack Special Candy Bar or Potato Chips
and a Can of Pop

Box of70
ONLY

79¢

Reg. $1.00

59¢

Cover Girl
Cosmetics

Jewelry
Complete
Stock

30o/o

Price

Greeting Cards
Pet Tales &amp; Gladys and
Friends

. 40

ONLY

Cl

off

, R. Ph.

Cha~es

""'"''u Hanning, R. Ph.

Limit l

r Customer

Russell Stover Candy
1 pound
Reg. $5.75

off

ONLY

$4.39

Aleve
New for pain relief

30o/(} off

24. '2.99

Pharmacy
!

50% off

Nature Made
Vitamins

SWISHER LOHSE
•

Timex Watches 30% off
Early Bird Special
Friday 8 am- 12 noon

Riffle, R. ~

Mon. 111ru Sat 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m. ;
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955'
E. Main F~endiV Servlce~omeroy, Oh.
Open Weak Nights 'till 9

50 '4.39

Prices are Good

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473
7rl2104

lnlorm.Uon. Unleaa otherwlao provided in notice• of
particular actlona, all communication• ahatl be aent
to: Hearing Clerk, OEP~
P.O. Box 10411, Columbua,Oh. 43266-01411, Ph.
(614) 644-2'115. Conault
ORC Chap. 3745 1nd OAC
Ch1p1. 3745-47 1nd 3746-5
for requiremenll.
Final laau1nco of
certification
Huntington Corpa of
Eng!""'•
Pomeroy, Oh.

Council on Aging, Inc., P.O.

Box 722, Pomeroy, OH.
45769, will accept aealed
blda for 1 1986 founeen (14)
paaaenger Maxivan until

No Maeungs No Weigh Ins

may address Inquiries to :
Mr. Terry Breckenridge,
Burgess &amp; Niple, Limited,

5085 Reed Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43220, (614) 459-2050.

right to accept or reJect any
or all bida. For more Infor-

The

A site visitation can be
arranged by contacting Mr.
Brent Bolin, 34481 Corn

contact Wandll

estimated

·Room Addition•
-Now garagea
·Electrical &amp; ·Plumbing
-Roofing
·Interior &amp; Elr1erlor
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Lose Weight

Burgess &amp; Nlple, limited
5085 Reed Reed
Columbus, OH 43220
upon payment ol $40.00,
NONE OF WHICH WILL BE
REFUNDED.
Prospective BIDDERS

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho Meigo County

work.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Public Notice
purchased at:

Vining, 614-992-2161.
PUBUC NOTICE
(7) 7, 10 2tc
Tho following were
received/prepared by tho
Ohio
Envlroninonlll
Prolecllon Agency (OEPA)
Public Notice
laat weekl Effec:Uve dlltee of
final ec:tiona and loauance
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
datu of propoaed actlona
BIDS
and of dr•H •cliona •r•
Leading Creek
alllted. Anel ectiono mey be
Conservancy District
1pputed, In writing, within
34481 Corn Hollow Road
_ • 3.Q_ dayo of the dille of thlo
Rutland, OH 45775
noilce, ID the Envlronm•llal
Separate sealed Bids tor
Board of Revl-. Am. 300, Well Field Development will
236 E. Town St., Columbua, be received by Leading
OH., 43215. Notice or any Creek Conservancy District
appeot ohetl be filed with at the office of the General
the director within 3 doye. Manager, 34481 Corn
Propo ..d octlone will Hollow Road, Rutland, Ohio
become final unleaa a writ· 45775, until 12:00 p.m. (local
ton 1djudlcatlon hearing limo), July 14, 1994, and
requeot lo oubmitted within then at said office publicly
30 daya of the laauance opened and read aloud.
date; or the director revla·
The work covered by the
n/wlthdrawo the propoaed Contract Documents
action. Any per1on may Includes t.he following
eubmlt commenlll and/or a approximate quantities.
muting regarding lillY draft
Contract A
octlon witl1in 30 daya of the
lnst&lt;~lt
approximately
date indicated. "Action", 11 4,000 feel of ductile Iron
uaed 1bove doea not pipeline
lnctudll receipt of 1 verified
Equip three welts wllh
complaint. 11 algnlflcant submersible pumps, pltleas
public lntereat oxlato, • adapters, and valve vaulte.
public meeting may be hold.
Contract B
Aa to any action, Including
Drill and Test Pump, Two
receipt of verified com- 30" x 16" gravel packed
plalnta, any peroon may wells together with all
obtain notice of further necessary appertaining
actlona, and additional

-~·

I1VI

CONSTRUCTION

Public Notice

mation,

All
Blinds Are
Custom Made
to Windows

Whatever you want.

,_,.

~

ROBERT BISSELL

Aging, Inc. reaervee the

up part or their parade entry. Here the scouts
prepare to plant the tree in Racine's Star Mill
Park.

USED RAILROAD TIES

992-6597

Wednesday, July 20th. The
Meiga County Council on

$
That's easy.

992-2269

Phone

to Huntington District Corpa
of Engineero Pu~llc Notice
(H) HCOE-25001.
(7)71tc

I Love You.

What can you get with
aBankOne ·
Personal LoanS
M?

• UGHT·
HAUUNG
•RREWOOD
BILL SLACK

REWARD

Effoctlve Dale 06127/94
Receiving Watera: Ohio
River and Triba.
Thla final 1ctton not
preceded by propoaed
action and lo appealable to
EBR . Pertalna to 401

•

TREE PLANTING - After their noat won
third place in the patriotic category in the
Racine Fourth of July parade, Cub Scouts of
Racine Pack 241 planted an ash tree that made

Brown and
white Brittany
Spaniel.
Ave Pt. Area.
Name, Buffy.

Public Notice

65°/o 75%

Home
Service Day
or Night

SHRUI&amp; REI
TRIM•••
REMOVAL

11311 mo.

On Blinds
&amp; Verticals

Kayfa Jo Salser. daughter of
Mike and Kathi Salser, Middlepon,
celebrated her first binhday with a
Minnie Mouse party at he home
recently.
Allending were Mike, Kathi,
Michael and Matthew Salser,
Robert and Lucille Salser, Robert
and Lucille Lawson, Dcbi, Jeff and
Myca Michael, Rhoda and Michael
Depue, and Coclle Salser. Verna
Salser sent a gift.

,...,

LOST

Certification, grant. pertaina

Shop At

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
pers·onal protection,
kennel Hrvlce, pup1 &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
RoHweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

6/1MN TfJrt

End of Salem St., Rutland
Baby bed &amp; fumrtura , ping-pong
table, lots of children's clothes,
12 mos.-size 12. Toys &amp; mora!

So it's been hot. Remember
those day s last winter when the
temperature went to 25 and 30
below and you were snol!{bound?
Does that thought cool you off
any? Do keep smiling.
Bob Hoenich i~ a former gen.
eral manager and contributing
columnist to The Daily Sentinel.

Custom 'Window Coverings ~

TRI-STATE K·9
ACADEMY

949-2168

HUGE GARAGE SALE
JULY9-10

The red, white and blue bunting
used around the top of the stage at
Diles Park in Middleport for the
July 4th celebration certainly created a nice, patriotic touch to activities. Tom Dooley, who headed the
Middleport observance which had
~orne novel stuff this year, said that
the bunting was purchased for the
event by Feeney-Bennett Post 128
American Legion . It was take~
down and can be reused whenever
needed in the future.

.9l 'Ioucli of Cfass

KA YLA SALSER

..

tions arc
Some of these w1 be on display
at the Meigs County Public Library
the week of Jul y 25-31 at a model
train show wh1 ch is ope n to the
public and is free of charge. The
show will feature four to six operating layouts.
Hours of the show will be from
12 noon to 9 p.m. on Monday, July
25 through the following Friday
and from 12 noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday and from I p.m. to 5 p.m. on
Sunday,the final day.

Howard L. Wrftesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
GuUers
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Hollow Road, Rutland, Ohio
45775. Telephone (614) 7422411.
The Leading Creek
Co·nserv·ancy

No drugs or chemicals

All for about

one dollar a dayl

446-3896
Public Notice
reserves the right to reject
any or all bids submitted.
the
above
Further,

collateral

wll ~ be

ranties given.
more

information

contact Jeff Gilkey, at 9922136.
(7) 6, 7, 8 3tc

District

reserves the right to reject ·
Public Notice
any and all Bids or to - - - - - - - - Increase or decrease or
PUBLIC NOTICE
omit any Item or items
Soturday, July 161h at
and/or award to the lowest
10 :00 A.M., the Home
end beot BIDDER. Each National Bank, Third Street,

proposal must contain the
full name of every person or

company Interested In the
same . The Leading Creek
Conservancy
District

reserves the right to waive
any

informalities

or

Irregularities In the Bidding.
(6) 23, 30; (7) 7; 3TC
---------

Public Notice
"' PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby given
that on Saturday, July 9th,
1994 at 10:00 a.m., a public
salo will bo hold at 211 West
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
The Farmers Bank parking

tot, to sell for cash the
following collateral:
1991 Chevy S-10 Pickup
SNI tGCCS14E4M2146429
1992 Ford Aerostar Van
SNI 1FMDA31X6N2B26051
1986 Oldsmobile Calais
SNI 1G3NT27L7GM337499
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, Pome·

construction cost as of July roy, Ohio, reaerves the right

Racine, Ohio, will offer for

sale at public Auction, on
Jhe Bank parking lot the
following :
1991 Ntuan 300 ZX
Turbo,

Serial

Number

JN1CZ24H6MX502106.
1973 Mercedes Benz,
Serial
Number

1QZP4412011292.
lf99hlhevrolet Corlsca,

Seri I
Number
1GILT53 '!IM¥161800.
1984 Ford Bronco II,
Serial
Number
1FMBU14S3EUD02702.
1990 Ford Ranger pickup,

Serial
Number
1FTCR10A4LUB27395.
1985 Chevrolet Spectrum,
Serial

If you're like most people, you've got

some pretty big plans in mind this summer. And, if you need extra cash to put
those plans into motion, there's never
been a better time than now. Or a better place to get started than Bank One.

• An additionall/4% discount for automatic -~ayment deduction from a Bank
One checking or savings account
• No payments for 90 days.
• An ea~y. uncomplicated application
process.

Because when you apply for a Bank
One Personal Loan at Bank One before
August 31st, you can take advantage of
these special features:
• 1/4% disfo unt on current interest
rates.

You could have the money you need
right away. So don't wait Talk to our
loan specialist at any of our neighborhood banking centers today. Or take
home an application to complete before
August 31, 1994.

through ~onday

eash.

The Home National Bank
reser\18s the right to reject
any or all blels or to remove

any unit from the sale at any
time.

In order to Inspect any of
the above named property
prior
to the aale,

WATER'S EDGE APARTMENTS

Whatever it takes:

loans and indirect auto loans are excluded.

Memoc-.rntc

Over 62, diaabled or handicapped FmHA 1 bedroom. Rent. for SO to $405, baaed on _Income.
Range, refrigerator, carpet, ale, on olte laundry,
parking.
FmHA Rental Aaalatanc:e
Equal Houalng Opportunity

wood &amp; pine.

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

Call

3~.93

1 MO

liNGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:46p.m.
Spacial Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches ·
Sidewalks
Driveways
614-992-7878
SA 7 • Five Polnll
1/IJI. .

CLRSSIFIED RDS

Hank One, Alhens.NA

,.

'

"Look ror the Red and White Awning"

-carpentry

992-4119 AI Tromm Ow1er 1-80()-291-5600

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

•Rea1onabla Rataa

-20 Yeara Experience
•Freo Eathnateo

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

985--4111
2ml1 mo. pd.

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

JESS' COMPLETE

Box 189

AUTO UPHOLSTERY
headliners, seat
covers, convertible
tops, Antique Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boot Seats.
992-7587
414114 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, ,Ohio 45769

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843-5264

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(;

New Homes • Vinyl Sidin~ew
Garages • Replacement Windbws
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESI[)ENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

___ ___...

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

WHALEY'S AUTO

614·992·7643

PARTS

(No Sunday Calls)

Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
Limestone- Fill Dirt
Gravel • Sand
Leach Bed
Installation and
Septic Systems

Specializing in Cu stom
Frame Repair

&amp;14 -992-7878
SA 7 - Five Points

AU MAKES &amp; MOORS
992·701l OR

992-SSSl 01
TOIHREI 1·100.141·0070
DARWIN, OHIO
7131/IWTfN

lll.l'flfl

fondng Chain

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,

U'*·Wood
11141
lle&lt;Grallvo

Salosl1141

HEATING &amp;

lnstolatloa

COOJING

CaD Westen Auto
992-5515
Free Eslimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial

QUALITY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

ft..lJ-1 rro

TOP SOIL,

FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

Delivered
Locally
992-3838

2/12/12/tfh

NEW &amp; USED PARTS fOI

1112&amp;'TfN

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out or
painting. Let us do it
for

you .

Very

reas ·

onable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Aher6 p.m.
614-985-4180

3125194

3 Announcements

· SERVIa
614-11112-3470
Umeatone: 15 ton &amp;
up $10.50 ton; 15 ton &amp;
under $11 .50 ton
Top Soli $6.50 ton
Gravel $11 .50 ton- 7
Sand? - Low Rate•
And More
10 ton min. on oil.
6116/1 mo. pd .

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB
Home of the Eastern
Girls Softball Awards

.....

Golfu•sotu

6

For 175

Club Repair

614-985-3961
rnn mo.

SUMMER
IMAGES

Grounda.

Ro,gla1eratlon

Sun.

July 10th, 3pm-&lt;luok og..

16- $25
992·2487

6N1MO.

Onl Addl

8-

1o...ra. For Information, Sam Huge Sale: Frtclly
"'
son
.. '
Townhouae, At. 7, a. Cloltwa,
Gwinn, Dk'. 304-675-6804 Of 875- Baby Toddler Womena, Mana,

4405.
Toy a, Mloc:.
Chriallan lody, whllo, blonde :,A:.!u1~lo..::
nd:;:;;.Ya-rd;-;;:
:: Sa:;:l•::-,-;;B:;oh:;:lnd::;-:;T:;::ho
tlan companion 40 to 55 yean
ot age, wrtta lo: PO Box 7".Zg C,

hair, wt.135, Neklng male Chrta-

Gravel Pit, Depo Street, i-5
Frklay And Saturday, New Tupperware, Fumlture, Home Inter·
lor, lDla 01 Othor Good SluHt

HIV T1ellng and Coun..llng
Anonymout (Your Name 18
N1ver Aakedl. Planned Par.n!hood of Southa..t Ohio. For •n

Woril. Boote, Toys, Cloll••·
w1 0 OH Cor
1
Glauwtre, De It r,
Mill Cloee To Outll Creek
S..t~rday t A.M.-?

Pomoroy, Ohio 45768.

Appolntmonl,__Call 014-446-0166,
Galllpollo. AIIO
Avalloble II Pllooed Paron- - - - - - - - - !hood of Southoall a.to In
P1. Pleasant
Alhona ond logon. "SSIdl"9 Feo
Scale."
&amp; VIcinity

414 Second "'·

Giveaway

4

S.I•King A.. ldance,
Fl..., • Adame, Muon, July 1-8,

Garag•

3 PH Bull mtx pupploa, 3 block Rain or Shine.
and white ktttont to glveaw•'t·
Yord I Croft Soi•A1 35 Sou1h,
814-443-5161.
lml . ln!m llght 1 ~ghl olclo, watch
4 Month Old F1male Black &amp; tor algnt, Sunaav.
White Border Collie, All Shota,

Good Home, Family Mowing,
814-446-3851.
Ador~ble

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

puppla, 3 white, 4

black, pan Lab-Retriever·? J04..

882-3781.

Aullrlllan pupploo lo

good

homoo, 30~5-3648 .

••La,

3 tamlly yard
Rlggecrnc
Rd. 1bova E81rt•m High
School, July llh 1 lito, ~.
lelevlalon, golf clube, new
country cl'ltfte, new l uMd
cloth.., bookc._ cuba--wood,

FIM Killono 114-441-7
· Llrgo Dog 1 Yoar Old N Good Counlry Homo, Gtwat Wllh
Chlldrwnl814 388 8004.
new etuff enlmalel much more.
Pa~ Gorman Sllopord I Lib.
All Yard S.,_ Muat Be Paid In
304-875-1103.

814-3711-2545

Tlrn, four 6.. LT 215-85 AI&amp;. Five
LT 255-85 Rl6. Good !road, 304675-5110 0&lt; 304-8~3703.
White Slberan hueky, 3

yr. old;

Advance. Deadline : 1:OOpm lhl
day before lhl ad ll to run,

Sundoy odhlon- 1:OOpm Friday,
Mondoy odhlon 10,ooo.m.

S..turct.ro.

aale- Thul'ltday and
Friday,
•.-,
dlshea,
bedspruda, cloth•, mlae.

Porch

mlxod Slboran huaky pupa,
born 3-17-114, 111H41JI.3803.

38430 Bradbury Ad.- bootdo

Lost &amp; Found
Found' Black Dog, Uppar
S.cond Avonuo, Gallfpolle, 114-

F~day

6

~'1101 .

Loat dog: ml,.lu,. collie, brown

with while, anawlfW to the Nme
of Micky, 1o11 orr a bolt •
li11on levte SUndll't evening,
chllda pat, reword.

Loll: Brown Po~ Chlhua,:::!:i
Famlllee PM, Around S
OuNn Llundry Mat On Eattem
Avenue, 81~1 -1270.

7

TANNING
NEW BULBS
LOW PRICE

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

CAMP CANAAN will bo hold
July 1)).15, Maaon Co. ~

Evenlnge.

WICK'S HAULING

Yard Sale

7

Announcements

Puppl...

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

bridge, 8 :30-??

.

only- llrot houoo on
Belloy Run Ad. Kld'o clolhoa

wo,_.n•• cloehea, toya &amp; morw. '

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Rick Pel,..,. Aucllon Compony,
tun time eucttone.r, complete
auctkwl

HrVIce.

UcenMCI

166,0hlo I Wao1 Vlrglnll,
773-5786.

304-

A&amp;oct- 754-84OoCIIrI Bonded,
Click,
UcenM t

Col.

E.

304-llil&gt;-3430.

9 Wanted to Buy
Antique• Will buy one place or
onllrw houaoltold, Olby Mortin.
top dolllr pokl,l14-11112-'11141.
Cloon

Lito llodol

eo..

0&lt;

Trucka, 11187 llodolo Or - . . ,
llh, 8th, 8-5 571 Notl... p Rd, Smhh
Buick Pontiac 1800
OH Uncoln ~Ike In Centenary, Eaatom Avonue,
Galllpollo.
Paparbockl, CIOII11"9, II toe.
ALL Yard S.loa Muat Bo Poklln Decoraled eloneware, well , ....
Advance. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. . . , _ , old Iampo, old ,...,._
- old ClocQ, orolquo
thll day bltora lhl ad II to Nn. tumtlure. Rlv•ltw An11quee.
Sundar edition • 2:00 p.m.

Ru• Moore, owner. 114-te:z.
Fndoy. Monday ldhton - 2,00 2521.
We buy eeretea.
•
Donl
Junk n1 Sol! Uo Your NonBig 1 Fomlly O.rwge Solo'
llojor Applloncoa,
Thun. Frt, H, 7'811 IIIII Run, Working
Color
T. V.'a~ AolrlgOt01oro,
VInton.
p.m. Saturday.

Ff'Mura, VCH'I, Mlcrowavee,

Annw.l Community Y1nl
Soli: Friday, Saturday, July Blh
And lith. ,_hl"t For
Evoryonal
Extromoty Llrga 3 Family: 13111

Eur.U

clean1ng &amp; scotchgard • drapery
• uot1ols!lerv
fabric • general cleaning

N~ to

Mil thla property to
Open Houae Sunday, July 10 from 2 to 4
Located behind Rutland Grade School. 3 bedroom
home with all new carpet In bedrooma, nice lot In
good neighborhood. Very large garage, big btlth,
llll'ge living room. Come to Open Houee and make
offer. Phone 614-742·2620.

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM·'·
110 Court St. Pomeroy, O.h io

.Pointing
•Power W1ohlng •
cleano all exterlora
with hlgh preoaure
_
aproyer

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM FREE
(Carpal Cleaning Only-l\laxlmum 240 sq. ft.)

Read the

Made
o Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
o Free Estimates
o $200 Installed
Call For Details

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

111&gt;0112.01n

MARTECH
• INDUSTRIES

o Custom

614·682·7676

Real Estate General

-

Loans subject to credit approval. Offer good through August31. 1994. Offer applies to
Bank One Personal Loans only. Not valid with any other offer or discount. Mortgage

OPENING Ill JULY

614-949-2012 TOO 800-750-0750

BANKEONE.

July 11, 1994

Joe N. Sayre

J81 RF69R3F8432195.
Terms or the sale are

14, 19941&amp;:
to bid at this sale, and to
Contract A$606,500.00
withdraw the above arrang6mentl may be made
Contract B $ 95,000.00
collateral prior to sale. by catting 949-2210.
The Contract Documents Further, The Farmers Bank
(6) 22, 23, 24, 29, 30
may be e)(amlnad at:
Leading
Creek and Savings Company (7) 1, 5, 6, 7: 9TC
Conservancy District
34481 Corn Hollow Road
Rutland, OH 45775
44
Apartment
Burgess &amp; Ntple, Limited
5085 Reed Road
for Rent
Columbus. OH 43220 .
Copies of the Contract
Documents may · be

Read the Best Seller·

timber, all hard

Number

SYUCUSE,OH.

Get a Bank One Personal Loan before August31, 1994.·
And get the greatest deal of the summer.

Reasonable Rates

sold In the

condition 11 Is In with no
expressed or implied warFor

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Wanted to buy·
Standing

Country Una, July 81h, tlh.......
160 N. F- Holzar 1.1 lllleo,

Right On Coun1ry Llno.
Houaoholdl Some Fumhuro,
Boyo Cloth ng stzao 3-8.
Ganlgo Sole: July 71h, llh, tllh,
Nloe Uood Fumn..., T.V.'o,

Air

Condllionorw,

Drt..._ Copy
114-2A-12311.

Wuhon,

llochlnao, Etc.

J I D'o Auto Porta ond Solvoga,

atao buying Junk

304-mQ4S.

!'OIW

1 .trucu.

Wolf to buy Ml of • mobUo homo, 814-8112-805:1.

ra.

W.rlod To Buy: Junk Auloa
With Or Wlthoul Motora. Cell
LAny Lively. 814-381-11303.
Top Prtoeo Pold: All Old u.s.
~-· ~by~ Colna, Gold At~ Sllvor Colno,
o.J:•HtAch Et 8 titlloo n.t• Gold Coln1. IUS. Coin Shop,
Bullville '111m R~hl On K.- 1S1 Second A""ue, GaiUpollo.
Rd., 11t 111 1038,114--441-1004.

ca.- Sole: Thurw 71h, F~ llh, Employment Services

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE
4·7-1 t.IO

lotlllh. WOOiom 11oo1oa, Antique
Dlahoo, t Oilton Doalw Chum,
Clolhoo,
Dolla, ~-.Lolar-.
0111--t
111

HoUoa On Ulll K= Rood
r Htglt

~hooi.Oaoe To -

11 Help Wanted
AVON I AI Arwoo I Shlrtoy

Spoarw, 304-111-1421.

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

•

I

.

I

I

I

f

• I I

Classified Line Ads

3 papers

Tribune 446·2342 Sentinel992·21 56 Register 675·1333
11

42 Mobile Homes

AVON! AU ar.... Need extra

J1'0fleY or wane

1

ca,...r,

~tt.r

1-1100.11112-6356.

Acceptng IPPiicatlona tar u r·
vJC• etadOn at1endent, wrlta ..t.

t• etatlng quallflcallona to:
Dally Somfnol, P.O. Box '1211-G
Pomeroy, Ohio 45761.

'

Are you lnta,.ated In nural ng ?

..ur

aponaor 1 clua In Point
F'leuant to train you to bacorM
a~ Certified NuraJng Auiatant.
The training • frM It you m...
JTPA Tlt .. mguiOellnea u a dl•
located worker or dlaplacad
homemaker. For mont lnlorma-

S1

- - - - -· 814-2&amp;6-60811.
2 Bedroom Fumllhed Air, C.~
Avoliobio, Ovo&lt;looklng Ohio
River In Kanauga, FoMer'1
lloblio Hano Plf'k, ~14-446-1802.

GOOD USED APPU.t.NCES
w..tJer., dryers, ,.trtgera1cw-.,
Sl&lt;aggo Applllrleft, 711
VIne StrNI, Call 814-44&amp;-73U , 1·

1008.
2 bedroom

furnished, air,
waeher and dryer, $300/mo. plue

dapooll 1nd ullllllo•, 814-Duz-

5800.

tion call OOIIoct. 3(]4.343-1980. H

no anaw•.... va m...aga. EOE..

2 Bodroomo, N;, No Polo,
Dopooh
And
Ror.r.nc.a,
5400/llo., W""""!; Dryor; 2 Bedroom HouH, t-umlahad, No
Polo, $350/Mo. Dopoolt, 814-7W'

AVON SELLS ITSELF! Polonllol
Eomlngo $200 -$2,000 Monlhly,
S.ll AI Work, Homa, And Mall
.O.dor. Frwo Trolnlngl HIOO.~·
4738.

4345.

3 Bodroomo, Bolh 112, 114-28&amp;1857.

0551.

Drive,. - loom Operation Will

Accept Single Orlvara Or Tum,
Home Woekendlr, ...,_hh Care
Plan, 1--100-362-6685.
E.am ThouNnde S1ufflng En-

velapee . Rush $tOO And A S.tt

lldd.-od, Stamped Ellvolopo:
Name, Addrese To: Hall'a E,...
1orpri,.., P.O. Bo• ~ Ap~rova,

w... VA 25502.

"H e say s 1t" s go1n g to ra m

t ry1 n g to make u s Jea lou s wdh h1 s ne w yac ht 1..

11

31

Help Wanted

Stale Approvad Nuralng ANi•
tanta : Scenic Hilla Nurwfn; Cantar 11 cwnnur S..klng The
S.rvlcn Of FuJ Tlma Anit Part

TJma Nur~lng Assl.-antlt {FuttTimo: 2 P.M. ·10 P.M . l 10 P.M. •
8 A.M.) IPort·Timo: 5 A.M. -II
.t..M. &amp; 4 P.M. -II P.M.) lnlorwlod?

Appllcallono Avollablo Mon .fri
1:30 A.M. -1:30 P.M. 311 Buck·
ridgo Rd, Bid., Ohl 45831,
"'Uall!y Coro ThrU T N S.H.N.C. Ia An E.O.E.

Homes for Sale

Cozy 3 Br. Ranch, Spacioua,

Modem KhchenbFamlly Room,
Bultt-ln
Wood umer,
Deck.
Pool, 2 Cor G1rogo, tf.l A&lt;ro l.ol,
Close to Town, 1~2 Adelaide Or.,
114-446-0618 Aftor 4:30 p.m.
for oolo by ownor- log homo,
1880 oq. ft., lull biiHmonl
W"I'Jamlty room woodbumer 3
i!lidroomo, 2 kHcho01, 3 both•.
CIA! central vaecum, c.thederat
cell ng. Ilona fireplace , large

dock,

32x56

.. ...,building

wlheated wark room, 2+ ac,.• In
wooded arM ctoM to lawn,

Molgo SchOOl Dlolrlct, doytlmo
814-992·2318, ovolng 814.11112·
7133.

New ranch llyla home Plante
IUb-dlvlslon, 3br., 2 bllth. atone
on Iron! I dock, ohtlng on 2

lolo. 814-446-1433.
Two ltory houaa, I

roome,

laundry room •nd bllth, 1 acre
of (ll'ound, 814-JII2-2m.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
'17 3 bedroom, 2 bolh c...,.
modore mobile home, 14170,
hao 1o bo movod, undorploolng,
$Q800, 814-114:U106.
121180 1IIJII Kirkwood 2 Bidroom!. Eloctrlc,_Conlrol Air, Uka
New 1 "';;'/~ UU1 VInal Underploolng,
11-4175.
4

don'

Horl1a Fanno now

Sowmlll
1he mill ]uot

hl~ng .

Pick
up oppllcoiiOM during otoro
...,._ 10:00otrM!I:GOpm, Mondoy llvough SoiUrday ond

121160 Mlclond, :Z br, In long
Bonom, Ohio Mo'&amp;~~·!J S560d;
good condhlon, 8
198.
11170 12 • 16, z br. ,..dy to
move, •eking mat., mull Mil,
11160, 814-11112,.1114 oftar 1:30
pm.

=

noon-!pm on Sundaya.

1m 12xl6 Down mobl homo,
cond., $2000. 30U715-

44

Apartment
tor Rent

poll, 814-lm-2211.

2bdrm. opll., tolal oltoclrlc, • .,.
pllancoo lumlahod, ilundry
~hool
In t-n. Applicolionl ovollablo
ol: VHI•g• GrMn Apll. .., 9 or
room tacllhl• clou to

e~~lt 814-112-3111. EOH.

Zbr. opl., Muon, WV, portly
utllhln

nlahed,

r..-

Included,

S Aoom8 Fumllhed, Upetalre
Apartment, No Pete, Olllltln

P11d, 04 l.ol:uot 1250/Mo. 1100
Dopooll, 814-4*-1340, 114-44638111.
5 Room Apartment, Second
Avonuo, Galllpollo, 814-4460542, 814-317-oz21.
Fumlahod EfflcllnCy 1165/Mo. .
UIIIHioo Pold, She,. Balh, 807
Socot1d Avo:!. Galllpollo, 814-4464418 Aftor 7 ~.M.
Fumlallod Enlcloncy 7V1 follnh
Avonuo, Golllpcllo, 1220/Mo.
UIIIHioo P11d, 814 Ul U18 Aft1r
7P.M.
Fumlahod Efflcloncy 120 Fouflh
Avenuo, GoUipcllo, 1195/Mo.
Utllhl• Paid, BU 416 4416 Aher

~:"s':id ':';l:.h"=l~

Noodod .full limo Workoro FO&lt;
Day Coro Con1or. Muol Bo At
1..oa11 18 Yoon Old And High
School Groduo1o. Pr•lor Pocplo
With Experience Workln11 With
Chlklren. Sand Rnume To Oa'-

Naollo Tribuno CLA :118, 825
l'hlrd Avo., Gollfpolll, OH 45631.
NMded: Someone To Mow
Lawno WNkly, Will Provide
Lawn Uowar, WMdeater &amp; Gae.
H lmo-od Coli Monday 814441.01111, C.n Come I Vlaw Yard
1 WIU Dlocuoo Paymonl
Ownar!Oparatot"W
Conlrwl Fralglrl COrrloro lo
hiring ollporioncod 0/o'o to Nn
flatbed, urn porconlago of
groa r.venua pulling company
frallln or pulllng own trailer,
hMlh lno..,once wldoniOI I viovoiiOblto, baoo pl•t•
avolablo, bol&gt;4oll lnouranco
awalabll. tu.l card 1ptam,
eettlemanle,
rider
~nm, timo homo. 1-1100.22().

waekty

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
rwc:ommoncto thot you do buofn - with pooplo you knft and
NOT to oond money through the
mall until you hiMinv•trgatad
the offorlng.
VENDING ROUTE: Won, Got
Rich Qulc:k. Wilt 0o1 A Sloody
Cooh lnco""'. Priood to Soli. 1'800-1120-4353.
..,

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

13 A&lt;:roo And Bern 3
Bodroorno, 1 1&gt;2 Bothe, LA,
Khchon,
Utility
Room,
Dootble
Ownerf()paratont
Gorogo I Povod Drlv-•r For
CaniMI Fr11lght Corrlo,. lo now SolO
By Owner, 814 Ul 0631.
hiring In tho van dlvlalon paid
loodM 'Or omply mllos unloocl- 3br. home, Leon, new FA furlng poy, otop poy, hoaHh ln- • - I AC. Aloo, 3 otory block
8UI'IAea wldental &amp; vl•n aviiibuilding, lncluclod. 127,600. 304UIO. -...u lnouronco avaf. 458--1i48, Stan.
· ·~
UIO, IUol card oyslem. co. pty
3br.
,.nc:h,
Golllpollo
fflny,
call
1o11 oyotom prompt ond ooOUfltte ww~tly eetttemante, rkllr for dotllla. 304-11711-3328.
~nm, dmo homo. 1-IIOQ.ZI(). 4 Bodroomo, 2 Blory N;, 2 112
Bothl, LA, DR, FA With FPhEotln KHchWI, Doolrobio Nolg bo&lt;POSTAL JOBS
111.41/ltr., fDr o..m ond hood, Clooo HMC, 814-446-1415.
lll)llllcoUon lnR&gt;. can 2111-7111111»1 ut WV541, llom-llprn,
a-Frl.
Boloe .......,.nt F,.~Timo, Ugflt
Olftoo Dutloe, Apply In Poroon,
flfdoy, July ath ~ Ori1y I A.ll 4
P.ll. lottono -ring Aldo Cona., 1112 Elllem Avenue, 0..
ltpollo, No P - Col11 PI.. N.
BomJ.Iruck wJioa t,.lor lor hlro.
Al1raa1 -lldV~ In
304-1182-:zso.t or1182-3121.
thlo nowapoperlo aubjod 1o
thO Fodoial Folr Houofrl(l Ad
TRUCK DAIVERB
ol1968 which malioo Mlllogol
1olldVortloo "any p.,onnco,
' Al8 You I.DDIIIna For:
lmltallon or cl8ctlllll• StoodY Paychock
bued on l'OCII, color, rolglon,
•IMUfW'Mie
sex famllll-u• or Milo,_
• Paid V..tlono And Holldoyo
otlgln, Of ony lntontlon 1o
makellrf IIUCh protonnco,
lmllallonor-lon."

··-·
·R-

Allonllon ·16x80 Avolilbio In W. VA. -MI. Stoto
Ho""!!. Pl. Plouant, W. VA. •
:ro..ar,..MIIO.
F- Cortt,.l Air· Ffoo Air On
Any New Slr!ile Soction Homo
In Stock- MI. Sl•t• Homoo, Pt.
P1-m, W. VA. 30U715-MIIO.
Save $5,000.C. Nonie 28x72
Dflploy,
Don,
Fl,.':'"~
Morning
Room

Soc:tlono1

-Aoduc
$5 000.011 • Franch
CHy Mobllo 1/CiiiH • Ootllpolla,
OH 114-416-11340.

34

Business
Buildings

COMMCERCIAL PROPERTIES
FOR SALE IN JACKSON
COUNTV1 _OHIO: Alrplono Hong.- On ... ...,.. Mil; 2 Apart·
mont Bulldlngo On I 1&gt;2 Acta
MIL; 12 Lano -lng Alloy. Coil
BIU Connell At Donno s.......,.
AMity · 114-3114-11:111.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

1 AdJoining ~ 2 AcrM. An To
Go To 1 Buyor. All Utllhl•
Avalllible,l1t W.3e57.

Alllo

Sholl

.,

W.-oJ!Z..-...
......
...... 11,
•. buildinG
=~.'otoll·

good •il

Wanlod To luy: Lot 1 Aon Or
lion, Coli Alhir I P.M. 114-4417567.
Wantod to buy. or - .
oulfabfo to build on ond
to • blecfdop . - . 114Mt-2481.

Rentals
41

Housas for Rant

1 Bod- In Gol11patlo,
4 Whllo Av.,,., tl7li/IIO Or
1:160 With Utllltloo Paid, h4-4461172.

T'* 011.._ wll not

.,.._,..Ina.
~77£011132
fjo~ln,WV

EOE

b-.

=--

Nice :Z lledroan, 4 1&gt;2 Miloo
Front
Golllpollo,
Stov1,
RohigorotO&lt;, w..., fumlahod,
I25Q'IIo,

No,.... 114 441 1031

Kitchen C.blnete. 114 418 8308,

1-1100.287-6301.
Z Bod,_. Mobllo Homo For
Aonl On Bladon R..d R=l•
·
- Coon
Engilah:
11177 Doa
JuldlPup •
Avenue For &amp;ala, 114.a&amp;l-8180.

2 boxoo of IIdia unlh&gt;rmo,
muot taka oil, 11-12 up 1o 15-18,
814-11112-64511.
3 P'- lctl e-m Sot, 114-24506tCL
3 Ton llobllo Pod&lt; Air Condhlonor lnotollod, Flnonclll
Avalloblo, 814-14&amp;-43011, 1 217-0308.

3 Uood Braoo Colllr!i Fano With
Ughll, 814-245-8773.

50 Whho Doll "-• t0"X6" 1Z
·18 R. Long, 1114-37NT.IO, Altar
I P.M.
Air Condhlonor lor Solo, oloo
Waohor, Dryor, Rolrlgorator,
Froour col1114-:z56.1238.
Coblnot model olocl~c Blngor
mochlno, llko tMW, 1100.
304-67&amp;-2181.
Collor ID bo1, 14 momory, brand
- · $43.1111, 114-11112-11118.
Computor-Applo llo, dlk
drive, monHor, IOftwarw l

_,"i

g.,.,..,

w/ or wlo Panuonlc

'primor. 304-676-31:11.
Concnlo . I Plutlc Soptlc:
TonkaL 300 Thru 2,000 Gallotw
Ron •vono Emorp~- Jor:flooo, OH 1-110~37..528.
Doop Fr""::S-!I:Z:Z CU. Ft. Rune
Good, 814210.

Draii'!V T1bloo, Prolaoolonot
Sla, Oito Wood, Ono BINI With
7 Lot Dnworo, 814--13.
Qo.kolt, J.hp, Brlggo wlolohol
corll. 11110, 114-91W879 ., 1140411-2041.
Homemado Wolght llollch, With
8.,..11, Dumbollo, And ApproL
180 lbo Of Wolghta,l30, 8f4.3711.

Nlctl Ono BR Untumlollod
Apott--.
Ringo.
Ro!Jig. 2788.
Ptovldod. Private
':;'.~~
Watar, Gorllogo Paid.
Hondo
250$7110.
ATV304-6711-1242.
th- - · ·
Roqulrod. 4-.o341 Altar ...
cond,

ep.m.

Ono bedroom, oil utf1Hioe fulo.
nlahod, $2-, 814-04-:ZS.
Sun Yolloy Apia. 1BR $251.
mont1t + Otlllfo8.

Do-'1

Rio

qulrod. ~"::Z Somo1hlng
Avolloblo. I
2987
1Wo 1 bedroom lumllhod

Mkld'-".ahaOhio,
114-11:1-5304 cr 814-lia.S:
45

Furnished

Rooms

-·All-.. .

1811, Mo_, WV.

46

Space for Rant
3 A - Olllco Sullo With
Ptlvalo Toilot In lloclom Fin
Proolllda: Cal MOf!lo lloeldno
'" . . . . Or114-441o2812.

Kid!• CTF opookar box! 2 10"/2
I"/ Z. 2"118" homl, otll In box,
$300, 114-11112-6173.
KLLSBUGS
and doodorlao TOOl ENFQR.
CER
COUNTRY
FRESH
FRAGRANCE Pool Control
Ptoducto
an
GUAfiAM.
TEEDIAYI I1bto ot: Pl. PI-nt
c::o.op, 15tt Konawlla It, Pt.

S.arw Air Conditioner, 21,000

BTU ~00, 514-24W811.
STOR.t.GE TANKS 3 000 Gollon
Uprigh1, Ron Evan• Entorpriooo, from. Alhono, OH. 1114-58:1-87:16
or 7'112-25411.
Jlckaon, Ohio, 1~7-Q528.
Tappon •loctrlc ..ovo; GE 64
Hay &amp; Grain
ro~lgo,.lor; 1150 lor both, 814- -::-- -,..,..:.-..,......,...-,.,.-,.048-.2528.
10 round boloo of mlxod hay lor
UGLY DECK OR FENCE?
oolto, opprox. 18001bo. Nch, In
Mlddltopcn, coli 614-!NI5-3J47.
R..aor. waod dackl&amp; flncw to
llka now condhlon wHh..., Hoy, llrwl cunlng, 11.00.f1.75 par
ocrubblng with ENFORCER bolo. 30U715-1876 onytlmo.
DECK CLEANER. Avall1bio at:
Thomoo DcHI Conlor, 1711
Transportation
Mc:Cormlc:k Rd., Golllpoi'-.
Uood Solu $75 Eoch, 814-378:mo, All• 6 P.M.
71 Autos for Sale
VoH Motorized Tread mil, c:om. .,.,.,.,...,...--.-.,.,..,,----pulortzod Progrommlr!i1_AdJ.,. 1963 Plymouth Valilm convor·
loblo Spood And Holg,.,
Uka tlblo, complotoly -orwd, all
$300, 8~211111.
· ~1, 8 ely, outo, rod wlbl if&gt;.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
' $8000, I14-04~B77.
200 PSI. 11US; 1 Inch 200 PSI 111611 ChovoUo Body Whh Now
$32.50j Ron Ev•na Enta,...-. Body Porto, $700, 1114-317-4506.
114-211&amp;-5130 Jockaon, Ohio
1987 Comoro $3,7VO, 814-4-11·
KILLS FLEAS!
0738.
Buy ENFORCER Floo Kllioro lor
polo homo I rord. GUARAN- 1VII Buick Rogol, V-11, f!,OOO,
TEEb offoctlvo Avolloble at: 304~7$-2352.
Point Ploaunt Co-op, 11111 1m Z-21 Clmero wiT-tope, air,
KanawhiSL, Point Pluant.
1mt1m canetta, new engine.
1i81 Pon11ac Gr1nd Prix, aulo,
55
Building
PW, PB, PS. 3a..a75-3298.
Supplies
1981 Falrmonl, Rune Good, New
Block, brick, - • plpoo, wlndowo, llntolo, otc. Claude Wln-

eos ~·-~·- ~ "'~-~
-··
...- trade
a
n
t
s
:
=
hot••hold
. Wll buy

TroiWSpooo,:Z t121111a0nll. any ~IICII
Cnlk ROod, 114-446-10112.
8ocond •••
0....
lloclly Peorooo.
q Wanted to Rent
Roaliotlc
91- • • .,.._

AKC OoldWI Rotrlo- to. .lo
Pupoloo, Roldy July lllh, f150
EAch, J50 D-N WIN Hold,
814-388-1:143 Altar I A.M.

nleo P1oyera.
AIU'II Rodlo,
Dual ,_.,.,
ca-e
Tumlablo.
ol UkaHow, 1100.1~ ·

114-lltlao
llryora, AI AIODndtlonlcl
Wanlod To Alnt: ClaiNo Locol And Gauntnt- 1100 And Up,
Adul Nlctl For :OWUI:'::"Doll;.:.':-:v;.:.•;.:.·lt;.:.4;,U:.:.;..ti;_;4,;.41.;;_,..-::-:-:LIHo, 114-141-MU, Lave .... Riding!"-"', lluno Good, 114-

~

Cruise,

lota Of New

-go.
101111 Dodae Omnl, $600 obo,
814-1185-3505.
111111 She- 7QO Low
Mila, Now Tlra, Shift Drive,
Auno GrMtl $1,500, 814-24511558, 814-446-1513.

AKC rogloterod :Z yr old molo
19811 Chovrotot Coltobrlty, 4 dr.
Sholtlo1 _~oo. noodl •
Mdan, axtr11 na. one owner,
homo. -.0715-5411.
oxcollont condHion, ol opllona,
AKC AOJIIII-.1 B - Howld 12100, 814-111:1-6111.
Puppioo," l Wooko Old Wl1h
Sholo, 1121, 814 ua 3354.
1887 lroc Bloc• With T·To.,.,
Powor Evwythlngl L.oto Of &amp; ·
AKC Aoglo1orod moJo Mlnloturo trul $5,000 DBO, 114-3711-2113.
Dobormlin
Plnochor, oppro•. 1 1187 Pontile Turbo Grand Am, 2
yoor old, 814-1111:1~131.
Door, Loodod, 80,000 lllloe, 614AKC RoglotMlnloluro 1 448:.::.·.::11::68::·_ _.,..,.,_ _ __
Schnouz• Pupploe, Coli FO&lt; 1Gnat Prlco, 814-38-, 114- 1187 Toyoto Mit! Excoilonl
387-1371.
. Condition, 1 Owner, 114-387-

~21~·~--~----------

ON IN

AKC Yol1ow Lobo Wormod Fila!
Sholl. Will bo Aoody 111, i'oldr!i
Smoll Dof:." Coil Aft1r 8p.m.
114 :1181 ·
•
CFA ~rod Hlmoilyon kittono-6~ 5-27-04, 1150, 114111:1
·
filii Till. I I'll Shop, 2413
olackaon Avo. Point PINaant,
304-675-:1083.
AO(I. Cockar $50, I yr old
t.rn.le. cnam, I yr. old mea.,
buft, 814-6118-38113.

fiT

7352.

I:.:=--------1888 llorr.na, wrockod, will ootl
Ffor.::.::part~e,=304:.;.,:~:=:75:...11:,:88=-.--:-::,..-,,1988 Toyoto Mit!, 5opd., CC, AC,
AD,.;=., T4opo, $51100. 3041:882===·- - -- - -11111 Probe S:Z,SOO. 11117 Pontloc
SE 11,11111. 11117 Blazlr $3,11115.
11111 Chov S10 14,2150. 1188
Alngor 12,815. 11187 F150
$3,ZOS. 11111 VW ololta 11,185.
1181 Cormoro T·Topo 12,1185.
Como Polo Dhllngor now
monagor. 8cottlo'1 UMd Cora,
KovWI, WV. 304-882-31&amp;:1.
11911 Nlooon pick up w/cap I
11/C, l'lldlo, $3190, 114-1112-2082.

Musical
Instruments
Plono for ail, ehorry ftnllh,. 11111 Pontile Grone! Am L.E, ' aood. condkion, $400, 814-11112- Mila, For Mon lnlo, lf4.446.
1134l
:1'1154 Aft• 3 P.M.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

111:1 Accord Chomr Rod
8 Spood, Colt Aft1r I P.lll. 11411800211

61 Fann Equipment

800

_,_...,_·•*

Cytt-.

.,..........
12

Trucks for

Sale

1113 Ford ton truck- cattlo
raoko, VI. good araa. Nrw
aood. ......... body worlt,
11oo0. lOt Ill 3411.

73

Uveatock

Vans &amp;

39 A ct o f d o 1ng

An swe r lo Prev 1o u s Puzzle

(s uM .)

PHILLI P
ALDER

A Q ]IJ !) J
• t\ ti )
t K .J ·1 ~

EEK &amp; MH: K
' '

I

4 wo·s

... J

.

D:::N T ASK
DOIJ T Tt:.L

• 11 ' i • ~ IJ H ~

7 t

] I!

• &lt;i 1 n n
~

4 A

t.

• .\

',l

:;

SOl Til
• A h .J

(U/5/N£ -

L __ __ ,
__.-:__

~~

~)

\'

•

7
. MIL/TARV J

• l) .I

_____ -

• j 4
... K () Ill K t;

iii l l l / 1 1 1[11 1. [ [ 1 [ 1 1 ~ 1 1 1 I•
i

40 Mes hes
1 Obs erve d
4 An cie nt Ce ntr al 41 B lueg ra ss State
43Type of
Ameri can
videota pe
9 Hawaii an tree
12 Baske1ball org 45 11 f o ll ows Fr1
46 Nears1g ht ed
13 Anoint
p er son
14 TV netw ork
49 Enco unters
15 Ex pose to
53 Inte nti on
rad ioac ti v ity
17 W1de shoe size 540f two parts
581m• ta le
18 Meas ured the
59 Emeral d c olo r
duratton o f
60 Rece nt (p reI )
19 Act s
6 1M al de 2 1 Legal malt er
62 Un ca nny
23As far - 6J V1per
know
24 Wo rd puz zle
29- Foxx
DOWN
32 Ac tress ~Fra nc i s
1 Fit o l anger
33 Co mmoti o n
2 Bom b shelt er
34 Great L ~ k e
3 So m ewhat hot
35 Compos er 4 Craz 1es t
Str avm sk y
5 South ern
37 Wa x
b lac kbir d

6 Cry o l

9 Leg jo int
10 Kin g Dav ld ·s
g randfather
1 ~ Hi g h ca rds
16 Of ai rcr aft
20 Ire land
22 1nves tme nt s
23 Oa k nut s

aff ir m al ton
7 Model Caro l 8 Necess ita tes

Vuln erab le• Both
Deu ll'r South

BARNEY

THANKY FE R TH'
CUP OF' TEA,
LOWE EZ Y

S uuth
1 ~T

Wt· ~ t

~

•

E a ~t

l'a.., . .,

\i orth
~ 4

l \ 1s:-.

:\ :\T

Al l pa ss

24 Rel a1ed
25 Ca nar:y' s
ho me
26 Hindu peasa nt
27 - fi xe
(o bsess ion)

P a ~...,

Ope nin g lead : , li

29 ~

-912~511.

By Phill ip Aldt•r
1984 s-10 Blozor Tahoo1 "_C, PS,

PB, 11,900 miiM, $38,000 finn.

304-476-2523.
19811 Dodga Ram Van~ 80,000
Mlln, $4,1)00; Con Be , _ At:
Golllpollo Dally T~buno, 825
Third Avonuo, Golllpolll, 814448-2342.

74

Ford I'Z80, 100 • cyf.,
out-tic.
-tlnio,
- MiliOOO
wltti
bfuo lntollor,
,_

........-......

llllla,MIDO,--

..

Motorcycles

1880 KowoNk LTO
cond, 1700. 011 beet
882-3731.
1981 CM 400 Hondo
304-675r32!18.
1881 Honda CB650,

440, ..c.

ott.r. 304-

ot,.olblko.
N - No

temator, $325, 814-446-3040.
1982 Honda Cuatom Excellent
Condition, Shah Driven, ov.,...
drive, $1,200, 814-388.fJOOI.

a-•.

1985 Honda 250 Four Trax, rune
$1600 l~m. 304-

ond looka
773-511111.

.•

75 Boats &amp; Motors
1988 F0&lt;1r Wlndo, 1T,110 hp,
horizon tcp, $5000, 814-0411-2127.
1987 18' ChaUon okl boot, 130
hp, Inboard mare, cruiMr, good
condition, $6000, all coaat
guard required equipment, 114llll:z-6544.
•
BOlton Whaler 100 HP Johnton

17 Ft. Trolling MotO&lt; Groot Fltolllng Bootl $2,200 NO(I. 614-4468024.
Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Prlcod Tronomloolono,
r.bullt, 111 typo•, ...,._
lng 1t 161; owner 814-241-1177,
814-378-2935, 814-3711-2263.

u..a •

Now t1nka, ono loft 1ruc:k
whaelit. r.dlatora floor mate,
ole. D l R Aulo, R{ploy, WV. 304372-3133 0&lt; HIOG-213-1328,

79

I

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1972 Dodgo Con1onlill compor,

26tt., ganerator, AC, retr1aw11or,

1&gt;,.

ASICS. ,,

Dr

for Sale

76

Yes te rda.v I gav e a d eal m wh1eh
II was log ic al for th e d e clare r l o
sta rl w1th a li ne"e If I ha t fm esse
/'. 7
won. h e w o uld a dopt on e lin e o f
pl ay: if 1t lo st. h e w oul d foll ow
a noth e r.
Today' s d eal is n't like th a t. but
1-7
TELL HIM WE DON 1T
it
s
ti ll r e qull'cs log ical thinkin g to
AND TO SEND US
gel hom e s afely . How s hou ld South
M1 55 HIM.AND WE DON'T
SOME COOKIE S..
plan t h e pl ay in thr ee n o -trump
CARE IF WE NEVER SEE .
aft e r Wes t lead s th e diamond s ix"
141M AGAIN!
Som e a uthoriti es say ~h a t yo u
s ho uld n e v e r op e n on e no -t rump
w i th a hand conl a 1n 1n g a low
doub le ton . I di s a g ree . Suppose yo u
ope n one club with th a t South ha nd
a nd pdrtn e r r es pond s nn e
di a mond Wh a t do vou re b1d '' One
no -trump is u balf und e rbid ; two
no·t r ump is as bad a n ove rbi d . Yo u
have no a cc urat e r ebid available.
IF~R~A:::N:_::K~&amp;~E:::_:R:::N:_:E::_:S:_'T:__ _ ______________ _-:--:-:---:---:---:-::---,
Tru e . h e r e thr ee no t rump is
7
.bette r if playe d by North . But one
MA~Y H·L~N (j,
DtA~
r/ll'llt,
e xample proves noth ing . Wh e n y ou
~
~
hav e a b a la nced hand m th e n g ht
f:/lN
1"
fl
"' ~
range. o pen o n e no -trump . It will
IU ,
sa vr you a lot of h ea daches
) ~
At tri c k on e. South fin esse d
PSYC.HIAT~IST,
( fi,
· dummy 's diamond jack. lo s in g to
AN$W~rS
---..
~ ~ Eas t 's a c e Ba c k cam e th e di a
n..__.
~'
ru.:.
A[)
' mond nin e . Wes t c ar eful ly over ~
YOU~
•
~"4
r'., /lOrt
0 taking with th e to . De clare r wo n
f'/O,MAN
~ wi t h dummy 's kin g and p la ye d a
., u
~
o club . but We s t won wi t h t h e a ce
Or- fi0M,; ·
~ and ca s h e d hi s diamond winn e r s :
one down .
=.......;~~~~~~!!!1.-------------Jf South look hi s d e fe at philo s ophic ally, but. a s Bertrand Rus ~
BORN LOSER
se ll wrot e. "Philo s ophy is an un ~
v
~
usually ingemou s atte mp t to thmk
l '1EeR YOV \lOt-\ Tfi E. LODE.RY,
f\EY. BUWY OOY.
fallaC IOUSly ."
ELMO OOY, ) 01',£ GUYS f\IWE
UX.K MD NOTI\IN:_'L---~
If only South had p lay e d a low
1
dia
mond from th e dummy a t trick
\0 DO WtT f\ IL .
ALL Tf\£ LUCK
on e , nothing n as t y cou ld hav e
II Wi&lt;.&lt;J S\RilTL Y
dev e loped. At t he wor s t, th e
~ I LL 1 [ ~DDfD
d e fender s would hav e got four
t r ic ks; and w ith thi s layout South
uP D\( DIGITS
m ight have e nd e d- w1th an
OF MY Pl10t-.IE
overtrick.
NUM&amp;.R ,

It,
COMIC. fniP

/

- -._
~
U
..

v,uAT
A
PSYCHOf' Ai!·l!"

OUfSTIONS

r;"

BATtS

TO

otovo. 5:1500. 30U75-2444.
1IIJII zm. Titan tnciO&lt; homo,
fully ooll-eontolnod, gonorolor,
1lr,
,.trlgaratorlfr-.zar,
microwave, mauve Interior,
51,000ml, -dy for rood, $8500.
304-117$-2041.
1884 28 Ft. Nomod Compor, 814387.(1558.

5) ) ~ 1 ( 1 ]

July 7, 1994
r--- -

TOOAY'S HISTORY: On this day m
- - - ---, 11987. Lt . Col. Olive r North began his

testimony at th e House Iran-Contra
TODAY ' S BIRTHDAYS : Gustav
Mah ler 1t860 ~ 1911l. compose r; Marc
Chagall 11887 ~ 19851. a rti s t : Geor ge
Cukor 11899· 198 31. film dir ec tor ;
Satchel Paige lt906 ~ 1982l. bas ebal l
great; P1erre Cardin 1192 2~ 1 , fashion
designer, is 72: Doc Severinsen 11927·1,
mus ician, is 67; Ringo Starr lt940 ~ ! .
mus ician, IS 54; Shelley Duvall11949-o,

11185 Cimarron t,.vel t,.lter, 28',

dual tanka, 110 1: 12 volte, tKuf..
lod right aldo, $6000, 814-0411ZIIOO !Ia~ Of 814-0411-:ZS..
IYOnfOJII.

Z3 Ft. P'-"1• Compor, Duoi
Alllo, Sioepo 8 11,200, Or Oflor, IM-3711-i'r.IO Aft• I P.M.
Ohio Rlvor Compgrounda now
cpan ond tor Nlo, 114-11411-:11121.

~~~~~::~::~~actress. is 45

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonal illotlme guaront... l.oeal rafaranc• fumlehed.
Coil 1-II00-287.o5711 Or 114-:1370481 Aogoro w..orpooollng. &amp;.
tabllahod 1175.
C&amp;C
Go01nl
Homo
Molnlononco- wollpopor, otonn
doMe, -ling and comploto
homo npolr, comploto
npolr, _ , . wolhlng and
mobllo homo .. polr. For Ira ...
llmoto coli Chot,IM-III:I-11321

GLUt:. HtY Wt'Rt. O£A\.iNG ¥11TH
iRI&gt;.I'S7 BRAIN'! f&lt;\\Ct. ~t:RE' VJf.\EN

1\Rt.\l'T
THI.JS E

IHE GO\ NS
1HE 10 1JGh

GUS TOUGH
Gt:T G0',N6

RG AliATE? t'MONr 6~
RH,liS': IC ' f\0'1&lt; COULl)
P.. t-1\0IJSE ~OSSI \3l'i . 7

K•.NO OF
C.'i&lt;UEL?

w,_

CUrtla Homo l m - o . No
Job Too Bla Or Sm11~ Yooro Exoorlonco bn Otdor !Nowr
r.-. AddHiona, F-.dotlona,
Roofing,
KHchono /Botho,
RopiacOIIWII Win-. lnaurod,
Frwo Eotlmola.l14-381.o111.
JIE Homo Molntononco- pointIng, vinyl aiding, roollr!i lnd
d'Y"'oll. FrM Mlfmota, IM-111124232, IOk for Joo Of EoJI.

ASTRO-GRAPH

\Ion s 10day by m cultng $ 1 .25 to Astr a ·
Graph. c l o this n ~ w s paper , P .O . Box

4465. New York. NY 101 63 . Be sure 10

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

wtllingn ess to 01:: coope rattv e. they 'll do
the sam e S P.! good e xampl es and see
for yo UJ se lf.

state your zod1ac s1gn .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) II you feel

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) 'Nhal you se1 oul

you shou ld be rewarde d for someth tng
you recently dtd do n't be alra td to blow
your own horn . The fact you haven "! been
prope rly acknowledged could JUS! .be an
ov erstght

to do can be accomplished today . but you
mu st be te nac tous , perstslent and pre·
pared to make changes whenever condt·
tion s dictate

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In deal •ng

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Ac1iv o11es

Ron'a TV s.Mce. eptc'a~
In ZonHh aloo oonrlclr!i
othor bntndo. llouoo calla, a1oo
..... IPPiilnco _.... wv
304-II1N3II Ohio 1,._2414.

wtth pals today . p lace friendship above
desires of a materia l nature . If you follow
tht s formu la. you could denve plea sa nt
unexpected rewards .

that are likely to gi ve you th e greatest

82

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Amb111ons can
be lullilled loday 11 you 're Willing lo pol
lorth 1he effort required. You m1gh1 have
to carry 1he whole load you rself. so don:r

Plumbing •
Haatlng

Frwomon'a Hating And Coollr!i.
lnllllflllon And Sorvlco. EPA
Cortlflod. llooldontlol, eomn....
olaf. 11WtJI.1111.
Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

wreath

X

BCYGEI S NCY

J N C

S T

MNCSXCQ

X

Y T C

UR

M E X S G

P CTM

S

R T B

AT G 0 I
AT B

M K N S

0 G N C

s

AT G S

U G XC 0

U B S

G V X T S
PREVIOU S SOLUTION "Ad s push trte pr1n ctp!e of notse all lh e way to th e
plateau of pe rsuas1on -- Marshall Mcl uhan
(~

. 994 by NE A Inc

'::~:~:~' S©RJl1A-~~tJs~
- - - - ' - - - - Edil•d by
leners of
0 Reorral'lge
four scrambled words

WORD
GAM I

the '=~--··
be

low ro form four word~

I

0 p GNR

I was read 1ng the head lin es

~~:~~~o~~l~n~h~h~;~~Y1~~
If-5:-.--.~.--.~--r~E- ~ ~hnet
my
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Pi lNT NUMBERE D
cETTfi S
.

bi ll I dec1ded that nothmg
be

as

ComD lele

I he

s hockmg
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as
o&gt;ed

by !,]long m the m · ~S o ng wo r d~

you dcve i:Jp lrom s1ep N o J below

I' I, 1· I' 1· I' I" I" I

111 111 1 11 1
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Growth - Might- En nut - Hackle - HITCHING

I bought a

sign at an antique store. It read "The past
can l)e va luab le as a gu idepost, but 1t can be dangerous
as a HITCHING post"

~~T~HU~R~SD~A~Y--~--------------J-UL-Y-71

Services
81

. CELEBRITY CIPHER

CeletJr 1 t ~ ( ,phe r cryp ! O:)r a m~ . l r ~ r (~ d i e d l rOrn quold!•on•, b v I.Jmous ()f'OO IP pil SI dl1f1i " f ' .Pill
E a: h lf'lle ' 1n Hle r:o ph(' r sl dnrt•, lor illlUih l;' l ' •JOd V s cr.,e \1 t'O &lt; J&lt;ll~ 1

hear ings .

2 door, root, air, microwave, a•
,.ng•, refrigerator and frHier,
full blth arid 1hower, fumaca,

1he Red

30Co mpu!er
sto rag e tl em
31 Pape r s ize
36 Pl ease reply
38 Cotton fabri c
42 So uthwe stern
Indian s
44 Row of shrubs
46 Yes. - !
47C ry ol pain
48 Hebrew
m eas ure
50 S ic ilian
vo lca no
5 1 Fas1en s with
string
52 Old Engli s h
poet
55 Ac tre ss
Mary 56 - U ngu s
57 Hawaiian

After logic,
philosophy

'80 Chovr, 112 lon pickup, 4WD,

Fnday. July e . 1994
Something of Significance mtght occur 1n
the year ahead that will strengthen your
faith and ba sic phi lo s oph ica l out l ook
These factors could add marvelous new
qual ~ies

to your character
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Through AO
lauh of your ow~. you might be sub1ec1ed
to some minor frustrations today . If you're
optim1s1ic and mentally fle xib le. you 'll
know how to turn lemons into lemonade.

Get a JUmp on life by understandmg lhe
influences governing you in th e year

ahead. Send lor your Astra-Graph pred•cI .

ACROSS

305 eng na, eolld, body fair,

84

83

TH' ~

I~G .

Soulhwoot Cobo, Bod•
Hood•, 1m Ford a;;(/ snarpl
814-4-4&amp;-0440, 814-256-6018.
TWo 1V78 Ford Plck-Upo, I
Cyllndor, $650 l $850, Good
Condhlon, 814-387·1230.

-•try

wv.

0

Paint,

Porto, $850, 114-441-4847.
la,., Rio Granda, OH C.A 114- 1982 Oldomobllo 98 Rogoncy,
:ZU-4121
84,000 Mil• 1 Family OWned,
Full Powor, E11ro Cloan, $3,500.
Will Tako Guno Or Boa1 1n Trillo.
,56
_ _P_ e_t"'S""'f"'o"'r_Sa--=le,_~ lf4.2511-M13.
Groom •nd sliiiply_ Sh or;';:
1984 Oldamoblla Deha 88, ne411Grooming. Jullo1Woli5. I 1
klnl condhlon Inside a nd out,
=0231_._-:-::-:--:---::-,.- --;- $2500, 8f4.111l2-2:!1t• .
Pomporod Polo by Sonyo, dog
1088 Chevy Comoro, lcyt., outo.
~~'l7:.'lhlng, 01 lMNda. 304-67~'1660 attar 5pm or ... Ya
101110118 doa kamot, 111111.1111.
Point Pluo, :Ji)W75-40f14.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

WELL , fo1 E8BE \
L!\N F IN[' /
WHAT'S '

TI-l' WIZE('

11

NICE HORSES FOR SALE

Quill well manne..S gekllnge &amp;
marwa.
Patamlnoa,
pt~lnt1,
buckakhw, ate. For trail, waetam pleasure, penning, jumper/anglleh, ••v•r•l lo chOOH

Hct Wotor T~nka, Ga. f100
loch, IM-3711-2720 Aftor I P.M.
0no 11 1'1. Bot llrth ~Uta­
~Wilt .... lllnlt; One

Moman Aontol I I t = Unite,
11~10
10110.
ao.10x18,

T~,_l

The Daily Senti

.W. C.J . Engine, Auto,

11500 OB

- . Sldorl
..., - ·
...In I =;;.~;"ii;;;;;od;;:,a"Cij;;;;
21145.
Equipment,
304,
171-11121 0&lt;1~
I Antiqul! Mira ada. 111V, 4 a....., .....,.,_.., _.,, ....~ $35011, 114-tCt.:ZS:ZS.
.....,., tlllor, ploW - . oulilv, MERCEDES 1000 1111:1 Flnil
Turbo, I
Dlooot, .._
llilooge, E•-nl Molnlo,.nce,
441-4141.

:7
........
~r·""~..~w.=-=·~-:..
I
f - ,,. c=' -: ;Rofr(gorot~=:
infl ......

Ono Fumlahod And Ono Unfur.
nlahod For Ront, At. 7N.
Golllpotla L.1m1to, No P•, 11444144111.

Merchandise

Livestock

w-.

Moving Solo: Konmont

KonrnOta Drver, M-ve
Ovon In Goot( Condition!, 11444MM7.

114-387-J1131.

11M
or -

63

1113 aEo ....... nu ,.. otll
0
1m 211 HP Ballrue TntctO&lt;, undor wo~ lllooor W11h Uve Powor, Hyd- j:m:::lloa:::;go=laii~:,..:CI-,--:-.oBOII=:=-=
routlc: c-tlono, I Ft. INih !!,. Dodao Dayt- 1100, 114Hog, I I Fl. llodo, :ZS Hro. -+141.
15.000. 114 ... 3,.
II Orand Am, AJC. arulee, new
Allla Clll1...,. :tM -om tlroo, hlah ml~c vwy oloon,
ptwo; JD oombf,. 44011 wf13' 12500, 11l-JII:I~-.
1
anln - ; 111100 Fonl " Butcll LoBabn, 4 - .
fracllw
,ond duola; hay auto.....
·~
nlc:o •&amp;,.~"'h
ond ...w/CikJ
In .......; 10' - ¥•,
~
..
dile; 13 holo Ollvw gnln clriU mlloe,
Nag; 11111
ar,
... rwr. 111 181 3401 attar i fine cu, n~• ~ •uto, air,
pm.
.. - loti• ti!M; 12,tll0; 1048 2
· 1-141111
Beclon, aood
ohopo,
Choln low boro I oholno to fit 12J00;
or 1-11-

='~1~:-~
-.1

Lot With TDiol Etoatrlo, ..... - .

54 Miscellaneous

114-im~173.

PI-nt.

....
Coil tralill'
oft• 2:00 ....... li04-TIS-

~- - --~-J

Hct Poinl chool - r . vory
aooc1 condhion, 'IT e. n., POO,

KILLS BUGS
ond doodorfao TOOl ENFOR·
CER
COUNTRY
FRESH
A - for ronl·- or month. FRAGRANCE POOl Con1rot
Starting .. 1120/mo. Golllo Hatol. Ptoducto ora GUARAHlUOI
Avalilbio ot 'T'flomu IJO.It eon.
11t Ul"".
tor, 171 llcCormldl Ad., a-.
Slooptr!i _ , . with -"'I· Npollo.

_..

Informed uw: -'1 d" •• tgl

oppor1Unl1y

Grocloua living. 1 and 2 room oponmonto ot Vlllago
Monor
and
Rlvoroldo
Aportmonto In Mlddltopon. From
$232-$355 • Coil 614-111:1-5858.
EOH.
Need 1 roomrn.ta lmmec:Uataty.
molo or tomolo, 1230/mo., 1125
depoolt nogotlaoiO,, no poll, 1&gt;2
112 cable oollo, lf4.1112.

: n~*'

lcnoWIIIfhaccopt
adverttlarnene for real-..a
lain Yloill1on of .... laW.
aur ..- ... ~

lldVertllod In 1NI 011-r
lf8ovalabioononoquol

4414523.

opartmonto In

16 Acra Of Land In W•r,no
Coun!y Wool Vlraln'-, Pr mo
Huntln;, $10,000, R lni•Mted,
114-25&amp;-1008.
.

Mochlrw,

Fumlahod Apartmont, UtliHla
Poi!j, 1 llodroom, Upotofro,
SocOncl Avonue, Go111polla, No
Poll, Excollont Conct111on, 114-

12 Ft. Trollor H~Tcp, Corpotjl
Llghio, Uka - · tz.300; 12 H
Murr1y TroctO&lt; N.;;J; A PI!IIOJ
$250; Aont10f FO&lt; lloptlc:, 1450, 114-381'0508.
18 Motat Door Framoo 32 Inch
ThN 111 lneh. Molol Frame WI"'
dowo, Coli For Slzoo, 1 Sot 8 A.

!-4 APP ENEO

Ford &amp; Chevy Truck Parteb~::'

1

$350/mo, dopoalt ,.qulrod. 304773-5143 ahor 6pm.
BUY I SELL ARROWHEADS,
3 Furnlohod Aoomo And Bl1h, 114-11112·2822.
Water !Trash Paid, $300/Mo.
Dopooft $250, Port1r Aroo, 814- 54 Miscellaneous
31111-6000.
Merchandise

1182 TownhouN Fairmont. 7P.M.
14x70, CA. All oloc., otoroo tom throughout, gordon tub, BEAIJTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
front porch. Soo by 1ppolntmont BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 .lockoon Plko
only. 814-388-111113.
from 1222 to $288. W1lk to ohop
1183 SchuM 14184 Now Corpot, I movloo. C.H h4-446-:z&amp;U.
New Linoleum, New Bath, EOH.
110,500, Coil 814-367.(13211 Allor EHicllncy
apt,_ _ nr.ronco,
&amp;P.M.
depcolt, no poll . ..,.-117!1-41112.
1887 MllfJO Eoltwlnd w/121131
odd+roan, 3br., 2 lui bothti For Loaoo: One Bedroom
one wiJacuzzJ IUD, new c•rpat,
OIIC. cond., Ooklr!i 110,800, 104- $:110 P1r Mont . S1cwo,
8715-4848.
Refrigerator And Wlter Fur1187 Radman Rlvenlaw, M180, nl•hod. No Pota, Coil 114-4462 bedroom, 1 N1h, gaa fUrnace, 1248 o- 814-446-2325.
2 1&gt;2 ton control air, vinyl ,... fumlahod 3 A.....,. I Both,
d1rplnnlng, pluo 1pplilnceo, Cloon, No Pote, Rolor....,. I
$1000, 114'11112-3443.
Dopoolt Roqul,.cl. 114-446-1511.
1904 Mll80 Brandy Wino 3 lledrvorno, :Z fuU 8atho, 3 Ton CA,
Wl1h -1 Pump, Laundry
Room,
Undorplnnlng,
Tlo
Dowrw, All Sot Up Ori Ptlvlllo
Ranted Lot, Many Eltru, lmmodlolo Poo~on. 814-25&amp;1387.

Hogon Edgo golf clubo ond bog,
3 Iron thrwgn SW, Ina thin 1
yoar old, $350; Big 'Bertlll
Drivor 1\ 1150; 114-m-&amp;171
Antiques
53
-,---,.-,..:....-.,--:314 grooved conrnonlll ue,
highly pollohed granho, porfecl
oondltlan, mueeum !Hce,locally
found, 11200, 114-1140-20:15.

Y I(N0 W, GUZ. IT So)UNQ;
T 'ME LIK E 5UMETJ..I IN'6

2!1113.

52 Sporting Goods

71011.

1 .-.d 2 beclroom apartmante,
furnished and unfumlshed,
-=urlly dopooll r.qulrod, no

()

Hou_,.: Yon-Sat, 0-5. 814-4480322, 3 mil• ouC Bullville Rd .
Frw O.tlv•ry.

Demon Croee Bow
Many Extrul 12110 DBO, 814448-111117.
Golf clubo 1 bog. Ptoluolonol
clubo, llka now bog. :JOU15-

$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 ~er wd.
S.OS day

,t,C, Towing Pkg., Topper Excallonl Cond, 1114-44&amp;-3416.
1V9o4 Chevy truc k. tM,7'00. 3048715-7'1181.
Chovrolot, Ford, Dodgo- pickup
l&gt;odo. Shon ., long . No - ·
304-67U288.
For oolo or trade, 1184 S-10
w n -. lncludoo ca. :JOU715-

Holpolnt. lincoln Pika. 4 mila
....141. 114-446-3158.
Khc,..; otovo, 1100. ~75111188.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comploto homo lumlohlnge.

Barnen

ALLF:YOOP

Locka,

~- )---"'--./'"' ~

VI'A1 Fumhu,. I AppUanc.e.
Month ot Juty. Vaughan, a_.
eatte, Webb, Sharwood, Q.E.,

road, one child, no pela, above

$59,500.

uM B~ • n11&gt;

Grond Oponlr!i. Now -......

SWAIN
AUCTION I RJRNITURE. 112
Olive St., Golllpoilo. Now I U8od
lumhuro, hooiM, WHiom I
won. -·· 814-446-:1151.

Now Hoven, $260/mo., 304-182·
2466 lllytlme.
Trollor 1ot rwrt, you pay utllhloo
plua $50 doposh. :JOU'II5.25:15.

L ~ flflY I N (,

A f'- 10

IK)0.4~34111l .

Kanu~

Ulllnloe P11d, f180/llo. 614-446JIIOI.
Thrwo l&gt;odroom, lumlahod, 011
oloctrlc, good cloan condition
good locallon, porch, yard, oil

lth 1n k he 's JU St

IH E- t..- 0 0 ~ '7 U f
1t-!l '-, ' . 1'H ~ AN 1 )

'""i•·

7, 1994

Over I S words

1990 S-10 Chevrolet, Exoollont
CondHion, 814-446~441 .
11192 Cherry Rod Hond1 A&lt;:oonl
5 Spood, 611 m 0028 Ahor il
P.M.
•
1992 Chov. S-10 Tahoo L.aa
Than 28t000 MI., PS, PB, PW, P

Do~V ' T l- I K E

I

Household
Goods

River Vall.y Oak Fumhwe.
Solid aolllablo I chol,., cunrod
gloa ch101 C1blnot1, ook
chnta, ICt ..handmlda oak
ltame. 38V3 O~ae Cr•k Rd.
Golllpcllo, Oh. Ph. 814-14&amp;-4311

Small 1 Bedroom, In

Child Cono Noodod For Two
School
Agod
Chlldnon,

)

14180 2 Br, 1 mUo South of
Euroka, on Sl R1.7. No poll,

J uly

72 Trucks for Sale

Merchandise

2 Bedroom Mablla HD~Mi, ParUally FIM'nlahed, Water Pakl,
1100 Dopolot. I22Mio. ~-

Boglnnlr!i AUG 8, HRDE Inc.

Prlmartally Nlghla, Shift Work.
Occa..lonal Day1, Prehtr My
Home, Chahlre Area. 814-:Mi.,_

6.00
1
9.00
1
13.00
1
1.30/day

1

1S words or less
1S words or less
1S words or less
1S words or less

for Rent

Wly-call Martlyn. 304-882·2646
Of

3 days
6 days
10 dav.s
Monthly

KIT 'N' C A KI.YI.E IRJ by La rry W rig ht

llEATTIF: llLV D.' " h• Bru ce Bt•allie

Help W a nted

...

••

I

depend on anyone else.

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Have lo tal
faith in yourself and you r ideas today , or
else minor setbacks could be magnified

out of propor1lon and lnh &gt;b&gt;1 your
progress. Trea1 mishaps philosophically.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 211 Lady
Luck m1gh1 be looking 1he other way 11
you 're inclined to take fooli sh gambles
today. However. if you lake a thoughtlul
calcula1ed risk. she (USt may back you up.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Others
Will act on your cue today. If you show a

pleasure IJ day could be those thai are
the lea st exp Pn s tv e . A big prt c e tag
doesn 't contribute !a the qual1t y of the

producl
ARIES (March 21-April19) Even 1hough
i1 m1gh1 cause you a degree ol 1nconve- ,
nience today , make 1t a po tnt to finish to
the last delail that wh ich you set out to
do. Reward s for accorrfpli shmenl cou ld
be impressive.

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Your hunches cou ld be rear- rank materia l today. so
don't depend upon them instead of usu 1g ·
yOur practicality and logic . Intellect IS the
winning ingredtent.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) POSSibilitieS
for gratifying your material obJeCtives look

good today . provided the goals lor whoch
you're stnving are realistic.
•.1!!194 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISF. ASSN

�Page-12-Ttie Dally Sentinel

Raging floodwaters
drag 7 to their deaths
AM ERICUS , Ga. (AP) - Raging floodwaters turned towns into
" bnds, swept people to their death s before helpless witnesses and
ld t S()O ,OOO people wnhoul safe drinking water in central and
~n utlwrn (~eorg iJ .

Sew n people were swal lowed by floodwaters Wednesday near
t\m cncus, whi ch got 23 tnches of rain in less than 24 hours, said
Sumler Count y ,Coroner Lynwood McClung. At least 13 deaths over
the past Lhrce da ys have· lxx:n blamed on flooding caused by heavy
rams from the re mnants of Tropical Stomt Alberto.
The lloods forced hundred.s of peop le from their homes. washed
uut " ""'' and bridge s and sent flash flood s racing across the sodden
c:trth . (;o, . Zcll Mtlkr dec lared 30 of the state's 159 cou nti es disaster ,u\·as More min was CX Jll'ctcd toda y.
D~u n a gl' to go \' Crnmcnl -0\\'ncd stru ctures such as water planLS,
nwl s :tnLI hridges was estimated at S'lR million. There was no csli matl' l&lt;lr hlllll CS nr bus messe s.
In Amni,· us, "' sout hwest Georg ia, helpless bystanders watc hed
a sm:an11n g woman clutchmg a baby slip into the rumbling Town
C' fl·ck.
Tit,· hmlg,· had

wash,:d out , and the woman stood '~tOp her
ca r as 11 ' lowly slid down the bank . She and her child were still
rm-.s mt: today.
" rt was ltkc the Atlanuc Ocean ," said Catherine Andrew, who
watched wtth several others from across the creek . She said a man
m another car al so was swept away .
"Pct&gt;pk arc wandering around aimlessly," Americus Fire Ch ief
Steve ~ l o re n a. " In a few days real it y wi ll set in."
Mor,' no " '"' ft ve people &lt;!t ed when their cars were swept off
bridges. li e 'predi cted that fi ve to 10 more bod ies would be found
JU S!

wh en th e w :..~ tc rs recede.

" We' re sort of ltke an island," sate! Dean Whitaker, a state
troop,·r at the Americ us barracks.
.
Ah&lt;Hll 76 miles sou theast of AtlanL1, the Ocm ulgcc Rtvcr overflow ed its banks 'md rolled down interstates 75 and 16 into Macon.
Water nn the highway s was 4 feet deep in places.
The 30-foot-tall earthen levee protecting the city of 107,000 was
br eached Wednesday night. Prisoners and volunteers worked
overni ght to rcmforcc the mile-long levee with sandbags.
As wa ter llouJcu 40 bl ocks of the central Georgia city, hundreds
of people !leu frqm their homes and up to 6 feet of water flowed
into sorn c businesses.
" You can watch it ri se. You can go down a street and then when
you come back up it , it'll be flooded," sa id Connie Howard.

Jury convicts
family friend
in abuse case
RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP) - It
took a JUry just 1-1/2 hours to convi ct a family friend of sex ually
abusing Katie Beers, the httle gul
held in an underground bunker for
16 days by anotltcr family friend.
The jurors ignored defense argumcnLs that Katie' s testimony about
abuse hy Sal lnghillcri, the husband"
of her godmother, was "based on
the memory of a child who went
through an extre mely traumatiC
experie nce."
The lnghillcri case is not related
10 the 1992 kidnapping hy John
Espo sit o, who held Katie for 16
days in a cell he had butlt for her
under his garage. He pleaded guilty
June 17 to kidnapping and will be
sentenced July 26.
lngh illcri, 4 1, was found guilty
Tuesday of two counts each of sexual abuse and of endangering the
we lfare of a child. He remained in
jail thi s moming in lieu of $10,000
bail.
He cou ld face up to 14 years in
jai l when he is se ntenced Aug. 9.
Hts auorney, Thomas Klei, said he
planned to appeal. .
. . .
Kati e. now II. •s thnvmg m the
home of an unidentified foster family . Suffolk County District Attorney Jam es Caucrson said he spoke
wi th her by telephone after the verdict, sum moning her from a netghbor's sw imming pool.
Katie replied, " I like it ," when
told of the vcrdict ' and "Good,"
when told lng hill eri was in jail ,
Catterson sa id.
Ingh ill eri was charged with
abusing Katie in April and December of 1991, when she was 8 years
old.

O.J. 's friend
set to return
to L.A. court
LOS ANGELES (AP) - AI
"A.C." Cowlings is expected back
in cou rt Jul y 15 to learn whether
prosecutors wi ll press charges
against htm for helpmg hts fnend
OJ. Simpson elude police.
Cowlings drove the white Ford
Bronco seen by millions of people
on national TV during a 60-mile
police chase J unc 17. Simp son
cowered in the back, holdmg a gun
to his head at times.
Simpson fl ed after learning that
he was about to be charged with
murdering his ex-w ife and a friend
of hers.
After the chase ended in Simp·
so n 's drivc't"ay, Cowlings was
arrested for investigation of aiding
Simpson's escape and freed on
$250,000 bai L
Simpson attorney Robert
Shapiro has said Simpson planned
10 go 10 hi s ex- wife's grave and
commit su icid e, but Cowhngs
talked him out of it.
When contacted by telephone at
his Pacific Palisades home, Cowlings refused to answer questions
and hung up. His lawyer did not
return calls Wednesday.
Simpso n and Cowlings are
childhood friends wHo played college and pro football together.
Cowlings has made at least one
public appearance since the chase.
A week after the incident, he
attended a banquet for the adult
fi Im industry and was pho tographed dancing with a porn
actress.

Thursday, July 7, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mountain wildfire kills 11 firefighters
GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) - A swtft wi ldfire whipped
by high winds roared over a steep
mou nl1in side, trapping 50 ftrefig hters . Eleven were killed and three
were mi ss ing today in one of the
country's deadliest such disasters .
Th e firefighters were trapped
Wednesday about 7, 000 feet up the
rugged slope of Storm Kin g Moun tain , wh ere the rough terram left
them no place UJ flee, said Garfield
County Unuershenff Levy Burris.
The survivor s esc ap ed tn
humcd-over ground where the fire
could not take hold , then strJggled
out wh en the dange r pass ed, Gov.
Roy Romer said at a new s confer-

enc e:.

"They have counted II bodies
at tht s point, " Romer said. "At
daybreak there wi ll be a helicopter
search for the three still mi ssing.''
Rom er cal led for an mvcs ti gation .to Llctcrminc why so many

lives were lost. Wea ther forec asters
had predicted hi gh winds. but firefighters were left in the fi clu .
A G lenwood Sp rin gs fire
department uispatchcr and a gov ernm ent source who spoke on condtltnn nf anonymi ty said 13 rircfi g~ t crs were dead , and an earli er
report from th e Garfield Cou nty
sheriff's office sa id 34 firefighters
were mi ssin g. The discrepancies
couldn't immediately be explained.
Fire officia ls said some of the
victims apparently had tried to
cltmh into their fircsh eltcrs, shin y
blankets used as shields during
flarcups.
The lightnmg-sparked fire began
Sunday, fiv e miles west of Glenwood Springs. The mountain resort
of 6,000 people is betwee n Aspen

and Vai l ·about 180 miles west of
Denver.
The ftre had lxx:n confined to 50
acres until high winds fanned it out
of control Wednesday afternoon.
Within fi\'C hours, it grew to 2,000
acre s.
Thi s morning, firefighters were
following instru ctions to monitor
the blaze, not fight it, unless it
threatened houses.
When the fire came within 300
yards of a subdivision of 50 homes,
many rcstdents fled . Others were
still there at midnight, dousing their
hou se s wi th wa ter from ~arden
hoses and waiting to sec tf they
·would make it.
''I'm going to wait until the last
minute, ' ' Ben Tipton said. "I' ll
keep my motorcycle pointed downhi ll."
The three mjurcd firefighters
were taken to Valley Vtew Hospi tal in Glenwood Springs, a hospital
spokeswoman said. One was treated fo r smoke inh alation, one for
burn s, and one wa s trea ted and
released.
The dead. who were not identi fied, were be lieved to be from fedem I agencies. The state forest service and scveml local fire dcpanmen ts also had crews at the scene.
In August 1937, 17 firefighters
were killed battling a forest fire 15
mtlcs cast of Yellowstone National
Park in Wyoming.
The National Interagency Fire
Center in Boise, Idaho , sa id
Wednesday that ftrcs in nine western states had sco rched about
150,000 acres of forest, bru sh and
grassland . More than 30 homes and
outbuildings have been destroyed,
said spokeswoman Pat Entwi stle.

About 7,000 firefighters, 17 5
fire engines, 38 helicopters and 32
air tankers were on the fire hnes m
Arizona, New Mexi co, Colorado,
Wroming, Montana, Idaho, Utah,
Nevada and California.
• In Arizona. firefighters battled
a 10,450-acre ftrc west of th e
Grand Canyon; a 3,500-acrc fire in
the Chiricahua Mountains; and four
fires ncar Tucson. A spate of 21
fires that began last week ha s
burned 53,3 18 acres.
• In Utah, eight fires burning
across grass·· and sta nds ol cedar
about 50 miles west of Salt Lake

City had scorched some 28,400
acres: The fight continued against
desert fires spreading over more
tltan 14,000 acres in the northwestem part of the state.
• A series of li gh tn ing-ca used
fires have burned more than 75,000 .
acres in New Mexico ncar Capitan,
Carlsbad and Roswell.
• In Ca liforn ia, crews fought
back a 19,900-acre blaz.c ncar Palm
Springs that forced the evacuation
of 500 homes, and an II ,000-acrc
fire 60 miles to the north west in the
San Bernardino National Forest.

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en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 46

By JOHN CIIALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMilUS - A gtoup of afnucnt school distrtClS agrees wi th Gov .
George Voi novtch that the sL1tc should appeal a Perry County court ruhng
that overturned Ohio 's sy&gt;tcm ot fmancm g educattO~:
The Alliance for Aucquatc School Funumg satd I hursday such a dcct swn was too important lO rely solely on a co mmon pleas cou rt opmton .
"To have a court that represents less than one-half of I percent of the
students in the sta te of Ohio make a deci sion that tmpacts the consmuuon
is inappropriate m our opinion," said Keith Richards, a member of the
group' s executi ve committee.
. .
.
" If it's going to be dec lared unconsutuuonal , the Supreme Co urt IS the
only place that should be detcnmincd,'' he said. .
.
Richards spoke at a news conference as rcacuon contmucd to Judge

Linton Lew is' ruling July I that the stale system for financin g education
was maclcqualc. mequitablc and uncomututlonal.
In related dcvcloprncnL' Thursday:
.
.
• The Ohto Public Expend iture Counctl. a nonpartt san tax Stud y group.
sa id rai sin g per-pupil spend in g leve ls for all dtStn cts up to the st;.He average would cost at least $750 mtllton '" slate and/or local tax "revenu e.
"This would be a major tax increase, and there wo uld still ?~a S6 ,1XXl or
$7,000 gap between the highest and lowest school dtStrt cts, s;uu Donald
Ilcmo, coun cil president.
.
.
. .
• Rep. Michael Shoemaker, D-Boumcvtlle, sa td a btparusan rally was
planned at the Statehouse next week to urge the slate drop tts appeal. and
to ask the Genera l Assembly to immediately stan . ':"ork on solvmg the
problem. Shoemaker is the only legislator who lesultcd agamsl the state
in the Perry Co unt y case.

Future
shock

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OVP News Editor
JACKSON - A state education
official believes the current learning system for students s hould be
revamped to cmphastze sktlls
applicable UJ the futurc workplace.
Dr. Darrell Parks, director of
vocational education for the Ohio
Department of Education, told the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Coun cil's summer meeting Thursday
that without strong academic skills
in mathematics, science, communications and technology, high
school gmduatcs will be "seriously
impaired" when they seck jobs.
The current instructional system
of what he called "!cam, feed back
and forget," designed to elevate
students into higher education, or
the "college mentality," must be
replaced with a "success in living
mentality," he added.
To underline his point, Parks
said only 50 percent of high school
graduates in Ohio go on to college
and only 25 percent actually obtain
a degree.
"If we believe in these facts,
then I think it is incumbent upon us
to raise the question, 'what about
the other 75 percent? ', and what is
it education need s to do to assist
that 75 percent," he noted.
The future worker will have to
utilize knowledge gained in the
schools for a varied number of

The Mctgs Local Iloard of Education htrcd Medical Claim s Service of Co lumbus as th e hea lth
in suran ce ca rri er for di stri c t
employees at th e board 's regular
meeting Thursday ni ght.
The co mpany will administer
the di stric t's self-funded insurance
plan for a start-up fcc of $2,500 ,
"p lained Superi nten den t Bill
Buckley . Since it is a se lf-fund ed
plan . th.c actual annuli cost
depends on the number of claims.
he added .
The board also met with Jud y

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A federal judge says it will be at
least 30 days before he holds a
hearing to finalize a settlement
between Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp. and 17 I fanner replacement
workers.
U.S. Di strict Judge Charles
Haden said he will not hold the
hearing until all the p~rties are
given at least a month s noocc,
either through a leg~! advertiSe·
mcnt or by telephone calls: . .
In a class-action lawsutt filed m
!992, the replacement workers

LowPrieeOf

•Rent Free Tank

Williams, representing Wtlliams &amp;
Associates In surance of Pomeroy,
to disc uss a health insurance proposal.
In personnel mailers, the board
hired William T. Musser as
cvcntng custodian at Meigs Junior
High School , effec ti ve July 11.
In addition, the board hireu Sara
M. Oxley as IMPA CT teac her at
MJJ-IS on a one-year contract, Scot
F. Gheen as dcvclopmcnt;tlly hand icapped teac her at Bradbury Elementary School on a one -year contract and as assis~mt varst!y foot -

ball coach and head varsity base ball coac h for the 1994-95 school
year , and Jcnif~:r Morton as assis·
tant band direc tor for tltc 1994-95
sc hool year.
In addition UJ Buckley, also presen t were Treasurer Jane Fry,
Boaru President Larry Rupe , Vice
PreSident Randy Humphreys and
board members Roger Abbott, John
Hood and Scott Walton.
Th e board 's nex t mcc ttng is
sc heduled for 7 p.m. on Wednesday, July 27 at the board's central
office in Pomeroy.

Board hires new EHS principal
EDUCATIONAL TALK- Dr. Darrell Parks, right, Ohio's
director of vocational education, discusses issues with Bob E,·ans,
president of the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council at ,the coun cil's summer meeting Thursday. Parks urged a reshapong of !he
educational system lo emphasize skills applicable to the workplace.
tasks in a business community that
is increasingly technology-oriented, Parks explained.
"If business , organized labor
and the community at large create
the standards the educational community is to address - standards
that arc specific and measurable and conduct authentic assessment
of those standards, I will suggest
that good things arc going to hap pen," he said.
" If that were to happen on a
wholesale basis, the schools would
be good, lhc business community

would be satisfied, and job creation
and expansion would increase,"
Parks added.
Such action is critical to continued economic growth in the southem Ohio, which "has everythingwater , land, roads , a strong work
ethic and the educational opportu nttics afforded by the public and
private schools," he continued.
"lf that were brought into sync,
you would enjoy the benefits for
years to come, if the various community leaders come together for a
common mission," Parks said.

RAC, ex-workers reach accord

All Ft~r The

• The Cleveland Board ol Edu calllln dropped a simila r !Jut separat e
lawsuit against the fundin g sy st em tlt:H was set for a November tnal. The
board s:llll it had spe nt more than S333.QC¥) on the lawsuit since tl was
filed in 1991. and would nc,·d another S500.000 to prepare for In a! " In
ltgh t of the dt strict's ftnanc"tl conchlions, we diun ' t belt eve that wou ld be
prudent ," saiu Lawre nce Lum pki n, boaru president.
The all iancc is made up of about oO of the state· s 612 dlStrtc Ls. Aboul
500 dtstricts arc memba s of the Ohio Coalttion for Equtty &amp; Adequacy
of School Funding, the' group that filed tltc Perry Count y lawsutt.
Richards is superin tendent of Olen tangy schools in Delaware County,
a diStrict with abo vc-a,·cragc real cs t;,ne val ues. Identical tax rates would
generat e more mone y there than di stricts with less valuable property .
Alliance distril'ls worry lltat legislators may try to take more of their
money for rc&lt;listn buuon !rom a central pool among poorer districts.

Employee insurance carrier
approved by Meigs Board

Hy KEVIN KELLY

Over 40 Years Of Dependable Servite

contended their dismissals were
illegal because Ravenswood Alu minum classified them as permanent employees.
The company hired more than
I ,000 non-union workers to run its
Jackson County plant during a 20month labor dispute with the United States Steelworkers. The
replacement workers were fired
when Ravenswood Aluminum and
the union agreed to a co ntract in
June 1992.
"We prctty well satisfied the
judge . We were close enough to
meeting his requirements for settle-

ment that he called the trial off,"
said Fred Holroyd of Charlcston,,a
lawyer for the workers.
'
Some details of the settlement
arc incomplete , Holroyd said. For
example, Raven swood agreed to
pay a sum "in the millions ," bul an
exact figure probably won't be
reached until nex t week , Holroyd
said.
Ravenswood
Aluminum
spokesman Pat Gallagher declined
to discuss the deal. The company's
lawyer in the case, Ricklin Brown
of Charleston, did not immediately
return a phone message Thursday .

Clayton Butler has been hired as
Eastern High School principal on a
two-year contract.
Action on the employment of
Butler, who has been principal at
the Switzerland of Ohio Schools Ill
Monroe County, was taken at a
special session of the Eastern Local
Board of Education Tuesday night.
Butler has been in sc hool
administration since I% I and prior
to going to the Switzerland district
was principal. al Fort Frye Htgh
School. He began his teaching
career in 1958.

In ot her personnel matters, the
board accepted the resignati on of
Debbie Wcbef as head teacher at
Ri verview Elementary and the res ignation of Amy Allison as a developmentally handicapped teacher at
Chester Elementary School.
Approval was gtvc n to Ute transfer of Rebe cca Edward s from a
teaching po sition at the Eastern
Junior High School to th e fifth
grade at Tuppers Plains Elementary .
A proposal from Dennis Park

Construction to repair and replace
the sidewa lk in front of th e high
school, and also to complete some
tile work. was accepted by the
board.
Current maintenan ce projects
being carried out in the buildings of
the di strict were di sc ussed by the
board.
Attending the meeting were Ray
Karr, president; Jim Smith, vice
president; and board members Greg
Bailey, Ron Eastman and Mike
Mar~n.

Syracuse~cil

mulls rates
for out-of-village water us,rs
By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Village Council was
informed Thursday night oy members of the Syrncuse :&gt;oard of Public Affairs that water meters have
been installed at the residences of
those customers who live outside
the corporation limits, but use
Syracuse water.
Board members Gordon Winebrenner and Larry Ebersbach met
with council 10 discuss water rates
for those customers.
'
Rates proposed by the board
were discussed at length by counctl
and the board members, with no
decision being made at the meet ing. Arrangements were made for
Council members to meet w1th the
board on Monday for further discussion and 10 establish rates for

those out-of-village customers.
sa ry stree t signs. He was also
Malcolm Guinther reported to authprizcd to proceed with necescouncil that lxx:ausc of some work sary res troom repair.
done by a village contractor, Home
The mayor' s report showed
Creek Enterprises, hi s vehicle was rece ipts of $968.
damaged.
·
Janice Lawson, clerk-treasurer,
Malcolm claimed that he hit a reponed balances in various funds
ditch created by the work at Cherry as follows ; general fund,
Street and Route 124 , resulting in S 16,392.77; street construction,
the damage. The matter was tabled $24,459.98; htghway, $7 ,041.82;
for further consideration.
fire department, $10,817.16; water
A 1995 budget of $208,090 was department , $10.021.34; pool,
approved by council.
$11,825.14; guaranty meter,
It was reported that work on a $2,75 148; and cemetery, $82.44.
ditch on Worch ester Street will
In executive sess ion. council
begm soon.
discussed several legal matters with
At the request of Councilman Village Solicitor I. Carson Crow.
Larry Lavender, Scott Walton was
Attending were Mayor James
given permission to rent the pool Papc, Clerk-treasurer Law son,
for scuba diving instruction.
council members Lavender, Dennis
Council heard complaints on Wolfe, Bill Roush, Shaffer, and
cable service reception, and autho- Kathryn Crow; and Police Officer
rized Don Shaffer to order neccs- Ryan Hall.

Judge approves disputed Simpson evidence
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State vo-ed director
tells·SEORC learning
system must change

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WHAT HE SAW- Brian "Kato" Kaelin, a friend of O.J.
Simpson's ex·wife who Uved In Simpson's guest house, used a diagram ot Simpson's Brentwood mansion to deserlbe what he saw
tile nlglat Nk:ole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were killed.
Kaelin testlned during a preliminary hearing for Simpson Thursday in Los Angeles. (AP)

••

By LINDA DEUTSCH
Ap Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - With a preliminary hearing ncar conclusion,
prosecutors must directly link O.J.
Simpson to two l:tllmgs 10 support
holding him for trial. Blood analysis may be their key.
"We're not at the end, but we 're
getting close," said Loyola University Law School Professor Launc
Levenson. ''What they have to put
on now is blood typing and the
coroner 10 tell us about the wounds
and how the killing took place.''
Levenson a former prosecutor,
said the co~ner also could link a
knife Simpson bought 10 wounds
on his ex-wife and her fnend.
"They have put on fairly strong
circumsiantial evidence," she satd.
"Now they have 10 get down to
hard physical evidence."
Some of that physical evidence
will be allowed even though dctec·
tives didn't have a warrant when
they found il at Simpson's estate,
MuQicipal Judge Kathleen

Kennedy -Powell ruled Titursday.
The defense had sought to bar a
bloody right-hand glove found on
the estate, blood spots in the driveway and a blood spot on the handle
of Simpson's Ford Bronco. A lefthand glove that appeared to match
the one found at the estate was
recovered at the crime scene.
Simpson, 46, is accused of murdering Nicole Brown Simpson, 35,
and Ronald Goldman, 25, on June
12 outside Ms. Simpson's condominium. Tite preliminary hearing is
to dctennine whether he will stand
trial.
On Thursday, Detective Tom
Lange testified that five droplets of
blood at the crime scene failed to
match the blood of tbe victims. A
police expert on blood evidence
was preparing 10 explain how he
compared the blood of Simpson
and the victims to the droplets
when court recessed for the day ,
If Simpson's blood matches the
droplets, prosecutors could argue
that he cut himself fi~hting with the

victims, trailed bloOd mi his way
home and dropped the bloody
glove at his estate.
Simpson had a cut on his left
middle finger when he returned to
Los Angeles the morning after the
killin gs. He said he cut it on a
drinking glass in his Chicago hotel
room when he received news of the
deaths.
The lead investigatnr, Detective
Philip Vannatter, acknowledged
under cross-examination that there
were no cuts on the left glove to
match those on Simpson's hand.
But he said the gloves could have
lxx:n dropped during the struggle.
Vannatter testified that he
believes the killer lost the lcfl glove
at the crime scene and that the right
,lllove was dropped at the estate.
· A witness who lived in Simpson's guest house testified earlier
that he heard thumps the night of
the slayings in the area where
detectives found the glove the next
morning. Vannauer said he though
the glove was dropped by the per-

•

son who made the thumps.
Levenson said prosecutors may
theorize that Simpson scaled a
fence, bumped into the guest house
and dropped the glove in his haste
to return home and be ready for a
I 0:45 p.m. limousine ride to the
airport. A trace of blood was found
on top of the fence, according to a
search warrant affidavit.
Simpson left for Chicago before
the bodies were found. His lawyers
suggested Thursday that someone
clse could have dropped or thrown
the bloody glove on a pathway.
"The defense strategy seems 10
be to throw out any kind of doubt
and hope it stick~,'' said Levenson.
In their motion to suppress the
evidence, defen se lawyers said
police violated Simpson's constitutional rights by scaling hi s wall
without a warrant
But Kennedy-Powell said police
clearly were trying to notify Simpson of his ex-wife's death and
ensure the safety of those inside.

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