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..
July 10,1994

Land value surveys avaUable at ASCS
Dy LISA MEADOWS
ASCS Executive Director
GALLIPOLIS - The U.S .
Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service (ERS) is
cu rrently conducting a land va l11e
surv ey in cooperation with the
Agncultural Stabili1.ation and Conservation Se rvice (ASCS).
ASCS is responsible for provid ing county- level estimates of farm land value, and estimates of rental
rates for crop land and pasture.
ERS will evaluate these estimates
and develop useful, cost-effec tive
altern atives for co llecting future
land price data.
The 1994 land value question MYSTERY FA!{M- Thi~ week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County . Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop ofT your
guess to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, III Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769, and

nairc contains the low , average and evaluation of ASCS programs. Surhigh market values, and estimlj)es vey resu lts showing statewide averof ren tal rates for crop land and ages will be available later this
pasture land and woodland, year.
(Lisa Meadows is the county
improvements and unused lan d.
The report also contains the aver- executive director or the Gallia
Agricultural Stabilization and
age rent for crop land and pasture.
ERS uses the information to Conser\'ation Servke.)
eval uate current land values and
cash rem data coll ec tion methods.
Survey forms have been mailed to
Whatever else may be said about
sta te ASCS offic es across th e the Sa lem wi tch hunts. they did not
nation for di stribution to coun ty result 111 the bu rnmg of a single witch
ASCS offices. Based on su rve y - or a nyon e e lse . Nine tee n people
data responses, ERS will determine werr hanged . anrt one crushed t o
state average estimates and furni sh death , after bri ng fo und guilty of
this information to ASCS. This wilchcrafl. bul burn ing supposed
data will be used to improve the witches was str idly a European pracdeve lopment, administration and tice .

you may win a $5 pri&lt;e from the Ohio Valley
l'ublishing Co. Leave your name, address and
telephone number with your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned in to the newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case of a tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Meigs Co unty farm will be featured by the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.

11 wi ll also offer systems to pro- exc hange for Westinghouse's two
clucc clcc lrJ CJly for small, remote mill1on shares in Photocomm Inc.,
diesel -power utilities, and wireless a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based supplier
power syste ms that depend on pho- of ph?tovo ltai c systems. New
tovnl~li cs. ce lls capable of convertWorld s ownership of Photocomm
1ng sunli ght direct ly into clcctrici - will mcreasc 10 about45 percent.
tv .
P1 ll sburgh-bascd Westing. Renewable power systems, con- house's ow nersh ip of New World,
siJer'"' alternatives to more tradi- now 5 percen t, will double after the
tiona I sources of power. usc wind, dea l is co mpl eted. Austin said.
water or sun shine directly to pro- Westinghou se's power generation
ducc electricity.
uni t is based in Orl ando, Ra. New
New World will give Westing- World Pow er is based in Lime
house 463,330 of it s shares in Rock, Conn.

USDA beef buy boosts cattle futures
By DAVID DISHNF:AU
AP Business Writer
Near-term cattle futurcs prices
skyrocketed Friday after the governmen t said it will buy an addi tional $50 million worth of beef for
school lunches and other food programs.
Live cattle for Augu st delivery
leaped the permitted daily limit of
1.5 cents on the Chicago Mercan tile Excha nge to 66.37 ce nt s a
pound; Augu s t feeder ca lll e
climbed I cen t to 76.85 ce nts a
pound; July hogs rose 0.30 cent to
45.92 cents a pound; July froze n
pork bellies rose 1.38 ce nts to
37.40 cents a pound.
Cocoa futures surged while coffee futur es fell sharply on New
York's Coffee, Suga r &amp; Cocoa
Exchange.
Unroastcd arabica coffee beans
for September del1very dropped 5
cents to $ 1.8835 a pound .
September coc oa soared $77 to
$1 389 per ton on buying that may
ha~e been prompted by co ffee's

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• Cruise Control
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Tonight, mostly clear. Lows
SS to60. Tuesday, partly sunny,
high ln tbe 80s.

•

en tine
1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 11, 1994

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press WritH
WASHINGTON - Despite setbacks, the Cli nton administration
in sists it isn't wavering in its policy of pressuring the Haitian military to
give up power while seeking safe havens for thousands of refugees.
"If you're for democracy, you're fur democracy. You don't allow
those with guns to throw out an election because they didn't like the
results of it," William Gray. the chief pres idential adviser on Haiti , said
Sunday.
Last week, as the administration redoubled efforts to force Haiti's military leaders to leave. some 10,000 Haitian boat people ned the economic
hardship and political oppression of thetr homeland.
The refugees swamped U.S . efforts to process th ose with leg illmate

Experts:
execution
unlikely
for O.J.

Section,

10

Pageo

35

c.,ta

A Multimedia Inc. N-o paper

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prose cutors probably won ' t seck the
death penalty against O.J. Simpson
because he' s too popular. legal
experts say.
" There is no way that a jury is
going to return a death judgment
against O.J. Simpson," said
defense lawyer Barry Levin, a former Los Angeles police officer
who has handled nine capital cases.
"What it boils down to is, the
only way a jury will kill your client
is if he is a complete animal, they
hate him," he said.
Not many people hate Simpson.
Recent polls show that most 'PWPie
sec him more as a football hero or
celebrity than a man accused of
murder.
His only reported criminal conviction was a no-contest plea to
misdemeanor spousal abuse in
1989. He was sentenced to two
years' probation and 120 hours of
community service and required to
auend counseling sessions for battercrs .
"O.J. Simpson has the advantage of being known for something
other than allegedly killing his wife
and another person ," said Bryan
Stevenson, director of the Alabama
Capital Representation Resource
Center.
"When you're forced to sec the
defendant as something more than
the criminal act, it becomes much
harder to say, 'We're going to kill
you."'
Prosecutors still haven't decided
whether to seck the death penally
against Simpson, who is accused of
murdering his ex-wife Nicole
Drown Simpson and her friend
Ronald Goldman.
He was ordered Friday to stand
trial for the June 12 killings. Simpson, who has been jailed without
bail since his arrest June 17, has
pleaded innocent. His arraignment
(Continued on Page 3)

p· .

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"They were all very vigoro us in saying that the military leaders should
keep their commitment and should lcavc," ,lhc pres ident said.
Secretary of State Warren Christopher. acco mpanymg Clinton, insisted
the tough economic sanctions imposed on llaiti were havi ng an impact on
Its military leaders ami their supporters, and not the Haition poor.
Christopher sidestepped again whether the United States would invade
Haiti to restore democratically elected Pres ident Jean-Bertrand Aristide,
bu il!Jld reporters, "they ough t to leave this afternoon ."
A Newsweek poll released Sunday found that more than two- thirds of
750 people surveyed opposed p U.S. invasion as a way to end military
rule 1n the country. More than half also opposed U.S. participation in a
multinational invasion.

school standards

WHERE IS IT? - Finding one particular gun out or about 1,500 guns is one problem officials
are likely to encounter during the process or returning firearms conriScated from the Robert Fire
residence last year, Here, prosecutor's investigator Jeff Miller looks ror a lirearm this morning.
See story on Page 3.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A federal
program that se ts up education
standards for students and teachers
could provide more money to Ohio.
but the tradeoff might be state control, an education leader said.
President Clinton sig ned the
Goals 2000, Educate America Act
on March 31 to set up voluntary
stand ard s and provide grants to
states that participate.
"We're well on our way to
Goals 2000 already," said Judi
Hahn, a state Board of Education
member from Cin cinnati . " My
biggest concern IS JUSt the matter of
more fqlcral government intrusion
into our state rights and loca l
rights."
The act establishes a panel to
rcv1ew guidelines on how to meet
eight goals that include ensuring by
2000 that all children start school
ready to learn and that American
students can compete in a global
economy.
Each participating state would
have to develop a plan for reaching
those goals monitoring whether
standards arc met.
Ohio, which has until June to
apply, could get $3.7 million in
1995 and about$ 12 million in eac h

of th e following four years. The
money would be used to develop
new curricula and set up outcomebased performance standards.
John Goff, an assistan t superi ntendent of public in struc tion, predicted it co uld wst as mu ch to
admini ster the program as the federal government is handing out.
He sa id reform s already taking
place in Ohio arc based on work
rrom national ed ucation organization s and the federa l educat ion
department. Gelling involved in
Goals 2000 is perhaps a logical
extension, 1f the state keeps th e
authority to decide what it wants to
accept, he said.
Despite concerns, Go ff said it
could be worthwh1lc for Ohio to
toin wh at will become a reform
·network of states and the federal
government.
" A lot of thi s is voluntary ...
we're trying to figure out exac tl y
where arc the catc h points," he
said.
Mari e Pfeiffer, a state board
member from Columbus, said the
board will scrutinize Goals 2000
before it recommends whether the
state should participate.

N. Korea postpones meeting with neighbor

Late Communist
Chief'S he/r keens
•
I"
grtp On COntfO/ Of
mou•'..n,·ng natl"on
•

Dy PAUL SHIN
Associated Press Writer
SEOUL, South Korea - North
Korea, making its ftrst foreign-policy moves since the death of longlime leader Kim II Sung, today
postponed indefinitely what was to
have been an unprecedented meeting of the North and South's presidents.
The North has also told the
United States it is putting off further high-level contacts until after
Kim's state funeral Sunday. Talks

Group: competitive
edge threatened by
school weaknesses
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
nation's economic competitiveness
is improving but remains under
threat, particularly by persistent
weakness in elementary and secondary education, according to a
survey of business, labor and academic leaders.
The Council on Competitiveness said Monday that while there
has been "some important progress
during the past year," survey participants believe by a two-to-one
margin that the most difficult challenF.es lie ahead.
'The competitiveness challenge
is here to stay,' • said Paul Allaire,
chief execuuve officer of Xerox
Corp. and the council chairman.
"We arc making progress, but are
in for a lengthy struggle."
The council's f994 Competitiveness Index notes SII'Ong growth
in living slandards, manufactured
goods exports, manufacturing productivity and investment in plant
and equipment in 1993.
Still, the council warned that

claims to political asyl um . Meanwhile, Panama retrac ted an· ear li er
promi se to take in some refugees, sending the administration scrambling
for other nations who would provide safe haven or processing sites for
Haitian refugees.
On Sunday, however, Panamanian President-elec t Ernesto Perc1. Balladares indicated he would reverse his successor's decision on accepting
refugees when he assumes office Sept. l. He said the current president.
Guillermo Endara, should not have refused to help the United St.1tcs and
called the Haitian political situation "a hemiSpheric problem ."
Presiden t Clinton , in Naples, Italy, foJ;, thc ann ual economic summit uf
Western democracies. said other Western leaders had fully endorsed U.S.
efforts to restore democracy to the Caribbean nation.

---Where is it?--_, State leaders mull

short-term cyclical improvement
must not be confused with the resolution of Ameri ca's long -term
problems. "We must not become
complacent," it said.
"' Although American companies have cut a lot of fat, many
have not yet built the innovative
capacity that will be necessary to
compete in the fuwre," contended
Professor Michael Porter of Harvard Business School, the survey
project adviser.
Allaire added that, "with Asian
economics gathering strength, with .
competitive pressure spreading·
from autos and electronics to software and telecommunications, with
U.S. savings rates at stubbornly
low levels and with intractable
problems in our elemenJary and
secondary schools, it is easy to sec
why many people believe that the
biggest challenjleS arc still ahead.''
The survey tdentified improving
education from kindergarten
through 12th grade as the nation's
top priority.

.t

• ·•

-~--

White House won't bend on Haitian policy

Dealership wins excellence award
cy, professional taclilliCS and com munitv relations , a press release
from tltc corporation said.
This is the first time that Norris
Northup Dodge, Inc. has received
the "Award for Excellence," which
is presented to approximately 10
percent of Chrysler Corporation
dealerships each year.

\

Super Lotto:
2-3-6-17-28-38
Kicker:
6-1:1-9-9-o
Pick 3; 1
o-o-3 ;
Pick ·4:
7-8-4-1

Vol. 45, NO . 47

clcc lmc.
Wh eat and soybean futur es
Sep tem ber deliveries of frozen prices were higher on the Chicago
concentra ted o"mge juice leaped Board of Trade .
10 ccnLI on the New York Cotton
Julv wheat rose 7 1/4 cents to
Exchange to 97.20 cents a pound.
$3. 14 ;. bushel; July com rose I 1/2
Crude oil futures gained on the cents to $2.41 1/2 a bu shel; July
New York Mercantile Exc hange.
oats rose I 3/4 cents to $ 1.16 3/4 a
L1gh t swee t crud e for August bushel; July soybeans dimbcd 7
delivery rose 36 cents to $ 19.48 a centsto $6.3 ll/4abushcl.
barrel ; Aug usth catingoilrosc0.61
On New York's Commodity
ce nt to 48.79 ce nt s a gallon; Exc hange , August gol d fell 60
August unlcaclc&lt;l gasoline rose 0.65 cents to $385. 10 a troy ounce; July
ce nt 10 52.78 ce nt s a gallon; silver rose 4.4 cents to $5.253 a
August naluml ga' fell 4.9 cents to troy ounce.
$2.023 per l ,000 cubic feel.

Norri s Northup Dodge, Inc: in
Gallipolis has been names a recipient of Chrysler Corporation's top
dealership award.
The "Award for Excellence" is
presented to Chrysler Corporation
dealerships demonstrating outstanding achievement in the areas
of customer satisfaction, sales performance . admini strative efficicn-

hands Reds
7-6 defeat

Copyright 1994

Companies to market renewable energy
PITTSBURGH (AP)- We stinghouse Electric Corp. and New
World Powe r Corp. have
announced an agreement to jointly
build, market and operate renew able energy systems.
The transaction IS worth approx imately $5 million. AI Austin . a
New World spokesman , said
Thursday.
The all ia nc e's product s wi ll
include wind farm s and hydroelectric facilities to produce clcc tncity
for large utilities. ...

--r;)h i~ i~&gt;H:· ,:_; T

-----~~f-;;
.,.d. -~lliiE~
Pittsburgh ~

...

...__..,

on the long-running dispute over
the North's nuclear program had
resumed Friday, the day of Kim 's
unexpected death at82.
Observers said the policy dccisions were the latest of growing
signs that Kim's son and designated successor, Kim Jong II, has sueccssfully taken the reins of power.
Many inside and outside Saudi'
Korea had feared the elder Kim's
death would trigger a chaotic
power struggle. The South's military remained watchful today, but
Southern officials said they were
acting on the assumption that the
younger Kim, at least for now, was
in control.
In the North, frenzied mourning
marked the passing of the elder
Kim, who during his four decades
of rule was the center of a worsh1pful personality cult. ln a central
Pyongyang plaza facing a towering

statue of Kim, tens of thousands of
people knelt, weeping , wailing and
touching their heads to the ground.
The secretive North provided
TV footage of such scenes to
Japanese television, whi ch was
seen as a sign Northern officials
believed the threat of instability
had been staved off.
The North also appeared to be
trying to restore some normalcy to
day-to-day life, although grieving
for the elder Kim will continue all
week.
Official radio has again begun
broadcasting regular news reports,
instead of the all-mourning fonnat
following Kim's death.
In what could be another sign of
growing confidence on the North's
part, South Korean reports said former President Carter, who met with
Kim three weeks before his death.
had been invited to a !lend the

funeral.
In the first hours after Kim's
death was announced , the North
had said no foreigner s would be
allowed in for the funcral, raising
speculation authoritie s fea red
unrest.
In Atlanta, Caner's spokeswoman, Carrie Harmon refused Sunday
night to comment on whether
Carter had been invited.
While Kim long II is apparendy
in the scat of power, he has not yet
formally assumed leadership. But
some North Korea watchers believe
that could happen soon.
South Korea, meanwhile , was
struggling to find a path through
the peninsula's changed political
landscape. At a Cabinet meeting
today, official s
Jared they
would continue to
·
tion with the North.
"We hope that Ul '\') 1"--HI

North Korea will keep the momentum for dialogue going for peace
and security on the Korean peninsula, and for a resolution to the
nuclear problem ," Foreign Minister Han Sung-joo told reporters.
U.S . officials , meanwhile,
voiced optimism about prospects
for the resumption of high-level
talks with the North in Geneva,
although the North did not suggest
any date for resumption.
A senior U.S. official traveling
in Europe with President Clinton
said the administration look it as a
"virtual certainty" that the talks
would continue.
North Korea says its nuclear
program is peaceful but has refused
to allow full inspections. The United States suspened ils push for
sanctions against the north pending
the outcome of the Geneva talks.

Report finds
half-cent hike
in gas prices

LIBRARY AUTOMATING - Patrons of the
Meigs County pub6c Ubraries are being reminded that the library is automating, and as a part
or that, plastic personalized library cards are
being issued. There is no charge for the original
card, although ir It Is lost or mutilated then there

will be 11 $3 repltlcement charge. Once the
automation process is comP.leted, then only
those with the plastic cards WJU be 11ble to check
out books, videos or other materials. Here Janice Curry, Pomeroy, picks up her new card from
Darlene See, library clerk.
·

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gas
prices at the 'pump rose a half-cent
during the last two weeks , said an
analyst. He attributed the rise to a
strong summertime demand for
gasoline and a hike in crude prices.
The average price of gas for the
two weeks ending Friday was
118 .94 cents per gallon, up .54
cents from the previous period
Trilby Lundberg, author of th~
Lundberg Survey, said Sunday.
But the rate of increase slowed
over the period, indicatinl$ that the
rise may be ending, she sa1d.
"What happens next, or course,
depends on what crude oil ~rices
d~ and s!rength of demand, ' she
sa1d.
The b1weckly survey is based on
a review of prices at 10,000 gasoline stations nationwide.
. At self-serve pumps, the average
pnce or regular, unleaded gasoline
was 112.16 cents per gallon. Midgrade unleaded was 122.63 cents
premium 131.09 and leaded
115.57.
•

•

''

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
·· Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publi&lt;her
CHARLENE HOHLICH
General Manager

1\IARGARET LEHEW
Controller

AMEMBER of The Associaled Press, Inland Dally Press Assoc1aUon and
the Amcncan Newspaper PublJshcr Assoe~at 1 on

LE"nERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be le ss than 300
words long All letters arc subJel;l lo eliitmg and must be s1gned with name,
address and telephone number No uns1gneJ letters wil l be pubhshed Letters
shoulJ be 111 good taste, address mg 1ssues. not pcrsonahlH:s

Ohio Perspective

Drug convictions:
do they really get
at the problem?
lly JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON - While the recent conviction or a reputed drug kingpin
was a victory ror law enforcement. some people question whether it will
really take a b1tc out or the area's cocaine and heroin trade.
Last month, Stuart T. " Buggs" Norman. 53, or Dayton , was convicted
in federal court or conspiracy to distribute large amounts or cocaine and
hero in, two counts or tax evasion. money laundering and filing a false
mcomc laX return.
u.s. Altomcy Edmund Sargus alleged that Norman was reputed to be
tile btggcst cocaine and heroin dealer in the area, say ing he distributed
about 200 pounds or cocaine wtth a wholesale value or up to $2.5 mtlhon.
Whtle rew d1s~ute that imprisoning a major drug dealer is worthwhile,
some caution agamsl getung too opt•m•suc about tts tmpact.
The Dayton Daily News wrote in an editorial that anyone who believes
that Norman's conviction will hamper the crack-cocaine trade " ts bound
to be disappointed.''
"Until there 's a drastic reduction in the American cravmg ror drugs, or
subslanUal and effective treaunent provided, or some way to take the
profit out or trafficking, communities will continue to produce characters
like Buggs Norman," the newspapc.~ said. "And law enforcement ':"ill be
burdened with never-endmg chases.
Dr. Harvey S1egal, director or the substance abuse intervention program at Wright State University's School of Medicine, said Norman's
niche on the street probably already has been filled.
"The profits arc so astronomical -~ drug d~in~.' the ~isks from the
criminal perspecuve are manageable, Stegal sa1d .. Ir.~e re ever gomg .,
to manage this problem, 11 has to be on ~e demand s1de.
.
.
Siegal said 70 percent or the nauon s anu-drug budget ts spent trymg
to stop the drug supply. while only 30 percent is earmarked for education
and treatment.
" Our philosophy is lopsided.': he said.
.
Siegal said the key to controlling the drug problem ts educatmg people
about the harmful consequences or taking drugs. Public education campaigns against cigarette smoking and drunken driving have been successful, he said.
"The best we can do is kind or keep hammering at it," he said. "After
awhile, people do geL the message._''
.
.
.
llul Dayton police LL. James Fmnegan sa•d arresung maJor drug dealers does have an impact, at least in the short term.
"Many times those who spring up to try to fill that void arc neither as
well connected or as experienced in the business," he said. "Very few or
the people who fill in the gaps have the kinds or contacts and variety or
supply sources to keep a consistent supply or contraband available.''
That view was echoed by Ralph Kohnen, an ass•stanl U.S. auomey
who helped prosecute Norman.
" My reeling is the longer somebody stays al the top, the more powerful and influential they become and the longer lhetr tentacles or mfluence
reach," Kohnen said. "I think everyone agrees you have Lo knock orr the
top guys as often as you can."

Letter to the editor
Has JTPA failed Meigs youth?
My daughter and several friends
in early April applied for the JTPA
summer work program that lets
youlhs from 14 to 21 get job experience and cam spending money on
their own . It is now July 6,1994
and I understand that JTP A or
Meigs County has done very liLLie
hiring, if any . The summer is
almost over and still no work .
Applicants which might have been
selected were guaranteed I 0 weeks
or work. How can they work 10
weeks with only six weeks before
school starts?
I am told that in a conversation
a friend had with a JTPA case
worlcer. thai worlcer indicaucd that
the selection process has not been
started . It is possible that my
daughter would not be eligible .
Had she been notified soon after
school let out, she could have made
other plans. auended ,camp, visited
family out or state, maybe round a
job, anything but han~ing around
the house all day hopmg to get a
phone call and have the chance to
work. At this point, with summer
half gone , she has lost all hope
about any job she might have been
awarded.
The JTPA Program in other
counties are already in progress most students commence work
widtin a week or two or school letting out. Why can't Meigs County
achieve what other counues do?
Realizing that "minor labor laws"
carry many restrictions about
employment. it is my understanding that there arc plenty of jobs that
rail in compliance with these
guidelines such as: runnmg
errands, filing, cleaning res1ro0ms,
laking trash out of offices, typmg,

'

etc. There must be numerous
offices and job sites that can supply
this employment envtronmcnt and
need the extra help.
With the ava ilability of state
funding from grants that will pay
the wages ror the JTPA worlcers,
there is no hardship on the employer Lo have these worlcers on board.
In most cases grants arc issued for
a llmited use or time, so my question is: what is happening with this
money? Is it being spent on the
consumption or paper work ~nd
someone takmg then ume getung
paid a little extra to put this together, with no benefit for those that
really need the money - those
who need something to do to keep
them off the Streets - experience
in the work force - or just to be
able to say we did this on our own
and made something or ourselves.
Why should this be only convenient ror those who don't have
school as a barrier and can be able
10 work at the program's convenience?
It has been brou~hlto my attention that there are some people who
have been put to work who may
have already been in the GR or
ADC program. What about those
who don't have the opportunity 10
geL assistance, or who want to
make a start without GR or ADC?
How are kids to get a start if
they are not given the opportunity
in summer worlc ~~'"'?grams that are
designated ror thetr benefit, ir these
other people bump them out or
change programs for their convenience?
Nancy Clark
Concerned Darent.
Pomeroy, Obio

Monday, July 11, 1994

Page--"2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July 11, 1994

The moment IS npe for Senate
Mmonly Leader Bob Dole, RKan . to break the JX!htica l lo&amp;Jarn
on hea lth care reform by mtroduc•ng a consenms bill along wtth one
or more moderate Democrats.
If the measure passed, Dole
would eme rge as the hero or the
hea lth care debate, Immeasurably
helpmg his chances or being elected prcs1dent in 1996. If he failed ,
he would at least have cslablishcd
that Republica ns did thw best to
solve America's health care problems and would have a positive
1ssue to lake ID voters in 1994 .
Most Amencans aren't even
aware th at Repub licans favor
health care reform - in spite or
recen t TV ads by the Republican
Nat 1onal Committee advoca tin g
greater portabi lity or health msurance and guaranteed msurab!lity
despite prc-exisung cond• tions.
Poll after poll shows that voters
thmk GOP oppos11ion w the Clmton health plan is ba sed on "J ust
politics," rat her th an principled
objection to the contents or the
plan.
Dole him se lf invar iab ly ge ts
quoted m the press and characterized by Democrats as opposi ng

(and poss1bly threatcmng to flitbuster) employer mandates, universa l coverage, and even efforts lO to
ach1cve a comprom•sc through

Morton Kondracke
"'tnggcr" mechan• sms.
What Dole has repeatedly said
he's lor - 1ncludmg insurance
reform, limits on malpractice
awards, and small business pooling
~ usually gets ignoiCd.
He' s also created confusion
because he originally co-sponsored
a liberal Republican measure sponsored by Se n. John Cha fce (R.I.).
but lately has socmcd to bac k away
from it because it has been atlacked
by conservatives as too close to
Clinton's bill.
One activist at the Projec t for
th e Republican Fu ture , which
favor s incremental in surance
reform and opposes Charee, says
that Dole's chance of leading the
party to the htgh ground on health
care may already have passed.
But other conservatives, such as
consultant David Keene, arc urging
Dole to tntroduce a Senate version
or the incremenlal insurance reform

--·

. - ~-

btll sponsored by Reps. Roy Rowland, D-Ga., and Mike Bilirakis, RFia .. and get a Democrat - possibly Sen. David Boren (Okla.)- to
co-sponsor it
From conversations with Dole
and his staff, Keene says he thinks
Dole is tom between being the savIOr or health reform and stopp ing
Pres1 dcnt Cli nton's bill, which
would endear him to conservatives.
Dole told me recently that he
might come up with his own plan.
"I have thought about Jt," Dole
said. "I have a rev. ideas."
The basis or a Dole Bill is ~;on ­
tained in a document prepared by
Dole's chief slafr adviser on health
care, Sheila Burke, representing
1tems agreed upon by all 44 GOP
se nator s. It goes beyond mere
insurance reform and undoubtedly
cou ld attract Democratic support,
conceivably including that or Senate Finance Chairman Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.
The feature mcludc portabi lity
of insurance; proteCtiOn agatnSl
denial based on pre-existing conditions; a mandate on employers to
offer (but not pay for) health insurance; phased-in subsid1es for the
workir1)( poor to buy insurance;

Tuesday, July 12

e:IS!Qi/'1 ''?Y
~Mn-1NeW S·~d

Accu-Weather• forecast for dayume condtttons and high temperatures

Legislation may make a dent in crime
The promising crime bill promised by Memorial Day,
promised by July Fourth - is still
only a promise as House and Senate conferees try to mesh their different versions or the proposed law.
Still, it looks as if it may happen,
cosung about $30 billion over live
years, and in a way that may please
both liberals and conservatives.
currently feuding about the bill.
Three issues have the congressional conferees Lied up in tight
knots.
One concerns the mistitled
"Ractal Jusuce" aclll•s the work
or the Black Caucus, which in
effect wants capilal punishment to
meet quota principles, giving black
murderers a greater chance Lo
legally delay or escape execution,
by use or racial statistics. There is
an irony here: Blacks make up 12
percent or the population, and commit 47 percent or all the murder
and manslaughter. About 94 percent or blacks murdered - arc
murdciCd by blacks. And the Black
Caucus says: Do not fully punish
the people who arc killing blacks!
It also doesn't make sense otherw•sc. Having reviewed all the
available studies, crime scholar
Jo hn Dilulio or the Brookings

Institution says that punishment m
America - including capital pun Ishment - is essentially colorblind.

Ben Wattenberg
The second hang-up concerns
the ban on assault weapons. Conservatives are against it Too much
gun control, they say. Silly. Real
hunters· and real sportsmen don ' t
use or need automatic assault
weapons.
The thtrd key tlem at issue goes
to the essence or the bill. All along
the legislation has been a balancing
act between liberals seeking "prevention" and conservaltves looking ror "punishment ,'"Both make
sense, although punishment keeping known violent criminals in
jail longer - is more likely to cut
crime raster than prevention remedies such as midnight basketball
leagues, or more drug rehabilitation
programs.
Both House and Senate bills
have serious money set aside for
additional cell space, to deal with
over-crowded prisons. The
amounts in the various proposals in
play differ enormously, from $3
billion. to $6.5 billion, to $10.5 billion, to the $13.5 billion figure

from th e Hou se bill, a number
recently reinforced by Rep. Bill '
McCollum's, R-Fia ., successful
motion instructing House conferees
n01 to go below that figure.
That is a lot or money, and the
formulas for spending it engender
great arguments. Some money will
be for new prisons; some may be
used to convert abandoned military
bases to prisons; some will be
Lightly linked to reforming state
penal codes Lo insure that violent
criminals spend 85 percent or their
sentence in prison (vs. an estimated
35 percent presently). Some money
will have looser linkage to longer
terms and "truth in sentencing."
But all version\; provide that there
will be more cells for violent criminals, which should decrease Ihe
promiscuous state parole and probation policies that are at the root
or much violent crime.
That's the important part.
Remember: A tbug on the street is
committing at least a dozen serious
crimes per year, not counting dru~
orrenses. When the predators are in
jail, they can only 'kill other prisoners, n01 you.
Together with President Clinton's 100,000 new police (in the
bill), the legislation could make a
dent in crime.

Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.,
has played a key role in the process. He is optimistic, but not certain that a bill will pass . He
believes that the legislation would
be the most important in federal
history, and that a final bill will
dispense about $9 billion ror prisons, $9 billion ror more police, and
$9 billion for prevention, thereby
accommodating the values or both
liberals and conservatives.
There are battles royal still to
come in this process. But if it happens, there is one set or heroes that
deserves particular credit: the voters. During the last year polls
charting the "most important
issue" have seen crime vault from
2 percent to over 50 percent, a
trend noted too late by some sorton-crime politicians last fall. That
reeling among voters - coupled
with an upcoming election - energized both the Congress and the
originally lackadaisical White
House and Justice Deparuncnl.
There are times, when hit upon
the head, even the government is
respons1ve.
(Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at tbe American Enterprise
Institute, is the host of the forthcoming weekly public television
proeram, Think Tanlc.)

'Oops!' factor corrects injustice
Although I continue to support
capital punishment, I also recognize the most powerful argument
against dte death penalty - its liTeversibility.
Once an mmate - later round
to be innocent - has been executed. the state cannot simply shrug its
shoulders and say, "Oops! We
made a mistake. " There are Ml
appeals from death.
Retired Supreme Court Justice
Lewis Powell - one or the great
justices or all time - acknowledges in a current biography by law
professor John Jeffries, the "&lt;KJP.s!"
factor in one or his irreverstble
decisions.
In l)1e 1987 decision, McCleskey
vs. Kemp, the court rejected the relevance of statistics that showed that
courts are more likely 10 impose a
death penalty if the convicted murderer's victim is while and and not
black. This ruling has helped send
disproportionately more bfack men
th8n white men to the electtic chair.
When Jeffries asked Powell if he
would change his vote on any case,
the stately Powell replied, "Yes,
McCleskey vs. Kemp."
He even went one s1ep further
and, like retired Justice Harry
Blackmun, declared that he

believed capital punishment was sued the Times because or an unfaunworkable and was now opposed , vorable review dtat accused him of
lOlL
"sloppy journalism." The court
In the Kemp case, the NAACP upheld h1s contention that he had
been professionally damaged.
In doing so. ironically. the D.C.
Chuck Stone
court overruled a 1983 D.C. coun
decision , Oilman vs. Evans and
Novak, which afflfllled the protecLegal Defense Fund had put
tion or opinions. Quoting the most
together an irrefutable set of statisfamous Supreme Court decision
tical evidence that Georgia's courts
upholding freedom of opinion,
were four to II times more likely
Gem vs. Welch (1974), the D.C.
to impose the death penally if the
Chief Judge Spottswood Robinson
victim was white.
wrote: "We begin with the common
Powell's one major mistalc.e is
ground. Under the First Amendbeing redeemed. The Racial Justice
ment, there is no such thing as a
Act, a component or the pending
raise idea."
crime bill, will permit condemned
The Rehnquist court disagrees.
killers to show racial patterns in
Chtef Justice Rehnquist, who
sentencing before they can be exeseems determined to reverse most
cuted.
or the Warren Coun decisions is
A few weeks ago, an entire
not convinced about the sanctity' of
court said, "Oops!" The U.S. Disopuuons.
trict Court of Appeals in D.C.
reversed itself on a libel decision
. "H a speaker says, 'In my opinton, John Jones is a liar '" Rehnwhen one of the judges confessed
he, too, had made a mislake. Judge
quist wrote in the majority opinion,
Harry T. Edwards' reversal in lhis MilkoviCh vs. Lorain Journal
past February's libel case of author (1990), "be implies a knowledge or
Dan E. Moldea vs. The New Yorlc faas whtch lead 10 the conclusion
Times made the full court reversal ~ Jones told_an unuuth ... 'In my
op!nton Jones 1s a liar' can cause as
possible.
It was a stunning ttiurnph for the much damage to repuration as the
First Amendment's protection of slalement, 'Jones is a liar.'"
There goes the First Amend-·
freedom of speech. Mo.ldea had

John W. Harper,~- Lorain, formerly or Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.,
died Friday, July 8, 1994 in the
Lorain Community Hospital.
Born Feb. 25, 1928, son of the
late Cecil and Ruth B. (Gardner)
Harper, he was a welder w1th the
Jim Lear Construction Co., and a
veteran or the Korean War.
Surviving arc his wife, Emilia
Diaz Harper; three daughters, Jan ice James of Bidwell. Sylvia Ham mack or R1chmond, and Paula
Jackson or Ga llipohs; a son, John
W. Harper Jr. of Gall ipoli s; four
brothers, George E. Harper and
Larry Eugene Harper, both or Gallipolis Ferry, Lewis W. Harper or
Pomeroy, and Keith D. Harper or
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; and eig ht
grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death
by a sister, Virginia R. Harper; and
a brother. Drury L. Harper.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday
in the Jordan Baptist Church, Gall•polis Ferry, with the Rev. Will iam
(Bud) Hatfield orriciating. Bunal
will be in the church ce metery.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home, Point Pleasa nt,
tonight from 7-9 and on Tuesday at
the church one hour prior to the
service.
Military graveside rites will be
conducted by American Legion
Post No. 23.

MICH .

tax-exempt med1cal savings
account s; tax deductibility for
insurance purchases ror the se lfe mpl oyed and for those who se
employers do not cover them: and
formula l10n of small -business
insurance purchasing pools.
Burke's list also contains mal pracl!ce reforms, including a
$250,000 cap on non -econom•c
damages and hmtls on attorney's
fees; administrallve Simplifications
to bring down tnsuran cc costs;
increased assistance ror academic
health centers: and expansion or
commun ity health clinics in rural
areas. Native Ameri can reservations, and inner cities.
The list also includes reforms
making it easier ror Medicaid and
Medicare patients to ge t care tn
HMOs and other managed-care
programs; expansion or federal
overs ight or medical quality standards; and LaX ass istance for providing home -based long-term care.
What the GOP consens us does
not tnclude are two bottom-line
demands on the Clinton admtnistration: employer mandates lo guaran tee universal coverage and premium caps or another government-set
price lid on medical expenses. GOP
senators also can· t agree on a basic
benefits package.
H Dole and Moynihan were to
mtroducc the GOP consensus plan,
poss ibly with a "soft tngger " .
requiring some consideration or
mandates and cost controls in the
future, such a proposal almost certainl y could pass the Senate and
would satisfy the problems that
most American s have with the
existing health care system.
Then, the administration, not the
Republicans, would be on the
defensive, forced Lo accept either a
consensus bill or hold out for its
own, grander proposaL
There is one potential downside
here for Dole. Ir his bill passed,
Cltmon might reap the credit, as he
did when House Republicans saved
NAFrA. ll's a risk worth laking,
and Republican PR skills certainly
are adequate to see that the credit is
shared.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

ment neighborhood! Fortunately,
Rehnquist is declining as a major
intellectual force on lhe Supreme
Coun
A third serious reversal will correct targeted discrimination against
black college alhletes. The NCAA
has proposed a softening of its
Proposiuon 48, which resulted in a
higher percentage of black athletes
being denied admissions to college.
Following threats of a boycott
by the Black Coaches Association
and a congressional investigation
by Rep. Cartliss Collins, D-Ill., the
NCAA has recommended a new
sliding seale ror dte SAT or ACT
scores and core-course grade-point
averages.
What all of that psychometric
gobbledygook means is that SAT
or ACT scores aren't that pre dictable when it comes to predicting black athletes' academic performance.
The new NCAA proposal would
reverse the efforts of the NCAA
President's Commission to cut
spending and tighten academic
standards.
Once again, "Oops!" has cor- •
rected a terrible injustice.
(Chuck Stone is a columnist
for Newspaper Enterprise Asso- .
ciatioo_)

•

Page-3

- -,Area deaths-- Return of _property
John W. Harper
seized in '93 begins

OHIO Weather

Dole could become reform he.ro

The Daily sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

cr, Bruce Riggs or Lancaster; a sister, Nancy Hetzer or Belle, W.Va.;
four grandchildren; and nine greatgrandchi ldren.
She was preceded in death by
her hu sband , Emmett Heiney; a
brother. Ted Riggs ; and a sister,
Mary Sampson.
Services will be Wednesday at I
p.m. at the White-Blower Funeral
Home. Coolvi ll e. The Rev. Phil
R•dcn6ur will officiate and burial
wtl l be tn the Heiney Ce metery.
Fu ends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 7-9 p.m.

By Sentinel News Starr
Office and ihe Meigs County ShcrOnc year and two day s after ,rrs Department.
Metgs County law enforcement
On Oct. 15, Fife staled he would
PA
orrtcials seized money and oth er not comply with th e forfei ture
ttems. including thousands or guns. agreement. At that point, the forfei You
from the residence of Robert D. ture proceedings were d1smisscd.
!Mansfield ja4o
F1fe, 68, or Middleport. the Me1gs
Tfu, monung, the prosecutor's
IND
County prosecutor's offi ce started off1cc began returning property Lo
returning some or those item s to those people w1th claims.
their nghtful owners.
Prosec utor's off1ce spokesman
Fire was arrested on ·July 9, Brian Reed said people wtth claims
87"
1993, on one count or trarfickmg in were se nt lcllcrs earlier te lli ng
John W. Thomas
Columbusl86°
rood
stamps and two cou nts or th em when th ey cou ld get the"
John William "Bill" Thomas,
receiving
property. Officers property
67. of Cheshire, died Saturday. July sea rchingstolen
ht
s
home
co nfi sca ted
The proce ss is being done in
9, 1994, at the Holzer Medical
firearms
and
about
$185,000
in
alphabcucal
order 10 avoid long
Center.
cas
h.
He
pleaded
guilly
to
th
e
lmes.
Born on July 15, 1926 in Leon,
three days later 10 th e
Peopl e arc coming in and arc
W.Va., he was the son or the late charges
Meigs
Coumy
Court
or
Common
betng
asked ror tdcnulicauon, Reed
Fred ri ck V. and Sophia Yauger Pleas.
said. After ensunng the1r properly
Thomas. He was a 40-year employF•fe's busmess was operated IS here and how much they need to
ee or Col umbus &amp; Southern Ohio
like
a pawn shop, but was not pay to recover it, they pay, sign a
Electric Co., and a veteran or the IJccnsed
a~ such; as a result, propreceipt and gel thw property back,
Korean War.
crty
belonging
to
other
people
was
Reed
ex pia• ned.
He is survived by hi s wife,
also
con
fiscated.
Gun
s arc bemg returned at a
Daisy Swis her Thomas . or
Under
provisions
or
the
original
building
that formerl y housed the
Chcsh ire, a son and daughter-inplea
bargain,
Fire
agreed
to
forfeit
Vulco
Touch
in M1ddleport. Other
law, Kenneth William and Laura
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
approximately
$185,0&lt;Xl
and
about
personal
property
items arc be ing
Thomas of Bradenton, Fla.; two
Via AssoCIII~ Pres• Grap~Jc~Nttl
C1994 Accu·Weether. Inc
1,540
rifl
es,
shotgun
s
and
hand
returned
at
the
Rutland
C1vic CeoStSLcrs, Rosella A. Stewart or Point guns seized from his South Th1rd tcr.
Pleasant, W.Va., and Phyllis F. Avenue home and business to the
Fife and his attor ney, David
Sheets or Columbus; three broth - Law
Enforcement
Trust
Fund,
Bacr,
ers, Charles A., Richard 0. and where they were to be distributed process.wi ll observe and aid in the
Fredrick Thomas, all or Cheshire; to the Meigs County Prosecutor's
four grandchildren; and severa l
Gladys
H.
Heiney
meces
and nephews.
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at
By The Assodated Press
Besides
his parents , he was preGladys
H.
Heiney,
82,
or
Cloudy skies are expected over 6:13a.m.
ceded in death by two half-brothCoolville
Road.
Coolville
.
died
,
Weather
forecast:
extreme northwest Ohio tonight,
Today ... mostly sunny. Highs Sunday, July 10, 1994 at the Hick- ers , Ben Thomas and Mari on
but clear skies are expected elsefrom th e upper 70s northeast Lo the ory Creek Nursin g Center. The Thomas: and two granddaughters.
wheiC.
Two Rutland residents suffered minor visible injuries in a twoServices will be 3 p.m. Tuesday
Plains.
Lows will be from 55 to 60 in mtddle 80s far south.
car
accident Sunday on Slate Route 7 near Tuppers Plains, the GalBorn in Ridgewood, she was the in the Fisher Funeral Home with
Tonight ..Moslly clear. Lows 55
lia-Meigs
Post or the State Highway Patrol said.
the east and about 60 elsewhere in
to 60 east with around 60 else- daughter or the late Bruce and Eva the Rev. Miles Trout officiating.
Harold
E. Hyse ll, 64, and Twila R. Hysell, 63, both or Main
the slate.
Sampson Riggs . She was a home- • Burial will be in the Gravel Hill
Street,
refused
treatment at the scene, the patrol said.
It wiII be a bit warmer and more wheiC.
Cemetery in Cheshire. Friends may
Tuesday ... Partly sunny with a maker.
said
Harold Hysell was southbound at 5:45 p.m. when
Troopers
humid on Tuesday, with a slight
Surviving arc a so n, Gale ca ll at the funeral hdtne tontghl
he
was
unable
L
o
stop m ume for a vehicle ahead of him driven by
chance or thunderstorms statewide. slight chance or thunderstorms .
Heiney or Belpre; a daughter, from 6-9 p.m. and until lhe time or
Tracy
A.
Murphy,
19, 50600 Pine Tree Drive, Reedsville, and
Highs will be from the mid-80s Highs in the middle to upper 80s.
E1leen Friess of Sylvania; a broth- servtccs Tuesday.
Extended forecast:
struck the rear or Murphy 's vehicle.
over the eastern counties to the
Wednesday and Thursday ... A
Murphy had stopped her car to make a left turn onto Orange
upper 80s in western Ohio.
chance
of thunderstorms. Lows 65
Township Road 289 (Hickory Lake) when the crash occ urred
The record high temperature for
troopers said. Damage to both vehicles was modemte and Harold
this date ~ the Columbus weather to 70.
Units of the Meigs County who was transported to VMH;
Friday
...
Fair.
Lows
in
the
lower
Hysell was ~ited for assured clear distance.
station was 104 in 1936. The
REEDSVILLE - 12 a.m. Sunto middle 60s. Highs in the lower Emergency Medical Service reportrecord low was 50 in 1945.
ed eight calls for assistance day to Number Nine Road ror Judy
Sunset today will be at 9:02 to middle 80s.
between Saturday and Monday Dai Icy who was tran sported to
mornings. Units responding includ- VMH;
A Dexter woman suffered minor visible injury in a one-car acciRUTLAND - 11:46 p.m. Sated:
dent Saturday on County Road 10 (Dexter), the Gallia-Meigs Post
MIDDLEPORT - 4:31p.m. urday to Mud Fork Road ror Anita
or the State Highway Patrol said.
Sunday to Middleport Police Butcher who was tran sported to
Lorella F. Campbell, 45, 31216 Bowles Road, was not treated at
LONDON, Ohio (AP) enforcement agencies posed as Department for Toby Hysell who VMH;
the scene, the patrol said.
Undercover officers thwarted plots .. prison visitors sent lo arrange the was tranSjlOned to Veterans MemoSYRACUSE -3:1 7p.m. SatCampbell was northbound, one-tenth or a mile north or Salem
by inmates al two Madison County slayings, dtc newspaper said.
urday
to Bashan Road for Luvenia
rial Hospttal; I :28 a.m. Monday to
Township
Road 21 (Montgomery) at 7:30 p.m. when she lost conprisons to arranged the killings or
Berry, 40, has been in prison Powell Street for Carrie Kennedy Hayman who was transported to
trol
in
a
left-hand
curve, the patrol said. Her car then went orr the
people on the outside, a newspaper since 1991. He is serving a rour- who was transported to VMH;
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 11:27
right
side
or
the
road,
struck a diu;h and overturned onto iLs wheels.
reporucd today.
year sentence for gross sexual
POMEROY - 7:42 p.m. Sun- a.m. Sunday to Dusky Street for
The
car
was
moderately
damaged, the patrol said.
One prisoner allegedly wanted imposition in Carroll County.
day Lo Hartinger Road for Rufus John Savage who was transported
to kill the prosecutor who put him
Court records say Berry had Browning who was transported to to VMH pending transfer to Holzer
behind bars and the other was said arranged ror a man by the name or VMH; 3:34 a.m. Monday to Mur- Medical Center.
to be afler the fadter of the girl he D.J. Armstrong Lo visit him in ray Hill Road ror Sharon Marcum
A 23-year-old Lancaster man was ctted nn several counts follow was convicted of sexually abusing, prison and that he had conspired
mg a one-car crash in Middleport Saturday around I a.m.
The Columbus Dispatch said.
with Armstrong in the killing.
Toby A. Hysell was southbound on North Second Street at a
Both ")lrisoners were indicted Berry allegedly oHered an IOU
high rate of speed when he lost control or his 1986 Dodge Daytona
June 29 by a Madison County guaranteeing payment of $2,500
MONROE - Ttffney F. Nor in a curve, according to a Middleport Pohce report The car hit a
By The Associated Press
grand jury on single counts or con- when the killing was carried out,
ton, 13, of Hamilton, driver in a
stop sign and came Lo rest on the s•dcwalk or the Middleport
traffic
accidents
in
Weekend
spiracy to commit aggravated mur- court records indicate.
Deparunent Store.
Ohio killed 15 people, including a one -vehic.le accident on a Monroe
der. Both pleaded innocent at
Following the crash, Hysell left the scene and was found later
Wyandot County commissioner, city street
arraignments.
CANTON- Michael J. Hignear the intersection or South Third and Ash streets, the report slatthe State Highway Patrol said. The
Madison Correctional Institution Snyder reunion
ed.
·
commissioner was a vtctim in the gins, 25, or Massillon, driver in a
inmate James A. Berry was
The 21st annual Charles and only double-fatality acci&lt;lent or the one-car accident on a Stark County
Hysell was cited for failure to control, drivmg under the influaccused or attempting to arrange Alma Hinzman Snyder reunion will weekend.
road.
ence, driving under suspension, leaving the scene or an accident and
~ror someone 10 kill Clirroll County be held at Star Mill Park Sunday. 1
LEBANONNathan
Gabbard,
speeding.
He was transported by the Middleport squad or the Meigs
Other victims included three
Prosecutor John T. Smiley. His Lunch will be served at 12:30 p.m. ' motorcyclists and a bicycle rider.
13. or Lebanon, driver or an all-terCounty Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospttal
trial is scheduled for Aug. 8.
for treatment or minor injuries.
The patrol counted weekend rain vehicle in a two-vehicle acciLarry L. Shreffler, a London Republican women to meet
dent on a Warren County road.
Damage to the car was listed as moderate.
Lrarric
deaths
from
6
p.m.
Friday
The Meigs County Chapter or
Correctional Institution prisoner, is
CHILLICOTHE - Stephanie J.
through
midnight
Sunday.
to stand trial Aug. 15 for alleged Iy the Republican Women's Club will
Robinson, 35, of Chillicothe, driver
The dead:
to attempting to arrange the murder meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Carleton
in a two-vehicle accident on U.S.
SUNDAY
School in Syrac.UsC:-Pians will be
or an Elyria, Ohio, man.
50
in Ross County.
ZANESVILLE - Besse H.
Local A &amp; W Root Beer distributors Carl Morgan and D1ck
The prisoners' schemes were made for wotking at the Meigs
AKRON - Anthony McDaniel,
Ansell,
81,
or
Stafford
,
Va.,
when
Berdine
recently teamed with I0 area Kroger stores to sell root beer
derailed within a month of each County Fair. All registered Repub2 I. or Aleron, bicyclist killed on a
noats
the
car
she
was
riding
in
ran
off
1
and
raised $3,0&lt;Xl for area Easter Seal programs.
other when officers from two law licans are invited to attend.
70 near Zanesville and struck two city street
Cambridge, Glouster, Nelsonville, McConnelsvtll e, Athens Bellarge boulders.
pre, Marietta, Parkersburg #710, Pomeroy and Gallipolis K~ogcr
CINCINNATI -Linda Barber,
stores participated.
43, of Brookville, Ind ., in a two-car
Easter Seals strives to promote the equality, dignity and indecoli is ion on a Hamilton County
pendence
or the phystcally-challenged by max1mizing their abilit•es
that
he
cut
his
hand
while
preparing
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
(Continued from Pa11e 1)
and preventing further disability through public educauon and
for his trip to Chicago the night of road.
Saturday
admissions
none.
.is scheduled for July 22.
FINDLAY - Carl E. TurnbeU,
research.
murders and left the blood
Saturday discharges - Louise
·'•A committee in the prosecutor's the
while retrieving a cellular tele- 69, or Carey, a Wyandot County Burbridge, Albany; William Whitoffice, led by Assistant District phone, Newsweek said, citing commissioner, and Cletus W. Oritington, Middleport.
Attorney Frank E. Sundstedt, will sources close to the defense.
ans, 61, of Carey, in a two-ear acciSunday admissions - Luvcnia
decide whether to seek capital punThe cut was in addition to the dent on Ohio 568 in Hancock Hayman, Long Bottom.
ishment
one he said he suffered in Chicago County.
Sunday discharges - none.
Sundstedt has declined 10 speak when he broke a glass upon hearing
WEST UNION - David E. HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
COLUMBUS (AP) - Direct
about dtc Simpson case, but noted of his ex-wire's death.
Himes Jr. , 29, of West Union,
livestock prices and receipts at
Discharges
July
8Mrs.
John
that the death penalty is rarely
A message left Sunday for when his motorcycle collided with
and son, Hilda Wilson, selected buying points Monday by
imposed in domestic violence Simpson attorney Robert Shapiro a pickup truck on Ohio 41 in Toland
Joseph Blazer, Tracy Pauerson. the U.S. Department of Agricul homicides.
Adams County.
ture:
was not immediately returned.
Joseph Thacker, Crystal Manuel.
In other developments:
WAUSEON - Ronald T.
Barrows and gilts: steady 10
• Eighteen inmates refused
Discharges July 9 - Leah
• Newsweek magazine reported meals Friday at Men's Central Jail Bahler, 21, of Napoleon. in a two- Whittekind,
firm; demand modemte to good.
April
Fought,
Mary
in its July 18 issue a new explana- to protest living conditions. But car crash on Ohio I 08 in Fulton
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
Miller.
tion for blood found on Simpson's sheriff's officials said the inmates Counly.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Robert pomts, 38.50-41.50;
Ford Bronco.
CANTON -Christopher T. Gordon, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
were eating candy over the weekSorted U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs.,
Simpson told polit::e. on June 13 end and were just capitalizing on Pontzer, 32, of CaniOn, in a two-ear Mrs . Anthony Heaton, son, country points, 41.50-43.00.
smashup on Ohio 687 in Stark Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
Prices from The Producers Livethe Simpson case.
The Dtilly Sentinel
It was not known if Simpson, County.
Jeffers, son, Athens; Mr. and Mrs, stock Association:
MONTPELIER - Jon P. Freddie Mathews, son, Beaver; Mr.
who is housed in another secuon of
Cattle: steady 10 2.00 higher.
(USPS ZIJ.Ht)
Spiess, 24, of Fayette, driver in a and Mrs. Daniel Stapleton, daughSTA.IT8 niDAl, JVI.T 15TII
the
same
jail,
was
aware
or
the
Slaughter steers: choice 58.00Published evn-y afttrnooa, Monday thrau&amp;h
"MGKLI 11 TQ OU'rPliiLD'"
two-car accident on a Williams ter, Crown City.
hunger sttike.
65.25; select53.00-59.00.
Friday, Ill Coull St., Pomeroy, Ohio by ll!e
UIIOLO &amp;OrWUI ..IIQD ln --riiUI LliiS'"
Ohlo Volley Publlthlq Compaay/Mulllmedla
County road.
Gin
CERT1RCATEI AYAILAIILEI
Slaughter heifers: choice 57.00Discharges July 10 - Cora
tac., Pomuoy, Ohlo 45769, Pb. 992-2156
KETTERING
Michael
J.
Dingess, David Kelly, Chancie 64.75; seleet52.00-59.00.
Sec:olld eliOt poo~~~e paid II Pomeroy, Obio.
''
Cooley, 27, or Kettering, moiOrcy- Carter. Reva Johnson, Robin
M.-: The AIIOC!IIed Preu, IDCI !he Ohio '
clist in a one-vehicle accident on a Calvert, Mrs. Daniel Stapleton and
NewapiPCf AaoQati.oa, National Advertili.JI&amp;
Alii
Ele
Power
·----191/4
Kettering street
RepreseDl.ltivc, Braaham Newspiper Sales,
daughter, Mrs. Freddie Mathews
ADD-------.55
1/8
SATURDAY
733 Third Avenue, New Yort. New York •
Alhlmd ou ______.Jl J/8
and son, Mrs. Anthony Heaton and
10017.
MIAMISBURG - Davinder S. son, Mrs. Bradley Jeffers and son,
ATAT---------------~
Sandhu, 21, of West Carrollton, Mrs. Robert Gordon and son.
POSTMAS11lR Sel!d- dlaiiJoo!O The
BIDir. Oae---------.34 Ill
Dally Seatlael , lll C()\wt St., Pumaoy, Obio
motorcyclist in a two-vehicle acci(PubHsbed with permission)
Boll ~---------.21 318
45769.
dent on
741 in
Clluaplon lllcL
SUISCRJP'I10N IIATIB
Clw11llna Sbop-------9 518
a, c.rr• • Moe- ROlli•

I•

•

·~
' ' ' •I
I

After lows in the 50s tonight,
temps to pick up on Tuesday

Local News in Brief:
Two injured in Sunday accident

EMS units log eight calls

Dexter area woman injured in wreck

Authorities nip murder plot

Lancaster man ticketed by police

15 killed on Ohio highways

Announcements

Kroger stores take part in drive

Execution unlikely for O.J.

Hospital news

Livestock report

Stocks

5~=-~::::::_::.::: : :.: : : : : : : :.: :: : : :.~:~~
SINGLE COPY

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No lllboerip4lou by moll permlaed ill .,..

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sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

In the AL,

Tribe, ChiSox still share Central lead

Monday, July 11, 1994
Pa~W-4

In the NL,

By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
The Cleveland Ind1ani will not
use the All-Star break to celebrate
their shocking occ upancy of f~rst
place m lhe Amencan League Central.
They will be th1nk1n g about
staymg m the race in the second
half - a ranty on the shores of
Lake Ene, where nary a championship flag has nown in 40 seasons
-and the Chicago White So•.
"We recognue that we haven't
played well against them," pitcher
Jack Moms said Sunday after the
Indians retained a lead of two percentage points over the White Sox.
"We're gomg to have 10 turn 11

Hunter's grand slam pushes Pirates to 7-6 win over Reds
lh .lOIII\ NOLAN
. CINCINNATI (AP) - Down
· b) "' run' . 11 looked like lhc Plltsh ur ~ h 1'1r&lt;11 ~ s were startm g thelf
-'II I ~ S t.lf br~ak early. Bnan
llunll'f \ Ihlfd at -bat delayed those
piJrl\.
ll11nlc'r who ll1ed out and struck
mil 111 h1 ., f1rst two al-baLS agamst
1\•J,· Sc hourek . h11 h1s second
, ,11c·cr pand slam 10 the SIX th
rn11111g, and the Puates ov~rcame a
().() dell ell with a 7-6 VICIOI)' In II
.nnrng' over the Cmcmnau Reds.
lLJrn Foley's one-out double m
1hc lith scored pinch-runner AI
Marun as the Pirates snapped a

lour-game losmg streak w1t!i the ~r
llf SI w1n at R1verfront Stad1um
\lncc July 2, I 993.
" The llrst two at-bats, he preuy
much p1tched me the way he wanted Io," Hunter said of Schourck.
" lie mrsscd with a curve, he had to
1hrow me a fastball and I took
advantage of 11."
In the lith, Don Slaugh~ pmchhitung for Steve Cooke (4-6)
walked lead•ng off and was
1cplaced by Martm. Lance Parnsh
sac rif1ced before Foley doubled
down lhe nght-ficld line off Hector
Carrasco (4-6).
Bias Minor got the final three

"There's nothmg wrong -

"»
'"'"· .J;;,~
~ &lt;

~\}W '
~"

outs for h1s first save
The P~rates, who trailed 6-0.
scored fo ur runs in the SIX th on
Hunter's second career grand grand
slam, and tied it in the e1ghl11.
P~ratcs manager J 1m Leyland
was proud Of h1s team 's comeback.
"They could have packed it up
and sa1d, ' h's the (AII -St.ar) break,'
" Leyland sa1d. "Commg m here
and gctung manhandled for three
days. then gelling down li-0 and
domg what we d1d. lhat's got to say
somethmg."
Shourek, who shut ou t the
P~rates on two h1ts through live
innings before Hunter's homer,
d1dn't offer any excuses.
"My arm wasn'ttircd," he said.
"It was a lack of concentratiOn. I
don ' t know what, but I got some ·
pi1chcs up and they beat me."
Kevm Mllchcll left the game m
the sixth after banging into the outfield wall 1n an allempt to catch
Hunter's homer He was taken to a
hospi t"l for X-rays to his left rib
cage. The Reds sai d the re su lts
were ncgauvc and Mitchell w1ll be
re-evaluated following the All-Star
break.

.,

FORCED OUT - The Cincinnati Reds' Hal Morris (right) is
forced out at second base to start the double play in the 11th inning of
Sunday's National League game in Cincinnati, where the Pittsburgh
Pirates won 7-6. Morris was retired as a result or Bret Boone's
grounder. (AP)

just

a lillie sore, that's about it,"
Mitchell sa id as he dressed as m
the clubhouse following a return
from the hospital .
"I'm alnghL I'll be in lhcre. "
C1ncinnati took a I -0 lead in the
flfst. Jacob Brumf1eld, playing in
place of the injured Dcion Sanders,
doubled off starter Denny Neagle
and moved to th~rd on a ny out.
One out later, Brumfield got a good
jump on Neagle and stole home on
a I. I pitch 1hat sailed h1gh and out·
side.
It was Brumfield's fourth steal
this season, and the Reds lhird steal
of home this season. However,
Barry Larkm and Hal Morris stole
home on double steals.
Larkm has decided nDl to play
in Tuesday's All-Star game
because of a bothersome sore

elbow.
He will be replaced by Wil
Cordero of lhe Montreal Expos.
" The in jury crept up on me. I
thmk 11's best 10 not go out there
and risk injunng it anymore,"
Larkin said.
The Reds made it 2-0 in the
th1rd on an RBI double by Kcvm
Mitchell.
Bret Boone tripled to lead off
the fourth and scored on Brum field's 1wo-out homer, his second,
giVIng Cincinnati a 4-0 lead.
The Reds extended the1r lead to
6-0 in the f1fth on an RBI double
by Morris and a run-sconng smgle
by Boone.
Notes: Lance Parr1sh played m
his 1,740th game. He is lOth on the
all-ume games-caught list, closing
m on Johhny Bench's record with
1,744 .... Don Slaugh! has nme hits
m his last I I at-bats .... Foley, who
had two hits, had gone 2-f&lt;I-20 m
I I games since being reinstated
from the I 5-day d1sab!ed list on
June 15 .... The Reds are 10-4 m
extra-inning games th1s season.
Elsewhere in the National
League, it was Montreal 8, San
Diego 2; St. Louis 6, Atlanta I;
New York 5, Los Angeles I; San
FranCISco 2, Philadelphia I in 10
innings; Rorida 6, Colorado 4; and
Houslon 5, Chicago 3.
Expos 8, Padres 2
After opening the season I 3-1,
the Atlanta Braves looked lilce runaway winners in the NL East. Now
look who's m second place.
Atlanta is looking up in the
standmgs for the first time since
Sept. 9 of last season. The Montreal Expos finally caught the Braves
after nipping at their heels for lhe
past month.
Montreal, which trailed Atlanta
by 8 1(2 games before lhe season
was even a month old, won their
fourlh straight game Sunday, an 82 victory over the San Diego
Padres.
Wit Cordero, named 10 replace

Cmcmna11 's Barry Larkm on the
NL's All-Star team before the
game, hll his f1rst career grand
slam as the Expos completed a
four-game sweep of the Padres
'' Th1ngs have really come
together for thi s team," Cordero
said. "Things have come togelhcr
for me. I mean, making the All-Star
team is just unbelievable. Th1s 1s
something you dream for."
The Expos, who outscored the
Padres 34-3 m the series, have been
a rughtrnare for the Padres.
Sunday's win was Montreal' s
ninlh stra1ght over San D1ego, and
the
' 19th in 21 games w1th

" We could have been playmg
anybody the way we were play mg ." Mpntreal manager Felipe
Alou said, "The kind of pressure
we put on [hem •n the se four
games, not too many peopl e can
handle that."
Moises Alou h11 two homers and
Jeff Fassero (7 -5) shut down the
Padres after givmg up two runs in
the first inning. He gave up six hils
and struck out eight in six innings.
Mel Rojas puched the final
three innmgs for his 15th save.
Joey Hamilton (5-4) was rocked
in the worst outing of his young
career. He lasted five innm~s and
(See NL on PageS)

-

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

...... ,
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~:' &gt; &gt;;:: ;- ,

y
y

&gt;

&lt;' ' ,

'

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.,
STEALS SECOND -The Cleveland Indians' Wayne Kirby steals
second just a hair before the throw gets to Minnesota shortstop
Denny Hocking in the second inning or Sunday's American League
game in Minneapoli~, where the Indians won 9-1. (AP)

Thursday's games
Cl.l!VEU.ND atChica&amp;o. I :OS p.m.
Milwaukee at Minnc.ota, 8:0.5 pm.
Decroitat Kanau Cuy, 8:0S p.m
Tormi.O at Tuu, I:3S p.m.
Boat.on at Oakland, 9:1S p.m.
Ballinu•. .• Calilomia, 10:0!5 p.m.
New Yod!: at Sa.ule,. 10:(15 p.m.

NL standings
F.aalem Dlv"loa
W L P£L
.. !i4 33 621
M"""""
!i2 33 612
AUat1U .
. ..41 47 466
Aonda .....

135

Philaddphia .

GB

TWII

New Yod ..

.41
40

I

47

466

13.5

47

460

14

Cenlral Dlvlslon

598

SL I...auil ..
.. 42 412
Pit"""'ah
... 41 45
ChiuB•· ........... 36 SO

.500

8.5

417
419

IO.S
IS.S

25

568

Wesla'n DhWoa

Loo Anacla ........ 46 42
ColoradO ............. .42 48

l2J
467

S

SO

438

7,j

393

ll .S

Sao fnnCliCO ........19

San Dieao ....... ..... 35

~

SundBy's scores
SL Lou.il6, Atl.uta 1

Pi..bwJ!t 7, CINCINNATI 6 (II OM)
Nc.w Yolk 5, Lot Ansclca 1
Mootn&gt;a!S, s.n Dios• l

San Fran~;I.Ko 2, Pbiladc.lphi• 1 (10
1M.)
Florido 6, Colcndo 4
HOUAOO 5. Olicaao 3

No games today

.344; Alou, Monoeal. .331; loft..,.., SL
Louio, .3]0, ~. 1A&gt;o Angd.... 325.
RUNS. BaJwcll, Hwston, 74, Grit·
som, MonnaL 73, Oalarnp, Colorado,
69; Lankford, St. Louia, 61; Bi&amp;&amp;to,
llooltat, 65; Alou, Monlloll, 62; R. Kelly, AWnla, 61, T. Owym, S.. ~o,61.
RBI' B•J...U, Ho..ton, 12; Btdtcao,
Colorado, 17; PiaUI, Lol Anaelca:, 76;

O.lmtsa. Col01ado. 73; Mao Williaml.
S.. FnnciJco, 69; Morna, CINCINNATI.
61; L Will«, Montteol. 65.
IDTS Mom., CINCINNATI, 121\ T.
Gwynn, s.n Dioso. Ill; OWmp, Cdorado, 114; Bichono, Color•do, II 3;
Mondoai, Lot Anaclu, 108; Bisaio,
Hou~tonL!~· Baswell, HoullOP, 106,
Corune, l'londa, 106; Alou, Moaue~l,

106.
OOUBU!S: Bl&amp;tpO. H.....,., J~; L.
Walker, MDIIIRII, 32; Motria, CINCINNA XI; Bi&lt;hetu. Colorodo. 216; J. Bell,
PiuaburJh. 2S; DyuiD. Pbibdclphia. 2S;

n.

Cordero, Monuul, 23; Aloo, Monttul,
2J, T. Gwynn. S"' Diqo. 2J

Tuesday's game

TIUPLES: Buller, Loa Ancel•, I; R.
Sanden, CINCNNATI, 1; Mottdai, 1A&gt;o
Angel•, !li, D. l..ewia, SID fllnCl.ICo, .5;
Sou, Cb.ica.o, S, AUcoa, SL Louu, .5;
Sandbora. Chicoso. ~ HOhlE RUNS: Mau Williama, Stn

All· Stu Game" Pill.tb.qlt. 8 p.m.

No games Wednesday
Thursday's games
San FranciKo at Mantreal,7:35 pm.
i..M Anaclca II AUJadclphia, 7:35p.m.
HouAoo at Pittalxqh, 1:35 p.m.
OUufJ at CINaNN'ATI, 7:35pm.
San Die&amp;o" New YOlk, 740 p.m
florida II Alluua, 7;40 p.m.

Francisco, 33; BaawoU, Houston, 27;

Oalarraaa, Colorado, 2!5: Boada, San
Fnnciaco. ZJ. McOrilf, Atlara, 23; Piuu, Loa
21 : 8 ichca.e. Col.ond('),
2l;Miteh .QNCINNATI,21.

':f.clCII,

STOLEN BASES: D Sanden,
CINONNATI, 32; Oriuom, Monll'cll,
30; Can, Floncb, 2S; Bigio, Howton,
lS: Mou1.01, HOUita~, 22; D. Lcwu, San
FntnC&gt;ICO, 22; l..&amp;dtin, CINCINNATI. 21.
PITCHING (10 dc.culOna): K. Hill,
M......t, ll·l, .112, 3.21; Danny Jodtaan, fbilacldphia, 11 ·3, 786. 3.33; Sabcrhaaen. New Yort. , 1~ •. 714, 3.1:5; G.
Maddua., Atlanll, 11·.5, .617, 1.10; Nicd,
Calondo, a.., 61&gt;7, 4.53; Dnbc&amp;, IJouo.

St. LoWa a1 Colcn6o, 9:05 p.m.

AL standings
IMltn Dhillon

Ttalll
WLPtt.GB
NcwYad .......... JO lS Jll
Ballimon: ........... JO 36 J81
j

a......................42

44
Dctcoil ...............40 ~
r...... ... .... .. .11 48

IJ
11

.411

.~

.442

Ctnlral Dlvldoe
n .6117
Chialao.............. J2 J4 .60S
KmauCi&amp;y .......... .45 42 .517
~ .............42 44 .411
Milwlukeo ............. )9 41 ..WI

t:u

CU!VI!LAND ...... J 1

7.5

10

t 3.S

w....... oh·~~&amp;o~~

r .......................42 4:1
Oakland ................l9 41

ton, lll·l. 667,107; Rijo, CINCINNATI.

.41J

.441

~~:::::::::: :::~ l:J ~~

J

~

Suaday's ocores
-..9,Scctltkl
TOOIIliO 7, X.... Cit)' 3
Dctloil6, r .... s

CalifmuaiJ, New YG 6
Oaltland l, Baltimo,. 4

Oticaso_7, Mi!•lllltce 2 ·

1-4..661. J.06.

R. Johnaon, Sctttle, 10~4 • .71-4, 1.09;

Rogcn, Tuu,I0-4, .714.4.51.

STRlKEOLrrS: R John~m, Seattle,
ISO; ct....... B..ton. Ill; FUtloy, CalifODUI,l20; ~tlll&amp;ert. Torocuo, llli Appi~

Fnnoo, New York, 19, McMichael, AI·
lanta, 11; Beck, San FnncUoo, 18; M)"Ct'',

91; Gonlan, " ' - Crty, 96.
SAVES : Lee Smith, O..ltimorc 29·

Mono.oi,IS

BATTING · T Owynn, San Dies('),

4.21; Alvm:z, Cltiatao, 1~. .714, 3.6J;

Glnine, Atlanta, Ill, P.J Marunc.z,
Montreal, 109, Saberhaacn. New York,
104.
SAVES: D. Jone~, Ptnlarlc1phia, 21;
OUe~ao. 11; Hudek, lloustm, 15; RoJu,

NL leaders
313; Monu, CINCINNATI. JSI; B•awcll, Hounon, .l41; Justice, Atlanta,

CINCINNATI ...l2 J5
Houa101
JO 18

STRIKEOUTS : 8Cilca, San Otcso.
RiJO, CINCINNA'fl, 12J, G. Mod·
du1. A.llanta, 118; F111cro, Montreal. 112;

IJI;

AL leaders

er, Karuu C1ty, lOS; G~~ZnUn, Toronto,

o.:

Asuiion, M&gt;M...,., 19; Ed&lt;cnJ,,
land, IS; Mmtaorncry, k.anNI Cny, 14;
Ayela, Sc.ttlo, I 1, Ruuc.ll, CLEVE~

lAND,

CLEVELAND, .J78, Belle, CLEVE·
LAND, .357, W. Clark, Tun, .3Sl;
Molitor, Tarocuo, .342; C. O.ril, Calif«~
Dia, .340.
RUNS: Thomu, Cltiatao, 9J; Lollat,
CLEVElAND, 82.; Caruoco, TCJ..U, 76;
Ontrey, ScmJe, 72; Belle, CLEVELAND, 70; Ptrillipa. llctrai~ 7Q B•crp.

CI..I!VI!UND, M.

RBI: Puckett, Minnc&amp;ou, 81; Carter,

Tomnto, 10: Thomu, Ch1caso. 18; W.
Clark, Texu, 71; Belle, CUNELAND,
76; """"'· OUcaao. 76; s._, Oaklond,
7S; Can..eco, Taau, 7S
IDTS: Lofton, CLEVELAND, 129;

Thomaa, (.'tucago, 116, Belle. CLEVE·
LAND, 116, MoliLor, Tormw, 116; BaCI"
8'• CLEVElAND, Ill; Griffey, Seattle,
111; Palmci.ro, Baltunoro. 109; Plu:i.CIU,
Minn...... I09.
DOUBLES: Knoblauch, Minncaota,
37; Belle, CLEVELAND, 32; Fryman,
Jlc&lt;RJil, 28; Thomu. Cltiatso. 27; Otcrud.
T01111110.26&lt; a...... CU!VELAND, 25;
Palm.U.. llaltim..., 2S; Molilm, TOIOIIto,

ts.

TIUP1.£S: L Johnaon, Chic:.ao, 13;
Col~m~~~, KlnMI City, 10; A. Diu, Mil·
wa\lkoc, 7; Loflon, CLEVELAND, 1,
Mcllac, K.anau C11j, 6, Whicc,. TWUJLo,
S; 9 uo lied wilh 4.
HOME RUNS: Griffey, ScaUic, 3J;
Thomu, Oucaao, 32; Bolle, CLEVELAND, 2l; Can1eco, Te-.aa, 24; M.
Vaup, 11oatcn, 21; Fiddor, llctrai~ 21;

Salmon, Califomu., 19; Sian, Olk.Jand,
19; Cau:r, Torocuo, 19.
STOU!N BASES: Lofton, CLEVELAND, 45; Coleman, Kanaaa City, 45;
Nilan. B011m, 14: XnOOlauch, Minnt.Mo
11. 21; tltady Andcnon. Bdtim&lt;R, 2J; L
J~n1011, ~~e•ao, 13; Mc:Rac, Kanua
Ctty, 21; Javter, Oakland, 21.
PITCIDNO (10 d......,.): Key, New

Yotk, IJ-2, .167, 3.JI, B=. Chicoso, 9·

2, .818, 3.S6, M. Clui., CLEVELAND,

lll-3, .769, 311, Muuuta, Ballim010, IJ4, .76S, 2.96; Cone, K1n111 Cuy, 12~4,
.750, 2.18; ~ Chicoao, J.J, .727,

ACIIIEVES FIRST - Ricky Rudd or Chesapeake, Va. waves to
the crowd from the winner's circle shorlly after capturing the Slick
50 300 Sunday at New Hampshire International Speedway in
Loudon, N.H. It was Rudd's first Winston Cup victory since becom·
ing a team owner. (AP)

IJ, Groho,Califomil, 12.

Transactions

BAmNG: Thomaa, Chicago, .383,
O'Neill, New York, .382; Loflon,

BasebaD
Amtrkan Lcapc
BOSTON RED SOX: AaivaiCd Swte
Fan, pt&amp;.chM, from 1M IS·day 4i..blocl
lia1. Sent Cory Bailey, ptleher, to Paw·
&amp;uc.kct of lhc lntcmatiorl&amp;l I..c.JUC.
ClnCAOO WHITE SOX; Called up
Ron TLn$1e)'. c.ucbcr, from Nuhville of
the AmOIICUI Aaociatlon. Optioocd Dane
ldwm, pildlnr. to Nuhvillc.
DETROIT TIGERS: Sisned C•de
Gupar, patcher, and uaianod him to
!.Ueland or the Florida s.... Lc.po.
UILWAUKEE BREWERS: Si••cd
Antone w~.
r·
SEAITLJ1 MARINERS; Activated
Eric Anthooy,autfiddor, l'nm the ll-day
diablcd lia Sont Rooct Salkclcl, pildta&amp;o Calpry of the Pacilic Cout Lapo. •
TORONTO BLUE lAYS: Oplioaod
Sbawn Groen. oulfieldu, to Syr~CU~C fll
lheln....,linllal !.ape.

Rudd wins Slick 50 300

thin!-...

National Luau•

NL: Addfld San Franciloo pia.cher Ro4.
Beck and M..-1 ~ Wd Cmtcr.

to the All ·Star learn N~Pbc:ana Cinanna\i
pnc:her Jo.o.. RiJo and ahoNtop BaiT)'
Larkin who arc injured and will not play.

FLORIDA MARUNS: Signed loth
Boocy, "''"""'~'·and uli&amp;Jtctl him to 1M
Mulina t:l lhe Gull Cout Lapo.
NBW YORK MBTS· Saaned Sean
Johrutone, pildler, and uaiped him to
SL l..u.c:ie of the Gull Cout IMp.

Commemorative Edition
Of
The Meigs County
175th
Anniversary Tabloid

FootbaU
Nallooal Fo«ball Lea&amp;•

ARIZONA CARDINALS: Annalnnod
tho retiremmt ~ Stevo Hycho.linoblcker.

MIAMI DOLPHINS:

N•mo4

Bill

nn.prcr rodio ohy-by-olay • - MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Siancd
8ra11. NOYOid&amp;ky, baN end. 101 on.)'IIIU
cmu.ct and Odeau. l'um.. _. ..,...,..
c:r, and Car, Blandwd., pho+ick•.

~···················································~

•

~•

CD SPECIAL

•
~•
•

•~--················································-~

17MONTH_

QJ!VEIAND 9, -.ut

No games today
Tuesday's game
AD-Sur Game at Jliwburah,l p.m.

By MIKE HARRIS
LOUDON, N.H. (AP) - Ricky
Rudd said the racetrack was
"driveable." Ernie Irvan did not
share his opinion.
Rudd, who started his own Winston Cup stock car team this season, won his first race as a driverowner Sunday in the Slick 50 300,
an event dominated by wrecks,
including one that knocked Irvan
right out of the series pomt lead.
The problems began early as the
asphalt 1.058-mile New Hampshire
International Speedway oval, heated by the sun and air temperatures
ncar 90 and abused by the 3,500pound, 600-horsepower cars, began
breaking up in the turns into tiny
prbble-sized pieces known to the
drivers as marbles.
The conditions produced I 7
caution nags that lasted a total of
83 laps, nearly a third of the 300Iapmce.
Rudd, driving a Ford Thunderblfd, somehow managed to stay out
• of trouble all day, finally passing
new series leader Dale Earnhardt
with eight laps remaining and holding on for a 0.69-sccond victory about four car-lengths.
Rudd was able to beat Earnhardt
and hold off third-place Rusty Wallace, the defending race champion,
despite pulling on just two fresh
tires - to four for Earnhardt and
Wallace -on his final pit stop.
"I'm sitting there with Dale in
front of me and Rusty behind me,
both with four fresh tires," Rudd
said. "They were going to be tough
enough if I'd had four new tires, to
try to hold them off or try to pass
them. But it turns out that with the
short distance (to the end), the two
tires made the difference.
"My car was qu1te a bit better
than everybodl else's at the end,"
Rudd added. • It's kind of remark-

No games Wedneaday

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Penalty for early withdrawal. This offer e•pires 7/15/94.

Ohio Valley Banl,i_m,

around.''

Thanks to the schedule - or
perhaps curses to It - the teams
Will dec1de lhe upper hand Immediately after th e break. Ch1cago,
holdmg a 3-1 advantage, w1ll meet
Cleveland eight Urnes 10 the first I I
days back to complete their season
senes.
For the lnd1ans, it's been more
than the offcns1ve thrust of All Stars Albert Belle and Kenny
Lofton. Morris, a quesuonable free
agent signee who has won eight
games, and Mark Clark have jomed
Dennis Manincz and Charles Nagy
to g1ve Cleveland a sohd startrng
rotation.
On Sunday, Clark- w1th Morns warming up m case - braved a
sore neck to pit ch eight strong
mmngs as the Indians beat the Minnesota Twins 9- I.
"I woke up (Saturday) and my

neck was stiff. Later m the day, I
couldn't turn my neck," s:ud Clark
{10-3), who allowed sax h1ts,
wallced none and struck out four.
Wh1le Clark held the Twms at
bay_, Lofton was busy provmg why
he •s an All-Star. He had a homer
among four hils and drove in four
runs.
Lofton homered off Scou Erickson (8-7) in the first mnmg; h1s
lOth after hllung only su m each of
h1s fusttwo b•g-league seasons.
Carlos Baerga, J 1m Thome and
Sandy Alomadr. also homered for
the Indians
Elsewhere, 11 was Chicago 7,
Mtlwaukee 2; Boston 9, Seattle 2;
Toronto 7, Kansas Cuy 3; Detroll
6, Texas 5; California 9, New York
6; and Oakland 5, Balumore 4.
White Sox 7, Brewers 2
Jack McDowell won h1s f1fth
straight game, and Lance Johnson
had three RB!s and stole home as
visiting Chicago won its si•th
Straight game.
McDowell (7-7), last year's AL
Cy Young Award wmner, scattered
10 hits, walked one and struck out
five m e1ght mnings. Bill Wegman
(6-2) allowed f1ve runs in 5 2/3
mnings as Milwaukee lost1ts founh
straight 'game.
Athletics 4, Orioles 3
Mark McGw~re hu a two-run
homer off Lee Sm1th in the nmth
mnmg as Oakland won at Baltimore.
Smith (I-2) has four blown
saves in 33 chances.
Ron Darhng (8-9) allowed four
runs and six hits m eight mnings.

Unser slips )last Mansell
to win Cleveland Grand Prix

Scoreboard
Baseball

The Daily sentinel-Page-S

The Daily Sentinel
t~ 1 Court

Street
.Pomeroy, OH

Sports
Auto racing
SILVERSTONE, England (AP)
- Britain's Damon Hill took
advantage of a penalty against Germany's Michael Schumacher to
win Sunday's British Grand Prix.
Hill, drivinj! a Williams-Renault,
finished wuh an 18.778-second
margin over Schumacher, who won
six of the year's firSt seven races.
Tennis
NEWPORt, R.I. (AP)- David
Wheaton beat Todd Woodbridge of
Australia 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 (7·5) to win

ahle. That's lhc best the car had run
all day."
Rudd had been running scvenlh
and the two-Lire change on lap 267,
during a caution period, moved him
up to third, just behind Geoff Bodine and Dobby Labonte and just'
ahead of lrvan and Earnhardt.
On the restart on lap 276, the
lead pack drove hard into tum one
and all hell broke loose, with Bodine, Labonte, Rudd and lrvan all
gelling up into the marbles. Bodine
and Irvan hit the wall. Labonte and
Rudd didn't
"We were fonunatc not to wind
up in the fence," Rudd said.
As for the track conditions,
Rudd said, "It was something
everybody had to deal with. It
wasn't pleasant, but the track was
driveable."
The furious Irvan disagreed
after his 30th-place finish left him
four points behind Earnhardt. He
had led the standings for eight
races and went into Sunday 88
points ahead.
"... Wc begged lhcm to sweep
the racetrack where it needed to be
swept, and they wouldn't do 11. I
just slid through the marbles. It was
like racing on a gravel road. You
can only slide so many times
before you don't get it right,"
Irvan said.
Earnhardt, a six-time Winston
Cup champion, said, "We were
real happy to finish second and
take the points lead. I'm sorry that
Ernie had trouble. He really had a
great car, but every point counts
and luck was just on our side this
time."
'
The victory was the 15th of
Rudd's career and gave him at least
one win in I 2 straight years, the
best current streak in NASCAR.
Rudd won $91,875, averaging
87.619 mph.

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)
AI
Unser Jr. made it look easy again
Sunday, leading from stan 10 finish
and beating Nigel Mansell by nearly 24 seconds 10 the Budweiser
Cleveland Grand Prix.
It was Unser's fifth victory m
eight Indy-car races this year, and
lhe seventh straight triumph on lhe
circuit for Marlboro Team Pcnske.
Paul Tracy and Emerson F1Utpald•
have each won once for Penske
during the string.
Unser won from the pole for the
second strwght race, moving to the
front at the start and steadily
pulling away in h1s Ilmor-powered
Pcnske racer. Mansell spent most
of the afternoon battling Fittipaldi
for second place, until lhe back of
F•Uipald•'s car caught fire 20 laps
from the end of the 85-Iap, 201mile event.
The dominance of the Penske
car was evident from the beginnmg, Unser said. He maintained a
lead of 18 to 20 seconds for most
of the second half of the race.
"It shows on the first couple
laps. You start concentrating on
your line instead of the guy behind
you," Unser said. "The car just
responds really well."
Unser's unofficial average speed
of 138.30 mph was a record for the
2.37-mile temporary course at
Burke Lakefront Airport, the
fastest road cour.;e on lhe Indy-car
series.
Mansell survived two brushes
with disaster: a collision that
knocked his own teammate, Mario
Andretti, out of the race on lap 32,
and a bump against the wall on lap
56.
.
Tracy started in the second position but dropped to fourth when
extra adjustments were made to his
car during the first of two pits
stops. He never challenged Mansell

for second place after lhat and finIShed 37.76 seconds from the lead.
Jacques Villeneuve was the only
other driver on the lead lap at the
end, and he barely avoided being
passed by Unser in the closing seconds.
The third-place finish concluded
a disappoinung weekend for Tracy,
who had a chance at a $1 million
bonus offered by the race promoter
if he would have won bolh the pole
and the race. The bonus was
offered to anyone winning both the
Detroit and Cleveland races,
including at least one pole and one
race record; Tracy set a race record
at Detroit but qualified second
behind Unser in Cleveland.

Red So• 9, Mariners 2
Rich Rowland had a hom er
among three h1ts and two RB!s as
Boston - worst 10 the Amencan
League in baui'ng - came alive
Wllh I 3 hits
Joe Hesketh (5-5) allowed five
h1ts m seve n mnin gs. Both runs
came on a homer by Marc Newfield Hesketh came wnhm six outs
of his fust complete game v1ctory
since 1985.
Boston entered the game w1lh a
.263 batting average. Bu1 !1m Con verse (0·2) lasted JUSt I 2!3 10nmgs
for VISiting Seaule, allowmg f1ve
runs on s•x hiLS.
Tigers 6, Rangers 5
Tony Phllhps h11 a three-run
homer w1th two outs m the bonom
of the runth mning off Tom Henke
(2-4) to rally Detroit over Texas.
Henke got ahead m the count 02 on Phillips, who was fooled by an
off-speed pitch for the seco nd
strike before hiwng the next for h1s
14th homer.
Joe Boever (7-2) pitched a hll·
less 2 1/3 mnmgs in relief. Cecil
F1clder had a three-run hom er and a

NL games ...

tnple for the T1gers.
Ivan Rodnguez hi! a two-run
homer for the Rangers.
Angels 9, Yankees 6
J.T. Snow homered and drove m
four runs, and Spike Owen and T1m
Salmon also homered for Ca llforma to back Chuck Fmley (7-8) at
Yankee Stadium .
Snow, a former Yankee, h11 a
two-run homer dunng lhe Angels'
four-run fourth off Terry Mulhol·
land (6-7) and s10gled 10 two runs
m the nmth.
Owen, also an ex- Yankee, h11 a
two -run homer 1n the f1rst and
Salmon led off the fifth with h1s
19th homer, both off Mulholland.
Blue Jays 7, Royals 3
Juan Guzman matched a career
h1gh w1th nme strikeouts 10 seven
mn1n g&gt;, and Jo e Carter had a
homer among lhree h1ts and three
RB!s lor Toronto.
Guzman (8-9) won h1s second
straight stan after breaking a streak
of four straight losses.
Roberto Alomar doubled off
Mark Gub1cza ( 1-3) w1th one out to
1gmte a two-run fourth.

(Contmued from Page 4)

allowed seven runs and seve-n h1ts,
including one of Alou's hom ers
and Cordero's grand slam.
Cardinals 6, Braves 1
At Atlanta, Mark Wh1ten hi! a
three-run homer in support of Allen
Watson.
Watson (6-4) allowed one run
and five hits in seven innings.
John Smaltz (6-9), VICtimized
by a four-run fourth inmng,
allowed five hits and four run s m
seven mnmgs
Mets 5, Dodgers 1
At Los Angeles, Bobby Bon1lla,
Rico Brogna and Joe Orsulak
homered to back eight solid innmgs
by Bret Saberhagen.
Saberhagen (10-4) ran h1 s career
record against the Dodgers to 5-0
with his third straight win .
Pedro Astacio (&amp;-6) gave up JUst
two h1LS in seven mnings, strikmg
out 10.
Astros 5, Cubs 3
At Chicago, Orlando MIll er.
playing his third major -leagu e
game, hit two home runs completely out of Wngley Field.
Jeff Bagwell drove 1ri h1s NLIeading 82nd run and Pete Harnisch
(5-4) got h1s lhlfd strrught victory.
Miller, called up from Class
AAA Tucson on Wednesday, h11
his first homer m the founh, g1vmg

the Astros a 3-0 lead. In the c1ghth,
M1llcr homered agam. makmg 11 5I.

Kcv10 Foster (2-3) took the loss
g1ving up SIX hits and four walks ~ ~
s" 10n10gs.
Giants 2, Phillies 1
At San Franc1sco, pinch-hiller
Jeff Reed's single 1n the lOth
scored Dave Martinez.
Reed's two-out single off Doug
Innes (2- 3) drove 10 Maninez who
led off w1th a single and mo~cd to
second on Royce Cl~yton's sacrifice. Dave Burba (I -5) pitched 1
2/3 mmngs for lhe victory.
Marlins 6, Rockies 4
At M1am1, pinch hiller Mario
Dmz h11 a bases-loaded triple.
Brct Barbene doubled, homered
and scored Iwice for the Marlins.
Lu1s Aqumo (2- I) pitched one
scoreless mnmg, and Robb Ncn got
the last two outs for his lOth 10 10
tries.
Andres Galarraga hit his 25th
homer for the Rockies.
Flonda trailed 4-2 when Barberie led off the sixth inning With a
double agamst Mike Harkey (1·5).
Kurt Abbou singled and Bob Natal
walked to load the bases. Diaz then
tripled on a 3-2 pitch to clear lhe
hascs

THE 1994

Notre Dame newest
member of Big East

NEW YORK (AP) - Notre
Dame has been approved as a nonfootball member of the Big East
Conference, The New York Times
reported today.
The Times said an unidentified
source familiar with discuss1ons
between Notre Dame and Big East
officials confinned reports over the
weekend that a commitment was
imminent and that announcements
were planned for today.
The newspaper said Notre Dame
was approved by a unanimous vote
of the Big East's I 2 members,
including recent additions West
V~rgmia and Rutgers. The source
said Notre Dame, which will
remain an independent in football,
will begin competition in the 199596 academic year.
Notre Dame has been a member
of the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, a non-football conference,
in every sport but basketball.
Notre Dame spokesman Mike
briefs
Enright said Saturday that he knew
the Hall of Fame Championships . of no plans to join the Big East, nor
on Sunday.
was any announcement scheduled.
"I don't think it's a secret that
On Saturday, four-time Grand
Slam winner Hana MliDdlikova of we've been looking around, but
lhe Czech Republic and journalist there is no formative plans th!!t I
Bud Collins were inducted into the know of," Enright said.
International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Other Big East members are
Tennis
Villanova, Syracuse, Seton Hall,
GSTAAD, Swit:tcrl:md (AP) Providence, Boston College, ConTop-seeded Sergi Bruguera of necticut, Georgetown, Pittsburgh,
Spain beay Guy Forget of France Miami and Sl John's. Temple and
3-6, 1·5, 6-2,6-1 on Sunday to win Virginia Tech play football in the
the Swiss Open for the thud con- conference, but were rejected for
full membership.
secutive year.
•.

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 12, 1994.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 4, 1994.
CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD IN
THIS YEAR'S EDITION

992-2155

(

�'··•

Page-&amp;-The Dally Sentinel

')
Monday, July

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

-.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11, 1-994

·Romantic real e~tate replaces diamond engagement ring
Ann
Landers
1994
'

L o~A· ,go la s

Tomes Synd•c a!e ar&gt;CI
C r11a1oo~ S ynCl1Cate -

Dear Ann Landers: Th1s is for

"Perplexed in Pisa," the soldier
stationed in Italy who wanted to buy
his girlfriend some land in Texas
instead of an engagement ring. He
probably gets his jollies reading the
Dow Jones averages in The Wall
Street Journal .
You were right when you said
diamonds are not only a gtrl's best
friend but a symbol of a man's love

for his woman .
If the last of the big spenders can
afford ID buy land in Texas, surely
he can afTord a small diamond. As
you said, Ann, it doesn't have to be
the Rock of Gibraltar. Thanks for
putting Mr. Romantic. in his place.
He needed that. -- WILL IN
AUBURN. MASS.
DEAR WILL: I appreciate your
support, but the vast majority of
readers didn't see it that way. In fact.
I got royally clobbered. Keep
readmg:
Dear Ann: "Pcrplexi:d's" idea is
a good one. Land can be an excellent investmenL My family moved
to Texas 29 years ago in I%5 and
bought the house we still live in for

$36,000. In 1994, according 10 the
tax appraisal, our home is now worth
$375,000. There arc few investments
that will give you such a solid
return on your money. I hope the
guy will not let that flea-brained
dame make any financial decisions
for him.-· D.S. IN DALLAS
From Little Rock: "Perplexed in
Pisa" should dump the chick. She
appears to be a little 100 interested
in the diamond.
I was
Stockton. Calif.:
disappointed when you advised
"Perplexed" to stay with tradition
and buy a! least a small diamond for
his girl. She sounds like a spoiled
brat who is 100 concerned with what
others will think.

San Diego: Has the world become and it never goes out of style.

so materialistic that we have lost our Besides, land in Texas might have

sense of romance? When my sweetie
asked me to marry him , he could
have given me a hunk of glass in a
tin setting and I would have been
thrilled.
Norfolk, Va.: Get with the
program, Annie. Traditions are
changing. One young woman I know
picked out a ruby for her
engagement ring, and another did
not want an engagement ring at all.
Riverside, Calif.: Arc you crazy?
The young man stationed neqr Pisa,
Italy, sounds like a real catch to me.
I'd much prefer a little piece of real
estate to a ring. Real estate doesn't
get losJ,. the settings don't fall out

oil under it. Remember, when you
buy land, you get all lhe oil, water
and mineral rights, too. "Perplexed"
is not only thinking of the present
but the future. His girlfriend sounds
like an idiot.
Nassau: I vote for the ring. Forty
years ago, my sweetheart gave me a
tiny blue swne that may or may not
have been a chip off a sapphire. I
could not have been more thriJled.
Last December, that same sweetheart

gave me a 7-carat diamond ring for
our 40th wedding anniversary. It Is .
very beautiful, but it didn't wuch
my heart the way the little sapphire
did.
Dear Ann Landers: Do you
believe money is the root of all evil?
Rush your answer. I need ID know.
-- DANBURY, CONN.
DEAR DAN: You have the
saying wrong. It's "The love of
money is the root of all evil." I
wouldn't say all evil but a good part
of iL

.

ago, but it was nothing like what's
nying now .
Here's a sampling of what's
aboard Columbia: veget.able sushi;
sauteed burdock, a plant; cooked
bamboo shoots and half-dried bonito, a fi sh; rape blossoms with mustard; boiled burdock and broiled
eel; grilled salmon with sesame
seeds; stewed vegetables and fish
dumplings; ball -shaped cakes with
octopus pieces and Takoyaki sauce;
and, of course, Takeda's piece de
resistance.
. The winning dishes were chosen
from among 1,730 entries.
NASA checked the food at its
laboratory at Johnson Space Center
in Houston to make sure it was
safe, then shipped it 10 Kennedy for
loading. Chopsticks were included.
Mukai, a Tokyo heart surgeon

and the first Japanese woman in
space, spent Sunday taking part in
medical tests and checkinl! on the
live fish aboard Columbia.
Mukai counted 10 freshly laid
eggs in the Mcdaka fish tank, seven
more than Saturday. Biologists are
flying two male and two female
Medaka to see how and how often
the guppylike fish mate in weightlessness and how the offspring
develop.
'
'
Columbia also holds goldfish,
jellyfish, newts, sea urchins. nies,
slime mold, plants and millions of
cells. Scientists hope to learn more
about human development and
adaptation to space by studying
some of these simpler organisms,
and how 10 feed astronauts en route
some day to Mars.
The mission ends July 22 .

Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

Help Wanted
Bob Morris now hiring
tomato pickers.
614-247-3421 anytime

992-7434

Elizabeth Schlesmger Library on the
History of Women al Radcliffe College !Cambridge, Mass J has a substantial collection of community
cookbooks _Jan Longone. a respected food authority and owner of the
Wine and Food Library, a bookstore
in Ann Arbor, Mich., has a vast array
among her personal books. And the
Mcilhenny Company of Avery Island,
La , created the Tabasco Community_ Cookbook Competition, now in its
fifth year. The purpose of the
awards. according lo company
spokesman Paul Mcilhenny, is to
"honor organizations helping to pre-

Mcilhenny Hall of Fame, which now 1
medium pclalo, clbld
has 33 honorees .
2
canots, ~ and shredded
1 haw a lot of cookbooks. Most are
The deadline is Sept. 30, 1994
~
cup alliJurpose tlour
· fun to look at. some are fun to read,
To obtain rules and an entry form , 1M
cups milk and H cups light
. and others are even fun to cook from .
cream (or 3 cups milk)
send a self-addressed, stamped en- Bul nothing inspires me more than
velope to Tabasco Community Cook- 1
tablespoon lemon juice
·- a good community cookbook, one as book Awards, c/o Hunter Mackenzie 3 to 4 dashes hot pepper sauce
.. se mbled by the wom en and men
Inc., 41 Madison Ave., New York, NY
Salt and pepper lo taste
" ' llel's face it. mostly women! of a
10010·2202. Also available is a bookFresh bay leaves
town or a club or congregation to
let, "Compiling Culinary History: A
benefit a good cause.
Crealive Guide to Crafting a ComIn a large, heavy skillet over
;· .._The community cookbook trad1lion
munity Cookbook," to aid your orga- medium heat, cook bacon until crispy.
started around the time of the Civil
nization in its future efforts.
Drain, reserving all drippings . CrumWar, when Ladies Aid Societies in
Below are recipes from the three ble the bacon and sel it aside.
··-both the North and South published
top 1993 winners. Because sales of
In a 6-quart Dutch oven or stock... .Lheir treasured "receipts" or "ru les"
these cookbooks benefit good causes, pol. heal 3 tablespoons of bacon driplas recipes were called) lo raise serve and record American culinary I have included prices and mailing pings !reserve the restJ over medium
- money for war orphans. widows and practices."
addresses, should you wish lo sup- heal. Add onion, and cook until wilted.
So if you are a member of a civic pori them .
_ veterans. Pretty soon, every church
If using fresh corn, use a sharp knife
and firehous e was publishing prized or religious group that has published
ID slice just the kernel lops from lhe
SOOlliERN CORN CHOWDER
- recipes for Tuna Pea Wiggle and a cookbook in I 993 or I 994 , cons1der
ears of com. Do this over a bowl. Then
;-· Cracker Hash as a means of buying entering the competition. Winners 1
scrape the cobs with the dull edge of
pcJIRI bacon
receive contributions for designated 1
the knife into the bowl. Add the corn,
. -a new orga n or pumper.
large onion, thinly sliced
Though they started as small, charities. plaques for their head - 8 to 10 medium ears of com, or 1
chicken broth, potato and carrot to the
= homespun projects . community quarters . and stickers for their
16--ounce package of frozen Dutch oven . Bring lo a boil_ Boil 10
cookbooks are commanding more re- books. Any book that has sold 100,000
minutes or until potato is tender.
WhOIH8mel com
-- spect these days. The Arthur and copies is eli~ible for the Waller S. 4
If using frozen corn, first add the
cups chic:k8n broth
broth. potato and carrot to the Dutch

Community calendar

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
::School volleyball meetings for all
··girls grades 7 through I 2 w&gt;ll be
·•·held Monday, 9 to 10 a.m. and 6:30
to 7 p.m. All interested girls are
. asked to auend one of the meet·
_ l!lgs.
MIDDLEPORT- Vacation
Bible School at the Middleport
·· presbyterian Church, Monday
-ttl rough Friday. Classes for all
ages, 10 a.m. to noon.
~:~. SYRACUSE Disabled
American Veterans and the Ladies
Auxiliary, Monday 7 p.m. at Car·
'"Ji:ton School, Syracuse. Dinner fol·
lowing meeting.

RACINE -

Racine Board of

Pub! ic Affairs meeting 10 a.m.
Monday at Star Mill Parle
MIDDLEPORT - Brooks·
Grant Camp of Sons of Union Vet·
erans of the Civil War will meet
Monday at 7: 15 p.m. in Hope Bap·
tist Church Annex. Guests welcome. Charter memberships still
available.
RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m.
Monday at high school. Parents of
all athletes and cheerleaders asked
to attend.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections, 4 p.m. Tuesday
at the office on Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce meeting
Tuesday at noon at the Senior Citi·
zens Center. Speaker Dar, Cowdery, executive director OSU
Extension Enterprise Center for
Alternative Agriculture.
THURSDAY
RACINE - A special meeting
of the Southern Local School
Board will be held Thursday at 7
p.m.
POMEROY - Dirmcr for $4
from 5 10 6:30 p.IJI. Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Center. Music by
The Classics. Public invited.

2

In Memory
In loving memory of
AUDREY (JEFFERS)
ARNOLD
July 11,1993
Mom...
Living w"hout you
doesn't get any easier
I still miss you so often
I remember the times
we laughed ... we
cried ... we shared our
innermost thoughts
It isn't easy being with out you ... I miss you
MOM! I love you .
Susie
Sacty missed by sons,
daughters, grandchildren,
and great grandchildren

ATTENDS SHEEP CONFERENCE - Riki Barringer, center,
of Reedsville, attended the Ohio Sheep Youth Conference at the
Ohio State University, June 28-30. The conference offered sessions
on sheep production for teenagers in 4-H and FF A and featured
experts from private industry and Ohio S!Jite, and included visits
to sheep farms, Oilers Processing and Mid-S!Jites Wool Growers in
Columbus. Here Riki is pictured with Roger High, left, OSU Shep·
herd, and Kathy Booher, right, 4-H agent from Ot!Jiwa County
representing Ohio S!Jite.

TRIM•ad

LEGAL NOTICE
The Rutland Board of
Township Trustees Ia
seeking qualified bids to

REMOVAL

build a

fence

along

a

disputed fence line. In
accordance with O.R.C.
971.07 the
lowest
reoponslble bidder ogroolng
to furnish lha labor and
mate1lal, ond build such

MILILT ARY NEWS
Phillip A. Woods
Air Force Airman Philip A.
Woods has graduated from Air
__force basic training _in San Anto·
--nio Texas. Woods IS the son of
· Gilbert A. and Vicki V. Woods of
Pomeroy.
He graduated from Eastern High
School in 1992.
...

Maria R. Pellegrino
~· Navy Ainnan Apprentice Maria
'ft. Pellegrino recently completed
basic training in Orlando, Fla.
The daughter of James A. and
Gertrude .M . Pellegrino of
Pomeroy, she joined the Navy in
February 1994.
Dennis M. Donohue

Navy Peuy Officer Filst Class
Dennis M. Donohue is deployed
with the Strike Fighter Squadron
136 in Cecil Field, Fla. and he
recently participated in the commemoration of the 50th anniversary
ofD-Day.
The son of Raymond E. and
Dolores G. Donohue of Pomeroy,
he graduated in 1978 from Meigs
High School and joined the Navy
in September 1993.
Frank T. Swanson
Navy Petty Officer Second
Class Frank T. Swanson recently
participated in the withdrawal of
U.S. forces frdm Somalia.
The son of Frank and Rosie
Swanson of Gallipolis, he gradual·
ed from Kyl!er Creek Hi~h School
in Cheshire m I 985 and JOined the

Navy in October 1986.
Kyle A. Fausnaugh
Navy Seaman Apprentice Kyle
A. Fausnaugh recently completed
the advanced non-Morse operator
course in Pensacola, Fla.
The son of Kenneth A. Fausnaugh of Reedsville, he joined the
Navy in May 1993.
Jason B. Thomas
Navy Seaman Recruit Jason B.
Thomas, son of Forrest D. and
Rebcx:ca A. Thomas of Glenwood,
W.Va., was recently promoted to
his present rank after graduating
from recruit training at Great
Lakes, Ill.
He graduated in 1990 from Han·
nan High School in Ashton, W.Va.

-Nelson family holds reunion at fairgrounds
- ~:· The annual Nelson reunion was
.lleld at the Grange hall on the Rock
:sPrings fairgrounds recently with
-!)9 family members and guests
attending.
:;,: Walter Ray Nelson had grace
Jlefore the dinner, games were
lr!ayed and pictures t.aken. Gifts
were presented to Bonnie Miller
-end Pauline Nelson, the oldest
..llrolhers, and Angie Johnson, the
JOUngest mother.
. Local residents attending were
• Richard, Roberta, Tanya and
Richie Dill, Dick and Sharon
I

Folmer, Flossie and Johnny Nel- Wyant, Kevin and Tammy Klem,
son, Ed and Judy Nelson, Robert, Joe and Monna Andreoni and Tim
Cathy, and Cortney Scarberry, · and Michele Showalter.
Attending from out of town
Robert and Judy Miller, Danny and
Debbie Fohner, Bonnie M11ler, were Robert and Joan Nelson,
Alvin, Angie and Alvin Lee John- Pleasantville, Walter Ray and Pat
son, Raymond and Lydia Smith, Nelson, Brian Benca, and James
Charles Smith, Joan Banlcs, Bobby, Christ, Lancaster; Gladys Landis,
Linda and Ryan Foster, Betty Dill, Baltimore; Pauline Nelson, Jack
Keith and Missy Swut, Davey Joe, and Cheryl Nelson, Proctorville;
Shirley, Mandi, Michelle and Richard and Patty Nelson, South
Chrissy Miller, Yvonne Whitting- Point, Ralph and -Gladys Blosser,
ton, Dwaine, Gina and Cody William and Hazel Moore, Grove·
Weaver, James, Darlene and Mor- port and Frank and Evelyn Leach,
aan Vanaman, Tim and Carla Wellston.

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!
ADVERTISING IN THE

TV TIMES

-II

••
,_
••

AHEA TEI..EVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATUUESEVERY WEEI{ IN THE
TV TIMES
.•

.,

CALL NOW....
GALLIPOLIS

446-2342

$100.00 GET 1 ROOM

FREE

(Carpel Cleaning Only-Maximum 240 sq. ft.)

• carpet cleaning &amp; scotchgard • drapery
•
&amp; fine fabric • general cleaning

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

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. e Agent
Box 189

REWARD

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843-5264

Phone

992-6597

opeclllcallons proposed by
the board will receive the
work project. Bids will be
accepted from July 11 to
July 25. The property, open
Aug. 5, 1994, Is owned by
Mo. Edith Clark and Ia
located on New Lima Road
In Rutland, Melga County.
For further Information on

thla project, plaBSe contact
the Rutland Townohlp Clerk
or the Rutland Board of
Township Truotaes.
(7) 11, 18, 25; 3TC

.•
_l

PT. PLEASANT, WV

675-1333

I

'·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

'f

-·

f
;I

SUMMER

HAUUNG
oAREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12131&gt;0Z'Tl'N

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES
Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
614·992-7878
SA 7 • Five Pointe
~·Public Notice

order of the Board of
Dl,..ton, et thlll mNIIng of
the sutton • Cheater
Far mora Mutuel Fire
lnourenca
pony a
r11otutlon willCom
be prNenled
to occapt the propooed
merger ofVelley
lhe Sandy
•
Beaver
Farmer•
Mutual lnaurance Company
By

Read the

::~m~~.su':;:,:.~h";1~•;

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB

NEW BULBS
LOW PRICE

Home of the Eastern
Girls Softball Awards

.....

16-$25

614·992·7643

Golfl.aso,..

992·2487

(No Sunday Calls)

Club Repair

949-2168

Howard

614-985-3961

CLRSSIFIED RD5
Retirees should be
aware of pension rules
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager, Athens
People who expect to receive more than one type
of retirement pension should be sure they are familiar
with how their Social Security benefits may be
affected. There are several important rules to remember.
If you have earned both Social Security and a mil. itary pension, your Social Security benefits are not
affected. You should call Social Security and ask for
the factshcct, Military Service and Social Security.
However, if you are entitled w both Social Security
and a government pension based on a civilian job not
covered under Social Security, your Social Security
benefit may be reduced,
There are two rules that may reduce yolO' benefits.
One, called "government pension offset" applies only
If you receive a government pension ang..are eligible
for Social Security benefits as a swJJBC(or widow(er).
This affects relatively few people and is explained in
our factsheet, Government Pension OffseL
The other, sometimes caned the "windfall elimination provision," affects the way your retirement or
disabilitr, benefits are
figured If you receive a pension from work not covered by Social Security. This rule affects the person
who spent most of hislher career wodc.ing for a government agency but who also worked at other jobs
where they paid Social Security taxes long enough 10
qualify for retirement or disability benefits. People
who worked in job where they didn't pay Social
Security taxes, such as in a foreign country, may also
be affected.
Before the law was changed in 1983, people in
tllesc situations reeeiv~ the advantage of the higher
percentage of Social Security benefits payable to
long-~. low wag_e workers under Soci~l Security.
A mod1fied benefit formula now ehmrnates thrs
windfall.
Here's how the formula works. When we figure
your benefits, we separate your average earnings into·
three amounts and multiply the figures using thnee
ftlctors. For example, for a worker who turns 65 in
1994, the fii'St $370 of average monthly earnings is
multiplied by 90 percent; the next $1,860 is multiplied by 32 percent; and the remainder by 15 percenL
In the modified formula, the 90 percent factor is
reduced. The reduction is phased in for workers who
reached age 62 or became disabled between 1986 and
1989. For lhose who reach 62 or become disabled in
1990 or later, the 90 percent faqor is reduced w 40

percent

·

There are some exceptions w this rule. For exarnf!!'l if you have 34
.
'substantial" earnings in a job where you paid Social
Security taxes, lhe 90 percent factor may not .be
reduced as much-to somewhere between 40 and 85
IICtWJI-depending oo the numher of years of substantial eam111gs. The modified formula also does not
llllPIY to survivors benefits and in ceztain other cases.
In any case, a guar111tce is provided to protect WOrk- .
us with relatively low pensions. It JXOVides that the
n:duction in the Social Security benefit under lhe
tnOdified formula cannot be more lhan one-half of
6at pan of the pmsion attributable to earnings aflu
1956 not covered by Social Security.
.
We also have a f.:lsheet oo this subject, cai1cd A
Pension From Work Not Covered by Social Security.
You may call l·800-7n-I213 w get this and other
lltciSheets on the subjects I've discussed here.

f/711-

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

WHALEY'S AUTO

Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
limestone· Fill Dirt
Gravel • Sand
leach Bed
Installation and
Septic Systems
614-992-7878
SA 7 • Five Pointe

.,....

ftndng Clrala

I·W
Unll.:_, ...r
-

headliners, seat
t"bl
covers, conver 1 e
to6s, Antique (grs,
2 ;rs experience.
oat Seals.

992- 7587

41464 Starcher Rd.

Dtdratfn

Saln a

lnst•lllloa

(gl Weste111 Auto

992-5515
Free Eslt'mates
Residential, Commercial
end IndustriaL,_,~

n•m•, bualn••• office, 1nd

objecta ol tho company to
be lhe •m• • ot preeenl,
lha margar ohalt bo
otlectlvo September 15,
1984 et which tima all
propiortlaa, lntereota, rlghta,
prlvltogao, lmmunltea,

powera, franchlaea, and
euthorlty of tho Sutton &amp;

Chooler Farmaro Mutual
Fire lneurenca Company
ehell be benelerred to end
vaal In tho Sandy &amp; Beaver
Velley Formera Mutual
lneurance Company, which
lhoruftar ahall bo
roeponelbla for all tho
llobllltlll ol every kind and
deeerlpllon of tho Sutton &amp;
Cheetor Farmar1 Mutuol
Fire lnourance Company
and the Sandy &amp; Beaver
Valloy Fermoro Mutual

44

Apartment
torRent

r-----===::::;;:=::;:::;:=.,____.,

WATER'S EDGE APARTMENTS
SYUCUSE,OH.

OPENING IN JULY
Over 62, dleabled or handicapped FmHA 1 bedroom. Rente for $0 to 54()5, baeed on Income.
Range, refrigerator, carpel, ale, on ella laundl)',
perking.
614-949-2012 TDD 800-750-0750
FmHA Rental Auletanco
Equal Houelng Opportunity

Public Notice
NOTICE TO

CONTRACTORS
Seeled blda lor the
,.pl-ment of tha roof of
the llelge llultlpurpo..
Building, llulbeny Halghta,
Pom.-oy, OH 4$788, will be
received by the llelg 1
County Commlulonere,
Court Houaa, Saoond
st... t, Pomeroy, OH 45708
until 2 p.m. on TIHI!Id~
July-11, 11M, end opened
end reed eloud lor the
following:
Repteoement of entire
rool of the llelge
llulllpurpoee Building 10
lndude • ftfl•n (15) yNr
meterlet guerentee end •
flfle•n (15) yeer Iebar
guenntae.
Building roof cen b e from 1:00 e.m. unlit S:OO
p.m. llondey through
Frldey.
Queallone
oon-nlng thle bid 111y be
ciNol8d to Chuoll HllmpiOn,
llelntenenoe eupervleor,
Woodtend Cenler'e, lno.,
O.ltlpolle, OH 4HS1 1114)
441-5500. Bpeolflaetlone
raey be ob18lnect lrora the
llelge
County
Commleelonere Oflloe,
CourthouM, s-nd Slnll,
Pom.-oy, OH 45708 (1114)
.2-2184.
The llelge County
CommiNio-e- the
rlghllo IODipl or njlllllllly
or el bide end/or eny pert
lhenof or to 11001pt lhelreet
bid for the Intended
JIW'POM.
(7) 4, 11; 2TC

V1VIZMI

uo.

Excavating Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Complete House &amp;

Trailer Sites
Driveways , Septic
Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
Lines, land Clearing

Trucking: limestone &amp;

F1ll D11l, Top Sot I

Reasonable Rates
Estimates

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
lnlerior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. let uo do it
lor you. Very reao·
onable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After&amp; p.m.
614·985-41BO

312SI94

992·3636 ' '""""

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

985·4473
TRI·STATE K-9

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room Addition•
-New garagea
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting alao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

buy·

Wanted to

ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel aervlce, pupa &amp;
young dogs for sale.
Ronweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614·667-PETS
1:11mn

Standing
timber! all hard
wood

&amp; pine •

614·682·7676

GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates

----

Joe

N.

Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3/4193

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

OFFICE 992·2259
NEW LISTINGII· DYESVILLE· 1 1/2 story frame home on 2
lots. approx. 100x50 each. Home has 3 bedrooms &amp; 1 bath.
Newer blue vinyl siding and newer storm windows. Block

NEW LISTING! RT I COOLVILLE· 32+ acres with 3 mobile
homes. presently rented. Income of $900.00 a month from
all. All homes are In 1he 60's. One is 12 x 60, the second one
Is 10 x 50, and the third is 8 x 35. 2 sheds, I porch, and
some furnishings 1n all the homes. Located approx. 1 1/2
miles from Hocking River.
ASKING $43,500.
POMEROY· Located on Union Ave.· 1 floor frame home with
3 bedrooms. 1 bath, modern kitchen. large living room. C&amp;S
electric, Leading Creek water, 2 out buildings.
ASKING $42,000
TR 275 LONGBOTTOM· 2 story lrame home wit'h 1+ acre.
bay window, screened pDfch, sheds. new implement shed,
newer kitchen. bath &amp;laundry room. newer plumbing, wiring.
appliances. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. newer roof (approx. 3 yrs.
old)
ASKINO $48,900
SUMNER RD· Very nice Brick/Frame Split Foyer home with 9
rooms. Home includes woodburner, wood burning fireplace, 4
ballrooms, 2 car garage, storage buildtng,2 decks. Some new
remodeling completed, with new carpet, vinyl, new electric
heat pump, and central eir, TPC water. 1. 485 acres, very well
landscaped.
ASKING $79,500
POMEROY· Condor St.- 3 bedroom ranch style home on
small lot near town. Included lull basement, central air,
woodburning fireplace. 1 car garage ..AGENT OWNED.
ASKING $25,000
DO YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR HOME? WE NEED
usnNGSI COME IN TO CLELAND REALTY AND WE'LL
WORK TOGETHER AND ACCOIIPUSH A LOTI!
HENRY E. CLELAND ........................................... 992--6181
TRACY BRINAGER..............................................Mt.2431
SHERRI HART...................................................... 742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111...............,....................... 992.0111
KATHY CLELAND................................................ 992.01111
OFFICE................................................................. 992·2251

-carpentry

a

-

(614) 992-7474

POMEROY, OHIO

cellar, wooa slorage buildings and ceiling rans . 100 gal.
septic lank. Newer covered patiO/carport. Also has garden
area.
ASKING $20,000

1MO

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES

QUALITY WORK
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
814-11112-3470
Uniletone: 15 ton I
up $10.50 loll; 15 ton I
undar $11.50 ton
Top Soli $6.50 ton
Grevel$11.50 ton·?
Sand? -Low Rlleo
And More
10 ton min. on all.

445-3816

Announcements

3 Announcements
Alt.clton.1e, - · SWF, 41,
out aolng, would llluo 1o SWif lor companlonahlp, otc.
Wrtto: Box C-7, c/o Pl. Pf-nl
RogloiO&lt;, 200 Moln SL, Pl.
Pl...ant, wv 25550.

and

HIV Tooting

CounMIIng

Anonymouo (V&lt;Kir Nomo lo
Never Aaked). PIIMed Pa,..,_
thood of Southeae1 Ohio. For an
Appolnlmorrt Coli 114--446-0161,

414

lloc:!&gt;nd St;,_Golllpolla. Al110

ol O'IOnnod Palonlhood or Southooot Ohio In
Athena and Logon. "SSiding Fao
SCOII.•

AYOIIablo

Malo Cono1no:Uon Worttor o1t
NS SO For Frvm Homo S..lto
WF For Companlonohlp I Fun

A&lt;dVIUoo. Soncl R - To:
CLA :1111.._ c/o Oolllpollo Dolly
Tribune, ""'&amp; Third An..... Ca~
llpolla, OH 45831.
811U Yow Jaarw Pogoon1,

July

Porlt. Point
Plauont. Muot call Sholto Hart
lor ontry form. 304-758-4060.
301h,

Krodel

4

Giveaway

1 Malo- Whho Kl11on ' Monlho
Old, 1 Brown Whlta Kitten 8
Wooko Old, To Co~ne Homoo
Only,l14-4~7.

175-11102.

LIMESTONE,

Real Estate General

Lose Weight
No Meetinga No Weigh ln1
No drugs or chemicals
Allor aooul
one dollar a dayl

1 omall ltu&lt;klood 1opooll. .104-

Call

HAUliNG

lnaur•nce Company, the

dlreotore ot the Sandy &amp;
Boevar Valley Farmero
Mutuol lnaurance Company,
and the conetilution ol tho
continuing corporation ohall
be the Nme •• lhe pr-nl
conalllutlon ol the Sandy &amp;
Beever Yellay Fermera
Mutual lneurence Compeny.
ey Order of lhe Board ol
Dlr.ctora:
.
Peul B-. Secrola:r
35165 Boer R
Racine, Oh 45771
(7) 111 "'

...

FREE ESTIMATES

6F..- 175

511MM TFN

PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NIW &amp; USED PARTS fOI
AU MAliS &amp; MOOUS
992-701!01
992-555.1 OR
TOll fRII HOD-141·0070
DARWIN. OHIO

6NI

· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
lnaurance Company with .___ _ _ ====!...t:===--~=_,

the continuloua corporation
lo ba lhe Sandy &amp; Beaver
Valley Fermera Mutual
lnaur111ce Comp111y with lbo

New Homes o VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Howard L. Writesel
ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Notice II hereby glvan to
tho membe,. of the Sutton
&amp; ChNbor Farmer• Mutuel
Fire lnaurenco Compeny
thot on Auguet 1, 11194, 111
8:00
e.m.of there
will be ofa r':::::::;;::;:;:;:'::::13'::";'fff~N
mNtlng
the memben
11id Compeny al the
JESS' COMPLETE
ll•onlc Building, on Main
SL, RL 248, Ch•ter, Ohio
AUTO UPHOLSTERY
45720.

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

IMAGES
TANNING

oUGHT

fence accorcllng to .• the

Read the Best Seller·

MIDDLE EASTERN COLE SLAW
oven. Bring lo a boil. Boil about 8
minutes, then add the frozen corn. 4
cups shredded '-! C!lllbaOe
tablespoons fresh mlrfll'(or 1
Bring back lo boil and cook a few min - 2
tablespoon dried)
utes more, until potato is tender.
Put a tO-inch skillet over mediumteaapoot' finely chopped glllc
low heat Add enough of the reserved
!S EIIJOO' I saft
cup fresh lemon juice
bacon drippings to reach a depth of
114 inch. Stir in flour until smooth .
cup olive oil
Cook and stir for 10 minutes or until
Mix cabbage and mint in a large bowl.
mixture (roux) is light brown .
In a small bowl, mash garlic and
Remove irom .heat.
salt lo a fine paste with back of a
Add milk and cream Iii using! to spoon. Add lemon juice and mix. Then
Dutch oven. Hea l through _ Stir in add oil, I tablespoon ala time, mixing
lemon juice, hot pepper sauce, sail continually until smooth.
and pepper Whisk in !he roux. Stir
Pour dressing over cabbage-mint
in crumbled bacon . Simmer until mixture and toss until evenly coaled.
thickened and heated through GarRefrigerate at least 2 hours, tossnish with bay leaves.
ing occasionally.
Yield: 8 to 10 servings.
Yield: 12 servings.
- Recipe from "Heart &amp; Soul," the
- Recipe from "From Generation
firs! place national winner in the 1993 to Generation," the Second Place naTabasco Community Cookbook Com- . lional winner in the 1993 Tabasco
petition. Make checks ($19.95 plus Community Cookbook Competition .
$3 .50 for postage and handling! Make checks ($16.95 plus $2:50 for
payable to: Memphis Junior League postage and handling) payable to: Si$Publications, 3475 Central Ave., Mem- lerhood Cookbook, Sisterhood of
phis, TN 38111 .
Tempi~ Emanu-El, 8500 Hillcrest
Rood, Dallas. TX ?S??s

RACINE - Cleanup day in
Racine Thursday. Appliances will
not be picked up at this time. No

-----Military news-tire-s.----

SPEND

Brown and
white BriHany
Spaniel.
Five Pt. Area.
Name, Buffy.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
Public Notice

:Traditional community cookbooks give recipes a higher cause
By Marialisa Calla

CLEANING SPECIAL

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY .

LOST

61311 mo.

Mmmm! Pass the freeze-dried eel, octopus
space agency's lly-your· lood-on·
lly MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer
th e-shuttle contest. The prize? A
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. trip to Kennedy Space Center to
(AP) - There 's nothing like a lit~e
sec Columbia Hft off Friday on the
eel and oc topus after a long, hard 1wo-wcek Jaboratory research missron .
day in space.
They're not part of the sw im " How will Americans feel eat·
ming menagerie aboard Columb&gt;a. ing my food?" Takeda fretted over
Thl'y ' r~ pri ze-w inmng dehcacJes
the weekend before packing to
prepared in Japan for Japanese return home to Tokyo.
asrronaul Ch1aki Mukai and her six
For what it's worth, her husband
American crew males.
and 2-year-oiJJ son love the stuff.
The astronauts will dig in to the
''Good hot and good cold," she
13 frcct.c-dricd and sterilized dish- promi sed.
~s - JUSt add water, heat and
NASA has sent up ethnic food
voila' - sometime this week or before at foreign astronauts'
next. li 's the commander's call as behest: Swiss crackers. Parmesan
cheese and French pate for starters.
to when .
M1ka Takeda is nervously
Japanese food, in fact, has nown
awai1in~ feast day . Her dried tofu before. Japanese astronaut Mamoru
stuffed with chicken and vcget.ables Mohri took aJ I kinds of rice, pick.
led plums and seaweed soup on
won ~&gt; c grand prize
in lhe Japanese
space shuttle Endeavour two years

HEATING &amp;COOLING
RSES &amp; EPA

•Painting
•Power Weohlng.
claene ell exterior•
with high pre11ure
epreyer
ofleeaonable ReiN
-20 Year• Experience
•Free EallmatN

FrM To Good Home, Ft~t~~la
B~Hany Spant.l, Spado, VacclnatM &amp; Wormed, 114-44013114.
good

PI- Holp Rnd Hcmo B W-ok
P\lpploe, 114--44U022. .

Old

P\lpploo To Good Homo: 114-

2~-01101.

Mon1h Old
Fomalo, 614-

To Good Home 18
112 DolmaUon Mia
258-e&gt;l83.

Young Mota Pup Homo
Country, 814-448 38Ur.

In

Lost &amp; Found
Found: lomala Coon Ho&lt;And,

6

TNT area, black I brown apota.
304-e7W112B.

Loot: I

month

old Dabna-

Uonlmlnlalure Collie mix, with

•~~~:Jii Long

Hollow ......

•

1

Yanl Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

V23/1 mo.

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POIIEROY
I:U p.m.

1o

7
pupploo, Port Go"'"'n
Shepard. palt Lob. 304-t'711-1103.

915-4111

liNGO

1

b1Hd 'f~
homo.304-e7

Mlxod

ALL Yard S.loa Muot Bo Paid In
" " - · DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day bolonl tha od lo lo l\ln.

Sundoy

odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldav: llondoy odhlon • 2:00

p.m. latur•y.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

9

Wanted to Buy

Special Early Bird
S100P•yoff
Thle ad good for t
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

111111 mo. pel.

1-

QUILrrY WIIDOW IYI'IEMI

Anllqun- will buy plooo ..
lloo•ahcld, Olby llorttn,
1op dollar paid, 114-lltl2-'11141.

ontn

llade
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
• Custom

/

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'

Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look for the Red IIJid Wbite Awning'~
992-4119 AI h - Oww 1·800..291-5600
110 Court St.

-

'

�..

!

11 1994

Pomeroy-MI

OhiO

The Dally

NEA, Crossword Puzzle
35Adhealve
oubatance
t Leg joint
36Hubbub
5 Shapee like Ice- 37 Architect ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER
42 Mobile Homes

lor Rent
AV~

14x60 2 Br, 1 mile South ot
Eureka, on St Rt.7. No poto,
,.,.,...... 114..:1~.

I AU Aruo I Shlrloy

s"""rs. ~711-1429.

AVON! AI ...... Noed · -

money

Of'
wa~all

2 Bodroom llobllo Homo, Partltolly Furnllh!".J.. !!otar Paid,
$100 O.polo~ """"""· 114-25&amp;1008.

want a earMr, elttwr

Marilyn. 304-882-2645
or ..;800-992-6356.
Ac a.ptlng appllcatlona tor ..,..
vlce •atatron anendent, wrhe ..,.
ter ... 8ta1lng quaiiUcallonw to:

2 Bod room, Noor Evorgr-.
614-3'/11.2678. No Sunday callo.

Da lly S.ntfnel, P.O. Bor m.G,

2

Ponwoy, OtMo 45760.

tog\.llar tNchlng ataft; Soc:W
Studla Tt.c:h• at IIttig~ Junior
High School (Comprehonolvo
Shldloa -lllcaUon
Social
~q__
ulr__
od~ ~~~~~~

Troller lor - . you poy ulllftloo
pluo $50 dlposlt. 304.e7S..:J531.

You Are Wor1h? Due To Pllnned
Expansion &amp; Promotlont Wt
Nood
3
Energatlc
llonoy
Motivated People Nowt Call
BalwlHin 1--5 Tundliy 6 We«J.
neaday Only. For lnttrviM
Thurlday, Start 5at, 8J4.446..7441.

'"""lpmil ...

PteaNnl a,.a. 304-87'5-1814 after
5pm.
Buo
Dr1vor
lllalnlonanc.
Worker, Contracted S.rvk:ee.
Must Havo COL
So Willing To
Obloln COL Oflvo Athlotlc
loami To And From Athlotlc
Evonta, Light llalnlonaneo Worll
In Alhlotlc Focllhloo. lluot So
Ablo To Work Floxlblo Hours. 12
Month Poohlon, No Frlngo
Bonollta. Sand · lntornt ~tar

or

And Resume Betcn The
O.adllna 01 July 20, 11114 To
Phylllo llaoon, Dlroctor 01

Unlvwelty

01 Rio Grande, P.b. Box 889,
Rio Granda, OH 4U'III. EEOIAA
Emptoyor.
Child Co,. Nooclod For Two
School
Agod
Chlld...,
Prlmutally Nlghta, Shift Wor11,
occao~~ona~ o.yo, ,.,., My
Homo, Cllaahlra Area. 114-31J.

0558.
Dancera .-ad. 1500+ wMidy,
no nudfty. Soulhlork Inn S"bar. Tarnrny "" Kony, 304.eJ'I.
5956.

Dental

Aeelatant~tal

otflce

experience
not
MHnt.lal,
maturity, wllllngneu to leam
and posltlva afllludo -.quiNd.
Sand raoumo or worll hlotory:
801 e-. c/o GaUII)OIIo Tribuna,
1
1125 3ta. Ave. Gallpollo, OH

45131
Orlvwa COL Ouallflad, Cloan
Drlvan Rocord, 1 Yaar Vorftablo
DTA Toam Oooration WIH .,_
col&gt;' Slnglo Driven Homo
Wookonda,
Cora Plan, 1-

.-n

800-382-1185.
Eam

up

~ng

to

$1000

mall, atart

-ly
AOIIII, no-

aJparlance, -.uppllea, lnlorrnltlon, no-obligation. Sand
SASE: Cucodl Dept·IIO._ P.O.
Sol 5421, San Angola, TX ml02.
Eaoy Worlll Elcollont Poyl - .
aombta Produclll AI Homo. Coli
Toll F-. 1.aoo.46'7-5511, Eat.

313.
Harrlo Fuma , _ hiring. Plc:ll
up opptlcatlono during otora
ho.... 10:00om-5:00pm, llondly ttwvugh Satuidly ond
nooo-lpm on Sundaya.

No ~I 1500 To SIOO
Polantfll,

Prolooolonol

Mort- Relunda, own Houri,
1~1-'1242 Ell 211, 2 4 -

-

occoptlng oppllcotlono lw

port-limo cuhlar, muot bo
111yr&amp; old, no ~ callo

=:-·

a m ax1mum security prison instead'"

11

Help Wanted

-:;;~~=:--;-;;;;

Noadod: 8orrMa10 To Law no Wookly, Wll Provlda
Lawn Uoww, WMdllter &amp; O.a.
If lntorootod Call II....S.y 814441-(11118, Con Como I V11i1r Yard
A WIU D1ocuoo Poyrnonl.

1--------18

Wanted to Do

I :::-::-::=-:7:-:-::::--=:-:--::-~
Doy CoN, all ohlfto, CPA I Firat
Aid quallflod, hoi moaiL plannod actlvltloa A looming. 304-

115-281111.
Ganoral llalnlo- Polnllng,
Yard Worlo W I - WaohoCI
Outt. . Cloanorl Llghl Houllng,
Cornmorlc:al, Allldonllot, lltoyj:
114-446-4148.
Gaorgoa Portabto Sawmill
houl your loa• to tho miu
cotl304-871-1la7.

don,

re.....-no., 114.etz..aa. -,

=/e.

1,.

Sun Volley Nuraary _ 8chool.
Chlldcoro lll.f' lam-5:3Gpm Agoo
2-K, Young flr:hool Aal During
Sum-. ! O.yo par ~Nit MinImum 114-441-3117.

Financial

21

Business

Real Estate

Allraoloolllo advertiUIJI h
lhls , . _ . , Ia ouiJjld to
tl!lll'odOralfllrHoumg M.

""'lch-"

.. , 968
llogal
to advartbo •any pl'll...,..,
Imitation or &lt;llalr•based on race. ootor, rallglon.
aex Iandi! atarua or nltlofW
~.or any r - . to
mako any """ pral-,

no-

lmtt.aton or c.l8cr:li._.kan. •
TNa

w11 not

Ia IOWti igly e&lt;aFI
oMrlloOmontolor r a o l Our _
_
whldlls
h - _ ot
lho,law.

lnlormod ..... cl-.go
Mtl.tiMd In thle ntwtptpr
...e
eqUIII

av...,_ on.,

DfliiOIIunlly -

31 Homes for Sale
13 Acrao And Bom Nouoo 1
Sod--. t w lalha. LA.
Kftcllon, Utility - . Doubto
Ga- • Pavod Drivowoy For
S.ll By 0.., 114 4 'C0131.

·R-

411-1MI,IIIvo.

=_:.!nOt~':r:;,.•l::

,

Corpot,
-$10,1100,u.-urn,
Bath,
Call ~~~321 Aftor
5 P.M.

darplnnlng,

pluo

applla.C.a,

1114 1411110 Brandy Wino 3 8106-

Saw

tl,ooo.o.

Nonto 28172

Don,
Rocrn
M 000.90 • Franch
II illiiiiiio • Clllllpollo,
Dloplay,
Morning

3UDIMI.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jacklon Plu
!rom $222 to $215. Walk to ohot&gt;
&amp; - . CoU 114-446-2584.

--sa.

EOH.

EHicloncy
opC 1 ___m.,.nco,
dopoolt, no polo.
Fo&lt; LM•: One Bodroom
Aport,_,., Second , . _
nor Sacond a PlnoL GaltiPoiiL
1210
Par
llontn.
Stove,
Rolrlgorotor And Wotor FurnlahOd. No Pota, Coli 114-4464241 Or 114-446-2336.

eo.-

Fumlohod 3 Roomo &amp; Bolh,
Cloan, No P•o Roloronco &amp;
Dopoalt Roqul;ti 114-14t-11111.
Fumlohod .lportmonl, Utllftloo
Upotolro,
Paid, 1
Avonuo, Galllpotlo, No
Poll, E x - Condlllon, 114-

Bod,_.,,

44641123.

Groclouo lYing. 1 ond Z - .
room apartmwa •
Vlllltle
lla,_
ond
RIVIf1lile
Aportmonllln lllddloDOrl. From

1232-$355 . Col 114-11112.aa58.
EOH.
Nlol 2 - . 4 112 lllloo
From
Galllllollo,
ltova,

Refrigerator, Watw Fumlahecl,

1914 11-10

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:
FINE ANTIQUES- Amarlcan art,

:~";l.,t":l.,"'~':· ~'1rc:

TIBL£5.

e:!l!'.;

Rotrtg.

lp.m.

Furnished
Rooms

6.32 ...... 113,110. 1.14 Rayllum
Rd, Roomolwrwrt · - o r month.
renanlbll Flllltliadona. I~ 8torti:Z ot . - , Galllo Hotol

---·

.,. 4

motlog rnallod ............ -

• AdJoining Loll. zAcroo. AU To
0o 'fo 1 Bu?W. AI UtllltlM

1510..

(,Jfl..f~

pootora, toolo,

pottory, c
boxll, )ora, botUn, l&gt;ooU, toyo, otc. ALWAYS
BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top
dollar paid. One Dloco Of one
hundrod.
APPRAISALS,
40

yurs •• _..._. 814-11112·!1822.

....

Pets for Sale

•

PompaNd Polo 11y Sonya, c1cg

to o - o p . - , 114-

11'71
nlol
11111 Chrptor lmportal; 114-IMJI. Wfth 7e HPJ""'-' .. '"'" 11411111

Avallablo, 114-448-1308, 1 -

AKC Ootclon Aatrlo- lomola
PuPIIIII. II"!MMY July lth, $150
Each, sso OoDoon w111 Hold,

28U301.

~

114 3U fi24Uftor fl A.M.

To

~
2613.

.

~.

Polnl, Crulll,

Runo-.Loco 01 -

251-61110.

7.,m='-=...
:=--rora--:ft:-11"'a,-...,---,.-,

_t-. ..., oonc1,

- · 'IOhD

~-

Porta,t410.114-441.ol41.

31 Gallon Floh Aqua~um c.....
pfoto $100; King W- Stovo
With Btowor 1100,114 441 3040.
110 Whfto Ook Logo, 10"11" 12
·1e ft. LDng, I1W7W720, Altar
I P.M.

Shillo, Si25, 114 4183154.

Amana air oondM-, 11,000
BTU, .... s":~
2yra.,12110.
II.

AKC Roglotorocl Chow Chow
PuPIIIII. Born lllZIIIM Shola,
Wcirinod', 4 llllu, 114-3811131

1114
9pMt1, O.od-Condblan,

AKC

010, 814-311

.-

BNnowlc:ll

PD91

Tobto

$1110;

Chill F.-1190 114-441-4141
Aftar IP.II. or On Wlllcondo.

AKC Roglotorocl- -

PuPIIIoo. 5 Woou Old Wfth

Aaglotorocl

lllnloturo

flr:hnouzor Pulll&gt;loo. Call For
Groot Pr'- BlWet.olsl, 114341 73711

'~'

·

-.

••• ....., ••~- . , =-•vc;-R=-:-Iot:-or-rad'7'-:p:----:-. "IU'"'""" -..Jan
,_,
....
Connlna quart !oro $2.0Q/dz., Pupa, ll14-44e.eJII2.
Collor ID bo"i 14

mo=z: lnnd

pinto $1.75. Zano Grey boob,
Bodar •d, t4.oo. -

.so..

171-17113.
Cono- &amp; Plootlc Boptlc
Tanka, 300 lhN 2,000 Ron Evono Enll,..... _,, OH 1-IION37.0521. .

,.,...,12110,

Cluoloy oloctrlc 30"
uu , _ 304-f15.44l4.

Datto A P-louo - · :104-

AKC Yo- Lobo Wormed Firat
Sholo. Wll bo Rudy 111, 'I~
CoR Aft• lp.m.

~

\lol..__ ,_tteo,

4

76

1181 ChoVY Co-,lcyt., auto.
304-t7JI.1&amp;ao oftar 1pm Of toovw
m nogo

a-roou.

Auto Parts&amp;

om~~rn~c....'1=.. -~ ~,.~one..:
11181 250 4 t~n •
mognoto, $850. 301 8

=

_37M1131-:-.:..:C.,.Cor-:;1.:....::.:~:..:,.=:::=:;,..,.=

-:Aulomotlc TIWW For U Clll teO,
1~211 IJ'IO.

Floh Tonk &amp; Pot 111o1&gt;. 2411
Jockoon A... Polnl ~.
3fi4.I7WOIIS.

BORN LOSER

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

~

HOW WI&gt;.S \o.lOi(ll.. TOP-''(. ~TUS 7

,

'""='WY

-r.

lloovor
-·
,_,
m uDrlahl
:to47e7Mia

Wit'/

Hot Polnl -

~~lan,

27 .. "· S2IIO,

57

•II.

""

: . M CAlM fLAY•

CAlli I CARRY

I

.... am.

One .......... And One UftiW.
~ Nouooo For Rani, AI. 'IN.
Llmllo, No Polo, 114-

::c:

5161-\ ..ANmHER r»-.Y
Rfo..T fl.N.£ I

IN~

Coi!~Por·
-12,1100.1Car:-!.l!.~Jr!"ddond
oul.
allor4 Pll

J

c

J C I,

DWLC

M C

'Z

C

VZUHLUVGAGXP

EHDGXCDD . '

OULCD

' EWXCFZHDJCZ '

DLGVJ .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: Tm going forward wilh lile and not ge_tting hung up on
my disadvanlages " - (D1sabled actor) R1chard Robert Redlin
C 199&lt;1 by NE.&amp;.. Inc

9

I' I I' I I
GUCH::J

I

0 D 0 T Y

If

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

1300, 114-lfl2-6173.

KILLSBUOS

I

61 Fann Equipment

P1 d 1011 ... GUAAAHTEEDI
Avalllble It: Thontll DD-11 Clft.

Upollo.

- ... --.

fully lllf.oontalnocl
...~rrwur.
-.
11111 loyall Comry. 4 •• 2.0 ••
,.,..,...
lira, I . , llrllllm _ . . , olr
oondtlooo, ruloa, Ill whlll, pw,
pdl, 4 , _ tlroeil ... ahauot, ~":'Y lor 1001d, 181100.
15000; 1810 Ulclt Laloln
Umftad, 4 dr, 1\111 - · air 1m~29FL..-Horna
-.on. ....... otorao, a- c il8,000 lllloo, 15,000,
.... Olllr, Itt Ill 1!01.
$8000,114111111 - Cnlt Po!Hip ~.
11110 Nlaoort pick up .,._ I 8181~11~p1~1,~11~U~8~84101~L:_-="
AIC, radio, ..... 114-J'II3.ao82. ""
11114 21 R . Nornod ~.1141DII1 Codllloo ...... luh 3fl7o05U.

trociOf, rolrtgerolor, 11129
pod,~.­

loadod,
2111.
11112 -

T\JO

\oiQ(I(JNC. To PU!oll

f/\LS 1

DIES,

MIGOS 1

ETHER

IN HAl{·

Acoonl Chonv Rod
I SIIIOCI. Coli Allar I p.l( IMo

bOINu

ITiflDAY''S HISTORY: On this day in
1804, Aaron Burr fatally shot Alexan- ,
Hamilton in a duel in Weehawken,,

'THE
t10\JER'

t'Y)N'( t.

BIRTHDAYS: John Quincy
I'"'""" (1767 -1848), U.S. president;
. White ( 1899- 1985) , writer; Yul
ner (19 20· 1985&gt;. act.or : Tab
1 "''"'',r 0931 -l , actor,fs-Ji~ ; Debbie
IH~wrv 0945·), singer, is 49 : Bonnie
IPo&gt;inter 0951 · ) singer, is 43; Sela

- . . _ •• 11,200, Or Ollor, 11447114'1:10 Aftor I P.M.

EX, -

....

"--11. 4

Ultl
~000 111111 11,100, 114-

PRINT NUMBfRED
LETTfRS
.

UNSCRAi.iU fORI
ANSWER
•

III IIJ I II

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

7,

a •9 ~

Keenly· Baron • Jerky - Uplift· FRONT

Living in a house with five teenagers I found that they
define things differently than I do. My one son says that
convenience food is the food in the refrigerator that's out
in FRONTI
·

is 36.

..
~ '"'-1'!.

112-DII.

11112 lluotong

956-),

E)

I'

Comp le1e . the chuckle quoted
by fdling in the m1umg words
you develop from step No. J below.

"""'PI'•

73 .._.II -

-

8

day of summer.

wH0'5

co. •a. _,... ~ =21:-::Pt.:-:P=--=,..:::-:eo=m=-:::-,-::Do:-:::ral

:;"':.': =-. .:O'Z. ~ """'"""

. 111111-10. 304-47UII2.

'TWO 6UI&gt;·

T;::

11112 -

Dovlllo, 11111 Fclnl 4114,

T\JO

~=.'f..

lll:oozL

Lawn
........
Coclllloo

i...__.__.._....__,_....1..--'
. L L _ _ .

Today is the J92nd
of 1994 and the

19J'It 27ft. Tlton - - homo,

11100. IJI4.87541v;

-

Serv1 ces

llulft-Pclo1, Rad,

..
..

81

Home
Improvements

IIEIICEDES 1000 1 - l'lnll
'llnlo, I l::rilndlr. 1111111. &amp;..
~':ft''at'Int........._.
t1t
....

72 Trucka for Sale

lalo lor ,..,., SOW75-

ASTRO-GRAPH

reveals which signs are romantically per·
feet for you. Mail $2 lo Matchmaker, c/o
lhos newspaper , P .O . Box 4465 . New
Vorl&lt;, NY 10163.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you're presenl·
ly indebled to a friend, lry to make some

-.-.---

...... 14 ...... lroclor,

aut-"o- ... -

...

type of arrangement today to clear up

~

Household
Goods

1:~

-~4~/tO

OPEN 11an. ·IlL N!WadN.

~

1m '21 11. Air -

chlrry ftnloh,

11n GlQ ......... ......
-:":1:..,Orool
....go_
_

liOOD

USED

APPI..WICI!I

-----·-10
UGLY DECK OR FENCE?

........

-·ion

KrUbblna

wllll

. ._

lhomll IJo.ll Contor,
lloCor mlok Rd., Oolllpollo.

Kft.... . _ .... -

Uood .Mor
- I P.M.
171 lloll. - 2720,

DECK c:tEANER.

I

Tuesday, July t2 , 1994

IIIFOIICER

~~1

....
For . . ln R i o Tho ...... Chonh. ...
lloy 114-113........... -

v

G X

VZUHLU .

s

46 Space for Rant

1.!1!1! -~'--you pay

'" ... 1111
Quollty .... hold ~

-

WK

uyc

1--'rl...::..,;p;;.-.;;,~,.::...,:1.:....-.:r-l G)

for Rent

411111~141

-

VI N C

J

KGPJVCZD

Driving can bevetystressful.
Since cars already have built-in
---'.-.1...__._L.-.L.__.. ...
directional signals, I think they
r - - - - - - - - - , should have another one that
LE 0 I H
indicates"··· •••••• "

ct .-...... 1400, 114-ltla-

-

YI'IIA FURNITURI

-

' L W D V

.

Musical
Instruments

Plano lor

Klckor C$ .,..._ bo1, Z 111'/ Z
8"/ 2, 2"111" homo, 1111 In box,

ond dlodorluo TOOl ENFORCER
COUNTRY
FRESH
FRAGRANCE P• Control
Producto
ora
OUAAAHTEEDIAvallblo II: Pt. PIMMI!I
Co-op, 1519 IConowho 81. Pl.
PIMNnl.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity C1ptl•r cryplograml a,. craated from quotallona by lamoos people , pael and present
Each lener 1n the cipM!atandt lor another Tcx:Uy's due.- /.. Y

L..

lu

In

2 br. houoo In lllcldloport, 13110
par month pluo ~.colt 1141112-5221.

.. Repo.loollon

CALL THE AD
A6ENC\" BEFORE
IT'S TOO LATE ..

. r--,-1--,ls--,:r,_..,l~ ~

c,t-,

1br houoo, Highland Avo, $!0

d2

Pass
Pass

East
Pas s
Pass
Pass

40111.

1fT Wanted to Rent

B~Land

-..n-3570,

I NT
3 NT

North
1•
2 NT
Pass

otorm &amp; 2 otorm
Wlndowl, 1311 lor II. IOW78-

-.I,
210S7BQ.
ATV!IDU1J.1242.
lhrao - ·

4 Allempted
5Wheel tooth
6 Golden aharry
7 Hoalery fabric

1 Sharf
2 Mala fastener
3 Actor -- Flynn

g

Mill R A~-

One Still With
7 Ull Drnr- IM21111t11.

-.a.nton.OHaaA.

~=

Wes t
Pass

Have you seen the golf -club ·
·advertisement tha t c la1ms that ·
tell a club th e shot you want to
pia~ . it hil s that s hot? Advertisers
believe everyone is gullible, but do
they really think we will buy that
one? I was re minded of Fantasia.
Now suppose we could talk to
cards. "Right, listen up, men . I'm
in four spades and you're in th e
recycling bin if you don ' t win at
least 10 tricks ."
Absurd? We ll, th e re is a book
called "Righi Through the Pack, "
by Robe rt Darvas and Norman de
Villiers Hart, that contains 52 tales,
each told by a different card.
Today's deal is the one narrated by
the spade jack Against South's
contract of three no-trump, West
leads the heart five : eight, queen,
king . Do you see how the spade
jack might play a pivotal role?
South d1d well not to bid three
~
spades over two no-trump, as the
!!.
spade game is virtually sure to fail.
o ~
With the heart SUit wide up c u, 1
f
South couldn't afford to lose &lt;he
!i m
lead . Also , it is better to risk one
~
'nesse in diamonds than two in ·
- ®
And , asliou can see, East
f/ r ~o•ues have the iamond king . So '
•l"uu1.n played a spade to dummy's,
and took the winning diamond!
'l~ine:sse for nine easy tricks, right? ·
quite'
East , guessing this was th e
position, s moothly dropped th e
king under dummy's ace .
nly the situation had
lctJan,ged . Taking the spade king
value, South played a club
ace and ran the spade nine.
.
ast produced the jack and
returned his last heart: two down .

'

-=--,--=Pro,_..,.too---:--:
w-.

IIC
-

DOWN

a
t

Budall Prtood Trouon lulono,
1111 Dodae 0rnn1, $800 olio, llllcl &amp; - · II l y - llort114-lltlfi.350a.
Ina • lit: l14-245a7F,
1181 - - ..__. . . ,....... 1~, 114-3711-Z113.
toadlci'"-U' -...
.... _,

11834.
DalmaUon Pupploo For llolo:
Pu-,
· ttoo
Each,
Ohio 11W17-3221.

,•

Accessortes

112-2186.
=Dno-:::ftl,-'!fi--,T=a7
Slza, Oill

CounlrJ
Raplloti'ro:Gltlllo
111110 Old 8 ' - Uno

HOU888

50 EI/Ef\'( NIGIH AT
SUPPERTIME YOU KNOW
't'OU'LL BE EATING 'TI-lE
SAME OLD THING''

..........

1 •._
_
_._
· -------------1

Real Estate
Wanted

W.nlod

S1,ooo, 75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
Dodgo Diplomat, z - ·
cor, liking 11300 0110: 11'71 llodol Joyboo 11 Fl. -

1fllltfllll doa unnal, $1119.111.
Point Ptuo, ~.

...

IT'S CALLED.
''THE SAME
OLD THING''

tm Buick Rogol, Y-6,

18 111111 Door F,._ 32 Inch
lhN 40 Inch. 111111 Frome Wlndowo, Coli For Slllo, 1 Sot I 1'1.
Kitchen C.blneta, 114 111 '13"1,
1.000.287-5308.

=~Nng,

52 Wear away
53 Word formed
with !ellen of
another
54- Hswklno Day
55 Sicilian wine
56 Type of duck

You speak;
they react

PEANUTS

-;;;;;-o;;-;;u;.;iYSii;i;;
0231

art

19- B. Johnson
21 Boxing· victory
abbr.
24 Moo -- tung
27Rama' motes
28Uirge oven
29 Courted
31- conteat
32 Musical work
33- - Wonderful
Life ,
34Auatralla's
neighbor (abbr.)

Opening lead: • 5

2-~

g:=,.;."'l.:r.t...~

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

48Shrub·trlmmlng

owe ......,,..-.

M.a~

36

Motorcycles

TELL DOC PRITCHART
HE'S INVITED OVER
TO MY HOUSE TONIGHT
FER CHECKERS

DON'T WORRY,
MAW'!
I'LL TAKE
CARE
OF IT

Block, brick, Dlpoo, wtndowo, llntlll. otc. Cloudo Wintara, Rio Orondl, OH Call 114-

56

Isaac -

(2 wds.)

By Phillip Alder

81•plna
oooklng.
AIIO trallar- lpiCI.- All -..upo.
Col oft• 2:90 p.m., 3CN-71Sf111St, ..._ wv.

- - . oulloblo to llulld on ond ~liar
-

I THINK TATER
PICKED UP SOME
SORTA BUG AT
KIDDY GARDEN

+

I

BARNEY

moa.

71 Autos tor Sale

Building
Supplies

55

114o3117o-.

two or

South

'II EX500 K8w., IXCIIIInl OORIPr
ond Nftl JlfloL
l14-ltWII7I
o1tar
1:00pm.

0 lafM ~MEA. Inc

3 Room 0111o1 IUI1o Wftll
Avollablo, 114 44&amp;31157.
- · T - In _ , . Fire
'1\oo 100dOII 011 SA 1t0 AcrG11 Proal Blda. Collllorrto Hoolllno
Frorn Old North Gallla H.l, 114- 111 Ul 2QI Or 114-44WSt2.
Ull Wfth Toll! E1oatr1o. For Rani,
W.nlod To Buy: U11 1 Aero or
lloro, Cal Aftor I P.M. 114-446- 111
;;;::::rllor1=:-:Rontat=:-:-:;6:-:81
=:-=---,Unlla,:-::7517·
!!!0L.!_~,_1flll11,
-

bur-

74

,t.., ... ..,

44SF writer

Vulne rable: East-West
Dealer: Sou th

~000 rnlloa, 111,100,

45

Rango,

•A K

·--.. --.-I

7- ..

a t -lldoro
ony - Equlpmont,
·prlooo In
tor, 171 llcConnlclt Rd. Gai- .....
1'111-lll210f1~

Unlumlohod

+Al0975

nnn:

1913 CIIIC Sofwllllnlnn, -

Prlvate
~~
Woter, Garbogo Pold.
Roqulrod. IM-448-43411 After

IR

• K I0 7

a:,_-

Antiques

53

.. 9 4 2

lion, -

==-=-=~..,.,====­

• K 4 2

Dodao
Von,a..;
10,000
lllloo,
t4,d'Oo; -Con Ia
At:
~ O.llr Tit ..... 121
411
Gltlllpolo, 114-

Wlngrno-

1'10

m e£ .. .

• Q4

Btaur T"":~ P8

~........

outornodo · - A -nlng
""'· Alluc. oond. 304-C7fi.711111.

AomlngtOII

• K J 5

VIIJDICATED'

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

30-411

BOL,

EAST

'I SHAll. E£

39 Still
40 Meaeure of
-lght
41 Obstinate
43Dog or cat

18 Reagan's son

SOUTH

11n 21 HP llaloruo Troctor.
DloHI With u.. - . Hyd'
..u11c eor ....~~or., 5 A. Brulh
KILLS BUOS
Hog, &amp; I Pt. B-,-21 lira.
and deod •bw TOOl ENF()A.. sa.ooa,
111 141 liMO
CER
COUNTRY
FRESH
FRAGRANCE Pool Control Chroln boro I cltolno to Ill

One

$14,1'10.

dlpoolt,

~~~onWolne.

.......

Pl••..

Air GOOdhloned. Pl
nt.
2br., partly IUmlohld, HUD occoptad. 304-1175-7783.

tz5Q.IIo. No Ptea, l1t ttl 1031

Land, I Bodroomo, 1 112 Bolho,
I llllto From Galllllolll Down
211. Land Controd, $18,800 Wfth
Down Poymont $800. Or WIU
San Colh Out For 111,1100, 114-

41

Br1ng A CUfnrl IIVR And Apply

~

pr-

700

;

•J 9 8 6 5

ea.

Troctor II',.Uor

r S t - E'mnllllovPoilf1""'"'""' Hlatory
• Uvo WJthlil11 lllloo 01 RlplaJ

AWAY

IS &lt;:Oiffi

Poe dick,
cu~
bonch,oupor lot mochlno, V4"
tubular llool oonotruc:tlon aortod wotahta, bars. bono.
Ovw ~
ln..otod
will
oac:rlllca or tredo lor truck, 114361'7l101.
Remington

lH£~16\]~
(!( 11115 £LKTOJ 't£PR

Renlals

·c-ACOL~

~77Eilt

lhfae Co.,

1113 Schuft 141114 -

Oo Y o u -

AI:

In~~

3 Roome Fumltohod, Upotalra
Aper1ment, No Peta, IJtilhl•
Paid, 84 LA&gt;cuot $250/llo. $100
0.-'t, -1340, · 3810.

0311.

W.nlod to

·a .....n..

-...

EOH.

2br. ope., ..._, WV, partly IUr·
nlohod,
utn~...
lncludad,
$350/mo, dopoolt ,.qulrod. 304-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Apon.-.
Mx'IO 11'71 lrallor on 3 Acroo 01 Provldod,.

3br. ~ Loon, ,_ FA luf.

v-

Cllll14~fl2·3711.

Nlco

1nlo.

• 1

"!,

OH 114-448-t340,

POSTAL JOBS
Start tn.41/lrr. tw •am ond
application
ooll 21t-7et-

•lrw...,...
• Paid v-~~oow And Holldoyo

Bottom, Ohio

CitY

rldor

• Staodv Paycheck

121110 Midland, 2

Flrotllaia
·Rocluc

~-· tirM - · 1-220-

Aro You Looking For:

2bdrm. apta., total llectrlc, •P"
pllancoo l\lmlohod, laundry
room loc:IIHioo c:looo to ochoot
In tcrwn. Applbdlono avollablo
ot: VIIIIOI Groan Apto. 1148 or

388~000.

--·

IOo

TRUCK DRIVERS

ITS 'SN) 10 1!11NK
f\&amp;:XJT. EUT .

Hogan Edgo~clubo ond bog,
3 ln&gt;n th
SW, thin 1
yoor old,
t, BIG Borthl
Drlvor 1\ $1110; 114-le2'~

3 Fumlohod Roomo And Both,
Wator /Trooh Paid, S300/llo. 3 Ton llobllo Pock Air eon.
O.pooft $250, Portw Aru, 114- dhlonor lnotallod, Flnonelol

-.W.VA. 304-871-14CKI.

oblo,_..Q-oYIIIoblo, luol cord oyotom, oo. pay

1301 IlL WVMI, llm-lpm,
Sun-frl

1 Bodroom Apartment, O.pooft,
Nawly Romodalod, Galllpollto
Aroa, 814-24U893.
1 Bodroorn Apt . Noor Holzor,
Control Air. $2&amp;5. Coli: 114-446-··
_,

7J'3..5843 after 8pm.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

..

platoo

---nil.

Roducod-Ptyrnall Ad, largo Mlln kitchen, 3br., aftlched
• ... go.... 11101180', _ , !fn.
ancfng anllable. Somerville
Roalty, :IOWJ'I-3030 or 171-3431.

- . 2. Full Batha, 3 Ton CA,
With IIIII Pump, Laundry
Opportunity
R_,, Undorplnnl~ Tie
oawr.1 AI Sot Up 9&lt;\ Prime
INDTICll
OHIO YAWY PIJBIJSHIIIO CO. Rantoo Lol, 111ony Ellloo, Iman. llWII..-.mondl thll JOU do buol- mediate Poe
, _ wfth pooplo you "'-r ond 1357.
NOr to Hnd money t"'-n tho
•111110 Now
mall until you hovoln-Tgotod Altontlon
Avollabto In W. VA. -Ill. 81oto
tho ollwlng.
=-~- w. VA. •
VENDING ROUTE: Won1 Got
Rlclr ~IL WIN Got A 81oody Frao Control Afro Froo Air On
Cooh Prlcod to 8el. 1Any lllnglo Soctlon Homo
10f1.G04712.
In lltock- Ill..... Nomao, Pl.

0wnor/Oparatoro
Conlnal Fralghl Cont. . Ia hiring In tho van dlvloion paid
loaded or ornply 011loo unloo6lng poy, otop pay, hMfth lneuranct wlclentlll I Yl8lan ·~

ou....

0&lt;1711.1431.

Sfl000,114'11112.:1443.

of

ond

Roducod-111. Yornon Avo., 5
- l u l l - . .... &amp;
carporl, ... 11011100', llan, flnlnclna onlloblo.
Sotr.vlllo Raolly, ZW7W030

•""**'

ovollobla, boll-tall IMuranco
ovollabla, luol cord oyatorn,
waoldy
-•moru.
rldor
~ram, timo ho&lt;M. 1-2211-

loll oyot"!!'L prarnpl

roomo.

...... 213ac., $12,800. i~Uu.
3131.

11117 14d0 Eaotwlnd w/12131
WIU do -loonlng and caro odd o rooo~ 3br 2 lui botho
1
one wl)acuul tuD,
n.w carpet,
lor otdorfy. - - ·
axe. cond., aoklng $10,1100. :lo4'
W1l otoom carpoto a_, 171-4841.
ta finish my
on
dNMr,~.
1987 Rodmon R......,law 141110,
2 bodo ocm, 1 both, gao lumoco,
2 112 ton control olr, vlnyt un-

grou ravanuo putting company
frallerw Of' puling own traltw,
hNith lnowanoo w/dlnlal &amp; vi-

-

boglnnor homo. I
11u , _ lnoldo ruro1

, - condftion,lf4..oat5..3988.

Ownor/OIIIrii-

avollablo,

31 Homes for Sale
Pwloct

Apartment
lor Rent

IIIII Pauta'o O.V Coro Cantor
Fumlohod Elllclancy $tf15111o.
lll.f' I A.M. -6:36 P.M. Oualfty 11172 Buddy L t2x10 whh 418 Lnllltloo Paid, Shira Bolh, 1107
IXplndo, $2800, 1'14-tt2·7Z22 M
Lovlna Cora For AI Chlldran
~!"f~.:.Uipollo, 114-446Our f1 Clool Port-Tima, Fuii- 304..e2-3715e aft• I pm.
Tlmo Fad. ..-..nco Avohablo. 11172 Elcona 12llll0 With t!IJ'It
Coli ~ lnlwmotlon or Vloft. In- Trallar Roomotto 12124 3 BR 2 Fumlohod Elllclancy 701 Fourth
toni ll'ocklor 114 4II IIZI1! ..,. Air Condltlonoro, 111,000, 114- Avonuo, Galllpoilo, $220/llo.
Utllhloo Pold, 114 441 4416 Allor
flr:hool,
8chootago,
IIU 31184821.
7PJI.
flr:hool, 114-44N2K
11175 14d0 llobllo Noma, Gao Fumlohod Elflcloney 1120 Fourth
Oualhy Cloanlng AI Affordlblo
Avonuo, Galllpoilo, $115111o.
Prlco!'1 1 Tlmo WoHiy, B-kiJ, :::.:. Port~ F...,lohod, Undor· LniiHioo
Pold, 114 441 4418 Ahor
~~~d~o
llo~o~U~.
1':;:/::
Frao Eotlmatoo,
7P.Il

Conlnal Frolghl carrtora II
hiring a~ olo'o to ""'

lion

Compound
Bow, Jonnlngo
Forl&lt;od Ughtnlng Col&gt;ro, 4-Pin
Sight, BoW Oul"!'1 8tabi~!IJ
fthaca Model 37 l&gt;notgun ..llodlflarlllaml, 114-44...1144.

Saarinen

12 Shrecla
1 13 Actress Dukaklo
14 Fish traps
l 15 Medieval
minstrel

16 Borrowed

• QJ 8
.. Q 4 2

lla.JI'!urn, :10" vwrt rib brlrrot ond
20 otayor borral wMh rl!la
olghto, 114-511'3221.

1 and 2 bedroom aport_,..,
l\lmlahod ond unl\lmlohod,
-urny dopooll roqulrod, no
poto, 614-&amp;m-2218.

1.,.

......,. lady willing 10 wor1l. Wll
do houoo oloonlng, oiM&gt;pplng or
olttlng wfth •nloi cltfun, gi&gt;od

o-y,

~go

44

"Sand c astles are ooring ... Let's build

OWNER OPERATORS Your
lr8Cto&lt; &amp; Flotbod For o.dlcatod
High Paying lAM&amp; Noma Oftan
Ptuo WHiuindl. Ptonty Ollllln.
otllol • ExiiiHI T - ·
lotion ~11-7212.

llatiMcl, .....

•A Q
• 9 8

Bamon Oornon ~ Bow
~e"J Eltraol 12110 080, 1141117.

pod
I
-lng.
3 Bodrooma, 2 Batho, Noor p,.. wtracoll
tor Aru, On 1110, Dopoalt, You Remington 87U, 12 gouga
wtahoi!L 22 llorlln 110, Poy Utllhloo,114-388-11112.

Antntlon: Want To Earn Wh.c

811byslner nMd.cl for 18mo. okl
gl•\ 4 dlyalwk.,
per1ence nec....ry, nee
Pl.

No Polo,
Rotorancoo,

2 Bodrooma, Prlvllo locL.51111M
South 211, 1200/llo. uoposlt,
Ro~roncoo, lncludH Wot•, 114251-67efl,l14-2f56.t337.

Local School Dlstlkrt Ia poellng
lhe t~&amp;owlng v.cancy tor tit

AVON SEI.t.S ITSELF&amp; Pocantlot
Eamlngo $200 42,000 llonthlr,
S.ll AI Work~ Homof And llaU
.Qrdar. FIM 1raining 1-IOC).l'42·
4738.

AC,

And

$400/llo., w~ Dtvor; 2 Bo6room HouM, t"umlalwd. No
Polo, $350/llo. O.pooft, 114-J'W.
4345.

AI per Anlclt I TrltllfiF'I lnd
Vacanc ln, Section B, Poetlng,
of lht NegoCiated Agrwemtnt
between lht MLTA and tht
Board of Education, lhl Mtlga

Human Reeoureee

Badtoomo,

Dopoo~

IIU!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!~~:~~~~~~ I

52 Sportlhg Goods

cream holder•

Answer to PreYIOUI Puzzle

A.-

ot:

171

A 'number of happy changes might be in
store for you 1n the year ahead . One
might pertain 10 a change of residence if
you've been contemplating a move.
Another could involve a career shill.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Usually you
try to be methodiC81 and purposeful. bul
there's a possibility today you may do
things in a slipshod lashion and create
problems for yourself and others. Know
where to look lor romance and you'll find
il. The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker inslantly

this obligation. Lack of anenlion 10 this
matter is hurting the relationship .
VIRGO (Aug. 2~Sept. 22) An assoctate ·
who is usually rather cooperative might
do an abouHace today and be obstinate
m order to get even for something you .
d1d lo him/her recenlly
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Don't become
so involved in your newest endeavors
today &amp;hal you neglect an ongoing project .•
that requires attention. Devote time to
each.
SCORPIO (Oci . 24-Nov. 22) Be
extremely careful how you deal w1lh
friends today . You may feel you're conslructively managing lhings for them. bul
they might feel they are being manipulat·
ed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) In
order to achieve an impor1ant objective
today . you must be consistent and lolally;
dedicated Anylhing less than a maxi·
mum effort might not work.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. t9) Persons
with whom you associate today will have
a strong influence on your attitude and
outlook . It they are negative thinkers ,
you're apt to ·lollow suit
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19) Losses
might result today if you fail to handle
financial matters skillfully, both your own
and those of others .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) Try to be
supportive of your mate today instead of
lakmg a position that opposes h1s/ her
views. Your lack of allegiance now may
cause your spouse lo behave Similarly lo
you later.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Nothing constructive is likely to resultloday il you ll'f
to get others to handle responsibilities or
duties lhal are exclusive ly yours. If you
won't, why should they? ·
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) If possible, 11
m1ght prove ,.ise loday lo reject the
appoinlmenl of treasurer for your club or
group activities. There's a chance you
may have trouble collecting lunds.
GEMINI (May 21.June 29) Be lacrtul and
diplomatic today instead ol pushy or,
assertive. If you're too self-centered, you
might catch a lol ol heat from all sides.
Ct1194 NEWSPAPER ENTERPJUSE ASSN
• · .... 1

..

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Monday July 11 1994

Pemeroy-Middleport Ohio

Friends, families mourn firefighters killed battling blaze
By ROBERT WELLER
Assoc ated Press Wr tcr
GLENWOOD SPRINGS Colo
- A w p of wh te smoke dr fted
Sk) wa d om he ashy mounta n
s de mou ne s held hand sang
Amaz ng G ace and wep a a
serv
o 14 li c ghters who died
t.ry ng o op
una"'ay w dfi e
ha hr a cncd h s cso t town
Fou cc n ha
d aped w h
Amcr can fla g and b la k and
wh c bb ons ood before th e
stage a abou 3 500 people gath
er :d Sunday to hono he fi efigh
e rs who we e burned o dea th
when the w ldf c uddenly oared
up S o m K ng Mounta n s steep
o k) ope on Wednesday
W c gl d hey d c I to ng
wha h y I ked o do
Mon ana
f gh Ted Murr y sa d
I cl or crs n ew pas n the
F
m ng nan fonnat on w th fou
lead ng a d one br ng ng up the
A 30 foot electr c cross h gh
on nearby R d Mountam was llu
n n c I U ual y onl y I ghted fo
Ch tn a
w I blaze for 14 days
on ro ea h c m
The dead firef gh ers were vet
er ns h ghl y sk I ed at the danger
o us wo k of con a n ng the w ld
f res ha bl ow up ac ass the hot
dry West each summc N nc were
from Pr ncv I c 0 c othe s we c
I rom Montana Id aho and else
where n Colo ado
These 14 arc now par o
Glenwood Sp ng s
sa d Bob
Zanella mayor of h Rocky
Mo unta n own of about 6 000
Th ey arc ou s They w II be
remcmbe ed
Up the mountaJn s slope black
sk e letons of JUn pe s tood ou
aga nst the gray ash du st ng the
ground
Please org e th s mounta n
she cou dn t contra what happened

Floodwaters
still wreaking
havoc in Ga.
BAINBRIDGE Ga (AP)
A
devaslllt ng flood that already has
k lied 28 people surged toward
Georg a s southwest comer today
threaten ng a fcndtzcr p am loaded
w th tox c chcm cals and fore ng
nearly a th rd of the ctty s res dents
from the homes
I never thought Ba nbndge
would look like th s satd Sharccn
Dav s 16 among dozens of res
den s who watched brown water
bury a vers de park Sunday
evcnmg I ve seen th s on TV bu
always somewhere else
Two bod es were d1scovcred
Sunday both m Amcncus about
95 m1les o the north A man whose
tractor tra lcr was washed off a
road and a 3 year old boy who was
n a car w th h s mother that was
swept nto a creek The mother s
body was found Saturday
The nood also soaked at least
400 000 acres of r ch cropland
stunung peanut plants and leavmg
peaches to turn wh tc wtth mold
and rot on trees because p ckers
and trucks can 1 get to them
The Amt Rtvcr swelled from 25
feet Fr day to an esumated 35 feet
tOday and was expected to crest
Wednesday at 45 feet That would
11e 20 feet above flood stage and
nearly 5 feet htgher than the record
set n the 1925 flood
Rtverstde homes JUSt outs de the
elly that b Us tsclf as Gcorgta s
first Inland Port were swamped
Sunday and the area on the nver s
west bank was expected to be cov
el'Cd today
Nauonal guardsmen worked
Sunday n llhl to shtcld a fert I zer
plant housmg 9 mtlhon pounds of
tox c ammon.a
C ty off ctals and a spokesman
for Vtgoro lndustrtes satd they
were conf dent the 10 foot d1ke
bcmg buill around the plant s 200fool tall ammon a tank would pre
vent a cawtrophe
We can l be I 00 percent cer
tatn because nobody has ever
encountered thts before satd Vtg
oro spokesman Davtd Prichard
Mayor B K Reynolds declared
a c tywtdc SlalC of emergency and
ordered a 9 p m to 6 a m curfew
that staned Sunday mghl
Pub! c Safety Department
spokeswoman Charlene Whne satd
al!out 3 000 of he c ty s 10 000
residents were evacuaung
J usl about everybody IS coop
eral ng
she sa d
There are
some dtehards Hopefully they re
gomg to leave when the wa~r gets
htgher or we II have to go m for
them tn boats
Sporadtc showers Sunday
eventng raiSed concerns about
poten ual sewer backups and offi
otals advtsed res dents m netghbor
hoods OUtside CllY I mtlS to bo I
thctr water
The floodmg began Tuesday
after Troptcal Storm Alberto
brought heavy downpours
Torrents also surged south
through the Flor da panhandle
where 3,200 people were evacuat
ed Flonda Gov. Lawton Chtles
asked PreSident Clinton on Sunday
10 declare four more counues fed
eraJ disasler areas
In Alabama. at least one person
wu killed and two more reponed
IIIISSIDJI;

up the c U S Rep Scot Mclnn s
old hose ga he ed at Two R ve s
Pa k where the Co lor ado and
Roar ng Fo k r ve s meet
It s
tr ly beau rul mounta n If thad
ons wou ld feel a deep y
h saswedo
NOT CE OF APPL CAT ON TO
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMM SS ON
OFOHO
FOR AN NCR EASE N RATES AND
CHARGES
FOR GAS SERV CE
COLUMBA GAS OF OH 0 NC
PUCO CASE NO 94 987 GA AIR
Pu suant o the requ aments of

Oh o Rev sed Code

§ 4909 19
Co umb a Gas of Oh o
Inc
Co umb a he eby g ves no ce tha

on June 3 994 t docketed w h the
Pub c Ut t es Comm ss on of Oh o
Comm ss on
an App ca t on fo

autho ty o amend s f ed ta ffs to
nc ease he ates and cha ges fo
gas se
App ca
1994

e The subs ance of he
fol OWS

The new a ff&amp; w be ef ect ve n
a te o es served by the company

PRESENT RATES
Th e ex st ng etas n these a eas
a e hose p esc bed n Columba s
Ru es and Regulat ons fo Fum sh ng

Gas Sorv ce P U C 0 No 1
PROPOSED RATES AND SUMMARY
OF CHANGES
The p oposed te ffs ef eel many
changes necess a ed by he Fede a
Ene gy Regulato y Comm sslon s
0 de 636 wh ch a te ed the monne

n wh ch nte s a e p pa nes p ov de
se v ce to natu a gas d st bu ion
compan es such as Co umb a 0 de

636 equ ad nte sta e p pel nos to
unbund e va ous types of se v ces
that we e p ev ously offe ed n a
comb ned o m Columb a s now

offe ng s m Ia unbundled serv ces
w th the ntent of bette ma ch ng ts
serv ce offe ngs w th the needs of ts
custome s
n esponse to the

mp omental on of FERC 0 de 636
Co umb a s ofte ng seve a new
se v co end neon vo p oposa s
desc bed n mo e dote be ow

The p oposed ta I s also eflec
Columba s ef o ts to wo k w th
ep esental vas of a l o Ito
custome s o co labo at ve y eaolve
revenue needs w thout eso to
expens ve and engthy adve sar a
p oceed ngs As a esu t Columb a

and he othe pa I as to his
proceed ng hava fled w th the
Comm sa on a recommendat on tha
w I esolve a
ssues n th s

proceed ng
THE
STIPULATION
AND
RECOMMENDATION
As part or th s st pu at on and
ecommendatlon al parties have
eg eed to ecommend lhat the
Comm sa on approve the fol ow ng
matters
The mp ementat on of the sales
nd ansportatlon atea desc bed n

the fol ow ng sect ons of lh s not ca
The n t a ion of an nfo rna
ev ew p ocesa n 1996 that w

affo d the opportun ly for a furthe
ev ew of Columb a s ales n 1996 If
all the part es cannot ag ee on the

need ro an adlustment no
adjustment w ll be effec ad With the
except on of this nfo mal adjustmen

opportun ty n May 1996 Columba
and the parties have agreed lhat
Columb a w II seek no other base rate
nc ease to be effect ve p o to

January 1 1998
The mplemenlal on of a
expe mental

Weethe

Normal zat on Adjuatment ( WNA )
mechanism lo tho b ll ng per od of
Decembe :--1 994 through April 1995
In addlt on Co umbla wlll calculate a
retroactive WNA for esldentlal and
comme c a 1ale1 and t an1portatlon

customers for the billing months of
January 1994 lh ough Apr l 1994
Th a retroacl ve WNA adjustment w l
be pa•sed back to customers during
the billing months of Novemba
1994 through Ma ch 995
The cont nued mpoo lion of
'earning cap bands on Columbia s
earnings th ough 1997 For 1995
1997 the portleo have ag aed upon o
procedure to determ ne Co umbla s
eturn on equ ty by efe ence to an
ave age al owed retu n on equity of

gas ut It as To the extent Ihat
Columb a s return on equity exceeds
hese ecommended lm ts the

pert es have ag aad to a procedu e
o c ad tlng the accrued balance of
Pool lnSe v ce Car y ng Charges
PISCC ) n orda to mltlga e lulu e
ate Inc eases

Author zat on of deferred
account ng for the dille once
between cash and expense for
Ret rement ncoma Plan expenses

and the In t al recognition n rates of
tha transition obligation of Other
Post Ret ement Benol I expenses
Continuation of a Temporary Base
Rate Revenue Rider to prov da
Columb a with tho opportunl y to
ecove

evenuea lost due to the

lnabllty to collect lull margin atao
f om eome t anaportatlon cuetome s
due to compet t ve circumstances

F ex ate revenue shall be shared fo
amounto that do not exceed $3 5
million per year boglnn ng January t
1995 and that do not exceed $10 5
mlllon for tho throe yea per od
ending December 31 1997
Ttle

va loua

cherges fo al de ve leo by
Co umb a to custome of cuatome

cus ome s

owned gas othe than he Tempo ary

provl1 ons

p ov ded that the

custome coruumes ess than 300
Met pe yea be ween Se ptembe 1

of

Columbia 1 p opooed and whe a
appropriate ex ollng tarlffo are
d ICUIIId belOW
SALES RATES
Columbia lo
p opoolng throe uparato ooleo ales
Tho following appllao to al three
11101 ratoo
Tht toto monthly charge fo goo
aorvlco Ia lhe oum of tho charge lor
the coot of gaa and the charge lor all
other coot•
Both the present end the
propoaed Ilea are subject to
deere••• or lncree1e In ecco dance
with lht Gat Coat Rtcove y
provlalona of Columbia a Rulao and
Rogulot ono on tllo w th the
Commlulon aa required by
Comm oolon Orders dated October
11 1978 and October 18 t979 In
Coso No 76-515-GAORD
All bll a rondored aloo ohall be
adluottd to Include tht Interim
.Emergency and Temporary PIP Plan
Torlll Schedule Rldor tho Temporary
Baoo Rate Revonuo Rider and the
Woathtr Normallzot on Adjuotmont
Foetor •• oat forth In Co umbla a
Rules and Regulot ono on file with
tho Commloolon

Base Rata Revenue A do the Volume
Bank ng and Ba anc ng Cha ge

he

han he
nte m

FERC 0 de 636 T ana ton Coats
Su cha ge supp omenta cha gas f
app cable and the Weathe

Eme gency and Tempo ary PIP P on
Ta f Schedu e R de the Tempo ary

e as

and Augus

31

Tho p oposed

cha ges fo a costs o he
cost of ga s and the

Base Rate Revenue R de and the
Wea he No rna za on Adjustment
Facto fo a I co nsumpt on each
man h a e as fo lows
A gas consumed pe account

7 753e pe

oo cub c feet

In add ton each consume

must

account pe mon h ega dless of gas
consumed

Gene a

AREA AFFECTED

tempo ary

Sma Gene al Serv ce Th s ate
ac hedu e
s eva abe to el

pay a Customo Cha go of $6 50 pe

on as docketed on June 3

S a9

f el nes dug n o he g round
C ews dump ng water from a g ant
bucket suspended from an Army
hel cop c ass sled ho se on he
g ound s ru ~~l ng to put ou he

ema n ng smal l solated blazes on
Sunday
A week ago half a dozen rna o
w ldfires were bum ng across Col
orado The Rocky Mounta n F re
Coord nat on Center u Denver sa d
Sunday n ght that only three new

T1 e f e wh ch burned I 856

a es was urrounded Saturday by

Sa

ce

Th s

a e

schedu e s ava abe to al custome s

who consume a east 300 Mel pe
yea

between Septembe

and

August 3 The p opoaed cha ges lo
a costs othe than lhe cost of gas

No rna zat on Adjustment Fac o
a co nsumpt on each month a
fo OWl

fo

Fo tho f s 25 000 cub c foot pe
account $1 5250 pe Mel
Ove 25 000 cub c leet po account
$ 4427 po Mel
n add on each con sume mua pay

a Custom a Chq,a:ge of $16 50 pe
account pe
man h and an
adm nat a ve fee of $6 00 per month
ega d ess o1 gas consumed Fu
equ aments serv ce s a so ava ab e
at a supp ementa cho ge

La ge

Genera

T ansportat on

Se v ca

Th s ate schedu e s
ava able to a custome s that
o he w se comp y w th the gene a

and the lnte o

te ms and cond tons of Co umb as

Tempo a y PIP
R de the Tempo a y Base Ra e

t anspo tat on

Erne genc y and
P an Ta If Schedu e

~av e nue

R de
and the Wea he
No ma za on Ad ustment Facto fo
a consumpt on each month a e as
fo ows

Fo

ho f st 25 000 cub c feet pe

account

7 75e per 100 cub c feet

Ova 25 000 cub c feet pe account
16 352c pe 00 cub c feat n
add on each consume must pay a
Customs Cha ge of $16 so pe
account pe month
consumed

ega d ess of gas

La ge General Sa v ce

Th s ate

schedu e
s ava lable o a I
com me c a and ndust al custome s

who consume at easl 18 000 Mel pe
yea

between

Novambe

and

Oc oba 31 In add I on a oas SO%
of
such
custome s
annua
consumpt on mus be consumed n

the seven b I ng months of Ap
th ough Oclobe The p oposed
charges for all costs othe than tha
coat

gas

o

and

the

nte m

Eme gency and Tempo ary P P Plan
Tar If Schedule A dar and the
Tempo ary Base Rate Revenue R der
fo a consumpt on each month a e
as 1o ows

Fo he f sl 2 000 Mel pe lac II~
S 6981 pe Mel
Fo the naxt 13 000 Me pe facl ty
$5180 per Mel
Fo the next 85 000 Mel pe facll ty
S 4880 per Mel
Ova 100 000 Mel pe facllly
$4280 po Mel
Custome 1 must aka a m nlmum of
1 500 Mel aach month and any
customer who falls o do so w I be

che god fo I 500 Mel at lhe Iota
b II ng rate that ncludeo the La ga
Genera

Service

ate

gas coat

ecovary and bll ng adjustmanls
TRANSPORTATION RATES
Columb a Is p opos ng lh ee aepa a e

Ia rfa

and

that
consume at east 8 000 Met pe yea
between Novembe 1 and Oc obe 3
and take de ve y of a m n mum of

500 Mel each month In add on at
east 50% or such cuatome s annue
consumpt on must be consumed n
the seven b I ng months o Ap

th ough Octobe
If a custome fa Is o take de Ve y

of 1 500 Mel n any month the
500
customs w I be chs ged fo
Mel at the total b ng rate that
Inc udes a del ve y cha ge and a
standby se v ce monthly demand
cha ge lapp cab e
S andby Serv ce s ave loble upon
the payment of Standby Sa v ce
Charges
The e a a th eo del vo y cha go
opt ons eva able o custome s unde

th s rate schedu e
The
F xed Del vo y Cha ge
p oposed cha gas lo
a l
del varas by Co umb a to
custome
of customer opned
gas fo a I consumpt on to each

month other than the Tempo ary
Base Rata Revenue R de the FERC
0 de
636 T anoltlon Costs
Su cha ge standby serv ce chargee
f app lcable and tho
Volume Banking and Balanc ng
Cha ge a e a a ro lows
Fo the tlrst 2 000 Mel per account
per month $ 5056 pe Mel
Fo the next 13 000 Mel per account
pe monlh S 3255 pe Mel
Fo the next 85 000 Mel pe account
pe monlh $ 2955 per Mel
Over 100 000 Mel po account per
month $ 2355 po Mel
Flex ble Dellve y Cha ga
The
max mum proposed delivery cha ge
fo a de lverloo by Co umbla to
cua ome of cuatome owned gas fo

a consumption for oach monlh will
be equal to the Gene a Service base

fires
all ur.der 20 acres - had
been reponed s nee Saturday
In Cal forn a mcanwh e a
19 900 ac c w ldf e s x m les
sou h of Palm Sp ngs was ex n
gu shed Sunday a day af er f re
f gh ~rs contro l ed a 12 238 acre
p us fl m commod y 1 ansportat on
cha ges nc ud ng sh nkage o c ty

Sh ppera have tho option to e act
FTS o FTS Sto ago copacl y

ga e
Shortages w bo so d et 20 %. of

ass gnmen

nd ex

gas

coa t

pu chase the same ave of balanc ng
serv ce

RECOVERY OF FERC ORDER 636
TRANSITION COSTS The p oposed
ta ffs prov de o the ecovery of
t ans tlon costs a 1 ng f om the

nta s ate pipelines mplementat on
ol FERC 0 de 636 Columb a
p oposes to ecove theae t ens t on

costs as described be ow
T ansltion

cost1

Columba a Gas Coal Rae ovary
( GCR ) rate
Columb a w I a loca e to and
collect f om both sa ea and
transportal on customers the
charges attributable lo he pipe nes
Ia mlnatlon of lhel gas aupply
function ( GSA coots ) These GSA
costa and charges shal be a located
between sales and t ansportatlon

customers as lol ows sa as

Columbia will al oca a to and
collacl rom sa as customs a 100%
of the charges all buteb e lo the
pipe nes recovery of Account 191

trans lion costs

once the delivery rate Ia flexed the

computer capab e of recelv ng
notlceo from Columbia of any
consumpt on I mltallona or
lnterrupUono
A I transportation customs s musl
e thor elect the Vo ume Banking and
Balancing Serv ce or be placed on a
dal y cash out provlolon The Vo ume
Banking and Balanc ng Service a a
system to account fo t ansporta on

customers vo umes received by
Co umb e but not de ve ad to the
cuatomera during the same monthly

billing cycle All b lis rendered alao
shall be adluotod to Inc udo the
Volume Bank ng and Balancing
Charge If the transportation
custome elects to ut I ze the Volume
Bank ng and Ba anclng Sa v ce eo
set forth n lhe proposed tar ffs
T ansportatlon

custone s

who

choose nol to aubsc lbe to the
ae v ce will ba paced on a dally
caah out

provlllon

and

are

ruponolblo fo the purchaoe and
lnotallaUon of a dally meaaurlng
device and OIIOCiated equipment
and ohal p ovldo and pay for a
dedicated telephone line and the AC
powe

necaasa y to operate th s

equipment
Columbia will offer I rm
tranoportal on or otorago capacity
aval able for release n accordance

with nterstate pipeline company
arlffo
Transpor1atlon customers must

enter nto a Service Ag eement with
Columb a the fo m of the agreement
being apeclflod n tha propooed
to lifo
Smal General Tranoportatlon
Th 1 ate schedule lo
Service
avallab e

o al

commercial and

Industrial cuotomero that consume
leas then 300 Mel par year between
September I and Auguat 31 and that
otherwise comp y with lhe general
terms and condlt ono of Columbia 1
tranoportat on tar flo Tho propoaod
cha gea for ol dellverlea by
Columbia to cuotome of cuotomor
owned gao othe than the Tomporary
Baoe Rate Ravenue Rider the Volume
Banking and Ba anclng Chargo the
FE'RC Order 638 Tronaltlon Coota
Surcha go oupplementol charge• If
appllcabla and the Weather
Normollzatlon Adluotmont Factor lor
all conoumptlon each month are 11
followa
All goo dellvorod per account per
motor $1 5828 per Mel
In addition each conaumer muot
pay a Cuotomer Chargo of $e 50 per
eccount

per

month

and

an

odmlnlllrotlvo '" of se 00 per month
rogardloaa of gaa consumed Full
roqulremtnlo oarvlco Ia oloo ovollable
at a aupp emontol charge
General Tranoportatlon Service
Thlt rote ochadulo Ia avalloblo to all
comme c el 1nd lnduatr 1 cuatomera

that conoume 11 loaat 300 Mel per
yea betweon September 1 ond
Auguat 3t and thot othorwloo
comply with tho ganorol lorrno and
condlllono
of
Columbia 1
trenoportotlon toriHo The propoaed

those customers connected direct y

lh ough a dual pu pose meter to
lacllltles of an ntentate p pellne
supp lor ol Columb a For ouch
customers

the maximum del very

charge Including al bl I ng
adlustmanta aha l be S 25 pa Mel per
account per month

Ope atlona F ow 0 de a
All
transportation customers or
sh ppers lo wh ch the customers do
not have dal y meta a will bo subject
to Co umb a Operational F ow Orde s
( OFOo ) Columbia w tl have the
author ty to dl act I ansportal on
customers o lhel suppliera to ad(ust
scheduled volumes to match their
estimated usage nc udlng volumes
In excess of dally cont act quantities
when ope allng cond Ilona exceed
Columbia des gn cr ter a II the
scheduled volumes are not adjuoted
as reque1ted

the customer or

consortium wlll pay a gas coat equal
to tho highest ncremental gao coot
Columbia purchased that day on the
volume difference one month a
demand cha gea on the volume

difference and all charges Incurred
by Columbia on the vo ume
diHerence
Operational Match ng Orde 1 All
LGTS tranoportatlon customers that
hove dally read mete a will ba oublect
to Columbia Operating Matching
0 de a ( OMOa ) Co umbla w ll have
the authority to direct lranaportatlon
customers to adlust thel usage at
the r lac lltlea to match the volumea
that ore flowing on tha p pellnea II
the usage s not adlusted es
requested tho cuolomer shall pay a
gas coot equal to tho highest
nc omental gas cost Co umb a
purchased that day on the volume
difference and all charges Incurred
by Columb a on the vo ume
diHerenca
Balancing Serv coo Co umblo will
establish o new balancing oervlce
The ba anclng oervlco wll be optional
lor SGTS GTS and lGTS cuotomers
Balancing Service will bt provided
under the lo lowing tormo and
cond Ilona
The ratea and bonking cho coo lor
balancing service will be •• fo lows
SGTS GTS
RATE/MCF
(Th oughput)
Monthly Bank Tolerance
(%Ann Vol)
LGTS
RATE/MCF
(Th oughput)
Monthly Bank Toloronce
(%Ann Vol)
$0437 tOO% $0218 5%
0370
8.0% 0185
4%
0300
6 0% 0150
3%
0233
4 0% 0117
2%
0164
2 0% 0082
1%
0130
, 0% 0085
5%
Be anclng oervlca rateo wll be
sublect to change blot on varlatlono
In TCOratoo
Exceaa volumeo may be
purchased at 80% ollndex gao coot

FTS Sto age capec ly aso gnment
wMI nc ude ~n al ocatlon of
Tennessee Gas ( FT A ) end TCO
( FTS ) TCO Sto ega ( FSS &amp; SST )
Assigned FTS Sto age capac ly at o
be dele m ned on a custome
spec f c or consort urn 1pec t c load

w

customers

the

charges attributable to tho plpel nos
recovery of stranded rae ties and
new lacllt eo transition costs
These 11 ended locllll eo and new
facti ties costs and cha ges aha I be
allocated betwe1n aa aa and
t an1portat on custom a s aa follows

aa as 62% and I anoportatlon 38%
Columbia will allocate to and
collect I om both ulao and
custome a

the

charges attributable to the pipelines
ecovery of Account 858 trans tlon

costa Thaae Account 858 costa and
charges sha I be allocated between
sales and transports on customers
as fol owa
aales
80% and

transportal on 20X.
Columbia w II recover through Its
Gao Coat Recovery rote that portion
of transit on coots a located 10 sa as
customers
Unleas otherw se ag eed upon In

ndlvldua
transportallon
ar angements the t anolt on coots
ollocatad to Columbia t anoportatlon
customers shall be collecled through
the establishment of a surcharge of
S 04 Mel on all of Co umb a a gas
tranoportatlon rotea Thla ourcha ge
oha l recover the trans lion coats
lha carrying costa on the uncollected
balence of the t onsltlon costa
allocated to tranaporta lon aerv ceo
at a rate equal to Co umbla 1 ahort
te m nteraat co1t
and
the
corresponding gross ece pta axe sa
tax on the bllad l anslt on coots and
carrying charges Co umb a sha l
app y to te mlnate the t ansportatlon
aurcharge once lt hat collected a I
tronoltlon cooto allocated to
transportal on

d sp acement pu suant to Ia ta ff
A capac t~ ass gnee w II be able o
eass gn capac ty subjec o ecall
The capacl y ass gnee must ema n

subject to Columb a ope et ona flow
ode a
The o g nal ass gnee must agree

to be espona be fo a I upstream
pipe ne cha gas associated w h the
capac ty e ease nc ud ng but not

m ted to damand and com mod ty
charges sh nkage nject on and
w hd awal chargee Gas Resea ch

nattute charges
t ans

cash outs

on coats p pe ne over run

cha gee and ACA s
REQUEST
The App cat on requests that the
Comm sa on f nd that the p eoenl
ates fo gas se v ce a e unjust
un easonable and lnsuff c ent to
y e d easonab e compensat on to

Co umb a f nd lha he alas and
charges proposed n tho App calion
are just and ea!lonable and wl
p ovlde a reasonable etu n upon the

property devoted by Co umbla to ts
gas service app ova the filing of new
to f a In the form p opoaad n the
Appl cation and approve tha
wl hdrawal of the tarllfs lor wh ch
they a a subotltuted order that sa d
new tar flo shall ba made affective
lorthw th and make such further
orders and g ant such further rei ef
as may be necessary )uat and p oper

GENERAL INFORMATION
Baaed on the current charge for the
cost of gas the es mated ave age

pe cent Increase n rates

should

the equested Increase be granted In
fu I
for sa es se v ces Smal

Transportation Se v ce (Ma nl ne

Co umb a w I al oca e to

transpo tatlon

A
cus tom a s w th n a
t ansportat on consort urn must be

and

November 1 1992 and October 31
1993

cuatomera

The

maximum trona lion coot aurcharga
for t ansportatlon customers Ia

$ 04 Mel All rafundo of Take-or Pay

or transition coota paid to Columbia
ohall be allocated l&gt;ttwaen aaloo end
transportation cu1tome a as follows
oalao 80% and tranoportatlon 20%
Refund a allocated to sa 11 customers

ohall be refunded through the normal
ope atlon of the RA mechanism of
the GCR Refunds al ocated to
tronoportatlon cuotome 1 shall be
held In the balance account to offset
the then existing and future allocated
transportal on trans t on co1ta

Columbia may not acover through
the GCR rate ony transit on costa
or glnally allocated to t anoportot on
customers The tranaportatlon
surcharge may be aueaaed to and
ecovared I om all tranoportatlon
customaro until all t analtlon costo
allocated to the tranoportatlon clall
are recovered
CAPACITY ASSIGNMENT Aa a
reault of lhe lmplamentat on of FERC
Order 836 Columbia w II aoolgn llrm
plpollna copoclly to firm .. leo
cuatomort under tormo and
condlllona doocrlbad n tho propooad
ta lila Theae termo and condltlono
are 1ummerlzed •• follow•

Minimum cuatomer conoortlum
volume of s MMcl day
Once application 11 modo for tho 5
MMcl day minimum volume the
ahlppor may add oddltlonal
cuotomoro on a month y baolo
However raductlone cen only be
made effective April 1 each year
unl... an additional cuaaomer of
oqual lfzl fa added
Capacity ••• gnmento muot be
renewed aach yeo eHectlvo Ap II 1

Buckeve 5
2 3 4 7 31

Page4

Del vary Charge) Is 0 0%
The
St pulotlon
Recommendat on

submitted

and
fo

app oval to the Commlulon
add asses among other things the
recove y of lnla stale pipeline
transition costs ar s ng as a reault of
the Fedora Energy Regulatory
Commlsolon Order 636 The public
hearings ochoduled lor th a case
provide an opportunity fo Into ested
persona to add eas this aaue
Thasa proposed ataa and cha gea
are sublect to changes ncludlng
changes aa to ..,ount and form by
the Commlsolon lo lowing ttl
hearings on the I led App lcatlon
Recommendations which dille from
the Application may be made by the
Staff of the Comm 111on or by
Into venlng pa Ilea end may be
adopted by tho Commlaalon
Any peraon llrm corporation or
ooooclatlon mo~ lllo pu ouont to §
4909 19 ol tho Revised Code an
oblectlon to such propooed
Increased rstea by alleging that ouch
propooala a e un.luot snd
disc lm natory o un easonab e
A copy of the Application Is
ova lable lor Inspection at lhe oHice
of Co umblo Gao of Ohio Inc at 200
Civic Center Drive Columbus Ohio
432 5 or at the offices of the Public
Ut Ill es Commlu on of Ohio at 180
East Broad St eel Columbus Ohio
43215-3793
The Publ c Uti Ilea Commlulon of
Ohio has ochadulod several local
pub lc hea ngo In Case No 94 987
GA AlA The hearing• are scheduled
for the purpose or providing an
opportun ty to lnlareotad mamba a of
tho public to taollly n theot
proceadlnga Tho locol hoorlngo will
be hold at the fo lowing tlmea and
place a
Mansfield Oh o Monday Auguat
8 1994 at 7 30 p m at Cit~ Hal City
Councl Chamboro 30 N Diamond
Street Room 75 Mansfield Ohio
44902
Parma Ohio Wednesday Auguat
10 at 2 00 p m at City Hall Counc I
Chambers 6611 Ridge Rood Parma
Ohio 44129
Toledo Ohio Tueodoy Auguat 16
t994 at 2 00 p m at Toledo
Gova nment Conte Clty Council
Chamboro F rot Flodr 1 Govornmont
Center Toledo Oh o 43624
Athena Ohio Tueeday Auguat 16
1994 at 3 30 and 5 30 p m at Alheno
Pub lc Library Maot ng Room 30
Home Street Atheno Ohlo 45701
Spr nglleld Ohio
Wodneoday
August 17 1994 at 6 30 p m Clty
Holt Forum 1st Floor 76 Eaat High
Street Springfield Oh o 45502
Columbuo Ohlo
Thursday
Auguot 18 t994 et 3 30 and 5 30
p m Public Utllltlea Commloolon of
Ohio 180 Eaot Broad Street 11th
Floor Room IIA Columbua Ohio
43215-3793
Tho propooed oaloo and
tranoportatlon ratoa wtn generate an
Increase of $47 499 000 In operat ng
revenuea

There •re

no m•Jor

unraOOIVed IIIUel In thl caae dUa tO
the partial agreement to tho
otlpu otlon and rtcommendotlon
deacrlbad above
Tho form of thlo notice haa b11n
app oved by the Publ c Utl!ltlll
Commloolon of Ohio
COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO INC
(7) 6 1t 18 3TC

l

I
.

I

r n gh par I UdJ Lows
ln he 60s Wednes&lt;lay pa y
oudy h Rh ln he KOs

- - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - " · - · - - _j

•

en tine

custome c ass

both sales and

t ansportatlon custome s hat were
GCR sa ea custome s between

I

3829

The FTS op on w I be eva able unt

General Sarvlce Is 4 0% Genera
Service Ia 4 I% and Lorge Gene a
Sa v ce Is 3 II. lo
anaportatlon
services
Smal
General
Transportation Sa vice Ia 11 9%
General T anaportallon Sa v co Is
17 6% Large General T ansportatlon
Service (F xed Delivery Charge) Is
5 0%
and La ge Genera

port on of the Account 91 t ana lion
coots attr bu ab e to Columbia s

A I billa rendered shall be
adjusted to
nclude the
T ansportatlon FERC Order 636
T ana lion Cools Surcharge and the
All t an1portat on customers or
their agents must have a pe sonal

p ovlded that

Co umb a w II a ocate to and collect
f om t ansportat on customers that

t ansportat on

set forth In the propoaad tarlflo

62%

and transportal on 38%

competitive conditions

Tempo ary Base Rete Revenue R de

upon

customers may be recove ed lhrough

rates

Flexible Delivery Charge determined
b~ Columbia each month lor throe
months The F exlble Delivery Charge
w ll be edete mined ( ncraaoa or
dec eased) each month
Main Ina Delivery Charge Th s
delivery cha ge opt on Ia available to

ev ed

Columb a by nte stole gas p pal ne s
FERC approved tariffs
undo
a ocated to and col acted f om sa es

I

a ota or 25 MMc day has been
subsc bed by lha f m t anoporta lon

w h n a s ng e TCO ope at ng a ea
Howeve Columb a resarvef tha r ght
to I m t t anspo atlon by

or a transportation consort um must
purchase Columba s balancing
se v ce
A I membe s o f a
transportal on conoo I a mus

P1ck 4

T ensm ss on Co porat on ( TCO )
( FTS ) and Tennesoee Gas ( FT A )

facto ana ys s

custome s The
de ault level s
5 :.- fo LGTS custome a A membe a

416

FTS ca pac ty ass gnment w I

commod y nc ud ng sh nkage to
c ty ga e Custome a w be equ ed
to make an annua e ect on o he
cho ce fo
ba anc ng se v ce
Cus orne s that do not elect a
spec f c eve o ba anc ng serv ce w
be deemed to have !le ec ed the

delau I lave The default
laval s 10% lor SGTS and GTS

P1ck 3

nc ude an ass gnment of Co umb a s
upst eam capac y on Co umb a

t ansportat on charges (demand and

collect from

cus orne must continue to pay the

m

serv ce w be p aced on da ly cash
out bas s unde wh ch da y
measu ement w
be equ red
excess vo umes may be pu chased at
80 ~ of ndex gas coat p us f m
commod ty t anspo tat on cha ges
nc ud ng sh nkage to c ty gate and
sho tages w
be so d at 20
of
ndex gas cost
p us
m

ate This rate may be flexed
downwa d whan warranted by
Howeve

p ua

ansportat on charges (demand and
commod y nc ud ng sh nkage to
c ty gate
SGTS GTS and LGTS customers
thai do not e eel da y ba anc ng

appl es to al three transportal on

transportation rates The fol ow ng

fi rc near Lake Arrowhead
And m Oregon frrefighters had
o put as de the r gr er after a
memor al serv cc for the v c ms
Saturday to keep a 3 500 ac c blaze
n north centra l 0 egon from
eac h ng the town of Grass Val ey

Hubbard
I tourney
i continues

Vol 45 NO 48
Copyright 1994

t Secbon tO Pageo 35 conto

Pomeroy Middleport Oh1o Tuesday July 12 1994

A Mu timed a Inc Newapape

Middleport moves to quit water district
8y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Se nt nel News Staff
S cps toward w thdraw ng f om
the B g Bend \\ atcr D str ct we c
taken by M dd cport V llage Coun
c I a ts rcgu a mec ng Mond y at
v I age hall
By unan mous vo e eoun c I
passed a no ce of nten o w h
d aw r om he d st t wh ch was
formed only last year by M ddlc
port and Pome oy V I ages
Funhe acuo by counc I w I be

equ ed bela c the v llagc can off
ally w thdraw f om the d str
wa rcpor ed
Co unc I mcmbe s ag ed ha
he water p oblems of M ddlcpo
can now be olvcd by I
lage
and hat the llage n t!i e f nan
c al tra
w be be tc off w h
ou hav ng o hand e he po blc
add anal cos ts of ope a ng a
water d str cl
The act on followed a leng hy
d scus on on M ddl epo l s water

Distribution of seized items
continues, prosecutor says
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentmel News Staff
D stnbuuon of tern s se zed last
year from the res dence and bust
ness of Roben D F fe 68 M ddle
pon w II contmue today after the
Me gs Coun y Prosecutor s Off ce
star ed return ng terns Monday
morn ng
D stn buuon IS proceed ng faar
ly well Me gs Coon y Proscc ul
ng Attorney John R Lentes satd
th s morn ng Be ween 30 and 40
cia ms were handled Monday he
esumated
One problem s that some of the
terns claamed have not been found
among the terns se zed Lcntes
satd Those people are be ng told to
wa t unt I he d str bu on s com
plet.ed to sec f the ems can then
be found he satd
Ftfe was ares ed on July 9
1993 on one count of trafficking m
food s amps and two counts of
recetv ng stolen property Officers
search ng h s home confisc ated
f rearm s and about $185 000 m

d how
0

a d
ng

c
h

Coni nued on Page 3)

urges president
to~stmte for less

ash He pleaded gu I y a he
c harges hre e day s late n he
Me g~ County Cou l of Common
P cas
F fc s bus ness was opera ed
I kc a pawn shop but was not
I ccnsed as such as a rc ull prop
erty belong ng to othc people was
also conf seated
Under prov s ons of the ongmal
p ca barga n F fe agreed to forfe l
approx mately $ 185 000 and about
1 540 r n es shotguns and hand
guns se zed rrom h s Sou h Th rd
Avenue home and bus ness to the
Law Enfo cemen Trust Fund
whc e they were to be d str buted
to he Me gs prosecu or s off cc
and the shenff s dcparUnent
On Oc IS F fe tated he would
no omply w th the forfe lu e
agrecmcn At hat pont the fort e
tore proceedmgs we e d sm ssed
Under the current agreement
proceeds from the return of the
f rearms and other terns w II go to
the county whtle money from the
(Contmued on Page 3)

bara Arnold whose home s ncar
the sl p and frees the village f om
respons b lty for any damage that
may occur to the Arnold propeny
by repa nng.the sl p
Blaettnar satd workers w II start
Thursday on repa1r ng the sl p and
the road
Also workers w II be search ng
for a water I ne blockage n Mm
ersv lie wh le nstall ng new ftre
hydrants Blaettnar satd
Counc I author zed Clerk{f ea
su cr Kathy Hysell to borrow
$145 963 f om f'a mcrs Bank
Pomeroy for a new f rc/rescue
(Contmued on Page 3)

ha
well

..--Tall tiger lily____, Bipartisan group

Pomeroy Council OKs
pact for repair of slip
By JIM FREEMAN
Sent nel News StaiT
Residents of~ e Wylhs H I area
m Pomeroy should soon have
another route onto the htll afte
Pomeroy \ llage Coone I agreed to
accept a contract holdmg he v I
!age blameless n ts effo ts to
repatr a sl p that has blocked the
road for about 10 years
Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar
presented the contract read by
Counc1lman B II Young whtch
w II allow the v II age tcf' remove
debns and dtrt f om the road
The contract ts between the v I
!age and Wyltis H II res dent Bar

llo on
"
been

Epsom salts applied m the fall IS Ellen Smtih s recommenda
lion for growmg tall Uger bites ThiS hly planted next to Mrs
Smtih s mobtle home at 760 Htgh St M ddleport stands 6S
mches tall Bestdes the Epsom salts her only other caretS ptl ng
dead leaves around the stem n the fall to keep 11 from freez ng

WASH INC I ON (AP)
0 crhau ng the ent rc US heal th system
"ou d be prcma urc and II ad ed
and P cs den Cl nt on and
Congrcs shou I settle for les say a b pan san group o fonne govern
men offi als
Reform ng he heal h sys em ca nno be ach eve n on omn bu
p ccc or eg sla on the Comm ee for a Respons blc Fcde al Budge
sad n a bluntly wo dcd 148 page epo Monday
The g oup p ed cted hat even P es den Cl nton s health plan would
o cr no mo e han 95 pe ce]ll of Amcr ans Some employers and ndi
v duals would f d ways o dodge hen at da es t sad
The omm ee mon tor he budget and pushes for def
reduct on It
s chaarcd by
mer Rep Robert N G a mo D Conn and ronnc Sen
Henry Bellman R Okla
Its d rec rs n Jude su h fanner off echo ders as Edmund S Muskte
Warren B R dman Da d S ockman Roy L Ash W II am H Gray Ill
Roben S Str u PaulE Tsongas Peter G Peterson and Paul A Volck
er
The group u ged Congress and the Wh tc House to press ahead wtth
nsuranee market cfonns cull ng red tape chang ng malpracl ce laws and
overr ding sw laws that b ock managed care The rcpon concluded that
a strong enough consensus docs not yet ex s to suppon changes to our
economy of he hcc magn ude contemplated
I sad Cl n on s plan and maJO al cmat vcs were hobbled by uncer
ta n long te n f nanc ng wh ch ra scs scr ous concerns abou lhet ong
e m v ab lty
The rcpo t d d not addrcs spec fi cs of the four b Is that erne gcd n
he past mo h om co ngress onal comm t ccs Three would rcq e
employe s to h lp pay the r wo kcrs prcm urns start ng n 1998 the Sen
a e F nanc C n n ucc plan would not cqu e coverage but would a m o
boost the number of Arne cans w th nsurance to 95 percent by 2002
The budge watchers cr uc zed the general tenor of he congress onal
debate say n more a tent on has been patd to expand ng bene[ l han o
satd
r gur ng out 1ow to pay for them That sa rcc pc ror d sas e
Federal m ndates arc taxes and shou d be treated as such l satd
Employees n thctr employers w II end up pa}'lng mo l of he b II
e her n lowe cash wages or h ghcr pr ces
It called un versa! coverage a means to an end
not the end tsclf
charg ng everyone the same pre
The repo t sa d commun ty ra~n g
m urns - wou I force the young to subs d ze the old and the healthy to
subs d e the
k It sad the young arc be ng told tha herr health bene
f lS w1ll be suh dtzed when they gel older
Dcmocra c leaders arc try ng to me ge the comm tee p oduced health
b lis and b ng hem to the floor of the Hou c and Scna e for debate and
vo cs over h next month

Voinovich calls rock hall, road grants beneficial to state
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
state has made $28 m Ilion n trans
ponauon grants w th $3 8 mtll on
for tmprovements at the harbor
where the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame and Museum ts bemg bu It
The elly s North Coast Harbor
area was the btg wmner Monday n
the latest round of transportal on

grants Gov George Vomovtch
sa d grants wtU go to more than 50
pro]CCts n the state but the largest
award went to the downtown har
bor
The hall of fame proJect benefits
the enure state satd Vmnov ch
Enhancement proJects like the
North Coast Harbor mprove the

qually of I fc m our commun tes
wh le sc v ng as tools for both
ncrcased ounsm and econom c
development he satd Monday
Thomas Hut.ka cuy eng necr ng
and construct on comm ss oncr
sa d the frrst phase of the East 9th
Street Nor h Coast proJCCl along
Lake Enc w II beg n m Apr I and

hould be completed by ~cptember
1995 n l me for the open ng of the
hall of fame
The f st pha se w II ncludc
street curb traff c s gnal and I ght
ng mprovement s The second
phase- to ncludc per rcconstruc
on and br dge wtden ng
w II
begm n 19Y5 and take about a

The order came as the Un ted
States was massmg addibonal war
shtps and 2 000 more Marines Just
off Ha u s shores
E ght warsh ps and IS Coast
Guard cuucrs already are stlluoned
off Hatlt to deal wtlh a wave of
Ha uans flccmg thetr nat on and to
enforce a U N trade embargo
mtended to pressure Ha111 s mtlt
tary coup leaders nto gtv ng up
power

Ocasek against action
labels funding ruling
most comprehensive

Prcstdent Clinton has repeatedly
satd he would not rule out the use
of force to restore the consutuuonal
government of Prestdcnt Jean
Benrand Arisude who was ousted
m a 1991 coup He was Haiu s ftrSt
democraucally elected leader
The U N mtsston has been
nvesttgatmg human nghts abuses
s nee the coup conclud ng that
many ktlltngs have been dtrectly
altnbutable to the army and lls
nght wmg allies
Up to 3 000 people have been
ktlled m pohucal vtolence smce
Arisude was lqlpled

tral
Other major grants mcludcd
$2 5 m I on to Akron for the Val
lcyv ew B cycle/Pcdestr an Tratl
$2 I m II on to the Montgomery
County Park D str ct for a b cycle
and pedcstr an fac I ty and $1 m I
I on o the suburban Columbus vtl
lagc of New A bany for seen c and
en ronmcmal and acqu1S1l on

State board weighs
appeal of decision

Human rights observers told
to get out of Haiti in 48 hours
PORT AU PRINCE HatU (AP)
- The army dommated govern
ment today ordered all human
r ghts observers from the Umted
N at10ns and the Organ zal on of
Amencan States to leave HaiU
Dante Caputo the spcctal U N
envoy for HatU sa d the momtors
had been gtven 48 hours to leave
the Canbl&gt;ean country by the mm
tstry of foretgn affwrs He satd tire
verbal order was delivered at 9 a m
and mcluded the wammg that the
army would enforce the expulston
tf necessary
I constder thts an outrageous
decmon More than that 11 ts an
tnsult to the mternauonal commu
mty They ktll they murder and
rape people and they do not want
any wttnesses Caputo srud
He swd t! was a very very del
tcate stwauon as far as securtty ts
concerned for the momtors
There are 40 U N observers and
64 OAS observers m Halll The
JOml m sston was sent tn February
1993 to nvesUf8le human nghts
abuses by Haiu s mthtary and tts
nght wmg supporters

)car Hutka sad
Vo nov ch satd the Ohm Dcpan
ment of T anspo tat on grants arc
part or the T ansponat on Enhance
mcnt Progmm crea ed by Congress
n 1991 The program was a med a
p esc v ng ransporlllt on related
h stor c s tes and sccmc areas and
bu ld ng b cy cle and pede s! an

BACK IN HAITI - A wom1111 and child get off a Red Cross bus
at a Port au Prmce bus stop after bemg repatriated to thell' homed
land by the U S Coast Guard Monday The Coast Guard returne
801 Hatltans aboard two cutters (AP)

By JAMES PRICHARD
Assoctaled Press Wr1ter
The pres dent
COLUMBUS
of the State Board of Educauon
sa d he was opposed to an appeal
of a Judge s rul ng that Oh o s
method of fund ng pub! c schoo s
~ unconSlllul onal
The II member board planned
to hear tes~mony today before vot
ng on appeahn)! the July I rul ng
by Perry County Common Pleas
Judge L nton D Lew s Jr The rul
ng overturned the way the sUI e
finances pubhc schools
Board Pres dent 01 ver Ocaselc
satd Monday he read the 400 page
dectston and called 11 the most
comprehcnstve rulmg by a JUdge
he had ever seen
That s one vote out of II and
there arc several members who are
undcotded saad Ocasek a former

Oh o Senate p es dent
The Black Elected Democrats of
Oh o a group of black leg slators
w ole Ocasck on Monday urg ng
he state school board to forgo an
appeal
Lcw1s concluded that fundmg
d spanues among dtstrtcts dcpnvc
so me students of fundamental
ghts He wrote that educat on tS a
ght the Oh o Constlu~on guaran
ccs and that the current fundmg
system vtolates the state s consttlu
onal duty to ratsc revenue
He ordered the sta c to prepare
proposals for chm na~ng financtal
d spartUes among distr cts
The lawsutl was f led by the
Oh o Coahuon for Adequacy &amp;
EqUtly of School Fundmg wh ch
represented about 500 of the state s
612 school d1stncts
Attorney General Lee Ftshcr
sa d he would appeal the dec ston
a the request of Gov George
Vomovtch F tshcr s office had not
filed an appeal as of Monday satd
Rob B1esenbach a sookesman

t

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>thomas</name>
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