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                  <text>Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 18, 1994

)Murray family reunion held recently
Desce ndant s of Margaret and
t~c late Charles Murray gathered at
l c camp area of Charles 0 . and
Dcbbte Murray for a reunton wh1ch
extended from June 28to July 5.
They played ball, went swim -

Legion Auxiliary
meets in Gallipolis
Lew is- Man ley Auxili ary
Alll ~ ri c afl l. q~ i on ,

I ..._

~ti .1.

met rcccll\ ly a t

Da le ' s Res taurant in GalltpoiJS
with Dorothy Casey as ho.stess.
Lorrenc Gogg 111 s pre sided at the
tn ntu :!l1 . .; tic
form . A gc t· wcll curd was '\C' nl to

mcc LJng whi ch npcnrd

Mary Ward of Po1111 Pleasant.
R e port~ of ofl tcrrs were g11•e n
and Marga re t Bowles, Am crt call ism chairman, read a poem, "When
He Whi spers Swee t Peace to Me"'
from the Nati ona l News. The group
sang " Ameri ca", there was :1 praye r

for peace and remarks by the prcsi dent.

Franks announce birth

mwg, hik ed, enjoyed games,
shared pictures. sang around a
camp fire, did outdoor cooking and
on Sunday morning enjoyed a
church serv ice conduc ted by the
Rev . David Kautt.
Among the 43 campers were
Margaret Murray , Pomeroy; Anna
and Jennifer Russell, Tyler, Texas;
Jay, Mary , Lacey, and Trevor Russe ll , Fort Worth, Texas; David,
Julie, Joel, Abby , and Caleb Kauu,
Mc Kinn ey, Texas ; Jill, Ree ce,
Duslin, Taylor, and Andra White,
Colony, Texas; Jack , Minada, and
Brent Simms. Ga llinoli s: Davie!.
Nata lie, Swcey and Caleb Foocc ,
Gallipoli s; Keith , Angie , Amber,
Jordan, an d Seth Keitel, Joe and
Charlullc Rowley, Ironton; Jeremy
Rowl ey , Germany; Mi ke, Denise,

Heath er Benjamin and Ashl e
Rowley 'columbus· ihe host fami:
'
'

1 Charles 0 D

·

:l:;d David M~eybble, Mary Ellen ,
'

Couple to celebrate
25th wedding anniversary

Vol. 45, NO. 53

Copyrighl1994

Modern Woodmen hold picnic

The Red C ross Bloodmobil e
will be at the Semor Ci Ulcns Center Wednesday from I to 5:30p.m.
Anyone over 17 year s old and
weighing 110 or more pounds is
eligible 10 donate.

AVERAGE SEI.I.ING PRICE*

Howerton named
All-American scholar

OHIO

BASIC

GPC

1.39

1.28

Jcn ni Howerton h ~1 s been named

All -Amer ican Sc holar by th e
Un ilc(l St;.ttes Ac hi evemcll! Academy. She is the daug hter of Phyl lis
and Virgil Howe rton or Micldlcport
and aucnds Meigs Jr. Hi gh Sc hoo l.
He r gra ndpare nt s arc Marjori e
Mill e r or Mtddl cport and Lucy
Perigo of London.
ll owcrto n wa s nominated fo r
th e award by th e United States
Achievement Assoctatton. It offers
c111

•

c:ID For about the same
price as other generic
cigarette brands, the
best can be yours. Doral
offers you the most for
your money with an
unsurpassed combination
of quality and overall
value. So why settle for
anything less when you
can upgrade to Doral.

recognition to super ior stud en ts

who exc el tn th e ~c:HI C nllC dtSCt plines. Scholars lllu st c;trn a 1J or
bcllcr grade poi nt average. Onl y
those se lected hy a sc hool tn st nJctor, coac h, coun se lor or other quali -

fied sponsor arc accepted.

KIMBERLY HAWTHORNE

Observes
birthday

•

Jim nnd Alice Hawthorne entertain ed rece ntly wtth a party in
observance of the second birthday
of th ei r daugh te r, Kimberly
Hawthorne.
· The cookout featured a Barney
theme. Attending were Darrell and
.Norma Hawthorne. paternal grand··pareot s, Roger and Carolyn
~itchic, matern al grandparents,
"'fim, Bet sy, Rya n and Dyana
·Hawthorne; Troy, Laura, Mall ory
and Seth Gu thnc, Doroth y Ha wk,
' Huh and BellY St ivers , Paul and
Amy Hend ri x, Charli e, Dhrunda
and L.1rry Ritchie, Steve, Shari and
Brandon Bohh, and Ron. Tanowa
and Alex McGrath .

•Avtr•s• selling price per po&lt;k based on on RJ. leynoldo """~of all ood..
l)p&lt;&gt;ot....., Ohio Uanull) - April, l9')i). Prlca wlllwy by
goopphy and oud.. Jyp&lt;. Check lhe prict whoft yo• boy dptelles.

1 5~. '" tar",
0.8 mg. nicotme av. per
cigarene by FTC method.

Tonight, partly cloudy ..
Lows In the upper 60s.
Wednesday, chance orthunder·
storms. High near 90.

en tine

,

.lle tO
Bloodmob
ere
vvee

.lENNI HOWERTON

Pick 3:
942
Pick 4:
3244
Buckeye 5:
2-14-16-32-37

•

A summ er lun cheon was
FIRE FUN)))NG- Middleport Fire Chief Ken Dyer, right
enj oyed by members of Preceptor
receives a donation from Emma Paugh of Peoples Dank Friday:
Bcut Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
The donation will be used to help purchase new equipment. The
PRETTIEST EYES -Ilreeanna Nicole Manuel, two year old
Phi Sorority at the House of Treavillage's volunteer fire department has held games to supplement
daughter of Donita Manuel and granddaughter of Joyce and Don
surcs in Pomeroy.
money that comes from the village and county emergency service
Manuel, Racme, recently won the title or'Miss Sunburst - PrettiAttending were Vera Crow, Nclfunding, Oyer said. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)
est Eyes" beauty pageant held in Parkersburg. This c~ the second
li e Brown, Charl otte Elberfe ld ,
year she has won in the talegory. Breeanna and her family reside
Maida Mora, Jean Werry, Ann
on Front Street in Racine.
Rupc . Joan Corder, Jane Walton.
Roberta O'Brien, Clarice Krautter.
Dorot hy Sayre, Eleanor Thomas,
Carolyn Grucscr. Carol McCu lModem Woodmen of America, Griffin of Alfred, served in \l'orld
Iough, Jean Powell, Norma Custer, Camp 10900, had a picnic recently War I as a former secretary of
Rcva Vaughan, Velma Rue, Belly at Hocki ng River Ca mpground in Camp 10900.
Oh linger. Rose Sisson and her sis- Coolville. "Love of Country" cereJessie Gilbert of Belpre celeter, Olga Gaudin, visiting her from montes were co nducted by Ma r- bratcd her birthday and shared a
JOfl C Malone, Ida Livingston, song and gt"ft wt"th her younger st·s
Flon.da.
REEDSVH..LE - Joyce and 19. They were marr ied at th e
Juaniw Littrell and Dan Ellis.
1 Karen A q · about atr"ot·c·
Alfred
united
Methodi
st
Church
Fo
llowin
g
th
e
luncheon,
the
cr.
·
mz
P l l
Jerry Bu rk e of Sumner Roa tl,
by
the
Rev.
Pearl
Casto.
Mr.
and
socia
l
com
mittee
met
and
planned
Mc~hoZr~~n~~~
lJa~p
c
~c~~~h:r:~~
songs
was
closed
by
all
singing
Reedsvil le. wil l celebrate their 25 th
Ihe calendar for the rem ainder of
f C 1 .11
d
.
'The Star Spangled Banner."
wedding anniversary Tuesday, Jul y Mrs. Burke arc the parents of four
children, Lisa Lute, Tuppers Plains,
In six National Football League the year. Members of that commit- ~f A~c;~il~c a:cr~oh~~~r~dHi~~Yy
Drawing and contest prizes were
Tr ic ia Carpe nter. Sumner Road. title games, Ban Starr, Gree n Bay tee .arc Kraulter
and
Sayre,
cod
h
.
won
by Lisa
Hoove
r, Clint
Marvt·n
Gt"lberl
Char
hatrman, Me C ullough, Walton , rccounte l etr experiences in Gcr- McPherson
Reedsville,
and
Sherry
and
Greg
quarterback,
wa
s
intercepted
only
c
·
•
• L·sa· · h
h'
k
0
many, France and Africa. Garner Jt"c Holman Rebecca Ellt"s and
VISit
t IS
r_B_ur_k~e,~a_l_ho_m_e_.______________o_nc_e_.______________________·s_r_ic_n_,J_o_ne_s_,a_n_J_P_o_w_ci_L______________________________~R~itc~h~ic:'·___· _____________l _

•

KC tourney
continues
Page4

Chapter
holds recent
luncheon

Mr. and Mrs . Le sli e Frank,
Texas Road , annou nce the birth of
thetr third child , a daughter, Lcs lca
Nickole on June 12 at the Ho lzer
Mcdieal Ce nter. Th e infant
wctghc.d seven pounds, ntn c ounces
aml was 21 inc hes long.
Matern al grandparent s arc Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning, paternal
grandparent s arc Mr. and Mrs .
Alfred Frank, maternal great grand·
mother ts Mrs. Anna Griffith all ol
Pomeroy; and the paternal 'great grandmother is Mrs. Edi th Cogar of
Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank have anoth cr daug htcr, Sara h, II, and a son,
Matthew, seven.

Ohio Lottery

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth. And Low Birth Weight.

1 Section, 10 Pagea 35 conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 19, 1994

Big
Brother:

AMultimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Local schools
unsure funding
wi II be fixed

IRS snoops
invade privacy,
senator says
By KATHERINE HIZZO
t\.SS(K' iah'd J•rcss \Vriter

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
11icc thmg about working for the
Interna l Revenue Service is it' s
easy Ill sec your tax fil es. But it' s
al so easy to sec other people 's tax
fil es. Too easy, compl ained Sen.
John Glenn .
" When Americans sit down and
provide the government with their
most personal infonnation. the IRS
has a moral and legal obligation to
keep it private and confidential,"
said Glenn, chairman of the Senate
Governmental Affairs Committee.
IRS Commissioner Margaret M.
Richardson agreed.
"A bu ses of taxpayers' right lo
privacy will nol be tolerated," she
said in remarks prepared for deliv ery today to Glenn' s committee.
Glenn, D-Ohio, release d new
IR S statistics Monday showing that
more than 1,300 of its employees
had been investigated since 1989
for unauthorized snooping in the
IR S computer system .
Richardson sa id th e IRS has
"made sign ificant progress" since
Glenn first revealed the problem
last year.
" We have a better detection
sys tem, a strong penally guide, an
IRS -wide privacy policy, an advocate for privacy and plans to make
our systems of th e future much
more "secure from any employee 's
abuse," she said.
Glenn also released IRS data
showing that the electronic filing
system had been used by crooks to
ge t an undeserved $15 million in
rc fund s this year.
" I do not believe that the agency currently has the capacity or
technology to catch most refund
sc he me s," Glenn said. "There
must be better controls on electronic filing."
IRS spokesman Frank Keith
co nfirmed statistics provided by
Glenn's staff that showed a differenc e between the early detection
rates of phony refund claims filed
on paper and those filed electronically.
During the first four months of
this year, the IRS found that paper
tax returns seeking $55.3 million in
refunds were fraudulent. The agency discovered the fraud early
enough to prevent $53.1 million of
that from going out to the cheaters.
For electronic filings, the IRS
found $44.1 million in fraudulent
· refunds, of which $29.1 million
was spoiled before refunds went
out
During that four months, the
IRS approved almost $62 billion of
refunds.
In 1993, electronic tilers tried to
dupe the IRS for $54 million in
undeserved refunds. The agency
Continued on Page 3

lly GEORGE AllATE

Sentinel News Starr

]f

'

~;

\

\

•

"What I'm afmid of is it will be
appealed, we'll wait fou r more
yea rs to see if we'll even fix it
when eve rybody ;.dmits its broken ," Ord said. " I do not understand why we don't get busy fixing
i l."

Education's share of the state
budget has fallen for a number of
years , while the poorest schools
have faced crumbling buildings and
antiquated books, Ord said .

PRESIDENTIAL VISIT- Former President
George Bush, left, and Ohio Gov. George
Voinovich talk to the media Monday after

George and Barbara Bush
help Voinovich campaign .
CLEVELAND (AP) - Former President George Bush did
a little fishing and watched his
son's baseball team while campaigning for Gov. George
Voinovich in northeast Ohio.
Bush received a standing
ovation as he was introduced by
Voinovic h at the governor's
58th birthday party Monday
evenmg.
After delivering a short
speech to about 3,000 people in
allendance, Bush joked about
cheering for his son's team, the
Texas Ra,ugers. who beat the
Cleveland Indians 6-5 Monday
night.
Within minutes of his speech,
Bush left by helicopter 10 downtown Cleveland and Jacobs
Field. Bush's son, George Jr., is
a general partner of the Rangers.
"I do coffee, I do windows,
and occasionally I do beds, but I
don ' t do much politics anymore," said Bush at the barbecue. "But when I heard of this
event for my good friend
George Voinovich, I could not
pass up this opportunity to come

out to Ohio."
Voinovich 's birthday was on
Friday , but the party was
delayed to accommodate Bush.
Bush and Voinovich spent
Monday afternoon fi shing for
walleye on Lake Erie.
" We did gel several fish, but
we didn't get any big ones,"
Bush said .
"We caught a lot of other
fish, but we release d 'em ,''
Voinovich said. "And if you
believe that, you 'II believe anX"
thing ."
.,..
Voinovich welcomed Bush
and his wife, Barbara, to a
breakfast reception in Akron
and said 1994 would be the
"greatest Republican year this
stale has seen since 1966."
That year, the Republicans
won all five statewide offices governor. lieutenant governor,
secretary of stale, auditor and
attorney general - and took
control of the Ohio House and
Senate.
Thi s year the party is fielding
nine major candidates- six for
constitutionally established

Triple whammy forecast

for black-eyed Jupiter
GREENBELT, Md. (AP) Jupiter, already sporting a black
eye and a half dozen other scars, is
about to be bruised three more
times in the same spot by the comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9.
Scientists said Monday that
three fragments from the comet
will hit Jupiter 10 hours apart at
approximately the same location.
"You'll have three - boom, ·
boom. boom" said Heidi Hammel
of the Space Telescope Science
Institute. "You are going to have
one heck of a mess."
The fusl of the three fragments,
Q, is expected to hit just before 4
a.m\ EDT on Wectnesday. R follows 10 hours later and S will be
10 hours after thai. The Jovian
rotation is 10 hours, which means
the fragments will hit 8l nearly the
same location on the planet.
Two fragments, K and L, are
expected to impact today. They
will be the eighth and ninth fragments to hit the gas clouds of
Jupiter since the cosmic bombardment slarted Saturday. The last
comet shard smashes the planet on

Metg s Count y su perintend :nts
stated they arc uncertain what fonn
- or eve n if - schoo l fund ing
reform will occ ur si nce a stat e
court dec ision could take fo ur more
years.
On Jul y I, a Perry County com mon plea~ judge ordered the sc hool
fundm g system Jo change to make
it more "wealth-neutral" and proVIde fa tr ed ucation for all Ohio students.
Local supcnntenden ts , including
Bobby Ord of Southern Local
Schools. agreed rece ntly that the
sc hool s must be fixed and they
can't alford to wait for the sta•c to
waste more time.

Friday.
Hammel said Jupiter was hit
Monday by fragment G, the largest
yet of the 21 chunks of ice and rock
from the broken-up comet The
impact and massive explosion left a
distinctive mark in the planetary
cloud tops.
"There is now a black eye on
Jupiter," said Hammel. Pictures
from the Hubble Space Telescope
show a circle, with a black center
and a smear of gray resembling a
BLACK EYE - Tbis image,
bruise.
taken by tbe planetary cam~ra
The circular portion of the mark
on the Hubble Space Teleis 80 percent the size of Earth, scope using a green fjlter,
proof of the power of the explosion . sbow theJulpact to planet
triggered by fragment G.
Jupiter or fragment G, above
All of the fragments are hiUing
smudge, or Comet Shoemakerthe backside of Jupiter, as viewed
Levy 9 on July 18. Impact D is
from Earth, but the fueballs rise so
the small dot to tbe left of
high that the Hubble is able to spot
impact G. The planet Earth
the cloud poking above the horicould easily fit ' inside the
zon.
diameter of tbe smudge.(AP
Eugene Shoemaker, who is a
Photo/NASA TV)
U.S. Geological Survey scientist
•
and co-discoverer of the comet,
This
explosion
is
far
more
potent
said the comet fragment released
than
all
of
the
world's
nuclear
an energy equal to the power of
about 6 million megatons of TNT. weapons set off at once.

offices, two for the stale
Supreme Court and one for the
U.S. Senate. Four of the nine arc
women, two are blacks and
three arc Roman Catholics,
Voinovich said.
The campaign said it hoped
to raise about $500,000 during
the lwo events, giving it about
$6.5 million on hand.
The Voinovich for Governor
Committee arranged lhe events.
Voinovich, a former mayor of
Cleveland, faces Democratic
state Sen. Rob Burch and inde pendent Billy Inmon in the Nov.
8 election.
Burch spokesman Jim
Blcikamp called Voinovich 's
prediction of a Republican
sweep "hogwash."
Burch, while trailing
Voinovi ch, is gaining name
recognition and other Democratic candidates arc running strong
campaigns, Bleikamp said.
Inmon could nol be reached
for comment. A message was
left at his horne telephone number.

"I don 't want to pick on any
sc hool distri ct or politician or
party, we're just trying to find the
means to fund a fair and efficient
education," he added.
A group of about 60 affluent
schools , along with Gov. George
Voinovich , intend to file an appeal
against the deci sion . Thi s group
claims taxe s would have to
increase and other means of
reforming sc hools should be taken
first.
.
Ted Sanders, superintendent of
public instruction for the Ohio
Department of Education, said the
court's decision would have drastic
implications.
"Almost everyone has acknowledged that the current funding system is broken and needs to be
fixed," Sanders stated. "However,
none of our previous recommendations match the requirements
ordered by the Perry County court.
"The judge has declared lhat the
responsibility for educating children is to be placed squarely on the
shoulders of the slate, and lhal any
funding system be wealth -neutral
and guarantee equal funding for
every child," Sanders said. "In the
simplest translation, this means
legislating a tax increase to fund a
bigger pie and inviting Robin Hood
to the table."
Sanders added that if the decision were to stand the slate would .

ri sk losing Sl 511 mtll ton in new
sc hool butldings fo r th e pocHcs l
dtStrJcLs; sc hools' ability to borrow
money wou ld also be threa tened
Taxc' wou ld lik ely ha ve to be
Increased, he ~ aid .

The stat e board of ctlu catt on
also declared that the number of
admi ni strat ors ha s ri sen whi le
enrollm ents have dropped , according to an Associated Press article.
13ut the number of administrators has jumped because of unfund ed mandat.cs from the state and federal governm en t, said Bill Buckley,
Meigs Local Supcrintcnt.
" It' s not ju st a so utheast Ohio
problem," Buckley sa id , adding
that 500 of the 600 state districts
backed th e co urt dec ision . "The '"
bollom line is th e stale board of
education has made good recommendations to th e leg islature but
they 'rc being ignored ."
Th e state funding formul a
should stop using local property tax
a nd c han ge Lo an in co me tax

Buckley said.
'
To prepare students for a technological 21st century, more must
be done, he said. And the basics arc
barely covered.
Eas tern Local Superintendent
Ron Minard said there is a problem
with the current disparity in fund in g when his average student gets
only $3,400 per year for an education and those in more wealthy di slricL&lt;; get $1 2,000.
"The quality of your education
should not be based on where yo u
were born . We're a kind of forgotten society," Minard said . "I could
guarantee you that if spending per
pupil was inc rca~ed you would sec
an increase in tcsl scores."
Local students are JUSt as important as those in industrial di stricts ,
he added.
"Since we have no industry in
eastern Meigs County the whole
tax burden fall s on residents and
they're already doing their share,"
Minard said. "I don 't expect a cureall in a very short time. Local people will still have to support their
schools - they are their schools."
Meigs County Superintendent of
Schools John Riebel said the legislature has gtvcn no indication how
law s might cha nge.
"We've identified there is a
Jlroblcm. We haven't found a solutiOn yet," Riebel said. "There has to
be some change s. Property taK
won't get it done in Meigs County."

Riebel warned that unless the
legtslature lakes action the cycle
will worsen of poor schools getting
poorer.

Clinton asked for Whitewater
advice, regulator's memo claims
--

By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
high-level banking regulator says
in a confidential memo that President Clin!On sought his "advice
and counsel" on Whitewater last
New Year's weekend.
Eugene A. Ludwig, the
comptroller of the currency, made
clear in the memo - and in an
interview Monday - that he
wasn't comfortable with the
requ est by his old college friend
who now is the president.
,
The memo, obtained by The
Associated Press, could be a worrisome political problem for Clinton
when Whitewater hearings begin
next week - Tuesday in the House
and two days later in the Senate.
While Whitewater special counsel Robert Fiske looked into the
request and found no criminality,
the hearings are to spotlight administration -regulator contacts in full
public view.
·'The president asked me
whether it would be permissible for

me, as a lawyer knowledgeable
about banking law, to provide
advice and counsel on any of the
legal-regulatory issues relative to
the Whitewater matter," Ludwig
wrote in the memo dated March II.
"Beyond asking this question,
the only information I recollect that
he imparted to me was that he had
done nothing wrong, and moreover
had lost money in the transaction."
Whitewater was the name of the
Arkansas land venture formerly
owned by Clinton and his wife,
Hillary, along with James McDougal and his former wife, Susan.
McDougal also owned Madison
Guaranty Savings and Loan, which
later failed . Fiske is investigating
whether Whilewater caused losses
at Madison.
A1 their hearings, the House and
Senate Banking committees will
not delve into the transactions in
Arkansas, under an agreement to
only cover topics that Fiske has
completed eKamining.
Ludwig wrote the memo in
response to Fiske's subpoena 10 the

'

Treasury !Jcpartmcnt tor documents and communications about
Whitewater.
The comptroller said lhat after
Chnton made th e request at the
Renaissance Weekend conference
of policy-makers, held last Dec
30-Jan. 2 in Hilton Head, S.C .. h~
contacted White House and T rcasury officials for advice.
"I told them (the officials) that I
was not certam whether to discuss
the matter with the president or the
ftrst lady," Ludwig said in the
memo. "Accordingly, we did not
d1scuss the matter."
WhiteHouse Counsel Lloyd
Cutler sa1d Monday that Clinton
was not asking Ludwig to provide
hts own advtce but to "recommend
some people to me who understand
real estate tran sac tions and could
wrue about them for the public in a
way the public could understand,"
Asked how Ludwig could conclude .that the president was asking
h1m dtrcclly for advice, Cutler said
m an mtervicw, " They may not
have understood one another. "

�Commentary

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, July 19, 1994

Tuesday, July 19, 1994

OHIO Weather

Rush becomes radio's third stooge

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WING ETT
Publl&lt;htr
MAR GARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Assoctated Pre ss. Inland Daily Press
the Amencan Newspaper Pubh sher Assoc Jallo n

/\ s ~u uatwn

and

LETTERS

OF OPI Nl O N lll'e welcome They should be le ss than 300
words long All letters are subject to edtung and must be stgned wtth name .
address and telephone number No un s1gned le tters wil l be pul:lli shed Len e rs
should be m good tas te , addre ssmg assues, not pcrsona1Jl1es

Yo u lt ke bold predt ctt ons?
Here's a bo ld predtcllon:
Rus h Ltmbaugh 's star has
already burned tts bnghtesl and has
begun the process of co ll apsmg
upnn tL&lt;;el f Someday there wtll be
noth tng but a btg black hole where
old Rush used to be.
I rcadtl y concede my prognosucauon ts not based on a lot of hard
fa ct I JUSt sense that Rush's be lit cosily and hts cruelty and hJS rec kless habtt of peddltn g rumor as
truth arc ca tchmg up wtth htm
More people seem to be ltktng htm
less
It does n' t really surpn se me,
et ther As an unregenerate popultst,
I have great fatth tn the Am cncan
peopl e's capactly for eventuall y
commg to the nght concluston on
JU St about any subJect. They arc
often possessed of a great deal of
tn crua . and somcumes 11 takes a
whdc for the ball of publt c optnton

to get rollm g, but tl usually doc&gt;
and 11 usuall y cru shes the trntant
that got tl movmg tn the fi rst place
Has th e ball beg un to roi J?

dnnk prune JUICC "
- In February, a cafe owner 111
Draper, S D (that' s close to th e
heartland, tsn't n?), dec lared ht s
establi shment a " Ru$h·free" wnc
and stopped scrvmg orange JUICC
Joseph Spear
- Attts convenuon m Jul y. the
Na
tt ona l Edu catton Assoc t.tll on
Judge for yourself·
- Wh en th e Fl o rtda Cttru s voted to boyco u Fl onda orange
Co mmt SSton awa rd ed Rush a $ 1 JUt ce tf Ltmb augh's cont rac t "
mtl hon contract to promote Flonda renewed. "The man dentgr atcs
oran ge JUICe, tl was swamped wtth teachers, he dcmgra tcs mmortttcs
ca ll s and lctters from peopl e who he dent grates women," one speakvo" cd to swttch bevc r&lt;~g cs tf Ltm - er tol d the 10,000 teachers and
baugh conttnu cd to pttch 11 One sc hool employees who attended
- Wntmg 111 USA Today JUSt &lt;1
Flonda lcgt slator satd " To have a
few
day s ag o, form er NBC News
clown ltk c Ltmbaugh represe nt
Flonda cttrus IS 111 and of ttsclf a prcstdent Mtchael Gartner c har &lt;~c­
tcm cd Ltmbau gh as " a sho" off
dtsparagement 10 Flonda cttrus ' '
La st March. th e NatiOnal and a showman and a Jerk " Gart Organtza uon for Women launched ner added " He's toy mg wllh you,
a boycolt of Fl onda cttrus and se t foiJ.:s, gcltmg you all nlcd up wllh a
up ptckets around the state and m stew of half-truths and non -truths
AJianta , Boston and Los Angeles. He's makmg fool s of you, fecd tng
One of the s lo~ an s "FI :JSh Ru sh. vou swtll - and you 'rc tal&lt; mg 11

Letters to the editor
Prisons at home need attention too
work the women's pnsons.
When you go to vtsll an mm&lt;lte,
you are searched and put through a
metal detector Then you are taken
to th e vtstung area and you watt
unul the mmatc ts brought to you .
Once the mmate arnves, you are
watched hkc yo u yourself are a
pnsoner.
If the human nghts people want
to do somethmg worthwhtle, then
they should look tnto the pnson
sy stem here and let other countrtes
deal wtth thetr own problems Let
them put all that ume, energy and
money to work helping the pnson ers that don' 1 deserve to be there
and even the ones that do. I know a
lot of the pnsoners don't deserve to
be thctc but got put there because
of hcs and tnckery. I know tht s
fmt hand
Anna Leamond
Middleport

Dear Edt tor,
I have sat and thought about the
Faye boy and I can understand ""
parents and how they feel, but I
must say th e human nghts people
should look behmd the walls of the
pnsons here m our own bade yard
I thmk they would fmd u's no better than 10 other countnes e&lt;ecpt
when they are expecung company
from htgher up places Then they
clean up thetr act unltl the company
ts gone
I grant you these people are
pnsoners, but they are still humans
and should be treated as such.
These pri sons htre women
guards whtch ts not a problem unul
they start putting them mstdc wtth
th e pn soners Tht s ts askmg for
trouble These women flaunt themselves m front of these mmates. It
ts my optnton that men should
work the men's pnsons and women

I. ~t 1\~

ANOi\\t\2 l(}l,

StiCKY

DAY OOT

Appreciates water line bill
At a pubhc meetmg on Oct 7,
Dear Edttor,
1992
we embarked on a path to try
The board of dtrectors of the
and
change
the law so that rural
Tuppers ?lams-Chester Water Dtswater
systems
would get the same
tnct would like to publicly extend
beneftt
as
ctty
system s Attcndmg
thctr heartfelt thanks to State Repthts
mccttng
were Able, Tum
resentative Mark Malone, Sen. Jan
wtth
the
Oh10 Department
Hednck
Mtchael Long, State Representative
of
TransportatiOn
and large group
Mary Abel and John Lentes. Thctr
of
Tuppers
?lams-Chester
Water
work on legislation that saved the
Dtstnct customers. We were told
customers of the district over
by several orgamzauons that the
$500,000 was outstandmg. The law
would be dtfftcult to change
planned route 50 road improve- and thts would never happen
ments between Athens and
Our reprcscntattves got an
Coolvtlle will require the district to
unprecedented unammous vote on
relocate the water lines. But
thts ISsue, and for that we arc truly
because of their work it will be proud to have them workmg for
paid by all who drive not JUSt the
rural Metgs and Athens counttes.
dtstnct ·s cuswmers.
Harold H. Blackston, president
In the past all relocation cost
Howard 8. Caldwell Jr., vice
where water lmes had been placed
president
m public nght of ways was providRichard F. Fick Sr., secretary
ed by the water company, except m
David L Weber, board member
the case of muntcipalities where
A.W. Nease Jr., board member
they recetved the benefit of all reloTuppers Plains-Chester Water
catton cost bemg paid by the state.
District

On side of the underdog

Dear Editor
I have no mtenuon of putung
It seems strange to me that I am anyone's doctor down, but I am
always on the side of the underdog. here to hft mme up.
First, Dr, Lentz, of whom I still
At another doctor's office where
feel the same A better doc!Dr can't we had an appointment we watted
be found .
from 9:30a.m. unul11:30 a.m. We
I only asked for prayer for saw people go in who came much
Mtchael Faye and heard from a later than we dtd. When someone
number of non-praying people and went outstde to get a patient at
was not pennitted to rebut them.
about II :30 I told my sister to
Now it is Dr. Thomas Spencer.
come on and we left.
He is my doctor and wtll be
We have never had to wait more
unul he gtves me a reason to look than 15 mmutes at Dr. Spencer's
elsewhere for medical help. I and office.
my sister were among the ftrst of
My feeltng ts that tf a doctor
hts pauents when he opened office can ' t keep h1s appomtments he
in Pomeroy. We have been perfect- should not make them. If his staff
ly sausfied wtth the treatment he ts meffictent, they should be fired
has given. He has always taken and replaced wtth better.
time to listen to whatever we wantDr. Spencer hang m there. I am
ed to talk 10 him about. A more sure you have a large number in
kmd doctor I have never met. It your corner.
takes more than kmdness to be a
Mary F. Smith
doctor and we have found he has
Middlepon. Ohio
the knowledge too.

Berry•s World

t

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--

-

oo

~_r''"\
-

:7

- .--

(

q,;_~
0 1994 by NEA, Inc

•

- A watchd og organtza tton
ca ll ed Fa trn css and Acc urac) ,11
Rcport tng pored throu gh Ru sh's
books and taped a number of ht s
broadcasts and came to the conclu ston that he often deal s tn rum or1
tnvcntt on, decetl and s om c ttm c~
outrt ghl ltcs He chum ed that stu dents at Chelsea Clmton ' s sc hool:
were requtrcd to wnte a pape r on
" Why I Feel Guilty Bcmg Whttc"
It stmply wasn't true. li e cla11n cd
not to rccJ II a sUJ glc Ne w York
!trnes stor y on Wlntcwater The
l1rncs broke th e Whttewatcr story
-,he mo st tnfamous 'Lunbau gh
fdbll cat to n occ urr ed wh en he
rcpe,ll cd and cmbellt shcd a stor y'
fro m a nght -wmg newsletter th ai
Whtl c House deputy counsel Vmcc
ros ter h,trl dtcd m an apartment 111
Vtrgtnta and ht s body had been carne d Jo the park where he was.
found Indeed , I prcdtct the Foster
ftb wtll eventuall y be seen as the
tnudcnl that prec tptlated the rutnauon of Rush L11nbaugh and hustled
htm mto the s:tmc great abyss that
S\.. allow cd the Rev. Charles E
Coughltn and Joe Pync.
Surcl) you've heard of Father
Coughlm He was the Rusl1 L11n ba11gh of the '30s, a thundenng
mtlttant foe of "godl ess capttal ~
JSts" and " Jew s " Joe l'ync? He
was th e Rush of the '60s, advt stng
ht s antagomsts to "gargle on razor
blades "
Coughlm, Pync and Ltmbaugh
Tlte Curly, Larry and Moe of radto .
As many of you arc aware from
past columns, I am always eager to
hear from Rush's flock and have
even arranged for a spcctal mail
drop to receive thctr cultured mus tngs. Dlltohcads may wnte to me at
224 West FtJI St, Apta, Western '
Samoa.
Wnte soon. I can't wait to hear
from y'all.
'oseph Spear is a syndicated
\Vrtter lor Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

New ways to retire spent dollars
Even money has a shelf life. The doesn't turomg a profH defeat your
I know that money has been
Federal Reserve used to shred purpose?
used as fuel pellets, as bedding for
worn -out currency and bury it m
In Los Angeles , the feds have horses (unulu caused rashes). msulandftlls. Those days are numbered.
latJOn, mattress filhng and even staLandftlls, ltkc dollars themselves
ltoncry Well, I have some tdcas of
are shnnkmg. Eco-conscious fed~
Jan Shoales
my own.
are on a desperate search for new b
·
If the btlls arc so ftber-heavy
ways to get nd of old money.
ccn ncgottallng with a roofmg couldn't they be used to forufy
There arc somethmg hke 7,000 company to usc shredded btlls to breakfast cereal and bread? Thts
ld
tons of dccrepn bucks out there. make ftreproof roofmg shingles.
Where do we put them? Huge piles Made of cement and wastepaper, wou not only keep the dollar
of Ltrcd money already gather dust they don ' t bum hke wooden shm- strong, tt would butld strong bodm taxpayer-subsidized warehouses. gles, and have become popular m tcsWe could usc tl for confetti
The more tax doUars we spend on Cahforma as a safeguard against wallpaper or kttty ltttcr We could'
them, the more dollars are added ID fuestonns. So cold cash may not be
a surefue hedge against inflauon usc 11 for snow '" those ltttlc southe ptle. It's a vicious cycle.
Vanous recycling schemes have anymore, but at least 11 can keep vemr snowballs ftllcd wuh Eiffcl
been explored. Some years ago, for your house from burning down. · Towers and Statues of Ltber.ty that
example, I bought a ballpomt pen Shingle experts claim that it's the we place on the mantel and turn
m Washmgton, D.C The body of long fibers m the money that make upstde-down once a year or so.
Why do we sllll call them "lickthe pen featured tmy pteces of them ftre-n:sistanl
They've
also
been
used
as
a
er
tape
parades?" We haven't had
shredded legal tender of high
fiberglass
ingredient.
It's
said
that
ucker
tape
smce 1960 I su ggest
dcnommauon floaung m some ktnd
money
would
make
great
fiberthat
we
call
them "shredded
of hqmd. I thought thts was clever,
and constdenng that u was a feder- board because of money's physical money parades."
In that same vem , we could
al government Jdea, quite resilience, but unfortunately, fibercntreprencunal. But sltll, call me a board makers need to know the vouchsafe some of these old btlls to
ltberal, I'm not sure it's a good idea currency's secret mgrcdtent, and eeonomtc alarmtst~ for the purposfor a government to tum a profit. the government is reluctant to say. es of public dcmonstratton. They
What tf this snipped-up thousand- 1 don't know why . Maybe there could stand before a group of condollar bill floating in a ballpoint was a ring of evil ftberboard manu- cerned CtUzcns and set fire to a btll
"Thts is whai
pen thmg had really caught on, like facturers back m the '30s who used while crying,
15 domg, America!" Ross
the hula hoop or hip-hop? If you're counterfctt btlls to make subs tan- Congress
Perot' take note · .
trying to get rid of your money, dard fiberboard. I'm not pnvy 10
that kind of informalton.
How about usmg them as a
(
cement or tarmac enhnnc~mcm. as

ncsllng matcnal for btrds? As
packtng, dollars wouldn't offer the
same phystcal pleasure as bubble
wrap, but ll would surely be outwctghcd by the pleasure of knowmg that you 're packing Grandma's
cracked chma m tom-up thousand
dollar btlls.
We could replace the sand 111
hourglasses wuh shredded dollars.
Ttmc, after all, ts money. We could
put ll tn Children's playgrounds.
Instead of those plastic balls that :
ktds dtve around in, they could
dt ve around m real money, just )ike
Scrooge Me Duck
Least of all, we could use tl 111
potltng soil. If nothing grows, we'll
know once and for all whether
money truly tS the root of all evil.
Or you could stmply send all
unu&lt;;ed dollars to me. I'll get rid of •
all of tl for free. I won't even
charge you. Honest
(To receive a complimentary
Ian Shoales newsletter, call !800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
(For inlormation on how to
communicate electronically with
tb-ts co1ummst
• and others, contact America Online by callin 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
g

Amerocentric Pro-Democracy Adhocracy
With chaos in Haiti, with North
Korea unfathomable, with genocide
tn Rwanda, wtth President Clinton
back from Europe, with hts foretgn
policy ratings very low, t1 is indeed
fortunate that the results from the
second part of the Name-Ollf-Forctgn-Policy contest arc now available. Wtth the label "Containment" obliterated in the pyre of the
old Soviet Union, Amenca surely
needs a new foretgn policy slogan,
a motto, a llumper-sticker, so that
we can try to get to where we want
to go.
Recall: The contest came in two
parts, Ikscnpuve and Prescripltve.
Ihad ongmally called for prescripLtons, but recetved mostly antiClinton descriptions. Then I asked
for both.
Last week we noted that 119 of
the 120 entries in the Description
c~test had a negative castiD them,
wtth the three descnptive winners
-"Lax Americana," "Hesicrasti·
natmn," and "Atleeism., - providing a sample.

Now we come to the Prescnptton results. There were 160
entries. (By the way, a reader
mformed me that when Ann Lan-

Ben Wattenberg
ders asked for comments on
whether a 33-year-old male virgin
was right to keep himself pure unul
marriage, she was astonished to
receive 700 leiters . Well, we got
almost 300 entries - and about
foretgn policy! Talk about sex
appeal!)
What should Amenca do in the
world? Labelling prescriptively at
this unique moment in global history is a much more difficult chore
than cancaturing descriptively
what we seem ID have been doing.
America, for all its deep problems,
is the most powerful geopolitical,
cultural, economic, technological
and military power in the world.
Ever It is an unprecedented sttuation, and a good one. We should

Today in history
.
By The Associated Press
, Todathy ts Tuesday, July 19, the 200th day of 1994. There are 165 days
1e.t m e year.
·
Today' s highlight m hiStory:
N J~-five years ag~•• on Ju,Iy 19, !969, Apollo 11 and iiS astronaurs,
eb't
strdothng, Edwm Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins, went into
Or ' aroun e moon.

stay No. I. No other nation seems
be in second place. and no one
deserves to be.
Some over! y easy answers were
provided, like the one by Mary
Teran of San Antonio: "Survival
Stupid." Well, sure. But Amcric~
ought to do more than JUSt survtve
The same goes for "MOOB"
("Mind Our Own Business"), submttted by Horace D. McCowan Jr
ofRichmond, Va.
·
We are not just the only superpower. We beheve in something
that we think will be good for us
and for all of God's chtldren, soon:
er or later. Let's call our belief in
shorthand, "democracy," whtch is
not nearly as simple a concept as
tt' s made out to be
Most of the other important
nations in the world beheve m what
we believe tn, and know that we
are the only leader around that can
move us all in the nght dtreClton. It
ts a direction that mtght prevent a
21st-century replay of the global
carnage we have seen in the 20th.
Moreover, what we beheve in has a
chance to succeed, and perhaps
faster than we thmk. We live in a
wired world going through ''Culturemesh" (the entry of Tom Gtll
of North Beach, Md.).
It's not One World out there,
but that's the way it's moving. If
we succeed, we wtll make the planet a better place for us, and our
children, and P.COIJle everywhere.
And so I like the submisston of
10

Phtlltp D Adams of Gruthersburg,
Md. It ts "Amerocentric." He
wntes (acknowledgmg our flaws)
that Amcroccntnsm concerns the
behef that "the Amcncan ideal (ts)
the paradtgm for a JUSt and prosperous soctety." I also liked "ProDemocracy Adhocracy," submit- ~
ted by Enc Hansen of Washington,
D.C. It captures the flavor that it's '
not so stmple out there, and that
whatever slogan we follow, we
must be very flexible as we try to
gently apply tl Our role should be
that of "Ltberty Leaders" (submitted by Bryon Wentworth of N.
Branford, Conn.) - but it gets
comphcated. Try Haiti, for example.
My first place wmner(s) arc a
blend: "Amerocentnc Pro-Democracy Adhocracy," whtch JUSt barely makes tl on to a bumper sticker
and rhymes.
'
"Ltberty Leaders" gets third
place.
. Prizes wtll be sent to the six
wmners. And there will be no more
contests for a while. I'm not cut out
to be a Judge.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the host ofthe weekly
public television program 1
"Think Tank".
(For Information on how t(
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others con·
tact America Online by caliing I·
800·827-63114, exL 8317.)

Aecu-Weather• forecast for dayLJme eondmuns and htgh temperatures
MI CH

•

IToledo I 91" I

• lcolumbusl9o'

•

Ice

'

Cloudy

By the Associated Press
A warm front wtll bnng unstable atr and thunderstorm s back to
Ohto on Wednesday , the Nattonal
Weather Servtee satd.
It also wtll be hot and hum td,
wtth htghs around 90
The scauered thunderstorm s
wtll continue through the rest of the
work week Saturday should be dry
wtth sltghtly cooler temperatures,
forecasters satd.
The record -htgh temperature for
thts date at the Columbus weather
station was 98 degrees m 1930
whtle the record low was 50 m
1979 Sunset tonight wtll be at 8:57
p m and sunn se Wednesday at
6 19 am.
Southern Ohio
Tomght. .Partly cloudy Low 65
to 70 South winds around 10 mph
Wednesday Partly clqudy wuh
scattered afternoon thunderstorms
Htgh ncar 90. Chance of ra111 30
percent.
Extended forecast
Thursday and Fnday Scattered
showers and thunderstorms . Lows
65 to 70 Htghs 111 the mtd to upper
80s

Saturday .. Partly cloudy Lows
m the 60s Ht ghs m the low to mtd
80s
Across the nation
A storm front moved tnto the
Southwest toda y, bnngmg ltghtmng and scaltered showers to land
swept by wtldftrcs , whtle fog and
haz e hung over much of the eastern
Umted States.
Thunderstorm s were expected
north from Mc&lt;~co mto the Rocktcs, through the htgh Plains, mto
the Mtsstsstppt Valley, east to the
New England coa~t and south mto
the Carohnas.
Wmds blowtng up from the
southeast were expected to cool
temperatures down to the 70s m
New England
'
Highs m the 90s were forecast
across most of the country's midsectton Temperatures were ltkely
to m e mto the 80s from the Mid
Atlanttc states west through the
Great Lakes. Htgh s 111 the IOOs
were forecast in central Texas and
the ami Southwest
The nat JOn's hot spot Sunday
was Death Valley, Caltf, at 119
degrees.

-Local briefs--Two sentenced in B&amp;E
Two men wen: sentenced last week on charges stemmmg from
the June 30 breaking and entenng of J&amp;R Sports Shop m Pomeroy_
Sentenced were John P. Kerby, 18. of Berlin Hetghts and Anthony S. Boling, 18, of Pomeroy. The two were sentenced to 18 months
confinement at the Orient Correctional FaCJhty Recepuon Center. In
addition, they are to pay $100 each for restitution and $500 for costs
of prosecution.
A thind man, Jasen E Thomson, 20, of Wakeman pleaded mnocent to charges of comphetty to brcakmg and cntenng, comphctty
to theft and receiving stolen property 111 the mctdent.

Woman injured in wreck
A Racme woman was treated and released from Veterans Memorial Hospttal Monday aftemoon followmg a two-vehicle acctdcnl on
State Route 7, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Htghway Patrol
reported .
Bonmc Walker was transported by Metgs County EMS after she
was struck from behund by Todd A Perry, of Pomeroy.
Perry reportedly had problems stoppmg. He told troopers the
brakes did not completely s!Dp the truck. Perry said he slowed down
to I 0-15 miles per hour before he struck the Monte Carlo.

Fair tickets on sale

Tickets for the !31st Metgs County Fair to be staged Aug. 15-20
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds are now on sale.
Dan Smtih, president of the Meigs County Agricultural So_ctcty,
satd that season tickets are $12 this year, and membcrshtp uckets
are $13. Both season and membership tickets provtde admtsston and
free parking for all six days of the fatr. Mcmbershtp llckcts arc sold
only ID Metgs Countians 18 years of age and over and give holders
the nghtiD run for and vote for those on the board of directors.
Membership tickets are sold only at the Sugar Run Mtll. They
may also be purchased from any fatr board member.
Season tickets are bemg sold at Joe's Country Market, Rutland;
Waid Cross Sons Racine; Baum Lumber Co , Chester; Sugar Run
Flour Mtll, Swt;her-Lohse Pharmacy, Gloeckner's Restaurant,
Pomeroy; Nita Jean Ritchie, Tuppers Plams; Whaley's Grocery,
Darwm; Helen Baer, Syracuse; Dorsel Larkms, Long Bottom;
Dan's of Middleport; Five Points Express, Route 7, Pomeroy;
Reed's Country Store, Reedsville; and McDonald's of Pomeroy.

EMS logs 6 calls

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ConlinuedfrnmPagel

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01994 Accu-Waathttr Inc

Wet, humid weather
in store for work week

()aily.....

Detccttvc Mark Fuhnnan satd more
thillt a decade ago that worktng tn
mmonty neighborhoods had made
htm a vtolent and unstable pohce
offt ccr
I he New York er ma gaz tnc
reported Sunday that defense attorneys mtght clatm ractsm prompted
Fuhrman to plant the glove. whtch

SIXJltcd the qucsuonabl c refund s 111 weeks to two weeks
Ketth satd clcc tronte I tltng n1c1 y
111ne 10 preve nt 529 mll lwn from
gDmg out. butt he checks for ""oth - mdk c It c dSJcr m th e long run to
prevent refund fraud Th e t 1gurcs
er $24 mdlton \\Cre m&lt;~tl ccl.
'I hat comJwccl wtth S~ 2 mtllll lll w ed by Glenn 's staff, he .1ddcd,
\\llrt h ot l&lt;~l sc l y claun ccl refunds on "ma y not det ec t th e cxl ent to
p,1pcr tdmgs. ol whJL h $72 0 IIIII - whtch we preve nt ed fr ,1ud fro m
I ton w ,\ 'i dctc( led 111 tunc to prcvC' nt ever ge lttn g tnto the sys tem thiS
year "
P'-' ) mcnt
For 199 5, new cu mpant cs that
U nd er electr oni C fd1n g ..w:u l
,tblc ll,Jli(Jn,JIIy SIIICC 1000, ,liJ Jho - want to ftle rl ec tron tc re turns wtll
ha\ e to s u bm~ to fin gcrpnnlln g for
f iZC d pr cpa rcrs and co mrn cru .ll
l
rtllllll d l tM&lt;.: k gru und t hcL k s ~m J
cnmpantcs c.1n ftlc returns for ~1&lt; ­

'

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Vis AssoCJBtod Pr96S Grapf"«sN6t

LOS ANG ELES (AP) - O.J .
Stmpson' s auorn cy satd he may
argue that a pohce detccuve pl anted a bloody glove at ht s chent' s
es tate, but won 't try to prove that
raet sm was mvolved.
" Race ts not and wtll not be an
JSs ue tn tht s dclensc, " Robert
Shaptro satd Mond ay "The onl y
thm g we arc looking at JS credtbth ly of wtmcsses "
Accordmg to record s obtam ed
Monda y hy The Assoc tatcd Press,

Big Brother

I

WVA

Ooi&gt;Y"'

Page-3

Simpson's lawyer: Race not an issue

Wednesday, July 20

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Senttnel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.. _........$23 40

2.s Woillla............................... . .. .$45Ji0
5 2 -... .................................... .$88.40

Untts of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to stx caUs for asSistance
between Monday and Tuesday
mornmgs. Units respondmg included·
MIDDLEPORT
3.17 p.m. Monday, N. Third
Street, Tanya Burt, Holzer Medical
Center;
9·34 p.m. Monday, N. Second
Street, Shelly Rupe, Veterans
Mcmonal Hospital.
POMEROY
II :29 a.m. MQnday, Lincoln
Heights, Barbara Jones, VMH;
I :20 p.m. Monday, squad and
volunteer fire department to a
motor vehicle accident at state
Route 7 and Forest Run Road,
Bonnie Walker, VMH, Todd perry
and Shawn S~. refused treatment;
9:08 p.m. Monday, Second
Avenue, Kenny White, VMH .
RACINE
11:37 a.m. Monday, Bashan
Road, Margaret Raiguel, CamdenClark Memonal Hospital.]

Pult ce hav e sa td th e glove
ntat ches on e found at the murder
scene of Stmpson' s ex -wtfe, Ntcolc
Brown Stmpson, 35, and her fn cnd
Ronald Goldman , 25
Stmpson. 47. has plcaciCil moocent to stabbtng them to dcdth and
ts Jaded wtthout batl He ts to be
arratgned Fnda y 111 Supcnor Court
Durtn g Stmpson's preltmtn ary
hc&lt;trmg. Fuhrman tcsuftcd that he
Jlllllped ove r the wall to Sunpson's
estate aft er scc mg blood statn s ouJSi de th e gruund s, and was al one
when he found the glove
Fuhrman dented the alleg at ton
that he planted th e glov e Th e
Pol tee Department had no comment Fuhrman 's coll eagues satd
the dctecuvc was dtsturbed by the
defense efforts but constdcred them
a SJgn of desperauon.
Shaptro conftrm cd that the
defen se ts c xammtn g a lawsutl
Fuhrman ftlcd tn 1983 seckmg a
dt sabtltty pcnston from the ctt y
Fuhrman clatmcd 111 the law su11
that worktng 111 black and Htspant c
nctghborhoods had made htm men tally unstable
PsychtatrJ sts satd Fuhrman told
th em he had to be "vwlcnt JUSt to

Meigs land transfers posted
The followtng land transfers
were recorded recently m the offtcc
of Metgs County Recorder Emmagene Hamtlton:
Deed , Dale M. and Margaret C
Dutlon to Mtddlcport Church of
Chnst, Mtddleportlot,
Deed, James W. and Mary Hobsteuer to same, Sutton tracts and
parcels,
Ccrltftcatc, Martlyn Jean Sh3Jl1 bltn, deceased, to Georg e W
Shambltn, Mtddleportlot,
Afftdavtt, Roger P. Damels,
deceased, to Helena R. Dantels and
Roger W Hysell, Pomeroy and
Salisbury parcels;
Certiftcate, Helena R. Damels,
deceased, to Ausltn W. and Dayton
L Phtlhps and Orella D. Hysell.
Pomeroy and Saltsbury parcels;
Deed, Virgtl and Bonme S
Walker to Zack W. and Betty L
Smtih, Letart, If}. acre;
Deed, Samuel and Narsa Terzopplous to Ronald F Whttc, Saltsbury, 1.04 acres;
Deed, Wilham R. Shevel to
Blame E. and DIXIe L. Carpenter,
SctpiO, 5 acres;
Affidavtl, Standard Federal
Bank to Coloma! Central Savings,
merger;
Affidavit, Albert L. Marlin,
deceased, ID Franos Eileen Marltn,
et al., Chester parcels,
Deed, Edward Lee, Emestmc Y.
and Beulah McComas to Edward
Lee and Erncsunc Y. McComas,
Mtddleport parcels;
Deed, Leo B. and Linda Morris

to Mtchael J. and Robm R Eblm,
Ru~and vtllage, 1/4 acres,
Deed, Leo B. and Lmda J. Morns to Henry and Hester M. Eblin ,
Ru~and vtllage parcel;
!ked, Marian Kmghtstep, Mari an Bell to Margaret Smuh, Sulton ,
41 acre;
Deed, Ina C , Danny L. and
Karen Meadows to Mttchcll H. and
Ehzabeth A. Meadows, Middleport
lot,
Rtght of way, Oscar and Ltlhan
L Maynard to Tuppers PlamsChester Water'Dtstrict, Sutton lot,
Rtght of way, Rtchard T. and
Pamela Yost to TPCWD, Orange,
.983 acres,
Rtght of way, Sherman D
Whttc to TPCWD, Bedford;
R1ght of way, Hamson and Ruth
Naomt Smtth to TPCWD, Sutton,
1.9 acres,
Rtght of way, Don cuc and
Kcvm Dugan to TPCWD, Orange,
2 1697 acres;
Rtght of way, Roy Jr. and
Eumce L. Jones to TPCWD,
Chester;
Right of way, Glennis and
Delores Hoffman to TPCWD,
Chester, 15 22 acres;
Rtght of way, Ronald Kmder to
TPCWD, Chester, one acre;
Rtght of way, Roger and Datsy
Vtrgtnia Frecker to TPCWD,
Chester, 80 acres;
!ked, Albert Eugene Holman to
Patncta S. Whttc, Sulton lot,
Deed, Harry E. Jr and Mary M
Stoban to Carroll D. and Margaret

--Announcements-Reunion announced
The 27th annual Samuel A.
Eblen reumon wtll be held Aug.
6 at the Star Mtll Park in
Racmc, 6 p m For more mformatwn restdcnts may call 9927366
Youth League picnic planned
The Rutland Baseball Youth
League wtll have a ptcnic Sunday at I p.m. at the park. Those
attending arc to take thetr own
table servtce.
VBS set at Rock Springs
VacatiOn Bible School wtll
begin Aug. I at the Rock Spnngs
Untted MethodiSt Church.
Classes will be held from 9.30
toll:30am.

be removed from all plasttc and
glass
Eastern booster to meet
Eastern Athleuc Boosters
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at
Eastern High School
Racine Post to meet
Racmc Post 602, American
Legion, wtll meet at 6:30 p.m .
Thursday at the hall. A dmner
wtll follow.
Reunion set
The Singer reunion will be
held Sunday at noon at the
Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy .

Couples Issued
marriage licenses

Recycle Day slated
Meigs County Luter Control
wiU hold a recycle day Saltlfday
tn Syracuse m the parking lot
Four couples were tssued maracross from Ktng Ball
na licenses recently m the Metgs
Fteld/Municipal Butldmg from
u ty Probate Court of Judge
9 a.m. to noon. Accepted wtll be __.. obc t Buck. Recetvmg licenses
all ktnds of cans, glass of all
were:
colors (containers only), newsJeffrey Todd Caldwell, 24, and
papers and inserts, corrugated
Ahsa Renee Wtllford, 22, both of
cardboard, no. I {llasttc (liter
Racme; Rtchard Alan Fridley, 36,
bottles), no. 2 plasuc (mtlk jugs,
and Kolleta Ann Mayes, 33, both
water Jugs, detergent and bleach
of Middleport; Rtchard Douglas
type Jugs), beverage wraps,
Durst, 33, and Dorothy Alma
cereal and cracker boxes, soap
Woodridge, 31, both of Cheshtre;
boxes, etc. Lids and caps must
Bnan J. Nttz, 27, Mtddlcport, and
Tammy Sue Klem, 20, Pomeroy.

Lawsuit filed

(Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines the grievances or party
against another. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.)
Bank One, Marietta, N.A. filed a
suit for foreclosure Wednesday
against Marvin L. and Marjorie J.
Keebaugh, both of Reedsville.
The bank, according to records
in the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas, seeks Judgement of
$37,952.07 plus interest and foreclosure of property from the Keebaugh's.

Hospital news
VIITERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Ethel
Lambert. Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Arthur
Barr, Middleport, and Mary E.
Jones, Pomeroy-

Stocks
Am Ele Power -----------29 S/8
Akzo
Ashland
on _______ ----35 I/8
AT&amp;T ·----·--------53 S/8
Bank On•-----------.33 Ill
Bob Evaas------------211/4
Champion IDd. ---------213/4
Cbarmlnc Sbop--------9 Ill
City Holdlnl----------.33 Ill
Federal MCJgUl.-------.30 Ill
Goodyeu T&amp;R
718
K-mart-------------16118
Llmds End--------.10 314
Limited IM---------18 Ill
Multimedia Inc.-.29lll
Point Banrorp -------17

·----------------..53

--------.35

eXJst" and once broke the elbows
and kn ees of a man who sptl on
htm . accordmg to court documents.
" If you only knew what tl feels
lt ke when some guy's dotn ' so mcJhm g, acung coo l, thmktng no one
sees hnn , and you come up and put
a shotgun to ht s hea d." Fuhrm an
told Dr Ronald Koeg ler
Fuhrm an's all eged tn stab tln y
cou ld help Stmpson's dc lensc dt sued tt an tmportant wttncss for the
proscc uuon Equ al ly dam ag111g
could be allcg auons by some u tile
psychtatrJSIS who treated Fuhrm"n
th at he was makmg uo ht s tl lnes s
so he could retrea t to a cabtn m the
woods anc1 hccome a comm cru dl
arD sl
"Thts man has become ured ot
poll ee work JU St as he bec ame
hored wtth ltfc as a Manne, " Koegler wro te " He docs not v. .1111 to
qUtt and lose h1 s bcncl tts, so he 1s

to ge t pcnst on .1nd com
pensatt on rewards
He ts ,Jillc tu
wo rk as a polt cc o flt cc r . hut
llncsn't want to do so ·'

&lt;~ lt e mpun g

Fuh rmJ n lust t11 s la wsull .llld
on the force

rc m a ~n e d

Fuhrman tol d a psyc ilt,ltrtsl thai
he left th e M &lt;~nn c' 111 I '!7 5 &lt;~nd
Jll lrl l' d

the Poli te Dqu nn ~~..: nt

bcc .1usc he "got urcd ul li,J&gt; tng a
hunch of Mcx Kan s and nt ggc rs that
should he m pnson tclltn g (linn )

the y wcrcn' t gom g to do so mc Foster Cleek, Racme lot.
thwg, '' acc ordtng to l llUrt doL: u·
Deed, Btlly R. and Ju dtth M
rncnts.
Gobl e to Matthew and M,llllld.t
Strong Pomeroy parcel,
Rtghl of wa y, RodnGy [ ,tnd
Dtann c C Walke r to Lc a d • n~
Creek Con servancy Dt strtct, Ru l'·
land;
Rtght of way, Kunbcrly Holt ·
day, Mary and Richard E. Whttc to
LCCD, Salem, 35 acres;
Rtght of way, Charles 11. Fcuv; ' WASHINGTON (AI') - Rep.
lito LCCD, Saltsbury;
'
Jun McDennolt and other ltberals
Rtght of way, Wtlltam Gregory
h.1ckmg a Canadtan- stylc health
and Della L. Peek to LCCD, Rut - pl.1n .trc the Rodney Dangerttelds
land;
ol the debate over how to rcpau Ute
Rtght of way, Roger D Wam s- US medtcal system. Thetr plan to
Icy to LCCD, Rutland;
replace pnvatc tnsurancc wtth govDeed, Clyda All ensworth to crnm ent paym ents has golten httlc
rcspc.cttn Congress
Knsltn Kclsa!l , Mtddlcpnn lots.
Deed, Knstm and Dou gla s G
But now , Wtth a bloc of 90 -odd
Kelsall to Ronald P. and Ann e votes, McDcrm olt and hts backers
Lowry Casct, Mtddlcpon loLs.
arc pmsed to wrest conccsstons
Deed. Clarence S Frank to from House DemocratiC leaders,
who wtll altcmptto wntc a comClarence S. and LouiSe Frank
Syracuse parcels;
' rro.~llSC health plan .
They can' l get to 218 (votes, a
maJOIIly) Without us, " satd
Deed, Margaret E. Scnpps and McDermott. a psychtatnst and
Chns Ptnkston to Rtehard E
Democrat from Seattle "They
McDonald, Bedford, 10 acres:
need every one of us. They can't
!ked, Glennts F. Taylor to Jerry wnlC us off."
L Jennings and Soma M. Men They have been promtscd a scpdoza, Bedford parcels;
ardte vote on the House floor on
Deed, James Graham, ct al. to thetr Amcrt can Health Sccunty
Marcus P. Bratton and Chcl ctc Act, whtch would pay all medtcal
Combs-Bratton, Rutland parcels,
btl Is , from doctor and hospnal
Agreement, Harold and Vugmta charges to prcscnptton drugs and
F. Evans ID John J. Evans, Lebanon nursmg home care, with a new I 0.5
boundary lme agreement;
percent payroll tax The govern Deed, Dtxic Kate Roush, et al ment would dectdc how much to
to Jack and Joyce Ervm, Salem pay the provtdcrs.
tracts;
The s tngle-payer htll eked
Deed, James 0. Pack, ct al to through the House Educauon and
Russell D. and Donna S. Cobb, Labor Commiuee on a 22-21 vote
Lebanon, 1.4 acres,
wnhout rccommcndauon Other
Deed. T. Jeff Daugherty to Amy ma,or panels tgnored or ICJecletltt.
J. Daugherty, Columbta, 5 397
acres;
Deed, William Ray and Mar garet M. Brooks to Wtlltam Perry
Brooks, Nancy Joan Brooks
Thompson and David Ray Brooks,
Columbia tracts;
Deed, Wilham D. and Joan
Chit.JS to James Wtlhams Harns,
Mtddleport lo~
Deed, James Wtlhams Harrts to
Wayne and Lomse Staats, Mtddlcport lot;
Deed, Patricta K. Haym 1n to
Gregory T. Hayman, Oltve, 6 6
NOW SHOWING' - - - - . ,
TRUE LIES
acres;
Deed, Jantce L. and Davtd F.
DMLY f'WI' Slia/aft 1 00,
tAl
Lawson to same, Syracuse lots,
RNGELS IN THE OUTIIELO
7:10,')·10 [)ULY 111M' SlT/lDI 1:10 l 10 I Pel
Deed, Thomas E. and Connie
BLOWN RWRY
Roush to DenZil and Bonnte Proc1 :00,~:JO lliULr M.T S/I{J'/9Jt 1:00,1:30 Ull
tor, Mtddleport parcels;
DISNEY S LION KING
7 10 9:00 DIUL't l¥l'!' SA'I'/!IM 1 'lO NlO ICI
Deed, Woodrow T. Zwtlhng to
THE SHRDDW
Woodrow T. and Shelton Russell
1 ' l0 'J lll
MI' .SAT/1Ut..1:20,1:2(1
Zwilling, Syracuse tracts;
I I.JJUE TROUBLE
1 OO , '),JO !li\.ILT 1M' SJtr/~ l•OO , l•)(J tPCI
Deed, Wtlltam R. and Mtchell
SPEED
R. Hall to Roy E. and Maunta
Mtller, Chester pan:cl;
Deed, Ray Wellman to Patrtcta
Kay Hawley, Bedford, 1.591 acres.

Health care
plan backers
hope to deal

IOJ f l\1 11

J:t~

~y

----------.38

Stock reports an tbe 10:30 Lm-

quotes provided by Advut o
GaWpolls.

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Sboney'e Inc. ---------14 311
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�The · Daily Sentinel

Sports

Tuesday, July 19, 1994
Page-4

Reds get rough enough with Hough to down Marlins 5-3
lhJOE KAY
. CINCINNATI (AP)- No one
was surp ri sed when Cincinna ti
Reds pitching coach Don Gu llett
took off running for the pitcher' s
mound. No one was more annoyed
than Rorida's Gary Sheffield.
Sheffield barely missed a grand
slam - his drive off Pete Schourek
hooked foul by a few feet - and
now had to ki ll time as Gull ett
restored calm.
Sheffield waited and waited. As
the moments slipped by, so di d
Sheffield 's patience. When play
resumed. Sheffield hit into a piv otal do uble play that turned th e
game and sent the Reds to a 5-3
vic tory Monday night.

There were plenty of highlights: has lost his last fiv e decis ions and
''I'd love to have Sheffield up at
Char li e Hough reg aining hi s gave up four homers in hi s Jul y 5 the plat e with the ba ses loaded
knuckleball, Kevin Mitchell and start against the Reds. His knuckle- every time," Lache mann said.
Reggie Sanders hitting consecutive ball had lls hop back.
The idea was for Schourek to
homers, and the Marlins hitti ng two
"A co u~Ic of pitches, I don ' t keep the ball down. He didn 't. The
of their own.
know how they hit,'' catcher Bah Icft -handcr's first pllch was a
But this game wtll be remem- Na tal satd. "They were tough to chest-h igh fastbal I over the middle
bered mostly for one long foul ball . catch. l don't know how they put a of the plate - tile worst place
" You talk about a foot here and hat on them."
imaginable. Sheffield whipped the
a foot th ere," Marlins ma nager
Sr hourek (5- 1). who has been hat arou nd and sent a liner arching
Rene Lachemann said.
crrau c as the fifth starter, got hit right down the third -base line wi th
An mtriguing game came down hard but somehow got by. Sheffield a loud crack.
to those cliched few feet in the fifth hit hiS 19th homer 111 th£ f~rs t and
The ball headed straight for the
Da vc Magadan Iined an ~ single ye llow fo ul screen. teased it, then
mnmg .
·'
The Reds got up on Hough (5-9) 111 the fo urtlt.
turned lcfl at the last moment. Foul
Then , the Marlins loade d th e by a few feet.
by scormg twi ce in the first and
agai n in the third on Kevin !J&lt;t&lt;CS with one ou t in the fifth and
"I just don' t sec how it went
Mitchell 's RBI doub le. But thi s Sheffi eld com ing up. They l1ked foul ," Sheffield said. "I hit it
was a beuer night for Hough , who thei r chances.
straight. It's not like it was hook-

mg."

.

Shefftcld said. " When a (pnchntg
coach) goes out and stays on the
mound , it docs so methin g to you.
As the Iutter, you want to stay in
there and hit when the pitcher' s r; 11 .
tied."
The Marlins had one 111 , 11._.
n&gt; oment of glory - Jeff Conine' s
15th homer that tied it 3-all in the
SIX th . But Hough faded again, g 1v.
ing up Mitc hell 's 23rd homer and
Sanders' 16th three pitches apan i11
the sixth.
·
"Basica ll y, I threw mostl y
decent pitches," said Hough, whn
is 4- 1I career against the Reds. "I
threw a couple of lousy ones there
in the sixth."

As soon as the ball crashed mto
the seco nd deck. Gullett took orr
for the mo un d talk to Scilou rck.
There could be no more of til 1 s.
"He sa id , 'A ll right, c;ilm
down,' " Schourck swd. '· lie was
more nervous than I was."
Cou ld anyone blame hin('
"Some of the guys got a littl e
ne rvo us ove r the 400 -foo t fou l
ball." Sc hourck said.
Shcff1eld had to stand ami coo l
off while Gullett ca lmed Iu s pitch cr. When play resumed, Sc ilourck
went to a 2-2 cou nt before getting
Sheffie ld to hit into a rally -killing
double play.
''T hat was smart mana gin g,''

Rangers make double play to post 6-5 victory over Indians
Ry CHU CK MELVIN

by Jose Canscco, whose tw o-out Alomar was eas ily doubled off secCLEVELAND (AP) _ Manuel dnve off Jose Me sa (7-5) banged on~..
Lce cou ldn't quite un derstand th e off the bullpe n fe nce 111 ce nter
If I were the runner, l would
fu ss hi s teammate s were making fiel d.
have gone as wcii ," Texas manJgover him .
Sandy Alomar started the Cleve- e r Kevi n Kennedy said . "I told
" I saved the game tonight but land ninth with a single and moved Manny that's one of the best pl ays
I'vc made better plays than that," to seco nd on Kenny Lofton's I've ever se,en. If he docsn:lmake
the Texas shortstop said after hi s grounder to first. Vtzquel then loft- that, ther e s no doub t 11 sa tt e
over-the-s hou lder catc h of Omar ed a pop lly mto shallow left cen- game. Those arc the kmds of plays
VIZq uel's pop lly started a game- tcr, apparently imo no-man's-land.
tha t make you enjoy th e Manny
ending double play Monday night
Alomar broke toward third in Lccs .. ~l separates the men from the
.
as the Rangers beat the Cleveland hopes of scormg the tymg_run tf the boys.
Indians 6-5.
ball feii 111 - lcav mg himself no
Tom Henke got Iu s lith save,
Texas had taken the lead in lite margin for error. So when Lee after Darren Oliver (3 -0) pitched
top of the ninth on an RBI double reached out and sna red the ball . two perfect innings for the win.

·

Scoreboard

NL standings
Eultm DIYII&amp;oD
Tum
W L Pd.
Atbn1.1 ---·
...... ..StS 34 .622
Manueal ..............SS '.J1 .591
Philadelphia .. . .. . ..... ~ .473
New Yark ..... .....42 SO .4S7

GB

l
13.5

tl

.4S2

1).5

.l98
.l70
4S .473
47 .472
Sl ... 29

2.l
tl.l
t t.l

Roridl ..................42 Sl
C mlral DIYIJion

CINCINNATI ....... .ll
"""'"" ............... .53
PiluburJh ..............43
SL LwiJ ................42
Chieaao .................. 39

37
40

IS~

LooAnJ101eo ...........41 4.1

.5t6
.484
.468
.394

49

SO
.57

3
4.l
t t .l

Monda~s
scores

Alluu 3, Pilu-l
&lt;JNClNNATI ~. Flori613

Saa Fruciaeo (PortY&amp;•I 1-6) aa
Philadelphia (Woot4-7), t ,ol pm.
SL Lcuil (l'ewktbu~J ID-1) at lba.Ma
(Swindell 6-6~ t '3l p.m.
LoJ Ansdca (N•rtina 1-6) 11 New
Yort (Saberhsaee~ 10-4), t :40p.m.
auc.ao (li...U I-ll •• Co1ando (Rilz

3-4),lir.l p.m.
Su Dicao (BatCI 6-10) at Montreal
(llauy 6-2). 7 ,3l pm.
Atllnll (Gla.Wlnc 11- 7) 11 Pituburp
(N..It). 11-l), 7,3l p.n&gt;.
Fforid• (Wouhon 1-B) •t CINCJNNA11 (ltijo 9-4), Ul p.m.

AL standings
Kallen DI•Uion
Tum
W L Pd.
New Yam ............. .sl :IS .611

GB

2.l

BollunonL .............l3 31 .lll
o.........................4l 46 .495
DocraiL....... .. .. ... 42 lt .• 52

tO.l
t4.5

TOIIIJI'&amp;A) ..................4\

.451

14 ..5

Ctnlr"tl DIYWon'
36 .604
CU!VELANIL ....ll 36 596
ICon,u City ...........49 .... 521
Minnolota ..............41 41 .473
Milwaukee .............42 .50 .4S7

t

Qtic.o ......... c ........ .55

7
12

13.S

47 .419
12 .43l
l4 .426
S4 .413

l
6
1

Torauo 1, Minnolo&amp;a 4

Tau 6, a...EVHI..AND 5
K~n~u City 2.. Milwtukee 0
Chicoso to, Odnil9 (1 3 inn.)
New YolkS , Oakland 3
Saule 7, Bt.ltimCR S

CINCINNATI BENGALS : Signed
Dunay Scott. wide receiver, to a lhrce-

CI.EVEI.AND

(SlDOicnyno l -7), Bl pm.
Kanlu City (Appia" 6-6) 11 Milwaukco (l!ldftd\l-9~ 1,01 p.m.
Dolmil (llelchar 1-l 0) ..
(Fer........ 1-7l. 1,as p.m.

au..,.

Boaton (Clomccu 1-•) at Calilomia
~ l-6~ tom p.m.
Now Yom (Abbou 1-4) "Oulond
(Wiu 7-ll,
p.m.
IW!imon&gt; (Mcl)ono1d tt.fi) .. S..ulo

tom

(Ftanina6-tO),t!Hll p.m.

Wednesday's pmes
Kanlu City (&lt;Jordon 9-S} at Milwau·
kee OJ-I-7), l,Qi p.m.

Bahimoce (Fcmandcr. &amp;-4) at SeaRl•
(Convaw tl-2), Bl pm.
T.... ~ 0.3) 01 a.EVEUND
(Obi: t t-3). 7ir.l , ....
Jo6-. (Eri.U.. 1-1) " T....,to

(Clwm'" 9-9), HI p.m.
Douoit (W.U.. 3-l) 01 OU..ao (Me·
Dowell7-1), lir.l p.m.
Boe:ton {Nabholl 2-2) tl California
to,]l p.m.
Now Yam
7-3) "o.t1on&lt;1
av- H), t0:3S p.m.

co.-

NL leaders
BAmNO: T. 0W"yaa, Saa Di•a•.
.391; BaJwel.l, HOYIIOG, .35$; Morril,
CINCINNATI, .34l; J.,lice, AUonu,
. 337; le«erie~, St. Louil, .3ll; A.lou,
Montreal, .329; Piau1, Lot Anaelu,

:a;:

i

N

DON TATE MOTORS, INC. -I ll

I~J

-- I.
61

Ill

.Do

IGeai

Toronto, 121; Thomu, ~hi~aao, 120;
Bclk, CLEVElAND, 120, Orill'cy, Scatllc. 12fr. Palmc:iro, B1ltimme. 117.

OOUBLES: Knobltuch. Minnctola.
JX; Belle, CLEVELAND, 33: Fryman,
LAND, 21; Po1moUo, Botbm..., 21.
TRIPLES: L Jahnton, Chic:aao, 13;
Colanan, Kmw: City, II; A. Din, Milwaukee, 7; Lofton, CLEVELAND, 7;
McRae. K.anau CU.y, 6; Whi\co ToronlO,
6; A. Cote, MinnCI&lt;MO,l .
HOME RUNS : Griffey, Seattle, 3~;
Thom11, Chictao. 34: Bello, CLEVE LAND, 26; Canteco, T.-.u, 25; Fielder,
"· OUlutd, 20; Cuter, y......,, lll.
STOLEN BASES' Lol\on, CLEVE·
UNO, 41: Coltman. K.n111 City, 46;
Nia.on. BOlton, ~ ltaobJaudl, Mim~
to, 21; B..Oy
U; L
Johnlon, 0Uc•1o. 13; J....ic,r, O&amp;kllod,

PITCHING (10 deciliool): Jloy, New
Yoft. t4-l. .17S, 3.lt: a-auc.,..ttl2. .133, 3.l4; Boever, Douoi' 1-l, .100,
3.16; M. Cluk, CLEVELAND, 11-3,
.716; 3.61; Mu11in1, B•ltimore, 13-4,
.765, 2.94; Cooo, ICoaul Cily, t:t-4, .765,
2.71; Sandoaon. Oticqo, tl-3,.721, 4.61.
STRIKEOUTS' R. r........ S.. tdo.
tl9; a..-, a ...... t31: FWoy, c.w.
romio, t2A; llcdpo, T..-, tt6&lt; Appi·
o r , " - Cily, 113; Ouanan, Tocont.o,
t06&lt; Cooo, Koma Ci1y, t04.
SA YES, Leo Smilh. Bdtimon&gt;, 30;
AJuilen,_ Minftelota, 20; Montsornery.
ICanAI City, 11; Bobnley, OUland, 15;
Ayal•. SNttle, 14; RY .. ell, CLEVELAND, t~; Onhe, c.Jilomlo, t2; Foaen,

i

~
Ill

Invites You To Help Us
Celebrate Our 3'd Anniversary

y&lt;u"""""'-

-

.Do

I.ooll for Great Selections and
Prices All Month

DETROIT LIONS: Asrocd to \emu
with Johnnie Mortoo, wide ra;;aivc:r, an a

four-year cont.nCL
• GREEN BAY PACKERS : Sianed
Edau Bcmca and Adam Walker. runnina
Mc.h. Caimtld Eric Dol~ . wide reoeivar,
olf waivCl'l from San Oieso.

GMC:TRuc:K..

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Sisnod

O.vi.d T~eadwdl, pllc:ckick:cr.

LOS ANGELES R.AMS : Waived
Kevin McDoogol. quonabocl&lt;.
MIAMI DOLPHINS : Sipcd Richmond Webb, oft"cnaiw ~&lt;&amp;le., w • danlo)"CU cmlrlct eJlCIUion.

NEW YORK GIANTS , Sii!Rod Muk
Jacklon and Chria Calloway, wide recciven, Chris Mnmalans•. dofon1ive
~c.k.lo 1nd John Booty, dcfe111ivc back.
Rc:Kindcd the 1a1dcr offer to Ed Mc:Caf.

1995 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

fray, wide rccc:iver.

.

NEw YORK IFTS' Apoed 10......,

~ with Tmy Meola. nlacekick.cr.
· ~::&gt; WASHINGTON REDSKINS ' Re·

OR

!cued Brad Edwanl.t, tafcty. Signed Joe
Plitton, guard, and Kurt lllwt:, ligh1 end.

BOTH LOADED
BOTH HOT!

1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

By
Dave
Grate

Loaded, low miles.

$15 995°0

of

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

1993 Chev.1500 Plckup.•......$11,400

Rutland
Furniture

LWB, V&amp;, 5 apeed, lir.

1989 Buick Lesabre .•...·-···--·····$6400
4 door, IIUio., lir,lo..ted,

Some people with a
sympathetic disposition sure
waste a lot of it on
themselves.

•••

No one is more exasperating
than the person who can
always see the bright side of
our bad luck.

1986 Buick Lesabre·-····-·-···-····$5250

1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM
Auto., air, stereo,air bag, more.

$1 995°0

•••

1989 Chevy 510 PlckUP-···---····$7995

4X4, auto., V--6, al8reor.

1989 Chrysler New Yorker...••••$7445
Lo..ted, 4 door.

1988 Chevy lroc Camaro ......... $6995
1990 Ply. Grand Voyager ......... $6295
Loeded, outo., juat In timafor vocd011.

•••

There's no speed limit on the
pursuit of excellence.
• • •
Middle age occurs when
you're too young to take up
golf and too old to rush up to
the net

Loeded, low mil•.

350 V-8, auto., air, T-topa.

Happiness makes up in height
what ~ lacks in length.

1991 Cadillac Aeetwood ...... $14,495
Lo..ted, leather.

1992 Buick Regal. ....•- .•.......•.•. $8990
Auto., V6, air, stereo,

P. windows &amp; locks .

SJJ 995oo

In the Kyger Creek LL Tournament

Pirates, Middleport
White Sox victors
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
The Tuppers Plains Pirates and
the Middleport White Sox captured
vtctoncs over Mason VFW and the
Gallipolis Whjtc Sox, respectively,
tn the second day of second -round
action in the Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament Monday night
to complete Thursday 's quarterfinal
picture.
Pirates 8, VFW 3
After a scoreless first inning, the
Pirates got on the board in the
second when Joe Brown, who got
the first of the five walks VFW
issued, advanced to second on a
wild pitch, got to third when catcher
Rocky Kearns held the ball and
scored on Kearns' errant throw to
third .
But VFW erased the Pirates' 1-0
lead in the third when Brown, who
hit Jeb Johnson with a pitch and
walked Kearns, saw his first pitch to
Michael Northup rined beyond the
left center field fence for a three-run
homer.
In the bottom of the third,
Tuppers Plains got back into
contention when Wcs Shafer's oneout double to right ccnt.cr scored No.
9 hitter Ben Wolfe. During Dustin
Kehler' s at-bat, Shafer used two
wild pitches to get home and tie the
game at 3-3. Kehler, who got an
infield single, later scored the goahead and eventual winning run by
taking advantage of a wild pitch
sandwiched between throwing
errors by shortstop Joey DiVeceno
and Keams.
While Brown and Shafer (four
strikeouts, seven walks) kept Mason
scoreless the rest of the way from
the hiU, the Pirates kept the heat on
by scoring in the next two frames.
Northup and reliever Johnson
registered eight strikeouts and five
walks for VFW.
The Tuppers Plains hillers were
Kebler, Shafer (both 2-3), Brown,
Brian Cowdery, Jeremy Connolly,
Corey Whitlatch and Brad Willford
(all 1-3). Mason's hillers were
DiVeceno (double), Johnson,
Northup and Josh Reed (all 1-3}.
Inning totals
VFW .... ...............003 000 = 3-9-1
Pirates .................013 13x = 8-4-0
WP-Brown
LP-Northup

--

Middleport 11, Gallipolis I
In this White Sox battle, the fourinning mercy -rule affair was
highlighted by the pitching success
of Aaron Vanlnwagen (eight
strikeouts, two walks and one hit
surrendered in a complete-game
effort} as much as it was by
Middleport's
second-inning
fueworks.
Middleport's Kyle Smiddie and
James Stanley started the game with
an infield single and a single to left.
Smiddie came home on Derek
Baker's ground-rule double before
Vanlnwagen's back-to-the-mound
groundout got SJanley home.
Gallipolis made its opening
argument in the bottom of the ftrst
when leadoff hiller Cory Perroud ( 1-

. Southern sports
physicals to start
Wednesday

HVRRY!!!

Lo..ted, 4 door, V6.

Sports physicals for the South·
ern Local School District will be
'. held on Wednesday, July 20 and
' Wednesday, July 27 at the office of
Douglas D. Hunter, M.D. in
Racine.
Physicals will be for all sports
for the 1994-95 school year and
will be held according to the fol . lowing schedule: July 20 from 8:30
a.m. to noon for boys in grades 7-9;
I to 5 p.m. for boys in grades !012; July 27 from 8:30a.m. to noon
for girls in grades 7-9; I to 5 p.m.
:. for girls in grades 10-12.
•
Physicals will be done free of
: · charge only on these days. To
: receive a physical, athletes must
· · bring a completed sports physical
: · card, signed by a parenJ or legal
: · guardian. Cards arc available at
·. Hunter's office in Racine or at
: · Southern Hi~h School. Athletes
· . should dress m shorts and T-shirts
: for their exams.

2), whose doubl e to ce nter was
earned when he barel y beat center
fielder Jcrrod Staats' throw to
second , scored when No. 6 hitter
Charlie Weaver was hit by a pitch
with the bases loaded. But
Middleport kept its lead when
Van! nwagen fired a throw to catcher
Brant Dixon to nail Mathew Bush at
the plate during Brian Barnes' at-bat
to end the mning.
Gallipolis only got to third base
once after thaL
Then came the riot.
Scott Johnson, who led off the
Middleport second with a single to
center, doubled in a run and scored
two of his team 's eight runs in the
frame , which was highlighted by
two-run singles by Vanlnwagen and
Staats as well as a pair of run scoring singles by Derek Johnson .
The only run that didn't come in as
a result of a hit was when Dixon
was forced in because SJantey was
walked.
Balcer outdid himself in the third
with a one-out solo homer coming
off Josh Sanders' 1-1 pitch.
Starter Mathew Bush and
Sanders combined to strike out four
and walk two.
Middleport's hits came from
Derek Johnson (2-2), Scott Johnson,
Baker (both 2-3}, Dixon (double) ,
Smiddie, Staats, Stanley and
Vanlnwagen (all 1-3).
Inning totals
Middleport ...............28l 0 = 11 -Il -l
Gallipolis ................ .IOOO = 1-l-1
WP- Vanlnwagen
LP-Bush

obWIUI.a-tlod~-·-·
r ...... "'.- Pocilio
t...-

c.SI!ATTLB MARINERS; Pun:h"ee

dto - - " ' ~ GIJDoliU, ........
J..uonv;tJe oliho-

r....,..

7SHOWROOMS

II WAREHOIJSES

Rutland Furniture
Rl. 124, Rutl•t Ol 742·2211

,

,

l~.
JOHNSON DOUBLES- The Middleport White Sox's Scoll
Johnson sprints toward first base arter nailing a double to right center field to score Jerrod Staats in the second inning of Monday night's
Kyger Creek Little League Tournament contest against the Gallipolis
While Sox at the Kyger Creek Employees Club field. The hit, one of
eight hits Middleport had in the frame, kept an eight-run rally alive
and helped the visitors win 11-1. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

RAKER HOMERS - The Middleport White Sox's Seth Raker
(left) is greeted at the plate by teammate Aaron Vanlnwagen after the
former's solo homer in the third inning of Monday night 's Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament game, which Middleport won Il -l
to move into the quarterfinals. (0VP photo by G. Spencer (h1wrne)

Browns happy after getting Snow for linebacker corps
BEREA, Ohio (AP} - Percy
Snow, newly signed by the Cleveland Browns, has as many questions as others about his four-year
Iinebacking odyssey in the NFL
"! know a lot of people want to
know what went wrong with me,"
said Snow, who si~ned with the

Browns on Sunday. -.. , can understand that. A lot of times, I still ask
myself what went wrong."
Browns defensive coordinator
Nick Saban, who recruited Snow to
play at Michigan State, said Snow
has an excellent chance to make the
team as a middle linebacker.

''Sometimes when you know a
person, you can get the best out of
him ," Saban said. "I just hope we
can get him to play like I know he
can.''
Snow, the 13th overall pick in
the 1990 draft, signed a one-year
deal with the Browns for the NFL

Belle appeals suspension in corked bat case
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Seemingly caught red -handed, Albert
Belle still wants his day in court.
Suspended Monday by the
American League for attempting to
use a corked bat, Cleveland's badboy slugger immediately appealed
the ruling and declared through his
agent that he had been wronged.
The I 0-day suspension will be
delayed until AL president Bobby
Brown hears the appeal in New
York on July 29.
Belle is no stranger in the AL
offices. This is the fourth straight
season Brown has suspended him,
including twice for charging pitchers and once for hitting a heckler in
the chest with a baseball.
Belle was also once demoted to
the minors for loafing, and he spent
part of the summer of 1990 in an
alcoholism rehabiliJation program.
If the suspension stands, it will
be his longest yet.
"We are outraged by the claim
and feel that it is no more than a
well-timed charge concocted by the
White Sox in the heat of a pennant
race with Cleveland," Am TeUem,
Belle's agent, said in a statemenl
"We me confident that once all of
the facts are brought forward at the
hearing, no impropriety by Albert
Belle will be found."
The evidence suggested otherwise. Belle's ~at, supplied to the

Corrugated Aaphell Roofing

•
•
•
•
•
•

WAS $24,275. Lo~ti;,; 100 miiM.

::J1 DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

5
____,

..

Correction: It was reported
Monday that the Racine Athletics
beat Point Pleasant's T-Shirts &amp;
More 1-0 in Saturday's first-round
action.
The Athletics won I 0-0.
The scribe regrets the error.

1994 Ford LID.Bi:&amp;n Vlct... $19,994

A-Lape
NEW YOlK YANKJ!ES, Reo.Uee
Slellia!:!''"''*·
pitdter. from Albon7
oltbe
Leope. Opti&lt;onod Dove Siliofiolder, ID Calombou ol lbo .......
liaaoll.eoelo.
,. OUl.AND ATHLETICS: Ploced
Corb Roy., pitdou, ..... ll-4oy ...

•

,J

league by the Indians after someone in the Cleveland organization
took it from the umpires' sealed
dressing room in Chicago's
Comiskey Park, was found to contain cork when it was X-rayed and
sa wed open Monday .
Filling part of a bat with cork
can make it lighter and easier to
swing.
The Indians have not disclosed
who broke into the umpires' room
and switched bats in the clumsy
attempt to protect Belle. The culprit
apparently scrambled through a
crawlspace above the ceiling to get
into the locked room during Friday
night's game.
The switch was discovered the
next day by umpire Dave Phillips,
who seized Belle's bat at the insistence of White Sox manager Gene
Lamont.
"I didn ' t know if it was corked
or not," Lamont said. "Once it left
the umpire's office, you kind for
took for granted it was probably
corked. Evidently they gave the
right bat back."
The Indians said Belle, who has
avoided reporters most of the year,
would make no formal sJatement.
While in Chicago, Belle denied
using an illegal bat, saying, "If I
used a corked bat, I'd have 50
home runs by now.''
Belle raised some eyebrows last
season when he insisted on relriev.

1993 Nissan 4X4 Ext. Cab .... $13,980
1985 Chevy K10 4X4 •.•.. ·--····-···$7460

NORTII~P HOMERS- Mason VFW's Mic hal'i North up is
hugged by hLS teammates short ly after pulling his team into thl" lead
~ilh his three-~un homer i~ the third inni n ~ of Monday night's
Ky~er Creek Ltllle League 1 ournamenl game a~a in st th e Tuppers
Plams Ptrales. However, Mason co uldn 't hold back Tuppers Pl&lt;&gt;in,,
which won 8-3. (OVP phot o by G. Spencer Osborne)

-·-·-·-

Air, at.-110 with c••"-·

BasebaU

HEADING OUT- The Tuppers Plains Pirates' Wes Shafer heads
out or the batter's box after getting his team's first hit - an infield
single- orr Michael Northupin the first inning of Monday night ' s
Kyger Creek Little League Tournament game near Cheshire. Shafer
had two hits, knocked in a run and scored once to help the Pirates
win 8-3. (OVP pboto by G. Spencer Osborne)

Here's a peek into the future.
Today - Racine Athletics vs.
Bidwell Pirates, 6 p.m.; Rutland
Reds vs. Green No. 2, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Vinton vs .
Gallipolis Yankees, 6 p.m.;
Hubbard's Greenhouse vs . Village
Pizza Inn, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday - Tuppers Plains
Tigers vs. Green No. 2, 6 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains Pirates vs.
Middleport White Sox, 7:30p.m.

1991 Chevy 510 Pickup ...•.•.•••$5,495

Transactions

\t

HURRYI

Long bed, ... to., 56,001) mil•

Milw•utee. tl

-

.Do

GMC:TRuc:K. ~

a•.

-

(614)·992-6614

1995 CHEVY LUMINA

BATTING: O'Neill, New Y..S, .38t ;
Thomu, Cbical'rte-:375; l.d\.on, CLEVELAND, .36&gt;1;
CUM!LAND, .341;
W. CJ.Ur., Tea-. .141; C. O.vil, Californio, .l4t; Palmoiro, Boltimom, .338; B"'·
Now Yolt, .331; MolilOr, Toronto,
.338.
RUNS ' n,...,.., CIUcoao. 91; Lofton.
CLEVELAND, 14; Can.~eco, Tau, 78;
Orif!oy, S..ulc, 71; Pbillipo, llctrod, 76;
Btcra•. CLEVE. LAND, 73; Belle,
CWVELAND, 7 t
RBI: Puclr.etl, Minncaolll. 36; Carter,
Toronto, IS; Thm~u , Chicago, &amp;4; Siem,
Oakland. 79; Ftmcc::a, OUcaso, 79; Bd.le,
CLEVEl.AND, 71 ; W. CaD., TIHU, 78;
eu...co, T..... 11.
HITS : Lofton, CLEVELAND, 132;
Bacraa. CLEVELAND, 124; Molitor,

23.
9-5) at Toronto

Ill

'eco nd 0~ a Wild pitch by Tt ll &gt;
Leary and a double by Paul So~ rcn to , and ~hey llcdh&gt;t at 3 on Ca rlo,
Bacrga s 14 th ome run 111 _tho
llwd. Bacrga has hll 111 15 strat ght
games.
.. .
.
Cleveland hm shcd ~ca ry 111 ti&gt;e
fo_u\th , taktng a 5-3 lead 0 ~. Aln mM s RBI S&gt;n gle and a run -sconn~
for~~oul by Loft?" ·
.
. I J~~t did n l have g~od stuf l
tunigi.&gt;l, Gnmslcy srud. 1 got by
bastcaii y by changmg speeds and
gcttmg them 10 hllthc ball on the
ground. Thts team can _come b;~ck
from JU St about anytlung. We rc
going to win a lot of ballgames tl
we (pitchers) just keep these guys
close."
Former President George Bush.
in town for Republican fund -ra ising events , wa tched part of th e
game from a sea l several row s
hchmd the Texas dugout. Bush \
son is a general partner of th e
group that owns the Rangers.

~m

( 614)·992·6614 ( 800)·837-1094 (

AL leaders

""""-Dol-

Toalgbl's pmes

cra.z

Agreed to teems whh Marlo Perry,
linebacker.

ttl;

lanta,l14; PJ. Martinez. Montreal, 112
SAVES: D. Jonca, Pbil•ddphia, 23;
Beck, Saa fnneilco, 21; Franco, New
YOlk, 20; McMicbool, Aduno, 19; Myan,
OUcaso. II; HudS., Houaton, IS; Rojas.
Mont...t, tl.

Douoil. 24: M. v••p.. a-, zt: su.-

c.lifomil 13, &amp;.on 4

(IAAwil:ll4-l),

AllAmA FALCONS ' Signod Lon«
Zcno, of"fcruivc linan10 . W1ivod Mike
GaM, defcnrive end.
BUFFALO BIJ.l..l, Signod ldf Bwrit,
delauivc b1ck, to a four-you c:onl.nct.

Sabarn.aen. New York. liS ; Glavine., At-·

lhom••· au~ao. 27; B•cqa, CLEVE-

Monday's scons

(T•~ani

Dmbtm, defensive. tackle, to a ~year
cantncl.

26; D. Lcwu, San FnnciJco, 2!5; Mouton,
22; LaJirin, CINaNNAn, 22.
PITOUNO (10 doci1iona): Mcrcl.er.
Allmta, 1-2, .800, 3.59; Freemm, Colondo, 1-l, .100, 3.03; K. Hill, Moo...t,
13~4, .76_3, 3. 31; Dann7 Juhon,
Pbil•dctphu, t t-4, .733, 3.3l; S.bcrlo•·
sen, Now Yodi, 10-4, .7t4, 2.92; G. Mod·
dua. Alllllla, 12-S, .706, 1.7S; Nitld, Colorado, 9-4, .692, 4.31 ; Rijo, CINCINNAn, 9-4, .692. 2. 97.
STRIKEOUTS: Bcnc1, Stn Dicao,
tl2; Rijo, CINCINNATI , 1211; G. Mod·

Delroil, 29; Pucken, Minne1ota, 28;

Wfll.tm ()ty61Joa

Minnesota

Gwynn, San Dietlo.lll.
TIUPLES: ButlCIJ, Lot Anplc:~, I; R.
Sondan, CINClNNATI. 7; Mao.~.,;, t...
Antpla,l; C.yton, San Fnncioco, l ; D.
Lcwil, San Pranciaoo, !§; Sot1, OtiCIJO,
5; Ali&lt;ca, St. LoW, l; SandbaJ, Chic•·

2?:

Wednesday's pmea

11

National Football Leaa~~e
ARIZONA CARDINALS : Cl•imod
Mich1el Bnndon fJ1J111 lndUinipOlil and
Danyl Milburn from New Orlcant, dafanlive ends, off wtive.n.Siancd Micb.tel

Walklw, Monlftl&amp;l, l4; BtcMttc. Colondo,
21 ; Monia, CINCNNA 11, '¥7; Bagwell.

" I think the b&gt;ggcst goal is_~eal lyJu St stay&gt;ng 111 flfst place, he
satd.
Texas squand e red an ea rly
th ree-run lead but came back to tic
it 5-5 m the seventh on a two-ru n
single by Ivan Rodriguez off Mesa.
In th e ninth , Me sa yie ld ed a
one-out double by Jeff Frye before
Canscco hi t hi ' two-out double.
"We hit some balls hard hut
right at people," Cleve land managcr Mik e Hargrove said. "They hit
some b&lt;&gt;IIs hard , too, but they also
had so me key balls that were ju st
out of our reach. Rodriguez's h:; in
the seventh hopped four or fi ve
times (i n the infiel,d). But you have
to give them c red~ for P)Uting the
ball in play."
, .The Rangers scored three off
Jason Grimsley 111 the second on an
RBI double by Lee and Da vid
Hulse 's two-run smglc.
The Indian s scored twice in the

1o

FootbaU

Bi&amp;aio, H011110r1,11l.
DOUBLES: Biag:io, HOUlton, 35; L

dua. Allanto, t2!1; F"''""· ManttW.

riJhll

ciulionil, guud, and 8)'1011 Hou.toa, forwanl.

CINCINNATI, 31; Grinom, Moouul,
30; Bigic! HCN~LOn,
Carr, Florid1,

San Die11o (Aahby 4-8) 11 Mont.rtal
(Martinez 6--5). 7:3S p.m
to. Angela. (Gro.s 7+6) ll New York
(Jom» 1().1). 7:40 em.
San frmciJco (Black 3-0) 1t Ptilladcl·
pllio (l•W.. tl-4), 7:3l p.m.
Atlanu (Avery 6-l) at Piltlburah
(Uoba-l-4), BS p.m.
florida (Gardner 3-2) at CINCINNATI
(Smil&lt;y 11-9~ 7:3l pin.
SL Loud (Palaci01 1-7) ll Houtt«&lt;
(Kilio 6-4), lir.l p.m.
Chic.•so (l'nchael. 1-6) at Colorado
(Nied 9-4), 9ft\ p.m.

JCUJ (FijaniO $-1)
(N•I)' 7-6). 7ir.l.!""

Bicheue, Colorada , 125; ~orril ,
CINONNAU 123; Galam.aa. Colondo,
121; Baa well, Howton, 116; Mondui,
l..ol AnJclCII, 113; Cooinc, Flcxida, I 13;

23.
STOLEN BASES : D. Sanden,

o.iel., '· Cdorado 3
Tonight's games

... _ .......... ..4S
Ooklond ................44
Colifomio ..............40
Scaa.Je .................. .31

qaircd Ricky Picn;e, guard; the

Carlot Rogen, forwud -centcr; 1nd two
ICICU'Id·round pick• i.n the 1995 draft from
W Scaulc SupmtWa for Sarunu J.W..

Colondo, 23; M.iu:beU, ONONNATI,

1Uwlootl. S..Louioot2

Te.~.•

Buketball
N•llonal Bcaltetball Auocl•llon
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS : Ac -

ao,.5.
HOME RUNS : Mut William•. San
FranciJco, 34; Baawell, Houlton, 29;
Bmdo, S.. Fnncioco, 28; G.wng, Cof.
ondo, 21; McOritr, Allanta, 2..5; Bichcuc.

Mmtrelll 9, Sin · o 2
t... ........ 1, New ••u (10 inn.)
San Franciooo 1' Pbilodetploio l

SO

RBI: B•awcll. Houuoo, 89; Bicheue,
Colondo, !9; Piazza, to. Anacla. 78:
Galarnp, Colondo, 71; M1tt Willianu ,
San~ 74; Morril, CINCINNAn
70; L Walkc:r, Monueal, 68; McGriff, At·
lantt, 61.
HITS : T. Gwynn, Stn Dieao, 129;

Ho\lltoo, 26; 1. Bell, Piuabw-Jh, 26; T.

W.tern pt.,Woa
Color&amp;e» ................46
San FranciKo ........4-4
San Dicao ............. .31

DcUsn•ted Milt Hill, pitcher, rar ~ ­
ment. Signed Doua Carroll. outfielder.
and Randy Vid.en, third ba~Cman . A• signcd Carroll to Bellinaham of the
NOf\hwc.t l...c:aguc.

c
RUNS : ~·aweU, Howton, 79; Grit lorn, Montreal. 7S: G&amp;lam.aa. Coiondo.
73; _Bigio, Houlton, 72; ~ord, St.
LoW.a, 71 ; Bondi, Saa FnncuQO, 69; T.
Gwynn, s.. Di'lo, 66.
.328.

Baseball

The Indian s, back from a 5-5
road trip, los t for onl y th e fifth ti me
mtheir Iast 29 home games and fell
a ga me be hind til e AL Centra lleading Chicago White Sox. The
loss came hours after the Indians
learned that Albert Beiie, their AllStar slugger, had been found gurlty
of usi ng a cork ed bat during a
weekend series in Chicago.
Bell e appealed hi s 10-da y suspensiOn and w1II keep playmg until
IllS case IS heard by American
League president Bobby Brown on
July 29. He went l -for-4 aga inst
Texas, lining a double to left in the
fifth inning, and is 3-for-16 sin ce
hi s bat was confiscated Friday
night.
The Rangers lead the AL West
at45-4 7, the latest that any division
lcader lias ever had a sub-.500
record. Canseco, though, said th e
Rangers aren't obsessed with getting back to .500.

Tuesday, July 19, 1994

--1'~.

8

I;IJN;QO

Sll. I;OH;QO
llrl.t:tH:OO

Carter Lumber
Athens
614-594-4269

R 00FJN G SALE

Faat, eaay imtallation
Goes directly .over old roof
Won't nut or co"ode
Reduces noiae
Providea added imulation
Lifetime limited wa"anty

Sale

Sale

10.99*

$41.76*

48" x 79" Sheet

Per Mal- Square

*White
*Brown
*Red
Black
Gray
Green
Tan
Blue
*In Stock Colors (At least 32 oquareo in olock)

ing the barrel of his bat from fan s
in Minnesota after it had broken off
and llown into the stands. Lamont
said he got suspicious because he
had "heard some things" and
because the White Sox stJ i'f
noticed that Belle was hitting a lot
of long balls to right field.
The Indians, however, said they
were unaware Belle had ever used
a corked bat.
"I don't know how often he
used it, or even if he used it," manager Mike Hargrove said. "I don't
know if that was the first time he
took it to the plate. And until we
find out some of the particulars .
we're going to slay behind Albert
and support Albert in this and see
where it goes."

I

I

AU 0

H
I

•

E
I

~

Slale Aulo's already
loiN premiums can be
reduced even m01e by
insuring both your car
and home wtth the Slate
Aulo Companies. . ·
Lei us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

minimum of $162,000 , w11h perfor- in a motor scoote r acc 1l1cn t and
wound up sitting out the year. He
mance incentives of up $300,000.
He made $600,000 in his first underwent surgery and hail a pin
se ason · when th e Kan sas Cit y inserted in the ankle.
" Th at's when my caree r went
Chiefs made him their top pick.
Snow, who was cut by Kan sas dow nhill, or a1 leas t ca me to a
City and Chicago in the past year, standstill," he said.
ended his career at Michigan State
Snow recovered from his ankle
as the school's all-time leadin g injury but has yet to houncc back to
tackler. He also received the Lom - the same performance level of his
bardi Award, given to the nation's first NFL season. In 1992, Snow
top college lineman. and th e was relegated to a backup and speButkus Award , given to the best cmls teams pla yer by Chi efs coach
linebacker.
Marty Schottcnhcimcr.
In hi s first season with th e
After the Ch&gt;efs rcleJscd him in
Cltiefs, Snow backed up his awards training camp in I 99 3. he wa s
by starting 15 of 16 games and fin- picked up by Chicago, which also
tshing fifth on the team in tackles.
used him as a back up and special
But during training camp the team s player before releasi ng him
next season, Snow broke his ankle in May.

FUN FOR KIDS
Big Bend Youth Football League
Is Organizing For 94·9 5 Season.
Purpose: To teach basic skills and to develop an
understanding ~f basic football rules for 5th and
6th graders. To foster good sportsmanship and
positive attitude.
Structure: Develop as many teams as there is an
Interest for_
Signup Dates are: July 16, 10 AM-1 PM;
July 21, 6 PM-8 PM; July 28, 6 PM-8 PM;
August 2, 6 PM-8 PM.
Location: Strike Zone on Front Street, Pomeroy
Players: Cannot be 13 years old priorto September 1,
1994. Copy of birth certificate required.
Fees: Fees for each player is $14.00 membership and
$36.00 equipment use.
I am interested in having my son or daughter partici·
pate in this year's football season.
MAIL TO: B.B.Y.F.L- BOX 190, POMEROY, OH. 45769

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

Name _____________________________

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

;./!j .State Auto
1nsurance Companies

Address-------------Age _ _Telephone No. _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Anyone interested in helping with the organization of
this year's season, please feel free to call.
Dave Jenkins- President 992-2117
Lisa Roush - Secretary 992-3486

�. Page- 6-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 19, 1994

SUV chapter discusses Gen. Sherman's March
The ne wly -formed BrooksGrant Camp No. 7, Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War, met at
the Hope Baptist CIIUrch annex in
Middl eport for its regular meeting
with Co mmander Ke 11h Ashley
pres iding.
Commander Ashley announced
that due to delays on the national
leve l, the camp's charter would be
de layed. That allo ws for anyone
suit interested to become a charter
member until Jul y 3 L
The Na tional Department SUV
will be meeting in Aug ust at Lansing, Mich. , with this camp's commander as a national delegate. The
featured spea ker will be Ed
Bearh hs, historian of Gettysburg
Battlefield, a~ the featured speaker.
A new, 34-star U.S. OaR was

be taken from cemeteries. Upon mating membership. Volunteers
motion of the camp, letters will be arc needed to man the booth.
sent to state and national legislators
Ashley announced that there
supponin g thi s resolution.
was an offer made to this camp to
In Civil War preservation , the fum1sh complete Union outfits with
commander reported that there is weapons for the re-enactment of
information concerning the pur· the Raid on Guyandoue at Huntchase of 400 acres of battle ground ington, W.Va., on Nov. 12 -13 .
in Virginia being purchased by a Tho se interested need to contact
Holly wood ac tor for preservation. the commander soon if interested.
Also, the destruction of Johnson 's
With Memorial Day being startIsland Civ il War Prison in Lake ed by Union veterans, celebrations
Erie has not occurred as the devel - involved camp members with paroper has been at least temporarily ticipation at the Burlingham and
slo pped by the •prese nce of an Frost celebrations, the Chester
endangered species.
parade, and the encampment at
The camp will panicipate in the Centerville.
upcoming re-enactment at BuffingTerrence Cummings of Spencer,
ton' s Island at Ponland. An infor- W.Va. , announced the planned
mation booth is planned for pro - dedication of a monument to Civil

presented to the camp by Michael
Trowbridge of Ga llipoli s and
James Mourn mg of Middleport.
This IS the nag used during most of
the Civ il War.
The camp's proposed const itu tion is finaliz ed and will be available to sec by the ncXI meeti ng .
A report on the Ohio Depart ment SUV mee tin g in June was
give n by th e co mmander. One
important action by the department
was a reso luti on asking for slate
and federal legislation makin g it an
offense to privatc ly own veterans'
grave nag holders or for recyclers
to handle them as scrap.
Ashley pointed out that the se
arc showing up in Ilea markcl5 as
col lcctihlc i1cms when they had to

papers used outrageous stories as
propaganda. Sherman liked this as
he u:td the fear to a psychological
advalptagc. Also, th e arrival of
escapees from Andersonville
Prison enraged the Union sold iers
causing them to show little mere y .
in foraging.
S~nnan tried to ask civilians to
remove them selves from the path
of war for their 12rotcction but
failed to do so in many cases. Sherman changed th e way war was
fought forever by eliminating the ·
civilian support of enemy armies.
Serving rcfrcshmenLI was Alan
Holter. Members also looked at
several pictures of old Union soldiers. TI1e next meeting will be on
September 12 al the church .

War veterans on Nov . 5 at Spencer.
He asked the camp to participate in
it.
Plans for th e trip to Gen. Sherman's home m Lancaster, Ohio,
were set for Saturday, Jul y 23.
Member s will be leaving from
Hope Baptist Church at noon that
day . Anyone interested in going
may contact th e co mma nd er at
992-7874 to arrange transportation.
The cost of admission is $3.
The program for the evening
was presented by Ashley on the
"March to the Sea" by Gen .
William T. Sherman of Lancaster,
Ohio. Ashley studied this march to
see how much of the alleged war
atrocities were fact and fiction.
He pointed out that so uthern

Woman's toenail '· clipping cause~ ~~barrassment in office
. Dear Ann Landers_: One mommg, after I had setded 10 at my desk
at wo~, lfbeganhatto feet extreme
di scom.oo rom w I was sure was
·
nail The an mgrownthatoc ,:__... pamff becarnsh c
so severe
1_1 """:'"' o my oe
and sock to reUeve IL I then got out
my nail cl1ppers and tnmmed the
Problem nai-1
'
··
1 wasca lied
_ A .ew mmutes 1
'" to the supemsor s office. He
seemed QUite embarrassed and
fmally asked if I had been cutung
my toenails at my desk I told him
. h
' "~
yesknI had 'Hand asked
.d w hy e wan;
toffi owh. ehSai_ someone 111
o 1ce t oug l II was extreme1y
f~
· and 1
not to do ·1 ·
1
~sensexac
vet wordswao;ere "If 01 agamneed.
w
Yu

•W:·

.
.
. .
to tnm your ~nads, please don '"
the bathroom.
Ann , I was not displaying my
private pans. This is my fool we're
lkin bo 1
desk,
18
g a ut. was at my own
not both cri ng anyone. I am
ewemely annoyed that my
supervisor reprimanded me about
this. What is your opinion? Was
h
f e out o 1me1 -- MIFFED IN
CALIFORNIA
DEAR MlfFED: Sorry, friend,
the supervisor -was not out of line.
You were . Toenails should be

Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response to the column about male
violence.
American women may have it
.
.
rougherthanmenmcenarnrespects
but emotionally, men are definitely
at a disadvantage.
It 15
.
iall ..,..._,0 , . ~
soc Y~1e or women
to cry, scream, kiss or hug other
women, act Oaky or Oirty and
indulge in all sorts c:i behaviC::.. that
would cost 8 man his job, marriage
and
.
reputabon.
"Real men· aren't penniued to do
any of the above A man who cries
screams or hug; a member of ~
same sex is immediately suspect If
.
.
·.
he 1s overly sympathetic, he 1s
considered a wimp.
Violence is by far our worst

clipped at home or in the washroom.
This intimate bit of personal
grooming should not be performed
· ·
f
'" VIew 0 your colleagues. Your
gaffe was crude and indefensible.

Last month, lhc factory closed. and
I lost my job. I am desperate. What
can I do?-- CHICAGO MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER : I strongly
d
A ES
h
recommen
.. , .,
t e
Association for Children for
Enforcement of Support A.CE.S.
can [XOVide you with 8 free packet
f . ,
.
.
o tn•onnauon telling~u how to
••n--A and hat
gel """tcu
w to . y ou can
also gel answers to q
·ons about
Slate agencies and learn how to use
them 10 get what you need. A.CE.S.
ha
s a 75 percent success rate m
helping people collect child suppon
money. And it is free.
For more information, write to:
AcES 2260 u
A
T
-. · · -·
pton ve., .aledo,
Oh1o 43606, or call the toll-free
number: 1-800-537-7072.

soc tal d1sease. Its also the most
socially acceptable way for men to
express themselves. Please, Ann,
point 8 finger at the unhealthy
·
stereotypes 1n our country.
American males need to have !heir
eyes opened. __ BEEN llffiRE IN
CALIR&gt;RNIA
C
.
,
D_EAR_ ALIF._: You ve made a
id
1 call ·~- J-~- w
val pomt.
It u"' vou• ayne
Syndrome.bomc:ifrontierdays. The
only solution is for parents to
concentrate on tenderness and
.
demgmte VIolence.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
has not paid any child support for
our three children (all under JO) for
-~- 1
!4
th E
·
u~&lt;&gt; ast
moo s. very ume 1
complain to the state agency,
nothif18 happens.

c

No Rain Checks
Will Be Issued

SHOPPER
c VALUE
POP
j
-------FLAVORITE
SHOPPER
c
VALUE
BROCCOLI
ORANGE JUICE
CUTS
________ I
COUPON

4LB.BAG

I

--~!?:!!L~'!: LI~IJ.!_ ________

c

COUPON

12 PK.12
S17-07-025- LIMIT 1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

oz. CANS

I

are evt:rywhere. They're
eary to get, easy to use and evt:n
easier to get lwoked on. If you havt
questions about drugs, you nud Ann
Landers' booldtt, 'The Lowdown on
Dope." Send a self-addressed, long,
business-siu envt:lope and a check
or money order for $3.~ (this includes postage and handling) to:
Lawdown, c/o AM Landers, P.O..
Box ll562, Chicago, 1/1. 606JJ0562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1/2 GAL.

---~:!.?~?_-o.!~.!:!!I!_!_

---

.J

------------,

COUPON

MEDIUM 3DOZ.
EGGS

$1 00

I

BREAD
3LB. BAG

LAY'S
POTATO
CHIPS

THORNAPPLE
VALLEY
WIENERS

2/$)

49
REG. $2.99 SIZE

12

oz.

c

POWELL'S

c

SQUARES

conaldered. Each envelope,

containing the proposal,
must be plainly marked,
"Round 8, S.C.I.P. Pro}ecta".
Bid Spoclflcatlono may be
picked up at . the Malga
County Engineer'• Office,
34110 Fairgrounds Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The aucceaaful contractor

may be required to lurnlah
any lab work as required by
the Melg1 County Engineer.
The Meigs County
Commissioners reaarva the

rlghl to accept or reject any
or all bids, or any part
thereof.
Gloria l&lt;loes, Clerk
Board of Meigs County
Comml11ionars
(7) 12, 19; 2TC

CHESTER - Vacadtion Bible
school, New Life Covenant
Church, Chetser, through Friday.
Ages, 3-19, 6:45p.m to9 p.m.
Theme; "Son Country."
ROLL

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Red Cross
bloodmobile, I to 5:30 'p.m.
Wedneay at the Senior Citizens
Center. Anyone over 17 and weighing more.than liO pounds eligible
to donate blood.
RUTLAND- Leading Creek
Conservancy District, regular meeting, Wednesday, 5 p.m at office.
Public welcome.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Free
child's immunization clinic, 9:30 to
11 a.m. at the TuppeFs Plains Fire
Department; I to 3 p.m. at
ReedsviUe Fire Department.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA, 7 p.m Thursday at Sacred
Hean Catholic Church.

79

Reunion policy

COUPON

: STRIPLE VENDOR !
SERVED 10AM -2 PM

Aa a prerequisite lor
bidding, only MBE
BITUMINOUS SUPPLIERS
lhat are qualified _ MBE
BIDDERS
will
be

POMEROY - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Deparmtnet
committee Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
the town halL

I

PIZZA

requirement.

House, Pomeroy, Ohio until
10 A.M. on Friday, tho 29th
day of July, 1994. Tho bide
will be opened at 1 :30 P.M.
on Friday, the 29th day or
July, 1994 and rood aloud.
This will be an MBE
PROCUREMENT
CONTRACT lor supplying
AC-20 bllumlnoua liquid,
delivered to Plant No. 5 Richards and Son, Letart,
Ohio. This material shall
conform lo tho Pertinent
Stale of Ohio Department of
Htghwoya Conetructlon ond
Malerlata Specifications
manual.
THIS WILL BE A TOTAL
TONS BID : Tho MBE
Supplier will bid total tona
OF AC·20 LIQUID that can
be delivered for a fixed

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Fraternal Order
of Eagles Auxiliary 2171, Tuesday,
7:30p.m.

r-----------------------

1

Commlaalonere In the Court

stated amount, from a bank,

doing business within the
ocope of Ohio Bonking
Lawe, will be accepted oa
complying with the bonding

ground

storage

tank,

altitude vault, and flush
hydrant, located on State
Route 124, approximately
1.2 miles west of State
Route 160 In Wilkesville
Township, Vinton County,
Ohio.
Additional Information
and spoclltcattons may be
obtained at the District
office at 34481 Corn Hollow
Rd., Rutland, Ohio, 45n5.
Each bid muot be
enclosed in an envelope

which IS aeeled end plainly
marked TANK PAINTING
BID. Such bid envelope

COUPONS GOOD WEDNESDAY JULY 20, 1994 ONLY

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFEOIVE JULY 20, 1994 ONLY

must also contain the full
the oame and must be
accompanied by a 10% Bid
Bond In the lull amount of
eech proposal to the
oatisfacllon of tho Olatrlct
Board as a guaranty that If
the bid to accepted, a
contract will be entered Into
and
Its performance
aecured. On bide that are

rejected, the guarantee will
be promptly returned to the
blddere. On tho bid that Ia
accepted, such Bid Bond
will be returned to the
successful bidder upon
execution of the contract.
An Inspection tour of the

tanks will leave from the
otllce on July 21, 1994 to

those who call and make an

CONSTRUCTION

Dtcoratlve
Sales 11141
lnslalatloa

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

:

With the family reunion season
quickly approaching, ~y will be
submitting arucles of famtly acuvtties for publication.
To ensure prompt publication,
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
requests that articles be neatly
typed and double spaced for easy
editing. Reunion items should not
exceed 300 words and must be submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
No exceptions wiD be made.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editinB· Articl~
wiD be published as soon as poSSIble.

Thirty-one of you correctly
identified the seventh "Whatsa the
Name of That Song" which was
"My Happiness".
One entry which was on a postcard failed to identify the sender
and two names of persons who correctly identified tune six were left
out of those accomplishing that bit.
They are Rita White and Irma
Bales, both of the Cheshire area
and both of whom seem to always
know the tune in question.
Here are the readers who correctly identified tune seven "My
Happiness":
Ralph Graves,
Pomeroy; Don L. Snyder, Athens;
Earl Dailey, Middleport; Ramona

Grande.
Tina Stover, Melinda Norman,
Jonathan Struder and Michcla Head
joined students from throughout
Ohio leaminll about business and
free market economics.
Whilt Sllldents listen to and talk
with business leaders, they also
obtain "hands on" experience by

985·4473
7fW04

skil

Tl!,ese .and Olhel exercises show
the sdldents how to work as part of
a group c:i total strangers within 24
to 36 hows after !heir first meetinJ.
Sheryl Roush of ~ei~ ~If,

• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'
110 Court St. Pom9ro.,., Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Owlet 1·80()-291-5600

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Howard
Excavating Co.

FREE ESTIMATES

Interior &amp; Exterior
Taka the pain out of
painting. Let us do it
for you . Very reasonable.
Free Eallmatea
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe

(No Sunday Calls)

Tra iler Sites
Driveways , Septic
Systems, Water &amp; Sewer

lines , Land Clearing
Trucking: Limestone &amp;

Fill Dirt. Top Sot!

Reasonable Aalcs

appointment before 4:00
p.m. on July 14, 1994. The
tanks will not be drained lor
3125/94
this Inspection.
The Leading Creek . . - - - - . . - - - - - .
Conservancy District
TRI·STATE K·9
reserves tho right to waive
lnlormalltleo, to reject any
ACADEMY
and all bids or to accept
TUPPERS PLAINS
such bid that will best serve
Basic obedience,
the Dtslrtcl.
taw enforcement,
LEADING CREEK
personal prolecllon,
CONSERVANCY DISTRICT
kennel service, pupa &amp;
By: Robart F. Snowden,
Preeldent altho
young dogs lor sale.
Board of Dlrectore
Rottwailer &amp; Shepherd
(7) 5, 12, 19; JTC
Stud Service
By appt only

Estimates

992-3838 ' '" ""

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM11d
REMOVAL

Reasonable Rates

992·2269
1213C&gt;UTfN

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM

FREE

• carpet cleaning &amp; scotchgard • drapery
Iabrie • general cleaning

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE
4·7· 1 MO

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

AMERICAN GENERAl liFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

614-992-3470

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

Umealona: 15 lon &amp;
up $10.50 ton; 15 ton &amp;
under $11 .50 ton
Top Soli $6.50 loft
Gravel $11.50 loft· 7
Sand? - Low Ratea
And More
10 ton min_ on all.

MARTECH
• INDUSTRIES

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

Locally

992-3838

---

who served as a stall assistant this
year, commended the conference.
"As a business education teacher I am greatly thrilled with the,
conference and am so happy that I had a chance to ,Participate firsthand. I will defmitely insist on
Meigs County being re~nted at
next year's conference. she said.
Ohio business leaders and a
small number of college and university instructors make up the faculty for this conference which has
now been conducted for 22 consecutive years.

CLEANING SPECIAL

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

Hawk, Pomeroy: Ann Boso, Portland; Betty Curfman, Syracuse;
Joe N. Sayre
Bonnie Ransom, Racine; Louise
SAYRE TRUCKING
Hall Middleport; Betty Reibel,
Pom~roy; Margaretha Wolfe, Mid614-742·2138
dleport; Rita White, Cheshire;
611511 mo. pd.
Marie Boyd, Racine; Ann Lambert,
314193 1 MO
Pomeroy; Margaret Brooks, Route
3, Albany: Betty Denny, Middle- _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,.
port; Helen T. Smllh, Pomeroy;
Gussie Hostottle, Pomeroy; Pauline
Wolfe, Racine; Ruth Young, Middleport; Juanita Henson: Cheshire;
Mildred Milburn, Mtddlepon;
Residential
Mazie Hannahs, Pomeroy; Louise
Concrete
E. Gloeckner, Pomeroy; Irf!la
Bales, Cheshire; Belly Pooler, Mid- and Masonry Work
Delivered
Porches
dleport; Grace Warner, Pomeroy;
Sidewalks
Johnetta Chapman, Pomeroy;
Dorothy Oliver, Columbus; L&lt;Jreua .
Driveways
Beegle, Pomeroy, An_n Lambert,
614·992·7878
Pomeroy, and Margte Weaver,
SR 7 • Five Pointe
Bedford, Ky.
~·I'm always glad to learn that
thinking about the old tunes in trying to come up with an identificalose WeiJI!t lit• •uazy*
LoleWelghl
tion many times brings back some
No
Meetings
No
Weigh"lns
Guaranteed
pleasant memories for some of you.
No drug• or chemicals
And the winner of the $5 prize
Lose Pounds and Inches
Allor about
for "My Happiness" is Betty Pooler
Natural Herbal Tablets
one dollar a dayl
of Middleport.
44838.
1·800.796·6328
The ei$hth tune may cut down
your battlmg average. Copyrighted
in 1936, it was a standard for Judy
Garland over the years. The lyrics
go:
"You work, you save, you
11 Help Wanted
worry so,
"But you can't take your dough
when you go, go, go,
SKILLS
WANTED:
COMMUNITY
"So keep repeating it's the
INSTRUCTOR needed to teach community
berries,
and
personal skills .to an adult with learning
"The strongest oak must fall".
limitations in Middleport. Hours: 8 a .m. Sat.
Send you answers to Box 729B, The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy, or
thru 8 a .m. Mon; sleep-over required. High
drop them into ,the office. Will I
:?Chool degree, valid driver's license, good
hear from yQu?
driving record, three years licensed driving
experience, and adequate automobile
If memory serves me right, I
insurance coverage required. Salary: $5.00/hr,
believe there were some local resistart. Vacation/sick benefits. Training
to
dents aboard the Mississippi Queen
when it passed by last week. That
provided. If interested contact Cecilia at 1·
should be enough to help keep
800-531-2302. Equal Opportunity Employer.
them smiling for a while, but what
about the rest of us?

44

&amp;:1

•UGHT
HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

1&gt;nll1n

LIMESTONE,

2112112/tt'l'l

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

USED RAILROAD TIES

HAULING

614-992·7 643

Service
Con,plcl~ House &amp;

"

participating in one ofsix competing firms which design, produce
and sell a producl
Each companr selects and prepares its economiCS quiz bowl team
and a socio-economic issues debate
team. In addition, each company
sponsors speech and essay contes18JUS and produces a free enterprise

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

LINDA'S
. PAINTING &amp; CO.

Students attend free enterprise conference
Four Meigs County high school
students recently received college
credit after panicipUiDg in lhc one
week American Free Enterprise
and Leadership Conference conducted at the University of Rio

FREE ESTIMATES

S.i-1 mo

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

I'm sure I don't have to remind
you that the annual Meigs County
Fair-the !31st-gets underway in
less than a month. Then, back to
school. Isn't that"spaashal"?
Deadline for entries for all
departments is 4 p.m. on Aug. 12.
The fair board office on the fairgrounds will be open from 10 am.
to 4 p.m . on Aug. II and 12 to
accept your. entries.

1131/VIITF N

U"·Woad

Free Estimates
Residential , Commercial
and Industrial

by Bob Hoeflich
You've probably have read all
you wanted to know and more
·about "Tecumseh", an outdoor
drama dealing with the Shawnee
Indians and presented for over the
past 20 years at Chillicothe.
I've been pllmning to see it for
years on end and finally nailed
down that plan Saturday evening.
It is exceptionally well done and
well worth the trip. Admission is
reasonable considering the prices
you have to pay for professional
entertainment these days and the
drive is not all that bad. I don't
recommend the show for small
children. Most of them are understandably unaware of the story line
and can get pretty restless in the
over two hours involved in the presentation. A cast of over 70 performing in the well-planned settings of the large amphitheater
makes for an enjoyable outing.

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USID PARTS 101
All MAliS &amp; MODELS
992-TOUOR
992-SSS3 011
lOU fR£11 -IOH41-oG70
DARWIN, OHIO

ROBERT BISSELL

CaD Westen Auto
992·5515

name of every firm and/or
corporation with Interest In

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

f liKing Clwln

...

Community
calendar Beat of the Bend ...

2

FRESH
00
BAKED
APPL.E PIES

614·682·7676

Hn

614-667-PETS

200Z. LOAF

-WEDNESDAY LUNCH SPECIAL IN OUR BAKERY..

PRINGLE'S
POTATO
CHIPS

---------

C GAY 90's

YELLOW
ONIONS

the aucceaaful bidder must
file a 100% perlormanca
bond. A tenor eatabllahlng
cortltled line ol credit, In the

be

Dlatrlcl ol their office, 3448t
Corn Hollow Rd., Rutland,
Ohio until 5:00 p.m. on
Auguat 04, t 994. Blda ahall
bo lor the entire job ol
cleaning, da-woxlng,
sandblaatlng, and painting
or the Interior and exterior
of one (1) . 20,000 gallon,
13' OD x 20' Ht., ground
sforaga tank, altitude vault,
and flush hydrant, located
on State Route 143 near the
lntoroectlon of Scipio
Townahlp Road #141
(Horner Hill Rd.) In Scipio
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio; and one (1)- 100,000
gallon, 27' OD x 24' Hl,

COUPON

BOUNTY
PAPER
TOWELS --------

Call

Public Notice

received and opened by the
Leading Creek Conservancy

Public Notice

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
BID NOTICE FOR
DESIGNATf'D ROUND 8
(S.C.I.P) PROJECTS IN
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Bid propouta from MBE
BITUMINOUS SUPPLIERS
will bo rocolvod by lho
Board ot Malga County

Each bidder muet file a
10% performance bond at
the lime of the bidding and

COUPON

COUPON

·Room Additions
-New garages
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
gQ2-6215
Pomeroy: cfh.ll&gt;~

Wanted to buy·
Standing
timber, all hard
wood &amp; pine.

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

PUBLIC NOTICE
Seated bids will

amDuilt ot $20,000.

1 LB.
7-07-035- LIMIT 1

COUPON

··-

Receive 20 Free Channels for
1 year with purchase.
For details call:

Public Notice

'' "t994, Los Angeles
Times Syrr&lt;hcate and
C;ealors Syndicate"

FLAVORITE
BACON

I

IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.
Specllll Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla lid good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie:. No. 0051-342

_ _......._....,

ONE DAY SALE
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1994 ONLY
SHOPPER
VALUE
SUGAR

EAGLES
CLUB

Public Notice

Prices In Effect While
Quantities Last

r-----I

YOUNG'S
cARPENTER SERVICE

ELLIOTI APPLIANCES

Ann ·
Landers

·

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

Apanment
torRent

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264
ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
QUALITY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

.....,.N

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

JESS' COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY
headliners, seat
covers, convertible
tops, Antique Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boat Seats.
992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES

.Carpentry
•Painting
•Power Washing •
clean• lilt exterlora
wllh high preuure
oproyar
•Reasonable Ralea
•20 Years Experience
•Free E•llmalea

915-4111

212311 mo. od.

949-2168
5.'1tiiiJ!ITFN

Announcements

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES
Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
Limestone· Fill Dirt
Gravel • Sand
Le~ch Bed
lnalallatlon and
Septic Svatema
614-992-7878
SR 7 • Five Pointe
~·-

3 Announcements
AIINtlono!e, - . SWF, 41,
OUI aotng, would liM to meot
SWII" lor com...,.._..tp, tlc
Write: 8o1 C.7, c/o Pt. Pl-ni
Rtglattr, 200 llaln Sl PI
P I - , WV 25UO.

HIV Tooting and Counooltng

"-"""*"

l!tt:'"'..•·..:!:"'""!!:In

lhood of Southoaat Ohio

:!,~ and Logan. "SSiding FM

SIRII Yow .leona P-nt, July
30th, Klodt~ Pail&lt;, Palm

MORRISON'S

IYUCUSE,ON.

HEATING &amp;COOLING

OPIIIIIO Ill JUlY

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

Over 12, diNblad or hancllc:apped FlftfA 1 beef.
room. Rente for to to 1405, band on Income.
Range, NfrlgarBIDr, Cllrpel. lie, on alta 'laundry,
.
parking.
614-949-2012 TDD 800.750.0750
FnflA Renllll Aulalllnca
Equal Houlng Opportunity

.

AMnr- (Yow Name 10
Novor All&lt;ed). Planned p....,_
thood oiBoutboott Oltlo. For an
Call 114-1-41-0168

Pllor- 11om

WATER'S
EDGE APARTMENTS
•

'

992-7434

call Shtlll Hart

entry"'""- -~-

4

Giveaway

~~:..'1.:...'*": a Pl~lwlll

_,pl-. 30WINI04.

2

-.th

Old - . . ,

- old ...."
Allco, llltten.

-

to•~-.,

-

fleagla, all
ohota, doa bol, puppy
chain, .......
aco.-on.e.
114-1112-2278.

.n

I WHII Old '""- B"*tn Kh-

loft To- Homo, 114-446-4m.

=-·~=-=·old,

�'·

Tuesday, July 19, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

J6An1ma1s· coats
37 What mascara
is put on
39Lavish
entertainment s

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

•
g AdJoining Lata. 2 Acree. All To
Go -ro 1 ~u~:- All Ulllhl•

Give to GoOO Home. AKC Reg•
l erod Chow, Blaek Female 614.

STNNS R£t{NEO

H.fi 7·5245.
!~ lttens,

* 'N\11\.f.·U· 'NNT *

To Good Hom., 614~ 3~

258 5.

Lost &amp; Found

6

A•alloble,.

From Old

il411-2.al.

Rentals

614-25&amp;-

41 Houses for Rent

5344

7

Yard Sale

l bedroom t'touae on Uncoln
Helghlo, 114-lm-7889 oftor 5pm.
3 Br., No Polo, $265/llonlh,
$125lllepollt, ·~3617.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

New condH&amp;on, 3br., reference,
do-H, no poll. 304-1175-5162.

&amp; VIcinity

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advanct . ()e.adllne : 1:OOpm the
day before the ad le to run,
Sund ay ~ttl o':l- 1:OOpm Friday,
edttlon
10:00a.m.
Mo nday
Sa turday

14x60 2 Br, 1 mile South of
Eureka, on Sl. Rl.7. No pece,
r.t.renoee. l14-251-e089 .

--:---=-:c=c:-::-:--:--

IAov in g sale, 71 18-7123 (Monday-

Saturday) , 9am-5pm . Some turrut ure, some Fenlon, dishware,
Lowery
organ,
old
Singer

:~ ew in9 macnine and lois of
m ts.c. It em s. Rain or shine. Tup-

pors Plai ns, take SR 681 past

ele menta ry sc hOO, tum left on
Brooks Rd. (Twp. 312),
o f roa d.

go to end

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Rk k Pearson Auction Company,
tull time auctlonMr, com plall
.1uc1ion
service.
Ucensed
#fi6 ,0hlo &amp; Wast VIrginia, 304773-5785.

AuctlcnMr Col. &lt;ncar E. Click,
License ' 754-i4 &amp; Bonded,

304-895-3430.

Wanted to Buy

9

Galllo H.S. 614-

Wanted to buy- two or men
acr•. tultable to build on and
elo• to a ~acktop road, 114-

Lost: Walker Coon Dog, Mostly
Whit e &amp; Brown With Brack SpoC
On His Back, Answer• To Name
Ot Duko , Vl clnl1y : Mill Cr. .k
Of"

No~h

388-11126.

-

614-446-7515

3857.

Two 100x300 on SR 160 Acroaa

lost : Black &amp; white Boe;ton T..-lier, ma le. 304-075--1125.

i~i..f\ d ,

1

Antlquee- wtll buy one piece M
anllre household, Osby Martin,
top doUar paid, 814-D92.'Jt41.
Clean Late Model Cara Or
Trucks, 1987 Modele Or Newer,
Smh h Buick Pontl.c, 1900
East am Avenue, Galllpolla.
Oecoratld 11on.ware, wall tet.

phonn, old llmpo old thor·

mometll"', old dock., antique
furniture. Riverine Antlquea.
Rus• Moore, OWOII". 114-192·
2526. W• buy 81tatea.

Donl Junk n1 Sill Uo Your NonWortlng llojot Appllane.,.,
Color
T.V. '11.. Ratrigeratora,
Freeura, VCH'I, Mlcrowavea,
Air
Conditioners
Waahara.
Dryera, COpy MachiMI, Etc.

614-2$.1231.
J &amp; D'o Auto Porto and Salvage.
aleo buying junk ca,. l INCka.
304-77S-5343.

Wanl to buy Ht of ltepe for
mobile home, 8M-ta2·S053.
W•nted to buy""U~ed Trllldmlllln

good eond. 30W7&amp;-1208.
Wonlad To Buy: Junk Aut ..
With Or With..- Molora. can
Lony Uvoly. 514-388-11303.
Top P&lt;lceo Paid: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gokl Ringo, su- Colno,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Socond A•on,., O.lllpollo.
Wonlad to buy: ulad rnobllo
ho,.... 814-446-0175

11

2 Bedroom• Furnlahed, On Clay

31 Homes for Sale

Help Wanted

Chapot Rood, S3001Mo. Ptuo

$304 Depoolt, 614--08.
AVON I All Aru.• I Shlrt1y

Spoora, ~75-14211.

OWner/OperatOf"'
cardinal Frelgnt Carrie,.. ,_
hiring experienced olo'l lo run
tlatb.d, Nm pen:entagt of
grou ntvenua pulling company
trailers or pulling own trail.,,
heaHh lneurance wldental &amp; 'tieton av.llabt., bue pllt•
avallablt, bob-Call lnauranoe
available, full card tyltam,
WMkJy
•ettlemente,
rlder
~ram, time home. 1..S00-2200wner!Operato,.
Cardinal Frtlgh1 C.rr1erw ,. now
hiring In the van dlvlakwl paid
ktadtid M 11mpty mil• unl01d..
lng pay, atop pay, haann lneurance w/dental &amp; vlalon ava!J.
able, bob-tall ln•unmce avalltuel card ayatem, co. pay
toll ay.tem, prompt and accurate wMkly aattlenwntl, rider
~~"'m, limo homo. HIOO.ZZO.

ab•.

6 Roonuo And Balh, Fuel 011 2 lldrooma, A£, No Peta,
Fum..,.; Rural Watar; Hook.Up Deposit
And
ReferMK:ea,
For 2 Mobllo - . Good Sl.zo $ol00/llo., w.~ Orvor: 2 BadGarden, 1 lv:.Fo lllL Clorl&lt; Chapo1 room Houul t'umlehld, No
Ro.d, 114 388 0812.
Poll, $350/llo. Depoolt, 614·711'7Apprvx acre lot, corner 1100e
w/14x70
tn~ll•
w/expando,

43415.

3 Badroomo $250/llo. + De-H.
$30,000. Camp Conloy 1101. 1 Badroom, 1200111o. + De-'!,
Shown by appoinlmont only, 114-245-0110. Or 114-256-6\lbl.
304-117~1191.

Eotolo SoHiomonl Solo: 1
Hou... , Acreage, S.tellltl Dlllh

44

Apanmenl
for Rent

-Con1oe1 Tom Lonlo At 1-«10945-1702 Or 1112-328-11473 Aftor 5 1 and 2 bedroom lpirtmenta,
P.ll.
tumlahed and
unfumlahed,
For oale lor ...,.,. log homo,
1660 oq. • .• full bloemont
wlfomlly 100mh woodbumor1 3
bedrooma, 2 k ct.ne, 3 batn11,
C/AI cen1ra1 .. ccum, cathadoral
cell ng, otone flroplac:o, Iorge
dock,
32xll8
oulbulldlng
wlhutec:l work room, 2+ acre• In
woodMI .,... ctoM to town,
llol~School Dlllrlct, d:ftl'""

HouM FM Sale In Rk» Orandt
Tho BoSiot Chwch. Ph.

~.:~

B,

E...,lnga 114-

HouN In Centorvlllo: 3 Badrooma, Uvlng, Dlnlna, Kitchen,

UtiUty

Rooma. 1 Bath,

Full

BoMmont Fon:ed Air, Gu Furnaco, 2 Doc:ke, 112 AciW II oro Or
Loll, Euy Clean Wlndowo,
VInyl Siding, 114-1122-835&amp;.
como, piMM call 614-im.QIOI N- 3br., 2 ~bothon
•-- •••
~~.ooo.
2111.
or apply In person at 36758 ..._.,
RocluiJWlngo Rood, PorMrvy.
New ranch 8fyta hom.1 Plante
E.O.E.
aub-dlvl..on, 3br., 2 betn.
on front I clock, lltllng on 2
POSTAL JOBS
Start $11.ot11hr./o lor exam and loll. 614-446-11431
ot&gt;J&gt;IIcltlon In . call 21t-7811Thrw bedroom hoUM on
83()1 ut. WV548, &amp;.m-9pm, Spring
A•a. Pameroy, vory good
Sun-F~ .
condlllonil Iorge lol, O'Brten 1
Nil)', 114-lm-2720,
Sol• penon, 5 poohlono ••al~ cable, WNrlng i lOlling high
luhlon jowolory. 30C-11U·2681, •••nlnge
114-11112-35811.
p-iiioi-ioiiiloiii---~
11:00 111111 :OOPII.
.

--a.
•one

Small l.oc:al Firm Soeklng

VIne St,_., CaU 81.....WS.T308,
800... 1111-341111.

1~

Help Wanted

Wanted: Experienced FumHurt
Rellnlshor, Will T"'ln, Poyo By
Tho Ploce Only, 114-446-4514 11-5
11-F.

11

$2j)O -$500 A WEEK Ill

Due To Largo Eapanolon, II.,..

18

aonnon Will Bo lntorvlowlng On

~Ca_r_po_nl~..
-----,--__,,,...,-cloc:-:k-1,

Frlc:lliy, July 22nd, At The Super

add one, ote,

frM

eatlmatee,

B llolol, 321 Upper Rl•or Road,
Galllpolla, From I A.M. -12 P:.Y.

114-812·2322.

Wo An Looldng F« Noll And
O.pendablo PeOple. lluot Bo
F- to Tra•ol To Placeo Uko

Ganoral llalnlenonca, Pa1Nint1
Yard Work Wlndowa Woohaa
Gun ... Cleonad Light Hauling,

Florida, Texaa, And lu Vegu
And AMum. Tr1naport.tlon And
L.odgin9 Furnlshocl. On Tho Job
Training. No Eapertence Nece.Mry. No Phone Calli.

AVON! All

or-.

Noad orua

money or want 1 ClrMr, ellhlr

woy-.:oU lla~IK;. 304-ll82-2645
or 1-aoo-8112
·
A JCAHO Acc:radHad - c y
Speca.&amp;lzlng
In
Subatance
AbuM A.cowery Hu The fol..
l-Ing Vacanc:IM In ft llolgo

C®nly Olflcl.

2 COUNSELOR POSITIONS: FT,
VARIED SHIFTS, Ouollllclllona:
l .P.C., •-P.C.C., L..S.W., LI.S.W.,
C.C.D.C. Or In Proc:ooo And /Or
Counselor Tulnee. Drug And
Alcohol Expor~nee PNlerred.
~,..II ling

Troek Important.

Pe••

Sind Resume And Lfttlr
Ot tnt--' To ~..un Recovery
S.rvieM, Inc. Ann. Nancy Oaf.
8011, P.O. Box n4, Alhene, OH
45701. Sallry Requl,..ment•
ec.mmenaunta With Education
And
Eaporlonc:o.
E.E.O.

EmpJoyer.

Commertul, "-'dlntlal, Stev.:
6~141.

G - Portoble Sowmlll, don'
hauiJ.::' loa• to the mill jull
call
75-1~57.
Mist Paula'• Day ea,. Center
11-F I A.ll. -11:30 P.ll. Ouolhy
Lavina Care For All Children
Our 11 Goel P1r1·nmt, Fullnme, Fed. Aulatlnce Available.

eh.ort bed, teal gr..,, 114,100.

304-1175-76611.

• h. .I
... i f'o

Frvat F,.1 5150; Rlfrlgo,.lor
Sldo By Sldo Wu 12115". Now
$1g5; Nle. Electric Rongo,
Eloclrlc Range

•o

can For lntonnallon Or VIlli. lntani!Todllw 1~46-8227. p,..
School,
Sc:hoologe,
B&amp;A
School, 614-4441-11224:
OuaiHy CIOinlng At AHordoblo
Prien, 1 Tlme W..kly, BfwMkly,

Monlhly. FrM EI11R11101, 6*
3711-21911.
.

Inch $125:

S(!uoro Tub, $175.i Automollc
w..h., $95; uryer US;

Wl'lirlpoot Washer Ukl New, 1
Yur Warnmty $205; Gta Range
30 Inch $85; Gu Range 31 Inch
$!15; Skoggo Appllonceo, 7e VIne
StrMI, Gillipolla, 114-446-TlUI,

Or HID0-41111-34Y8.
$300. 304-678-27118.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
011•• Sl., Golllpollo. New &amp; Ulad
tumhLWe, h..t.,., WHt.m a
Work boolo. 5-31511.
VI"RA FURNITURE
• lllloo Ou1141
814-443158
Oualhy Howahold Fumlahlnga

And Appllonc:n, Wit~ Tonne For
Any Budgol • HENT-2-0WN 1110
DAY SAME AS CASH /LAYAWAY
CASH &amp; CARRY
Wo AlloHova
A Repo. Section

1 Blc:lroom Apt. N11r Hotur,

71011.

clubo, llko , _ bog. 304-67&amp;-

Remington 100 BDL. 30-011
w/rec:oil
pad
&amp;
owing.
Remington 870, 12 gouge
wl•helf8. All exc. cond. 3M--67S785t.

53

Antiques

::::
00::Nc;A::-:Lc::D:-::S::-:II:::ITH~ASS=:-:oc=1 ,..::TE=-s:
FINE ANTIQUES- Amorlcln a~,
china, a~ gllll, oliver, lumhll'o,
llcCoy R-wlllo, ole. COLLEC-

TIBLES- printll, po.te,., toole,
boxoo, I•"' bol·

r;:orr. cloc:u,

:::.~~::!~'f.!. 701~.: BUYI~,R~rwH~",\~~W~~

bperlenced Whh ReftNncea,
614-245-$887,
I

Miscellaneous

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
Merchandise
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON "H00•·d
Phonic • 11 ._
ESTATES, 536 Jacbon Plko
~ on 1'0'7.
now,
lrom $2221o $285. Wolk to ohop 1.•:-::'"=·::--..,...~-=·---···-,.,--­
&amp; movi11. Call 5~2568. 1aa5 &amp;-10, Gravely, r.c:llner, 1N1

...o -.. _._ . .

°, -

Ford 414. 304..e75-5182.

Br&lt;&gt;Okoldo Aportmonlo, 1 BadYNr Old Amana AC 6,600 BTU
room,
Sto..
Rafr1garolor, j ~i;:.~~~ Condnlon, $200, 614LN
11
W
Wolhor, Oryor Hook.Up, 614•• oouge Ill
&gt;MI-41127.
Coun1ry Slda Apaotmont 5881.2
Air Con-

-Oo-'t
CA. WID
Hook-up
I$350/llo.
Aoqulrad,
114- ll~~t::~:FI:na~nc:~lat~
1.,..._.222.

Financial

Bertender

Wented: Apply In

Paroon AI Tho Addloi&gt;n Club,
614-4411-4756.

Doll I Bakory Worl&lt;or, Boklng
ExP.Orlonco Roqulrad, E•onlng
8111ft 1·10 P.ll. Noad Oulgolng
Poroonally, Good With Public,
Pay lllnlm,.. Wogo, Bulollego.
lloble Oopondlng On Eaperllince, Brawn'•lGA. •~
118181 BolwMn 8 I 3 Edie
Wonunan Contact.

Eam

up

~tlng

to $1000 w..kly
m1ll, 811rt now, no-

-adln-HIVWI.OOMto
ectraaii,SI3.800. 1Q4..U2..2511.

OTR drl-. COL, .....
.. 1yr. vortt.blo
·up., home

3 -room Ranch, 1 ...... AItachad
~Unattacltad
a~

,.,., Ago,·-··

U-'-'

-

-

wMIIondo. SEnd wort

34

2 bedi'OOM hot,. WfUIJrnenl

n• I -r.eo.

ICNY I phone """'bor: Box R-18,
c1o Pl. Rogllllw, 2110

MxH, 2 Bed-

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
........ ndo lhol you do bus!- 11181 T.-Jior 14x70, ! Bad-,
. . . wllh poopJe you k.-1 and 1 112 Bath, Z Doc.!&lt;!.. AwninQ8,
NOT to oand IIICIMY lhrougn lhe Unde!plmlng, 18,-, 114-ZS.
maU uniH you hove ln-lgotad 1326.
tho_,_
1m Sc:hun 14xe• earp~~
Now u.-um Now Bath'
Real Eslate
SlUOO, Cal aiWe'i.o3211 Afto;
5P.II.

31 Homes for Sale

=·w:::=
.
liVX

-

:•cc•
:...n.:.''fii,IIOO
=:,:..:,::.•:...•14-:.....:311::.:...::1111:..::;._ _
3br., 1 both houM on quill
lllln 81., Pl. P - . WV dud end ""'d, Haven Holclhto,
·
... le10011105', 12'1",600,
OWNER OPERATORS Your wladjol~~12' loW ~.
4323 ·
T,....or 1 f'latbad For Dadlcatad flat lind.
High Payln9 l.anH. Homo Olton 4 - - z 8tooy ~ z 112
PI• WeoUndo. Plonly Of IIU... &amp;.lho, LR, DR, FR With ~Eat­
Office - ExPN• T,.._. 1n Kncllen, .,...,._ Ne'll"bof.
lollon 1-1100-4111-7272.
hood, C'- HIIC, 114 441 14111.

llnlnd

3438.

Transportation

87&amp;-SIIU.

AKC Roglll- 8 - 5 Wilko Old With
snola, $125, Itt ttl 3354.
AKC Raglollrad Baoglo Pupe,
Wormad And Shceo, 181 I
Woolul, Sllvo Staplllon, 114448-4112, 114-251-1111.

PuPDiol:

HAPPY JACK Fl£ABEACON:
electronic device controll fiHa
In lhe home wllhoul , _ . - .
Polonlad deolgn _..., bu,.
of llalll flloe can, nlllol.
Raoulfo ovamlahl. R&amp;O Flad 1
Supply, 114-81:1'-21114.

-~-

.::=·
..

·11181 Chivy Camero, llcyl., auto.
304-1175-111410 eftor 5pm or

IN••

mn• •a-·

111811 CadiUac Sadan DoVIIIe,
114-44-21113.

PEANUTS

111811 Chevetlo 5 •PIId

err w1111

114-241-4212.

18111 Oodao 100 trodo or 1011
$700. Flnlih dull bUi Nna good,
u.. - ~. 304-675-5115.

~h~dr:'

C:.T•

=

....
114-44-11!155 " No1 Homo, 614......1144.

1117

.

1wll1 old,

,4004
__
. -,..,--:-:------ 57
Musical
Hayward Hlllh Rate Band f111ar,
Instruments
Pro SoriH f Y• Old. Haywara
Pool Pump 1h32 Solar llanllol
Baldwin Plano Black Studio
llloe, Pool Equip. 114-4411-10711. ,.,.,., 1600....... 1301.
Hoi Walor 1111,. lloal Radial.,., "--ed Slue, 114Farm Supplies
-1423 Lllve -go.
&amp; Livestock
King IIIII Wllorbad, Clla•
Cablneto,
11-,
Ufll!lad
llobllo
Loce For Rent, Hoodboard $400. Q&gt;Oin IIIII
61 Fann Equlplllllnt
814-4411-12711.
Wolorbad saoo. F Sofa, Roc:flnor Roctdng C..lr
Chain Sow ....... cholno 1o Ill
Oftlcl Spoce For Ront: OW.. 1~-6245.
Flnlble en T..,. a 8poco.
· ,.._
...
Tatol Spac:o 3,100 Sq. Fl . .\vaa. L.anno1 Hall P - . $:180, 114- .,..,
- OI1J - Equ'3041111-11121 "' 1.-:matl:
ablo. Good ~~. Clo01 To 448-WIIO.
Bddga, Can Dove , . _ AI :cll¥1:7'ng.:..:.::...room
_ _IUI-::-e-wl1h-::-:~l
Jolin DooN book'-, 111110 OIIC
Wloiinon RMI Eatete, 114-4411- rodiMroiiOial old, .... 1 lon 4114 INcll and lowloov
:11144.
,._._,,
-·~ft· Dovlo
21+4, ...
"'"
111N131,
1Zprn-lprn,
lloncloy
IIIIU S.unlay.

3 Roan Offici Sullo With
Private Tollol In llodorn Fl"'
Proof llkfa. Call llorrlo Hooklne
614-44&amp;-~ Or 114-44&amp;-2512.
Lol For Ront: llobllo Homo Loc,
Counly Wotor, Phone: 614-24511855.
llarhart Rantat • Slorogo un~•
~~~101115, 10x2ll, 10x30:

.

lor Sale
·

~
~..

__ _

:::;.

:
.
·

.

,...

l..; '

Goods
carp~~

$8.00 Up VInyl $4.41 To
.18.80 In Block, 114-44&amp;-ll44,
....- . . Carpoeo.

4
b u l - l ......
ors_a_oncf
z

eo~~or-;
...-.
potlad ·ii4
-

~

:J:""'· al lor ..... - -

C:::'~ /~
l

· -

.7.~-~~""'

,

l

oi6. ~ifi: ~ ~

-

j.

- ··-

sr AY

AwAY

F,o,...,

Tt~OS~

•

I:'"

.,

~

rflfCT

'

~

"

""- f

j

}_ [

\

. ..

m

~~ og

-~
.'l"-_1'-'U~
.-~
·- / ;-.._'\'Jv,_,
,-:~.
•
, '
~
~ &lt;
1 //J' ~

c.m.ro,

T-tope, lolded,
~~-· 136011 010. 304-

Ford llllllang GT, 5.0,
14,111 miiH, blue, 1m/1m . . .
_., air, uldng S460C!t ,,.._.
2600 dayo or 114 1,. 11151 11llpm, uk far - ·

1187 P - c Turflo Grand Am, 2

~~ 110,000 111101, 614-

.
·

11187 T-Bird. Air, CruiM, Tin,
PIW, Blue, Auna
OOocl .._.... Good, 13115 114....... or 114 441 0001.
1111 llarfl 11 CUII-.r van,
loW milage, Z· BART IIIQiocfad,

1

/

&lt;:&gt;

.,1

e

o

~ ~

0

.,

v

BORN LOSER

r

~

TEI&lt;RIBl£. I I CJ&gt;.N m£1.'1' f&lt;f.N)

THIS Pt-.f'(R, IT~

SO WJR.RYI

r

TN(£ Oft YOUR

~·

onglne. ~8.

gao tanko, one lon truc:k
whMie radlatora, tkwar mate
ole. D &amp; RAulo, Ripley, WV. ~ ·
372-3833 or 1.-273'11321.
·

1111 Ford 11-ng Cc&gt;n-able
GT, I s-4. Stondord, Dork
Bluo i Oroy." EIICOIIenl Cond~
tloniiU 441 0415.

1111
Pontiac
Formulo·
Alll-lc; Air; T-T-; oM,iiOil
IIM01; POL· PW; Rad; Gray Interior . . . ., 114 ••• 8201.

TT+--+- -f.

Parker

retmn som e

hotv in g

a u off

WO\.J l~ T ~'::alE

mond to dummv ·s aee. rdu rn to
h a nd wilh a trump I"'W h cw th ey"re 2 -2"'1 a nd lo d iscard on e of

w ill b e So uth ' s l ll lh

Wa sSo uth abeg u1n er"'ra rfrom
it He was playing in the final of the
1992 World Team Olympiad .
Colette recommended: "'You will
foo li s h thrn gs . bul do them with

e nthu s iasm ." However, thi s d ecla r ·
er wasn't too en thu si as ti c ab out h is
mistak e_ Hi s only consolation was
th a t hi s erro r cos t less t han it
moghl have . Hi s tea mmates, silting
East-Wes t at the oth e r tabl e. had
climbed t o the Evcrcs tin e h eig hts
of fiv e di a monds Sou th had been
happy to doubl e a nd th e co ntrac t
went fiv e down . costing 1,100 with
the no -longe r -s o-n e w scoring.

OOP 1 LOOKS LIKE
i H E C.OKH

\~

( o1 V IN6

ME A. S IGN

I

Toda)J ;,, Ihe 200th duy
of 199• rwd the 29111

tS T AAT

1 HE HIT AND RUN SIC. N 7
OR 1 HE ".::11 E.~l S IGN 7

OR An

,....-...,TO

I

day of .'i'W1l11ll.'T.

SVPf'OSE D
BLufF?

•

TODAY'S IIISTUIH' : On thi s day 1n
1MB. thr fir s t v.·o me n's- ri g hLs con ·
venlion met 1n Se neca Falls. 'I Y
TO DAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Edgar Degas
11834 -191 71 . a rti st: Li zz ie Borden 118fi0
1927&gt; . acqu illed of ax murd e r: O ."rlcs
Mayo 11865-19391. surgeon: r:et1rge Me
Govern 11922-1. U.S. ~o:iti c i a n . is 72:
Vicki Carr ( l!l41 -l. singer, is 53 : llie
is 48

1171 25ft. campor..l.....~ conlalnad, e bade. 304-~ ,.........
19W Toyola motor homo, 27
51100 mlloo, oondMion· 11
lruc:k-campor, . , _ 4, doe;
114-9112-30110,

Services
ROBOTMAN

Home
Improvements

"A~t.Y

F(IC.TOR
IN SPEtD
WI&gt;.\1&lt;,\NEo

IASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhton.l llt.llme gu•,.otM. L.ocal ,...,.nc• fumlehed.

I~ 1\11:
1\Nr;LE

Call 1~ Or 114-231'
1Mit Rogors Wal-ling.&amp;.
tobllllhad 111111.

111110 Chryo1er L.allaron, 2 Door.,
Al'l Cruleo, Su"""", Freolt
PI I'll, .._ 111101, $4,11110, 11421141-4111.

ASTRO·GRAPH

GEO llllno IIU NW ••
-- g o Oil:
-rmly.
I -- - gao

lor lhe yea r a head by ma1hng $1 25 10

you have a poor all1lude. 11 w1 11 make

Astra -Graph . c/o th is newspaper , P .O .
Box 4465. New York . N.Y 10163. Be sure
to state your zodtac s1gn

everything you atl empt to do harder than
it should be . Th1s can be reve rsed. how·
ever. and msptre productiVIty

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In your commer·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) S11ua11ons

c 1al aff air s toda y. don't be so tmpatlent
that you take th e t1rst propo sa l that ts
ot1ered. Your deal can be •mproved. •f you
have the courage to watt things out.

of a tinanctal or worldly nature mtght not
work out too well for you today. yet you
could be very lucky 1n arrangements you
have wtth persons with whom you have a

VIRGO (Aug. 23-5epl. 22) Someone who
h1ston cally has proven to be only a pa~·

strong bond.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) Yow noble~

t1me ally mtght aHempl lo thw art yo_u r
progre ss today . II you 're aware of thiS ,
you 'll lind ways to circumvent him/her

qualitte s may be magn tfied tod ay . but.
unfortunat ely . your les s- des ir able tra1ts
could be as well . Be sure 10 display more

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Hos 111e reac · ollhe Iormor and less ollhe Iauer
tions are a poss1b1hly loday il co-workers ARIES (Marcn 21-Aprll 19) Rathe r tha n

&amp;

$15,000 - - · .. ·--son.

82

Hllatlng

Wednesday . July 20. 1994

72 Trucks for Sale

Frooman'o . _.... And Coollna.
lnat...Uon Alld llorvlcl. Efll
Certified. Ruldontlal, ecomn-

In the year ahead, do not throw 10 t_he
towel regarding an endeavor on wh•ch
you've mvested lots of time a~d tears. Just
when it looks like your back IS to the wall ,
the cavalry could come to the rescue.

.

...,.-+---j-+~

aren't tr ea te d w1th cons td eralton and avoid social encou nter s today . slrtve to
respect Try to do unto othe1s as you bask tn them . You need a sociable soundwould have them do unto you .
· ing board to combat loneliness or Gespon-

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Calculaled dency. Smile and pa~ake .
ri sks you lake lor practrcal purposes !oday TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Thmgs on
should pan out. However , gambling [USt which you 're depending might be on wolr

lor lhe sa ke ol gambling could produce bly legs loday and not come lhro ugh
undesirable results .

SAGilTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) In your
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Let well involvements wilh oulsiders loday , you'll
enough alone today in situations _
w here behave in a manner !hat should generale
associates are trying to do something for
good will. Unlortunalely . you mighl no!
youobenelit. Whal you have Ia add to lhe use these same admirable taches on fam1·
miK could sour the deal rather lhan sweet·

ly members.
en il. Canceo, lreat yoursell to a birthday CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) Today, il
gift. Send lor your Astra-Graph prediCIIons

when needed Conversely. that tn wh1ch

you pullinle slack could be a w1nner.
GEMINI (May -21-June 20) In order lor
successes 10 be meaningful lor you loday ,
w~al is achieved musl be shared wilh olh·
ers . If it isn't, your grati fication may be
only nominal .

horse's leg
JBLimb
39Avlation agcy.
41 Of a kidney
42 An Aslaire
43 Finnish first
name
44Noman - island

Ua_y

tra ct
The s imples ! line is to cas h th e
spade a ce a l tric k two, play a dia

35Using bellows
36Hair on

fk xi -

no longer make the con ·

BIG NATE

111,0110ml, rudy far ....... $81100.
304-417WM8.

Plumbing

sll oufd

10Wampum
11 Shoe Stadium
tenants

7

July 19 , 1994

air,
NfrtgerMorlfrMz.-,
mlcrOWI'Ie,
mauwa lnt--'or,

~c. concf, $11,000.

.- \I I p;~ ss

.8 Hats
9 Actress Perlman

19Depoalf
21 Raced
23 Enlertolner
McEntire
rr+--t- -f ' 24 Liberate
Slippery
- -+--11---1 25
261rrllale
27 Author
Phi11p 281n - (routinized)
.,.,...+---j-~ 29Wax
JOHardy heroine
,-+---j-~ 32 Aclor -

45Region
46 Olive genua
4 7 Nol prelty
48Surtell
51 Espionage

CELEBRITY CIPHER

or g.

C f' l f' ~ro ry Col)her Cf'\IDtograms a r ~ o eated !rom QuOt&lt;ti iOf\!'. h v li!moros peOIJIE' pa ~ 1 ;,~r·u1 present
Each le! l{'r 111 thl· (lpher st a no ~ tor ~notlu! r

·v

TV BB

TF

E

J

HKN

E K S

HKN

WJXMNUJ

U N XXJ U U R N B
HKN

XFMELJ ,

VPVKS . "

TM.II s crvli' f: - H

XFMELJ

M G J

MGJ

ME P
ME

MGEKBP

UXFTMGOJEJLLJG
PREV IOUS SOLUT ION · so me g uys are &lt;nwa rd ly out go1ng .. - (New York
Met sportsca sler) Ra lph Kmer
(&gt; 1994 by NEA lm;

"

T~~:t:~' S©RJ.\~0 Reorronge letters of the

£ZfSII

------- Edittd by CLA~Y~~~:.:,;;;;;;:;::::::;;;;;;;;;::lour scramb led words be·

low lo form f our words

I

ZELN Z O

'IIII1
2

PRINE

I

I. I I I I .
J

"" Dad . I nee d to know how to
get rich qui c k ." th e newly
marrie d fellow confided to h rs
fathe r. "Well , son," the dad
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
" replred. "If you want to get rich
,...-- - - , -- .,..-,...--..,
SL A VAS
just earn rrore than you ----_ ,..

.!,

0 0 N WU

1--r,-rj-rj-rj,--fj:':,
I
DATE BOOK

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

'7:1 Suporfar 22' ...... homo,
....,. a, ruiW lib now, root air
condltlonl~ Dodae 413 C.I.D.,
moo. 114- D-3301".
.
1Vlll 27ft. Tllan motor homo, '
lully Mlf..,.,..alnad, goneralor,

81

l t

4•

1- W dummy 's c lub lo s e r s on t he di a ·
": m o nd jack . The later c lub ruff in

, -••-· rack for -~-~ w..ol .·
~
~
but truck $75. 350 Otdl Rocket ·

~.

Pa s~

Pa ~s

· •57;~ :~~kdummy
~~_}\ · ,·, ' ~~{ "Ni~\.· ··.~.•,·,·,
~
-· 'J.·
:2
:I
o
.
L~:..::::::::::~:::~~:::?::::::::::::_::~~-~-_::__:__.....,:____.:_____:,__.:____~do

.

alaL 114-216-1111.

Household

1

,)~..

'

LJOM/
~'\D ""UY "··TL1'-jfl 'Ow"• BACIC
~
,-.
t.7
~
P"
"
~,.
PAIN MAICES TtlrM MfAN!

uoad or o•emaulad, g.. rontMd
• • 30 days. 30«78-4890, Pt

79

4 Alphabet items
5 Young chicken
6 Expel
7 Compass pl.

1-:&lt;tst

Perhaps he h a d h a d a tough lim e
a t the office. or hi s pet sa la mander
had JU s t di e d
In l odav s rlr a l. Soulh"s lw o
spades wa s an inlcrmcdialc jum p
overcall, s ho wi n g a good s ix card
s uit ami about a king more th an a
minimum open in g bid.
Obviously . th e defenders cou ld
have taken the firs t fo ur t ri cks. llut
followin g hos partner's thin opening
bid in diamonds . West understand ·
a bly led th a t s u1t
Sou t h won F:a s l ·s d iamo n d
queen wit h h is king and imm e d1 ·
a lr ly drPw two rounds of !r ump s

.F.:R.::A..:.N~K:...:.&amp;_E~R-N_E_s·_r_-:---:------:'-::":""":'"':'::-:'::'--------------~----;;::--, He co uld

350 or 400 tw-bo t,..namla81ona

M cam.ro. Nd, UCIUIJW oordo
....
lion. loW - . -

5I

1

.?.; -

1 1 2 - ...... XE. - . 8 op,
AIC.L...-~:·000 miiOI, aoldna
...- . I
t-:lotS after 1:011
pm.

Merchandise

.2 -;"__

&lt;(..""'

==:-:-:===--==--::7

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

)

,

.....,~~:..__Ll-)4~__....

1~

1

~.

--

m

......

7 - I 'I

VERI( STRAN6E .. SOME60D'f
SPILLED BIRD S ALL OVER
THE 'lARD

-

IWIIOOI, OXcellont body and Interior, red wKh ar olrlpoo, rod I
block lnlerlor, Nno good, S1325,

~· urth

P&lt;i ""

s aw s om e o 1H.:

$350. 304-882- ·

0135.

~)

J Prickly shrub

bliity 111 your llun kmg. Maybe ynu

75 Boats &amp; Motors

l!M.e"$.'1810 1187

lloglll- _ . . , pupploo
fur ..... 11250, 114-1112-2811.
Sc:hnauur puppl01, mlnalure,
1111&amp;-.iolootoypoocloe,
~pion bloocflln., 1141141
,Coolvlle.

-Or

rwp~~lra ,

55 Early Br11on

56 Actor 24 River boat
Amec he
27 Perform a gam
3 1 Old Portugu ese 57 Highlander
58 Actor Danny money of
account
DOWN
32 Watc h pocket s
33 Female
sandpi per
1 Type of dance
34 Cloth measure
2 Mrs . Charle s
35 Greek cheese
Chaplin

abou t !he ab ol rty of e &lt;J c h . But ubvr
ou sly you

pu........

Rat T•Jo";
$1001.

46 Space for Rent

)

1984 Yamahe Venturi, dre•Md,
wery ciNn tMke, $3100 OBO 614-

minor

Columbus '
ships

Watching four s trang e r s pL..1y
UridgC'. you w ill form an opinion

. '

11181 Eldu,.cfo Cadillac .., 100, 18 llopor 383 H.P. motor, dlooooomblod, $260; throo 14x7.50"
10x10d doa -~ $11111.81. good ohepo, :MM-11"111-11111111.
olumlnum olola, S"IOO; 614-lm·
Paint Pluo, ~
,
1882 Z-28 Camero, S"IOOO. 304- 2326, ..... -ugo.
2 AKC Roglatorad Toy p-._ 17&amp;-138&amp;.
r:~c=-;;:=~==-:-• Plk:ad T"'nomloolono,
Fomale: ~. I WhMo.
1811!
Oldomobllo
0meaa
11,000
U 1 l Nbuln, atl ~·· oto~llale: Whbo. Great B-r. $150 MIJ•, $1,500, 114. . .3hot.
lng at $60; owner I 245--51177, ·
Each Or $250 Bolli, 114-441614-371-:ms, 5"""7t-2263.
01115.
11183 Ponlloc o..nct P&lt;lx, newly
VI
qlna~,
•uto, Four Yokohama 21SI60HR15
AKC Datmatlon
1 ,..bulb
_r..,. good, $1800. 30C- opoad "'tad blaekwallllra loa
fomale, 3 moloo, all ohGio. 3o4- 1112-2114g ovenln-.
tlion 500ml....or, $160. 6i"ol-441-

lllnllhn Sohnluz•, I 112mo.

eom...... 111 bulldlng far nn1 1n
llldd~, 1ho old llalgo WeifaN bu]kflng, 114-911:1-2.51.

T.-llor lctll I a=.r. In
- o y . price ..
.......
fwi'WII or lilt O'Brton I Cnow
Rlall't, 114:fi":!-2720, avonlngo
114-110:1-3581.

pelnte,

Motorcycles

Plllllnt.

Buildings

175-11253.

Pal8mlnoe,

53 Epoch
54 0ne of

-+---j-+~

bucklklne, •c. For trait, . . . n2-2n1.
1om pleuwe, ponnlng, la.m- 1985 Kaw-kl Rll125, llko now, _
porlonglloh, H-at lo chooOI S900 nogollablo. 304-862·34911
from. Alhena, OH. 114-511:1-1731 after lpm « 304-882-2847.
or 782·2114g.
19tl XRBOR Dl~ Blko Runo ·
Slmmonlol Cowo And Cal..o, Good, For $1100, 8"14-256-1561.
And Ol..r c-Brod caulo,
514 318 11311.
Honda 125 4-whoolor, noado ·

own.r, 57,000ml. 304-ell-etll.

Business

5.32 ..- . $13,160. 1.14 $14,570.
Rayburn
Rd,
rOII-ble - r l c t - Information mallad on roq.-. 304-

miNI.

11171 Chryolor Lo BalrW1, 1

llalo llaoglo pup, 11wko old.
304 1111 3854 an.r lpm.

45

'J4 Von()yko, 2 bodroan, 1 bath,

Metllrnor~~

Qulle well mannered geldlnaa 1

52 Russian
woman 's name

By Phillip Alder

=:-::---,,--:.,....=,--,--...,-

r.::~~:!~ _71~..,.Aut~o_s.,.fo_r_Sa.,.....l_e__

-Ww.lpm.
old, - ·

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1972 Elcona 121150 Wllh 1Vl'l

NICE HORSES FOR SALE

-::
1885 opoad boa1~500. Faat011
Whflo 11011 IMulatad garage 18112 110 ,.plica, $4200, 325 boll on Rlvor.
7!&gt;11200 or
door, llko now1 olzo 8'117', caU Pago St, lllddloport, 114-911:1· 575-8818 anor 5pm.
lm-o213 aftw • pm.
511411.
111811 Chockmalo 11ft 110hp llor1068 Fl,.blrd 400 Big Block cury outbcNird, trala.r Included,
55
Building
Rune Q,...t, L.ooka Grelt, 12,300. 30W71&gt;-12'12.
$3,500, With Eal"' llolor I
Supplies
18111 P&lt;e&gt;Maotor Bua boa!,
Tranemlalon, I'Mo441-3m.
1N111~~&amp;:•reury m~~ nc.
Block, brick, -~~ olpoo, win- tm . Buick Slrylarll, 2DR., HT, lhapo,
• 304-895.
do-, llnloll, ole. Claude Wln- PS, PB, 83,000~ !!_leo lor ~~
loro, Rio Orondo, QH Call 11411190 Yamaha Wave Runnw 500,
- $1500. 30«,_28,
245-412t
IDuol T"'llor, 614-446-1136&gt;1.
11178 Dodgo Aopon, Slant e Engine. Rune Good, $100, 114-379- Vamat. W•v• Runner Jet Ski
56 Pets for Sale
2720 After e P.ll.
whh now troller, $3000, 114-lm75111.
Groom and Supply ShotiPal
Grooming. Julio Wabb. 114-441- 11171 Chivy llallbu, 400 email
blodc robuln, ,_dual uhauol, 76
0231.
Auto Pans &amp;
paint...._!'!~ u-. 11200
010. :IOC-1 r.HW11I.
Accessories

old, ... -

18110 14x60 Uberfy, 2 br, AIC,
WID, 16500, 114-'.112-3701.

oxporlence, ._..,pplleo, ITInformation, no-&lt;&gt;bllgollon. Sind
. SASE: Cucodo Depl-!10.._!':0.
Box11421, Son Angelo, TX ,_,z.
Needed Now: Corn~nlon To
rd
s......_
Uw tn F,... B011 •
''"..,.,

STORAGE tANKS S~OOO 0.11011
Upright, Ron Evana o.nllr))ltMo,
Jac:koon, Ofllo, 1-«10-537-01128.
SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEOS. N- Com-cW- Homo
u.n. from t~911.oo, LamS
~ Icc
ria Monl
PIYmonll loW 11 $11.00. Ca
Today- FREE NEW Color
Calalog, 1.aoG.412-111W
Ulad! ton-...._ HoU air
- . 304-1178-31111.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: :&amp;14 Inch
2110 PSI tiUI; 1 Inch 200 PSI

Full - . - lleaale Dllllfllo&amp;

lnlormod thai ... dMI!ngs

roomo,Gutllat -lyFurnlahad, Bloc:ko, Undlrplnnlng,
AnchorM, $1,1100, 114-245-0318.

Opponunhy

Merchandise

304-e7W0113.

This IWIWliJIIIPIII'WII R01
lcnowtlngly """'P'
advertisemefia lor realastale
'Otllcfl II In vlollllon ol l1lo low.
C&gt;.Jr readar.l are hereby

3357.

Business

63_ _L~Iv_e..:..st.:..:o..:..c..:..k_ _ .,.
1 ,.,

50 Image

Was he foolish
or careless?

Dodg~

~~;;.:::::;;:::::::-:==-r============~-~
Third A•anuo, Golllpolll, 11454
Miscellaneous
o~C&amp;-2342.

Floh Tank I Pot Shop, :Mt3
Jaclcoon Ave. Point - . . . ,

based on riCa, color, Nlglon,
sex lanilal status or llllllon.l
or1gln, or IIT'f lnlonllon lo
make any sudl pret-.:e,
lmltallon or llocr1mlnllllon."

tm

21

c 1~ ~ NEA. 1roc

Chlhuah.. Femato v- • 112,
Brad To CMcolate llale, PIIP'
..... Due I/2DJIIC, $121, 114-2161011.

lo lldvO&lt;tiM "IIT'f pl'lllerence,
lmlllllon or llacrtnlnatlon

Trollor R - o 12128 3 BR 2
Air Condlllonoro, $1,000, 114to flnlllt my poymenll on 386-9821.
cloanor, 1144112-4536.
1W5 21M., uooo or trade far
Bl...r or •wn. 3Q4.ft6.

.738.

looo'~Vltl

~

~)

Ope ning Ipact •

WHAT ARE
YOU GIGGLIN'
ABOUT ?

Ram Van, eo,ooo
MIIN, $4,0"00; C:.n Be SMn AI!
Galllpolle Dally Tribune, 825

YMN experience. PleiN call
IJ'14-I92·2a22.

011968 wlllch "'"""" R 1Haga1

Will •team ciNn earpeta cheap

AVON SELLS ITSELFI Palontlol
Eamlngo $200 -$2,000 llonlhly,
Soli AI Worll, Homo, And lloll
-Onlor. F- T"'lnlngl 1-IIOO-JII2·

19H

dollar paid. Ono oloco or ona
hundrad. APPR.\ISALS, -10

54

:l •

new Ura, new ralln, ••kfna
$3200 make olfar. 304-51&amp;-2383.
7 · t't

Solid
charry wood curio
cabinet, axe. cond., 33 112x72",

BARNEY

1987 Aatro van\, high mll•a•,

.?.,,.. .. 1

w~ ·.., t

South

'81 Chevy von, air, PS~ PB,
amltm ca ...tta, $1000 OBu, 814012-6088 evenlnga.

49Legal matter

\"ul ner,. hlr• ii rwl h -South
f&gt; eail'r \I'L" s l

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

•bytag Wringer Waat\er, Nice

All ...........oriiHlg In
lhls .._ . . .. odljad lo

Sun Volley N~.nory School. new ••~fl~1 p~~lnt, ...._,
Chlldcaroii-F lam-6:30pm Aall dryor,
oondltlon, HaOO,
2-K, Young School Ago Dunng 6. .)112.
•
Summer. 3 Deyo por Wook lllnlrnum 614-4. .3657.
1m Buddr 121150 With ~:"l'll
i Underpinning $2,500, 1
Will Babyon Ono Child In lly 3868 L.aa.. llaOugo WIU Rolum
Homo, Sll~lng End Of August, Coli.

Ch•vratet, Ford, Dodg• pk:kup •
bed1. Short or tong. No ruat. ~
304-&lt;175-6286."""

•'

Mlcrowtva Oven On Top, $250;
Eloclrlc Rango 30 Inch $!15;

AKC YelloW L.abl Wormld fl..
Shceo. Will Ill Roady 711, ~aklng
SmoiiDoDOIII CaU Aft• llp.m.
l14-251-11i31.

ad./ertlled tn tN1 newapaper
are evalable on an equal
opportunly b -.

... K I ll R

11tt Chevy S·IO Tahoo, V-11, Air,
Alllfll CUHIII, Sharp! 014-

Ratrigerator $95; Refrigerator

tho F-ral Folr Houllng Acl

wanted to Do

112,500. ~2383 .

7

41 Rodent

42 Pretend
45Eager

23 1nle1

• A 7
t(J !Oitfi l
A :\ J ~ I 4

18114 Cho•i' 4.3 11cy1., 2WD,

Po~­

Send Reeume To SCCS, P.O.
Bo1 538, Korr, OH 451143.

• J 3
H :i -1 .,;
• f J '!.

•tf

\f li

Tlme On Call CINnlng Piraone.

Employment Services

W lv10111£R (AUS
CD:E A MEK

S OI ,TII
A ,\ K I) .I 'I

Calf dubl &amp; bag. Profnelonal

EOH.

43,000ml.,
gorogo Mol, loolul now, 0111"'1,

EAST
• lll 7

:J8&amp;.41551.

Paid, $250/llo. Pluo Socurfly, No
Polo, 614,..46-142G Aftor e P.ll.

Apartm1nt 3 Roome, Prlv.. e
Bolh, Utii~IOI Pold, 1128 Socond
A•onue, Goll~l:e 31$225/llo.
$1150 ~. e
11.

auto.,

T

0322, 3 mUM out BulaviUe Rd.
F,... Delivery.

52 Sponlng Goods

UtllhiOI Pold, 114 111 •fl6 Aftor
7 P.ll.

~f1 H!M6to

350

.. ,l :1

CO l,tXJ HAVE. 1-'EALTH
rNSU RAiJC£ . ME. E. I&lt;:. 1

1881 Cho•. SU•oracfo ulondad

cab,

V/ JI ION Do "IH~ Y

FURNITURE
Complllo homo lumlolllnge.
Houra: llloM!at, t-5. 5~
L.AYN~'S

1 BedrCKH11 Apartment, Partly
Fwnlahtd, Gal, Water, Sewage

1-

1f A t:AT w,T~
NINE" ~IVii~ IS
5/if'IT,; /IICEb fo
/-.ifr&lt; /N l'li.'.t)ON,

~I

r\

t

EEK&amp; MEEK

per, 73,000 lllloo, Eac:ollonl
Condhlon, $7,000, 614-256-6336
Anore P.ll.

40 Abstract being

van der 13 Norse poem
t4TV ' s - Haw
15 Single item
16River in
Belgium
17Consume
18 Railroad -tra c k
part
20 Boasts
22 Spik e ot corn

A H ti 2
¥ K .J Ill !I :i

Auto, AC, Stereo, Cuatom Top-

Kenmore ,..trigerator, tro.t tree,
a maker, llmond, ••c. cond.,
$300. :IO&lt;WIIW71l3.

OPEN lion.· Soi.II-II/Wad i-5.

4411 After 7 to.M .

72 Trucks for Sale
111811 Dodoo 0.100 V-11, LWB,

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
WoohoraL. drye&lt;o, rofr1gorot~
rang01. :~~~oggo Appllonceo, "'

eecw-tty dlpoalt required, no
polo, 614-lm-2211.

Cent"'l Air. S2M. CaU: 814-44&amp;2157.
~~- -Z11&amp;, ovolng 1 1lll2· 2bdnn. apia., 1o111 ollc:lrlc, appllonc:oo lumllhocl, loundry
Person nMdad to milk dairy G-.brlw Ell111oo4piM foyor, room laciiHIOI to ochool
cowo, hou~y pay, paid •ocotlon1 lorgo ll•lng &amp; dining room, 3br., In lown. Apollc,;llone a•olloblo
mobil home available. S.M 2
112
belh.
famllyroom II: Vlllogo c... Aplo. 1411 or
Naume: Box A~12, cJo Pl.
PIHMnt Reglater, 200 Main St, wnl..,placo, doublo cor garago, call 514-812-31'1 1. EOH.
Pt. p ...,.nt, wv 25450
~~1'~. ~..;,.~-::'· R!~~ Fumllhocl Eftlcloncy $11151110.
»1-1176-3030 or 571-3-131.
Utllftleo Pald, Sha"' Both, 607
Pomeroy
Nun1lng
and
Socond A...._ O.lllpollo,
RlhabUftatlon Cln1er hal an
Immediate opening for a tuH
time AN or LPN on 11·7 ahlft.
Thla position l8 tor a nurM
committed to ~lvet1ng exceptional qualhy care tor our
gertatrk: rnldantl. We ott.r an
excellent benefit package, compethlve Mlary and a etable,
aupportlva work tnvlronment .
Parwona . .king to ahlre on
thill team cf nul'll8 commlhld
to aur abndard of poahlva out-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by L11rry Wright

1 Chicken
5 Doling
9 LP speed '
12 Architect Mies

Answer to Previous Puzzle

I

I1--r,-T,:5:-.....,,-,,- ..,,.....,., O Complete
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
~_L_.J._...J._..I....-''--'

8

rh e chuckle quoted

by l.llt n g tn th e mt1Stng wo rds

you deve lop from step No J be low

P~ INI NUMBfR fD tEllER S IN
IHf Sf SQUA !E S

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE IEIHRS
TO GET AN SWH

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
7 ' I e'
Weaker- Capon - Otter - Eulogy - TEENAGER

9'

Several m o thers were s 1tting around discussing diffe rent me thods of domg things . One mom laughed and told
the others. "If you want to know all about anything just ask

a TEENAGER'"

�Page- 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Ohio Lottery

Racine,
Rutland
teams win

INGELS FURNITURE'S
ANNUAL TENT SALE!
Pillow Arm
Or Colonial

Double Incliner Sectional

Pick 3:

172
Pick 4:

6707
Buckeye 5:
6-8-12-13-23

Page4

•

ent1ne

Affordable Shaker Design Furniture
Comp1rrc.: Pll'U

BEOROOM ll
$499 ::~• 'I
Vol. 45, NO. 54

CopyrlglltttM

279
LOVESEAT
$249

---=~=·

Comtonaote, convenienl and
versatile descnbes this handsome
modular seating group .. .tt provrdes
maJimum seatingrn a minimum floor

SLEE PER
5
Only

498

() space ...Uphol!itltrvd in a plush. long

sass

CHAIR
5)79

__

__...... ...
..................
............ ..

--.......
~

# 1819 D:t;)''bed: Chrisline

~--­

White &amp; Br·as~ with 1 1w.

---~----~

Foam Hunkie

·---·-.-.--~

. .... a. ....

.!

I

Cltoit·e
( '"s/1 &amp; Cilrry
) 'o ur

I , . -,

.Cf'lerry I thtl

CMfury S tylt
o()llftn AnM Stylin g

YOUR CHOICE
Styles and t·lnishl.'

I 11] ·

Inspectors probe
dam's stability at
Vinton County mine

Here 5!he latest desrgn mbedroom
•
fum•iure--thf' Shaller klok 1 You WO\Jid e11.p«1 tolrnd
rtontv 1n tar more !!xpenSI'Ie !urnll ure Pnce 1ndudesdresser. mrrmr
cllest and heaclboard N1g ht stand $89 95

2 Colors

wearing velvet taam.

S139

WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) The U.S. Office of Surface Minin g
will continue Lo monilor the stabili ty of a dam buih ala Vinton Coun ty coal mine.
However, an industry lobbyist
said Tuesday lhe federal regulators
were pressured by a former state
engineer who opposed design
changes to the dam.
Neal Tostenson, president of lhe
Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Association. accused the regulators
of violating an agreement wilh
Sands Hill Coal Co. of Wellston,
which buill the 100-foot-high dam.
"I don't like to see coal compa·
nics walked on, and I don't like the
way government does it,'' he said.
An aRreement bet ween Sands

I

•

0

ONLY 166°
Save 184"

J

f.l\0 .VJ SULIU \\ IIIII) II UN I\ Il l· II

Willi TWO Jl.lUUNK I EM II.TIIll~ t-'&gt;
l' (, ~tud&lt;, '"•"'Y ttinf li•il h. tn u u~W-

(110~~

5

299.95 COMPLETE
IMAKES TWIN BEDS! I

5·Pc. DhteUe St~f
Laminate Top, Solid
Pine Chairs
. S

188

Your Uwice
C"sl. &amp; f~m-y

·I·Drawer Chest

Honey Pine Finish

/"'-...

ANYSIZB-

$49

ONELbW.
PRICE!

:I
I

Coffee &amp; End Tables 96.00

SJ99
Spfif&gt;i A~

BURNING OLD EVIDENCE - Meigs
County law enforcement officials destroyed
drugs and old evidence Tuesday afternoon near
lhe Meigs Counly Highway Department. Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lenles, righl, ignites

Ci\SII &amp;

1

C.u tRY

tilftl

~~ suq~
·-~-

fi9rlngAir"

3 Days
Thur.
...-!PI
Fri.
Sat.

5 Cu. Ft. Chest Freezer

...

~~ suq~

Bed Frame~
11

41

·ll0(16

Gas or Electric Range

1888

S

The Quality Goes
In, Before The
Name Goes On!

Four Head VHS VCR

Stereo with Multi-Brand Remote

Zenith
• Chrome-Plated Dnp Bowls
• Lrft 'N Lock · Top
• Porcelain-Enameled Oven
ln\enor
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· Front &amp; Rear Leveling Legs

• 5.0 Cu Fi
• 1 Baskel

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• 4-Head Double Azrmu\h
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· SEq Audio wrth Surround
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ZENITH 25"
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16·8 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator

WASHER

• 16.8 Cu. Ft.

• Exira Large Capacity
·Heavy Duly
• 12 Cycles
• 3 Waler Levels

•2
Shelves
• 2 Crrspers
• Meat Drawer

--~
• 4 Temper. fi!.,GJilP
DRYER

· Texlured Doors

• T1med Dry,i '_L•rv
• End ol Cycle Srgnal

Sentry 2 TV with Remote
• 25' Diagonal
• Remote Control
·Flashback
• 181 Channel Capabilrty
• Picture Prefeence
• Sleep Timer
• On-Screen Menu
• Closed Captions
• Slate FiniSh

20" Receiver/Monitor TV
• 20' Diagonal
• Unffied TVNCR Remote
Control
• Closed Caption
' 181 Channel Capability
' Receiver/Monrtor
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11

• 6 Cycles10p\1ons
• Normal &amp; Ltghl Wash
· Rinse &amp; Hold
• Plate Warmer
• 2 Level Wash Ac\ion

a

prepare wrongful deaih lawsuit that we can indeed find white,
againsl Simpson, 47, who has black, brown, every color jury
pleaded innocent to murder and is there is, who will indeed be fair
being held without bail.
and impartial," Gan:etti said.
Meanwhile Tuesday, 15 leaders
Media reports over the weekend
from the city"s black community said lhe defense team was considmet wilh District Attorney Gil ering a claim that racism prompted
Garcetti to quell racial tensions Detective Mark Fuhrman - who
arising from the case and urge like lhe viclims is white- to plan!
GarceLti not to seek the death a bloody glove at Simpson's manpenalty if Simpson is convicted.
sion. Police say the glove matches
"We don't need to add anolher another found near lhe bodies.
Fuhrman denied planting 1he
human being to that already overcrowded (Dealh Row) line that is glove. Lead defense lawyer Robert
clearly a product of racism in this Shapiro said he may argue that evicountry and a product of classism dence was planted, but would not
in Ibis country," said John Mack, say racism was a motive.
Questions about Fuhrman's
president of the Urban League's
Los Angeles chapter.
racial attitudes are pertinent, said
Garceni is expected to announce celebrity lawyer Johnnie Cochran
sometime before the trial whelher Jr., who attended lhe meeting wilh
he'll ask the jury to recommend a Garceni.
dealh semence if Simpson is con·
"As much as I don't want to see
vic ted.
race broughl into this case, if lhis
He assured the leaders !hat person has a feeling against minoriSimpson would get a fair trial.
ties, his credibility becomes very
' "I am hopeful, I am confident, much at issue.·· he said.

,..___-Local briefs--

SLS20&lt;9S

Jewelry Dept. 40°/o off all in stock Gold &amp; Diamonds
You Get More When
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A 20-year-old Rutland man was sentenced 10 five years probation and six months at the Southeastern Probationary Treaunent
Alternatives Center in Nelsonville for his role in the Feb. 9 breaking
and entering of Vance's Service Station in Harrisonville.
David Priddy was sentenced Monday by Common Pleas Coun
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill after pleading guilty to a charge of receiving stolen property.
. .
In addition, Priddy was ordered to pay $1 ,200 restitution and
$500 costs of prosecution.

Accident causes pile-up on bridge

Pr.

24" Built-In Dishwasher

LOS ANGELES (AP) - OJ.
Simpson will offer a 5250,000
reward to help police locate "the
real killer" of his ex-wife and her
friend, according to TV reports.
Today's New York Newsday
reported that preliminary DNA
tests of blood found on the door
and inside Simpson's Ford Bronco
show it is consistent with Simpson's blood, not that of lhe victims.
Newsday quoted unidentified
sources who also said thai if the
findings hold, that could make it
much harder to convict Simpson.
Simpson's reward will be
offered for information leading to
an arrest and conviction in the
killings of Nicole Brown Simpson
and Ronald Goldman , KNBC and
NBC News reported Tuesday.
The Associated Press' repeated
calls 10 lhe offices, homes and cars
of Simpson's lawyers were not
returned.
KNBC also reported that Gold·
man's family has hired a lawyer to

·Man sentenced on charge

]1- 10Ct9 37-1009

Washer and Dryer Pair

the evidence while Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby, left, and highway deparlment work·
er Steve Hartenbach, center, look on. Some of
the evidence destroyed dated back to 1986.

0. J. Simpson offers $250,000
reward to help find 'real killer'

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2 Sectiono, 12 Pagee 35 cenla
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 20, 1994

SAVEs211

SOFA
5

Too\gbl, parlly cloudy.
Low near 70. Thursday, chance
or ralo JO percenl. High near 90.

No one was injured when lhree cars crashed in a chain reaction
at the foot of the Pomeroy-Mason bridge Monday afternoon,
according to Pomeroy police reports.
.
. .
. .
David Wolfe, 63, Middleport, was cited for failure to mamtam
assured clear distance after he struck another car from behmd w11h
his 1983 Oldsmobile Delta 88 which then dented another car at
12:24 p.m. Monday, records show.
.
Wolfe's car sustained light damage to lhe front end and driver's
side, reports stated.
Aimee Hendrick, 21, Letart, W.Va., had light damage to the
front and rear end of her 1986 Oldsmobile Delta after Wolfe hit her
while she was stopped at the light, records stated.
Robert Schneider. 35. Middleport, who was stopped at the light
in front of Hendrick had light damage to the rear of his 1986 Ford
Tempo, according to reports.

Local woman treated after accident
A Middleport woman rear-ended a Mason, W.Va., man's car
Monday night, acrording to Middleport police records.
Shelly Rupe, 20, was cited for failure to maintain assured clear
di~ and her vehicle had heavy damage to the front end, reports
~taled Rupe was ttanspMed to Veternns Memorial Hospital.
"Bobby Joe Roush. 17, reported moderule damage to his vehicle
after lie was hit at 9:27 p.m. Monday while driving south on North
Second Avenue near Diamond Street, records showed.

Continued on page 3

New housing
starts down in
9.8% in June
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hous·
ing starls plunged 9.8 percent in
June, lhe government said today,
new evidence of lhe curbing effect
of mort~age rates nearly 2 percent·
age pmnts above a 25-year low
reached last fall.
Activity was off in every region
of lhe nation except for the North·
east, which rebounded slightly
from a double-digit decline a
month earlier.
The Commerce Department said
starts totaled 1.35 million at a sea·
sonally adjusted annual rate, down
from a revised 1.50 million in May,
Many analysts had expected con·
struction to slip only to 1.48 mil·
lion.
The initial May estimate was
1.51 million. Allbaugh the revised
figure was up 1.8 percent from a
month earlier, the increase was due
solely to a 15.4 percent jump in
apartment buildings. Construction
of single-family units, which
account for 80 percent of all starts,
was off 1.2 percent
Still, overall starts during the
first six months of the year were
17 percent above those of the
same period of 1993. Starts totaled
1.29 million liiSt year and many
analysts still expect them to total
nearly 1.40 million this year.
Analysts attribute recent slowing of housing activity to mortgage
rates that have remained above 8
percent since April. They averaged
8.4 percent in June, and reached
8.68 percent last week.

Hill and th e reclamati on di vision
call s for an independ ent engineerin g firm 10 conducl lests on th e
dam 's suength and stability.
The dam holds back water used
10 wa sh coal taken from Sand s
Hill 's slrip mine.
Questions about the con strue ·
lion of the dam were rai sed by
Howard Fauss, a fonner Ohio Divi sion of Reclamation engineer.
Fauss filed a complaint with federal authorilics , triggering an investi gation .
Dan Schrum , regulatory pro·
gram supervisor for 1he Office of
Surface Mining, said the stale may
have allowed a number of viola·
lion s durin g lh e des ign and con·
struclion of I he dam .

Schrum said Tuesday h1 s agen·
cy's inves1iga1ion was conlinuing.
Several samples of the dam 's core
were taken laS! month , he said . A
prelimrnary report is expccled by
the end of August.
Schrum said the federal agency
alway s planned to lest for durabili·
ty and that the agreement did no1
rule out durabilily testing .
Bonny Huffman, sccrclary-trcasurer of Sands Hin. said she lhinks
the durability te st is a wa ste of
money.
"h is no I a valid test to prove
1he stability of the dam.'' she said .
The construction of lhe Sonds
Hill dam al so is being investigated
by Ohio Inspector General David
S1urtz.

State Senate finance chief Ney
opposes school funding appeal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Senate Finance Chairman Bob Ney
of St. Clairsville and fellow Republican Gov. George Voinovich are at
odds over whether the state should
appeal its loss in a Perry Counly
school funding case,
Ney opposes appeal as a waste
of laX payer money and an insult to
school children.
He engineered the state Conlrol·
ling Board's rejection Monday of a
request from Attorney General Lee
Fisher to waive competitive bidding rules and spend $250,000 for
a lawyer to handle the appeal.
However, a special emergency
session of lhe board was scheduled
today to reconsider the matter.
Voinovich asked Fisher to
appeal a decision from Perry County Common Pleas Judge Linton D.
Lewis Jr.
Lewis ruled July I that the cur·
rent system of financing education
was unconstitutional because of
disparities in per pupil spending
levels.
The State Board of Educarion

voted against appeaL IL is a defendant in the lawsuit that Ll1c Ohio
Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy
of School Fundmg filed on behalf
of more ~Jan 500 uf the s\alc"s 612
di stricts.
"I don 't want it appealed, obvi.
ously," Ney said in an interview
Tuesday.
"I think we just ought 10 face
the music. "We "re eventually
going to have to face Ibis problem.
It is not going to go away," he
said.
Voinovich spokesman Mike
Dawson said views about appeal of
the decision vary among legislators
of bolh political parties.
"There are obviously some
members of the Legislature who
would like the state to not appeal.
But nol appealing this case is tantamount to letting Lhe courts dictate a
massive tax increase of well over
$1 billion," Dawson said.
Ney disputed such estimales.
''No one knows how 10 cure lhe
problem. No one has lhe numbers
crunched to know what satisfies lhe

court. This could be phased in,"
Ney said. "You don't necessarily
have to have laX increases."
Colleen O'Brien, board presi dent, said the panel may have been
unclear about issues involved when
it voted aguinSI the spending.
"I 1hink !here is a question of
exactly what is being presented
here . The auorncy general is presenting this request for a waiver of
competitive bidding.' ' Ms. O'Brien
said.
"This approval of Lhe waiver of
competitive bidding is in no way
Controlling Board approval of the
appeal," she said.
The requesl also includes money
to cover two olhcr school funding
cases in stale and federal cour1s.
O'Brien is Gov . George
Voinovich"s reprcscntalive on the
board lha1 also includes six legislators.
The $250,000 IS pan of
$828 ,000 that legislators gave 10
the Ohio Department of Education
to pay for lhe state's defen se in the
case.

Armstrong's boyhood hometown
celebrates moonwalk anniversary
WAPAKONETA. Oh'il'l (AP) Twenty-five years ago loday Neil
Ann strong became t/ie first man to
walk on the moon . The former
astronaut's boyhood home wants 10
make sure nobody forgets it.
The western Ohio communily of
8,500 residents has been celebrat·
ing the event for the past three
weeks as part of "Moonwalk 94. "
Activities have included an air
show, hot-air balloon rally, a
model-rocket launch and displays

at the Neil Armstrong Air and
" I remember silting tnlenUy on
Space Museum.
my mother's living room couch,"
The celebralion culmina1cs said Zwez, 42. "I stayed up all
tonight al lhe museum with a laser night to watch. It was more apprelighl show, fueworks and a replay hension than anylhing else , not
of the lunar landing and moonwalk knowing what was going to hap on giant movie screens.
pen."
Museum Manager John Zwez
Mayor Don Wittwer said resiwas among lhe residents who hud- denls attended prayer vigils as
dled around television se\S July 20, Armstrong and astronaul Buzz
1969, to watch Armstrong emerge Aldrin walked on the moon and
from a lunar module and plant that Michael Collins orbited in the comfirst step dn the moon.
~_,...,....,..c.;.o.;.n..:t""'ln;.;;ued on page J

:s

WRECK SCENE - Two people were trans·
ported from a two-ca~ crash Tuesday afternoon
in lialisbury Township. Jamie Blaettnar, seated,
wipes away a tear arter she wrecked ber car.
lnl'ormation from lhe Ohio State Patrol on tbe
accident was not available by press time. SOME
detaDs include tbat at about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday,

a pickup truck collided with a brighl yellow Geo
Slorm at lbe intersection or SR 7 and County
Road 75. Jamie and Jessica Blaetlnar were
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospilal where
tbey were later treated and released. (Sentinel
pbolo by George Abate)

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