<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9800" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9800?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:48:57+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20238">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/dd8eaf4ca0c428a3238364ae03e4f1ab.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2a1f807efffb9b5d8c154bc3eee5e54b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31376">
                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Modeling
course
completed
Cindy Lewis, 13 yea r old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lewis, Jr., and gra nddaughter of
Mrs . Anna Mac Lewis, the lat e
Roben Lewis, Sr. and Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Imbod en, all of Middleport, ha s completed a 13 hour
course in advanced modeling with
the John Robert Powers Modeling
School of Columbus.
Lewis will be a student at Meigs
Junior High School in the fall
where she will be active '" the
cheerlcading program . She IS also
an active member of Hope Bapt1st
Church of Middleport. Local buSI -

Monday, July 25, 1994

Conflict over Confederate banner heats up

CINDY LEWIS
ne sses and indi v•du als spon sored
Lewis in the modeling course.

MYRTLE B-EACH, S.C. (AP)
- One hundred and twenty-nine
years after Lee bowed to Grant at
Appomattox, this town of miniature golf courses. amusement parks
and packed beaches is where
Southerners are taking a stand on
the Confederate battle flag.
Thousands marched here Saturday as tounsts watched from side walks and simmered in traffic jams.
"DixiC, we're gonna bring your
flag down." sang the predominantly black ant1 -fl ag marchers. Th e
pro-llag group, all white, launched
ilS rally with rebel yells and chant ed: "Never take it down'"
Deep in the sea of rebel flag s,
some shouted racial slurs and wore
T-shirts reading "You wear your X
ami I'll wear mine;" "It's a white
thmg;" and "The original boys in

.the hood, " depicting Ku Klux
Klansmen.
"The Confederate flag says the
same thing to me !hat lhe swastika
says to my Jewish brothers," countered the Rev . John Hurst Adams, a
bishop in lhe AME Church.
With anti-flag se ntiment growing and supporters digging in their
heels across the South, a showdown loom s in South Carolina.
Civil rights leaders threaten Labor
Day demon strations in the resort
town of Hilton Head Island and
promise an economic boycou if lhe
banner continues to fly over the
statehouse, as it has since 1962.
"This would be one more feather in their hat. We're not going to
let it happen," said Michael Parker, taunting black marchers wilh a
portrait of a Klansman on horse-

back bearing a flaming cross .
Both sides agree the slllrry blue
"X" on a red field is a powerful
symbol; what it symbolizes
depends on who's talking.
"It's heritage, it's honor, it's
glory," said demonstrator Sherman
Todd, 31, who wore a flag T-shirt
reading: "It's A Southern Thing.
Y'aU Wouldn't Undersland."
"It represents the scars and
stains of our past, not our future; it
symbolizes divisiveness instead of
unity," U.S. Rep. John Lewis, DGeorgia, sa1d recen~y.
Throughout the region. battle
lines are being drawn.
Democratic Gov . Zell Miller
seeks re-election !his year after stirring bitter debate in 1993 with his
unsuccessful drive to change the
slate flag in Georgia, which incor·

International agreements protect Social Security for workers abroad
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager, Athens
Some years ago, an American
working abroad counted among the
risks the loss of Social Security
protection. Since foreign jobs were
subject to the Social Security payroll laX, they were not earning the
credits necessary for Social Security retirement, survival, and dJsability benefits and Medicare protection.
Today, thousands of such workers are protected by agreements
between the United Slates and 16
foreign countries. Many of these

workers are receiving a higher benefit than otherwise would have
been payable, or receive a benefit
where none would have been
payable as a result of the se agreements .
A 17th agreement, between the
U.S. and Greece. is expected to
take effect before year's end. Preliminary discussions regardmg possible agreements with Japan and
Korea are planned fort this year.
Since 1978. the United States
has concluded bilateral Social
Security agreements with Austria,
Belgium, Canada, Finland, France,
Germany Ireland, Italy, Luxen -

bourg, the Netherlands, Norway,
Portugal, Spai n, Sweden, Switzerland , and the United Kingdom .
r 'he agreements have two main
pufJJOSes. First, they help fill gaps
in benefit protection for workers
who ha ve d1vided the11 caree rs
betwe en th e Unit ed States and
another country. For exa mpl e, if a
worker has earned some Social
Security credits in the United
Stales, but not enoug h to qualify
for a benefit, the U.S. Social Security Administration can count the
worker' s credits under the other
country's syswm to mak e up tt1c
difference.

If a person meets the minimum
elig•bility requirements based on
combined credits. he or she will
receive a partial U.S . benefit
proploptional to the amount of
credits earned in lhc United Slates.
The other country can also use lhe
person ';s credits from both countries 10 help meet the eligibility
requirements for its social security
benefits.
The agreements also eliminate
dual Soc.al Security coverage and
contribution liability . This can
occur when a person from one
country works in another country
and is required to pay social securi-

ty contributions to both countries
on the same earnings. Each agreement sets out rules that assign a
worker's coverage to just one of
the two countries.
U.S. Society Security agreements apply to the United States
retirement, survivors and disability
insurance program. About 44,000
people are now receiving U.S. benefits that would not be payable
wilhout the agreement.l. The contribution exemptions provided by lhe
agreements save hundreds of millions of doUars a year for employers and workers in the United
States and the other countries. In

Herman. Emma Hoffman and Caroline Volz giving an update on
their various families.
Given special recognition were
Ethel Orr, Chester, and Louise
Ewing, Zanesville, for revival of
the Theiss reunion. Also given particularrecognition, in honor of par-

ticipation 50 years ago in World were also gtven to the oldest men
War II , were Woody Paul. Paul present, Blylhe Theiss and Melvin
Hoffman , Bill Davis, Bill Young, Wcnderoth; oldest women, Lomse
David Yost, Clifford Beaver, Ken- Ewing and Ethel Orr; youngest
ncth Thei ss and Bdl Wagner.
boy , Tyler McVay; youngest girl,
Game s, to include all age Rachelle Davis; traveling the greatgroups, were played with all partie· est distance, Dorothy Salmon sen
ipating receivmg a prize. Awards and Sam Chapman Florida; most

the close ol the program, David
Yost, Racine, identified and gave
an explanation of family connections for all of the pictures.
A potluck dinner was held at
noon. Those attending came from
Florida, West Virginia, Maryland,
Kansas, Illinois, and Ohio.

AVERAGE SEI.IJNG PRICE*

OHIO

GPC

1.39

1.28

1503
Buckeye 5:

I

____ _ __

Page4

,

•

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.

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

,.

..

1 Section, 10 Pagea 35 cent.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 26, 1994

A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Middleport OKs $1.3 million '95 budget
•

By GEORGE ABATE

Sentinel News Staff
Middleport passed 3 $1.3 million proposed 1995 budget at its
regular council meeting Monday
night. The budget is expected to
end 1995 with a $68,713 surplus.
The bud~et was approved 4 - 1.
with Counctlman Paul Gerard dis·
senting and Councilman Nick
Robinson abstaining.
Next year's $1,385,580 budget
was prepared in June by ClerkTreasurer Teri Hockman and
accounted for income earned this
year and last, Mayor Dewey Horton said.

The four heavy snows cost the
village $25,000 this year, which
had not happened in the previous
fouryears,hcadded .
Gerard questioned how the vii lage could expect to end with a
$68,000 surplus.
"Are !he numbers we have realistic? Does anyone think we'll have
this much in surplus?" Gerard
asked. "It seems !hal the payroll is
just as big next year."
The surplus is from refuse and
meter funds growth. and costs will
be held down, Hockman said.
This June, the general fund l)ad
a balance of$22,678.05, while rune

of the 18 funds had defiCits . The
largest defiCit balances were
$10,175.R3 in recreation fund and
$8,927.84 mpubhc transportation.
The village ha~ been plagued by
paymg bills that are months old 10
get out of its financial constraints.
Counc1l had cancelled giving
longevny ra1ses based solely on the
employee's years of experience,
Honon added.
In other business, the council
also concentrated auention on savmg lhe village pool.
Th ·ll
h
1
e VI age as a ready applied
for a grant !hat would pay for half
of $80,000 m repatrs needed tore-

open it Other grants may also be
sought, Horton said.
The village park board present·
ed the council with a check for
$365 in money raised for the 42year-old pool from a softball tournamcnt and yard sales. A town
meeting will be held at 7 p.m. on
Thursday, Aug. 4 in council cham bers to look at ways to raise money
and get more volunteers.
Bake sales, tag days, yard sales
and even putting an item on th e
water bill stubs where people could
pay more ~tan their bill to help the
pool all were discussed . The mon ey
that is donated for the pool will

Zoning dilemma prompts
Pomeroy public hearing

only be used for ~lat purpose and if
the pool can not be repaired the
money will be return ed . Horton
said.
The connell also passed a resolution thanking the Order of the
Eastern Star for donating money
from a bean dinner for the pool.
The co uncil also thanked Park
Director Tim Shane for hi s hard
work.
In other park news, the board·
reported that the min ia ture golf
course will have new holes
in stalled, and any businesses that
would like to spon sor a hole can do
so for $150.

A 'purr-feet' rescue

firefighter Michael VanMeter.
Blaettnar then appointed Wayne
Davis and Rick Blaettnar as
liaisons between the fire depart ·
ment and Dills Fire and Safety of
Ravenswood, W.Va., for outfitting
of the new fire truck. Council ratified the appointments.
Also, Blaettnar said state and
village workers would start removing portions of sidewalk on Main
Street ncar Nye Avenue in August.
The sidewalks are ~angerous following a slip on the road earlier
this spring, he said. In addition,
contractors hired by the state are
continuing to examine the slip on
Main near Nyc, he noted.
During open discussion, council
members George Wright and Bill
Young noted that street repairs
were needed on roads including
Wyllis Hill, Pleasant Ridge, Ann
Street and Spring Avenue. Blaet·
tnar indicated work crews would
perhaps continue road repairs by
Thursday or as soon as possible.
Blaettnar also commended street
supervisor Jack Krautter for the
repairs on Wyllis Htll Road, notmg
(Continued on Page 3)

'

"

RESCUim KITTEN - A member or tbe Meigs County
Humane Society, Fred Baloy, above, climbed onto tbe roor or
RiteAid Monday morning to save this kitten. This eight-week·
old killen was Ukely thrown ooto the roor by youths or haterul
owners, said Sharon McLead, humane society investigator.

ftled Monday in a Cincinnati feder- speech."
The Klan likely will seek anothal court. Greenwood asked U.S.
District Judge Carl Rubin to issue er permit for a cross this Christmas,
an order that would permanently their lawyer said.
"I think lhe decision ... is clearprevent Cincinnati from interfering
with the Klan when it wants to ly a victory for the First Amendment, for the free exercise of reliplace a cross on Fountain Square.
The city's lawyers opposed the gion and the concept that a public
request. They are defendmg a city forum, once opened, can't be
ordinance that forbids displays with closed to the views of people who
symbols that could be percetved as may be regarded as hostile to the
"fighting words" that could incite · establishment," said Benson Wolobservers to violence.
man, an ACLU lawyer who repreIn the Columbus case, the sented the Klan in lhe case.
appeals court rejected the state's
Judges Nathaniel Jones and
argument !hat allowing the wooden Robert Krupansky joined in the
cross on Capitol Square violated appellate court's unanimous opinthe constitutional separation of ion, which was based on the coun's
church and state by creating the 1993 ruling in a Grand Rapids,
appearimee lhe state was endorsing Mich., case. That ruling said the
a religion.
Constitution allows a private orga·
"In a public forum, the religious nization to display a religious symcontent of private speech is abso- bol - a menorah in that case -on
lutely irrelevant for First Amend- a public, square, as long as aU pri·
ment purposes," Judge James vate groups are afforded equal
Ryan wrote. " ... The Klan's dis· access to the public forum.
play of a Latin cross is private

Abuse perplexes
humane officials
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News StafT
An eight-week-old kiuen was
rescued from the four-story roof
of RiteAid Monday morning by
a member of lhe Meigs County
Humane Society.
The black-and-white kitten
was alen but emaciated, infested
wilh ear mites and fleas after the
rescue, said Dorothea Fisher,
president of the Meigs County
Humane Society.
Fisher called Fred Baloy,
who took a ladder and climbed
up to the flat, tarred roof and
snagged the cat, Fisher said.

The cat could have been
there for one day or three, but
would nol likely have survived
the sunny Monday, Fisher said.
"If I keep it I'll name il
Fred," Fisher added, referring to
the kitten's savior.
People who abuse animals
usually have a history of being
abused. she added.
"I've been in this business
for 25 years. Why do people
beat their children or beat their
wives?" Fisher asked. "I have a
very dim view of my fellow
man."

Citizens should not have pet.l
if they can't take care of them,
she said.
"God says we have dominion
(Continued on Page 3)

Simpson DNA test results
to become battle of experts

'Av...,. selll111 prier per (lll&lt;k bastd on an KJ. RtJ~~olds survey of all oudet
l)p&lt;IICI'OSS Ohio (1""'11'!- April, t991). Pri«s ..m..., by
~y 1nd oud&lt;t type. Cbeck lht prier wherr you buy cl81"flt1.

15 mg. "tal'''
O.Bmg. nicotire av. per
c•garene by FTC method.

·~--..1.---------

ent1ne

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
state will challenge a U.S. appeals
court's ruling that the Ku Klux
Klan has the right to displ~.y a cross
outside the Ohio Statehouse in
Coltul!buS.
Rob Biesenbach, a spokesman
for Attorney General Lee Fisher.
said an appeal of the 6th U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals' ruling Mon·
day would be filed with the U.S.
Supreme Coun within 90 days.
The state is worried that allowiflg the display "poses serious constitutional problems," Biesenbach
said.
For the last two years, the Klan
has waged a similar fight in Cincinnati. Both times, a federal judlle
ordered the city to let lhe Klan display a cross at Chrislmas on Fountain Square, a public square downtown.
Scott Greenwood of Cincinnati,
an American Civil Liberties Union
lawyer representing lhe Klan, cited
the aJli)CIIate ruling in arguments

® For about the same

Tonight, partly cloudy .
Luw ln 50s. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High ln lower!!&amp;.

4-8-30-31-32
738228

State to mount appeal of decision
allowing Klan cross at statehouse

Baptist women
hold workshop
Twenty women from Jackson.
Cheshire, Patriot, Rio Grande,
Pomeroy and Racine met at the
Bob Evans shelter house at Rio
Grande on recently for a workshop
on American Baptist Women's
Ministries programming for 199495.
The program opened wilh a welcome from President Arlene Tracy,
Rio Grande, A new theme song,
"No Longer Strangers" was presented and sung by the group.
The morning session was spent
with reports and distribution of
materials from the AB W Ohio
State Conference held in June at
Dennison University, GranviUe.
Delphine Dale , Ironton, was
speaker in the afternoon using the
theme, "One Spirit • No Longer
Stranger." She emph~ized three
points - stop and tlnnk, look m
the Bible, listen with mind and
heart
Anita Holley, Rio Grande, lead
group singing _and Donna. S~d~rs
was soloist, wnh several mspmng
songs.
Contributions were made to the
State Officers Training Fund and
the new slate project.
.
AnJIOUIICCIIlenl was made of the
Association fall rally on September
17 to be held at Pomeroy First Baptist Cburch.
The meeting opened with a "free
hug" mixer led by Martha Lou
Beegle, Ra~ine, and closed with
prayer by Mrs. Dale.

BASIC

Pick 4:

lead

the zoning resolution was original·
By JIM FREEMAN
ly passed.
Sentinel News StafT
The review board will meet
A zoning question resulting in
Pomeroy Mayor John BIaettnar' s Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the
calling for a meeting of the vil- Pomeroy Municipal Building. The
lage's zoning review board was meeting is open to the public,
among lhe items discussed at Mon- Blaettnar said.
"We hope the issue can be
day's meeting of the Pomeroy Vilsoon," Blaettnar comresolved
lage Council.
mented.
Blaettnar called for the meeting
Council authorized the construe·
to hear .a zoning dispute in the viltion of a 55 -foot radio tower on
lage's Mulberry Heights area.
A house on Mulberry Heights, Breezy Heights for use by the
in an area zoned as urban residen· Meigs County Emergency Medical
tial, is possibly being purchased for Service and the Radio Amateur
Emergency
Service
use as an office - a violation of Civil
(RActs).
the village's zoning ordinance,
Emergency Services Director
Blaettnar said.
"The agent for the buyer has 'Robert Byer said the tower would
been informed and has requested a allow better communications durhearing before the zoning review ing emergencies and would benefit
. the village because a village anten. board," said Blaetblar.
Council members indicated they na would be placed on the tower.
In personnel maners, council
have received calls from nearby
property owners opposed to the accepted lhe resignation of police
business being located on Mulberry Pauolman Scott Jonas, effective
Heights across from Veterans Friday due to new employment. In
Memorial Hospital.
addition, Blaettnar appointed Bracy
Although the area is zoned Korn as third lieutenant on the
urban residential, the area houses a Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Departdoctor's office put in place before ment, following th~ . resi~nation of

Gene Kelly
hospitalized
stroke
after
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gene

Kelly, the acrobatic danc~r who
slllrfed in Hollywood mustcals of
the 1940s and '50s, was hospitalized after a mild stroke.
Kelly, 81, was in stable co.~di­
tion and "resting comfortably at
UCLA Medical Center after his
stroke Saturday night, nursing
supervisor Susan Davidson said
Sunday.
Kelly's publicist, Warren
Cowan, said doctors described the
stroke as mild and "in such a ...
minimal way that I don't believe
that there was any permanent damage.''
Kelly choreographed and
danced in such musical hits as "An
American in Paris," ~~singin' in
the Rain," and "On the Town."
Kelly also had several serious acting roles and directed "Hello,
Dolly!'' and other ftlms.
He attended a July 16 concert
given by opera tenors Placido
Domingo, Jose Carreras and
Luciano Pavarotti

245

Vol. 45, NO. 58

the united States. lhe exemptions
apply to Social Security contribu·
lions and also contributions for
Medicare hospital insurance. In the
other eountnes, the exemptions
apply to Social Security contributions and, in some cases, contributions for olher programs.
People do not have to do anything about receiving benefits
under an international agreement
until they are ready to apply for
benefits. A person who wishes to
do so can apply at any Social Security officer here or in a foreign
country.

generations present, Ethel Orr wit~
four; largest family present, Lena
Chapman family .
Twenty first-time attendees
were recognized and given a special welcome.
There was a display of family
pictures, without identity. and at

Pick 3:

hike

Copyright 1DM

-------------Family reunion---~--------THEISS
The fourth annual revised
reunion of the Reverend Luben and
Marie Louise Hille Theiss' descendants was held at Sll!r Mill Park,
Racine, with 150 family members
and friends attending.
David Kucsma of Racine, master of ceremonies. extended a welcome and !he invocation was given
by James White, Mlddlepon.
Mrs. Maye Mord, Pomeroy, presented a brief history of Marie
Hille Theiss. She told of the difficulty of gathering a young family
together for travel to a distant
country after her husband had
already come to America, burying
two children in Germany before
leaving, hardships of her life and
the personal strengths to keep
going for over 90 years.
.
Family groups were recogmzed
wilh descendants of Julius, Henry.

()hi;;-L~tte~y ~-===-·_,-=.:---

Reds

porated lhe battle flag in I956.
There were demonstrations at
this year's Super Bowl in Atlanta.
and more are expected when
Atlanta hosts the 1996 Olympic
Games. Last week. Holiday Inn
Worldwide asked its franchises to
remove the Georgia flag, and flag
foes are pressing McDonald's to
take it down from Georgia restaurants.
It came down from Alabama's
slate Capitol last year. Soon after
taking office in 1993 . Gov. Jim
Folsom decided not to challenge a
coun ruling against the nag.
In Tampa, Ra., lhe county cornmission replaced the seal that
included the nag earlier this year.
And in Mlssissippi. which made
the rebel emblem pan of its flag in
1894, there have been court challenges.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
hearing 10 help decide whether O.J.
Simpson's lawyers can conduct
their own DNA tests on the prosecution's evidence is shaping up as a
duel between expertS.
So far, the circumstantial case
a11ainst Simpson in the killings of
hts ex-wife and her friend largely
rests on blood found at the crime
scene and his estate.
Genetic fingerprinting tests originally were scheduled for today.
But Simpson's lawyers asked for
an emergency hearing out of fear
that the tests could consume the
blood samples and leave none for
the defense.
Judge Lance Ito ~ Monday,
to delay the tests until Thursday to
give a defe~~SC expert lime to get to
the Maryland laboratory where the
tests, will be conducted. He also
said the expcn could have the lab
hold 10 percent of the blood sam-

pies for possible testing later.
Ito said he would convene a
hearing in about two weeks at
which expens will educate him in
the exotic technology of DNA test·
in g. Then he 'II decide if the
defense gets a portion of the samples.
DNA - deoxyribonucleic acid
- encodes each individual's
unique genetic makeup. Some scientists call DNA testing the greatest forensic breakthrough since fin~erprinting. Others argue it is subJOCI 10 contamination and laborato·
ry error and cannot be trusted.
"Since I sense that this is the
critical physical evidence, I think'
we need to be very clear on what
we're doing here,' 110 said. "The
record is not complete here. I do
not have enough sctentifrc evidence
to make a ruling at this point''
Monday's hearing was just lhe
beginning.

NEW EMS VEIUCLE FOR SYRACUSE Mary PlckeDli, chief or the Syracuse squad, was
presented keys to a new vehicle Monday afternoon by Meigs County Emergency Service
Director Robert Byer. The new vehicle will
replace a 1986 model, which will now be used

(

....

for patient transfers by the EMS. Cost of the
new vehicle and all its equipment was approximately $74,000. From the left here with Ptekens
and Dyer are Doug Lavender, captain, Eber
Pickens Jr., assistant chier, David Lawson and
Eber Pickens Sr. (Sentinel photo by by Charlene

Hoenich)

In other action . the council ·
• voted 5-l, w1th Robinson tlisscmin g. to withdraw from the Big
Bend Water DIStri Ct. This was the
second reading of th e ortlmance. A
meeting will be held at 7 p.m.
Monday, Aug. I in council cham bee~ to d1scuss the different options
for water service.
·
"I think we should ta ble th e
third reading un t1l we hav e a
chance to review th e options"
Gilmore said. "I think we need to
be careful about locking ourselves
out of what we might want to get
back in."
(Continued on Page 3)

Legislation
drops ban
on assault
weapons
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
compromise crime bill proposed by
top negotiators drops a ban on
assault-type weapons that had been
approved by lhe House and Senate.
The weapons ban was only one
of the major items still in dispute as
conferees prepared to resume work
on the bill this afternoon after a
six-week delay.
President Clinton was meeting
this morning with members of the
Congressional Black Cau&lt;;us, looking for com100n ground tin anot!&gt;Q,r
area of lhe bill: racial implicatio'\,
of the death penalty.
A provision in the House-passed
crime bill would allow use of
statistics to prove racial bias in
death penalty cases. But even a
compromise version that would
rcslLict it to federal cases, among
other limits, could not attract
enough votes in the Senate to overcome a threatened GOP filibuster.
To mollify the provision's supporters. the White House has
offered to impose an executive
order implemenung part of the
compromise and to appoint a commission to study the problem.
The chairmen of the congressional judiciary committees, Rep.
Jack Brooks, D-Texas, and Sen.
Joseph Riden, 0-Del., distributed
their proposed compromise crime
b11l to fellow negotiators Monday.
Congressional aides say it left out a
lot or major issues because Brooks
and Riden could not agree, including the weapons ban and how
prison funding will be distributed .
Brooks adamantly opposes the
firearms ban, which would affect
19 named types of firearms and
scores of copycats and other rifles,
shotguns and pistols that lhe government says meet the characteristics of assault-style weapons. It
would limit magazine capacities to
10 rounds. At the same time, it
would exempt 650 named flfearms
and all guns legally owned when
the law took effocL
The Senate passed the ban as
part of its crime bill, and lhe House
passed it as a separate measure.
Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.,
said he would reintroduce a version
of his House-pa~sed bill at the conference, saying, "I'm cautiously
optimistic that we'll have the
votes. •'
~s for prison funding, Senatepassed legislation would require
states to implement such rules as
requiring all prisoners to serve at
least 85 percent of their sentences.
House-passed legislation would
distribute the money to all states
while setting aside a portion as
bonuses for those with such rules.
The Brooks-B•den agreement takes
neither side, sources said.
Another potential issue is feder _
al court funding. The Senate bill
authorized $300 million to cover
increased work from lhe biU's new
laws. The House approved no
money, and the Brooks-Biden proposal leaves it out.
Monday, U.S. District Judge
Maryanne Trump Barry of the
Judicial Conference of th~ United
States, urged House Spe.aker
Thomas Foley. D-Wash., to restore ·
the funds. Rep. William Hughes
D-N.J., said he would try to get~
money back in.
(Continued on Page J)

�Tuesday, July 26, 1994

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

8MULTIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubiL•her
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ge neral Manager

A MEMBER of The Assomtcd !'(css, Inland Da1ly Press Associallon and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association .

LETilORS OF OPINION a.re welcome. They should be less than 300
words loog. Al l lettcf' are subject to editing and must be signed witll nanoe,
address and te lephone number. No unsigned letters will be puh li shed. Le tters

should be in good taste, addressing issues, no t perso nalities.

Letters to the editor
Nothing to do
Dear Editor,
I am writing this letter to defend
my rights. I am 17 years old and a
drug and alcohol-free teenager with
nothing to do. I realize that some
businesses in our area get some
people who come there just to terrorize the place with violence, alcohol, etc., but I think that it is ridiculious that there is not one place
in Meigs County for teenagers to
"hang out".
I have tried to go til local restaurants to eat and talk to my friend s,
but I get ran out. I'm not naming
every place I have been to but I've
been ran out of all of them . To my
knowledge, curfew isn't until II
p.m. those under 18, well then why
can the Pomeroy Police make us

leave when we 'rc not hurting a
thing . I reali ze someti mes it's the
business that suggests it, but other
times I've had permi ssion to sit
somewhere but the police still has
me leave.
From word of mouth I've heard
that the mayor docsn' t like for us to
"hang out" at these places. but I
would like to know what he sug gests for us to dp. I'm sure there
arc probably paities, etc., for me to
go to, but I would not like to screw
up my life, so please someone gtve
a suggestion for us teenagers with
nothing to do but travel to Gallia
County to the movies every weekend, because just remember - all
qf aren't rich .
Lisa Tatterson
Pomeroy

That would be catastrophic for
President Clinton may well be
mking his entire presidency by Clinton politically and for his abiliLhrcaten ing an invasion of Haiti to ty to threaten force anywhere else
scare its military rulers into abdica- in the world. At worst, it could lead
tion . It' s a nsk worth taking - but
only if Clinton has thought his way
Morton Kondracke
through a maze of complex ities.
The ways Clinton could fail and be humiliated both domestical- to a horrendous war on the Korean
ly and in ternationally - are far peninsula, if the new regime in the
more apparent than the ways he Nonh is tempted by U.S. weakness
could succeed. That's why hi s to launch an invasion of So uth
Korea.
course is so risky .
Just possibly, Clinton will get
If his combination of tough ceonomic sanctions and "coe rcive lu cky and. through threa ts and
diplomacy" - open threats of promises, convi nce the Cedras
invasion, ship movements, Manne gang to decamp to the South of
practice maneuvers - fails to con- France. there to live peaceably on
vince Haiti's military leaders to assets looted from Haiti.
More likely. Clinton is going to
abandon power, Clinton almost has
to invade to maintain any interna- have to order an invasion . This,
too, is fraught with great risk. Clintional credibility.
His previous twists and turns on ton has done little to prepare the
Haiti, reaching bottom last Oct. 16 American people for the operation,
with the retreat of the troopship and polls show they mostly oppose
Harlan County off Pan-au-Prince. iL
Republicans in Congress and
ha ve persuaded the Haitian junta
most
conservative foreign policy
and all other U.S. adversaries that a
experts are dead against the invaClinton threat means nothing at all.
Likely as not, Lt. Gen. Raoul sion, even though some of them
Cedras and other Haitian military readily supported the U.S. invasion
leaders think right now that if they of Panama. They argue that the
dig in and glare back at Clinton, Panama Canal was a vital U.S.
he'll once again climb down from interest that justified that invasion,
hi s threats to invade.
but, in truth, Manuel Norie~a never

threatened the security of the canal.
President Bush never secured a
vote of Congress prior to the invasion of Panama, but Clinton should
be prepared to do so if it comes to
that. More importantly, he's got to
make a strong enough public case
that he could win a test vote if he
had to.
But so far Clinton has allowed
the impression to be created that
he's been pressured into an inva sion primarily by the Congressional
Black Caucus, wi th seco nd ary
pressure from politicians from
Florida. He's go t to erase that
impression and make the case that
restoration of Haitian democracy,
and cessation of the flow of
refugees, is in the U.S. interest.
Foes of an invasion are arguing
that Clinton must show a " vital
national interest'' before using
force - implying that Lhe sec urity
of the U.S. mu st be under threat.
nut that's not the case, especially
in the Western Hemisphere, where
there 's a IQitg history of U.S. intervention.
Senate Minority Leader Bob
Dole, R-Kan ., even implied on
''Face the Nation'' last Sunday that
democracy or " nation -building"
was an illegitimate reason for intervention.

Responds to prison letter
Dear Editor,
.
I am writing this letter in
response to the letter written by
Anna Leamond.
I was very offended by her letter. I have met many women that
work in prisons, but have not met
one yet that would flaunt herself in
front of the inmates.
My daughter works in prison, as
a matter of fact, and she works very
hard. This job is quite stressful and
~gerous .

;Jrhe state of Ohio employs
11.000 people, so I guess there
could be one bad apple m the barrel, but isn 't there always.
Because of the unemployment
situation in Meigs County. she had
the option to get on welfare and
stay there, or go to school, work
her tail off and get a job outside the

OHIO Weather

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, July 26, 1994

county. She chose· the latter in
order to help take care of her family.
I am very proud of my daughter
and really take offense at your suggesting that all women who work
in corrections are the same, they
arc not.
My son-in-law also works in
prison, and his uniform is the same
one the women wear, and believe
me they are not that revealing.
!think if you would walk a mile
in my daughter's shoes, you would
not like il
I suggest that you check out
some more women that work as
guards and you will see that they
don't flaunt themselves.
Edna Hunnell
Racine

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By Tbe Associated Press
E~cerpts of Ohio editorials of statewide and national interest
Tbe Cincinnati Enquirer, Sunday, July 24
The trench warfare over national health-care reform goes on, but the
territory Clinton vowed to fight for has. been surrendered. The. winners are
the American people, who exarnmed his plan carefully and reJected 11 as a
costly. complicated, foolish experiment that could turn .the world's finest
health care system into a cross between Soc1al Secunty and the Postal
Service.
.
Clinton tried to retract his white flag, but he has deserted hts bottom
line by signalling to Congress that it's negotiable. He wants to claim victory for whatever passes. He has never met a principle he was willing to
stick to. And public opinion has twned against him. .
Public protests and pressure on Congress forced Clinton to back down
on his most damaging demands .
· Now Congress should get the message and refrain from major changes
that jeopardize health care, until voters have a chance to raufy or reJCCl
Clinton's agenda in the fall elections.
Tbe (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Friday, July 22
..
.
.
As though Haiti doesn't have enough problems. A mthtary JUnta 1s ruling the country with its strong arms wrapped ever Uj!hter around the
nation's neck. International economtc sancuonschoke sun more.
And now, Baby Doc Duvalier, the younger half of one of the world's
most infamous father-son dictator duos, wants to come home . How touching.
.
.
He should indulge his sense of nostalgta .- from a generous distance ..
Duvalier was shuffled out of Pan-au-Prince m 1986, endmg h1s family's thuggish 29-ycar reign. Though he was vanished to relative obscurity,
he did not retire into poverty. His was a plundered pens1on, a more-thancomfortable sum that should have lasted the rest of his life. But now he's
43 and shon of cash.
Duvalier, not surprisingly, lists patriotism as his motivation for going

~/6'1

i' 'I

Proud to be an American ·cynic
In case you haven't noticed, we
are being scolded.
It' s true. It seems a number of
informed and astute people think
that we, the American people, are
getting far too cynical about poiitics and the political process.
Vice President AI Gore, for
example, spoke to a luncheon of
federal bureaucrats the other day
and said that the public's mood of
distrust " has fallen heavily on the
largest institution in America the federal government - and it
has worn heavily on federal
employees for much of the past two
decades.'' He urged them to hang
tough in the face of "deep and pervasive cynicism."
Washington Post columnist
David Broder, who pauses often to
waggle his finger in our faces for
being 100 rough on our public servants, recently asserted that "cynicism is epidemic right now," and it
"saps people's confidence in politics and public officials." In a Baltimore Sun anicle, Rhodes College
political science professor Michael
Nelson e~plored the question,
"America's Image of Politicians:
Why Do We Hate Them?"
Well. let me count the whys...
Tammany Hall, Teapot Dome,

Adams, BobiJ, Baker, Richard
Nixon, Spiro 'Agnew, Jim Wright,
S&amp;Ls....
Vietnam.

Josenh Spear
I"

Watergate, Koreagate, Billygate,
Irangate, lraqgate, Whitewatergate,
Nannygate, Scalpgate, Bimbogate....
Congress.
Ah, yes, Congress. Where to
start? With the 19 major pieces of
legislation it has exempted itself
from? With the $35,000 stealth pay
hike disguised as "ethics reform"?
With the Cost of Living Adjustment the lawmakers tacked on to
their pay struclW'e - the one tha.
gave them an auiOmatic pay raise
of $4,092 last year and has jacked
their minimum pay up to
$133,644?
The bureaucracy.
Ah, yes, the bureaucracy, that
paper-eating beast that keeps growing and growing, those wonderful
federal employees whom AI Gore
says have been bearing the burden
of our cynicism.
Bearing the burden? They enjoy
virtually guaran~ employment,

pay and great benefits and even
auxiliary benefits in many cases. In
1991, the federal government handed out $487 million in bonuses to
695,559 employees. The Social
Security administration awarded
$32 million in bonuses to about
50,000 of its 65,000 employees.
The Agency for International
Development gave extra cash to 73
percent of its employees. We
should all have their burdens.
Yes, Americans are cynical
about politics and government.
This nation was founded by
plungers and profiteers, and we
were cynical toward them. We are
governed today by hypocrites and
pretenders and we are cynical
toward them . Cynicism is our
birthright and our natural state of
mind. It is nothing we should be
ashamed of. And heaven knows,
we never run out of reasons. Take a
random dip out of the news:
- The director of the White
House Office of Administration
hops a military helicopter for a golf
game in northern Maryland. He
gets caught and says the president
might be playing there and thus the
trip was tantamount 10 a reconnaissance mission for him and a "training mission" for the helicopter

'l'~;c;i~';··~h·;ijJ' itgirl?

They're either setting OJ. up, or
he's getting away with murder. Not
that it matters. The flesh-eating
strep is probably going 10 get us all
anyway. Or some comet aimed at
Jupiter will miss it, and make a
crater 50 miles wide on our own
blue watery orb, bringing dalkness
~~ .
for months, withering all life
"I have many friends there, and, as you know, I love my country,'
forms. Cockroaches will inherit the
Duvalier said.
earth. And killer bees.
Fine. Love it - and leave it alone.
But let's not thinlr. about that.
There is cause for hope. AfiN aU, it
is Lassie's 50th anniversary. A
Tbe Athens Messenger, Tbursd.ay, July 21
.
.
brand-new Lassie movie is in the
Five years ago, Georgia Insutute of Technology ditched 1ts toucht
theaters. I don't mind admitting
feely remedial orientation program for AftJcan-Amencan and Hispamc · that I tear up a little every time I
students and replaced it with a rigorous five-week summer school regi- even see an image of Lassie. And
men called the Challenge Program.
.
every time I hear anybody say.
No longer are minority students held by the hand and essenttally told
"Lassie, what is it girl?" - weD,
that they are the victim~ of an uncanng. and b~goted soctety. Instead.. !be I'm bawling lilce a newborn babe.
students are pointedly mformed that wtth hard work and determmauon
II' s true. This hard,bitten iconothere is nothing to stop them from e~cellmg m sch~l.
.
clast skeptic is a sucker for a dog
So how are Georgia Tech's mmonty students domg .today m the wake
movie, especially if it stars Lassie.
of the program's higher expectabons? In a word, magm(icenlly. Not only
I've followed aU the adventures of
are these students generally outperforming their countetpii1S on campus, this mutant collie with the white
blaze. I've sweated bullets with
many of them are on traelr. for advanced degrees in engineering.
. .
Better yet !he heretofore yawnmg performance gap between mmonty
Donald Crisp and Roddy McDowstudents and 'the rest of the student body has been eliminated. In fact, the ell, waiting for Lassie to come
freshman class of 1992 saw twice the percentage of minority students home. I've watched bet fight Nazis
with Peter Lawford, and work
with a straight-A aveJ'II8e than the wh1te students.
If more of our public schools from elementary onward preached the
through combat fatigue with Liz
same self-help gospel, our guess is it would have a proportionally positive Taylor. I watched her outlast
Tommy ReUig and Jon Provost.
effect on their students of color.

.

But securing democracy surely
wa s th e rubri c under which th e
United States fought World War I,
World War II and the Cold War.
ny itself, it wouldn' t justify massive loss of lt fe where other U.S.
interests were not involved , but
where the prospec ts arc for rather
light losses. the case can be made.
This assumes Cl mton has a
well-devised plan for an in vas ion
and for its aftermath , involving lit tle or no loss of U.S. life in the ini tia l takeover, mobi li zation of a
large French -speaking foreign con tingent to do much of the work of
nation-building, and a committnent
on the part of President Jea nBertrand Aristide that he' ll govern
like a democrat, with reconciliation
of his country a top priority.
Haiti is an inhospitable place for
democracy- building. Its political
culture is violent, co rrupt and
exploitative. Ari stide's poor fol lowers wi ll be all too mcl10ed to
wreak vengeance against anyone
perceived as being an oppressor.
Somehow, the U.S . has to be sure
that Aristide is going to resist thi s
tendency if he' s rctwned to power
by U.S. forces.
It's often claimed - accurately
- that the United States occupied
Haiti for 19 years after the 1915
invasion without setting up democracy, but in tho se day s, Third
World models of democracy did
not exist and U.S. occupiers themselves were st.eepcd in racism.
This time, the job of democracybuilding should not be assigned to
the U.S. military, even though it's
perhap~ the least racially polarized
institutkln in U.S. soc iety , but to
Canadians, French and representatives of the Organization of Ameri can States.
Clinton has got to make clear to
the U.S. public that reverses will
occur. People will get killed. Riots
will happen . He has to prepare the
public for an exte nded co mmit ment.
The risks involved arc so daunting that Clinton might better have
taken a different road . Having
headed down the path toward intervention, Lhough, he can' t turn back
without terrible penalty. If his luck
isn't good, let's hope his planning
is flawless.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Cloris Leachman and June Lockhart. I followed her through the
tangled landscape of syndication,
where she ended her television

/an Shoales
days troubleshooung wilderness
problems with faceless forest
rangers. She put baby birds back in
their nest: she saved toddler raccoons from forest fires; she put
makeshift splints on the broken
legs of wide-eyed does. Smoky the
Bear has nothing on this pup. She
is a princess, a paradigm of selfless
nobility, the Elvis of dogs.
Now she's baclc. I can't wait to
see the new "Lassie," even if it
was produced by Lome Michaels
of "Saturday Night Live" fame.
I'm sure this means that the boy
Lassie must help will be·one of
these whiny media adolescents
with floppy hair, ruDer blades and a
jones for MTV. It means the
soundtrack will be fiUed with Sonic
Youth and Red Hot Chili Peppers,
as an aural inducement for young
consumers who ordinarily wouldn 'I
be caught dead in a dog movie. A3
usual, Hollywood will mix blatant
sentimenlality with flagrant product placement, and hope somethin~

sticks.
Despite all that, I have to go.
Don't I owe it to Lassie? Look at
all she's done for us! A baby
trapped on a mountain ledge by a
cougar? Lassie's teeth are bared
and she •s ready to take it down.•
Some old prospector's been
snakebit? Suck out the poison,
Lassie! Good girl! Rabid skunks
are descending on the orphanage?
The cub scouts are trapped in the
ravine? Baby Jessica's in the weD'!
Lassie, what is it girl?
What if Lassie had been there
that night in Brentwood, instead of
that pathetic Alr.ita? She would
have taken the alleged perpelrator
down before a blow was struck.
She would have kneeled on his
chest, barked him his rights, and
kept him at bay until the proper
authorities arrived. Lassie knows
the early symptoms of flesh-eating
strep, and can recommend both
competent physicians and efficient
HMOs. Why place our trust in
astronomers? Lassie can see
comets coming from light years
away. She'lllead us 10 safety, if we
only put our trust in her. Cockroaches and lr.iller bees live in fear
of Lassie.
I want to live in Lassie's world.

-Sen. Alphonse D'Arnato, the
ethically challenged New York
Republican who has repeatedly
censured Hillary Rodharn Clinton
for making big profits on the
futures market, files papers showing he made $37,125 in a single
day on a stock investntent. "I am
no Hillary Clinton," he says. This,
of course, is true. Hillary the
novice made only a few hundred
bucks a day.
-Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan.,
holds up a bill that would provide
funds to restore historical buildings
at black colleges and universities
because he wants to add $3.6 mil- ·
lion for a school in his home state
that is 97 percent white.
Yes, we are cynical, and it's a
good thing, too. It keeps the pols
and bureaucrats on their toes. What
do you sup~se they would try to
get away w1th if we were not cynical?
Yes, we are cynical, and God
bless us for it.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columaist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext 8317.)

a world where families are dutifui
and loving, and children are perfect. You don't even need family
values in Lassie world, you don't
even need faith. Lassie doesn't ask
that you believe in her. Just call
her, and she will come. She will
come.
. I confess everything! I want to
nde ba~k to the farm from Capital
C1ty w1th Gramps. I want a beautiful, fine woman by my side, a
handsome son m the back seat and
the finest dog in the world riding
shotgun. I'm ready, Lassie. I'm
ready for the rural lifestyle. They
do have cable in the country, don't
they? I don't want to miss those
Lassie reruns . Can you get me a
deal on installation? Good girl!
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St., Nevada City , CA
95959.)
Ian Sboales is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper enterprise
Associalion,
(For lnrormatlon on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by ca16ng l-

800-827-fi364, ext 8317 .)

Area death

Wednesday, July 27

Henry Scarberry

Accu-Weathcr0 forecast fo r daytime condllions and high temperatures
MICH.

Haiti dilemma has Clinton boxed in

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IToledo I 75" I

IMansf1eld In' I•

You

IND.

• lcolumbus laoo

I

-

W.VA .

(f~~
Ice

Sunny Pr. Cloudy

Via Assoctstsd Pr9ss Graph,csNet

•

Cloudy

101994 Accu-Weather. Inc.

Cool temperatures expected
through Wednesday in Ohio
Hy The Associated Press
Partly cloudy skies arc expected
to co ntinue across wes tern Ohio
Wednesday. The eastern half of the
state will sec a mi•ture of clouds
and sun . Showers arc possible over
the e•treme northea st. Temperatures will remain cool. Most areas
will fail to reach 80 degrees.
A high pressure sys tem will
build over the region Wednesday.
The record h1 gh temperature at
the Columbus weather station was
102 in 1934 . The record low was
50 in 1946.
Sunset today will be at 8:52
p.m . Sunrise Wednesday will be at
6:25a.m.

Weather forecast:
Today ... Partly cloudy with a
cha nce ofshowers or thunder storm s. High today fro m the mid
70s nonh to the lower 80s south.
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers cast and south .
Low s from the mid 50s to around
60.
Wednesday ... Partl y cloudy . A
slight chance of showers northeast.
Hi gh mid 70s to lower 80s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday and Friday ... A chance
of shower s and thunderstorms.
Lows 55 to 60 and highs 75 to 80.
Saturday ... Dry. Lows around 60
and highs 80 to 85.

Middleport OKs budget
(Continued from Page I)
• unanimou sly voted to apply
for a state grant that would pay for
se nior citizens to ride the Blue
Streak Cab Co.
• was updated about a drainage
problem at Logan and Broadway
streets where water was flooding a
mao's family room. The grant is
still available and this project
should begin in the next few days,
Honan said.

Dilemm~

• learned the Middleport Fire
Department an swered 72 calls tn
Jun e , with II fir e and 61 EMS
run s. Nearly 50 man hours were
logged by the members of the
department and 30 hours for eqmpment mamtenance.
• conunucs to search for background to ensure that res1dents who
should have been granted tax
abatements w1ll get the abatements
and not be taxed, Honan satd.

prompts hearing

· (Continued from Page t)
that workers have removed a slip
thereby opening Wyllis Hill to
Spring Avenue.
Councilman Larry Wehrung
noted that street lights were out on
Wyllis Hill, Lincoln Heights and
Laurel Street, while Councilman
Bill Haptonstall commented on
trees along the riverbank.
Councilman Scott Dillon noted
that St. Paul Lutheran Church, in
conjunc.tion with other churches,
including Trinity Congregational
Church, is holding a vacation bible
school and requested permission to
close the east section of Second

Avenue for a street fair on Aug. 12
from 5-8 p.m. .
Other counctl members and
Blaettnar mentiOned usmg Lmn
Street, the portion of Second
Avenue behind Rite Aid orlhe
upper parkmg lot as alternauves
since Second Avenue and
Sycamore Street are major traffic
routes.
Blaettnar said council would
make a decision at the Aug. 8
meeting.
Present were Blaettnar, Clerk
Kathy Hysell, and councilmen
Scott Dillon, Bill Haptonstall, John
Musser, Larry Wehrung, George
Wright and Bill Young.

New bill drops gun ban
(Continued from Page I)
"We have to ensure that every
link in the criminal justice system
is provided with resources," said
Hu~hes, chairman of the House
Jud1ciary Commiuec couns panel.
"It makes no sense to shonchange
the courts."
According to congressional
sources, the Brooks-Biden propos-

al

• Includes House-passed legislation to send third-time felons to
prison for life if their third convictions were 10 federal court. Th1s
would limit the felonies to violent
and drug -related offenses, and
would let out early some over-70
prisoners if they served at lea!t 30
years and if the Bureau of Prisons

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS llJ-96t)

Published nery afternoon, Monday throu&amp;h
FrNiay, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley Pub liahlng CompanyJM~ I timedia
Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156.
Second clau poll~&amp;t paid at 1\tiJlQoy, Obio.

Member: The Associated Preas, and lhe Ohio
Newspaper Association, National Advertising
Repre.entative, Branham Newspaper Sa les,
133 Third Aveaue, New York, New York
tOOt7.

POSTMASTER: Send addreas changes to The
Daily SentiDcl, Ill Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio

45169.
SUBSCRimON RATES
87 Curler or Molor Route

8:FE~ .:::SINGLE: .:COPY
:.: : .: : :;i
PRICE

Daily......................................... - - 35 CeutJ
Subaqibcn not dmirina to pay the carrier may
remit ID IIChance direct to The Daily Seotinel .
on a three. aix or 12 moath buil. Credit will be
given cmi« etCh weet.

No aubacript.iona by mail permltted ID •eu
where home caTier I«Vice iJ available.

Mall Subocript-

t...we Melp County
Weeb...................... .. .................. $21.14

t3
26 Wceb .................................................$43.16
!12 Woeb .... " .......................................... .$8&lt;1.76
Oulllde Meip CoaniJ'

~=:=::::::::·:·::::::': :::::·. :::::::·:·:=::~ '

requested their release .
• Favors a House-passed provision allowing prosecution of 13year-olds as adults for certain violent offenses.
• Contains a death penalty for
major drug traffickers even if no
death is directly attributable to the
trafficker.
• Drops a Senate provision that
would m~e federal crimes out of
numerous gang activities, ranging
from conspiring to join a criminal
street gang to committing murder
for that gang.

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - Direct
livestock prices and receipts at
selected buying points Tuesday by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture :
Barrows and gilts: firm to 50
cents higher; demand moderate to
good.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ·---'-----.29 3/4
Akz.o -----·--··---------.59 3/4
Ashland ou -------..--.35 1/8
AT&amp;T ------------·------.54 1/4
Bank Oot.----·--,----.31 5/8
Bob E••ns--·------..·-·--·-.21 5/8
Cbomplon Ind. --··--·-·-.ll til
Charming Shop .......,_____, 1/4
City Holding -·-···-------.32
Federal Mog.ul--------·--.29 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ---·-·· ---.35 718
K-m1111-------------,16 1/4
Lands End ------------19 1/4
Limited IIIC. ----------·18 Ill
Multimedia Inc. ·-------.29 3/4

Point Bancorp ·-----------17
Reliance ElectrJc ________ t9 518
Robblos &amp; Myen.--------..20
Sboney•.,Jnc
___________ .tl718

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

518
Wendy lnt'L------ --·15 1/4
Worthington lod,.---"'·---19
Stoek rt!port. llrt! the 10:30 Lm,
quotes pro•lded by Advest

Star Bank

Gallipolis.

oi

Henry F. Scarberry, 70, of Vinton, died Sunday, July 24, 1994 at
Grant Medical Cente r in Co lum bus.
Born Feb. 19, 1924, in Middlepon. the son of the late Alfred A.
and Margaret Gay Scarberry, he
was an offi ce mana~ e r with
Machinery Tool Rentals 10 Columbus. He was a graduate of Middleport Hi gh Schoo l and Business
College of Dayton, a World War II
Army veteran. a membe r of
Masonic Lodge #363, and a member of the American Legion.
He is su rvi ved by his wife,
Wilma M. Newell Scarberry of
Vinton; son. Stephen P. Scarberry
of Columbus; son and daughter-inlaw. Dani el D. and Penny Sue
Sca rb erry of Wa shington, Pa.;
se ven grandc hildren; brother,
Alfred A. Scarberry Jr. of Gal lipolis; and severa l nieces and
nephews .
He was preceded in death by a
brother, William Scarberry; and a
sister, Sara Stockman.
Serv ices will be at I p.m. Thurs day in the Fisher Funeral Home,
w1 th the Rev. Chester Lemley offi ciating. Burial will follow in the
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may
call between 7 and 9 p.m . Wednesday. w1th Masonic services at 8:30
p.m . Wed ne sday at the funeral
home.

BEEF AND IIUNNY ROYALTY -In
preparation for the Aug. 15 opening of the 1994
Meigs County Junior and Senior Fai r, royalty
was selected following Monday's livestock judging at the Rutland Civic Center. Ileef princess is
Chastity Judd, second from left, standing next to

the bunny princess and prince, J ea nie Newell
and Josh Roush, and pictured from the left, runners-up in beef, Juliette A. llrown, second runner-up and Candace Bunting, first runner-up,
(.lurid, Newell and Roushl and bunny runnersup, Amy Smith, fi rst, and Cheryl Jewell, sewnd.

Widow sues
miners' union
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The widow of a Mingo County
non-union contractor killed during
a United Mine Workers strike is
blal)'ling the union for negligence
·and endangering lives, according to
a $27 million lawsuit
Wanda M. York said the union's
conduct led to the fatal shooting of
her husband, John Edward
"Eddie" York of Lenore. The lawsuit also accused th e UMW of
authorizing, planning and directing
picketing and other Slrike-related
activities.
UMW General Counsel Robert
Stropp said Monday he had not
seen the law suit and would not
comment.

Car-deer accident
injures area man
A Racine man suffered minor
visible injury in a car-deer collision
Monday on U.S. 33 in Salisbury
Township, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Hi ghway Patrol said.
Lester A. Wolfe , 52, Walnut
Street, refused treatm ent at the
scene, the patrol said.
Troopers said Wolfe was westbound at 5:30 a.m. when his vehi cle struck a deer that attempted to
cross the road. The deer was killed
and Wolfe's car was moderately
,
damaged.
The Ohio Department of Transportation was notified to remove
the deer from the scene, the patrol
said.

'Purr-feet' rescue
(Continued from Page 1)
over aU animals, but that means
we have responsibility to care
for them, not to do whatever we
want," Fisher said.
Laws exist that penalize animal abusers, said Sharon
McLead, Meigs Humane Society investigator.
"I've seen some of the worst
cases you'd ever want

LO

see,"

McLead said. "In Rutland a
month ago, someone punched a
kiuen 's eye out."
This kitten was saved by
local veterinarians and now can
be adopted by a good home, she
added.
"Sometimes I think we arc
more ,.animals than they are,''
McLead said. "It could be the
social times or people haven't
been brought up right."
Animal abuse of aU kinds to chickens. dogs. horses and
cows - is pervasive in this
county, she added.
More volunteers are needed
for the humane society, Fisher
added .
The thrift shop in Middlepon
and private donations fund the
department that has only one
full-time employee, she said.
The society will pay half of
the cost for spaying and neutering of animals if a person has
financial need, Fisher said. This
cost totals between $400 to ·
$500 a month .
Most cats are sent to the
Athens County shelter, while
dogs only go to the Jackson
County (W.Va.) shelter, Fisher
added.
Meigs can not afford to run
an animal shelter, but if enough
money could be raised, a shelter
would make the local process
more effective, Fisher S81d.
More than 3~teachers in lhe
county schools teach students
about animal abuse, she added.
"In other words, education is
our only toOl," Fisher said.

1994 JUNIOR FAIR ROYALTY - Prince
and princesses to reign at the Meigs County
Junior Fair, Aug. 15-20, were se lected Monday
night following the livestock judging at the Rutland Civic Center. They arc from the left, Sus:m

Grueser, horse princess; Kristi Warner, dairy
prin cess; Tara Gr nes~r, goal princess; Mdissa
Guess, poultry; Michael Guess, poultry prince;
Leslie Parker, swine princess, and Riki Barringer, wool princess .

Land transfers filed in recorder's office
The following land transfers tram to Willi s R. and Thelm a
were recentl y II led in the office of Poner,Oiivc. 26. 15 acres;
Meigs County Record er EmmoDeed, Carol A. Sm ith, Carol A.
gene Hamilton:
and Ryan B. Mahr to Carol A. and
Deed. William R. and Michelle Ryan B. Mahr, Middleport lot;
Deed, N. S. and Winnie White to •
R. Hall to Ro y E. an d Maurita
Miller. Chester parcel;
Bruce W. and Pamela Humphrey.
Deed. Ray Wellman to Patricia Sutton lot, 1.4 acres;
Kay Hawley, Bedford, 1.591 acres;
Affidavit, Richard A. Finlaw ,
Deed, Ray Wellman to Beth E. deceased, to Gertrude M. Fin law,
Eggers and Ben Bailey, Bedford Salisbury parcel ;
parcels; •
Deed, Jaymar Coal Company to
Deed, Gary Wayne and Donna Jelm Enterprises, Scipio tract' and
L. Gilmore to Wilma Hysell, Rut- parcels;
land lo~
Deed . Ernest A Wing ett ,
Deed, Linda C. Jarrell to Harry deceased, and Robe rt Win gett to
E. and Mary M. Stobart. Letart Charles F. Chancey. Paula J.
Falls lot;
Chancey and Donald C. Shaffer.
Deed, Henry C. and Nara Hart- Racine, 3.8468 acres;
man to Jam es S. and Pa mela S.
Deed. Denise and Steven Bunce.
Stettler, Chester parcel;
c t al., to Do tti e S. Turner,
Deed. Dou~las and Cheryl Bar- Pomeroy/Scipio parcels;

Deed, Don B. and Gi na R. Ti llis
to Joseph S. and Faye Marie Tilli s,
Rutland parcel;
Affid av it , C.C ., Cla y C. and
Mac Wright. a ll de ce as ed, to
Monad Wil son;
Deed, Monad May Wil son to
G uy David Webb, O liv e . 2.3 87
acres;
"
Deed. W1lliam C. and Mary E.
Cu ndiff to Victor R. Counll, Syra-"
cusc lots;
Deed, Linda and Donald Fi tch·
to Carl E. and Arlene S. Park er,"
Orange, 5.065 ac res;
Deed, Alfred Charles Smith to
Mac Smith, Cora Mac Sm ith ."
Pomeroy lot;
'
(~
·
.Henry E. Jr. and Kathleen
~ 'leland to Dcnms R and Juan 1- :
ta E, ryant, Sc1r.1o parcel.
•
____ _;;
"

Group wants prison issue put
COLUMBUS (AP) - A group
of citizens that has worked for two
years to stop a state prison from
being built in southeast Ohio wants

EMS logs 5 calls
Units of th e Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reponed five calls for assistance between
Monday and Tuesday morning s.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
4:44 p.m. Monday, Lincoln
Street, Margrctha Wolfe , Hol zer
Medical Center.
POMEROY
2:57 p.m. Monday, Enterprise
Road, Harold Hy sell, HMC;
I 0:05 p.m. Monday, Peacock
Avenue , Glady s Smith, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
RACINE
2: 47a .m. Tuesday, Pea rl and
Third streets. Thomas Baldwin ,
VMH.
SYRACUSE
7:43a.m. Tue sday, Pomero y
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
Leona Wallace, VMH.

to put the 1ssue before the voters.
The Concerned Citizens for a
Safe Community on Monday asked
the Ohio Supreme Court to force
trustees in a Noble Co unty township to create a zoning board.
The board would have to put a
zoning plan that covers the prison
site up for a vote by res id ents Nov.
8.

on ballot

The citizen group wants the ·
170-ac re Olive Town s hip s ite"
zoned so that the Noble Correc~on­
al Institution cannot be built there.
The townsh1p now has no zoning.
The township trustees have 30
days to rcspi&gt;nd.
.. I don ' t know anything about
th e law suit," Francis Arn o ld,
trustees prcs1dcnt. sai d Monday.

Commemorative Edition
Of

The Meigs County
175th
Anniversary Tabloid

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admtssion - Emma
Fox, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Gladys
Short , Reedsville; Katherine
Moore, Syrac usc.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges July 25 - Stacy
Harden, Mrs . John Hatfield and
daughter, Mrs. Mark Addis and
son, Mrs. Paul Barnett and son,
Mrs. Phillip Denney and daughter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Maynard, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Ivan Stanley, son, Hampton.
(Published with permission)

g_

$1.50 per copy
Available at

..

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH

'

�..

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Tuesday, July 26, 1994
Page-4

In the NL,

Reds beat Astros to hike Central lead
Bv JOE K.-\Y

- CINC INNATI (t\P ) - The fan s
treated 11 li ke JUSt anot her game.
The Houswn Astros shrugged it off
.ts JtiSt another loss.
·so why we re th e C tn c innati
Reds ac ti ng like they' d JUSt done
\O rn ~ th i n g lmJXJfl.ant?

ll) ra ll ytng for a 7-4 vtctory
mght , the Reds strcngthcnctl th ctr month-long hold on ftrst
place trt the NL Ce ntral. The wtn
pu shed th eir lead ove r Houston to
• t\\ 0 ga mes wtth two left in th e
. . en!.!~
So whil e owner Marge Schott
fumed about low attendance and
the As tr os st art ed talking about
tomorrow, the Reds celebrated the
way thc•y defe nded their turf.
"Thi s was very important fo r
us," sa id Kev in Mitc he ll , who
pla yed the mos t important role
Monday.
Mttchcll , playing with a sore hip
that kept htm out of the lineup a
day earli er, hom ered on hi s ftr st
two swmgs against Greg Swindell
!7-7) to wipe out defiCits and make
a half-empty stadium erupt.
"He played like it wa s th e
World Series,'' Reds manager
Da vcy Johnson said.
The stands made it look like one
of tho se play -it -out game s 111
September. Only 28 ,693 tick ets
were sold and onl y 25,247 fan s
showed up on a pleasant 74-dcgrcc
night for arguably the Reds' most
important series in two years. The
Astros won 't visit Cincinnati agam
this season.
The Reds · attendance has been
down all season, but it was hard to
explain the lack of interest in a
late-July showdown for ftrst place.
"That's bad," Schott said . "I
just feel embarrassed for the
team."
The Red s embarrassed them selves early . John Smiley (11-9)
had trouble throwing strikes, and
shortstop Barry Larkin booted a
ball to set up a three-run second
inning. Jeff Bagwell drove in his
\l &lt;~ n tby

99t h run with a sin gle and Crai g
Biggio had a two-run double that
made it4 -2.
But Mitchell turned everything
around a second tim e.
In the first inning, Mitchell took
a ball from Swindell before pulling
a chest-hi gh fa stball into the sec ond dec k in left field for a two-run
home r. He fo ll o wed the same
sequence in the third, taktng a ball
before golfing a change -up into the
seco nd deck for a 4-alltic.
" He hit one off the top of hi s
shoes and on e off the bill of his
hat," manage r Terry Co llins said .
" It 's not lik e he made had pttchcs
on him ."

" After the seco nd home run, he
was re all y exc ited," Cmcmnatt' s
Brct Boon e said . " He gave me a
hard high- fi ve. Usual ly he gives me
a soft one."
Boone foll owed Mitchell' s 26th
homer with a two -run doubl e off
Brian Williams that put the Reds
ah ead to sta y 111 th e third. Brian
Dorsett added an RBI single in the
seventh off Tom Edens.
Smil ey and Hec tor Carrasco
took u from there. making the lead
s tand up whil e sav in g John son
from severe criti c1sm.

Smiley settl ed down after the
second innin g, gi ving up just one
more hit and fi ve in all during his 6
2/3 inning s. Carra sc o , who has
struggl ed lal cly , cam e on to fac e
Bagwell with a runner aboard in
the seventh and nearly gave up a
game -tying homer.
Bagwell sliced a ball that veered
foul down the right-ftcld line, then
struck out on a slider.
"It was maybe a foot (foul), but
close docsn 't count," Bagwell said.
"He made the right pitch when he
had to. Give him credit."
Johnson decided to let Carrasco
bat with the bases loaded in the
eighth and a 7-4 lead. The pitcher
took a called third strike, underc ut ~
ting a potentially big inning.
' ' I definitely left myself open by
letting Carrasco hi~" Johnson said.

" Ev en (Jose) Ktjo was telling me
to tak e him out and go for more
runs. But I rea ll y lt ked the way he
was thro wing.''

Carrasco made it a moot poin t
by re tir ing all seve n batters he
faced for hi s first save since Jul y 4
and hiS stxth ovc mll .
Now. tlt c best the Astros can do
is win the last two and settle for a
t iC.

"What you can't let thi s gam e
do is affec t what yo u do tomor row," Collin s satd. " You've got to
come out there and be read y. They
will not let dow n. I guarantee ymt
that. "
In other games with fir st place
at stak e. Los An ge les beat San
Francisco 10-5 and Montreal beat
Atlanta 6-4.
A Iso, Col orado beat San Diego
4-3 , New York stopped St. Louis 71, Philadelphia de feated Florida 81 and Pittsburgh downed Chicago
6- 2.
Martinez brothers help
Dodgers, Expos win
At thi s rate, Ramon and Pedro
Martinez might sec each other yet
again thi s season.
The brothers took tums pttching
their team s to bigger leads Monday
ntght, Ramon lcadtng the Lo s
Angeles Dodgers over San Francisc o 10 -5 and Pedro helping the
Montreal Expos beat Atlanta 6·4.
Pedro and Ramon talked Sunday
when the Dodge» were in Montreal. That wa s th e la st tim e their
te&lt;tm s arc schedul ed to meet thi s
year, although a playoff matchup"
still a possibility .
"We pumped each other up, "
Ramon said.
Ramon (9-7) collared Darryl
Strawberry and cooled off streaking San Franci sco. giving up onl y
four hits in eight innings. Strawber ~
ry went 0-for-4 .
Pedro (8-5) left in the seventh
inning with Montreal trailing by a
run, but the Expos rallied.
Strawberry laced the Dodger s
for the first ti111e since they released

him May 25 . He gree ted Los Angeles manage r Tom Lasorda - who
had mad e critical re mark s about
Stra wberr y - wtth a hand shak e
and hu g before the game.
" I fee l co mfo rt abl e I ' m no t
press ing at a ll ," Strawberry said.
Martinez struck out fi ve. walked
one and held Matt William s. Barry
ll onds and Strawberry to a c om ~
bined one hit.
Eric Karras homered twt cc and
drove in four run s for the Dodgers.
Mark Portugal (9 -7) was tagged
for seven run s in 5 2/3 innings.
E•pos 6, Braves 4
Moiscs Alou hit a key tripl e.
Th e vi c tor y in th e ope ner o f a
three-game series ensured that the
Expos will leav e Atlanta in fir st
place.
Terry Pendleton , pla yin g for tltc
first time sin ce go ing on the di sabl ed li st June 22 with a strained
low er ba c k, a nd Rya n Klc sko
homered for Atlanta.
The Expo s overcame an early 30 deficit, but still trailed 4-3 in the
seventh when Pedro Martmcr left
for a pinch ~ hitter. Marquis Grissom
drew a one- out walk from Mark
Wohlers (7-2) . Cliff Floyd singled
and Alou tripled. Alou scored on
Larry Walker' s grounder.
John Wetteland got his 19th
save.
Rockies 4, Padres 3
Andres Galarraga hit hi s 3 1st
home run and Colorado beat And y
Benes in San Diego.
Benes (6- 12) fanned 11 in six
innings. He leads the NL in losses
and strikeouts (168). Kevin Ritz (44) won his third in a row and Bruce
Ruffin got his 16th save.
Phillies 8, Marlins 1
Curt Schilling won for the first
time since pitching a shutout in
GameS of last year's World Series,
leading Philadelphia past host
Florida.
Schilling (1 -7) gave up one
unearned run and struck out seven.
lie had not pitc~cd in the majors
since May 16 because of surgeries
on his elbow and knee.

tomorrow," McRae satd. "I saw
nothing but positives."
The biggest positive was
Hamelin's homer, his 20th of the
season and third in three games.
"I was just trying to get the run
in from third and got a pitch I could
drive ," said Hamelin, whose tow;
enng blast on Robertto Hernandez
first puch just cleared the 4 10-foot
mark 111 cen!Cr f1eld. It scored Dave
Henderson and Wally Joyner, who
both stngled.
"lt's a great feeling to ~~~e the
other tea!ll out on the held. satd
Hamchn, who also beat Boston 2: I
wtth a mnth -mmng homer earlier to
the season. "I was looking for a
fastball because CH,emandez has) a
good one,-, It doesn l get any better
th~. th1s. . .
Hamehn..Just crushed one of
my fa~tballs, satd Hernandez (34), who had an 0. ~ ERA m hts last
13 appearances . . !t was bound to
happen someume.
.
f
The homer made a wtnner out o

Hipolito Pichardo (4-3), who
aUowed one run in 2 2(3 innings.
The White Sox took the lead in
the top of the 12th when Ozzic
Guillen doubled with one out and
scored on Tim Raines ' two-out single.
Chicago tied the game 3-3 on
Robin Ventura •s opposite-field
RBI double in the eighth, scoring
Julio Franco.
Trailing 2-0. the Royals rallied
to take a 3-2 lead in the sixth. Joyner led off with a triple and scored
on Hamelin's bloop single to center. Mike Macfarlane's double past
third moved Hamelin to third and
Hamelin scored on Felix J~se's
grounder . One out later, Greg
Gagne looped a run-scoring single
to center.
Kevin Appier.allowed nine hits
and three runs in eight innings.
Chicago starter Jack McDowell
gave up 11 hits and three runs in
nine innings.
In the only other AL game Man-

day night, Texas beat Minnesota 74.
Rangers 7, Twins 4
At Arlington, Texas, Jose
Canseco hit his 27th home run,
leading Texas past Minnesota as
the Rangers ended their four-game
losing streak.
Canseco broke out of a 2-for-18

Eultm OlvtlkNI

NL standings
Tum

Tum

B.ttim~ ..............S4

Eastern Dlvlllon
W L PeL

Montn:al ............. 61

Atllnu ................ 59
Philadclphi. ......... .41
New York ............. 46
Aoridl .......... .. ... .45

J7
40
52

GB

.622

596
.480
.469
.455

52

54

2.5
14
IS
16.5

H01..11tm . ...... ... ...57

43

_570

2

PiluburJh ............ .41
SL Loui.l ............. 46

51
52

.4i0
.474

11
12

OUc.go ................ 43

S4

.443

14.1

Western Dh'lllon
'-"'An got............ 49 so .495
Colondo .......... . ....48 S3 .475
San fROCil&lt;o .. ...... 47 S3 .470
62

2
2.5
ll

.3&amp;6

Monday's scores

Today's games
i...ol Anselu: (Hcrthiacr 5-4) n San
funciaco (Vanl.andinaham !!i-1), 4:05

p.m.
.
Phihdelphia (Weal 4-1) at Aonda
(Hooah S-9), H5 p.m.
Cfi!c•ao (Youna 4-6) 11 Pituburah

(Z..Smnh 9 ~ 8), 7:35p.m.
Howton (llamiach 7-4) 11 CINCINNATI (ltijo 9-4), H5 p.m
MooU'CIJ (Henry 7·2) at Allanu (Mad·
d01 t:I-S), NO pm.
New York (Cutillo 0-0) at St. l..ooiJ
(Palacio&amp; 2-7). &amp;,35 p.m
Colorado (Thompton 0-0)
o;'llo (Sandon 3-7), I 0,05 p.m.

11

S•n

Wednesday's games
(R"'"' S-1) at CINCINNATI
(Dnbd&lt; t0.6),1BI p.m.
MOfiJW (Hill 14-4) at ALI1111.&amp; (Mc:r·
at Aorida

(llapp 6-S~ HS p.m.

.

C?aicaso (Moraan 2-9) at PitUbW'ah
(Whi10l-S), H5 p.m.
New Y Olt (Jacome 4~ J) at St.. Louia
(Urlloni :Z..S), Bl p.m.
11.

13.5

Central [)lvblon

gu;JEu.No
~:
CUy ...........Sl

~

47
Minncaou ..............46 S2
Milwaukeo .............45 53

II
13.5

m

.525
.469

.459

WeJtem DIYIIion
To• .....................47 ~2 .475

o.tUand ................44 'S4
Cdilotnio ............. .42 51
Scaulc ....................40 ~

.449
.420
.417

18

1.5
15
[3
14

Brogna' s two-run double high~
lighted a five -run fifth inning
against Omar Olivares (2-3) .
Pirates 6, Cubs 2
Pitcher Denny Neagle hit hi s
first homer in the majors and Pitts burgh beat visiting Chicago.
Neagle was hitless in his first40
at-bats, the third-longest slump in
major league history at the start of
a career. Since then, he's 8-for-23
(.348), and he has five RBis in his
last two starts.
Neagle (9-8) struck out nine in
seven innings. Dan Miceli finished
for his second career save.
Willie Banks (8 -9) was the
loser. He gave up the two -run
homer to N.:agle.
·

slump with a 423 -foot, solo homer
in the fifth inning. Rusty Greer had
a pair of RBI singles and two walks
for Texas.
Brian Bohanon (1 -0) won for
the first time in the majors since
July 15, 1993. He started in place
of Kevin Brown, whose scheduled
turn 111 the rotatiOn was pushed

back a day because ol a stress frac~
ture m hts foot. In h1s second start
of the season, Bohanon allowed
three runs and stx htts '" SIX
innings.
Darren Oliver got three outs for
his second save. Scott Erickson (8 10) took the loss for the Twins ,
who had won three in a row .

SI
S.l

Monday's scores
Kantu Clly 6., OUcaso 4 ( 12)
TCl&amp;l 7' M.innOIOU 4

Milwaukee (Bonea 9·7) at Tcronto
(Gwrnon !0.9), HS p.m.

au.c. 10 (Al~ua:

ll ·Sl at Kana• Cily

(a..- 9-6), 1.05 p.m.

Minneao\1 (Dahaica S-10) at Tuaa
(Brown 7-1),8:3S p.m.
Otkland (OntivCI'OI 5-3) at California
(Finley 7-9), [0,05 p.m.

Wednesday's games
Oakland (Darlina 9·9) at California
(Ldlw;d. 1-8), 4ill p.m.
Seaulc (Johnaon 11-5) at Detroit
(Moolo 9-9), HlS p.m.
Bo.lon (Se.lc 7-6) at New Yodl (Pensz

1·3), Hlp.m.
CLEVELAND (Morria 9-6) II Balti•
mere (Muuina 14-4), 7:35p.m.
Milwaukee (Wqman 7-3) ll TOfOnto
(Hen!... I l--6), HI p.m.
Ch.iuao (Bere 10·2) al Kana11 City

(Gubicu (,.8), , ,05 p.m.

Minncacu (M.ahomiCI 7-•&gt; al Tcua
(Lwy l-l),I ,3Sp.m.

Lot Ana.!• (C.ndiotti 7-S) u san

Nallonal Leaaue
ATLI\NTA BRAVES : Actinled Tcr·
ry PcndltlOn. lhu"d bascman. from the 15d•y diubled l ist ; 1en1 infielder Mike
Mordecai lo Richmond of !he ln~.emttion ­
•ll...er.gue.

Castillo, pii.Cher, from 8i.nghun1on of the
Eutcm Lei guc.
PIDLADEL.PHIA PHlU.JES: Actint·
e.d Curt Schilli.ns. pitcher, from !.he 15·
day di.. blcd lin

Basketball
National B.,ketball AuoclatJon
DETROIT PISTONS: Acquired Eric
Lcckncr, cc:llter, from the Philadelphia

Transactions
Baseball
American Lape
CLEVELAND INDIANS' Optione&lt;l

•

Annual Percentage Yield

76en for a suond· round dnft pick in
l 996 or 19'17.
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS , s;gn..t
Detlcf Schranpf, forward.

eontnct..

to 1

(AP}!

'%

fivr.u•.. ~

Football

National Fool ball Waaue
AIUZONA CARDINALS ' Placod Gu-

rison He~tll, running b.ck, on the (i\ysi·
call Y· \1/Ubl~ to-perform -lisL

r.-

ATLANTA FALCONS: S\lapcnded
Chuck Smith, ddcnaive cnt,
weeks.

1

three

BUFFALO BlU.S : Signed Mike Du·
mu, aafcty. Rcleued Shawn Lawson. dcfctlive back. R.emcwed Kctt Hull. ccn1er,

....

from lhe phyaically-\lnablo-lo·pcdorm·

DETROIT LIONS : Sisncd Larry
Tharpe, ctrcmive l.lc:klc.
GREEN BAY PACKERS' Claime&lt;l
Bob Bruha, tight end, oa waiven from
the Lea Anaelc• Ram1. Siancd Aaron
Taylor, offensive auard, lo

I

(our· year

oontmct.

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Siso"
NtRin&amp; bac:t, \0 • KVCn·
year conuact. AIJOOd to la'IU wilh Trev
Alberts, linebacker. Rc·•iancd Scott
Manhall Faulk,

RadGcic, lincbatkc:r and Tony McCoy, do-fenaive laekle. Waived Wcaler Carroll,
wide ftiCIOi.ver; Caaiul W 1ft\ linebacker,
and Todd F.ricton, dcfauivo kck.
MIAMI OOU'HJNS, Rdcuod Eddio
Blab, pant. Sianod Hoo11on llooYe&lt;, dfawi.vc lineman, and Kevin Gkm, wide
receiv•.
SAN FRANOSCO 49ERS, Waivod

Hockey
Nadout Hockey Ltque
LOS ANGELES KINGS, Named
Lcacr M. Wintz e.Kecutive vice pra:idcnL
ST . LOUIS BLUES: Named Bob
Berry ...ociate co.ch.

the players who decide to pack up
and leave .
The latest came Monday at Red-

skms camp in Carlisle, Pa. , where
rookie fullback Brian Sallerfield
quit the !Cam .
"He said he didn't want to play

It··
FIRST CAMP WITH BROWNS - With
Vinny Testaverde and an unidentified coach
watching from a distance, Mark Rypien (11)

throws the pigskin during his lirst training camp
with the Cleveland Browns at their facility in
Berea, Ohio, Monday. (AP)

In the Goodwill Games,

Mitchell, Joyner-Kersee,
Torrence among winners
champion, withdrew because of a
lly STEPHEN WILSON
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia hamstring injury.
''They signed everybody but
(AP) - The "Green Machine"
him,"
Smith said of Mitchell. "He
felt like a money machine after
was
angry.
It was a disgrace. They
winning the men's 100 meters at
couldn
'
t
run
the race without him."
the Goodwill Gaj'e~.- Now. he
Mitchell,
known as the "Green
wants to cash in.
"I feel like a mi lion dollars," Machine" for his green running
Dennis Mitchell said after beating a outfits and shoes, led from start to
marquee field that included Leroy finish to win his first maJOr chamBurrell and Carl Lewis. "I wish I pionship race in 10.07 seconds.
The relatively slow time was due to
had a million dollars.·'
a
strong headwind.
Mitchell might not collect that
Leroy Burrell, who set the world
right away, but he's cenainly in a
record
of 9.85 earlier this month,
strong position to demand big
money for appearing at lucrative finished with a surge to take second
Grand Prix meets in Europe this in I0.11. Jon Drummond was third
m I0.12 and Carl Lewis fourth in
summer.
"Zurich and Cologne will be 10.23.
Mitchell finally shook his thirdbigger races than this," he said.
tag. He had won plenty of
place
"There is a lot of money walking
bronze
medals, including at the
around in the 100 meter.; this year,
1992 01 ympics and the 1991 and
and I want to get a big piece of it."
Mitchell's coach, John Smith, 1993 World Championships.
Now, he can lay a legitimate
said he will sec to it that the 28year-old sprinter is well rewarded claim to being the world's best
sprinter.
by big meet promoters.
"I want to live up to the traditon
"When an athlete is running
well, they want him," Smith said. of a cocky sprinter and say I am."
"Dennis is running extremely weU. Mitchell said.
Ukraine's Sergei Bubka may no
He's a streak runner, and he's
longer be able to say he's the
catching fire now ."
Originally, Mitchell wasn't even world's best pole vaulter. In a
invited by Goodwill Games orga- major upset. the world record-holdnizers. He was asked to compete er finished third behind two Rusonly after Britain's Linford Sians.
Gwen Torrence completed a
Christie, the Olympic and world

sweep of the women's sprints, winning the 200 meters in a Games'
record 22.09, and Jackie JoynerKersee, the world record-holder in
the heptathlon and seeking her
third straight Goodwtll title, built a
109-point lead after four events.
The final three heptathlon
events - the long jump, javelin
and 800 met.crs - were scheduled
for today.
Other key events included the
men's mile, featuring world recordholder Noureddine Marcel i of
Algeria, and the long jump with
world record-holder Mike Powell.
Lewis pulled out the long jump,
saying he did not want to compete
on consecutive days at this stage of
the season.
In beach volleyball, Karolyn
Kirby and Liz Masakayan of the
United States were paired in the
final against Monica Rodrigues and
Adriana Samuel of Brazil. In the
men's final, the U.S. team of Jeff
Williams and Carlos Briceno was
up against Norway's Jan Kvalhein
and Bjocm Naaseide.
The U.S. basketball team got
back on track after Sunday's 77-75
loss to Russia, beating China 99-80
to set up a semifinal matchup
Wednesday against unbeaten Italy.
Puerto Rico will play Russia in the
other game.

anymore . He dtdn't have hts heart
in it and felt he was wasting our
time and his time , too," running
baekscoach Bobby Jackson said .
It was all the more surpri sing
because Satterfield, a rookie free
agent from Nortlt Alabama, played
brieOy but well '" a s crimm~
Saturday, catching three passes For
26 yards and rushing for a two-yard
touchdown .
Jackson srud it was only the sec ond time he could recall someone
quitting training camp like that.
"You'd never think the guy
didn't have his heart in it ," said
Jackson, who said he wa s
approached Monday by Satterfield
and told, "Don't try to talk me out
of it."
'
Reggte Brooks, currently sidelined with a ham string pull, is the
certain starter at running back, and
Frank Wycheck is the team' s projected fullback .
With Brian Mitchell and Rtcky
Ervins sure bets to make the team,
Satterfield was competing for the
fifth and possibly sixth runnin g
back slots.
'i&gt;
On Sunday , Lance Lundberg ,
the seventh -round draft pi ck by
New Orleans, left training camp
saying he didn't want to play foot ball anymore.
"llike him, I tried to talk htm
out of it," coach Jim Mora said. "I
thought he had a chance to make it
and tried to encourage him to
stay."
"He came 111 this morning and
said, 'I just don't have it in me.·
This wasn't for him," Mora said.
Cardinals
Arizona will open camp
Wednesday without hallback Garrison Hearst. coach Buddy Ryan
said.
Hearst, the Cardinals' top pick
in the 1993 drdft, will be placed on
the physically unable to perform
list, keeping him from practicing
wtth the team.
Hearst missed all of training
camp last season in a contract dispule before suffering a season-ending left knee injury against Washington in the sixth week of the season. He underwent surgery to
repair a tom ligament on Nov. 2.
He has been unable to pmcticc
regularly during the Cardinal s'
three-week "voluntary" camp that
concluded today.
"I'm not ready yet," Hearst
said Monday.
Dolphins
Linebacker Bryan Cox, taunted
with racist slurs by fans in Buffalo
last season, is suing the NFL,
charging racial discrimination

mad e htm a lesse r pla ye r and
prompted him to drink hea vil y.
Attorneys for Cox fil ed the suit
Monctay '" U.S Dt stnct Court in
New York Ctty. Cox charges th e
NFL for ce d him to pl ay in a
" ract all y hos t tic environm e nt '·
durin g a Bills- Dolphi ns gam e 111
Orchard Park . NY .. and tltd ltttl e
to defu se the situati on.
' 'I'm not looking for money. but
for a chan ge in policy for what the
league put me through last year."
Cox satd Monday " It was handled
very poorly and it 's made rn c bitter
toward th em, enough for me 10
want to ex pose them for "hat thC)
arc."
Cox wants the league to " bed
up sec urity" and weed out drunks.

tnj ury suffe red Suntl:t y.
First ~ro und dr Jlt ptc k i\ Jro n
Taylor , ex pec ted tu be s tdcl tn n l
unul Dccemhcr whil e rccovc nn ~
f ro m ~~ km.:c 1nju ry, ag ree d to

co ntract hcltcvccl to he
wnnh ahout 54 mil lion.
49crs
No. I dralt pt ck Bryan t Young.
a dck nsi vc lin ema n from Notrl'

Dame, was ex pec ted to :-.ign
year. \li million co ntract.

Colts

One day after stgntn g top draft
choice Marshall Faulk , ln cli&lt;~n a poli s signed lincbac·kcr Trev Alhc-rts.
their last unsigned draft choice.
T he Indi anap olis Star said
Alberts, a 6-3 linebac ker, got a SI X·
year, $8 million deal that includ ed
a S3.2 million signing honus. Fau l~
got a $ 17.2 milli on. .scvc n ~ yc a r
deal - the ri chest rookie co ntract
in NFL ht story.
Bills
Buffalo sigrcd free agent safet y
Mike Dumas, a pla yer they con.stdcrcd drafting in 1991 before picking Henry Jones in stead.
Coach Marv Lev y call ed
Dumas. who pla yed with the linu ston Oilers the last three years , on e
of the top 10 special teams p_layers
in the leagu e.
"But we didn 't get him for special team s abtlit y only . We think
he ' s a good defensiv e backfield
prospect," Levy sa id . "Now we 're
going to have to sec where he fits ."
Giants
In the battle to s ucc eed Phil
Simms as starting quarterback ,
Dave Brown wtll have the first shot
at looking good.
Brown and Kent Graham, the
two players vying for the JOb,
dccttlcd between themselve s to let
Brown work with the lirst team lor
a half in the Giant s' prese ason
opener again st th e Miami Dol phms. Gmham will take over earl y
in the second half. The roles wtll
change the followin g wee k in th e
gam e against Cl eveland , al so at
GtanLs Stadtom .
Packers
.
Green Bay clatmed rookt c Boh
Brasher on waiv e" from the Los
Angeles Ram s m an effort to hoi stcr the ttght end postuon . The No.
2 man at that poSttton, tlmd-year man Mark Chmura , will mt ss at
least four weeks wtth a ham stnng

•

Interest Rate

It's a certified hit. With a minimum balance of$1,000 to earn the
AP~. you can take advantage of this exciting interest rate. Our
certificates of deposit not only earn high interest rates but come with
flexible tenns as well. Call 614-593-6681 or
'
1-800-677-4994 for more infonnation. Or visit
any Bank One office in Athens, Gallia, BANKEONE
Hocking, Meigs or Perry Counties. Either Whatever it takes:
Dank One, Athens, NA
way, it will be music to your ears.
Membe[ FDIC

-

ing the suspension, lie will be
By JIM SALTER
barred
from all hockey business
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Mike
will
not be allowed to coach
and
Keenan says he hasn't had a break
the
team.
in 12 months. Now he has 60 days
"It is maybe not the most ideal
to rest, courtesy of an NHL suspcnsituation. but it is very acceptsmn.
And while the St. Louis Blues' able," Keenan said. "It is a situaRf:W coach and general manager tion we can overcome."
The man who will help guide
said Monday he isn't happy about
Blues through the transition
the
the layoff, he admitied it might do
wtll
be a familiar face. The team
him some good.
announced
Monday that Bob
"I have a responsibility to prewhom
Keenan replaced as
Berry,
pare myself mentally, physically
head
coach,
will
now be assoctate
and psychologically. I'll have an
said
Keenan chose
coach.
Officials
opponunity to do tha~ •• he said.
Berry
before
the
suspension
was
In addition to the two-month
levied.
suspension that began Monday,
"I am thrilled at the prospect of
NHL commissioner Gary Bettrnan
working
alongside Mike Keenan
on Sunday fined Keenan $100,000
because
of
the respect I have for
and ordered him to return fourhim,"
Berry
said.
.
fifths of his $500,000 signing
Ted
Sator
will
rema1n
as an
bonus with the New Yark Rangers.
assistant
coach,
the
team
said.
Last season. Keenan coached the
After eight hours of talks SunRangers"to their first Stanley Cup
day
at Dettman's office in New
title in 54 years.
York
the commissioner had stem
The Blues were fined $250,000,
word~
for
aU three teams involved.
the league maximum. The Detroit
"Such
conduct cannot and wiU
Red Wings, who tried to hire
not
be
tolerated,"
said Dettman,
Keenan before he agreed to terms
the
league's
commissioner
since
with the Blues, were fined $25,000.
!993.
New York also was fined
At a news conference Monday
$25,000 for filing a lawsuit to keep
Keenan from signing with St. at Lambert Airport, Blues president
Louis. And the Rangers agreed to Jack Quinn said Beuman "wanted
drop the lawsuit and pay Keenan ' to kind of set a wne as the new guy
the $608,000 playoff bonus that set in town, the new sheriff, as to how
thin~s were going to be."
off the whole chain of events. ·
" Keenan called the settlement
The suspension means Keenan
fair.
will miss vtrtually all of preseason.
"Mr. Bettman did a fabulous
He will be allowed 10 return Sept.
25. The season opens Oct. L Dur- job bringing the parties together

-

j

~ L' ·

By .

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture
Money can 'l buy happ iness,
but tl can rent it lor a while.
Heard about the guy who
couldn'l tell toothpasle from
pu\ty? All his windows lell out.

. ..
He who kn ows litlle must
repeat it ollen .
...
Rebate : put a new wo rm on
your hook .
...

Winners watch for opportunity
to knock. Losers kn ock every
opportunity.

...

1 SHOWROOMS

II WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, Rutllllld, Oh.

742·2211

THE 1994

and resolving this situation.··
Keenan said. "I have a great deal
of respect for him and what he was
able to accomplish.

OSU to have only
two veteran RBs
for new season
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State will return only two
experienced running backs this season af!Cr two others were ruled academically ineligible.
Sophomores Lou Willard of
Grove City and Keith Wilkerson of
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., will not be
with the team ~hen it reports Aug.
5, head coach John Cooper said
Monday.
Both saw limited action last season.
Tbe Buckeye running game will
be in the hands of junior Eddie
George and sophomore Dimitrious
Stanley, who was converted from
wide receiver in the spring.
"We'll go with Eddie and Dimitrious; they were the only two
guys we had in the spring anyway," Cooper said.
·
Redshirt freshman defensive
back Tommy Willis of Griffin, Ga.,
was also ruled ine~gible.
Cooper announced that recruits
Calvin Brown, a defensive lineman
from Cleveland, and Iinebaclcer
Roe dell Dupree of Jersey City,
N.J., did not meet Proposition 48
enrollment requirements. Cooper
said he could not elaborate.

J

fo ur ~ye ar

NHL orders Keenan to return most
of signing !Jonus to N.Y. Rangers

25-Month Certificate Of Deposit

N£W YORK METS : Phccd Pc:lc:
Smith, piLChcr, on \he 15·day diu bled lis\,
reltoaclive 1.0 July 18 . Recalled Juan

Karl Wilam, defau:ive end.

San Dicto

m.cuoo (Swift a.-;), t 0,35 p.m.

lO Char!ouC cllhG
lntemuional Lc.aue. Called up Albie
Lopc:z, p1lChcr, from Cbarlolle. E11.mdcd
lhe contract of Mike Hargrove, manager,
through the 1996 ICISUI .

1.5

CLEVELAND (Lopez 0-0) 11 Balli·
p.mCLE'IE.lAND (Mutincz 9·S) 111Wti·
mare (Oquiat 3·2), 7:35p.m.
Botton {NabholJ. 2-3) a1 New York
(Key IS·l), Jill p.m.
Scallle (Convene 0· 2) at Dcuott
(Well• 3.-;), J,os p.m.

New Y&lt;nt 7, SL lAuU: 1

Colorado . nw 3-4)
(lhmillon 6-,), to,;u pm.

GB

mwc (McDonald 11-6), l:)S

1..oc An&amp;elct 10, San FrancUoo S
Colonlo 4, San DiCF 3

~))

To1001o .......... .......47
DdroiL ...................43

Pd.
.625
J6i
.48S
.48S
.439

Today•s games

Philadelphia I, Aorida 1
l';a.bu'l!h 6, OUcago 2
ONCli'INATI7,-4
Mmtn:al 6, ALI&amp;ota 4

ci.c:r ... 3). 12:40 p.m.
Philadelphia (Mu.noz

8~1m ................. ..47

L
J6
4l
SO
SO
55

K.Mu

Central UlviJion
CINCINNA11... ..... 58 40 .592

San Dleto ............ .. 39

W

New York ..............60

lly The Associated Press
Th e signings and injuries that
dominate camp news in July some~
times share the NFL spotlight with

CURTAIN CALL- The Cincinnati Reds' Kevin Milchell steps
out of the dugout to acknowledge the fans after hitting his second
homer of the night in the third inning of Monday night's game
againslthe visiting Houslon Astros, who lost 7-4. (AP)

Jerry Di.Polo, pitcher,

AL standings

Satterfield leaves 'Skins' camp; Alberts signs with Colts

-~

Scoreboard
Baseball

On the NFL camp scene,

- 1111~
~

Sc hilling drove in the Philli cs'
first run . Milt Thompson 's singl e
off Dave Weath ers (8-9) put
Philadelphia ahead 2-1 in the sixth.
Mets 7, Cardinals 1
Rico Brogna went 5-for -5 and
Brct Saberhagen won his ftfth
straight decision as New Yark won
at St. Louis.
Brogna tied a team record for
hits in a game. He doubled twice,
drove in two runs and also started
two double plays from first base.
He is batting 19-for-37 (.514) in his
last II starts.
Sabcrhagen (12 -4) gave up
seven hits , struck out five and
walked one in his fourth complete
game.

The Daily Sentinei-Paae-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-~

White Sox, Rangers record wins in abbreviated AL docket
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) The fireworks returned to Kauffman Stadium, thanks to Bob
Hamelin.
Hamelin's three-run homer with
one out in the bottom of the 12th
inning Monday night gave the Roy als a 6-4 victory over the first-place
Chicago White Sox and set off the
fireworks, suspended since an aerial bomb exploded in the right fie ld
bleachers July 15.
Royals manager Hal McRae was
much more elated over t~e fireworks on the field.
"This could be the turning
point," McRae said. "I think we'll
get it done this time."
_
The Royals · third consecutive
victory lifted them to two games
over .500 at home for the flfst ume
this season and to ftve games over
.500 for the season. However, they
still trail the White Sox by 7 1/2
games .
"It was a must win and should
give us some momentum for

Tuesday, July 26, 1994

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 12~ 1994.
•
Advertising Deadline Is
August 4~ l994.
CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD IN
THIS YEAR'S EDITION

992-2155

�By The Bend

/

The

Sentinel-Page-?

D~ily

Sentinel

3 Announcements
Strut Your JMne Pagunt. Camdon Part., Augulll I . All ogo
dlvlalone. Nk:a •warda. C.ll

Page-6
Tuesday, July 26, 1994

Shollo Hart, 3Q4.7!11&gt;-0060.

Chester D of A meets; several ill
Several members were reported
ill at the recen t mee ting of Ches ter
Council 323, Daughters of Amen ca. held at ~1e hall.

It was noted thai Opa l Hollon is

now rec uperating at Wes tern Hills
Home, and that Erma Cleland has
had eye surgery . The de3th s ol
Lora Damewood' s son and grand·

Meigs bikers to have run

n:&gt;r EMPLOYEE- .Lisa Hawley,

center, is the Pleasant Valley
Nursmg Center's lop employee for July. Hawley, a housekeeping
a,nd .laundry allendanl, IS pictured between nursing admini,trator
C~ ros Stov~r and hous~keeping supervisor Steve Burnett. !lawley
h\Cs.'" Middleport w1th her one-Jear-old daughter and t•nj&lt;ns
rradong and swimming.
·

Pastor honored with dinner
The Rn. Shar o n Han sman

rctuming for another year as p~lsto~

of th e Allred L nit cd Mcthorll\1
Church, was honored "I a ba s'c'l
dinner fo ll ow in g recent rnorntn g
at LJJ C church.

SCfVICCS

Lloyd Dillinger, Su nd"y sc hool
superintendent. prese nted her w11h
a cas h gift from th e church. The
mini ster responded with word s of
apprcc ialion to the church for their
work in the community.
Th ose Jllcnding ser v ices J nd

dinner were Florence, Ri chard and
Tim Spencer, Pam and Sarah Yost ,
Marilvn Robin so n. Th elm a Hen-

dcrs01i. Ne llie Parker, Sarah Ca!J we ll , Os ie and Clair Fo ll rod, Kail1y
and Alan Wat so n. Susan P11 llin s.
Li sa RiLCI1 ie. Clara Follrod, Lauric.
Ma tth ew, Jess ica , Ashl ey , and
Janac 13oy les. Katr ina and Rt1ben
Brooks, and Wi ll Poole, all ol
Meigs Cunt y; Ekanor [J oyles. [l eipre; Ru ssell and Elo ise i\rch cr.
Guy sville , Sharlene and Marl 3
Dillmger. Route SO; John Tay lor.
Du tch Rid ge; Lloyd and Dori s
Dil linger, Pratts Fork; Jackie, Eric.
Erin and Jody Brooks. New Marsh-

Gabriel Starcher
observes birthday
Th e f&lt;r st hinhda y of Gabri el
Perry Starcher. so n of Eddi e and
Micil cll e Starcher. wa s observed
Jul y 1 with a part y which carried
ou t the Winm c- ~1 c- P ooh ~1c m e.
(; irt s wer e pr ese nt ed lo the
young ster by th ose attending, h1 s
gr:&lt;rH ip ar cnl s. Ccorgc and Judy
S t;~rchc r and Mik e an&lt;l Joy Zirkle,
Iu s aun ts, Li sa Starc her and Pam
Zirkle. hi s grca t-granclmothcrs,
l. cnni e llapton stall , Gayncl l
McAbee, and Mary Starc her, h1 s
grea t un cle, Walt Ha yes, grea t
aun ts, Sue Ha yes and Gail
McAbee, and numerous other relati ves and fr iends.

~ c ld .

The Me1gs Co unty B1kcrs w1ll run will end m the Watering Hole
have a commumty service run Sat- where a blues band will pla y. To
urday with sign -in on the Pomeroy attend the dance and not take pan
parking lot 10 take place between in the run will cost $5 .
II and 12 noon.
Pr ior to the group pullin g out,
Proceeds fro m the run will go 10 Rep. Mark Malone will present the
the Sc n1or Ci ti zens Center. Regi s- group with a co mmunit y se rvice
tration fee is $5 to parti ciratc. The plaque.

Priscilla Lilley celebrates birthday
Pr1sci lla Lilley recently celebrated her 12th birthday with a pizza
pa rt at the hom e of Peggie and
Brian Klei n, spec ial friends of her
fa ther, Keith Klein .
Priscilla was taken swimming
follow ing the pany by her mother.

Lisa Li lley. Others attendi ng were
Benny Carro ll , Be n Carro ll,
Michelle Snider, sisters, and Jessica and Valerie Li lley. Mrs. Li lley
made a cake for her daughter. Gifts
were received by th e honored
guest.
·

Missionary group meets

son were rcportca .
Mary Jo Barringer, councilor ,
pres id ed at the meting with the
pkdge to Chri stian and American
flag s bei ng said , ih e nati onal
anthem sun g, and Lord' s Prayer
It was noted that I he Council ha.s

Eva ngeline Missionary Group reports we re giv en by Paul1ne
of the Pomeroy Chu rch of Chnst Kenned y. Mrs. Venoy. Mrs. Thoma
met recently at the ch urch with and Mrs . Rower s. Ca rd s we re
signed for shuli ns.
Charld inc Alkire as hostess.
Mrs. Vcnoy had the miss ionary
Eileen Bowers presided at th e
y. Linda La udermilt thanked
stud
meeting which opened with devoth
e
group
for flo we rs during her
tions given by Go ldi e Shaffer.
recent
illness.
Refres hm ents we re
Janet Venoy had prayer. Pat Thoma
serve
d
by
th
e
hostess and her
read "Land of the Free" and Mrs.
daughter,
Debbie,
who gave prayer.
[Jowers pre sented "A unt Meg and
Next mee ting will be at the home
~1c Fuurtl1 of Julv".
Co ll ections -were taken and of Mrs. Bowers.

James Harmon , all of Middleport.
Sylvia Cook Rachel and Tony
R. Lee , Cheryl Euva and Allian
Stumbo , Pomeroy; Richard,Tcresa ,
Preston , Briaso n, Nathaniel ,
NaLas ha and Charl es C()('k. Linda
Dowell and Betlm a Garlsberry of
Ba shan; Wilma Cook Bo lin g,
Steven, Stephanie, Sharlene and
Sharon Chapel l, Ke sha Coun ts,
Brandon and Ph1lop Smith, F1ra
and Evamac Clark Phill ips of Syracuse.

Names in the news
CHI CAGO (AP) - Robin
Givens says she's commg to understand the violence that Mike Tyson
'brought home fro m the ring .
"As the heavyweight champion
of the world , he was exempt from
the rules of civilized behavior. He
had been condemned for his brutal·
ity in hi s early life, but th en he
found hi s way mto th e boxing
arena, where brutality was not onl y
condoned but expec ted and richly
reward ed," Given s writes in the
September iss ue of Playboy magazmc.

One of their many fights ended
when Ty son knocked Given s
across the room with what he later
called " the best punch I've ever
thrown in my life."
Tyson and Givens divorced in
1988 after eigh t months of mar riage. He was later conv icted of
rape and is serv ing a six-year sentence.
NEW ORL EANS (AP) They've got the money , honey, and
Willie Nelson 's got the lime.
Gov. Edw in Edwards and Jefferson Parish Sheriff Harry Lee have
each pledged S I0,000 for the seventh Farm Aid bencf1t concert,
sc hed ul ed for Sept. 18 in th e
Louisiana Superdome. A company
from Loui siana and another from
Mi ss1ssippi have tossed another
$55.000 into the pot.
" Thi s is the best kickoff we've
ever had ," Nelson said Monday at
~ news conference. "We haven't
spen t any money yet and we're

aiready making money."
Sc hedu led pe rform ers incl ude
John Mellcncamp, Kris Kri stoferso n, Ne1l Young , John Co nle y,
Juho lglcsms and David Alan Coc.
Farm Aid , Inc. has raised about
5 11. 5 milliOn for farm support
groups around the country since
1985.
CH ICAGO {AP) - Writers ?
Don't ask David Geffen about writers.
"The fact that someone writes a
good book docsn' t mean their ideas
for the movie are good," said Geffe n, whose company is producing
the film version of " Interview with
the Vampire."
Author Anne Rice and many of
her fans have complained about the
casling of wholesome Tom Cruise
as the vampire LcsLat. But Geffen
says in an interview in the Septem ber 1ssue of Playboy magazine that
the critics are just batty.
"People were outraged when
Vivicn Leigh was cast in the role of
Scarlett O'Hara. Today, it is
unthinkable that anybody else
could have played i~" he said.
NAPLES, Italy (AP) - Sophia
Loren: Drop that fur!
People for the Ethical Treatment
of Animals and the Italian Anti Vivisection League ran an ad in
Sunday's " II Matlino" newsoaoer
calling on the film icon to cancel
her modeling oontract with a furri er.

OQ.

11

SAMUEL EVANS
S~tmuc l Ray Evans, son of Marlin and Debb ie Evans, Racine,
recen tl y celebrated hi s third birthday at the home of hi s parents.
All ending were Evere ll , Char lott e and Michael Gran t, Raymond
and Ada Evans, Delbert , Eleanor,
Tim and Eli za beth Law son, Pam
and Shayne Davis, Ritch Coe, Rick
McKnight, Charles, Marsha. Adria,
Mana Frcckc r, Elva and Lew is
Hudson, and Scott Anderson .
Cake and ice cream we re
served . A Thomas the Tank engine
theme was carried out.

50-year pins
presented to
Warner, Young
Harri so nvill e Chapt er 255 ,
Order of the Eastern Star, presented
two 50-year pins to members last
week .
The pins went to Amber Warner
at the Ski lled Nursin g Facility at
Veteran s Memorial Hospi tal , and
Alice You ng, a res1dcnt of Overbrook Cemer in Middl eport.
Present for the presentation to
Mrs. Warner were all of her children , Mr. and Mrs. Ge ne Thompso n, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Warner
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Warner, Mrs:
Ada Nease, Ted Warner, her granddaughter, Margi e Warner, and
great-granddaughter, Jill Nease.
The pin from the Grand Chapter
of Oh10 was presented to her by her
daughter , Lois Thompson. Mem bers of Harri so nvill e Chapter
attend&lt;ng were Betty Bishop, worth y matron; Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Will, Pauline Atkins, Clara Mac
Hyse II, Franc es Young, Frances
Alkire, and Bernice Hoffman.
Other Eastern Star members at
the presentation of the pin to Mrs.
Young we re Elizabeth Ann Webster and Marcia Denni son . Familv
members atcnding were her husband, Frank, her daughter , Mrs.
Patty Clark and gran dson. Robert.
Mrs. Webs ter made th e presentation from Grand Chapter to Mrs.
Young.
The eve nt s we re planned by
Betty B1shop, Harrisonville Chapter worthy matron.

ATTENDS WORKSHOP
-Shane Foster, son of Jerry
and Tammy Foster of Shade,
participated recentl y in the
Ohio Leadership Training
Camp held at Greenwood Lake
Camp in Delaware. Shane was
one or 160 junior high school
students representing 30 counties from across Ohio at the
four-day residential leadership
camp. The campers participat·
ed in Ohio Close Up Day, a pro·
gram held in Columbus focusing on state government.

~~

A ,I -~

We Want You
Overbrook Center'• experienced siDJ/iflookingfor a
few new members for our nursing team. Call today kl
kam td&gt;out our NEW and IMPROVED WAGE and
BENEFITS and sign on bonus package. Apply Today!
Call Marilyn Conaway, D.O.N.
Mondny-Friday
9:00a.m. -4:30p.m.
EOE
JJJ Page STrtt~ Middkport, Ohio 45760-992-6472

5

Happy Ads

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate is ready to go along with
substanlial cuts in the federal program that supports the arts, reflecting irritation among many lawmakers over some of the artistic projects that are geuing laXpayer support.
Supporters of the National
Endowment for the Arts backed
away Monday from trying to
restore $8.5 million that the Senate
Appropriations Committee cut
from the agency's budget, saying
they hoped some of the cuts can be
recouped in negotiations with the
House.

~RNER~

nsurance s'er~i~~s

214

992-6687

ir:J

\

YOUR MESSAGE!
ADVEHTISING IN THE

TV TIMES

-II
••
••
••

-

AHEA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATUHESEVEUY WEEI( IN THE
TV TIMES

CALL NOW....
PT. PLEASANT, WV

' 675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

LIMESTONE,

Lose Pounds and Inches

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Natural Herbal Tablets

Reasonable Rates

1·100·796-6328

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

Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE tRUCKING

614·742·2138

992-7434

31.193 1 lot()

•I
,,

j·

OF STUFF
She's Mean &amp;
Lean, &amp; Now

13.

l

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA

Docoratln
Salts ....I
IMI..aiiOR

Cal Wesler~~ Auto
992-5515
Free Estimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial
S-0.1

WANl

Happy Birthday
Jennifer

ADS

QUALITY WORK A
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

tr'ft

IW3'TfN

QUALm WINDOW SYSTEMS
• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

44

FREE

{Carpet Cleaning Only-Maximum 240 sq . tt)

ROBERt BISSELL

1 Ye•r ~d Male Dog, Molher:
RtglllerR
Collie ,
Father:
R.glllered
Au11r~~lll•n
Sh•pherd, Good With Chlldr.n,
Good Walch Oog, 614 -388-110311 .
2 Gl"lly White, 4 Monlh Otd Kll-

tenl, Need To Be Tr!:~h~r With
A C.ring C&gt;Nner, 614
317.
3 Kittens, 1 White /Spoil, 1
Groy, I Grey &amp; Whllo, 6 ..-&lt;44&amp;-

• carpel cleaning &amp; scolchgard • drapery
upholstery &amp; fine fabric ·general cleaning

CONS1RUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

8824.

Kltt•n•. 2 Whit•. 2 Y•Uow, 814446-1619 Att..- 4 P.M.
Kltt•n•, To Good HonMI, 614-3"192585.

PuppiH to giveaway,
go, 814-985-4120.

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE

985·4473

4·7 · 1 MO

To Good Home: Playful Khttna,
fi14-379-2S52 .

Lost &amp; Found
TRI-STATE K-9
ACADlMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal proleclion,
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs for sale.
RoHweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

./'1

Found: Cock., Sp•nlel dog, Pt.
Pleasant •rH. 304-675-6638 or
ti7&gt;4i46

evening~ .

Lost : 3mo. old Dachshund
puppy, brown WHring white liN

collar. Grear Rd . 304-8754452.

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

DOG
GROOMING

W_ _:
} \.

•

Water's Edge Apartments· Syracuse, Ohio
Over 62, disabled or handicapped FmHA
1 bedroom. Rents for $0 to $415, based on
Income. Range, refrigerator, carpet, AJC, on site
laundry, parking.
614-949-2012 or 614-992-6419
TDD 800-750-0750
FmHA Rental Assistance

n

IU BREEDS

l•y

-;-,

Apartment
lor Rent

•••

Susa• Gilmore

992-5316

ALL Yard Salea Must Be P•ld In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad Ia to run.

edition

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

July 28th, 291h, 301h,

Yaaro Experience
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
For Free Estimate
Call 742-2303
26

2:00 p.m.
• 2: 00

:m Uppor

Route 7, Acrou From SJiv.r
BrtdQ• Plaza. Tum At Uaht Go
Stra~~ht Past Bob Evana'"To'Left
Up R1vtr Comer; Second Home
Behind TM Aharatlont Shop,
Georgia Smith Haa Moved To A
Sma.ller Hom• And Ia Selling
Excesa Items, Also Offered Are
Goods
From
Family And
Friends. Salt Ia Und•r Root. Will
Be Opon Rain Or ShLne. Of..
fared: 78 Recorda, Depression
Glasa, Tea Pots, Com Jobber•
Pool Stick Stand , Granite Tabl~
With Chairs, Stone Jug, lube
Radio, Dairy Sc••••J. Router, Jig
Saw, And Circular :;;aw Standa
Ban Sander, Jig S1wa, Powt;
Hand Plan•r, 25' Ext. Ladd•r,
Elo. Pig Toilo, Ugh! AlllurH, D.
Glan Top !Other Gl••• . JNnl

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunday Calls)

Price
Construction
Co•

.

~Ilion

p.m. Sat ur~y.

614·992·7643

AMERICAN GENERAl liFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Oressaa

Coati,

Swnte,.,

Tremendou1 Amount Of Nice
Clothing, Merw, Womana And

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

Sc11p

Jo-IIJ,

Chlldrono

Materlal, V•let St•nd, Pk:turea,

Pocklll Booko, Hord Bock
Booka IP1per B1ck•, ToaNr
/Baker 0Y•nL CB Seta, Dlah..
Glaasware, t"•na, Tupperware'
X-M.. M•ma1 Plaatic Bucket•'

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agenl
Box 189

Fuel OU Tank With Stand 01.
plar, St•nda IRacka Porch
Sw ng, T·Bird And American
Racing Hub Caps And Sean Air
Conditioner (A• Ia) Sal. 30th
Remaining heme Sold For Halt
Price. All Sal.. Final. No
Refunda. l•rma Cash. No

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5764

7120/1 mo. pd.

Check1. Not AHpomilbi• For
Accld•nta.

Equal Housing Opportunity

' 'Public candor will be on ter controversy ha s been
trial,'' said Rep. Jim Leach. rank- "overblown in a lot of instances"
ing Republican on the House Bank- and predicted the hearings would
ing Committee, which was holding show that there was ''a lot less to
this than met the eye.
the hearings.
Accounts of Whitewater-related Stephanopoulos' remark carne durdiscussions between the White ing an appearance on CNN 's Larry
House and Treasury have been King Live.
But Leach sai&lt;! in advance that
seeping out over the past five
during the hearings, "a pattern of
months.
The first congressional hearings misleading the public will devel were ~mited in scope to those con- op.'' The congressman said the
tacts, leaving out the bulk of issues chief question to be addressed was
in the Whitewater affair, which are whether the administration intenunder investigation by Whitewater tionally misled.
A central figure in the hearings:
prosecutor Robert Fiske.
Fiske already has concluded that Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger
the White House-Treasury contacts Alunan, who is now under fore, five
months after disclosing to Congress
were not criminal.
Presidential adviser George the first of more than 20 White
Stcphanopoulos said the Whitewa- House-Treasury contacts.
Altman has altered his account
several times to disclose more contacts.
Altman is the No. 2 Treasury
official, but until last March he also
was acting chief of the Resolution
Corp. That was the agency
Trust
Oregon line. Th e biggest had
the Whitewater land
investigating
blackened more than 3,500 of
venture
and
its
tics to a failed savbrush and timber.
"We're pulling firefighters back ings and loan owned by the (lin away from that fire," U.S. Forest tons' Whitewater partner, lames
Service spokesman Pat Kaunert McDougal. The Treasury Departsaid. "It's burning in steep, inac- ment eventually referred a number
of matters regarding the S&amp;L to the
cessible terrain."
1
ustice Department for possible
Planes and helicopters scouting
criminal
prosecution.
the fire and dropping flame retarThe
Clinton
administration
dant were careful to avoid the
annual Karuk Indian manhood cer- launched a political offensive on
emony. The Indians were in no the eve of the heanngs, with Clinton and Treasury Secretary Lloyd
immediate danger, officials said.
• Planes dropped loads of retar- Bentsen saying they wanted Altdant on the worst of about 150 fires man to remain in his prist.
And Alunan held a news confersparked in northern and western
ence,
saying he has ·no plans to
Idaho by weekend lightning
storms. About 700 firefighters resign. He was "whoUy accurate"
manned fire lines. The worst fire when he told Congress he did not
had consumed 150 acres of grass learn until this year about Whitewater briefinj!S given to senior
and brush.
• Firefighters struggled against White House aules last fall, Alunan
three fores in northeastern Nevada told reporters.
.Another Treasury official,
that have charred more than 30,000
Joshua
Steiner, also went on the
acres and continued 10 bum out of
offensive.
control.
·
The lawyer for Steiner tried to
•In Arizona, fire crews contained a 27 ,SOO-acre blaze that downplay inflammatory entries his
broke out near the Mexico border client made aboUI the Whitewater
on June 28. They also controlled a contacts in a personal diary.
Reid Weingarten. Steiner's
20,725-acre wildftre in the southlawyer,
said such references were
em Rincon Mountains.
• In Washington, winds up to 35 "offband, impressionistic" and
mph whipped a fire in the sometimes recorded weeks after the
Wenatchee National Forest to twice fact.
its size, burning 2,000 acres and
Much of what comes out in the
forcing the evacuation of 20 hearings, even the Republicans
homes. Two other major ftres cov- concede, will be material that's
already been disclosed.
ered a total of nearly 3,000 acres.

rNd)' to

Small 5mo. old Fem•l• 112
Chlchuahu•-112
Pomeranian
Puppl•. Kilten to good homa.
614-256-165'1

Sunday

NOW OPEN

Oregon vacationers flee
advancing new wildfire
KAH -NEE-TA, Ore. (AP) - A
burning barn ignited a wildfore that
burned within a mile of a Indian
reservation 's resort village early
today. Two highways were closed
and about 200 people evacuated.
A fresh wave of lightningsparked wildfires kept fire crews
busy across the West. About 4,000
firefighters and support personnel
were either battling blazes Monday
or on their way to the fire lines,
said Ralph Satterberg of the Northwest Interagency Coordination
Center.
The Oregon fire consumed
3,000 acres and reached the top of
a ridge overlooking Kah-Nee-Ta
Village on the Wann Springs Indian Reservation, about 85 miles
southeast of Portland.
About 200 people were moved
to the main lodge , many of them
sleeping on the noors in banquet
rooms. Both highways out of KahNce-Ta were closed.
"I can sec the flames right now,
not just 'the smoke," said Larry
Shoop, a TV reporter who was
vacationing with his wife and three
children.
The fire also threatened 25 10 30
homes in a subdivision. Residents
. were urged to evacuate, but several
'Stayed behind.
Elsewhere:
• In California, more than 1,900
firefighters fought 75 lightningsparked blazes in the Klamath
National Forest on the California-

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM

Giveaway

Friday. Mond•y

~
AIIJ
WORK
••
.. Defense of Clinton ethics
opens Whitewater hearings
By PETE YOST
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Clinton
administration's ethics were being
placed under scrutiny in Congress
today with the opening of Whitewater hearings into how the president' s aides gathered information
about a politically sensitive federal
investigation.
The leadoff witness for the hearings , White Hou se counsel Lloyd
Cutler, was expected to argue that
contacts between C~nton aides and
Treas ury Department officials
broke no ethics rules.
But Republicans planned to
challenge that and also to question
whether the administration's cxplanations hav e been completely
forth coming.

4

Guaranteed

1212/11n

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St. Pom9rcy, Ohio
"Look fol" the Red and White Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Owtter 1-SOG-291-5600

GARAGE~FUL

I ,
I

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

t

HOMES WITH

992-2156

iI

POMEROY

REACH OVER 18,500

446-2342

l

EAST MAIN

State Auto
lnsurance Companies

GALLIPOLIS

1

:

C~

HEATING &amp; COOUNG
RSES &amp; EPA

...

~ - @~-{~

!

OGAN

LoH Wei~ Llt •(razy"

u•·Wood

Help Wanted

I

Let us Jell you JUSt
how much your savings
can be .

1O!bushel

HAULING

hndng Ouoln

Stale Aula 's alr eady
loiN premtums can be
reduced even mor e by
insurmg both your ca r
and home w1lh Ihe S i a l~
Aula Compan1es.

Senate ready to
cut arts budget

SEOEMS AWARDEll GRANT, Soutbeastern Ohio Emergency Medical Services (SEOEMS) received a $49,950 slate grant Friday for training and equipment. State EMS director Rodger Glick,
lert, presents check to Mary Holzapfel, Ironton SEOEMS unit. The
money is part or SUI million grant generated from seat belt fines .
SEOEMS operates 12 emergency squads in Athens, Jackson,
Lawrence and Vinton Counties. SEOEMS' headquarters is located
in Gallipolis. SEOEMS also received Ohio's "EMS Service of tbe
Month" award last week with officials from the Ohio Department
of Public Safely, Division of Emergency Medical Services looking

5

Tye Brinager &amp; Sons
Reedsville- Hl14-378-6194

bee n invit ed to participate 111 the
Coo lvi lle founder' s day in August.
A cake walk was held and won by
Jean Welsh. Nex t meetin g wil l be a
white elep hant sale. Members are
to take a wrapped g 1ft or S I or
more.
A reccpiion will beheld fo r Jo
Ann Baum Oct. I at the Na~.arcne
Chur ch, Long Bottom. Refres hmen ts were serve d to El1zabcth
Hayes, Sandy White, Mac McPeck ,
Ada B1sse ll. Jean We lsh, Ethel Orr,
Virgini a Lee, Erma Cle land , Jean
Frederick , Kathcryn Baum , Charlotte Grant. The lma White. Betty
Young, Mary ll olter, Dor is
Gruc sc r, Go ldie Frcden ck. Mar y
Harnn gc r. Esthe r Smith . Laura
Nice , JoAnn Raum , and a visi tor .
Bette [Jiggs, diStrict deputy.

Cook reunion held recently
The annual reunion of the Cook
family wa s held recentl y at the
SyraGuse Municipal Park.
Attending were Jenny. Ashley
and Cady Cook of Baumholder,
Germany; Gene and Della Cook
Miller, Kevin Roberts of Tucson ,
Ariz .: Samuel and Loui se Cook
Rutledge , C hesapeake, Va .;
Clarence and Ed na Cook Searl s,
Nikki and Shalyn Searls, Bidwell;
Raymo nd Cook, Marilyn Oiler,
Kellie Cook, Sahara Harmon and

Self Pick

g1vcn m un1 son .

MORRISON'S

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Howard
hcavating-(o.

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Let uo do it
for you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Alter 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

3/25194

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Service

Lines. Land Clearing
Fill Dirt, Top Soil

Reasonable Rales

992-3838 """"

WHAlEY'S AUTO

Call
614·682·7676

949-2168

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM11II
REMOVAL

JESS' COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOlSTERY

•AREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992-2269
USED RAilROAD TIES
llf.ll1o'IIW1fN

headliners, seal
lavers, lonverlible
taps, Antique Can.
20 yrs experienle.
Baal Seals.
992-7587
41464 Slanher Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

MARTECH
• INDUSTRIES
Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
814-992-7878
SA 7 • Five Point•

··-..

9

Oeeorated stonewar•, wall tel ..
phonea, otd lamps, otd thar~

momaters, old clocks, •ntlqu.

tumhura. Riverine Antiquaa
Rus1 Moore , owner. 614-992~
2526. We buy eatat11 .
Don't Junk hi Sell Ua Your NonWorking
Major
Appliances
Color
T.V.'s,
Refrlgaratora'
frMzers, VCFI 'a, Microwaves'
Air Condltlonera, W.. hera'
Dryers, Copy Machlnea, Etc:

Water hauling
Backhoe Service
GRACE
ENTERPRISES

992·4103

Wanted to Buy

Clun lat• Model Care Or
Trucb, 1987 Mod•l• Or Hew•r
Smith Buick Pontl•c 19o0
Ealtwn Avenue, Galllpod1.

411~1tn

7131/DI.fTFN

&amp;11184 TFN

Auction.., Col. Oec.r E. Click
Llc•n" I 754-~ &amp; Bond4td'
30HI95-3430.
'

Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
Limestone - Fill Dirt
Gravel- Sand
Leach Bed
Installation and
Septic Systems
614-992-7979
SR 7- Five Points

Eslimales

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Purson Aucllon Company
lull time •uclionHr, complete
auction
1ervlce.
Uc•nsed
166,~1o &amp; Weal Vlrginl• 304773-5785.
•

MAR TECH
INDUSTRIES

Trucking: Limestone &amp;

Howard L. Wri,tesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

8

Free Eotlmatn
mwn

Trailer Sites
Dri veways , Septic
Systems , Water &amp; Sewer

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

•UGHT
HAUUNG

550 Page Sl, Middleport

Complete House &amp;

PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USID PARTS FOR
All MAKIS &amp; MODUS
992-70UOR
992-SSSl OR
TOll FI£11-IDIH41·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

P.M. Clolhl"ll1 Houoohold And
Mlac. h•m•. 2 Ylt .. Out From
At 7, On Addison Plko.

992-2096

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe

·Room Addition•
-New garage•
· Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterlqr
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
PomerQy, ~~~.....

Two Family: Wed ..S•t, I A.M. ~

til4-256-t238.

J I 0'1 Auto P1rt1 and Salvage
11so buylna Junk cars &amp; truch:
304-773-5343.

Want to buy: Home or trail• on
l•nd contract . 304--67S-t3l5.
Old clgar•tle lighters, milk bot·

tiN, tount1ln pens, •llv•rw•r•
marbl••. ltonew•r., magazines'
St•r Wars •nd Slar Treli llems:
Osby Manln, 614 ·992·1lt41.
'
Warned To Buy : Junk Autos

With Or Without MotOJa. Call
larry llvoly. 614-388-9303.

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES
.Carpentry
•Patnllng
•Power Waohlng clean• all exterlora
with high preaaura
sprayer
•Reasonable Ratee
•20 Years Exparlence

•Frae Eotlmaleo

985-4181
212311 mo.

T011 PrlcH Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Silver C&lt;Mna
Gold Caine. U.T.S. Coin Shop'
151 ·Second Avenue , G•llipolla. '

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areu I

Spooro,

304~75-1429.

Shl~oy

AVON! All ar•aa. Noed elflra
mon•y or want • career, either

way-call Marilyn. 304-882-2645
or 1~()0..992-63~ .
AUenUom Want To Earn What
You Are Wonh? DUll To Pl1nned

Announcements

Expin~on

&amp; Promotions We

NHd

Energetic

3

Money

Now! Call
BMwMn 1-1 Tue8d•y, Wedn...
day &amp; Thurodoy Only. For tnt•-

- - - : - - - - - - - - llollvolod Poople
_

3 Announcements
I, Bonlomln Carroll, will nco bo
Niponolblo lor ony dablo olhor
than my own from thlo dolo.
Uvo Hoi Glrto r.-263-8000

view Thu...c:l•y, Start Sat, 6\4-.

=====----

,_448=·1114:..:..:.1:::
.

1·

AVON •• SALES
..
Polonllol $200 -$2,000 Monlhly.

Fontoollc Dlacountol Bonolhol

Ext.

5078 $Ut Jilin. 18 • Yro Floxlblo Houro. Torrhory OpProcoll Co, 802-864-10120.
llonol. HIOG-1112-4738.

liNGO

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB

IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.
Speclel brly Bird
$100 PayoH
Thl• Mi good for 1
FREE c•rd.
Lie. No. 0051-342

,_

Tho Town of Now Ho- 211 t/2
Fifth Sl., Now Ho"!' 1 ~ wll bo
accepllng
DKI8 tor the
purc:hooo ond lnolollltlon a1 o
fl"' doloctian ond olonn oro~to bo lnotollod In tho Now Ho....;
Communlly Conlor. t..._tlon
of oold proJoct mull bo by oppolnlmon1 only. To oc:hodiM on
oppoln1mon1, Ploo• coli 3Q4.
&amp;a2-!lllllll or 30Wtl2-3:103, bottom-3:30pm, llondoyFlldoy. Tho Town ,...,_ tho
lighllo Ntuoo ony or oH - -

••led

Bobt!~: noo~larobly

In

my
lor
m, Olortlng
In ..te s-.t•mber. A•l•,.ncn

....,lrod, It lnloro01od plo11o
co
==II16::,14-9:..::112:.·::
22j2:::·~.,...,---­
I;
Eom up 1o $1000 wookly
proceollng moll, otort now no.
-.oupplloo, · - .
In mollon, no-obllgotlon. Sond
SASE: Coocodo DOpl-50 p 0

1

••c:.,loncfo.

IOI &amp;421, S.n Angelo, TX 1Mij;i

Eo
oy World E-lonl Poyt ....
oornblo Pl&lt;lducll At HomO. Call

Would Ulto Somoono To T - Toll F100, 1-800-4&amp;7-65641,
11o To Rood, Eomlo McKinney, 311.
614-44&amp;-72111•

Ext.

�..

~

.

.

.

:

•

I

•

I

f

;. f

t

I

•

Classified Line Ads

I

3 papers

11

Help Wanted

44 .

Gallia -Meigs HNd Start Ia Accepllng Application• For The
Follow1ng PoeHione :

ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pika
from $222 IP $285. Walk to ahop
&amp; mov la l. can 814-446-2568.

Parellt lnvolvfNT'Ient Coordinator

Field Or Equlnlent Expt~rle~
Plus Thr• Yaara Experience
Working With Famlllu With
'Voung Children .

EOH.

Country Slda Apartment 583, 2
Bedrooms, CA, WID Hook-Up
1350/Mo. O.poait Required, 61._

Olsabilitl .. Cootdlmtor · BS In
Special Need1 !Ralaled Field Or
Equivalent
Experience
PIUI
ThriH1 Yaara Experience Work·
lng Wltt-1 Families Wlth Voung
Children.

446-4222.
Fumiehlld
ment, all

Contract Gallla County Cook •
Raqu irca•
A High
School
Olplome And Prior Food Service
Ex p~trlence.

Help Went.d: Body Work, 614Lln·ln companion tor elderly
lady, must have reterenc., 61.f..
992-3140 or 614-992-6232.

Local phyalclan 'a office now
accepling afpllcallont tor the
position o
medical aul•
tanVrecepUonnt, computer ex·
penance hllpful, PO Bo1 458,

Raclno, Ohio 45771.
Nlldod: 2 Salol Ptroont Sell

Motivated Soma Experience In

Retail Saln A. Pk.11. Good BaM
PIUI

Resume

Bring

Commlulon.
To:
Nata

munlcallonl,

eom-

1502

Eaetam

Avenuo1 Galllpollo, OH,
Phone calls.
New Tarmntl

No

Cardinal F,..lght C.rrlan Inc. ts
hiring
experienced
ownar/opera1o,.
for
the
van/flatbed division, prothable

pay program, accurate w•kly
Ina. avaiJ.

aettlements, medlc.l
able, rider program
home, no up front
lease on. Call Boyd,

and time
money to
1-800-22().

'
'1

Help Wanted

Truc:k drive,. 'Minted to h1ul

cal, coii614-JI12·2548.

toa

Worlltr Nlldod For B..ln- I

Small

Trailer

Park,

Drivara

Llconoo A Mull. !lome Ell·
l*tence In Mechanic, Plum~
lng, C.rptnlry, R1nt Plue Hourly

Wago, 614-3811-9686.

18

Wanted to Do

-=---:-:-:-:-~--.,-,_,..-

General Maintenance, P1lntlng,

Yord Work wtndowa Waohod
Gutte,. Cleaned Light Hauling,

Commertcal, RMidentlal, Stave:

614-44&amp;-4141.

Georg• Portable Sawmill, don'1
haul your toQII to the mill )ult

coil :telUJ5.1~57.
Mill Paut.'• O.y c.,. Center
11-F 8 A.M. -6:30 P.M. OuoiHy
loring Care For All Children
Our 111 &lt;loot Pon·Timo, Ful~
Tlmo• Foci. Aooltlonco Avolloblo.
Call ..., lnlorma11oo Or Vlol1. InIon! !Toddlot 114-446-8227. p,.
School,
Schoologo,
B&amp;A
School, 814-446-822{.
Sun Valley Nurwary School.
Chlldcoroii·F 1om-6:30pm Ag•
2·K, Young School Ago During
Summer. f Daye per Week MinImum 8"1-4-44&amp;-3657.
WUI do hoUHCiaanlng on
w•kly ba1l1, hlva refer~nC~~e.

Financial

weekend. Sand reeuma to Box

21

Opportunity
INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
......,mondo 1hot you do buoJ.
, _ wfth poopto you k.-1and
NOT 1o Hnd '"""'Y 1hrouon tho
moll until you hovo ln-IIJIIod
lhl o""'lng.
lllrdw- bullnoM lor oolo due
~ram, u. . homo. 1-800-220- 1o lllno~~ -bly prlcod.
4 or 1182-2343.
304-812
Pomoroy Nurolng • RohabiiH•
11on Conler II occ:opllng opReal Estate
pllcatlone tor Certified Nu,.lnl

gross revenue pulling company
frallel"' or pulllng own trailer,
heahh lrwurance wldental l vf..
alon available, bu• pl1t•
available, bob-tall lneurance
awallable, fuel c;ard 1yetam,
wllkty
Httllm.nle,
rtdlr

Apply

Rocklprlnge

Rd.,

at

3675

Pomoroy.

EOE.

Pori limo LPN or RN pool11on
available It Pomeroy Nurang

end Rahabllhatlon C.ntar on J.

31 Homes for Sale

pando In

ll~ngroom,

2br., 1

ba1h, $1500. 30UQ5.3395 ohor

5pm or WMkende.

1m N- lloon 12ri0 2 Bocf.

1988 Schunz 14170 mobil homo

w/u:pando, 3br., 2 bath, nice
large 1011 1 unattached garage.
nke rnlaant areL 304-i82·3502
after 5pm or '-•• m. . .ge.

Pool n 1)1 SUbolftuto T-hor
In Child Develapnlnl Conlor,

High ~ ,..an Or Equlv·
.,.,.
• p_.... EJI.
,..,.,_ a.ldng Wl1h Young
Chi- P-...1. Sorld t.onor
0r lnl_. And ,..._ ly
Auguol 1._ 19114 To Pltyllll
111-, PHN Dtrwctcr Of Humon
R_.rc-, l.rRO, P.O. 8oor '!~
Rio Orondo, OH 411111. EEO '""
Employor.

1

Ac,.., 5 Mille From Raccoon
Perk, $511,500,114-379-2240.

Furnished
Rooms

614-446-9580.

Alto lraller opoco. All hook-upo.
Call attar 2:00 p.m., 304·7735651, Mason WV.

5.32 Kr., $13,160. 8.14 ac,.,,

46

3 Room OffiCI Sullo Wilh

t1 Acltolnlng loll. 2 At:rot. All To

lo 1 Buyor. All U111Hioo
Avolloblo, 114-446-3657.
wanted to buy- two or more
acrM, auhabte to build on and
1o 1 blocklop rood, 114Qo

114..-,.

41

Houses lor Rent

1308.

.. .2: '-rwo=-"'ar=--Thr=--..

-II.

From

Qavfn

~.

$200

All 1'8111 oolole llt.ler1Bing In
lhiS
lljat:IIO
lho FodoiOI Flir Houllng ACI
or 198llwhtcl1...,.,. Kllogli
to ldiert• •any pnlfii"'I''CC,
._nor dba~l·lllllon
buod on r1101. cck&gt;r. rolglon.
..., lomllllslalua o r origin, ., flirt lnllnllon10
mlico IIJf IIUCh pnl.....,,
lrNtltlon or cla;elt•*lllllon."

2bdm. opto., Ioiii _,ric, oppllancee lurnllhed laundry

na , . . _ wll no1

ltllOw1lr9Y ICCOfJI

1 -.-oforrool-o

"'*"loin vlollllton o1 u. ""'·
.,. ........,

·--•
lnlormod 1hol II -.go

ldYII1illdln II* no - r
. . . . . , - on on oquo1
Ofii)Oftunl1y billS
.

Space lor Rent

Prlv1t1 Toilet In Modern Flra

Proof Bldg. CIIIMorrio Hasklno
814-44&amp;-2631 Or 814-446-2512.

-:.r.:••i

room
ochool
In
lown.
lono toovolioblo
11: Vlllop roon AIJ1o. M9 or
oolll14-tl92·3711. EOH.
Fumlohod Efllcloncy $1851Mo.
U111Hiol Plld, Shotw 811h, 107
S.condAvo.LClolilpoiii,I14-441-

4418 After 7 ~.II.

Fumlohod EHicloncy 701 Fourth
Avonuo, Golllpolil, $220/llo.
U111ftlol Pold, 114 441 4411 After
7 P.ll.

Household
Goods

Corpol $5.00 Up Vinyl $4.49 To
$6.50 In Slock. 114-446-11144,
llollohon Corpoll.
Couch I choir, bolgo • mouvo,
$225. 304-8&amp;:1·2ll44.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W.ehtrl, dry.-.. rafrlgtrltor.!J
rong11. Skoggo Afll)lloncoo, "'
Vlno St-. Coll814-448-73118, 1·
800-41111-34119.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolo homo lumlohlngo.
Hours; lion-Sat, H . , ............
0322, 3 mllol out Bulovlllo Rd.
F- Dollvory.
Rol1laer11or Sill; Rolrtgonlor
Fooof FrM $150; Rolrtgorotor
Sldo By Sldo Wu $288~ $1115; Nice Eloc1rlc "'11111•
Mlcrowove O..n On Top, 1250;
Ellclrlc Ronge 30 Inch $911;
Eloclrtc Ringe 40 Inch $121;
lloytog Wrlngor Wllhor, Nlot
Squore lub, $171~·
Au1omo11o
Wither 195;
er Ill;
Wltlrloool Wother U Now, 1
y.., Warranty $205; Oae Aa"Gfl
30 Inch $05; Gu Ron111 31 Inch
S85; Skoggt Appllonc.., 70 Vine
Slr111, Golllpollt, &amp;M-446-73118,
Or 1-800-41111-3499.

SWAIN
FURNilURE. 12
Olivo St., Galllpotll. I Ulod
rumn.n, 11111.,., Wllloln a
Work boc4o. 114-446-31H. ·
AIJCliON I

ditioner

Avolloblo,
287-8308.

llBLEla- prlnlo, - - ......
pottery, clocb, ............. lioo, booko, lop, elc. ALWAYI
BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top
dollor pold. One ..... or - ·
hund..S. APPRAISALS, 40

54

ALDER

Ron

Af!ER ALl OUR H-ARD~
111f:SE A\Sf TWB.JTY rt:AR&gt; ...
~E.IJ ~Ll

...

IU5LL , /v!AYBE 0\£ 6:JT

rr: .

BUr Mb WAIJTS

fT ?

DCN f rS£r IT.

Chevrolet

4x4

tQJ9fl :l

..KJI&gt;

.. Q I0 7

• 9 8 :l 2

.

BARNEY

443-2342.

61

~~~- wlr&gt;-

Block. brld&amp;, -

dOWII , lint•, etc. ctaude Win'"'"• Rio Clnondo, OH Call 114248~1.

Sale

Groom ond Supply 8hot&gt;PII
Grooming. Julio Wobb. 114-4460231.

Pompo....t Polo by Sonyo, clog
~=-Jno~hlng, Ill bNodo.
10110x8 doa ...~ 11111.15.
Point Plua, ~
•

Wlndahleld, Saddle Bags, New
TlrM Low MIIH, E•callant

CondMionl $1,200, 614-446-4525.
11184 lllrloy Dovldoon Spor1a111r

63

3 Roglote..S IIMaioo, -ke
old, lomolo, $5011. 114-11124722.

Hond1 Alpencade, loaded,
Nice 24 - h Umotln Bull, I 1V85
Iota ot chrome, new tires,
Yurllng Block lo While Foco atrtpee
and murtela, 29,000
Holloro, 114-4411-4013.
original miles, call 614·992-7803
ouortor llorMa Won Broke, 114- oher5pm.
--~
::.••;::..:~:.:-:::·~----- 1885 Suzuki RM125, llko new,
$900 nego11ablo. 304-882·341111
otter 8pm or 304-882-2847.
64 Hay &amp; Grain

Livestock

1000CC, low milage, exc. cond.,

$3100. 30W82-2M7 oftor Spm.

2573.

175-8253.

AKC Bn- pupoloo. 1 -~co
old, $100, F.A. w.n.dura. 114-

-n

""*':

AKC Rogll1ond IIIIo lllnll1tn
Schnouztr, 13 WMko Old, 114~~.

Square boill t.y. 304-87&amp;.31180.

71

Autos for

I;~1112~-~2«5.~~~~~=~
AKC

Sale

1850 Pun1111c Chloftln aood
~~~- $22110. 11187 For~ lirvo,

- . ..............
~------. ...... -·~··

1181 lluollng, lcyl., outo., PS,
nc. lnlorlor, f4200. :104-8753980
::.::.::·--------------1978 DodiJI Alpon, Sion1 I En~~ Runo Good, $100, 114-379Aior I P.ll.
1177 florocho 924, now Plroill'o,
ounrool, nMdoo luol lnloc11on
work, $1500. ~WIIIt oftor
1181 Eldurodo C.dllloc $2,100,
good ohlpo, 304-8711-81181.

11181 c.moro, ..... \1-8 - .
wl1h otr, 111oing IIIIOCI, 114-1112·

ZSI7.

AKC. lrlltony oponlol. Fe. .lo
orongo ond Whl1o. 114 :1411117
Floh Tonk . • Pol S'-. 2411
Jockoon AYI. Point ~.
304475-2013.
Full Bloodod -nllln Pupe 2 F111111oa, ••• ~--h, 1••
3711.336.
...,. ~

1981 Chlvent I opood OT w11h
IUnraol, 0 1 - body IIICI 11&gt;lorlor, ..S wllh OT llrlpoo, ....t lo
block lntortor, runo good, $13:15,

Full lleoglo pupa,
Bwb. okl, $ 3 0 , - $50. 3041182-2442 oftwlpnt.
HAPPY JACK FL£AIIEACOH:
Elootronlc Device Controll
Fleu In Tho Home Wllholl P•
llcldel.
Pallnlod
Doolgn
Creotoo Burol Of Llahl FIMo
Can' Rlllol. - • • Ovemlahl.
J D NORTH PRODUC£ 1144411933.
HAPPY JACK FLEAIIEACON:
tloclronlc dovteo oonlroll In lt. homo wl1houl poollcldoe.
Pt1onlod cllolgn burol
of llghl n.a oon1 - ·
R-fo OYW11Iahl, R6Q I
Supply, ......-2114.
RoglllorodSVborlon
Pujlploo, 114 4411 Sill

HuoltJ

114-~212.

-

Oldo.....
- 304-17U12'C
•YWYihlna,
uc.
oond
13000.
11117 Cltnvllr La8oron 2.2
Tllrllo, CJooil Condition, $2,7110,
I14-3IM72I.

Musical

KlmboU "'-• Eltaollonl Condlllonl$1,200, 114-211-11117.

58

~!

!XC&gt; ce£R.'Je:..h-\.,_.)-~

PI-nt.

roltl~.

ga llnkl, ono 1on truck
wheela. r~~dlatore, floor mate,
ola. D &amp; R Au1o, Ripley, WV. 304·
372-3933 or 1-800-273-9329.

ll£/'1~11"" 10

,.

sssoo. 814-!141-3301.

18 Fl. HI lo All lllddlo Camper,
$2,7110, 114-367-78111.
11'M 27ft. Tltln motor heme,
tully lilt-contained, generator,
retrtgeratorlfrHzer,
m1uve
Interior.
H.~~ rNdy lor rood, $8500.

*•
microwave,

·:
·~:

,.,...

mo1or
- · fully MII-&lt;:OIIIIInod, mull
to approclo11, 114-11112-3431.
1111 Wlld1111111 C.mpor 24' Air
CondH- Roll Oul Awning,
Folr Condl1r.,;, $2,500, 614-3889118.

22'

•'

=
--

'=.illlu!:

-

Fcwtlll-!11 C..vortoblo

Services

.,•.

VegetabiH

0411 Roga• Watarprooflng.
llbUihecllm.

Older /Newer
Addhlon1, Found1Uone,

.

houra,114-lll2-

84

=:..•.:,u

~~~~~
li_ony _ _ _ ,..... ..

Choln- .... · - · ·

uzc

DLXSMMDUIH.
UHIOHNH

C F H

CFH

B G J

J

HNHY

DLXY S UGUIH

SMBGY
0 0 IV H
PREVIOUS SOLUTI ON "I hope, when I Slop. people Wllllh1n k lhal so mehow I
mattered ." -

Mar1ina Navrattlova .

WOlD
UMI

spade
to dummy's
Casplaying
h the diaa·
a nd dtamond
ace kmg.
before
mond king, disca rding your heart two.
a nd ruff a low hea rt in ha nd Re tu rn to
dummy with a trump and ruff a nother
low heart m hand. Finally play a club
to dummy 's ace a nd cas h th e A· 7 of
hearts, discarding two of your three
club losers . Mission accomplished.
Wa lch out for the prelimmary dis·
carding play thai makes later ruffin g

safer.

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF

S I J WH E

I

CHITK

I" I I I

3

kid always
T I D0 T
got into minor scraps, but al·
s 16 ~,' ways remained cool . One
. . . . .
evening my son asked him, 'Is
~
11 hard to remain cool when
r --:C:--R_A_F_O_T---,1 you're up lo your neck in ...

1:.

II I I

l

A

·

1 I I I I ·c; ;:_~Z~Icle
7

8

lhe "cn"'Ue quoled

b y 11/lmg in ttle m1~smg words
L...J._..J__..JL.,...J.._L......J you develop from step No. 3 below.

•

@

.

•

•

_

•

PRINT NUMBERED
LEITERS IN SQUARES

.

t

A UNSCRAMBlE FORI
'1:1 ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEJIS
Gimlet - Fudge - Middy · Plexus · MISGUIDED
Friendswere discussing the differences between past
wars and present war capabilities. One insightful guy
said that modern wars consist of guided missiles and
MISGUIDED people .

..•

JULY 261

..

~ .. .J'

. ._,

.

ASTRO-GRAPH
•·•

"

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

..
,.,·

..

·.,

tor a companion to get in touc h with you

newspape r, P.O. Bo&lt; 4465 , New York. today il you 're sharing an importan1 mutu·
N.Y. 10163. Be sure to slale your zodiac al concern . II will be up lo you lo s upply
s•gn.
the initiative.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Problems can PISCES (Feb. 2D·March 2D) In money
be solved today through a little h onest 1 mailers or developments of a malen a l
soul-searching. 11 you probe dee p enough . . nature. you could be a lrdle luckier lhan

J

'•

you might discover how and why you ini· usual today . Keep looki~9 for your fourtially got off course.
leal cover.

;. •

.:

on your mind recently wilh a trusted friend qualities, and loday they will be even
could turn oul to be as therapeutic lor more evident and strongly enhanced.

=door,autt

- ·

UHIDHNH

LIBRA (Sept. 23-&lt;lct. 23) Discussing an ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) You a re

'T7""- .................

-

8 G J

··

J J

'·

.. ''·

..

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

-

P... po, Air CondftlonoN,
Eloclrtclon
IM-441-eJUB, 1-800.217-8308. '
F~-1 _ Molller

_010 .............
-..morclol
uncllt . , . , . Otlll ... RMido,.lol or
l'!~Mt!. now llfYice or -lro.
-..-~
rbll, 11100. ..._

oroo. Sidon Eaullntint. IM- 14 Della et
175-11121 or1~
441-0147

,.,

llooler Uconlld oloc1~clon.
RldoMur Ellcttlcol, WV000301

304-870-1788.

poes~:~nl

:·'•

/Sotho, ·:

-mon·o Hooting And Cooling.
lnololllllon And Sontlco. EPJI
c.rtfled. Rnldtntlal, Commtr·
cloll14-251-1111.

•

' L G J

important matter that has been weighing innately endowed with good leadership

Equ1prMnt

I

w

.,

him/her as it will be for you .
SCO~PJO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)

- - nioloo . . . . .
Bod), ':z..~ 111 - 1172.
lilting

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebnty C1ph&amp;l cryptograms are crt~a l od lrom quola!lons by lamous people. past and
Eacnlonet m tho c1pher stands lo1 another Today s clue 0 equai5

••
..

&amp; Li vestock

OOioctntOo~&amp;\

findin g him se lf in a deso late

J

bn

Kftchant

van der -

52 Sou1heast
Asian holiday
54Big551ncluding
56 Legal matter

....

Whllo 112 R You
Pick; C.bbogo, You Pial&amp;; 1114251-1111.

Fann

town

36 Loan shark
39- Hawkins
Day
41 Range of
knowledge
42Ciumay
43 Stray calf
45 For fear lhel
4BWeakena
50 llrchltect Mlel

··:

.. polr, prauure wuhlng ond .......,.
mobllo l1ome npolr. For lrM ...
1-o coli Chll, l14-1192-8323.

~tmlnt Windon, lnsut'ld,

61

Belgium
30Thy
32 Russian river
33Splll
340klahoma

•

Froo Eollmot•. 1114-387~511.
JloE Home llolnlananc. pelnl·
lng, vinyl oldlng, roofing ond
ckYwall. F,.. ntrmatn, S14·H2·
4ft2, Ilk lor Joe or Eo~.

a.-.

Pa"
Pass

28River in

e

e.

cloora. rooting and complete
home rep~~lr, complete window

Roofing,

20 Greek letter
21 Pull Into a fold
23 Heroic poem
26 Son of Noah

i'

CloC
Ganorol
Homo ·· ~
llal,.enance- WIIIPiper, 1t01m : ~

Hom..

191ntertwlne

15 Black bird

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
Uncondhlonol Hlotlmo guarent-. l..oeel refaNnc" tuml1hed.
Coli 1-800-287.0571 Or 614-237·

IMIIence

12Mix

compound

••
.7!

Curtil Home Improvements. No
Jab Too lkl Or Smol, Yure Ell·

Fruita &amp;

Pa ss

4 .o.
Pass

ITUESDAY

·f

Home
Improvements

$D111~\',

l NT

Pass
Pass

IUUI:l&lt;1,~

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

AUIOIIIIllo. 114 t• 0011.

B Oxygen

,..

l CAAI OCUEVE:.IE KRJN.J.i' 1\-11~
fiE. C.~ CD ~W~'I WITI\ C.OIM\G TO
~ V..1E B'( \OIPU&lt;J~.:::;::...___

uud or ovarttauiMI, guaranteea
8 lo 30 doyo. 304-875-411110, PI

- a-r ..._en.
oow.
.__
•.ooo 2 -.

17 Unfaithfulness
to mate

'-AI&lt;'r

BORN LOSER

304..7..,.1149.

........ - - - 104-411-

, Instruments

Avf"'Gt

T1'4lL

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Cooclunon

10High·11 Soak

Gr

•

11aG Y•maha Wava Runn• 500,
/Dull lrollor, 814-4411-9364.

1177

Pas!'

tltllf/!T'
P.!!

..., .... ,

l-=::~~=~_:::__~~~~~~~~J.=~~~~:;~::===~~;;:;d:J~i:f!!J[J

2087 Mondoy:)oriday, 8am-4pm,
Ilk lor Jody.

. . -"""
. ...fl.,
-114·
mootroal,
-.
72 Superior 22' motor home,
... liDO .. ~- Ilk .....,_ 5, run~ like new, root air
tor Pam, ........... ISpm.
concliUonlng, Dodgo 413 C.I.D.,

11

fj1

ge ruo::

I) 'J.l-'f7"

control motor $3500, 114·i92-

110.

IIUIIIIIoo. ..........,
IIIII I peppoir; iloo 10, ..........
AK;~mplon bl-, 114-

=,:n1oc1

TLI/5 MU'T

ABOUT • ,

thruat, Mlnnkotl trolling remote

79

""-'n Town Cor,

1•

lean~.

r.ttpwt of

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Condftlon, 614-446-11569.
11188 Pocor, 1&amp; 112·, l~ ·Hull
ftborgluo bau boxt, 70 hp.
llorcury oil lnlac1od, 28 lb.

acmo....,

,Coolville.
W.nlod: Stud 111r11ce For
Roglolorod Red Dochollund Hoo
Hod All Sholo,
TD
Buy: Fenlo l'
Tllllor,
In ... For • - . . ;
114-387-TIIIII.

'

1183 17 112 Rlnkar Mere Cn.dur
140 H~ Trim, llorlno R~~o~
Wolk tnru Open Bow

76

Pa ss

area.
l S ~OULD WRITE A LETTER
I COULD TELL 1-lER HOW
LAST
NIGHT M'{ SUPPER
··A pack of feral dog s led by a parliC·
TO Tf.lAT LITTLE RED·f.lAIRED
DEPENDABLE A~D RELIABLE
u lar ly mean -looking s pecimen ap ·
WAS
ELEVEN
SECONDS
LATE
~
GIRL, AND TELL HER ALL
proached me . Feeling very nervous. I
I AM ..
ABOUT M'I'SELF ..
picked up a big st1ck a nd ...··
"A nd the lead chi huahu a immed 1
a tely took one pace backward:· inter·
rupted one of lhe aud ience.
In bridge. sometimes you must find
a s urpri se play l o make or defeat a
contract. 11 so. th e hard part is act ual·
ly lhinking of lhc play Take tod ay's
deal. for examp le . Do yo u see how to
make s ix spades after West leads lhe
FRANK &amp; ERNEST
trump Jack a nd East follow s' If you
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ; - - - - - - = = : : - ; : o - - - : : - - - = : ; . : : : - - - ; 1 like, look al all 52 cards .
jpc. c.-~
With t hose club losers staring you in I
ro
7
ro~
'Pi
n~ • 'r 1, , .
I{OOV
the face . your mi ss ion 1s to establ1 s h
INFOflMATION t-IIGHwAY
t'/fe
1114/(0
1/V/1) 7b
dummy's fiflh heart. If you can man I
~vc.oyoopy• 1 TAL"' lNG
J"l"#P'f
.~:;
,..
age it . your 12 tncks w1ll be s ix
11
I:"
~,.. 1&gt;
7
"
...,,, /'l~
1$ ,.o~~
spades, lh ree hea rls , lwo diamonds
1$ /2SO'
a nd one cl ub. But Wesl·s heart double ~AINton and tr-ump l ripl e l on make life
t::.AI /... IN
tricky.
rn,..
./?Ill£- IS'
You must win the first trick in hand
HONOJ.U/..1./ ., 10 , 1\~D
with the spade queen : dummy en tri es
vn.r
are at a premium. Cashtlfe heart kmg

11184 Ml= Couallr, aood
-cor,
• Colll~71. 350 or 400 turbo traneml11lone1

puppleo.

Full bloodod Booall IM!JIIIIH.
Bwke okl, t4Cioo. 10W7&amp;-'rlllli
baloro tlpm.

cond., $1500 Hrioue cane only.

75

7pm.

AKC Roglotorocl 111111 bull
Cocker Sponlol puppy, oholo
ond _,..., f12S; AKC Roatolorod block ond 1111 Cocltor
:J:niol, ,.,..., S YN. old, SJI;

1188 Honda 4 Trax 250, good

304-875-4152 or 87!1-1865.

Transporlation

capital
5 Monk"s
counterpart
6 Heraldic border
7 Comes close

Most humor ari s es from say in g
something unexpec ted . A fr ie nd was
relali~g a ta lc of how he had turned
down the wron g sl rPPt in New Or

PF.A NUTS

plckor, 12 roll bad, $2000; oloo 3 rtor, $1800 DBO, 614-992-8511.
com wogono, complolo, oil (3),
$1000; 2 hoovy duty grevfly 19111 Hondo CB 800 Cua1om

a•ra.

4 Scandinavian

condition

:::.87~Y::-,-m-o-:-h-o-:,.,-•...;,_:..w.,.h_H_Io_ r_
w-a
r·
Now kiN 325 2 ,_ nonow com
bad• mlnu• running

horse

35Remove
(2 wds .)
37Waxy

By Phillip Alder

~~~- l'orguoon 36 Troclor prtcea under book value, musi
With Buoh HOa • Blodohn.aoo; Mil, 814.388-0811.
2020 John 00... Wl1 •"""
Hog, $5,850; 850 Fold Wl1h Plow
~Cuhlvolor, $3,750; 114-281- 74
Motorcycles

$200111.,114-1192-11072.

3Command to

31 Free time

Unexpected
works well

John DMre m E.B. combine
wHh 331 com haod 3 norrow, e1cellent condition, $2500, Red 1087 S.10 Chs~y Blaur 4x4
114-ttl2-8072.
air cond., PW. PL, sunroof, 1111
IJC.IIent

2 Electrical unit

Opening Iearl • .J

.

1yr. okl moil, Spring Cntk nalote..S Worker ~.
$1110 or Indo lor llghl :!N-112-

AKC Ak.., _1 1J2yn old, moil,
ublo • wmo, very 111go. 304-

TATER!!

1•

3•
6•

Fann Equipment

WhH11

Pets lor

BUT FUST !!
LET'S PUT ON
OUR BIB!!

VITTLES,

S..

Mil. ., $4,0"00; Can Ba
n' At ·
OalllpoUa Dally Tribune, azS
Third Avenue, Gallipolis 614-

C 1994 by NEA. 11"1(:

56

TIME FER

1989 Dodgo Rom Von 60 000

L. ,.,...._

1

27 Stringy
291rrllated

Vu lnerable : Ne ither
Deale r : North
South
Wf'st
North
East

tion, 1114-!149-2526.

w fl.llnt1"

Sgl.

251ntel lecl

substance in
cork
38 Ponders
40 Musician Shankar

+A

Plck·Up,

1184 Ford COnversion; also 1979
Dodge Convar~lon; good condi-

887-38811.
oogo.
AKC Cocker Sponlol puppln, 10
f'\111 1118 ·1Md; lull llzo bol wkl old, oholt • wormod, $100.
trprlng• lnd mlttr.u; eterwo· 304-4711~
-11 ""- of droworo; ,;;;(
lillie.; 8,..-6524.
AKC Min. Plno. I -ke Oldil
S200
Eocll.
114-alll-111
HlliiiiiOIIil·
wnh lf&gt;llklr: Evonlngo.
old two 28" glrl'o
bllloto; ll1ljllller; Yomoho d[gllel AKC lllnlol~n Schno-, Born
tplhoolar, 22 rlllo wfth ocope; &amp;'11114, Shott, w~ Can a.
c1or1n1 ond wlndowe; '111 Roglllorod, 114 441 4ao2.
Aile ~ oll11on wogon; AKC nglolorod 2 yr old nil
114-1112-2141.
Sholtlo,J100. nMdoo • eounlly
JC Pen"' camcorder, $250. homo. :104-875-MII.
R011y-Boo, onoko, $50. 30HJ5.
11710.
AKC Roglllorod 8 - Ho&lt;lnd
PuOIIiol, 5 Wooko Old Wl1h
King olze wo1orbad wfth il9hlo ShOio, $125, 114 Ul 3314.
and mlmw, 6 drawera under·

1978

$2600. 304-67!&gt;-5128.

EntarpriHe, Jack·

3044JI..I147 leave m...

•QJ 108

• K ~

1178 CJ 5 jMp, new whMis
p.alnt lift, front end, brakes:
hood lop, looks/runs good

1· 1(,.

- · DH 'lo80N37-t528.

EAST
ltl 7

tiOB 7:i4

4 WD's

DOWN

24 Slllch

•JI0 9
•95

Shor1 Whool Baso. loll 01 New
Portoi1114-446-2640.

Ananclal
114-448-8308, 1-10&amp;-

iv,n•

Vans &amp;

60Goals

shrubs

... A S

AQRti ~J 2

Building
Supplies

Winona -

51 Deny
53 Line on map
14 Set into surface 57 Musician
58 Frui t ripener
16 Pacific59 Trial
18 Opera role
190ut1it
22 Dense row of

SOUTfl

lnatelled,

" - r $100 814-448-4141
After 8 p;ll. Or On Wookondo.

26 94

,f t K 2

Ford, Oodg ... pickup

73

Answer to Previous Puzzle

44Rusllc
1 Not functioning 46Guided
47Son of Se1h
properly (51.)
49Actress
5 Taboo item
12 Snail ~enus
13 Egg diSh

Farm Supp11es

DC»&gt;ALD IIIlTH ASSOCtAlEI:
FliiE ANT1QUES. lit,
........ ., a'""!1_ollvor, rum11...,
llc:Cow Rciilo.-. ole. COLLECo

-

PHILLIP

304-87H26ti.

55

41 Tease

ACROSS

1187 Dodge Dakota, mld·alze
n-llroo, S.pd., $2g5o. 304-11~
21149.
Chevrolet,

Antiques

X:':n-~·

SEE YOU, MY !lOY'

1177 Ford Pick-Up, 6 Cylinder
AuiOINIIIC, 1700, 614-367-n:Jo. •

S.ctlonol tola whh nell""' on
both Indo, llko now. J04.1711.
11189.

53

OOP! GOOD TO

•A 7fJ~J

3 Ton -11 Pock Air Con-

nooth, monreoo ond llnot,
Marhart Ranta! 6 Sto,.ga Unlta, hoo1or, comforter ond curtolno,
5110. 10110, 10X15, 1Dx20, 10x30. SSOO. wfl. . .var to reasonable
304-875-2480.
- . e . - - e a.
Mobllo Homo Speco. In Rio King stz. Wolorbad, Glooo
Grondo, 814-448-3617.
Clblnolli
lllrror,
Ugh1od
OHiee Space For Rant: Owner Hoodbolnt 1400. Ou•n Slzo
Flexible On Tarme &amp; Speca. Wollrbad $200. FrMZOr 175.
Tolol Spoco 3,800 Sq. Fl. Avol~
oblo. Good l.ocoll"!!1 Clooo To
Roddng Choir
Bndgo, Call Dovo wloomon AI
Wiseman Aul Eetat., 814-446- ~ Duncen «&lt;~~mlc kiln. 3041711' 118.
3644.
Moving MUll Sell Fill: F Trailer Iota lor rant, 3~75Fne Rolr~rolor, 175; Sldo By
81184.
Sldo Ro
1cr $1~;_ Stovo
$50; King
orbad wnh Dek
47 Wanted to Rent
llookco11 Hoodboonl, $250;
6 Choir, $50; End loblo
Won1od lo Ronl : 3 Or More Bocf. Couch
$38•
Cc•,_
Toblo
$110;
room Homo Noodod By Pn&gt;l. . Ntgl.tolantl $10; Lorgo Anllquo
tlonol l'tlmlly Rliocollng In Go~ Mirror tal; Hooelar Cupboard
llpollo /Galllo Coun1y Aroo, 304- Sl25; Od Sorpontlno Front
523~340.
Dnuor Wllh lllrror $150; 814Elderly hdy would llko 1 nloo 441-4257.
am•ll aper1ment or hou11 11 ..,_ Hutell ·.ezze: Nlco Air eon.
re110nable
prtce.
Pret.r --~ -18oll'o $50; Enlor·
Pomeroy,
Middleport
or lllnmori(e.ftter S75; WoodburSyracuM, 614-G02-2886.
,.. $1=suo lloylog Wrlngor W11
Bulh In 1g21 $100;
1114-371After I P.M.
Merchandise

51

NEA Crossword Puzzle

WHY ITS

AU.IY! ALLEY

bed1. Short or long. No rult.

~=--

Rentals

1-lU~?

$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 per wd.
$.05/doy

I SN'T

1985 S-10, Gravely, rocllnar, 1i81

aso.

$14,570.
Raybum
Ad,
reaMnabla rutrictlons. lnfor·
matlon mall.d on r.qunt. 304175-5253.

ALLEYOOP

72 Trucks lor Sale

1832.

ba1h, no pe1a, rolorenct ond
doposH, 614-992·2275 ohtr Couch , . Choir In Good Cond~
lion, Prlce.&gt;f10Q, 814-4411-3541.
5:30pm.
Counlly 111.. couch I twcllnor,

Sleeping rooma wtth cooking.

Depoo11,114-311H436.
2 11ory, 2br. II -lrlc opto.,
corpllod, IPPillncll lumlthod,
- welor, .... 1noh pickup, on
1111 monogomont, holldoy ootlvMy lw child,.,, lo
8torw, Qhun:hll, Khookt .
W1w"'con you ....
""' Ill IIIII lor
$210/mo. La...,.lid Apellmomo,
llh &amp; ClooriJI St., NOw Ho...,,
WV. 30WII2o37'11 EOH.

Our -

Untumlshed
apartment,
Pom&amp;roy, 2nd lloor, 4 room•

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
21 At:roo R1. 233 2 lllloo From
Kon1on Loko, Adlolno Ho11onol
ForrHI. $22,000, 514-44&amp;-11751

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

9 Treasure boxes

11" VN~)U!\~ FoF&lt;.
II BII1 D To SE:
Aff&lt;AI!) of
HE!q t-&lt;TS ~

10·12o·
potlo
roof
WIICCOIIIOftllo, 1300. 304-675-

One bedroom furnished apar1·

Room• for rent ·week or month ,
Starting 11 $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.

-urnr._

!!.C.,='ii:.U- F::'Th.

614-446-2957.
Nice 3 br. opt In Mlddlopoll,
814-992-5858.

Fann1 38 ocret, Crob Cr•k Rd,
aultao11 for hou. ., farming 6
hunllng. Smoll cobln. $37,1100.
304-743-3855.

. -.--?

llmlll Locol Flnn Sllklng Poll·
Time on Coli Cioonlng - .
Sond Ro..- To stes, P.O.
lox 131, Kerr, OH tMU.
T - • • - . lluOI HoYO
Ellpo- In And
-~~ Home Ropelr, Aool,
And -ing. 114-QA.
1181.
.. Of Rio ft-~11

~£"LLY ~

10" table Mw w/cablnet, $75.,
exc:. c:ond. 304-773-5274.

&amp; Theatre, $255/Mo. + Vtrllllea,

45

33 Fanns for Sale

d:t=

Sand Aaeuma &amp; ller.r.nca To:

6.00
1
9.00
1
13.00
1
1.30/doy

26, 1994

7

814-2-8.

Caller ID lw&gt;11 14 memory, brlnd
- , 143.811, D14-ill2-81fl8.
Llko Now Thn&gt;uvh Dull e~ ment In Middleport, call &amp;14-ml;omputw IBM Compo1ablo. 3.5,
0175.
8225 or 614-992-5304.
5.25 Ani! Honl Drive. Color
11185 Skyline 14170, 3br., 1 balh,
lumlohod 1br. opt, Ill. MonHor. Ponllel And Sltlol
CA, dock, $10,200 080. 304-875- Small
Vernon
Ava., ground floor, no - · Aiel Sohwaro, 814-4462503 or 875-4935.
polo, no HUO, $250 plut ma.
11188 Cloy1on wtnnot II 14X6S . 2 alectrlc, raflreneea &amp; deposH. Cc&gt;ncnlo lo Plolllc Sopllc
BR. 1112 Bolh. Ahor 6PM. 614- 304-67!&gt;-2651.
Tanks 300 Thru 2,000 Gallon•
441~7!17

Chormlng Country Collago, 2
11 • 11·7 ohlh. Thlo poohlon It
tor a nurse committed to 3br. ronch, OoiiiPGIII l'tlrry, coil Bod.-n,
U.lnl
Room,
IKhchen -Dining
rN, Bath,
delivering exceptional quality fot detalla. w..e'IS-3328.
Carport,
All
Eloc1rlc,
S400illo.
care tor our gar(atrtc rHidents.
Wa ortw •n excellent benefit Coun1ry Soiling: 3 111111 From No Poll, 8M-245-5053.
peckaga, competltlva Mlary .and Galllpotlo, Lorg• K"chon, 2 Or 3
1 ltabll, .uppor1ht wort! en- Bedrooms, Large &amp;.lh, 1 112 Small In GaiMpolll, 1 BA. Poreh,
vlronlnlnl. Ptnonl oooldng lo AcrM, C"y Schooll, 614-371- :-'•nl1 Porl&lt;lng, Good Neighbor·
nooa, Der, llol Roqulrod, No
shari on thlt team of nurt• 2343 For Appolnlmlfll.
Pill, Cal Eo~ Tope, 814-446committed to our atandard of E.IIote S.Uiomonl Silo: 3 0181.
DOShlve GY:corne, pi••• cell
814-VBZ-81106 or ofll)ly In poroon
~.:'~nS:":l 1
I
-=Bod-:-room--::Ho-u-..
01 31175!1 Rockoprlngo Rood, 945-1702 Or 1112-328-IHn Ahor 5 In Galllpollo. DoposH And
ft M
RaleranCM Requlr..d. No Pats,
""'-GY· E.D.E.
,...., •
Send Harne And Phone Number
Pool11on Opening • Rooldonl For 1111 by ownor· log homo, lo: CLA 321J Clo Golllpollo Dolly
Aoolllonl For Carr Sllwot 18110 oq. ft., lUll TrlbuneJ..8_2• Th~d Avoooo, Go~
- . . - . . Jocklon, Ollio. wo1omlly room woodburnor1 S llpotll, un45e31.
Shift Work. High School baclroomo, 2 khct.no, ~- "'!1no
Oroduolo IEqulnlonl ; .• V.lld CJA. central vaecum, ClmiONII1 Unhrnl8hed hou11, 2 br, nlca &amp;
Drl_.o Uconoo· Flr11 AIG And col ling, 11ono l~oploco, Iorge cloo~1 - no poll, dop. roqul....t,
CPR Roqulrocl. ~~~~ Ell· clock,
3211111
outbuilding 114-W2·3C)g0.
..,.,_ Wl1h Emollonolly Dio- wfhlltad work room, 2+ ICIW In
lurbad AduRo Prelll1'od. $5.19 woodod · - c1ooo to town, 42 Mobile Homes
Per Hour.
lloiao School Dl11rlcl,
for Rent
• l-,.---,-~--...,..:.,..--Poolllon o-.lng • Cllnicel M- 614-kl·2318, ovolng I
12lc85 2 Bodroomo; Gu Hoo1,
olotenlo • Child"'"'' Rnldontlol 7133·
Troolment Prognm, Cr1lill ln- For Silo By OWner: S BR., 1 112 Depooll And Roloroncoo R•
torvonllon Unl, And Crllil Uno. Bllh, 2,100 Sq. Ft., 1 Story._ 2 qul....t, 10 Mlnu1• From . Ga~
Shill Work. Hlah School Flroplocoo, Out Hoot, Cont. Air. llpolla,
J,.t
Raconlly
Groduolo !Equlvilont, Valid Lariat Drive. Walking Distance Aamodeled. No Pate, $250/Mo,
Drl-·· ~ Flrol Aid And 1o '-pllol, $85,0GO. ll'-n By l':.:*
,:..:.367:.:....:~:.:.':::5:.,.: - - - , . - - CPR All lloQul&lt;od. Rnldontlol Appolnllnlnl, 114-446-12011.
2 Bodroom, lotol Ell&lt;lrlc, 1 1/Z
Ellpe- With Emollonolly
Dlllrubad Chlldron Or Adullo Houu lor oolo, .$17j000 or ront Mil• From Sto1o RoU1o 1118,
$300/mo., 3 -room. lull Roloroncoo, Oopooil Roqulrod.
,.,.,.... $1.19 Por How.
baoornonl, coli 114-84f.2405 o~ 11.:.:1.:.40.44::.1~34:.:::.11:__,.,,......,....-.,.I~
Send R.u.,... To: P.rwonnll t•3pn.
2 Bedroome, At;, No Pete,
Dlt&gt;lrlmo,. Woodlond C.nllfl, Hou., 10.14ac:., 2 miiM from O.poah
And
Alflrancaa.
3081 Slate iiOUiO 110, Clolllpolll, town, priced on lnlpldlon. 3Q4.. $400/Mo., Waeha.!l Dryer; 2 Bed·
Ohio45131.
175-45'75.
room HouM, l""umlehad, No
RESPITE
CARE
WORKER lloclulw, 2 Cllr garage, 2 balhl, Pill, $350/llo. DoposH, 614·797NEEDED: Would you .. willing central air, nur Cheater, 114- 4345.
10 coro lor poroono wllh film. 1185-42118 or 1114-118!1-3839.
3 Bodroomo $250/llo. • DopooH,
ing Umftlllon In 1hllr homo on
1 Bedroom, $200/Mo. + O.poelt,
ronc:h 11ylo homo Pilnlo 114-:M!!-01104 Or 814-256-8909.
lolory: $5/hr. Hlah ocllool dogroor nlld oubodlvlolon, 3br., 2 ball., 11ono
drlvlr'o ,,__, gooCI arlvlng on lronl 6 dock. ol111ng on 2 44
Apartment
,..;onl, Uno yooro 11c....a loll. 114-446-11433.
drlvtng ozporllnce onc1 ..,..
for Rent
qu1111 a~omobllo lmwro~ ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 ·-:----:-~~~~---:---coveraga required. Contact II
1 and a bedroom apanment1,
Ceclllo II 1-«10-631·2302. Equol
lumlohod ond unlumlahod,
Oppor1unHy Employer.
doiiOIII nqulrod, no
Rnlouronl Stoking Enorgotlc
pe1o,l 11112-2218.
Elporllncod 6 Will 0 2
Bod,_,.
Unlumlohod,
Po_,. For lluhlolo Oponinao.
StOYO, Rolriawl1.,!!,.~ 112 Milo
CUI 322. Clo Galllpollo Dolll
lrlbunol...~5 Th~d Annuo, Clo
Mpolla, ._., 411131.

1

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

10 Wooden Frame Wlndowe,
Vartoue Slz• t100: 2:2 Antique
Glan Pan•, Stu 13x20, $160,

4 wtndow air condltlonara. 304$350/Mo., Pluo Socurl1y Depos_!!, 773-5848.
814-441HJT/6 Dayo ; 614-44CH15n Air Condllloner lor Salt, oleo
31 Homes lor Sale
E~enlngs .
Washer, Dryar,
Refrigerator,
p,..z.w Cllll 814-.256-1238.
SINe 'flaw, 2 plus 1crea, 2br., 1 Gracloue living . 1 and 2 bed·
112 batha, 2-car garaoe, duck room 1partment1 a1 Vlllag1 Anllq1» Singer Mwlng machine,
and
Rlvarshle n:c. cond., won., $100. Oak
pond, much more, $49,500. 304- Manor
576-2778.
Apartment• In Middleport. From Wlshatand, $80. OUMn llze
1232·$355 . Call 614·992·5859. doublo -lng rlng q'!'H
1
EOH.
32 Mobile Homes
handmade 'locony, $225. ""'
Modem EHiclency Ap1nmen1, Royal -Hor, workl, $50.
lor Sale
Country Soiling, Call Ahor Spm. 304..aM-i&amp;31 efter 1pm .
1060 New Moon 10x50, 2br.• 814-441H1720.
Apple II OS Compu1er ond lm$1000. :JC&gt;H75-7&amp;34.
New Air Conditioned 1 Bad- ageWrlter I Printer, 2 dlac.
driVel, mGUM, and 10ftw1r1.
1067 C.etla 10x5.5 w/4x8 ••· room, Convenient To Shopping $800. 611!1 448 8658

2 Bodroomo In Galllpollo,
N- Homo: 3 Bodroomo, 3 Ro,.,.,_ Roqulrod, 114-441·

=

One

laavaM•uo•-

Business

hlrtng experienced OTR'a to nm
flatbed, Mm percentage of

A11l.tant1.

Blldroom
Apartment Acroea From Park,
AJC, No Pelt No Smoking,

rooma, Gal Heat, Naw C.rpet,

304·773-5498.
242t
Now accepting ,......,. from Will oteom cilln corpoto choop
Closo A COL oomllruck drlv- to flnleh my . pay menta on
Sirvlclng ~r~en ltatt .,.., our c111nor, 114-8112-4531.
l~y ownod, WV ...... firm
gats drivere horne tor the
C·19 'II. PI Pn Rogl111or, 200 Moln
51, Pl. Pn, wv 25550.
OWner!Operatort
C.rdlnol Freight Carriero II

FumlshiMI

·'They're lwo bucks ap1ece. unless you're bUild·
ing a bookshelf .. then th ey're ten bucks each .··

~ecord

446-6958.

bedroom apart·
ulllltl11 furnished,

1

Air Cond. Private parililng.
Utllltl•
furnished.
except
privata Elec. 614-446-2602

All Applicants Must Pouaq A
Valid &lt;ihlo Driver's license And
Carry Auto Liability lnsuranee.
Oriver"s Llc.nM And Criminal
Checks On Prospective
Employeu Are R~ulred By
Law. Employment AppiiCII Ionl
Are Avallablt At Gallla -Meigs
Head Start's Woodland Cant••
OHice, 3086 Stale Route 160
ButwMn 8 A.U. And 4 P.M.,
Monday -Friday. For Additional
Information Call 614-446~674.
Gallia -Meigs Head Start le An
Equal Opportunity Employer.

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

fiord 4x4. :JC&gt;H75~62.
1250/mo., 614-9411-2526.
2 box oprlngo, $10/oo.; baby
Furnished 3 Roome &amp; Bath, bed, $30j baulnet, $20; call 614llln-2624.
Clean, No Pate 1 Reference &amp;
Depooft Aoqulrea. 1114-44&amp;-1518.
2 Cuh R~11oro $50 Each;_ 1
Fnnch Hom $1114); 1 onNicely Fumlahad Aplrtment, cyclopedlo Sot S2S; 1 Portable
1br, nm lo Ubrory, periling, S.wng lloclllno $50i 1 Cha1 01
central heat, 1lr, rwterance ,..
Aulo l - f75; 1 Hlcyclo $25
qul....t. 814-446~338.
Can a. &amp;,on AI: 422 Slcona1
Furnished eHlelany Apt Central, Avanua, OIJUpoU1.

Gallla And Melgl County Sul).
.tltute Bus Ortvers • Requlm A
Cla11 C /COL Or Wllllngn... To
Obtain COL Priof To Employ·
men I.

I

Tuesday, July

Merchandise

BEAIJTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

• BS In Social Wortt IAe'-t«Kl

3 days
6 days

54 Miscellaneous

Apartment
lor Rent

...

'

:

Over 15 words

10 da~s
Monthly

Tribune 446·2342 Sentinel992·21 56 Register 675·1333
BEATTIE BLVD.'" by Bruce Beattie

.. I

•

,.

Wednesday. July 27. 1994
Even if you already had a busy social cal·
da ·11
ld l~l ·cl&lt;
· bl in
~n r. :~ad\/; ch~~ ~~=: y
u~n~e~ilh sev~ral ~verse rou s . JlOP:
LED ~Jul 23-A . 221 W~l ,!y appear
k break w1·11
Io olhers yto be ug
mEire 1y a 1uc y
be
the
It
lans and
1 11
1
:;:. YYou'll k ~·~~ray::~ !aniiO go
nd h · 1
n~
L
1 1 yourse~
~ a b";;h~
~~'~~
.It
~~nd~~r
re~ur Astra·
1
Graph red~~i~~s· for tho ye:r ahead by
mallin: s . ~ 10 Astro·Oraph. clo this

1

12

,.

'•,

Admirers might mimic your behavior.

....

The resolve TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You are not
and persistence yau·re capably of achiev· only a good slarte1 loday, you are also a
ing 1oday Ia fullill your ambrtions is excep· strong finisher. This is an excellenltime lo
. tionally slro~g. Mentally and physically, tackle a srtualion thai previously 11111m1dal·
yau·re eq~ip
ed to be a winner.
ed you .
SAGITTAR S (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A friendship
;Becaus
r far-seeing and .positive 1you·ve been eager to encourage could get
1aHilude, you can be helpful today 1n 1nsp1r· oH lo ~ sohd sta~ today. Bolh ol you have
1ing a loved one Ia look beyond presenl much 1n common, and somEI mutual bene·
rds hopei 1h .
11.15 are poss1·ble .
limitations towa
a
u onzon .
; CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Make CANCER (Jurll 21-.luly 221 Your present
your thoughts regarding domestic material ideas could help Increase your eam1ngs
needs known IO your entire family loday. or advance your career. Instead of doubl·
Benelils oould result from fresh insights. . ing their merits, test them cui and
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 19) Don'l wa1t, make your evaluatlon6.

' .I

.

,{

..\

I

'·

...,,
·&lt;

·.::

•.

'

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, July 26, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Astros
cut Reds
lead to 1

Drug victim sorry for problems he caused family

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob. Hoeflich

Dear Ann Landers: 1 am a 34·
year-old man who has spent the last
eight years incarcerated in the New
York correctional system.
I started drinking and doing drugs
as a teen-ager. For those young
people who read your column and
think this cannot happen to them.
let me assure them that it can. If
they continue drinking and using
drugs, sooner or later. it will catch
up with them .
My worst pain was being locked
up in prison when my parcniS needed
me. My mother was dying in the
hospiUll, and I was given a pass so I
could see her for Lhe last time. I was
shackled like an animal and brought
to her bedside for a final farewell.
Four years later, again shackled, I
was taken to see my father on his
deathbed. He died the next week,
and I was not permitted 10 auend
his funeral .
I can't describe the feelings I live
with dai ly. My wife has stood by
me, and I am grateful. I will be
released soon and will go directly to
the cemetery to visit my pareniS'
graves and ask them to forgive me.

The Mtssissippi Queen or the logg. daughter ol Bernard and
Delta Queen didn't pass by Mon- Betty Fultz, was the subject of a
day to get your attention but those recent feature story in the Small
two F· I 5's that flew over should Business News published in the
Columbus area.
have.
The full page story wi th a phoJ he pilot or one of th e two
planes was Capt. Mark Mums. He tograph of Dr. Kell ogg tells of
and another officer had flown the Beth's work operating her own vet·
planes to Dayton on Friday where erinarian clinic in Worthington for
they were a part of an air show held the past two years and takes the
on the weekend. Friday, due to rain reader through a very bu sy day for
and cloud s. visib ility was terrible Dr. Kellogg and her employees in
for spoiling the plan es and they taking care of the animals brought
could be heard but not seen. How - to the clime.
Before purchasing Lhe clinic, Dr.
ever, on Monday when the two
large airplanes were returning to Kellogg tried three different types
their home base at Tyndal Air of veterinary pmctice which includ·
Force Base at Panama City, Fla. ed country practice, a large urban
were easy to spot as they passed practice and a small animal prac·
lice so felt ready to take over Lhe
over our towns..
While in Dayton, Mark was able operation of her own clini c. The
to travel to Rutland where he spent major problem that Dr. Ke llogg has
a part of the weekend with his par- encountered is the fact that while
she was getting her intensive traineniS, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris.
ing to be a vet, the schooling didn ' t
business training. Howcv·
include
A big thanks from Iris Payne
who has returned to her employ- er, she mastering th0&lt;c problems
ment at Farmers' Bank after being too. The reporter do 1n g the &lt;lorv.-.
iU. Iris was a patient at the Holzer apparently spent a day at Dr.
Medical Center and then at Univer-- logg' s clinic and was more onar'"'-'
sity Hospital in Col umbu s. She impressed by the way Belh na~••weul~,::·
thanks you for the lovely cards, her many animal pare"n~t,~s. c';;~cd~ ~;~; ..
owners, and fi elded n
remembrances and your prayers.
phone call s related to her practice. ..
Dr. Kellogg, of ·course, grew·up!' ;'
Hnc · s an update on Aaron
Buffrngton, former Pomeroy resi- in Middleport and it' s nice to see ~ - .,
dent.
anolhcr local person getting some~· ;ji.,_''
: •
Aaron underwent amputation of well deserved recognition.
:. '!his right leg last Wednesday and is
Down Middleport way, Mar- '~}:
in Grace Hospital, 5071 S. Outer
garet
John son will be observing her · ··:·,
Drive and Schaffer Ave., Detroit,
94th binhday on Friday, July 29th J ·.
Mich., 48235. ,
His room number is I I 3 and he Friends arc planning a card shower
can be reached by phone at 3 I 3- to mark the occasion. Want to join
966- I 14 3. You did so well in 'em? The address is 325 Page St..
remembering Aaron during his last Middleport, 45760.
"bout" and he appreciated and
What 's a fella to do when the
enjoyed hearing from you so very
petunias
grow so fast that pinching ! '
much. No doubt he'd really apprethem could become a full time job? ~
ciate hearing from you now .
Beats me. Do keep smiling.
~
Dr. Elizabeth (Beth) Fultz Kel·

===C=o=m=m==u=n~ity~ca=l=en=d=a=r==='
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization (RACO),
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park, Tuesday.
New members welcome.
HARRISONVILLE - liar·
risonville Senior Citizens Club,
Tuesday. noon, at townhouse,
Potluck dinner.
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Scottish Rite Club meeting
at Middleport Masonic Building
Tuesday at 7 p.m. All Scouish Rite
Masons welcome.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders suppon
group, Wednesday, I to 3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Center. Susan
Bowers to talk on hospice.
POMEROY - Wildwood garden Club, annual flower show,
Wednesday, 17:30 p.m. home of
Betty Milhoan.
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District.
Wednesday. 8 p.m., Meigs SWCD
office.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County

Women's Fellowship, Thursday,! ,;
7:30p.m., Pomeroy Church of, .
Christ.
~POMEROY - Free clothing
day, 10 a.m. to noon at the Salvation Army 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education regular meeting 7 p.m. at the high school.
POMEROY - Pomeroy group
of AA , Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
Hean Catholic Olurch.
SUNDAY
HOBSON - Special singing
Sunday at 7:30p.m. at Hobson
Christian Union Church featuring
Bill Ward Gospel Trio and Rev .
Charles Curry.

News of our servicemen
Keith T. Hagen
Army Spec. Keith Hagen has
earned the Army Achievement
Medal, which is gtven to those sol·
diers who give meritorious service.
Hagen, a telecommunications center operator, is the son of Patricia
L. Hagen of Middleport
Hagen graduated in I 990 from
Meigs High School. He is currently
stationed in Sierra Vista, Ariz.
Steven F. Wilson
Navy Airman Apprentice Steven
F. Wilson , son of Fred and Kelli
Wilson of Albany, recently gradu·
ated from a basic flight course.
Wilson joined the Navy in March
1993.
Robert C. Francisco
Navy Petty Officer Third Class

Robert Francisco, son of Ci•nd,,IIJIQ
Kimble of Leon. W.Va., recently ~;--1
returned from a six-month Medii·
teranean Sea deployment. Francisco visited Trieste and Naples, IUlly,
and Valencia, Spain . The USS
Saratoga aircraft carrier supported
the U.N . and NATO forces in
Bosnia.
Tracy N. Lawrence
Air Force Airman Tracy N.
Lawrence graduated from Air
Force basic training in San Antonio, Texas.
The daughter of Max and Teresa
Huck of Lowell, she is maried to
Marine Cpl. Jermey J. Lawrence.
His parents are Melvin Lawrence
of Portland and Jill Lipscomb of
Pomeroy.
'
She graduated from Fort Frye
High School in Beverly in I 990.

Rock Springs Grange meets
George Wright was presented
the "Citizen of the Year" award at
a recent meting of the Rock
Springs Grange.
William Radford made the
plaque presentation to Wright in
recognition of community service
and his contribution to scoutin\(.
Wright was accompanied by hts
wife and daughter, Susan Clart.
"Good Citizenship through Education and Experience" was the
program topic presented by Pat
Holter, lecturer, when the Rock
Springs Grange met recently at the
hall on the fairgrounds .
The article read by Mrs. Holter
dealt with education inside and out.
side the classroom.
Opal Grueser, legislative chairman reported on several issues and
Barbara Fry, CWA chairman,

reminded mem bcrs that the county
judging of contesiS will beheld at
the September meeting of Pomona
grange. Bunny Kuhl asked members for contributions to the Mei~s
County Fair BOOih. Members wtll
vacate the hall for the fair at the
next meeting.
Humorous readings were given
by Radford and Roy Holter, and
Barbara Fry read "Door Jam";
Nancy Radford, "I Shall Not Pass
This Way Again", Sarah Caldwell,
"It Couldn't be Done" and Helen
Blackston had prayer and a reading.
Sympathy was extended to
Betty Conkle and Hazel Van
Cooney and get well wishes were
sent to James Conkle. RefreshmealS were served by Charles and
Bunny Kuhl.

This stranger's response was "I
.
didn't know there were special plates
for handicapped people." Then, the
idiot had the nerve to ask, "What is
wrong with you?" I told him it was
'""' ' 0 ' " " ' ' ' "
none of h1s busmess.
T1mes Srnd~eatt aoo
c"""' s'""'~"·
Please, An n, Jet peop 1c ••~
..now that
in some states, the car owner may
opt for license plates instead of a
window placard. And tell them, too,
that it is exuemcly rude to demand
The bigger question is: How do I that a toUll stranger reveal his or her
forgive myself for bringing such medical history .
disgrace to my family ?
Thanks for letting me blow off
1 hope every teen-ager who reads steam ... SYCAMORE, ILL.
this will realize that they run the
DEAR SYCAMORE: Thanks for
risk of being in my place if they blowing the steam in Lhis direction.
contin1 e to mess wilh drugs. I. too, Your letter is anotl1er reminder Lhat
thought it could never happen to me. the only exercise some people get is
.. STATEN ISLAND. N.Y .
running their moulhs and jumping
DEAR NEW YORK: Here's your to conclusions.
plea. I hope somebody tist.cns.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm sending
Dear Ann Landers: Once again, you an article from Lhe Mesa, Ariz.,
a total stranger knocked on the paper. It says the Social Security
window of my car to ask if I knew 1 Administration spent $32 million on
was parked in a space reserved for employee bonuses last year. The
the handicapped. I replied, "Of largest bonus went to an execuuve
course I know. If you'll look, you'll who had been on the job less than
see that I have handicapped license three months. His annual salary was
plates."

Ann .
Landers

more than $100,000.
How come government workers
haul in such huge benefits when
some of the elderly are ttying to
survive on less than $600 a month?
Please print this, Ann . I'd like
an answer. .. ANNOY ED IN
ARIZONA
DEAR A IN A: I read the same
news release and was as baffled as
you are. U anyone from the Social
Security Administration has an
explanation for this horrendous
inequity, I would like to hear il
Gem of the Day: When you go to
a restaurant, always ask for a table
near a waiter.
· What's the truth about pol, co-

Page 4

caine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed and
downers? 'The Lowdown on Do~"
has UIJ·IO·Ihe -minule information on
drugs. Send a self-addressed, long,
businus-siu envelopt and a check
or money order for $3.65 (this in·
eludes postage and handling) to:
Lowdown, clo Ann Landers, P.O.
Box I 1562. Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4 .45.)

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
POMEROY, OHIO

•

1 .~1

IGes

GMC:TRuc:K.

1

~

.J8 » ANNIVERSARY SALE
Last 10 Days - We Are
Turning Up The Heat
On The Competition!

'
v.\) 994 CHEvY
CAVALIER
WAS $11,045
NOW $1

0,327

.\~

1994 OLDS
CIERA

1994 BUICK
CENTURY

1994 CHEVY
BERETTA

s1 S,99S

$14,495

SJ1(99S

1995 CHEVY \\~
MONTE CARLO &amp; 1994 CHEVY
CORSICA
1995 LUMINA
NOW IN STOCK "512,495
\\\~

1f2 TON CHEVY

PICKUP

AU PRICED Ar
\\\~

#2803

ONLY

CAPRICE
CLASSIC

\\\~1994 CHEVYSSERIES
PICKUP

SJ7,99S

sa,999

\\\~ 1994 CHEV.

#2789

\\\~

1994
GMC'%TON
4X4 PICKUP

SJ3,995 '; $16,995

#2547

1994 CADILLAC

FLEETWOOD
BROUGHAM

$33 995

\\\~

#2699

21,495

$19,995
,. ,,

1993 Nissan 4X4 Pickup Extuded Cab ••• s13,995
1993 Chev. lf2 Ton Pickup....................s1 0, 995
1991 GMC lf2 Ton Pickup........................59995
1991 510 Pickup ................................. $4995
1993 All Wheel Drive Astro Van ......... s1S,99S

1986 OLDS DELTA 88 ...........................................'3995
1986 BUICK LESABRE.........................................'3995
1993 EAGLE TALON ..........................................'12,995
1989 CHRYSLER NEW VORKER ........................ $6995
1992 BUICK REGAL ............................................. '8995
1990 CHEVY CAPRICE only 28,000 mlles .......... '8995

Open
Sundays

(EDITOR'S NOTE: A lawsuit outlines the grievances or
one party against another. It
does not establish innocence
or guilt.)
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- A $4 million lawsuit has
been filed in Mason County Circuit Court by Joseph Demck of
Aiken, S.C .. against Chern
Power Inc., an Ohio corporation
doing business in West Virginia,
for injuries allegedly suffered in
October 1992.
Derrick's suit allc~es that he
was electrocuted wh1le insulat·
ing a boiler duct owned and
controlled by Chern Power at
the Philip Sporn Plant in New
Haven.
·
The suit claims Chern Power
knew Derrick was working in
the area where electric wires
were charged, and that he came
into contact with the wires.
Derrick is suing for $2 million in compensatory damages,
$2 million in )lllnilive damages.
pre-judgment and post-judgment
mterest, and attorney costs and
fees.

~=! ~~~~~~~;:~-~.~~~~-~-~~~::~-~~=

Hotn:

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The legal bat·
tie over school funding has taken a
new twi st: prosperous districts
want to appeal a court ruling even
though they arc not part or the case.
The Alliance For Adequate
School Fundin g sa id Tuesday it
asked Perry County Common Pleas
Judge Linton D. Lew is Jr. for the
right to intervene in the case for Lhe
purpose or appealing his decision.
Lewis ruled July I that the current state -local system of financing
education was inequitable and
uncon stitutional because of dispari ·
tics in amouniS spent per pupil.
The alliance of 58 districts with
above -average real estate value
said it agrees that too many schools
are underfunded.
But James Betts, the group's
lawyer. said such a far-reac hing
decision should go to the Ohio
Supreme Court for review, instead
of relying on an individual judge.
Betts ac knowl edged that the
alliance request to intervene was

South Carolina
man files$4
million lawsuit

$·1 6,995

USED CARS

.-"

J

::::::::

•

..

: •

.r • •

:·

Showers

Buckeye 5:
1-13-17-26-31

Tonight, showers, cloudy.
Low In 60.. Thursday, cloudy.
High In 80s.

en tine
2 Soctiono, 12 Pagee 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 27, 1994

unusual.
"It's rare that somebody who
has not been a party in the trial
court is granted the right to appeal,
but it's not unprecedented," he
said.
Three of [our defendants in the
laws uit that the Ohio Coalition For
Equity &amp; Adequacy of Sc hool
Funding filed already have decided
against appeal. They are the State
Board of Education, the Superin tendent of Public Instruction and
tile Ohio Department of Ed ucation.
Attorney General Lee Fisher,
acting at Gov. George Voinovich' s
request, has said he will appeal on
behalf of the state, the fourth
defendant. Voinovich was not a
defendant
Betts said a challenge to
Voinovich's authority to appea l
was likely.
"We have been advised that it is
a possibility but we certainly don't
know," he said.
William Phillis, executive direc tor of the coalition, acknowledged

...

- ~:
;;-,, : :
ur:n: • • • ''. 1 : 1 • •

•

Wealthy schools seek
role in funding battle

ResideniS of the Southern Local
School District will vote on a three·
year"4-mill renewal levy for general operating expenses when they go
to the election polls in November.
Meeting Monday night, the
Southern Local Board of Education
voted to place the levy on the Nov.
8 ballot
In May, voters defeated a
replacement levy for the current
school levy, which expires this
year. Replacement levies generate
more funds than renewal levies,
according to Dennie Hill, treasurer,
but since the defeat of the replace-

1994 OLDS
SILHOUETTE

USED TRUCKS

"""(:

6309

.

Co~yrlght1994

-""~

• ·. . -: : .;"J"_- ; .....,,w

Vol. 45, NO. 58

';

5

...

. . ..
,· :·.
·t:

AMultimedia Inc. N-opaper

,---Celebrating
a
bygone
era---.
'
t ..

'

11!J,., Ii
•·kJ
· '

Jf&gt;

that lawyers were looking mto Lhc
possibility or a challenge. The
coalition includes more than 500 of
the state's 612 districts.
Phillis said the coalition would
oppose any action tllat would fur ·
ther delay a solution to the funding
problem. including intervenor status for the alliance and its subsequent appeal.
"We recognize Lhat the state has
never wanted to race up to the
problem , and we differ with the
alliance on thi s basic point,"
Phillis said.
"They're operating under the
delusion that the state without a
court order will somehow so lve
this problem . But the sta te has
demonstrated throu ghout the
decades that it' s not willing 1~ face
up to the problem ," he said.
DistriciS raise money fTOm real
estate taxes. Because property in
some districts is worth more than
others, identical tax rates raise different amounts or money and put
poorer districiS at a disadvantage.

- -. !

"··-

. allltJ.

Dunfee said between 10 and 18
percent of the- students attending
Meigs Local Schools are ADD
children.
Although she said her own
experie nce with the district has
been good, the district needs to
sponsor an inservice session for
teac hers g rades kindergarten
through six. and needs to adopt a
umforrn poltcy on testmg. and management of chtldrcn wllh ADD.
The ADD support group will pro·
vide the inservice.
"T hi s will keep kids from
falhng through the cracks," she
said.
.
.
Answenng questiOns from
Board Pres1dent Larry Rupe, Dunfcc said ADD is a medical disorder
which can be treated with drugs
prescribed by a doctor.

An e• hibit featuring a halfBefore ADD was diagnosed as a
dozen operating layouts,
medical disorder, "the child with
including all sizes or model
ADD was probably the class clown
trains, is open for public view·
or the little girl who looked out the
ing at the Meigs County
window and just barely made it
library in Pomeroy through
through," she said.
Sunday. Trains owned by
Board Vice Presiden 1 Randy
Gerald Shuster, David and
Humphreys said the problem wilh
Nathan Robinette, Richard
ADD is that kids are not being
Freeman, Eddie and Tom
diagnosed. "We have to identify
Ball, Rob Lowery and
the problem," he said.
Howard Writesel are featured
Dunfee outlined the steps par·
in the extensive display in the
ents should take if they suspect
library's Riverboat Room . In
their child has ADD: r~rsl, consult
addition to model trains, the
the school psyc hologist and sign a
display includes railroad
release allowing testing; second, if
accessdries, such as books on
the child is diagnosed as having
railroading, steam gauges
ADD, consult a pediatrician for i, ~ from old engines, switch locks,
treatment, and third - meet with
marker lights which were used
the child's teacher.
on either side of en'g ines,
"It takes cooperation between
caboose lights, all owned by
(Continued on Page 3)
Shuster, and a crossing sign
marking the entrance to the
room of railfoading. Above,
from left, Nathan and David
Robinette, and Shuster stand
contract with the Athens County
beside one of the operating
Board of Education to ·serve as fis·
layouts. Shuster, at right, discal agent for the Southeastern Ohio
plays a before-the-turn-of-theSpecial Educational Regional
century caboose lantern which
Resource Center for basic services,
is a part of his railroad collecincluding special education insertion. It can all be seen free of
vice for staff and administration,
charge from noon-9 p.m.
development or forms and various
through Friday, from noon-S
documents, and interpretation of
p.m. Saturday, and from I-S
new laws and regulations concern·
p.m. Sunday. (Sentinel photos
ing special education. The cost per
by Charlene Hoenich)
year is $840.88.
To comply with state regula·
lions for a decision this year on
corporal puni shment, either 10 sup·
(Continued on Page 3)

Southern Local to seek 4-milllevy

1994 PONTIAC 1994 OLDS CIERA
'" .
BONNEVILLE STATION WAGON
WAS $24,252
NOW

Pick 3:
325
Pick 4:

e

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local Board of Education received a brief lesson Tuesday night on the subject of attention deficit disorder or ADD.
ADD is a term used to describe
a chronic behavioral di sorder in
children who are inattentive, easily
di stracted and impulsive . This
behavior is usuall y matched with
certain other criteria such as hyperactivity. ADD also includes Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder
(ADHD), in wh1ch hyperactivity is
the primary chamctcristic.
The board met with Teresa Dunfee. parent of a fourth-grader diag·
nosed with ADD and vice president
of an ADD support group for
Meigs, Mason, Gallia and Jackson
counties.

\\\~

\\~

1·,

~

Ohio Lottery

Board briefed_on learning disorder

'"

#2858

DEALER COS1

.\~

.\~ .

.\~

ROYAL PALM
CONVERSION
VANS

'

~

iGeai
845

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Derarunent Ladies Auxiliary . specia session, Thursday 7 p.m. at ftre
station. Plarui for annual street fes.
tival on Sept. 3.
RACINE - Free irnnmni1zation I
clinic for children, Racine
Deparunent. 9 a.m. to I I a.m.; """'1:::1
I to 3 p.m. at Chester Fire Department

.

~·

llon.-1'~.

t:IJOoi:OO
Sat.t:~:OO
Sun.t:~:OO

L---....1

614·992·6614, 1·800·837·1 094

ment levy in May, it was decided
by the board to go for a renewal.
A renewal levy will generate
about $215,000 a year, Hill said.
Employed during the meeting
was Vicky Northup on an extended
service contract as a Chapter I par·
ent coordinator aide. She will wort
two hours a day for four days a
week and will be·paid from Chapter I federal funds.
The board renewed the district's
membership in the Coalition of
Rural and Appalachian Schools fot
1994-95 at a cost of $250.
Members al so entered into a

Legislative. leaders
restore weapon ban
to pending crime bill
ByCAROLYNSKORNECK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A ban on
assault-style firearms was restored
to the $30.2 billion crime bill as
Senate and House negotiators crafted a measure that would put
100,000 more police officers on the
street and send third-time felons to
prison for life.
Senate negotiators voted 5-4
along party lines Tuesday· to
include the ban in the crime bill,
but its place there won't be fin~
until House negotiators approve it
as well.
House Judiciary Committee
Chairman Jack Brooks. D-Texas, is
adamantly opposed to the provision
and has written his own strippeddown version. However, Rep.
Henry Hyde, R-IU., a surprise convert to the bill last spring, was
expected to vote for the ban, keeping it in the crime bill.
"Don't be afraid 10 do what's
right,' ~said Sen. Dennis DeConci·
ni, D-kiz., co-author of the gun
ban amendment. "You'll feel bet-

ter about it and you 'II make your
state and your hometown safer."
On the other side, Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah, called it "a misleading substitute for fighting
crime"· and said it was "just one
more step to take firearms out of
the hands of law-abiding citizens.''
The provision, similar to mea·
sures passed earlier by both the
House and Senate, would ban 19
named types of firearms and scores
of others that the government says
meet the characteristics of assaultstyle weapons.
It also would limit magazine
capacity to 10 rounds. At the same
time, it would exempt 650 named
fuearms and all guns legally owned
when Lhe law took effect.
A compromise crime biU drafted
by Brooks and Senate.. Judiciary
Committee Chairman Joseph
Biden, 0 -Del., had omitted the ban
because of Brooks' opposition.
leaving the decision on whether to
include it up to the conferees.
The Brooks-Biden )I'Oposal was
introduced at the conference as the

CRIME BILL DISCUSSION - U.S. Rep .
Jack Brooks, D· Teus, left, chairman or the
House Judiciary Committee, spoke to Senate
Minority Whip Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., as Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohio, rar right, talked
to Sen. Joseph Riden, D-Del., chairmai.n or the
House proposal, and the Senate
conferees spent much of Tuesday
afternoon amending it. When the
senators are finished. the House
negotiators will have their tum to
make changes.

Senate Judi(iary Committee, during a HouseSenate conferees' meeting Tuesday to discuss
tbe pending crime bill. The conferees met to
cr:tft a compromise crime bill, deciding ir it
would include a ban on assault-style weapons
and other botly-contested provisions. (AP)

death penalty cases. The CongresOne major issue not expected to
arise until the House conferees get . sional Black Caucus strongly suptheir chance is a House-passed pro- ports 11, but enough senators ·
vision that would allow use of oppose 11 dlat a Republican-threatened fttibuster in the Senate could
statistics to show racial bias in
kill the whole crime biU.

'•

-- .· -· ...
.~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="363">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9735">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31378">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31377">
              <text>July 26, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="76">
      <name>scarberry</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
