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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy:._Middleport, Ohio

Dean captures top
rosette for fair
flower show entries
Top rose tte wi nner in the 1994
Meigs Count y Fa ir fl ower show s
was Bell y Dean. ac!Jvc in beth the
S h ad ~ Va ll ~y and Chester Garden
Clubs.
At beth the Mondily and Thursday shows, she took the rosette as
honiculturc sweepstakes winner for
fl owe r speci mens, at Mond ay's
show she won best of show in artistic arrangements, and at Thursdily 's
show, took reserve best of si10w.
Jo1ning her in the winner's circle were he r dau ght er, Mela ni e
Stethem, who Thursday captured
the awa rd for bes t arrangeme nt,
whi le taking reserve best of show
Monda y; and her granddaugh ter,
who both days won bes t of show
aml horticulture sweepstakes in the
junior division.
The crcatt vit y awa rd went to
Peggy Cra ne and reserve best of
show in the junior division to Tracy
Card .
Winners in the Thursday show,
li sted first, seco nd and third,
respec ti vely, were as follows:
Artistic Arra ngements
" Happy Ann iv ersa ry ", a still
li fc: Pc~ ~ Y Cra ne, Middl eport ;
Donia Cotton, Middl eport; Sheila

Taylor, Pomeroy.
" Wash Day ", featu ring whi te:
Bell y Dean, Pomeroy; Donia Cotton, Evelyn Hollon. Racine.
"S unday Picnic", using basket:
Sheil a Taylor, Belly Dean, Allegra
Will, Rutland.
"Quilting Bee", mass arrangement: Peggy Crane, Mildred Jeffers, Dexte r. Melanic Stethem.
" Harv es t
Di nn er",
with
fruit/vegetables: Melanie Ste them,
Donta Cotton, Gladys Cum ings,
Pom eroy.
"Do uble Wedding Ring", mod ern satclit ic des ign: Bell y Dean,
Melanic Stcthem.
"Courting Lig ht", using candles:
Sheila Tay lor. Twil a Bu ckl ey,
Pomeroy , Evel yn Hollon.
"Fa rmer's Al manac", crescent
design: Donia Cotton, Sheila Tay lor, Brenda Bolin, Rutland.
" Sch ool Days", us in g slate,
(j uni or c lass) ; Li sa Steth em,
Rebec ca Taylor, Pom eroy; Tracy
Card , Racine.
"Morning Prayers", few flow ers: Lisa Stcth em, Tracy Card ,
Rebecca Taylor.
Horticulture division
Plumed cclosia: Melanie Steth -

CREATIVITY - For her interpretation of
the !75th anniversary of Meigs County in a stiU
life arrangement, Peggy Crane won the creativi·
ty award in the second Meigs County Fair now·
er show judged Thursday. Here she depicts the

Bears
defeat
Chiefs

Guests were welcomed by Betty
Dean , and devotions by Maida
Mora entitled "Banish Worry"
were taken from a book by Norman
Vincent Peale admonishing each of
us to replace worry with positive
action.
Roll call was answered by "One
year at the Meigs County Fair, I
remember. '.'
A short business meeting was
conducted and new members, Deb·
bie Miller, Judy Bunger, and Lula
Tobin were introduced and welcomed . Betty Dean, president,
thanked the sun shine commitees
for completing hospital visits and
delivery of fruit baskets. Dean
reported on the state convention of

111 Second St., Pomeroy

YOUI IIDEPEIIDEIIT
AGEIIU SEIVIIG
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

80s .

ent1ne
BEST OF SHOW - This sate~tic design of all.wbite flowers in
the " Double Wedding Ring" class made by Melanie Stethem won
the best of show award in th e second flower show at the Meigs
County fair.

TOP WINNER - Betty Dean went away from the 13lsr Meigs
. County Fair with numerous blue and red ribbons, and fou r
rosettes for her exhibits. Here she is pictu red with Sarah Budnick
or Baltimore, show judge, wh o presented her with the rosettes following the Thursday show.

'\

em , Betty Dean, second and third.
Glad ioli: Ali ce Thomp son,
Parricia Holter, Karen Werry.
Marigolds, large: Alice Thompson, Be tty Dea n, Melanic Stethem.
Mari go lds, s mall : Melani e
Stcthem, first and second.
Zinnia, dahlia flowered: Betty
Dean, fLrst an d second.

Pernestti, six to 12 months; and Cayla Bush, 12
to 18 months. Standing from left to right are:
Alyssa Talbott, 18 months to two years; Shelby
Ohlinger, two to three years; and Chelsea Pape,
three to four years. (Sentinel photo by Amy B.
Potts)

DOWIIIG CHILDS
MULLEI MUSSER
IISUUIICE

13-14-17-23-30

Low tonight In 50s, clear.
Wednesday. sunny, high In mid

•

longevity or the county with old pictures and
bottles, with a lnap of the county on weathered
wood, using a crock for her arrangement of
sweet peas and false bamboo.

the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs. She noted the quality of the
flower show and the tour of Wade
and Gatton Nursery. She received
the award for superior rating for the
Chester Club, publicity book for
1993.
The Meigs County Fair Flower
Show "!75th Anniversary" was
discussed and assignments were
made to enter four classes in each
show. Eleanor Knight will clerk for
the Chester C!u6 at Monday's
show.

665
Pick 4:
7456
Buckeye 5:

--------l..__ _ ___j_ --------·-J

- Zinnia, miniature; Alice Thomll-. third &lt;)nl y.
son.
' ~ l ia , pompon: Betty Dean ,
Zinnia collection: Alice Thomp- fir st and second , Patricia Holter,
son.
third.
Dahlia, cactu s: Al ice T homp Rose, floribunda; Alice Thompson, Betty Dean, Melanie Stethem.
son , Betty Dean, second _
and thtrd .
Dahlia, decorated: Melani c
Zmm a, dahh a_ (Junwr class) :
Stethem, first and second, Alice Rebecca Taylor, L•sa Stcthem, sec·
Thompson, third.
and and tlmd.. .
.
Dahlia, ball: Melanie Stethem.,
Marigold Uumor) Rebecca fay·

JUNIOR ROSETTE WINNERS - Lisa
Stethem, lef'l, took best or show and the horticul·
lure sweepstakes award, and Tracy Card,

Vol. 45, NO. 78

Landfill
gets state
approval

lor, Lisa Stethem, Abbie Chevalier,
Pomeroy.
Ro adsid e materi al: Abbi e
Ch evalier, Li sa Stc th em, Niki
Lewis, Pomeroy.
The Shade Valley Coun cil of
Floral Arts had on display durin g
the week an educational exhibit of
topiaries and handmade stone containers with plant material.

A final permit to build the
Beech Hollow landfill in Jackson
Coun ty has been approved by the
Ohio Environm ental Protection
Agency, OEPA announced today.
The landfill is to be built in Mil ton Town ship north of th e
Appalachian Hi ghw ay by Sands
Hill Waste Services Inc. The ftrm
told the Gallia·Jackson· Meigs· Vin·
ton Solid Waste District last week
that once approval was received,
the facility could be open by the
spring of 1995.
The new facility would bring to
two the number of operating landfills in the distric~ and is expected
to tak e off some of th e volum e
stress on the Gallia County Land·
fill ,.which is leased to Mid·Ameri·
can Waste System s Inc.
The Gallia landfLII is currently
the only one operating in the dis·
trict.
r
OEPA official s said Sands
Hill' s landfill meets all siting
requirem ents and applicable regu·
lations. Public comment received
during and after a public hearing in
December 1993 was considered by
OEPA before approval was grant·
ed.
The permit allows Sands Hill to
construct a 225 -acre landfLII within
the boundaries of the 400-acre site.
The landfill would have about 25
years of capacity, OEPA said.
OEPA said the new landfill is to
meet current stringent environmen·
tal protection standards for landfill s. These standards include syn.
thetic and recompacted clay liners,
· a leachate collection system, a sur·
face water control system, a
groundwater monitoring system, a
final cap system and financial
assurance for closure and post.closure care.
In addition, the facility must be
monitored for at least 30 years after
closure, the agency said.
Gallia's landfill is currently
seeking an expansion permit from
the state agency. Mid·American
manager Don Graves told the district board of directors last week
that the landfill could run out of
space by Marth 1995 if expansion
is not permitted.
An application for a vertical
expan sion will be submitted by
Sept. 8 and a review would be
completed by Jan. I, Graves told
the board.

BOY WINNERS - The boy winners of the
pretty baby contest were announced at tbe fair·
grounds Saturday. The winners are pictured
with LIUie Miss Alison Woods and LiUle Mister
Adam Wolfe. Seated from left to right are:
Chase Payne, birth to three months; James

Ervin, three to six months; and Tyler Cline, six
to 12 months. Standing from left to right are:
Austin King, 12 to 18 months; Jacob PiUow, 18
months to two years; Jordan Denes, two to three
years; and Colton Roush, three to four years.
(Sentinel photo by Amy B. Potts)

Mrs. Dean reminded members brought out several good tips ,
that orders for spring blooming including bulbs do not do well
bulbs must be in this week. These under walnut trees.
The program committe for 1994
will arrive prior to plantin~ time
and members will be notified. A is Macel Barton, Edna Wood and
discussion on planting methods . Betty Dean. If there are any topics

FHEE

of choice, members are to contact
them prior to the next meeting.
Edna Wood, assisted by Brent

Buckley, auctioneered a variety of
articles brought by members. Other
guest~ attending were Bob Wood,
Don Mora, Howard Knight,
Woodrow Mora , Bill Buckley and
sons Ryan, Brandon and Jeremy.

1!\~PECTHlN

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
$395

OL

(AIIIra•ds)

TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2:30-4:30 P.M.

326 E. Main· Pomeroy, OH.
MARY CAROLYN WILEY, DIRECTOR
Now accepting registration for
children ages 3, ,4 and 5.
FOR MORE INFORMAnOII

FRUTH PHARMACY

(304) 882·2318

Same Day Service
All Parts Extra
Includes: Cleaning, Oiling,
Adjustments,
Greasing.

716 N. 2ND AVE'~, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

CAll

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
Pomeroy Mayor John W. Blaettnar ejected Pomeroy Fire Chief
Danny Zirkle from Monday ni~ht's
village council meeting after Zirkle
attempted to address council on the
matter of appointing fire department officers.
The dispute apparently stems
from Blaettnar' s appointment of an
officer within the fire deparunent
in July. Fire department officers are
traditionally elected by other fire·
fLghters.
In excusing Zirkle from the
meetin~, Blaettnar said Zirkle
should 'follow protocol and the
chain of command" and further
advised Zirkle to "call me when
you want to discuss iL"
After Zirkle left the meeting and
Councilman Bill Young said he
wanted to hear both sides of the
story Blaeunar t61d councilrnem·
bers ihat they would discuss the
issue as a ''personnel matter."
During open discussion, coun·
cilmembers George Wright and
John Musser expressed concern
over housing and rental ordinances
they said are not enforced. Blaet·
tnar said the ordinances involved
concern rentals and building con·
demnation.
"I'm not satisfied with the
progress," Wright commented.
Councilmemben also diseussed
road repair and brush removal from
the Pomeroy-Mason W.Va. Bridge
approach.

COntinued on page 3

State of Ohio
'·

1 Section,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 23, 1994

Copyrlght1eM

reserve best of show in the junior division of
exhibits at the setond Meigs County Fair nower
show.

Annual Chester Garden Club picnic hosted by Karrs
The annual family picnic and
mee ting of th~ Ches ter Gard en
Club was held recently at the Karr
Cottage with Dorothy and Horace
Karr hosting.
·
Members and guest~ were seated at picnic table s covered in
brightly colored cloths. Grace was
given by Marge Mora.

Plek3:

Page 4

Fire chief
excused from
council meeting
GIRL WINNERS -The winners or the pret·
ty baby contest were announced at the rair·
grounds Saturday. There were no entries in the
birth to three month category. The winners are
pictured with Little Miss Alison Woods and !--it·
tie Mister Adam Wolfe. Seated from left to raght
are: Logan Denes, three to six months; Lauren

Ohio Lotter\-•

toP-

35 conl8

A Multlmedlo Inc. N-opoper

Middleport
works on solving
water problems

SCIENCE WORKSHOP - Teachers were
given hands-on experience in aquatic science,
plants and trees, and aerospace, at Monday's 4·
H science curriculum inservice held at the Meigs

County Library. Here pictured around a work
table from the left are Eastern teachers, Becky
Edwards, Tina Kelly, Sandy Needs, Doris Well,
and Marty Baum working on on e of the plant
projects, specifically, parts of a flower .

Eastern teachers take part
in 4-H inservice program
Seventeen teachers from the
Eastern School District partici·
paled in a 4- H Science Curriculum lnscrvice held at the Metgs
County Library Monday.
The program was sponsored
by Meigs County schools in
cooperation with Ohio State
University, Meigs County, and
funded -by an Eisenhower Grant
awarded to the Eastern School
District.
Participants took part in
hands-on experiences relating to
aquatic science, plants and trees
and aerospace. Presenters for the

inservice included Dr. Bob Horton, extension specialist, Th e
Ohio State University who conducted the Fishy Science pro·
j ect; Dian e Smith , County
Extension Agent, 4-H, Hamilton
County with the Acorns to Oaks
project and Fred Dee!, County
Extension Agent, 4· H Gallia
County who explained the "Blue
Sky" project.
The 4-H Science curriculum
materials arc designed for use
by elementary school teachers to
supplement the science pro·
gram with hands on activities
and incorporated 4·H program·

ming in the classroom .
The inservicc was coordinated by Dana Kes singer, sec ondary school supervisor, Meigs
County School s; Jim Huff,
Ei senhower Grant coordinator,
Eastern School District , and
David R. "Chip" Haggerty,
County Extension Agent, 4-H, ·
Meigs County.
The curriculum is available
to all Meig s County school
teachers and for additional
information about that and other
4· H projects, contacts may be
made wnh the local extension
offtce, 992-6696.

By GEORG E ABATE
the village due to a lack of space,
he added.
Sentin el News Starr
In other business, the vi llage
Middl e port Vill ag e Co un cil
continues
to wa it for insurance
agreed to hire a part-tim e employee
to sur vey the vtll agc's residents approval so Quickel's Insurance of
Pomeroy can manage tllC vi llage's
Moodily evenin g.
Brenda Lesley, who wor ks in health insurance policy, Hort on
the vill age housing corporation added. The village employees have
offi ce, will be empl oy ed fo r 60 been without insurance for nearly
hours at min im um wage , Middle- two weeks.
Counci l also:
port Mayor Dewey Horton said .
- passed the ftrst reading of an
Lesley will surve y one of every
fou r resident s to upd ate the eco- ord inance that will des ignate four
nomi c status report of the village's parking spots on the north side of
Race Street between North Second
population , Horton said.
Thi s survey is needed to apply Ave nue and the river as two·hour
for th e Co mmunity Development parktng. The ordinance also will
Block Grant small cities ' funds and remov e th e loadin g signs from
a revolving loan fund , he said. The Coal Street.
- heard from Emmett Rawson,
loan fund money will be used to
help the village solve its water sys - who compl ained th at th e repairs
done to storm sewers on Broadway
tem problems, Horton said.
Logan streets still did not solve
and
The vill age mu st raise the vil th
e
water
problems. Council stated
lage wells abevc the nooct plain by
it
will
solve
the probl em. Mayor
Jan. I, 1996, to comply wtth with
the
project came in
Horton
said
Ohio Environm ent al Protecti on
Agency orders, Horton said. Rais- $ 1,400 under bid.
- authori zed the mayor to seek
in g th e well s wi ll cos t ab out
a 70 percent state grant - through
$1I ,000.
Continued on page 3
New well s cannot be drilled in ·

Start-up costs for water
district project could
exceed $4 million
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
If Middleport and Pomeroy vii·
!ages develop the Big Bend Water
District start-up costs could exceed
$4 million, officials said at a meet·
ing in Middleport Monday morn·
mg.
Board members of the Big Bend
Water District, along with Middleport village officials, di scussed
possible funding avenues including
Issue 2, Community Development
Block Grants and grants from the
Appalachian Regional CommisSIOO.

Funding from the se sourc es
could total nearly $1 million, said
C. Boyer Simcox, director of the
Buckeye Hills·Hocking Valley
Regional Development District.
The water distri ct would serve at
least 2,000 customers in Pomeroy
and Middleport
The remaining funds for the prothere'll be plenty of people jump- ject could be acquired through a
ing on the bandwagon, ' Phillis grant/loan from the Farmer's Home
Administration, said John Rauch,
said.
Phillis said coalition lawyers distri ct loan specialist with the
still were considering a challenge FHA.
But this FHA process could lake
of the State Board of Education's
inclusion in the appeal, despite the about five years, Rauch said.
Time is essential since the vii·
beard's 6-5 vote against participat!age of Middleport must make its
ing.
Long said other senators who wells comply with Ohio Environsupport filing with the court mental Protection Agency orders
include Robert Ney, R-St. by Jan. I, 1996, Middleport Mayor
Clairsville; Jeffrey John son, D- Dewey Horton said.
To raise the wells above the
Cieveland ; and Rob Burch, Dnooct
plain will cost abeut $11 ,000,
Dover. Shoemaker said about 15
Horton
said. But EPA regulations
House members have indicated
will likely become more stringent
support so far.
Voinovich contends the court and an entirely new source of water
ruling would cost taxpayers from eventually will be needed, he
$1 billion to $13 billion.

Ohio legislators support
schools in court case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Some legislators who believe Gov.
George Voinovich was wrong to
appeal the state's loss of an education funding lawsuit want to align
them selves legally with the
schools.
They said Moodily they will ask
court approval to file documents in
support of an attempt to overturn
the current funding system.
Districts that filed the lawsuit
praised the action, but it drew a
critical response at the governor's
office.
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D-Circleville, and Rep. Mike Shoemak·
er, D-Bourneville, said a group of
House and Senate members want to
show that the state's decision to

appeal was not unanimous.
Voinovich announced the
appeal Aug . 12 with top legislative
leaders at his side.
Perry County Common Pleas
Judge Linton D. Lewis Jr. ruled
July I that the system was
inequitable because of disparities in
spending per 11upil among districts.
His decision came in a lawsuit
the Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp;
Adequacy of School Funding filed.
More than 500 of the state's 612
districts arc members.
William Phillis, coalition direc.
tor, welcomed the legislative sup·
port.
"I just appreciate the fact that
there are some of them coming out
of the woodwork here now. I think

Smith calls '94 Mf]igs fair 'super'
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
"Super, just super" was how
Dan Smith, president of the
Meigs County Agricultural
Society, described the 131st
Meigs County Fair which closed
Saturday night
Smith credited the coopera·
tion among board members,
"working together like a dream"
for the success of the fair.
"Not that we were without
problems. We weren't", said
Smith, "but everything always
seemed to wort out, everybody
helped, and we hope everyone
understood while we worked
things out."
Smith complim'ented the
junior fair personnel and partie·
ularly members of the show and
sale committee which this year

got increased interest from buy·
ers and eliminated the problem ·
of a few local businesses having
to maintain the sale. It was
noted that more than a hundred
buyer packets went out in
advance of the sale.
Despite the heavy rains on
Saturday night which reduced
the crowd, gate receipts were up
nearly $4,500 for the week over
last year.
In 1993 gate receipts totaled
$81 504
'In 1994 the total was
$85,931.
'
·
In addition to the gate
receipts, the fair board took in
$47 868 from the sale of season
tick~ts at $12 each, and $4,628
from the sale of membership
ticketsat$13 each.
When money collected
through the ride booth is added

to the gate recc1pts and ticket
sales, the gross sales totaled
$151 ,509, according to Smith .
The fair beard paid $56,761
to Bates Bros. Amusement Co.
for the rides which this year
included the new High Flyer.
Besides paying for the rides,
Smith hsted other expenses as
premiums and prizes for all of
the exhibitors and events, the
entertainment, mcludmg both
professionals at the grandstand
and those on the hill stage, and
lots of workers to keep things
running smoothly.
"It takes a lot of money and
plen!r of hard work to put on a
fair,' said the beard pres1dent,
who noted that already fair
board members are looking for·
ward to 1995 and the 132nd
Meigs County Fair.

added. New wells cannot be drilled
i n the villag e due to a lack of
space.
"As long as we are working on
so mething else we ' ll have some
leew ay with the EPA," Horton
said.
Middl eport Council President
Bob Gilmore expre ssed concern
about the costs of the project.
"We are a distressed area; we
ju st don't have money," Gilmore
said. "Unless we have a plan to pay
back all our water system we can't
come up with this project."
The FHA fund s would likely
come in the form of a 35 percent
grant and 65 percent loan, Rauch
said. The low -interestloan could be
held at 4.5 percent for 40 years,
Rauch said.
Just counting debt payments, the
water rates for area residents would
jump about $7 per month, Rauch
said. This does not include mainte·
nance and other costs, he added.
Simcox pledged to help with the
funding process as much as possi·
ble.
A specific cost of the project is
still not known because the quality
of the well s in Syracuse would
determine the water treatment
plant's size, Simcox added.
A new wrinkle in the Big Bend
funding process through CDBG
grants is either Middleport or
Pomeroy must send the gram appJi.
catmns. The water district cannot
Simcox said. If the district would
get a $3 million loan/grant from the
FHA, it would have to match 10
percent of the funding,
Continued on page 3

Patrol presses investigation
of two Meigs County wrecks

Two accidents in Meigs County
on Moodily remained under investigation today by the Gallia·Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
In the frrst acciden~ two passen·
gers suffered minor injuries in a
three-car crash on State Route 7,
the patrol said.
Carrie Caldwell and Jessica
Codner, ages and addresses
unavailable, were traveling in a car
driven by Kendra M. Norris, 17,
4 7245 Bowman's Run Road,
Racine, that was eastbound at 5:04
p.m. when it failed to stop in time
for a stopped car ahead driven by
Cheryl L. Rairden, 33, Point Pleas·
ant, W.Va., the patrol said.
Norris struck the rear of Raird·
en's cal', which forced Rairden's
vehicle into the back of stopped
pickup truck ahead of her driven by
Betty L. Maynard, 56, 49463 State
Route 681, Reedsville, the patrol

·'

said. Maynard had stopped to make
a left turn onto Salisbury Township
Road 199.
D~mage was moderate to May• .
nard s and Rauden' s vehicles and
slight to the Norris car. No infor· .
mation was available on treatment
for the injured.
In the second incident, Nicholas
J. Pelfrey, 17, 10816 State Route .
160, Vmton, escaped injury when hts car crashed on Rutland Town . .
ship Road 174 (Shotgun), the patrol ·
said.
Troopers said Pelfrey was east· .
beund, ftve·tenths of a mile south
of State Route 124, at 6:40 p.m .
when the left tire on his car caused .
the vehicle to go out of control
travel off the left side of the road'
strike a tree and ovenum onto i~
top.
The car was moderately dam.
,
aged, the patrol said.

.•

�Tuesday,August23, 1994

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

$MtA.TlMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MAR GA RET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Assoc1at&lt;d Press, Inland Daily Press Assonallon and
the Amencan Newspaper Publisher Assoc1allon .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long All leners are subject to ed1tmg and must be signed w1th name,
addres s and telephone number No uns1gned !ellen; will be pubhsbed Lett&lt;rs
sbould be m good taste, addressmg Issues, not personalities

Letters to the editor
Don't let government take health care
What has 1,342 pages weighs 5
3/4 lbs IS 4 mchcs thick, 240,000
words and is the b1ggcst Federal
power grab in history' The Chnton
" Health Sewnty Act".
There is no crisis, everyone gets
essenltal care a t the emergency
room. The problem is not quahty,
but worry of not havmg msurancc
or losing the in surance you have.
Eighty five percent of Americans
have heallh insurance. Even the
illegal aliens get med1cal auenuon
There is no claim that 11 wtll cost
less but will increase your taxes
and the Federal deficit.
Med1care staned out at five b1l lton dollars and now 1s over I 00
billion. Med1ca1d has increased ten
ttmcs more than innauon. How will
the Chnton plan work
I) Your current pnvate msurance w1ll be canceled. You w1ll be
forced to 1ake coverage from the
gove rnment monopoly . Th1 s 1s
called a regional alhanee (Government Collective) money pa1d is a
taX .

2) You can't choose your doctor but can choose your plan.
unle ss the Regwnal Alltance
assigns you to a plan.
3) Tests, treatment, surgery,
hospitalization must be approved
by a government bureaucrat not by
you or your doctor. Only care
deemed necessary or appropnate.
4) SpeCialiSts. after the bureaucrat you must go to a gatekeeper
doctor who w1 ll be pa1d more by
refusing to refer you to a special 1st
or put you on a wa1tmg list like
Canada docs.
5) Try to sec a doctor on your
own and you will be cnmmally
prosecuted for "health care
bribery" you also cannot buy a supplement hke you do for medicare.
6) Commumty raung - your rate
and care will be the same as the
drug addict.
7) All public schools will have
condom climes and there 1s mentioned four times money to reduce
the barriers to sex education. (Barners means parents)
8) National health board responsible o'.'IY ~ the Pres1dent
puts Jim1ts 111f reg10nal alhancesprice control on doctor fees, keep
pat1ents on long waiting lists, deny
approval for treatment, decrease
the number of specialtsts in half

and select those that arc trmncd on
a rac1al basts wnh quotas.
9) mandate on employers wh1ch
Chnton admits wtll cause tens of
thou sa nd s of small bu s me sses to
close and put m1lhon s of people out
of work. Employers w1ll have to
pay 7.9% of payroll. Each employee matches 20% out of your pockct.
10) Your medical pn vacy w1ll
be one as all med1cal treatment has
to be reponed to the nauonal data
base This allows some bureaucrat
access to your personal medical
records
Th1s plan IS based on scare tacucs and mcludes Penalty 59 T1mes,
Mandatory 24 TIMES, Prohibit 51
times, Rcstnct 54 11mes, Enforce
87 11mes, Obligation 56 times and
Llmlt 269t!mcs.
Congress should deal first with
the problems they caused -the tax
law s. Refonm should include- permit tax deduction of health insurancc prcmmm, freedom of choice
of pnvate or government, set up a
subs•dy for unmsurable people with
the pnvate insurance companies.
All the plans offered to date take
poruons of the Chnton plan.
When the government is the
only one to offer somethmg and
there 1s no pnvate cnterpnse perm!lted that is soc!lllism. Sociahsm
1s a proven fa1lure . Are you prepared for the day your momma 1s
sick and has to talk to a bureaucrat
before she can talk to a doctor and
probably will be put on a wattmg
hst
Where is the efficiency in government now? The Post off1ce, the
V.A .• Medicare, Medicaid, Wei fare, Public housing. This is what 1s
called bait and sw1tch taeucs. Nmeteen pages cover universal access
or coverage and 323 pages on the
government takeover. Nmety thousand new federal jobs to watch
over us - who arc going to be
exempt from the plan. If you like
what you hear good. If not call
right now.
Representative Ted Strickland
(614) 353 -5171
Senator John Glenn (614) 4696697
Senator Howard Metzenbaum
(216) 522-7272
Bill Quickel
Pomeroy

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
Dy The Associated Press
Excerpts of Ohio editorials of statewide and national mterest:
The (Lorain) Morning Journal, Aug. 16
Baseball? Oh, that
It's always been a bit upsetting, anyway. Here 11 IS, the middle of
August, and already the spans pages are full of profess1onal football game
stones, and even pre-season stuff on pro basketball.
Just when the professional baseball season is getting really interesting,
these other contests are arriving to clutter up the spans pages.
Football and basketball should wail their turns, some fans might say.
Let's get one season out of the way before we stan the next
The baseball players and owners have taken care of that for us this year
with a baseball strilce. The Indians are idle, their new ballpark silent
We had high hopes that this would be the year for the World Series to
come 10 Cleveland.
It's bad enough that both sides seem to be at fault for this strike. Greed
i~ god at the ballparks.
Worse, there wasn't even a pretense of trying to head off the walkout,
Jet alone effons to keep talks gomg afterward The players and owners are
Jllce a guy who welcomes a summer layoff so he can go fishing, confident
that the factory will be there when he returns.
But w1ll 1t be there? The Gallup Poll reponed for USA Today and
CNN that three-fourths of people who answered a survey - 55 percent of
them baseball fans- said they wouldn't miss the game.
'fhe Marietta Times, Au~. 19
A difference m percepuon exists on how well merchants are complying
with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
The ADA prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in employment. government services, public accommodatJon, transportation and
t~lecommunication services.
. A new phase of the law took effect about three weeks ago. It requires
400 000 businesses nationwide that employ 15 to 24 people to comply
with the Jaw. That's about 52,000 small busmesses in Ohio.
: Many new businesses are complying with the law at the outset Buildings are being adapted at the same time business owners customize facili·
ties for their operation.
: Apparently not everyone thinks a problem with compliance eXIsts.
Who's right isn't important. What is important is that the letter and
s~irit of the new law be followed to provide equal access to everyone in
the commumty.
The problem may be in perceptions held by people. Or there may be a
real dtfference of opinion. But the only way to resolve the issue is to talk
directly to each other.
\

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, August 23, 1994

OHIO Weather

Sunny weather to continue around Ohio

Wednesday, Aug. 24

By The Assuciated Press
Another gorgeous summer day
was on tap for Oh1o on Wednesday.
forecasters sa 1d. There was a
remote chance of a shower or two
m the north west.
Otherwise, skJCs w1ll be mosUy
sunn y w1th h1ghs m the low to mid80s, the National Weather Semce
sa1d. L1ght breezes w1ll add to the
pleasant effect.
Lows tonight wi ll be tn the m1d
to upper 50s under clear sk1es

Goldwater withstands test of time
I have made it a pract1ce m
recent years to pause period1cally
and applaud a class of people who
do more than any other to keep the
world sane.
I speak of c urmudgeo ns, of
co urse, those congenual sourballs
who hale pretense, ca n spot hypocntes at a hundred paces and do
not hes1tate to pomt them out, usuall y wnh a touch of caustiC humor.
creauv!ly and gusto
For all my grumbhng about curmudgeons rarely getting recogni tiOn, I have co mm1Ued the egregJOus trespass of ovcrlookmg the
one person who co uld win a
'lallonal Cra nk con tes t gomg
away .
I speak of Barry Goldwater, of
course, the crusty, 85-year-old former U.S. senator and Republican
pres1dcnual cand1date who IS commonly regarded as the foundmg
father of modem Amcncan conserva t1 sm. They beat a path to h1 s

Phoen1x ho-me these days authors, writers, old pals, up-andcoming pols - conservatives and
hberals alike, seeking insight and

Joseph Spear
perhaps a catchy quote.
It wasn't like that 30 years ago,
when he ran for the preside ncy
agamst Lyndon Johnson . To many,
he was a sca ry pariah then, a
maJor-party cand1date who talked
openly of ending the Vietnam War
with a few strateg1cally plac ed
nucl ear bombs . He defended the
John BJrCh Society, a group so
absurdly rad1cal that 11 behcved the
Umted States was under the control
of the KGB.
He scared me, too, but somehow, beneath the bluster, I perceived a person of courage, mtegn ly and common sense, and I
became one of 27,175,770 people

to cast my vote for him.
.
pohucs out of God ought to go to
That was the first pres1denual
hell." A year ago, he told the An election m which I ever voted and
zona
Republic that the conservative
perhaps the only one about which 1 movement seemed to be doing well
ha ve never ente rtatn ed seco ~d
despite the "crackpots and nuts"
thought s. 1 would vo te for h1m
on the reltgious Right. "I know
today' regard less of hi S advanced
them aU," he continued. " I've said
years, if he co uld gea r up hi s
Jerry Falwell should be kicked m
strength to overcome 15 kn ee,
the ass , and I meant if.' He has a b1g
shoulder, hip and heart operauons
one. You can 't m1ss it"
and compete against the Clmtons,
- "I don't like what the
Doles, Quaylcs and Kcmps he
Repubhcans are trymg to do w1th
would surel y hum1hate.
(Clinton's) background," he told
How can one curmudgeon not
Men 's Journal. "In my opin1on,
appreciate another c urmudgeon
what a man d1d 20 years before he
who brim s with co ntrover sial became president doesn't make a...
beliefs and find s 11 impossible to
btt of difference . I wish they'd get
contam himself! I fancy myself a off h1 s back on th1s so-called
cand1d cnbc but I stand m awe of Whitewater .... Not going to prove
Barry Gold~ater. Consider JUSt a anythmg."
few of the observations he has been
- "Should there be gays m the
moved to make m recent months:
military?" he rhetorically asked a
_"I' ve got no use at all for the Washmgton Post reporter las!
religious Right," he rcccnUy told a month. " Havmg spent 37 years of
reporter for Men' s Journal maga - my life 111 the military as a
zine. "Anybody who tnes to make reservist, and never having met a
gay m all of that time, and never
havmg even talked about it m all
those years, I JUSl thought, why the
hell shouldn't they serve? They're
Amcn can Citizens . As long as
they're not doing things that arc
harmful to anyone else .. .. So I
came out for it."
That last quote ts a telling one,
as ll puts the l1e to the not1on, popular among Goldwater's Republi can cnucs, that he has tilted left in
h1s sunset years. The fact is, he has
not changed a whit. He was a libertarian conscrvati ve m 1964 and he
is a hbenanan conservative today.
He believes we have the right to do
as we choose as long as we do not
harm others. H1s mam goal is to
keep the government out of peo ple's lives.
He IS tanned, rested and ready.
AuH20 m '96.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317 .)

~--------~-----------------#----------~

~l~

~----------------------------------~

Clinton should lean right on crime, health
Despite his recent agreeable session with 13 House Republtcans,
n' s not at all clear that Pres1dent
Clinton is out of danger of losing
h1s crucial crime bill, or that he's
fully ded1catcd to the idea of bipartisanship m governmg the country.
Admimstration officials indicate
they are w!lling to make modest
changes in the cnme conference
repon to meet GOP objections, but
this may fall shon of what's necessary to pass the measure. Even if it
doesn't, Clmton has made no move
to talk to Senate Republicans about
crime, and there's no evidence that
the White House is ready to be
bipartisan about health care.
Should the crime bill survive its
second test in the House, it's liable
to be challenged wllh a point of
order in the Senate by Republicans
who claim that it contains $13 billton in spending that hasn't been
pa1d for and hence violates the
Budget Act Waiv1ng that act
requires 60 votes, which Clinton
may not be able to garner.
On health care, it's long past
time for Clinton to hold a summ1t
With Senate Minority Leader Bob
Dole, R-Kan, at least to try for a
comprom1se hke the biparusan
mainstream group's long-awaited
proposal or the new Nunn-Domenic i 1dea adopted from House moder •
ates.
The record suggests that Chnton
IS strongest when he's acung like a
"new Democrat" and making
deals w1th Republicans ~ as on

NAFTA - rather than when he's
pursuing the strategy of pass1ng
legislation with only DemocratiC
votes.

Morton Kondracke
Another potential example is the
GATT agreement, which Commerce Secretary Ron Brown calls
"a quiet bipartisan success" that
he hopes will be voted on m midSeptember. Republicans say the
deal is not yet done, however.
Chnton may as well get used to
the idea of dickering with Dole and
incoming House Republican Leader Newt Gingrich (Ga.) because the
I04th Congress next January is certam to contain more Repubhcans
than the current one. The only
question remaining is how many.
But dealing with the GOP does
not require Clinton to utterly abandon his principles and undercut his
Democratic base.
In working the crime bill, for
mstance, It's tmportant that he
maintain stiff pressure on the
Republicans by enlisting police
ch1efs, families of murder victims,
GOP mayors, and gun control
advocates.
Republicans certamlr. won't
stop their effons. Even wh1le meeting with Clinton and talking bipar·
tisanship, Gingrich reportedly has
been working on the II Republicans who supponed Clinton on the
first enme conference vote Aug. II
to return to the GOP fold . One

account has five of them wavcnng.
Meanume, Clmton 1s trymg to
win over some of the I9 so-called
"assault-ban Republtcans" those who voted last April for the
original House cnme b11l and in
May for a ban on 19 assault
weapons, but voted against the
crime conference rule .
Clinton has a good argument to
make 10 constituents of the 19: The
btll they supported in Apnl contained virtually all of what the GOP
now is calling "pork" and less
money for police and pnsons than
the conference repon docs.
Clinton should point out that
Republicans are JUSt nat wrong in
complaining that the bill grew in
s12e from $28 billion to $33 billion
from House to conference, all in
social spending. In fact, "prevention" spending dropped from $6.3
billion to $6.1 billion, the per-year
cost of the bill dropped from $5.6
biUion to $5.5 btllton, and the extra
$5 billion to be spent over six years
went to prison construction and
police.
The upshot of the administratiOn's argument is that the GOP
isn't against "pork" but simply
wants to deny Chnton a victory for
partisan advantage.
Republicans also arc playmg a
cynical, Willie Honon-ish game by
focusing on "midnight basketball"
as one of their prime examples of
social spendmg. "Midmght basketball" is code for "bribmg black
males to keep them from committing crime" and exploits a wedge

1ssue for wh1te working-class voters, even though evidence suggests
the programs actually do help
reduce crime.
Even as he publicly expounds
his side of the crime issue, Clinton
needs to work on fellow Democrats
to persuade them to give up ele·
ments of the cnme bill that actually
do constitute duplicative soctal
spending - such as the multiple
education, job training, and commun!ly development programs
written Into the crime-prevention
section of the bJU.
The money should be transferred to pay for more police, to
finance the police corps, and to
build more prisons. Also, as
Repubhcans request, Clinton
should restore Rep. Susan Moli·
nari's, R-N.Y ., proposal to admit
ev1dence 1n court of prior sex
cnmes a defendant may have com·
mllted and provide for community
notification when a violent sex
offender is let out of prison.
Obviously, leaning right in these
ways does not assure Clinton
majority GOP support, NAFTA·
style, and may cost him the votes
of liberal Democrats.
But leaning nghl is the right
thing to do on crime, and it's the
right thmg to do on health and welfare refonm. And after November,
11 will be an absolute necessJty to
get anything done.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the news·
paper or Capitol Hill.)

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 23, the 235th day of 1994. There are 130 days
left in the year.
Today's h1ghhght 1n hiSIOry:
On Aug. 23, 1927, Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo
Vanzetu were executed in Boston for the murders of two men during a
1920 payroll robbery. In 1977, Sacco and Vanzetti were vmdicated by
Massachusetts Gov. Michael S. Dukakis.
On this date:
In 1754, France's King Louis XVI was born at Versailles.
In 1785, U.S. naval hero Oliver Hazard Perry was born in South
Kingstown, R.I.
In 1838, one of the ftrst colleges for women, Mount Holyoke Female
Seminary in South Hadley, Mass., graduated its ftrst students.
In 1914, Japan declared war on Germany in World War I.
In 1926, silent film star Rudolph Valentino died in New York at age
31.
In 1939. Nazi Genmany and the Soviet Union signed a non-aggressiOn
treaty.
In 1944, 50 years ago, Romanian prime minister Jon Antonescu was
dismissed by King Michael, paving the way for Rom31'ia to abandon the
Axis in favor of the Allies.
In 1960. Broadway librettist Oscar Hammerstein II died in
Doylestown, Penn.
In 1972, the Republican national convention, meeting in Miami Beach,
Fla. nominated Vice President Spiro T. Agnew for a second tenn.
In 1982, Lebanon's parliament elected ChristiWI militia leader BashJr
Gemayel president. Gcmayel was assassinated three weeks later.
In 1991, in the wake of a failed hard-liners' coup, Soviet President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Russ1an President Boris N. Yeltsin acted 10
strip the Communist Pany of its power.
Ten years ago: President Reagan accepted th~ npmination o( the
Republican national convention in Dallas, declaring the Democrats were
"openly committed to increasin~ vour tax burden."

Berris World

IMansf1eld 179° I•
~
~

IND

Showers T-slorms Ra1n

Aum9s

Ice

VIB Assoc1BI9ri Pross Grllp/JICSN9r

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
ICI1994 Accu- Weather. Inc

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Today ... Sunny _ H1gh m the
lower 80s. Light east winds .
Tonight...Clcar. Low 55 to 60.
L1ght southeast winds.
Wedn csday ... Mo stly sunny.
H1gh around 85 .
Extended forecast

Thursday .Partly cloudy. Lows
near 60. H1ghs in the m1d 80s.
Fnday ... Partly cloudy. Lows 60
10 65. H1ghs in the mtd and upper
80s.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy with a
chance of thunderstonms. Lows 60
to65 .

--Area

deaths~-Nora Martin

Benjamin F. "Ben" Fultz Jr., 89,
Columbus. died Monday, Aug. 22,
1994
He was a retired state employee
w1th 35 years serv1cc with the Ohio
Bureau of Employment. In addition, he was Middleport village
clerk for seven years .
Survivors mclude h1s wtfe,
Mary; son and daughter-in -law,
Thomas K. and Barbara Fultz of
Grandview; five grandchildren;
four great-grandchildren and a sister, Dorothy Askren of Atlanta, Ga.
He was preceded in death by a
brother, G. Alan Fultz.
Services will be held Thursday
at 10 am. at Forest Lawn Cemetery
Chapel with the Rev. J. Russell
Crabtree officiating. Arrangements
arc being handled by Schoedinger
East Chapel, Columbus.
Memorial contributions may be
made to the Mt. Canmel Hosp1ce.

Nora Jean Martin , 51, of
Chester, died Monday, Aug. 22,
1994, at Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.,
after an extended 1llness.
Born May 12, 1943, in Mineral
Wells, W.Va., the daughter of the
late Robert Gillian and Evelyn
Eddy Brown Gillian of Chester, she
was a homemaker.
Besides her mother she is surv1vcd by a daughter, Summer
Groves of Chester; aunts, Pat L1fe
of Coolville and Esterela Powell of
Long Bottom; uncle, Jim Eddy of
Orv1lle; and several mcce s and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by a
son, Wilham Man in.
Funeral serv1ces will be at I
p.m Wednesday at the Spencer
Funeral Home in Belpre, with the
Rev. Roger Grace officiating.
Burial will follow in the Rockland Cemetery in Belpre.
Friends may call between 6-9
p.m. today at the funeral home.

Ethel Lambert

Ethel Lambert, 73, Pomeroy, Peggy L. Reitmire
died Sunday Aug. 21, 1994 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Peggy Louise Reitmire, 55,
Born April 3, 1921 in ColumHartford, W. Va_, d1ed Monday,
bus, she was the daughter of the Aug. 22, 1994 in Veterans Memolate William Howard and Ida Belle rial Hospital.
Bisler Russell.
Born Jan. 6. 1939 in Mason,
Survivors include seven sons, W. Va, daughter of the late Herbert
Stanley and Charles Lambert of R. Gibbs, and Ethel Louise G1bbs
Rutland, Harvey and Ronnie Lam- of Hanford, she was a cook for the
bert of Pomeroy, Howard Lam ben Mason County Board of Education
of Marion, Tom Lamben of Vinton for 21 years. She was a member of
and Donald Lamben of Galhpohs; the Church of Christ m Christian
five daughters, Janet Swisher of Union in Hartford.
Gallipo lis; Susan Thompson of
Surviving in addition to her
New Haven, W.Va; Terry Barrett mother arc her husband, James C.
of Pomeroy; Kathy Lambert of Reitmire; and a daughter and sonDexter and Cindy Lambert of in-law, Cheryl Ann and Johnnie
Wilkesville; one brother, Archie
Russell of Gena; three sisters, Oldaker of Hartford.
She was also preceded in death
Vtvla Lucas of Wilkesville and
by
an infant daughter.
Lucy Lambert and Silvia Bishop of
Services
will be II a.m.
Columbus; 41 grandchildren and
Wednesday
in
the Foglesong
several great grandchildren and
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
' great-great grandchildren.
she was preceded in death by Rev. James Hughes officiatmg.
her husband, Orlie McGraw Lam- Burial will be in the Union Ceme·
bert and one son, Clifford Lambert. tery. Fnends may call at the funeral
Fnends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and home tonight from 6-9.
7 to 9 p.m. today at the McCoy
Moore Funeral Home m Vinton
where services will be held I p.m. Margaret M. White
Wednesday w!lh theRe~. Jerry
Margaret May White, 80, Van
Hines officiating. Burial w1ll be m
Zant Road, Langsville, died Monthe Radcliff Cemetery.
day, Aug. 22, 1994 at her resi dence.
Born May 10, 1914 in Toledo,
daughter of the late Jesse and
Bessie Frost Kimble, she was a
retired public school cook.
The Daily Sentinel
Surviving are her husband,
(USPS ltJ-!1641)
Alfred White; two daughters, Mrs.
Pubh1hed ~vety afternoon. Monday through
Lyla Mellott of Defiance, and Mrs.
r.,.1day, I 1I Court St , Pomeroy, Otuo by Lhe
Carol
Cross of Langsville; a son,
Ohio Valley Pubhah1n1 Company/Mulluned1a
Richard White of Bailey, Colo.;
Inc, Pomeroy, OhiO 4S76 9, Ph 992-2156
Secood class po&amp;tage paul at Pomeroy, Oluo
nine grandchildren and II gre.at·
grandchildren; a stster, Geraldme
Member The Anoclated Prea1. and the Oh1o
Mockeustrum of Toledo; and a
New5papcr AIIIOC&amp;ation, Nabofl&amp;l Advert.i11ng
Represeotal•ve, Braoham Newipap« Sales,
brother, George Kimble of Toledo.
733 Thtrd Avenue, New York, New Y01i.
Graveside services will be con10011
ducted at the Coy Hill Cemetery at
POSTMASTER Send .c&amp;dress c.hllllgts to The
the convenience of the family.
Dally Senllnel, 1t t Court St., Pomeroy, Oh10
Arrangements are by the McCoy~l169 .
Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
SUBSCRIFI10N RATES

Sub&amp;a'1bm not deaarlnaw pay the '*ner may
mrut in advuce direct to The Dilly Sell1nel
oa 1 three, Jix or 12 month buil. Credit w1UDe
JiveD Cltrier eldl w«k.
No sub~c.riplions by m1H penrutted lD •e.u
where home CIITier lttVIct llavaitable..
Mall Suhoorlpllo111
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26 Woelcl..... ......... .... .. . .... ....$45.50
52W-.......................................$8UO
13 Weeb .

•

Atlanuc states and much of New
England later today, w1th temperatures m the 70s and 80s
Sunshme also was expected for
the Great Lakes and from the
sout hern Pla1ns to the mtcnor
Sou th east. Temperatures were
expected to be mostly m the 80s.
Thundershower s were ltlc ely
from the Texas Coast to north ern
Flonda. wnh temperatures m the
90s
In the MIS SISSIPPI and M1ssoufl

River vall evs. sou thwe st Winds
were expected to brJng m01stcr atr,
leaclln g to sca ttered storms from
eastern Nebraska to W ~&gt;co n s ln,
some w1lh gusty w1nds and small
ha1l
Dry weather was prcdK tcd for
the West and Pac1f1c Coast w1th
mostl y sunny sk1cs except for Isolated th understorms m th e moun tams Temperatures were expec ted
to range from the I 00 s tn the
deserts to the 70s along the coast.

'

GUANTANAMO NAVAL
BASE, Cuba (AP) - D1sgruntled
Cubans. undaunted by U.S. cffons
to keep them home, are conunuing
to flee m drov es, thrcatemng to
overwhelm the haven bemg set up
for th em at th1 s swe ltenng US.
m1htary enclave.
As some I ,200 1ll-clad Cubans
rescued from the sea arnved here
Monday, nearly I ,400 others were
en route, leav mg U. S. offic1als
wondenng how long it will take to
fill up the 10,000 slots that arc
planned to be ready by the end of
the week.
While the Cuban government
has derided the Guantanamo faclh ttes as a "concentratiOn camp,"
vmually all refuge es seemed
relieved that life under commun1sm
was behmd them .
But the sense of triUmph over
having escaped was m1t1gated by
the realization that a new Start m
the United States is beyond reach
for now. One embittered newcom-

er, Dav1d Sanchez Na\ca, sa1d he
and a group of colleagues set sad
for south Flonda before Pres1dent
Clinton's new policy was
announced, only to be brought here
anyway.
"We are disgusted ," Sanchez
Navea said.
" It's a very b1g sacnfice," sa1d
Rosa Maria Diaz Canmcnate, 30.
The sense of 1solat10n among
Cuban s was strong as they began
thm rust day here. Many pleaded
w1th vis1lm!( U.S. reponers to call
fn ends and relauves m Flonda to
mfonn them of thelf amval.
Defense Secretary William
Perry v1sned here Monday shortly
after the fifth Coast Guard cuuer of
the day entered pan.
Perry trav erse d the waters
between Key Wes t and Cuba, gazing from the cockp11 of h1 s C-20
executive JCI as 11 sw ooped over
several sh1p s pluc kmg refugees
from the sea. Dunng the n1ght, he
observed at least 20 ony makcsh•ft

mfts.
" It' s a stunning s•gh!," Perry
sa1d "There's a udal wave of people formmg out there."
More than 50 Coast Guard and
Navy vessels patrol th e waters.
formmg, m effect, a seaborne sea
wall Th1ny planes patrol overhead.
Clinton, worn ed that Flonda
wa s unable to accommodate the
largest exodus of Cub&lt;tns s1ncc the
Mar1cl boathft 14 years ago, last
week ordered that all Cubans res cued at sea be brought th e Guan tanamo for the 11m e bemg. Monday' s amvals were the rust smcc
that announcement
As one Coast Guard cutter after
another unloaded Cubans here,
officials womed about thctr ab1l!ly
to handle the now . New arnvals
m1lled around anx1ously m a hold mg area, not sure what would happen to them next.
The Guantanamo base' s m1SS1on
1s anu-submannc warfare trammg
But th e 45-square-mil c fac1ltl y IS

acqwnng a new 1dentJty wllh the
presence of nearly 15,000 Ha•tmn
boat pcopk and growmg num bers
ol Cuban s. along w!lh row upon
row of ten t' to accommodate them.
Two mtles separate the Cuban and
H~u tlan areas.

M1 chacl Wtlson. a former Peace
Corps volunteer workmg w1th the
H ~ullans. s:ud about 1,800 ch1ldren
arc m educauon program s at the
Guantanamo camps. He told Perry
the children needed pens, penc1ls :
and any l" nd of reneauonal eqUJp- ·
mcnt they could get.
Perry told the offi c1als he would
lr) to do evcrythmg he could to ·
•mprove cond1Uons at th e camps.
One of the relief Off!C!als told
the defense secretary that a maJOr
concern among the Ha111ans was
whether they would be treated differently than the Cubans.
" If the Han1an s thmk there' s
any difference, there could be vtolcncc," the off1c1al smd.

Simpson's lawyers prepare to challenge DNA test results

Benjamin E. Fultz

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Roben
Bowles, Reedsville; Jewel Lauder·
mill, Middleport; Edward Bumea,
Middleport; Rose Carr, Coolville;
Ida Spradling, Middleport; James
Spencer, Middlepon
Monday discharges - Mamie
Swauger, Middleport; Emma
Duffy, Pomeroy; Ellie Lemley,
Pomeroy

.

.

•

The record-h1gh temperature lor
th1s date at the Columbus weather
stauon was 95 degrees m 1959
while the record low was 46 m
1912 Sunset ton1ght will be at8 18
p.m . and sunn se Wednesday at
6:5 1a.m.
Around the nation
The Northeast dawned chtll y
and cloud y toda y, wh!le fog
shrouded parts of the South
Sun shin e and dner atr wa s
expected to return to the M1ddle

U. S. efforts to deter Cuban boat people fall short

By Canl.- or Motor Route
OoeWeck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$160
One Month .
..
. . .. .$6 9S
Ooe y.,. .
.. .. . .. . .... - · $83.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Daily .. .... .. . .. , ......... · - -35 Cents

NIGHT OF THI: LIVING DEAD

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

man, prosecutors sa1d m papers
has room to maneuver. S1mpson ·s the sampl es matchmg so meone
filed Monday.
lawyers are expected to challenge else's blood.
With no known eyewitness to the test results at a hcanng after
The defense 1s expected to argue
the June 12 killings, DNA cv•deJlce Jury selection.
thai the populauon sample used to
is crucial to the case against SimpProsecutors said one k1nd of ca lculate the frequency of Simpson. That's why his lawyers arc
DNA tesung, called PCR. on two son' s blood charactcnsucs could
fighting so hard to keep the jury samples from the blood tratl 1nd•ca1c there arc O!her people w1th .
from heanng about 11.
showed matches w1th S1mpson's the sa me genetiC markers - per "We contend that, with regard blood.
haps even another killer.
to all of this evidence, there' s a real
One of the samples also underquestion that all of it has been
went a more sophisucatcd DNA
degraded or contaminated m some test, called RR..P , and those results
Continued from page 1
way ," defense lawyer Johnn1e also showed a match w!lh SimpIn other busmess, council:
Cochran Jr. said outs1de tl1e hear- son's blood.
- Accepted the res1gnauon of
The RFLP te st, sometim es Betty Baronick from the village
in g.
Prosecutors claim Simpson left called DNA fingerpnnting, IS based zonmg comm!ltee effective th1 s
blood at the murder scene when he on the positiOn of dark bands of Wednesday.
- Pa1d b1lls and accepted the
The followmg couples were cut his flllger durin~ a struggle. DNA matter on X-ray film
Expens
detenmine
if
bands
genof the previous mccung.
minutes
The
defense
has
provtded
a
variety
recently granted marriage licenses
erated
by
DNA
taken
from
cnme
Hrred
Phllhp J. Richmond of
m the Me1gs County Probate Coun of explanations for the cut.
scene
body
fluids
or
ussue
samples
Langsville
as
a part-time patrol S1mpson
has
pleaded
mnocent
of Judge Robert Buck. Receiving
man .
the
same
distance
from
appear
at
to
two
counts
of
murder.
Jury
hcenses were:
the top of the 111m as bands from a
- Not ed the zoning rcv1ew
Monty Rae Hart, 37, and P~ula selection is to begin Sept. I9.
suspect's
DNA.
Once
a
match
1s
board
would meet Wedncsday at 7
Scientific
expens
have
differed
Lynette Burke, 30, both of Racme;
generated,
scientists
use
statistic
s
m
the Pomeroy Mun1cipal
p
m.
on
how
to
interpret
DNA
teSts,
so
Joseph Alan Snyder, 25, Pomeroy,
Building.
to
help
explam
how
many
people
prosecutors
must
persuade
Judge
and Heather Lynn Finlaw, 23,
Present were Blacttnar and
Long Bottom ; James Lawren ce Lance Ito to admit their results . might share the pattern . The
more
than
one
person'
s
chances
of
counctlmen
Wright , Larry
They
also
must
say
what
the
odds
Snodgrass Jr .. 20, and Rebecca
DNA
having
the
same
pattern
can
Scon Dillon. B1ll
Wchrung,
Young,
that
t.he
blood
came
from
Simp·
are
Lynn W!lliiij!~S, 18, both of
son
and
not
someone
else.
range
from
one
in
a
few
thousand
Haptonstall
and
Mu sse r. Also
Langsville;
'\_
court.~ have
Cahforn1a's
appeals
to
one
m
b1lhons.
wa~ Pohce Chief Gerald
attending
Curtis A. Jo!lfim,
25, and
The prosecution's motion did Rought. Not present wa s Clerk
Trisha Anne Spencer, 3, both of been divided on the admissibility
DNA
evidence,
so
the
defense
of
not
mclude the statistical odds of Kathy Hysell.
.tlliam
Long Bottom; John
Ohhnger, 21, and Wendy Jaylene
Continued from page 1
Clark, 19, both of Pomeroy; Larry
Gene McCormick, 44, Cheshire,
and Regina Ann Burns, 42, the Ohio Department of Natural increase.
Suvcrs said. All mterested people
Pomeroy; John Ray Cline, 24, Resources - to help save the vil- accepted by a 3-2 margm to in collecting donations should meet
Charlotte, N.C., and Sheila Renae lage pool. The village has already update the village ordinances at 9 a.m. Sept. 3 at the Dave Diles
LattJmer, 20, Long Bottom.
sought another grant but has not through the Walter Drain Co. park. On Oct. I, the village fire
heard if it was accepted, Horton Counc1lmen Gerard and Robmson department will host a fish fry to
sa1d. The village cannot accept dissented.
save the pool, she added. The vilboth grants, he added.
- learned about the Middlepon lage will continue 10 accept dona- approved the second reading River Festival, whtch will be held liOns for the poot at the village
Lodge to meet
of an ordinance updating a curfew Sept. 17, with an hour-long kick - office with Opal Kauff or at Peo;I'he Shade River Lodge 453, ordinance.
off on Sept. I 6. If local artisans or ples Bank in Middlepon.
F&amp;AM. Chester, will meet in spe- unanimously ar~~~rov cd the groups still wish to set up booths
- welcomed new businesses
cial session, Saturday, 7:30p.m . second reading of an ordinance that
they should contact Johnson' s 1nto the village. They are Dan's
Work m the master mason degree
Apphances, Manley's Garage and
Refreshments. All master masons will change the buildmg penm!!S to Variety Story.
comply
federal
mandates.
Eventulearned
a
tag
day
will
be
held
the
Ohio River Bear Co.
invited.
ally the bu1lding permit cost will Sept. 3, Councilwoman Beth
Library Board sets session
Continued from_:........;;__
page 1
The Meigs County Library
Board of Trustees will meet at I
Middleport Village Council was smd. All counctl agreed.
p m. Thursday.
Mayor Honan said that the vilupdated about the meeting later
Monday night
lage's water rates - wh1ch the
Racine Council to meet
COlOR OF NIGHT
"I owe it to the people of Midminimum averages about $14 per
Racine Vilage Council will meet
7.00,9.)0 OIULY ll'tT SKr/'f/U4 l; OO ,l.lO (a)
month
will
increase
whichever
dleport
to
get
it
at
the
cheapest
in special session at I 0 a.m
IT COULD HAPPEN IO YOU
7: 10,9 · JO OUL.Y IIVI'J'. SitT/!UI . l: I O, t :)O IR::)
rate," Councilman Jim Clatwonhy option ts taken.
Wednesday at Star Mill Park.
FORREST 5UMP
Middleport officials will meet
1.00,1. 4"&gt; nr.n.r NJa !Wt/fJM 1:00,);4) ll'Gll)
with area water authonues to diSIN TilE RHMY NOW
cuss other options because it may
7:10,9 2'0 ~y Mta SM/0.1:10,): 20 UG)
IHE LIH!E RASCAlS
. Omitted from a listmg of pet pull out of the Big Bend Water
1 .20 'J 10 OJULY MilT SKr/~ 1:2D,l:10 (K;)
District Leading Creek Conservanm
the
show
staged
at
the
wmncrs
Units of the Meigs County
CLEAR RNO PRESENT DRN6ER
cy District officials will meet at 6
oo••1m • ._.,.,,liM,
Emergency Medical Service repon- Me1gs County Fair was Jessica p.m. Sept. 7 at the council cham7:00,'1:4"1 f»ill.Y MT.s.\T/9.Jt. 1 00, 3:4~ (PG1 J )
ed nine calls for assistance Mon- Wheeler, who took ftrst in the most bers, while Gallia Rural Water Co.
I
m MASK
I
7: 20 9: 10 DU\V 11111'1' SAT/Y.M 1·20,1:)0 1PC1])
talented class with her dog. She
day. Units responding included:
- - COMING S OOt! I
and her dog were included in the will meet at 6 p.m. Sept. 8 in the
MIDDLEPORT
JOHN C.\NDY In "WAGOfiS U ST "
council
chambers.
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVot.ILABLEI
1:43 a.m., Overbrook Center, p1cture of the pet wmners, but her
Ida Spradling, Veterans Memorial name was inadvertantly omitted
from the cutline.
Hospital;
2: II p.m .. Beech Street, Edwin
Lose Inches E.f'6rtlessly
Bumem, VMH;
With The Professional
6:33 p.m., S. Second Avenue,
Rachel Wilson, Holzer Medical
Toning System by SunTana.
Am Ete Power ........................30 518
Center;
Akzo
........................................
62
3/4
8:42 p.m. Page Street, James
Ashland OU ..................................37
Spencer, VMH.
AT&amp;T ....................................53 318
POMEROY
Puter just a few short weeks of regular visits, you will fii1Il up sagging
Bank One ................................J4 1/2
8:49a.m .. Union Avenue, Nona
Bob Evans ...............................lO 1/4
muscles, increase your flexibility, tighten skin, and relieve tension. Best
Nelson, Camden-Clark Memorial
Champion lnd ........................22 1/4
of
all, you will begin to reduce cellulite and lose inches.
Hospital, Middleport squad assistCharming Shop ........................8 1/2
Cl!y Holding .................................33
ed·
You'll experience fast results with no muscle strain, sweating or
's:JO p.m., motor-vehicle acciFederal Mogu1 ........................26 3/4
fatigue. You will begin to notice the many beneftts of improved
Goodyear 1'&amp; R......................33 1/2
dent on U.S. 33, Jessica Codner
circulation. The Thoing System uses mo~rized machines that combine
K·mart .................................... J71/4
and Keri Caldwell, VMH, Kendra
Lands
End
..............................
19
718
isometric and isotonic exercise witb a remarkable principle proven
Norris, William Harder, Cheryl
Limited Inc ............................. 19 318
effective by physical tbenpists.
Rairdon, Betty Maynard, Sarah
Multimedia Inc ......................29 114
McCarty and Amber Thomas,
Call or come by today for your complimentary session on The
Point Baocorp .............................. 17
treated at scene.
Reliance Electric .....................- .• 20
Professional Thning System and rei3Jt your way to a beautiful, new
RACINE
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... l9 518
image.
9:06 p.m., Willow Lane, Samuel
Shoney's lnc ........................... 14 1/8
Star Bank .....,.........................413/4
Williams, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Wendy lnt'L .......................... .16 1/8
11 :06 p.m., Yellowbush Road,
Worthington lod ....................20 1/4
Vebna Wmland, VMH.
Stock reports ore the 10:30 a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS
quotes
provided by Advest or
118 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
9:01 p.m., state Route 681,
GaUJpolw.
Larry Harris, SL Joseph's Hospital,
(614) 992-3233
Reedsville squad assisted.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - DNA
test results have armed prosecutors
with their strongest evidence yet
against O.J . Simpson. Now the
question is whether they w1ll be
allowed to use it at S1mpson 's tr1al.
Tests show that the gen etiC
makeup of Simpson's blood matches the makeup of blood drops that
led from the bodies of Nicole
Brown S1mpson and Ronald Gold-

Fire ...

Couples issued
licenses to wed

Ml"dd'eporf
,, · · · · - - - - -- - - - -

Announcements

Start... ___

EMS logs 9 calls

___

Name omitted

Stocks

MANE IMAGE

�Tuesda~August23,

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Gov. George_ Yomovtch has
asked the Untverslty of R1o Grande
men's basketball team to _give his
letter of greeungs to offtc1als of
Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan, when the
team travels to that country thts
Saturday.
.
The Redmen, along wttil Huron
Umverslly of Huron, S.D., w11l be
taktng pan tn the IYY4 Japan-U.S.
Goodwtll basketball games. R10
Grande and Huron are the fnst
NA IA teams ever to compete in
.
..
Japan .
The two um vers tU es also have

Bears slip past Chiefs 21-18
Williams with a 32-yard touchdown strike with 3:07 left. Walsh
then found Ryan Wetnight for a
two-poi nt conversion.
"The defense made a couple of
nice plays there at the end," Walsh
said . " I th ink we got a lot out of
this game after some adversity in
the first half. We came back and
played a good second half."
Walsh was 11 -of- 12 for 11 3
yards. Erik Kramer, playing the
first half, was 11-for -16 for 120
yards. But his pass ncar the end of
the first half was intercepted by
Mark Collins and returned 30 yards
for a touchdown .
"I was just in the right place at
the right time," said Coll ins, who
spe nt nine seasons with the New
York Giants. "I jusc made the read
and then made th e play. It was
nothing fantastic."
''I'd give it a B-minus ,"
Kramer said of his performance. "I
wish I had a couple of the throws
back. We could have had another
touchdown."
Joe Montana played the first
half, going 13-for-20 for 141 yards
and an eoght-yard touchdown pass
to J.J . Birden, the first ex hibition
TD given up by Chicago.
"I think we were in sy nc to a
certain degree," Montana sa id .
"We would have liked to be in the
end zone that last time. But we
wanted to work on some things, see
how we handled them. I think my
performance was average. I missed
a couple of throws. missed a read
or lwo."
"I think you really saw the

offense startin.g to click,'' said Birden, who caught six passes for 64
yard~ " I think we played two real ly good quarters."
The Bears hav e surrendered
onl y 24 poinL~ in three exhibition
games, but the 3-0 record "doesn't
mean anything," coach Dave
Wannstedt said.
"It beats losing, " Wannstedt
said. "Obviously, I saw a lot of
good things come out of this. We
made some sloppy plays, had some
drops and made so me penalties.
But we arc going to look for the
good thing s. There were a lot of
things to learn from."
Broncos
Denver got down to 62 players
by releasing 12 and placing three
more on injured reserve. Two more
must go today in order for Denver
to meet tile NFL limit of 60.
49ers
Toi Cook beca me the fifth
defensive free agent added by San
Francisco this year, signing a oneyear contract for $162,000 wich
mcentives that could raise the value
to $1 million.
Rams
Los Angeles released nine players to get down to 68. Coach Chuck
Knox believes the Rams are strong
enough at wide receiver to let go of
veterans Sean LaChapelle and Greg
McMurtry.
Redskins
Tight end Ron Middl eton. an
eight-year veteran who started
every game last year, was cut,
along with five backups as Washington got down to 68.

CONTINUES PUSHING Ohio State wide receiver Joey
Galloway (right), shown having
his arms stretched by strength
and conditioning coach David
Kennedy during a practice earlier this month, bas overcome a
major knee injury suffered two
years ago by continuing the bard
work be put out duriDg rebabili·
tation. Such effort bas paid off iD
is being placed in the starting
lio•eup this season arter coming
orr I
bench and putting up
impressive numbers in his junior
campaign. (AP)

CenlruPI•-

Chioall" ............ 3 0 01.000 49
Detmit.............. 2 I 0 .61.7 l7
Green Bay ........ l 1 0 .61J7 51

Tampa Bay ....... 2 I 0 .667 52

International League
standings

MiMOIOII ......... 2 2 Q .500 6/o
Wt~~lern

EulmiPivlllon

Tum
W L
p,"""""(lloo.) ........ 74 56
Syncu.10 (far.) .......... 64 t.S
Owwa (MIL) •........... 64 66
Rodalcr(Bah.) ........ 60 6&amp;
Scnnuon-W·B (Phil .).5l 76

PtL GB
569 .496 9.5
.492 10
.%9 13
.411 lO.l

Wcatern Dlvldon
Richmclnd (A11.)........ 71 57 .ll5
Owloolc {Ciev.) ........ 71 58 .llO

543

U

Nod.U. (NYM) .......... 64 67
Tolodo (D&lt;o.) ..............SS 74

.489

B.l

.426 165

Monday's scores
011: Syncu.o II, Toledo 7; Toledo I,
Syncwc:O
RichmcJnd 5, Nodolk l

aUip.

pme)

DIYidon

44

Allaroa .............. 2 2 0 .500

71

89

LA. Ram~ ........ 0 l 0 .000 l6
New Orlcana..... 0 3 0 .000 33

71

51

Monday's score
Otica&amp;o 21,1Unau Cily II

Transactions
BasebaU
t.aaue

Amorl...

OAD.AND ATHLETlCS: Activned
OeruUmo Bcrt01, ou&amp;ficlda-, fmm the t Sday c!Wbled lilt. Opli&lt;&gt;1od Em;. Youna.

outf'.dda-, 10 HW1tarillc U lhe Southern
~.eo..,..

PoWIUdu• 5. COLUMBUS 2 (10)

au. •• 10, Charloa.c 7 (cunp. d

47
59
7J

S7

Basketball

Scnnton· WiJks.Bam: 7, Rochmltlr 5
(10)

4l

San Fnnciaco... 2 I 0 .6€1

.l

COLUMBUS (NYY) .70 59

24

N•don~l Buketball Altllfladon
CHICAGO BUlLS: Announced the

f'Ctircnatt of Jobn Pauon, auud

HELD UP- Kansas City running back Marcus Allen (32) Is held up by Chicago defenders
Dante Jones (left) and Mark Carrier (20) in the

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) If
progress is too much to hope for in
the I:&gt;ascball talks, mudslinging is
always a fallback position.
There was no progress Monday
as the walkout by players completed its lith day. But union head
Donald Fchr ca lled management
negotiator Ri chard Ravitch a
" hatc het man " for owners who
shed "crocodile tears" for laid-off
workers.
Federal mediators announced
talks will resume Wednesday in the
first face-to-face meeting between
the bargaining teams sinre players
struck Aug. 12. Fehr said he saw
no evidence that there could be
progress, and Boston Red So• chief
exec utive officer John Harrington
said when owners get to the table
th ey will be offering the same
salary -cap proposal that caused
baseball's eighth work stoppage
since 1972.
" We assume that at the first
meeting we' ll ~et the management
chorus of 'S ohdarity Forever' and
'We Love Dick,"' Fehr said after

first half or Monday night's NFL exhibition game
in Kansas City, Mo., where the Bears won 21·18.
(AP)

Ohio State will face Fresno State in
the Disneyland Pigskin Classic in
Anaheim, Calif.
Galloway oven:ame a blown-out
knee and a couple of subsequent
close calls, then chose this spring
co forgo big money offered by the
pros to return to Ohio State for his
senior season.
"Right now, I'm having a good
time. It's hard to get a degree. I'm
close and I don't want anything to
get in the way of it," said the
senior from Bellaire. "The NFL
and millions of dollars were there,
but I didn't want anything in the
way of iL"
Two years ago, in the second
game of the season, Galloway
crumpled to the ground at Ohio
Stadium after returning a lcickoff.
He was helped off the field, his

knee swelling until its shape was
distoned.
But he still never thought that
his career was over.
"The thought never crossed my
mind," Galloway said. "Originally
I thought I'd play again that day. "
Others didn't feel the same.
Ohio State head footbaU trainer
Billy Hill was one of the first to
reach Galloway. It didn't take long
for him to guess the worst: torn
anterior cruciate ligament
"Seven or eight years ago, that
type of injury is career-ending. No
thought of coming back," Hill
said. "Initially, he was very down.
But once we sat down and talked to
him and told him that a lot of his
recovery would come from his
rehabilitation, it changed. He said.
'If that's what it is, then no prob-

lem."'
Galloway spent the entire next
season lifting weights and exercising , watching as others scored
touchdowns, caught passes and
returned punts.
When he returned to tile team
last fall, he was a new man in more
ways than one. In building up his
knee. he had also bulked his weight
to 186 well-muscled pounds on his
5-foot-11 frame. His time in the
40-yard dash actually improved to
4.3 seconds.
"Coming into last year, we
thought he'd be a good player but
we didn't know for sure," Ohio
State coach John Cooper said. "He
had only played two games the
year before. So it was a matter of
keeping him healthy to see what he
could do."

Onawa 4. Chark»ae l

OOUJEN STATE WAIUuORS , Ao-

Tonight's games
DH: Toledo at Rochclter, 6:05p.m.
DH : Syracuae at Scranton-Wilkea·

;al~ !:y~e!!=· :~~~

of lhe Spanilh Leop

Barre, 6:05 p.m.

FootbaU

R.idunond ., PlwtuW:l. 7 p.m.
Otuwa at O.arloue. 7:30p.m.

Wedneaclay's gamea
Ridunorld tl Ptwwckat 1 p.m.
O.adoao • COLUMBUS, 7:05p.m.
Toledo at Jtoc:t.\.111,1~ p.m.
Ottawa ill Norfalk,7:1S p.m.
Syncu1e at Scrantoo-Wilkot-Birre,
7: 35p.m.

National Poolballl.a...
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Waived
~~ FUTC~, quar\clback; JJ. flournoy,
kicku; Terry Vaushn, Am.hooy OwQ'Ia,
C';fl BNCite. and Jon Pinckney, wide rccave,.: Rodney Turpin , fullback; John
Reece, ccmcrb.ck; Laanie Jcnkina, Scou.
Reapn and Darryl Milburn, dcfcmivc:
line.non; Willie_ wn;u, baht end; Rob
Wallow, offenaavo lineman; and Tracy
Ganim, tmobad&lt; ...
BUFFALO BILLS : Wah·cd Anlhoay
Ficldinaa, Todd HC1Jct, Scou Stephen,
•nd Aalhoay Abnma., lineblcters; Mia

Football

Rodatn, - ; ldut Bock.

JUIM;

D~rrick ~ranch and Orlando McKay,

NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
TUWI

Eukn1Dhblon
W L T PF PA f'cL

lndion•polil ...... 3 0 01.000 56

44

New En,llnd .... l 0 01.000 79

33

M;ani ...............

'"de reotllY. .; Mike Colli.aa aad Gr._
Evana, uf.ci•; Sonny FecJ~.ico, punlcr,
Dm Sllv.ui, Utker, and Tim Tlnd&amp;le,
!ullbact.
CLEVELAND BROWNS : Placed
Mike Schad, pard, and 0,. Tnmble,
Hfcty, oa injund racrrc. Rcleuod Ao,d
Field~,
11fot . AMouncod thet Robert
Cobb,
• hu ldllhe tam.

3 I 0 .750 19

86

Bulfuo ............. 2 I 0 .6m 31
N.Y. !.............. 2 I 0 .6m 60

54
60

D
BRONCOS: Waivedllmn
Faik;aa. &lt;;'lal Hampel, Cra!J_ Ritter and

44

29
&lt;45
ll
60

rumina t.ct: Briaa l&gt;)w... dolcn.ivo .,d.;

W•W.Diwblolt
L.A.Raidcra ..... l I 0 .750 91
Soaato............... 2 I 0 .6m 61

90
31

Cntrai(MwW.
CI.EVEL'oND.. 3 0 01.000
H..-............. 2 2 0 .500
l'illlbwlll········· I 2 0 .3JJ
CINOJ'lNATI .. 0 3 0 .000

~a.,

......

2 2

61
70

57

o -'00

61 69
Donver ....•••.••.... I 3 0 .250 72 95
San Di&lt;F···.. ·-· 0 4 0 .000 64 110

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
T••

laolonolllftlloo
W L T 1'1' PA PeL

Dol1a ..............
l 0 -'«) 70 S2
Amau............. I 2 0 .333 l3 lfl

Ptmadelphia..... I 2 0 .!33 47
N.Y.Oiuu ...... I 3 0 .250 72
Wllltin.,.. ...... 0 3 0 .000 42

53
77
S7

Mano Cucot.l, oll11101ivo linanan; TIDI
Moak:y, wide rtaivar; (hu(t SAowdaa,

....t Billy Loftm, .... ~.mt.. Pl.....t Bob
Mee.ka, otfM~ive li.-..n•n. and Mclvill

Bcanar, wide zaociva-, oa iajwal--=rvc.
GREEN BAY PACitl!RS: Si&amp;ned
Damll Th..._ IUIIIiqbocL Wlivod
Mike Mcrri,..l!.,l.ineb.c:br.
HOUSTON OILERS : W1ivM Lee
Will_i•m•on,

(fllartorback;

w-

Meb·ia

Atdridfe. ..r..r. Jimm1 Ootclen, auant;

Keith 1ck ud DUDOD Maya, wiilo ,....
ooiva-a; Willie lcminJIIDII Lmoy TllliiL,
defen1ive t.aci.l•; aM 1..any I..1m md
r
liaobocUn.

-

""KANSAs &lt;n'Y i:mEPs: Si&amp;Dod Dan

SalelwaUI, acMe I-ackie, to 1 live-year

LOS ANOI!l.ES RA!Ili!RS: Waived
Akili C..... and Tun ltoahu, clcfcmiwo
tact IN; K.eilb Pnn.tlin, lincb1cker;
~lia Na&amp;jobr,
liD&lt;mul; 0..

elf-

Manit.~

w......... navtint

bock,...! loolnla&lt; ...t Mib Alaa...t.,
wide reoeivan. rt.ood Olea Robiuoa,

numin&amp;bodl, &lt;&gt;llhC ph)'lic;llly-IIIIIIJio.lo.
perform liiL
LOS ANGELES RAMS: Waived
Bcno Bryant, runnina btlck; Mau Turk,
punLGr, Yonnio Jact1011, tiaht end; Jeff
Pahu.toa and Ron Edwudl, orrc:111ive
lirumen: and St~~~n U.Ot•pclle, Turllon
O'Bannon, Jennaine R.o.. and 0,. McMwtl)', wide reocivco.

MlAMI OOLPHINS: Waived Ronnie
Woolfoli., lincblckm-; EtMn Albri&amp;fl.. ~­
fenlive tadl...lc; Kcrvia Br'Ollum and Tmy
R~ aU&amp;Jda; T~y Fapn usd Mad.
SturdivanL, dcfcmavc cndl; PIUJ fRncilu,
tight aul; Calvin Jacboo, oomcrbed:; Pa
John10n and Mike Middletoo, ufetica;
Bryan Rowley, wide receiver, and Jim
BUlud,~do.

MINNESOTA VIKINGS : Waived
Scca Adlml, pant; Troy Riemer; offen·
aive 1incm&amp;n; Edward Buck and Rtm Carpanter; de!cnaivo bacH; Todd Harriaoa
and Derek Tennell, tiaht enda; Richard
J~ fi'I'JICr, O~t:~ Mmu.U.y, linebacllcr,
Odcua Turner, wide receiver; 1nd J.J.
Lu!Cf, nmnin&amp; bock.

NEW YORK GIANI'S: Wli...t Kmh

Cnwford. wide receiver, Ond Jom.on,
auud; Kurt Bloodom, punter; Mike
Alcaandc:r, oamrr, Jlian Brown and Dor!lld IJoo&amp;lu,

""""""'*'' ond Brie au..

lullbock.
NEW YORK JETS , Ann-lhe ...
tinmem~ of Perry William~, cort'ICibK1.
W1iYOd Kyle Admn and Tcmncc Wia-

PfiTSBUROII !TEEtERS: Wa;v.d
Cluc:kie Dukca, ftlr'l.llina t:.c:k; ·ltidty SuttOCI, defenaive end; Ch1rlio B1umana,
kicker; Brice Abrama, fullback; fnnk
Adlma. comaback; Dominic Cdloway,
der.,.;,. bod&lt;; Plteolhur Edwank. delcolive tackle; Corey Hollidly, wide ftleeiv.
er, l.alilh KiMler, 11fe1y; Patri~ Scott
linobecbr; and ChN Willi.rw, dclonaiYC

lleklo.
Pllccd
Rico1iA.
Mack. - · ...
lhc ill.iumd
racnc

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS, Sianed

one-,_,

Toi CoGt, corncrt.c:k, to a
CQI·
trKl, 1nd Adam Walker, nmflina Net..
W•ivod Ron Collint aDd Dr« ltwll'll,
_ , ICift Kittaey, deiCIIIiYO &lt;oekle; and
Rar:l Wihan, dcfmlive011d..

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS : W1ivcd
V1nco Johnton, Eamott Wyatt aad
Wa}'doB-. wide ...,.;wn; O,..Line,
lLndtel Ourie and Mile Wtllian, carnetbaeka: Chril Thompto• aad ltrael
StmlcJ, claf'm1ivo cndl; Dlaiae Bcqcr,
dcluaive llcklo; Mike Hollil, kieler;
Ju1n Lona, Tom John1or1 and Zinc
Hoehn, linob.atken; Jo.e Mu•o1 tnd

A Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, September 1, 1994
RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

Cbri• Rodahatrer, oCfeoaive liD-.ea;
Trmt Green, "'uart«beck; TOD)' ViniCIII

•rul Walw Dwllon, NMinJ becb; and
Cbria
Plaocd l!ric M&lt;&amp;m.
aua:rd. 11ft the ph)'llle.Uy-llnlhJe..to--por-

r-. "'"T·

foanU...
SEATIU! SEAHAWKS: Wli...t ldf

~-

•icl-Deeal,
Onhllll,
ruanina bact; Claraco
- -·
Williama, titht •ul; Jaaon Alkbuon,
Hillary l•tfer 1rtd Anthoa)' DIYia,
linoba&lt;l:aa; Mo.... C....., wide """", _ Cllildl, pan!; led DeVIioo, ci!'IDIiYe lletlo; llld Clulio )«ccVVel deleo-

""'-..ow
r.. o...,t
w,_

dw
"Now
lheU ll&lt;tlo.
Indo wilh
BnaJaod

atwr
failo4 to
bil (IIIJii&lt;ll ond . . 1995
ftuh...mddmlt ddcL
WASlllNOTON RIIDSitlNS' Waived
Ron Middlo&amp;on, liabt Mel; Tim Kalil,
(111111«; 11co DuclOI&amp;, JlllllliDa baoi; 1111
O'Han, quu~AWdl; Ollilllall, ul&lt;&amp;y;
Wtaa, comcwblck,
poll

... _a.-_.......-.

excha nges , open the doors for
expanded busmcss and trade opportunities, and foster ?'utual recogniuon of each nauon s nch hentage
and traditions," he added.
.
Vmnov1ch satd he was delighted
that the state and the NAJA would
be represented, an~. that he constdered the team as .. sports am bassadors of goodw_111. . .
The team wtll arnve tn JaJ)an
thts weekend and begtn playtng
Monday, Aug. 29. Games played
Aug ..29 -31 wt·11 be heId at vanous
·
sttes tn the Toky o area. Then the
two U.S. teams travel to Kyoto to

992-2156
ASK FOR DAVE OR BOB
AD DEADLINE THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1994.

meeting with Ravitch and the
mediators for about 20 minutes to
set tili s week's schedule.
Three owners were picked by
the ruling exec utiv e council for
management' s 12-member pool:
Jerry Reinsdorf of the Chicago
Whtte Sox, Jerry McMorris of the
Colorado Rockie s and Drayton
Mclane of the Houston Astros.
Also in the group is Wendy SeligPrieb, daughter of acting commissioner Bud Selig and the vice president-general counsel of the Milwaukee Brewers . the team her
father owns.
Fehr, in his most testy demeanor
since the strike began Aug. 12,
launched into repeated attacks on
Ravitch's credibility. He predicted
owners would sing the ·" Hallelujah
Chorus" at the bargaining table.
" The owners want to drastically
lower player salaries," Fehr said.
"Dick's the assigned hatchet man
to go and get it done. Dick is not an
independent figure here."
Ravitch, in baseball talks for the
first time. shrugged off Fehr's comments.
"The last time I found name
calling to be meaningful was when
I was in grade school," Ravitch
said. "!don't think it helps the sit-

uation ."

Ravitch has said repeatedly he
feel s for the tens of thousands of
workers laid off because of the
players' strike, which has already
forced cancellation of 141 games.
Fehr, pointing out that Ravitch
is getting paid his $750,000 annual
sa lary during the walkout while
players and union officials are not
getting paid , referred to "the
crocodile tears Dick c'ries once in
awhile for the people at the stadi -

play Sept 1-3. departing Japan on
SepL 4. Rto Grande and Huron are
not. sc hedu led to play each other
dunng the tour.
Redmen Coac h John Lawhorn
sa1d the tnp IS a chance for hi s
tea~ to gm~. .
Th1s tSn t JUS~ about basketball,
even though ":.e II be p!aymg as
hard as we can. he satd. 'Thts w11I
help our team grow as people, and
grow together as a team.
"We'll have to overcome jet lag,
th en Pay
1 f.tve games ·'" stx
· days
agatn st team s we know noth1n g
abo ut ," he added. "It won't be

easy, but we tilink it wi ll be fun to
take pan and to have an opponunity to Ie~ about anotiler culture."
Assistant coaches Earl Thomas
and Jeff Lanham will also accompany the 14 Red men maki ng the
trip. They include seniors Walter
Stephens of Akron. Matt Powell of
Barnesville, Larry Caudill of
Beaver, Brett Corcno of Westlake,
and Jason Cunis of Akron; juniors
Rick Konicki of Troy Eric Caud 1·ll
of Beaver Jack Morgan' of Barbc r•
ton, and Shawn
Snvder of Mount
Vernon- sophomores Craig Kern s
of Ch ilii cotile and Tobey Schreck

of Bucyrus; and freshm en Chad
Barnes of Crown City David May
of Columbus, and E~ic Seitz of
Fairfield.
Three Rio Grande cheerlead ers
_ Denise Morgan of Coal Grove,
Mandy Saunders of Sunbury, and
Jodi Stambaugh of Lucasvill e _
will also accompany the team .
"Some of our players have done
ve ry lit tle traveling a t all, "
La whom said "so th 1·s -11 11 b
new to ·"c.m l.w '" WI Ia he
u• ·
t "year, and
I reall yasenwere
·o edcar
the1er
coun·
try and the peop li f, .
h
play~rs will, too." · m sure 1 e

I
!I
\

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Cleveland running back Eric Metcalf
knows that his performance in the
Brown s' first three preseason
games left much to be desired.
Last season. Metcalf le~he
NFL with 1,932 com~·nedy ds,
and this year he has
a g al of
2,500 combined yards fa · elf.
But if the preseason is a sign of
things to come, Metcalf has a long
year in front of him . In the three
preseason games. he carried the
ball 29 times and only gained 31
yards, giving him a 1.1-yard average. Eight of those carries resulted
in a loss of yards.
Offensive coordinator Steve
Crosby said tile Browns' opponents
have been concentrating on stopping Metcalf and tilat has cost him
some yards.
"Eric Metcalf is an exciting
player and everybody in the league
is scared to death of him," Crosby
said. "People are not going to let
you take Eric Metcalf and beat you
outside with 50- and 60-yard
runs."
Crosby said the perfect examrle
of that was Friday ' s preseason
game against the Atlanta Falcons.
In that game, Metcalf could only
muster seven yards on nine carries.
"They were going to stop Eric
Metcalf, and they did . But they
didn't stop us," Crosby said after
the Browns' 28-7 win over the Falcons. "I think people are bound
and determined not to be beat by
Eric, and if that's the way it is,
that's the way it is. Pretty soon,
they 'II get hun in Utose other areas
and it will all balance out, and it
will start opening back up for
Browns' consultant and all-time
rusher Jim Brown said Metcalf is
just tuning up to the season.
"It's sacrifice time for Metcalf
right now," Brown said. "We're
setting up the season. We have to
establish certain things, including
running him inside, so people will
pay attention. That way, not only
will he have a chance to explode,
but it will open up the whole
offense."
Metcalf hopes the former
Browns' running back is right.
"Things aren't going very well
right now, but I'm confident they'll
get beuer," Melealf said.
Crosby agreed.
"Eric Metcalf is fine, he's weU,
and he's going 10 play weU," Crosby said. "When we get through the
preseason and get some thin~s
ironed out, I'm sure it will be a dtf·
ferent story for him."
In other news, the Browns
placed offensive guard Mike Schad
and safety Greg Tremble on injured
reserve Monday. Both will be out
aU season.
Schad, who signed with the
Browns on July 15 as a free agent
from Philadelphia, underwent
surgery on a tom biceps Aug. 12.
Tremble, a rookie free agent out
of the University of Georgia,
severely sprained his ankle in Friday's preseason game with the
Atlanta Falcons.
Meanwhile, the Browns said
rookie free agent quarterback
Robert Cobb has left the team
J

By RICK GANO
DEERFIELD, Ill. (AP) - John
Paxson can recall those early days
of his career when he didn't know
how long he'd last, when championships seemed so far away for a
6-foot-2 guard just trying to make
his way in tile NBA.
"After my first year in San
Antonio, I thought I was done,"
Paxson said Monday, announcing
his retirement after II years, the
last nine with the Chicago Bulls.
"I guess it was perseverance. I
never knew I'd be making shots to
win championships."
But he did.
Paxson, who appeared in 772
regular-season games and I 19
playoff games during his career
with the Bulls and Spurs, is best
remembered for hitting a threepoint shot with 3.9 seconds left in
Game 6 of the 1993 finals.
The basket gave the Bulls the
lead over Phoenix and tiley held on
for their third straight NBA title.
Paxson could always hit big
shots. He scored I 0 points in the
fourth quarter of Game 5 of the
199 I finals against the Los Angeles
Lakers, sending tile Bulls to tileir
first title.
"For me the greatest moments
were those championships years.
Those are the things I will remember forever," said Paxson, who
joined the Bulls in I985.
"I was fortunate enough to see
the tr&amp;nsition from a team that
wasn't very good to one that won.
The special tiling for me in all three
of those (championships) was that I
was on the noor at the end of each
game.''

Paxson also had the advantage

hav e different agendas, they all
believe change is necessary. He
also denied Fehr's charge.
"I wish we had it all mapped
out as well as he think s we ' ve
done," he said.

Harrington, head of tile owners·
expansion committee, said a long
work stoppage ma y effec t his
grou p' s consi derati on of adding
teams for the 1998 season.
"It could . I hope it does n't

reach that point,' ' he said.
Mediators will me et separately
today with th e del egati ons from
both sides and f'e hr and Rav1tch arc
to appear on CNN tonight wi th
Lahor Secretary Rohcrt Reic h.

.

AU 0

ums."

Fehr said nothing tile union does
makes a difference in the talks and
insisted owners are on a preset
schedule, believing that players
will crack and accept a salary cap.
" The owners decided a long
time ago they are on a clock," Fehr
said. "And when tile clock gets to
the day they want to se ttl e whether it's this week, this montil,
next montil, next year or 1996 then they'll talk seriously. Up until
then we can't expect them to .
Unfortunately, all we can do is
wait."

Harrington. who run s the Red
Sox for the Jean R. Yawkey Trust,
accompanied Ravitch to a news
conference to speak for the bargaining team. He said while owners

Metcalf
shackled
in pre-season Paxson retire$ from Bulls
action so far after 11 NBA seasons

him ...

dom, a~a~.rda; Rob O.ril, teatcr·P.~•nl;

DaYiAI Mcleod ond Alan Allen, oride ...
c:eiven: P1ul Burke, ti,tn end; lindu.y
a.....,., NMin&amp; bock; Gary Bcekloxd
lnd Cecil Doacao. ddc:n.livc t.cb; IOd
Lavu Bal. dcltNiYo cnd-ti&amp;Jil end.

somethmg else tn common: both
have branch campuses m Japan.
The governor also sent greetings
to the teams Rto Grande and Huron
wi ll p_Iaying, induding Keio. Waseda •. ~lhon andKmkt umversittcs.
. Th1s off1ce recogmzes the
un1que beneftts that can be
ach1eved fro~. eKchange programs
~I th1 s ktnd, Vom ov1ch wrote.
Such programs create meanmgful
and long- la st tn g rela t 10 nsh1ps
between Ohio and other countries.
"Thesc relatmn
· sh tps
· lac1htate
· ··
future spo rts and ed uca ttonal

Federal mediators announce talks slated for Wednesday

Scoreboard
Baseball

Page-5

Entering 12th day of baseball strike,

Galloway's never-say-die attitude still paying dividends for OSU
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Joey Galloway could have given up
- on his college career. on Ohio
State, even on ever walking without a limp.
But instead he will be the unter
of attention Monday night when

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Red men to take governor's greetings on Japanese tour

Tuesday, August 23, 1994
Page-4

In latest NFL exhibition bout,
By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY , Mo. (AP} Anyoogy who questions if this was
a prac ucc game had bener check
Kansas City's final play.
With 41 seconds left Monday
n1ght. the Chiefs faced founh down
and goal at the two, trailing Chicago by three points.
In stead of kicking a short field
goa l and forcing overtim e. the
Chiefs opted to try a pass. It never
had a chance, and the Bears
remai ned unbeaten in three exhibition games with a come-frombehind 21-18 victory before the
largest crowd to see a Kansas City
exhibition game in 20 years.
The crowd of 75,114 was the
largest gathering for a Chiefs' ex hi bition game at home or on the road
s ince 75,231 saw Kansas City host
Green Bay in August 1973.
" There may come a time in thb
Season when we make a judgment
that rather than kick it and go for
an ove rtime. we would play to
win ," coach Many Schottenhcimer
said.
From two yards out, Scholten/lei mer figures, "The opportunity
to get it done is beller than 50 percent. Kicking off from the 30-yard
line in overtime, with a one-inch
{ee, wiih your position being on the
30-35-yard line, and your opponent
gets a couple of first downs, they
arc staring at a field goal and you
)lever see the ball."
The Bears. the only team to beat
the Chiefs (2-2) at home during the
:1993 regular season, trailed all
night until Steve Walsh hit Tyrone

1994

of playing alongside the greatest
player ever, Michael Jordan.
"When Jerry (general manager
Jerry Krause) brought me here in
October 1985 I didn't know what
type of organization it was. All I
knew was they had a second-year
player, a talented guy named
Michael Jordan," Paxson said.
"If I had not been playing with
Michael and been a part of three
championship teams, I probably
would have been just anotiler player going through the league," Paxson said. "I just was in the right
place at the right time.''
Paxson, 34 next month, will
remain with the Bulls as a radio
commentator, work with the team's
guards, attend coaching meetings
and learn the nuances of the front
office.
His retirement, hinted at all last
season, came as no surprise . It
came less than a year after Jordan
announced his.
"I knew this year would be my
last," said Paxson, who was both·
ered by injuries and appeared in
only 27 games last season. "When
Michael retired, it sent a signal to
me that it was probably my time to
go, too."
Paxson, a graduate of Notre
Dame, was signed as a free agent in
1985 after the Bulls acquired his
rights from San Antonio to complete another trade, a deal Krause
called "the best $100,000 we ever
spent."
"He's been special," Krause
said.
Paxson played his ftrst two seasons with the Spurs, who had made
him a third-round pick in the 1983
draft.

Stale Auto·s a ir eddy
loW prem1ums can be
reduced eve n more by
msurtng bolh yow car
Jnd home w1 th the State
Auto Compar11c s
·
GO GO-CARTS GO- Charlie Young, #65, and Jackie Gibson,
#53, whirr around the go-cart track at Saturday's Meigs County

Let us tell you 1ust
how much your sav1ngs
can be .

Fair. Gibson beat out Young in the rookies' clas.~. The seven classes
vted for the top spots and corresponding cash priles at the fair .
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

OGAN

Go-cart winners named
Although rain s dren ched the
tractor puU during Saturday night's
fair festivities, all the heats of the
go-cart races roared on .
The following winners in each
races included:
- rookies - first, Jackie Gibson; second, Charlie Young.
- yard cart - fir st, Dante!
Shores: second, Darren Shore s;
third, Dara Shores.
- junior - llrst, Falcon Smith;
second. John Sayer: third. Chad
Hobbs.

r.:~

2\.RNER~

nsurance s'er~i~~s

- stock - ftrst: Randy Croston: second, Jim Stewart; chird .
Sam Hobbs; founh, Aaron Adkins;
fifth , Chuck Clark; sixtil, Bob Ball:
seventh, Doug Pate.
- two cycle - first. Troy
Guthrie; second, Mike Hayman ;
third, Phillip LaComb.
- claim - fir st, La rry
Lunsford; second, John Moore;
third, Rick Polling.
- open - first, Ron Wooten;
second. Sam Hobbs: third. David
Howard;
Adkins.

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Walter's knee injury makes
Bengals' line situation worse
CINCINNA11 (AP) -Joe Wal ter's knee injury leaves t11e Cincin·
nati Bcngals with at least three new
staners on the offensive line.
Two new staners were expected,
following off-season signings. But
Walter, who suffered a tom anterior cruciate ligament in Saturday
night's 17-7 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, now is lost for the season.
It was Walter's right knee; he
had the left one rebuilt in 1989.
"I think we were all optimistic
when it happened" that the injury
might not be serious, Walter said.
"But tile way it happened, tile way
it felt, the way the knee came out
of the socket, I kind of knew.''
Walter and guand Brure Kozerski had been the mainstays of the
offensive line. The Bengals recently renegotiated their contracts to
extend tilem thmugh 1995.
"Somebody has 10 stop up and
play right tackle, and play it well,"
Kozerski said. "We're missing a
lot of years out there. We've got 10
get some continuity going here this
week."'
The Bengals, 0-3 in the preseason after finishing 3-13 last year,
had hoped to shore up their porous
line by signinl! free agents Eric
Moore and Darrick Brilz during lhe
off-season.

Last week, they agreed to terms
with Dave Cadigan, even thougft
they weren't sure where they
would put him.
With the injury to Walter, the
regular left tackle, more shuffling
will be necessary - witil less tilan
10 practices to get ready for the
Sept. 4 season opener against the
Cleveland Browns.
Coach Dave Shula said he
wasn't sure Cadigan, who missed a
whole summer's work and only
signed Friday, would be ready to
start the final preseason game
against Detroit.
"It's a possibility, but it all
depends on what he looks like,"
Shula said. "We haven't seen him
do anything yet.
"We want to put the best five
out there, but we also have to
decide how much the cohesion is
going to be affected against Cleveland."
Right now the line from left
tockle to right tackle appears to be
Moore, Kozerski, Brilz, Cadigan
and Kevin Sargent, with Kozerski
the lone returning starter.
Last year, Moore was witil the
New York Giants, Cadigan with
the New York Jets, Brilz with tile .
SeaUie Seahawks and Sargent was
inactive because of a broken arm.

The Honc;la Passport
When you have that much ground clearance to see over tratTIC, a sturdy
175-horsepower, V-6 engine at your disposal, and available four-wheel drive
to negotiate the most uncooperative of terrains and driving conditions,
you can do just about whatever you please. The Passport LX DIICJr::l!illED!:3

Athens

Cars

810 E. STATE ST.- ATHENS, OHIO
NEW CAR DEPARTMENT

594·8555

USED CAR DEPARTMENT

594·2114
•

�Page-&amp;-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesda~August23,1994

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--7

:- Youth Night recognition finale at Meigs County Fair
Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!
For As Uttle As
$6.00 Per 1nch Per Day

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
6r'IW4 TFN

Public Notice

OUTSTANDING 4-H BOY - C. E.
Blakeslee, in tribute to his wife, Daisv . a 4-H
advisor for 27 years, startt•d a nnr pl;1que for

outstanding 4-H'ers this year . Here Mr. and
Mrs. Blakeslee present the award to Mike Lawson of Racine.

TOP SCOUTS AND TROOPS- Outstand·
ing girl scouts recognized during Saturday's
Youth Night program at the fair were from the
left, Melissa Holman of Southern Troup 1261,
cadette; Jennifer Norman, Letart Troop 1290,
iunior: and Brandi
of Letart Troop 104,

brownie; pictured with Brenda Neutzling, leader
or Pomeroy Troop 1180, back left, selected as
the best overall cadelle troop, and Pam Johnson,
leader of Middleport Junior Troop 1276, named
best junior troop. Brownie Troop 1004 was
selected as the best brownie troop.

•
.-~
OUTSTANDING TROOP AND SCOUT- Don Frymyer's Boy
Scout Troop 249, Pomeroy, receh·ed the award for outstandin2
. troop in the county and James Clifford, of Troop 235, pictured
· right, wa~ recognized as the outstanding Meigs County boy scout
at Saturday night's Youth Night at the fair.

OUTSTANDING FHA MEMBER- Crystal Smith was named
· outstanding FHA member and presented a plaque by Chip Hag·
gerty, 4-H extension agent, on behalf of Janice Weber, Eastern
FHA advisor, at Youth Night at the fair.

OUTSTANDING 4-H BOYE. Blakeslee, in tribute to his
wife, Daisy, a 4-H advisor for 27 years, started a new plaque for
outstanding 4-H'ers this year. Here Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee present the award to Mike Lawson of Racine.

Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society schedules fall rally
A report on the women's conference attended by Mary K. Yost was
given by her at a recent meeting of
the Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society held in the Racine First
Baptist Church social room.
Yost, president, opened the
meeting with prayer and devotions
"I pray for you." Isaiah 5:20, and
distributed program packets to the
circle chairman. The theme for the
year is "In one spirit, no longer
strangers."
Yost also gave a pen sketch of
the group's national missionary,
Miss Betty Killian.
It was noted that the Rev. Judith
Sutterlin and the scholarship recipi·
ent, Thomas J. Davis of Powell, are
attending the Central Baptist Seminary in Kansas City, Kansas.
The white cross quota was read
and was accepted. The district fall
rail y will be held Sept. 17 at the
Pomeroy Baptist Church.
Martha Lou Beegle had the love
gift program and both circles pre·
sented their offerings. Flowers

were sent to Wanda Powell and
Dortha Salser who were hospital·
izcd. The Esther Circle served
refreshments and Florence Adams
closed with prayer.
Anending were: Dorothy Badgley, Lillian Hayman, Sue Lightfoot,
Meadie Long, Florence Adams,
Mildred Shuler from the Esther
Circle. From the Ruth Circle were
Mary K. Yost, Marjorie Grimm,
Linda Grimm, Emma Adams, Nondus Hendricks, Geraldine Cleland,
Barbara Gheen, Manha Lou Beegle, Naomi Stobart, Mary Curtis
and two guests, Carrie Lightfoot
and Joy Young.

BEST SCOUT EXHIBITS - Recogni,zed and presented
plaques for best exhibits at the fair's Youth Night Saturday in the
show arena were from the left, Bethany Cooke, cadette; Sarab
Houser, junior; and Madison King, brownie.

CUNDIFF
The Cundiff family picnic was
held Aug. 14 at the Syracuse home
of Ralph and Jan Lavender.
Captain Sherman Cundiff and
his family of Gastonia, N.C., and
Captain Will Cundiff and family of
Dallas, Texas, were the out-oftown guest~.
Virgil Teaford had a birthday
cake served to her.
Attending the picnic were the

Cundiffs including, Victoria, Jason,
Mickey, Rachel, Benjamin, Mary,
Jim, Bill, Jeremy, Joe, Tammy,
Sue, Will, Greg, Vickie, Valerie
and Sherman; Virgil, Helen and G.
Bruce Teaford; Sue and Robbie
Murphy; April and Crystal Harmon; Theresa and Allison Lee;
Fred, Nonnan and Becki Matson;
Doug, Ralph and Jan Lavender;
Debbie Call; Dianna Lawson; and
Allison Lee.

Read the

Furniture==---=~--~
One golfer is so used to
cheating that when he made a
hole in one, he wrote down
zero.

•••

OUTSTANDiNG FFA MEMBER- Chris Hamm of the
: Racine FFA Chapter was selected as the county's outstanding FF A
member and presented a plaque by advisor Aaron Sayre during
Saturday night's Youth Night program at the Meigs County Fair.

Success comas before work
only in the dictionary.

•••

Despite all its accom·
plishments, humankind still
owes its existence to a six·
inch layer of topsoil and the
fact that it rains.
• • •
Senior citizen to another: "I've
lost my glasses, and I can't
look lor them until I lind them."
•••
One joy of middle age is
happening to see the person
you didn't marry.

REACH OVER 18,500
\

1 SHOWROOMS

11 WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rl. 124, R"'-l, Ol 742·2211

985·4473
112219&lt;

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE
Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Yeara Experience

992-4447 or 742·2360 1 '"'

""'

Public Notice
eate.
Said root 01 tete woo
appraioed at $4,680.00 end
will not ba aotd lor leu than
lwo-thirdo of tho opprelaecl

value.

Dewey M. Horton, Mayor
(B) 16, 23; 2TC

HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!
TV TIMES

-II

••
,_
••

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

By ED PETERSON ·
Social Security manager, Athens
Everyone needs 8 linle help
once in a while. The help could be
from a friend or co-worker, from a
bank or credit union. And sometimes the help could even come
from Supplemental Security
Income (SSI).
In the real world, for example,
individuals who are not earning
much money may find themselves
responsible for an elderly parent a
·
disabled child, or another re Iauve
who is blind or disabled and are no
longer able to care for themselves.
If you are confronted by any of
these circumstances, or similar
ones, you should explore the avai1•
ability of SSI benefits.
SSI pays monthly checks to

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
314'-ll 1 MO

BINGO

You didn't get to Woodstock I.
And you didn't get to Woodstock:
II. That doesn't mean that you
don't believe in "love and peace".
Does it? Do keep smiling.
Bob Hoenich i~ regular columni~t for The Daily Sentinel.

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road

FOR SALE

Rutland, Ohio
742-2455

Manco-Go Karts

Excavating-Co.

•
Fo~ example, we don t count:
the f~rst $20 of most Income
received in a month; the frrst $65 a
month you earn from working and
half the amount over $65; food
stamps most food, clothmg, or
shelter you .get from private nonprofit orgamzallons; or most home
energy ass1stance. If you are a student, some of your wages or scholarships you receive may not count.
:There are ~an.Y. rules that deter·
mme your ehg1b1hty for SSI. You
should realue that you are not the
best J'udge of your eligibility. If you
are doing the best you can and still
need help, call us at 1-800-7721213. We may be able to provide
the assistance you need. Remember, everyone needs a little help
·
hil
once maw e.

I·

LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Jay
Leno shared poignant memories of
his father with his "Tonight
Show' • audience shedding a tear
as he promised :'We'll· fight the
good fight pop.'.
Leno Wok h~ seat as usual after
Monday night's monologue, then

explained that his father had di~
Wednesday at 83 after months m
the hospital.
Angelo Leno, his son said, was
a real up-by-the-bootstraps New
Yorker who toiled as a mechanic,
truck driver, boxer and insurance
salesman.
"H'r:· n ·rj

·~·:J

' ·'

·a·

righter than I _was," said Leno,
whose mother d•ed a year ago. .
Leno fondly recalled how h1s
father chose the toughest neighbor·
hoods to sell insurance in, including Harlem and Spanish Harlem.
He said he still ~ the 78s his dad
used to learn Spamsh.

Water hauling

Lines, Land Clearing

Backhoe Service

Estimates

992·3838

lll&gt;nln

GRACE
YOUNG'S

ENTERPRISES

CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room Addition•
·New garage•
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
~alntlng also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, ~~Wo~ Hn

1

Card of Thanks
I would like to give a
special Thank You to
all who have spon·
sored me over the past
years. Especially this
year In the Pythlan
Sisters Bowl-A· Thon
lor Arthritis.
Eagles Club 12171 of
Pomeroy, G&amp;W Plastic,
Ken's Appliance Service, Powell's Super
Vaiu, Kenny Utt, C.P.A.;
Bank's Construction
Co., Chateau Beauty
Salon, Teaford Real
Estate and to all my
Pythlan Sisters and
Brothers.
Again I say,
Thank You
Betty L Young
Longbottom, Ohio

TRACTOR WINNER
Winner of the pedal tractor
given by the Big Bend Farm
Antique Club at the Meigs County
Fair was Barbara Murray .
Pomeroy.

efits.

742-2455

Trucking: Limestone &amp;
Fill Dirt, Top Soil
Reasonable Rates

CARD SHOWER
Friends have planned a binhday
card shower for Luther Boothe ,
49621 Hickory Lake Road,
Reedsville. Ohio, 45772. He will
observe his 74th birthday Thurs·
day.

OHIO STATE
FAIR WINNERS
Twelve Meigs County 4-H boys
and girls were "outstanding of the
day " winners at the Ohio State
Fair. the Meigs County Extension
Service announced today.
They were Noelle Pickens in
designing interiors, and Lisa Stethem, outdoors in decorma; John
Krawsczyn in dogs; Kelley
Gruescr, fashion revue; Cynthia
Cotterill, Kristina Kennedy,
Dorothy Leifheit and Michael
Leifheit in food and nutrition;
Johnathan Haggerty and Julie
Spaun in health; and Kristina
Kennedy and Joseph McCall in
home equipment.

110 Court St. Pom'l~.c·;. On1a
"Look for tile Red and White Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Ow1er 1-800..291-5600

Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

Systems. Water 6 Sewer

BATON CORPS
Now accepting new
students. Girls Ages 4
and Up . Develop poise
and self confidence
and have a great time.
ln•tructor· Nan&lt;y W. Swartr
Classes
beginning
September.
(aU 992-3796

WINNING EXHIBITOR
Mary Ann Shoults, Racine, wa~
the winner of a blue ribbon in
afghans and a white ribbon in miscellaneous knitting and crocheting
in the domestic arts department at
the Meigs County Fair. Her name
was not included in the original
listing of the department winners.

•vtS/T OUR SHOWROOM'

Morris Equipment

Trailer SHes

"DAZZLING
DOLLS"

992-2096
550 Page Sl, Middleport
FreeEatimatea

3H.P.&amp;Up

Driveways, Septic

11-

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

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

New

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Complete House &amp;

6:45p.m.
Special Early Blrd
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
fREE card.
Lie. No. OOSt-342

OUILI'I'Y WINDOW SYSTEMS

Parts &amp; Service

Howard

EVERY TH UASOAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POIIEAOY

a little help sometimes

individuals who are ~5. or older, ~r
blmd, or have a disability a~d don t
own much or have a lot of mcome.
Monthly checks can also go to disabled and blind children. If a per·
son qualifies for SSI, he or she may
also be able to get Medicaid, food
stamps, or other social services.
To qualify for SSI, you. your
family members, or individuals you
care for don't need to be destitute.
You may work, own a car or home,
or attend college. Generally. if the
applicant lives in the househol~ of
another the basic SSI benefit IS
reduced 'as much as one-third.
If you're working and think that
your earnings may be too much to
allow you to qualify for SSI, you
should be aware that under SSI, not
all income is counted in determin·
· ~
ing whether you're elig•ble or ben-

614-367-{1302
Ampa, Gultara, Strings,
Keyboardo, Druma,
Plano &amp; Guitar LMoona.
Cheohlra, Ohio

2

JACK

992·4103
KINGS'

Free Estimates
,

I

Before 6 p.m. leave
~

mess a ge

Alter 6 p.m.
614·905·4180

-

Your wife,

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NIW ' USED PARTS FOR
All lUKES ' MODUS
992·7013 OR
992-SSS3 OR
TOI.liRU 1·100.841·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

forever,

t

And her hand we cannot
touch
Still wo have oo many
memoriee

01 the one we loved 10
much.
Her memory Ia our keepaake
With which we'll never
part
God hao her In Hlo
kaeplng
We have her In our

sage.

Decendents Of Ernnt ~Ut&amp;ell
Will Hold 41st Annual Autsatl
Raunlon . VInton Memorial Park
VInton, Ot-l Sunday, Sept, ' 4th:
1994. 11 A.M. Bring Ev1rythlng
Normal For A Plcnfcl Stc. Norwood And Batty Austell.

4
2206 .

•

3 whils m11ls kiiUms, 2 long hair.

Can see 1205 Viand St, Pl. Pp .
4 kittens. 2 black, 2 ~lte ,
medium ha ir, littor lra lnad . )04675-377'6.
•

Bags, Mostly Clothing, 614-3888449 .
•

Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.

Bicycts pans. 304-675-Jns . .
Couch &amp; ct;~lr, - so~~ds
clothes. all sizes . 304-67S-430t.

742·2443
11'1111 mo.

7131101/TFN

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

MANLEY'S
HOME

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding,
Concrete, Room
Additions, Etc.
P.O. Box 220 Bidwel~

Bill Slack
992·2269

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found: 6 month old long halr8d
tabby-type cal with bushy tail
Pomeroy buslnoss district 614~

992-6na.

'

Keys car &amp; house, found corner
ot 6th &amp; College St, Syracuse

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

BUY-SELL·TRADE
Something New For
Meigs County
Tuea. Thru Sat. 1·6
Name Brand Tools,
Toys, Fenton.
Como and Sse.
One mile out Rl 143
from Rl 7.

Delivered
locally

992·3838

811111 mo.

614·992-5241.

.

~~~~~~~-~
lost : black whllo-facod ~

last seen on Vance Rd . SnoJv ~

ville/ Harrisonville vicinity, &amp;14992-3146 or 614-698-3105 .
••

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

141 Second Avenue
Rtar
August . 25th, 26th, 27ih 19-'fi,
Glassware, Whatnots· 'Mite '
Clothes; Shoes, Tools. '
, ;•
All Vard Sales Must Be

.

Paid ;n

Advance. DEADLINE: 2,00 p.ojl

TRI·STATE K·9
ACADEMY

Fendng C'~n
Uri·Wooi

TUPPERS PlAINS
Basic obedience, ·
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel service, pups 6
young dogs lor sale.
Rottweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

Decorative
Salts ...
fllsl..atlol

Call Westen Auto
992-SSIS
Free Estimates
Residential. Commercial
and Industrial

ft.l,·

the day bafora the ad Is to
edition - 2:00 p".m:
Friday. Monday edlllan • Z:GO
p.m. Saturday.
:,
Sunday

,....,,

II Rain Will Be In Garag•. Potjo&amp;

Pans, 2 Druset~, Dlstwa,
Clothes, Misc. h•m•L 1127 State
Route 141, Acroq From V~n
Plant, Tun, Wed, Thure.
Thursday,
Friday-, -.,.
CI~
ogg
~
Residence At Rodney1 Dlshlia,
Furniture, Wicker
umterfls

Chicken
Water., '
Clothes Galore

8

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

WhatnQts'
'

Wed, Thurs. 1063 Second
Avenue, Boys &amp; Girls Clothes
Toys, Dolls, Misc.
'

hearto.

Sadly mlaoed by her
loving !amity and
cloae frlendo.

Giveaway

2 year old female St. Bernard,
frl•ndly, has all shots 614-94g..

Specializing in
Winterizing

Rl.a /1 1110

In Memory Of
BESS HENDRICKS
Who Pasaed Away
August 23, 1990.
Though her amite Ia gone

clso. 304-675-1235 leave mes-

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair

'
Diad Aug. 23187

Joan King

Bicyc ling
companlona, . Pt
Pl•asan1. Just tor fun and IXIr·

J/25/94

F. KING SR.

Some day our eyes
shallaee,
The face we keep In
memory;
And God will link the
broken chain,
Still closer ~hen we
meet again.

3 Announcements:

33151 Happy Hollow Rd
Middleport, Ohio 45760
NewHomea,
Additions, Siding,
Painting, Garages,
Porches, Pole Barna
Call Ua For An Eotimato
614-742·3090
304-773·9545 11/Wn

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out ol
painting. let us do it
lor you . Very reasonable.

I

Announcements

Home
Improvements

LINDA'S
.PAINTING &amp; CO.

OH 45614
(614) 388·9865

In Memory

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction CompaRy

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

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)
vummn

full lime auctioneor, eompl11~
auction
servlc:a.
Ucensltd
166,0hlo &amp; West Vlrglnle, 304-

773-5785.
Auctlonoer Col. Osear E. Click
LlcenM I 754-94 6 Bondlcl'
30H85-3430.
• ,'

9 Wanted to Buy : :
Cloon La1o Model c.,. Qr
Trucu, 1987 Modolo Or ~
Srnhh Buick Pomioc 1t!lli
bstem Avenue, Galllpode.

Decoratttd

, ·

slonew~,., Will ' " '

pl!onn, old Iampo, aid lhef.
mon'MIIers, otd ClocKS, IN'qult

Jl fl'oucfi of

crass

Custom 'Winicw Coverings

Jay Lena shares memories of late father

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

Did you catch the Delta Queen
when it passed by our communities
Saturday afternoon? Hope you did.
The excellent caliope player did all
of"our" favorite songs.

been held on Thanksgiving weekend, the Saturday following in fact.
Due to the standing room only situ·
ation which developed at last
year' s show. some thought is being
given to stage the musical production two nights, Friday and Saturday evenings following Thanksgiving. Sponsoring the show will be
the Meigs Division 6f the American Heart Association and the Middleport Arts Council. Both groups
served as sponsors last year. It is
hoped that David Gaul, principal of
the Meigs Junior High School, will
be able to make that building available for this fall's show. That location was used last year and turned
out to be ideal from the standpoint
of elevated seating, sound and
other accommodations so ably provided by Gaul, a most cooperative
school administrator. Talented
Jennifer Sheets, a Meigs County
attorney. will again be accompanying the show. Jennifer has a new
keyboard she'll use in this year's
production. It's a tremendous
piece of equipment. It almostUtlks
and I'm not real positive that it
won't do that.
Incidentally, there's an incredible amount of interest being shown
by participants for this fall's show
and a number of former cast members have already committed to be
on hand when the curtain goes up
come Thanksgiving weekend.

Everyone needs

LISTINGS AND
fi'EATUUES EVERY WEEI( IN THE
TV TIMES

GALLIPOLIS

by Bob Hoeflich

With a little bit of luck, a lot of
cooperation and a heap of work by
participants, the Big Bend Minstrel
Association will be sUtging its fall
production in November.
The show through the years has

AHEA TEtEVISION

Joe N. Sayre

Society
scrapbook

Beat of the Bend ...

What with healthcarc form,
alliances among hospitals are quite
commonplace these days. Small
hospitals especially are doing this
in order to be a part of the managed
health care contracts, provide better
services, and to better meet healthcare demands of the future. Those
which don't affiliate will be unable
to stand alone and stand-alone hospitals are expecting to go the way
of the dinosauer, according to predictions.
One of the latest hospitals to
announce affiliation is Lawrence
County Medical Center in Ironton
which has signed an agreement to
become the latest affiliate with The
Ohio State Medical Center in the
Healthcare Consortium of Ohio.

CALL NOW....
. BICYCLE WINNER - Two year old Michael Barrett,
.Pomeroy, was tbe winner of one of the four bicycles awarded as a
'part of McDonald's Day Saturday attbe Meigs County Fair. Here
. John Hoffman of McDonald's holds the youngster at the purple
; bicycle be selected. Other bicycle winuers were Jennifer Smith, 5,
of Darwin; Andrew Bissell, 4, Long Bottom; and Randi Buckana,
. 11 of Wheelersburg. Numerous other prizes were awarded. The
· bicycles were donated by the Meigs County Fair Board, Bates
Bros. Amusement Co., and McDonald's of Pomeroy.

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

Reasonable Rates

112MIn

Even though the Betsy Ross
Bakery in Middleport no longer
exists, former employees and their
families are continuing to
"reunion" once a year and held
their third annual picnic Sunday
afternoon at the Kyger Creek
Power Co. park: below Cheshire.
There was a good crowd on hand
and the group is looking forward to
picnic number four. The event is
held on the third Sunday each
August.

CLRSSIFIED RDS

ADVERTISING IN THE

Rutland

PUBUCNOTICE
The Village Council lor
the Village of Middleport will
Erika Norman
hold 1 public auction on the
Case No . 28206
30th day of Auguot, 1W4 at
Application to change name 4:00 O'Clock P.M. at the
Revised Code Sec. 2717.01 Middleport Village Council,
Your applicant respectfully City Hall Building, Roce
represents that Erika Street, Middleport, Ohio
Norman Is and has been, for 45760, for tho following
at least one year prior to the deacrlbed real eetate:
date of tiling this
lot Numbor 26 of tho
appllcallon, a bona fide Philip Jonu Eotete
resident of said Meigs Subdivision excepting 3.43
County, Ohio, and io of the acrw owned by Dr. Jamea
age of17 years.
Schmoll end deocrlbed In
That she desires to deed Volumo 289, Page 1311,
change her name from Erika Molgo County Deed
Norman to that of Erika Recordo. All ol loto
Meadows.
Number 27, 28, 211, 30 end
That the cause for which 31 of the Philip Jonoe
the change of name Is Eotate Subtllvloion end ell
sought Is to get my driver's real Mtal8 being currenUy
license.
owned by the Vlllago of
Your applicant therefore Middleport excepting tho
prays that an order be made reel eatate deacrlbed In
changing Erika Norman Volume 234, Peve 257,
nama to that of Erika Melga County Dood
Meadows as aforesaid.
Recorda.
Dated this 19th day of
Nono of the above
August, 1994
deacribed real Mtalo oholl
Erika Norman, Applicant Include eny property
Kathryn A. Meadows currenUy uoed lor cemolefy
39815 Gold Rdg. Rd. purpooea by tho Village ol
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Middleport
(8) 23; 1TC
Termo of Solo: Cuh et
In The Matter of

Family r~union

By
Dave

Grate
of

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders ,
Boom poles,
Parts &amp; service

Blinds • Verticals • Shades
~3="11

Bapnlsd
BfrrJul••

Bflda Smlthf
,..._ \"("fn!' """""""

Shop At
Home
Service
Day Or
Night

h's not just a way to
cover a window
It's a way to
light up a room

892-5311
1-800-BLIND-11
Blinda .t Verticals
4~~ lJFF,..'T .,.,. MO&gt;nJ Fr&gt;l:'7r "P'
·'• .' .. ' . ' .. ' . . 'f ......,, ..· . ,, ' ... .
~0-W~

off

~·

lumhwo. Rlvorlno Antiquo._
Rua Moor•, owner, ll~lla2521. Wa buy oototoa.
Don1 Junil hi Sollllo Your NonWortdng MaJor Applto--,

Color

F~zen.

T.V.'o

vcR·..

Rolrlgondoro

Mk:rawan•'

Air Condltlonero, Wuhan'
Drvoro, Copy Mochlnoo, Etc:

614-256-1238.
J &amp; D'o Au1o

Porta and Solvoge

1110 buying junk Cllra I trucb:
304-T/3.5341.
Old clgtr.rte llghtera, milk botliM fountain pre.-., allverwat•,
ma;b..., 11onewar., magazlnt•,
Stir W1rs end Star Trd html;
t")• '-·•

~ln r!'r

co11 1\ft?.-.:41

�Tuesday,August23,

1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The

Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

ALLEYOOP
creature
46 Zodiac sign
1 Meadow
47 Computer
4 Busy as - anachment
8 Quiche
SO Two words of
Ingredients
dismay
12Hyena's kin
54 Costat 4 Delineated
55 Seltzer-making
15 Cicy in Turkey
process
16Actress 58 Hebrew month
Rowlands
59Tough
17Sac
60Pinochle term
18Most decorative 61- terrier
20Wide shoe size 62 Clinlon ' s
238ound
Instrument
24Jai ls
DOWN
28Chinese or
Japanese
1 Secular
31 Guided
32 Math I unction
2 Sim ple
3 Academic
34ToiTV
35- Knievel
subjects
37- - I say
4 Beard ol grain
39Title ol respecl 5 Go lor apples
40A c lor Ed6 Hebrew month
42Grabbed
1 Musical key
44 Leaping
8 Most nervous

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

72 Trucks lor Sale

tor Rent
lata Model GM S11tlon Wtgon
Or 4 Door, Sedan From C)Wner'
614-256-6332 Leave M...1 ge. '

Mx60 2 Br, 1 mila South of
Eureka, on St. Rt .7. No peta,

roflrlnCII. 614.;!58-IIOIIg ,

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call

2 lledroomiL Golllt&gt;OII11 AG, No
Poll, O.pooo And Ro.....,coo,
$40Mio., Wuhlf, Dfyor; 2 Bodroom HouN, Oalllpolla, Fur·
nt.hed, No P.ta, $350/llo.
Dlpoolt, 114-711-4348.

Lorry Uvotr. 614-368-11303.
Top Prien Pold: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coin•. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

2 Bedrooma, Potter ArM, MdO,
O.pooH I Rlllroncto Roqulrod,
You Poy All UtiiHioo, 814-38811162.

W1nted to buy: UMd mobUe
hom-. 6~175

Wanted to rent or buy on land
con1ract : 1-21c. In counlry tor
trolltr lot. 30~7!&gt;-2682 "' 67!&gt;8863.

2b&lt;. mobil homo, CA, Ill oppllanet~o
lumlohed, 830Cimo
pluo utllhloo'-$260 do-lt, 7ml.
out Sondhlll Kd. 304-885-3483.

Employment Services
11

MDIIII homo outlklrtl a1 HandanC»'', Wv, utiiHioo pold,
$275/mo. plut SSG dopooH. 304I'IS454t oftor lpm.

Help Wanted

Mollllo homo complototy turnloha!l1 Golllpollo Forry. oftor
C»' 67!&gt;6:00PM
4075.

Shl~oy

AVON I AH Areal I
Spoorw, 3~7!&gt;-1429.

-15-8335

All arMa. AVON earning ~

afbllhle1 equal your cap.~&amp;llfllll,
11M product with tlgn-up.
Marilyn 3()4....882-2645 ot 1.8()0.

-s., le e l.

m-nsa.

AVON$$ 9ALE9
Potontiot 8300 -$2,000 Monthly.
Fanta.tlc: OlacouOtal Be,...fh!
Fioxlbll Hours. Torrhory Optlonal. t-aoG-7'12-4738.
Dental Anlllont Noodod To
Join Our F1mlly Practlc1, EJ:.
po~once
NICNOiry.
9ond
R"ume To: CLA 32.5, c/o Gel·
llpotlo Dally Trlbun•, 825 Thin!
Avtnue, GalllpoUI, OM 45631

TroS..
13

Insurance

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

AMERICAN
NATIONAL
INSURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS I AUTO DIS..
COUNTS
UFE &amp; HEALTH
304-581-4257

Domino's Plno In Pcmoroy . -

_1..:,8_W__;a..;.n;.:t..:.ed.:..:t..:.o..:D:..o:....._

aec•pllng applications.

B•forw &amp; •tt•r •chool Day C.rel

Ortver COL Ouallfledl 1 Vur

New Haven, 6:30tm•chool ena
1hcoal-8pm, klnd•rgarttn
hlf-dlyt; wtleomtk brukfaet &amp;
after achool •nac • provided,
erutlvt proj~~ete 6 loving tu-

VerttabMI OTR . lmmtd at• Poel·
lion tor 1 Driver run with aiNm .
Homt W•bnds, Heallh C.re
Plan, 1-60().362-5685.
Eom up to fiOOO Wllkly etufllng
tnvtlopet at home, start now,
no-experitnct,
tre•eupplltt,
t.....lntormatlon, no-obligation .
Sind SASE: C.scad1 O.pt-60
P.O. 801 542'1, San Angelo, TX
761102.
Euy Wortll Excollont Pari AoHmblt Productt AI Home. Call
Toll Fr~~, 1-i00-467-6566, Ext.
313.
Exporttncod
Bour
/Cau
Decor11or NMded. Monleon't
HoepltaiHy Gro"!'1 Unlv1r1hy 01
Rio Grandt, &amp;M-245-5660 Or
Stop By Student C.nter Annex
M-F 8 A.M. -4 P.M. EOE.
Full T1m1 Wahren, Apply AI
Holiday Inn, Golllpotls, No
Phone Calla.
lmmediltt Need For RN't,
LPN't, HHA't Statt TH1ed NA't
Compt~nkml, Homemakers. Interim Heltlhca,., 814-354-5550,

1-800-280-7535.

•fl•

porvlllon. 304~2-3121 .

Chrtttlan Lady will cart For
Chlld,.n, Any Shift, Near
Ellzlbtth Chtpel Church; off
218. ~1 -1487
Experienced Guitarist Now
Giving lAaaona In There Homa.
For More Information, 61~10131.

O.noral Mtlnlonanco, Ptlnt!ng1
Yard Work Windows Wasnea
Guttoro Clotnod Light Houllng,
Commtric:al, Rtah::lenUal, Stave:
614-446-4148.
GIOrgoo Ponoblt Sowmlll, don1
haul your loa• to lht mill just
coll304-875-1l57.
Handy man, Interior/exterior
palnlfng, light htullng &amp; corpontry. ~Auto body wori &amp; pointIng. 30&amp;-88!&gt;-3630 or 304-87!&gt;7595,
Proflsslonal Tree Service, 30
Yttrw Experience, 814-388-9843,
614-387-7010.

Llconlld Proctlcll NufWII: Qualhy Clunlng Affordable
Woutd you llkt to have the belt Prlcea, Ont Tlmt · IW•k1y
of both wortdl? Jolrt an lnnova- IBiwHkrr,, Ytara Of E1pertence,
llvt INdlng htahh eart tNm. If Froo Ell matoo, 6t4..:17V-218t.
you tnJOY vanity In your
.:hedule and a,. ,.ady kM' a Sun Valloy NurolfY School.
cluollengo, ,...,. •• luovo lhe job Chlldcoroii-F lom.IJ : ~Opm Aaoo
for you! ear.Haven of Pt 2-K, Young Sct-1 Ago Ouilng
Pl ....nt, e 68-becl akiUtd nur. Summer. f Oeya r.r Wttk Minlng t.cllhy ott.n qualified, Imum 614-446-365 .
prot.ulonal 1nd caring •r·
vic• In totol rlhlbllhlllon ond Will care tor elderly person• In
homo, counlry 11Uing,
~ t., nursing cart. Pt. my
P I - hu I ptrl-tl""' LPN loving coro. 304-11115-:1840.
chertll pooltlon lor quollllod WAI do backhoe work, 614-QinappUCaniL Must hive 1 vaUd
WOol Vtrglnll LPN 11-. W 5858 or 114-1111:1-3173.
you htvo tho right crodontlalo
8nd art up tor a dltUtngt, contact: C.rolltvon al Pl. Plouont,
Jill Bumgont,_, AN, DON, At. t,
Box 32&amp;1- ~ Plllllnt, WV
25!80. 31&gt;H1~t&gt;-3005. A GlenBusiness
21
mork Ftcii"Y· EOE.
LOOKING FOR CHILD CARE?
CCRN -Child C.ro Aooourco
NeCwork Ia A Frw Cornmunhy
Slrvtce Which W0&lt;11d Alllll
Vou In L..ocatlna Cart To MMI:
Your Ntodo. C.~ 1~2276
To 811 How Wo Con Help.

New Terminal
C.rcl,.l Frotght C.rrllfl Inc. It
hl~ng
oxporloncod
ownerloptr'ttOI"'
tor
tht
vonlltotbod dlvlolon, proiMoblt
PlY program, accurate wMklv
MttlenMnta, medical Ina. avalf:.
1ble, rider program and time
home, no up fi'ont money to
1oa01 on. Coli Boyd, 1-8011-Z!0242\

Opponunny

INOll eEl
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocommondo thlt you do bul~
,... with poop1o you kMWhond
NOT to oond monoy througt tbo
mall urill you have lnvMtlgattd
tht afftrlng.
Dfy Ct11n1rw &amp; Looodry In Gal-

llpollo Arto. Eotobllohod Von
Routt.ExcotltntCondhlonl614882·7302, 814-882-3198 Uer 6
P.M.
VENDING ROUTE: Won, Got
Rich Quick. Will Got A Steady
Cllh lncomo. Prlcod to Soli. 1800-820-8782.

How Teklng Application• At Gallipolis 6
Point
PttaNnl,

Oomlno"IPIUI.

Owner10ptrltor.
Ctrdlnol Freight . C.rriero It
ltlrlng uportoneod OTR't to ""'
llltbid, 11m pon:ontotll ot
rwvonuo pulling compony
frtllt,. Of puiOng own trailer,
_,.h l,.wance w/dtntll &amp; vilion ........... bolo platll
IVOiiobll, boiHIII lnouronet~
ovolllble, lull cant oyotom,
WllkJy
alltlltmtnl:a,
rkttr
rutram, Ume home. 1-800-220-

P I - Ctro Contor II LookIng F..- An Entftutllltlc Dlleclor
Of Nurwlna With Exctltont
Leadar.tllp J.bllttv, Communlclotlon Skllto, And Suptnlloory Ell-

Real Estate
31

Homes lor Sale

2 Llrgo Bod._., t Beth,
Llrlll Uvlng Room~. Llrgo
Dlnfng Room, For all By
Ownll, 34 VInton Awern•, Gal·
tlpollo, ~&amp;-1125 .
3 bedroom, all electric homt 1
Spring
A..,uo,Pomoror,
830,000, l14-8t2.;!g13 0&lt; 114-

1182-7304.
3 - - · z Bolt1o, Hoot
Pump, Gu Fu":.'l"c1.. 1 Acre,
0 . - . Will CO
Slnoio
Wlda On Down Poymont, l.ddloon Arll, 112,000, 114-31J.
7211l
s

boclroom ronch, O.lllpollo
Forrv_. call lor doto•lo. 304-8153321.

~-~-~~._,...~~-~·;·;;~~

Sun .f11.

POSTALJ088
!11111 fl1..,.., lar 111111 ond
Into. CIA 2111-~

_..lion

t * at. WV841, lln&gt;lpm,
lur&gt;.f11.

"to 11188
which
llltgol
ldV111111
'IllY,...
_
_
lmltlllon or dacitlt•lllllkw•
- o n roct, color, rolglon,
- llmllollllluoornlllonol
origin, Of o n y - to
lmllltlon ordtlcrtl••lllllon.•
Thill n o - wtl not
kno.... . , .......

-lnlnloforrulllllta

""a:!!

=-.s.• ,!'"~"C,:
1111 - ·

WBYO

_..or,
........... Loti • ..,._....._mumo 10 CEO WIIGSINBYG,
P.O. Boll 41'0, Point ,..._,.,

6 Room Brick With Full a..._
rnent, And C.ntr11 Air, In Galllpollt, P~co R1ducod, 61~-

11128.

8 room houN, can be 2
apartm.ntl ar converted tor

a""

· - · ..... $14,!100, llnanelng avallaW..
121 Butternut, Pomeory.
FOR SAU BY OWNER
Excollonl LDc:oltiC»'' On Second
Avenue, Within Walking Dl•
tance Of Downtown, Large
Uvlng Room, Dining Room,
Khchon, Utllhy Room, Both
Roomo, Gorogo, ~ ThrM Bod._..,., Llrgo Bock Yord. MUll
81 SNn To ").pprKiata. Call 614~..:1857.

For Solo By OWner: 3 BR., 1 112
Both, 2,100 Sq. Ft. Rtnch, 2
AropiiCII, Gu Hut, Ctnt. Air.
Ll~ot O~vo. Wotklng Dlllonco
To HMC, $85,000. Shown By
Appointment, 0'14-441a1208.
New Hou11 FO&lt; Solo By Bulld"i
3 Bedroom.. On 3 Ac:,... Rwa
Waler, 5 Mlnut• From Park,
$58,000, 814-371.;!240.

Very nlca, 1 floor home offering
3br.,
1
batt-,
completely
remodeled, new vinyl tiding,
ntw root ntw furnace, $49,500.
Wollon Koony. 304-875-3433.

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

11171 Mobllt Homo 2 Bodroomo,
Balh, Outbuilding•, Gorogo, t.51
01 An Aero, $20,u00, 6l4-44611718.
Fairmont.
14a70, CA. All 16ec., lttrto . , .
tom throughout, gordon tub,
front porch. 811 by oppolntmont
only. 814-3B8-8t83.
1982

TownhouM

18611 Naohuo mcblll homo, 2
bHroom, 1 bath new carport,
light gray tlllorlc,; whh dork
groy lhuttoro, 8t4-114t-a213.
1881 Cloylon 3 Bodroomo, Ex·
ctlllnt CondHion, 614..:1118-4538.

8828.

44

Apartment
lor Rent

1 n 2 bedroom apartment•.
IUmllhld ond uniUmlohod,
IICWMy dopoolt roqulrod, no
pete, 114-812-2218.
2 Roome &amp; Both, No Khchon,
$200/llo, All Utllhlot l'"'ludod,
614-446-7733, Bltw11n 8:30
-5:00.
2bdrrn. opto., toltl lloctrlc, applloncoo luml•hod, loundry
room laciiHioo clolo to ochool
In town. Apl&gt;lic:atlono ovolllble
II: Vlllaal Groon At&gt;lt. 148 or
cott1114-Gg:z..:m1. EOH.
35 Wool Apt. :lbr, 1 hoth, potlo,
clolo to grocory • - I ohopptng ctnfer, wlttr, MWtr, truh
provldod, $2111/mo. E-1 Ho,.._
lng Opportunny,l14-o441-1608.
Fumltllod Elftctency $150/llo.
UtiiHioo Pold, Shoro Both, 807
Socond Avo, Golllpoll•, 614-4464416Aftor7 P.M.
Fumlohod Efficiency, 70t Fourth
Avenue, O.lllpollo, $185/llo.
Utll"leo Pold, 1 - 1 8 After
7P.M.
Fumllhld Aportmont 2 Bodrooma, $295.11o., Utlllllot Pold,
70t Fourth Avo., O.lllpollo, 814448-4416 Alw 1 P.M.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 JockoC»'' Plko
from 83a2 to $281. Wolk to ohop
&amp; movloo. Colt 814-446-2588.
EOH.
Fumltllod 2 Bedroom Aportmont, AcJOM From Porto, CA, No
Pall, RoloiOIICII I O.poolt R•
qulrod. U50/llo. 814~~
O.yo; - H m Evonlngo.
Fumlahld 3 Roome I Bath,
Cleon, No Poto1 Aotoronco &amp;
DlpooH Roqulroa. 614~6-1519.
GrteiOUI living. 1 ond 2 bodroom oporlmonll ot Vtllogo
Minor
and
Rlvii'Siae
Aporlmonto In Mlctdllport_ From
Coli 814-8i2-581t.
S%124356
EOH.
0

1881 14x79 FIMtwood Rolloctlonl, ltc. lot, 2br., 2 lull bath,
grul cond., chy water, uwwr
ays1em, tltc:tric I phone hoc*·
up, 2 outbulldlngo, porchlo,
nlco locotlon, $25,l)OO. 304-111153361 after &amp;pm.
1888 Ook Wood molblo homo,
14•70~ btdroont8, exc cond,
304-8
853.
Doubt-kit Mobile Homo, 3
Bedroom, 2 Botho, 15 Acroo,
Flohlng Pend, 614-882-7545

HUO approved 2 bedroom
mobllt home, all
$250/mo. and dopooH, 814-1'422014.

•*trlc,

UMITEO OFFER I Now 14x80
only mou z poymonll, no
poymonto oftor 4 yearo tr11
dollvory &amp; Ill up, - - tlnonc·
lng ovolloble. 304-7515-6581.
NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 llftl
Novor llvod In, otlll hu rww
homo worronty, trwo dollvory I
Ml up, owner financing avail·

Nlco 2 - · 4 112 IIIIM
From O.ltlpollt, City S c - .
Stove, Rolrtgorot"!'1 Wot• Furni~)250/Mo. NO Pill, 6144488...,,

-ltporl.
.,8·~14-j;ll821n·;!88jjj5;;;8;;t;;;l:l;t;kj;;;;;
Nlcl 3 br. opt. In

~hllomood:

ollldoncy
locllod In MolgO
nty, toloUy
with Ill
utUIIte pold. For moro I n lion colt 1114-t11:2-2212, ......
n 1111ge H no anaw•.

tum._

I

Twa
bedroom
tpll1mont,
utiiHioo pold, f3J;:,~to portllng,
rlvw vltw,
mo., $200
dopollt, no poll, 614-1182-6724.
Unoportmont,
- o y , 2nd 11-. 4 rooma1
bath, no polo, roflrlnco ona
dopooft,
tl14-lltl2.;!275
oftor
B.OOpm.

45

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Furnished

"" 01 - u m Trot And Bllur
RoH, $14,000, 114-3S'I-78tl.
For Mit 42 ecrea of hunting
round l&lt;&gt;r clotr I wild turt&lt;oy,
14-4107-3716 coli torty morning
or lito ovonlng.

l

lnY•tom And ~VIIop!ll'll : 2.5

Zoned AcrM
Wllhln C"y UmMo, Ollllpotl1,
Ohio. 814-44&amp;-wn:

Commerlcally

Lind For Solo On Lond COntroct

Poner ANI, 114-446-8204.

Rentals

For nrnl- In Autllnd, rot.
l dop. roqulrod, no poll, coli
114-1112-2611.

- I I I n - ot tho ltw.

Our--hlroby
WOIYI*t thlt .. ct1 alllngl
ldV-Inlhll no-r
- o v - on on oquot

OIIIIOfltJ1tiY-

100,000 BTU Gu Fum1001 Q2'!l,
EHicloncy, 80% Efllcllncy, 1800.;!I7-8308, 8 14--441-8308.
150}!'!0 BTU Qae Fumac1,

63

56

Pets lor Sale

~G=room=~.::nd:;:..:S;:u::ppl::;y:=;Sho~~-::-.~
Grooming. Jullt Webb. 81

tB Older Style Church Powt,
Nlldo Some Painting, $20 Each,
or Boot Ofttr, 114-446-65111, &amp;14-

1011016 dog k·~~ $18t.85.
•
Point Pluo, 304-47

~-8127.

111B6 Wlr.ard riding lawn mower,
lllldo wort&lt;, $350. ~75-6458.
2 Comotory loto, Klrkllnd
Mtmorlol O.rdana, $1100 lor
bolh. Huntlnuton, 304-6:D-7048.
I aluminum awnings, fhe etandard-olu wlnctowa, pluo 1 omoll
porch
owning,
roooonobly
prlcod. 304-8~.

Blllord•tz. pool llblo, $1000
llrrn. 30oH82-3m '"" opm.
Bluo Hld•A-Bod $65, Older
L8nno1 Fumace 150k BTU $75;
Yollow Ellctrlc Rongo $45~ 111111
Lincoln 83,000; IWB Hllbbh
Pin• 8300; Dump Tabl11, $25
Elch, 814--446-3539.
Coller ID box, 14 momory, brond
IIIW, $43.65, 614-1111:1-41118.
COmmodore 1211 With Okldltt
Prinlor, Keyboard. Dllk DriVI,
Comp!Aer O.k. Saveral Dlak1,
lncludod Tho P~nt Shop, 114a56~632.

Coneort Tlcklle: 4 Tlckott To

Wynonn1 In Akron Augu• 30th,
$1b Etch, 614-245-5076.

2 hotutllul mole B11gle pupo
out ol poroonat huntfng dog,
835. lOCh. 304-87!&gt;-3424.
AKC block Poklng-~11, 3
yro aid, J250, 614-'11120

•

42

A
1010.

Spoclll F - Clll Solo: Sotur·
doy Auguot 27th, At 1 P.M. All
Yearling Cattle, 1 Sp~ng C.lvn
Accoptod, All C.Hie lotay Bo
Brought In Aft• 4 P.ll. On
Fndoy. All CC»''olgnmonto Aro
Wllcorno, fltull"l Avolloble,
614-8118-3531,
14-682-23a2,
Athlnl U-ock SliM, Albony,
Ohio.

64

Hay &amp;Grain

8501b round bet., mlxtd hay,
llrot &amp; cutting, $11111.
304-87!&gt;-21102.

F - Mlco &amp; Roto fltmttiiW
Cocullll At: Bumott Rood Or
814-441-4263 Moro In-lion.
Fllh Tonk I Pit Shop, 2413
Jackson Ave. Point Ptauanl,

~304::..:,--8~7::._!&gt;-2::._06:..:::._3.7-:::--::---:-:-,­

Aut
I Sal
=-=--.--0:-S......;o_r_:_:....;.e_ _
'111 Pontile Sunblrd, AC, Cl'ulto,
tilt w~ ..., dotoggor, $6500,
614-W2-Ill57.
11110 Novo, Nlco, All Now Porto,
2 Door, Auto, $1,1100, or Trodo
For Snwll Car, 814-367-790'1.

Prolt•loolll Dog Glom11ng, All
Bnodo, - b l e RIIM. No
Tronqulllaro. C.M llu'a, Your
Doge Prllnd. 211 y..,. Ex·
,...... ... tr14-21il 8141 " No
A . - O.IIP Trying.

1883 Pontile 8000 tlmnod od~
tlon, U lour cyt, $400. 11184
Chovolt !IS'...! ~ good
cond $2,500. 304-)'~-11184 c~vyo~or E-&lt;:tut 0ooc1
wor11, c.r l1,200, 114 448 em.

Gtrdtn tlllero, 8hp Troy Bin, llhp
Glblon, bolh good cond, t30477W331.
Kina WODdburnlr, Cool Or
WoOd, 2 SPIIII Blowlf, $250,
~~-

Now r101Hftotot1zod Jane Fond•
t....tmiN, will doll-, 1yr.
guoronty,
13110.
V2urot
dlomond onnl,....ry ring, IIZI
e, 8300. 304-875-4837 loavo

-··

Aoglotorod Dllmotlon pupploo.
304..75-6153.

57

Muslcel

0.• 80 PoHomo KMchon C.rpot
In Stock, 30 Pottomo VInyl In
Stock, Mollohan Clrpot, At. 7 N.,

814-448-11144.
Plono, $tOO· Solo /~
$300; Enl-lnmonl Contor $45;

a.stu - - t150, 114:17W72S.

Instruments
Conn trombone with ..... vwy
good condHion, $125, 114-411121104.

.._,..bto

Splnot~

pllno. Wontod,
porty to , .... low
monthly poymlnto. 811 10e111r.
1~:145.

58

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables

COnning tont- I _ . .
T--83obuoi*,Morohtll
Adamo, Lottrl Flllt, 114-:Z.V.

2611.
Conning tomat- lor 1111, pick
your own I oomo ~~~
Dlcltlcl. bflng your own can-

talntrl, ·~242061.

Sit.. a.- _, plckod dolly,
WWIIml F..... Synoo-. Ohio,
114-112-ANorll-111
Slhw a.- corn plckod dolly,
wtllllmo Form, Synooutt, Ohio,

814-112-AN or814-t12-31185.

0

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock
61

SUNCUEST WOLFF TANNIHQ
BEDS- Now
Homo
Unfto from $1".00,
L..otlone- A4 CIll= r1la. llonlhty
- · ._ .. $11.00. Cali
Toilar- FREE NEW Color
Cllllog, 1-8CJ0.48H117

1880 Pontiac Bonnevll.. , PS,
PB, Auto, $1100, 080, 814-246-

IIZ28.

a11188

4

2

Ford Tompo, ely,, - .
"*n
uCIIIont condfilon, 1141111:1- 88.
11181 Oldo SIW, high mlleiJII,
ucotllnt Nnnlng condMIOn,
115110, 132 Buttomut, Pomeroy.
1881 Rod C.moro $1,200, 814241 1881.
11187 Tra,. Am GTA Bright Rod,
350 Tune Pelt, FUll lr\loctlon,
Loodod, 2 Door, Automatic, Loa
Thin 80,000 Mi111,111 441 4811.
1988 Ford E.ocort Wogon A~

Conditioning,
' -.::·~
Condition,
P,300,

:='

75

lor Sale
t7tl2
n
liFO
C.prtco
lnloutbotrd, 140hp ............
opon bow, lull whho convu
OOYif1 wltralltr. 304-m-1540.
1178

s.. Ray, 18•.• 8 pal:llf"'IOI,

~

5 Flnltllod
-·
Sopimo
Toe~o....tng
ExCIIIont Conct~
tloft, 13.,500,i 441 Dl7l.

Choln Sow bon I _ . . to Ill

441-1000, LaaveiiiiiiQII

11181 Dodao

_..._

0.~ d~v..t

-mllll I.....
da~3,537
IP., tuck
r11 lnterlor1 ~1 _PBLPW, Jt;;il
, 114114......,. aoyl or 14-141-21144

11181 Flroblrd, loodod, T·Topo, Vcond, 304-

nooo. ...,

ou=ciNn-

llblo, low mtlll, uc. cond. 3041175-1717 .... llpm.

m

onglnt,

72 Trucks for Sale

-2-.asaza...,

YrRAFURNITURE

._.,.

·-OUtAt.Mt

With-"-··-

cea 2 112 Ton

Budaot Prlcod Tronomloolont,
U...J &amp; robuih, Ill typoo, 111ft•
lng ot '!!&lt;.owner 814-245-8177,
114-3'18-...,., 814-37V-2213.
Now goo tonu, ono ,..., truc:IJ
....,.
ell
:c. •
·
o, Al1
~
372-3133 or 1

poJR*llo ._ 11 $11.00.

79

w.-./DryoN

w.._ t-a;
Don, ForJ11 Our REPO. 111011ouro 11on•• 911.

tlon.

u

Uoocl Sota'o F« Solo, t211, Cali
114-3'/S-2120 Aftar I P.ll.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 114 Inch
200 PSI $1U5; 1 Inch 200 PBI
832.10: Ron Evtn1 Enll....-_

COunty C.mpground
Fairground•.

-lnd

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional tllotlmo g......,.

to lllhod 1871.

C&amp;C

Homo

Qo,.roJ

• .....,_., llonn

- . , rooftng 11nc1 _,ptot1
homo 1'1P11ir, compltt8 window
ropolr, pronurw ~ 11nc1
mobile home ropo~. For
tlmato coli Chit, 114482-83211,

no -

Ron't TV aor.toe, -'lllllna
In Zlnnh aloo . . _,.. .,..

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating

eon-.

63
uv-ock
~,........;:..;.-:;;,:'-=-=:.:.:....,~,_ 11111 Ford F-1110 XLT .._Cob,
IS y- 01c1 Ttl-Co Ia rod Point r llod -~~- toppor, 84

~.:

311 . . . ,

!~&lt;"-' ~"11·--~ lltd

Foncy T - . 41,000 111111, ExOttltnl Candtllon, 1114-4411 T "·
Chevy 41488 Ex • I
~ ttuoa. • 11 ....:.

• ..._..uiliN

--.
u--. =

~14 4 41 IJUt, 1-~00-2~7-Uo~.

RaeJdt,.lal

tllllllriOur

or

conwdiwolll

EllclriCII. ~-

J D

NAG

X K W A S

N R G

N R G M A

ZCKSDZN,

NAG

E C C H 0

JMOCWCODCL ,
NAG

J D

K M L

JMDCWCODJMA

UGWMCDD .

PREVIOUS SOLU TION "W mheld rs gorng back. he hil s lhe wall wrth hi s head
rt' s rolhng toward second base ."- (Announce r) Jerry Coleman
'

':~~;~:~Y S©\\c!U)A-~tZf'bs

ASTRO·GRAPH

P.O. Box 4465. New York, N.Y. 10163. 8e temptations at th•s time to participate rn

sure 10 stale your zodiac sign .
additional defici1 spendmg _ Pay your old
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 231 Do not make billS llrst. •nstead ot seek1ng instant gralil1·
commitments today you might have trou- cation with something new
ble lullilling laler. You will be laken at your ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Try lo be l a ~r
word and expected to do what you and reasonable 1n your negotiations
promise
today, but don't unnecessarrly give away
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 221 Your more than you should The arrangemenl
attempts to flatter someone today cou ld must benefit you as weU .
produc e an ellect that is quile diflerent TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The excuses
from what you're intending. Your motiva- you conceive today lor not doing things
lions will be easily diScerned and deeply you should be doing could be rather e lab·
resented.
orate . You 'll be much better off if you put
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 You're your imaginal•on and energy into producln a favorable cycle, but keep your hopes ing.
and expectations w1lhin reasonable G£MINI (May 21-June 20) Today you
bounds . You could be severe ly disap - might have to handle something rather
Wednesday, Aug. 24, 1994
pointed when you don't get everything you sticky with a sensitive friend . If it isn't
In the year ahead you might form an lhink you deserve.
done prope~y . he/she might misinlerpret
alliance with a tnend who has a dynamic CAPRICORN (Dec. 22,Jan. 19) You may your intentions and end up wnh wounded
personalily . This enlerprising pal coulc be able to acquire something today you've leelings.
have a positive eflecl on your lite
been wanting . Untortunately. however. 1 CANCER (June 21,July 22) Try lo avoid
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) You're usuall) once you get it, you might wonder if it was compelitive siluations today where your '
a prelty good bargain hunter, bul toda) worlh the effort.
wort&lt; is concemed. Thera's \chance you ~
you might buy two unrelated items anc AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) An might mismatch yoursen against a seaJ
knowingly pay more lor Ihem than they • acquaintance might have uherior motives soned veleran who usually triumphs.
;
are actually worth . Virgo. lreat yourseM to today if he/she is nicer lo you than usual . LliO (July 23-Aug. 22) II spmoone asks'
a birthday gilt. Send for your Aslro-Graph To be on the sate side, stand back a bn . you tor advice IOday, slrive to be as frank!
and forthrighl as possible. You won't help ;
predictions for the year ahead by mailing and keep your guard up .
$1 .2510 Astro-Graph, clo this newspaper, PISCES· (Feb. 20-March 20) Try to resist this person by supercoatinq the truth.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Edi1od by CLAY R. ~OUAN - ' - - - - - -

lleorronge letters of
0 four
s.crombled words
low ro form fou r words

I

RHELO C

I GENAB I

If

F H E T T

The young musl know how
to rebel and conform at the same
. . . . _ .~ · lime. They have consequently
r--------~ learned how to defy their parWR Y A L E
ents and copy one - - - - - - _

f7,--,,r-.,17' -rl-,.l---l ~

'AHANDFUL

.OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
·~oF STUff

I

ITUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

Mull Soli: 18t4 llodot C.ropor
Trailer 30 R . Soii-Contolnod
Root, Air!. Sflroo, Mony ExiiWii
J10,500 ur Boot OM.., 811 AI:
0.111• ~nty C.mpgnrund a.
hind Ftlrgroundo.

81

ECCHO

I

Motor Homes
1W7 Skytorto, 18 V2 ft good
concthlon, phono oHor s:OO, 11411411-3087.

FrMman'o Hilling And ~"11inlllllltlon And 8onQ EM
Corllllod. Ro-..ot
clot. 814416-1811.
'

=::' =

C.OI'\t1ERCIAL I

campers&amp;

=e_

$2111.;,:•d

OOOOH,
MY HAIR 15
TINGLiloiG'
JUST LIKE
TH~T DANDRUFf

D~ A,.Auto;:R~~mllo,
-

Electrical &amp;
!oita1' FREE NEW Color
~ - ; 7 y - Old = . : , n1 ~
oxoollonl
And API1flo- - - ..... cowog, 1-800-482-1187
Refrigeration
•.oo; . tMt.tiO; Trlldmlll I Eurcloo Blkt, lltgllt- Toio t
Wotklna I;::,::'=""::,:..:,:..==..:.:;::,..,,_Uvlng Room 81.•
' Hoi'M IIIIN. llook In Color, Wol 1HI Ford ~ XLT . . _ Hilt P1111po, Air ~
1'001'111
••
•
OOj 814-388-11261.
.... 114o»31101.
Cob, V-8, Air, Ciullo, I lptod, Fu-~-::lllltor Elocl1fdon;
_,.,..... • Rongoo

Outlty Hoo•ahold Fumlohlngo

I&gt;ID YOU 5E.E n!AT'
5HE PATIEI&gt; ME
Olol THE HEAt&gt;'

~=,-:-:--:-::c---.,--,--

82

Com.........,_

Llm:s

East bid a brave seve n hearts. South,
looking at an ace, doubl e d . Wes t, look ing at a void. redoubled . The contract
was unb ea tabl e , g iving East -Wes t
2940 points. IDo n'l forget that you re ·
ceive a IOO · point bonus for making a
redoubled contract these days. I The
net plus of 40 pOints earned on e imp.

BORN LOSER

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

4Zio.PB, other brandt. Houoo ootr. Sol Up l'or llobllt Homo I Flllh lpptlt- _..._. wv
- . ....,... fi,SOII, 114-441- 304-171~ Ohio 114-446-2454.

SUNQUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEDS- Now
Home

Unitt fl81.00,
l..olloM- Ac'
..... 11on1

undisciplin ed raise to seven clubs .

fltwollln Punch 22 R., Doy
CNiaer Jtt B011t, 480 Ford
Jotovotor JVC CD Pllyor, \000
Won Audio Syotom, Tondom
Axle Troller, Muot Soli, $4,1100,
Firm. 114-441-0835.

Com.........,_
-r-or,
• 1,000 Ford I
~~1·Lim,. ._,.,.
oaa.
Llvo
, ~~110; 1122.
Cill

FUTU~A

PASTA

TS WIVI Ru-r
UU N-, $4,500, 1\4.441-7103.

Malnt~n~ncee

FAST CAR
111711 z.za. -

111711

At th e other t a ble , North a lso
opened four clubs . East doubl e d for
tak eo ut. South raised to fiv e clubs .
We st cue-bid s ix clubs . North made an

~kl

euua.

1ttl
Oldan gblll
luprlmt ExCIIIorl Condftlon. 1
Own«, PIW A Door l.ockt, 11tt,
Ctvloe. Alr, 411,000 Millo, 21,000
111111 Lttt On W.rnnty, $7,100,

when do ub led. S ou t h s tood hi s
ground .
The defense was accurate, Sout h
failing to win a trick in four h ear t s
doubled .
Upon scori n g up. when th1 s board

E C C H0

J D

Win one int ernational matc hpoint

Services

871.1JZ.

Americans call Na rnyats. ll shows a
s trong four · heart opening. And eve n

E C C H 0

BRWEJMA

fimp l? How?

1189 , _ Wlnno 11112 R.
Long 1~ ~~ t - Houro 0 1 Ktpl,l
1138.

76

CELEBRITY CIPHER

" Minu s 2900 ." Unex pec tedly , South's
teammate repl ied. " Wi n one "

1088 Pae., 111

I auto,
171-11111.

1WCI Dodge ~y U, V-4,
1811'1 Chryllor
Lo
- . . . loodod. 304-

understa ndin gs were bound to occur
South tho ug ht that North's four -club
openin g bid wa s what Norlh

was reached. So ulh , sotto voce, said,

. Elaht

~~~~~
_coryotto
" " ' -EqullrmOnl.
· .... prlcoo
In CAll,
-.,...
304Rolloy,....,:111.
171-11121 "'

,_mwrr;

~:~=~~:;K~&amp;~E:;R~N~ES~T~-~--=~:-:.: ~: ~: -" ': _·~-~·~· -_:j i.L~~§~-::~~=-~- -_:~::7;~=-·~_:~=·~~:_--_j

111611 Botroy 17 R. Boot And
Trolllr, ExCihnl CondltiC»'', Inboard, Outbolnl, After 5 P.M.
614-317-.

11110

·57Dined

Celebnty Copher c ryph&gt;y•a"":; itr~ ~ · eal!l'd tr ow quutallons by famous people . pasr anc.1 pres.enr
Each leU!!r rr1 ltle !,:rpher slands lor ;m o ther TOOsy"s cll/8 S equals L

unfamiliar partnerships in action, mis·

18U 24' fltrrlt pontoon boat
wnrolltr, 79 H.P., mony utroo,
excellent condition, $5500, 1141111:1-70:14.

.... l.octl ..,.,..... - - ·
114 ... 8281.
Coli 1-80G-21f7-GIITI Or 11W3l18114 Horw a= a I I neok Tralltr, 1lltlll Chryllor LISoron _,vor- 04Bb I Rogoro Wotorproollng. &amp;Farm Equipment

i

"

2IfT

1988 11ft. Ah Loo Pontoon boat, .
EVW~ruda, d~vo on trollor,
. :104-875-4461afttr lpm.

~&lt;o-+-1---+-+--+-+--+--l

Howev er. occasionally thing s don 't
I urn out as ba dly as yo u fear
Today's d eal arose during th e Pepsi
Youth F es tival . he ld las t February in
lh e Nether lands . In th e opening session everyone. in c ludm g s pon sors and
tourname nt d irecto rs. took part. Wit h

I

Boats &amp; Motora

For Solo: 1m Holiday Rulbltn
Oldo. Ctmp.. Trolltr 24 R. Root, AI&lt;
RogMcy
B~limtn,
ont Fully Soli Conta1Md _Awntna:
_ . , Exc. CGrid. 71,000 mi. 91Hpe Six Or More 1",000, Gi
Loodod, lull - · 18,800, 114- Bill Olltr, Soo AI: 0.1111

li81

Q

aren't renowned for their great se nse
of humor in th ese circumstances.

DOt&gt;(T BE DISCOURAGED ..
I'M NEW AT T~15 ..

ill VZS IOOA G~ brond , _
In Juno, $5,790.
75-4115.

112", Tri-Hull
llborglul bolo boa~ 79 hp.
Mt1Cury. oil lnjlctod, 28 lb.
thruot, lllnnltoto trollng romoto
control molor J3500, 114-1111:12087 lotondoy:J.~ctoy, llorn-o4pm,
oaklorJody.

18811 Codlllle Cou.,O O.VIIo,
t...o.dtd, RuN Good, SilO, 114-

All pass

In a pa1r tournam e nt, if you a nd
your partner have a bad result , you
can keep it to yourselves . But in a
learn event you must go bac k a nd face
your teammate s . And teamm a t es

PEANUTS

13 Goes out with
19Spy org.
21 Dawn
goddess
220klahoma
town
24 Entreaty
25 Accelerate&amp;
26 Exactly allka
27Winter
' rrecipitation
29 ca nnot tell
30Social
misfit (sl.)
33 Nobleman
36 Actor Nimoy
380bserve
41 Rodent
43Foct
45 Gives out the
cards
47 English buggy
48 Astronaut
. Sally49Smell
51 Speeds
52 Writer Ephron ·
53 Semiprecious
stone
56 Beam

By Phillip Alder

tiiGO XR200 Honda, good cond.,
J700 OBO. 304-87!&gt;-2682 ..- 17!&gt;8863.

1W7 Olda Ootto 88, 2 - · oport
rim, 307 V-8, 4 opood, dull tl·
htu!i1 t"'"k prtmorod, $1000,
814-..t-2727.

Moll AKC Yorbhlro Ttrrlor &amp;
Female
AKC
lllnhuro
Schnluzor,
very
,_ly,
m- 30W75-7Til

Supply, 114-112'~14.

East
Pass

The sun
still shines

t - Milot,

:;g.

448-1408.

Pitch, Kerr Rood, 114-a45-

Dbl.

Opening lead: •

$2,300,114-256-83111.

11177 Ford Plnlo1 low mlleaga,
vwy good concltron, $1100, 6l4tt2-2129, IMYI N~.

1871 Pontile P'-llx, 8 cyt,
autC)IIWtlc
PS, PB, am'fm
lloroo, cil, body ond - o r •••
Clllonl condMion, 17110, 614-:Z.V.
2115.

Gorden Ill""": Yellow, WhHI,
Orongo And PurDie. Ttvlor't

11187 Nlnlo 1100,

1884 24' Boot Troclcor """'-'
Boot New Molor 111811 t - Hro.
Trl. I Cover, In Woter nn Llbor
Day, $8,1100, 6-7193.

,.....,...... prlco. 304-773-5854.

r.qutnd,

4•

245-8881.

Transportation

HAPPY JACK FLEABEAGOH:
lloc:tronlc dovlco controlo lltu
In lhe homo without plltlcldt•.
Pattnled d•lgn cru1•• buret
of lklht liMo con~ rooltl.
~IIi onmlaht. AlO FOld A

Concrtte atepa w/2 8tepe and
lending, $80. Swivet n;x:klng
chtlr, $40. -5-4137.

11181 Honda XR 250 $875, 114-

AKC Maltooa, milo, 5moa. old.
304-87r.-a582 botwoon 12noonBpm.

eon, OH 1-&amp;0o-637-0528.

Ron ~vane EnttrpriHe, Jack-

ttat Yamohe ~~ "'"" good,
nlldtl .orne wc;n, $225, 8141185-4235 boloro 2:30p.m.

VI Chevy onalno, nn lowlr
unh, rurw grNl, Uale Dude
!roller, I nn tllajaclwlo, $5000.
304-882-20112.

71

North

4"'

Motorcycles
~::-:-,.--:--=...:...-,-.,..,-=-=­
t878 Hondo 400cc, $880. OBO,
304-875-44!12.

Square bol11. $1.25 to $2.00 por
bAle, tlfMfa, clover, orchard
gru•. 304-87!&gt;-3160.

AKC
Ragl.tartd
Boxer
pupo,llwno ond brindln, bolh
porwnlo on proml-, chomplon
podlgroo, 614-7'12-2208.
CFA Roglollrod Hlmoloyon Kitt - 2 Blue Polntt I 1 Sool
Point. 114-441-0771.

West

74

AKC German WI,. Hair Polnler,
malt, 10 wkt old, o.-: of hunting
otcck, U50. 3114-4176-3424.

Full Blooded COllie Pupo, Sablo
&amp; Whftt, &amp; Trl.COior. Now Atody
$7&amp;, 814-381-851 t.

Sloy Worm In Your lloblto Home
When Tho Elacl~c CION Off
51
Thlo Wlnt• Wllh An Empire
Household
Mobile Home Woll Fumoct Thll
u - No Elaclrlclty. c.u a.nGoods
· Mobile Home HTG I CLG
GOOD USED APPUANCES AI· 11-&amp;-IMII,
or 1--.a72Wo~ryoro, rol?lgondoro, Si67 F0&lt; Oottllo.
'""liM·
Applll
71
Vtno 1!!_~ ;
8~-i;;eI ,_ Sldo by oklo rohlglnltor1 1_200;
800-tw-Mn.
-riC """' irlth DIOK~n
mtcrawovo, ~,;__ _!!!_ conKlng INu Wotllbod, lflrraro, d-r,UO;I~.
C.-1, $200; Stop lllchlno
835, 11W?V-2410.
St-motlc Combulllon Air
Fumoco 1 Excotlonl Concltlon,
S6110, 114-388-113S4.

Mobile Hom•
torRent

Roglllorod Jorooy Com 2 Y11ro
Old $800, 114.;!45-ltZO.

AKC O.rmon lhorl-hllr pointer
pu~. 111 shota and wonntod, 8
wu. Auguot 271h, $200, 614-7'1231n

STORACE TANKS 3~CJC!O Oilton
Upright, Ron E...,. Enbor..-,
Jocuon, Ohio, 1-IOOo83Milza.

= n--

Uv11tcck Houllng, Anytlmo,
Anywhorw. Producoro Hllloboro
1 T~pplo
Evory Mond1y, Col
Crook Trucking, Chucll WI~
llama, 814--245-5018.

Concreto &amp; Platlc Septic
Tanka 300 ThN 2,000 Gallon•

toto lor rwnl, 304-175- Royol Ook mom-lp, lncludll
cout to cout,

Un............ 2 b?d'OOft'l houla.
e.polod A ....,, no ptto,

South

BARNEY

304..a7!-3378.
.loop $12.000.
Flborglo•
Top w lllooro,
~~~all Oro WI fltrctworo, .
81
3
-~.:...:.:..:...:.·:__ _ _ __

Livestock

h-.-+- 1--+--J

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

~=o~'~"'~"'="':'=·'~=====-~==========--1•1ze,
s.:

Pomporod Plio by Sonyo, !lou
grooming, bathing, 111 broods.
304-882-3730.

Rolrlgorotoro, Slov11, Wuhtrt
And llryoro, A8 Roooncltlonod
And O.uronllldl fltiO And Up,
Will Oothw. _ . . _ , _

Merchandise

tAQ109742
3 2

•a

Mll11, 83,'11)00·! Con Bo ~on At:
Galllpollo O.ly T~buno, 826
Third Avo.-, O.lllpollo, 114-

Building

9 Ava ric ious to
the max
tO Clan
1t Hll hard

• 9 3
W3

1Q8t Dodge Ram Van &amp;0,000

1 0231.

3 Room Ollloo lulll With
Privott Tolltl In - . , FIN
Proof Blda. Clllllorrlo Htoldrtt
814-448-~ Or 114 441 2812.

1

11188 Toyott 4x4, $4,1100, 114~-81158.

•KIOB6 2

SOUTH

4 WD's

1881 Joop Chlfclwl UmHod,
t20,000ml., very good cond.,
JT.IOO. 304-882-357f oftor 6pm.

Ulld 3 Ton Pocugo Air Condhlonl!1 1 U11d Eloctrk: Fur·
~. Metal Door Framee, Maonoct s~uo., 814-44«HH30B.

46 Space for Rent

304·773-5881, ....... wv.

Vans &amp;

EAST

•A K 6 5

...• J. 8 6 5

$TA1US ..

1881 V2 Nlooan pickup. ~
ltandard, 87,000 mil•,
condhlon, m•t Mil, $5000, 814
1111:1-7184.

Supplies
Block, brick, plpoo, win- · llntoto, otc. Cloud• Wlntoro, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 81424U12\

F - Will Fllrw For Ford
Explorer Sporll, Cl- 3 AMM
HHch With Swoa Soro I Troller
Brokll, Sharp AK Ptroonll 0..
goniEor, Cobro 25 LTD Clullc
CB Smhh Con&gt;nt IEioctrlc
1JpN11tor, 114-317-41248.

Sllllllna with -.a.
AloO trilltr ..., rlvor. lilt
hook-upo. C.U olllr 2:00 p.m.,

Houses lor Rent

4 Bod""""" 1 112 Sotho,
Rllldonlllt Aroo, CIOII To
"-~tot, Excollent Condhlon,
Socu11ty D-lt, S800tllo. 114~.;zose Evontngo.

Fret

73

t Year Old 24x4 Above Ground
Pool, Wllh All A&lt;:coooorioo,
Al8o, 18 CU. Ft., Admiral
Rohlgtnotor Good Condition,
Aoklng: iin, 814-388-1080.

::w.

1D caJSID£R MY WIMRRI£0

304-87~288.

55

Furn~~ce,

WEST
•QJ108 72
wAQJ 71

tWO Bronco, Ectdlo -or. lUll

Merchandise

o..

MY MQTH!;:R lUD M£ 1t1AT

f'R:A'vl 1-j)\IJ ()IJ Sl-t IS GaiJG

445-2342.

Pluo, 304-175-4084.

EH&amp;cltncy
Klechen,
Laun*y, 114 311 1721.

Chevrolet, Ford, Dod~ pickup
bode. Sho&lt;t 0&lt; ion(. No Nil.

t COA&gt;onono Slovo Top, Dvon,
Dlohwuhor, Doublo Bowl Sink,
Ronao Hood, 1-800-28U308,
114«116308.

80,ouo BTU

• K3
•KQJ109765

1801 S-10 Toh~, loldod, blk on
blk, 4.3 l., 6M..:J67-0122 lftor
4:30.

Miscellaneous

sttoplng R - $15 "- Doy.
eon.truc:tton
Wotcomo,

8114.
2 Baclr_, N.G.H.S. Stove,
Rohlpotor. Wot• And TIWih
Ptld 8325 Pluo 8325 O.poon,
114-388-11181.

54

• 9 5

EEK&amp; MEEK

01 Worronty, 614-4411-84111.

Antiques

PIIIIIM!rgh Pllnto callng
palnl 17.811 ..... Lilli rodwooil
rw - r otOin SI.W got Point

w-

t.IC,T .

OONAlO SMITH ASSOCIATES:
FINE ANTIQUES- Aml&lt;lcon on
chilli, on glla,_lllvor, lumhwo:
lolcCcJr R011vlloo, ole. COLLECTIBLES- prlnta, poltef'l, toot.,
poltlfJ, c:roch, - - . Ja~,,bol­
tlle, boollt, toyo ole. ALwAYS
BUYING ARROWHEAD!I. Top
dollar paid OM piece or one
hundrod.
APPRAISALS,
40
JMI'II exputence. Buy or Mil .
PI- caiii14-W2.;z&amp;22.

Roomo lor ront • wook or month.
Storttna 11 $121111- 011111 Holll.

Tralltr

41

53

1801 GIIC Sonoma 414 Extondod C.b, Slo Loadod, Excolont

CondhJon, Tlh, Cru6M, Balanc:e

Sponlng Goods

Compulor,
Compltlo
$850;
Ltmpo fiOl Twin Bodo fl5; 114441-1203 Anor 8 P.M.

Rooms

IO M•~T - WA .. TED

• IllS'

Now 223 RMio AR11 Style Buoh
Moot~, FuN Military Conllguratlon, i!U , Inc:h -vy Blrrel, Con
Tou lnto!MIIng Trade, Al10
fltvo Stvorol 9KS't, 8 Bl""'
Llno, Golllpolto, 114~&amp;-t8a2
BootAft•O.rlo.

Rutlond,

AIINI ldVortiMig In
lhll n o - l l oubfld lo
tho Fodorol Fotr HOIIUig Ad

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

W-

Homes lor Sale

4 Acr11 OM Adell_, Plu Cor- 114 us;15ao.

porlonct~Kl-lodao
Of ·
And
F-.1
Roauitlono
And
Abltily To AIIPIY "Thoro To Tho 4 Bod
1 llllh Kft...._
Dolly Mtnoga..- Of - • •• __ ,
Ctro And p_,not It LR, DR, In Good LDc:oltron, eto.
8 -ulrod. Tho Abll~ To Stlmu- To ~l 1 ..1 . - Soctlon,
.....
814-448-73..,,
:104-7611-7111
111e C~:~J911'.tlve earn Work -•100 .._..,.._bl
And
To llonftor
AlpactoAro
01
Aotldonl
Ctro •11
Procnm
Ottlrod. Contld "'rho Admlnltlrotorl P I - C.ro Contor, 179 P nociMI Drlvt 0.~
Mpot~lo 454131, 81~7112.
lluot
Botora Soptomhor I,
111114. E. •
POSTAL JOBS
81111 t11.41 Mr. F« Exam And
AlrPIIctllon Info. Ct11J21111 ~
Ph Ext. Oltllt, I A. . .. P.M.,

31

lot l'lfll In

$275/mo. pluo utllhlll, 114-W:z-

...... 304-75'-71111.

.

0111 Hill Trucking Compony
ExpononcoG Soml T...,.
tor Trlllor 0rtVIfl IOTRI Eocottont Ply, 814-882-41111

Nlco 2 I ~ bedroom mobllo
holnll In Middleport, 114-W:z5851.

te n 1nc h es 1 A new world record'"

52

fi-G A ~~~~"'A\1 of [I'IV~)li61\T.

lf-1""

Wuhor, Dfyor, Col..- T.v.,
Mlerowava Stove, FrMzw, Air
CondH'-, Mloc. 614-256-1236.

8 23 94

Answer to Previous Puzzle

I

f--,.,6_,,-.,,r-.,,r-..,.,,7---l
.

.

.

.

.

_

G)

•

Complete the chuckle quoted
by ldl.ng m the m1ss1ng words

'---l.-.L.--''-..L.-L...J you develop fr om step No 3 below

@)

I

UN SCR AMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Guffaw - Quail- Unfit ~ Outwit - QUITTING

.I've come to the conclusion that most people don 't
mtnd gotng lo work. What they are really irritated by is the
long watt unttl QUITIING time.

AUGUST 231

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday,August23, 1994

Second time around gives· widow rollicking love affaircompamonsrup or fmancial security.
Instead, at the age of 63, I find
myself mvolved m a passiOnate,
rolhckmg love affau wnh a
marvelous w1dower who IS 70. We
spend a great deal of ume laughmg,
mostly at our own follies . We will
be mamed as soon as some rouune
mauers are settled. .
If more people rcal1zed that a love
affaH at our age can be JUSt as
cxcitmg and grand as for people m
thCif 20s, II m1ght happen more
often. Actually, a late lov~ 1s _more
fun. We have none of the mev1table
chtld-reanng problems.. Nor do we
have the tens1on-producmg struggles

Ann
LanderS
199J. lOS AngR AS

r.,..,es Syrldoeate ara
Cr~..:1ors

Svndca te"

Dear Readers.· I am on va•alilln,
bu1 I have lefc behillli some af my
favorite columns thai you may have
missed 1he {us/ rime aroMd. I hope
you enjoy chcm. -- Ann Lllnders
Dear Ann Landers: I became a
widow in my early 50s. When my
husband died, I was sure if I
married agatn il would be for

that young people face in a geuing her to reconsider when
DEAR D.: Because of the
profession or a business. May all another man shouted~ "Goaheadand advances in communication,
your readers have the same good JUmp. Nobody w1ll m1ss you. especially TV, we know instantly
fortune that we are enjoying' -Nobody g1ves a damn." The woman what is happening in all parts of the
LUCKY IN GREENWICH
Jumped. She d1ed two hours I~ter. world . Bizarre incidents get
DEAR LUCKY: Beautiful. Just The man who had baited her mto immediate and complete coverage
beautiful. I'm happy for you. I'm sure _leaping to her death laughed and -- and they make a strong impact
millions of readers join me in walked away.
There have always been hate,
wishing you both all the best .
The dead woman's landlord rushed killing and nuuy people on the loose.
Dear Ann Landen: Somethmg to the scene. He sa1d she had been A country that has grown in
happened in our town recently, and mental~y 1ll for some lime but population and complexity as ours
1 just couldn't behcvc 11. A woman
wouldn I seek help. My question IS has must expect more of ail kinds
stood on a window ledge three
th1s~ Ann: What is this world of people- Cfll7jes included.
stories above the ground,
commg to? We read about so many
Dear Readers: It seems there's
threatening to jump. A man below
b = thmgs happening. It didn't been a great deal of speculation over
was pleading with her not to. It
used to be thts way. Are there more the years as to what a Scotsman
appeared that he had succeeded in
crazy people? Are our laws too soft? wears under his kilt, if anything.
I am nearly 70 years old, and I can't
Tommy Mcintire, a wild Irishman
remember a ume when there was so who enlivened the Detroit newspamuch hate, l&lt;1lhng and crazy people per scene until his death was once
loose. Can you explain it? -- seized with curioslly reg~g that
DIXON, ILL.
old question , "What does a

Scotsman wear under his kilt?"
One afternoon, fuU of booze, he
was covering a parade of the Essex
Scottish regiment at Windsor. Suddenly, he was struck with :he sudden impulse to learn the truth. He
rushed out and peelced under the kilt
of a sturdy and muscular marcher.
When asked, "What did you learn?"
the answer was "WeU, he knocked
me cold, and when I came to, l
couldn't remember."
Wha1's 1he 1nuh abow1 pol, co:
caine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed atu!
downers? 'The Lowdown on Dope"
has up-10-the-minute information on
drugs . Setu! a self-addressed, long ,
business-size envelope and a check
or money order for $3.65 (this ineludes postage atu! handling) to:
Lowdown, c/o AM Landers, P.O.
Box 11562. Chicago, f/1. 606/10562 (In CIUIOda. setu! $4.45.)

_ __..;_Community calendar---hall.

TUESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Levy committee, Eastern Local School District,
7 p.m. Tuesday at the high school.

RACINE - Parent meeting for
first and second graders, Letart and
Racine Elementary, 7 p.m. Tues day, Southern Junior High school .

RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m . Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.

FASHION BOARD NAMED -The 1994
Meigs County 4-H Fashion Board was selected
following the annual fair style show Wednesday
afternoon. Becky Culverson of Gallia County
was the judge. Named to the hoard which plans
4-H fashion events, participates in style shows,

and experiences fashion outings during the year
were lert to right, Melissa Dempsey, Noelle Pickens, Cynthia Cotterill, Billee Pooler, Christy
Drake, Kelley Grueser, Jamie Drake. Jill Lemley, Pamela Neete, and Amanda Neece.

..

No Rain Checks
Will Be Issued
•

RACINE - Racine Masonic
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM. special meeting, Tuesday, 7:30 with work in
third degree.

POMEROY - Meigs High
School Athletic Boosters, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at school. Plans for
upcoming sports season. Public
invited.

MrDDLEPORT- Bible school
at Wesleyan Bible Holine ss
Church, 75 Pearl St., Middleport, 7
to 8:30p.m. through Friday.

BEDFORD - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department
committee, Tuesday, 7 p.m., town

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Alzheimers and

ONE DAY SALE

Related Disorders support group, I
to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center. Topic,
"Save Your Back".
POMEROY - Zoning committee of the Village of Pomeroy,
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the municipal building.
POMEROY - Big Bend Stemwheel Association meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at Carpenter's
Local Union Hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Youth League end-of-year meeting
6:30 p.m. at the park for anyone
interested in coaching or participating in youth league next year.

Prices In Effect While
Quantities Last

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1994 ONLY
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GOLDEN COUPON
ll LIBERTY COUPON
ll
GAV COUPON
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CHEESE

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7.250Z.

:

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I I

LIMIT 7 PLEASE

1

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40Z.CAN

2/$1 00 !

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Reg. $1.49 size

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24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

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10 Oz. links or 1 Lb. roll

16 OZ. PACK

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7

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489
Pick 4:

6749

Page 4

ent1ne
Vol. 45, NO. 79

2 Sectiono, 12 Pageo 35 tenia
A Multimedia Int. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 24, 1994

Copyright 11194

DEP issues response
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A 17-page response by the Divi sion of Environmental Protection was issued and mailed Tuesday to
groups and citilcns who have written and expressed their fears
about the proposed Apple Grove Pulp &amp; Paper mill.
The response answers questions posed about the wa~tewater discharge and industrial landfill permits that were issued Aug. 5, plus
fears over polluted water, toxic fish, risks to endangered species and
health hazards from dioxin, a byproduct of the pulp and paper
industry's chlorine-bleaching of pulp for bright, white paper.
Some of the concerns and answers issued included:
• Concerns that similar facilities have caused odor and water discoloration.
The DEP said officials visited the mill in Alabama owned by the
same company, Parsons &amp; Whittemore, and did not encounter any
noticeable discoloration or odor.
• Concerns about human health involving dioxin.
The DEP said limitations to protect waters from adverse impact
are based on the restricted discharge quantities set by the state Environmental Quality Board.
• Concerns over dioxin's impact on aquatic life, endangered
species, livestock and wildlife.
Some people have noted studies by the U.S. Fish &amp; Wildlife Service and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that showed mussels
and fish in the river already contain levels of dioxin. Some recommended another study of the Ohio River before issuin~ a permit.
Others have said the DEP chose to ignore all available diOxin .background data.
The DEP said in response that this assertion was false . DEP does
not believe the water quality standard is currently being violated
and also does not believe the proposed mill represents a significant
dioxin discharge source.
• Concerns from the U.S. Fish &amp; Wildlife Service about effects
of the mill on the endangered bald eagle and pearly mussel.
The DEP said it asked the company to submit an annual freshwater mussel monitoring proposal, subject to agency approval.
Although not anticipated, the response said, additional sampling
and dioxin analyses for game fish will be required if downstream
sampling results exceed water quality limits.
• Concerns that the DEP may be persuaded to support the permit
application because of economic considerations and influence from
government officials.
. The DEP said its review was based only on environmental
1ssues, and had nothing to do with site selection property value decisions or timber industry regulations.
. Groups or citizens seeking to appeal the water quality permits
ISSued Aug. 5 have unul mid-September to file a notice of appeal
with the Environmental Quality Board, 1615 Washington St. East,
Charleston, W.Va. 25311.

ODOT urges drivers to stay
right at bridge construction
Travelers on State Route 7 who
stop for the construction on a
bridge just south of the Kyger
Creek plant are urged by the Ohio
Department of Transportation to
stay to the right.
Traffic pulling left of center at
the site is causing detector loops
embedded in the pavement to trigger the traffic signal to red, Philip
Roberts, project engineer,
explained.
"During peak traffic flow periods, as long as a vehicle crosses the
detector every five seconds, the
traffic signal in that direction will
stay green for the maximum time
of four minutes," he said.
"As soon as there's more than a
five-second-break between vehicles, the system will go to a red
light and traffic in the other direction will get a green light," Roberts
added.
Vehicles are pulling left of center before reachin~ the detector,
Roberts said, partiCularly in the
southhbound lane in the evening.

GOOD ONLY 8-24·94

ODOT to bid first phase of
connector project by October
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Area citizens made no formal
objections at a public hearing for
the
ftrsl
phase of the
Ravenswood/Route 33 Connector
Tuesday night in Pomeroy. The
2.25-mile stretch should be bid and
so ld by October, paving the way
for construction next spring and
usc by the spring of 1996.
The 18.6-mile connector which is divided into four sections
- from Rock Springs to the
Ravenswood, W. Va., bridge is
scheduled for completion by 2000,
said Nancy Yoacham, spokeswoman for the regional Ohio Department of Transportation office in
Marietta. Design, sale and construction of the project hinges on
funding - both state and federal,
Yoacham said.
But the remaining corridor,
especially from Five Points 10 the
current state Route 124, crosses
environmentally-sensitive areas
and historical sites, said John
Dowler. ODOT district 10 director.
Dowler assured the audience of
about 50 people that money is
already earmarked for the first
phase of the connector - so no
delays in construction will occur.
A construction company will
sign a $16 million contmct for the
2.25-milc section by late October,
Dowler said.
Engineering costs could total
$755,000, while right-of-way purchases could exceed $800,000. The
section should be open for travel by
the spring of 1996. The project will
be 80 percent federally-funded and
20 percent state-funded.
The state legislature continues

CRITIQUING THE CONNECTOR - State
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D-Circleville, discusses
the Route 33/Ravenswood Connector with
Nancy Yoacham. Yoacham, a spokeswoman for
the Ohio Department of Transportation, helped
clarify questions about the first phase of the pro-

to waver on whether more fund s Countian. "But we'll contmue to
for highway development should get it all completed."
Although no complaints were
be pumped into the state, sa id
George Collins, .administrative raised during the formal session of
the meeting, once the tape recorder
assistant for District 10.
"I was hoping that we'd have was turned off area residents spoke
the other sections already worked up about the rest of the project.
on," said Collins, a native Meig s
Cecil Rice, who lives in Sutton

Education.
Brown displayed several books
currently used by her students, all
of them outdated with the exception of spelling books she purchased with her own money.
In addition there arc not enough
books to go around, she said,
meaning students cannot take the
books home for assignments.
"When we buy new books we
should buy for LD as well," said
Randy Humphreys, vice president
of the board.
.
Part of the problem is that not
enough money comes from the

Jackson sheriff fined

bxL~J~f~~?(~~-c~.~~o~~~~~~c~

was
malicious intent. We believe
should he ever become involved i~
another campaign, he will fare far
better and learn a great deal from
these proceedings,'' she said.
In the agreement, Kiefer admitted that a $500 campaign contribution listed as coming from Karen
Fulton came from a number of
sources: that he failed to report a
$500 contribution made by the Big
W Coal Co. on a pre-election
report: and that his campaign
finance report listed two expcnditures for advertising on a Jackson
radio statiori', which had donated
the time.
Other allegations concerning
Kiefer's campaign finance committee were dropped as part of the
agreement.
Former deputy James Manering
filed the complaint against Kiefer.

Trial dates set for Pomeroy men

L-----------------------------~
BEST IN THE FRANCIDSE- Vaughan's Cardinal in Middleport was recently named the top store in tbe Cardinal chain for
qualities sucb as, sales growth, special sales, working on community projects, store cleanliness and merchandising techniques. Pictured bere i~ tbe store's produce section are from left: Dodger
Vaughan, assiStant store manager Micbl King, regional retail consultant Jim Leitz and store accouatant Gale Patterson. The Middleport grocery store competed with 170 stores in the chain to win
grand prize trips to Maumee Bay near Toledo. (Sentinel pboto by
George Abate)
'1

•

ject that should be built by the spring or 1996.
Dirt could be moved beginning this fall on the
2.5-mile stretch from Rock Springs to Five
Points, Yoacham said. (Sentinel photo hy George
Abate)
Township, sa id he would fight a
proposed section i[ it cuts lhrough
the midrtle of hts home and greenhouses.
"I worked two jobs seven days a
week my whole life to build these
greenhouses and farm," Rice said.

Continued on page 3

Meig$ Local Board mulls LD textbooks

During morning peak flow, and By JIM FREEMAN
lhroughout most of the day, traffic Sentinel News Stan·
has been moving smoothly, he
"Someday man may sec Earth
added.
from the Moon."
"In the evening is the real probWhile that statement invokes
!em," Roberts said.
images of pre-moon shot visionarln order to maintain the green · ies. it is also something some
light for a longer time period, Meigs Local School District learndrivers are urged to stay in the right ing disabled students see in their
lane until they reach the stop bar, science book- an outdated edition
he said.
from 1968.
Carla Brown, an LD teacher at
Access to the bridge was closed
to one lane Monday as a recon- Bradbury Elementary. addressed
struclion and widening of tile span the topic of books for learning disgot underway. The $508,642 pro- abled students at Tuesday's meetject, contracted to Belville Con- ing of the Meigs Local Board of
struction Co., Waterloo, is to be
complete by July 31, 1995, accordingtoODOT.
However, Roberts said, twoway traffic is to resume Nov. 15.
"If at all possible, the contractor
wants to finish the job this fall," The Ohio Elections Commission
Roberts said. "However, weather said the Jackson County sheriff did
and the availability of materials not maliciously falsify his 1992
will be the key factors in whether campaign finance report, but still
or not the contractor finishes the must pay a $5,000 fine. .
jllb this year."
Shenff Gregg K1efer stgned an
apeement admi~ting he falsified
hts records, averting a hcanng. He
said he has admitted from the
beginning that he made mistakes.
. K1efer's attorney, John_ Fartherm_g, told ~?e comm1ss1on th~!
K1eferwas very unsoph1sUcated
regardmg catnprugn finance reports
and there was no intent to launder
money.
"He's learned a very serious
and responsible lesson," Farthering
smd.
The commission on Tuesday
issued the $5,000 fine, which
amounted to a "gracious action of
the commission," said member
Judith Moss.

(PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
NO RAIN CHECKS WILL BE ISSUED)

PRICES EFFECTIVE AUGUST 24, 1994 ONLY

Low lunlghlln 60s, partly
cloudy. Thursday, partly cloudy,
htgh In upper 80s.

•

---,

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
•

Pick .3:

Buckeye 5:
10-12-14-28-35

10 AM- 2 PM
COUPON GOOD FOR S TRIPLE
TONY'S PIZZA VENDOR COUPONS OF SOC OR LESS
SQUARES ·
5

Ohio Lotterv

Baseball
negotiations
resume

Trial dates have been set for two
Pomeroy men charged with unrelated felony counts.
A trial date of Tuesday was set
for 22-year-old Donald Edwards
who faces two counts of receiving
stolen property, two counts of
aggravated burglary and one count
of grand theft.
Edwards is accused of receiving
the stolen propeny of two of his
Mulberry Avenue neighbors, Tom
Reed and Probate/] uvenile Judge
Robert Buck. He is also accused in
the alleged March 10 and 19 bur-

glaries of Buck's residence and in
the alleged theft of property from
Dwight Cullums.
Aggravated burglary is an
aggravated felony of the first
degree while receiving stolen propeny and grand theft are fourth· and
third-degree felonies, respectively.
A trial date of Sept. 29 has been
set for 21-year-old James Braley
who faces three charges of corrupting another with drugs, each a
felony of the third degree.
He is accused of giving drugs to
three minors on Mav 31.

state to purchase LD textbooks,
Superintendent Bill Buckley sajd_
"We live in a high-poverty
area," he said. Areas with high
poverty tend to have more learning
disabled and developmentally
handicapped students, he added.
Following Brown's presenta tion, the board instructed Buckley
to order enough of I he district· s
new math and language arts books
for the LD students.
·
In personnel matters, the board
accepted the resignations of EMIS
coordinator Gary Walker, high
school teacher Kimberly Adkins.

substitute teacher Bryan Durst and
mstruct10nal aide Frances Shrimplin.
In addition, the board hired the
following substitute teachers: John
Barcus, Alicia Bauer, Diana
Bauserman, Shawn Bush, Jodi Dailey, SHaron Edwards, Michelle
Gillilan, Mary Boggs Grim, Beuy
Hutchtson , J.R. Kennedy, Vinas
Lee, Nathan Robineue, Deedrah
Simmons, Rita Slavin (tutor only),
Michele Starcher and Craig Wright
The board also hired substitute
aides, secretaries and custodians.

Continued on page 3

More public comment
is sought on proposed
pulp mill project
. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Two environmental permits
1ssued for the proposed $1.1 billion pulp mill in Mason County
changed signtficantly enough from the draft to fmal"stages to
prompt a trade group to ask for more public comment, the Huntington Herald-Dispatch said in today's edition.
The Affiliated Construction Trades Foundation has asked the
Division of Environmental Protection to allow public comment on
the wastewater discharge permit and an industrial waste landfill permit, both issued Aug. 5 for Apple Grove Pulp &amp; Paper.
The foundation said it considers the final permit to be so substantially different from the draft permit that it deserves public comment
as if it were the original.
Steve White, director of ACf. said the permit was changed by a
number of things, including upping the amount of dioxin by a factor
of m He said this i~ most significant change to the final penn its.
Elt McCoy, DEP s deputy drrector.told the Herald-Dispatch that
the change in the dioxin limit occurred after the company pointed
out that the DEP was inappropriately applying some toxicity numbers. McCoy sa1d the DEP looked at what the company said and
agreed.
"We were applying the human health numbers to the acute toxicity in fish, which is totally inappropriate," McCoy said.
The switch changed the formula for the discharge limit from
being calculated on 5 percent of the river flow to 50 percent of the
nver now.
. ACf, a group of construction unions based in Charleston, saif it
1s not opposed to the pulp and paper industry, but is opposed to the
Apple Grove mtll because the parent company, Parsons &amp; Whittemore, w1ll not comm1t to hiring West Virginia workers and has not
agreed to usc a chlorine-free bleaching process.
. Chlonne, when used to bleach pulp, creates minute amounts of
diOXIn.

Norm Stcenstra of the West Virginia Environmental Council
cla1ms the DEP 1gnored public comment about dioxin. ·
White added that his ~up will determine if it should appeal the
permns altogether after IL~ environmental consultant finishes an
analys1s of the final permits.

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