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~nday nmes-sentlnel

July 25, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

Record yield for wheat seen

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meig.s County. ln,diyiduals wishing to participate an the weekly coolest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop ofT your
guess to the Dajly Sentinel, U1 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,'or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a SS prize from the

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number witb your card
or letter. No telephooe calls will be accepted. AU
coolest entries should be turned In to tbe newspaper otrk:e by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
or a tie, tbe winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Gallia County farm will be fe!l•
lured by the gallia SoU and Water Conservation
District.
•

Dairy farmers
to vote on
marketing
program
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
"Large competitOr supplies and
avmge U.S. wheat yield this year slack global demand are conSirain·
ts expecUld to top 40 bushels per ing U.S. exports and res_ulting in a
acre for lhe fJrSt ume, coming in at sharp drop in export prices," it
40.5 bushels.
·
said. "U.S. sales and commitments
That's the prediction of the remain slqggish."
Agriculture Department's Econom·
Major buyers such as China and
ic Research ~rvicc in a mid-monlh lhe fonner Soviet Union have not
situation and ·outlook summary on yet purchased U.S: wheat for the
wheat,
crop year, it noted, though there
Tqtal U.S. wheat production for have been relatively large sales to
1993 is forecast at 2.6 bfllion such major markets as Morocco,
bushels, up 6 percent from 1992, EsrP.t and Algeria.
and lhe founh largest on rec~.
' Thus, total commitments as of
"Contributing to the ex cted . .July 8 were 4 percent below a year
bumper crop were wheat rices · earlier, and the second lowest in
stronger than for most co
ting more than a decade," he said.
crops duril)g planting, a 0 percent
However, it added that total
acreage reduction program,. a larg· domestic use is projecUld 10 reach
er-lhan-nonnal portion of planted 1.26' billion bushels,'the second
area harvested, and favorable largest on record. The increased
growing coaditions in many do_mestic use largely offsets the
areas," it ••
1ower exports, leaving projected
~'d.
With wheat production the tOtal use basically unchanged from
largest since 1990 and carry-in last ye;u-.
.
stoc~s from last year up, wheat
The report noted that "heavy
supplies are forecast to be up 7 per- rains and flooding increased com
cent this year.
pri.ces just as new crop wheat was
However, U.S. wh'~t exports.in bemg harvesUld" and c•Uld generthe 199394 crop year are projected ally higher feed grain prices.
down II percent, to 1.2 billion
bushels, the l'Cpon said.
WASHINGTON (AP) - New

Scientists develop electrified
pyramids to zap farm flies
and can become a major nuisance the suburbs, farm-bred l11es have
at neigh boring homes," ,he said. become, in ·some instances, sub"With so many people m?ving into jects of lawsuits.''

.

BILL LOOKADO

MIKE SERGENT

JOINS SALES STAFF ·Gene Johnson of Chevrolet-GEO
announces tbe addition or two new salespersons. Bill Lookado,
Gallipolis, had 12 years service witb G &amp; J Auto Parts prior to
joining the staff. He is married and has four children. Mike Sergent, Pt. Pleasant, is married and has four cbildren. He has been
assoc\ated with tbe automobile business for 20 years.

Farm Flashes

Drought condition
nears 1988 level
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
.'
GALLIPOLIS - Much of our
region has rapidly moved into a
drought situation . The extreme
heat, along with some breeze, has
dried out much of the top soil that
had been ncar ideal up until the
past three weeks. If the present
trend continues, some areas in Gallia County could reach drought levels similar to 1988, within the next
two weeks.
A lot of high quality •hay has
been made in Gallia and Meigs
Counties this past week. Farmers
took advantage of the warm, dry
period to cut second and third cuttings of hay . With drying conditions for pasture growth, and a
good hay supply, it may be time to
consider strip or intensive grazing
on some of th ose good legume
meadows.
Bill Di x, a grass farm er from
Athens County , made a statement
this week that we all probably n.~d
to thmk about. He says that, he
keeps reminding himself that h~
make hts money •.n the summer.
As a seasonal Dall'yman he must
use. h•s forage at1ts htghcst quality
whtch /nay only be at four mchcs
of growth . Too often we worry
a~ut savmg the qual tty forage for
wmtcr use. In the beef co:v and calf
enterpnse, feeder calf we•ght IS put
on through m•.lk productton of the
cow and grazm~; by lhe calf. The
htghcr th e quahty of forage, the
better the pote~ttal for datly gam.
Take a few mmutes to reflect on
how and when you are usmg the
best forage on your farm.
Attcntwn Tobacco Growers!

The Gallia County Pride In Tobacco ;\ssociation is ~ponsoring a
Twthght Tobacco F1eld Tour this
nex! week Thursday, July 29th
startmg at 7:00pm. The event will
feature lhe C.A. lluncan Farm near
Northup. The tour will hlghlijlht
herbicide weed control usmg
Dcvnnol and. C?mmand, topping
pra~t•ces, vanetJes, and vegetable
opuons. An added attraction will be
the viewing of Smeltzer Rose's
Tobacco field. The tour will con·
elude with a stop at Marion Caldwell's Tobacco barn and greenhouse in Norlhup. Cold soft drinks
will be provided -courtesy of the
Gallia County Pride In Tobacco
Association. A special thanks to
these .growers for helping put this
acuvny together. Please plan to
take time to attend!
Meigs and Gallia County "pepper" growers will have the opponumty to VISit w1th Dr. Bob Precheur,
O.S.U. Extension Vegetable Speciali st thi s Tuesday, July 27th .
There will be an informal session at
,.} p.m . .at the Star Mill Park Shelter
10 Rac10 e and a second one starting
at 8 p.m: at the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center near Gallipolis.
Dr. Precheur will discuss various
production practices to maximize
yields on green and late red peppers. Dr. Precheur will be available
to do a few farm visits on Tuesday.
Please call Hal Kneen in Meigs
County at 992-6696 or myself in
Gallia County at 446-7007, We
will try to work in as many
req~sts as possible.
Ed Vollborn is Gallia C:ounty's extension agent agriculture.
'
.: -

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
· WASHINGTON (AP) _ Dairy miniature white plastic pyramid
fanners .will decide in a referendum that electrically zaps farm-bred
next month whether to continue the flies before they can migrate to
National Dairy Promotion and nearbysuburbshasbeendcvelopcd
Research ·Program, which is by Agnculture Department scienfinanced by an assessment on the tists.
milk they produce.
· The pyramids could be pl~ced
Those farmers who produced along the flyway on fanns, between
milk for commercial use during the manure where they breed and
April 1993 will be eligible to vote, . th~ areas where they become pests,
said Eugene Branstool, assistant saJd ~wrer,tce G, Pic!;ens,ll!" ento·
secretary of agriculwre for market- molog15t w1th U~DA s Agnculturing and inspection services.
~I Research Serv•ce. and one of lhe
. For the program to continue, a mv~ntors of the dev1ce.
.
s1mple maJority of those voting
I~ some cases •. they would be
must favor iL
effecuve at home s!JeS to intercept
Dairy farmers finance the pro- t1!e pes~ befo~e they get 'into lhe
gram with a IS-cent per hundred- lcitchen, he saJd.
weight asses~ment on an milk pro~he 3-f';lot-taU pyramids ~re
duced and markeUld coll\iJiercially· equipped With solar-powered gnds
in the 48 contiguous states. The on lhe s•d~ and top lhat produce a
farmers can direct up to tO cents weak electnc current that provides
per hundredweight of the assess- Ju,st enough of a shock to zap the
me~t for contribotions to qualified fl•e.s; .
. .
reg1onal, state or local promotion . Fhes - but not beneftctal
and reseaich programs.
msects - seem to .~Je attracUld .to
Authorized by the Dairy and the hg~~ reflected ~ff the whne
Tobacco Adjustment Act of 1983, pl~s~IC, Ptck~ns satd. The ~~·yra­
the program is administered by a mtd IS harmless,to humaps, animals
36-member board appointed by the and birds, ~e S31d.
.
·secretary of agriculwre.
The deVIce was desig11ed for use
"USDA is malcing every effort on farm~ tha~ .generate manure-.bred
to distribute referend 11m informa- houseflies. They are unsamtary
tion to all eligible producers,"
Branstool said.
Individuill producers may obtain
ballots, instructions and return
envelopes at county offices of the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation S,ervice from July· 21
through Aug. 16. Or they may call
•
1-800-745-5417. Any producer
needing more infonnation can call
USDA at 1-800-858-7501 until
Aug. 16.
Cooperatives that want to bloc
vote on behalf of .their producer
members must have advised their
members by July ·6 as to how they
will vote and must provide offieial
ballots to members for individual
voting. However, producer ·members may choose 10 cast individual
ballots.

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Ann·oun·ce·s a·cqui·s·"'•t•JOD
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WASHINGTON ~AP) - Hog
prices probably peaked for lhe year
in late June and early July at nearly
$50 per hundred pounds, lhe Agri·
cui ture Department says.
" Prices are expected to fall into
the low $40s per hundredweight by
late summer and early fall as production rises seasonally," the
department's Economic Research
Service said in a recent report
A record 17.3 billion pounds of
commercial pork is expected to be
produced Ibis year, it said.
".As hog prices slide into the
low $40s, returns will be near the
break-even point," the report said.
"The excessive rains in the Midwest have increasect the uncertainty
about feed costs. If feed costs
change significantly from present
levels, proctu,ccrs wiD likely reeval·

uate production plans for 1994."
Turning to cattle, the report said
supplies are increasing and fed-cattle prices went from the low $80s
in February through May io the low
$70s in July.
. .
"Excellent forage conditions
and tight feeder cattle supplies
have resulted in prices for yearling
feeder cattle remaining in the mid
$90s, in spite of declining fed-cattle prices and rising feed costs,'' it
said. _
Broiler production is expected
to eKpand around 5 percent in 1993
to 22.1 billion pounds, the repon
said, with exports likely to hit a
record high. .
Wholesale broiler prices are
forecast to average 52 cents to 56
cents per pound, compared with
52.6 .cents a year ago. ·

)

OAK HILL, W.Va. -William E.
Meador, President of Long-Airdox
Company, Oak Hill, W. Va.,
announces the acquisition of Simmons-Rand Company, Bristol, Va
Long-Airdox and SimmonsRand each have a valued reputation
for service to the mining induslry.
This acquisition of product and
manufacturing facilities, by LongAirdox, will provide the mdustry
with a very stable and responsive
organization to maintain this
stature. Long-Airdox is now the
only mining equipment manufacturer in the world to offer complete
mining systems from the mining
face through the loadout facility.
Simmons-Rand's contribution to
this newly-expanded product line
includes mine-proven Continuous
Miners; single and double arm
Roof Bolters; battery powered face
haulage equipment; and relined
products for all seam heights.
In over 50 years of developing
highly efficient mining machinery,
Long-Airdox has made many, last-

ing contributions to the mining
industry. ContinuoUs haulage is a
Long-Airdox development, dating
back to the 1950's. They supply
over 90% of the systems in use
today. They supply over 50% of all
of the underground con)leyor systems. The feeder-breaker concept
of sizing coal is another Long-Air·
doll development. Tunnel boring
advancement records hilve been set
311d broken with the lol)g·Airdox
Continuous Tunneling Conveyor
System.
Long-Airdox can also furnish a
complete line of longwall and
shonwall mining equipment; Sanford-Day mine and safety cars and
hoists; and, LADCO pneumatic
bulkbreaking systems. They are
also an established contractor for
material handling systems and
other mine-related construction
projects. Long-Airdox is a member of the
Marmon Group of companies. Simmons-Rand was a part of World.wide Ingersoll-Rand.

A

too low to qualify for a home
loan, Bank One has a special
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mortgage Joan.
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• 5% downpayment
• ,15 or 30 year term
• 3-year adjustable interest
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·
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• No private mortgage
insurance required
• All verifiable types of
income accepted

Saunders to attend ITT
DAYTON· Robert Saunders,
Crown City,, has enrolled in the
Electronics Engineering Technology program at m Technicallnsti·
tute, Dayton.
The· ?6-week program, which
begins September 7, 1993, will preparr . Sa~nders for an. entry le.vel
PQS!bon m the electromcs field. .

earlier this year. Gennan prosecutors linked him to purloined GM
documents ... The parents of Amer· •
lcaa Alrliaes and Delta Air Lines
made money in the second quarter,
a sign lhat the airline business may '
finally have reached a tepid recovery, even though. lulluty airline
UltraAir Inc.1went out of business
after only six ~onths...Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co.'s second-quarllir earnings more than tripled, whith suggested the company may finally
h11ve turned around its dowdy retail
business ... the Federal Trade
Commission deliberated but took
no· action on complaints that
Microsoft Corp. monopolizes ~e
software market ... Walt Disney
Co., sougbt lavestors who·wish
. upon a star 100 Ught yean away.
It marketed bonds thai won't
mature "ntil 20!13.

'

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mterest rate is 6.63%, and the APR is 7.24%.

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Whatever it takes:·

Fit~

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Member )'DIC

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•.

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·'

Pick 3:

106

Pick 4:

6816
Super Lotto:
4-8-10-19-21-39
Kicker:

Page4

Low tonight around 70.

054601

Clear. Tuesday, blgb lo 90s.

•
Vol. 44, NO. 62.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, f,'londay, July 26,

Multimedlolnc.

historic march----.

1 Section. 10 Pageo 35 centa

1S93 ·

AMultimediolnc. NeWfP"""
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•L

All out effort to save
Missouri town fails

McBRIDE, Mo. (AP) - As the
Mississippi River roared through a
collapsed levee, weary volunteers
tried to empty enough beer cans to
rival mountains of suddenly useless
sandbags.
.
"Those boys out there drinking
beer, they've busted their rear ends
to save this town," said Lois
Naeger; whose family has owned
and operated At's Place bar and
cafe since 1947.
Three beer-drinking, would-be
rescuers propped a small lioat on
one stack of sandbags, climbed
aboard and mocked the approaching floodwaters that broke lhrough
the levee 10 miles down river.
Couriers keP,t hauling cold suds
from the bar. 'We've worked for
weeks and there's ,nothing else to
do," declared Chalmers Berkbuealone roads used by modern automobiles. Here
ANACHRONISM - Dave Gloeckner's
gler, who opened a can under the
Gloeckner pauses to talk with Jerr Jones or
march retreating the path used by Confederate
shade of a pecan tree.
Racine at the junction or State Routes 7 and 124.
General Morgan during Morgan's Raid drew an
"Hey, want a beer?" he asked a
unusual picture of 1 Civil War soldier marching
visitor. "But drink it fast water's coming."
them."
ent reasons. One reason is to
By JIM FREEMAN
Within30 minutes, swirlin~,
Attempting to foil ow the actuincrease local recognition of the
Sentinel News Staff
smelly river water inundated Al s
event.
·
al route used by Morgan's
Many motorists in Meigs
Place and the· rest of McBride,
raiders, Gloeckner said he walked
''This
is
lhe
only
place
in
lhe
County Ibis weekend were treated
sending about 120 people scurrying
on the old roadbed shortly before
to an unusual sight, perhaps one state, Indiana or Ohio, that put up
for safety. The 20 residents of Dfl'·
reaching Langsville, walking
not seen in this county for. more any resistance against Morgan."
by Belgique also fled. The levee
through pastures and woods.
"Right from lhe beginning, in
lhan 125 years - the sight of a
had protected about 26,000 acres of
On the more contemporary
Union :;oldier marching along the Langsville, they burned their own
fannland and 60 homes.
roadways,
Gloeckner gets varied
brid~e
to
keep
him
from
crossElsewhere, about 80,000 resi. road.
reactions from passing motorists.
First Sergeant Merrill Holt of ing,' he explained.
dents of St. Joseph remained withThey dropped trees all along
"People driving by kind of : out water today after Missouri
. the 36rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
the
way
an'd
sniped
at
them
...
grin
and wave," Gloeckner combetter known locally as Dave
River floodwaters knocked out lhe
killing
18,
he
said.
mented.
"Occasionally you run . city's only water treatment plant.· It
_Gloeclcn~.Racine, a m~mber of
"The only UnijlD ca5il'alty was - into a hardcore Rebel"that looks
the 6lst OVI, spent Ibis wee!C6nd
could be midweek before lhe plant
a
serg~ant
who got his finger shot the other wily."
recreating lhe path of Morgal)'s
is restarted, officials said.
"People so far have been realmarch through Meigs County off," he said.
St. Joseph residents stood for
, "The monument out in Vinton
ly helpful, feeding me and putting . hours Sunday at water distribution
during the Civil War.
me up for lhe night." .
"When I go out to a re-enact- by the post office is the only
sit(ls. People also scrambled for
other
marker
on
Morgan's
Raid
The Meigs County Historical
ment or do somelhing like this, I
bottled water in Brownville, Neb.,
take on lhe persooa of one of the in the state of Ohio other than the Society has been selling sponsorone at Buffington Island·Park.
ships and plans to recognize
soldiers,'' Gloeckner explained.
"It's
a
shame.
There
are
many
sponsors,
Gloeckner said . In
Attired as a Union soldier,
things
that
need
to
have
historic
addition,
the
society is selling Tcomplete with rifle, boots and
markers,''
he
explained.
shirts
commemorating
the event.
other gear, Gloeckner said he
At
the
halfway
point
of
the
Area police were involved in a
For
Gloeckner,
the
march
prefers for lhe real Civil War Sol- ·
march,
Gloeckner
appeared
to
be
car
chase Saturday evenin~ which
serves
as
a:
way
to
get
in
shape.
diers to receive the recognition handling the 44-mile journey
went
across three counttes and
"Last
November,
the
doctor
instead of himself.
with
no
serious
ill
effljCts.
resuiUld
in lhe extensive damage of
told
me
to
change
my
ways,"
he
Holt was killed in actioo at the
"My
feet
are
kinda
getting
police
cruiser.
a
said.
"I
lost
33
pounds
and
did
a
Bat.tle of Winchester, Gloeckner
numb," he pointed out. "I have 10
According 10 Pomeroy Chief of
little wallcing."
explained.
Police
Gerald Rought, the chase
keep
moving
my
feet
around
to
"What
the
heck,
Ibis
is
a
good
Gloeckner said he is conductkeep
making
sure
I
have.
blood
in
started
in
Middleport around 10:30
way to do a lot of thipgs." '
ing the march for several differp.m. after officers attempted to stop
John A. Ward, 28, of Pomeroy, for
a traffic violation. From there he

Services held for slain nonunion
w9rker; double .reward for killer

If you think you'r income is

WASHINGTON (AP) - Six
new members have been appointed
to the National Porlc Board, which
promotes the marketing of porlc.
The six were chosen frQIII peo·
pie nominated by _the National Porlc
Producers Delegate Body in Denver last March. Secretary of Agri·
culture Mike Espy announced their
appoinbnents
in. mid-July.
.
-

Bidwell
winsKC
tourney

where flooding shut down water officials evacuated nearly 2,000
service for about 200 residents. · residents for fear three ·levees
The 650 residents of DeWjtt, would give way. They essentially
Neb., had just begun cleaning up surrendered one levee protecting
from several tornadoes lhat swept Valmeyer, Ill., and some 70,000
through late Saturday when the acres of fannland because of water
boiling lhrough lhe structure.
floodwaters came.
Back in McBride, about 65
The Big Blue River and two
creeks that meet near DeWitt went miles south of St. Louis, Naeger
over their banks Sunday afternoon was among the last to leave At's
and spread through most of the Place. Sbe lingered until the river
town, 75 miles southwest of was lapping at her pickup's rear
Omaha, Neb. The Big Blue was wheels before skidding off.
S screamed at her 22-year-old
expected to crest sometime today.
tanley, to flee as water
No new rain was expected in s
lhrough the bar's front and
Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and north- ru
ern Missouri until late today or bac doors.
early Tuesday, the National Weather Service sa1d.
At least 41 people dealhs have
• •
•
been linked to the Midwest flooding since it began last monlh. The
floods have caused billions of dollars in damage to homes, business
Two Mason men escaped injury
and fanns.
Despite drier weather, officials Sunday around 8:40 p.m., when the
were concerqed that more dikes, boat Iiley were riding in nearly cap- '
battered for weeks by high waters, sized, according to a spokesman
might start to crumble. At least two from lhe Mason Volunteer Fire
Mississippi River levees - ncar Department.
Fire Chief Chuck Blake said
McBride and Quincy, Ill.,- colMike
Allensworlh and Todd Ruslapsed Sunday.
sell
were
traveling in a small motor
"I lhink the water has just been
bQat
that
Allensworlh
had just purup too long on these levees," said
chased
Ibis
weekend.
Allensworth
Jack Niemi, an engineer with the
apparently
turned
the
boat too
Army Corps of Engineers in St. .
sharply, and waves caused water to
Louis.
The breach of the Sny Island ·rush into the boat.
Blake said the boat did not sink,
levee Sunday, 10 miles south of
Quincy, flooded 44,000 acre~. and .was towed to shallow water.
National Guard and Co~st Guard ' He added there was water damage
helicopters were u.sed to resc.ue to .lhe vessel's engine.
four workers from the levee, one
Bolh the Mason fire department
from a tree and one from a bulldoz- and EMS were at the scene, and
er.
.
Blake stated the Pomeroy and MidSome 125 miles to the south, dleport fire departments were on
alert.

Mason men
escape InJury m
boating accident

High-spee.d car chase ends in man's arrest

One
Mortgage can your
key .t o ho1ne ownership.

h0 g
prices have peaked G~!t~~~~~-?···

. USDA annourlces
,

Yorlc has beCome the fJflh slate to
eradicate tbe livestock disease
pseudorabies.
It joins Alaska, Maine and Utah
in achieving Stage V or "free" sta,tus in the five-stage psuedorabies
eradication pogram.
"New Yorkers who helped to
rid their livestock of this highly
contagious virus should all be commended." said Bj)ly G. Johnson,
deputy administrator of veterinary
services in USDA's. Animal and
Plant Heallh Inspection,Service.
In anolher move, the inspection
service has accepted the recommendation of the ·Na tiona! Psuedorabies Control Board to advance
tpe state of Washington to Slage 4
in the eradication process.
Pseudorabies. is a viral disease
most prevalent in swine, often
causing newborn piglets to die.
Older pigs can survive infectikon
and be carriers of the virus for life.
Other animals also can become
infecUld.
·
~tales participating in the eradi·
cauon program advance from Stage
I to Stage V.

Ohio Lottery

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The weekend burial of a slain
nonunion worker hired during a
coal strike failed to temper the war
of words between mil]ers and management.
Ed!Jie York, a 39-year-old heavy
equipment operator, was shot in the
back of the head as he drov~ past a
United Mine Workers picket line
Thursday at Arch of West Virginia's Logan County mine.
More than 16,000 union miners
are on strike in Indiana, Illinois,
Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
West Virginia and Virginia. The
walkout over job security began
May 10 .

About 300 family members and
friends packed a church in Lenore
Sunday to mourn York, fonnerly of
Columbus, Ohio.
Meanwhile, the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association, target
of the strike, doubled to $200,000
the reward offered for information
leading to the conviction of Yorlc's
killer.
· ''It is time for people to step
forward and demand an end to lhe
violence that has permeated West
Virginia and other states since this .
strike began," said B.R. Brown,
chief negotiator for the association.
The UMW has denied involvement in the shooting. Union

fled out 10 Route 7 over to the laurel Cliff Road and then got on lhe
by-pass and came into Pomeroy.
After going through Pomeroy he
went back out the by-pass where
the State Highway Patrol and the
Gallia County Sheriff's deputies
tried to stop him. During Ibis time
he hit two civilian' s cars.
He got on the Silver Memorial
Bridge and hit lhe police cruiser of

Curt McConnahay ·which disabled
his car. He attempted to flee on
foo~ but' was then caugh~
He is being held in the Mason
County jail without bond on a
charge of attempted murder and
resisting arrest wilh a $500 bond.
Charges pending from Meigs
County include driving under the
innuence, endangerment and several traffic violations.

Two injured in SR 143 auto crash

A Middleport woman and her
passenger
were injured in an accispokesman Jim Grossfeld said Sunde_nt
Sunday
afternoon on State
day the reward announcement was
disrespectful and ill-timed.
- Route 143 that also caused heavy,
"This is a day when our disabling damage to her vehicle,
thoughts and prayers should be the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
with Mr. York's loved ones and on Highway Patrol reported.
Beverly K. Nappier, 25, was
the need to restore calm to lhe coal
fields," Grossfeld said ill Washing- norlhbound on SR 143 in Salisbury
Township when she lost control of
ton, D.C.
No arrests· had been made by her vehicle, went off the left side of
early today, but troopers said they the road, struck an embankment
know what kind of gun was used
and believe ' Iiley know where the
shots came from.
York was working for a subcontractor at the mine. It was his fll'st
day on lhe job.

and overturned.
Nappier was cited for failure to
control. Her vehicle was towed
from lhe scene.
Nappier and Donald W. Hunnell, also of Middleport, were
transported to Veteran's Memorial
Hospital by the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service. Nappier was treated and released; Hunnell'was held for observation.

The Patrol also cited two for
driving under the influence
between Sunday and today.
Cited early this morning for
D.U.I., failure to control, expired
registra'tion and underage consumptiOn was Matthew A. Eblin,
19 , 467 Third St., Middleport.
Cited for D.U.I., left of center and
no seat belt early Sunday morning
was David
. F. Reed, 47 38301
Rockspnngs Road, Pomeroy.

.

June home sales up 1.9 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sales
of previously owned homes
increased 1.9 percent in June, the
third straight advance and the
beginning of what a real estate
trade group pre-d icts will be a
strong summer season.
The National Association of
Realtors said today that sales of
existing sin~le-family homes
tOtaled 3.69 mtllion at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate, up from a
·revised 3.62 million in May. The
May rate first was estimaUld to be _
3.61 million.
.
But sales were mixed regional·
)'y; rising in the Northeast and
South, while falling in the West
and Midwest.
• Realtors President William S.
Chee said the overall gain reaff'll'ffis
earlier predictions of an active
summer, traditionally a busy sea·
son as families try to get settled in
newly purchased homes before
&amp;ehool starts.
1\ r

Sales, which have risen each
month since a 2.6 percent decline
in March, have been spurred
recently by low mortgage rates and
relatively stable prices, the Realtors
said.
For the first six months, theJO
were 3.1 percent over the same
period of 1992.
Thirty-year, fixed-rate mortgages averaged 7.42 percent in·
June, down from 7.47 percent in
May, according to surveys by the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corp. They stood at 7.20 percel)t
last week, a 22-year low.
At the same time, the median
price of a previously owned home
was $108,900, up 2.3 percent from
May but just 3.2 percent from June
1992. The median means that half
of the homes cost more and half
cost less.
Realtors economist John A.
~uccillo said prices are expected to
nsc at a moderate pace over the
\~

next several years, compared to lhe
surges experienced in lhe 1980s.
But despite low mongage rates,
sales of new homes plunged 21
~ent in May, virtually erasin~ a .
21.5 percent gain a month earlier.
Although analysts had said the
market could not sustain the huge
April jump, Iiley were surprised by
the size of lhe decline.
The goyemment will repon on
June new home sales on Friday and
economists at .Donaldson, Lufkin &amp;
Jenrette Securities Corp. in New
Y'ork predicted 'a 10.5 percent
increase, recovering abuui half of
the May loss.
They said sales ptobably
increased iil all regions of the
nation except the rain-drenched
Midwest.
Regionally, the Realtors said
sales of previously owned homes
sho up 14 percent in lhe Nonheast,
to a 570,000 annual rate. The median price there.was $144,000.

TWO INJURED • A Middleport driver and
her passenger were Injured In an accident on
State Route lfl3 Sunday afternoon In which the

vehicle (center) went ofT the roadway and over·
turned (Sentinel Jlhoto by Dave Harris).

�•

'

.

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel ·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •
Monday, July 26,1993
. ..

The Daily Sentinel
Ill COurt Street
Pomeroy. Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF·THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

WASHINGTON - Did a private appeal from Sen. Alfoose
D' Amato, R-N. Y., to President
Clinton ti the balance in favor of
apprehen~ng the Muslim cleric
who has boen implicated in terrorist plots? Although the evidence is
onl circumsuintial it helps shed
li
on one of the iin ering myst!es behind the cracJng of a terrorism ring
The story. begins wi!" a phon.e
caD from Clmton to D Amato on
the morning of Jtme 25. D'Amato,
t fi st, as understandably suspiIf
w the years, D, ~ato
·
,s
acious.
Over
friends have telephoned h1m pretending to be presidents and ~ine I secretan'es• a"nd this seemed like
a perfect ~~ion to pull a S;imilar
prank. Th!s nme, however, 11 was
the real thmg,
,
The day before, D A',"ato had
been ~ed as~ of the ~gets of
a terronst plot, which also mcluded
plans to bo_mb several key..New
Yo.rk Ioca!10ns and assassmate
Umted NanonsSecretary G~neral
Boutros ~outros Gha.h. Clinton
was. calling to set th_e record
straight, and to offer h1s condolences.
"I reaDy called to say I'm concerned about the terronst threats,
and I'm going to take terrorists .on

LEHEW
Controller

~ARGARET

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General~anager

LETJ'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 30Q
words . All letters are subject to editing and must be. signed with DOllie,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he published . Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Ohio changes law
for film industry
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
· COLUMBUS - Bickering over a workers' compensation refonn bill
was put aside in the Legislature last week for a nod to the yotmger brolher
of "Horne Alone" star Macaulay Culkin.
.
.
Actually, it was more of a bow to the film mdustry, whiCh for some
reason has laken a shine to Ohio.
. .
.
. '
,
Hollywood is .pouring more than $20 million I!£1S year 10to the Sl(lte s
economy. Three .movies have been made here thiS year. Two otherS are
planned and a sixth is possible.
,
A House-Senate conference committee, trying to prepare the worlcers
compensation biU, took a break Wednesday to consider Ohio's child·labor
laws.
Margaret Van ~eter, spokeswoman for the Department of 1ndusm'al
Relations, asked for an amendmentlo remove. any legal doub~ that ch1!d
actors- particularly I !-year-old Kieran Culkin- can work m a mov1e
to be filmed next month in Cleveland.
.
.
The old law said childien under 14 are not aUowed to worlc m Oh10
and 15- and 16-year-olds cannot worlc after 9 p.m.
.
,
There are some exceptions, including one for theatrical productions.
But Ms : Van Meter said lhat exception applie~.to plays an~ live productions, such as the outdoor drama "Tecumseh near Ch1lhcothe, but
not to movies.
.
··
rodu ·
The amendment, which adds movies, radio and televiSIOn p
cbons
to the list of exceptions, won prompt approval and became a part of the
bill that Gov. George Voinovich siJ~ned into law two ~ys later.
.
Kieran Culkin appeared briefly rn "Home Alone, and has acted w1th
Jean-Claude Van Damme in "Nowhere To Run." He also appeared m
.
" Father of lhe Bride" and "Home Alone 2: Lost in New Yor~"
The Department of Develo~ent's film bureau said he w11l appear rn
· MOM's "My Summer Story,' the saga of family bonding during a memorable summer.
It wiD be shot in Cleveland starting around Aug. I.
"Double Dragon" was made in Cleveland earlier this 'year. "Rita
Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption" is being filmed in Mansfield.
Park of Kevin Costner' s production of "500 Nations" was filmed earlier this year in southeast Ohio's Hocking hills.
The film bureau said the movies "A Reason to Believe" will be
filmed at Miami University in Oxford and "Milk ~oney" wiU be shot
later this year in Cincinnati.
.
.
The mm bureau estimates lhat each time a full-length ptcture 1s filmed
in the state, the local economy gets a boost o~ about $2 million. Ohio also
benefits as a site for TV shows, the bureau srud.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday. July 26, the 207th day of 1993. There are 158 days
left in !he year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Forty years ago, on July 26, 1953. Fidel Castro began his revolt against
the regtmc of !'ulgencio Batista with an unsucces_sful. attack on an army
barracks in eastern Cuba. Castro frnaUy ousted Babsta m 1959.
On this date:
In 1775 Benjamin Franklin became Postmaster-General.
In 1788'. New York becam~ the lith state to ratify the U.S Constitu~.In 1908, U.S. Attorney General Charles J. Bonaparte tssu
. ed an order
creating an investigative agency th~t was a forerun~er of the FBL
In 1945 Winston Churchill res1gned as Bntam s pnme mm1ster after
his Conse,.;,atives were soundly defeated in elections by lhe Labor Party.
Clement Attlce became the new prime minister.
In 1947, President Truman signed the National SecuritX Act, creating
the Department of Defense, the Na~onal Secunty Counctl, the Central
Intelligence Agency and !he lomt Ch1efs ofStaff. .
.
In 1952 Argentina's first lady, Eva Peron, d1ed m Buenos Anes at33.
In 1952: King Farouk I of Egypt abdicated in the wake of a coup led
by Gamal Abdel Nasser.
·
.
In 1956, Egyptian President Gamal .Abdel Nasser seued control of lhe
Suez Canal from the French and the Bnllsh.
In 1964, Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa and ~ix other.s were con·
victed of fraud and conspiracy in the handlmg of a uruon pensiOn fund.
In 1971, Apollo 15 was launched from Cape Kennedy.
.
Ten years ago: During a news cof!l'erence dommated.by quesll~ns ~n
Central America, President Reagan sa1d planned U.S. mtlitary exerc1ses m
Honduras and the duibbean Sea were nothmg out of the ordinary, and
bore no comparison'to the early stages of U.S. involvement in Vielnam.

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

and ~With them very strongly,"
Clinton told D'Amalo, according to
a source.. "I'm prepared to take
tough acllon, and I hope you 'U be

stiU a free man, the Justice pepart·
ment hadn't even repll~d to
D' A~ato's l~tters. Clinton
pronused to look 10to the matter.
D' Amato had been worried
Tack
about possible attemptS against him
J'
since receiving i! cryptic phone call
from the FBI at 1:45 a.m. one Sunday morning last spring. FBI officials
that they
an assassmauon p1ot agamst 1m,
but '!"ere reluctant to spell out more
supjJortive." (The following day, details. .
U.S. forces bombed Iraq's intelliAlthough a member of the Sen~ence headquarters in retaliation ate Intelligence Committee,
. .stonewailed
.
D'Am
• .'ee
, 1mg
or an assassination plot aga1nst
. . ato was
.
former President George Bush.)
m conversations wllh Jusuce
Finall/':, Clinton solicited Departme~t officials. His staffers
D' Amato s suggestions about how had boen .,.
a.ven a vanety of excuses
to cope with the renewed terrorist for ~by !he sheik had not been
threat. D' Amato responded by ~tained: It w~.cost too ~uch to
scolding the Justice Department for mcarceralt h1m, 1t -.yould .Jeol'ar:
failing to detain a man believed to dize an un~rcover mv~t1ganon,
be one of the chief instigators: there w~n I ~nough ~vld.ence to
Sheik Omar Al\del Rahman, who charge h1m ~~If a cnme, or th_e .
was living in New Jersey. D'Amato depatbt)!llll 4idn t.have the I!'Jthonhad wriuen three letterS to Attomeh ty to lipprehen_d hun. But w~th susGenetaiJanetReoobetweenMarc
pects already m custody, DAmato
26 and June 28, requesting that the S!lw no further reason why the Jussheik be detained on immigration ' nee Depanment l£!ld to ~t any
grounds. D' Amato became con- sou.rces. It was ume to bnng the
cerned about the sheik after he was sheik m to custody.
linked to some of the suspects in
On June 28, three days after
the Februar'y World Trade Center Clinton's phone call, the wheels
bombing. Not only was the sheik finally began to turn at Justice.

By

Anderson
d

an
Michael Binstein

exp~~

MICH.

That M?nday afternoon, Reno
called~ Amato and .asked to meet
w!th h1m the followmg afternOon.
D Ama!IJ offered to ~~ over to
her ~ff1ce, but Renl:! tn~1sted .the ,
meetmg take place lR hiS off!CC . .
!Jtat day also marlced the fll'81 bme ~
m three months that the Jusllce ,
Department bothered !O craft,a
to D Amato s .
. da R
. ed .
~~~~1:fnc/~t ~5 p~\n '
at .
Cab" -like f hi
.
dec1dedly tm- met
as on.
W1th none of the assorted .
entourage
that normally
accompa,
nies an attonie
enera1 on
Capitol
H'U R
~into D'Amato's
~nod~ ss the New York
1
obombmg
Ice 0 attempt.
lscu
It was a vintage Reno perfor- ;
mance: She left the meeting having ,
won D' Amato's respect without•'
surrendering an inch. "She was
amicable, but fmn, that for inves. live purposes that they were
ug.a . continue (surveillance),":
~~~~:Cia! familiar with the meet·
.
'd "(D'Amato) told her 'I
~=aSaJe~ but 1 respect your candor ,f," Reno also acknowledged the
fail.
f J slice to respond to his
ure 0 u. .
the lo
letters, bhu'!lrng •t on.
s w pace
of sub-Cabmet appmnunents at the
ag~ci:;nwhile, the ~litical pres- ; .
sure was building w1thin the White ,
House to do something about the
sheik who by now had become a .
tabloid villian and a symbol of the
rising threat of terrorism in the ·
United SillieS.
Forty-eight hours after D' Amato
was told by the attorney general
that Sheik Rahman would.remain
free, Immigration officials apprehended the blind cleric by revoking
his immigration parole staws. What.
brought about the sudden change? .
A Justice Department spokesman
told us the sheik was initially
allowed his freedom so "the
department could monitor the vari-·
ous people who might be meeting
with him." The decision changed,
he said, after "it appeared to the
department that there was a signifi_cJint danger that the sheik might

PA.

IND.

u_ncovh~ :rq~s.re~ponse

WHAT HAPPE~
WHEN WE RIIN OUT
OF£AND?

• lcolurnbusl91•

6

rr'

lcs
Vi• AssoCiated

Gay rights take a big leap .f~rward
have moved faster and further on
gay rights than on any comparable
social issue in the nation's history.
Having done so, they are profoundly divided about ·the wisdom of
their journey and arnb1valent to
negative about the wisdom of
going much further.
Given both realities, it was no
surprise that Bill CliniOO produced
considerably less than half a loaf
on his campaign pledge to en\! aU
discriminanon against homosexuals
in the military. What is and was
surpriEJ!g was that he made the
promi:!IJ in the first place, was
elected despite it and delivered as
much as he fmaUy did last week.
Opponents and proponents of
unfettered military service for
everyone regardless of sexual orientation are united in finding the
president's decision unacceptable.
For myself, while I think he should
have gone further, I doubt that was
ever a realistic political option in
this democratic s~iety. His new
!! -point pohcy gUtdehne, though
muddled, is best understood as a
small but significant step in an
arduous process of change.
· For anyone over the age of 35 or
40, it is lhe rate of change that has
boen so surprising, not the difficulty. Less than a half-century ago,
homosexuality was considered so
._ unspeakable that virtually no one
dared admi\ to it. Outside the
furtive, secret world they had to
construct for themselves, gays and
lesbians were invisible. Gay-bash·
ing,physical as well as rhetorical,

Hodding Carter Ill

,.

.
~
1tl3 b&gt;j NU, Inc.
~

"I've got an idea. Why don't YOU do the gath:
ering, and I'LL do the hunting?"

Sybil Ebersbach

'

\

r,

me.

Wednesday through Friday
Wednesday, hot and humid with
a chance of thunderstorms. Lows
70 to 75. Highs 90 to 95. Thursday,
fair and a little cooler. Lows 65 to
70. Highs 80 to 85. Friday, fair.
Lows 60 to 65. Highs from the
upper 70s to middle 80s.

Nile Sanders

Sybil Ebersbach, 89, of 166
Nile C. Sanders, 85, of HockMulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died jngpon, died Saturday, July 24,
Sunday, July 25, 1993, at Veterans 1993, at the Arcadia Nursing CeoMemorial Hospital, Exte~ed Care ' ter in Coolville. ·
Facility, after an illness or five
.Born in Tuppers Plains, he was
months.
the son of the late Cecil and Emma
She was a legal secr~tary LeMaster Sanders. He. was a
.
employed at the Crow and Crow farmer.
Law Firm for 61 years before h~r
He is survived by his wife,
retirernenL Born on Jan 11, 1904tn Olive (Bill) Heiney Sanders, a
Meigs County, she was the daugh- daughter,
Donna
Griffin,
ter of the late Willinm .H. Ebers- Reedsville; five sisters, Wilma
bach artd Iva Scott Ebersbach. She E;ynon of Reedsville, Evelyne Bonwas a member of Trinity Congre• nett of :v;incent; Justine Smith and
gational Church.
C I Feather, bolh of Canton, and
She is survived by an aunt, Egan
rna Jean Pullins of Chester; five
Rader, Mesa, Ariz. and sev;.......,':g~ra:~.::ndchildren, four great-grand.cousins.
children, and several nieces and
Funeral services will b held nephews.
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the wjng
He was preceded in death by a
Funeral Home. The Rev. oland son, Kenneth Sanders, a brother,
Wildman will officiate and burial 8nQ a sister.
will be in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Funeral services will be held
Friends may call at the funeral Tuesday, 11 a.m. at the Whitehome Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to Blower Funeral Home Coolville.
The Rev. Jerry Wilson will offici9 p.m.
ate and burial will be in Stewart
William Guthrie
Cemetery, Hockingport. Friends
William H. Guthrie, 67, of Mid· may call today (Monday), 3 to 5
dleport, died Saturday, July 24, and 7to 9 o.m.
1993, at the Holzer Medical Cen-

accepted and no automatic assurnption of forbidden· behavior.
Hypocrisy and !yin~ will be the.
·order of the day, wh1ch 'js shameful, but not half as shameful as
overt repression and sexual purges.
All of which is not only more
than the military command had
been prepared to accept, it is also
more than a majority of the Amencan people seem willing to support.
But something else needs to be·
added. Familiarity, rather than
breeding contempt, has demonslrably led to greater understanding
and acceplance. In every poll, those
who actually know gays and les·
biahs are markedly more supportive of their rights than those who
don't. If the chain of command
enforces the new rules, that is the
likely outcome in the anned forces
as well.
A little less than 50 years ago,
President Truman used the military
to make a giant leap in the struggle
for racial equality by integrating
what had boen a rigidly segregated ,
institution. With his new guidelines·
on homosexuals in the military.
President Clinton is asking something quite different, which is that
the military catch up with society at
large. It isn't too much to ask, nor
very far to go.
Hedding Carter Ill, former ·•
State Department spokesman
and award·winning reporter, edi- .,
· tor and publisher, is president or
~a in Street, a Wasbin~ton, D.C.based television production company.

Hospital news

ter ·Born in Middlepon, he was the
son of the late Dewey and Goldie
Lynch Guthrie. He was a retired
self-employed carpenter, a veteran
of World War 11, and a member of
the American Legion.
He is survived by a brother,
Gordon Guthrie of Cleveland, a si~ter, Maxine Burress of Cincinnati;
four nieces and two nephews.
Graveside services will be held at
the Middleport Hill Cemetery
Wednesday at II a.m. with
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, ~fficiating. . . .
There w1ll be no VISitatiOn.
Arrangements are being ~andled by
Fisher Funeral Home. M1ddleport.

obtained a CO!,lY of a description of
D&amp;X at a Nanonal Abortion Federation seminar in Dallas last
September. Dr. Martin Haskell,

"
norlhwest
an\! norlh cenll'al Ohio.
Highs today were 10 range from
around 90 in the north to the middle 90s near the OhiO' River. The
combination of the hCat and hutnidity ~U make itfeel more like I 00
to 105 degrees over the southern
third of the state dpring the afternoon.
Sunrise Tuesday at 6:25 a.m.
Sunset Tuesday at 8:51 p.m.
Record high temperature 102 in
1934; record low 50 in 1946.
Around the nation
The Midwest came up for air as
clear, dry weather was expected
across most of the nation's midsec-

PERRYVU.LE, Ark. (AP) - A
family fishing trip to a cool river
on a hot summer day ended disas·
trously when the group's small,
overloaded boat sank. Five children
and their tments died.
Nine people, all family members, were aboard a boat meant to
hold only three, Pef!Y Cotmty Sher-,
iff Gary La)IISOn said.
None was wearing a life preserver and onJy the father, David
Bailey, 32, could swim, Lawson
said.
Bailey, however, was among
those who drowned Sunday, along
with his 40-year-old wife, Wanda;
Crystal and Chris, 10-yelir-old
twins; Amanda, 7; Amber, 4; and
David Jr., 18 months, Lawson said.
Two girls survived: one 14, the
other 12.
.
They told authorities the 12foot, flat;booomed aluminum boat
began taking on water over the
sides. It apparently sank soon after
being launched on the Fourche
LaFave Rivec.
Nina Kelley, 74, of Perryville,
said she and her son, Phillip Kelley, arrived at the river soon after
the boat sank.
"We cotne 10 fish, but we come
up on thaL We _didn't see J_K&gt;thing
but a girl hollenng, screammg she
· wrui drowning," Ms. Kelloy said.
She said her son helped one girl
get to shore; the other girl made it
out of the river on her own.
The river has little current. but is
about 18 feet deep where the boat
sank, near PerryviUe, Lawson said.
Perryville is about 35 miles north·
west of Little Rock.
The sheriff said the surviving
girls ani in the cusiody of other
family members. Their names were
immediately available.
Arkansas was under a heat advisory Sunday, with temperatures
reaching 100 degrees in spots,
sending many people to rivers and
lakes for relief.

lion tOday,
.. ,.
But the breather wasn't expected
to last.
Clouds were to move into the
Dakotas as well as Kansas and
northern Missouri, bringing a
chance of thunderstorms to those
areas today. Thunderstonns' were a
pc&gt;ssibility in Minnesota, Iowa and
Wisconsin tonight.
The low pressure system developing in the Plains was expected to
scatter thunderstorms across most
of the soggy Midwest by Tuesday.
Showers could continue into
Wednesday.
Highs in the 80s and low 90s

not

Work continues on

·Iraq accuses U.S. of violating air space
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iraq
accused th·e U.S. Air Force today of
provoking Iraq by violating its
airspace and asked the United
Nations to halt such inmiSions.
The Iraqi protest came as a team
of U.N. weapons inspectors left
Baghdad for two Iraqi missile test
sites south of the capital to prepare
to instaU surveillance cameras.
Iraq's refusal to install the cameras earlier this month had brou~ht
Baghdlld closer to a possible military confrontation with lhe Western
aUies, who had threatened to attack
if Iraq did not relent. ·
The inspection team is led by
Bill Ecken, 47, of Dayton, Ohio.
He said his team would install the
cameras on Tuesday.
"We still have questions to
work out with the Iraqi government
on technical aspects,'' he said
today. "I want to give them time.
We are here to succeed''
Under a compromise, .the cameras wiU be installed but not turned
on until af1er further talks on longterm monitoring of Iraq's weapons
of mass destruction, as called for

. Veterans Memorial
Saturday 1admissions: Harold plan to remove water
Fe"'y, LangsviUe
.
SB.~urday discharges : Teresa
Work is continuing on a plan for
Aldei'Stln, Racine
an environmentally safe way of
Sunday admissions: Arthur Car- removing the minions of gaUons of
done, Pomeroy and Erma Roush, flood water from Meigs Mine 31,
Racine
Ohio Environmental Protection
Sunday discharges: Franklin Agency spokesman Rob Berger
Molden, Pomeroy and 'Archie Lee, said Mona morning.
Syracuse.
Ber~e7Said that no p!an has
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
been fmalized yet but that more
July 23 discharges- William discussions have been scheduled
Musser, Burnadine Lewis, Jeffrey later today by the OEPA, the Ohio
Hopkins, William Jackson, Velvie Department of Natural Resources,
Dewitt, Joe Bowey; Marvin CiJCle, and American .Electric Power of
William Harrell, Jane Clatworthy, which Southern Ohio Coal Compa- , An action for divorce has been
Jamie Johnson, Marie Rayne, Paul . ny is a subsidiary.
filed in the Meigs County Court of
Malone , kimberly Miller and
Mine 31 was flooded on July Common Pleas by Brenda Weber
Christina Bowyer.
II with water from an old adjacent from Keith Weber.
July Z3 births- Mr. and Mrs. mine throwing 230 underground
A divorce has recently been
WVAlottery
William Haptonstall, son, miners out of work.
granted to Howard E.. Minard and
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Russell
AEP wants to pump the water Katherine A. Minard 10 the Metgs
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Saunders, son, Gallipolis.
out ot the mine into Raccoon, County Court of Common Pleas.
In the case of the State of Ohio
- Here are the winning numbers
July 24 discharges - Minnie Leading Creek and Campaign
selected Saturday in the West Vir- Smith, Melinda Wyatt, Ruby creelcs so that work can begin on versus Jason Hysell the defendent
Bayer, Jane Swingle, Barbie Har- getting the mine bock into produc- plead guilty to one count of trafgiriia S.tate Lottery:
Daily 3
gett, Nellie Chandler, Lokie Smith
tion. The cornpa1.1y's p1bposed plan ficking in marijuana and one co~nt
0-3-6
and Arnold Hi~nbotham.
has drawn criticism from environ· of failure to comply m the Metgs
(zero, lhree, six)
July 25 d1scbarges - ~rs .
mental groups as weir as the threat County Court of Common Pleas.
R tissell Saunders and son, Kyle of a lawsuit. They are now await• The defendent was sentanced to
Daily 4
D,ray;; Sat)luel Roush, Raym~nd ing approval to do that from the two years in prison for the first
2-0-1-0
(two, zero, one, zero) ' ·
~ew, ·Rachel Wyant, Cindy Zmn
Ohio EPA where officials are charge, one and a half years m
studying the short and long term prison for the second charge and a
and Patricia Gannon.
July
25
births
Mr
and
Mrs
effects
.of ,putting that water into the fine of $500 and court costs. The
"
sentence for the second charge will
Casey Hart, son, Letan, W.Va. Mr. three creeks.
The D~y Sentinel
be suspended upon completion of
B.
J.
Smith,
public
affairs
direc·
and .Mrs. Martin Woodard, daughtor
for
American
Electric
Power,
the
SEPT A program.
(USPS21J.....)
ter, Letart, W.Va.
said
this
morning
that
the
company
Dana
E. Haines, CL al has been
Published every atteraooa, Monday lhrough
Friday, Ill Court St., PornetOy, Ohio by the
is awaiting word from the EPA and ordered by the Meigs County Court
Ohio Valley Publilhioa ComPany/Multimedia
once
that is received, then work of Common Pleas to $3,260.91
(nc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45169, Ph. 992-2156.
wiU begin on getting the '!"ater out plus court CI\StsJand I 0 percent
Second clw pclltqe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
of Meigs 31 and that mme back mterest per ann m to Delaware
Am Ele Power:...................38
Member: The Auocialtd Preu, and the Ohio
Trust Company .
into production.
Newspaper ANociatioa, Natioual Advertisiug
Ashland Oil.. ......................28
Repreaentltive, Branham Newspaper Salea,
AT&amp;T......... ::'......................64
733 Third AveoUe, New York, New York
.
Bank One.......... ,................ S4 1/2
10011.
BOb Evans .........................18 1/2
POSTMASTER: Seod .ddress chan11t~ to The
Charming
Shop...,.............. 13
Daily Sn:Unel, 111 Court St. Pornttoy, Ohio
4S169.
ChamJ:ion Ind.................. 13 1/2
oldil!g......................25 1/2
SUBSCJUPTlON RATES
ll1 Canier or Motor ROYle
F
raJ
M~L .................20 3/8
One Wetk: ..................................................$1 .60
Goodyear
R ..........:.......42 518
One Mooth........................................,, ..... .$6.9'
went to the home with · Scioto
Lands End.... :.....................291
, PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) One Ycar.......................................... - .. $83.20
SINGLE COPY
County
Children Services officials,
Limited Inc........................20 3/8
A man shot and lcilled his daughter,
PRICE
were
getting
a divorce, said Evelyn
Multimedia Inc .................. 32 1/4
then killed himSelf as county offi ·
Dally................. .............. T ...., - 3SCeau
.
'
Point Bancol)l....................14
cials tried 10 remove the girl from Bias, an ageney investigator.
Subscribers not dairina to pay lhe carier may
Stamper
was
cooperating
with
Rax
RestauranL
..................
I/16
his
home,
police
said.
·
remit in ldvaoce direct to The Daily SenUnel
Douglas Stamper, 40, shot him- social workers when they amved to
Reliance Electric................ 18
on a three, 1il or 12 month buil. Credit will be
given carrier each week.
self shortly after 10 a.m. Saturday, lake custody of Alisha and tum her
Robbins&amp;Myers ................. 17 3/4
No 1ubscriptlon1 by rtiail permitted iD we•
Shoney's Inc ..................... .l9 1/4
moments after his daughter, Alishar over to her mother, Bias said. But
where home carrier service l1avall1ble.
.
Star Bank ...........................35 1/2 • 12, was found in bed with a gun- he apparently changed his mind
•
MaiiSablcrlt.:;'
shot wotmd to the head, police Sgt. after the girl went inside the house
Wendy Int'l....................... .l4 3/4
lnald.Melp
1J ,
to get her clothes.
'
Worthington lttd................28 1/2
Brian Meadows said.
13 Weelu............................ ............,...... .$21.14
Stamper
followed
her
in,
shot
26 Weelu ....................... ..........................$43.16
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
Alisha died at 1:40 p.m. after
S2 Weelu .............................................. ,:.$14.76
being
flown to Grant Medical Cen- her, then walked back outside and
a.m.
quotes
~rovided
by
Outolde Mdl' C.W.IJ
.
Kemper Secur ties, Inc., o
ter in Columbus, the .hospital said killed himself with a .38-caliber
13 Weelli ........,...................... ............... ,..$23.&lt;40
handgun, police and wimesses said.
26 waatcs ................ .........................$45.50
Stamper died at the scene.
Galllpolil.
52 Week&gt;P. ......................................$88.40
He and his wife, Cheryl, who

Court news

Portsmouth :tnan kills
daughter, himself

CiJe

'

1

.

under 1991 Gulf War cease-fire
agreements.
.
Eckert said those negotiations
would take place in New York in
late August or early September.
The Iraqi protest followed a
U.S. missile strike Saturday against
an Iraqi anti-aircraft site in southern Iraq after an A.mencail Jet
detected it was being tracked by
radar.
Baghdad denied Sunday that its
radar had locked onto the jet and
denied reports it had returned ftre.
Allied warplanes have patrolled
a "no-fly" zone over southern Iraq
since August 1992 to protect Shiite.
Muslim rebels sheltering in Iraq~s
southern marshes. The rebels fled
!here after a failed uprising.
Since then, allied planes have
flown thousands of missions to
ensure Iraqi aircraft do not fly
below the 32nd parallel. Locking
on with radar is considered a hostile act
"Iraq has lodged a protest w!th .
the United Nations over the continuation of airspace 'violations by

1

,,

'
U.S.
aircraft for provocation and
reconnaissance purpose," said a
government statement issued in
Baghdad.
The statement said U.S. aircraft
based in Saudi Arabia and other
U.S. facilities in the Gulf carried
out as many as.1580 sorties over
nonhero and southern Iraq in the
past two weelcs.
On June 29. a U.S. jet fired a
missile at an Iraqi antiaircraft
artillery site in Basra province after
radar targeted two patrol planes.
On Sunday, the aircraft carrier
USS Abraham Lincoln and a hattie
group of seven ships, including a
nuclear-powered submarine,
cruised up the Persian Gulf. Two of
the support ships have Tomahawk
cruise _ missiles, a Nav y
spojceswoman said.
Th!!.;Abraham Lincoln group ,
based J n A!ameda, Calif., replaces
the OSS Nimitz group, which lcfl
the region last month . The ships'
presence in the Gulf is part of a
regular U.S . deployment in the area
following the Gulf War.

EMS responds to ~1 calls
'Meigs County Emergency Med- were I :45 p.m . P.ome.roy for a
ical Service responded to II calls motor veh1cle ~cc1dent on State
for assistance Saturday, Sunday Route 143 for Don Hunncl and
and Monday morning.
Beverly Napper who were both
Units responding on Saturday transported to V~H a~d I 0:30
were:. 10:00 a.m. Tuppers Plains to p.m. Syracuse to Minersv1lle Road
Eden Run Road for Claire Brown for Erma Roush who was transport·
who was transported to St..Joseph's cd to VMH.
.
Hospital; 10: II a.m. Racine to
Units respondtng on Monday
State Route 338 for Myrtle Nevelle morning were 3:45 a.m. Racme to
who was transported to Pleasant Walker Alley for Mary Wolfe -.yh!.J
Valley Hospital; 10:17 a.m . Rut- was transported to Holzer Medical
land to Overbrook for Mary Center; 4:33a.m. Rutland to Beech
Rickard who was transported to Grove Road for Chester Stewart,
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 9:03p.m. Jr. who was transported to VMH;
Middleport to Lagoon Road for 6:23 a:m. Syracuse to Second
Caroline Stewart, transported to Street for Thelma Miller who was
Veterans Memorial Hospital and treated but not transported and 6:51
10:00 p.m. Rutland to Run Mine a.m. Rutland to Overbrook for
Road for Ryan Smith who was Freda Hart who was transported to
transported io VHM.
Pleasant Valley Hospital. .
Units responding on Sundav

Elimination of duplication
could save billions: GAO
WASHINGTON (AP)- If the
military is looking for v.:ays to save
billions of dollars, it could start
with its $56 billion program of
communications satellites, congressional investigators said today.
The General Accounting Qffice
found that if the Defense Department chose a standardized design
for its sateUites, the proj!l'8m would
cost nearly $18 billion less than
planned.
"There are acceptable allerna·
tives ... but the Defense Depart·

ment's plan for taking advantage of
modern technology, which is
inlended to consider such savings,
has failed to materialize," the
auditing ann of Congress said in a
report.
.,.

Licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been
issued by Meigs County Probate
Court to Paul D. McBane, 39, and
Susan Rae Manley, 21; Billy Joe
Murphy, 17, and Chastidy Dawn
Miller, 18, and William Thomas
Carleton, 50 and Cathy L. Carleton,
40.

i·
.I

were predicted over much of the
Midwest today. Across the north~
temperatures were expected to be
in the 70s. Highs were to top 100
degrees in the South, including
pans of Arizona, Texas, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia.
A critical heat alert was ~
today covering all of Miss1ssippi ·
and all but the coastal counties of
Alabama. The alert was in effect at
least through Tuesday.
Heat advisories were posted
today over parts or Oklahoma ,
Texas and much of Arkansas.
The high Sunday for the continental United States was 109
degrees at Lake Havasu City, Ariz.

rise and force ber to leave her home Sunday. At
left is Paul Vosselikemper, her neighbor. (API

. MORE WATER ON WAY· Joan Gust,
right, of Portage Des Sioux, Mo., reacts to the
news that the ~ississippi River will continue to

Stocks

nen

.

01993 AcarWnther,

--Area
deaths.-.

.

rest of the fetus.
lions.
Dr. James McMahon of Los
That is true for the activists, but f
Angeles- one of the relatively many onlookers wonder about the ,
few physicians who, so far, per· defrnition of "few." Diane Gianel· :
form D&amp;X - ~eriean Med- li quotes the Guumacher Institute :
J\T I u
I oFF
ical News: "If I see a case ... after • as estimating that in 1988 .= the •
lYQ
OJJ
20 weeks, where it frankly is a last. year for which figures are :
·
child to me, I really agonize over it avatlable - there were close to :
wlio has pe¥ormed the proced_ut~ __ bjlc~use the potential is so immi- 168,~ second- and third-trimester ,
iiiOre tnan 00 times on patients nently there....
abon10ns. Of these, according to 1
from 20 to 24 weeks - and some
"On the other hand, I have Dr. Martin Haskell, probably 4,000 1
up to 26 weeks - explained that another position, which I think iS" are done in the third trimester.
i
be takes a large grasping forcep to superior in the hierarchy of ques·
.
:
grab hold of a "lower extremity" lions, and that is: 'Who owns the
However, Diane Gianelli care- •
which he pulls into the vagina. child?' It's got to be the mother."
fuUy notes, "Accurate figures on •
Then, with his fmgers, he removes
I reminded Jesse Jackson, a second- and thi'rd-trilneste~ abor- :
the rest or' the fews except for the while ago, that when he was a lions are elusive because a number :
head. In most cases, the fetus is spellbindin~t pro-lifer, he used to .of states don't require doctors to · •
stiU alive.
·
liken the claim of ownership of the report abortion sWtstics. For exam- :
At that point, according to the unborn child to the slave-owning pie, one;third of all abortions are
offteial repon of the seminar, "the plantation owner who said he could said to occur in California, but the '
surgeon lakes a pair of blunt curved do anYthin&amp; he liked with his prop- state has no reporting require~etzenbaum scJSSOn" and "forces eny. Jackson did not deny having
ments."
the scissors into the base of the said that, but, looking WICOmfonskull," $preading it to enlarge the able, he said nothing more tb me.
opening. With a suction catheter,
Anyway, say the pro-chqicers,
he "evacuates the skull contents." · there are so few second--ster ,
The fetus is now dead, and the abortions that all this fuss over '
skuV is small enough to join the D&amp;X is a tactic to end all aJ)or-

Pr•• Grap/'ic.N«

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low
around 70. Light southwest wiilds.
Tuesday, mosdy sunny. Continued
hot and humid-with the high in the
lower 90s.
Extended forecast:

Pro-lifers scorn new abortion method
Through the years I have known
nurses who refused to lake part in
second-trimester abortions. Most
were not pro-lifers and had participated in many ftrSt-trimester aborlions. But, they told rna, they could
not bear seeing - during D&amp;E
(Dilation and Evacuation) - the
. dismemberment o( the fetus in lhe
uterus. Some lost their jobs in ·
states that had not yet adopted
"conscience clauses" for nurses in
hospitals that performed abortions.
There is now a new approach to
second- and third-trimester abor·
tions. It is D&amp;X (Dilation and
Extraction) and has led pro-lifers to
use this development in an attempt
to kill the Freedom of Choice Act.
In American Medical News (a publication of the American Medical
Association), reporter Diane
GianeUi notes that "scores of calls
from congressional staffers and
others" have been received by the
National Abortion Federation aslcing about the pro-lifers' brochures ·
and ads illustrating D&amp;X.
·
The anti-abonion forces had

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

------Weather------

Jack Anderson and ~icbael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

was not the condemned exception more educated Americans are less
but the approved rule if anyone inclined to knee-jerk bigotry than
were unlucky enough to be caught people of my generation, but even
out of the closeL ·· '
some .of us older folic have been
forced to rethink our assumptions
as relatives, old school friends or
fellow workers have dropped their
masks and declared themselves.
Underlying society's attitudes
The military services, as deeply
were religious precepts and pro- conservative as President Clinton
found sexual fear. On the latter described them and for largely
point, males in paiticular thought understandable reasons, have not
of homosexuality as l!:amed behav- moved as far as the nation. Many
ior or a personal choice, and there- military men believe homosexualifore dangerous in much the same ty is incompatible with unit cohe· way that an infectious disease is sian and morale.
dangerous. On the former, JudeaAnd it undoubtedly would be if
Christian teachings were straight· gays and le~bians who joined the
forwardly opposed to sexual "devi- military treated their fellow seration." They proscribed anything vicernen anci women as fair prne.
outside of heterosexuality and the But a point ·worth rernembenng is
missionary position, and endorsed that these are pe?,Ple who liave vol- '
both only after marriage.
unteered as mdividuals to serve
Today, the picture is radically their country - volunteered
different. Religious Jews and despite knowmg how hostile the
Christians are split aU over the lot, new environment would be to their
from strict rejection to tolerant sexuality. Only an idiot would
. acceptance. The Bible is quoted leave the relative openness of the
liberally by all sides. Science, 100, civilian w11rld in hopes of easy sexhas moved away from former cer- uai pickings in the military. A sectainties. Psychiatry no ~~~ter offi- ond impor1ant point is that countcially thinks of homosex 'ty as a less individuals who are gay or lesform of mental disorder, to be bian have repeatedly proved what
treated and cured. Recent research every study of the subJCCt has conlends impressive weight to the the- firmed. Sexual orientation has
ory that gays and lesbians inherit nothing to do with a person's rnilitheir sexuality with their genes, tary aptitude or performance.
rather than by choice or ·seduction.
The president' s new doctrine
Perhaps most importantly of all, places the burden almost entirely
the once-closeted ."other~· have on bchavjor. There will be no more
shed· their roles as victims. Gay witch hunts for gays and lesbians.
pride and gay rights have become There will be no preliminary
familiar phrases. Younger and screening before a volunteer is

I

By The Associated Press
Dry weather is expected over
the region tonight and Tuesday.
Ii will be mostly clear tonight
with lows in the upper 60s to lower
70s. Sunshine will be abundant
Tuesday with highs again from
around 90 in the north to the lower
90s in the south. ,
A second and stronger cold front
will move into Ohio on Wednesday
causing a chance of thunderstorms.
Earlier today, a warm front
moved across Ohio, bringing a
humid, southerly flow of air. Showers and thunderstorms were widely
scattered during the nilh t over

Overloaded·
boat sinks, 7
drown

flee.''
Or maybe a phone call from the
top helped speed up the proceSs.

The people of the United States

·Hot, humid weather conditions continue

Tuesday, July 27

D' Amato, Clinton talk, then Justice jumps
tt

ROBERT L. WINGETT
·
' Publisher

OHIO Weather

--

The Dally SenUnei-P~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 26, 1993

\,

...

0

�•

•
I.

'

The Daily Sentinel

Sports
,.

Ll I I 1,.1:

Monday, July 26, 1993

Page-4

By DAN SEWELL
MIAMI (AP) - The first time,
Rich Renteria took steps in the
right direction at lhe right time and
kiUed a Cincinnati Reds rally. the
next time, he got his right hand in
the wrong place and kept a Florida '·
Marlins rally alive.
Both times, the Florida second
baseman was in lhe middle of cru·
cial plays in Marlins victories over
the Reds.
.
"It wasn't any great plan;''
Renteria said. ' ' Sometimes little
things happen."
Saturday night, in the sixth
inning of a 1-0 game, Rentefia
moved near second after left·hlUtd·
ed Hal Morris got two strikes, figuring Morris wouldn't try to pull.
· Morris lined the ball up lhe middle to Renteria, who lhen. doubled
Chris Sabo off second. Ryan
Bowen then went on to a 2..() victory with Bryan Harvey's ninth ·
inning help.
Sunday evening, Rentefia ' s
right hand got in the way of Tim
Belcher's 3..() lead.
"I think that .was the turning
point of the bailgame," Reds manager Davey Johnson said. "We get
out or that mning easy.' .
With two on and no outs in lhe
bottom of the fifth, Bret Barberie
hit a grounder to Juan Samuel ai
second, who flipped to Jeff Bran·
son to force Renteria. But Bfan·

L~UI:

TOURNAMENT

NN\NG 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 TOTAL
1:'JR

PIRATES ,CAPTURE TITLE - With a 5-2
win over Kyger Creek #2 in the Kyger Creek
Little League Touraament ' s championship
game Sunday, Bidwell #I became the rll'st Gallia
County team to capture tbe tourn ament title
since Hannan Trace did it in 1990. In the front
row are (L·R) scorekeeper Tammy Swisher,
Craig Swisher, Jason Humphre ys , Michael

Shaw, Chris McGinniss, Aaron SuUivan, bat boy
Brandon MitchuJ11 and Allen PhiUip~ Standing
are coach Ed Swisher, manager Chester John·
son, Michael Stephens, C.J. Johnson, Joey
James, Justin Terry, Ben Haney, Ryan McFann
and coach Bill Shaw. (OVP photo .by G. Spencer
Osborne)

Broyles, Matt Bissell, Dustin Kehler and Jeremy
Gillilan. Standing are manager Dan Spencer,
Steve Wh itlock, Jeremy Coleman, J .T. White,
Abe Rach, Josh Hager and coach Doug Bissell.
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
·

TIG E RS THIRD - The Tuppers Plains
Tigers, the only non-Gallia County team sti!! ·
alive on the Kyger Creek Little League Tournament's final day, took third by beating the Gal·
lipolis Rockies. Kneeling are (L ·R) Ju stin
Delacruz, Kirt Spencer, Matt Caldwell, Matt

'

0 CJ IUIN.

!'

BOB CATS SECOND - Despite losing to
Bidwell #l in the Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament title game Sunday, Kyger Creek #2
won three games- all against upriver opponent,&lt;;- en route to a second-place finish. I n the
front row .are (L·R) Mike Mollohan, Trevo r
Kern, Adam Hood, T J . Slr&lt;iud, LJ. Hood and

Derek Gilbert. In the second row are manager
Richard Mollohan, Jas 0 n Veith, Andrew Parsons, Brian Bradbury, Jeremiah Doimett, Jeremy Drummond and DJ. Fife. Behind them are
coaches Bill Hood, Phil Bradbury and Keith
Ve ith. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

ROCKIES FOURTH- The Gallipolis Rock·
ies, the first team to take the field in the Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament, ended their
involvement in the 10-day diamond holiday wi th
a fourth-place finish . In the front row are (L·R)
coach Dave Walker, Dusty Cox, Cra ig Sanders,
bat boy Mtchael Warren, Chris Saunders, J ason

r

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - With
Albert Belle suiting up for one
team and Ken Griffey Jr. in uniform for the other, no lead was
safe.
The co-owners or the American
League home-run lead were at their
best Sunday, Belle homering twice
for Cleveland and Griffey extend·
ing his home-run sll'eak to a Seat·
tie-record six games.
Edgar Maninez and Tino Mar!inez also homered for Seattle, but
Cleveland won 11-9.
The power display left Belle ~d
Griffey wilh 28 homers each. Gnffey 's total is a career high, beating
last year' s 27; Belle hit 34 last season.
.
"Wow! That's all I can say,''
said Indians manager Mike Har·
grove, whose team blew a pair or
five-run leads tJefore pulling it out.
' 'I'm glad we got it, and I'm glad
it's ove~."
Griffey is now two games away
from tying lhe f!lajor-league recor4
of eight consecutive games wilh a
home run, set by Pittsburgh's Dale
Long in 1956 and matched by the
New York Yankees' Don Mattingly in 1987. _
.
Although his most memorable
homer may have been the, one ~e
rifled off the warehouse arBalh·
more' s Camden Yards during this

- • Ba~ball • Euttm Dholslon

stances, nor did anyone score on authorily when with one out and
WP- Whitlock
But to prove the logic that run
Bradbury in the second and third.
Mike Mollohan aboard , Bradbury
LP-Cook
prevention that follows offensive
After
the
Pirates
got
two
more
latched
onto a 1· 1 pitch and airfireworks is a winning ronnula. lhe
runs
in
th
e
fourth,
KC
s1ruck
with
Bostic
inducted
Tigers roared back. In the top of
(See HOLIDAY on puge 5)
Jack Bostic, a resident of Racine
the third , it took three hits, two
walks and one Gallipolis error for who played for the 1960 Racine
the Tigers to tie the game. Then af- Cardinal s, was inducted into the
ter lhe Rockies went three up and Kyger Creek Little League Hall of
three down in the bottom of the Fame between the consolation and
third , T.P. went ahead when J.T. championship games.
The Cardina.ls outscored their
White 's fielder's-choice grounder
to second that retired Justin opposition 54·17 in four games to
Delacruz allowed Matt Bissell to make -it to the championship game,
get hom e from third . Bisse ll which they lost to Point Pleasant
Somerville· Motors, led by 1991
reached on a double.
·
The Tigers broke into the clear HOF inductee Johnny Vickers.
In the tournament, Bostic struck
in the fifth when lhey sent II bat·
out
42 and walked three, and on ofters to the plate. The rll'st five were
fense,
half or his 10 hits were home
responsible for getting two run s
runs.
The
others were four singles
· home before the Rockies were able
and
a
double.
to get lhe rrrst out. By then, Cook
Three or those homers came in
was sent to lhird base in favor of
third baseman/catcher Kevin Walk- the Cardinal s' first-round game
er, but not because Cook gave up against the Gallipolis Indians ,
the go-ahead run. Earlier in the which the Cardinals won 17-5 in
frame, third baseman Dusty Cox part because of a 12-strikeout,
was shaken up when the Tigers' walk-free pitching performance. At
Jeremy Coleman came in hard to press time KCLL T directors
third on Abe Rach's fielder ' s. planned to check to see if the
choice groun'der to shortstop, home-run clinic is a tournamem
record.
which loaded the bases.
The Tigers got four runs during
' WNCHGRANDBUFFET"
Bidwell claims title
Walker's adminisll'ation to give
&amp;SliNI:WBAA
The championship game was.
themselves some brealhing room
and secure their grip on third place. for three and one-half innings, a
Whitlock (seven fl trikeouts , pitcher's duel between Bidwell's
WITH «lUU''H
three walks) pitched for 5 2/3 in- Joey James (II Ks. five walks) and·
nings before giving way to one- Kyger Creek's Brian Bradbury
pitch relief help from Rach, who (seven strikeouts', three walks),
got No. 9 hitter Timmy Mahan to both of whom tossed complete ground out to second to end the games.
James flirted wilh disaster in the
game..
second
when D ~J. Fife, the BobThe Tigers' hiuers were Coleman (3-3), Josh Hager (2-4), Bis- cats' No. 5 hitler, walked and got
sell (2-5), Delacruz (1· 2), Kin to third on ~ pair of wild pitches.
Spencer and Whitlock (bolh 1·3). Af~er settling down.and not letting
The Rockies' hitters were Cox , anyone get to second base in the
Craig Sanders (both 1-2), Randy lhird, KC cleanup hitter Jeremiah
Roach and Walker (bolh 1'·3).
Donnett put Bidwell's 1-0 leadCook strike out five and walked it was gained ,in the first when
four in four innings . Wafker Jam~· twO-out single to left center
walked two and struck out none in scored CJ. Johnson - in jeopardy
when he singled to left in the fourth
two innings of relief.
and got to third base' on two more"'
Inning totals
Tuppers P!ains ..003 161 = 11 -10-2 wild pitches. However, no one
Gal. Rock.ies .....220 000 = 4-4-3 scored on James in any of lhese in-

WHY
WASIE
TIME?
WHY
WASTE
MONEY?
$3.49

_...,

(,

.582

4

Montreal ................S2 47
Chicogo .. .... ........... .49 48

.52S
.SOl

9.5

ll.S
1~~
19
21

Western Dlvlllon

mY PONDEROSA
FORLUN(H

'

GB

SL LouiJ .............. ,.51 41

Pit~b"ah .. .......... ..45 54 ' .455
Horidl ...............42 56 .429
NewYodr: ..............33 65 .337

San Franci&amp;co ........67 33

.670
.580
.520
.520

9
1S

SO

.SOl

165

62

.3&amp;0

29

CoJorado ................ 36 62

.367

30

Atl&gt;nta ..................58 42

Hou.lon ................. Sl
1..o1 Angc.lei ......... .. SJ
CJNCINNA1L .... .S l
Son D;qo .............. 38

47
47

New YolkS. Callf'omil3
Minnc.ota 2
Chicago 6, Milwallbe S
Seattle 6, &lt;l.EVEUND l
Toronto .S, Tex.u 1
Baltimore 9,

Team
W L · PeL
Philadclphia ...........62 38
.620

•

KEEPS RALl.. Y ALIVE - The Tuppers Plains Tigers' Abe Rach
sprints to first ba~c after hitting a fielder's-choice grounder to
shortstop that tea mate J eremy Coleman beats to help load the
bases in the fifth i ning of Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament. championship game against the Gallipolis Ro&lt;;kies.
Rach, who r .: Coleman score the go-ahead run before denting the
plate lin an errant throw during the Tigers' six-run jailbreak, got
his season-long wish to pitch in the sixth and delivered one-pitch
relie'f work to help secure lbe Tigers' 11-4 victory. (OVP photo by
G. Spencer Osborne)

Kanau City 6, Detroit 3

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Tuppers Plains claims third before Bidwell lands crown
7, and Kyger Creek defeated the
Rockies 9-2.
·
Tigers take thi rd
The frrst two innings of the consolation game saw Gallipolis RockIes hurler Justin Cook act as if he
was going to Clean house and take
na mes. as he struc k out four ,
walked one and al lowed one hit in
the period while hi s crew hit Tuppers Plains pilcher Sleven Whitlock
wi th a pair of two-run frames .

year's All-Star home run-hitting
contest, Griffey said he derives
more satisfaction from the Goes
that count.
"They mean something ," he
said. "Home run-hitting contests,
it's a day when you·do your best,
and the fans get a show. But !hat's
it."
The crowd of 54,378- secondlargest at Cleveland Stadium this
season, behind only the openingday crowd of 73,290- got one of
the SeasoQ's best shows.
The Indians built leads of 5.() in
the first and 7-2 in the third , but
Seattle refused to be blown out,
scoring at least once in each inning
from the second through the seventh. Edgar Martinez homered in
the second, his lhird, and Griffey
homered in the fifth.
Tino Mariinez completed the
Mariners' comeback with a threerun home run off Jeremy Hemal!dez 'in the seventh, putting Seattle
allead 9-8.
Belle, who had already homered
once, tied itat 9 with another in the
bottom of the seventh.
"I don't want him to $0 up
there guessing for a cenain pitch,''
hittin~ coach Jose Morales said.
"But 1f you throw him a breaking
ball, and it doesn 1t break, and he's
looking for it, you're going to get
hurt."

.

BOSTIC NEWEST INDUCTEE -Jack
Bostic of Racine (left) was named the 1993
inductee into tbe Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament Hall or Fame between tbe consola·
tion and championship contests Sundl!y evening.
Bostic, a member of the 1960 Racine Cardinals,

ge.ts his HOF plaque from tournament cha irman
Don Barnette (center) as past tournament chairman Jim Crace announces his accomplishments
to the crowd. (OVP photo by G. Sp en ce.Osborne)

Marauders 9-3 in OU basketball

c~mp

Belle declined to comment.
A .team of nine players from camp.
Other activities included swimming
Cleveland loaded the bases in Meigs Junior High School attended
Other highlights of the camp and lectures by Larry Hunter and
the eighlh on a hit_bauer, a walk, a Ohio University's team basketball included touring the Ohio Universi- his staff.
groundout and an intentional walk. camp last weekend.
ty basketball complex, and a partial
Team members were Jos h
Kenny Lofton's sacrifice fly off
The camp, consisting of 18 tour of the Ohio University football Witherall, Jason Mul)ens, Robert
Rich DeLucia made it I 0-9, and teams from throughout Ohio, was complex by former Meigs standout
Qualls, Bradley Whitlatch, A.J .
Wayne Kirby followed with an .conducted by Ol!io . University and OU assistant football coach Vaughan , David An derson ,
RBI double.
meri 's baske!ball coach Larry Mike Chancey. The Little Maraud- Michael Wyatt, Brad Daven port
Jeff Nelson (3-2), who yielded Hunter. During the three day camp ers also posted a 3-0 record while and Josh Harris and co ac he ~ Ron
Belle's home run in the seventh each team played a total of 12 playing at the ~onvocation Center. Drexler and Rich Bailey.
and put the rli'St two runners on in games.
•
·
the eighth, took the loss. Hem;mOn Thursday, the flrst day of the
dez (2-2) was the winner, and camp lhe Young Marauders played
Derek Lilliquist worked a perfect three games . The Marauders
ninth for his ninth save.
defeated Coshocton and Bucyrus
Cleveland starter Jose Mesa before losing to eventual champion
lasted five innings, giving up eight Mount Gilead.
hits and five runs. Seattle starter
On Friday morning the local
Dave Fleming was even less effec- team, lhat was .made up of lhis past
tive, yielding nine hits and eight year's seventh- and eighth-grade
runs in 4 2/3 innings, inCluding teams defeated Newport and New
Belle's 271h home run.
Albany to raise !heir camp record
The Indians scored five runs off to 4-1. The teams were then split
Fleming in lhe first inning, high- into two divisions, with lhe'Little
lighted by Glenallj:n Hill's two-run Marauders in the power division,
single.
which was made up of the six best
''They scored five runs off teams.
Fleming m lhe .firsl inning, and I
Meigs once again was pitted
didn't see many balls hit hard,"
against Mount Gilead and even
Seattle manager Lou Piniella said. though lhey played a very aggres"That's part of the game, too. In sive game they came up on the
the end, what hurts you is a hit short end or the score. Meigs
batsman and a walk."
turned in their two best perforThe Indians won for the 16th mances of the camp by defeating
time in the last 21 home games, but Sheridan and Licking Heights.
they were only 3-9 in the ·season
Tile last day -of the camp the
series with Seattle.
Marauders faced an undefeated
Dayton Carroll team. Meigs took a halftime lead only to fall to the
eventual runner-up team in the
final minutes of the contest. Again
ciiCO, 14-4, ,771, 3.23; OlaviM, Ada.nta,
the local team cam back strong
12-4• .750. 29t: Swift. Son Ftanciloo.l4winning its three_remaining games
5 , .737, 2.6,; 01bomc, St. Lo,.U.1, 9-4,
against
teams from Newport and
.6'12, 3.72,
STRIKEOtn'S: Rija. CINCINNATI,
Licking Heights. Meigs fini shed
135; Smoltz, Atlanll, 130; G. M1ddu1,
the camp wilh a very impressive 9Atlanta, 124; BcnCI, San Dicgo, ll8; Harnisch, Houston, 115; Gunn•n, Chicago,
3 record and third place in the
107; T. Greene. Ph.illdelphla, 106; CanFOUL GROUND CATCH- Kyger Creek #2 first baseman
d iotli, l..ot Anadao, 106.
Jeremiah Donnell sprints into foul territory near ·his team 's dugout
SAVES : Lee Smith, St. Loui1, 34;
· Mycn, Oticaso. 30: H1rvey, Florida. 29;
to caleb Michael Shaw's popup for the first out of.the first inning of
Bed::, San Francilco, 28i Stanton, All.antll,
Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament championship•
26; Mitch Williams, Philadc1phi•, 26;
Wcucland, Monuul, 21 .
game against Bidwell #1. Tbough Dunnett, a cleanup hitter who had
half of the Bobcats' hils in the affair, the Pirates won 5·2 to win the
Sign-up for lhe Big Bend' Youth
AL leaders
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
crown.
BAITING: Olerud, Toronto, .401;
Football League will be held from
O'Neill, New Yolk, .331; Hamilton, Mil9 a.m until noon Saturday and Satwauk ee , .327; R. Henderson, Oakland,
urday, Aug. 7 at Big Bend Health
.327; Gonz.alcz, Tcxu, .326; M. V1uJhn,
&amp;o.l.on, .31A; Molitor, Toronto. .322. .
and Fimess on Mill Street in MidRUNS; Molitor, Toronto, 79; White,
dleport.
Tcronto, 71; Burp, a..EVElAND. 72:
were presented to several r lnyers
(Continued from page 4)
To be e~gible, participants must
Griffey Jr., Suttle, 12: R. Alcmu, Tcwnactive
in the tournament:
mailed it beyond the left c enter
to, 72; Lefton, CLEVELAND, 70;
not have reached !heir 13th birth·
First
no-hitter (glove): Justi n
Phillip&lt;. Detroit, 70: R. Hoacloaan, Ookday before Sept. I Their wiD be a field wall.
lond, 70.
Cook,
Gallipolis
Rocl&lt;i es
If that wasn ' t enough to shake
. RBI: Belle. CLEVELAND, 85: Fidd$50 dollar fee for all players and
Most
strikeouts:
Bri
an
Rrad
etr Delroil, 85; Olerud, Toronto, 81;
cheerleaders. The price includes out any complacency that may bury, Kyger Creek #2 (33)
Carter, Torontq. 11; Tettletoo, Drc:tni.t, 76;
membership
dues
and have existed in the Pirates' dugout,
Thomu, Chicaao. 73; B•qa, ct.EVETop defen sive pla yer: IJen
Donnett singled to left and reached
LAND,74.
equipment/uniform
fee.
Gallipolis Rockies
Craig,
Hli'S: Olaud, Toronto, 137; Moli1.0r,
Adults interested in coaching second 'on Justin Terry ' s errant
Toronto, 127; Baera• . CLEVELAND,
First
home run ( bat): Je ff
122; McRae, Kan111 City, 121; Griffey
this season can turn in their throw from left field to first base. Mitchell, Gallipolis Rockies
Jr., Scau.le. 111: Lofton, CLINEu.ND,
However, Donnell died there when
resumes during l.h~ sign-ups.
11-4; R. Alomar, Tormtn, 114.
Most hits: Matt Bissell, Tuppers
Fife flied out to right and Jeremy
DOUBLES : Olerud, Toronto, 41;
Plains
Tigers .
Dtiun mood struck out.
White, Toronto, 27; O'Neill, New York.
Physicals
for
Meigs,
Most
hom elnns: Ti m Siders .
26; Puckett , Minneaota, 2S; Carter,
After the Pirates gave them ·
Tororuo, lS; TManincz. Scra.uJc, 14; Orif.
Gallipolis
White Sox
selves more ,breathing room with a
fey Jr., Scatllc., 24; Anclezson, Blltimon,
athletes
set
Southern
ijome run derby champ: Rusty
24; Palmeiro, Teu1, 24.
'
two-run rally in the fifth, James
'J'RlPLES: HW.e, TcUI, 10; L. John.
Stewart,
Middlepon White Sox
""'· cm.,. 8o. 10: t.o~... a.EVEI-'ND,
Holzer Clinic of Meigs County. came back in the sixth and sand·
7: Cuyl« , De""''· 7: con, Chi&lt;aao. 7:
will be conducting sports physicals wiched a groundout between a pair
McRae,IC.anlla City, 6: Bacp, CLEVEDOWNING CHILDS J
LAND,l.
on Saturday, 'Aug. 7 for Meigs and of strikeouts to get lhe win.
Bidwell's hitters were Michael
HOME RUNS : Belle. &lt;!.EVELAND,
Eastern local school dislrict stil21: Orilfe y Jr., SNtlle, 21 ; Oonulez,
·
Shaw (2· 3), James, Johnson (both
Te11u, 27; Tea.ldiln, Detroit, 26; Fielder,
dents.
Do&lt;roil, 25: Thomu, Chic•a•. 24;
All Meigs Local School District 1-2) and Craig Swisher (1 -3). KC' s
Salmon, Califomia , 21 : Palmer, T"l'·
students should plan to arrive at 7 hiuers were Donnett (2-3), Trevor
2
1. STOLEN BASESoLorton, CLEVE·
a.m. Eastern Local School Di~trict Kern (1 -2) and Bradbury (1 -3).
LAND, 41: Curtio, C.lilomia, 37: R. A1ostudents should plan to arrive at 9 Inning totals
mar, Torooto. 33; Polonia, Callfomia, 32;
KygerCr~k#2 .... 000 020 = 2-4-5
YOUR INDEPENDENT
R. Henderson, Oai..land, 29; L, JohniCI1,
a.m.
Bidwell #1. .......... .100 22x = 5-5-1
aucPN&lt;:~~\( J::::;;.~l it,,,
1.... ..,
Aredsigned sports physical card is
WP-James
,. AGENTS SERVING
Yodr:, 12-3, .1100, 2.56; Muuina, B•IUreqUI ·
. .
.
LP
Bradbury
more, 11 -4, .733, 4.45; "~'¢"'· Konm
Holzer Chmc or Metgs County
MEIGS COUNTY
c;~y, 11-4, . 733, 3.04: W•ckmon, No~
is located on the "T' in Middlepon
Yak, 8·3, .7TI, 4.59, McOow.U, Chi"'
. SO Mill S
Special awards presented
SINCE 1868
o, IS-6, .714, 3.71; Hentgt~~ •. T~ron,o,
at J
~·
.
The
following special awards
f2-l , .106, 3.69: Fcnondoz. Chiclao. 12For more mforrnauon, call 992·
5,.106, 2.92.
2188•
STR.IKEOtn"S: R. 1ohnaon, S01nle,

Scoreboard

Wheeler and coach J ohn Sanders. Standing are
coach Gib Craig, Derek Baker, Kevin Wal~er,
Justin Cook, Jeff Mitchell, Bert Craig, Randy
Roach, Tim Mahan and coach Danny Cox.
Absent was play er Ian Fenderbosch. (OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne )

On Kyger Creek LL Tournament's last day,
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Sta" Writer
The Bidwell #I Pirates and the
Tuppers Plains Tigers claimed vic tories on th e Kyger Creek Littl e
League Tournament' s final day to
take the champion ship and 'third
place. respectively, at the expense
or Kyger Creek #2 and the Gallipolis Rockies.
In Saturd ay's semifinal action,
Bidwell #I bea t Tuppers Plains 15-

son's relay to rrrst for the double RBis, including a two-run homer.
play glanced off Renteria's ril!ht
The former cleanup hitler, hit·
hand and into the stands, allowmg ling .182 since lhe All-Star brealc,
Chuck Carr to score.
batted sixth Sunday.
Barberie alSo went on to score
" I think lhis is a big lift for the
as the Marlins ralli¢d for four runs
team,
winning two in a row for lhe
en route to a 7-3 victory.
" I got a bad break on what first time in a wh ile (s ince July
looked like a double-play ball,' ' 2)," Destrade said.
Rookie Robb Jllen (1-0) won his
S~~id Belcher (9-6), who had won
first NL start, his 90 miles per
four straight decisions.
Johnson argued unsuccessfully hour-plus fastball poPJ?inl! past lhe
with the umpires that Barberie Reds hitters at lhe begmmng of lhe
should have been ·called out twilight game. He retired the frrst
11 - seven on strikeouts - before
because of Renleria ' s inlerference.
Said fll'st baseman Hal Morris: Sabo followed a Destrade error
" The way I saw i~ lhe runner was with a two-run homer.
The 23-year-old Nen allowed
out of the baseline and be obstruct·
ed the throw, and I had the best two hits, walked none and struck
out eight in six innings. He was 1·1
view in the house."
in thre e starts for the Texas
Branson wasn ' t so sure.
"Sometimes when you slide, Rangers, who traded him July 17
for reliever Cris Carpenter.
. "'your hands go up," he said.
"It
was
hard
to
pick
up
the
ball "\..
"That's the way I was taught to
that
time
of
day,"
Branson
said.
slide," Ren~ria said.
Added Branson: "You've got to "He's got a good fastball. He's
be crazy to intentionallY, put your going to be a good pitcher. He
already is one."
body in front of the ball. '
The Reds had climbed to three
Renteria, his bruised right hand
wrapped in ice, said the victory games over .500 for the rli'St time
made his uninlentional injury "feel !.his season by. winning the rii'St two
~ames of the weekend series. Los·
a lot better."
Marlins first baseman Orestes uig lhe last two left them a seasonDestrade's sore back felt better, , high 16 1/2 games behind San
too. After getting Saturday off to Francisco.
''We need a minor miracle, not
rest his back, and also to get a
break from boos and fan critic ism, a sweep," Johnson said. " Maybe a
Destrade went 3-for-3 with three sw.eep all the way to the end."

Indians outslug Mariners 11-9_,.

IU UKN~MI:. N I

I

The Dally Sentinel- Page-S

'

Florida downs Cincinnati 7-3

Monday, July 26, 1993
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

tS

Sunday's scores
Bc:.ton 8, Oaklllld I
New Y ad 9, Ctiifomia 8

MinnCIIOLI 5, Baltimore 2
Milwaukee 7, OUCIBO 3
Toronto 9, Tcu1 7

Tonight's xames
Tcau (Brown 7-6 and Bohanon 4-1)
at Kanu~ City {Haney 6- 2 and RumlliiCn 0-l). 2. 6:05 p.m.
New York (Key 12-3) II Detroit
(W.U. 9-6), Bl p.m.

CLEVELAND (Kramer 3-2)

Saturday's scores

(Finley

Allant.a J I , Piuabursh 6

ll·1),t0o0l p.m.

Colorado 9, SL Louu 8

Tuesday's games

San Oiqo II, Monuul. 4

New York (Abbott 7· 1) 11 DeLtOil
(Oullick1001 6-l), 7oOlJ&gt;m.
Blililnorc (Su~elllfe 8-6) at 'foronlo
(Moorill-10), 1:35 p.m.

Sunday's .scores
Atlama 13, Pittsburgh 1
Chic:aao 3, Houlton 1 (ll inn.)
· St. Louis S, Colondo 4 (II inn.)

CU!VELAND (Mulil 2·3) at Chicago (M&lt;Oo...U ll-6), 8:05p.m.
Boo.on (Duwin 9-7) 1t Milwaukee

New Yodo 4. t.o. Angdeo 0
Montreal.S, San Diego 4 (10 inn.)
San FranciKo S, Philadelphia 2

(NIVID'O

(Appter 11-4), f :1S p.m.

Minnesota (I'apani S-1t ) at Seattle

Today's games
(He1'11hiser 7-9) at San

Francisco (HICkmon 5· 1),4:05 p.m.
San Di.eso (Whilchunt 3-6) at Otica8,0 (Guzman 9·7), I:O.S p.m.

CINCINNATI (RiJO 7-l) "H.......,

·

'

(Kilell · l), 8o05 p.m.
Allanta (Maddu11 l 0-8) at Colon do
(l.Mkanic 1·3), 9:0.5 p.m. ·

'Tuesday's games
San Dicao (Benu 10-7) at Chicaao

(Cookel-6), 7:35p.m,

, Florida (Rapp 1-2) 11 New York
(Gooden), 7:40 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Browni ng 7 · S) at
HOUlton. (B. Williama 3·3), B:OS p.m.

Adan11 (Smoh z 1-8) 11
(Reynoo•}·l ), 9o0l p.m.

Color~do

LOI An&amp;elel (Grou 7-B) 11 San Fnncilco (B\Ukea: 14-4), 10:3.5 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGI)F;
EulemDMdon
W L
P&lt;~

ss

Bmt.on ....................

Gl

43

.S61

Now Yollt ..............S6 44

.560

Tomnto ..................S6 44

.S60

Ba1U.................... l4 45

.S4l

Dcuoil. ...................Sl 41
CU!VELAND .......47 S2

.liS

4.5

.475

l .l

Mllwaukee ......... ~.-39 57

.406

ll

45
47
47
SO
S3
MUu.CIU ............. Al 54
OUland .................40 ll

.536
.SlS
.510
.49S
.4S4

2
25

4

.438

8
9.5

.421

11

Saturday's scam
B011.CI\ S, OUland 3

Oll:land (W itt 8-7) at California
(Sprinaor 1 -~~ lOoOl p.m.

NL leaders
BAmNG: Gllarraaa. Colorado.
.392; Merced , PitllburJh, .3.5S; Bondi,
San Francisco, .344; K:Nk, Pbiladelphi•,

.341; !e.ffcrie~, Sl. Loui• • .-340: Gwynn,

RUNS : Dytnra, Philadelphia, 90;
Bondi, Saa fp.ncilc;o, 79; Kruk:, Philadelphia, 67: Bigio. !lou...., 66: D. Lewir,

Sm Franciaco, 65; BlllliCI", AllanUI , 63;
Cohman, New Yolk, 63.
RBtoBandt, San francioco. 79: M&gt;u
Williunt, San

Fr~ncilco,

72; Galamg1,

Colorado, 70; Daulton, Philadcl~, 70;
J\ll\ico, Atlanta,, 61; Mu.my, New Yock,
66:1h.a.-.HoU.oon. 6l.
IIITSololl'orioo, SL Lwio, 1:12: Golu·
raga, Co1ondo, 121; Dykllta~ Phil.ldelphi• , 111; Bondi, S1n Frane i1co, 117;
B1peU, Hou.\011, 116; Butlm, t.o. Ante·
leo, 116; Graco. Oticaao.ll4.
OOUBLES; B'ichette.. Colorado, 32;
Bifaio, Hol.lltoa, 21; Dyk~tr• , Philldcl·
phil, 26; Oi.lkey, St. Low., lS ; Oru:e,
ChicliO. 25; Galarnaa. Colorado, 25;
Gwyruo, San Dioao. 25.
- TRIPLES: Colam1n, New York, 8;
CanUla. Colorado, 6; Morandini,
Phil.odelp!U, 6; D. U.wio, $,. F -

Diamond holiday ends .. ~

MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 Second St., Ppmeroy

New

110; Lanptoo, Cllifomia, 120; Guzman,

111; Penz. New vcm. 1t6; A~
pier, Kanna City, ~ 14; . Cone, Kanus
City,114; Finley, Califomn, 113.
SA YJ!S; M~t&amp;amCII')'. Kanw: Cit~,
30: Aplilon. MiMoiCilO, 27: Oloon. Balli·
more, 26; D. Wud, Toronto, 261Ruuell,
Booux\, 26: Henke, TOlu, lt; Ee.i&lt;cnley,
o.tund, 21.
.
Toror~to,

6; Finley, H~1ton t 6; E. Younf, Col·

Ll

Wetltrn Dlvlllon

OUcoao ..................S2
Kan&amp;U City ...........so
Texu .....................49
.· S..ule ....................49
Call!Omia ...............44

(llwonl·1), 10:05 p.m.

s.. Dioao..329: Once, au"''"· .325 .

(ll.t.Uy 7-4), 3o20 p.m.
SL Louil {Magr.n e 8· 8) al Philadcl·
phia (Clrcate l 2· 3), 1:3l p.m.
Monttcal (Rueler l-0) at Pittabuqh

Twn

5-8),1;()5 p.m.

~es.a1 (Rogers 7-6) ll Kansu Cily

florid.l 7, CINCINNATI~
A_!IJC~ell

11

Cbicaao (Alvarez 8~) •.8:05 p.m.
Botwn (Ocmc:n~ 9·6) 11t Mih~·•ukee
(Novoo G-0), Ull p.m.
O&amp;kllnd (Dulin&amp; 2-4) n Callfomi1

Chicago 7, Houlton 6
San Franeilco S, Pbilldelphil 4
to. Angeles S, New YC'M'k 4 (10 lnn.)
Rorid.1, CINCINNATI 0

L01

BBYFL sign-ups
to begin Saturday

Detroit 3. Kanua City 0
CLEVELAND 11, Seoule 9

orado, 5; Marun, Piwbuqh, 5; . Bell,
Piltlburah. S; Butler, I...t:. Anaelal, .5.
HOME. RUNS: Bonds, S""an Fnncilco,
29; l111tice. ·AillftLI, 23; Man WWi1au:,
S~n Fnnciloo, 23; Oant. AtlanLI, 22; Me·
Cllilf, Allanu, l2; llonillo, New YOlk, 21:
PWzo, Loo An-. 20.
STOLEN liASES: Coioni.an, Now
" Yolk, 38: D. Lawia, San Fnncilco, :W;
De.Shiolda, Montrul, ~1; Carr, Florida,
301 Jeffcme~, St.
30; E. Youn&amp;.
Calondo, 26; &amp;-., CJNCI!;NAn, 26;
Dyk-. PhihdolpiWo, 26.
PITCHING (U decision1) : Kilc,

Lou••·

H'
"'"""· 11 ·1. .9l7,l.1t:
T. o,..,,,
Phila-.
3.31:
At·

B-.Son Pnn·

12· 3, .800,

1ott10, l {-3••716, 3.05:

A~,

"

- • Transactions • Buebi!U
AnwkanLaa•
CHICAGO WHITE SOXoPloood

Gomao Bell, dooi&amp;nllod hitl«·oonfieldor,
on the 15-day disabled Ua:t RccaUcd Man

MeNllo, catcher, from Nuhvi&amp; of the
Amoric.an Auociation.

DETROIT ~TIGERS : Siped Storm
Qavil, pitcher. O.lpotod 1olul H.Wot.
pitcher, to Tol~o of lhc lntcmalional
U.p for uai.pmCI'Il.

--Sports briefs-Tenn'Is
MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) -· Jennifer Capriati routed Mary Joe Fernandez 6-3, 6-0 in lhe final or lhe
Palhmark Classic exhibition Sunday.
.
Soccer
MEXICO CITY (AP) - . Ignacio Ambriz, Luis Zague and
Guillermo Cantu scored goals 1111d
American defender Desmond Arm·
stron,s had an own goal as Mexico
routed the United States 4-0 in
Sunday's final q£ lhe CONCACAF
Gold Cup.

John A. Wade, M.D.
. Suite 112 Valley Drive

Pt. Pleasant, WV.
Call 354·675·1244 for appt. or information
' I,

--

"""'...

,,

,_

�..

I,

.. .

•
•

The n ·aily Sentinel

•The Area's Number I

Monday, July 26, 1993
.

:•

.

.

At least one R~no tadio station,
KillT-FM, won't play it because
some listeners complained.
But Milce Houghton, marketing
chief of the Reno-Sparks Convention &amp; Visitors Authority, looked
on the bright side.
" Maybe the peop)e will remember Reno ,8!1d forget what the.song .
is about," he said.
,

•

'

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Susan
Rullan, w~o played office manager
. Roxanne Melman on "L.A. Law"
for the past seven years, said she
was unceremoniously dumped
from the NBC series.
In the July 31 issue of TV
Guide, Ruttan said her character
wiD disappear next season because
"the powers that be felt that the ·
: character wasn't worth the
money.
She says that nobody who
. worked on the show even said
goodbye: "It hurt my feelings,"
• Ruttarnatd.
· Executive Producer William
Finkelstein said he felt the net: work's :money would be better
spent getting new faces on the
show.

BAYREUTH, Germany (AP) Russian culture is in distress and
needs foreign aid to support artists
templed to leave the country. former Soviet President Mikhail S.
Gorbachev said.
Help also is needed for architectural monuments, museums and
libraries, Gorbachev said Sunday at
a news conference before the opening of a five-week Richard Wagner
Festival.
Fonner German Foreign Minister Hruis-Dietrich Genscher joined
Gorbachev. The two will head a
German-Russian committee seekin!( support for Russian culture,
whicj). is faltering as former state
financial backing dries up.
Genscher often dealt with Gorbachev in negotiations ihat led to
Germany's unification in 1990.

:
;
;
~
~

•

;St. Paul willing
·workers meet
" R:enection on God's Word"
was the program presented by
Hazel Barnhill, Mildred Brooks,
Doris Koenig and Joanna Weaver
at the recent meeting of St. Paul
Willing Workers at the church in
Tuppers Plains.
Mae Vineyard opened the meet'
ing by reading Psalm 90. Prayer
was given by r.-fildred CalweU.
Mildred Brooks and Patricia
Hall gave reports.
Thank you cards were read from
the Grace Kuhn family and St. Paul
youth group.
·
A donation was made to the
Donna Reed fund and 36 sick calls

were reported.
Quilting and apple butter making will resume in September.
The group voted to go to Burr
Oak Lake for the Oct. 12 meeting
to observe the fall season and a
luncheon.
Hazel Barnhill served ice cream
and cake to celebrate Doris
Koenig's and Tern Soulsby's birthday.
Glenna Sanders will serve at the
August 10 meeting. Beulah ·zumbach also attended the July meetmg.
The meeting closed with the .
prayer circle.

Women's society meet
The Reedsviile Nazarene bara Swartz titled ''Let Freedom
Women's ·society held their month- Ring."
ly meeting at the church with GloAttending were Taml Putman
ria Decker, Christie Hensley. and Rosie Scott, Marlene Putman, Eve:
Evelyn Barr as hostesses.
lyn Barr, Chrikstie Hen.sley, Gloria
Tami Putman presided at the Decker, Janelle Sargent, Sandra
meeting. Playground equipment Wnght, Amanda Scyoc, Greta Sutpurchased by the group was deliv- tle, Mattie Mae Morris, Sue Douered during the meeting.
glas, Kenda Gibbs, Lijnda Putman,
Birthdays and anniversaries Barbara Masters, Cathy Masters,
were recognized for July.
· • Sue Suttle and Barb Swartz.
There were 67 shut-in calls
The next meeting will be held at
reported and cards were signed for the church with a white elephant
the sick and shut-in.
·sale following the meeting. .
Devotions were given by B.ar-

Q: My husband and I are apply-

ing for Supplemental Security
Income (SSI). We were told that
our r~rst month's check may be less
than the others. Why is this?
A: SSI payments are adjusted in
the flfSl month 10 take into account
the number of days you're eligible
during that month. For example, if
your eligibility begins on the 15th
of the month, the firSt month's payment will be about 1(1 the amount
of the your normal paymenL
Q: My parents, who are elderly
aad in financial need, receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
The •checks help but they still have
ttouble meeting their basic needs.
Is it possible that they might be
able to receive public assistance
payments ru; well as SSI?
A: Check with your local social
services agency to see if your parents are eligible for home energy
assistance or other kinds of help.
And if they haven't done so
already, they should check with
Social Security or the nearest welfare office to file for f09d stamps.
If their income from sources other

RATES

.

than Social Security or Supplemental Security Income (S~I) has gone
down since they applied for SSI,
they should call or visit their local
Social Security to see if their SSI
payment can be increased ·
Q: I had a car accident and
broke my jaw 'and chipped some
teeth. Will Medicare pay for the
treatment I receive for these
injuries?
A: Medicare will pay for the setting of your broken jaw but the
capping of broktn Ieeth is normally
not covered.
Q: ·My wife recently suffered a
stroke which left her unable to
,spealc clearly. The doctor suggesred
that my wife take speech therapy.
Will Medicare pay for speech therapy?
.
.
A: Yes, however, your wife's
doctor must prescribe the therapy,
set up a plan of treallllent, and periodically review the plail. Your wife
may receive the therapy as an outpatient of a participating hospital or
skilled nursing facility, home
health agency or clinic, or public
health agency approved by Medicare.
Q: I am a disabled veteran who
is receiving Social Security benefits and Medicare . Recently, I

received treatment at a Veterans
Administration hospital (VA) for a
condition not related to my military
service. The VA charged me a copayment fee. Will Medicare reimburse me?
A: No. Medicare does not reimburse velerans for VA co;paymerits
for services they receive in VA
hospitals and facilities unless those
services are emergency·inpatient or
ouJpatient hospital services.
Q ; My 30 year old sister has
been recently diagnosed !IS having
AIDS . Will she be able to get
health care under Medicare?
A: To receive health benefits
under Medicare, il person must be
age 65 or older, or be sev~ly di!l;, •·
a bled, and have received Social
Security disability benefits for at
least 24 months. If she isn't working, or if she's only working very
little, she. should file for Social
Security disability benefits right
1away. And if her income and assets
are low enough,' she can apply for
Supplemental Security Income ·
(SSI) benefits and Medicaid.
Reaching 65 years of age may
be a significant rung on life's ladder, but. it doesn't mean you have
to retire and begin collecting your ,

Dear Ann Landers: This · is in
worldwide multibillion-dollar
response to "Learning Spanish in
company. The average person here
Dayton," who complained that
puts in 10 to 12 hours a day with no
people don' work hard enough for
breaks or lunch. We have learned to
thirir companies.
cat and work at the same time. Our
At midlife, i changed occupations.
"lunchroom" consists of two
ANN LANDERS
There are a dozen people working
"1!193, Loo Au,et ..
vending machines and a water
in this office. We have no time cloclc.
11m.. Syndicate
fountain
. When a co-worker
Creafon Syndloate'''
Everyone puiS his own time on the
expressed his complaint about. the
time sheet
workload, he was told, "There are
I have seen phony time sheets and government, state governments, 24 hours in a day-- get it done."
coffee breaks that run anywhere unions, ad nauseam, have all
DENVER, COLO.: My husband
from lS minutes to six hours if the • "benefited, perked and privileged" works 12-hour shifts. We have
boss is out of town. Yesterday, three employees to the point of excellent benefits that include
employees played cards for seven bankrupting the citizenry. Major medical, dental and optical. For the
hours.
corporations are being brought to firSt time in our married lives, we
We have sick leave, vacation time, their lcnees daily.
can finally make it on line paycheck.
pension plans, paid insurance and
Wake up, Americans! We are If others want to complain about lhe
wages ranging from $10.85 to responsible for ourselves, ftrst, lru;t company, let them try to find
$18.69 per hour, as well as time and and always. .. SHIREMAN- something beller out there. They'll
I half ftJ" overtime. And still they
STOWN, PA.
be very disappoir\ted.
complain. When will it end? -PROM ROCHESTER, MINN.:
SALEM, ORE.: This is in
SOMEWHERE IN MISSOURI
Corporate America is in trouble response to "Learning Spanish in
DEAR MISSOURI: Good because of years or short-sighted, Dayton." I am a ·small business
question. Keep reading for some foolish decisions made by grossly owner and can attest to the fact that
additional comments:
overPaid corporate executives. These the letter writer was on targeL
Dear Ann Landers: The cradle- people rarely pay for their mistalces .
to-grave mentality has .banlaupled Even if they are ftred, they are so
Federal and state taxes, Social
our wonderful country morally, wealthy they continue to live in Security and Medicare, unemployfmancial!Y and creatively. '
luxury and couldn't care less.
ment insurance and . worker's
NO CITY, USA: I work for a compensation are eating me alive.
From the top down; the U.S.

Ann
Landers

CHICAGO (AP) - Michael
Jordan's all-star softball team had
some Magic but wru; slam-dunked
by Michael Bolton and his band.
"Michael brought in the heavyweights, but we dealt with them
appropriately and swiftly," the
singer said Sunday after his team
· defe;~led Jordan's All-stars 7-1 in a
charity game.
The all-stars included Earvin
"Magic" Johnson, actors Daniel
and''William Baldwin, Tom Selleck
and Mark Harmon, Hammer, EvanRENO, Nev. (AP) -Country . der Holyfield, hockey player Chris
singer Doug Supemaw is getting Chelios, and broadcaster Ahmad
some heat about his hit song Rash ad.
That lineup managed only four
"Reno," though he says he only
used the name because it rhymes hits. Jordan scored their only run
when he reached home after an
with casino.
The song, which compares the error.
The g~me, pl~yed before a
city and casinos to a heartless
Chicago
White Sox-Milwaukee
worpan, is in the Top 20 on B•llBrewers·
match up at Comiskey ...
board's country chart
Park,
raised
money for the Michael
Supemaw, of Houston, said he'd
Jordan
Foundation,
which raises
never even been to Reno when he
money
for
needy
children.
wrote it at a Texas fishing lodge
last year. "It just made for a good
• BOSTON (AP) - Joe McGinrhyme," he said.
niss
has been accused by a second
Mayor Pete Sferrazza, who first
Q,llthor
of improperly using her
heard the song on his headset while
work
for
his controversial book
jogging, said his initial reaction
''The
Last
Brother" about Sen .
was that it portrays casmos as
Edward
M.
Kennedy.
being heartless.

..

'

From Ed Peterson
Social Seeurity man.ager in
Athens

Social Security benefits. Many
people choose to extend thei r
worlcing life, and when ihey delay
their retirement they are increasing
the amount of the benefit they will
eveniuhlly receive.
People who' continue working
beyond age 65 increase their Social
Security benefit in the following
ways:
• Each additional year you work
adds another year of eljrnin$S to
your Social Security record. Higher
life-time earnings result in higher

Days

To place an ad

Call 992-215f1
MoN. thru FRI.

• Your benefit is also permanently increased-depending on
your age&gt;-;-bY a certain. percentage
when ret1rement 1s del;~l'ed. For
example, a per~on born 10 1928
would increase h1s or her benefit by
4 percent each year worked beyond
age 65.
Even though you delay your
retirement, be sure to contact us to
discuss applying for Medicare
when you reach age 65. In some
circumstances, your Medicare premium will be higher if you delay
applying for the medical insurance.
The Athens Social Security
office is at 221 1(1 N Columbus Rd
and the l'!"&gt;ile is 592-4448 (toll free
nationw1de 1-800-772-1213).

8A.M.-5P.M. -

SAT.B-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

benefi~.

• Ad. outlide lhe eounty your ad ruu MUit he prepaid
• Receive dYcouat for ..U paid iu adva-.ee.
• Free Ad. : Glweaway aad Fouad. ad. "adlll' 15 word. will be
•
•
•

•
,
•

nnl·da)'l al ._ ebarp.
Prtce olad for all c•pitallelten il douhle price of ad eolt
1 poialli.De type only ued
Sentinel il nol r-Npon~ible for erron alter fiJ'•l day (check
for error. fant day ad rUDI ill paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
d•y after puhlicatioa to mde correction
Ad. t~i m1111 be paid in advaoce are:
Cord of Thulu
Happy Acl.
Ia Memoriam
Yard Sal•
A elu•ified at:herti.ee-.ent placed in the Gallipolil Daily
Tribune (except Ct.willed I&gt;Uplay, B111iaeu Cord or Lepl
Notice.) wUI aho appear i.n the PoiDt Pleua.al Repter a.ad

take food back on one of those,"
Spradlin added.
'J:hat's the beauty of this little
museum overlooking the Russell
Fork River on the Kentucky-Virginia border. Spradlin, 66, and the
other retlfed railroaders who run it
are part of the history.
uwell, it's our ' life/' said
Edward Stone, 70, who worked for
39 years as a car inspector on the
old Chesapeake &amp; Ohio Railroad.
''I mean, that's aU we ever did.''
"You get it in your blood,"
added Jetry Slone, 56, who retired
last year after 34 years as a C&amp;O
1
clerk.
It's hard to imagine this sleepy

Community Calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and ~he day or that event. Items
musfbe received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal,
endar. .
.
MONDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS- Vacation
Bible School at St. Paul United
Methodist Church will be Monday
through Friday from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
The theme is Celebration Park.

Pomeroy.
REEDSVILLE - Eastern High
School will start varsity football
conditionin&amp; MOnday. Players
should be drc!ssed and on the field
at 7:30p.m. Pick up athletic packets at the high school office. All
sports physicals will be Aug. 7 at 9
a.m. atHMC.
~

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The regular meeting of the Meigs County
LEPC/EOC Committee will be
Rutland - Vacation Bible School Tuesday at 11:30 p.m. Lunch will
at the Rutland Free Will Baptist ·be served.
church will be held from Monday
through Friday, 7 to 9 p.m. The
RACINE - Pepper Production
public is invited to atlend.
educational sessaon Tuesday, 45:30 p.m .• Star Mill Park, and 8MIDDLEPORTFamily 9:30 p.m. at McK~ie Ag Center
night swimming at. the Middleport in Gallipolis.
Pool is Monday from 7-9 p.m.
HARRISONVll.LE - The HarTUPPERS PLAJNS - The free risonville Senior Citizens Club will
- tuberculosis skin testing clinic at meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
the Tuppers Plains Fire Station will townhouse. ·Bring snacks. All
be Monday from 5-7 p.m . with members urged to atleoo.
readings Wednesday from 5-6 p.m.
at which time cardS will be issued.
POMEROY - Big Bend Stem. wheel Association meets Tuesday,
MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN 8 p.m., Carpenters Hall, Pomeroy.
Coin Club will meet Monday at Plans for 1993 festival will be disBurkett Barber Shop in Middleport. cussed. Public invited.
Social bour and ttadin4 session at 7
p.m. precede the meeting. RefreshWEDNESDAY
mentS. New members welcome.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville
Past Matrons will hold a
·
POMERO.Y - The Meigs Coun- picnic Wednesday
at 7 p.m. at thety Veterans Service Commission
ho~e of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Nelson,
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in Flatwoods Road.

hamlet of 800 souls was once the
north-south interchange for two of
the mightiest railways of this country's industrial past - the C&amp;O
and the Clinchfield RailrOOd.
"AJI your fruit trains and manifold freight from Florida was interchanged here," said Spradlin. "As
far as a railroad point, Ellchom City
was known.''

' Along with that freighi came
masses of passengers and rail
workers who would pack the tiny
town's old boarding houses.
But duringt.~ past three
decades, railroa and trains have
grown less and ess a part of the
average American's life, and many
of the hundreds of items inside the
former 'oal-comp,any office seem
odd to younger visitors.
"Ordinary people don't know

Sometimes I wish I could IW11 baclc
the pages to the time my company
was just me.
· MAPLE HILL, ~.: I have to
agree with "Learning Spanish in
Dayton." America the Beautiful is
going to become "America the
Broke" if we don't shape up.
ST. LOUIS: As a retired manager
in a Fortune 500 company, I've been
around the block and paid my dues
many times over. One of the most
overused pacifiers today is the
·~ syndrome." When I was a
lcid in the '40s and '50s, social gurus .
attributed our shortcomings to
"the bomb.• Now "corporate stress"
is in . vogue. Both are cop-outs.
Whoever said life was supposed to
be easy?
P/anhing &lt;2 wedding? What's
right? What's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Bri&lt;Us" will relieve your aruiety. Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope
and a check or rrwney order for .
$3.65' (this includes postage' and
handling) to: Brides. clo Ann Landers. P.O. Box ll562. Chicago. Jll.
60611-0562 . (In Calfada, send
$4.45 .)

what anything is, " sa id A.N.
Stafford, 66, a clerk on the Clinchfield line for 32 years.
· The museum's hoard includes
dozens of ol&lt;J hand lanterns used to
signal along the tracks. Scores Of
belt buckles and hats bear the
insignia of " short lines" that were
long ago "starved out" by giant
companies, Spradlin said.
Some items show the strong
continuity of the railroads - for
example, 39-years-worth of dated
tacks, hammered into wooden tics
to show their age.
Others iII ustrate how much
things have changed . There's a
two-man crank drill once used to
bore bracket holes through the steel
rails, a process that Stone said took
40 minutes "if you had a sharp
drill biL"

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

142-Ru~and

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•

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614·698·3290

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'""
.I

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or TOLL FREE
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a few pennie~ spent here
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.

I

'

992-2156

" 1

11- Help 'IV oaled ·
12- Silualiona'IVaaled
1~ IDturaDC:e
14.-- Buai-·1'railli0f1
15-- Seboola &amp;:: laetructioa
16- Radio , TV II: CB Repai!17- Miacella.......
18- Waaled To Do

----

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Hlf\UUNG: Limeatone,
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PH. 614·992·5591

,\ I 1\ I ' I I
32- Mobile Hom• for Solo
33- FaMil• for Sale
34- B111l..,.. Buildillp
35- Lou II: t.•......,
36- Real Ul&amp;le Wanled

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Phone Evening•

I

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING
Plumbing
.......

;ij~

Leadlna
Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio
614·992·7144
38904

. 4/29/93 lin

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
•Painti ng Services '
interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing·
FREE ESTIMATES
50734 Bigley lldg• Rd.
Lang lollom, Oh. 45743

::Jr .

Call Sentinel

CLASSDIEDS!

.

992-2156

J&amp;T HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION
•NewHontel
•Garap1

Roof

Inside and Out
Free Eatlmatea,
Low Colla.
Work Guaranteed

614·9.49·2911 or
614·593·5010

I

In the Classlfledsl

5-24-1 mo.

.

.

· ~JAY,MAR
Qualig

Stone ·o.

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·99 2· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, ON.

,949·2826
6-11·93-1 mo.

EVERY THUR~DAV

EAGLES

BULLDOZER, BACKHoE

and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SJTES·and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAlNG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

CLUB

992·3838 1

6181'!12/ ma.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

Racm Addition•
-Gutter Work
-EI11Clric.ol and Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Ex18rior
Palntl'll!,
(FREE llMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

.-co.......

Re•deli•l
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

~ g

. IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thialld good tor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 005t-32
1
1112vt2111n
IiL--_-. ....
.. -.. ....,l.l:~lllll

FREE ESTIMATES

I

RIVER VALLEY"
CONTUCIORS'
. FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top
to Bottom

PH. 742·2217
6-30-1 mo. pd.

9-1 0-92-tfn

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
205-75R15"1lger Paw XTM AWL
205-75R14" Tiger Paw XTM AWL
215-75R15" Flreotone OWL
235-75R15" Firntane OWL

- CAll FOR PRICING 'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGR~SS' .112ws

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773-SSJJ
ASK FOR CHRIS

AMERICAN GENEUlliFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE C
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Morlgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. eAgent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·52'64

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)
2112192/tfn

Shade River Saddle Shop
r

• CUSTOM $ADDLES, •

LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

985·4473

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

7122m

. ..

'

'BINGO

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

949-2814
712'J/1 mo. pd.

From Foundatlo• .to

Mobile Home Re,.ir
Upho~lary
,

Ttickerwllle Rd.
Racine

1n11 mo.

6-9-93-tfn

Rof'r-ipnotio.j

G•eral Haulint

FOREVER
BRONZE .

992·7878 .

"Mathematic• Is the
alphabet with which
God h.. wrlltan the ,
Unlve ..e. "-Gali/eo
By Topic
By Apfiointment

E~lricalll:

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

Pomeroy, Ohio

......

..,

PI1U1hiDJ&amp;Heolillf .
Excuatitat
.

$25.00

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

PRIVATE
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTION

c...,;., Equi,....,

UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
· •TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

MotoreydM
lloau &amp; Moton
Salo
Auto Parlo II: Acc.~:rieal
Auto Repair

51-HoueboldGooda .
52- Sporlillc Gooda
53-Autiqueo
54- Mioe. Merchandioe
55- Build;"' Suppli•

3-4-93· 1

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6628

v•• &amp;41VD'•

\Jio 1\1 II\ \Ill~ I-.

HAUliNG
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable
Rates
JOE N.SAYI!lE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

Au,.. for Solo
TrueD for Sale

49-F.rL.ae

211ol\·3/tl n

k

Seed A: Forllliaer

41- 'H o...e. fM Real
42- Mobile .H om• for Real
43- Fara• for Rent .
44- ApartJaent for ReD&amp;
45- Fumil•ed Room•
46- Spaee for Rent
47- Wanled 10 Rent
48- Equip•eat for Beat

614·985·3373

II

'IVaotocllo Buy
Li•~IOek
Hay A Craia

HI· \ I \I ,

12-5-tln

4-19-93-tln

1

985·4181

DINO-MITE

·sAVINGS •••

'

PACK
ABIG PUNCH!

614-698-6500

CLASSIFIEDS!

I

ROOFIN\i.

. · WALKER ALLEY
Paris and Servke
Mowers • Cltala Saws

Fra1111 Repair
NEW &amp;·USED PARJS FOR
At.L MAKES &amp; MODELS

r. . ' -1;1,:
.....

.

Howard

_

'

~

-L Writesel

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

Speclabztng In Custam

·~
.
. ~----~.~
~~
-~"
.
.
.
.
•

882-New Haven
895-Lelarl
937-Bull'alo

WHALEY'S AUTO
· PARTS · .

CA&amp;II?!!
'

I \li\1 'I 1'1'111'

' 51201113

PIN down EXTRA

f "J

3-- AnnouDCemeatl
4- Giveaway
5-- Happy Ada
6- Lo,l and Found
7- Lo.t and Found
8- PuhiH: S,Je &amp;
Auclioa.
9- Wuled 1o Buy

James Keesee, owner

Want to:

•

67S-PI. Pleuant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-MMon

992-2772

Call Sentinel

"

I

245-Rio Graade
256-Guyaa Oi.t.
643-Arohio Dial.
379-Walnul

PUBUC NciTICE .
On Ju•.. 6, 1813, II
approximately 6:00 A.M.,
.L the MIV /lt.A. V11lll
· , IICCidlnlllly dl1chera-d 1n
.. unknown quantlly · of
nu...- 2 ciJeHI lull .t mill
poat 237.5 ol lh• Ohio Rlv•.
th affeoWcl • - lnolude
mU• 237.1 tD. IIIII• 2A2.5 of ,
the Ohio River. Campbell
Tr•n•portlllon Coll)pany,
Ina. 11 lh• OWIIIIr of the M1V
A.A. V11hll, wilfch le the
dalgnahld 1ource of the
eplll pur1uant 'to the on
Pollution Act of 11110.
Claim• ·lrlelng out of lhle
· 1plll mill' be eubmlllld to
Campball · T,.lllpOI'IIUan
CompMy, Inc., P. 0. Box.

8.

=4 Days=
40% off all items in stock ...
except Wilton Products
1 July 28-July 31
Sprina VaHey Plaza
Phone 446-2134

of any. Wibon Cake pan.

388-VIbton

992-Wddleportl
Pomt;roy
985-Cb.....
843-Portlaad
24 7-Lelart Fall.
949-Raeine

Public Notice

1,, _ _ _ _ __
2 . _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ __
4 . _ _ _ _ __
5. _ _ _ __
6 . _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ __

Store Wide Sale!!

I

2-laMemory
446-Gallipob•
367-Ciieahire

614-446-8568 r21'

CaU our ofTu:e for paid in advance rate•!

food barrel, noting that 115 pounds
of food and 25 pounds of hygiene
products have been collected. She
as the grange's deaf chairman read
an article on leaches.
_ Keith Ashley reponed on plans
for the Meigs County Historical
Society's observance Aug. 13-15,
of the battle of Buffington Island. '
Plans were made for the Meigs
County Fair exhibit and the next
meeting was aqnounced for Aug. 7
at 8 p.in. with Hemlock Grange as
visitors. Attending were 31 members, visitors and juniors. Potluck
refreshments ·were served.

1rr-------------------~
7·28·931hru 7·31·93
,
DJ's Candy,
I
1
Coupon Cakes &amp; Croftll 1
20% discount and tree
1
1
1 · Duncan Hines Cake Mix w~h purchase
1

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Free Estimales
446-2845

•'

.G ET RESULTS ·FAST!

Cla.,ified page&amp; cover the
foUowing telephone eschanges.••
'
.
GaDia Counly Meigs County Ma10n Co., WV

Remodeling and Repair
Painting, Experienced
Free Estimates

Public Notice

PellforSale

M01icallaa...,....u
FruluA:V•Ialtloo
For s.J. or Trd

,------1

667-Coot.llle

Young's Chain Link
Fencing

Rate Over 15 Words
$ 4.00
$ .20

15
$6.00
$ .30
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Business Card--.$17.00/ inch per mamlh
BuUetin Board.-.$6.001inch per day

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
t :00 p,m. Saturday
l:OOp.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedl\esday
tOO p.m. Thtmiday
t:OOp.m . Fri~ay

CARPENTER
WORK

Star Grange elects officers ~
J&gt;atty Dyer was re,elected master of Star Grange 778 when the
group met recently at the h311.
Other officers elected were
Larry Montgomery, overseer: Ray
Midkiff, sleward; Vicki Smith, lecturer; Rich Macomber, assistant
steward; Maxine Dyer, lady ru;sistant steward: Freda Smith, chaplain; Waid· Nicholson, treasurer:
Opal Dyer. secretary; Rose Barrows, Ceres: Bernice Midkiff,
Pomona; Janet Morris, Flora; AJan
W. Smith, gatekeeper; and Eldon
· Barrows, executive committee.
Janet Mccomber, community
service c~airman, reported pn the

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedl\esday Paper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

the Daily Sentinel, reachint O'Yflr 18,000 homeot

Railroad retirees keep museum chugging along
By ALLEN G. BREED
Associated Press Writer
ELKHORN CITY, Ky. (AP)If you think a "velocipede" is
some speedy insect with a zillion
legs, you need to make tracks to the
Elkhorn City Railroad Museum. ·
'C
E?~ard ' hick_'' Spradlin
won t JUS! let you v1ew th~ !50year-old, thre.e-wheeled railroad
hand. car. He 11. m?unt the oddlookmg contrapuon s wooden ,,~eat
and demonstrate how it was
pumped up and down the lines.
And it wasn'tjust used to check
the tracks. "In remote areru; where
there were no roads, if a person got
sick or needed food, they would

Words
15

1
3

Is the work ethic lost in America·?

MIKHAIL GORBACHEV

SUSAN RUTTAN

M~rketplace

Answers to social security questions

Names in the news
HINCKLEY, Minn. (AP) Willie Nelson, who has raised more
than $13 million t!Jrough six Farm
Aid concerts, hopes the floods devastating Midwest fanners also will
draw auention to their other problems:
"As honlble ru; everything is., ..
this may be the excellent opportunity to draw' all of the f&amp;limers '
problems to the allention of the
government," he said Sunday.
U.S . Sen. Paul Wellstone, D- •
Minn. , who joined Nelson at a
news conference, agreed, saying ·
the "silver lining" of the floods is
the opportunity to talk about the
plight of the American fanner.
Nelson was in Hinckley for a
benefit concert for farmers ~it by
floods. He presented a $20,000
check to the family fanners' disas- ·
ter fund, which is part of Farm Aid.
Proceeds from two other con. certs in IUinois also will be donated
to farmers.

Page-6

i

�.

r

Page 8 The Dally Sentlnei

Monday, July 26, 1993

OhiO

41 HOUS8$ for Rent · ·

Announcements
'&gt;~"" ~All&gt; R~&gt;JNIN&lt;! ouT oF

.The Dally Sentinel PaGe-9

ALLEY

Autos for Sale

71

SNAFU® by Bruce Beatlie

Monday, July 26,1993

w.-.as,oeo ~Air, CAiioo

O fovr
llearrange lett•rs of
acrombled words

Control, Oiood CoNidon GoM
To Hlalloll....,, Con SH At:

AmlrfCon -~ F!Ninco, 114~1S, Ptzu H.UI, Go~
tlpolle.

ALDER

For Sa/a: 1t811 ()tdomobllo IS
Royal, Exc:ollolll Cond/llqn, 814-

"'•

be-

low to form four 1impJe Wcrds.

PHILLIP

.

444-1211.

WOlD

PUULII

~MI ChlvroW CJIJtrttr 8t1Uon

Polf~l'l'1" l(VIII-If''l A~
~ 'Ill - 1'-M~,IU'Ie N C.~ . I' L 1..
~£'\' '7tl~ '; A t&gt;~ f'l"IZ-5- 0 N·

u.:ffo•r&gt;

.....

IUT IAilf

I

VANERG

I

BATOJ

.

NORTH
+JJ2
.7643

\

+AKJ6
+K&amp;

EEKANDMEEK
WHAT t::Q..'S HE
f'&lt;R A L.IVIIJG ?

WEST
761
A K 10 2

[X)
_...L..._ _

'1-H-tl

~
PLEMIT
1-"""T:......;:....=.,;.:....;.,....:...,....-4
I I .I I 1 I'

-r-o. . ,.u...;::L...r,;E;...E,.,_I.·:
·
I
s
.
My roommate in college
"
I. I• I• .
was not too smart when it
,.-------=·:...-. came to .guys•. One night she

EAST

+15

.QJt8

u ·

tQ1092

+eu

87&amp;2

I

lcameinlromadateand
sighed, "Do you think a boy
shc?uld leave his homework,tor
'-·--1.....:...1..-.L..-...1.-.&amp;..--1. a g1rlto do after only .......? ·

6

SOUTH
+AKQIOV

·~
HIS

+AQJIO

Vulnerable: Nortb-8outh
Dealer: South

""''

. Pill
Pill
Paso

Pw

P111

IT SEEMS UI&lt;.E

I FERGOT
SOMETHIN' !!

Norlll

2t

3+
t+

s+

Pus

Eul

Pus
Pus
Pus

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Cymbal • Musky • Aw!Jrd • B!Juble • SA0RY . .
Boss to son-in-law clerk, "You've got to think btg tl
you want to be a success. ' The son-in-law clerk replies,
"Oh yea, so how about doubling my SALARY?'

Pua.

Pus

Opening lead: • K

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Should you trust
opponents' bids?

.

ACROSS
1 Boxingvictory

'87 Bronco, Eddy Bower Ed.,
Exc. Cond., S3,00o mle., air,

cruioa, p/w saooo. 114f46-8584
affor 7 p. 814-441-1181.

Woohlf'r Drvar,

Color

Canning Tomatoee For Sale

Size

$3.00 /Buahol, Pick Your Ownl
Bring ConlalnorO. Don A. Hill
Fann, Letart Falla, Ohio, Cat/
114-247·2532 For 0'-lona.

256·1238.

oonvaraat on. 304~75~7108.

~king

C.mper

Refrigerator, Microwave, 814-

lo /Iva inl light houookHping,
Whho Maio Ago 23

.V. FrMZer, Air Con·

dhlorwr,

Wanted : female, 18-40yrs. old,

6535.

Rafrtgorotor,

For

C.nnlng
lom~~toea,
l)lcklld
$4.501 buohat, 614-247-4292

Single While Female Penpal
Age: 17 112 -23, Prefer Nonsmoker &amp; Alcohol FrH, Sind

anytlmo, Raymond RoW11.
Goldin • Sllvor Ouoon awoot.
com $1.50/doz. Tom Rouoh'o

Response To: P.O. Box 55, Gal·

lipoiis, OH

45631.

Dairy

Farm,

Rt. 2, Letart,
WV.304-862·2703 1ar largo or·

dora.

.

Tame Blackberries. $2.75 Quan,
We Pick PleaH Call Betorw You

Como, 814-317-0415 (Chaahiro).

PEANUTS

1m Chovy 4 - • drive, 4110
engine, D" lift k~, new rime I
lim. :JOW75-63$0 or m-a&amp;S5.
19112 GIIC Slorra, 6f4.446.7i31
AhorSP.II.
86 112 Nlaalan 4x4 king cab, vory
good eond.3o"ri72 extras, mull
oalt; S3200.

74

YOU KNOW W~AT'5 WRONG
WITH '(OUR 5TOR't'? IT'S
UNBELIEVABLY 60RIN6!

Hydraulic oil $14.50 buckot or 50

One Walker coon · dog, not
trained, to good home, 614-992·

7043.

H-rson;·wv. 304-175-7421.
J.D. 45 Comblno Lata Modo/

Three old televisions for part1,

Good Cond~ion, 814-245-5624.

With 234 Com Haads, Really

6

Motorcycles

1975 Suzuki Motorcycle .SOOT
$375, Cat/ 614 441 6418 Aftar 5

P.M.

1887 Interstate, uc.llent condition, 17.000 miiH, !oaftd,

chrome end llghte, m~~tchlng
e~~rgo
t111ller.
814-949-2587

FRANK AND ERNEST

245-5533.
Four1d: male Collie, In good
cond ., near traffic clr1ce .,.• •

Condition, 114-448·780Z
1980

Yamat.

Terrii· Pro

4

whMter whh 41" mower deck.

Excollonl condillon, uood vory
ltttlo. 614-446-0113.
'•
19111 Honda CBA 600 Now Ttroal
Vory Cloln, llony Extru
14,~. 814-441-71160, 614-44811H.

1992 Suzuki GSX·R eoo, 3000ml,
304-875-4836

Other Equipment At Howa'a
Farm Machinery, Jackson, Ohio,

114-286-5844.
llu•y Forguaon 165 Tnrctor,
$4,850; 135 IIF With Loader,

Har/ay Dawldoon Soortlllor 34110
mtloa, $5500 finn, 814-1192:0282.
Suzuki 11187 4 Whoator, 4 WD,
$1,500; 114-256-8614.

17,550; 1i0 Allie Chalmera With
Vermeer Round Bller, 17,150;

114-286-85.22.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

Found: parak81t, muat ldanllty,
Spring Avenue aru in Pomeroy,

Ram

614·9g2·2924.

Key• found at Cheshire Park
near shelter. 614-367-7026.

1Q81 TX17. bali U'llcker, 70ht
Evenru~= =or, w/ traUer,

Transportal ion

Lost: carpenlir equare, betwMn
sr,I'ICU$1 and Rutland, If. found
pease call 614--742·2201.

S6200. 3

76
71

(Bo) Blaek &amp; Whilo,

New Hell 31on piCkage air con--

Large Dog With Aid Collar,

d~ionar

Family PAl , VIcinity: Charolals
Lake, Plea•• Call It Found; 614·

Rooms for rant • week or month.

446·7435.

Clll after ·2:00 p.m., 304·773-

t.ost: Ski Master water ski, nur
Leon on Kanawha Aiv1r. It
found please call :l04-675-40QO.

5851, Maaon WV.

30 acre finn with 3 bdnn.
houee, 1 112 mlle• out Alo

Sale

Granda. 114-245-1227.

Mini farm 23 acrH 10 room 2

47 Wanted to Rent

$1,2115. lnlllailod. Oaa

Fumaoee, 614-148-1308

BORN LOSER
fliLLI~~!

Will Do Babyoltlin! in lly Home
Ratoo, 814-44'1o1152.

Phono: 114-448·2522, 10 A.M. To
5P.II.
.

GoH AI olftn'tn, Low

Financial

614 448 8581 aftor 7 p. 114-441·
1561.
11110 Chovllle Gel/ For Dataiio:
814-256-1481 Aftor IP.II.
11171 Cull- Suprema, 455 V-8,

counter dl.ep fryer, 2 bubt•,

Ilk•. new. 30....571-2132 efter

7:30pm.

S.al'll 18.. Cu. Frweur $75;

•uto., $2300. 304-675-2148.

1i73 Dodgo Polan, ohting on 4
WhMI drtve frame, new 318 IUIIO.

Or lull, 336 Second Avenue,

: MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Auto Parts &amp;

YOL.I1RE' AN IDIOT 10

~D

6G' MY FRIEND. I'M
A BUL
....L.:~';-(:_:.·":_..-4"1

2 15x8 1/T centerline pro ehock
whMI• w1 new llrM, fli8 Pontiac

TERRI6LE.
Di6A:J51Tio-J.

V.f Ford,

$1115, 814-388-t:ltt.
New iU tanka, one' ton truak
whaalo, radlatora1 lioor mota,

Ole. D 6 R Alil:oJIII&gt;IIY, WV. 304-

372·39$3 or I

79

~A_o_hlon.

Bowen, .Jr "J04-5 r.n36.

:!73"!1329.

·-.........

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Serv1ces

Ciydo

StMma
Prevent
Connac:ted

56 Clrew old. ·
57 Flnllh &gt;

DOWN

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CMtbrity Clphlt etyptogrwna . . CI'Mied tram quotatlona by fln'IOus people, put and
E.m letter In lhe cipher ttandl rot anotMr. TodiJr'• dutl: D tqUIW X.

preeent.

---

JULY 26l

Home
Improvements

are romanlica liy pertect for you . Mail $2

I tnfie melancholy \oday . il could

be sell ·

and a lOng. self-addressed, stamped enve· . induced. Tally up your ass e)s 1n l1f~ and
·lope to Matchmaker , c/o this newsp,aper. ,. you'll real ize the posilive side of the ledger
P.O. Box 4465 . New York. N.Y. 101 63.
i has more on it than the negative side

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be prepared ' PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Upon occa·
today by having a flexi,b le sche dul e . 1 ~ion your intuitive perceptions. are some·
becaus~ res pon Si bilitieS you ' ve been l limes rather remarkable . butth1s mtghl ~01
neglecting m1ghl vy lor immediale allen · 1 be one of those days. Rely upon your log 1c.
lion .
., not ypur hunches.

land; wooda, pli.tu,.. lnd hUll.

LIBRA (Sepl . 23-0ct . 22) Play 1~ 1ngs
close to lhe ves/loday and do not take any

COli

A
'Your
,.'Birthday

41 Hquses for Rant

Bad-··

For - : 3 I.A. 1 112 Both,
Ooraga Eclao Of Gal/lpctlo, NlcO ~uH l:arpot, No
Pilta, Muet Hive er.dlble Rtf.
$350111o., Sacurhy DopoaH. lnqulro At: 1127 Sacond A-ua,
GalllpolloOIIio.

Dobonnan

AKC

Pupploa, All Shota, Par- On
SWAIN
.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olivo Sf., Oallipoile.- &amp; UIOCI
fllm~uro. haatoro, Woot1n1 1
Worll booto. 114-446-3159.

l

Preml..., &amp;14-251--1450.

'

.

demands on yOur time and abilities. If you

ter of importance. It's im perative you posi·

' lions. will continuously grow in strength. as
well as mutual benefits.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) 11 you·re negotial·

today. A great deal more than what you nations tod~y t~ wo~ry '" advance cttout
intended might be constr~ed out of any . ~ow s~methmg IS .go1ng to t~m out. It you

negative comments you make .
..
J conc~1 ve a ~egat1ve blueprml , your sub·
CAPRIC_ORN (Oec. 22·Jan.19) it mlgh.t.be I conSCious mlghl follow II.
w1se to 1nvolve ~rse/1 1n o_ther ac11V111es / CANCER (June 21-July 22) Before voiun·
loday instead ol g01ng ~hopp1ng or barga1n · leering to manag~ a CritiCal ass1gnment ~or
hunting . This may not be one of your better another, be certa1n you know what you re
days for being value conscious.
.
, getting into. Surtace indica/ors may nol
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 1~) if you lee/ a portray a lrue p1cture.

at tt1e improv

I

osition . Know where to look for

I

mailunclionlng .
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) An open mind
is a must today il you're negollaling a mal·

get nailed. it could be your own lault.
lion yourself so you can see lhe olher guy's
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) Guard. po1ntolview.
.
. .
whal you say and lo whom you say il GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Be wary ol 1nch·

f!':ance and you 'll lind it. ·r~e Astro·Grap~
lli''F alchmaker. 1nstant1y reveals Which signs

,.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your inde ·
pendence will be ol 1mportance to you
loday, bul you m1gh1 Mve olhers pul heavy

_
in 'the year ahead you m1ght lorm two new
very benelicial alliances. These associa·

ing an importanl mailer today. thmk twice
be/ore bringing in an arbilralor. because
/his persOn might be anli-you and pro your

Roglotonod

ARIES (March 21-Aprl/19) Depend upon
yourseil 1nstead ol others .loday and you

risks in areas wilh which you're unfamiliar. ~ won't be caught oil guard . Reliable sources
especially those of a financia l nature.
upon whom you can usually count might be

Tuesday, July 27, 18113

5 Yoar Okl With I Acrli
-Or
Looa,
4
Or
5 114-371$375.tlo Pluo Dopooh,

24~24

I

--·

Flollda tower

I&gt;,RRE~r

SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCEi..S:
lla/aO County, Salom . l'wp.,
18501 IC,.., Remote, IM•udtul

:1114.

"WeH, there goes my appetite."

54 Equai\IY ·,

55 LOOked at

E&gt;t:T

Goods

Solid C111h Bualn•e.

Estate

53 Arrow polaon

11~10

Household

good . map. 1_.14-5113Fraa Dotaila, 212·211&amp;-111110, Ex!. 8&amp;45, for
At-.,OH.
'
2117.
Vending Routa: For Sale.
Ren1als

Real

52 TJPt Dl due,k

(kTON

WMk Pot1nt111. Muat Sell. 1-800-

ltron~t

47TtaM
51 Actren
Mtrl&lt;el

"COPS'' YO\)

Wiler, Information rn~~utd on re304-171-1253, plal.u no
Local Vondlng Routo: $1,200 A qUMt,
alngle wldl tr:allel'll.

_High Traffic, Local l.ocationo.
Equipment. HI00-214Vand.

27
29
30
31

Clrrllgt
44 Faint

MOO'I;ro

Merchandise

Loti &amp; Krw•ge for home con8trvetlon on Raybw~ Ad,
,.,.10n1ble Natrlctlon., county

MIII, Prolle Dally, Gaurlntled.

. IIMdlntl

21 In
22 ttqaUve
vote
23IIHIYP

I MONDAY

ASTRO·GRAPH

Nama Your Own lneoma llaka
Foriuno At -Homo, OWn .luoi-

under-

t:J,ule•

40
41 Father ol Jr.
42 EngHoh baby

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 aera ioto" Rf

85S.. 363.

LEAVE IT 'IV N\e. TO
PKJ&lt; AN IDIOT R:lR
A FRie:ND.

I HA'VEA

C.rburator

To 3111

Btate
12 NulfttrO 13 Plalnun
14 Andea
country
t5 Malt turkey
16- Inkblot
talt
IBUMiul .
20 Two wortll ol

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
' p
IAYIGM
ILFIPU
YIM
H L
1847, Liberia, which was founded by
the American Colonization Society as
ZXIZ'M
OFHVIYAG
YXG
BIP1.
a West African colony for freed U.S.
slaves, became an independent re·
p
MZIGKU
H E Z
IAYIGM
H L
public.
(VHDPCN
ZFHEVAK.'
TODAY'S )URTHDAYS: Georg e.
Bernard Shaw (185~ · 19501, playwright·
FPUUPWJ
WXIIOPHC)
critic; Carl Jung (1875·19611, psychol·
••• _R _ _ _ __ ,,,
' ' V H Y K.
ogist-psychiatrist; Aldous Huxley PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "Whatever you see 1n ~ movies comes totally
11894-19631, novelist; Blake Edwards out of TV commercials." - (Director) Rtdley Scott.
11922·1. director, is 71·

I Chavorolaf, $3110. 304-675-1719.
111711 ·1886 302,

Thall1nd

-

mOior, 304-8'75--5883.

892-2428, If no lniWir ptuM
IMYI m...age on machine.

Business
Bulldtngs
Commorclal Building For Sa\o 51

~ln.,

32,000 mit., air, cruiH, $8000,

8 Mormon

Todoy is !he 207th
rilly of 1993 and the
36th day of summer

aftor 4:30.

'90 Grand Am, 2 dr., exc. cond., · New PoUr a.rrel

Julius Caesar said: "There Is no terror; Cassius, in your threats; for I am
arm'd so strong in bpnesty."
·
It Is Pne. of the enigmas of bridge:
How honest Is an opponent's bid or
play? Sometimes, of course, be Is purposely trying to mislead you with .a
psychic bid or a false-card. But most
of the time be is honest as a Boy Scout,
and you can lake his bids and playe at
face value.
West learned this lesson the bard .
way on today's deal.
North agreed on spddes. After four
cue-bids, South, who bad nothing else
to cue, Jumped to the slam.
West led the heart king and cootin·
ued with the ace. South ruffed and
casbed two top spades, noting the 3-2
bfeak. He had 11 top tricQ: · live
spades, two diamonds and four clubs.
Tbe bunt was for tbe 12th trick. One
possibility was to hope for.some luck
in dlamoacls, taking the finesse after
caJbing dummy's ace. Here that
wouldn't have worked.
South spotted something much bet·
ter. He played a .diamond to dummy's
king, ruffed a heart in band, led a diamond to dummy's ace aad ruffed dum·
my's last heart. Now a club to tbe king ·
was followed by tbe spade jack, on
which South discarded his diamond
loeer. Three more club tricks broapt
the total to 12. South bad won Ills
trump tricks, not five.
·
West should bave believed South's
lour-heart cue-bid. If West just switch·
es to a diamond (or a club) at trick
two, South must finlsb one down, lack·
ing tbe entries for the dummy
reversal.

July 26, 19'93

Accessories

for S&amp;le

992-629il.

Wanting to rent· 2 or 3 bedroom Rogu/Oiton Slzo Ping Pong
houu, ln c... n end good cand~ Talito $75, 114-388-lHIII1, 114-3811liOn, p,.ter prlv1te uttlng, 11_.. 11304.

.tory houN, amall birn, 1 mUe
out Jtrrtco Ad, overtook• Point
Plu•nt, $35,000. 304-675-t811t.

Autos

'82 Buk:k Riviera, good concU·
tlon, hloh mlluga, $1200, 114-

Starting ot $120/mo. Gallta Hotol. PO~m maclllno, 59, lika n~
514-446'11580.
21' 118", color •CIII, 120v,
1220w,
60hz. Hotdoa mach/no,
SINplng roome whh cooking.
et11m bun warm•, SS, llka new,
Aloo trailer opaca. Ail hook-upo. color
docate, 28"Jc11". Hotpo/nt

Lost: medium size dog, black
wllh brown face, Vinegar StrMt
area, children&amp; pet, 614·949-2315.

Yard

z."'

1m Croottlnor 11 Ft. cipon..a..,,
TrHla'!'l 165 HP llarcruloar, 61'256-61,...
19801 BaJa 17 Ft. Opon· Bow V·

must call to 10, 614· 992·2120.

7

7-

Haul, 140 HP, Me.n ::ruiHr, Uka

pursa In Mkldleport,

Dog

'

ebbr.
4 Old name lor

-

Anewer to PriYioua Puz:z:le

DATE BOOK

Now Concltlionl 614-2511-6160.

Loot:

..

'

or 875·7256.

304-575-6595.

Found:

$3,0110 Flrm. l14-44f.7t04.
19VII Hortoy Dawidaon U3, Now

IXC. CO!ld., $58011.

prox. 1 ·Year Old Found At Ex·

Very Friendly, Poulble Chlld'a
Dog. Found On Wed 7121103. It
No Answer L..VI Mnsage: 614-

Banthl!ll 350, fair

N- Holland 246 Hoyblnd, Ancj

Shaphard, Appears To Bo A/&gt;"

160 lAt. 35,

Yama~

Balltrl, New Honend Raket,

Found: Female : Part Germ1n

Rt.

Fertilizer

Spraador1 Ford Plow 1 Oloko,
Com Ptckara, SqUir. Hay

Lost &amp; Found

xon Station, 5I

SpMdlr,

READING IT..

Low Mlltag., Loll Ot Extras

gal $125. Sld1r1 Equipment,

l.. nure

WRITING IT !

ohapo, $15110, 614-148-3010.
1989 Yamaha VIrago 750,
••ught Niow 'Itt lllnl C'ondttlonl

1986 John O..ra Tractor 850,
Good Condition, 614-446-3210

614·1112·2793.

I FELL ASLEEP

.:_:_~.:;_:...;_:~~=--­

1987

61 Fann Equipment
Five mixed collle puppies, male
and fvmale, to good home, 814·
985-3 436.

COULD
FALL AsLEEP

·3397.

avanlnga.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

A PERSON

By PbUIIp Alder

with
~2 Small ehlld
33 Nec:k..,ar
34 A continent
(abbr.)
35 Tendon
37 llually clump
38 Soutlleut
Aun hOliday
39 Partly
fermented

1

I•

'•
.

'

�..

.

Page-1o-The Dally Sentinel

1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday,

July~.

1993

Exhibit has landmarks and trivia from 42

Reds
defeat
Astros

By ANNE GEARAN ·
It begin s with a letter from there is something for everyone."
AssOcilted Press Writer
George Washington, coincidentally including a chair fashioned of elk
FREDERICKSBURG, Va. (AP) addressed to "Governor Clinton," horns and presented to Rutherford
- A special ticket admiaed Amer- a British colonial overseer. There's B. Hayes, and a replica of the enoricans to a bizarre spectacle in 1868: also a shopping list prepared by mous bathtub built to ileeommodale
the impeachment proceedings Thomas Jefferson, and a love letter the obese William Howard Taft
against an unpopular president, from John Tyler to his wife.
"Sometimes the very accessiA lock of Jefferson's red hair, ble, anecdotal items lead pwple !0
Andrew Johnson.
One of those tickets, with highly . cut just after the third president ask more questions about the presistylized printing and florid 19th· died, is on show, as is a piece of dency," Ms. Salata 5llid.
century language, is among more the White House draperies used by
Most of the Monroe Museum
than 200 items related to America's James Buchanan.
items were acquired by Laurence
Garish Victorian·era paintings Gouverneur Hoes, Monroe's great·
42 presidents on display in ·a new
of presidents are mounted near great grandson and an avid collecexhibit.
" Can you imagine? That would political cartoons lampooning tor.
be like getting tic~ets to Water- Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Herbert
"They have just been stol'ed in
gate,'' said Lee Langston-Harrison, Hoover and others.
our archives and no one really
The display for each president knew what was in there," Mrs .
curator of the I ames Monroe Museincludes
a portrait, an example of Langston-Harrison said.
um and organizer of the exhibit
Johnson, a Democrat, served his signature and at least one other
All ilems are original and some
from 1865 to 1869 .. He was item. All but a handful of the items are quile valuable, Mn. Langstonimpeached by Republicans in the came from the Monroe Museum's Harnson said, Others have purely
House of Representatives but large collection, Mrs. Langston- anecdotal appeal, such as a handHarrison said, and most haven't lettered sign proteSting a 1973 visit
cleared by the Senate.
The exhibit runs the gamut from been exhibited before.
by Richard Nixon's wife to the
"We wanted to do a popular museum. "He Lied ... Again," the
grand china and formal White
House invitations to Woodrow exhibit. This is history for the sign reads.
Wilson's bridge deck and a 1953 masses," Mrs. Langston·Harrison
The museum is housed in Mon"Citizens for Eisenhower" said. To that end, there are several roe's former law office in Frederdisplays for children and the exhib- icksburg's Old Town section . A
newslener.
"The 18th-century items tend to it literature is not scholarly.
prize possession is the writing desk
be more formal. Later on, things
"Exhibits on the whole have where Monroe si~ned the farn9us
get more cheesy," Mrs. Langston- had to have broader appeal," said Monroe Doctnne protecung
Stefanic Salata, spokeswoman for nations of the Western Hemisphere
Harrison said.
The exhibit, "Presidential Para- the Ronald Reagan Presidential against European interference.
phernalia: Frqm Washington to Library. The Simi Valley, Calif., Monroe served in the White House
Clinton," includes personal items museum is featwing a similar show from 1817-1825.
like letters and notes, and official called "Our Presidents."
The exhibit continues through
While House documents.
"Ours has a very fun tone and Oet 31.

J. R. and Linda Laudermi\"t "were Christian · Standard "In God We
'hosts for a meeting of Evangeline Trust" and read a poem entitled
Missionary Group at the l&gt;omeroy "Each New Born Day". She
thanked the group for prayers,
Church of Christ recently.
A potluck dinner was served cards and flowers during her illwith Andy Miles, pastor, giving the ness.
Cards were sent to Ba~bara
prayer. Others attending were :Debbie Miles. Charldine and Debbie Fields. Elizabeth Ohlinger, Martha
Alkire, Eileen Bowers, Eva Hoffman, Dorothy Ritchie, Kate
Dessauer, Betty Spencer. Pat Smith. A sunshine box was given
Thoma; Janet Venoy. and Pauline to Mrs. Fields.
Mrs. Mi.les had . the closing ·
Kennedy.
.
·
· Mn. Miles had a Bible quiz and prayer, The next meeting will be
an offering was , taken. Mrs. held at the home of Mrs. Vcnoy.
Kennedy
. gave devotions from .the

,..

90s.

1 S.CUon. 10 P1111M135 CMia
A Multimeclalnc. Nenpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 27, 1993

Chester D of A meet
Several members were reported
ill when Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America met Tuesday
night at the hall.
It was noted that Dorothy
Ritchie is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and that Zelda
Weber is confined to St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va. Ill at
home is Enna Cleland. Cards will
be sent by the Council.
Pledges to the Christian and
American flags, and the Lord's

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
an order from lhe Ohio EnvironSentinel News Staff
mental Protection Agency approv~
Southern Ohio Coal Co. offi- ing the water removal plan within a
cials are meeting today to review'-"specific set oflimitations.
the enU,e situation of the flooding · "We appreciate the OEPA 's
or Meigs Mine 31 and hopefully diligent effort on this issue". said
will begin pumping water from the Smith, "and we believe we have a
mine soon, B. J. Smith, public workable plan to remove the water
affairs director for American Elec· with the least effect The company
!ric Power said lare this morning.
has pledged to address any enviSmith said that the company ronmental effects the pumping may
"believes that it can meet an of the cause."
EPA ~tringent requirements" set
yesterday when the ~outhern
down m a state rev1ew board meet- Oh10 Coal Company nottfied the
ing held late Monday afternoon.
Ohio Department of Natural
-She said that AEP has in nand Resources and the Ohio EPA that it

day. Rodeo performers from a_cross the cou11try
and Canada are taking part in Frontier Days,
which runs through August l.{AP Photo/David
Zalubowski)

GRAB THE BULL BY THE HORNS • Tom
Murphy of Kilder, N.D., sailS through the air
after grabbing the horns of a steer in bulldog·
ging competition at the 97th annual Cheyenne
Frontier Days Rodeo in Cheyenne, Wyo., Sun·

Prayer in unison, singing of the
national anthem, and reading of
Psalms 26 opened the meeting conducted by Betty Young. councilor.
Virginia Lee, Nancy Bond, and
Brenda Cunningham served
refreshments to those named and
Charlotte Grant, Mary Barringer,
Kathryn Baum, Mary Holter,
Sandy White, Everett Grant, Op~l
Hollon, Marcia Keller, Inzy .
Newell, Betty Roush, Doris
Grueser, Thelma White, Esther
Smith, and .Ethel Orr.

Honor students announced
The Ohio State University has Sheets, Pomeroy; Carol Fisher,
announced it honor roll for the Racine; David ~ice, Reedsville;
spring quarter. Those honored and Douglas McPhail.
received a grilde point average of at
least 3.5 and were enrolled for at
In 1939, Adolf Hitler and Benito
least 12 credit hours.
Local students receiving honors Mussolini signed a "Pact of Steel"
are Andrea Cleland, Long Bottom; which committed Germany and
Barbara Anderson, Pomeroy; Jared Italy to a military alliance.

.

Senior choir'
picnic held

I

Ralph Werry hosted the annual
Trinity Church senior choir picnic
held at the Clifton, W. Va. campsites of Tom Werry and Carl and
Janet Morris.
,
Choir members and guests'
attending were Lois and Marvin
Burt, Alice and Phil Globo~ar,
Debbie and Bill Haptonstall, Beth
Mayer, Mary and Art Skinner,
Dianne Hawley, Irene Bailey, .,
Linda.and Don Mayer, Pat and Roy
Holter. ·Dottie and John Musser,
Becky, Nick and Trevor Depoy,
Carolyn and Don Thomas, Don and
Lisa Snyder, George and Lena Nessel road, Roland Wildman, Ruth
and Marianne Carsey, Tom Werry,
Carl and Janet Morris, and Werry.
The choir is conducting fund
raisers to purchase carillons for the
church. Plans are for the carillons
to be installed by the end of the
year.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Statr
Middleport Village Council has
decided to go af1er a share of the
$280,000 in cash forfeited by
Robert D. Fife following a raid at
his Middleport home and business
earlier this month.
That money was forfeited by
Fif~ as a part of a plea agreement
on charges of receiving stolen
property-and traffickinjl in food
stamps when he apjleared in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
· Meeting last night Council
authorized Village Solicitor Linda
Warner to proceed with whatever
action is necessary to intervene in a
split" of Fife's forfeited money
between the offices of Meigs
County Prosecutor John Lentes and
Meigs County Sheriff James Souls-

. I&gt;.l'·

Southern Ohio Coal Co. plans to
discharge a total of up 10 50 minion
gallons per day of mine water into
Leading Creek, Raccoon Creek,
and Campaign Creek, with the
!'lajority 9f the discharge going
mto Leadmg Creek, according to
"EPA and ODNR spokesmen.
The conditions include:
-minimize the number of discharge poinl.!l and receiving streams
to the extent possible.
·Treat the maximum volume of
water possible before discharge.
·Construct discharge points so
as to prevent severe erosion where

.

.

,

never have happened·." She
described the money as a "windfall
for law enforcement" and said that
Middleport is entitled to an"equi- .
table share."
·
"Our officers initially arrested
and interviewed the informant,"
said Warner, "that was the start,
and then the officers went to the
prosecutor and the sheriff, but it
was after that initial investigation."
· It w~ also pointed out that.Middleport officers helped secure the residence, hauled some of the confiscated items, and were substan~ally
involved in othef ways.
·
Warner told Council members
that Prosecutor ·Lentes told her
whe_n she approached him about
the Middleport Police Department's role that he would give the
village $5,000 and. that he would
ask the sheriff tp give $5,000.
Warner told""\1DII11cil ,tbat she
felt that amount is' not an "equitable
distribution", and suggested the vii-

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is C~ming
August 13, 1993.
·
Advertising
. Deadline Is
August 5, _1993.

-Submit witlun 120 days a plan
to hasten restoration of the streams.
The plan must be implemented as
soon as Ohio EPA approves it, and
completed within 120 days.
A release .from the review board
said that the state anticipates that
the impact of the discharge on·
stream quality will be short-term,
and expects no flooding to occur.
The primary contaminants in the
discharge .would be acid and iron.
Neither would occur in sufficient
quantity to pose a serious threat to
the Ohio River where the three
streams discharge, the release said.

With Middleport having a one
percent income tax"in effect, Council members asked Warrter about
the possibility of some collection
on that since it is assumed Fife did
not pay income tax on the money.
Warner said she plans to pursue
Fife on the tax.
Improvement Projects
Two paving contracts were
awarded at last night's meeting.
The contract for. resurfacing
North Second f(om the corporation
line to Mill Street went to Tom
Maley and Sons whose bid was
$65,926. Awarded the contract for
widening and resurfacing Park
Street was the Shelly Co. The bid
was $28,364. They were the only
bids on the two projects. Both
paving projects are being paid for
with Issue 2 monies.
Mayor Fred Hoffman read a letter from th¢ Ohio Department of
Development advising Council that
Uinlinuecs on page 3

Plannirig commission approves overall program

'

992·2155

the discharge enterscthe stream.
·Stop each separate discharge as
SQOn as enough standing water has
been removed from the mine to
place that portion of ihe mine back
in service.
-Continue to investigate ways to
minimize the environmental impact
of the discharge and report them
weekly to Ohio EPA's Southeast
District Office. Viable alternatives
must be implemented immediately.
-Cease the discharge if it threatens a lonl! term impact on the
stteam, or 1f restoration of the mine
is found to be unfeasible.
,

.

!age move on intervention before a
ruling is made on a forfeiture distri·
bution action which has been filed
In the Meigs COWJty Court of Common Pleas.
She also said that she does not
favor an infonna) agreement about
distribution but a court order
because it provides necessary
"checks and balances".
Council authorized Warner to
proceed with whatever steps are
needed to get a fair distribution of
the Fife's forfeited cash for the vii·
lage. Members then passed r~lutions authorizing her to move on
intervention and setting up a Law
Enforcement Trust Fund for any
monies received.
As for the guns and electronic
equipment, Warner said she under·
stands.lhe proposed plan calls for
offering that personal property to
p\i1iliCoffiCU"WIIliC811"uselt·as li ·
part of their duties, and then after
that perhaps have an auction.

involvement in the strategic plan·
ning process. She noted that only
three people were present at the last
meeting of the strategic plan committee.
"This has dragged on because
we're not getting the input we
need," Thacker said.
. Property Transfers
Ed Werry of the tax map office
sug~gested a new policy on land
transfers in the county.
"What we want to see is mathe·
matical correctness. We want to be
able to put what is on the deed in
the tax map," he said,
Currently, just about anybody
can write a description of a property on a deed and this causes problems when the description is vague.
Werry said most counties
already have a policy that states
that when deed descriptions are
vague that the land be surveyed.
Counties throughout Ohio have
two ways of dealing with the prob·
!em. The first is that all land that is
transferred, even if the party is just
splitting the land, is surveyed .. The
second way is that deed descriptions already on record that are
vague are stamped. .If that land is
altered in any way or sold it must
be surveyed in onler for tile trans-

fer to be cotnplete.
The Planning ·Commission
decided to take the idea to the bar
association's next meeting to discuss the 'effects of implementing a
new policy on,realtors and lawyers
and will discuss the policy again at
the next meeting.
·
Office or Economic Development
The Planning Commission also
discussed the financial problems
existing in the office of economic
development. The program i.s running out of money.
A number of solutions have
been proposed among the most reasona,ble is moving the office of
economic development into the
extension office.
Extension Agent Cindy Oliver
said this would help with funding
because a good portion ·of the
agents salary would come from
Ohio State University. She said it
would also be good for the county
because of the availability of university resourc(tS and the connection to other economic developers
throughout the state.
.
The decision on whether or not
to relocate the office 'is now await·
ing a del:isi.on from the Meig·s
County Commissioners who have
to approve the local fun(jing.
Meigs County Commissioner

Janet Howard said the board of
commissioners is hesitant because
they do not want to lose local control of the development office.
Planning Commission President
John Lentes stressed 1the importance of having an office of econotnic development by pointing out
that the only bodies that could deal
with such ihings as a new prison in
the county would be the planning
commission or the individual village governments.
Other Business
In other business the planning
commission
- Discussed zoning in Olive
Township that will probably come
to the commission at its next meeting so that the township will have
their approval to put a zoning issue
on the February ballot. Lin Coleman made a motion to form a committee to look at the pros and cons
of zoning the area, but the motion
failed.
- Endorsed a I mill levy on the
November ballot for the Senior
Center.
-Passed a motion to give $100
from the Planning Commission
Budget to the extension office to
help pay for an ad campaign promoting Meigs County.

,_-Local Briefs-- Clinton plans tighter
Two injured in wreck
immigration controls

CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION .

.,

.

. , ~ it was pointed out by Wprner, "if it were not for Middleport
officers, this whole thing would

By CHERYL KULAGA '
Sentinel News Starr
. The Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission passed a resolution approving the overall economic development program from
Buckeye Hills Regional Deyelop·
rnent District at a ·meeting at the
County Prosecutor's Office Monday.
This is a strategic plan for overall economic development in an
eight county region. Work is still
being done on producing a strategic
plan for the Meigs County.
Vi Jaye Gadde, planning spe·
cialist, Buckeye Hills, Regional
Develqpment District said the July
12 meeting of the strategic plan
committee discussed what projects
might be taken on under the major
issues of infrastructure/transporta·
tion. economic development. edu·
cation, community pride/leadership·
and human resources.
The project ideas included
water/sewer expansion, improving
tourism, building low-income
[lousing, improving medical facili·
ties and holdin¥ seminars for the
public on the historical aspects of
Meigs County.
.
Meigs County Development
Director Paula Thacker urged

.

In an effort to provide ol!r read·
ership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune will not
accept weddings after 60. days
from the dale of the event
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
· be submitted within 42 days of the
occurence.
All material subinitted for publication is subject to edilling.

intended .to begin pumping water
from the flooded mine, the agen·
cies immedialely ordered the company to stop its efforts and scheduled an emergency meeting of the
Board of Reclamation.
AI that meeting which took
pla.ce at 4:30p.m. Monday, the
Oh1o EPA prov•ded Southern Ohio
Coal Co. with a set of conditions
that must be met if the pumping is
to take place.
The co"!pany's .d!scharge permit
does contam proviSionS that allow
an additional discharge in case of
an emergency.

•'

Middleport seeks share of cash forfeited by Fife

THE 1993

News policy

,,

10-18-19·24-25

Low tonight around 88.
W•dnesday, suany, high Ia hlgb

Coal officials review Meigs Mine 31 situation

"I suppose it's not just Bristol," ·
Ben muses. "I suppose a lot of
people feel that way about the town
in which they grew up. For a town
to feel this good to you, so many
years after you've left- you've
got' to have grown up in a very
lucky way.''
In Greene's beautifully wrinen
story, the people, the conversations, the places are so real as related in the first person by Ben that
the reader could easily believe this
is an autobiography rather than a
work of fiction. When the travelers
end their journey on Labor Day it
is like losing thn:e friends. But they
will linger in memory just as Ben
will savor his memories:
"Late September now. By
nightfall the air 'will be cool. But
the warmth of the summer sun will
be inside me. It will be with me all
through the winter, and every winter to come."

i

Buckeye 5:

.'»&gt;.0:

Summer's warmth radiates
from nostalgic first novel

Evangeline group meets

0795

Mulllmedla J~c.

as exuberant and life-affirming, late 1950s, Irwin began to question
draw inspiration from cemeteries.
traditional notions of "art" and to
, Bole says she's been fascinated realize that his true medium was
by cemeteries since childhood light itself.
she grew up across the street from
He went on to create ''line'' and
a graveyard. Now, she says, ironi- · "dot" paintings, then temporary
cally they "make me feel alive and installations using fabric, light, tape
connected to the rest of the world.'· and string - unobtrusive materials
Mostly in ceramic, but also in that still managed to shape and
cast bronze and rubber, Bole's focus the space in which they were
sculptural constrl\ctions in a new installed.
exhibition, "My Yard," include
More recent site-determined
mosaics with images and some- works developed for public spaces
times humorous sayings she's in urban and rural settings incorpofound on gravestones.
rate natural plantings, aiming to
In other works she reinterprets create an aesthetic experience withcommemmorative motifs common out a separate piece of "art."
to many cultures - watchful eyes
The show includes about 40
and clasped or pointing hands- in paintings and sculptures from the
quirky, mixed-media monuments. , late_1950s through the early 1970s,
In "Nipped Buds (Misfits)," two .re-creations of installations
she uses ceramic, child-size mittens from the !1970s, and a specially
to suggest young lives "nipped" commissioned installation. Also on
by death, and in "Tree of Life" view is a videotape in which Irwin
she combines bronze with living discusses his installations.
trees.
.
.
After closing in Los Angeles
The exhibition is scheduled to Aug. 15, the retrospective will travbe on show at the Wexner Center el to Cologne, Paris, Madrid and
for the Arts from July 31-0et. 10.
New York. Irwin is to create a new,
site-specific work for each venue
Robert Irwin Retrospective on the tour.
Opens Tour in Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Museum of Cont;:mporary Art Js Rare Photo Discovered of Civil
p ay~host th1s summer to a War Ship Nevada
FALLON, Nev. (AP)- What's
major retrospective of Robert
Irwin, the Southern California artist believed to be the only photograph
who moved away from painting of the first American Navy warship
early in his career to become a key to bear the name Nevada has turned
figure in the "light and space" up in a military archive in Con·
necticut, some 120 years afler it
movement
'
Irwin helped launch that move- was made.
ment, said to be the first truly origi-· · The photograph of the Ci vii
nal art movement from Southern War-era ship was taken sometime
between the years 1871-1873 at the
California.
After early experiments with New London Naval Station in Conabstract expressionism during the necticut

three of lhem the gift of one more
By JOY STILLEY
priceless summer?
~or AP Special Features
Ben, divorced, takes a threeAnyone who grew up in a small
month
leave from his network.
town with a Main Street will have a
Michael,
a high school teacher in
nostalgic trip through ''All Summer Long" (Doubleday, $23), and Bristol, and Ronnie, a millionaire
those who didn't will wish they had CEO in Cleveland, fall ..in with the
plan and the trio take off in a rented
enjoyed that experience.
In his first novel, newspaper car with no destination in mind.
Thanks to Ben's connections
columnist Bob Greene evokes the
feeling of the rightness of life as and Ronnie's stuffed wallet, they
three best friends laze away sum- are able to visit the Chicago Cubs
mer breaks from school: "Summer clubhouse at Wrigley Field and a
was everything - it was freedom, · TV studio, drop in on the 40th
it was joy, it was the promise of birthday party of Michael's first
adventure and maybe of romance.'' love and hop on and off planes at
'
But those carefree days are long whim. ·
But
the
book
is
far
from being a
gone as Ben. a TV correspondent,
travelogue.
The
summer
brings
returns to his hometown of Bristol,
new
self-knowledge
to
all
of
them
Ohio, for the 25th reunion of his
as
well
as
major
changes
in
their
high school class. Remembering
lives.
Each
adventure
leads
to
rcmi·
the happy days with the two close
companions of his youth, Ben has niscences about their days as boyan inspired idea: Why not give the hood friends.

465
Pick 4:

Vol. 44, NO. 63

dawn of American art

Cemeteries Inspire Sculptor's
Work
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)Works in Mary Jo Bole's latest
sculpture installation, characterized

Pick 3.:

PageS

Ivory spear represents
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) The inscribed shaft of an ivory
spear believed to be the oldest artwork in North America has been
given to a University of Florida
museum by the amateur fossil col· lector who found it
The rare artifact, recovered from
the Aucilla River near Tallahassee,
was made by the CQ!ltinent's earliest residents between 11,000 and
12,000 years ago, said David
Webb, a UF paleontologist. Until
now, the oldest known native
American art was probably deco·
rated bone at Windover, an 8,000year-old site near Titusville, he
said.
·
What is noteworthy about the ·
ivory spear is a zigzag inscribed
pattern, which appears to have no
function other than decoration,
Webb said.
· "This spear piece is a strong
clue to the origin and identity of
these first North American residents, who have remained very
much a mystery to us," he
explained.
·
The ivory foreshaft resembles
those found in Asia, strengthening
the argument that North America's
first residents "migrated across the.
Bering Strait, he said.
The spear shaft was found in the ·
1960s by Dick Ohmes, a farmer
and avid scuba diver, who had
stored it in a crate for 30 years.
Now he's donated it to lhe Florida
Museum of Natural History on the
UFcampus.

Ohio Lottery

'

. Two children sustained minor injuries Monday morning in an
accident in Sutton Township, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Robert T. White, 2, and Patricia ~· White, eight months, both of
'].2752 Bucktown Road, Racine, were transported by Meigs County
Emergency Medieal Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where
they were treated and released.
·
The children were passengers in a vehicle driven by Brenda K.
White, 28, 22752 Bucktown Road, Racine.
According to the acCident report, White was westbound on State
Route 124 when she rounded a bend and saw two maintenance
vehicles stopped on the roadway. She stopped quiclcly to avoid collision and was struck from behind by James R. Smith, 44, 479 Four
Mile Creelc, Coolville.
Smith was cited for failure to maintain an assured, clear distance
ahead.
White's vehicle sustained moderate damage. Smith's was not
damaged. Both vehicles were ·li"v~n from the scene.
I

'

'

.Two cited for D.r,J.I.

.

, , Two men were cited recently frr driving under the influence, the
Gallia· Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol !:(lOrted.
Cited were Matthew A. Eblin, 19, 467 S. Third Street, Middleport, early Monday morning for D.U.I., failure to control, undetage
consumption and expired registration-and David F. Reed, 47, 38301
Roc~springs Road, Pomeroy, early Sunday morning for D.U.I.,
drivmg left of center and no seat belt
.
.

Abdel-Rahman was allowed to
remain in the country while suspected of terrorist activity, the official
said.
·
Concern over lax immigration
procedures has been heightened by
mcidents ranging from the World
Trade Center bombing in New York
says.
The plan, which was to be un- City .to a shooting outside CIA
veiled today, includes the hiring of headquarters in Virginia in Janu;uy
up to 60(), additional border pauol that left two dead and three
aj!Cnts and ordering federal agen· wounded. In that case, the FBI is
seeking a 28-year-old Pakistani
CICS dealing with immigration to
better coordinate their efforts, said said to have been disgruntled over
the official, who spoke Monday_on the tteatmcnt of Muslims in Bosnia
and elsewhere.
condition of anonrmity.
The Clinton plan calls for "ex·
Clinton's goal1s to organize impedited
exclusion," which would
migration control throughout the
speed
up
the asylum process and
administration' to stop the flood .of
prevent
unwanted
illegal imillegal immigrants, especially those
migrants
from
remaining
in· the
with ties 10 terrorist groups, the
country for months or years during
official said.
The efforts·are aimed at prevent- their review.
"It \bill be a continuation of the
ing another "tragedy ol eii'Ors" that
the Slate Deparll!lent cited in a June' 18 efforts with a n~mber of
report explainmg how Sheik Omar other things," said the official.

By RON FOURNIER
WASHINGlON (AP)- As part
of a comprehensive plan to keep
unwanted people out of the country,
President Clinton wants to speed up
the reviews ·of people seeking
asylum, a While House official

DRIPPING POT CREATES PROBLEM · Water dripping
from a nower pol caused an electrical short in an air conditioner
and created qui.te a scare at Overbrook Monday night. Middleport
Fire Chief Kenny Dyer said that the overwalered plant had been
set on tbe vents of an air conditioner and dripped into the electri·
cal components. Three patient rooms were evacuated as a precaution. Damage was confined to the air conditioner. Here Linda
Briggle, administrator, and Dyer discuss the incident. (Sentinel
Photo by Charlene Hoenich)

Scores of miners arrested;
union expands coal strike
By AVIVA L. BRANDT
WHARTON. W.Va. (AP)
Scores of striking coal miners upset
over a company's plans to increase
production blocked a mine entrance
Monday as 1ensions since the
shooting death of a nonunion
worker at another mine remained
high .
Sixty-four pickets were arrested
at Eastern Associated Corp.'s
Colony Bay surface coal mine ncar
Wharton.
Pennsylvania State Police said
they also anested three striking
miners from .another Eastern As·
sociated mine in West Virginia after
tl\ey allegedly chased a deli very
truck across the state line and ram·
med vehicles escorting the truck.
Strike tensions have, increased
since the shooting death 9f a nonunion worker as he was leaving the
Arch of West Virginia's Logan
County . mine on Thursday. A
$200,000 reward was offered by
Peabody Holding Co. Inc. and the
Bituminous Coal . Operators As·
sociation.
The United Mine Workers expanded its walkout that began May
10, ordering 1,000 miners in Ken-

tucky, Ohio and West Virginia to
join 16,000 others on sttike against
members of the association.
At the mine near Wharton, striking workers staged a sit-in for
about eight hours, blocking a shift
of nonunionized workers from entering.
Onlookers jeered as managers
crossed the picket line. Spikes called jackrocks had been laid at the
mine entrance, and those crossing
the picket line had to remove them
before they could drive past
The company asked state police ·
to arrest the pickets. The protest
went peacefully, however. Several
miners joked with troopers and
shared snacks with them as they
were escorted away for processing ·
on misdemeanor b'Cspassing charges.
They were released on their own ·
recognizance and face a $100 fine
state police said.
'
The company wrote strili:ing
miners last week informing them of
its intention to increase production
and the number of management
workers at the mine, said Eastern
Associated spokesman Mike Heimn.

.

Courthouse hazirs·lllttire'ii:',., .
in effort to beat the hellt ' · ·
Offices in the Meigs County
Courthouse are temporarily altering
their business hours due to prob·
lems with the courthouse air conditioning system.
Effective Wednesday, offices
will be open for business at 6 a.m.
and close at 2 p.m. to allow
employees to worlc: during the cooler morning hours.
The foUowing offices are affected: county court, clerk of courts
(title and legal), recorder, treasurer

and auditor.
Exceptions are the Meigs County Coun of Common Pleas al!d the •
Meigs County Juvenile/Probate '
Court which will OP.Cn at 6 a.m. _
and remain open until 4:30 p.m. In addition, the office of the Meigs
County Commissioners, including ~
the tax map office, will remain ,
open dwing regular hours.
Regular business hours will
resu!l)e when repairs to the air con- ·
ditioner system are completed.
'

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