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Page-1 0- The Dally Sentinel

Federal
Reserve
studies
doll·a r's
decline
WASH INGTON (AP)- Fc&lt;kral Reserve policy makers arc mcctmg am id co ntinui ng concern that
the fa ll ing doll ar w ill prompt the
ce ntral bank to ra"c interest rate s
for the fifth time this year.
But many eco nomi sts predi ct
the Fe d will he content to stay on
Lhc s idelines fo r now -

Page4

RIVER PARADE - A.few patriotic boats
pa rticipated in the annual boat parade at Mid dl eport. T he best -decorated boats were owned
by the Rupes, .Jividens and Caruthers, said Tom

Pick 4:
2-5·8-7
Buckeye 5 ~
7-14-21-34-37

.

Vol. 45, NO. 44

Copyrlghll994

" I be lieve th e Fed is goin g to
s~1ml pat and do nothin g and hope
thai th e currency markets st;tbilizc
themselves," sa1 d Sung Won Sohn,
chief economi st of Norw ell Corp.
in Minneapolis.
Pre si de nt Clinton , in rece nt
interviews with foreign journalists,
also played down the need to lx&gt;l -"'
stcr the dollar with higher nllcrcst '
rates. "I do not want the dollar 10
be too low ," he sai d. but added
thai "great care shou ld be taken
before unusual ac tions arc taken"
10 rai se the va lue of the dollar.
Financial markets will be closely watching as th e central bank 's
top policy making group. the Fede ral Open Mark e t Comm1llc c,
meets behind closed doors today
and Wedne sday to review the econ the judging and awarding or prizes to Mary Ann
THE TASTE TEST - Vicki Ferrell, Gary
omy and tl cc ide its next interest
Myers, Sharon R'iffie and Maxine Lee, nrst, secWhite and Gloria Oiler sampled the many pies
rate move s.
ond and third respectively, the pies were sold to
which " 'ere entered in the pie baking contest at
The Fed already ha s pu shed
the highest bidder during an auction.
Rutllmd
July
4
celebration
Monda)'.
After
lhe
short-term interes t rates up four
times this year. Three moves were
annou1Ked immediatel y follow ing bank prcsidenLs.
another increase.
to buy U.S. bonds to- obtain the
meetings of the FOMC, composed
The dollar has tumbled to record
Raising interest rates can prop higher yields.
of Fed governors in Washington lows against the Japanese yen and up a weak currency, with higher
But analysts note that the doland fi ve of the Fed 's 12 regional that could be adequate reason for US rates luring foreign investors
lar's value on international markets
traditionally has ranked low as a
priority for the central bank, far
behind domestic economic considerations.
With the economy already
shnwing signs of slowing, higher
short-term rates could lead to an
abrupt end to the three-year-old
recovery.
"You run the risk of pushing us
back into stagnation and maybe
recession,· · said Lawrence
Chimerinc.

STANDING TALL- Charles Harmon costumed as Uncle Sam
marched in the Fourth or .July parade at Rutland Monday morning.

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CLOWNING CLOWNS - No parade is complete without
clowns. Mary Hudson and Tammy Klein were among a group of
clowns representing Rulland EMS and Fire Station 4 in the parade
at Rutland's annual ox roast celebration. They were second place
•
trophy winners.

Bank One RegularSavingsSM

%

and number 17; car, Carol Johnson; horse,
Marsha Williams. Other awards went to Megan
Harrison, Hannah Alleman, Nancy Pickens,
Laura Harrison, Jessica Cale and numbers 14, 7
and 3. The above-mentioned numbers won
awards and they can pick them up at the Middleport Department Store. The parade's celebrated citizen was Nellie Zirkle. (Sentinel photo
by George Abate)

Interest Rate

Bend Area Gospel Jubilee
July 8th, 9th, lOth
...
Mason County Fairgrounds
6 miles north of Point Pleasaol, WV
(and just off State Rte 62)

Over 40 ainging groupe
- Singing StartsFriday, July 8-6:00 p.m. tilll:OO p.m.
Saturday, July 9-.-12:30 p.m. til???
Sunday, July 10--10:00 a.m. tilS:OO p.m.
Rain or Shine-Under Shelter
• Admission Free• Concessions • Camping
Everyone Welcome- Bring Lawn Chairs

I

tbucan't-i norean

interest ra
• At Bank One, we'll do
"Whatever it takes" to keep
our savings interest ratesls
high as possible. And, tha
includes our regular savings
account that gives you immediate access to your funds, as
well as medium and longtenn
investment options. So you
can choose the plan-or combination of plans'-that works

~this big.
I

best for you .
To qualify for this special
interest rate, just make a minimum initial deposit of$25 in a
Bank One Regular Savings
Account. To open an account,
or to find out more stop by any
Bank One office in Athens.
Gallia. Hocking, Meigs, or
Perry Counties. Or give us
a call at 614-593-6681 or

1-800-677-4994.
We've got savings interest
rates that are just your size.

BANK:ON£
Whatever it takes:
Member FDIC

0 1994 BANC ONE CORPORATION Interest rates subject to chage Fees may reduce earn.ngs Interest rate and Annual Per centage Yelll
(APY) in effect as o1&amp; 24·94 . A v a1~0 1e arBank One. Athens. NA ot1•ces onty

,.

The Tuppers Plains Reg ional Sewer District was awarded a $500,000
grant from the Ohio Public Works Commi ssion Tuesday .
The grant, which will hel p fund the $2.2 million wastewater treatment
system, wi ll help lower the monthl y bills of cusiOmcrs in the 200-resident
northcm Me1gs town . said Lindsey Lyons, president of the sewer board.
'This is a surprise. We hadn 't even sought it," Lyons said.
The district has already received more than $75,000 in Issue II grant
mon ey and is seeking Commun ity Development Block Grant funds,
Lyons said . The Farm ers Home Adm ini stration will also provide lowinterest loans and grants.
The grants will help reduce the amount of loans for which the district
will have to apply, Lyon s said .
Representatives from the FmHA, Buckeye Hills Regional District, the
proJect engineer, county health department and county economic development w1ll meet with the sewer board at6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Tuppers
Plains-Chester water district Clffice.
The project should be completed by 1996, he added_
Both Sen. Jan Michael Long, D-Circlcville, and Rep. Mark Malone, DSouth Point, commended the grant.
"We must proceed togeth er on infrastructure improvement in Southem
Ohio and continue to secure swtc dollars to assist with these improvements," Long said.
infrastructure improvcmcnLs remain the key to economic development,
Malone added.
VALUABLE EXPORT- Meigs County tomatoes are a valuable crop. However, the familiar tomato basket, as shown here by
Racine Mayor and rarmer Jerr Thornton, needs to undergo
changes berore being shipped into Canada. Canadian law caDs for
labels to be printed in French as well as English. Area tomato
farmers met in Racine Tuesday to discuss the possibility of shipping tomatoes into Canada.

River Festival gets
partial sponsorship
lly GEORGE AIIATE

Sentinel News Starr
The Middleport River Festival 's
:lctivities this September will be
partially paid for by Don Tate
Virginia officials letting Persons Motors of Pomeroy, said Tom
free.
Dooley, president of the Middle "This has happened to us before pan Community Assoc1ation.
--' twice," Soulsby said. "The gov This year's fes tival, sc heduled
ernor's warrant must not be worth for Sept. 17. will feature a "threethe paper it's wriuen on."
on -three" basketball tourn ament
Persons continues 10 be a fugt- that should a11rac1 panicip:mls from
tive from justice, Soulsby said. He across the region, Dooley said al
escaped frol)l a treatment room at tl"' group 's monthly meeting Tues Veterans Memorial Hospital in day at Peoples Bank.
April. He was captured soon after
"For the ftr~ttimc we don't have
in Parkersburg and was released by to worry about our treasury," Dooauthorities, pending an extradition ley said. "Our biggest relief is we
don't have to worry about the_
(Continued on Page 3)

Frequent escapee rem_ain·s free .on bond
lly GEORGE ABATE
,
Sentinel News Stall
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. - A
fugitive wanted in Meigs County
on several felony charges posted
bond and walked from the Wood
County Circuit Court last week,
according to Wood County officials.
David M. Persons, 31, who has
addresses in West Columbia and
Long Bottom, was arrested on a
fugitive from justice warrant June
27 in Parkersburg. said Sgt. G.L.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state plans to save nearly half of
the $560 million surplus it
found at the end of the 1994
budget year.
Greg' Browning, state budget
director, has ordered that $260
million be set aside in the state's
"rainy day" savings account.
That will increase the fund to
$281 million. since the Legislature previously had reserved $21
milhon in anticipated surplus
funds for the savings accounL
The budget year ended
Thursday. The state collected a
total of $14.9 billion in general
state revenue in fiscal year
1994. while it spent slightly less
than $14.5 billion. The gross
surplus, after accounting for various fund transfers, was $560
million.
Browning attributed the surplus to a combination of factors,
including higher-than-expected
tax collections and lower-thanexpected spending.
For the budget year, the state
received about $62 million: or
0.4 percen~ more in taxes than it
anticipated. That was mostly
due to an improving economy
and slrongcr motor vehicle sales
than anticipated_
Personal income taxes were
the state's largest single source
of revenue_ . Since the state
income tax rates were doubled
in 1983, that tax has passed
sales taxes as the state's largest
revenue producer. . .
Lower welfare and health
care outlays kept spending
below the estimate by $464 million, or 3.1 percent. Lower
unemployment and the state's
strengthening
economy
depressed anticipated state welfare costs.

%

difficult, said Nancy Swartz, the group's instructor. In addition to the twirlers other performers
were Denver Rice, "Fit Together" aerobics, the
Shady River Shurners and Belles &amp; Beaus
square dancers.

IJy .JIM FREEMAN
farm ers ~ay, b e abt; _1o comply
•
w1th C wada s bdmgual rcqutrcSentinel News Stall
Drivcn by the desire 10 find new mcnL' by hav1ng st1ckcrs made up
markets and eliminate the middle- w French and attachmg them 10 the
man. some .Meigs County tomato tomato baskets.
.
farmers may be sending their crop
Canad1ans usc th e metr1c systo Canada.
tern of mea surement m gradmg
About 18 farmers mostly from tomatoes, Kncc n sa1d. Most of the If
, the Letart Fall s arc~ . attended a markctmg ts done on the bas1s of
meeting at the Racine Fire Depart- tomato SIZe, ltc added . .
ment Annex Tuesday nighi to disTh ere arc still qu cs t1on s tha~
cuss the possibility of shipping need an swered and th ere may be
tomatoes into Canada.
other demands, Knccn sa1d. HowRacine Mayor Jeff Thorn toll. ever: tomatoes are not the only pasalso a fanner, said the current plan s1btlny; Canad1ans may bemtcrcstis for he and Meigs County Agri - ed tn other ~roducc grown 1n Me1gs
cultural Extension Service Agent Couni_Y, he,tdded.. .
,
Hal Knccn to take some Meigs
In add1Uon to fmdmg ne~ marCounty produce into Canada to sec kets, Mc1gs County tomato fanners
arc trymg to avOid mtddlemcn thai
if there is a market.
The next step would be to send cut 1nto thctr profits_ Currently,
a truckload of tomatoes into Cana- tomatoes ~lfe generally sold tobroda, Thornton said.
kcrs m Plllsburgh or Detroit Farmers accustom ed to doing apparently w1th no guarant ee of
bu siness in surrounding states payment to the farmer.
would find different conditions in
Thornton summar1zed ~,e fat;m·
c· ada
crs' d1 stru st of brokers: We vc
ru;,or · example,
Thornton had problems with the~ for years
explained, tomato baskets would takmg ou;, money, we rc gctllng
need labels printed in French as npped off.
.
well as English, and tomatoes
Iromcally, Mctgs County lOrnawould need to picked earlier Tor toes arc probably already bcmg
shipping 10 Canada.
sold m Canada - by brokers who
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland's field purchase th~ tomatoes and resell
representative, Molly Varner, said
(Contmued on Page 3)

State win
save half
of surplus
Annual Percentage Yield (AP}]

TRIUMPHANT TWIRLERS - The Dazzling Dolls Baton Corps performed to a medley
of rock 'n roll classics as part or Middleport's
stage shows. The twirlers' routine was highly

TP sewer district
given $500,000
from state pan,el \

Meigs tomato growers eye
marketing product in Canada

cc onom lSI al Prudential Scc1J ri ti cs.

ENJOYING THE STEEDS - A group or
boys happily observe the passing horses at Middleport's parade. Watching the parade are at
left, Wesley Scott, of Michigan, and Brooks
Johnson or Middleport. Viewers lined Second
Avenue to view the ·floats, bands and fire
trucks. Winners for the parade included: walk·
ing unit, Satin &amp; Lace Baton Corps; float, Manley's Trash Service; bicycle, Brandon Dotson

Low tonight near 70, partly
cloudy and hazy. Thursdlly,
partly cloudy. High In 90s.

2 Sectiono, 16 Pageo 35 cenll
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 6, 1994

Northern export

i nt crvr nc i n exc han ge markcL'\ to

'

4-0-0

ent1ne

protec t the dolb r unl ess thin gs
rea ll y go t o ut of ha nd ," sa id
M1chacl Aho, seni or internat ional

,

Pick 3:

•

awaiting

Republican Executive mee,ting
The Meigs County Republican
Executive Committee will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Meigs
Coumy Common Pleas courtroom.
Fund drive set
The Tuppers Plains Fire Department wi II conduct a door to door
fund drive Saturday beginning at 9
a.m. in the district served by that
fire department. Donations from
those not contacted may be sent to
Terry Deem, _department president.
Additional mformanon may be
obtained from him at667-393l
Volleyball meeting set
Eastern High School volleyball
meetings for all girls grades 7
through 12 v;ill be held Monday. 9
to 10 a.m. and 6:30 to 7 p.m. All
interested girls are asked 10 attend
one of the meetings._

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Dooley, event coordinator. Tbe front porch decorati on contest winners were the homes of
Henry C latworthy, Skip Johnson and Jean
Moore.

furth er de ve lop me nt s 'on the
domcs uc economic front.
"I don't be lieve for a moment
that the Fed is gomg to unilaterally

Announcements

Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
wins fifth
straight ;"

Clark of the Point Pleasant detachment of the West Virginia State
Police.
Persons had escaped June 24
from a We st Virginia trooper in
Mason -County, Clark said. Persons, who was handcuffed at the
time, ran away into the woods.
The fugitive went before the
Wood County Circuit Court and
had a charge of obstructing an officer dismissed because he was sci-to
appear for a hearing last Thursday,
Wood County Prosecutor Michele

Ruscn said.
• "When l:c was picked up the
second time, it was a mistake,"
Rusen said. "I don't know what the
judge was thinking, but the judge
would not have let him out on bond
if he had a reputation for not showing at hearings."
Circuit Judge Robert Waters and
his office refused to comment on
the hearing and why he released
Persons.
Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulshv said he is upset with West

O.J.'s 'disappearance'
highlights testimony

..

The last time Goldman, a waiter at
Mezzaluna, was seen alive was
when he left the restaurant to return
a pair of glasses to Ms. Simpson.
Kaelin said he and Simpson
returned from McDonald"s about
9:45 p.m. He said he went outside
at 10:40 p.m. to investigate thumps
he heard, and saw Simpson a short
time later getting into a limousine.
Limousine driver Allan Park
testified that he arrived early at
Simpson's mansion for a 10:45
p.m. pickup, and no one answered
the intercom until after he saw a
tall. black person slip into the front
door 2f the house close to II p.m.
He said a voice, wruch he
believed was Simpson's, ift'en said
over the intercom that ''he overslept, that he just got out of the
shower and he'd be down in a
minute."
Earlier testimony has sugl(estcd
that Ms. Simpson and Goldman
were killed between 10 and II p.m.
Police have not released a time of
death.
One of Simpson's previous
auorneys said Simpson was at
home at the time of the killings
waiting for his ride to the airport.
SirQpSon's current lawyers have n01
disclosed his whereabouts in the
hours before II p.m.
No evidence has been presented
so far that directly links Simpson to
the kiltings.
In its motion to throw out the
evidence from Simpson's estate,
the ddcnsc contends detectives
illegally scaled the estate's wall
without a warrant the morning after
the slayings. When they obtained a
warrant a few hours later, they did
so by misrepresenting the _si!Ua!ion,
the motion says.
Detective Mark Fuhrman, who
climbed the wall, testified that
poliel: corning from the bloody
crime scene spotted blood on a
Bronco outside the estate.

By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - On the
bloody Sunday that transformed
OJ. Simpson from superstar to
defendant, he played golf, watched
his daughter's dance recital and
drove to McDonald's in his RollsRoyce for a hamburger.
Then he disappeared for about
75 minutes, according to testimony
Tuesday at a preliminary hearing to
determine if Simpson wtll stand
trial.
'
The testimony showed that
"this case is going to come down
to minutes," said Loyola University Law Professor Laurie Levenson.
"It's a very tight squeeze,"
Levenson said. "He has to get
there, commit the crimes, get back,
clean up and leave in a limousine
for the airport. How can you get
this all done in this period of time?
"On the other hand, he's OJ.
Simpson, the man known for run ning through auports . H1s own
image may work against him ."
Meanwhile Tuesday, attorneys
argued a defense motion to throw
out all evidence seized at Simpson's house. Testimony on the
motion was to continue today.
Simpson. 46, has pleaded innocent to murdering Nicole Brown
Simpson. 35, and Ronald Goldman,
25 . Prosecutors have not said
whether they will seek the death
penalty.
Brian "Kato" 'Kaelin, who lives
-in a guest house on Simpson's
estate, testified that Simpson spoke
of his failed marriage when he
returned frem a golf outing on June
12, the day of the killings . Later,
after his daughter's dance recital,
Simpson said he thought the dresses his ex-wife and her friends were
wearing were too tight, Kaelifl said.
He said they went to a McDonald's drive-in after Simpson was
excluded from a family gathering
at the nearby Mczzaluna restaurant.

·,

lt'f" FIT
--~

ASSISTS WITH CLEANUP -The AEP
River Transportation Division's M/V Safety.r'i
Leader assisted Ohio River Sweep volunteers

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recently by. picking up more than live tons or
heayy appliances from the riverbank between
Lakin and Point Pleru;ant, W.Va.

AEP lends hand to river sweep
Transportation
•
Unit boat hauls
. b k. k
fiV8f. an }Un
LAKIN, W.Va.- American
Electric Power's River Transponation Division provided an added
boost to the recent Ohio River
Sweep- a five-ton boost
That's the total weight of the
refrigerators, hot water tanks and
other heavy appliances it pulled
from the river using a crane placed

on a barge which _ w~s transported
by one of the d1v1S1on s towboats.
·:we've always SUPP?rted the
annual cleanup of the Oh1o Rtver,
but this year we wanled to increase
our involvement," said Gale.'R.
Rhodes, River Transponauon D1v1s10n mana~cr.
. .
. .
. In awhuon to prov1di~ 17 d1v~smn. employees and m of thetr
famtly members to he P ptck up
trash along the nvef near Pomt
Pieasant, the company placed Us
harbor towboat MfV Safety Leader
mto acuon.

•

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money , but we' II have to get the
(basketball) teams."
Don Tate will IJ3Y for the the
basketball tournament and all
cntenainmcnt.
Each three -member team will
have a S55 entran ce fcc, which
cou ld be defrayed by sponsors'
donations, Dooley said.
The community association will
al so be seeking other co-sponsors
to help pay for other cosLs incurred
during the celebration, he added.
Local businesses will be asked to
donate items for the give -away
contest
In other celebration news, Dooley presented the group with a list
(Continued on Paj!e 3)

-

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The vessel transversed the
scvcn-mtle stretch from Lakin 10
Point Pleasant, where it picked up
the heavy items from along the
shoreline.
."V'f.e are glad to do it," Rhodes
satd. The Ohio ,Rivez is a vital part
~f our nat1on s transportation
mfrasuucture and provides jobs foc
th~ds of people.
We depend on it to transport
C&lt;?B! and to 'help us generate electncuy. We want to make sure this
resource remainsbeaithy and thrivmg."
~\

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Wednesday, July 6, 1994

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
6

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

IWB ERT L. W!Nt;ETI'
Puhlc,h&lt;r
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gentral Manager
''

~IAHCAHET

LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION

are welcome They should be less than 300
word s All letters are su bja: t to cd1Ung and must be Signed Wllh name,

address w1d telephone number No uns1gncJ Jcu..:rs wtl l be published Le tte rs
sho uld be m gooJ ta~le. addressmg tss ucs. nut }XrsonaJJtJ es

Not so fast, now:
women's 'firsts'
common in D.C.
lly MIKE FEINSILIIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Proud about being appomted Prestdent"Chnton 's
budget director, Allee Rt vhn made the kmd of overstatement in words
that this careful economist would never make wtth numbers.
· She said she was pleased to be the first woman nom mated to hea d the
Office of Management and Budget. She satd she antiCipated someday
having her portrait hanging m the OMB conference room alongstde the
pictures of all those male budget dtrectors .
•
Then she went too far: "Fortunately we' re running o~t of firsts" for
women.
Not so fast, Ms. Rivlin. There arc lol~ of portratt-hned corridors of
power left in Washington from which no female face looks down.
Prestdcnt Chnton has been chipping away at that state of affairs with
appoinUTtents such as yours and that of Laura D'Andrea Tyson as charrman of the Council of Economic Adv~s - two prevtously male-only
postuons.
No woman has served as secretary of defen se, the mterior, agriculture
or veterans affrurs. Smce Frankhn D Roosevelt mstalled social refonner
Frances Perkins as sec retary of labor 10 1933 (a post she held for 12
years) , fewer than 20 women have sat in th e Cabinet
As recently as 20 years and fiv e pres idents ago, when Rtchard M.
Ntxon held office, a president could get away with an all-male' cabinet.
Through U.S. htstory, 11,377 people have sat m Congress; 163 of them
have been women. The riht arrived in 191 6. Today, about II percent of
the House and 7 percent of the Senate are women.
,
Until 1978, when Nancy Landon Kassebaum of Kansas took her seat,
no woman had ever been elected to the Senate m her own right - that is
wtthout having been preceded by her husband
Even until recent years, the surest way for a woman to get to Congress
was to be the widow of a representative or senator.
It was also helpful to promise to be a seat-warmer, that is to take an
appointment with the promise of not running when the late legislator' s
tenn expired. The first female senator, appomted to fill her late husband 's
seat served for exactly one day before his - and her - tenn ended.
Unttl 20 years ago, no woman was elected governor of any state in her
own nght. Thtrty -eight states have never elected a woman governor.
Texas is the only state to elect more than one.
Across the nation women at no time have held more than 20 percent of
electtve posts. Seven states - Maine, New Hampshire. Alaska, Georgia,
Maryland, North Carolina and West Virgima - have never elected
women to statewide office.
And Alaska, Delaware, Iowa, Mississippi, New Hampshrre, Vermont,
Wisconsin and Wyoming have never sent a woman to Congress.
Chnton, who campaigned on a promise to give the counlry a government that' 'looks like America,'' has been moving in that direction. Harriet Woods, president of the National Women' s Political Caucus, calls his
delivery on that promise "astonishing ."
,
More than 31 percent of Clinton's appointments to jobs requiring Senate confirmauon have gone to women. That compares with 20 percent for
George Bush, 12 percent for Ronald Reagan and 18 percent for Jimmy
Carter.
(Mike Feinsilber bas been covering Washington since 1968.)

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, July 6, the !87th day of 1994. There are 178
days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on July 6, 1944, 168 people dted when frre broke out
in the main ient of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus in
Hartford, Conn.
On thts date:
In 1483, England 's Kmg Richard Ill was crowned.
In 1535, Sir Thomas More was executed in England for treason.
In 1777. during the American Revolution. Bntish forces captured Fort
Ticonderoga.
In 1854, the Republican Party came mto bemg at a convention in Jackson. Mich.

Berryls World
,

,

l'fS OK 1. 1 J l..l S'\ 'VON I
L\ l&lt;E ~R'EA..\t\11--\6
~~C'(CL~D P-.IR. ON
A..IR?L~NE.S.

-

Page-2-The Qally Sentinel ·
Pomeroy-Middlepor.t, Ohio
Wednesday, July 6, 1~94

Tackling a new frontier: space jun~k
WASHINGTON - Govern- ' .add rcss111g the problem tn talk s
rncnt socnu st.s have confirmed that with the European Space Agency,
at any grve n moment billiOns of which had been leavmg thousands
Umdenu licd Flym g Objects arc w- nf pteces of debns in space with
cltn g th e eart h. But th ey've got
nothmg to do with E.T
T hank s to thr ee deca des of
By Jack Anderson
ex plora tion, csptonage and cable
and
TV, the heave ns arc ltttcred wllh
dchn s from space gloves to patnt
Michael Binstein
chtps Btlltons of other pteccs of
dcbns arc too small to idcnllfy
The thr eat from th iS ttdc of the launch of its rockcis. NA SA
dcbn s (S so great that the Nauonal also tmll atcd secret talk s m late
Acronaultcs and Space Admintstra- 1989 with Russ ia to cu t down on
tton (NASA) rece ntly cs ttmatcd the space notsam, whtch thi s colthat there ts a one in five chance umn was the first to reveal.
th e debris wi ll stnkc the mtcrnaThe pmn ary hazards of space
tiona ! space stauon plann ed for po llutton arc posed to astronauts
completion tn 2002.
who wtll work and live in the cnvt. 'Le ft unchec ked,'' one report to ronment, and to expensive satellites
the Na uonal Scc unt y Counctl of put up by var ious nations and comthe Bush ad mini stration wa rned, mereta! ventures - like cable tclc, ' the growth of dcbm coul d sub- vtston satellttcs. The space st.auon
stanttally threaten the safe and rch- ,, designers arc trying to mimmizc
able ope rati on of manned and the ltk clthood of damage with
unmanned spacec raft 111 the next heavy, expenstve shielding.
century .... lmcmational cooperation
The U.S , North American
ts csscnttal to a satisfac tory solu- Aero space Defense Command
lion ."
(NORAD) has cataloged more than
NASA ha s taken the lea d '" 20,000 maJor ptcces of debns in

orbtt smce the Sov tets flf Sl sent up
th e Spulntk m 1957. More th an
7,000 arc sttll up there. NOR AD,
the Umted State's pnmary ha llt sttc
misstl c warn in g age nc y, has to
track all these pteces beca use 11
must dtffc rcnllate between the JUnk
that loses orbtl and plunges to earth
and hosul c mtsstles on thctr way to
U S. targets
Beyo nd th e more than 7, 000
larger, trackabl e pt cccs , th ere arc
ltterall y btlhons of other pteces of
debn s that ca use haza rd s 111 th e
space la nes. Those 111 low ea rth
orbtl travel at the mcrcdible speed
of 17,500 mtlcs an hour, or seven
times faster th an the fas tes t 111'l e
bull et.
Even a pamt clup can be &lt;jutle
damaging to a satellite - :md one
can be lethal UT an astronaut out on
a spacewa tk who nugt.l be struck
by one. A ptccc of pamt about the
SJzc of a grain uf sa lt struck th e
three-layer wmdslu cld of the U.S.
space shuttl e at ht gh veloci ty m
1983 gouging a crater m the outermo st layer The wtndow cos t
$SO,OOO to replace . At least three
such co lh s10ns ~ave occurred m

T~

HuB6LR- SPace
TeLescoPe ut!ST
C.Ot-JFiRM~D iH€
!2,)(i$TeN~ oF BL&lt;lcK
tiot.e.s. so IA2Nse
THaT TM~Y Suc.K UP
e.veR¥rHiNG N€&lt;lR TtteM,
(5LG\CK Ho~S aRe
PeRFecT C:IRiGt:Jf'l
MeT.:IPtioRS.

BoSI-JIA
DRUGS

IVIO!.ENCE I
)coNGREss I

rece nt spa ce hi story which
destroyed U.S. and Sovie t satel lt tes.
In the late 1960s and 1970s, the
Sov te ts tes ted an anll -sa telltt e
weapon m space whtch destroyed
satcllttcs by stflklll g them with
fragm ent s, ltke a grenade. The
repeated expe rim ent s produced
hun dreds of large ptcccs of metal
shrapnel.
Addllionally, the Sov tct Umon,
dchberately destroyed II clectromc
surv e tl lance satdltte s between
197 5 and 1983, producmg almost
600 rclattvely large fmgments. The
last known q,plodcd Soviet satellite was in 1988. The Untted States
ts also responsible for many large
pieces from at least mne acctdental
ex plosions of rockets
NASA, Europeans and Russians
·have sought to hmtt by agreement
these kmd s of major debns-producing cvenLs. Some ex perts have suggested, 11 may be necessary to 5e;nd
up a space tr ash collector wtth
mcc ham cal arms to ptck up some
of the larger dcbns and return it to
earth.
The vartcty of objects that have
been laun ched into orbit range
from dozens of ancient, now inoperable satellites, to a glove f.mcrican astronaut Ed Whttc lost in 1965
during th e 20-minute first U.S.
s pa ce walk. Astronal);l Mike
Collin s lo st a camera ilurmg a
space walk the following year. In
1984, an American astronaut lost a
power screwdriver from the space
shullle whtlc repairing the Solar
Max satellite.
Many of these kmd s of ttems,
particularly in the lower earth orbit
of 250 mtles, where human-piloted
mtsstons generally fly , lose their
orbit and bum up as they re-enter
the atmosphere.
The single largest piece of junk
to fall from orbit was the 82-ton
U.S. Skylab m 1979, whtch broke
up into sizable chunks that crashed
to earth in Australia and the South
Pactfic. The Sovtet Cosmos space
station fell the prevtous year,
spreadmg radtoacuvc debns across
Canada.
(Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are nationally-syndical·
-ed columnists.)

As usual, consumers are shafted .

You've no doubt heard by now
that the pnce of your daily caffeine
fix is going up, and you're probably confused by all the blather and
Jabber about
commodittcs
exc han ges, coffee futures , dimm tshing stocks, hedge buymg and so
on, and you really need some
answers before all the te nsion
butlds into a maJor erupuon of the
shakes or the hives or at least a
temper tantrum.
You've come to the right place,
friend. The Curmudgeon has seen it
all before. The Curmudgeon will
clear It up.
The ba sic problem: A heavy
frost in the coffee-growing region
of Brazil damaged 15 to 30 percent
of the crop
The result: Wtthin hours, wholesale pnccs began shooting up. At
the New York Coffee, Sugar and
Cocoa Exchange, coffee jumped to
$1.80 a pound the first day, $1.90 a
pound the second. • .
For 24 hours, th e btg coffee
manufacturers played H cool. They
would not prcdtcl pncc fluctualions, but the Reuters news agency
quoted "obscrw.u-,:1 'who specula!ed that a few cents would be added
to a pound of coffee within several

months.
One day later, Procter &amp; Gam blc Co., maker of Folgers coffee,
and Phtlip Morris' Kraft General

Joseph Spear
Foods, maker of Maxwell House,
announced that the Brazilian freeze
would requrrc them to tncrease the
price of a 13-ounce can of coffee
by 35 to 40 cents. Nestle Beverage
Co., whtch makes Taster's Choice
and Nescafc, said a price hike was
coming soon.
The botlom line: The consumer
ts getting shafted. As usual when a
cnsis threatens the supply of some
commodity, the big corporations
get greedy and the consumer gets
shafted.
Think on it: The damaged beans
are still hanging in the trees. They
are next year's crop. Why should a
freeze of 1995's beans cause a
prodtgtous hike in the cost of
1994's coffee? Were there no
beans in storage that were pur chased at this year's prices? No
beans in the pipeline?
Think on this, too : Do you
believe the price hikes will result in
more money for the Brazilian

growers? Not likely. Do you think
grocers wtll reap more profits from
the price increases? Agatn , not
likely. Food marketing is a passthrough tndustry which make s
about a penny for every dollar of
cost.
So who's raking in the bucks?
The big coffee companies, that's
who. The people wtth the huge
inventories of coffee 'beans every bloody one of which was
alchemized mto a gold nugget the
moment Mother Nature frosted
Brazil's coffee trees. Perhaps we
should call them the Arrogant,
Predatory, Price-Gouging Coffee
Companies. I like that APPCOCOs
for short.
They should fonn a club, these
arrogant price-gougers . The btg
orange JUice companies (hereinafter APPJUCOS) would be eli gible. With every freeze in Flonda,
milhons of gallons of stored orange
JUice purchased at cheaper prices
turn into liquid gold as the retail
price of OJ septuples overnight.
The big oil companies (hereinaftcr APPOCS) would be charter
members. When the Persian Gulf
war erupted in 1990, gasoline
prices shot up immediately and

stayed up long after 11 was clear to
everyone mvolved thal the world
supply of 01! was not tn danger.
Millions of ~allons of cheaper
crude already m th.e mventory were
marketed ~~the htgher pnces, and
the followmg quarter, the APPOCS
posted astronomtcalprofits.
, The otl compa~tcs thought up
26 reasons why pnces and profits
soared, and some of them are
instructional because they presaged
what the coffee compantes are saymg today.
.
The APPOCS satd they had to
hike prices because "replacement •
costs" for their stored crude would
be so high. The APPCOCOS say
they are "hedging" against the
cost of tomorrow's coffee. The
APPOCS clatmed 01! pnces had
been creepmg up for ages and they
had nobly absorbed the costs. The
AAPCOCOS say worldwide supphes have been dwmdhng for years
but th~y have only recently begun
adjusung pnces.
APPJUCOS, APPOCS, APPCOCOS. The products may
change, but the game's the same.
(Joseph Spear is a columnist
for Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

Health care needs piecemeal reform.
AI Gore paid a vice presidential plan - employer man&lt;lates, price heaith insurance must wonder why employer' s health insurance plan
visit to San Diego this week, the controls, standardized benefit packthe entire system need be turned for 18 months . The so-called
occaston of which was'thc annual ages.
upside down to accommodate the COBRA provision might also
At the moment, the Senate
include workers moving between
conventiOn of the Amcncan Feder15 percent wbo are uninsured.
,
ation of State, County ar.tl MumciIf millions of Americans were jobs.
A
related
issue
on
which
there is
pal Employees.
quietly
perishing
because
they
Joseph Perkins
In a one-hour jeremiad on health
received no health care whatsoever, common ground is " pre-existing
care reform, the veep explained to Finance Committee and House then universal coverage would be condttions.'' A111ericans who have
the gathering of 4,000 public Ways and Means Committee are an urgent priority. But no one in past medical problems often face
employees why the president's plan thrashing out their own versions of America is·denied health care, even considerably higher premiums
is unlikely to be enacted this year: health care refonn. The Democmts if they are uninsured.
when they renew their insurance.
It's the Republicans' fault.
Lawmakers should forget about Lawmakers might usc the tax code
are detennined to pass something,
Indeed. said Gore, the GOP's anything, before Congress adjourns comprehensive health care reform . to make these premium s more
opposition to the administration's later this summer. The idea is to They stand a far bellcr chance of affordable.
proposed reforms is no less than present the president with a face- reaching consensus, of getting
There is consensus on certain
"an affront to democracy." Those saving bill he can sign in time for something passed, if they take a cost-containment ideas. Both parnasty, old Republicans are " deter- the November midt.cnn elections.
piecemeal approach to health ttcs agree, for instance, that medimined to do everythmg they can,"
reform
. In the next two months, cal claims processing could be
But health care refonn is much
he said, "to lry to stop this presi- too important for Democrats to Democrats and Republicans should streamlined. As it is, doctors and
dency in its tracks, even if it stops start from scratch this week with work together to craft a bill that hospitals must contend wiih 1,200working people in their tracks."
the idea of ramming something addresses the several health care some different insurance forms.
" Methmk s the vtce president through Congress in two months. issues on which there is broad
By paring that to two or maybe
protests too much . Last ltme I When we're talking about a mas- a~reement on both sides of the three standardized forms, more
checked, the Democrats enjoyed a sive and complete overhaul of the aiSle.
~n $50 billion a year could be
56-44 majority in the Senate and nation's health care system, some
One of those issues is "portabil- ,..,rsaved.
256-178 majority in the •House. If one-seventh of the gross domestic ity." In a Sltrvey conducted for the
Even larger savings may be
the Democrats fell in line behind product, it is not something that U.S . Advisory Council on Social recouped by reforming medical
thctr man m the White House, there can or should be cobbled together Security, some 28 percent of Amer- malpractice. Because doctors are so
would be nothing the Republicans in a mere matter of months.
icans said that at some point they wary of being hauled into collrl,
co uld do to block health care
That's the way the American were forced to stay in a job they many practice "defensive
reform .
people feel. Most recognize the wanted to leave because they didn't medicit•~." giving patients more
The reason the president's need for certain health care want to lose health care coverage.
tests and treatment than they really
health care reform is all but dead is reforms, but only 33 percent want
Congress could remedy this by need. Indeed, a study by the Rand
because it has no broad suppon in Congress to pass a comprehensive amending the provision of the Con- Corp. suggested that 15 percent to
Congress. If it were put to a vote biU Lhis year, according to the latest solidated Omnibus Budget Recon- 30 percent of medical procedures
today, 11 would be resoundin~ly USA Today-CNN-Gallup poll.
ciliation Act of 1986, which allows are unnecessary.
dcfeated in both houses. There stmLawmakers should heed the sen- workers who ' ve either bee"n laid
(Joseph Perkins is a COIIJ!Ilnist
ply is no consensus that favors the timents of their constituents. The off, had their hours reduced or even for Tbe San Diego Union-Tri·
maJor planks of the p_resident's 85 percent of Americans who have been fired to remain in their bune.)

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Heat, humidity to continue
lly The Associated Press
Hot and huml(l wtll contu1ue to
be the buzz words ro r Oh10's
weather Th urs&lt;lay ~md Fnday
Ht ghs wtll coll tlltu c tu hover
around the ~II degree mark. Lows
wtll be around 70.
Sc,tttercd U1Undstorms arc ltkcly
bot h day s, the N,lltonitl Weathe-r
Scrvtcc sard
Sltghtly coo ler co ndtllon s arc
posstbl c hy the weeke nd . wt th
highs of RO-BS . forecasters satd
The rcc onl -l11gh temperature for

th rs date at the Coluut bus weather
station wa' !JK deg re es 111 18RI
whtl e th e reco rd low was 43 10
1972. Sun,c ttuni gln wrll he at 9:03
p m and s11nrtsc I humla y at 6· 10
a.m
Wrather furerasl:

Today ... Partly cloud y... Hot and
humid with sca ttered afternoon
thunderstorms. Highs 90 to 95.
Tomg ht.. .Partly cloudy. Lows
ncar 70.
Thursday .. .Partly cloudy with
scattered afternoon thunderstonns.
lltghs from the upper 80s to lo,wer
90s
Extended forecast :
Fnday ... Vanably cloudy wtlh
scattered thunderstorm s. Low s 70
to 75 . Htghs 90 to 95.
Saturday ... Vanably cloudy with
scat tered showers and thund erstorms . Lows 65 to 70. Htghs in the
80s.
Sunday .. .Partly cloudy ... With
scattered thundersto rm s mainly
south. Lows 65 to 70. Highs 80 to
85.

Gallipolis' city manager
quits to take engineer post
GALLIPOLIS - Glen n Smtth
wtll be vac alm g lm po sttton as
Ga lltpolts ll l)' ""'n,tgcr next month
to ftll an un ex pi red term as
Guernsey Count y engmeer.
Sm ttlt , who ha s been ctty manager ror tile p:tst ihrce years, submtttcd ht s resig nati on , effective
Aug. 5, to tlte Galltpolt s Ctty Comlll tSs ton Tuesday. Tlt c resignatiOn
was acccpt cll 4-0 on a motion by
CommJSston cr Dow Sau nders that
was seco nd ed by Herman Koby.
Co mm iSSIO ner Brll Davis was
absent.
Smith tendered the rcstgnatton
during a 19-mmutc execu ttv c session and Co mmi ssiOn Pres td cn~
Ca ro l O'Rourke made th e
announcement w hen th e co mmiS -

sion returned to open sess ion.
O'Rourke added that the search
for a new manager wou ld begin
tmmcd tntcly. The posillon, whi ch
currently pays $46,760 per year mcludtng $3,000 fot tl1c ct ty health
CO mllll SSIOTICr' s slot - wd l be
advcrll sed.
Smtth wtll replace Tom Parnell,
who resigned to enter private bustness. Parnell had appromn,llcly 21/2 years le.Q_ on hi s term, Smi th
satd .
.' \
"Engineering ts my field and the
pcrGon who fi ll s th e JOb mu st be
qualtfi ed, " Srntth said as he

cxplamed hts reasons for taking the
jOb.
"I've enjoyed bemg city manager, bull think tht s suits me better,"
he added. "As city manager. I've
tncd to concentrate on the underground things you don't sec every
day. As a result, I thtnk we've
reso lved some real problems for
people."
Smith , a civil engineer by profess ion, pomted to improvements
m b3stc sem ces to city residents as
examples, including the recent
tn sta llatwn of ne w pumps and
improvements to the Spruce Street
sewage lift station .
Smith served as Gallia County
engi neer from 1969 to 1975 and
was manager of Buckeye Rural
Electrtc Cooperative from 1980
until 1991.
Smtth ts the seventh city manager in Gallipolis in nearly a decade.
Following the departure of Chris
Morris m 1985, the posttion was
held in swift success ion by Keven
Wnght, Homer Pcllegrinon, Albert
Ptcrcc, Paul Knotts and Dale Iman .
lman, employed in May 1986,
resigned on June 7, 1991 to accept
a job in Michigan. The cornmtsswn
promptly installed Smith as interim
manager, and employed him fulltime two months later.

'

Schools chief orders funding study
COLUMBUS (AI') - The state
will try to come up with tdcas to
end school fundmg mcquities at the
very ttmc tt appeals a court ruling
th at declared the current sys tem
un constitutional.
State Supenntendcnt of Public
lnstrucuon Ted Sanders satd Tuesday work should bcgm on one or
more proposa ls to submit to the
General Assembl y as Perry County
Common Pl eas Jud ge Ltnton D.
Lewis Jr. ordered.
"It seems to me e verybody
agrees that we have problems wnh
th e c urr en t fund in g sys tem,"
Sanders said.

Frequent escapee

·'A nd the question about
whether it's unconstitutional or not
doesn't have to be answered for us
to continue.

Marriage licenses
Etght couples were granted marriage licenses recently in the Meigs
County Probate Court of Judge
Robert Buck.
Receiving licenses were Donald
Ray Carmack. 31. and Drema
Arlene Ward , 37, both of Fort
Worth, Texas; Steven Arthur
Blouin, 27, and Tammy Sue
Backus, 22, both of Long Bottom;
Carroll Ray Nelson, 35, Middleport, and Cristy Deanna Coker, 21,
Pelzer, S.C.; Robert Lynn Thompson, 19, and Jennifer Lynn Smith,
33, both of Chester;
Larry Wayne Simpson, 43, and
Tina Marlene Jones, 30, both of
Long Bottom; Steven Jerald Stites,
44, and Brenda Nadine Fort, 36,
both of Dexter; Timothy David
Bonecutter. 27, and Bonnie Sue 1
Bonecutter, 39, both of Portland;
James Dame! Holt, 26, and Laura
Gail Austin , 25, both of Inverness,

(Continued from Page I)
hearing.
~
Persons dtd not appear for that
hcanng. He had been awaiting trial
in Meigs County for fe lony necing
and auto theft cha rges when he
escaped in April.
"They're tcllmg us that tf tt's
not fr om their state, they don't
care," Soulsby said.
Future acuon will depend on
what the Meigs County prosecutor 'tta.
suggesLs, he added.
But Ruscn made a suggesuon to
Meigs County offictals.
"If they have any informatiOn
(Continued from Page 1)
that can help us tllcy should call us
and not complain in the newspa- them across the border.
"Our tomatoes are already going
per," Ruscn said thi s morning.
into Canada,'' said Thornton. "Why
Persons is set for another hcarnot do it directly?"
mg at 1: 30 p.m. Aug. 18 in Wood
"We may have to go through a
Circuit Court.
broker this year to get our foot in
the door," Thornton said.
State Rep . Mark Malone said
the state would "make every effort
lo assist" the farmers.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Other state and local officials
Tuesday admission - Wtlham
attending were Julie HoudasheltWhittington. Middleport.
Tuesday discharge - Walter Thornton, Meigs County Economic
Development director; Lynne Crow
Barrett. Lan~sville .
and Elizabeth Schaad of the Governor's Office of Appalachia; Randy
The Daily Sentinel
Hocksteter, International Trade
Dtvision; and Pamela Lankford,
(USPS 2 U-960)
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Published e very aflemoon, Monday throuiiJ
Friday, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Ohto by the
Regional Develo~ent District.

Meigs tomato

Hospital news.

Ohto Valley f\J.bltshtng Co mpany/Multtmed~:'
Inc., Pomeroy, Oh to 45769, Ph 992-2 156
SWJnd clas&amp; poslage ~atd at Pomeroy, Oh iO

Member lhe Assonaterl Pr~s and the Ob.1o
Newspaper Auoctallon , Nauonal Advertismg
Reprelelllal• ve , Branham Newspaper Sales.
733 Third Avenue, New York., New York. '

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Stocks

--"--"--.18

Am Ele Power
1/4
Akzo ·--"--"--"--"--.54 liS
Ash laud OU
SIS
AT&amp;T ·-"----"--"--.53 3/4

---"--"--.33

Bank One·- - - -------.34 111
Bob E•aoa--"--"--"--.11111
CbampiOD lnd.-"-------..21
Cbarmllll Sbop"-"--"---9 718
City HoldiDg."-----"--.34112

Fedend Moxul--------.31 liS
Goodyear T&amp;R ----"-.35 314
K·mart "----"-----"--"16
LaDdl End "-"---"-11 718
Limited lnc.-"----"--.17 3/4
Multimedia IIIC. ·---"--.1' liS
Point Banccrp --"-"--"--17
Reliance Electrfc "--"--"--18
RobbiDI It Myen.....-----11 311
Sbooey'a Inc.."----"--'15 111
Star Bank _ _! _____ "_.J7 3/4
Wendy lnt'L ""---"--·15 3/4
WortblogtOD lnd..--"-----"11
Stock reporta""' the 10:30 a.m.
quotos pro¥fded by Adv..a of
GaWpolll.

-Area deaths-Garnet Gerlach
'

Garnet A. '"Tudor" Gerlach, 59,
of Letart, W.Va., dted Tuesday,
July 5, 1994 at her residence. She
was a homemaker, and a member
of the Midnight Cloggers and the
Gutding Star Advent Christian
Church of Lelart.
Born Ma rch 6, 1935 in Point
Pleasant, W.Va ., she was the
daughter of the late Ralph, Sr., and
Era Cooper Shlfley.
Survtvors mclude her husband ,
Shennan K. Gerlach, Sr., of Lelart;
three daughters, Ktm Gerlach of'
Point Pleasant, Susan (James)
Layne of Solon and Sherry (Eric)
William son of New Haven, W.Va;
two sons, Sherman (Cheryl) Gerlach , Jr., and Sheldon (Ketrina)
Gerlach, both of New Haven; two
sisters, Velma Clark of leLart and
Orillae Ohlinger of Mt. Alto.
W.Va; thr ee brothers, Ralph
Shirley of Mt. Alto. Robert Shirley
of Leon and Richard Shirley of
Parkersburg, W.Va., and one step
granddaughter.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and
7 to 9 p.m. at the Fogelson Funeral
Home in Mason, W.Va., where services will be held I p.m. Friday

wtth the Rev. Kenneth Durst officiating. Burial will be in leLart Evergreen Cemetery.

Melvin E. Cross
Melvm E. Cross, 69, 30417 Van
Zant Road, Langsvtlle, died Tuesday, July 5, 1994 ot his residence.
Born Nov. 6, 1924 at Millstone,
W.Va .. son of the late Harley and
Rosie Mace Cross, he was a retired
carpenter, a U.S. Army veteran of
World War II, and a member of the
Feeney-Bennett American Legion
Post No . 128 and the Tuppers
Plains VFW Post.
Surviving are his wife, Carol
White Cross; a stepson, Ellis Myers
of Langsville; two stepdaughters,
Jessica Spackey and Judy
McGuire, both of Langsville; five
stepgrandchildren and three stepgreat-grandchildren; and three sisters, Pearl Sullivan of Worthington ,
Ky., Ruth Thomas of Marinsville,
Va., and Myrldcnc Litchfield of
Pomt Pleasan~ W.Va.
He was also preceded in death
by three brothers and two sisters.
Gravestde servtces will be held
at the convenience of the famtly .
Arrangements are by the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton.

GOOD COTTON CANDY- Seven-year-old Ross Anderson of
Jackson, in town to visit his gra ndparents, enjoyed some cotton
candy at the park festivities of the Rutland July 4 celebration.
Food and game booths were in operation all day.

-Livestock reportCOLUMBUS (AP) - Direct
livestock prices and receipts at
selected buying points Wednesday
by the U.S . Department of Agricul ture:
Barrows and gtlts: steady to .50
lower. Demand moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., counlry
points, 38.00-41 .00;
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
counlry points, 41.00-42.50.
Prices from The Producers Ltvestock Association:
Cattle: steady to 2.00 higher.

Slaughter steers: choice 58 .0064.00; select 53.00-59.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 57.5062.50; select 53.00-58.00.
Cows: steady to 2.00 higher; all
cows 54.00 and down .
Bulls: steady to I .00 higher; all
bulls 61.25 and down.
Sheep and lwnbs: steady to 2.00
lower; choice wools 60.00 -77, 75;
choice clips, not available; feeder
lambs 66.00 and down; old sheep
3450 and down,

Land transfers posted
The following land transfers
were recorded recently in the office
of Meigs County Recorder Emmagene Hamilton:
Certificate. Eugene F. Carpenter, deceased, to Elizabeth Carpenter, Lebanon, 1-1/2 acres;
Afftdavit, Dale A. Hysell,
deceased, to Mary E. Hysell, Middleport parcel;
Deed, Gerald Hegedus to Diana
Fcrnan Skuratowtcz, Sutton, 35
acres;
Deed, Rodney William and
Carol J. Brooks to same, Columbia,
4 acres;
Deed, Rodney William and
Carol J. Brooks to same, Columbia,
40.2062 acres;
Deed , Edna Bearhs Stalder,
Edna Bearhs Stalder Walker to
Eugene Daniel and Sharon Lynn
Tucker, Chester, I .050 acres;
Deed, Emma Lee Brrd to Dana
S. and Pilyllts M. Turner, Racine
lo~

Affidavtt, Vernon R. and Sheryl
L. Little to Marvin G. and Juanita
M. Little;
Deed, Leroy and Judy&gt;E. Hen-

drix to Slleri Kropka, Suiton, 1.873
acres;
Affidavit, Nonnan K. Evans to
Norman J. Evans;
Deed, Norman K. and Norman
Evans to Melvin and Judec Dailey,
Olive, 6 acres;
Affidavit, Madchne M. Swan,
deceased, Kenneth Lawren ce,
deceased, to Phylis M. Glasgo,
Olive parcels;
Deed, Donald and Eula Mae
Landon to Mary E. Kibble, Olive
lots;
Deed, Nancy E. Cohee to Mark
T. Cohee, Rutland Township, 30.60
acres;
Deed, Mark T. Cohee to
Richard Liebfl\llnn and Natali e
Young, Rutland Township, 30.60
acres;
Deed, Glenn and Grace M.
Stout to same, Chester Township
parcels;
Deed, Eva Schreiber to Robert
E. and Tammy L. Ball, Salisbury
parcel;
Affidavit, Homer Hysell,
deceased , to Hattie B. Hysell,
Pomeroy.

RED, WHITE AND IILUE BICYCLES- A dozen or so bicy·
cles decorated for the patriotic holiday were a part of the Rutland
Fourth of July parade Monday morning. Winners in the category
were first place trophy to Joseph Stanley, and second place trophy
to Cour.tni Van Meter.

WINNING HORSES - Steve Stewart took first place, and
Johnny Clonch, second, in the judging category for horses. They
were a part of this group at the Rutland July 4 parade.

Meigs announcements
Farmer's market renewed
The Mi&lt;ldleport Community
Association will again hold a
farmer's market, beginning this
Saturday. The market will be open
from 8 a.m.-2 p.m., with farmers
allowed to come and set up at 7:30
a.m. Fee for the selling space next
to Dave Diles Park will be $5 . All
vendors should preregister by calling 992-5458.
Park a/ ailable for yard sales
The vtllage of Middlepon will
once again be allowing people to
hold yard sales 10 Gener
Hartinger Park on Saturday. $5 s
up fee. Contact Mrs. Arnold Johr
son at 992-6589 for more information.
Circle Reunion set
The annual Circle reunion will
be held July 23 at noon at Star Mill
Park in Racine.

Bookmobile on vacation
The Meigs County Publtc
Library bookmobile is "on vacation" until July 18. The vehicle is
being overhauled, Ruth Powers,
librarian reported.
Car wash to be held
A car wash will be held at
McDonald's Friday beginning at 10
a.rn. by the Meigs County 4-H
horse committee.
Bible school announced
Vacation Bible School will be
held at the Middleport Presbyterian
Church next week, Monday
through Friday. Classes for all ages
will be held from 10 a.m. to noon.
Reunion set
The Theiss reunion will be held
Sunday at Star Mill Park, Racine,
starting with a potluck dinner at
12:30 p.m . There will be games
and pnzes for the children.

Partial sponsorship given
(Continued from Page 1)
of tentative costs and income from
the Fourth of July festivities.
The passing of the bat raised
$308, the teddy bear compeuuon
raised $211, and food ve~dor fees
yielded $35. Expenses tncluded
$176 for soda and unknown costs
for the portable toilets. But, as of
Tuesday, the festivities raised $380
for the group.
The f~rcworks donations totalled
nearly $3, I 00, while the entire cost
of the display was about $3,500,
Dooley added.
"It looks like we're going to
come up short. We could still use
some more donations," he added.
"There are a lot of people we need
to thank for their help."
Councilman Bob Gilmore sug·
gested Lhe community association
give $150 to the Shady River Shuf·
flers to def111y some of the costs for
their final performance. This donation will be made.
One community group member
suggested next year's celebration
close off Front Street for safety

business:
• the farmers' market wtll begin
again this Saturday near Dave
Diles Park. The event will be held
from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. and all vendors
should eall992·5458 to preregister.
• the Order of the Eastem Star
will hold a "Save our Swimming
Pool" bean dinner from 11 a.rn .-7
p.m. July 22 at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. All yoJJ can eat
beans, corn bread, cake, tea and
coffee will be available for at least
a $5 donation, Dooley said.
• the next Middleport Community Association meeting will be held
at 5:15 p.m. Aug . 2 at Peoples

Two hospitalized after crash
Two Reedsville residents were reported in good condition today.
The patrol said George Baker
sent to area hospitals with injuries
suffered Tuesday m a motorcycle was driving a Suzuki motorcycle,
acctdcnt on State Route 681 in on which Jason Baker was a pasOrange Township, the Gallia - senger, eastbound at 4 p.m. went tt
Meigs Post of the State Highway went off the right side of the road
and struck an embankment.
Patrol said.
The crash ejected the driver and
George W. Baker, 19, was taken
to Grant Medical Center, Colum- the passenger, the patrol said.
The accident remains under
bus, by LifeFiight and was listed in
investigation.
senous condition this morning in
the inten si ve care unit. Ja son L.
Baker, 16 , was taken to St.
Joseph 's Hospital, Parkersburg,
W.Va., by the Meigs EMS and

Divorces and
.dissolutions
Two actions to end marriage
were filed last week in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court of
Judge Fred W. Crow IlL
Dawn Early Young of Lon-g...
Bottom filed Thursday for divorce
from Donald H, Young, Chilrlotte,
N.C. In additiOn , Charles V. Hannahs and Rhonda R. Hannahs filed
Friday for dissolution of marriage.

• ••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS

will H aive• i• Meigs/Gallia Counties .,

~-· HEARING AID CENTER

••
•
•

Bank.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges July 5 - Mrs. Ben
Hall and daughter, James Cundiff,
Mrs. Paul Perry and son, Tina
Thomas.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Atkins, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. 1obnny Pearson, daughter,
Point Pleasant, W.Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. JOhn Toland, son, Oak Hill.
sake.
.
. ,
(Published with permission)
In other commumly assoclauon

•

••
••

Friday, July 8, 1994
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
11 0 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy
9:00·Noon

•

•

: Cal Tol Free 1-IOQ-634-5265 f~r a• Immediate appol•tme.t. :
• Tile tests
be givea by a Lkeased Hearl1g Aid Spedalst •

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• Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversation Ia Invited to •
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•
ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL OTHER
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�•

Sports

'·

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, July 6, 1994 .
Page--4

In the NL,

Five HRs
. help Reds defeat Marlins, get fifth straight win
.

By JOHN PACENTI
MIAMI (AP) - Kevin Mnchell
said it had LO be the shoes.
Mitch e ll, wearing Deion
Sanders' shoe s to cushion an
injured left foot. hit two of Cincin nati's five home run s to hei,P the
Reds w1n thelf f1fth straight , 9-4
over the Florida Marlins.
An X-ray showed a bone frac ture in Mitchell ' s left foot before
the game . That's when manager
Davey Johnson went to work.
Johnson wrote out a plan for a
cobble r to anach a p1ece from a
catcher's shin guard and add it to
Mitchell's own. Mitchell also wore
a pair of Deion Sanders' shoes
because they were bi gger and softer.
He said th e injur y actually
helped him hit.
"It's keeping me timid on my
front foot," said Mitchell, who fin ished 3-for-4 wllh three RBis. He
had been out of the lineup since
Saturday when he hurt the foot
after a foul tip against Pittsburgh.
Johnson added." Mitchell asked
me if !·was an engineer. I'd go to
any length to get him in the lineup."

Pete Schourck (4-1) piL£hed s•x
scoreless innings. scattering six hits
and striking out four, to hand the
Marlins their founh straight loss.
"He's that sixth starter I've
been trying lO get for a year and a
half," Johnson said. "When something happens. I want 10 throw him
in there."

Schourek was claimed off
waivers from the New Y !Irk Mcts
gn April 7.
"I don't want to get too comfortable yet," Schourek said. "I
have to do the job every time I get
the ball."
His job was made easier by the
2-3 -4 hillers, Barry Larkin , Hal
Morris and Mitchell. The trio combined to go 9-for -14 with ..seve n
RBls.

The Reds j umped ahead 2 0 in
the f~r s t when L:trkin and Morri s
hitlx1ck-to -hack homers off Florida
knucklcball er Charlie Hough (5-8).
Hough al so allowed hcnne runs
in the second innmg to Tony Fernand et and in the fourth to
Mitchell. The four homers were the
most all owed by a Marlins pitcher

19'1 I..._J:_~ched perfect ball for six
1111.11ngs 'l_ucsday before allowing a
leadoff horner in th e seve nth to
Darren Lewis in New York 's 4-2
victory over San Francisco.
He was ~1e first MeLs pitcher to
tak e a perfect game into the se venth inning si nce Tom Seaver did it
on Sept. 24. 1975.

lhis sC&lt;I.'iOn.

" I s tarted lhinking no - hitter

Hough, who comp leted only
four innings, has lost his last four
starl.l and ha s not pitched more
than 4 l(:\u1mn gs since June 14.
" I was JUS\ •nconsistcnt. I
co uldn ' t th row a good pitch fol lowed by another," Hough sa id .
''A ll th ose pitches should hav e
been hi!. ''
Brian Drahman re lieved Hough
in the fifth and gave up Mitchell' s
21st home run.m the sixtl1 innmg , a
two-run shot that reached the upper
dec k above th e left. fi eld score ~
board.
Joh nny Ruffi n pllchcd 2 1/1
1nning s of reli ef for Cincinnati,
before Gary Shellield hit hi s 17th
!tome run off Rich DeLucia in the
nmth .
Th e Reds added a run in the
eighth off Jeff Mulis and two in the
nmtll off Richie Lewis. Both ninthinning runs were driven in by Morris. givi ng him three RBis for the
game and a career-high 60 for the
season .
Else where in the Nl. 11 was
Ne w York 4, San Francisco 2;
Pil!sburgh 3, Atlanta I in a rainshortened game; Houston 3, St.
louis I; Co lorado 9, Chicago 6;
San Diego 7, Philadelphia 2, and
los Angeles 2, Montreal 1 in 10
innings.
,(
Mets 4, Giants 2
The New York Mets, who have' '
won two World Series in their 33year history. still don't have a no'
hiller 10 thw record book.
All-Star Bret Saberhagen almost
changed that on Tuesday.
Saberhagen, who threw a no-hitler for the Kansas City Royals in

going mto the fourth i.nning,"
Saberhagcn S&lt;llll. " I've been in that
situntion before . The thing is you
don't want to thmk perfect game.
" The one bad pjt£h !made was
to l ewi s. Everythi ng went then the perfect g~un e, the no-hiller and
the shutout . You have to think nohi tter. I had a prelly good idea of
wlwtl was doing. I just didn't want
to walk Lewi s leading off. and I
came in with a bad p1L£h ."
Saberhagen (9 -4), who also
all owed a leadoff homer to Dave
Martinez in the eighth , gave up
o nly two hit s in eight innings,
struck out eight and walked ' none.
He has struck out 98 hillers this
season while walking JUSt nine, a
ratio of nearly 11 to I.
Sahcrhagen al so helped himself
offensively, contr ibuting a runscori ng double for his first major· IC11gue RBI in 110 at-bats.
Consecutive two-out singles by
Joe Orsulak , Bobby Bonilla and
Jeff Kent off John Burkell (5-7)
made itl -0 in the first inning. Ryan
Thompson, Saberhagen and Jose
Vizcaino hit two-out doubles in the
sixth for a 3-0 lead.
Pirates 3, Braves I
At Atlanta, Jay Bell had a tWO·
run triple for the Pirates in a game
delayed by rain three times before
· it was called after 6 1-2 innings in
the opener of a scheduled doubleheader.
Bell had one of only two hits off
John Smaltz (6-8). who went seven
_innings and gave up three ru·ns two ea rned - walked four and
struck out six.
Denny Neagle (8-8) gave up

four h1ts - three to Davicl Justic e Howard John son tied th e game
- as th e Pirates snapped a three- with a three-run homer and Andres
Galarraga hit his 23rd homer to cap
game losing streak.
Astros 3, Cardinals I
a six- run seventh for the Rockies.
At St. louis. Pete Harnisch and
Chi cago's Mark Grace hit a
two relievers combined on a four- three- run homer in the fir st off
hitter and Steve Finley had a home Kevin Ritz (2-4) and S ~unm y Sosa
run and two RBi s.
had a solo shot in the thi rd. Rill
Craig Biggio led off the game went six innings, allowing six hits
with h1 s fifth home run and Fmley and five run s with four walk s and
hll h1 s nmth homer leading off the six strikeou ts. Cruck Crim (3 -3)
llfth.
LOok the loss.
Harnisch (4-4) allowed only one
Plldres 7, Phillies 2
run to win on the road for the first
.At San D•ego, Eddie Williams.
time this season. Vicente Palacios who played semi-pro ball la st fall
( 1-7) took the loss.
after being out of th e majors the
Rockies 9, Cubs 6
previous three seasons, hit l)i s first
At Chicago, pinch-hiller career grand slam .

Williams, hitting .375 with five
homers and 19 RBis since being
promoted three weeks ago, homered off Bobby Munoz (4 -3) with
two outs in .the fifth . Lui s lopez
and Scott Li vingstone also homered to back Joey Hamilton (5-J ),
who allowed one run and six hits in
seven innings.
Dodgers 2, Expos I (10 inn.)
At Los Angel es , Raul Mondesi
homered w1th one out in the lOth
off John Wcn eland (2-6) after
Montreal starter Jeff Fassero retired
22 consecutive hitters.
Rookie l smac l Valdes (1-0)
earned hi s first major league victory with two perfect innings.

.....
GOOD BLAST, HAL! -The Cincinnati Reds'
Hal Morris (right) is greeted by third base coach
Ray Knight as Morris rounds the bases following
his two-run homer off Charlie Hough in the sec-

. IJl~,

'

REACH OVER 18,500

·.4/!... .

.

. •

their noat which bears the message "We had a
b~ll; won 'em all," referring to the Rascals'
record .

RACINE RASCALS -Winning first place
in the patriotic category in the Racine Fourth or
July parade was the entry by the Racine Rascals
baseball team. Here, members or the team sit on

Scoreboard
Baseball

AL standings

NL standings

Teun

TW L Pd.
A\lonll ...........- ..... .50 30 .625
M-..1 ......... ......49 33 .591
Pbiladclphia ......... ..41 42 .494
New Y«k .............. 31

Gl

2
!O.l

4S

.4:51

1-4

Florido ................... 37 46

.446

14.5

Cenlral Dh,ldon

ClNCINNATI........ 49 ~ .
"""'"" ............: ...41 ,;!6
St. loW .............. ..40 ..,
Pilub&lt;qh .............. 39 4t
a.;.,. 1o ..................~ 41

.598
.566

2..5

8
9
14.5

jO()

.488
A20

w...,.DI......
loo Ao..,loo .. - .... -44

:Ill

Coa.-lo-..-·-..... .40 45

Son Fnnciooo ........3! ·49
Son f&gt;i&lt;lo ..............~ 50

.471

10.5

Tueodoy'• ~~~:ores

NewYodt4,SanF~l
l.oo """""' 1, Mmaool I (I 0 inn.)
P1WburJ113, Alllda I (I iMinp.

oo,

""'~ll'i';:~.

CclonOO 9. au.ol/' 6
3, S.. [..,.;, I
Sao lliqo 7. Pbillddphia 2

.494
.461
.-432

31

.608

Chlcaa.o .. ·- .............41 l4
)(..,... Ci•y ........... 43 .)9

580
.524

MinnCIIcu ..............4()
Milw1u.kca ............. 38

.494
.463

41
44

Auto racing

.600

.no

1.S
8.5

WAY CORPORATION, Nornod )....,.

11

M.

11.5

.422

Califomit ...............3S 49

.417

IU~

dirtdor ~new terie~~ develop-

2
6.5 '
9
IU

A..erkan Leaau•

NEW YORK YAIIKEES ' Ploood Doo
~altin&amp;l ~, finl betc:man , on the 1!i --d1 y
dialblod lilt. nli'OICUVC l£1 J110c 30.

ll

Oric•1o

Pbiladelphia (Weal 3-6) 11 SUI Diqo
(l{Nq.. 0-\), .,QI ~....
. Dll Piu.bmp (Smi&amp;h 1-6 and Wapor
~-6) at Allanll (Merd:c::r 1-laad Avecy S·

2).4:QI p.m.

CINCINNATI (Roper S-0) 11 Florida
(&lt;lonNo&lt; :1-2). Hl p.m.
Houlton (l)iabak 10-S) 11 St. LoW.a
(Suldilfel-3), 1,35 p.m.
New Yook (Jon. 1-7) 11 S.. Pnncil"' (llickenon :1- 7). I &amp;.OS p.m.
MonlrNI (PJ. Mattia• ._.)at l..al
Aoploo tO.. 7-l), 1&amp;.35 p.m.

•

Tbursday'agames

~ (lloobo 4-4) "s.. Fnndoa&gt; (Bt..i I-G), 4:QI J&gt;-'"'
Cokndo [N!od 7-4) • Ploddo (Mo&lt;h-

Tuesday's scores
DH: Dctrod 6. Chicago 2; OUc.go 6.

n..m••

Califomi.a 10, Boc.on J
OU1and 8, New Yom 7 ·
lkltimorc !1, San!e 2
Torooto 14, MinnCIOU 3
Km.u Ci1y 10, Milwaukee S
Tcua -4, a.EVE.l.AND J

*

(S~naer 2-1) ll Bo.tan
(VanEgmood 0.2), 7:05p.m;
Oakland (Dulin&amp; ~9) It New Yolk.
(Abbou 7-S). 7:QI pm.
Chicaao (Femande% 7- 7) at Detroit
(Gullicbon 4-4), 7:QI p.m.
Scaulc (Salkeld 2·4) 11 Baltimore

... t-t). 7:lS pm.

Pi!UboraJI (Cooke 3-6) II CNCIN-

NATI (IJ.nooa !-!), 7J~ p.m.
.
IPuam (Kilo l-3)" Obcaao (B....,
I-6),1:QI p.m.
New YOlk (Jtcome 0.1) tl Lot Ana•
""'(c...tU&gt;tti 6-l),IO:QI
Moauoal (Hill 12· 3 u San Dieao
(AtbbJ ~' IO&lt;rl p.m.

(0qu:ill2·2), 1:15 p.m.
Toroo10 (SIOUhmyre S.S) 11 MinnCIO~ (Eriduon 7-6),1:QI p.m.
.
Milwau.koo (Scanlan 0-5) 11 Kana..

cur (Appia' ~). s,QI p.m.

Q..EVEJ...A.ND (Morri17-5) at Tuu
(lleam«0-2l. s,3l p.m.

Tbundloy's ~tames

Cllifomia (l..analltm f.-4) It New Yott
(K&lt;r 12-7), LOl p.m.

Chicaao (Af.... ror. 9 -4) at Detroit
(MooR 8·7), I Jl p.m.

Toronto (Leiter 3-~) 11 Minneaota
((luanUdo 0-l).
p.m.,_
Saale (Johuon 9-4) lt' B.anon (Sele
7-4), 7:05p.m.
OUI.and (VanPoppal 4- T) at Baltimore
(McDonald 111-6), Hl p.m
Milwaukoo (Eldrod 9·8) 11 Kanau f'ity
!Gonion i-4),&amp;:QI p.m.
CLEVELAND (NaiY 7-4) 1t Tuu
(Loaly !).()), 8,35 p.m.

us

-I•

ADVERTISING IN TilE

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••
·-

TV TIMES
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LISTINGS AND
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Tonight's games

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HOMES WITH
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m..,c

BasebaU

Wellern Dlv ..&amp;on
TeAll ................... ..40 42 .4118
o.kland ................. 36 46 .439

47

INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEED-

California

Today'sgames

f-"'·

Gl

CenaniDhUion

5
9 .l

.417
.40!

Colorado (Leabnic ().0)

B0110n ..................40 41

Seallle .................... 3S

j)O

32
l4

l:ldroiL. .................. 38 44
Toron~o .................. 3S 46
CU!VEI.AND .......48

.-h-....

Transactions

i:utft"ll Ol'fldon
W L PeL

New York ............ .48
Baltin'Kwe ..............47

lal&amp;em DIYUion

'I

ond inning or Tuesda,r's National League game
against the host Flor.da Marlins, who lost 9-4.
(AP)

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. Wednesday, July 6, 1994

In the AL,

Rangers edge Indians 4-3;
ChiSox gain ground in DH
Coles hit three home runs, becoming the sixth
major leaguer to accomplish the feat this year, in
leading Toronto over the Minnesow Twins 14·3.
Coles began the game batting only .145 (8·for-55)
with one home run and six RB!s.
''I was just hoping I could play because my finger
was barkiqg at me all day," Coles said.
Coles hun his finger Monday night when he dove
into ftrsl base. He was scheduled 10 stan Tuesday at
the Metrodome while third baseman Ed Sprague was
in California with his wife, who gave birth Monday.
Coles' injury, however, le[t his swtus in doubt.
"He said he was OK, but there were a few guys
who doubled whether he was telling the truth," Blue
Jays manager CiLO Gaston said.
Coles hit a two-run homer in the fifth inning and
solo shots in the eighth and ninth. He joined Tim
Raines. Jose Canseco. Karl Rhodes, Cory Snyder and
Jeff Bagwell as players to connect three times in a
game this year.
Paul MoliLOr hit his second career grand slam and
Joe Carter foUowed with his 18th homer of the season during a six-run seventh. Molitor also had two
singles and a double.
Randy Knorr also homered.
Juan. Guzman (7-9) won for the first time since
June 3. Pat Mahomes (7-4) was the loser.
Angels 10, Red Sox 3 - Chris Turner, who
began the game batting only .138, went 5-for-5 and
became the ftrst California catcher to steal home.
Turner doubled twice, drove in two runs and
scored two. He snuck home as part of a double steal.
Chili Davis hit hfs 16th homer and drove in three
runs.
Chuck Finley (6-8) gave up six hits in eight
innings. Joe Hesketh (4-5) was hurt by poor defense.
Athletics 8, Yankees 7 - Geronimo Berroa 's
two-run homer in the seventh inning lifted Oakland
at Yankee Swdium.
Berroa's lOth home run carne against Greg Harris
during Tuesday night's American League game in
• FORCED OUT - After being forced out at
(3-5). Ruben Sierra also homered for the A's.
Arlington, Texas, where the Rangers won 4-3.
second base, the Cleveland Indians' Albert Belle
Matt Nokes homered twice and Danny Tartabull
(AP)
(r!gbt) tries to knock Texas second baseman Bill
also connected for the Yankees.
R•pken out or position to complete the double play
Bob Welch (2-5) won in relief.
Orioles 5, Mariners 2 - Jamie Moyer won for ·'
In Hubbard Memorial LL Tournament, ·
only the second time in 14 slllrtS as Baltimore shut
down Ken Griffey Jr. and visiting Seatlle.
Cal Ripk:en drove in two runs and Brady Anderson homered.
Moyer (3-6) went6 1/3 innings and Lee Smith got
his 28th. save. Jim Converse (0-1) los!.
Royals 10, Brewers 5 - Bob Hamelin homered,
doubled and drove in three runs as Kansas City won
double.
in the fifth inning to close out the
at home. The Royals hit four doubles and Milwaukee By DAVE HARRIS
Mason will play Bidwell Thurs- scoring. The Pirates LOok advantage
Sentinel Correspondent
hit six.
of two walks with two outs, a douThe 17th annual William "Bill" day at8 p.m.
Reliever Rusty Meacham (1-1) won for the ftrSl
In
the
evenings
second
game
ble by Dustin Kebler. a single by
lime since June 6, 1993. Billy Brewer got his third Hubbard Memorial lillie League
scored
seven
runs
in
the
Gallipolis
Brad Wilford and an error to plate
staned
TuesBaseball
Tournament
save.
third
inning
and
went
on
·10
post
a
the runs.
day
evening
with
two
games
at
Bill Wegman (6-1) was stopped one win short of
Kuhn was the sMer and winner
King
Field
in
Syracuse.
the team record for consecutive victories at the stan
13-7 victory.
for Gallipolis with relief help from
In the first game, Mason VFW
df a season.
Gallipolis scored two runs m the
Tigers, White Sox split DH- Jack McDowell defeated the Middleport Cardinals first inning lO take a 2-0 lead on a lane. They combined to give up
three hits, walk six and strike out
struck out a career-high II in only six innings and 10-5. In the nightcap, Gallipolis pair of walks and two errors. Tupnine. Jones led Gallipolis at the
Frank Thomlls hit his 30th home run as Chicago won defeated the Tuppers Plains Ptrates pers Plains came back in the secplate
with a triple, Lane added a
13-7. Both games were played in ond lO tic the game on a single by .
6-4 salvage a doubleheader split at Tiger Stadium.
double
and Kuhn and Kolcun each
McDowell (6-7) is 4-0 in his last seven swrts. hot and humid conditions.
Jeremy Connolly, a walk and a pair
added
a
single.
In
the
first
game,
Mason
plated
Roberto Hernandez went I 1/3 innings for his ninth
of passed balls.
Wes
Shafer was the slllrter and
save. Four White Sox pitchers combined for 15 five runs in the fifth inning to pull
In the third the Yankees scored
loser
for
T.P. with relief help from
away
from
a
5-4
advantage
and
go
strikeouts.
.
the seven runs on only two hits to
Joe
Brown.
they scattered four hits
Greg Gohr (2-1) lost for the first lime in five slllrtS on to post the 10-5 win.
break the game open. Three hit batwalk
eight
and strike out nine:
Middleport jumped out on top ters, two walks a pair of errors and
this season.
Kcbler
led
the
Pirates at the plate
In the opener, Cecil Fielder and Tony Phillips 4-0 in the top of the second inning. a single off the bat of Robby Kuhn
With
a
double,
Jeremy Connolly
The
Cardinals
took
advantage
of
homered in a four-run frrst inning for Detroit, which
and a double from Micah -Kolcun
and
W1lford
each
added a single.
two
walks,
three
errors
and
a
single
plated the runs .
won6-2.
The
Yankees
will
play the Gal.
by
J.
Robinson.
T.P. scored a run in the fourth
David Wells (2-5) allowed eight hits in his second
White
Sox
on
Friday at 8
hpohs
But
Mason
came
back
in
the
inning without the benefit of a hit,
complete game. Scott Sanderson (7-3) had won three
p.m.
bottom of the inning to score three but the Yankees plated four more
ina row.
The tournament will continue on.
runs and make it a 4-3 contest. A runs in the bouom of the inning to
Wednesda~ evening with the Galhit batter·and singles by Josh Reed, make it a 13-3 contest. Three walks
hpohs Mariners playing the Racine
a double by TrenlOn Roush and sin- and a double off the bat or Cody
A's at 6:30, the evening's second
gles by Brandon Hankinson and Lane and a triple from Justin Jones
contest will have Pomeroy No. 2
Charlie Kapp scored the three runs . scored the runs.
Adam Rickard also added a double
Tuppers Plains scored four runs playmg Syracuse Hubbard's
Greenhouse.
in the inning bul was thrown out at
By DOUG TUCKER
and a "C" average in certain core . · Bringing up the rear was Ten- the plate for the innings second out,
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) subjects.
nessee State with a 13 percent all three runs were scored after the
At the head of the class are Mari~r \
Providence and Maris! were the graduation rate. This was followed first two outs were reconded.
Mason scored single runs in the
and Providence, the only NCAA ' only schools who have been by North Texas and Texas Soutllthird
and fourth innings to take a 5Division I schools tllat graduated NCAA members since 1987 and ern at 15 percent, Alabama Sute
4
lead.
Mike Northup homered in
100 percent of their 1987-88 fresh- graduated 100 percent of their (21 percent), Prairie View A&amp;M
men.
_.--'
1987-88 freshmen.
and Texas-San Antonio (22 per- the third inning to lie the game. In
At the other end sunds TenHigh achievers also included cent), Lamar (24 percent), Coppin the fourth inning Kapp singled and
nessee State, whose 13 percent Holy Cross and Georgetown (95 State (25 percent), Arkansas Swte advanced on a fielders choice and
graduation rate was the lowest.
percent), La Salle {94), Manhattan and Northwestern State (26 per- came around 10 score on a double
Overall, an NCAA survey (93) and Boston College, Colgate, cent): and Alcorn Sute and Robert by Jed Johnson.
Mason broke the game open in
released Thursday indicated, ath- Xavier and Lehigh (92).
Morris (27 percent).
the fifth inning. Mason plated five
lctes in the second year of Proposibig runs on an a en'or. singles by
lion 48 maintained the -gains of the
Joey
Divincenzo, .Josh Reed and
first year, with black athletes makTim Roush. Kapp followed with a
two out double and Jed Johnson
and
the bases with a home run.
cleared
Fifty-seven percent of all athMiddleport
closed out the scorentrance
in
Tuesday's
third
stage,
letes graduated who enrolled in By JOSEPH WHITE
ing
in
the
sixth
inning on back-10the
41-mile
team
time
trial
from
NCAA Division I schools in the
DOVER, England (AP) - The
back
walks
and
a
single by RobinCalais.
1987-88 academic year, compared cycling world considered the Tour
son.
The
Italian-Belgian
GB-MG
with 56 percent or the general stu- de France's trip through the ChanJed Johnson was the winning
team won the stage with a lime of I
nel Tunnel a historic occasion.
dent body.
hour,
2(')
minutes,
31
seconds.
Its
pitcher
scattering three hits and
For teammates Greg LeMond
The data cover nearly 300 Diviwalking
II and striking out 13.
top
rider,
Belgium's
Johan
sion I schools and count only stu- and Chris Boardman, it was a bit of
Johnson
led
the hit parade with a
Museeuw,
took
the
overall
lead
dents who received athletic schol- a letdown.
home
run
and
a single. Kapp,
from
Boardman
of
England.
"It was a bit boring, actually,"()
arship aid. A 1987-88 freshman
Rickard
and
Reed
added a single
Boardman,
who
had
held
the
was allowed a six-year degree pro- Boardman said after emerging from ·
and
a
double,
Northup
a home run
yellow
jersey
since
the
race
began
the half-hour train ride Tuesday
gram.
and
Divincenzo
and
Hankinson
on
Saturday,
was
the
first
racer
Athletes in the first year of underneath the English Channel.
''I guess takinjl the train wkes from his country to lead the race added a single each.
Proposition 48, the controversial
T. Roush was the surter and freshman eligibility requirements, something out of tt." added three- for 32 years. His dream of wearing
the
leader's
colors
in
his
home
loser
for Middleport with help from
also graduated at 57 percent - a lime champion LeMond. "!think it
country
was
dashed
when
his
GAN
D.
Camp.
They combined to give
jump of five percentage points over would be a more significant feeling
team
experienced
mechanical
probup
13
hits,
walk four and strike out
if you could be able to drive
the previous year.
lems
and
finished
more
than
a
had a pair or singles
six.
Robinson
·
"I am more confident now that through it"
for
Middleport
and Miller added a
minute
off
the
pace.
Or perhaps cycle through it?
the significant increase in freshman
"Now
that
would
be
a
bit
diffigraduation rates was due to the
imposition of Proposition 48," said cult," said LeMond, noting the
Jerry Kingston, chairman of the changes in air pressure and circulaNCI\A's Academic Requirements tion in a tunnel far beneath the surface of the earth.
CoiJimittee.
The cyclists stopped pedaling
In vinually every major group,
athletes held gains they had made just short of the _tunncl'_s French
in the first year of the new swndards, which included minimum
scores on college entrance exams
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - Gerald Brown was
well enough to give his son Kevin some advice.
Gerald Brown had had a heart auack on Monday,
hut on Tuesday playfully admonished his son Kevin
the Texas Rangers pitcher, for leaving the tea~
before finishing his workout Monday afternoon after
lcarnmg of h1s father 's ailment.
"He said I should have thrown first and then
come," Brown said Tuesday night after beating the
Cleveland Indians 4-3. "But it was one of those situations where I didn't want 10 wait around . You never
know about things like that."
Brown rejomed his teammates after spending the
mornmg w1th h1s father. who was in a Georgia hospital after having the heart attack on Monday.
There were doubts that he would make his scheduled slllrt but when doclOrs told Brown that his father
was in stable condition, Brown took an afternoon
flight back to Texas to take his regular turn in the
rotallon.
"I saw him a couple of times yesterday afternoon
and I saw him this morning when they were about 10
take h1m down for more tests," Brown said. "He
was giving me a bit of a hard ume about flying out."
Brown (6-8) hadn't won since June 10 but turned
in his second complete game of the season, striking
out 10 to match a career-high. He allowed three runs
and seven hits and one walk to snap Cleveland's
five-game winning streak.
"I thought it was one of his best outings, especially having to deal with some adversity," Rangers
manager Kevin Kennedy said. "He had a tough outmg h1s last t1me out (a no-decision in what would
become a 10-6 defeat to Detroit) and mainly he had a
family illness to deal with.
·
"B ut at 5 o'clock I went up to him and asked,
'Ne you OK mentally?' He said, 'That's why I carne
back, to pitch."'
Rusty Greer's sixth-inning single snapped a 3-3
tie and sent the Rangers to their fifth victory in six
games to move within two games of .500 (40-42).
The first five Rangers batters in the sixth singled
off Indians sWrter Mark Clark (9-3), who was 7-1 in
his previous 10 starts.
'
But the night belonged 10 Brown, who started the
season 0-4 and has struggled to find consistency.
Indians manager Mike Hargrove was most
impressed by Brown's performance. Opposing hitters
were batting .333 against Brown at the stan of the
day but Brown again resembled the pitcher who won
36 games the previous lwo seasons.
"Kevin Brown was on his game," Hargrove said.
"Even though we're a good-hitting club, he can do
that to a team. I've always thought until this year that
he's been one of the best. if not the best. righthander
in the league."
In other games, Toronto crushed Minnesota 14-3,
California beat Boston 10-3, Oakland defeated New
York 8-7, Baltimore beat Seatlie 5-2, Kansas City
downed Milwaukee 10-5 and Chicago split a doubleheader with Detroit, losing the first game 6-2 and
then winning 6-4.
Blue Jays 14, Twins 3 -Look up Darnell Coles
in the baseball Who's Who and the entry reads like
something from Rand McNally.
He's played with Toronto, Cincinnati, San Francisco, Piusburgh, Seattle - twice - and Detroit also twice. There have been stops along the way in
Bellingham. Wausau, Bakersfield, Chauanooga,.._Salt
Lake City, Calgary, Toledo, Phoenix and Nashvrue.
For most of his 14-year career, he's been a utility
player, always patient and prepared for a chance to
play.
On Tuesday nigh~ he got another opponunity to
play and was determined that a dislocated finger
would not stoo him.

Mason VFW, Gallipolis post
o,_
pening-night triumphs

Marist, Providence graduate all
their 1987-88 freshman athletes

~~~~~J~fn~~:rp~~e~~:t

BBYFL planning
meeting Thursday
There will be an organizatioilal
meeting of the Big Bend Youth
Football League on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Meigs County Golf
Course.
Any interested adult that wants
to coach or help with this year's
· season should attend.

Tour de France cyclists
ho-hum about Tunnel trip

DOWNIII CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
IISUUIICI
t1l &amp;aaond 81., Polnlft)y

YOUR IIDEPEIDINT
· AGENTS SEIVINI

•••scou1n
SINCE 1161

FISH TAIL
$179
WITH FRIES......$2.49

Commemorative Edition
Of
The Meigs County
175th
Anniversary Tabloid

$1.50 per copy
Available at

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH

•

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'

�J
Pag~Thel&gt;all

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WE NOW
ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

.....

WEidnesday, July 6, 1994

Wednesday, July 6, 1994

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

Despite coming out of diabetic coma,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Parmer heavyweight boxing cham-·,
rion James "Bu ster " Douglas
reportedly is out of a diabetic coma
although he remains in serious but
stable condi tion at Grant Medical
Center.
WBNS -TV quoted unnamed rel atives as sayi ng Douglas wa s
upgraded from poor to stable condition Tuesday after com ing out of
a diabetic coma .
But The Co lumbu s Dispalch
reported that Douglas, 34, had
never been diagnosed as diabetic .
Sou rce s the new spap er did not
1dentify said Douglas had a blood
sugar level of about 800 when he
was admitted. A normal level is
between 80 and 120.
By Tuesday afternoon, Douglas'
level had dropped to about 400 and
was continuing to fall. The paper
said Douglas was awake and alert
Tuesday night.
The hospital refu sed to comment. A nursing supervi sor who
would not give her name said toiliJy
that the family asked that no information be released .
Douglas was apparently at his
Columbus home Monday afternoon
when he became ill . He also maintains a home at Marco Island, Fla .
Douglas' father, Bill Douglas,
could not be reached to comment.
A man who answered the phone at
Bill Douglas' home Tuesday iden tified himself as a friend of the
family and said he knew nothing of
Douglas' condition. There was no
answer at the home later Tuesday.
· Messages seeking comment
ftom his business manager,
Lawrence Nallie, were not
returned.
Douglas was the heavyweight
champion for only eight monms.
He was a 42-1 underdog when
he won the title in February 1990
with a lOth-round knockout of
then - undefeated Mike Tyson in
Tokyo. Eight months later, an outof-condition Douglas lost his first
title defense in three rounds to
E vander Holyfield.
Douglas took home a $24.1 million purse for the Holyfield fight.
He has a career record of 30-5-1.
He used some of his winnings to
build a community center near the
east side neighborhood where he
grew up.
Douglas said he was content
with life outside the ring. But he
also faced problems away from the
spotlight.
In 1993, a jury ruled that Dou~las owed his hometown $293,163

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I

m ta xes from the Holyfield ftght
purse. He was acquitted of drunken
driving charges in 1992 and convicted of speeding.
Douglas' uncl e and former
train er, J.D. M cCauley, toldJhe
NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO
THE PUBLIC UTIUT!ES COMMISSION
OF OHIO
FOR AN INCREASE IN RATES AND
CHARGES
FOR GAS SERVICE
COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO, INC .
PUCO CASE NO. 94-987-CiA-AIR
Pursuant to the requirements of

Ohio Revised Code § 4909. 19,
Columbia Ciao of Ohio , Inc.
("Columbia") hereby gives notice that
on June 3, 1994, It docketed with the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
("Commission") an Application lor
authority to amend Its flied tariffs to
lncrepa~ the rates and charges for

gas""servlce. The substance of the
Appli ca tion as docketed on June 3,
1994, 1s es follows:

AREA AFFECTED
The new tariffs will be effective In
all territories served by the company.

PRESENT RATES
The existing rates In the1a areas
are those prescribed In Columbia 's

Rules and Regulations for Furnishing
Gas Service, P.U.C.O No. 1.
PROPOSED RATES AND SUMMARY
OF CHANGES
The proposed tariffs reflect many
changes necessitated by the Federal
Energy Regulatory' Commission's
Order 636, which eltered the manner
In which Interstate pipelines provide
service to natural gas distribution

companies such as Columble. Ordar
636 required Interstate plpellnas to

GROUND

BEEF
10 POUND

SJJ90

newspaper me family worried Douglas would become ill.
"High bloo~ pressure runs in
our family," McCauley said . "And
the way Buster has been putting on
weight lhe last few, years, it almost
Small General Service - Thi s rate
schedule Ia available to all

customers.

provided

that

the

customer consumes lesa than 300
Mcf per year between Seplember 1

and

August 3t . The propos ed

charges for all costs other than the

cost

ot

gas

and th e Interim,

Emergency and Temporary PIP Plan
Tariff Schedule Alder, the Temporary
Base Rate Revenue Rider, and the
Weather Normalization Adjustm ent
Factor, for all consumption each
month, are as follows :
All gas consumed per account •

t7.7S3¢ per 100 cubic teet.
In addition, each consumer must
pay e Customer Charge of $6.50 per
account per month, regardless of gas
co nsumed.
General Service - This rate
schedule Is available to all customers
who consume at least 300 Met per
year between September 1 and
August 31. The proposed charges for
all c osts other than the cost of gas

and the Interior. Emergency and
Temporary PIP Plan Tariff Schedule
Rider, the Temporary Ba ~e Rate
Revenue Rider, and the Weather
Normalization Adjustment Factor, tor
ell consumption each month , are as
follows:

For the first 25,000 cubic teet per
account - 17.175e per 100 cubic feet;
Over 25,000 cubic teet per account

- 16.352e per 100 cubi c teet . tn
addition, each consumer must pay a

unbundle various types of services
that were previously offered In a
combined form . Columbia Is now

Customer Charge of $16.50 per
account per month, regardless or gas
consumed.
Large General Service • This rate

olfertng similar unbundled services
with the Intent of better matching Its

commercial and Industrial custome,rs

service offerings with the needs of Its
customers. In response to the

yea r

Implementation of FERC Order 636,
Columbia Is oflerlng several new
service and Incentive proposals,
described in more detail below.

The l'l9POSed tariffs also reflect
Colur«&lt;bl\l"a efforts to work with
representatives of all of Its
customers to collaboratlvely resolve
revenue needs without resort to

expensive and lengthy adversarlal
proceedings. As a result, Columbia
and the other parties to this
proceeding have filed with the
Commission

a

recommendation that

wilt resolve all Issues In this
proceeding.
THE
STIPULATION
AND
RECOMMENDATION
As part of this stipulation and
recommendation, all parties have
agreed to recommend that the

Commlsalon approve the following
matters:
- The Implementation of the sales
Jnd transportation rates described in

the following section a of this notice.
· The Initiation of an Informal
review proceaa In 1996 that will
afford the opportunity lor a further
review of Columbla's-rates In 1996. 11
all the parties cennot egree on the
need

for

an

adjuetment,

no

adJu•tme'nt will be effected. With the
exception of this Informal adjustment
opportunity In May, 1996, Columbia
and the parties have agreed that

schedule

Is

available

to

all

who consume at teaat 18,000 Mel per
between

November I and

October 31. In addition, at least 50%
of
such
customers
annual
consumption must be c'o nsumed In

the seven billing months of April
through October. The proposed

had to happen . It was lik e a time
bomb, waiting for it to go o ff.' '
Do ugla s weighed 232 pound s
I'! hen he beat Tyson and 24 7 eight
months later when he lost his on ly
ti~e defense to Evander Holyfi eld .
charges

for

all

deliveries

by

Page-7

Southern sports
physicals slated
for July 20, 27

Sports brief

He is rumored now to weigh more
than 350 pounds.
M cCa uley sai d h e was not
allowed to visit Douglas in ihc hospital Tucsttay . Dougl as severed tics
with him after th e Hol yf1cld fight

• Shortages w i11 be so ld at 120% of
i ndex
ga s
cost,
p lus
firm

FERC Order 636 TransUion Cost s

transporta t ion charges (demand and

upstream _capacity on Co lumbia .

Surcharge, supplemental charges If
appli cab l e, and the Weather
Normalization Adjustment Factor, fo r
all consumption"" each month , are as
follows :
For the first 25,000 cubic feet per
account- $1.5250 per Mcf.
Over 25,0UO cubic feet per account

com modity), inc luding shri nkage , t o
ci ty g ate .
SGTS, GTS and LGTS customer s
t ha t do not elect daily balanc i ng
service will be pla ced on dolly " cash
o ut " bas i s, under which : da ll y
mea s ur ement will be requ ir ed;
excess vo lumes may be pu rchased at
80% of inde )( gas cost, plus fi rm
comrfl'odlty transportation charge s,
including shrinkage, to city gate ; and .
shortages wi ll be so ld ot 120 °/o of
Index
gas cost , plus firm
tra n sport ation charges , (demand and
commodity), Including shrinkage , to
city gate . Customers will be requir ed
to make an annual election of their
choice for balancing serv i ce .
Customers that d o not elec t a
specific le vel of balancing service will
be deemed to have selected the
""default "" level. The ""default ""

Transmission Corpora tion ("TCO")

- $1 .4427 per Mel.
In additi on , each cons umer must pay

a Customar Charge of $16.50 per
account

pe r

month

a nd

an

administrative tee of $6.00 per month ,
rega r dle ss of gas co nsumed. Full
requirements service Is elsa available
at a supplemental charge .
Large General Transportation
Service - This rate sc hedule Is
available to all customers that
otherwise co mply with the gonernl
terms and conditions or Columbia ' s
transportation tariffs, and that
consume at least 18,000 Mcf per year
between November 1 and October 31,
ancl take delivery of a minimum of
1,500 Mcf each month . In addition, at
least 50% at such customers annual
consumption must be consumed In

the seven billing months of April
through October.
If a customer fails to take delivery

or 1,500 Mel In any month, the
customer will be charged for 1,500

Mel at the total billing rate that
Inc ludes a delivery charge and a
standby service monthly demand
charge II applicable.
Standby Service Is available upon
the payment of Standby Service
1
Charges.
There are three delivery charge
options available to customers under
this rate schedule:

Fixed Delivery Charge - The
proposed chargas tor all

p lus firm commodity transpo rtati on
c harge s, including shrinkage , t o city

gale

level Is 10% tor SCiTS and CiTS
customers. The ""default "" level Is
5% for LGTS customers . All members
of a transportation consortium must
purchas e Columbia's balan cing
service . All
members
of a
transportation consortia must
purchase the same level of balancing
service."

RECOVERY OF FERC ORDER 636
TRANSITION COSTS - The proposed
tariffs provide for the recovery of
trt:msltlon costs arising from the
interstate pipelines· Implementation

charges attributable to the plpeiinU'

as follows:
For tha first 2,000 Mel per facility $.6981 per Mel ;
For the next 13,000 Mel per facility $.5180 par Mel;
For the next 85,000 Met per facility $.4880 per Mel;
Over 100,000 Mel per facility
'
$.4280 per Mel.

Surcharge, standby service charges
II applicable, and the
Volume Banking and Balancing
Charge are as follows :
For the first 2,000 Mcf per account

function (" CiSR costs") . These CiSR

Emergency and Temporary PIP Plan

Tariff

Schedule Rldar and

Customers must take a minimum of

per month - $.3255 per Mel;
For the next 85,000 Mel per account
per month - $.2955 per Mel;

1,500 Mcf each month, and any

Over 100,000 Mcf per account per

customer who falls to do so will be

mQnlh - $.2355 per Mel.
Flexible Delivery Charge - The

charged for 1,500 Mel at the total
billing rate that Includes the Lorge

maximum proposed delivery charge

General Service rate, gas cost

for all deliveries by Columbia to

recovery and billing adjustments.
TRANSPORTATION RATES
Columbia Is proposing three saparate

customer of customer-owned gas, for

transportation rates. The following

applies to all three transportation
rates:

- All bills rendered shalt be
adjusted
to
Include
the
Transportation FERC Order 636
Transition Costs Surcharge end the

("GCR") rate.
Columbia will allocate to, and
collect from, both sales
transportation customers

all consumption lor each month, will
be equal to the General Service base
rate . This rate may be flexed
downward when warranted by
competitive conditions . However,

and
the

termination of their gas supply
costs and charges shall be allocated
between sales and transportation
customers as follows : sales - 62%
and transportation - 38%.

per month - $.5056 per Mel;
For the next 13,000 Mcf per account

Columbia will allocate to, and
collect from, sales customers 100%
of the charges attributable to the
pipelines' recovery of "Account 191 "
transition costs ; provided that
Columbia will allocate to, end collect
from, transportation customers that
portion of the Account 191 transition
costs attributable to Columbia's
transportation customers that were
GCR sales customers between

November 1, 1992, and October 31,
1993.
Columbia will allocate to , and
collect from , both sales and
transportation

customers

the

once the delivery rate Is flexed, the

charges attributable to the pipelines '

customer must continue to pay the

recovery of "stranded facilities " and
" new facilities " t ransition costs .
These stranded facilities and new
facil ities costs and charges shall be
allocated between sales and
transportation customers as follows :
sales • 62% and transportation - 38%.

Flexible Delivery Charge determined
by Columbia each month lor three·
months. The Flexible Delivery Charge
will be redetermined (Increase or

will be determined on a customerapecl tlc or consortium-specific load
facto r analysis.
All customers within a
transportation consortium must be
within a single TCO operating area.
However, Columbia reserves the right

to

l imit

transportation

by

displacement pursuant to Its tariM.
• A capacity assignee will be able to
reassign c apac ity, subject to recall .
The capacity assignee must remain
subject to Columbia operational flow
orders.
• The original assignee must agree
lo be responsible lor all upstream
pipeline charges associated with the
capacity release Including, but not
limited to : demand and commodity
charges . shrinkage, injection and
withdrawal charges, Gas Research
Institute charges, cash outs,
transit ion costs, pip eline over run

charges. and ACA's.
REQUEST

are just and reasonable and will
provide a reasonable return upon the

Basa Rata Revenue Rider, the FERC
Order
636
Transition Costs

Interim,

Tennessee Cias ("FT-A" ) and TCO
("FTS") TCO Storage ("FSS &amp; SST") . ,
Assigned FTS/Storage capacity ratio

allocated to and collected from aales
customers may be recovered through
Columbia's Gas Cost Recovery

Temporary Base Rate Revenue Rider,
for all consumption each month, are

the

cus tomer class.
• FTS /Storege capacity assignment
will Include an allocation of

Columbia by Interstate gas pipeline 's
under FERC -approved tarllls

the

gas and

("FTS") and Tennessee Ciao ("FT-A").
The FTS option will be available until .
a total of 25 MMcf/day has been
subscribed by the firm transponation

The Applic ation requests that the
Commission find that the present ...
rates f for gas service are unjust,
unreasonable, and insufficient to
yield reasonable compensation to
Columbia ; find that the rates and

of FERC Order 636 . Columbia
proposes to recover these transit ion
costs as described below.
Transition costs levied upon

deliveries by Columbia to
customer of customer·opned
gas, for all consumption for each
month, other then the Temporary

charges far all costs other than the

cost of

and McCaule~ 's name was not on a
li st of approved vis itors, he said .
"We've had our differences of
opimon, wit h o ut a doubt,"
McCauley sa id . "But I love h1m
like he was my own son ."
• Shi ppers have the option to elect
FTS or FTS / Storage capacity
assi gnment.
• FTS ca paci ty assignment will
include an assignment of Columbla'a

Columbia to customer of customer owned gas, other than the Temporary
Base Rate Revenue Rider, the Volume
B ~ nking and Balanci ng Charge, the

Columbia will seek no other base rate
Temporary Base Rate Revenue Rider
There will be free physicals
Increase
to be effective prior to
set forth In the proposed tariffs.
given at Eastern High School on
January 1, 1998.
• All transportation customers or
decreased) each month.
Saturday, July 16, from 8 a.m. to
- The Implementation of a their agents must have a personal
Mainline Delivery Charge - This
noon for all Eastern athletes in
temporary, experimental Weather
delivery charge option Is available to
computer capebte of receiving
grades 7-12 who wish lD participate
Normalization Adjustment ("WNA")
notices from Columbia of any
those customers connected directly
mechanism for the billing period of . consumption
in the sports programs for the
through a dual-purpose meter to
limitations or
Decamber, 1994, through April, 1995. Interruptions.
facilities of an Interstate pipeline
1994-95 season.
In addition, Columbia will calculate a
supplier of Columbia. For such
-All transportation customers must
Veterans Memorial Hospital
retroactive WNA for rosldenttat and
customers, the maximum delivery
either elect the Volume Banking and
will be providing the free services
commercial sales and transportation
charge, Including all billing
Balancing Service or be placed on a
this year. Amletes who plan to play
customers for the billing months of dally cash out provlelon. The Volume
adjustments shall be $.25 per Mel per
fall sports (football, golf, volleyball
January, 1994, through April, 1994. Banking snd Balancing Service Is a
account per month.
Operational Flow Orders - All
and cheerleaders) should pick up a This retroacttve WNA adJ,ustmenl will system to account for transportation
be pa•sed beck tO customers during customers' volumes received by
transportation
customers
or
sports packet in the amletic office
the
billing
months
of
November,
shippers, for which the customers do
Columbia
but
not
delivered
to
the
u nFrida
l l E ! lm 8 a.m. until noon.
1994,1hrough March, 1995.
not have daily meters, will be subject
customers during the same monthly
a etcs who will not be
- The continued Imposition of blllln.g cycta: All billa rendered atao
to Columbia Operational Flow Orders
playing a fal sport, but will be paraarnlng cap bands on Columbia's shall be adjusted to Include the
("OFOs"). Columbia will have the
ticipating in a winter or 'sR.ring
earnings through 1997. ·For 1995· Volume Banking and BalanclnJl . authority to direct transportation
1997, the parties have agreed upon a Charge, If the transportattc;'n
customers or their suppliers to adjust
sport should pick up a physical
procedure to determine Columbia's customer elects to utlllz.e the Volume
scheduled volumes to match their
card at me the same time.
estimated
usage Including volumes
return
on
equity,
by
reference
to
an
Banking
and
Balancing
Service,
as
Athletes must have a physical
average allowed return on equity of set forth In the proposed tariffs.
In excess of dally contract quantities
card.
gao utilities. To the extent that Transportation custonera who
when operating conditions exceed
All athletes wishing to rec~ive a
Columbia's return on equity axceeds 61)oosa .n&lt;&gt;l to subscribe to the
Columbia design criteria. If the
free physical on July 16 must have
these recommended limits, the
scheduled volumes are not adjusted
tervlco' Will be piiCtd On I dally
parties have agreed to a procedure .caeh -out provision, and are
a physical card filled out and
as requested, the customer or
consortium will pay: a gas cost equal
signed by a parent or legal guardian , tor crediting tha accrued balance of reaponolblo for the purchase and
to the highest Incremental gas cost
Installation of a dally measuring
before a physician will sec them. ·' PosHnServlce Carrying Charges
("PISCC") In order to mitigate future device and auoclatad equipment,
Columbia purchased that day on the
No (lhysicals will be given without
rate lncreaate.
volume difference; one month's
and ohall provide and pay for a
prior consent and a physical card.
Authorization of deterred
demand charges on the volume
dedicated telephone llna snd the AC
accounting for the difference
difference: and, all charges Incurred
power neceaury to operate this
between cash and expense for
by Columbia an the volume
equipment.
Retirement Income Plan expanses,
dille renee.
Columbia will offer firm
and tho Initial recognition In rates of transportation or storage capacity
Operational Matching Orden · Ali
the transition obligation 9! Other available for release tn accordance . LGTS trantportatlon customers that
have dally read meters wilt be subject
Post-Ratlramonl Benefit expenses.
with lntorotato plpollne company
to Columbia Operating Matching
- Continuation of a Tomporory Baae artffa.
Orders ('OMOa"). Columbia will have
Rate Revenue Alder, to provide
- Transportillon customers must
the authority to direct trensportatlon
Columbia with tho opportunity to enter Into a Service Agreement with
: Sports physicals for the Southcustomers to adjust their usage at
recover revenue• loat clue to the
Columbia; the form of tho agreement
em Local School District will be
their facilities to match the volumes
Inability to collect full margin rates
being apeclflad In the proposed
that are flowing on thf pipelines . If
from some transportation customers
held on Wednesday, July 20 and
tariffs.
the usage Is not adjusted as
due to competttive clrcumotancaa.
Small General Traneportatton
Wednesday, July 27 at the office of
Flex role revenue shall bt aharad for Sorvtco - Thlo rote ochodule Is
requested, the customer shall pay:· a
Douglas D. Hunter, M .D.
gas cost equal to the hlghesl
amounto that do not axcaod $3.5 available to all commercial and
: Physicals will be for all sports
1)1Hf1Cll&gt;-per year beginning January t,
Incremental gas cost Columbia
lnduetrlal cuatomers that conauma
for the 1994-95 school year and
1811,5, anCI that do not exceed $10.5 tell than 300 Mel per year between
purchased that day on the volume
million for the throe-year period
difference; and, all charges Incurred
will be held according to the folSeptember 1 end August 31, and that
by Columbia on the volume
ending December 31, 1997.
.
lowing schedule: July 20 from 8:30
othorwleo comply with thr general
The varloua provlalona of
difference.
torma and condttlona of Columbia's
a.m. lD noon for boys in grades 7-9;
Balancing Services - Columbia witt
corumbla'a proposed and , where traneportotlon tarlffe. The propoeed
I :10 5 p.m . for boys in grades 10establish a new balancing service.
appropriate, oxtotlng tarlfle lrt chargea for all dallverlea by
12: July 27 from 8:30a.m. to noon
The balancing service will bo optional
dlecueetd bolow.
Columbia to cuetomtr of cuatomerfor girls in grades 7-9; I to 5 p.m.
for SCiTS, GTS and LCiTS customers.
SALES RATES • Columbia le
ownod gu, other than the Tsmporary
Balancing Service will be provided
for girls in grades 10-12.
propoalng thrtt aoparato eolaa rates.
Baao Rata Revenue Rider, the Voluma
under the following terms and
Benklng and Balancing Charge, the
The following applltl to 111 three
Physicals will be done free of
conditions :
ealea
ratee:
FERC
Order
636
Transition
Coate
charge only on these days. To
• Tho ratoa and banking choices lor
•
Tho
toto!
monthly
cherge
tor
Surcharge,
aupplemantal
chargee
If
receive a physical, athletes must
balancing service will boas fottowo:
11rvlce 11 tho aum of tho chorge far
appllcoblt, and the Waathar
bring a completed sports physical
SGTS/GTS
the coat of gae and the charge for all
Normalization Adjuatment Factor, for
card, signed by a parent or legal
RATE/MCF
other coete.
all coneumptlon 11ch month, ara as
guardian. Cards are available at
(Throughput)
- Both the preaent end the
followa:
Monthly Bank Tolerance
propoetd nlea ere subject to
All gal delivered per account per
HUnter's office in Racine or at
(%Ann. Vol.)
dacraaoe or lncroaae In accordonco
motor· $1.5828 per Mel.
Southern High School. Athletes
LGTS
with
tho
"Goo
Coot
Recovery".
In
addition,
each
conaumer
muet
should dress in shorts and T-shirts
RATE/MCF
provlelona of Cotumble'o Rulli .and
pay a Cullomer Charge of $6.50 per
fat their exams.
(Throughput)
Regulation• on flit filth tho
account per month and an
Monthly Bank Tolerance
Commlaalon aa roqulrtd by
admlnlatrotive Ito of $1.00 per month,
(%Ann. Vol.)
regardloll of gu coneumtd. Full
Commlaalon Ordere dated October
$.0437 10.0% $.0218 5%
requtrementl aervlct Is olao evellobla
11, 1978 and October 18, 1079, In
.0370
8.0% .0185
4%
C.ao No. 76-!115-GAORD.
at 1 eupplomantal charge.
.0300
6.0%
.01
~0
3%
General
Transportation
All
bllle
rondortd
olao
shell
be
Service
Tennis
.0233
4.0% .01 t7
2%
odjueltd to Include tho Interim,
Thla rato ochtdulo Is ovallable to all
, . GSTAAD; Switzerland (AP) ....,:_
.0164
2.0% .0082
1%
Emergency end Ttmporery PIP Plan
cemm,rclal and lnduetrrar cuatomer•
T,op-seeded Sergi Bruguera of
.0130
1.0% .0065
.5%
Tariff Schedule Rldor, tho Ttmporery
thet"Conaumo at lent 300 Mel per
Spain beat Patrick Rafter of Au.s- ~ Ball Rote Rovonut Alder, end the
• Balancing service rates wilt be
year betwoen September 1 end
Ualia 6-4, 6-2 and Guy Forget of Weather Normalization Adjuatment
subject to chiila!' base on variations
August 31, and that otherwlee
lnTCO ralea.
France upset No. 2 Andrei
Foetor, 11 eat forth In Columble'e
comply with the general term• and
Exce11 volume• may be
Rur.. and Regulations on file with
conditione
of
Columbia'•
Medvedev of Ukraine 6-3, 7-5 in
purchased at 80% ot Index gas cost,
the Commloelon.
trenaportatlon tarlffa. Tho proposed
tile fust round in the Swiss Open.

a••

•

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Fprmer heavywei§ht champion Douglas in stable condition

24 PK 12 Ol. CANS

STORE HOURS

Pome;oy

Columbia will allocate to, and
ollect from,
both sales
ransportation customers

~

and
the

h4rges attributable to the pipelines·

recovery of "Account 858" transition
costs. These Account 858 costs and
charges shall. be allocated between
sales and transportation customers

as

follows : sales - 80%

and

transportation - 20%.

Columbia will recover through Its
Gas Cost Recovery rate that po(tion
of transition costs allocated to sales
customers.
Unless otherwise agreed upon In
In-dividual
transportation
arrangements, the transition costs
allocated to Columbia transportation
customers shall be collected through
the establishment of a surcharge at

$.04/Mcl on all of Columbia'o gas
transportation rates. This surcharge
shall recover: the transition costs;
the carrying costs on the uncollected
balance of the transition costs
allocated to transportation services,
al a rate equal to Columbia's shortterm Interest cost ; and, the
corresponding gross receipts excise

tax on the billed transition costs and

charges proposed In the Application
property devoted by Columbia to Its
gas service; approve the filing of new

tariffs In the form proposed In the
Application ;

ancl

approve

the

withdrawal ot the tarllts lor which
they are substituted; order that said
new tariffs shall be made effective
forthwith; and make such further
orders and grant such further relief
as may be necessary, just and proper.

GENERAL INFORMATION
Based on the current charge for the
cost of gas, the estimated average
percent Increase in rates -· should
the requested lncrene be granted In

lull -- lor sales services: Small
General Service Is 4 .0% , General
Service Is 4.1 %, and Large General
Service is .3% ; tor transportation
services:
Small
General

Transportation Service Is 11.9%,
General Transportation Service Is
17 .6"/o, Large General Transportation

Service (Fixed Delivery Charge) Is
5 . 0% ,
and
Large
General
Transportation Service (Mainline

Delivery Charge) Is 0.0%.
The

Stipulation

Recommendation

and

submitted tol

approval to the Commission .
addresses, among other thlnga, the
recovery of Interstate pipeline
transition costs arising as a result of ...
the Federal Energy Regulatory

Commission Order 636. The public
hearings scheduled for this case ·•M

provide an opportunity for Interested
persona to address this issue.
These proposed rates and charges
are subject to changes, including
changes as to amount and form, by ....

the Commission following Its
hearings on the tiled Application.
Recommendations which differ from

the Application may be made by the
Staff of the Commluton, or by
Intervening parties, and may be
adopted by the Commission
Any person, firm, corporation , or
a... oclatlon may file, purouant to §

4909.19 of the Revised Code, an
objection

to

such

proposed

Increased rates by alleging that such ·proposals
are
unjust
and
discriminatory or unreasonable.

A copy of the Application Is
available for Inspection at the office

of Columbia Gas or Ohio, tnc. at 200
Civic Center Drive, Columbus, Ohio
43215 or at the offices of the "Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio at 180
East Brood Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215-3793."
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has scheduled several local

apply to terminate the transportation
surcharge once It has collacted all

public hearings In Case No. 94-987GA-AIR. The hearings ore scheduled
for tha purpose or providing on

transition coats allocated to
transportation customers . The
maximum transition cost s~l.:charge
for transportation custotnbrs Is

the public to tutlfy In theoe
proceedings, The local hearing• wttt •
be hold at the following tlmeo and ·•

carrying charges. Columbia shall

$.04/Mcl. All refunds of Take-or-Pay
or transition costs paid to Columbia
shall be allocated betwaen aales and
transportation customers as follows:
sales • 80% and transportation - 20% .

Refunds allocated to sales customers
shall be refunded through the normal
operation of the RA mechanism of

the GCR. Refunds allocated to
transportation customers shall be

held In the balance account to offset
the then existing and future allocated
transportation transition coats.

Columbia may not recover through
the GCR rate any transition costs
originally allocated to transportation
customers. The transportation
surcharge may be assessed to al'ld

recovered from all transportation
customers unlit all transition coots
allocated to the transportation class
are recovered.

CAPACITY ASSIGNMENT · As e
result of the Implementation of FERC
Order 636, Columbia will uolgn firm
pipeline capacity to firm aateo
customen · under

terms

ar1d

conditions described In tho propoood
tarlfle. These torme and conditions
are aummarlzed •• follows:
• Minimum cuatomer/consortlum

volume of 5 MMcf/day.
• Once application io modo lor tho 5
MMcf/day minimum volume, tho
shipper may add additional
customers on a monthly beals.
However, reductions can only be
modo offoctivo April 1 ooch yoar
unlees an additional cuo1omar of
equal size Ia added.
• Capacity aul~nmenta muot be
renewed each yaar effective April 1.

opportunity to Interested membara of -

places:

Mansfield, Ohio - Monday, Auguet 8, 1994, at 7:30p.m., at City Hall, City
Council Chambers, 30 N. Diamond
Street, Room 75, Mansfield, Ohio _
44902.
Parma, Ohio · Wednesday, August
10, at 2:00 p.m., at City Hall, Council
Chambers, 6611 Ridge Road, Parma,
Ohio 44129.
Toledo, Ohio - Tueaday, August 16, ...

19941 at

2:00

p.m ., at Toledo

Government Center, City Council
Chambers, First Floor, 1 Government ...

Center, Toledo, Ohio 43624.
Athena, Ohio - Tueaday, August 16,

1994, at3:30 and 5:30p.m ., at At•n•
Public Library, Meeting Room , 30
Home $treet, Athena, Ohio 45701 .
Springfield, Ohio - Wedneadoy,
Auguol 17, 1994, at 6:30 p.m., City
Hall, Forum, 1st Floor, 76 Eeat High
Street, Springfield, Ohio 45502.
Columbus, Ohio - Thuroday,
August 18, 1994, at 3:30 and 5:30
p.m., Public Utlllttea Commission of
Ohio, 180 East Broad Streit, 11th
Floor - Room ttA, Cotumbue, Ohio
43215-3793.
Tho propoaed utea end.
transportation retea, will gentrete an
Inc rene of $47,499,000 tn operating

~

•
••
:
•

rtvtnuea. There are no major ·•
unreaolved laauea In the caae dut to

the parties

agreement to the

atlpulatlon and recommendetlon

deecrlbed above .
Tho form of lhle notice hu boon '
approved by tho Public Utilltlto ..
Commlealon of Ohio.
COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO, INC. •
July 5, 12, 19, 1994

. . ,,

�•

•

s: 1994

Ohio

The Dall

Luck of the draw determines. inheritance

Dear Ann Landers: I read the
leuer in your column about a man
who had had a falling out with his
hrolher over their father's estate. The
man was ClipCCially grateful they had
reconc1led because his brother died
in an !IIXident n01 long after.
I wonder how many family fights
happen because the dear! y departed
fruloo to execute a will and leave
specific instructions about bequests.
Please tell your readers never to trust
someone else to carry out their
wishes. without specifying those
w1 shes m black and white.
Money does strange things to
people, Ann. Those who are
normally generous and trustwonhy
can be quilc different when dollar
signs appear.
,
Tell your readers that even if the.
estate is small, !here should be a
will to specify who gets what, right
down to that ugly old clock that
looks like the Empire Stale
Buijding.
dne of the best methods for
disposing of item s fairly is to have
each benefic~w a number out

A t:amiiV ownetl anti
Operated Supermarket
DHering the best ol seruire,
oualitv anti Prire, to the
People ol ou~ community
A Ca rdinal - Altil ra led Supe rm arkel

At The corner of
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and PeariSt.• Middlepo::rt::==~~~~~~~~~~~~J

THURSDAY
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet Thursday at 7:3 0 p.m. at Eas tern High
School.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday al the Sacred Hea rt
Church , Mulberry Avenue.
RACIN E - Racine Post 602,
American Leg ion will meet al 7
p.m . Thursday al the post home. A
dinner will be held following the
meeting.

Limit 1 Free W/Coupon Inside &amp; 1 10.00 Purchase
E.rozen·Assorted Varieties•half gallon carton

Assorted Varieties
12 12-ounce cans

BUY ONE GET ONE

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at the Middlcpon Masonic Temple.
Members arc 10 lake canned food
for the food pantry.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Republican Executive
Committee will meet Thursday al 7
p.m. in the Meigs County Common
Pleas courtroom. ·
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Youth League will hold an end of
year meeting Friday at 6 p.m. at the
baseball field. All coaches and parents are asked to attend.
POMEROY - Th e 175th
Anniversary Commiuce will meet
Friday at noon at the Meigs Courily
Museum.

Cut or French Style Green Beans, Whole or Cream
Style Corn or Garden Peas·13-13.25 ounce can

PEPSI COLA &amp;
PRODUCTS

FRESH LIKE
VEGETABLES

SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS

FreshlikB.

,. .

"t994. Lo:~ Angttltts
fm1es S ymJocntt~ and
' CreatOfS S·ynoocate-

l, •

of a bowl. No. 1 gets to select the
first item. lhen No. 2. and so on.
number.; -- even though she was-No.
6 •• and how much fun the family
had discuss ing their memories of
Grandma whil~rthey chose the items
that meant the most to them.
People should leave their heirs
with t1fc best legacy of all -- good
feelings about ooe another..• BEEN
lliERE IN CHICAGO
DEAR CHICAGO: Your letter is
one that shou ld be read carefully by
all who arc interested in malcing sure
their worldly goods go where they
want them 10 go and not be the cause
for famil y fights.
It has t&gt;c;cn said that you never
know a person's true character until
you share an inheritance with him ._

DETERGENT

BOUNTY
TOWELS

ULTRA TIDE

The

CLIFrON - The Rollins Fam ily will be the fcalurro singers at a
hymn sing Saturday to be held at
the Clifton Tabernacle Church, 7
p.m. Pastor M.E. McDan iel invites
the public 10 aucnd.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Darin Smith will
speak at the Mt. Moriah Church of
God , Racine, Sunday at 7 p.m. A
rev1val will be held there July I 5I 7 with the Rev. Marvin Cann as
speaker. The public is invited.
DARWIN - Th e Mod ern
Woodmen of America. Camp 7230,
will have its annual potluck picnic
and community service recognition
program Sunday, 12:30 p.m. at the
north bound park, Route 33.
Recognition will be given to Ola
St. Clair and Aletha Randolph for
outstanding community service.
RACINE - The family of the
Rev. Lubert and Maria Hille Theiss
will have a reunion Sunday at Star
Mill Park. There will be a covered
dish dinner at 12:30 p.m.
MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
School volleyball meetings for all
girls grades 7 through 12 will be
held Monday, 9 to 10 a,m. and 6:30
to 7 p.m. All interested girls are
asked to auend one of the meetings.

'

'

,_.,,M~ WINNER Mary Ann Myers displays the cake
which look a first in the cake decorating contest al Rutland' s
Fourth of July celebration. The cake carried out the !75th
Anniversary of Meigs County theme. Mrs. Myers also look f'irsl in
the pie baking contest for her blackberry creation.

-Society scrapbookBIBLE SCHOOL
The theme "Code Jesus" will be
used this year for Bible school at
the Middleport First Baptist
Church.
The Bible sc hool will begin on
July I I and continue through the
15th from 6 to 8':30 p.m. with a
cookout and sw im pany to be held
on Saturday, July 16, at 5 p.m.
There will be classes for children
firstlhrough sixth grades.

bellsville, Ky. 10 be honored by ~1c
United States Achievcm~ iu Academy.
Hoffman, son of George A and
Joan A. Hoffman, received the
award based on outstanding work
and academic achievements. He is
a 1993 graduate of Meigs High
School.
,
The students' biographi es w1ll
be published in the All-American
Scholar Collegiate Directory.

ALL AMERICAN SCHOLAR
Bryan T. Hoffman of 25
Riverview Place, Middlepon, was
one of several stude nts at Campbellsville College in Camp-

CARD SHOWER
Miss Clemma Vale, fonncrly of
Dyesville, will celebrate her 90th
b•nhday on July 23. Cards may be
sent 10 her at 4098 Marion Street,
Cardington, Ohio 43315.

$ 99

¢

59¢
0:0::~

A•

)

ea.$1.99
'• '

&lt;;• •of

II

'A

HONEY
CURED
HAM

HUNT'S
KETCHUP

RICE

\• I

the crowds. The group is composed of women
from elementary school age and up. (Sentinel
photo by George Abate)

SHUFFLERS' SWAN SONG- The Shady
River Shuffers clogging group gave its last per'formance ever at the Middleport festivities.
Here, the group high kicks and taps to entertain

'

-----F--mily reunions-----

15 ounce package

¢

Qudtion: I have a childhood
fri end who is, like me, now a mid dle-aged adu lt. Wh en we were in
hi gh sc hool he deve loped
schizophrcma. Now, he seems' l:urly normal when he tak es hi s
medicine. Unfortuna tely, after taking 1my medication for a while, he
disco ntinues il because of side
effects. Stopp1 ng th e me d1 cine
brings back his confused thinking.
I' ve heard d1 a1 there arc new medi cations for sc hi ~hrcni a d1a1 have
fewer side effects . Can you tel l me
anylhin g about them''
Answer: Your friend' s haLLi e
wi th schizophrenia is not unusual.
About 1 perccnl of lhe populalion
in all countri es of the world suffers
from this chronic mental disorder.
ll ca uses halluci nalions, delusions
and disorganized thoug ht s along
wilh apalhy and olhcr less common
symptoms.
Schizophren ia - which usually
develops during adoles ce nce or
early adullhood - produces significanl soc ial and occupational
impai nnenl. For a fortunale 25 percenl . the symp10ms clear wilhin 10
years. However, 75 percent cont inue lo cx hibil Uli s behavior thro ughout their lives, or have epi sodes of
recurrence. ll seems your fri end is
in thi s less fortunate group.
We currently don't umlcrsland
the cause of this illness, although it
is clear that it lends to run in fami li es. In fact, ·sc hizophrenia ma y
eve ntuall y be show n to have many
causes that all produce the group of
symptoms we label as sc hi zophrenia. Although we have a great lack
of undcrswnding abo ut its causes,
we do have trcaun ent.
Medical science IOday can 'Lprovide a cure, but we can offer medications that improve the mdivldu al's mood and abilily to think more
dearly . Psychosocial serv ices help
sufferers and their families learn to
function be tter al home and at
work . Unfortunalcly , as your fnend
has noted, most of the medication s
can have significant side effects.
-And without medication. about 75
percent of individual s will ha ve a
re1urn of the disorganized _thought
processes within a year. Vocational
rehabilitation, family th erapy, and
psychotherapy - those psychosocial services I menti oned - all
require the ability to lhink rationally , so 1hey lose their effectiveness

when the person begins to have
sc hizophrenic episodes once again.
Now to address your question
llboUL new medications. There are
two relatively new medications for
lh c lreatme nt of chron ic
sc hi zophrenia. Clozapin e (brand
name Clozar il ) and Risperidone
(brand n;vn e Risperdal) are both as
effective for schizophreni a as th e
old er medication s but have fewer
side effects. The key word is
"fewer" side effects, because each
sti ll has side cffccls.
One of these newer medications
may be a good choice fo r yo ur
fncnd. He should disc uss lhis with
his psyc hiatri st. The average cost
of a monlh 's worth of either drug
- more than $3 00 - may seem
l1ke a maj or drawback. However,
1hi s is anually less than one day of
hosp1 wli za1ion would cost. That 's
why I think u makes good financial
sense to usc one of lhe sc dru~ s
when it works and other treatments
don' 1. Ques tion: The side effec ts
my friend complains about don't
sc~ m that noticeable to me, and the
medication do cs help him think
much beucr. I've somctil]lcs wondered if we - lhc coll ective social
se rvices agen cies our tax dollars
pay lor - should just force him to
Lake his mcd1cations' 1 What do you
lhmk? Answer: On brief consideralion. il seems sill y to lei someone
who can' t th ink clearly make decision s about wh eth er or not he or
she will lake medication . On closer
consideration, however, to do otherwi se limit s the individual' s and lhcn soon all of our- rights.
There would be liul e difference
between your friend being required
to Lake hi s medi cation and all
reproducl ivc-agcd women being
req uired to lake birth control pills
until some bureaucrat says it is
"OK" 10 have children. Botti sound
unacceptable to me.
Be sid es, in th e most se vere
cases of sc hiwphrcnia or other
causes
of dcmemia, there arc legal steps
for having the individual judged
mcompeLcnL In th ese cases th e
court appoints a guardian who is
then responsible for making decisions for the individual, including
whether or not to Lake medications
recommended hy the doctor.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions
write to John C. Wolf, D.o .:
Ohio University College of Osten·
pal hie Medicine, Grosvenor Hall
Athens, Ohio 45701.
'

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Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 8

ENTRY FORM
Limit I With Coupon lnside•Kellogg's Cereal

READER'S FRIEND MIGHT liE
HELPED
BY
NE W
SCHIZOPHRENIA DRUGS

Genurne Baked or

''

Squeezable
32 ounce bottle

John C. Wo l r. !Hl.
Associate l'rulcssur
oiTami ly Medicine

Ttm DEADLINE HAS BEEN
EXTENDED FOR

99

lrch P.1n

ICED BROWNIES
il&gt;A

Family
Medicine

Del•

FRYER
-DRUMSTICKS
lb.

$5.87.)

College of Osteopathic Medicine

.

lJ S Government 1rrspecled
Fam1ly Pack

Paper•Assort ed Varieties
single roll

let, "Gems," is idea/for a nights/and
or coffee table. "Gems" is a collection of Ann Landers' most requested
poems and essays. &amp;nd a self-addressed, long, busiMss-siu enw:/ope
and a check or mo~y order for
$4.85 (this inc/utks postage and
handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann Landus, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, J/1.
60611 -0562. (In Canada, u nd

Tuppers Plain s Fi re Department
will conduct a door to door fund
drive Sat urday beginning at 9 a.m.
10 the district served by that fire
department. Donations from those
not contacted may be senI 10 Terry
Deem, deparunent presi dent. Additional infonnation may be obtained
from him at 667-3933.

FOR
. e~wd e r ed •R eg .. Unscented or WiBieach (42 -47 oz .)
18 Loads ·or Liqu1d•Reg. Free or Wi Bieach (50 oz .)

BETHLEHEM. CONN.
DEAR BETH: Apparently, your
experience was not unique. I
received a surprising number of
letters from women who went
through the same thing. For more
inform ation on ovarian cancer,
readers can cootacl the American
Cancer Society atl -800-ACS-2345,
the Gilda Radner Familial
Ovarian Cancer Regimy at
1·800-0VARIAN, or the Cancc~
Information Service at 1-800-4CANCER. If the lines are busy,
please call back.
Wilat can you give the person who
has everything? Ann Landers' book-

-Community calendarWEDNESDAY _
PAGEV II.LE - Sc1p10 Tow nship Trustees, 6:30p.m ., Wcdnesday at Pageville.

liELVET
SUPREME
ICE CREAM

Ann
Landers

I'd like 10 add-- "or her."
Dear Ann Lan~ers: This is for
"Not P.G. in Minn.," the 35-yearold, slightly overweight woman who
is often asked if she is pregnant
Several years ago, I, 100, had a
"pregnant" appearance even lhough
I was noL Since I had a tendency to
gain weight, I didn't think much
aboul it As lime we nt on, my
"pregnant" looll became more
pronOWlced. My docia, close friends _
and family thought nothing of iL We '
jufl assumj:d that this was "the way
!was."
Finally, I decided to pursue the
mailer. It Look all my courage to
bring ilto my doctors attemion. One
afternoon, in tears, I refused to leave
his office, insisting that he examine
me funher. lie did and then Quickly
ca ll ed in a specialist. My
"overweight" appearance turned out
10 be a I3-pound ovarian cysL
Any woman who believes her
appearance is unusual should
pursu e th e mauer with her
physician. ·I'm g lad I did . --

Ohio Univers ity

Name._ _ _ _ __
Address. _ _ _ __
City_ _ _ _ __
State
Zip._ __
Phone._ _ _ __
Age. _ _ __
Store._ _ _ _ __

KRISPIES

$ 99
SPONSORED BY
SUPIRMARKEYS &amp; KIMBERLY CLARK

DRAWING TO BE HELD
AUGUST 1, 1994

/

GILLIAN
The descendants of Elbe~ and
Della Gillilan gathered recently for
the 13th annual family reunion at
the Kyger C~~ Power Plant club
house.
'-.
Auending were Belly Spaun,
Mildred Freeman and Jan
Williams, Shirley and Gerald
Simpson, Stephanie and ;amie
Stemple, and Harley Rose, all of
~acine; Joy Imboden and Zachary.
Chelsea, Dalton and Dakota, New
Haven. W.Va.
Dolores and Raymond Donohue
and Steve Donohue, Harrisonville;
Lori Bearhs aitd Rachact. Pomeroy;
Gmce Holsinger, Reedsville; John·
ny Holsinger, Mark and Regina
Simpson, Joshua and Tiffany, Middlepon; Glenn and Suellen Simpson, Becky, Mauhew. and
Jonathan, Portsmouth.
Carol Cline, Todd and Diana
Bissell, Andrew and Brady. Long
Bouom; Goorgia Cliclrenger, Mike

a~d Paula Carlyle, Mikie, Brian
af1d Lenae, Linda and Gary
Haynes, Jordan and Isaiah, all of
Columbus; Beatrice and Rex Car·
lyle, Stella Carlyle, Brian and
Tammy, Steven, Preston, and Little
Rex, all of Westerville.
Prizes were given to the
youngest girl, Chelsea Imboden,
the youngest boys, Dalton and Dakota Imboden, the oldest man.
Raymond Donohue, the oldest
woman, Stella Carlyle. Door prizes
went to Belly Spaun and Isaiah·
Haynes.

GROVER
The I 2th Annual Grover C.
White Sr. family reunion was held
recently at Royal' Oak Resort with
50 family members attending.
Receiving gifts were R~lplt allard, the oldest man aue mg;
Thelma Eddy, the oldes woman
aucnding; Cameron Robinson,
I

I

youngest boy ;' Kri sten Ballard,
youngest girl; Nancy Carmichael,
gill for traveling the fanhest; Dan
and Sheila Spencer, most family
members present
Those auending were Dan,
Sheila, Kirl, Daniellc and .Tiffany
Spencer, Tuppers Plains; Dave,
Leli and Kristen Ballard, Pomeroy;
Ralph and Wilma Ballard, Junior
and Elsie White, Jeff, Sonia,
Christa, Jeffrey and Tyler Circle;
S crena, Bradley, Jordan and
Cameron Robinson, and Woodrow
Fortney, all of Long Bottom.
Thelma Wal10n of Dorcas; Thelma Eddy , Dori s Hill, Janel and
Ryan and Kailie Rae Troyer; Mike,
Gina and Beau Baker, all of Killbuck; Beuy Lou and Boyd Dean,
Bali van; Nancy, Lisa and Jessica
Carmichael, Akron; Audley and
Pat White, Mike Jones, Wooster;
Joel Karen, Jessiea. Melissa and
Josiah Pauley, South Charleston,
W.Va.; and Aaron and Heather
Jones, St. Albans, W.Va.

The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 15th issue of The ~~
Sentinel.
"
·
\
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete -\
the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet-size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each photograph. (enclose payment with picture)

r-----------------,

: PARENTS' NAME

:

I CITY &amp; STATE
: CHILD'~ ~AME(S) &amp; AGE

I
I

I
I

:
I

Submitted By

L-----------------~
SEND TO OR DROP OFF AT...

The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

BABY SENTINEL

/

�i
Wednesday, July 6, 1994

Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel
ADVB'Tl!lBl rTRI PCl.JCY- Each o f

COPYR IGHT 1994 - THE KROGER CO ITEM S AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JULY 3
THROUGH SATURDAY, JULY 9, 19941N POMEROY.

these adver tlsed lten1s Is reaulred to be re adily available
for sale In each I&lt; roger Stor e, e~~.ceot a5 ~O{'(I rically noted In this ad If we do run out of
an adver t ised Item. we will off er vou vour chOice of a compar able item when av ailable
r~ nec tlng the same savings or a r.::~lnrheck which will entitle you to pur(hafo€ the :~d...e r'.
t sed It em at the adver tlse-d plice within 30 d .?JY~ Only one vendor coupon wi ll be atc cpt E'd oer Item our OlctsE"J

Wednesday, July 6, 1994

'--' Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Hayman will
cheer with MU
varsity s~Liad

WE RE SE RVE THE RI GHT TO LIUIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

TOTAL

USTOMIR ATISfACTIOH
THAT's A BIG B~AR HuG

Diet Pepsi, MI. Dew or Caffeine Free
Diet Pepsi

see store for details.

coca Cola Classic
12~oz.

Taman! Hayman, daughter of
Dan and Fa11h Hayman, Syracuse,
has been selected for the Marshall
Univers it y vars ity chee rl ea din g
squall .
The Southcm High Sc hool graduate was one of eight selec ted for
the squad from the nearly 30 who
competed. In early Augu st she will
go to a checrlcading camp in Ten nessee for a trainin g period.
Tamara bega n cheering when
she wa s in d1c fifth grade at Syracuse Elementary Sc hool and was
on the squad at both Sou th ern
Juni or High School and Southern
Hi gh School where she was an al lstar wi th a two year affiliation wi th
the Universal Chccrleading Assoc iation. In 1993 she went to London
with the All -S wrs and pcrfonncd in
a parade_
Tamara has co mpl e ted her
freshman year at Shaw nee State
Universit y where she earned a 3_84
grade point average fur the spring
quarter. She has now transferred to
Mar shall wh ere sl1e wi ll continue
her studies in business admini stra·
lion wid1 a conc entration in health
management.

10-14-LB. AVG.U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN
FED BEEF CAP-ON

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
CAFFIENE FREE CLASSIC, DIET COKE OR

6-Pack

TAMAilA IIA YMAN

12 oz.
Cans

Limit 1 Pack
Per
Customer ·

Pound

USDA

SOUTHERN JUICY

GRADE

A - BIG

.
With
Wings

1M

fiy MIKE McKESSON

Limit 2 cases of
four 6-Packs with
$10.00 additional
purchase.

AP Auto Writer
DETROIT (AP) - For the third
year in a row , a survey found that
new Lex us, lnfin iti and Saturn
owners were the most sat isfied
with the reliability of their cars and
their treatment by dealers_
Lex us. Toyow's luxury car line.
led with 176 points in th e J.D.
Power and Associates 1994 Customer Satisfaction Index released
Tuesday. Nissan's lnliniti line had
171 points and Genera l Motors'
Saturn 1 55~
Honda 's Acura lu xury line and
Gennany's Audi filled out the top
five. The highest possible score is
202.
The survey of 25,000 buyers of
new ca rs ranked their sati sfaction
with repa irs, rel iabil it y, and how
they were handled by dealers during the first year they owned their
cars. A similar Power report based
on a. survcy of 10,000 light truck
owners was to be released today .
Industry sources who had seen
that report said Chrysler and Toyota ti ed as the highes t ranking
nameplates in the category, which
include s minivans, pickups and
sport utility vehicles. Oldsmobile,
Mercury and Plymouth completed
the top five in the truck survey,
The average score for the indus·
try in th e ca r survey was 135 ,
unchanged from a year ago.
General Moto rs nameplates
averaged 136. the ftrst time in the
history of the survey that a U.S .
manufacturer average was higher
than the industry average. Chrysler
brands averaged 128 and Ford was
at 125.
In 1986, the Big Three average
was only 94.

Sliced
Free!

LIGHT OR

oscar Mayer
Meat Wieners

springdale
orinki'!Pon wa·~

e

1-Lb. Pkg.

U.S. GRADE A WAI~PUoR/li~I'/GACRE

Chicken

g:~~rs - -· · --"sge
BigK .
Soft Drinks

Deli Fried Chick

5-Ltr.

When you purchase an
8-Piece bucket for $5.99.
4-Free Pieces Include: 1 Breast,

Name omitted
Jen ni Howerton. student at
Meigs Junior High School, made
the honor roll for the final nine
weeks' grading period . Her name
was omitted from an earlier listing
of honor roll students.

e

Wheat

HotDog suns
8-Ct

cottonelle
Bath Tissue
4-Ro/ls

'

•

With the family reunion season
quickly approaching, many will be
submitting articles of family ac,tivi·
ties for publication.
To ensure prompt publication,
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
requests that articles be neatly
typed and double spaced for easy
editing. 'Reunion items should not
exceed 300 words and must be sub·
mitted with in 30 days of occur·
renee.
No exceptions will be made. _
All material submitted for publt·
cation is subject to editing. Articl~
will be published as soon as posst·
ble .

CHilLED

Kroger
orange Juice

$ Gal99

79e
•

Lb.
Bulk
lb.

\

...m

OHIO
PROUD

Chicken Leg Quarters •••••••••.••••• 59~.
JUICY SWIIT

hOPICANA SEASON'S lEST

California
Cantaloupe

Orange

Juice

Each

12 ·ct.
64
From

01.

Ctn.

Concentrate

MICHELINA' 5

FOOD CLUB

REGULAR OR LIGHT

Mac and

Apple
Juice

Blue Bonnet

Ch·eese
Shells &amp;Cheese or Chili Moe

Spread

Regular or Natural

Reunion policy

1-Leg, 1 Thigh and 1 Wing.

KROGER liGHT WHITE OR

BEAR

Chicken Breast Quarters

Peaches

Car buyers
prefer Lexus,
lnfiniti , Saturn

Whole Sirloin Tips

Cans.

12 Pack Pepsi

64 •••
ltl.

FOR

Prlcea IHectlve July • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 At This Location:

31 OHIO RIVER PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS
FOR YOUR SHOPPING COWENIENCE WE OfFER THE FOLLOWING SERVICES EVERYDAY I
•Postoge Stomps Available at Post Office Prices • Money_Orders Are Avoilable At Our Se_rvice Desk • Carpet Cleoning Rental • Copy Machines
• Express Sh1pp1ng • F1lm Develop1ng • Carry Out Serv,ce • Gi~ Certilicores

)

•

J

Q

�6, 1994
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dachshunds take
to the racetrack

State calls
for stricter
safety tests
on elevators

• ' '
-

FIRST IN SF.MIS -This ~mi-truck, which
took a first place in the judgin~, was loaded with

LIFE IN EARLY MEIGS COUNTY - This
entry in the Rutland parade Monday depicted
lire in early Meigs County when the way to trav-

COLUMBUS (AP) - Eleva!Dr
companies will be required to perform a tougher annual maintenance
safety test in th e wake of a fat·
elevator crash.
The Ohio Dcparunent of Industnal Relations will begin requiring
the stricter test after elevator com·
panics receive a notification letter,
deparlment spokesman Gordon
Gatien II said Tuesday.
The letter was to be sent today
to about I 00 comp,anics that have
" installed, or maintain, elentors
within Ohio, Gatien said.
Rutland League ballplayers carrying colorful
The change is being made to
avo1d a recurrence of the June 25
balloons.
elevator crash that killed one person and injured eight in suburban
Cincinnati, Gatien sa id.
The elevator at the Indian Creek
Apartments complex was of the
hydraulic type, in which oil
pumped from an underground
cylinder lifted a piston that raised
the elevator car.
The elevator fell four floors and
landed so hard in the basement that
the car's floor was bent upward,
said Hank Arnold, the state's chief
elevator inspector. Arnold concluded that oil somehow leaked from
the underground cylinder, decreasing pressure within the lifting system and allowing the car to fall.
The underground cylinder may
have corroded, he said.
Arnold said on June 28 that he
would propose the state require elevator mainten ance companies to
test hydraulic elevator systems by
subjecting the cylinders to the maximum pressure they are designed to
withstand.
Armor KONE Elevator Co.,
which
has the contract to inspect
el centered around a horse-pulled wagon. Sponthe
elevator
that crashed, said it
sor or this entry was Equinox Botonicals.
conducted it.s June 21 inspection of
the elevator "by the book" and
could not have foreseen the fatal
problem. The company would be
willing to go along with Ohio's
proposed new safety requirement,
spokesman Bob Duncan said Tuesday from the company's headquarters in Louisville, Ky.
Otis Elevator Co. manufactured
the elevator and installed it in
1972. Company spokesman Mike
Reilly did not return a call Tuesday
to his office in Farmington. Conn.
Towne Properties, a Cincinnati
development partnership, owns
Indian Creek Aparunent.s. Company spokesman Bob Wahlke did not
return a call to comment Tuesday.

llyBOB BAUM
AP Sports Writer
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Their faces reflect
fierce determ ination as they break out of the starting
box. The1r cars flap hke Dumbo's. Their bellies
almost scrape the ground.
They are the dashing dachshunds·of America, and
this weekend they'll be running in the Wiener Dog
Summer Nationals at the Multnomah Greyhound
Park in suburban Portland.
"The crowd will go wild," predicted Larry
Sorenson, president of the Dachshund Club of America.
Both novice and experienced racers will run on
Saturday. The 32 beginners were chosen at random
from some 2,700 Northwest dog owners who wanted
their pet.s to compete for the grand prize of a year's
supply of dog food.
The biggest question is whether they can be
coaxed down the 100-yard main straightaway.
"We have one of his favorite female s that we're
going to try and put at the end -of the finish line, ' '
said Kathleen Ayres, whose dog Otto will make his
racing debut.
The e&lt;pericnced racers won ' t have to be coaxed.
They arc uained to chase a plastic bag hooked to a
wire on the ground - and they do so with absolute
enthusiasm.
"The dogs put so much heart into it," Sorenson
said. "They're kind of comical when they run, but
they're dead serious about it. They have that long
back and they coil it like an inchworm."
Dachshund owners have been racing their peLS for
at least 20 years, Sorenson said, but the national
attention didn't come until the animals were featured
in a beer commercial last year.
Some of the fastest wiener dogs in the West will
be on hand for Saturday's exhibition run. The field
includes Frankie and Max, the top two finishers
among the 50 or 60 who dashed through the Hyatt
grand ballroom in Palo Alto, Calif., during the club's
convention in May.
"Frankie was always kind of a shy boy and he
just djdn't get excited about anything until we look
him to the races," .said his owner, Miki Perry of
Eagle Point, Ore. "He got to watching the other dogs
and he absolutely went berserk."

LITTLE TYKE ON A TRIC - Little Adam Lambert on his
decorated tricycle joined the big guys on bikes for the annual Rutland Fourth or July parade Monday.

Reno stops in Ohio today
COLUMBUS (AP) - Attorney
General Janet Reno is taking to the
road to promote ?resident Clinton· s
crime bill.
Reno has scheduled a news conference for this afternoon on the
west lawn of t.he Statehouse. She is
e•pected to be joined by Ohio
Attorney General Lee Fisher. U.S.
Attorney Ed Saraus, Franklin
County Prosecutor Mike Miller.

county Sheriff Jim Kames and oth·
ers.
The adminisliation's crime bill
is before a House-Senate conference committee. A vote is expected
this month after Congress returns
from it.s July 4 recess.
Reno also plans to visit Houston; Baton Rouge, La.; and
Petaluma and Oakland, Calif/•

Dr. Lynn Welch, Dean,
MU School of Nursing, will
be at PVH In the downstairs Conference Room
Friday, July 8, from 2-4:30
p.m.
RNs Interested in pursus·
ing a BSN or MSN should
attend.
To register, call

THE 1994

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 248
GOD'S COUNTRY - "This is God's Country" proclaims the Forest Run United Methodist
Church noat entered in Racine's Fourth or July

parade Monday morning. The Forest Run UMC
entry won third place in the religious category in
the village's annual parade.

Farm Antiques Club. Here, Racine resident Edison Hollon puts his 1955 John Deere JDSO to tbe
test.

DNA testing aids in skeleton identification
Stoneking said Tuesday he used'
WOOSTER (AP)- The skelesamples
of biood from the boy's
ton of a 16-year-old boy found on
mother
and
sarr.ples of the boy's
the bank of a creek two years ago
has been identified through DNA
testing and computer imaging, the
Wayne County sheriff said.
Wayne County Sheriff Loran
Alexander said Tuesday the skele·
ton is that of Damond Leo.nard
Jones of Detroit Jo~s. who was a
ninth-grader at the time of his disappearance in June 1991, was
buried Saturday in Deuoit, Alexan·
der said.
Jones died from sev~r3:i blows
to the head, Alexander .sa•d. Two
fishermen found the boy s skeleton
wrapped in a carpet along the
Chippewa Cre~k 10 Rittman 1n
April 1992, he srud.
.
.
De~eetives were able to 1denufy
the boy's body with the help of
Penn State University anthropoloist Dr. Mark Stoneking, !I" e~pen
fn forensic mitochondnal DNA
1e5ting.

bone to identify the skeleton. There
is a one percent chance that the
identification is incorrect, he said.
~

5l tToucli of Cfass

65°/o 75o/o

Custom 'Window Coverings

OFF
On Blinds

&amp; Verticals
Shop At
Home
Service Day
or Night

All
BlindaAte
Custom Made
to Windows

CALL-IN, WALK·IN OR BY
APPOINTMENt'
Walk-In Hoon: 18:011 Lillo• 3:0Qp.m.,
Moo. AWed.
483 Berch Stnet •c:ro. hun Super At.rtca
Middleport, Oblo 457.0
lnalallallon f Bllndt DelveNd 510 10 doyo

(614)992·5311 or(BOO)-BLIND-11

BIIIGO
·EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

ClUB
IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
s;oo Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

445-3898

HAULING
LIMESTONE,

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM

Reasonable Rates

Public Notice

Public Notice

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
314193 I MO

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice to hereby given
that on the 5th day of
Auguot, 1994, at 2:00 p.m.,
In the office of tho 8oard of
Commlaalonere of Melge

County, Ohio, a hearing will
be held on the propoood
vacating of Cheolor Townahlp Rood 222, Spencer
Rood . The 8oard of
Commlulonero of Melgo
County, Ohio, wlll view tho
otto of tho proposed
vocotlng on the 5th day of
Auguot, 1994, at 10:30 a.m.
Tho plat deacrlblng the
location of the road
propooed to be vacated
may be vie-d at the office
of the Board of Com·
ml111onero of Meigs
County, Ohio, Courthouse,

Pomeroy, Ohio.
(7) 6, 13 2tc

• Cuslom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement

PU8UC NOTICE
Notice Ia hereby given
that on the 5th day of
Auguat, 1994, at I :00 p.m.,
In the office of the 8oard of

Commlaalonera of Melgt
County, Ohio, a hearing will
be hold on tho prop011d
vacotlng of a portion of
Thomaa Street and Holly
Street In the Hartinger
Acret Subdlvltlon, Section

1

Cheater Townahlp, Molgo
County, Ohio. Tho 8oord of
Commllllonera of Molga
County, Ohio, will vtow tho
al1a of tho propo11d
vacating on tho 5th dey of
Auguot, 1994, at 9:00 a.m.
The plat deacrlblng the
tocotlon of tho road
propooed to be vacated
moy be viewed at 1he offlce
of tho Boerd of Com·
ml11lonero of Molgo
County, Ohio, Courthouto,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
(7) 6, 13 2tc

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

992-2155

card of Thanks

Rutland
Youth
League would like- to
thank those that have
sponsored a team,
gave donations and
· supported us through·
out the season. This Is
greatly appreciated by
this organization.
Sponsors: Bank One
• Rutland, Charlie's
Midtown VIdeo's, Porn·
eroy Flower Shop,
Rutland Furniture,
Rutland Tire Shop,
Stewart's Gun Shop,
Rutland Fire Depart·
ment, Millie's Restaurant, Vaughan's Cardl·
nal, Pizza Dan's Restaurant.
Donations; Craw's
Steak House, Farmers
Bank, Peoples Bank •
Middleport, Pomeroy
Flower Shop, Knight &amp;
Tenoglla, Attorneys-at·
Law; Dairy Queen
Brazier, Pomeroy Exxon Food Mart,
Adolph's Dairy Valley,
Dr. James Schmoll,
Veterans Memorial
Hospltll, Meigs Veter"lnarlanl Clinic, Maaon
Furniture, lfnlted Mine
Workers Local 1857,
Valley Lumber, Dan
Lewis, Facemeyer
Lumber.

windows

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

• Free Estimates

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

&amp; TREE

••tl

• $200 Installed
Call For Details

FREE ESTIMATES

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St. Pomarov, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

614·992·7643

REMOVAL
•UGHT
HAUUNG
•AAEWOOD
BILL SLACK

(No Sunday Calls)
Z/12112/tfn

lOST

992-2269
IZ'301DTFN

Public Notice

o...rotln

992-6597

·Room Addlllona
·New garagea
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting al1o concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

TRI-STATE K·9
ACADEMY

REWARD
Phone

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

985·4473

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement.
personal protection,
kennel aervice, pups &amp;
young dogs for sale.
Rottweiler &amp; Shephard
Slud Service
. By appt. only
614·667-PETS
I&gt;J2/Ifn

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

· Howard
Excavating Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Complete House &amp;
Trailer Sites
Driveways, Septic
Systems , Water &amp; Sewer

Lines, Land Clearing
Trucking: Limestone &amp;

Fill 011l, Top Soil
Reasonable A.ltcs
Esttmatcs

992-3838

In Loving
Memory of

VERNON L.
WEBER
March 3r 1826
July

6,1983

Wife, MargiNt Bell
Children '1ncl
Gl'llndchlldren

Stlu...t
lnsfalllfloll

CaD Weste111 Auto
992-5515
Free Estimates
Residential, C&amp;nmercial
and Industrial
5-0..1

MAR TECH
INDUSTRIES

Apartment
lor Rent

Real Estate General

SYIACUSE,OI.

SUMMER

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

IMAGES
TANNING
HEW BULBS ·
LOW PRICE

16 ~ $25
992·2417

61811110.

Home of the Eutern
Girls SoltbaU Awards

.....

Oolfl.aaotu

OPENING IN JULY
Over 12. dlaabled or hendlcepped FmHA 1 beef.
room. Ranta for SO to $405, lieaed on lncoma.
Range, r.frlgeretor. cerpet. ale, on alta leundry,
parking.
614·949-2012 TDD 800..750·0750
FmHA Rantel Aael11ance
Equal Hou1lng Opportunity ·

6 F•r 175

And

614-985-3961
111nmo.

&amp;11511 mo. pel.

Interior &amp; EX1erlor
Take the - pain oul of
painting. Let ua do it
lor you. Very reaaenable.
Free Estlmalea
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After 6 p.m.
614-995-4180
3/251114

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

Call
614·682·7676

ARNOLD'S
PLUIIIING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WHAlEY'S AUTO
PAITS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair

992-2886

lllW I USED PAITS FOI
AU MAKfS I ltlllllS
992-101101
992-SSSlOI
lCll Fill HD0-141-0070
DARWIN. OHIO
71311111TFN

ROCKSPRINGS ROAD -An older home with the downstairs completely renovated . Has an enormous living room
with 2 bay windows &amp; a nice stone fireplace. The beautiful
kitchen has now cabinets with an island, &amp; 3 bedrooms
with large walk-in closets, dining room, wrap-around
porch, and many outbuildings, sitting on 1'I• acres. .
WAS $55,000
NOW 1110,000
RUTLAND - ,Main Strati! -A vacant lot with city sewage
and water available. Nice for a mobile home, ate. $5,000
POMEROY - 8ellay Run - Approx. 56 acres with free
gas and royat~es. A one story small house, and a one car
garage.
$32,500

.

RT. 143- A1'1• story, 4 bidl'®m. 1'/obath home that has
a beautiful stone fireplace between living room and dining
· room, has spacious eat-in kitchen, a large 2 car garage
wlworkshop, cellar w/storage abOve. and Is all smtng on
approx. one acre.
DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ........................ (114) 1112-1102
8RENDA JEFFERS ................................... (614) !112-30118
JERRY SPRADUNG ................................. (3041 182-34111
OFFICE .............................................................. 1112-2184

QUALITY WORK A
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

(614) 992-7474

-

POMEROY, OHIO

JESS' COMPLnE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY
headliners, seat
covers, converlihle
tops, Antique Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boat Seots. ·
992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Obio 45769

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD - Approx. 7 acres of vacant
ground. Most IS haytand and has a great building site.
Water Jlnd elec1ric available. Owner will finance with a
reasonable down payment.
$10,500

PQ~EROY • Point Lane • 4.6 lla'81 of V8cant Grcundl Roling I

11 motdy wooded. Immediate poaoe1oion.

'ijil(iNIG iii.i
Ulilltlet lhould be avaiable.
••
$11,500

1

ATTENTION FRIENDS Ill DON'T MISS OUT ON YOUR
DREAM HOllE, COME ON DOWN 10 CLELAND REALTY,
ITS WAIT1NO FOR YOU.
HENRY E. CLELAND_ ....................................... I!I2-6fl1

TRACY BRINAGER. •• - ..................... _ .............. Mt-2438
SHERRI HAAT....- .....- ............................- ........742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND UL•• - ................ __......... 1!12-6111
KATHY CLELAND...- .... - ......................- .......... 1!12-61111
OFRCE.............................................................. I!I2·22SI

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
oCerpantry

.Painting

-Pow• Waahtng •
c l - all axterlora
wlthhl~pretaura

opray•
oA•IODilllla RIIIM

Y-•

Mo~e

10 ton min. on oil.

Club Repair

Real Estate General

(~

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
614-992-3470
Umeetone: 1S ton &amp;
up $10.50 lon; 15ton &amp;
under $11.50 ton
Top Soli $6.50 1on
Graval $11.50 1on ·?
Sand? -Low Relet

CHESlER
COUNTRY CLUB

WATER'S EDGE APARTMENTS

lftl

Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
Limestone· Fill Dirt
Gravel • Sand
Lehch Bed
Installation and
Septic Syolema
614-992-7879
SR 7 • Five Polnta

' ''"''"

regular monthly aeealon,

In Memory

u.--w.u

111311 mo

PUBUC NOTICE
Bodford Townohlp Truatoll will hold tho Budget
Hoorlng for Flacal Veer
1995, when they meet In

2

.

Ftndnv Chal•

Public Notice

Monday, July 11th, ot 7:00
p.m. at tho town holt.
lntoreoted cltlunt are
welcome to ottend. Budget
will be avtlltble for vtewlng
at the clerk'• homo upon
roque II.
Barbera J. Gruuer, Cieri&lt;
42774 Helwig Ridge
Shade, Ohio 4!177&amp;
6116-1244
(7) 6, 1tc

992-4119 AI Tromm Owaer 1-80()-291-5600

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

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

USED RAILROAD TIES

PUBLIC NOTICE
Saturday, July 16th at
10:00 A.M., tho Home
National Bank, Third Slroal,
Public Notice
Racine, Ohio, will offer for
sale at public Auction, on
1he Bonk parking lot 1he
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby given lollowlng:
that on Saturday, July 9th, · 1991 Nlooon 300 ZX
1994 at 10:00 a.m .. o public Turbo, Serle! Number
sale w111 be held at 211 Wool JN1CZ24H6MX502106.
1973 Mercedea Qenz,
Main Stroot, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Number
The Formero Bank parl&lt;lng Sorlol
tot, to oell for coah th~ 10704412011292.
1991 Chevrolet Corlsca,
following collateral:
Number
1991 Chevy S-10 Pickup Sorlol
1GILT53G9MY161800.
SNI 1GCCS14E4M2146429
19S4 Ford Bronco 11,
1992 Ford Aerootar Van
Sarlo!
Number
SNI 1FMDA31X6N2B26051
1986 Oldamobllo Caleta 1FMBU14S3EUD02702.
1990 Ford Ranger pickup,
SNI 1G3NT27L7GM337499
Number
The Farmoro 8ank end Serial
Savlngo Company, Pome- 1FTCR1 DA4LUB27395.
1985 Chtvrolel Spec1rum,
roy, Ohio, roaorvoo tho right
Numbn
to bid at thla oole, and to Serlo!
withdraw tho above J81 RF69RJF8432195.
Tormo ol tho aale ore
collotorol prior to oate. cash.
Further, The Farmera Bank
Tho Home National Ban~
end Sovlngo Company·
roeorvu tho right to ra[ecl reurvu the right to reject
any or all bldo or to remove
ony or ell blda oubmltted.
Further,
the
above ony unit from the oale at any
collaterol will be oold In the lime.
In order to lnopect ony of
condition It It In with no
axpreaaod or Implied war· tho above named properly
prior to the ealo,
rontloa given.
For more Information arrangement• may be mede
contact Jeff Gilkey, at 992· by colllng1149-2210.
(6)22,23,24,29,30
2136.
(7) 1, 5, 6, 7: 9TC
(7) 6, 7, 8 3tc

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

QUALm WINDOW SYSTEMS

......

TRIM

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

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

Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
614-992-7878
SR 7 • Flva Po Inti
SHRUB

AMER,CAN G,ENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

N. Sayre

44

FREE

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

,,..,._

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Joe

m(l-C CLEANING SPECIAL

611MN TFN

4, Town 2, Range 13,

ANTIQUE TRACTOR PULLS - Racine's
annual Fourth of July celebration featured
antique tractor pulls sponsored by the Big Bend

LouWelghl
No MOOiingo No Weigh !no
No drugs or chemical•
All for aboul
one dolj,ar a day!

Announc ements

=

REDIICE~ off lot ..... -

PlwlnMJ.
. , . -~~~~~~
2 1.
OML,

REDIICE: llum off lot ..... ""'
.....,_
T... OML, ,.,.......
~ PMnnlil'ft llld#ap art.

4

Giveaway

o20
Expeltof'.... Eed10111M

915-4111

.•

,

�Wednesday, July 6, 1994

Page-14-The Dally Sentlnel

Wednesday, July 6, 1994

Pomero -Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei--Pa e-15

ALLEYOOP
tJUST CAN'T F"I ~ UIU IT -3Ul '
'NE LL GETII NG OU't
"'(pU 'D THINK. Hf WIZE R WOUL D -'.T
STU!=T' IS ON£
~T l.ET YOU KEE P YOUR CIWWN5 Tl-iiNG W E DON ' T

t&gt;.N' LET YOU GET YOUI&lt;' 5TljFF

'lAVE Tv wOR""

OUTA. TI-l' PA.LA( £ '

NEA 9'0s.sword Puzzle

.. T ~ E GUI&gt;&amp;l'5 SAID
T1-4ER£ WEREN'T A.NV
OF OUR TH INGS LE FT

IN THE PALACE '

A.&amp;Jl.JT A ll, EY '

ACROSS

PHILLIP
Al.DER

35 Negatives

Answer to Previous Puzzle

36 Adversary
38 Peruvian Indian

, Politici an Jackson
6 Resembling

40 Bandleader -

Arnaz
41 Composer Rorem
12 Of pre -Ea ster
42 Glacial ridge
13 Tennis pl ayer
461nvasion
- Goolag ong
48 King of Cret e
14 Gives
49 Performing
15 Animal s
52 Stupid on e
16 Winter
53 Tr anquil
downpours\
54 Dem ea n
17 Remaind er
1B Bronte hero111e 55 Li s t ~ ne r
56 Nasa l so un d
J a ne 19 Fond du --.
DOWN
Wis .
20 Rear
24 Oh . both er!
1 Jenniler ·s
26 Kentu ck y
nickn a me
2 Bibl ic al w it ch ·s
college
27Winter ailm ent
home
JODi spatc h b oa t
3 Pac ked awa y

wood

4

Giveaway

REA TTIE BLVD.'" by Bruce Beattie

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Port Gorman Shopard I L.ab.
Pupploo,
E'llenlnQII .
White Slbe,.n hueky, 3 yr. o6d ;
mixed Slberln hwky pu,.,
born )-17-114, o.-~3803 .

t..- doa: mlna1ur11 collie, brown
whh whlta, antwerll to the name
of Micky, t08t oft a boat at
Maaon MvM Sunday ewenlng,
chlkia pel, r.-ard.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

8th, lth, IJ.&amp;c 171 Northup Rd,
ott Uncoln ~lko In C.ntonory,
Poporboc:ko, Clotlllng, II lie.
ALL Yord Salol llutt Bo Pokl In
ldYinCI. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

I

m

Eur.U AnnUli Community Yard

Solo: Frldoy, SIIIWdoy, July 8th
And lllh, Somolhi"G For
Evoryonol
011'111" Solo : July 71h, Blht lllh,
Nice Utld Fumhwo, .V.'o,
Slo-,
CouchM,
Wuhor
/Orylra, Bodo
Boby Bodo
0ook1, HU:ch ac. a lfllloo Out
Bullville Turn Rlg111 On KNief
Rei., 114 446 40311, 814-441-100A.

cale 10 buy sluff on lh e home shopp•ng cha nnel "

.:.11..__...:H...:e~lp::....:.W:..:a:...n..:..te...:d..___ 18
up to $1000

Ulblel~

R•pH• C.N Aa
Our Folter F1mlll•

fumltii'L

Rl...t,.

Antlquoo.

A- llooro, apnor. lt4-111122112t.W.buynlitu.

OwnoriOpariiCUdl..l Fl'llght Corrlwa Ia hlrtng In tho von dlvlolon pold
loodOd or ornptr mlloo untoodlng pay, llop poy, hMllh Jrt.
....nc. wl-111- ovoJI.
oblo, boi&gt;IIU ovoJI.
obto, futl cord oyotorn, oo. poy
toh oyotorn _ . , and ..,,.,. wNiily uttlo. .nta, ~rom,

J 1 D'o Auto Porto ond Solvogo,
Junk ...... trucb.
304-773'Mol1
Want to buy ... of otopo tor
mol&gt;llo homo, ·--1051
Wontod To Buy: Junk Aut
With
Or Whllola - - CaM
Lony LhtoJy. IM-3111-11303.

oloO bUying

Top -

Pold: All Old U.S.

Colno, Gold Ringo, Sllvor Cotno,
Gald Cotno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

- · Ootllpotlo.

tSI -

Employment Services

lmo homo. 1-.z!O.

POSTAL JOBS
Stort $11.41111r. lor uom and
oppllcotion tnlo. ooM 218-71!~
830t 1111. WV548, tom-epm,
n.f'rl.

..... Alolotont Ful~n... Uglll
ottlco Dutlll, AIIIIIV In Poroan,
Thii'OdoyL July 11h 'Only I 14.11.
-3 P.ll. ..hone H11r1na Aldo
c.ntw, 1312 EUtem "venue,
Oolllpolll, No Cello
PISom~ruck wJioa troller lor hlno.
304~ orll8:z'l12t.

18
11

Wanted to

Do

Help Wanted

i.

\

21

Real Estale

AVON SELLS ITSELF! Polantlol
Eomlnall 12Gll 42,000 llontliiY.
Sol Af Work Homo. .lnd IIIII
.()rdor,

ii73L

---

F- 'trolnlngl , _ _

111,_ lody wlll"Gio - . Wll

d o - -Inti. ollopplng or
oltllng dh ci1IUn, gOod

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

(11994 by NEA !no:

54 Miscellaneous

46
3

wv.

Space for Rent
0111co Suite With

Room

Prlvoto Tollol In llodorn Rro
Proof Bldg. C.llllorrto Hukl,.
114-446-2C:It Or 114-44fl.2512.
Lo1 With Totol Etectrle, For Rant,

114-317-lll38.

no-

for Rent
14ri0 2 Br, 1 milo South of
Eurlko, on SL Rt.7. No pate,

..

-.~.
2 llodroorn Fumllhld Air, C.bto
Avolllbto, Dvertooklna Ohio
River In Kanougo, l'ootor'a
llobllo H - Pull, '114-416-tll02..
2 Bodroom llollllo Homo, Plfo
tlllly Fll'nlohod, Wollr Pokl,
$1011 Dopoll~ ~. 114-zae.

sex tatrilaJ statue or national

or ony lnlOnllon to

make 8f'floucl1 preloronco,
lmlllllon or ciiCtmlnllllon.'

1008.

ThiS newspaper wtl oot
IU1owtlngly occept

2 bocl•-e~.y lumlo'-~ olr,
''""
wuhorand .~r, S300Jmo. pluo
and ....,..... 114-llll2·

=c:.-"

ac:JYentsemerts tor real eslata
whk:tlls In vblallon ol thllaw.

our readers are hereby

=

2 ~ 111:, No Plio,
And
Ro'---

lntonnod thol ... dwellngo

odvortiSedln thll n o - r
are available on an equal
opp&lt;rtunhy basis.

·- ---.
,W~Oryw;ZIIad-

,_, - · •umlohld, No
Polo, S350111o. Dopoelt, 1114-'JID.
4341.

31 Homes for Sale
13 Ac- And Born I
llodrvomo, 1 112 ...... LA,
Kftchon, Utility R-. Doubto
P ·'~ ~- For
1 o._ 4~·'"""IY
3br. ..:::: : . : :

a::·,...

11101
I AC. llao, I lte&gt;ry_building, Included. 127,1100. 304-

411-11148, Stevo.
4 B ~- • •ory .A • 112
... .;:·uroR7Fii Wlth~EIIIn Khchon, Dlolrobto No.,...borhood, C,_HIIC, 114 4411411.
~ S Br. Roncll, lpocloua,
om Kltcllan,
Fomby Room,
BuiM-In
Woodbumor,
Doell,
Pool, 2 Cor Oonao. 113- Lo4,
CioN to Town, 1~2- Adttoldo Or,
514 441 OStl Allor 4:30 p.m.

168.100

I llodrvomo, Both t/2, 114-281111167.

llno bod,_,, lurnllllod,ionlfl
- · good cllln oondt Oil
good looition, porch, yord,
lvrd, on. ohltd, no ptU. •bon
Hlvon, J210/mo., - - . ,
241hnytlmo.
Troller lljr:.-~.;:;~M
plua laG
·
'

44

==

Apartment
tor Rent

•Hachmenta. moww,
n&gt;111ry Utler, plow . . - , oulky,
IIW
• bor - · 114~148.

Q

Wanted to Rent

-

Dille, $1,175; Plck.IJp Dlok, -

1 ~h 4 Boctom, Com PickOthor Equipment. -··o
Form lloclll,.ry,
Ohio,

114--.all44.

Merchandise

3 Pony'a Brolll, 1 Comoo Wllh
Boddie, I Brtdlo, llWAI 1087.

Booutltut pony, walt INoka, gflll
wlklda, llki"G 1750, 114.o8271!41.
Hcnn. VO!Y Gontio, Hlvo Boon
1n And On T..u.. 114-441o41tO.
NICE HORSES FOR SALE
Clulol Will monna.-d gokllngo I
morn. Pollmlnoo, polnto,

Household

Goods
GOOD USED APPLWICE!I
Wa~f)Ofl, tefrtgorotor:!,
nngoo.
Appllo,_, 111
Vlno
114-441-73111, 1-

St-.

800-4fll.3411.

G,.nd Opanl"ll. Now ownoro.
Vl'Ro FumHu,. 1 Applllncoo.
llonth of July. Voughon, a..
11110. Wobb, Shlnoi0od1 Q.E.,
Hotpolnt. Uncoln Pike. • mlloo ..... Air Concltlonor, 21,0011
out141. l14-4*3151.
BTU 5100, 114-24WI1~
Konmoro Wa- ~i Konmon STORAOE TANKS 1,000 Colon
Oryor $7!; '(0011 B IU Air Con- Upright, Ron Evono Ento,.,...,
dhlonor, $71; Hot Point SI"Gte JockOon, Ohio, t-.a37-0aa ·
Door Rolriao ..tor $15; c - a
Door
Rolrlaorll«
1121;
IIOVIj_ GE
Wlll~pool wo.r.... 1 y- w... Tiff!!!.,,
~t:!i2i.or; NO lor botn, 114.. nty $201; lloglc Chef Etoctrlc
Ro"ll' 185; ·-~..,_., Toohlbo Copier, ts00. ldoll lor
'It VI,. 8t-, 111111
porory Hou..:
ohurdl, oiVlo anoup, or ~
.f'rldoy; ~ Satunloy, I
1
73111, -.,.fll.34_
UGLY DECK OR FENCEt
LAYNE'S FURNrTURE
R i l l - - rllcke I llnooo to
Cornplllo ~~orr. tumllhlnga. IIIIa ,_ ooncltlon wMhoul
Hou
lllor&gt;.!lll N. 1~ acrullblna With ENFORCER
.,..... '3 ml'- out' BullvU'- Rd DECK ClEANER. lvol- 11:
F,;'~~o~1..',j.
• · Thomu D&lt;&gt;ll eont.r, · "'
Rlvor Volloy Oolt Fumllft. llcCormlclt Rd., Gllllpcollo.
Solid ..... tobto • cholra, ourvod UoiCI Bolla
Eooll, · ftloM ohlno eoblnoto, .,... 2120, Alor I P..ll.
•
__...
Chaato, oct•.hondmodl -11oft T . - , c-

=

llucllaldfll, lie. For troll, -

tom ptouuro, panning, lum...,onalloh,
to lrvm.
Athono,- Olf. I1WIIH7311
or712-2541.

64

Hay &amp; Grain
.:40..;-_....;,b:.:_to.:o:_of.:ml:..:ud
__hly_lor_
111a, opproL -lbo. -h, In
lllddtop on, 011 t14tiiW347.
Hoy, ftfll

m

t:.\".,.::'0:~'1..~ r:_"T.-.~"'In.!~~~':;

SWAIN
1300, iiW7Niil'"'
AIJCI10H I FURNrTURE. 12 WATER LINE SPEaAL: ~ Olivo St. Gallpollo. I Uold :zoo PSI Stl.ll; 1 :ZOO PSI
tumnuro, - · Wntom 1 -.so·
workboota.l14-441-315l.
iiiah810olllokoon,Ohlo ·
KILLS FLEAII

::.

Ron,_.-....-,

~·,:: ~

TEED afloctlvol A-lito at
,.__
.......,. 1lll

55

,..,

Transportation
71 AutOS for Sale
,;,.;......,,_.....;..;,...,.,.......,..-11113 P!ymOuth Vllllnl tllllo, -pllllly _.,.., 11
orglnll, 1 ol-, outo, rod wn.l Jrt.

· - · saoaci:·-~en

tVN Buick Roglf, V-1, St,OOO,

~

1U4 Oldtnaablle Dettt u. , _ .

ond out,

1886 ChoW C.111010, llcyl., auto.
111M lplrl or lllve
· ~n•••ee
~'18-11110

Fumllhod Ellloloncy StiMio.
Utltltill - .IJolllp
·do7
-.tlvo.L
ollo,Bllh
ii4-4414411AIIor7".11.

condhion"

ion, 12111;

11181 Dodae Rim V1n 10,000

s-

111101, 14,11'00; C.n Bo
At: . .
Golllpollo Dolly Trfbuno, 825· '
Third Avonuo, Ootllpotll, 114- ,

.......... Eloc:lrleJ..~rol Air, Ulla
-pinning,~
Th._h UUl Vlnll -

_ ___ ·=-....
-- - ..
::.:,:~a bra.,lnJ:I

-;r.. hu.

good oondltlon,

-

........

12 • 88, 2 br.

tllflr

to

$11110, 114-ld41M -

......
---~:o~~-wlh _ _...,.....
0.,.. 11t Ul 1212o . . . l

W-114-241oll44

.-- YOu &lt;.AN LtAflN A LOT

441-n42.

wATCt-(ING

..A
Motorc les
.'
::r..:::-:=:-:-:=.Y;::,C-:;:~-d·tilt Hondo CIII!O, AI,·.:
tii"RRtor, $32:5. 114 • 48 3040.
.· •

'

'JEOPAilPY.

..

1/

.l. &amp;..~A~NtP

1182 Cuotom Eocollonl · •
Condhlon, Shift Drtvon, 0.... • •

AN
IP\OT ·

,l.' tJ\

:.z

1111 Hondo 250 FOil' Tru, runo:J
ond looko Qflll, StliOO llrm. 304-..

p

' &gt;'
n
0

~

~~~="=~~~~--~~~~
11113 SUZIIkl Katona 1100 .-d ·:
)uot like now, 2400 mlloo, i3DOQ,-•
'*-n 8:1»-

.

BORN LOSER

75 Boats &amp; Motors

SMACK '

liS NOT OFTE:f.l m'IMORE. Tl-1~1 [
"
CAA GE.T YOU

tor Sale
111711 8ton:roft 11ft run - . ,
boll, 'IOhp J...._ OIC oond,

/

lo.l'1 Y !X lt{T

WE. PLI\'1 1\

:104-e~ae.

saooo. 114-141-2127.

E.NOUGf\

......

•

•

P ll:-; s

!'ass
I 'itSS

4•

I' as"

4 •
~~ •

fi :.J T

l' a s~

)'ass

l'ass

ca ptain
23 Parts of a
week
25 Spi r ited

Pass

26 Type of piilu

27 Ran away

Philli11 Ahlt·r

28 Toe the 29 Exploits
3 1 Dispatch
37 Muddier
39 With hands on
hipS
41 River in Africa
43 EgypJ' s S ad a t

What do y ou thin k nf l1 i"g i c ~

44Damp
45 Princel y

t hem or ha t e I he m As Glori a
St ein em sa id . .. Lo gic 1s in th e eye
of the logician ...
Nev erth eless. mo st bridg e
problems ca n be solved by thinkin g
logically . I particularly lik e deal s
that feature an alys is along these
lin es : "If II i s tru e. then suit B must
be played like thi s: but if II is false.
su1l B mu st be played like that. "
Today's deal will ~ hopefully ~
give you th e 1dca. West leads th e
spade Jack againsl your contract of
six no-trump . How do you plan the
play"
If the c lub fin ess e i s winning,
vou n eed onlv fi ve heart t rick s:
wh er eas if th e club fin esse i s
lo s in g. you mu s t wir: s ix hea rt
tricks.
I~ the dub fin ess e winning lA is
true I or losin g lA is fal se I'? At trick
two. play a clu b to your queen. If
she l oses to Wes t 's king tA is
fals e 1. y ou mu st win six he art
tricks. To try to accompl is h thi s.
you should fine sse dummy' s j ack
on the fir st round of the suit. But
here th e club fine sse wins lA is
true! . Now y ou need only fiv e heart
tricks . How should you pla y to
maximize your chances of winning
those fiv e heart tricks"
Right - you should duck the
fi r st round of hearts. planning to
play off dummy' s ac e and king next
when you regain the l ead. This
works wel l when the suit breaks 3·2
or wh en eith er opponent ha s the
smgleton qu ee n.
If you can th in k logically on all
deals . it is l o ~l!' a l to assum e you
will be a big win11 cr at this game.

campers&amp;

w.th- n, l SUPEP: l-l'!nd &lt;OOrcbnot.on,
'5UP~RDAD 9ropl th&lt;
ba 11 and t a ke:l a,"" '.

BALLL
AIRRR
P&gt;ALLl.

""

.'
I

ME:

1

LE T .S IT F"L Y At.~D

.

2 - · ...,f, llr, m-.vo, goo
rongo,
..hlgorll..
and lumoco,
-·
tuU
both
lrid ..._,
dull ........ 110 • t2 ...... lid rta111 aldo, 141000. 114-M~

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1957, future Uealles Paul McCarln ev

AIRRR

1

1886 Ctmoroon '"''"' trolte~ 21',

'

I

114-Mt.:ll44

ovonlngo.
21 fl. P-.lx Compor, DuoJ ·
Axle, 811111!. !J.!,200, Or Olllr, ~~~ Aftor I P..ll.
Ohio Rlvor Compa-.ndo , _
-and lor....; 114-14~~-:~U~. ..

.

I/

·"'

I

...

,

•

and John' Lennon first met.
TODAY'S BIHTHDAYS: John Pau l
Jones 11747-l 7Y11. US . naval hero:
Bealrix Puller 118GG·I943l. children 's
writer: Nancy Reagan \19.21 -1. form er
first lady, is 73: Merv Griffin II Y25· 1.
entertainer-businessman. is 69. J&lt;.~ne t
Leigh 11927· 1. actre ss , is 67 . Dell a
Reese (19 3 1- J, singer -atlre ss, is 63 ;
Ned Beatty 11!1 :1', · 1, arlor . is 57 :
Sylvester Sta llone 11946 ·1, actor, IS 4B

l

&amp;

Italian family
47 Ac tres s -

Baxter
48Demeanor
49Fire residue
50 Fair grade

51- lala
52 Denti st's deg .

( f!lfltl"'~ (; t~J ht&gt;l

l

I W A

1•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,_I)!O•(ji,W o&lt;, ar e Cf ei! lt'&lt;l ! tOfT\ (IUO!iJ! tr) nS b 1 ! , tt llOlt~ [ll'Uj&gt;!f' p,t'&gt;l ol"l! P 1 \'~{lrt!
,, "'' " '' "' rho;&gt; { 1phflr ~liltH"I~ lo t o~r~o rtwr
TtJddl ~ L.'iu f' I f'Ot"' '~'

0 VAP

AP N

0 UXJ G X0 KN

KK

RP N

H I L

D XA N

J

OKIRNIV

0 E

R P N

~~ I

'194 Oy N(/&gt;.

LiS

Moth e r H oo d-"~"'

'

in~

TKAT DAllY

WORD
GAM I

PUUliR

I

~

6'·

ONUAVIAXDJ

CIUAPIKK
CGKVPIJ
PR EVIOU S SOL Uli ON ··was Robm Hood"s mother kn own
~ {Phlladelpt11a Ph1ll 1es p1!che r) La rry And e rse n

w0 G T R H

I I I I I'

I:.
I
I"
.:.
I I I
UN N E
I

.

.

.

.

L-..L-L-..L_L-...J ,._

I bought a sign al an ant1que
sto re II read "The pa st can be
valuable as a gUidepost. but
1t c ~n be dan~erous as a

Q-~o-m-p;,;,p~hset chuc~ I P
.~?~K~H....,.,E......,C
I I ~ I_A~L~--11
I I •

by ld l, ng •n The mo\\ ong

quoted

word~

L...J.__.L._I__....L__.L.....J yo u de .. e lop from ~Te p No J below

11:11 PR INI NUM BER[[)
g
tETf ER S IN SQUA RES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Wretch · Filth - Squaw - Dragon - FEW WANTS
As a k1d I always dreamed of be1ng rich . An old family
fnend told me that bemg nch doesn t only mean hav1ng
many th1ngs but 11 also means hav1n~ FEW WANTS

IWEDNESDAY

'

A D

DE

JULY 61

1 ST\l\.

C»l'l f\1-1\l
\1\t. N\IC£
fRDN\ WIY
1Q ~RUG
t YP£RIN'ttNT.

BUilding

Home
Improvements

Antiques

I •

:l •

:l N T

\'a ~~
l 'a~:-.
P ;tSS

A

Moines

12 - majesty
17 Sanctioned
19Volcano
product
2 1 Press
22 Ficlional

-=-o-:-A=TE=-=B~O~O"=""=K

BIG NATE

Motor Homes

Supplies

I ""

July 6, 1994

lie. D l R Auto, AI~. 304-

Of'

acc t.
11 -

East

C 1994, NEW SPAPER ENTER~~?~~ !_S_SN .

TIME.~ 7

Butlaot Prlcld Tronomllolono,
Ulllfl I robulft, Ill typoo, llortlna II SSI; 114-24'-11177,
~~-. 1-Ta.zztiS.
goo tonko, ono ton nca

.
79

Ff&gt;..C£,
ll K.E.. 0..1&gt;

TO (.(){){)(£

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

372-3133 or 1~27J:S

LITIL£
K!'Xl'l -

LOMG

11111 Fow WI,..; 1T,140 hp,

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

"'-'dhlonal .,..,. . .........
.... Locll .... lllrilllhld.
Cllt 1-801).2117-011711 Or 114-23'JL
0488 Roaoro
btobtlohoi 11'/L

..ncr on,,_,

w.._,.,..

LL...t:.~.-=:_L_...:::::...L.QI~.-IIJ~you to understand what to do to make the

_.._

.liE--~
Hondo Aooord a.ry Rod
I Spaid, C.l Allor I P.ll 1144411 0021
1 1 1 2 - - EX,-

ond

_..lllnov.

Ron'a TV e.r-.
In lantlh oleo -..a mool
othor llnndo. ...... -

opplllnoo ,_.,...

wv

30WM311DIIIol14-4*2414 •.

~'C =~. ~~ ":&amp;:: I~..;.;.;.:~=~..;;;..;;~
82 Plumbing a

ii:l.-e.

~==H::-=eat=l":"nf.IJ==~

OEO IIIIa 1111 1
-nnty. goo I F - • o -lngAnd Cooling.
-gooal: .......,_
lnllllotlon And Borvloo. EPA
88 IJNnd lrrl, AJC, ....., Cor1lftod. Rooldontlll, CcJmmor- .
~
oloon, I ;oii;;;;L;.;;IIW.;,;,~...
.;;..111;;.;.,;,1.- - -

a:r--::.. _,

84

Elactrtc:al a

Refrigeration

relationship work . Mail $2to Matchmake~ .
P 0 Box 4465. New York . NY 10163.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) It's essential lhat
you be opt1m1Siic and enthusiastic regard·
1ng the outcome of events today. If your
attitude 1s strong and . constructive. you'll

secret.

AOUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Toda y
your chart 1nd1cates you m1gtlt ach1eve
success 1n th e very same areas whe re
you were prev1ously thwarted . Regroup
your forces and try agam. or· even a th1rd
BERNICE
make the moves to make you a winner.
time if necessary .
VIRGO
(Aug.
23-Sept.
22)
It
you've
been
PISCES
(Feb. 20-March 20) Begmnmg
BEDE OSOL
neglecting several close friends recently , today , start to make eflort s to increa se
th•s •s a good day lo make amends. Try your range of soc1al ac11v111es . Yau·re 1n a
to get 1n touch with all, because they 'll be cyc le where you cou ld be very lucky
delighted to hear from you .
meeting new people and makmg new
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) D.vote your fr1ends
efforts and energies today on financial or ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Changes
career obJeCtives that are meaningful. tend to work for your ultimate benefit
These are your strong areas and you today , whether they are precipitated by
might be able to pull off someth1ng big.
act1ons you take or mfluences over wh1ch
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Somewhere. you have no control. Don 't think small or
Thursday, July 7, 1994 ~
far removed .from your present circum- be static.
,
•
ld be 1 me- stances. good things m1ghl be sl~rnng on TAURUS (April 2().May 20) Today has
In the year ahead. you cou
ex re .. your behalf . What's occurring may be far more promise for you than early sigIV to rt una le ·n
1 endeavors where you w1ll ~
•
•
or : revealed to you over the ne&gt;et few days.
nals might indicate. Something promising
be lrying to improve the ,quahly of Ide I SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) A cou ld develop through a partnership
.
s ou love You'll be lucky IOilhem
person Y
·
benign gesture you made recently m1ghl arrangement
and they'll be lt,~CkY for you.
be repaid you today in far greater mea· GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) This could
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) Your com- sure lhan you gave . You're in a cycle turn out to be a very profitable day tor
.,ml·slic outlook and demeanor
.
.
.
where good deeds w1U be commg home you . provided you think in terms ot doing
petent • Opl
·
today will win admirers as well as act1ve
good tor olhers as well as tor yourself.
l I
fans to roost .
supporters . Spearheadcn•ca opera 1
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Your Sincere motivations won'! go unrewardyourself instead of ass,gnmg surrogat~s. influential friends won't be averse to help- ed
· to patch up a broken romance? .
.
Try•ng
mg you today 10 ach1eve thmgs you can't
The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker can help ·

ASTRO·GRAPH

~1'-"'::t.:
'.
oo1t lor .loo or Eolf,
1211011111~2-

LOTS OF CUTE GU'i'S
f\ERE, CI.JUCK, AND
Tf.IE'{ ALL TI.JINK
MARCIE AND I ARE
REALLY SOMETHING'

1 nn, '81

- ...._-

r\o r t h

probl ems'' Probably you ei ther love

304-6711;1523.

76

\\'P ~ t

H~·

1984 9-10 lltuor Tohoo1 ~_c. PS,
PB, 1\100 mllao, $38,uuu
111111.

horUon top,

9 Cric ke t

8 Abhor

Opening lead : • J

1084 Ford, full 1lze converalor~,

... 114 1182 3011
1:00,

5 Pr int er ·s
measures

po sitions
I 0 Pro lit on bank

The solution
is logical

Serv1ces

,....

SH E AN' PAW
JEST WENT FER
THEI R MORNIN'
JOG'!

'80 Chevy 112 ton pickup, 4WD,
305 qlno, 0011d, - . , fllr,
11500 090, 114.0112-tSI~

2doO ~

oondftlon
12100,
11MI24211.

15 YORE MAW
HOME ,
JAMEY

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

drive, tl,200, 114-388-«*1.

6 Sa iling ship
7 - St Lau re nt

34 Res tau ran t s

South
L

,.._ tm Fcwd Plck.IJpa, 6
Cylinder, saso • saso, Good
CondHion, 614-3117-7230. •

1817 Conwo J3,700, . - .

07.11.

HARNEY

For Hie or hde, 1M4 S.10
~'fpor, lnctudloo CB. 304-6711-

motor, aood oon

4 Stitches

Vul nera bl e Ne1l her
ll&lt;'a lcr Sou th

Ct1ovrotot, Ford, ~ pickup
bodo. Bhort 0&lt; long. No ruot
304-t754281.

114-114~2521.

J2Peg - - Hea rt
33 Fleur -de- -

+A K
.. A II Ill R 1

tiM Chovy truck, 114,700. 3041711-78111.

5

tQI OR.J
"'K 4 7 S

¥fi -1

P.ll.

llrgo tlr ..,

• R fi :1 2

•Q

tt 7

• J :!
... . I 4 :1

11112 Chorn Rid Hondo Acoord,
5 Speed, A14 44tl 0028 Aft• 6

cut11na. $1.00-$1.71! por

........ $12011,114-14
2br. opl., - . , _ WV, portly turnllhod,
lAIII•
lnclUclod, Antiquo bothtulldb logo, 1100.
114 14121:'11
S350irno. dopooll _..ad. 77UMi oiiM .....
BUY l SELL ARROWHEADII,
3 Fumlohocl And Bllh, 114-112-2122.
W.tar /Trull Pold, f300IIIo.
. , . _. . . Portor - · 114- 54 Miscellaneous
,.._
Merchandise
I Furnlohod, Ullll....,._, No Polo, UtltHioo 1! 111111 Door , ..... :12 Pilei, 14 ........, $250/110. StOO
40 Inch. llotol -~1340, . - . Tlvu
· C11t
Fw a-,
8111301,
I Pt.
Kitchin
CablnN,
1111Ul

=-·

~I

L

• A K ~J4

!:::!

~St., Polnl--.

53

• I0

:i

SOl ''l'll

1110 NIAOn :ZX4, ,.W tir01, I
opaod, bod
14,000 milia,
~ good
ftlon, 114-1112·

bofe. :IOW'III-11'7hnyt1Mo.

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

;5;2~~;.;~G~ood~;S--~

Jockoon,

Livestock

63

1MIIM. ....... 1010.

A.-.. Ml or
clll1114.f83-371~ EOil

a,,.., RokH,
a

S3SO; 8N Ford Troctor, s;!L350i
.lohn Doore 11 R Wing ..,..,

1581.

2 Bod- 2 lllho, $271!111o.
• t2711 Doooolt, • Utllftlao, 2
1111• N. Of VInton, AvoUobto,

11: Vllllgo

Hotllnd Hoy

And "-ua,. B•l•.-.. $1,000 Upj
Hoy Toddor SSSO; Hoy Wogona

3 Bodroom Or Double- Or
Llrgo 2 B o - Smlfl
Yord $30Mio. Ront, ih4-44t·

51

• .I 1 0 q I

DEIAOCRA'TK (;1STRIMIOIV
15 GC1v'£.R UMWT
CCRRl!PTia..J

118'11 Ford F250, 300 I cyl.,
autonwdc aunvleor blue whh
blue lnteilo&lt;, ,.. tl,.o, 841000
mil•, 15500, 814-941-2000 01p
or 814-tMa.a44 evening~ .

$42"00; 1f71

Ort~vely

=.=..."TTI.c1.0:~ :":".....-~r..."':.
'",.;-:.;;.._~_::""'.,lllf""c.:--=·c,_ ·:= ,;,~,;,·::t.-.-~...;.·~'"....

Mobile Homes ·
tor Sale

11n 21 HP B1illrue Tractor,
Dlloel Whh Uvo Powor, Hycl,.ullc Connoctlonl, 5 fl. Bt11oh
Hoa. I 5 fl. Blldo, 211 Hno.
$5,DOO, 114 44t 3040.

...ve neme 1nd phone number,

:...=.!. bo:;roocurh
dopooh roqulrod, no :u"...,a":: ',!:G~~
pole, li4-81:1-2211.
7IOI.

For ...;, by log home, 2bdn11. opllo., totot ......... .,..
1110 oq. 1, tul bm..- p11onoo1 lumlohod, ioundry

CIA. ctntrot voccum, co
Olldng, otono tlraplooo, lorgo
dllck,
321!111
oulbulkllng
-ad
wor1t roorn, 2+ - I i i
woodod .,.. . - lo toom,
lllial Bchool Dlotrtct, ........
&amp;14-lii2-Zitl, - . . •*7133.
llvto homo Pllnla
....,....Ilion, lilt, 2 bot!., 11ono
on front I dllck, lilting on I
loll. 114 4411433
,.._ llory - . 1 loundry noorn and both, t -

Fann Equipment

....,.,,...... ttaaa. 814-2~

.

42 Mobile Homes

All real ..... odvO!IIstng In
lhls
II lllbjed to
tile Fo&lt;loral Fair Housing Ad
ot t 968 wlllch moi!M a llogol
to odvortl!e •any proferonce,
lmlllllon or chcltmlnallon
bu8d on race, color, relglon.

61

Hot Point - r , vary Chain s- bert I cholno 1o fit
good oondhlon, 'II .. II., $200, al,_ ony .... Baat prlcoo. In
114-11112-t173.
• - Skin Equlpmont, 3048~ltl2t or 1~
box, 2 1G" I 2
IIIII In box, FARIIALL "H"· Eocolfonl condJ.
tlon wHh ,.., wot llno, londoro,
llg111a, PS, pull typo llc:kte blr
- · 11850. NEW IDEA- Roller
bor hoy flka, wholl d~-. u·
Clllonl conah~L ,.. taath.
11500. HAY TEuutR· 2 boulld 1 yoor. $850.00 J.D. HA~
BALER· llodat 24T, oxcolfonl
oondHion, fllld ...dy. No tlo

14~ol8t

•n.

r.doctlvltlot1~304-

v,

"-•f'P"'

V'ltllfl'f

Wontod to
or """"
ec:r-.
•utl.lble lo build on 1nd
to o bllcklop rood, lt4-

1br - · Hlghllnd Avo, eaa
,._., StOO rent, you PlY
utliHIIL :104-367Q, 1:3C).7:3Gprn.
One Fll'nllhod And One UnfurnWied Hou- For R1,., Rt. 7N.
~.: Umha, No Pill, 814-

t:r. •

liiiSI, · -

..

will Nlurn call.

NOT to oond monoy throuah tho
mol until you hovo lnviiiTgotod
Rentals
tho olllrfng.
VENDING ROUTE: Won, 011
Rich Oulck. Will Oat A Stoody 41 Houses for Rent
c.oh tnoomo. Prlood to Satl. 1aoo.tzo.4363.
1 Bod- In Oolllpolll,
4 Whho Avonuo, $171111o Or
sao With Utllllllo Plld, 114-416-

~n.

)

~i

EAST

WES T

1'5 JUST A lvYJF'£

1~371-1885.

~ W11giilllonCh, With
sao-.k; 114-M~-252~.
Borblll, Dumbollo, And "-'oL
110 lbo Of Wllghto,l30.1~
Roornolor rent·- or month. 2'lU.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
U

t !! ..,.

Trucks for Sale

tillY Ford Rl"llif 414, 2.1 FUll'
lnloct!!'J.. 4 Spood, OVer Drtvo
AIC llllt'll c....u., Vary Good
CondHion, Hlah lllloo 14,250,

Merchandise

Sltoplna with ooold"G.
Aloo' troTiar - · All hook-upo.
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., :104·773-

AMity • 114-384~2511.

AI;

• 1\ K .I :1 J 2

11~~885.

3884710.

,.nt. S2Ginlght,

Stortlna 11 $1211/mo. Glllll Hotll.
114 t41o9180.

72

7 II 9·1

11111 cnov Stoptlde, ioww.-d
body, 350 V-1, rune good, very
ah1rp. auto tn~namlnkm, mult
Mit, 30Wll2·2157 onor 1:00.
11178 Chovy, 414 314 ton, tool
bo1aolladdor rock. $21100. 114o

buy- -

INaTlCEI

Doy c... lit ohlfto, CPR I Flrol
Aid quol1
tiiCI, hal mMto. paon-

rille:!

3 112 Aer•

• II

good, nMda eome body work.
11000. 30WIS-3418.

:104--~~8114.

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
-..mondo thll you do buolnooo with paopte you"'- and

32

tor ltttlna quollflcotlono to: 1'1$-21111.
Dolly lontTnot, P.O. Bo1 721-0,
Flhh loptlot lodrllor Toch I IttPonwor, Ohio 45111.
lint coro, Rodr.y, Ohio ODin
A.. you lntorutod In nurolng? ·lion Thru Frt. 7:00 14.11. To 5:30
BaaJnn1na AUG I, HRDE lric. P.ll. Giving Chrlotlln Cora For
wtl epoMor 1 a... In Point • y.,.. n.wbotn To 11 y..,.
PINMnl to ,,.In yeu to-... Otd.I14UI2Wl
0 c.rtlllod Nurol"ll Alolotlnl.
Tho trllnlna II ,_ II you moot
JTPo\ Title ID auldtlt- .. I ....
-od _,.., or
l'llonwr'k•. For ..... '"
lion col OOUOd, 304-3U-4180. II
no..,...,, ... m ng1 EO£

rn.nt BulkUnge On

To 1 Buyor. All Utllhloo
Avolllbto, 111446-31157.
Food lot, (t2,ooo.q. It conc:rllo,
1\OOOIMI tt. Nm IPICI, 1ac.
Ioiii~ -.1 Will. 301401L olio.

Business
OpportunHy

•.,.....,Ill llarflyn. 304-a:l-21141
Accloptlna oppllcotlono lor vloootatfOftlllendont,-lol-

A~~ - C AT

IIERCEDES 300D 1882 Flnt
TI.Wbo, I Cytlndor, 01-. Low ·
1111::1:, hcollont llolntenonco, ·

11113 Fcwd ton truck wtnow clltlo
,.ella, VI, good ur-. runo

Rooms
Roomo lor

11/L; t2 Line -11"11 Allay. Call
Bill Connell AI Donna s...n,.,.,.

Qo

Financial

of groUnd, tlt4-'JII2.m7.

or-. Hood 111n1
moner or w1n1 a carMr, elthlr

COIIIICERCIAL PROPERTIES
FOR SALE IN JACKSON
COUNTY, OH~ llrplono HI,..
gor On eo Ac- 11/l; 2 Apan·

I Adlolni"G Lola. 2 Aerie. All To

AVON! All

or 1--63M.

&lt;H - f1ovf't

,JE.W
c"'BI-E. c ,.~roiNfL.·.

1

Aer• Of Land In W•rnCPuntv WMt Vlraln&amp;l, Prime
Huntlrig, $10,000, R lnt....,od,
to flnlah mr payment. on 114-:zaf.1008.
deanlr, 814-882-4531.

45131 114-446-ntz.

Noodod .f'uN nmo Worbro For
Doy C.ro Contor. lluol Bo AI
Lout 18 Yoo,. Old And High
School Gmuate. Protw Pooplo
nwrea.
With bpartonco Wortd"G With
Ao~c:tiOM* Col. Oocor E. Click, Chlldr.n. Sand R01.- To Qoi.
llpollo Trtbu,.l CLA 318, 821
L.lciMO
• • - · Third Avo., Doll polio, Olf 45131.
:104
..~.
Ownor/Or&gt;lrll)
9 Wanted to Buy
C.rd,.t Fr.iglrt Conlon! II
hlrtng oxportoncod olo'a to run
Ant~ wtlt buy ono ~or tlltbOd, oom pore-go of
ontn houullold, O.by llortln, g.,.vonuo pulling oornpony
top doltlr paid, ~--'11141.
c,.u.ra or pulnng awn trlllllr,
Ctoon Lito · llodel c.,. Or hlltth lnoll'lnoo wldlonlot I ¥1olon IYOIIobto, buo plltto
Truclla, 11187 llodelo Or - .
boiHIII lnou,.,_
Smith Buick Pontile 11100 ovolllbto,
ovolllbto, ..., cord oyotom,
Eut- A-uo, Oolllpodo.
Woalliy
OICIIo. .IU,
rider
D ca...e.t .. OMIWII,.. waN,..._ ~.......... homo. 1-.z!O.

.........
thoro
momotn,oldaid11:::~.~lntlqUI

Wanted to Do

llolntononc:o;-l&gt;.ilritlng1
wookly G.n0..1
Yord
Work
Wlndowo Woohoa
~alng mt~ll, at1rt new, r-.
11porllnoo, ,_.uppll01, , _ Guno,. Ctollllld Light Hauling,
AMI•nllal, St•ve:
lntormotlon, IICMibllgollon. Sand Comm~~~
~~.....,
SASE: C.ocodo DOpt·SOL. P.O.
Bo1 11421, San Angelo, TX 111102. S..n Valley NII'OifY School.
Chlldcoroii-F eo~:30pm Agoo
FOSTER Po\REHTS NEEDED 2-IC, YOU"G School Ago llurf"G
To Sllbto, LoVl"G, Thoropautlc Summer. 3 O.ye p« Week MinHom.
Envlronmenta
Fot Imum 014-440-3857.
Chlldr.n WhoM Uvto A,. tn
Crtolo. ll'llnlng, ongoing 24 Will cllln - · ..-ni"GL
-How C... ll.linogomtnt Sup- 304-t7Hitl3.
Per Dlam COmJ&gt;Of1tlatlon
Will otoom c1oon corpoto choop
Eom

a.r.go Solo: Thu,. 71h, Frt 8th,
A Nllurol S - Group
Sat tlh. Woatorn Booka, Antiquo Form
With Soclol, EmOtional, And
Dtahoo, I Gillon Oullor Chum, Educatlonol
BonoiHo. Wo S...
cto&lt;hoo, Toolo, Dollo, Whlolbor·
vice
ChlldNn
From
row, Lata Of Mlacellaneoual 1at South-om
Ohio
ComOn Lhtlo Kyger Rood munHII• Onty. For More Info
Thol Goo• To Rlvor Volley High C.ll /Send ff•ume To Robin
School.
Harrfl, R..lden1l1l SerYk•
COOrd., - · P.O. Bo1 1110,
Golllpolll, OH 45831. 114-416Pt. Pleasant
112811.
&amp; VICinity
Hardwue S1llaperaon Needed
For Local HI_,. Sto.- In
Gonogo Salo-1&lt;1"11 Aeoldonca, Golllpollo.
Sand Roo- To:
FII..Cll Ada.m, ......,.., July 7-8,
CLA :115, c/o Oolllpollo Dolly
bin Of Shine.
Tribuna,.821 Third Avenue, CW.
Hpolll, "" 45e3t.
Pomeroy,
HELP WANTED:
Middleport
Tractor Troller Dio111 llochonlc
&amp; VICinity
With intornol IEitomol Dl3 tomlly yord Ute, Rlggoc,_, hportonco. WogM Com,.,.
Rei Obc&gt;vo Eoor1orn High au,.te With Allllhy. A - To
School, July IIIII I lth, IJ.4, Truck I T,.lttr Boivlco camor,
tolftfolon, golf clubo, now 1104 21th St ... ~ Pltllaroburg,
oountry crofto, , _ I uNCI WV :ztltOt An EoE.
cJothll, ,,bookc... cu.,..wood,
LP w·~ED
,_ 11ud onlmolo I much mora. HE
-' :
All Yord Sileo llutl Bo Pold In Troctor Troller Drtvoro llln. R•
AdVInc:e. DNcll,.: 1:OOpm tho qul_,o- CioN A CDL With
doy botore tho od Ia lo run, Good Driving Rooord 3
-•••-- 1 ...._ Frld
Polnto
IIU.
lhort-Mout
Sunday - - · :....,....
oy, Oparlllono, 400 1111411 Ringo.
llondly
odhion
10:000.m. SS.OO /Hr. Apply AI Alloo Tnllor
Sllurdly.
Rtntolo 1104 21th 8traat,
Cor-' ..... ono dey only, July 1.Po==="'!:',::WV~An::·;;;.EOE:;:=.....,..,..,...
I. t:oo.? lilt SyCIIfiOfl St., 1immodlllo Ooonlngo Avolllbto
Mkld._,, Ohio.
tor c.rtltltd liu- Aldoo. C:O.
Carport, Thu.-dly/ Friday, J1.4, potHivo Wogoo, 01-ol with
Clrlotono R- Hilt 112 milo Exportonoo, Sign on Bonuo
paot tho B110on on 33.
Avoltobto, Equot Opportunny
Employer.; eor-t thio A.....
toni ·01-or of Nuroi"G,
Public Sale
8
Pine- c... Contar. 110
Pl..._, Orhr., Gllllpollo, Ohio
&amp; Auction
Rk:lo Poo..on Auction Company,
tuM timl ouet-r, cornptoto
urvlco.
UconNCI
ouetion
168,0hio 1 Will Vlrglnll, 304-

tillY Rodman Rlvorvlow t4ri0,
2 bedroom, t both, gu lumoco, Need a roommllte lmmedlltety.
2 112 ton centr11l arr, wlnyt un- ma.. Of t.mlle, t230/mo., $13
derpinning, P'ue appllancea, dopoolt nog«lobto, no polo, 112
11000, 1~..:14ol3.
v.z Clbto 111111, 1~11112·
11114 t4x80 a,.ncty Wino 3 Boclroomo, 2 FuM Bothe, 3 Ton CA, Nlco One BR Unfumlohod
Ratrlg.
With HNt Pump, Llundry Apan_,, Range,
Private
~rklng,
Room,
Undon&gt;lnnlng,
Tlo Provided.
Downo, All Sot IJp On Privati Wottr, Oorblgo Pokl. Rented Lot, ..."I Extr1a, lm- Requl.-d 8~3ol5 Anor
medtata Po=
...an, 114-~ 5p.m.
1367.
One bodroom, Ill "'IIHioo lul'Anantion -t8180 HornN How nllhld, $21101ln0., 11W4~25211.
lvollabto In W. VA. ·Ill. Stlla
Dulol neighborhood, l l a
Homto, Pl P-nL W. VA. · County.
2 tiodroorn, oornploto
304-t7&amp;-t4QO.
lumlohad, oil utiiHioo
F- Cont,.l Air- Froo Air On IVIIIobto July 1. For oddH
Any Now SI"Gte Soc:tion Homo Information, plo- CIM 614-11112In Stock· MI. St1t1 Home1, Pt . 2:292. If no - • ...va rnNNII'·
Pl....nt, W.VA. 304.75-1400.
Savo 15,000.00. Norrto 28172 S..n Valley Apia. t BR 1255.
Soctl-1
Oloplly,
Don, month • Utllhfoo. Dopoolt ~
llornlng
Room
ul.-d.
~~":!~ 21157
Sornolhi"G
vallable. 8
·Roduc
S8 000.00 • F,.,.h
Chy llol&gt;llo 11-o • Qolllpolll, Two 1 bldroom fumlohod
()If 814-446-1340.
opartmonto In lllddl•~,g"lo,
114-11112-6304 or 114-1111:1·11:
34
Business
Furnished
45
Buildings

Fn"!:/

"Here's an unu sua l wedd1ng p resenl .a g1ft certlll-

thl day before the ad ._ lo n..tn.

Sundty odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
F-y. llondoy odhlon • 2o00
p.m. Sllurdly.
Big I Fomlly Gorogo Solo:
Th'-"t Frt, 0--4, 1983 Bull Run,
Vinton.

BE&gt;"~ C•NIME'i&gt;-&lt;:. 1~~~ orJ ' " "

=--·

Lost &amp; Found

7

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

Apartment
for Rent

Fumlohod S Roorno I Both,
Ctoan, No Poto, Ro,_.onoo I
Dopooh fl«&lt;und.l14-446-tSII.

l04-t7&amp;-1103.

6

44

\

·'

Pn.....,ws !CCI

Voong Riders (CC)

,.

�Page-16-The

Sentinel

-

~

•,/

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

e've

~

Wednesday, July 6, 1994

Ohio Lottery

:•'

Marlins
turn tables
i on
Reds 4-3
I

ott a

L

...

l

I

ou •••

I

Super Lotto:
25·27·2'1·29·31-34
Kicker:
2·9.0·9·4-2

Pick 3:
5· 7-9
Pick 4:

8-5·8·4

Page4

Low tonight n.. r 70, partly
cloudy and baey. Friday, partly
sunny. High In 90s.

~

•

ent1ne
, Vol. 45, NO. 45
Copyrlght1994

Pentagon readies contingency invasion plans

BIG BEND
700 W. MAIN ST
POMEROY, OHIO

By RITA BEAMISH
Associated Press Writer
WA SHINGTON - Although the Clinton administration's latest Haiti
policy blocks Haitian boat people from entering the United States, it will
be relatively easy for them to gain entry to safe havens in Panama and
other countries, U.S. offic1als say.
Haitians intercepted at sea will still be screened before being sent to
safe haven camps. but they will not have to meet the "same son of rigorous" standard - a well-founded fear of persecution - required for U.S.
asylum , said one official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The Pentagon, meanwhile, is proceeding with contingency plans for an
invasion of llaiti should economic sancuons fail to drive its military rulers
from power. A four-ship amphibious group - wilh 2.000 Marines on
board - sailed for Haiti on Wednesday to stand by for the possible evac·
uation of some 3,000 to 4,000 Americans living there.
Two weeks ago, Army Rangers and Navy Seals staged exercises at
Elgin Air Force Base in Florida and on the Gulf of Mexico simulating the
seizure of an airfield such as the one in Haiti 's capital, Pon-au-Prince, and

SHOP OUR XTRA VAtU-,
S~CTION AND PUT SOM~
VINGS IN YOUR POCK~T t1

'fl\A
SHOP THESE LOW PRICES

ASSORTED FLAVORS

SOUTHERN

PEACHES

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Nickels and.
dim es. Gov. George Voinovich
knows that is how some peopl e
may respond when he talks about
$125 million in cost savings out of
a $15 billion st.ate budget.
But Voinovich insisted Wednesday that amount the Ohio Depart·
ment of Administrative Services
has saved over the last three years
is significant.
He challenged local school districts statewide to follow the exam·
pie of operating more efficiently.
"I can certainly tell you that the
business community in Ohio feels
that the money they are investing in
education is not paying the divi dends they are entitled to, and are
very anxious to sec us do a beuer
job with the money that we're
investing in schools," Voinovich
said.
His admonition came at a news
conference in which he gave a
"Golden Scissors" award to the
administrative services agency for

FOOD LAND

GLENDALE SODA POP

the capture of a pon, The New York rimes reported today. It said Ote
exercises involved about 2.000 uoop s.
The U.S .. Coast Guard intercepted at least 1,537 Haitians in 34 boats on
WedneS£1ay, bringing the total to about 14,000 since President Clinton lib·
cralized U.S. policy on Haitian rcfugres on June 16. The refugee popula·
tion has swelle.d to 7,500 at the U.S. na val base at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba.
A day after unveil ing plans to usc Panama - and eventual ly the
Caribbean islands of Antigua and Dominica - as safe havens fp r fleeing
Haitians, admini stration offi.: ial s were busily clarifying th e po li cy
Wednesday.
Three officials who spoke on condition o nonymity contrad icted
William Gray, President Clinton's special advi er on Haiti, who sai d
Tuesday that safe haven would be granted only those who could meet
the "well-founded fear ' ' standard required for U.S asylum.
dnesday was that boat
The administration's position as of carl
people would be granted safe haven with "no questions asked" beyond
stating a wish for protection, according to one State Department official.

But later in ~~ ~ day, two other oll llial.s s:mJ u had llccn decided some
proccss mg wou ld be used - a li beral11cd version of tl1e asylum screen·
1ng, wnhout the length y intervi ews ~lal asy l11m applicanLs undergo.
The modificat ion apparen tly was 1n1ended to partially answer critics
who compl:uned th at a different st;mdard was be ing used for Haitians,
when rcfugccs from other cou ntr1 ~s such as Rwanda ami Bo&gt;nia can enter
safe ~a vens wah no qu es uons asked.
Randall Robin so n: hcacl of th e lob bying group Tran sAfrica, said
Wednesday thatall Ha•u tms picked up at sea should be granted passage 10
the safe haven m Panama. lie saiCI the administration was clouding the
quesuon of whether refugees would have to meet the same sumdard as for
U.S. asylum.
The admini stration's explanation - on the one hand indicating usc of
the asy lum stan~';l'd and on the other s~.ggestmg a more liberdl processing
- amounted to a nonscns1cal pol1cy, Robmson sa id .
H? renewed his call for a multilateral invasion as the on ly way to ev ict
Ha1t1 s mthtary rulers and St:luneh the flood of refugees.

Voinovich: schools
must cut expenses

YOU CAN'T AFFORD NOT TO

LARGE S

2 Section•, 12 Pageo 35 cenfll
A Multimedia Inc. N-•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 7, 1994

PEANUT BUTTER

COSt savings in State construction ,
telecommunication and employee
health benefit administration.
Voinovich said the $125 million
represe nted a real savings, even
though tot.al state spending rose to
a record high during the same three
years. He said the growth rate was
the lowest in 25 years.
" Because of the savings 01at are
occurring we are able to fund other
things in state government," he
said.
Voinovich said schools should
follow his admini suation's example.
" They arc no better than h1gher
education, or other state agencies
or other services," he sa id .
" They've got to do what everybody else is doing. They've got to
restructure.' '
About 500 of the state's 612
school districts belong to a coalition that is suing the state to overtum the current method of financing primary and secondary educa·
tion.

U.S. seeks
N. Korean
campi iance ·

. '.

..

NEARING COMPLETION - Work at the
site of the rock and land slide at Hobson that
occurred in the spring or 1991 is nearing com·
pletion. Seeding of the 1,800·foot area, which
was affected by the slide, has begun and the

reclamation project is expected to tie completed
in u few weeks. The U.S. Office of Surface Min·
ing, Reclamation and Enforcement in Ashland,
Ky., has charge of the $1 million project, which
got underway
about 18 months ago.
c

Sheriff labels gas fumes, UFO repo/i 'mass hysteria'
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By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
An unsupervised slumber party
apparently wrong when children
called emergency officials early
today claiming they were exposed
to chemicals and wimcssed UFOs,
said Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulsby.
Five emergency crews and sheriff's deputies responded to a call

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AG stops to promote
Clinton crime proposal

Coca Cola Products

By JAMES PRICHARD
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Whil e Janet
Reno spoke out for the federal
crime bill ,. dozens of protesters
spoke out against the U.S. attorney
general.
Reno told a crowd of about 500
people who rallied at the State ·
house Wednesday that they must
put aside politics and pass a compromise version of the bill. The
measure would set aside money for
more police officers, state and local
prisons and crime prevention pro·

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1994

SJ.79

grams.
"People throughout America
have come together to fashion a bill
that ... could have a real im~ct on
crime in America," Reno sa&amp;d.
Different versions of the legislation are pending in Congress.
Those versions include: a $22 bil·
lion, five-year bill passed by the
Senate; a $28 billion, six-year bill
approved by the Hou se; and a
$30.2 billion , six-year bill being
discussed by a conference committee.
The committee's version
includes $10.9 billion for st.ate and
local law enforcement; $8.4 billion
for state and local prisons and $7.6
billion for crime prevention .

Funding would come from
money saved by reductions in fed eral bureaucracy. The conference
committee has not sent the compromise proposal back to the House
and Senate.
The bills all include a "three
strikes" provision that requires
mandatory life sentences for people
convicted of a third violent felony.
She said the bill provides "a
balance of punishment, policing
and prevention that can make a dif·
fercnce."
About 50 people at the rally
protested gun control and the
action federal agents took last year
at the Branch Davidian compound
in Waco, Texas. Others supported
Reno's appearance.
Ohio Attorney General Lee
Fisher admonished the protestors,

some of whom chanted "Murderer," and .. Reno' s got togo." .
Dayton police Lt. Randy Beane
repeatedly was shouted down by
protestors as he recounted the death
of his partner. Steve Whalen.
Whalen was shot about two years
ago by a man with an assauIt rifle.
"As I stand here today listening
to about 12 people show absolutely
no respect for · law enforcement,
I've never been more proud of law
enforcement," Fisher said.
But Reno's speech didn't sway
opponents.
"My fear is that it's just another
way for the federal government to
control the general public," said
Pam Sheets of Columbus.
"What is in the crime bill that's
going to stop crime?" asked Dennis Wallcer of Columbus.

PUSHES CRIME BILL - U.S. Attorney General Janet Re
spoke at a rally Wednesday at the statehouse in Columbus as Oh'!o
Attorney General Lee Fisher listened. Reno was on a five-c't1 t to
to support President Clinton's crime package. (AP)
Y our

Search of O.J.'s estate may cloud future trial

Country Style

LB.

to assist, but it tics up a lot of emerThe children th en went oulsicle whether she was there every 30
gcncy personneL"
and mistook a lightning bolt for a minutes to check on them," SoulsNine children between 6 and 14 UFO, he added.
by said. 'There cou ld have been "
years old were found at the home
Two of the children were trans· real disaster."
of Deborah Roach, but authorities ported to Veterans Memorial HosMeigs County Childrens Sc r·
could not jetect arry unusual odors. . pital because they had hyperventi- vices wilt investigate the incident,
Soulsby said. Tile children were lated, Soulsby said.
he added. No charges will be filed
telling ghost stories and a smoke
Roach had been checking up on against the children or th eir parbomb went off in the basement the children every 30 minutes, he cnts.
which may have caused the chit- added.
·
Columbia, Scipio, Rutland ,
dren's eyes to bum, Soulsby said.
"It doesn't make a d1ffercnce Middleport and Pomeroy emergency crews responded to 01e scene.

Ohio anti-gun control protesters jeer Reno

ASSORTED FLAVORS

c

Armour

that several chiidren had been
knocked unconscious by chemical
or gas fumes around I a.m. at a
Woodyard Road residence in
Columbia Township, Soulsby said.
" What it turned out to be was
mass hysteria," Soulsby said. "I
don't think it was a prank call.
" lf there had been an adult there
that wouldn't have happened," he
added. "It's not that you don't want

WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
ofricials want Nonh Korea to make
an " unambiguous commiunent" to
fully comply with an mtcrnational
treaty barr;ng nuclear weapons
deve lopment.
Stme Dcparuncnt spokeswoman
Chri sti ne Shelly sa id Wednesday
the United States also will insist
Nortll Korea· implem ent a 1991
agreement with South Korea to
denuclearize the Korean peninsula.
Both issues will be rai sed in
ialks beginning Friday in Geneva,
Switzerland, that also will deal
with U.S.-Nor~1 Korean economic
and diplomatic relotions, as well as
No rth Korea's stat ed desire to
replace its nuclear power reactors
with a design that is less well suited to pro duci ng plutonium , an
ingredient in nuclear weapons.
The talks were arranged after
former President Carter vi sited
Nort h Korea last month and got a
promise from President Kim 11
Sung to frcczc hi s nuclear program,
wh1ch Wa shtngton sa ys appears
a1mcd at developing nuclear
weapons .
Sllclly said the talks arc expected to continue on Saturday and
then break before resuming early
nex t week. She stressed that there
was no time limit on the conference
and she declined to speculate on
how long it might last.
The U.S. delegation will be led
by Robert Gallucci, the assis tant
secrct:lry of st.atc for political-military affairs and President Clinton's
coordinator of Korea policy.

/

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The spots on the driveway . Municipal s~owing that there were emergency
decision by police to scale a wall Judge Kathleen Kennedy -Powell ctrcumstances that supponcd scal - injured and lay bleeding while the
offic?~r.s went to get a search war.
and enter O.J. Simpson's estate · said she would rule on the issue ing the wall," Bergman said.
rant. . Deputy District Attorney
raised a thorny legal issue that today.
Detectives testified that they :-:'arc1a Clark asked the judge.
Her decision cannot be immedi- rushed from the crime scene to
could haunt his murder case long
What would we have said? We
after a judge decides if the search ately appealed, legal experts said. Simpson's mansion to left him
would
have 'said they were de.rclict
But it can be appealed during a about the killings.
was legal.
m
fulfilhng
thetr duties.••
.
Simpson's lawyers say police trial, or on appeal if Simpson is
After spying a spot of blood on
Qut
Simpson
lawyer
Gerald
entered the estate without a war· convicted of murdering his ex·wife Simpson's Ford Bronco parked in
rant, then misrepresented the cir- and her friend, said University of the street, detectives testified, they Uelmen warned agamst letting the
cumstances to get one. Prosecutors Southern California law professor feared someone else might be in government break the law, saying it
would encourage citizens to do the
say police had to enter because Erwin Chemerinsky.
danger. When they received no same.
they thought there might be an
Legal experts say motions to answer over the intercom and tefe·
emergency.
exclude evidence are rarely grant· phone, they entered the estale with- . "A~ain and again, we hear the
detectives sav. 'Well, we didn't
The evidence the defense wants ed. Chemerinsky and. Paul out a search warrant.
to exclude from the preliminary · Bergman , an evidence and trial
Police can enter a home or prop· know what we have, we didn't
hearing - which will determine if advocacy professor at the Universi· erty ~ithout a warrant if they are kno~ w~.~t happened on these
Simpson will stand trial ty of California, Los Angeles, pre- pursumg a SIISJleC~ think evidence prem1ses, Uelmen said. "I don't
includes blood found on Simpson's dicted the judge would rule against will be destroyed or believe that know what they had. 1 do know
\Yhat they didn't have. They didn't
car, a bloody glove resembling one the defense.
someone is in jeopardy.
have a semth warrant ..
found at the cljm~ scene and blood
"The prosecution made a strong
"What if someone had been

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