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                  <text>Page-DS-Sunday Tl mes-Senilnel

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant, wv

KC tourney
will resume
tonight

()hio Lottery
~

l'

Pick 3:
922
Pick 4:

~­

9497
Super Lotto:
3-16-23-25-32-39
Kicker:

,~~ ,

Page4

Ton l~ht ,

clear.

Lows In the 60s. Tuesday, sunny.
High In lhe mid · 80s.

863475

•

ent1ne
Vol. 45, NO. 52
Copyrighl1994

DISPLAY CERTIFI CATION· J im Rlnins.
lert, associate administrator, Pat W&lt;H&gt;Ium, R.N.
branch manager, Karen McCall, RTm -M. &lt;"erti fi ed X-ray technolo~ist and Ted Adams, dia~ -

nostir testing center manager, display the Holzer
Clinir of Jackson's Mammography Certifica·
lion .

Clinic receives
certification of
mammography
J ;\CKSO~ l c~~

ol ! CJd~tdo~..:' (t\ ('K ) Cn1nn 1Jl·
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pora\H lll ;uJnouncc d Thurstb y conllllU~ d 1mprovcm cnt m llJSJ4 earn ings .
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f3y p;lSS tllg thi s cc rtlliClli Oll,
Hol1cr Cli11 ic is proven 10 ll~ vc the
ht!.! hC'I I SI~HHI;trds of Jn&lt;lfllll lOg raph -

ic ~t es ting. hoth in r esults :1 nd safe -

ty. Cli &lt;t ii Cl'S or Ullit cd S t:lt CS
WO I11 C1 1 tkvc l opi n g breast cancer
:trl· one tn ei gh t. Marnmlll_: r:Jrh y
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salespeople with extra training to
earn the right to call themselves
realtors, and who've agreed to
abide by professional standards and
a striqcode of ethics.
Sonny Garnes is president or
the Southeastern Ohio Board or
Realtors.

m 11 110il lw the "l'U liHI qu :1rt n ol

ltJiP, :md
qu :l rll'l"

S~7. K

llldlron lor thL'

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qtJ:Hh.: r 1 1) 1)-l c arn1ng s

12.(l pe rce nt

O \ ' i,_' r

PROMOTED · Daniel S.
Pullin has been promoted from
associate chemist to assistant
chemist in the chemical department, effective July 7, 1994, at
the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant.
Pullin join OVEC in July of last
year. He is a graduate of Ohio
University with a bachelor of
arts degree in chemistry. He
resides in Nelsonvillr•

cent o\· cr the fir ...; t quarter ol· 1904 .

\

JUST ARRIVED!

5 Grand Am Gt's, 2 Drs. &amp; 4 Drs.!

MAR IET TA- Til e o llt cc of
th.. :

add&lt;110 11 ol E:1rl Dn ~g ·'· DP~l. In
hiS podiat m pr:lc tt rc 111 M:tn clla
and Ath ens. D r. Dri ggs is a n;J\ 1\'C
O hio~m :md cornp lctclf h1s 1 w o -yc~1 r
residency tr;Jining ~H Vlc lho1n B ap -

ti st Ho,pi lal . Evansvil le, Ind. Gr:l(l ualln g !ounh 1n hi s c lass !"rom lhc
Univ c r \I I Y
of
OstcopalhJc

PORTSMOUTH - Douglas S.
Peterseim has been promoted to
director of office services and facilities according to Roben L. Morton, president of American Automobile Association Club of South
Central Ohio.
Peterseim h:;s been the club's
director of safety and education
smce July 1993 and prior to that,
assistant director or safety and education since June 1992. He is a
native of Lancaster, Ohio. Peterseim is a graduate of Ohio State
Univer.;ity.

Mcdic&lt;n c ;lnd Health Sc1ences Colol Podiatric Medicine :111&lt;1
S 1;rgcry. Dr Driggs received th e

$18,998
Power seat, cassette. cruise
control, rallye gages, illuminated
entry, power mirrors, s poiler.
custom interior with bucket
seats, 16" aluminum wheels,
power windows

l c~c

•

''Excelle nce· 1n Pofl 1atr1 C Medicine
Aw~ 1 nt" 111 I 1J&lt;J2. During hi s resi d e n cy, h-.: wor k e d with th e

Evan .-.,· tll c Me n 's Spurt:-. f='~Js ­
~,;ioto nu ~s .tiiHI lws lectu re d on dia ·
hc li c lun t c ;~r e :IIHI plam;~r

l:tscll i.s/hccl .sp·ur .sy ndrom e at the
tndi ;,1 n ~ t PiHir;ltric

tton , 1:11l'

Mcd1cal A ..;..;ori a-

lll l'~ trng .

Business brief
NEW YORK fAPI - CBS Inc
droppc&lt;l plan&lt; lo huy QVC In c.
af"tc r !.1 riv&lt;.1l suitm, cable company

ComcaSI Corp .. proposed to th e
home sl1oppmg ch annel operator .
In stead . the TV nc1work plans to
spend S 1.1 hill ion bu ying iiS own
SI&lt;)Ck.
Mcdi:1"n:dy.sts said 1hc buyback
should prov ide CBS wilh some
prot cc li on over the ne xt tw o
months ag;tinst a sharp s10c k price
decline that cou ld attract unwel come bidders. But they said unless
the company wk cs some signifi cant
steps to nnprovc its :lffihatc rcla lions, dcvc lnp programs th"t appeal
to young er viewers and diversify

111to

c:~ hl c

TV. it may he a 1argct

for a wkcovcr.

Fraley promoted
CHESHIRE · Michael L. Fraley
was promoted to yard supervisor in
the yard department, effective July
I, 1944, at the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant.
Fraley joined OVEC in 1979 as
a laborer. He 1ransferred to the yard
department in 1981 as a coal handler and advanced to barge auendant the following year. He was
promoted to tripper operator in
1984.
In 1987, Fraley was pro'!'oted to
tractor-diesel opemtor and m 1989,
conveyor operator. He progressed
to cmne operator in 1990.
Fraley and his wife Linda reside
in Gallipolis. They are the parents
of two daughters,.

Some homes tiy to separate
you from the environment.
Our homes make you a
part of it.

New Car Financing
on Selected Models!

1994 GRANDAMS

As Low As

Automatic. air conditioning, tilt, cassette. cruise
control, rear defogger, drivers side a ir bag , antilock brakes. balance of 36/36 bumper to bumper
warranly. Low Miles

,$11,990

1994 SUNBIRD
Automatic, air conditioning, rear defogger,
8,000 low miles

As Low As

$9 900

Call today ror more lnrormalfoo

Jt 1&gt;1&gt;"1" ac;hian

...,.tractures,

PONTIAC.

Inc.
More choices make for better living.

P.O. BOX 614
RIPLEY, WV. 25271

t -800-458-9990

~==,====::=-J
Ave.

CtL~ tc m

Ohio. I dill surveys l or my own di slrtc t &lt;tnd

tried to co mpare how docs tillS ra11k us wnh othe r
di str ic ts, ar c we in fact too many chiefs and not

enough lndtan s 1 " Dunnan saul.
The Oh10 Department ol h luca1um pcg ~c d stu dcnl enro llm en t 1n 1 9X3 - X~ al I.X27 ,17.\. w1t h the
number of principals, aSS IStant pnnupal . ; and other
administrators at 'J.672.
In the 1993-~4 school year. c nrolln~c•nt dcclmcd 10
1,7X2,77 1. The nu mbe r of aclmtnistr:unr.s was placetl
at 11 ,962.
The Ohio Coal iti on i'or Equ11y &amp; Adeq uacy of
School Funding noted V01 novic h 's challenge for
schools lO follow the lead Ol agencies under hi s CO il·

Gallia deputies
investigate
armed robbery

1994 BONNEVILLE SE

Peterseim promoted

"Whe n I w~Ls a sc hool .s upcnntcndcnt up '" norl h·

lly GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Th e scarin g job of squ elching
lircs is even honer for the Middleport Volunteer Fire Department
because of soaring costs, Fire Chief
Ken l:l yer said Friday.
The fire department 's appropriations tota le d $16,500 in 19 93,
while expenses were $19,994, Byer
said.
"You have to remember everybody's in hard times and must take
cuts," By&lt;!r said. "But, it' s tough
and it's hard on morale. With the
volunteer departments you need to
have new training and new
approaches .... This is the cheapest
division that this town has, paying
no salaries."
Training requirements - which
mu st come from the budget have jumped to more than 30 hours
and may expand soon to more than
I 00 hours of training.
Slate and federal rules have also
changed dramatically, Byer said.
"The standards arc changing
every day," Byer said . "To comply
with these slandards takes money."
The village's volunteer fire
department has held games to supplement money that comes from its
tax levy, along with village fund s
and county emergency service
funding, Bycr said. The dcpartmcnl

\

Former Gallia
resident
named to post
COLUMBUS -Catherine Clark·
Eich has been selected as diversity
manager for Nationwide Insurance's home office in Columbus.
She is the daughter of Mary E.
Clark of Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
She comes to Nationwide from
The Ohio State Univer.;ity's
CoUege of Human Ecology, where
she was the director of siUdent and
alumni services.
Clari:-Eich graduated from Gallia Academy, and has an undergraduate degree in retail merchandising and communication, a masters in education, and a doctomte in
counseling, developmental psychology, and evaluation from OSU.
Clarlc-Eich is active in community 3Ctivities. She and her husband, Paul, live in Columbus.

adminislf:.Hors th an bu:-.1ne s~ or th e rest o f !-!0\'C rn -

mcnt.

troland ~:ut cnsts th rough more ,· I lH.:Il' lll opr ratiOilS.

\Villiam Pl1ill is. coaliti on L'\l'l'Ui t vc dtrcc tor, said
1hat rs cxactJy what schools h C~vc· hcc11 ti&lt;Hn~ .
" Where 's the ~ovt: rnor bci..'n ! ColurllhtJ'i C1 t y has
annou nced cuts. Cleve land ll~1d Ill :ui JH itt!JU~ cuts,
C incinn'lt'

ha.'l bee n L: uttm ~, C~m t u n uty Lllt ha lf of

1hclf central ofli cc Sl: til, " Ph &lt;I :" 'a'd
St_;_ltl&gt;g uaranu.:cd private luar1-.; tn ht.' lp . . dill•.d di strH.: t.-; avo id hudgct dcfll'lh ri.'LJU IT C ll ll,tl l"lll" in

S PL' Tldlll ~ .

"Sehoul dtSi fi LIS have been

C ullin ~.

,\ntl hence

sc hool d tst n l'L'-' have been way ahead ol othn Jgcn-

n cs 1n terms ol cuts." Philli s sai d.

Tot;tl swtc and loca l spending for primarv and seconda ry educatio n has grow n, but opponc111.s of the
current funding sys tem say edu cation 's 'ha re as a
pcrccn lagc ul the state budget has dec lined.

Middleport fire department
survives with tight budgets

th e

,,til" pcnml in I~'J:l and 2.4 per-

Dr. Driggs joins podiatric
staff in Marietta facility
~tnnnu n ccs

Du nnan said .st:hool adrn iu istrators arc sensitive to

comments lik e tho se Vo1novich made abo ut
increa sed hiring of managers at a wne when there arc
fewer students in the sys tem.
" I thmk many di stricLs as we speak arc downSIZing administraDvc s1a ff,' · Dunnan s:ud .
"B ut I'm not so sure that' s go in g to m ntribulc to
a world class, 21 sl centu ry education when we have
chi ldren m risk. all kinds of probl ems dcaltng w1lll
fi nance and staffin g, and meeti ng new swnclards, and
10 provide llle kintl or prog rams tha i we need to provide for our boys and g ~rl s." he .s;rid .
Dunnan and other school :td \'OCales said national
studies show schools empl oy comparatively fewer

15'" Aluminum wl1eels, s poiler. air
condi!tonmg. casse tte. tilt wheel,
delay wip e rs. rea r defog ger.
door loc ks. anti-lock bra kes.

'~

Donald Hcbh , DPM.

schoo l di strict and sec what's exactl y happenmg."
said Barney Dunnan of the Buckeye Association of
Sc hoo l AdminiStrators.

$11,795

tiJ ~ pJ iy\ ti.· l;llll'-.), l h'l".'-l lllJl ~·J ;J1Hi l'i.jll 1p111 Crll

Star Bane shows
•
•
•
Increase 1n earn1ngs
St;~r

1994 SUNBIRD LE COUPE

·\L T I L' tiJI;![I\Jil l"(I\L' I \

Appraisers... con11nued rrom o-1

(' 1:-;C INN /\ Tl ·

lly JOliN CHA1.FANT
Associated Press Writer
COLU MBUS, Oh1 o (AI') - Gov. George
Yoinovich is mis~ ing the mark with complainLs that
schools arc too quick to hire admmi,trators and too
slow to cut cos1s. lea ders of two educati on groups
said .
Both issues bubbled to the top m debate al"tcr a
Perry County mun rulmg that the sUJic sch ool fund ing system was unfair and inequilllble because of disparities m per pupil spend mg.
The slate said it will appeal.
Groups of admini strators and loca l districts took
issue wi .h rece nt Voinovich comments about lh c
need for schoqls to cut costs and administralors.
" I think that the governor really should go to a

lt111~ dlld ri ~orut~'&gt; 1~''-!ill!..:. :--L·Il,·duk''l

and th e publi c th:ll

inspector to find the answers.
Trust me: the peace of mind
you'll be buying is more than
worth the cost of the inspection.
For more information about
appmisers and inspectors, call your
local Southeastern Ohio Board of
Realtors. Realtors are real estate

School groups dispute governor's claims

The Ohio Valley's New
LOW PRICE OUTLET

wnh the k:t··a possi hk' n ... h . To ot11;11 rt tlii" :tppro va!.

I''' II I'I" JII :llh ·~·

t;liiOil .

you may win a $5 prize from th e Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. Leave JOUr name. address and
telephone number with JOUr card or letter. No
telephone calls will be afcrp ted. All fonte sl
en trit•s should be turned in to th e news paper
oilier by 4 p.m . each Wednesday. In case of a tit•,
the winner will be chosen b.v Iotter)·· Next week,
a Gallia Co unty farm will be featured by the
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District.

MYSTERY FARM- Thi' week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs So il and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs Co unt)' . lndh·idual s wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm 's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
guess to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

Section , 10 Pages 35 cento
AMultimedia Inc. Newspaper

t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 18, 1994

Gallipolis, Ohio

FARMERS' MARKE"I -Area-grown pro·
duce was available Saturday at the Middleport
Farmers' Market near Dave Diles Park. Mar·
vene Lowery of Middleport, left, buys her goods

from Shirley Sayre, who operates a 20-acre produce farm in Letart. The market will be held
again from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. next Saturday. (Sen·
tincl photo by George Abate)

More killed in refugee stampede, shelling
GOMA, Zaire (AP) -Rebel
forces in Rwanda declared v1ctory
today as hundreds of thousands of
Hutu refugees threatened to over.whelm a second area of neighborin Zaire.
gThe Tutsi-dominated rebels said
ihey had swept away the lasl_.Hutu
~overnment resistance, and that a
j;ease-fire was in place. The rebel
)eader said he hoped the end of the
fighting would halt the desperate
Jmman llightoutofR~:Yanda.
.
· It was eerily qutel today 111
:aoma where up to I million terri·

r

fied Hutus had f!cd advancing
rebels in the prcv1ous five days. An
estimated 170 people died Sunday
in cross-border mortar fire and in
two massive stampedes across lhe
frontier . Today, the shelling had
slopped and the gunfire had tapered
off.
.
Hutus, feanng reven~e from the
rebels, began crossmg mto Goma
last Wednesday -at least 300,000
commg across on Sunday alone.
From Geneva, the Red Cross
satd fears of a rebel advance mto
southwestern Rwanda touched off a

new exodus Sunday into Bukavu,
60 miles south of Goma.
Red Cross spokesman Tony
Burgener said tens of thousands
had arrived by this morning and the
number was rapidly approaching
I00,000.
"There is a potential of another
couple of hundred thousand people
that might come in there as well,"
he said. With that many refugees,
the situation in Bukavu would
become "very dangerous." he
said.

The manager of an area res tau ·
rant told Gallia County sheriff's
deputies he was robbed at gunpoint
early Sunday morning when he
stopped to help what appeared to
be a disabled motorist, but Sheriff
James D. Taylor seems skeptical.
"This is an extremely unusu·al
crime for Gallia County and we're
looking into its validity," Taylor
said. He declined to comment further, olher than to say the incident
is still under investigation.
Sidney D. Shorter, 24, 40 Lincoln Pike, Gallipolis, told deputies
he was taking home the night's
receipts from Chef's Galley and
Clipper Lounge when he saw a
white Ford Escort pulled off the
side of Fairfield-Centenary Road .
The vehicle looked disabled and
Shorter stopped to sec if he could
assist the two men.
Shorter told deputies one of the
men pointed a sawed-off shotgun at
him and ordered him to get out of
his vehicle. They then stole the
money from his car, tied him up
and left the scene.
Taylor would not release the
exact amount of money stolen, but
said it was several hundred dollars.

also gets money from an agreement

with Chcshtre Township for fire
protection.
As of June. lh c villa ge's fife
~ qu 1 pmcnL fund was

man y years they've don e a good
job. If it ain't broke don ' t fix it.
They've got a group of dedicated
work ers over th ere."

runn ing a

Firefighters donate more than 80
ddic il of S490.
hours each munlh just washing
But this defi cit IS not a proble m trucks. mowing grass and malcing
since the fire contrac ts co m e in at repairs. This docs not count the 50
the. end of th e year. Middleport emergency runs th e departm ent
Mayor Dewey Horton saitl .
responds to, Bycr added .
" Th e fire department is no
Only one -third of the departworse off l11an they have been," ment's time involves making runs,
ll onon said. "They arc no worse Bycr said .
off than the rest of the village."
" I don't know what the solution
The village has had bill s of is. I feel the people in this town are
S25 .000 for four snow day s and paymg a lot of t;I.\CS already,'' Byc r
S1,600 for pesticide tests that never ~a id . " Th er e n c~ d s to b e ince nt ive
occurred before, Horton sa id.
fur ,lhc working ma n and woman to
"As far as the village goes we're mo ve lo Middleport. Th ey bring in
close r than we were at 1hc beg in - lax dollars ...
ning of thi s year," he added .
Adding the fund1ng prohlems is
Horton praisc&lt; l the departm ent .
many youn g people ha ve a "mc"They rai se quite a bit of money flfsl" att ilucle and arc less lik ely to
and they arc preuy much self-sup- vo lunteer, Bycr
portin g and self-run, " he said. "For

Local briefs+-------.
Man hurt in motorcycle wreck
A Guysville man remains in critical condi 1ion following a motorcycle accident Sunday afternoon in Orange Township , the GalllaMeigs Post of the Swtc Highway Patrol reported .
Lowell M. Guthrie. 22, IR 776 Iluck l.~k e Road , was transported
by 1hc Tuppers Plains Emergency Squad to St. Jo seph Hospittl m
Parkersburg, W.Va. , where he was admiucd to the intensive care
unit. The hospital would not release lllc cx tenl of hi s injuri es.
According to the accidcnl report, Guthrie was eastbound on S~tte
Route 6R I when he went oil the right side of the road. The motorcycle overturned and then struck a tree ami a fence post. susUJining
moderate, disabling damage.
The accidcnl is still under invcsDgation .

TP-CWD announces shutoff
Water to residents along several roads in Chesler Township will
be shut off Tuesday the Tuppers Plains- Chester Water District
announced .
Water will be shut off around 9 a.m. on slate Rou1c bclwecn
Chester Agri Service and 500 feet south of Baum Addition , Bawn
Addition, Warehouse Road, Wood Road, Pomeroy P1kc bc1wcc n
Epple Road back to 2,000 feel south of Chesler.
Wa1cr should be back on at4 p.m. said Donald C. Poole, district
general manager. Th e reason for the .s hutdow n is to com pl e1c
repairs from a leak on July 2. In th e evcm of rain , work wil l be po.s t·
poncd to the following day.
When service is restored, a boil order will be issued until a sanlple can be drawn and tested, Poole said.

Continued on page 3

~Comet fragments smash into Jupiter
\

lly PAUL RECER
:AP Sc:ience Writer
; GREENBELT, Md. - One of
'the biggest of the 21 rragmems of
&lt;:omet Shoemaker-Levy 9 smashed
:Jupiter early today, causing the
EOSl powerful planetary exploston
:ever observed and blinding some
::instruments w~tching from Earth.
''
~ The comet shard, called frag:ment G, hit the backside of Jupiter
:and immediately bloomed mto a
•

''·
•

any of our experiences on Earth,"
hugh fireball that for a few
moments was brighter' than the · said Lucy McFadden, a University
of Maryland astronomer. · 'Ten
whole planet. as1ronomers report.
thousand megatons is the total
· "It was a big wallop," said energy that we can create on Earth
Eugene Shoemaker, a U.S . Geolog· with bombs."
ical Survey scientist and co-discovInfrared radiation, which is heat,
ered of the comet. He estimated was so great from the explosion
that the energy released by frag- that detectors at the Keele Observa·
ment G was equal to about 250 mil- tory instruments were overlion megatons of TNT and created whelmed, or saturated.
temperatures of more than 30,000
More big explosions are expect·
degrees. ·
ed as fragment H, nearly as big is
"The energy released is beyond G. hits later today.

"'

Pictures from other telescopes,
including !he Hubble Space Telescope, show that the effects of car·
lier impacts have left black pock marks in a band on the southern
end of Jupiter. The marks are
spreading out and some now are
bigger than the diameter of Earth .
Scientists said the spots seemed to
be !~inning and it was unknown
how long lhese scars would last. /'
Shoemaker said that both G and
H were about two miles in diameter.

PLUME OF IMPACT • This image from the Universilf of
California's W. M. Keck Observatory in Mauna Key, Hawaii taplures the plume of impact G, lower lert, of Comet Shoemaker/Levy
9 Monday. This image taken from NASA ·television was photographed in the 2.2 micron infrared range. (AP) .

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

ROBERT L WINGE1T
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MliMBEK o f ·lbe Associated Press. Inland Daily Press Assoc iation aod
lhe Ameri can New spaper Publisher AsslXiatio n.

LErrERS OF OPINJON are welcome. They should

be

less than JOO

words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name .
address and 1elephonc number. No un signed letters will be published . Letters

should be in good taste , addressi ng issues, not personalities

Parkview Hospital
closes; are others
far behind?
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
TOLEDO - Mary Atkins litought she ~ould spend lite .rest of her
nursing career at Padview Hospttal. She enJoyed working wtlit her colleagues and patients, and it is near her home.
.
But administrators on Wednesday told hospt!Jil emplo~! that
Parkview, the city's only osteopatluc hospttal, was bemg closed
use tl
is losing money. Now she will have lo find another JOb.
"It's going to be hard," said Ms. Atkins, 34, of Toledo, who wod.ed
at Parkview for seven years. "You read about the demand for nurses and
other health care professionals. But in Toledo, there is a Sllflllus of health
care workers. It's very discouraging."
While Washington continues to debate heallit care reform, Toledo hospitals are taking painful steps to curb heallit care costs.
.
Two of lite area's nine hospitals plan to merge. Some are layms off
workers and eliminating beds. focusing more on outpatient servtces.
Workers are bracing for more layoffs and worrying aboutliteir futures.
. "Doctors aren't hurt when a hospital is having financial problems,"
said Andie Nau. a nurse at St Luke's Hospital in suburban ~umee.
"Downsizing hurts nurses and mamtenance and oliter employees.
About 400 people will lose liteir jobs when Parkview closes in three
months.
.
Parkview, which has 114 beds, will transfer its osteopalitic residency
program to St Vincent Medical Center A~~- I..
The hospital repor1ed losses of $1.4 million!" 1992. Its occupancy rate
was 29 pen:enl in 1992, down from 66 percent ·~ 1985.
"While we have been extremely successful tn the devei'?Jlment &lt;_&gt;f &lt;_&gt;ur
teaching pro~, lite hospital's patient base was not expanding tn sunilar
fashion ' Parkvtew Prestdent Joseph Ferguson srud.
He S:Ud St Vincent may acquire Padview's buildings 3fi!1 pup:.ny.
He said Parlcview likely would receive more than Sl millton from SL
Vincent as part of the physician training agreement He would not gtve a
specific amount
Earlier this year, Medical College of Ohio approved a plan to me~e
with Toledo Hospital. Medical College operates Medical College Hospttal, which has 319 beds. Toledo Hospiqll bas 774 beds:
Transition teams have started woikmg out details of the proposal,
which is awaiting state apiiUval.
.
Unions arc looking closely at lite plans, feanng that a merger could
lead to more layoffs.
.
.
. . .
Hospitals all over lite nation are trymg to cut costs m anbctpauon &lt;_&gt;f
hcaJth care reform, said Scott Fry, spokesman for the Northwest Oh10
Hospital Association.
.
.
He believes local hcallit care workers Will be able to fmd new JobS.
"We're seeing a shift from inpatient care to outpatient care to home
hcaJlit care. I litink there will always be a demand for heallit care professionals, just not in the same setting as was the case five years ago," Fry

sai~

period of transition follows a hospital closure or layoffs, he
acknowledged.
. .
.
.
..
"But I'm convinced that lite hospttal mdustry IS suffictendy senstnve
to lite needs of those employees and wiU do whalf.ver litey can to assist
litem in fmding heal lit care employment elsewhere, Fry satd.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday, July !S,litc !99th day of 1994. There are 166 days
left in lite year. l
Today's highlight in history:
.
Twenty-live years ago, on July 18, 1969, a car driven by Se~. Edward
M. Kennedy, D, Mass., plunged off a bridge on Chappaqutddi~k Island
ncar Martha's Vineyard. His passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, died.
On this date:
In A.D. 64. lite Great Fire of Rome began.
. .
In 1536, the aulltority of the pope was declared vo1d tn En~ land.
In 1792, American naval hero John Paul Jon~ dted to Paris at age 45.
In 1872. Britl\in introduced lite concept of v~ltng_ll}~ret ballot.
In 1927. Ty Cobb hit safely for the 4,000th ume m hts career.

Berry's World

WASIDNGTON - An administration-backed hoUsing bill workin~ its way through Congress is
· bemg touted by at least one lobbyist as a way to bring homeownership to "litose who need it mosL"
Others might ca ll it Clinton's
answer 1o oick.le-down econom ics.
In a suspect example of biparti sans hip . the House a nd Se nate
banking committees have slipped
home builders and realtors what
some consider a multi-million dollar gift A law that greatly increases
the size of mortgages the Federal
Housing Administration is allowed
to insure. If appro ved , the plan
would expose American taxpayers
to billions of dollars of financial
risk, while the benefits would fall
mainly to high-income home buyers in wealthy areas, particularly
California and New England.
The plan - hatch ed by th e
Clinton administration and
approved overwhelmingly by lite
two congressional committees would raise the limit on FHAinsured property from the current
level of $151,750 to $172,625. In
practical terms. this means that
(Tf/lr

In::

"S~ when did you become 'The Shadow'?"

·:,

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

buyers who make as much as
$71.000 per year - the minimum
income required by most creditors
to make payments on a $172,000

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
home - will soon be able to insure
liteir homes with almost no money
down , courtesy of lite federal government.
When the FHA was created at
the height of the Depression, credit
was nearly non-ex istent and default
rates were high. The agency was
designed to give banks incentive to
lend to low- and moderate-income
buyers by insuring mortgages that
wouldn't oliterwise be approved in
the private market. Now it seems
FHA is ready to redefine what it
means by moderate: An income of
$71,000 puts one in the top 13 percent of wage earners in the United
States.
With the government's guaran-

tee, high-income borrowers will no
longer have to meet the stringent
downpayment standards required in
the private market. Home buy ers
can put as tiule as 5 percent down
if they are buying in a wealthy
area, and can even fin ance th e1r
closing cos t and firs t-year mort gage insurance premium . And •f
they defau lt, the original lender ts
reimbUrsed by lite government
The plan is attractive to Clinton
for two major reasons. First, tt
allows him to fullill his campaign
promise to generate more housing
starts. Second, it will help kick start the recession-plagued rea l
estate markets of California and the
Northeast - which will be crucial
. in lite upcoming elections - while
placating powerful Washington
lobbies.
Not surprisingly, liti s plan has
the full support of a triad of powerful real-estate interests - the
National Association of Relators ,
the Mortgage Bankers Association
and the National Association of
Home Builders - which stand 1o
gain millions of dollars.
These groups are getting their

@ l, ~"t fO~ WOro-\ ~ TAl(: · "'fl;LfG~

HVl"'-E
~e. SAY&gt; it\ IS I)
A FAMil-Y AFFAIR .. ·

J"f ALMo$'T ALWAY)
ENt?~ TI-\E SAN\E WA.Y."

I

I

USU~I.l..'f t-IE $AY5 1-1~'$

REALLY

S'O~~y.,,

Tl\E L.~Sl liME t-IE EVEN
~~0U61-\i ME. Fl-OWERS .

\

\~

D.C. digest for summer's dog days
The dog days of summ&amp; came
early to the nation's capital this
year, and seem destined to stay
late, which helps explain the disjointed nature of what follows. It's
hard to develop a litesis longer than
a sound bite while television
reporters are frying eggs on the
sidewalk to make a point for lite 6
o•clock news.
First, dog bites man.
Washington is permanently
infected with a handful of bad
ideas, which, much like recurrent
bouts of malaria, reappear just
when you think the city is finally
cured. Among the worst is the
lunatic notion that the antidote to
government by jack boot in Third
World countries is a stronger, better-uained military. In a perversion
of Mao's famous dictum, Washington believes lhat democracy comes
from lite barrel of a gun.
The current application ill to
Haiti. National Security lea~ers
have assiduously spread the word
that Aristide wtll need the army
when he is restored to power, and
all lite Haitian army needs is a bit
of old- fashioned professionalism
plus concentrated training in good
citizenship.
It almost sounds reasonable,
until you remember that it has
never worked. It hasn't been for
want of the old college u-y in places
like El Salvador in the days of the
killer colonels, Iran in the regime
of lite shah or the Philippines under
the Marcos dictatorship.
Despite the record, the argument
never changes. If we ~ive Country
X' s military the toys 1t wants, and
uain its )cadets, we'D build a stable

institution amenable to American
influence.
What also nev&amp; changes is lite
result - an officer corps that uses

Hodding Carter Ill
its bigger and beaer weapons to kill
the opposition while contemptuously rejecting half-hearted
demands from the United States
that it slop misbehaving. Rather
than strengthened democrats, what
we invariably get are more powerful despots.
But what is evidence in lite face
of a fued idea? There are people in
lite CIA, the White House, the Pentagon and the State Department
who can't help themselves. They
see those comic opera uniforms in
Haiti and begin to shake all over in
a fit of anticipation.
Repeat after litem: When democratic fon:es are weak and military
fon:es are despotic, the way to right
the balance is 1o strengthen the military. Now take two aspirin and go
to bed until the fever ~Next, "It seems I ve heard this
soog before," verse 24.
.
As the president's European trip
reached its apex in Germany last
week, we were treated to a clutch
of planted stories in America's
leading newspapers about the
newly intimate friendship between
Presiden\, Clinton and Chancellor
Kohl of Germany. They were nothing new. For unfathomable reasons,
American presidents have a compulsive need to pretend to intimacy
with the ~pie they meet during
liteir official duties.
You name the president and he

emerged at least once from a ftrsttime meeting with some singularly
revolting foreign leader to speak of
their "close personal ties." Thereafter lite rhetoric can, and does, get
downright mushy.
Remember, we're not talking
about adolescent boys and girls, but
hard-shelled politicians. And yet
we are asked to believe lite kind of
breathless pap which ran last week
in The Washington Post and The
New York Times under the bylines
of oliterwise respectable reporters.
First, lite Times:
"Mr. Kohl... has become Mr.
Clinton's closest friend among foreign leaders. They share a common
vision of Europe, a love of eating
and a basically optimistic view of
the world."
Next, the Post
"Aides who remark on the evident warmlit between the two men
point 1o their working-class ori~ins,
their natural passion for polttics
and their equally impressive
appetites.''
Never mind that lite two stories,
run on lite same day, don't seem to
be translated from the same lex t.
They agree only that lite two men
share a love of pigging out
That's quibbling over details,
however. What someone ought to
ask, and doesn't, is what such a
"friendship" means in the real
world. The two men have been
thrown together for portions of
seven event-packed days spread
over 16 months. That's better than
Ronald Reagan knew President
Marcos, whom he slavishly
, praised, or than President Carter
knew the shah, whom he all but

The use - for political purposes - of "family values" has been
largely left to polemicists on the
Right, very much including the
Christian Right Members of those
organizations are increasingly
elected to school and library hoards
around the country, and litey then
try to decide for all the families in
the town what can and can' l be
taught and read in the schools.
They censor books and silence
teachers - all in the name of their
family values.
Yet I consider myself very much
concerned with family values. My
wife and I have four children, and
we have not in the leltSt been passive in teaching them about honesty and respect for others and the
dangers of censorship 10 free
thought We nev&amp; mention God,
however, so I expect many in the
Christian Rifhl would claim that
what we cal family values is so
deftcientllll to be fraudulenL
My wife and I appea- to be out
of step in another way. According

to all the rolls, a considerable
majority o the Am_erica~ people
beheve that what BtU Clmton did
- with regard to adultery -

Nat Hentoff
before he became president is of
liule importance. The man was
elected to be president, they say, so
let him govern.
My sense is that anybody who
commits adultery, in or out of
office, has a weak character. That's
one of the reasons I dido 't vote for
Clinton as p-esidenL The adultery;
the ways he dodged the draft; and
other IK:IS of questionable mootlity
in his years as governor made clear
to me that he would be a p-esident
who does not stand up for his
alleged principles. And I was right
- as survivors in Bosnia and fleeing Haitians can tell you. So can
civil libertarians 1111 they watch him
support a 17!me biU swarming wilit
such dracoruan measures 1111 60 new
crimes that will bring tbe death

..

penalty.
What does all that have to do
with philandering? The man's
moral compass veers with the
wind.
Pro-choice organizations claim
litey certainly have family values.
When a woman has a choice as to
whether to bring a pregnancy to
term, lite child will he welcomed
into - and thereby strengliten lite family.
Yet, in New York state, when a
woman legislator recently tried to
get a bill passed that would allow
moliters to be told if liteir infants
are illY-infected, the fierce and
successful opposition to that bill
was led by the National Organization for Women and the National
Abortion and Reproductive Rights
Action League.
As it is now in New York and
43 other states, all infants are tested
for illY - which leads to AIDS at birth. But they arc blind tests,
and nobody is allowed to tell the
names of infected infants. What

•

t

By The Associated Press
· !lot, humid and stormy wcalitcr
wJ! I return 10 Ohio on Tuesday and
remain for th e res t of the week ,
forecasters sai&lt;1 .
H1gh s will be in th e mid to
upper XOs ami lows wi ll be in the
60s. Sh owers and thunderstorm s
will be widely sc atte red . th e
Nati onal Wt at hcr Service stud .
The record -high temperature fu r
chi s da te at the Columbus weather
station wa s 9Y degre es 111 I RR 7
whrlc th e reco rd low wa s ) :J 111
1976. Sunset toni ghl will be at ~ :S X
p.m. and sunri se Tuesday at 6: I R

MICH.

money's worth from members of
Co ngress. So far this elec tion
cycle, lite three groups have given
a collective $3 16,000 in campaign
donations to members of lite House
and Senate Banking Committees.
That· s still substantially less than
the $1 million that the groups
poured into races during lite 1991 92 election cycle. According to an
estimate by a financial adviser
ret.ained by one private mortgage
insurance company, mortgage
bankers would boost their annual
reven ues by $48 millirn if the plan
goes through, while realtors stand
to reap an extra $222 million per
year.
According to the Clinton administration. the plan will help the
FHA by infusing it with lite extra
money high -in come borrowers
would bring to lite program. But to
those who ha vc seen lite mess lit at
FHA has created in many innercity areas. th e plan is Clinton's
ans wer to the trickle-down economics he campaigned against.
"We feel that the energy and
time and money spent could he better used in cleaning up the FHA
program and cleaning up the
incredible amount of foreclosure,"
said an official at National People's
Action, a Chicago-based community housing group that lobbied in
vain against the popular Clinton
proposal. "Some neighborhoods
have been devastated." Federal
Housing Commissioner Nicholas
Retcinas, however, told our associate Jan Moller litat lite FHA is selfsustaining, and that its ledgers
improved substantially last year.
Judging by a memo from Retcinas to Housing Secretary Henry
Cisneros. lite FHA has much work
to do before enticing high-income
borrowers.
"FHA will be a majif test of
this administration 's commitment
to reinventing government," the
May 10 memo states. "FHA suffers from significant management
weaknesses and outmoded systems,
lacks risk. management tools. and
has been 1o0 long wilitout an infusion of new talent with up-to-date
skills and training or lite resources
to train and reward staff."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

deified, but no better litan you or I
know the person we chat with at
church each week.
Even Hollywood's denizens
need more time to develop liteir
"intimate relationships." At the
White House, however, protocol
requires that its residents pretend
ther~ are shan-cuts along lite long
road to real friendship. It's a way
of sentimentalizing lite hard realities of the national interest and
international relations, and it's a
mutt's game.
Finally, "trust me" is alive and
well.
Health care caravans will be
striking out toward Washington
this week in support of a national
hcallit plan. There is just one hitch.
The caravans' organizers have
required lite sponsoring organizations to promise they will support
whatever legislation is recommended by the Democratic leadership in
both houses, a product whose form
and details had yet to take shape at
litis writing.
That's called buying a pig in lite
poke, and it proves one of two
litings: Either lhal cynicism has not
yet conquered all in Washin~, or
that, even now. a sucker ts born
every minute.
Hodding Carter Ill, rormer
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, editor and publisher, is president or
MainStreet, a Wasblngtoa, D.C.based televisioa production com·
pany.
(For iorormatlon on bow to
communicate electronically wltb
.this columnist and others, contact America Online bt calllnal·
27 364
soo-s "' .exl8Jl.)
kind of family values do NOW and
NARAL have when they are
ardently willing to allow the mfected infants 1o go home wilitout anyone knowing that they will soon be
attacked by infections due to their
weakened immune systems? More
1mportant to these pro-choice
groups, however, is lite sanctity of
confidentiality. That is, once the
mfocted child's name is known, the
moliter w1U be revealed to be HIV
positive.
It's more vital to them to keep
the mother's secret than to save the
infant who is obviously liOl a fetus
any longer, but a born person under
the Constitution.
Yet, the moliter will know inexorably - when the child, who
would have lived much longer if
treated. dies.
Is this truly an illustration of
family values?
Nat Hentorr is a natlo•ally
renowned aulbority on lbe First
Amendment and the rest clr tlte
BiD or Rights.

\

IToledo I89" I
You
IND.

-;:=__
;~; ~• IColumbus lsr I

87'

•

•

· ,~,~--- ··

FJirries

VIS Associal9d Prsss CraphicsNot

south east were expe cted to cool
temperatures down to th e 70s in
New England.
··
llighs in the 90s were forec as t
across most of the country' s mid -

section . Temperatures were likely
to rise uno 1he 80s from !he M•&lt;I
At lantic states wes t throu gh th e
Great Lake s. lll ghs in th e I OO s

were lorcc a..o; L m cc nLial Tex as ami
the arid Southwes t
Th e nation' s hot spot Sun &lt;L' Y
was Death Vall ey. Calif .. a1 I I Y
deg rees.

a.rn .

Around the nation
A storm front mov ed into th e
Sou thw es t today, bringin g li ght ning anJ scattered showers to hmd
swept hy wil dfires. while fog and
haze hung over much of the eastern
Uni ted St.ates.
Thunderstorms were expected
north froll). Mexico into lite Rock JCS. th rough the hi gh Plains. into
1hc Mississippi Val ley, east to th e
New England coast and south into
the Cmolinas.
Winds blowing up from th e

WVA .

Showers T-srorms Rain

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

More sticky weather on the way

Accu-Wcather- forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

Who really owns 'family values'?..

~
0 IINIJV NEA.

Monday, July 18, 1994

Tuesday, July 19

Mortgagers support cash cow housing bill

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G•neral Munu~er

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July 18, 1994

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy Clo udy
\01994 Accu-Weather, Inc .

- - - - - W e a t h e r - - - - - EMS logs 8 calls
Units of th e Meig s Co unt y
SCOl&lt;T SESSION - Area (;irl Scout
omd T~tra Norman. Ttw ~routs "ill ramp, s wim,
Emerge ncy Medical Service reportcadcttrs prepared Saturday for the sumrnl'r day
fi ...,h, hi kt• and work on rrafl\. Tht• program \\·.ill
ed eight ca ll s for assiStan ce
program to be held Thursday through Saturday.
ht· hl'ld from~ a.m.-.1:.10 p.m. Thur"lav and Fribetween Sa tu rday and Suntl ay
day •met W a .m.-') p.m. Sa turd:t _,. at tlw n~ort.
Pil'turl'd from left are Tim Bianro. sales/marketmomcn gs . Units responding includtSl'ntind photo hv &lt;ot·orge Ahatt' l
ed:
ing din·rtor fur Royal Oak Resorts. and IJ-)earn lri · · ~ ·~ •·It•·..: M,..li~.;,.a 11olnun. 1\t'than\· ( ' onkt'
MIDDLEPORT
7:02 p.m. Saturday. An n Street.
Pom eroy, Ruth Francis. Ve te ran s
Memorial Hospital;
2:46p .m. Sunday . S. Fo urth
John Jackson officiating . Burial
Virginia E. Derrick
will follow in the Centenary Ceme- Street, Gloda Dav is, treated at th e
scene;
Virginia Ed 1th Derrick, 62. lJ IO tery.
5:50 p.m. Sunday , Bradbury
Pall bearer s will be Francis
Gallatin St.. Ravenswood . W.Va.
Kuhn, Charles Plymale, Harrison Road. Audrey Wes t. VMH .
di ed Sa1 urda y. July 16 . 1994 in
CLEVELAND (AP) - The laundering trial was deadlocked Il - co uld do anything bu t convi c t
REEDSVILLE
Roc. J1m Cundiff. Tom Woodrum
Cheshi re.
attorney
for ousted Phar-Mor In c. l for conviclion.
Monus.
11:15 p.m. Sunday. Reedsville.
Born Feb. 10. 1932 in Dunbar. and John Mel van .
President
M1chael Monus sa id
" Representa tives of Phar-Mor
"G i&lt;mt Eag le and Pltar-Mor arc
Cathy
Smith,
VMH
.
W.Va.. daug hter of th e late Delbert
today he believes Phar-Mor offi - and (Phar -mor parent company) inte res!cd in exonerat in g th eJIJ Lawrence
Plants
RUTLAND
Aubrey and Ethel Boggess Mibm.
5:35p.m. Sunday, Ca rpe nter c •a Is orchestrated reports that the Giant Eagle attended the trial and scl vcs from any of the problems at
Lawrence
Gregory
"Greg"
she was a homemaker.
jury in Monus' fraud and money - had plenty of opportunities to sec Pltar-Mor." he said .
Surv iving arc her hu sband . Plants, 45 , of Cross Lanes. for - Hill Road , Gary and Ca rol Hay what was going on." defense attorPhar-Mor
off cc ials
'"
James E. Derrick: two daught ers merly of Point Pleasant. died man, Holzer Medical Ce nte r.
ney
Gerald
Messcnnan
said.
Youngstown
referred
calls
to
com
and sons-in -law. Jo Ellen and Scott Saturday, July 16, 1994. at Pleasant Columbia Township First ResponMesserman
sa
id
media
reports
pany
spokesman
Gary
Holme
.
'
.
Morgan of Ravenswood, and Joyce Valley Hospital following a shon ders assisti ng.
were manipulated to suggest that who did not return a telep hon e
SYRACUSE
Elaina a nd Larr y Epling II ur illness.
there was no fair way that a jury me ssage. A ca ll to G iant Ea g le
I :42 p.m. Sa turday. Pomero y
He was a graduate of Rio Grande
Am l':le Power ........................ 29 1/2
Spe nce r, W.Va.; tw o gra nd c hil headquarters in Pi ttsburgh wa~ ' " 11
Akro ........................................58 1/4
dren. Ryan Hart Morgan and Ethan College and a paralegal for the Nursing and Rehabiliwtion Center.
returned.
Ashland Oil ........................... .34 3/4
Michael Epling; two brothers and West Virginia Division of Human Freda Carsey. VMH pending trans·
Monus was acc used uf masLcrAT&amp;T
............................................
54
sisters-in -law, Delbert "Jim" and Services in Putnam County. a past fer to HM C.
Rank
One
...............................
.33
718
minding
an alleged $1 hi Ilion fraud
TUPPERS PLAINS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Carol Milam of Xenia, and Henry Master of Minturn Lodge No. 19, a
Rob
Evans
...............................
21
1/4
an
d
embezzlement
sc heme th aJ
5:37 p.m. Sunday, squad a nd
Saturday admission - Robert
and Darlene Milam of Cheshire; a member of Moose Lodge 565 of
Champion Ind ....................... 20 112
forced
Youngstown
-based
Phar ·
Bowles. Pomeroy
SJster and broth er- in -law. Lou JSe Nitro.
Cross
Lanes
United volunte e r fir e departmen't to a
Charming Shop ....................... 9 518
Mor
to
seck
bankrurtcy
court
pm·
motor
vehicle
on
sta
le
Route
681
Saturday disc harges - none
and Bill Soulsby of Pomeroy; three Melitodist Church and Tau Kappa
City Holding .................................34
tec tion.
Sunday
admission
....
Crage
sisters-in -law and husbands. Arbu- Epsilon Fraternity. He also par· West, Lowell Gulitric, St. Joseph's
Federal Mogui ....................... .JO 518
He fa ces 11 5 cou nts of mon ey
Brown. Racine
IU S and Kell y Beman of Charl eston,
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .34 Ill.
ticipated in local theater produc - Hospit.al;
laund
erin g , fo ur coun ts of wI l l'
K-mart ....................................16 114
7:50p.m. Sunday, state Route 7.
Sunday diSc harges - none
W.Va., Margaret and Donald Lucas tions.
fraud,
one count of con spi racy a11d
Lands End ..............................19 718
UOLZER MEDI CAL CEN TER
of Indiana . and Nancy ancl Conley
Survivors include his wife, Tony Jones. Camden-Clark Memotwo
co
un ts each of bank frau d.
Limited
lnc
......
-......................
18
I/2
Discharges .July 15
"Doc" Wickline or Dunbar; a Melanie (Haught) Plants: foster rialllospital.
Multimedia
Joe
.
.....................
29
3/4
mail
fra
ud and filin g false mcon rc·
Edward Long. Gale C. ora, Er ika
brother-in-law and wife , John and daughters, Annie Merica! of
Point
Raneorp
..............................
17
Lax
returns.
Eleanor Derrick of Charleston : and Ravenswood and Tammi of VBS to begin l onight
Bryant. Me li ssa Gruc sc r. Mr s.
Reliance Electric ................... .18 3/4
Hts trta l ended in a mistri al June
severa l ni eces and nephews.
Michael St utes and so n. Mrs .
Pomeroy;
step-son,
Thomas
Robbins &amp; Mye.-. ......................... 19
23 when juro rs said th ey wer e
Vacation Bible School at the
Friend may ca ll at the Straight· "Thaddeus" Cossabone of Cross
James
Rainey
and
&lt;
bughtcr.
Shoney's lnc ........................... l4 718
horelcss ly dead locked.
Tu cker &amp; Roush Funeral Home, Lanes; step-daughter, Beth Ann New Life Covenant Church ,
l!irths July 15
Star Rank .............................. .38 718
Ravenswood, today from 2 to 4 and Cossabone of Cross Lanes; parenL~, Chester will begin tonight at conMr. and Mrs. Ca lvin Shee ts of
Wendy lnt'l .................................. 16
tinue
through
Friday.
Theme
will
7 to 9 p.m. Services will be TuesWorthington
Ind
....................
IX
3/4
Wellston
had a son.
Lawrence and Allene Plants of
Stock reports are the 10;30 a.m.
day at 10: 30 a.m . in the funeral Point Pleasant; and sisters. Julia be" Son Country". Classes for those
Discharges July 16
quotes provided by Advest of
home. wilit Minister David Sander- Turner of Spring, TX and Gale three through 19. 6:45p.m. Jo 9
Terry Row e, Mary Baldwin.
Gallipolis.
p.m.
All
children
and
youth
arc
son officiating. Burial will be in the Taylor of Point Pleasant.
Mrs. Calvin Sheets and son.
Boggess family cemetery, Gold Births .July 17
Service was held at 1:30 p.m. invited to attend.
town . W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Session
Monday, July 18, at the Wilcoxen
or
Bidwell
had a son.
TRUE LIES
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, wilit
Jacob Melvan
1:00,'1:4~ lAlLY 11AT . SM'/~.I : OO.J:4':&gt; IRI
Rev. Bennie Stevens officiating.
ANHtS IN rH£ DUTFIELO
was
in
Leon-Bethel
Jacob J. "Jake" Melvan, 60, Burial
Continued from page 1
1:10 , 9: 10 I.».ILY 191.T . SioT/!U'I . 1 : 10 ,l: 10 lPG)
2336 Centenary Road, Gallipolis, Cemetery. Graveside service was
BLOWN AWAY
1: 00, &lt;J: .J0 C».fLY Mi\T . SA't/!IM. 1 :00. J ~ )0 IR)
drive~
died Saturday, July 16, 1994 at the conducted by Mintum Lodge No.
19.
DISNEY I LION KING
Ohio State University Hospital in
7: 10 9:00 lliULY f'llt.T .SII.T/SJ!I .1: 10,J:OO (GI
Columbus . A resident of Gallia James Watson
School bus driver certificates for Meigs and Southern Local
fHE SHADOW
County since 1977, he was a retired
7:20,9:20 1:1\lLY Mo\T .SKr/!U4 . 1 :20,J:lO (PC1.1)
School Districts were approved by the Meigs County Board of EduJames Robert "Jug" Watson , 47 ,
111
Second
St.,
Pomeroy
I LOUE TROUBLE
manager of lite Gallipolis branch of of Florence, South Carolina, forcation at lite board's meeting Thursda y night.
.
7:00,~;)0 Do\ILY IVI.T .SAT/SJJri . 1: 00,J:lO (PI:;)
YOUR
INDEPENDENT
Heiner's Bakery.
the
drivers
approved
were
Donna
DanJcls
..
For
Meigs
Local
merly of Henderson, died Tuesday,
SPIED
Born June 11, 1934 in Chicago, July 12, 1994.
Katherine Deskins. Vonda George, Lck1 Goo&lt;lwm. Debb1e Grueser,
AGENTS
SERVING
7:10,9: 10 llULY llilT.SitT/~.):.1(1 lPG)
he was the son of Mary Habzansky
Patti Johnson, Alberta Loftis, Cynthia McMillin, Gloria Oiler, Kim He was a former employee of Jhe
BABY'S DAY OUT
Fleenor and lite late Jack Melvan.
MEIGS COUNTY
bley Pauley, Dorsel Thomas, Minnie Thornton and Shtrley Wilson.
Wt.TIM,J!:S ~Y/flft».Y &lt;JG..Y 1 ; 10 R;
McLeod Regional Hospital in
STARTS
,JULY 19th
He married Barbara A. Brown June Florence, SC and also of Pleasant
Drivers approved for Soulitem Local were Wtlltam Dowmc. Jr..
T'OtUIIIY I.E E JONES Ill "11111 C L IE NT"
SINCE
1868
19, 1954.
Thomas
Hill,
Daniel,
Rifne,
Dan
Sm1th,
Delbert
Smtth,
Jerry
Sm1th.
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILAEILEI
Valley Hospital. He was a graduate
Survivors include his mother. of Point Pleasant Senior High
and Ernest Spencer.
. .
.
who resides in St. Petersburg, Fla:
In other action the board employed Tneta Wolfe as a substttute
School, lite Salem College School
his wife; three sons. Michael Mel- of Nursing, and Morris Harvey
teacher and Kality' Barrett as a teacher's aide for the severe behavior
van of Los Angeles, Donald School of Aneslitesia.
handicapped class for lite 1994-95 school year. Cheryl Crossan and
(Jeanie) Melvan of Tampa, fla.,
Robert
Hudak were employed for ftve days each, Shc1la Hashman
Born January 7, 1947 in Henderand Anlitony Mel van of Gallipolis: son, he was a son of the late James
for 13 days, and Nancy Carnahan for two days for summer tcstmg
one daughter, Sue Stephenson of 0. and Viola M. (Jones) Watson.
of early childhood handicapped students.
.
Gallipolis ; one brother, George
The
resignation
of
Cheryl
Crossan
as
school
psychologtst
effec(All Brands)
(Judy) Mel van of Inverness, Fla; He was also preceded in death by
tive Aug. I was accepted.
..
..
his
grandmother,
Leone
Jones,
who
one sister, Mary Ann (Martin) Smit
The
current
salary
schedule
for
ccrt•f•cd
Sk'lff
and
non-ccrttfJcd
raised him.
of Tampa; five grandchildren and
staff was adopted for the 1994-95 school year.
He is survived by two brothers.
several nieces and nephews.
Same Day Service
Attending were Jeffrey Harris. Robert Barton. Howard Caldwell.
John M. Watson of Gallipolis and
Friends may call 7 to 9 p.m.
I. 0. McCoy, and Jeanette Thomas, along with treasurer. Caro le
All Parts Extra
Thomas D. Watson of LawrenTuesday at lite Cremeens Funeml
Gilkey.
ceville, GA; and two sisters, Karen
Includes: Cleaning, Oiling,
Chapel where services will be held
Me
Doug
ale
of
Parkersburg
and
Adjustments,
II a.m. Wednesday wilit lite Rev.
Cheryl K. Yates of Covington, GA.
Greasing.
Service .will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday, J.uly 19. at the Crow-HusTI1e Dtilly Sentinel
A Gallipolis man was shot in the wrist early Saturday morning in
seh Funerdl Home, Point Pleasant
(USPS llJ-Hf)
Huntington, W.Va., the Huntington Herald-Dt spatch reported today.
wilit Eugene ZopJ&gt;. minister,
Howard Lee Booth, 26, was found by police about 3 p.m. lylllg
Published evtry afternoon , Monday through
officiating. Burial wtll follow m
Friday Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Obio by th~
· on the couch of a home in the Fairfield West secuon of the ctty. the
Ohio YaJ iey PubllahiDJ Company/Multimedia
Kirkland Memorial Gardens, near
786 N. 2ND AVE., MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
Dispatch said. He was bleeding profusely from a bullet wound tn
Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio 4!1769, Ph . 992-2156.
Point Pleasant
Second ch111 po1t11e paid at Pomeroy, Otlio.
his left wrist.
.
·
·
Visiting hours will be held at the
Boolit
told
police
he
was
wilit
a
group
of
men
tn a parking 1ot m
Member: llte Associated Press, and the ~~io '
funeral home Monday from 7-9
the 1600 block of Charleston Avenue. When he told lite men he was
Newspapct Auociation, National Advetll.stng
p.m.
Reprueotative, Branham Newspaper Salea,
ready to go home, litey became angry and one of litem grabbed h•s 9
713 Third Avenue, New Yorl, New York
mm pistol and shot him.
10017.
far~~tone
Booth was taken to Cabell Huntington Hospital where he was
POSTMASTER: Send addreat chanae. to The
treated
and
released.
Dai ly Sentinel, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Oh.io
Extended forecast
c han ce of showers or thund erTonight...Ciear. Low in lit e mid storm s. Lows in the upper 60s to
60s. Winds ligh t and vanable.
around 70. Highs 85 to 90.
Friday ... A chance of showers
Tucsday ... Sunny. High 85 to 90.
and thunderstorms. Lows around
Extended fore~:asl
Wednesday and Thursday ... A · 70. Highs in the mid to upper 80s.

--Area deaths-

DA says reports of jury
deadlock orchestrated
Stocks

Hospital news

,......-----Local briefs...
Board approves bus

l

II() U \1!1

""1-VUIO " """'

IIJ ' ' W I

llliAiroi iO Olr..T

DOWNING CHilDS..
MUllEN MUSSER 1
INSUUNCE

II~ONI': S OAI ,

FREE INSPECTION
SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
$395

Gallia man shot in wrist

TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2:30-4:30 P.M.

FRUTH PHARMACY

Divorces and
g: ;:~_:_~ :~ ·:·:~: ·:~ : ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~·:·:~ ~ : ~:_:_~ ~: : : :_:_::;_~ dissolutions
4l769.

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Outolde Molp CCIUIII)'

..:.

I

The following actions to end 1
marriage were filed recently in the · ,
Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun of Judge Fred W. Crow Ill:
Divorces asked - Terry L.
Cline, Coolville, from Mary A.
Cline, Racine, July II: Trudy R.
Reese from Mark A. Reese, both of
Racine.
Dissolutions asked - Theresa.
G. Ankrom and Cecil A. Ankrom,
both of Little Hocking, July 13;
Beverly K. Jones and Gregory Alan
Jones, both of.,Albany, July 14.

-~ ·

. -.·-

~

... .,... ...... ... . ..

-

,. Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; T•r~atlncluding

John A. Wade, M.D.
Salta 112 , . . , Drhra
Pl. Pleaunt, WV.

CaD 104-171-11441or Appt. or IDiar•atioa ,,
Memlter of Aetaa PPO &amp; Ft.tral Mogul PPO

•

GENERAL TIRE SALES
. -S•':'4'i ii;lili!i :t!1t!1:t3t:u ._,
l614-992-7161l

"

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465 North Second Avenue Middleport, Ohio 45760

�'•

•

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, July 18, 1994

Page-4

.,.&gt; .·

....

•
-"'-

:'W·

...
-.~·

. ·.

~.t.,

•...,.&lt;h'II

·;;r· .

CUMINGS SCORES - Hubbard's Greenhouse cleanup hitter
Adam Cumings beats the throw to Home Care Medical pitcher Matt
Campbell (with glove) to score during Matt Ash's at,_~i!Nhe third
inning of Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament game,
which Greenhouse won 14-10 in part because of the six-run rebellion
that erased the 2·0 lead Home Care took into the inning. (OVP photo
bv G. Spencer Osborne)

FLAMASAURUS 1a:x- Tuppers Plains pitcher Eric Smilh
threw nothing but heal in Sunday's third Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament game against the Middleport Cardinals. The 15 strikeouts accounted for all the Tigers' putouts. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne!

AT THE CENTER ol' the sHen-run storm the Tuppers Pl&lt;lins
Tigers whipped up against the Middleport Vaughan's Cardinals were
Eric Smith (right) and Wes Crow (to Smith's right), who c.hat in th&lt;·
dugout after their fifth-inning homers accounted for f1ve of lh!'
Tigers' last seven runs that helped pushed them to an 11 -0 mercy-rule
victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

In the Kyger Creek LL Tournament,

•

Yankees, Greenhouse, Tigers and Green record victories
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Swrf Writer
In addition to the completion of
the first-round action, the entry of
the first two teams into the
quanerfinals and the eliminations of
all but one of the five new teams in
the tournament as well as the first
bye team to play, what else
happened
during
Sunday's
resumption of the Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament?
The highlight of the day was that
three no-hiuers were pitched. Of the
four pitchers that contributed in
them, the two that shared the last
gem of the day found themselves
joining their team in exiting the
diamondfest in the second round.
In Saturday's action, the Tuppers
Plains Pirates beat Kyger Creek No.
1 14-3, Mason VFW beat Fruth
Pharmacy II- 7, the Middleport
White Sox shut out Rio Glllllde 8-0,
the Racine Athletics blanked Point
Pleasant's T-Shins &amp; More 1-0, the
Rutland Reds got past Point

Pleasant's Mead's Mody Shop 7-5
and Vinton defeated Point Pleasant
Hardware 14-6.
Gallipolis Yankees 11
Mason Co. Bar Ass'n 0
The Yankees' Cody Lane was
one error away from losing his nohitter in the fust inning of that day's
opener, because the grounder hit by
MCBA's Josh Reynolds went
between his legs before Reynolds
beat Yankee second sacker Michael
Rodgers' tluow to fust base. Many
in the crowd thought it was a hit, but
the official scorer ruled it an error.
No problem. Lane got help from
the defense, and throughout the
contest, only two MCBA hiners Reynolds and Jason McCoy in the
third after being hit in the back by a
throw intended to reach first base
from Yankee catcher Justin Jones -.,.
got to second. None got farther.
Meanwhile, the Yankees got on
the board in the fust on the strength
of two walks, a groundout, a steal
and cashing in on one wild pitch,

Gallipolis, La~caste~ s~lit
American Leg1on tw1nb1ll
The Gall1polis Post 27 Ameri- and Mark Wood (1-4).
The second game saw Lanca~ter
can Legion baseball team knocked
get
ahead and stay there.
off Lancaster 7-4 in the first game
Mullins,
who pitched a comof Saturday's doubleheader at Lanplete
game,
fanned seven and
caster before losing 4-l in the secwalked one. For Gallipolis, starter
ond game.
. _
In the first game, Gallipolis, J.T. Northup and Grueser comwhich tied the game 4-4 in the top bined to strike out six and walk
of the seventh, held Lancaster at three.
Lancaster's hitters were Bartlett
bay in the bottom of _the frame . In
(4-4),
Morarity (1-2), Mullins and
the eighth, Galhpohs racked up
Rogers
(both 1-3). The Gallipolis
three runs, with the first two comhitters
were
Haislop, Toler and
ing on the catcher's errant toss to
Williams
(all
2-3), Grueser (l -2)
first, which allowed two runs to
score to get home seconds after and Trent Thomas (1·3).
Gallipolis (13-20), which got a
Chris Toler struck out. W1th Toler
f~rst-round
bye in the Eighth Dison first, Gary Stanley sacrificed
trict
tournament,
will play the winhim to second before Paul Covey's
ncr
of
the
McArthurWellston winsingle got Toler home with the last
ncr
Tuesday
at
5:30
p_m_
at Pickerrun.
ington.
Post 27 starter Bobby Haislop,
Toler and Stanley combined to Inning toUtls-firsl game
strike out six and walk seven. Lan- Gallipolis: 000-012-13 =7-7-2
caster pitchers Varney and Dau~n­ Lancaster: 110-200-00 ~ 4-4-2
WP - Stanley (in rei ief of
m ier combined to str1ke out mne
Haislop
and Toler)
and walk four.
LPDaubenmier
The Gallipolis hitters were Ryan
Inning
totals-second
game
Williams (2·5), Chad Duncan,
Gallipolis:
000-001-0
~ l-8-2
Dylan Evans (both 1-2), Stanley (1301-000-•
=
4. 7-0
Lancaster:
3), Covey and Andy Gnueser (both
WP-Mullins
l-4). Lancaster's hitters were Hurst
LP-Northup
(1-l), Mason (1·2}, Varney (1-3)

The Daily Sentinei-Page,5

In the 10th inning,

Reggie Sanders'·' single helps Reds slip past Cubs 3-2
up for it late.
"We don't start to work until
the latter pan of the game, as you
can tell ," said Sanders, who struck
out in his first three at-bats Sunday.
"We get a feeling for w~t's going
on in the game and th e n go to
work.''

They took advantage of ihe
Cubs' inability to get a clutch hit
and reliever Jose Bautista's trouble
gelling strikes.
Bautista (3-4) relieved in the
IOth and gave up a leadoff single to
Jacob Brumfield, his third hit.
Brumfield advanced on Barry
Larkin's sacrifice bunt, and
Bautista loaded the bases with an
intentional walk to .348-hitting Hal

Morris and a walk to Kevin
Mitchell.
Bauti sta threw the first pitch
past Sanders, who is one of th e
worst in the NL at making contact.
Sanders has struck out 87 times in
85 games.
Sanders choked up on the bat
for the next pitch , a pretty good
slider, and lined it off the middle of
the wall in left field .
Once again, the Reds had
redeemed themselves at the end .
·' It was a slider down and away.
He went out and got it and hit it
with one hand," Bautista said.
"I didn't want to go to 0-2. I
was just trying to hit something
into the outfield." Sanders said.

"That's the best pitch t6 try 1.0 hit.
In a situation like that, you tend 10
foul off fastballs. The off-speed
pitch you tend to drive into the out field more."
Johnny Ruffin (5-0) pitched tile
lOti! to get the win in Cincinn&lt;lti 's
28th come-from -behind victory.
The Cubs had a chance to wm it
in nine, but came up empty after a
bases-loaded opportun ity in th e
eighth. Jeff Brantley got Shawon
Dunston to line out and end the
threat.

gled and the defense let him clown
Brct Boone hit a solo homer in t!1c
fifth and Mitchell' s so ft fl y ball fell
for a Single that ti ed ll 2-2 111 the
sixth.

Fos ter, ca ll ed up fr om th e
minors June I, allowed just six hiLS
and walked two in hi s fin est

lll&lt;lJ Or -

lcague stan.
The Cubs threatened repeatedly
against Erik Han son, but scored

Chicago 's Kev in Foster stru ck
uut a career -high IU in 5 2-3
inning s, but didn't ge t a "''"
because the Cubs' offen se wug -

and sc ored on Derrick May's
1nfield sing le.
Sanchez led off the fifth with "
sin gle and was safe at second when
Morris, play1ng first, threw w1ldly
;JS he toed to get a forceout on Fos ter's bunt. Dunston lined a single to
center for a 2-0 lead.
Boo ne's seventh homer and

s tr J nd ~d

poor defense let the Red s ti c it.
Brumfield and Larkin opened the
six th with singles. One out later,
M1tchcll h1t a soft Oy. Ce nter fi ellt cr Glenallen Hill initi ally froze on
the hall and couldn't recover - he

go runs. li e do ubl ed in th e lillrtl

short . lettin g it fall for" game ·
tying si ngle.

J U~ t

twi ce in his ~ I X innin gs. Chi ca-

go undercut a fi r&gt; t-inning rally by
hilling into a ct ouh le play an &lt;f
four runners tn sc o rin g
position in Hanson's ~ ix inning'\.
Rcy S&lt;lnchcz score d hoth C'ili c t-

r:l cc d in but came up a lew feet

White Sox beat Tribe 5-2 to share Central summit again

,.

·-

Pomeroy-Middleport , Ohio

Dy JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Manager
Tom Trebelhorn knew the Chicago
Cubs were in trouble long before
Reggie Sanders came to bat with
the bases loaded in the lOth inning.
"You can't take 'em into extra
innings at home," Trcbelhorn said.
Sanders showed why . He lined a
single off the left-field wall to give
the Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory
Sunday that underscored their lateinning dominance at home.
The Reds are 9-2 in extra
mnings at Riverfront Stad1um and
32-14 overall, the best home record
in the National League. No matter
how poorly they play early in the
game, they usually manage to make

··~"""-~~~""-

. -·.

) .. •

Monday, July 18, 1994

Saxon.
In the bottom of the fourth,
Greenhouse tapped out four more
hits- consecutive singles by Davis
and J.P. Hannon preceded triples by
Cumings and Hubbard - to ring up
the five runs that put the game
permanently out of Home Care's
reach.
Greenhouse staner Matt Ash and
relievers Harmon and Adam
Cumings combined to strike out
nine and walk three . HCM starter
D.J. Taylor and reliever Derrick
Watterson
combined to strike out
(l-2).
nine
and
walk
eight.
Inning totals
hitters ·were
The
Greenhouse's
Yankees .............. .241 022 ~ I 1-7-2
Hubbard
(4-4,
triple),
Chad
MCBA ................. OOO 000 ~ 0-0-4
Cumings
(3-4),
Davis
(2-4,
triple)
WP-Lanc
and
Harmon
(2-4,
double).
Home
LP- Campbell
Care's hiuers were Taylor (2-3,
double), Clarke (2-4, double}, Matt
Hubbard's Greenhouse 14
Tarbell (1-2) and Brian Kelvington
Home Care Medical 10
The longest game of the day saw (l-4).
Point Pleasant's Home Care Inning totals
Medical lose the early lead it had
and all but eliminate the early deficit
it had after the Syracuse-based
squad held its third-inning riot, only
10 fail to keep pace with Hubbard's
Greenhouse in the final two
complete innings.
After the first passed without a
dent on the plate or even
baserunners 10 accomplish the Jaslc,
Justin Carr, who got Home Care's
second started with a walk, got 10
second on a wild pitch, got 10 third
on Drew Hudson's groundout and
scored on pitcher Matt Ash's errant
throw 10 ftrst on a fielder's-choice
grounder by Charles Oarkc.
But the Greenhouse, after getting
no one past second base in the
second frame, rebelled by using
three hits (Josh Davis' triple and
singles by Adam Cumings and Chad
Hubbard), three wild pitches (of
HCM's four in that inning), two
walks (of HCM's three in that
inning) and Brandon Pierce's
sacrifice 0 y 10 score six runs.
In the founh, Home Care chipped
away at the 6-2 stone with a
vengeance. Hudson, who started it
with a walk, scored on Clarke's
double 10 right. Clarke, who got to
third on the relay to the infield,
scored on Tarbell's infield single.
Tarbet! later scored when the throw
to the plate by Cumings, the
Greenhouse backstop, went wild
shonly after Cumings retrieved the
wild strike-three pitch to Billy

which got Micah Kolcun and Lane
home with two out. From then on,
Gallipolis scored in every frame but
the fourth to keep the heat on the
West Virginians.
Lane fanned 15 and walked two
in the complete-game performance.
Starter Malt Campbell and relievers
Reynolds and Josh Lee combined 10
strike out eight and walk 12.
The Yankees' hillers were
Richard Mullins (2-3}, Wes Larkins
(2-4), Allen Skinner, Jimmy
Wiseman (both 1-1) and Rodgers

HCM .................. 020 314
Greenhouse ......... 006 53x
WP-Ash
LP-Taylor

~ 10-6-2
~14-11-0

-Tuppers Plains Tigers 11
Middleport Cardinals 0
He was the dominator.
In helping to make Middleport
the fust bye team 1.0 sec action and
the fust to exit the t.ournarncnt, Eric
Smith put plenty of roar in the
Tigers' game plan.
How dominant was he?
-He fanned 15 of the 16 batters
he faced and walked none. Mike
Smith, the bauer he didn't strike out
or walk, reached when his grounder
went between the third base bag and
third baseman Jeremy Gillilan. The
play was ruled an error.
- Nine of his victims went
down swinging.
_:__ In a period spanning the
second and third innings, he threw

I I straight strikes (foul balls
included)
- He threw 67 pitches in hi s
five-inning complete-gam{ stint
While the Cardinals' luck against
him was similar 10 getting blood out
of a turnip, the rest of the Tigers put
plenty of teeth into their attack .
After getting two runs in the first
and being offensively silent in the
next two frames before equaling
their efforts in the founh, Tuppers
Plains bolted away in the fifth when
Wes Craw's three-run homer and
Eric Smith's two-run blast preceded
Jereme Osborne's RBI single that
got Steven Weeks home and
Osborne's dash 10 the plate on two
throwing errors during Josh Will's
at-bat.
Middleport southpaw Tommy
Roush and reliever Mike Smith
combined to strike out five and
surrender no walks.
(See TOURNAMENT on Page S)

By RICK GANO
CHICAGO (AP) - It was a
corker of a ser ies, a batty fourgame set where baseball at times
was not the issue. The talk was of
switched bats, not switch-hitters.
Break-ins, not breaking balls.
And after it was all over, the
Chicago White Sox and Cleveland
Indians had settled very little, winning two games each. They did
escalate their emotional rivalry,
one that has four games left this
week in Cleveland.
"It just means we're closer to

ByRON SIRAK
TURNBERRY, Scotland (AP)
- Nick Price rolled in a 75 -foot
eagle putt on the 17th hole Sunday
to win a British Open champi , onship that only moments earlier
· seemed 10 be in the hands of Jesper
Parnevik.
Price, twice a runner-up in the
British Open, appeared headed for
a second -place finish when
Parnevik birdied five holes on the
back nine to get to 12-under par
· after No. 17.
But the 29-year-old Swede
bogeyed the 18th when he mistak: enly thought he needed a birdie on
the final hole to win. He found L11e
rough twice and missed an eight- foot par putt, giving Price his
chance.
Pamevik then watched on tele: vision as Price rolled in his long
· eagle putt, burying his head in his
left hand as the ball dropped.
Price then got the par on 18 that
eluded Parnevik for a 4-under-par
66 on the day and 12-under·par 268

tar.

So Hargrove went out ancl h&lt;ld
home plate umpire Tim McClel land check the ball that was hcing
used by former Indian s rel ie ver
Dennis Cook. It was kept in play.

for the tournament, one stroke bet·
ter than Pamevik.
It was the same score posted hy
Tom Watson when he won the
British Open on this Ailsa Course
at Tumberry in 1977.
Watson's determined drive for a
record-tying sixth British Open
championship ended with consecutive double bogeys at Nos. 8 and 9.
He shot a 4-over-pM 74 and finished at 4-undcr 276, eight strokes
behind Price.
Fuzzy Zoeller, trying to become
one of only nine golfers lO win
th'ree' different major championships, was third at 271.
It was sweet revenge for Price,
who twice had a chance to win the
world's oldest golf tournament
only to finish behind Watson in
1982 and Seve Ballesteros in 1988.
"I waited a long time for this,"
the 37-year-old native of Zimbabwe said. "I guess 12 years now,"
since the 1982 loss.
"I've been patient," he said.
"In the back of my mind I always

New YOlk 14, SeiUle 4

Baseball

Toronto 3, TCUI 1
Kanau City 4,llolrot I

NL standings

Tonight's games
MiMmou (Gurdado 0-1) at Torm.10

Eu&amp;em Dlvlllon

(Loil« ).~).I ,US p.m.
Tou1 (!.oat')' I·Ol 11

Tum
WLPcLGB
Aillnll .................. ..'15 14 618
M..-.1 .________ ______ 54 l7 593
2
P!Uhddf&gt;hia ...........44 41 .478 12..'1
New York ..............42 49 .462
14
Aoridt ...................42 lO .457 14.3
Central Dlvlllon
CINC!NNA11 ........ 54 l7 593
HOUitm .................S2 40 ..565
l';ttabu.W&gt; ..............43 47 .478
Sl Low. ....... ......... 42 46 .477
Cbi"'8o .................. 38 l2 .422

2.5

10.5
10.5
ll.l

45 .511
41 .489
lO .462
S6 .398

TOUI (Fajardo S-S) at CI..EVEU.ND
(N1111 1-6), 7,os_p.m.

2
4.5
10.5

Minno•ota (Tipani 9-3) u Toronto
(SIDIIIomyno ~- 7), 7:35 p.m.

Kanau Cily (Appicrr ~) at Milwaukoo (Fldnod 9-9~ I'll! p.m.

Sunday's scores

llolrot (Boldtor7-t0) II O!itl.. (l'&lt;rnlndeo 1-7), I :Ill p.m

Atlanta 2. Aoridtt I
San Dicp 10, New Yod: 1
H..-.9,Piuobtup0
Suo rn.c;.a, 6, ,..,.... 4

8oa;ton (Clemens 1·&lt;4) at California
(LanaJIAln 5-6~ IO:M p.m.
- N'Cw York (Abbott 7·6} It Oakland

l'hiladelploil 9, Loa Anp!o17
ctNaNNA11 3, ~~· 2
im.)

_

(Win 7-1), 10:{)5 p.m.

qo

Colando 10, St.IAlUil6 ;

CLEVELAND

Tuesday's games

Welttrn Dlvlalon

Loa Anaclea ...........47
ColontdO ··---···· -------46
Sin Fnn.itoo ........43
San Dicto .............. J7

1-1~

Ul! p.m.
K.u.u Cily (Haney 1-2) at Milwaukee
(Mnndt 1-l), I ,US p.m.
Datroit (Oardiner 2·2) at Chicaao
(Sindenoo 1-3~ I:M p.m.
11oaGn (V~RC~p&gt;ond 0-2) 11 Cllifomia
(Andcnon 5-4), t I :M p.m.
NewYozk (Hilchcock 1-l)ltOakland
(V~nPoppoiS-1), ll:Mp.m.
JMltimOR (()quilt ~2) at Sotllle (Gli·
n111iJ 0.0), 11 :OS"" p.m.
(Grimoloy

Ba.hifn()ft (Md)ortald 11.6) at Suttle

(Flanina6-IO), 10:{)5 p.m.

Tontxbt's games

San Dqo {Knae,ar 1-1 ) at Montreal
{lbtd«&gt;l-2); B,USp.m.
Loa AnaeJoa (Vt!doll.()) ll New Yodt
(Ranlinp0-3), I ,OS p.m.
Stn Fran&lt;:iaco Hickenon 2-1) at
Philttddf&gt;hia (llook;e 4-5), I ,OS
.
Allanu (Mon:ltcr 7-2) al 1i:bur&amp;h
(Couto 4-6), I :M p.m.
florida (Halall 5-i) II CINC!NNA11
(Sehootrok ,._ 1&gt;. r:M p.m.
St. l...auil {WatacJn &amp;-4) at Howton (B.

t-lJ, am pm.

Tuesday's games

~

San Dioa? (AihbJ -4-1) u M011tre.al 1
(Manlnez 6-~J. 7,35 p.m.
l..ol AnaeJol (Orola 1-6) al New Yolk
(Sttbozltlp t~), 7;1() p,Jil,

~--·······················~,·······················-~

Sin Fmnciaro (lllat:k ).0) II Philttddphia (loobon l \ ..). H5r ...
Adanta (Aver)' 6·3 at Piualnuaft
(Uobw 5-4),
I""·

us

Transactions
BasebaU
(

Am«kanLupe
BOSTON RED SOX' Satt Culoa Roclripo&lt;, infieltlt.-, ID Pa wtut:kot of lho lnICmatimal Leap Rocalled Tim VanEamond, pitcher, from Pa~
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Ptteed

Mike J.bam~nte, pitdu1r, an the U-day
dia1bled H11. Recalled Joae DoJe1u1,
pilehcr, fn1111 Omaha of lho Amelican N-

aociati.m.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Placed
Bnnt Ot\01 infielder, on I '-day diubled
liaL ~ &amp;he con118Cl of Fnnc:ilco

The Tigers· hiuers were Matt
Bissell, Crow (both 2-3), Will (2-4,
two doubles), Gillilan, Osborne
(both 1-2), Mall Edwards, Eric
Smith, Kin Spencer (alll -3).
Inning totals
Tigers ................. 200 27 = 11-11-1
Cardinals ............OOO 00 = 0-0-6
WP-E.Smilh
LP-Roush
Green No. 2-4
Kyger Creek No. 2-3
With two no-hitters in the books
by the time this game came along, it
wquld seem that a three -hiuer
wouldn't merit much auention.
VVrong.
•
Green starter Bobby Angel, like
Lane and Eric Smith before him,
needed no bullpen he,lp . Despite
being rocked for three runs in the
third after his mates staked him 10 a
2-0 lead, he dido 't slop striking
people out. When the dust cleared,
he bested his predecessors in
success by posting 18 strikeouts.
Green got on the board in the
first when Jake Richie, who reached
on a walk, scored on a wild pitch

Malo~, infielder, from Taoorna of the P.cif'x: Coat l..elgu~
SEATTLE MARINERS: Rec il lltd
lolut Cwnninp, pi\Chcr, fnm Calg1ry of
lha Pacific Cou1 Loipo. Optiooed Marc

CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD IN
THIS YEAR'S EDITION

Minimum deposit $2,500.00. This CD is automatically renewable.
Penalty foc early withdrawal. This offer expires 7122/94

Ohio Valley BanJ.i.....~

992-2155
1.

hi s lith homer to ti c it in the th~rd .
Ozz ic Gui ll en sing led. bea t a
force play at secon d cmd stnlc thirtl
before scoring on Tim Ra ines'
grounder 111 lh ~ Ch1cagn lhlfll
Thomas then foll owed wi th a long
homer to nght center. hi s 33 rd, for
a 3-1 lc;1&lt;l
Single s by \V;ur~.: n New son and
Rllll Karkovicc and a 5;1U III tc fl y
by Guillen pul Ch1 cago up 4- 1 in
the fourth
Carlos Bacr ~a doubled to exte nd
hi s hitting str~~1k to 14 games and
scored on Eddi e Murra y's smgle in
the sixth . T.w o wa lb load ed th e
bases and fi nished Bcre before
Cook got Paul Sorrento on a forceout grounder.

three with seve n strik eo ut s. Cook

allowed one hit in 2 1-3 and Rollerto Hernandez pitched the ninth for
his lOth save.
Morris (8-6) gave up nine hits in
seven innings with five walks and
six strikeouts.
The White Sox went up 1-0 in
the second on a walk to Julio Fran co. sto le n ba se and a single by
Lance Johnson. Sandy Alomar hit

during Mau Bess' at-bat. After Bess
was thrown out trying to score
during Aaron Quimby's at-bat, Paul
Summers, who later walked, scored
when a bases-loaded walk to Mike
Barry forced him in.
Kyger Creek tied the game in the
third when Jeff Gardner doubled on
Angel's full-count pitch and brought
home Bryan Sutphin and Ryan
White. During George Garnes' at·
bat, Angel's pickoff attempt at
second base was off the mark,
allowing Gardner to beat center
fielder Shannon Louden's throw to
the plate and give KC a 3-2lead.
That lead held up until the
bottom of the fift:l, when Angel,
who reached on a balk and moved to
second on a wild pitch, scored after
Thomas Polcyn, who swrted as a
pitcher but was moved behind the
plate when Games was sent in from
third base to pitch two innings
earlier, fired an errant throw past
third sacker BJ. Rose in an attempt
to nail Aneel at third during Bess'
at-bat.
Angel struck out the side in the
top of the six to get Green into the

&lt;continuedfromPage 4)

quarterfinals.
Green's victory ovcrsh&lt;ldowcd
the shared no-hitter by Polcyn and
Games, who struck out as many as
they walked (eight) and hit one
batter.
The Bobcats' hitters wer e
Gardner (2-3) and Garnes (1-3).
Inning totals
Bobcats ............... 003 000 = 3-3-0
Green No. 2 ........ .202 Olx = 4-0-1
WP-Angel
LP-Polcyn

-·-·-·-

Here is a peek at the future.
Today - Tuppers Plains Pirates
vs. Mason VFW, 6 p.m. ; Middlepon
Wh•te Sox vs. Gallipolis White Sox,
7:30p.m.
Tuesday - Racine Athletics vs.
Bidwell, 6 p.m.; Rutland vs. Green
No. I, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Vinton vs .
Gallipolis Yankees, 6 p.m.;
Hubbard's Greenhouse vs . Point
Pleasant Village Pizza Inn , 7:30
p.m.
Thursday - Tuppers Plains
: Tigers vs. Green No . 2, 6 p.m .;
tonight's winners, 7:30p.m.

REACH OVER 18,500

Ncwfidd,ootfiel.tlrz, toCalpry.

'I'EXAS RANGERS' 1'11&lt;0&lt;1 Billy Ripkan, infidd., on lho t!S-ciiJ diublod lilt.
Plaood Olri..l Jamw, uutfiCldc:r, on the ISday diu.bled li11, reuotelivc 10 July 16.

Actintocl Gar1 Rodu1, outfielder, and
Doua s ...,., inlicWor, fnm lhe IH1y
&lt;liNblod lilt.
N111onal Leope
CIUCAGO CUBS: Placed Anthony
YOWIIJ, pitd-acr, on dtc 15-day di..blod
till. rctroutive to July tO. Call ed up
Randy Vera, pil.chcr, flom Iowa of the

HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

American Auociatioo. Tranafe.rred J01c
Gunrwl, pi.tcher. frun the IS-day lo the
60-day dillbled lin
SAN DffiOO PADRES' P\.o&lt;ed Don nie Elliou, piu:ha", on lhc 1S.day di11bk.:d
hit, rctroutivc to July 10. c.ucd up
Bryce Florie. pitcher, from Lu Vegat of
lhol'leilic Coull....,.,.

FootbaU
Nallooul FOCOball Ltque
CIDCAGO BEARS' A.,-IID ,....,
with Jay LeeuwenbwJ. cauer. on l one-

ADVERTISING IN THE

-I••I

TV TIMES

·-

year con\ACl and Mara.u~ Spean. offen-

aivc \ICk1c. on • W..yeu c:ontn.ct.
HOUSTON OlLER;=.S:
Sl ned Cri1
Dilhman, comctbu:k. A
to lenni
with Duryl Lcwia, com
ct. and Sun
Thmnu. cfl'an~iw 1ac*lc.

KANSAS CITY CHIEl'S' Silnod Tn·

Georae Jamiaon.1incbaek·

....LOS AN&lt;JEI.JlS RAIDERS , As-liD

cy Rocen ud

tcmu wilh Derrick Hoakina, nfcty .
SiaJtod Ken Llnicr, ..aio.
NHW YORK GIANTS: SiJned
Willilm Roberu, p1rd; John Bnndca,
ript md; Jouo C""'f'bcbJ,ldtn Bouy IDd
Juan Sehcxd, u.f~; Thorn• Randolph.
oomarbtdt· Ctad Bn\zke. Oelen~ivc linoman. and s~ Whilo. ~ w.;.YOd
David PyDo. oaar; 't9illlam Townc., doJCI'IIivo &amp;acklc. ~ Duane Mub,
linoblcbr, flilod hia phyaietl.

Hockey
Natlonll Hockey ~..a&amp;ue
ST. LOUIS BLUES: N1med
Keenan pncnl mm&amp;Jer mel coach.

••
••

AHEA TJ~LEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATUUESEVERY WEEI\. IN TilE
TV TIMES

M&gt;ke

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL

florida (Oanbna 3-2) 1t CINCINNATI (Satilo1 9-9~ 7:35r.m.
St. Louit (Palaci01 -1) 11 Houatca.
(Kilo 6-4), I:M p.m.
Chic1ao (Tr~~ehlel 1-6) al Colondo

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 12, 1994.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 4, 1994.

"Grover (Hargrove) is trying to
get an edge any way he ca n. If he
says I' m trying to cheat, then he's
got to do wh&lt;ltcver he can, " said
Cook. "Maybe they thought I said
something b&lt;ld about Alhert."
Ja son Berc (10-2) g:1v e up five
hits in 5 2-3 inning s and walked

Kyger Creek LL Tournament...

thought I would have a chance. I
hit wme squirrelly shots. But I
played well when I needed to."
He did it with a round of two
bogeys, four birdies and the eagle
at 17 that seemed to take forever to
get to the hole.
"I thought I needed a birdie at
the last hole," Parnevik said. "l
thought I was one or two behind ... I
thought I was chasing someone
else. It was just a bad mistake."
Jack Nicklaus, doing TV work
for ABC, said .of Parnevik 's mis take: "That's the way you learn."
The victory for Price meant that
all three major championships
played this year were won by nonAmerican players.
Jose Maria Olazabal of Spain
won the Masters, Els the U.S. Open
and Price here. Americans have
never been shut out in all four
majors since the Masters - the
youngest of the four - came into
being in 1934.
The PGA Championship, won
by Price in 1992, is next month in
Oklahoma.

Scoreboard

(IWby

17MONTH

the bat be checked.
"When I hit a home run . l don't
think I surpri se my self. I surpri se
the whole world," Cora said.
" I got a quote for you," said
Morris, making li ght of tl1c ce ntr&lt;ll
theme of the series_ " I think Joey
Cora went int.o the umpire's room.
... l ~.upplied all the energy on that
one.
Earlier in the game, Morri s told
Cleveland manager Mike H&lt;lrgrove
that the ball was covered with pine

Price wins ·crown on 17th hole

Williaml S-5), a,os p.m.
Cbio•ae~ (Bollinaa- 3-2) at Colondo

I• CD SPECIAL I.•

manager Gene Lamont wanted to
sec if it was corked, then sw itched
during a break -in into the umpires'
dressing room . A bat - appMently
the original one - was returned
after Saturday night' s game. On
Sunday, no one sa id who was
responsible.
An investigation is on -going and
the bat headed to New York. L1kc
an injured player, it will be Xrayed.
After Cora hit just hi s fo urth
homer of his career in the se venth ,
Morris pointed and asked - perhaps in frustrati on and jest - that

On the British Open's final day,

THE 1994

r···················································~

the strike," joked losing pitcher
Jack Morri s said after he gave up
homers to Frank Thomas and Joey
Cora in the White Sox's 5-2 victory
Sunday. "l would tell yo u it' s
going down to the wire but l don't
when the wire is.''
The series, made more intriguing by the mysterious disappcrance
of Albert Belle's confisc&lt;lted bat.
left the first-place Indians two percentage points &lt;lhead of the White
Sox.
Belle went 1-for-4. His bat was
taken Friday night after White Sox

(Nlod 9--4~ 945 p.m.

AL standings
r-

EutentlllWLPCLGB

Now Yadi ............. ..'14
a.-___
,___ .......'13

l5 JHI
l7 ..'119

...................&lt;1.5 &lt;1.5 .500
t:ltuW,,,,,,,_,,,42 lO .457
TOI'OIIIO ...................O lO .444

t.l
9.5
13..'1
14.5

CALL NOW....

C•lraiiMYIIIoll

CIJ!VI!LANt&gt;...-..Sl 35 .602
Clticop,,,_,,, .. ..'l4 36 .600
lttmM Cily .............. 44
..............43 47
ltlll....U0 .............4Z &gt;19

w.... r... .......................

47
OUland ................40 51
Cllifomil ...............39 54
S..ttlo ....... ,,,_,,37 54

.522
.471

.461

IZ..'l

.414
.4&lt;111
.419
.4!11

•
6

Sunday'• KGnll

Milwl- 5, Minrtoaou 3
Ctieop15, ClJ!VI!LAND
llollim&lt;to.IO,Cilifomit5
11GalGa4,0Ulandl

7
ll

z

7

GALLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

525 N. Second St., Middleport, OH

Dates: July 18-22
Time: 6:15-8:45 .m.

I

A. es: 3-13
\

992-2156

�(
Monday July 18 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport Oh o

The Dally Sentlne

Pome oy-Middleport Ohio

No Increase 1n denials seen in proposed disability process
cen of pe sons who app y fo d
ab y henefl ts are found 10 be I
abled undc the So al Se u( y
de n on Tha p
entage s o
expected o change und the p o
po ed p ocess of de c m n ng (I

BY Ed Pe erson

Soc a Sccur y Manage n A h n

NOT CE OF APPLICATION TO
THE PUBL C UT L T ES COMM SS ON
OFOHO
FOR AN NCR EASE N RATES AND
CHARGES
FOR GAS SERV CE
COLUMBA GAS OF OH 0 NC
PUCO CASE NO 94 98 GA A R

fo

do vorles

Sh ppe s have he opt on to 1 ect
FTS o
FTS Sto age capac ly

by

Co umb a to cuetome o cuatome
owned gaa o he than the Tempo ary
Base Ra e Revenue R de the Vo ume

ass gnment

FTS capac ty ass gnmont w
nc ude an ass gnmen of Co umb a 1
ups earn capac ty on Co umb a

Bank ng and Ba anc ng Cha go lhe
FERC 0 do 636 T ans ton Coo a

T anam sa on Co po a on TOO
FTS and Tennessee Gas ( FT.;A
The FTS opt on w t be ava abe un
a tote of 25 MMcf day hea been
subsc bed by the rm t ansportlll on
custome c ass
FTS Sto age capac ty as a gnmon
w
nc ude an a ocat on o
Tennessee Gas ( FT A and TCO
FTS TCO Sto age FSS &amp; SST
Ass gned FTS S1o age capac 1y at o
w be date m ned on a cua ome

Su cha ge aupp em._n a cha gas f
app cab e
and the
Wea he

No me zat on Adjua mon Fee o fo
a conaumpt on each month a e as
fo OWl

Fo he I al 25 000 cub c loot pe
account $ 5250 pe Mel
Ove 25 000 cub c feet po account
$ 4427 po Me
n add t on each conaume mua pay
a Cuatome Cho go of $16 50 pe
account pe
month and an
adm n s at ve fee of $6 00 pe month

on
The n en of the p oposed d
ab I y plans s o stream ne he
pocs oarr eatacuaed
s ons fastc It w II no hange the
def n on of d ab
y only he
p o es by wh ch tha de s on
reached
People wl o mce the defin on
of d sab I y unde the law who
have a mental or phys cal d sab I y
wl ch s exceed to keep the wo k
ng for a year or mo e or to resu
n dea h
w II
I qual fy fo
benefits People who do not qual fy
w II no have to wa t an unreason
able long pcnod of ume to f md ou
and can get on w th thelf lives
A rna or hange calls for putung
the cia m n the hands of a d sab I
ty cia ms exam ner who w II con
trol the file unul a dec son IS made
on the cia m The plan perm s a
heanng and an opportun ty 10 pre
sent more ev dence before a dec
s on A new s mpllied ndex of
tmpall1llents w U replace the ur
ren complex I st ng of mpa r
ments 10 perm earl er deciS ons
By ass sung the claunant m every
poss ble way w th the nfonmauon
and serv ces needed o pursue a
eta m we hope to reduce the
amount of 1 me I takes to get a
dec son
Some have quesuoned whether
the sunpl fied ndex of mpall1llents
w U result n denymg more people
It shouldn I The ndex will be used
only to allow an rndivtdual 1 w II
not provtde the basiS or denym~ a
chum Clrums by ndiv dua s who
do not meet the cr ena m the ndex
w II be dec ded at the nex step of
the evaluat on process wh ch s
based on an assessment of the nd
v dual s ab lily to funcuon

Commumty
calendar
The Commun ty Calendar ts
pub! shed as a free serv1ce to
non proftt groups w1sh ng to
announce meebngs and specml
events The calendar ts not
des•gned to promote sales or
fundra•sers of any type Hems
are prmted as space perm Is and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
speCific number of days
MONDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - B g Bend
Farm Ant que Club meeung 8 p m
Monday at the fa ground secre
tary s office
LETART FALLS
Letar
Township trustees Monday 7 p m
at the office bu ld ng
LETART FALLS - Letart
Townsh p Board of Trustees meet
mg 7 p m Monday at the 10wnsh p
office bwlding
POMEROY - B g Bend Farm
Antique Club Monday 8 p m
secretary s office on fa rgrounds

0

ows

conaumpt on mus be conaumed n

Fo he sl 25 000 cub c lee pe
account 7 175e pe oo cub c feet
Ove 25 000 cub c ee pe account
6 352e pe
oo cub c lee
n
add on each consume mus pay a

Cus orne Cha ge o $ 6 50 pe
account pe month ega d ess of gas
consumed
La ge Gene a Se v ce Th s a e
schedu e
s ave abe to a I
comme c a and ndus a cus ome s

who consume a east 8 ooo Mel pe
yea

be ween Novembe

and

Oc obe 31 tn add on at east 50%
of such cus orne s annual
consump on must be consumed n

the seven b ng months o Ap
th ough Oc obe
The p oposed
cha ges fo a cos s othe

han the

cos

nte m

of gas and the

Erne gency and Tempo ary P P P an
To If Schedu e R do and he
Tempo ary Base Ra e Revenue R de
fo a conaump on each month a e

as lot ows
Fo the I at 2 000 Mel pe lac ty
$698 pe Mel
Fo he next 13 000 Mel pe lac tty
S 5180 pe Mel
Fo he next 85 000 Mel pe lac ty
S 4880 pe Mel
Ove 00 000 Mel pe lac lily
S 4280 pe Mel
Cus ome a must take am n mum of

1 500 Mel each month

end any

eustome who fa a to do so w

be

cha ged o 1 500 Me at the total
b t ng a e that nctudes the La ge
Gene a

Se v ce

ate

gas coat

ecovery and b t ng ad]uatments
TRANSPORTAl ON RATES
Co umb a a p opos ng th ee sepa a e
t ansportot on etes The lot ow ng
app ea to a th ee t ansportat on
ates

A b a ende ed aha be
adjusted
o
netudo
the
T anspo tal on FERC 0 de 636
T ana t on Costa Su cha ge and the
Tempo ary Base Ra a Revenue R de

set forth n he p oposed arlfls
A

Park

anaportat on custome

so

the agents must have a personal
compute capable of ace v ng
no lees I om Co umb a of any
consumpt on I m lations or
nte up ons

All t anaportot on cuslomors must
e the e eel the Vo ume Banking and
Ba anc ng Serv ce o be placed on a
da ty cash out p ov s on The Volume
Bank ng end Ba anc ng Service Ia a
system o account fo t ensportallon
custome 1 vo umea

ece ved by

Co umb a but no do ve ed to lhe
custome s dur ng the same month y
b ng cycle A b 1 ende ed atao
shot be ad ua ed lo ncluda the
Vo ume Bank ng and Balanc ng

Cha ge
I the t ansportat on
custome e eels to ut t zethe Volume
Bank ng and Ba anc ng Serv ce aa
set orth n the p oposed a flo
T anspo tat on custoners who
choose not to subac lbe to the

aervlce w

ba placed on a dal y

cash ou

p ovls on

and

a •

reaponalble for tho pu chaae and
natal atlon of a do ly maaaurlng
dev co and asaoclatod equlpmonl
and aha t provide and pay lor a
dod caled to ephona Ino and tho AC
powe nacesse y lo operata his
equlpmonl
Columb a w ll olio
I m
tran1porto ton o 1to age capaclly
avallab e fo

e ease In accordance

w lh nlo ala o p pel no company
orif11
enter nto a Sarv co Agreement wllh
Columb a the lo m of tho agroement
be ng spec I ed n lho p opoaod
a lis
Sma

MIDDLEPORT- Vaca on
Bible school for ages 3 13 a V ctory Bapust Church from 6 15 8 45
p m through July 22
REEDSVILLE - Ohve Town
ship Trustees spectal meet ng
Monday g 30 p m
at Btll
Osborne s home on Route 681
Personnel and budget approval
heanng
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Fraternal Order
of Eagles Aux liary 2171 Tuesday
7 JOpm
POMEROY - Bedford Town
sh p Volunteer Fue Deparmtnet
comm 1uee Tuesday 7 30 p m at
the IOWD hall
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
Red Cross
bloodmobile I to S 30 p m
Wedneay at the Semor C t zens
Center Anyone over 17 and we gh
mg mae dian II 0 pounds el g1ble
to donate blood.

So

the aovon b ng montha o Ap
th ough Octobo
f a cua ome fa a to take de very
o 1 500 Mel n any month he
cuotome w be cho ged fo
500
Me a 1he ota b I ng ralt thai
nc udes a del ve y cha ge and a
a andby •• v ce mon hly demand

cha ge IIppi cable
Standby Serv ce 1 ave able upon
he payment o Standby Se v ce
Cha gee
Tho o 1 o lh ee dol very cha ge
opt on a ave lab e to cuatome o under
th • ate ochedulo
F xed Del ve y Cha ge
The
p opoaod cha gas lo
a t
de ve eo by Columb a to
customer of cue omer opned
gas fo al consumpt on fo each

month othe then the Tempo ary
Bue Ra a Revenue Ride the FERC
0 de
636 T ana t on Cos 1
Surcharge otendby aarv ce chargee
I appl cob o and lhe
Yo umo Banking and Batanc ng
Cha ge 11'8 II lot OWl
Fo the I ot 2 000 Mel per eccounl
pe month
S 5056 par Mel
Fo the next 13 000 Mel per account
pe month
S 3255 per Mel
Fo tho next 85 000 Mel par account
pe month
$ 2955 po Mel
Ovo 100 ooo Mel per account per
month $ 2355 per Mel
The
Flex b e Dol ve y Charge
max mum propoaod delivery charge
fo all dotlvo tea by Co umb a o
CUIIOmo Of CUIIOmtr-ownod Qll lo
a conoumptlon lor etch month w tl
be equal to the General Service bue
rete Thta ate may be flexed
downward whotn war anted by
compet Uve co11d Ions

T ansportat on cuatomera muat

RACINE - Rae ne V llage
Counc I meetmg m recessed ses
s1on Monday at 7 p m at Star M II

ou

spec f c o consort urn spec f c oad
fac o ana ys s
A
custome s w h n a
t ansportat on conaort urn mue be
w th n a s ng e TCO ope at ng a ea
Howeve Co umb a eserves he gh

ega d ass of gas consumed Fu
equ ements aerv ce a a so ava ab e
a a aupp emen a cha ga
La ge Gene a
T anaporta on
Se v ce
Th a a e achedu e s
ava lab e o a
cua ome 1 hat
o herw se camp y w th he gene a
te ms and cond t ona of Co umb a s
t anapo ta on ta fh and that
consume at eaat 18 000 Mcf pe yea

between Novembe 1 and Oc obo 31
and ake de very of a m n mum of
1 500 Mel each mon h n add on at
east 50% of auch cuatome 1 annual

v ce

Gene a

Th

1

T aneportat on

role schedule

•

ava ab e to al commerc al and
nduat a cuatome s ha conaume

ass han 300 Mel per year between
Soplembo 1 and Auguat 31 and that
olhorwlae comply w th tho gone al
e ms and cond I one of Columbia 1
anaportat on a lila The p opoaed
chargoo fo all dallvtrfea by
Columb 1 to eua orne of customer
owned gao otho thMI the Tempo ary
Baae Rate Revenue Ride the Volume
Banking and Balancing Cha ga the
FERC Order 636 Tranallton Cootlt'
Surcharge 1upp emontal chargoa H
appl cable
and the Weather
Norma lZIItlon Ad)uatment Factor lor
all conaumptlon each month are aa
follow•
All gao dol vo ad per account per
mete $1 5828 par Mel
In addlt on each conaumor mutt
pay a Cuatome Charge of ~ 50 par
account

per

month and an
odm nlat otlvo foe of $6 00 par month

roga dlaoa of gao conaumod Full
requ remen11 Hrvlce to atao avol ablo
a a aupplemen a cha go
General T anaportot on Service
Thto rete achtdu e 1 ava fable to a I
commercial and nduetrlal cuatomera

that conoumo at laool 300 Mel per
yao between September 1 and
Auguat 31 and hat othorwtoe
comply w th the gentrof terma and
condlttona
of
Columbia 1
t anoportallon a lila The p opo.d

Howeve

once the delivery rete to flexed lhe
cuatomer muot continua -to pay lhe
F axtblo Delivery Charge determined
by Co umb • each month lo throe
montha Tho Flexible Dollvory Che ga
wll be rodeterm ned (Inc eaoo o
doc eaaod) each month
Matnllne De Ivery Charge
Thte
dol very charge option 1 available to
those cuotomere connected dl ectly
th ough a dual pu poaa mote to
lac t ties of an Into ateto p pe Ina
suppl e of Columbia For ouch
customo 1 the max mum dative y
cho ge
lnctud ng of
billing
adjuotmanla shall be S 25 pe Mel pe
account po month.

Ope at onal Flow 0 de a
t anspo lat on

custom&amp; a

AI
o

sh ppe a ~ wh ch tho cuatomero do
not have dally mete s wl I be subject
to Columbia Operational Flow Ordero
( OFOs ) Columbia wl I have the
autho ty to dl act tranaporta on
cuatomo 1 or their aupptlors to edjuat
scheduled volume• to match their
est mated uaege Including volumao
n exceaa of dally contract quant ties
when operal ng conditione exceed
Co umbla dootgn crlte a II the
ocheduled volume&amp; are not adjuated

aa

equeated

the cuatomer or

conaort um wtl pay a gao cootequa
to the h ghool ncremental gao coot
Co umb a pu cheaed that doy on the
vo ume dtllorence one month 1
demand charges on the volume

d He enco and a I chargao lncu rod
by Cotumb a on the volume
d fte ence

Ope ettonal Match ng Ordero All
LGTS t onoportatlon cuotomora that
have da ly rood metera w II ba oubjecl
lo Columbia Ope atlng Matching
0 dora ( OMOo ) Columbia wilt have
tho autho lty to direct transportation
customoro to adjuol thol uaoge at
the lacllttles to match the volume•
lhat a e flowing on the p pellnaa II
the uaage ta not adjuated at
equestad the cuolomor thai pey a
gas coot equal lo tho hlgheat
ne omental gao cool Columbia
pu chaoad that day on the volume
d He ence and a I chergea fncurrsd
by Co umb 1 on the volume
d ffe enct

Balancing Servlceo Cotumb a will
eatablloh a new balancing aervlce
Tho balonctng aervlce wll be optional
fo SGTS GTS and LGTS cuotoma I
Balancing Sorv co will be provldtd
undo the lo towing tarmo and
condft one
Tho otto and banking choice• lor
ba anclng oerv ca w tl ba •• followo
SGTSGTS
RATE/MCF
(Throughput)
Monthly Bonk Toteronce
(%Ann Vol)
LGTS
RATE/MCF
(Th oughput)
Monthly Bank Toft enct
(%Ann Vol)
$ 0437 10 0% s 0218 5%
0370
8 0% 0185
4%
0300
6 0% 0150
3'!1.
0233
4 0% 0117
2%
0164
2 0% 0082
t%
o 30 1 0% ooea 5'!1.
Ba anc ng oervlce rotao wilt be
aubject to change baoe on vartallon1
tn TCO atn
Exco11 vofumoo may be
pu chaoed at 110% of Index gao coat

-carpentry
Painting
Power Woahlng
cleano all axtorlo •
with high prOIIU 0
apr aye
Reaaonabla Roleo
20 Yoara Experience
F...., Eotlmat01

y

ab
cha gea

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

to

m

t anspo tat on

by

d sp acement pu auan to ts a ft

A capac ly ass gnee w

bo ab e to

eass gn capac ty aubjact to eca
The capac ty ass gnee mus ema n

subjec o Co umb a ope at onat I ow
o a ansporta on consort urn must
pu chaae Co umb a a ba anc ng
se v ce A
membe 1 o
a
t anspo Ia on conao t a must
purchase he aame eve of ba anc ng
service

RECOVERY OF FERC ORDER 636
TRANS T ON COSTS Tho p oposed
ta ffs p ov de fo the ecovary of
t ana t on coata a a ng f om he

nteratoto p pel nee mp emantat on
of FERC 0 de 636 Co umb a
p oposes to ecove these t an1 t on
coats as dasc bed be ow
T ana t on coats ev ad

upon

Cotumb a by n e slale gas p pe ne a
undo
FERC app oved
a lis
al ocated to and co lected f om sales

custome a may be recove ed th ough
Columba s Gao Coot Recove y
( GCR ) elo
Co umb

a

w

a ocate to

and

collect I om both sa ea and
t anapo at on cuatome a the
cha gee aft butab e lo the p pe nes
term no on of the
gas supply
function ( GSR cost•
These GSR
coats and cha gas aha t be a located
between utee and t ansportal on
custome s as fo owe sa es

62%

and tranoportal on 38'%
Cotumb a w I a ocate to end
col ect f om aalas cuatome 1 00%
of the cha ges att butabte to the
p pol nea ecovery of Account 191
1 ana on coato p ovldod that
Cotumb a will allocate to and col oct
f om t anaportat on cuatome 1 that
portion of the Account 191 I ans t on
costa aft butab e to Co umb as
t enaportat on cuatome

a that we e

GCR sales cuatomen belween
Novembe
11192 and Oclobo 31
11193
Cotumb a w t a locate to and
collect from both safes and
lranopor atlon customers the
chargee all bulab e to lhe pipe no1
recovery of alranded faciiUeo and
new lacll flee tranalt on coata
Theoe ot anded fact lllea and new
lac lltlea costs and charges ahell be
• located between aalea and
t anaportatlon cuatome s aa fol owa

aateo 62% and t anaportat on 38%
Columb a will allocale to and
collect I om both eat01 and
t anapo

at on

cuatomen

the

cha goa ott lbutable to the p pe lnea
recovery of Account 858 t anatt on
costa Then Account 858 coats and
chargoa shall be allocaled between
sales and tranaporta lon cus ome s

es follow• aa eo
80% and
traneportatlon 20'%
Columbia wll recover th ough Ita
Gao Cool Recovery rate lha port on
of trans tlon coots allocated to sates
customers

Unless o horwlse agreed upon n
lndlv dual
I anapo ta on

a rangementa the t ana on cos a
a located to Columbia tranaportal on
cuolomo 1 aha I be collected th ough
the eotab tahment of a au cha ge of
$ 04 Mel on a t of Columb a s gas
tranoportat on raloo Thla aurche go
aha! ecove the tranalt on cosla
the ca rylng coota on lht uncollected
balance of the t ana ton coa a
a loca ad to tranaportatlon aerv cas

at a oto equal lo Columba a short
term lnterul coat and tho
correopondlng groaa racalpta axe ae
lax on the billed 1 aneltlon cools and
ca rytng chargoo Columbia ohall
apply to terminate lhe transportation
aurcharge once tt hao collacled all
t anoltlon coat• allocated to
1 an1portatlon cualome a The

max mum

tranaltlon coat aurcharga

lor tranapo lotion cuatomo 1 1
S 04 Mel A I refund a ol Take or Pay
or tranollton coata paid to Columbia
shall be allocated l&gt;atween aa es and
t anaportat on cuatomera •• lol ooafu 110% and tranaportat on 20%
Refundo allocated to aales cualomera
ohall bo refunded through the norma
operat on of tho RA mechan om of
the GCR Rotundo a foca ed o
I enaportatlon cualomara ohalf be
held n he balance account to olloe
Jhe lhon ex atlng and lulura al ocaled
tranaportat on trana t on coats

Columbia may not ecove through
tha GCR ate any I ansi on coata
originally allocated lo t ansportallon
cu1tome • The tran1po tatton
ou charge may be aaaeued to and
recovered !rom a I tranaportatlon
cuatomera until all tranalllon coats
allocated lo tha tranaportat on c •••
are racovered

CAPACITY ASSIGNMENT Aa 1
raoun of the mptemantatlon ol FERC
Order 638 Cotumblo wlf 111 gn II m
plpollne capaolly to I rm aafea
cu1tomora under torma ond
condlllona doocrlbad In the propooed
tartllo Tholl lermo and cond llono
are aunvnartzed •• fo lowe
II n mum customer consortium

velumo of 5 MMct doy
Once opp !cation 11 mode lo the 5
MMcl day minimum vo ume the
ahlpper may add add t onat
cu11ome o on a monthly baolo
Howove roductlona can only be
modo ollect va April 1 each year
un 111 an addltlonol cuofomor of
equal atza Ia oddod
Capacity &amp;Mlgnmenta muot be
ranewed tach )ear effect va April 1

odes
The o g na ass gnee mus ag ee
to be espons be o a upst eam
p pe ne cha ges aasoc a ed w th he
capac ty e ease nc ud ng bu not
m ted o demand and commod ty
cha gea sh nkage nject on and
w thd awa cha gea Gas Aesea ch
nat tute cha gas
caah outs
t anslt on cos s p pe ne ove un

che goo and ACA s
REQUEST
The App cat on equests lhat he
Comm sa on f nd that the p esen
ates fo gas se v ce a e unjus
un eaaonab e and nsuff c en to
yed

easonab e compenaat on to

Co umb a I nd thai the ates and
che gee p opoaed n tho App cat on
a e us and easonab e and w
p ov de a easonab e e u n upon the
p operty devoted by Co umb a o a
gas serv ce epp ove the ng of new
ta flo n the fo m p opooed n the
App cat on and app ove he
w thd awol of the a flo lor wh ch
they a e oubot luted o de thai sa d
new Jar lis sha bo mode aflecl ve
lorthw th and make ouch furtho
o de a and g ant ouch furthe e ef
as may be necessary Just and prope
GENERAL INFORMATION
Based on the cu on1 cha ge for the
cost of gas the eat mated ave age
pe cent nc ease n a ea
1hou d

the requested nc ease be g anted n
fu

sa es ee v ces

fa

Gene a Se

Sma

v co s 4 0% Gene a

Serv ca a 4 1% and La ge Gene a
Se v ce s 3% o t ansportat on
eerv ces
Small
Gene a

T anapo at on Se v ce

s 11 9%

Gene a Tranaportat on Service a

17 6% La ge Gene at T ensporta on
Serv ce (F xed Del vo y Che go a
50%
end
Large
General
T anapo at on Sa v c• (Ma n ne
De very Cha ge) a 0 0%
The
Sllpulal on
and
Recommendation

aubm tted fo

epp oval Jo tho Comm as on
eddreasea among otho thtnga the
ecove y

of

nte state

p pel ne

t ana tton coats 1 a ng aa a result of
lho Fedora Ene gy Ragulato y
Commloa on Order 636 Tha public
hea ngs ochodulod fo th 1 case
p ov de an opportun ty lor lnloraated
pe son1 to addreao th 1 luue
Theae p opoaed alee and cho goo
a e aubject to change• lnclud ng
changes as to amount and form by
lho Comm aolon lol owing
s
hearlnga on the fled Appl cal on
Recommendat ons which d Her I om
lha Appl cat on may be made by the
Slafl of tho Comm •• on or by
lnte ven ng pa t ea

and may be

adopted by the Comm ss on
Any pe son f m corporal ort o
asaoc al on may me pu suant to §

4909 9 of the Rev aod Code an
objecl on lo such p opo•ed
tncreaaod rotea by alleging that ouch
p oposals
a e unluot ~nd
d ac

m natory o un easonable

A copy of lha Appt ca on s
ava able fo

napect on at the off ce

of Co umb a Gao ol Ohio tnc at 200
C v c Center D ve Columbus Oh o
43215 o at lhe off ces of the Pub lc
Ul t es Commission of Oh o at 180
East B oad St eel Columbus Oh o
43215-3793
The Publ c Utlt es Comm sa on of
Oh o has ocheduled oovo at foca
public hea tngs In Case No 94-987
GA AIR Tho hoa ngo a e acheduled
lo the purpooe of p ov d ng en
opportun ty to nterooltd membe 1 of
lho public to tutlly In tfl"oae
proceeding• The local hea Ina• w t
be held at lho following tlmea and
pfacoa
Manaflold Ohio Monday Augus
8 1994 al 7 30 p m ot City Hat C ly
Counc Chambe 1 30 N D amond
St eel Room 75 Manafleld Oh o
44902
Parma Ohio Wodneaday Augua
0 a1200pm atCtyHell Councl
Chambera 66 1 R dga Road Pa ma
Ohto 44129
Toledo Oh o Tutaday Auguat 16
994 at 2 DO p m
at To ado
Gove nment Cantor Clly Counc I
Chambo 1 First Floo 1 Government
Conte Toledo Ohio 43624
Atheno Ohio Tuooday Auguat 16
1994 al 3 30 and 5 30 p m at Athena
Pub lc Lib ary Meeting Room 30
Home Street Athena Oil o 45701
Spr nglleld Oh o
Wednoaday
Auguat 17 1994 at 6 30 p m C ty
Hall Forum 1at Floor 76 E11t High
St aa~ Sprtnglltld Ohio 45502
Cofumbua Oh o
Thuraday
Auguat 8 1994 al 3 30 and 5 30
p m Public Utllltlea Commloa on of
Ohio 180 Eaol Broad Straot 111h
Floor Room ItA Columbua Oh o

915-4111
212311 mo

Publlc Notice

PubIc Notice

NOTICE OF SALE
By v rtue of an 0 de of
Sa e uued out of he
Common P ease Cou t of
Me gs County Oh o n the
case of Ga y J Wo fe
P a n If aga nat Sonya
Wo e e a Defendants
upon Judgment tho e n
ende ed bo ng Case No
94 CV 2 n u d Court t w
olfe fo sa e et tho I ont
doo of the Court Houae n
Porno oy Oh o on the 29th
day o Augua
994 at
o 00 o c ock A M
he
lo tow ng Ianda and
tenementa to w t
The fo ow ng dooc bed

AUDITOR S PARCEL I 900528 9 00529 19 00530
and 19-00397
DEED
REFERENCE
Vo ume 324 Page 2 5
Ma go
Coun y Dead

p em 101

s tuated

n the

VI age of Rae ne County of
Mo go and State of Ohio
Po ce 1 S tuate In the
VII ago of Rae ne Me go
County Oh o Be ng the
weal I ve feet off tho
eoote ty th rty I ve feel of
Lol No 36 n he VII ago of
Rae ne Oh o The above
I vo feel s tha portion of Lot
No 36 owned by tho forma
G anto 1 wh ch wae not
conveyed by he r deed o

And
the fo ow ng
pe aono p ope ty and
f x u ea upon lhe above
p em ses
L Fo to Pop Mach ne
Sunbeam lee 0 Mat c
Regu o 4 pe son tab ea
9
Small 2 pa son tab e
Onng oomcha 1 34
Moble Sa ad Ba
H gh cha 2
Sta Metal Sendw ch
Coole
GE Toaoto
Frymaote Chorb o or
Southband otovo 6 grIt
Toutmuto Daop F ye
w 2 g aa•e pana
Walk n coo e 6 I eoze
S gna ure up ght I ooze
(green)

Names in the news

GuHer Cleaning

ARNOLD'S

Painting

PlUMBING,

FREE ESTIMATES

949 2168
" .... 11'N

Lou Weight

GuBranteed
Lose Pounds and nches
Natu al Herbal Tablets

No Meenngs No We~gh no
No drug&amp;o hem eels
Afl to abou
one dolla a day

I 800 796 6328

446-3898

PlUG IN

AFFIRMAT VE ACT ON
POLICY
The Me go County
Counc t on Ag ng Inc and
Mo go County Sen o Cit zen
Canter s total y comm tted
to
p ov d ng
aqua
opportun y n employmen
and aervlce accasa w thou
ega d

ettg on

Pub! c Notice

~

Public Notice

to

ace

na ona

co o

o gn

hand cap sex educat on

age o ab ty to pay
Leafy
Chaatoen
Info rna on and Re e a
Coo dlnato
s the Eque
Emp oymant Oppo tun ty
Off cor lo the agency
tl you lea you have been
d ac m noted age nst w th
ega d to ace y ng aerv cea
or obtain ng amp oyment
conlact the EEO Off ce at
the Sen o C t zan Cen1er
altho
n pe son o by
cat ng 992 2161
(7) 18 lTC

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT PROBATE D V StON
MEIGS COUNlY OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
SETILEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS PROBATE
COURT MEIGS COUNlY
OHIO
Account• and vouchers

of tho lo ow ng named
I due or ao have been I led
n the P obato Court Meigs
County Oh o o approve
and aattlomont
ESTATE NO 26803 Fine
and Dlatrfbutlvo Account o
Jennifer L
Sheela
Adm n 1 at x of the Eotato
of Guy E Hun e Dacoased
ESTATE NO 27935 Flna
and Dtst lbuttve Account of
Robert A Mallox Executa
of lha E1lata of Edwe d L
Mattox Deceased
ESTATE NO 27879 First
and Final Account of S d
Llttlo Guard an of Jomeo
Caoto an lncompolenl
Peraon

ESTATE NO 25836
Fourth Cu rent Account ol
Bernard V Fu tz ond Jamoa
E D ddfo Truote11 of the
Truat Created Under Wl I of
Roger Adamo Docoaoed
ESTATE NO 27591 F nat
and Dtat lbuttvo Account of
Wanda
M
R ze
Admin atrat tx of lho Eatate
of F ankl n M Rlze
Decoooed
Unteao axceptlona 1 e
llltd the ato aa d accounte
w II ba for hoar ng bafo e
uld Court on tho 22th day
of Auguo 1194 at which
time aald accounta wtt be
conalde ed and .:ont nuod
lrom day to day untt nne ly
d opoaod of
Any peraon ntereoted
may II e wrlllan excaptlona
to oa d account• o to
matter• pertaining to the
execution of tho truat not
teoa lhan live daya prtor to
the clalo ott lor htartng
Robart Buck Judge
Common Pteaa Court
P obate Dlvl1ton
Me go County Ohio
(7) 18 lTC

11

LEGAL NOT CE
The Rut end Board of
Townsh p T ustees
a
seek ng que I ed b de to
bu d

a

ence a ong a

d aputod fence
ne tn
acco dance w th 0 R C
971 07
the
owes
espons b e b dde ag ee ng
to lu n sh he abo and
mate o and bu d such
fence acco d ng to the
spec f ca ons p oposed by
the boa d w
ece e he

wo k p Qjec B ds w be
accepted I om Ju y 1 lo
Ju y 25 Tho p operty open
Aug 5 1994 s owned by
Mo Ed th C a k and s
toea ed on New L rna Road
n Ru end Me go County
Fo furthe n o mat on on
th s p ojec p ease conloe
lhe Rutland Townsh p C erk
o the Ru end Boa d of
Townsh p T us ees

7

1

8253TC

Card of Thanks

v

614·992 7643
{No Sunday Calls)
21 2112/Uh

Dear Editor
I want to thank all of
the generous citizens
who sponsored a par
tldpant In our saddle
up for St Jude event
on June 4 1994
I don t know all of
you but I want you to
know that with your
help we had 18 riders
and raised $1020 49
Riders names are
lsable Dill
Laney
Hankla Terry Carsy
Bob &amp; Ann Sargent,
Susan Gruser Sara
Gruse~
David
&amp;
Sandra Jvlden Donna
Knapp Joseph Young
Amanda Bentz, Jesstca
Wheele~
Kenneth
Wbeele~ Carlyn Darst,
Pam Mllhon Donny &amp;
L I o da
&amp; Dam el
Young Pete &amp; Cindy
Scott
These funds will ben
ent St. Jude Cblldrens
Research Hosptlal
Americas
Leading
Center for the study &amp;
treatment of chlldred
Cancer
Jr through this pro
gram we save one child
your support will be
rewarded In full
I also want to thank
Chapman s Feed Store
of Rutland Sugar Run
Flour Mill of Pomeroy
for the/ donation of
prizes gave out to the
top 3 riders wlth the
most sponsors &amp; the
Meigs Co Sheriff s
Dept ror the escort
through Rutland.
Thank you very much
Sincerely
Isabel DID St. Jude
Trail Ride Coordinator

Help wanted

$100 00 GET 1 ROOM

FREE

MORRISON'S
HEATING &amp; COOUNG

HEATING &amp;

RSES

&amp; EPA

COOLING

Untversal

QUALITY WORK l

Cert1f1ed Sales

GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992 7474
POMEROY OHIO

....,.....

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM•••
REMOVAL
•UGHT
HAUUNG
•AREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992 2269
USED RA LROAD T ES

Service

&amp;

Installation
Free estimates

992 7434

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO

AMERICAN GENERAL liFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Inter or &amp; Extenor
Take the pan oul of
pa nt ng Let us do
to you Very
onabe
Fee Est rna es
Belo e 6 p m eave
message
Alte 6 p m

471~0

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

R Hupp, D( U • Agent

Box 189
Middleport, Ohto 45760
(614) 843 5264

614 985 4180

12i31:&gt;'1W!l'N

44

SPEND

{Carpet Cleaning Only Maximum 240 sq rt)

''"'""'"

Apartment
for Rent

TRI STAH K9
ACADEMY

WATER'S EDGE APARTMENTS

TUPPERS P A NS
Bas c obed once
aw ento cement
po sonal p o oct on
kenna aarv ce pups &amp;
young dogs lo sa o
RoHwe e &amp; Shepho d
Sud ServiCe
By app only

SYUCUSE,OH

OPENING IN JUlY
Over 62 dioabled or handicapped FmHA 1 bedroom Rento for $0 to $405 baaed on Income
Range refrigerator carpet ale on o te laundry
pa king.

614 949-2012

I•

3/25194

TOO

614 667 PETS

800 750 0750

FmHA Rental Aaa stance
Equal Houa ng Opportun ty

WANTED
COMMUNITY
SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR needed to teach commun ty
and personal sk lis to an adult w th learn ng
ltm tattons n Mrddleport Hours 8 a m Sat
thru 8 a m Mon sleep over equ red H gh
school degree val d dnver s I cense good
dnvtng record three years licensed dnv ng
expenencB and adequate automob le
Insurance coverage reqUired Salary $5 00/hr
to start Vacatton/s ck beneftts Tratntng
provided If nterested contact Cectlla at 1
800 531 2302 Equal Opportunity Employer

There are no majo

COMMERCIAL and RESIDEN riAl
FREE ESTIMATES

Downspouts

Lo11 Wll~ Ukt •erazy"

ClaooiOedo

Room Additions • Roofing

997 41l9 AI Tromm Ow•er 1 SOG-291 5600

....

Bunn Coffee mach ne
M c owave oven 2

Garages • Replacement Windows

GuHers

614 992 7878

B~r.:P ~

New Homes • VInyl S1d1ng New

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

NEW REPAIR

SA 7 F ve Po nta

toGreat

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
110 Court St Pomeroy Oh o
Look for the Red and Wh1te Awrung

ROOANG

Backhoe Work and
General Hau ng
L mes one F I D rt
Gavel Sand
Leach Bed
Instal a on and
Sept c Sys ems

Reco da

Hot fudge warmer
Star metal steam labte
Kenmo e up ght I ooze
Eve ett Rouah and Grace
Rouah eco dod n Volume (white)
Ice c eam keepe hand
231 Page 207 Meigs
dpleeze
County Doed Reco do
Shako mach no w mtx ng
Pa eel 2 Tho fo ow ng
due fbed
ea
eatate cup a
Gene al comma c a meal
a tuatod n tho County of
Me go State of Oh o a ce
Sea a New w ndow a
Townoh p of Sutton and n
the ncorpo aled VII ago of cond tone
2 a ge • a nleaa atee
Rae na be ng twenty seven
(27) loot north and aou h tebtea
2,.1alnlooa oloot bua carts
along Th rd St eat and
1 JIOc1d top wo k table
eighty lour (84) feat eeat
1
po tab e
II o
and weal along Pear St eel
off of the north 1 de of Lot ext ngutahe a
Mlac dl1hoo
Numbe Th ly atx (36 n
Kn vee lo ka apoona
oa d VII age of Recine
Jackson
ouJoma!lc
Parcel 3 Being a part of
Lot No
36
n
he d ahweohor
Glasa front p o caoe
Incorporated V llage of
Sharp cuh reg ater
Rae na Me go County Oh o
Mlac
polo and pane
bounding 84 feet Eaot and
Boo hs 8
Wut on Pea t Streel and 62
loot North ond South on togethe w lh a I aupp 11
Third Stroot except ng f xtu ea me chend 11 and
therefrom 27 loot North and mface laneouo equ pment
South along Th d Sl eat located ln and around tho
and 64 feet Eut and Weal p em see
Sa d rea eslate was
along Pea St aet off of the
appro aad at $47 600 00
north alda o11atd Lot
Pereonal p operty wu
Parcel 4 Be ng twonly
two (22] llel off of tho North approlaed at $6 600 00
Te mo of Sate Caah
aide ol Lola No 33 and 34 In
The rea aatate cannot be
the VIllage of Rae ne aatd
22 feet extend ng the fut oold lor teas than two thlrda
depth of oald Loto No 33 of tho appro sed Vtllue The
and 34 being a total depth peroonaf property wit be
best p lee
of 238 feet Excepl ng parcel so d a
ao d lo Everett Rouah ond obtainable
Jemea M Soutaby
G ace Rouoh 11 deocrlbod
She til of Molga County
n Vo uma 238 Page 44
Oho
Me go County
Deed
(7)
18
25
(8)
1
3TC
Record I

Howard L Writesel

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

The p opooed uloo and
tranaportatlon 1111 wilt gonarot• an
lncraaoo of $47 4119 000 In oporatlng
unreoolved l11ueo n the celt dull to
tho part111 ogrooment to the
11 pu atlon and
ecommendatlon
deocr bad above
Tho lo m of th 1 notice hao ~on
epp ovod by the Public Utllltle1
Commlooton ol Ohto
l
COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO INC
(7)6 11 18 3TC
~

headliners seat
covers convertible
tops Antique Cars
20 yrs expertence
Boat Seals
992 7587
41464 Storther Rd
Pomeroy Ohto 45769
~-----t

4321~3

revenue•

JESS COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY

Wanted to buy
Standing

Real Estate General

t1mber, all hard
wood &amp; p1ne

Call

992·2259

RACINE Sharon Ho ow Ad So udod HunUng Cab n on
approx 20 OS ac os 40X28 Cab n has W 8 s o o soma
fum b.Jrv no wa e o e ec nc On away o cab n a so carport.
Th a a petloc Dee &amp; Turl&lt;ey area G oa oca on o he
Hlllte o CNO o the outdoors
ASKING St7 000
SYRACUSE Located at Lee C rdo Ranch sty e lpme home
With 3 bedrooms al on one floo carport app anoos cable
hook"\Jp pa ed s re good ne ghborhood Low rna enance
homo &amp; awn IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! ASKING
$32,000 Owner May Accept An Olle I
MINERSVILLE 2 s ory I arne w h 2 bad ooms bah
N G FA heat 80x 00
o Homo has newe w nng
carpeting &amp; roof Cabo hook up ron porch o 7X24 Loca ed
on pavod s real
ASKING S29 500
LETART SA 338 Vacant t a a o WI h sap c TPC wa e
avo tabla curron ty across he road ASKING SS 000
MIDDLEPORT Au and S eo 2 s ory I ama homo w h
newe Vlnty s d ng and newe roof 3 bedrooms
12 baths
gas floo fu naca now un a
ea scraendod po ch
opplancas b nds fi op ace bock storage bu d ng 6 wood
s orage bu d ng 3 oom ap w th so age &amp; ce a be ow
Lovely flowers S onn doors end Windows Very we taken
care of
ASKING $42 000
SR 124 Rae no 2 otory framo home WI h 4 bod ooms
bath plaste wa s hardwood ftoonng FA N G hea ron &amp;
sicla porches rea pe o and shad
12 co garage bu n
bookcase ce a a ea cable hook up firap ace
ASKING $40 000
NEW LISTING SA 7 JUSt out o Ches a Ranch style home
With 3 bedrooms 2 baths o a e oc nc carpet hroughou
modem ki chen w cay U o &amp; opp ances also tea u as a one
car garage that s comp etelv w red to handfo al handyman
needs THIS IS A MUST SEE HOME!
ASKING S74 900
NEW LISTING New Hope Ad N ce 1 I oo I arne home
leatul81 2 3 bad oom
bath 2 ca ga ago ou bu d ngs
ler&lt;:ed yard ge!den aroa bl nds AIC pane ng carpo~ E ec
H I' and ce a ASKING $35 000
NEW USTING- Ranch Frame S ck Home on 39 ac as
Home has 5 rooms 3 bodrooms 2 baths penna payne
Windows, carpe~ Elect B B heat dn ed we 8 2 ca garage
w door opener deck l'lllngera or &amp; range att c secunty
oyotam Now heat pump With AIC and a Pnma S a Sa e o
ASKING $59 000
LOOKING FOR A HOME? COME TO CLELAND REALlY
AND SEE WHA'I' WE HAVE TO OFFER!
HENRY E CLELAND'., ....,......,.......................,........ 992~191
TRACY BRtNAGER94G-243D
SHERR! HART.
742 2357
HENRY E CLELAND Ill
992~191
KAlMV CLELAND
992~191
OFFICE - t92 225D

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complele
Remodetng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

614 682·7676

OFFICE

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCJION

985 4473

WHALEY 5AUTO
PARTS

fondng &lt;ltaln
U"·Woo4

Spec a z ng n Custom
F arne Repa
HIW &amp; USID PAITSIOI
All MAliS &amp; MOOILS

Do&lt;eratlvo

992 70UOI
992-555.1 OR
lOU FRill 101)-141-0070
DAAW N, OHIO
fJ li flfN

HAUliNG
LIMESTONE

&amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
Joe N Sayre
GRAVEL

SAYRE TRUCKING
614 742 2138

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
614-992-3470
Umeotone 15 ton &amp;
up $10 50 ton 15ton &amp;
undtr $11 50 ton
Top Soli S6 50 1on
Gravel $11 50 Jon ?
Sand? Low Rateo
And More
10 ton min on all
6115/t mo pd

YOUNG'S
CAIPEHrER SERVICE
-Room Addlt ono
Newp,.gea
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing
Interior &amp;
Painting alao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Extellor

VC YOUNG Ill

992-6215
Pomeroy hlo

...

s.los..d
lnslaftall011

CaD Western Auto
992 SSIS
Free Est mates
Res dent a Commerc al
and

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE
Delivered
Locally

992·3838
MARTECH
INDUSTRIES
Resident al
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Dnveways

614-992 7878
SR 7 Flva Pointe

~·-

liNGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

CLUB

IN POIIEROY
645pm.
Special Early Bird

$100 P41JOff
Thla ad good for

FREE card.

lie

No

1

0061-342
~~

�P age-S-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, July

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

18, 1994

Monday, July

;&gt;

18, 1994

The

, Ohio

Po

Dally

Senti

J\LLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

• Announcements

Merchandise

Busln~tss

34

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Buildings
Announcements

Comm•rclal building for rent In

Middleport, tho old Molgo Willtaro building, 814-!192-2459.

.focllooa! u, honest, SWF, 4'1,
..,[ going, would li kl to mHI

·.wf.l tor companlonehlp, etc.
Vr1t e: Box C-7, CJO Pt. Pleasant
~e g1s ter. 200 Main 51., Pt.

35

-'!A o..Lsar\1, WV 25550

5.32 acros, $13,1SO. 8.14 ac"s,

&lt;..J

-

- -1

$14,571).
~aybum
Rd,
reasonable rutrtctlcns. Information mailed on requeat . 30467.5-5253.

, hood o l Sou theast Ohio. For In
'lppoi ntmont, Ca ll 614-44fHl166,
"-1 Second St., Ga llipolis . .lito
111

Planned

9 Adlolnlng Lolli. 2 Acrwe. All To
Go 'ro 1 ~u~~ All Ulllltl"

Plren-

Available, 61

, •oaod o! Southeut Ohio In
iJ tr'ens and Loga n . "Sliding FM
-;n le''

From Old

Your Jeans Pageant, July
Krod 91
Park,
Point
1'l9asant. Must call Sheila Hart
'H enlrf lorm. 304-755-0060.

Chevrolet; Font, Oodg• pickup.
bodo. Short or long. No ruot.
304-67U28tl.
'

If..¥

C.rpot $5.00 Up Vinyl $4.41 To
$6 .~ In Stock, 814-446-11144,

North Galtl1 H.S. 614-

USED

• K B fJ 3

EEK&amp; MEEK

Washers, dryWI, refr1geralort,
rangn. Skagga Appliances, 76
Vine Street, Call 614-446-ng.e, 1-

Hoodo, 1m Ford Bid Sharp!
614 446 11440, 614-256-6018.

0

800-4~341111 .

•

73

Klng-el:u wtlerbed complete,
ralls,
aeml-wave
mat1ross,

Vans &amp;

;J•nca s. bronze color, plush &amp;

"Are

you ever gomg to buy an extension cord

4 WD's

heater, 4 drawer pad., $400

OBO. »H7!1-5JII2 or 675-1770.

Help Wanted

11

18

Wanted tO

Do

Gaorgn Portable Sawmill, don1
haul
I~ to the mill juat
call
75-1 57·

:J::

box, puppy

AbuM Recov.ry Has The FoJ..

rh aln, loash, ail accessorlt1. lowlnp, Vaeanclll In h Melge 1 - - - - - - - - - G1 4_742 .2276 .
I"
Coun YOttlce.
21
Business
g Week Old House Droktn Kit·
10n To Good Homo, 614-4464173. 2 COONSELOR POSITIONS; n,
Qpponunlty
VARIED SHIFTS, Qualifications:
Coc ker Spanlal puppy, 9mo. old, L.P.C., L.P.C.C., L.S.W., L.I.S.W.,
!NOTICE!
black &amp; whlto. 304-67S-1439.
C.C.D.C. Or In Procoso And lOr OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Counselor TralnH. Dru~ And rocommondo that you c1o bull·
Co uch &amp; 2 Chairs To Glvuway, At eo ho1 Exper 11nee p re er rod · noao With pooplo you know •nd
614-245-9171.
Cre dontl a 11 ng Trae k 1mport ant·
NOT to lind money ttvougnI thl
Give to Good Home. AKC Regismall until you have lnvntfgated
tared Chow, Black Female 614- Please Send Resume And Litter · the offering.
~ro-.
01 lnterul To Health Recovery
524 5
c::u•·
-·--,--,...,.--,-.,--:::::-I Sarvicn, Inc. Ann. Nancy Dot·
1-i ittens, To Good Home, 614-319- son, P.O. Box n4J. Athena, OH
~585
45701. Salary Hequlf'lmantl
Commensurate With Education
Ellporlonca.
E.E.O.
- - - - - - - - ! And
Employer.
Lost &amp; Found
6
AVON SELLS ITSELF! Potontlol
lost Strayed Or Possibly Killed, Eomlngo $200 -$2,000 Monthly,
Go rman Shepherd Mall, Ad- Soli At Work" Homo! And Mall
dison Pike, Brick SchOOl Road -Order. FrM training 1-800-742AlltHiastato tldYetltstng In
4738.
Area , 614-367-'T'i"S.
this
Is 011bjod lo
!he FodeiBIFolrHoustng Ad
Lost : Black 6 while Boston lerBartondor Wanted: Apply In
rier, male. 304...S7S.1125.
ot1968 .mlch makes n 110go1
Poraon At Tha Addloon Club,
to advertise •any preterence,
Lost: green Parakeet, West Main 614-446-4756.
lmtatlon or -nation
Slrolilt, Pomeroy area, reward,
based on race, cotor, rallg6on,
Chriotmao Around Tho World
614-992-2008.
Decor And More, O.monatat01'11
sex tamllal status or n.UOnal
Lost : Walker Coon Dog, Mos11y Noodod, FrM $300 K~. Earn
Of'9n, or any lnlontlon to
Whlta &amp; Brown With Brack Spot Ful'-Tlmtl Pay For Part ..Time
make any 1111&lt;11 protorence,
On His Back Answer• lo Name WortL Atoo, Bool&lt;lng Partl11,
Of Duka, VIcinity: IIIII Crook 614-24!1-11031.
Imitation or !ltcrtmlnollon. •
Road, 614446-7515 or 614.256Doll &amp; Baiuofy Worker, Baking
634 4.
This .... _ . wtl not
Eoporlonco lloqulr.d, Evonlng
knowtir9Y accept
Lest: Walker Coon Dog, Mostly Shift t·1D P.M. Nood Outgoing
White &amp; Brown With Brack Spot ~rwo011llty, Good With Public,
actvertlsemerl;• tor real Mtate
On His Back, Answers To Name Pay Minimum W.go, But N_.
whktlls n vtolldton of dle law.
Of Duke, Vicinity: Milt Cr..k tlabla
Dopondlng On Exourre-areheteby
Road, 614-446-9552.
porlonc:o, Brown'alGA, • lntormod that oil dwelflgo
0818, Bot-n 8 6 3 Edla
advertised In thta newspaper
WoRman Contact.
Yard Sale
7
818 avalabte on an equal

no_.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; 1/lclnlty
All Yard Saln Mull B• Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:oopm tht
day before the ad II to run,
Sundav .dltlon-- 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
edition
10:00a.m.

Saturday.
Moving ute, 7118-'7123 (Monday·
Saturday), Dam-Spm. Some ful·
nlture, aome Fenton, dlshware,

Llvo In Frao Boord, No Strlngo,
Any Ago, 814-446-3411.
OWNER OPERATORS Your
Tractor &amp; Flatbed For Dodlcatod
High Paying Lanea. Honw DfiMl
Pl .. Wookondo. Plenty Ollllloo.
New Office - Exf~:' Tr~napor-

tatlon 1-800-418-

.

Porwon nooded to milk dairy
cowo, hourly pay, paid vaca~lon 1
mobil home available. ZMnG
rwaume: Box R·12, c/o Pl.
Pleasant Register, 200 Main Sl.,
Pt.

Pleaaan~.

WV 25550

Pomeroy
Nuralng
and
Lowery , organ, old Singer Rehabilf1atk»n Center hall an
sewing macllint and lots of lmmodlato oponlng lor a 1\111
misc. hems. Rain or ahlna. lup- tlmo RN or LPN on 11·7 ahlft,
perl Plains, take SR 681 past Thla -Ilion Ia lor a nuroo
elementary achool, tum leh on commllted ta delivering u:cepo
Brooks Rd. (Twp. 312), ga to end tlonal quality care lor our
geriatric ruldanta. Wt otter an
of road.
excallant banet• package, campethlve Alliry and a .table,
Public
Sale
8
supporttva work envlronmenli.
Paraona aHklng 10 ahllre on
&amp; Auction
thil team of nu,.... committed
Rick Pearson Auction Company, to our llandard of poehlve outfull time auctlonMr, complete come, pltaM Clll 614-QI2..6806
auction
sarvlce.
Ucansed or apply In poroon It 36761
#66,0t1io &amp; West Virglnlt, 3Q4. Rockaprlngo Road, POIIIIJOy.
E.O.E.
773-5785.
POSTllJOBS
Auctioneer Col. Oscar E. Click,

Bonded, Sttrt $'11.41/hl.lo for exam and
application In . call 21i-76a..
Earn up to $1000 weekly 8!)01 axl. WV$48, llm--8pm,
processing mall, atart nqw, no- Sun--Frt.
License 1 754·94 I

experience, lr. .suppllta, tr....
Information, no-obligation. Send
SASE: Cascade Dopt-50, P.O.
Box 5421, San Angolo, TX 7U902.
Noedtd Now: Companion To
304-895-34:10.

9

Wanted to Buy

Antique• will buy one place or
ontln ho..ohold, Daby Martin,
top dollar paid, 6t4-912-J114t.
C!oon Lato llodet Con Or
Trucka, t987 llodolo Or Nowor,
Smith Buick Pontiac! 1900
Eaotam Avonuo, Gatllpolo.
Decorated .tonew~re, wall tel•
phonoo, aid Iampo old thormometars, old clock., antique
1\lmlturo. Rl-lno Antlquoo.
RuM Moore, owner. 114-~2526. Wa buy eatat11.

opportuA!y bull.

S1l.. parton, 5 poalllona avallab .., wMrlng &amp; ••lllng high

fashion jawelery. 304-837-2681,
1:00 till tt :DDPII.
SERVICE PERSOHNEL
Sorvlclng
Silk
Flowor
Dopartmonla 01 National Rotall
Chain Storn In Your Ataa. Port
Tlmo, Aoxlblo Houn, Hourly
Wage And uu..ge. Mall Latter
With bualltleotlono To: Roilanoo
Trading, Attn: Mike Lynch, 3683
lnvarary Orlvt, Columbus, OH
43228.
Wanted: ExparierlC~ Fumllure
Refinisher, Will Train. Paya B)'
Tho Pleco Only, 614-446-4514 8-5
M·F.

18

Wanted to Do

=---=--:---:---:-:C.rpontor wor1t root, doeka,

Real Estate

41

SOUTH

•
AQ H 7

BARNEY

reference,

A Repo. Section

OPEN Mon . ·Sot. 9-6/Wod t-5.

14x60 2 Br, 1 mile South of
Eureka, on St. Rt.7. No pete,
rwt.rtncea. 814-256-60811.
2 Bodroomo Furnl•~!'!, On Clay
Chopot Rood1 $3!JO/Mo. Pluo
$:106 Do-~. 014-256-6406.
2 Btdrooma, AC, No Pt~ta,
O.poalt

And

Refaf8ncaa.

$40001to., Wooho~ Dryor; 2 Bodroom Houat, ~umlahld, No
Pota, $350/Mo. Dopooft, 814-717·
4345.
3 Bodrooma $250/llo. + Dopoo~.
1 Bedroom, $200/lolo. + Dopoolt,
614-24~4 Or 614-2511-61109.
Trallor lor rant, you pay utii~IH
pluo $50 do-lt. 304-675-2535.

44

Apanment
lor Rent

1 and :Z bedroom apt~rtmenta,
tumlahed and unfurnished,
oocurlty do-lt r.qulrod, no
pota, 614-912·2218.
1 Bedroom Apal1ment, Partly
Furnished, Gas Water, Sewage
Paid, $250/Mo. Pluo Socurtty, No
Poto, &amp;M-446-1423 Aftor 6 P.ll.
1 Bedroom Apt, Near Holzar,
central Air. $255. Call: 614-4462957.
2bdnn. aptL, tctal electric, ap-

tumlahld, laundry
room tocll~lu clooo to achool
In town. AppJ{callone available
at: VIllage Creen Apls. ~g or
calf 614-'192-3711. EOH.

pliance•

Fumlohod Eflleloncy $165/Mo.

-Conlael Tom lAflla AI 1-800- Apartment, Second Floor Cor114!1-1702 Or 1112·328-11473 Aftor 5 nor Socond 6 Plno, Gallipolla.

$210

Por

Month.
Stova,
And Wtttr Fur~
For 1alt by owner- ~ home,
1880 oq. ft., lull bUoment nlohod. No Poll, Coli 514-446w/tomlly room!. woodbumor, 3 424V Or 614-446-2325.
bedrooms, Z knchen1, 3 batne Fumlohod 3 Roomo &amp; Bath,
CIA. central vacc::um, ct~thlderal C!Oin, No Peto Rolot111C41 6
CllllniJ, ltone flrap&amp;acl, l1rge Dopoolt Roqulna.1 514-44&amp;-1511.
dock,
321156
outbuilding
wlheltld work room, 2+ acrtaln OIICiouo IIYing. 1 and 2 bod·
wooded aru cloee to town, room aportmonll It Vlllogo
llolgo School Dlotrlct, daytlmo Manor
onrl
RIYoraldo
814-912·2311, aYolng 614-1112- Apanmanto In lllddlapon. From
$232-$355 . Calf 61.. 912-5861.
7133.
EOH.
GNenbrtar &amp;tatM4pllt fovtr,
l•rgellvlng &amp; dining room, ~r., Nico 2 Bodi"OCitllo, Aft Elac1.,
2
t/2
bath.
tomllyroom Fum. Kltchon, Counlry Sllllng,
wlflr.pl•c•, double car prap, Cl- To Spring Valtay, No Polo,
lf111'ound pool, 3.85eo. land, $33Wo. Pluo llo~:t:s~
t7.
axe. cond. Somerville R•h)', Pt .. R,,_oo,8
304-67!1-3030 or 1711-3431.
N!co 3 br. opt. In Mlddlapon,
Houoo For Sola In Rio Orondo 814-111:1-5861.
Noor114~=let
Churah. 114Ph.
Day
8, Evonlngo
45
Furnished
Rafrlg~rator

19110 750 Kawaukl Runo Good
Would Like To Trade For
Whlalar, Or 3 WhHIIr Of Equal
Value, 814-441-1465.

4 goote, oil lor $&amp;0. 304-882Sof81 $75 Or BHI ottor, 814- 3438.
371-2720, After 6 P.ll.

1984 Y1maha Ventura, drtt~Hd,
very ciHn bike, $3100 080 614-

Uood 3 ton whoto oond, 304-475-31181.

Transportation

52

Sporting Goods

Golf clubo 6 bag. Prof81alonol
clubo, llko now bag. »H7!1-

d -1 llka n-, olu l'xT, colt
992..0293 aftll' • pm.

55

Building
Supplies

7t09.

53

Antiques

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:
FINE ANTIQUES· lmorlean an,
chino, an glaoa, oliver, 1\lmlturo,
McCoy Roseville, ate. COL~C.
TIBLE"S· prtnta, poston, toolo,

pottery, clockl, boxn, )are bot-

11~1 books, toy?,. ~tc. ALWAYS

BUTING ARROvvMEAOS. Top
dollar paid. Ono ploco or ono
hundred. APPRliSALS, 40
years uporlence. Pleau call
614-1112·2822.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

"Hooked oo Phonlca", like new,

l150. 304-671&gt;-4076.
1985 S..10,

Gr~~vely,

r.cllner, 1881

Ford 4x4. 3()4.675~62.

1992 Sot Of Brlttllnlcl Encyclopodlaa With An Add~lonal
61) Books, Laathor Bound, Uka
Brand Now l1,200, 614-446-61114.
2 Yur Old Amana AC 5,600 BTU
Excollont Condition, $200, 614446~86g Laavo ll18oago Will
Return Call.
3 Ton Mobllo Pack Air Conditioner lns1allad, Financial
Available, 614-44&amp;..6308, 1~
287-8308.
36" Kuster Sander $1,850,i 10"
S.ara Table Saw $175; 12.. aar.
Handsaw $150; 8" Ryobl Radial
Saw $150/· 6" Soon Jolntor $175;
100'o 0 Ook Ralood Ponot
Cabtnl1 oooro $8 Ea.; 3,000 A.
Wain.. Lumber $1.45 To $2.50
PT.; 11165 Oodtlo Comet ~0
Now Motor 6 T11na, $1,400; IS
Shooll 4x8 114" Oak Plywood
$t5 Eo. 814-44&amp;-1318.
36'" White CI'Oia Buck Storm

Door ISetMn lrn:ludod, Vory
Good Condltlonl 814-448-4278
Attor 3 P.M.

50 .Wh~o Oak ~. 10"116" 12
-18 Fl. Long, 614-3W-2720, After
6 P.ll.
Air Condhloner for Sale, also
Wa1har, Dryer, Refrlgar1tor,
Freezer call 614-258-1238.
Automatic weahlr, like new,
304-67!1-1272 otter 5;00 Pll.
Choat Froozor StOC!1.814-4411-4141
Aftor 6 P.M. Or On wookondo.
Collar ID i&gt;ox1 14 momory, brand
new, $43.85, tt14-n2-6168.
Canning )ar8; 2 cannaraj email
exercl11 blka; 614-948-2688 after
1:30pm.

Concreto 6 Plaatic Soptic
Tanka 300 ThN 2,000 Gallon.
Ron Evan• EntarpriMa, Jacke
aon, OH 1-800-637-11528.
Dining Room Tabla With 4
Cholro I SolVIng Butr.~ $150,
114 448 11642 Attor 5 P.ll.
Evana I. J•nninga Electric
Whoolchalr &amp; Charger, Good
Choir, Llu Now, 1114-4-.

";:!&amp;ht

Gotdo Oym
bancll, llka
now.304-88Z·
Got,. ctuba wlbag, ll-1 I~
pllchlng -go, 1,3,5 w/plng covoro, punor. Uood 2
-ocna, $200. 304-67!1-tiiOot.
Hayward Hlah Roto Sand Flft...
Pro Sorloa f Yur Old. Haywa111
Pool Pump 18x32 Solar Blonkal
llloe, Pool Equlp.ll14-44.1071.

71

Autos tor Sale

1181 Flroblrd 400 Big Block
Rune GrHt, l.ooU GrMI,
$3,500, With Extre MC14or &amp;

Block, brick, - • plpoo, wtndowa, llntela, etc. Claude WI• Tranamlalon, 614-448-3f78.
ton, Rio Gn!ndo, OH Call 514- 1m! Dodgo Aopan, Slant 8 En245-612t
gine, Runs Good, MOO, 614-37V2720 Aftor 6 P.ll.
56 Pets lor Sale
----,--:---,.,--:,- 1f79 Buick Rogal, V-8, 11,000,
Groom and S..ppty Sho!H'ot 304-6711-2352.
Grooming. JuUe Webb. 514-44&amp;1m Chevy Malibu, 400 email
0231.
block nbulh, new dual exhaust,
Pompo...t Pota by Sonya, dog niW paint, Nna · grNI, $1200
grooming, bothlfiiJ, all brNclo. OBO. 304-77ll-5i11.
304-882-3730.

rm Chryotor La Barron, 1
owner, 57,000ml. 304-17!i~881.

10 Gillon Aquartuma For Solo
Forroto, Pot Bolllod Plgo, Aiid
A&lt;coooorloo, 814-387-0t 17 Early rm ~· Aopan - k car,
$550.
71-41113 ahor 5:30pm.
llomlng Or Lale Evonlnga.
1981
Etdundo
C.dltloc $2,100,
1011018 dog UMII, $1111.85.
good ohopo, 304-67S4llltl.
Paint Pluo, 304-17S-4084.
2 AKC Roglotorod Toy Poocloa. 1082 OtdotiiOblill 18 Rogohcv,
Famale: Chocolat• &amp; White. 84,000 llllal 1 Family CJWnorl,
Malo: Whlta. Groat Bnodor. $150 Full Power, Elllra Cloon, $3,500.
Each Or $250 Both, 614-441- Will Taka Guno Or Boat ., T e.
814-2!11-8413.
0965.
AKC Booton Torrlor llolo, I
Wooko Old $200; Alao, llynlo
Bird, $250, 1114-24!1-11802.
AKC Dolmatlon ............ 1
female, 3 mal11, 111 U.O.a. ·304675-5553.
AKC Roglotorod Ba- Hound
Pupptoo; 5 Wooka Old With
Shote, $125, 014 4tl 3354.
AKC Roglotor.d B11111o Pupo,
Wormed And Shob; $55 8
WHkl, Sto.. Staptoton, 8144411-41n, 514-2511·1611.

MEET
MARLEENY'S
COUSIN!'

44Concerning

5 Center of shield
9 Small house
t 2 Sharp
13 Refuse from
grapes
t 4 Before
t 5 Puzzling
11 Actor- Mineo

(2 wds.)
46 Pilgrimage
49 Last Greek
letter .

18Look fixedly

53 Playwr~ght Betti
54 Made sate
56 Actress
J?anne -

190f no avail

57 Hmts

58 Bake~ c lay
59 - Momes
60 Anglo-Saxo n

21 Open wide. as
the mouth
23 Wheel track
24 British Navy

slave

abbr .
27 Snack \sl.)
29 Back o neck
320ne or the
other
34Unlocked

61Turts
OOWN
1 Hawaiian
music makers

fl :l

8 Happen

5 Actress Thurman
6 Morning
prayer
7 Part of fan

2 Penny
3 Star Wars

37 Ring shape
38 Profound
39Antlered
animals

princess

4Mad

· 9 Tendency to

wait
10 Russian river
1tTotnf
16 More miserly
20 Piano adjuster

1185 Oodgo 500 trado or aoll
$700. Flnllih dul but runo aood,
tlrM vory good, 304-87!1-51!5.

1987 PtyiiHHIIh Sundonc:o 87K,
AC, Good Condition, 814-24fl.
1585
Floh Tank 1 Pot Shop, 2413 .,:-;::, --::-::-:--r--:--:--,
Jackoon Avo. Point 1'10.-, 1987 PonUoc Turbo Grand Am, 2
3044711-2083.
Ooor, Loodod, 80,000 IMtao, 614446-71811.
Ful bloodod lloaalo aulltlloo,
lwka old,..-. ~'1110 1187 T·Bird. Air, Crulao, Tift,

Collla Puppl• For Solo, 8142511·1058.

-=·

euutte,

PIW,

Blue,

Rune

Good, Looko Good, $3515 114llola Boogie - · tlwka old. 446-8232 or 1114-448-4008.
304-llts-31154 titer lpm.
ltll Eacort, Nno I loolr aood,
Rot Tor;:.;""'"' 7wka otrt, will 1111 tor fi!IY ott. 30(..773$50ea.
-3340.
1518 ••• 3;G0 Pll.
Roglotorarl R-lor P"ppl• 11111 Fonl ....lang eon..rtablo
lor ..,.. $250, 114-1112-.Utl.
GT, 5 9paad, Standard, Dartc
Btuo I Gray. Excottont Cond~
Scfwlauzor 11"11111-. mlnatun, tlonl114
441 M18.
oon •
toy poodtn,
All_!:._&lt;:: mplonilao
bloodllnoo, 114- 1181
Pontiac
Form~'!Ji
86,.....,4, Coolvllla. .
Automatic• Air. T·Topo; 44,ow
lllloo· PO(· PW· Rod; Oroy 1,..
57
Musical
tertor' ..
Instruments
1tl8t llonto Corio, good " ' - ·
$4800. 304-175-1200 or 175-8878
Baldwin Plano Black 8ludlo aftor5pm.
Typo, $500, 8M 388 11101

=

,.,o, ·~···

Fa rm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Jt Paradise
330ptimist
35 Engine part
40 Non-clergy
431n readiness
(2wds.)
45 Leaves out
46ActorAirsch

50 Singer Pinza

51 Anglo-Saxon
tax
52 fruit drinks
55 Employ

992-2728.

19i1 XRBOR Din Blko Runo •
Good, For SDOO, 614--256-1581.
1g114 Hortoy Davldaon Sottrall,
1340 CC, Evolution engine, tX•
collant condition, l1D,ODD, 814-

~1. C~UGK! JUST
THOUGHT I'D LET

Honda 125 4-whaoler, nHda
minor rwpalra, 1350. 304-882-

't'OU KNOW I'M
BACK FROM CAMP ..

912~537.

1 ~AD A NICE
TIME .. DID YOU
M155 ME, C~UCK? "'

I'VE NEVER HEARD
OF 'IOU EITHER,
C~UCK

I

3438.

75

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Ce!ebnty Cophe• cryptograms are Cleated lrom Quo\ahons bV !amous people pa ~l and pm&lt;;enr
E;~ch le11er rn lhe CJphe• stand s !o• another Today 's du€ ~'- K

18' Open Bow 11!1 HP Narc Out- '
bolrd, Power Trim, Walk Tttru :

' Z E J 0

1185 opood boat, $8500. Faatoot
boat on Rlvor. »H75-5200 or
67!1-1878 """ 5pm.
1186 ChockmotO 16ft tohp lolorc:ul)' outboard, trailer Included,
$2,300;30447!1-1272.
.

EKBIEMTI .'

1990 Y1maha Wave Runner 500, ··
!Dual Trailer, 814-446-1314.
Yamtha Wave Ruooar Jet Ski
with new tralltlr, $3000, 814--8927574.

76

;,
'I

&amp;

Auto Pans

I • 30 doyo. 304-6711-411110, Pt
Pt-nt.
88 llopor 383 H.P. motor, dl...
oomblad, $2~; . throo 1417.50"-

~

'.1£

Buclaot Prlcod Tnnomloolono,
U..cl 6 NbUih, all typel, etart•
lng II tlli OWMI' 114--241-S6771
114-3J9.21135, 81W711-2283.
-

MI~D

YOU 1-.T 8:30,

YOO LkChm:&gt; I

215160HR1Jo

opaod tltod blackwalt tl~. ~!!"

AS A

-----~~~~~~~~----WORO

BOOIC.

- - - - - - - Editod by

~~~:t;~' S©R~~-L££tfS"
,OliAN

POP-UP

letters of
four scrambled words
lew to form four word$

...

f\OW SWEE..T OF
HI I'\ m1W.. ~ ...
1T':&gt; NK£ m&amp;:
\fo\l~W) BY YfJJR

.

DATE BOOK
July 18, 1994
BIG NATE

Motor Homes

RIG.HT' H&gt;RE
coM£~ THE tu_ cREAn
MAN' HE'(' HE'&lt;, IC.E
C.REAI"\ I"'AN ''
ALL

'72 S..partor 22' motor homa,
a111po 5, ru,. ltka now, root air
cond~lonlng, Oodgo 413 C.I.D.,
$5500, 814-141-3301.

Todayisthel99thday

IC.E" CREI'IM MI'.N I
HE'f,OVER HERE 1
HE'f, ICE (.~EM'\ 1'\1\W'

of 1994 and the 28th

II

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1969, a car driven ~y Sen. Edward
Kennedy plunged oil a bridge at Chappaquiddick on Martha's Vineyard in
Massachusetts; his passenger, Mary
Jo Kopechne, drowned.

11711 2111. campor..~......•!~ oontelned, I beda. 3t)4..~--~·

_________
Services

,

Home

-.
.

Improvements

•

.

TO DAY'S BIRTHDAYS: William,
Makepeace Thackeray tl811·18631.1
wrtter·

16.

.

~EY -1HEI&lt;t:S /&gt;.,

LOTTO 11.

IHI&gt;.T'S WH~ 1'M ?R~C.\iC!NG

INSIIJE FIRST-."".r==:::::_

~

ltotlmo a~
"'
too. l.ocot rotonnc11 1\lm
Colt 1-8W-287-4511 Or 8
\
0488 Rogon Wotorpn&gt;e&gt;ftng, Eo;~

1 rowr w~NT

ro \\11

;j

.

.

.

.

8

.,.,..nee
Homoo.

bn Older ,.,..,_
Add~lono, Foundoti-

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

lloyteh:"Y duty oxtra largo
wuber. t YNI'I Old.
uklntl
, 114-MII-2281.

capac

Tuesday, July 19, 1994

IMI Dotlaa D-10D 'H, LWB,

NICE HORSES FOR BALl
Auto, II(;, 'SI~Cuetorn Top.
au1o1
wo11 _ . . . . fllldtti!JI&amp; ~ 11
,........
.......

Pa...._-

buckoklna, -

poTnto,
For trait; -

suoo. .......,.
.

tom ploao- ponnlng, 1..,._
porlonalloh, . - . . lo chOooo ~ 1-10 T-, 'H, Al&gt;,
1n&gt;m. lthono, OH. 1M-88W731 AIIIFII Cieootlo, 8lwpl 114• 11•
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 1/4 Inch or'/52-284V.
200 PSI $1UO; 1 lncll 200 PSI sr-ntat Cowo And ~ 1112 1-10 Plclt-Up TNck. Tahoa
$32.~ !,!.!'.!!, EYIIII Entenlrlaao. And Othlr er--lrod Cattlo, PocU-. lluol Boltll8,500 Firm,
814-...,._,., Jaokoon, Ohio
.
11t 311 ....
' 1·~

84

Electrical &amp;

Refrigeration

'J "

;:;:::;-;;=~~"::;:'::-;::;---- -,
HIIIF P~~npo, Air Cond~ ,",

" -1 __11aotor Eiaot~olon; .
111 448 b&gt;O, ~.....
c.'
Rntlol or - l o t ·
wiring, -....,.or........_ r'
llaotlr U-..d atacltdotan. ,.
Ridonour
___
Eioclrlcal, WV000301, ."
1044 ......... _

If certain situations in the past year have
been trying ones, they shouldn't be per·
mitted to influence your attitude toward
!he future . It's a wbole new ball game,
with better times in the offing.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) There's a
possibility you may not have learned your
lesson from a past experience; you might
repeal the same mistake today. II you

Matchmaker mstanlly reveals wh1ch
signs are romantically per1ect lor you.
Mail $2 to Matchmaker, c/o lhts newspaper. P .O . Box 4465. New York. N.Y .
10163.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Someone woth
whom you're presenlly involved tends to
be more ol a Iaker than a gtver. Be care-

@)

.

ohe chuckle quoted

by ldlrng 1n the m1ssmg words

1

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS I
FOR ANSWER
.
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Citron. Ledge . Their. Admire. RIGHT on TIME

"You seem to be getting wrinkles at a premature age,"
the over fifty woman remarked to an acquatnlance. Not
ready to divulge. hEl':_ age lhe woman replied ."! lhtnk they
are RIGHT on TIMK"
·\

\HEReS NClTIIIN&lt;!&gt;
IN "lt\E INDE.X
AI)()UT t.ND \ABLES

11011/ AB0\11" LAWN
fURN i"TURC II?

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Be very
careful today you don't reveal to others
information tcild to you in confidence. If
you betray a trust, ot could shaner a relationship
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t 9) Under
most circumstances, you're the one who

establishes the trend. Today. however,

lui this individual doesn't manipulate you

you might follow the masses and fall prey

tor sell1sh purposes agatn today.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) II you expect
assoc•ates lo cooperate with you today,
you must ilrst set the proper example
and cooperate with them. It"s a quid pro
quo arrangement.
LIBRA' (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today you
might have to deal with more duties and
responsibilities than usual. Several ol the
tougher ones could be things palmed oH
on you by others.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Spenders
eventually have to lace a day of reckon·

loa wasteful lad.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A melan·
cKoly attitude could be your biggest stumbling block today. If you hope to achieve
anything worthwhole, you must first divest
yourseH of that gloomy outlook.
ARIES (March 21-Aprlt 19) Occasionally
,you're a rather intense person, and when
you de a de to th.nk negat•vely, 11 can be a
humdinger. Oon't antagomze yourself
with unproductive conjecture.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) II you've
been having problems genong a commer·
1

ing, so don'• be surprised if some of your cial venture started, perhaps it's time to

past extravagances have to be deah with
today.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ee. 21) Take
care you don't come off abrasively today,
don't learn this time, you might never. especially when deahng with relatiVes, inKnow where to look tor romance and laws or tamoly members. This is touchy
you'll lind it . The Astro-Graph territory.

'

•

PRINT NUMBERED
LElTERS IN SQUARES

Job Too Bla Or Small, Y11rs El::...

Fnoman'o Hooting And CootlfiiJ.
lnotallotlon And '*-· El'll ..
Cartlllod •-~-lot, ~
•- -··...·· •
::cla;;;l;;.,8;,;14-2,;,:;1111-::;,:1;;;11:.,:1.:_
_______
-,

.

you de.,elop lrom slep No 3 below

~ Si&lt;t£t&lt;I\ORN 1

auhe with 3
,.ell~•- 5 montha old, llka
now, S1uou,l14-114t-2171.

.

around dis cussing
methods of doing things. One
mom laughed and told lhe
others, "If you want to know all
about anythmg JUS! ask a

I
I!,7;-T,--.,-..,-,,-B-rl--1 o· C~..;p·l;,~'

L~11'16LIKE

roon1

:::

GUL E y 0

1\-IE 'i."~l£

C&amp;C
Oonolll
~
U.lnlenance-- wallpaper, ..ortftrol
docn, rooftng and oom~
-~
homa npalr, "'""plate wl
ropolr, pnooun waohlng • _ _,.
moblla homo ropolr. For troe ~
tlmoto call Chot, 814-8124323. _'

Rooltng,
K~chono
lllotr.,
Roplacltnltll Wlndowa. lnaurod,
Fno EatlmatOL 11W411ee.

I

~=~~=~::::::::~::::::::~::::~-"--,

"iii;ut"HOiiiit~iiiii-;;;i&amp;iiO
Curtlt Home lmllt'DwatMrtta. No .~•

tO Cowo &amp; Hellen ..._ /Pound,
114 381 AU.
1987 ::t.:~m...._._•
.........,
-t'
304-1711120111.
- . otd pony, tziO, 114-t112- 21411.
·-

i
d iHe

'"IM~O~ND~A~Y--~------~-------JU-LY-1-Bl

ROBOTMAN

----~BA~SE~II~ENT~~-----~

t.bllahtd 1m.

~~~

day uf &gt;"Ummer.

IIlii 2711. Titan motor homo,
!\lily 1111-contalnad, gotlllltor,
1lr,
retrig•atorllrMztr,
mlcrowtve,
mauve
Interior,
51,~~ rMdy lor road, $8500:
30447...141.

WATERPR~NQ

PI I I"
'---.T_R.,o__,T.,.....E...--11 :,'

&amp;

Uncond~lonol

P ANC0

.-- I Is

Now gao tanlca. ono ton !ruck
whoolo rodlatora 1'-t mota,
etc. D if. R Auto, R(ploy, WV. 304372-39:13 or 1-800-273'1321.

81

GAM I

0 Reorronge

Laddor rack lor ahort whlol
truck $75. 350 Otdo Rockal
1111Jino. 304-895-38511.

campers

VMTOF .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm on a live-and-learn mi SSIOn. We all have to learn

CO · W~I

than IIOOml. woar, $160. IM-4410135.

79.

FLU W S

A WK E E R

2328, "-" mesaage.

Yokohama

J 0 B

XEFV

to live together We have lo coextst'' - (Rapper) Chuck 0

TOAS'T~flS

BORN LOSER

elumlnum llota, $100i 114-802·

F...

(TON

Z ·W E F B Z P L Z 8 0 F )

IT'S P~flftGT .I
A HISTO,Y OF

MTNLFAUX

L F 0

IKXZ

Wlndahlld, 614-441-0148 Aftor ,
5P.II.

Lannox Hut PLWnp, $350, 114-4411-117110.

Soan UIHI~r 1100 TNodmll,
Uold vorr nta, hOG, Cal 111448-1SZ7.
STORAGE TANKS S.OOOUpright, Ron EYino E~
olacUon, OhiO.~- ·

28Pawns
30 Brazilian
soccer great

47Monster
48 Large birds

814-817·5245.

Rotrlgorotors, Stovoo, Wuhon
And llryore, All Aooonctltlonod
'nd Gouront h
~
••
oo And Up,
Wilt Dollver.
814-18114441,

26Vigorous

By Phillip Aldl'r

uNCI or ov.rhauled, gua111ntMd

Hot Wotar . Staam Noll Ho11011
Rodlatora. Anortod SIZM, 814448-1423 Laovollaoooga.
King Size W.torbod, Glaoo
C.blnoto,
lolltTor,
Ughlod
Hoodboard $400. Quoen Slu
Wa1111&gt;od $200. Froour $75.
Solo, Rocllnor RockltiiJ Choir

Uving

,..

[)bl
Pass
Pass
Dbl
All poss
Opening lead • A

350 or 400 turbo tr~namt..lont.

1185 ChovaHo I opoad GT with
ounrool, oxeotlont body onrt '"'
torlor, rod with ar otrlpao, rod •
black Interior, run• good, $132.5,
6t4-241'o42t2.

22Less good
24 Pay attention
25Mud

Read, analyze
play

4

Accessories

AKC Yollow Lalla Wonnorl Arwt
Sholl. Will ba Roady 715, Taking 1188 OodY:, Charger, Good
Smoll Dopoalt Call Aftor &amp;p.m. Cond~lon1 c uet Soo $150 080,
814-4411-11..5 H Not Homo, 814614-2564338.
4411-41144.
!":'II."~J:.fllllea, $200. 1187 Camo10, T~opo, toodod,
good cond., S3600 OBO. 304CFA
Rogl-arl
-no
onrl 1.:..:.::...;:::..:.;.;
~44.
Hlmaloyana2 flrnaleo,
S15CIIaa.,
_ _ _ _ _ __
3 matH, S10CIIu., Bluo Point 1087 Ford lluotang GT, 5.0,
Hlmaloyana onrl black Por- 34,111 mltao btuo, imllm ...
alan, 2 Btuo P...W., 114-1112- - · · air, aolrtng $4SGO, 114-14113144.
2800 doyo or 114-8G-IIttlt •
ChlhuahJa Female Y- I 112, lprn, uk lor Bob.
Bm To Chocolate Malo, Pup- 1087 lroc Black With T-Tpln Duo 8121114, t1211, 814-2811- Powor E-vthlngl Loto Of Ex·
1081.
tnol$5,000 080, 814-3711o2t13.

...tonVprn.

3"

Motorcycles

4 bull calveo tor lnodlng pur·
2 black and whKo IKo 2
polled hlnlord; alao cowo With
Holt olr calvoo by oldo; tn4-tll2-11158.

White IIMI lnaulat.cl gara~

tor Rent

Second Avo.1 Gatllpollo, 814-44631 Homes lor Sale
4416 Attor 7 e.ll.
=2-:bod-:r-OOI-m--:-~--.-::,.------.1 Fumlahod EHicloncy 701 Founh
localod In Now Havon. Ctou to Avonuo, !lolllpollo, $220/Mo.
oehoolo, $13,800. 304-882-2581 Utllltln Paid, 814-446-4416 Attar
7 P.ll.
3br. ranch, Gatllpollo Forry, call
for dll:alla. 3()4....8"15..3328.
Apartment 3 Room., Privata
Bath, Utllltln Paid, 828 Socond
4 Bodroomo, 2 Story IIC 2 112 Avonuo, !lolllf~: $225/Mo.
6 3117.
Sotho, LR, DR, FA With F~l Eot- $150 Do-H. 61
In K~chon, Ooalroblo Nolgnbor- BEALITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
hood, Clooo HIIC, 614 -448-14IS. BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Appr&lt;&gt;x ocro td, ,...., ESTATES, 536 Jackaon Pika
wl14x7ll tnllor w/oxpondo, trom $222 to $2B5. Walk to ohop
$30,000. C.mp Conlay ana. &amp; movloo. CoN 614-446-2568,
Shown by appolntmont only, EOH.
30447Htillt.
-=---=-~-=---:-::--:--1 Brookoldo Apanmonto, 1 BodCozy 3 Br. Ranch, Spt~cloua, room,
Stove
Retrigarator,
Modom K~ch111 1 Fomlly Room, Waohor, Dryor Hook-Up, 614Bulft~n
Woodaumw, Dock, 4464627.
Pool, 2 Cor Ga~~go, 1/3 Aero Lot, Co
Sldo A
Clooo to Town, 132 Adalaldo Or.,
untry
partmont 588lt 2
614-4411-01111 Aftor 4:30 p.m. :Jt.:':'~~ ~~ul~~ti~
$5I,500.
446-4222.
Eallto S.Hiomonl Solo: 3
Hou-, ActNgo, Sotolllto Dloh For Laaoo: Or. Bedroom

856-2378.

WaAtso Have

dopoolt, no poto. 304-875-6162.

UtllltiM Pllld, Share Bath, 607

P.lol.

74
CASH &amp; CARRY

Mobile Homes

'l. •

I WAS GIVIN' MY
MARLEENY A BATH
AN' SHE SCRATCHED
ME!!

3 Br., No Pl11, $265/Monlh,
$125/0epoaH, 614-446-3617.

42

1 w. Coast coli.

36Mistakes

2

¥AQJ!0 5 4

Houses lor Rent

Rooms
u-..tor Ia , - edd one, Me, irM eltlmatee, .--• • .....,., .,.._ ~
WorkltiiJ Major Appllancoa, 814-1112·2322.
815-81172.
Rooma lor rant • - k or month.
Color T. V.'aR Rotrtgoratoro,
Houoo tn Contorvllto: J Bodo Starting II 1120/mo. !loltla Hotol.
'
Ill
a ...... , llalntononeo, Polntt,ng,
81t 4411'11580.
Fr~~~zer•, Yc 1,
crowav11, Vard Work Window. Wunea roome, Uvlng, Dining, Kitchin,
Air CondltioiMro, W""""'·
UIU~y Roomo, 1 Both, Full Bllllllna rooma wlh ooofdng.
Dryan, Copy llachlnoo, Etc. g.U::,"::~:,~~::~Iot':'s~::; Boumont F-.1 Atr, Ciao Fu,. At.O t11llor - · All hook-upo.
814-256-1238.
n - 2 Docko, 112 Aero Mora Or Call aftor 2:00 p.m., 304-Tn614-4411-&lt;1148.
l.ooo, Eaoy Claan Wlndowa, tl8tlt, ll11on WY.
J I D'o Auto Porto and Sotvogo,
Vlnyt Sld!IIIJ, 1114-622-8355.
also buying junk carl • lrucKI. Mise Paula"a Day Clrt Center
46 Space lor Rent
11-F
6
A.ll.
-6:30
P.ll.
OUai~Y
304-7n-5343.
Loving Core For lll Chlldron 32 Mobile Homes
3 Roan Ollloo SullO With
Wanl to buy HI ol 11opo lor Our 11 Goo!. Part-Tlmo, Ful~
lor Sale
Prtnto ToUot In - n Flro
moblla homo, 814-912-15053.
Tlm•L Hd. Aulltlnce Available.
C.U &gt;or Information Or Vloll. '"' '711 VanDyke, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, Proot Bkla. Call lloma Haklno
Wanted To Buy: Junll Autoo font
814-448-211:11 Or 814-446-2tlt2.
/Toddtor 814-44U227. p,._
With Or Without lllolora. C.H School,
-~=-1/
point, wuhlrf
Schoolago,
B&amp;A ...
dryer,
aoricltlon,
$4500,
Lot For Rlnt; llobtlo Homo Lot,
Larry Lively. 814~811-11303.
School, 814-446-8224:
114-1112·
.
County Watar, Pltono: 614-24&amp;Top Prlceo Paid: AU Old U.S. Quality Ct•nlng AI Atlordabla
1111511.
Colna, Gold Rln!l!r Sllvor Cotno, Prk•, 1 nme WMkly, Blwllkly, tm Buddy t2x50 With ~:':':2
Gold Colna. M.T.!t. Coin Shop, Monthly. Frea &amp;tlmatM, 614- • Undorplnnlng $2,1f4!!l1 8
3811 Loave -aago WJU Rl1um
1St s-nct Avanuo, Galtlpolla.
3711-21111.
C.tl.
Wanlod to buy: uud mobtla S..n Yalloy Nunory _ School.
1WZ Elcona 12160 With 1tlll Ollloo ~ For Rent: awr.r
homH. 8'14-4464175
Chlidcllro 11-F ~;:IOpm Agee
- · 121121 J BR 2 Flulblo On Tornw I s-a.
2·1&lt;, YoutiiJ School Aao During Traitor
Air Condhlonon, 18,000, 114- To181 ..,_ 3,800 Sq. A. lvol~
S..mmor. 3 Dayo por i'illk llln' 381-8121.
Employment Services lmum 614-4411-3857.
Clood l.ocotlon, CIOM To
l~dgo, Call Dovo 1111-n At
11180 14x60 Uborty, 2 br, IJC, Wlotirnan Rill Eatalo, 114-448Will Bobyo~ Ono Child In lly w.n, $1500, IM-1112-31115.
3844.
Homo1 Sllr11ng End 01 AugUII,
11 Help Wanted
Eoponanood With Rer-. 1tl8t Tt1llor 14170, I Bod-.
814-2411-5187.
1 t/2 Both, 2 Doc1ca, lwnlnao. Q Wanted to Rent
Undorplnnlng, SI.SOO, 1114-$
GRAND OPENING
Etdorty 1or1y -ld nka a nlca
1321.
lllri-WHiom hood Co. Ha Eo·
omaU apa- or houoo at
181J Schul MIN Now carpae, nuonable
Dr'lcl.
Pret.r
pandor! To Gallpolto - · Wo
Offor Excotlonl Eamlnga To
Middleport
Of'
Now l.lnolo...,, Both, Ponwoy,
Start &amp; Paid Vocotlon. can lion
.,,..,..,
fM...fl:i-2111.
$10,500, CaH 1~3211 Atllr
WID otaem eloon carpale chMp I P.ll.
10 A.ll. -5 P.ll. !_~llt-41148.
to Hnlah my poymMta on
P r o - t Couplo OoolrM To
cleaner, 114-102-4131.
Oklor Tnltor, 2 Bod-. Good Ront 2 Bod- In Go~
Shape, 2 - . , 11/L, Stato Upollo Or RUIIII AIM, lluet Ha1141
AVON t All AlMa I Shlrtoy Would Uka To Ctaon -Call Routo 180, lluet tlettl t13,500. Pt- For 1 Pet, can Fumlah
Anytlmo, 114 448 14114.
Spoore, 304-875-142t.
RlfMWICW, 614 441 4120,
814-388-9271.
Don't Junk ltl Sell U1 Vour Non-

-

-.A K 9 5 2

42 New (pret.)

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: East
South
Wt•st North East

2012 Chalham $265/Mo. $160
Depoah, Stove And Refrigerator
Fumlahld, 6w.456-3870.
3 bedroom hoUII on Lincoln
Holght1, 614--ti2-7689 ahlf' 5pm.

New condhlon, 3br.,

4J10974
¥9
• Q J

ti J

I\6S 1

lmlfm CIIHfto, $1uw 0Bu, 814992-5088 evenlng1.

Rentals

- - - - : - - - c A JCAHO Accrodltod Aaoncy
old female Beagle, all Specializing
In
SllbSlance
new dog

~LE.IJI')LD

1-:AST

•s

"::=========t======:::===1 ==========

: AVON! All areal. Nlld extra
4 O r 5 Month Old Kittena, To money or want a ClrMI, allhllr
Good Home Only, 614-446-2823 WB)I--f!&amp;ll Marilyn. 304-S82· 2645
01' 1-800-fl2-6358.
Atta r 5 P.M.

shots,

/~ThRE-~11

\X)IJ'T 'lbU lrllf.Jf(. IT WARRMlTS
11-\E. AFmiJTMfNI OF NJ
lfJDfffiJ(:UJT CCUJ':&gt;E.L AIJO

'It Chovy van, ~l~ PS-' PB,

Wanted 10 buy- two or mort
acr•, suitable to build on and
close to 1 blacktop road, 6t4949-243t.

for our hedge tnmmer?"

Trai ned, 614-24S.5091.

Gmo

15 GUILlY CF
A Calf"L\0 Of

A\SYGE. CiF Lf.GI')lATlOIJ
SE..\lT 00UJ Elf A WESIC:WT
WftiSE. JC5 l-IE. i.U'ok.JlS

J·.~ups , Cho
w/German
10 wks.
o ld, 1S hepherd
mala, 1 ,

''"'""· 614·992·3459. __ _ _
-&lt;
Lovea ble
Kittens,
lltta1

.. ,o

IAJt.J 'T l,W AGRE.E., 'SIR, THAT
A SUJAmR \Vfb ~

Ford &amp; Chlvr Truc-k Parte, From
Southwea1 c.a., e~. Door•

APPLIANCES

¥ B 3
•AKY 5 42

JS!iT.

u 16 rug w / st.:~lrway &amp; hallway

~art

CI\1"Nif M•u~C
!'lt&gt;J'DS I'EiCHo'I~O,tN(t

7 18 94

' :

Wanted To Buy~ Lot 1 Acre Or
Morw, Call Afler 5 P.M. 614-446-

Gi veaway

:c--:--c

Goods

GOOD

r-·

304-1175-7681.

388-11126.

·.·.' th,

304-882·3104.

36!7.

lwo 100x300 on SR 160 Acroa

-_~t: Jt

~c L•Iptur ed .

&amp; Acreage

10114 Chivy 4.3 lcyt., 2WD1 ·
llhort btd, .... ,......, 114 7'00

Household

Mollohan C.rpeta.

lQStl ng and Counseling
~ ,onymous ('!'our Name I•
N.Jv9r A!&lt;&gt;k&amp;d) Planned Paflln-

~·· .&amp;lldb le

Lots

51

Answer to Previous Puzzle

41 Deep yearning

ACROSS

reevaluale whether you're teamed with
the right people.
GEMINI (llay 21-.June 20) Favors m!Qht
not be easily- obtaiMd today, especially
tram persons you've never helped. It you
· don't expect to be indulged, yoo won't be
disappointed.
1

�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 18, 1994

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

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

I ..._

~ti .1.

met rcccll\ ly a t

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

mcc LJng whi ch npcnrd

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

for peace and remarks by the prcsi dent.

Franks announce birth

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

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

1 Charles 0 D

·

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

Couple to celebrate
25th wedding anniversary

Vol. 45, NO. 53

Copyrighl1994

Modern Woodmen hold picnic

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

AVERAGE SEI.I.ING PRICE*

Howerton named
All-American scholar

OHIO

BASIC

GPC

1.39

1.28

Jcn ni Howerton h ~1 s been named

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

•

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

recognition to super ior stud en ts

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

fied sponsor arc accepted.

KIMBERLY HAWTHORNE

Observes
birthday

•

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

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

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

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

en tine

,

.lle tO
Bloodmob
ere
vvee

.lENNI HOWERTON

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

•

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

•

KC tourney
continues
Page4

Chapter
holds recent
luncheon

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

Ohio Lottery

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

1 Section, 10 Pagea 35 conto

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

Big
Brother:

AMultimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Local schools
unsure funding
wi II be fixed

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

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

lly GEORGE AllATE

Sentinel News Starr

]f

'

~;

\

\

•

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

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

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

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

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

Triple whammy forecast

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

'

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

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