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                  <text>Page- 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Inspectors probe
dam's stability at
Vinton County mine

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WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) The U.S. Office of Surface Minin g
will continue Lo monilor the stabili ty of a dam buih ala Vinton Coun ty coal mine.
However, an industry lobbyist
said Tuesday lhe federal regulators
were pressured by a former state
engineer who opposed design
changes to the dam.
Neal Tostenson, president of lhe
Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Association. accused the regulators
of violating an agreement wilh
Sands Hill Coal Co. of Wellston,
which buill the 100-foot-high dam.
"I don't like to see coal compa·
nics walked on, and I don't like the
way government does it,'' he said.
An aRreement bet ween Sands

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prepare wrongful deaih lawsuit that we can indeed find white,
againsl Simpson, 47, who has black, brown, every color jury
pleaded innocent to murder and is there is, who will indeed be fair
being held without bail.
and impartial," Gan:etti said.
Meanwhile Tuesday, 15 leaders
Media reports over the weekend
from the city"s black community said lhe defense team was considmet wilh District Attorney Gil ering a claim that racism prompted
Garcetti to quell racial tensions Detective Mark Fuhrman - who
arising from the case and urge like lhe viclims is white- to plan!
GarceLti not to seek the death a bloody glove at Simpson's manpenalty if Simpson is convicted.
sion. Police say the glove matches
"We don't need to add anolher another found near lhe bodies.
Fuhrman denied planting 1he
human being to that already overcrowded (Dealh Row) line that is glove. Lead defense lawyer Robert
clearly a product of racism in this Shapiro said he may argue that evicountry and a product of classism dence was planted, but would not
in Ibis country," said John Mack, say racism was a motive.
Questions about Fuhrman's
president of the Urban League's
Los Angeles chapter.
racial attitudes are pertinent, said
Garceni is expected to announce celebrity lawyer Johnnie Cochran
sometime before the trial whelher Jr., who attended lhe meeting wilh
he'll ask the jury to recommend a Garceni.
dealh semence if Simpson is con·
"As much as I don't want to see
vic ted.
race broughl into this case, if lhis
He assured the leaders !hat person has a feeling against minoriSimpson would get a fair trial.
ties, his credibility becomes very
' "I am hopeful, I am confident, much at issue.·· he said.

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A 20-year-old Rutland man was sentenced 10 five years probation and six months at the Southeastern Probationary Treaunent
Alternatives Center in Nelsonville for his role in the Feb. 9 breaking
and entering of Vance's Service Station in Harrisonville.
David Priddy was sentenced Monday by Common Pleas Coun
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill after pleading guilty to a charge of receiving stolen property.
. .
In addition, Priddy was ordered to pay $1 ,200 restitution and
$500 costs of prosecution.

Accident causes pile-up on bridge

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LOS ANGELES (AP) - OJ.
Simpson will offer a 5250,000
reward to help police locate "the
real killer" of his ex-wife and her
friend, according to TV reports.
Today's New York Newsday
reported that preliminary DNA
tests of blood found on the door
and inside Simpson's Ford Bronco
show it is consistent with Simpson's blood, not that of lhe victims.
Newsday quoted unidentified
sources who also said thai if the
findings hold, that could make it
much harder to convict Simpson.
Simpson's reward will be
offered for information leading to
an arrest and conviction in the
killings of Nicole Brown Simpson
and Ronald Goldman , KNBC and
NBC News reported Tuesday.
The Associated Press' repeated
calls 10 lhe offices, homes and cars
of Simpson's lawyers were not
returned.
KNBC also reported that Gold·
man's family has hired a lawyer to

·Man sentenced on charge

]1- 10Ct9 37-1009

Washer and Dryer Pair

the evidence while Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby, left, and highway deparlment work·
er Steve Hartenbach, center, look on. Some of
the evidence destroyed dated back to 1986.

0. J. Simpson offers $250,000
reward to help find 'real killer'

-~ ·1111

_,.

2 Sectiono, 12 Pagee 35 cenla
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 20, 1994

SAVEs211

SOFA
5

Too\gbl, parlly cloudy.
Low near 70. Thursday, chance
or ralo JO percenl. High near 90.

No one was injured when lhree cars crashed in a chain reaction
at the foot of the Pomeroy-Mason bridge Monday afternoon,
according to Pomeroy police reports.
.
. .
. .
David Wolfe, 63, Middleport, was cited for failure to mamtam
assured clear distance after he struck another car from behmd w11h
his 1983 Oldsmobile Delta 88 which then dented another car at
12:24 p.m. Monday, records show.
.
Wolfe's car sustained light damage to lhe front end and driver's
side, reports stated.
Aimee Hendrick, 21, Letart, W.Va., had light damage to the
front and rear end of her 1986 Oldsmobile Delta after Wolfe hit her
while she was stopped at the light, records stated.
Robert Schneider. 35. Middleport, who was stopped at the light
in front of Hendrick had light damage to the rear of his 1986 Ford
Tempo, according to reports.

Local woman treated after accident
A Middleport woman rear-ended a Mason, W.Va., man's car
Monday night, acrording to Middleport police records.
Shelly Rupe, 20, was cited for failure to maintain assured clear
di~ and her vehicle had heavy damage to the front end, reports
~taled Rupe was ttanspMed to Veternns Memorial Hospital.
"Bobby Joe Roush. 17, reported moderule damage to his vehicle
after lie was hit at 9:27 p.m. Monday while driving south on North
Second Avenue near Diamond Street, records showed.

Continued on page 3

New housing
starts down in
9.8% in June
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hous·
ing starls plunged 9.8 percent in
June, lhe government said today,
new evidence of lhe curbing effect
of mort~age rates nearly 2 percent·
age pmnts above a 25-year low
reached last fall.
Activity was off in every region
of lhe nation except for the North·
east, which rebounded slightly
from a double-digit decline a
month earlier.
The Commerce Department said
starts totaled 1.35 million at a sea·
sonally adjusted annual rate, down
from a revised 1.50 million in May,
Many analysts had expected con·
struction to slip only to 1.48 mil·
lion.
The initial May estimate was
1.51 million. Allbaugh the revised
figure was up 1.8 percent from a
month earlier, the increase was due
solely to a 15.4 percent jump in
apartment buildings. Construction
of single-family units, which
account for 80 percent of all starts,
was off 1.2 percent
Still, overall starts during the
first six months of the year were
17 percent above those of the
same period of 1993. Starts totaled
1.29 million liiSt year and many
analysts still expect them to total
nearly 1.40 million this year.
Analysts attribute recent slowing of housing activity to mortgage
rates that have remained above 8
percent since April. They averaged
8.4 percent in June, and reached
8.68 percent last week.

Hill and th e reclamati on di vision
call s for an independ ent engineerin g firm 10 conducl lests on th e
dam 's suength and stability.
The dam holds back water used
10 wa sh coal taken from Sand s
Hill 's slrip mine.
Questions about the con strue ·
lion of the dam were rai sed by
Howard Fauss, a fonner Ohio Divi sion of Reclamation engineer.
Fauss filed a complaint with federal authorilics , triggering an investi gation .
Dan Schrum , regulatory pro·
gram supervisor for 1he Office of
Surface Mining, said the stale may
have allowed a number of viola·
lion s durin g lh e des ign and con·
struclion of I he dam .

Schrum said Tuesday h1 s agen·
cy's inves1iga1ion was conlinuing.
Several samples of the dam 's core
were taken laS! month , he said . A
prelimrnary report is expccled by
the end of August.
Schrum said the federal agency
alway s planned to lest for durabili·
ty and that the agreement did no1
rule out durabilily testing .
Bonny Huffman, sccrclary-trcasurer of Sands Hin. said she lhinks
the durability te st is a wa ste of
money.
"h is no I a valid test to prove
1he stability of the dam.'' she said .
The construction of lhe Sonds
Hill dam al so is being investigated
by Ohio Inspector General David
S1urtz.

State Senate finance chief Ney
opposes school funding appeal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Senate Finance Chairman Bob Ney
of St. Clairsville and fellow Republican Gov. George Voinovich are at
odds over whether the state should
appeal its loss in a Perry Counly
school funding case,
Ney opposes appeal as a waste
of laX payer money and an insult to
school children.
He engineered the state Conlrol·
ling Board's rejection Monday of a
request from Attorney General Lee
Fisher to waive competitive bidding rules and spend $250,000 for
a lawyer to handle the appeal.
However, a special emergency
session of lhe board was scheduled
today to reconsider the matter.
Voinovich asked Fisher to
appeal a decision from Perry County Common Pleas Judge Linton D.
Lewis Jr.
Lewis ruled July I that the cur·
rent system of financing education
was unconstitutional because of
disparities in per pupil spending
levels.
The State Board of Educarion

voted against appeaL IL is a defendant in the lawsuit that Ll1c Ohio
Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy
of School Fundmg filed on behalf
of more ~Jan 500 uf the s\alc"s 612
di stricts.
"I don 't want it appealed, obvi.
ously," Ney said in an interview
Tuesday.
"I think we just ought 10 face
the music. "We "re eventually
going to have to face Ibis problem.
It is not going to go away," he
said.
Voinovich spokesman Mike
Dawson said views about appeal of
the decision vary among legislators
of bolh political parties.
"There are obviously some
members of the Legislature who
would like the state to not appeal.
But nol appealing this case is tantamount to letting Lhe courts dictate a
massive tax increase of well over
$1 billion," Dawson said.
Ney disputed such estimales.
''No one knows how 10 cure lhe
problem. No one has lhe numbers
crunched to know what satisfies lhe

court. This could be phased in,"
Ney said. "You don't necessarily
have to have laX increases."
Colleen O'Brien, board presi dent, said the panel may have been
unclear about issues involved when
it voted aguinSI the spending.
"I 1hink !here is a question of
exactly what is being presented
here . The auorncy general is presenting this request for a waiver of
competitive bidding.' ' Ms. O'Brien
said.
"This approval of Lhe waiver of
competitive bidding is in no way
Controlling Board approval of the
appeal," she said.
The requesl also includes money
to cover two olhcr school funding
cases in stale and federal cour1s.
O'Brien is Gov . George
Voinovich"s reprcscntalive on the
board lha1 also includes six legislators.
The $250,000 IS pan of
$828 ,000 that legislators gave 10
the Ohio Department of Education
to pay for lhe state's defen se in the
case.

Armstrong's boyhood hometown
celebrates moonwalk anniversary
WAPAKONETA. Oh'il'l (AP) Twenty-five years ago loday Neil
Ann strong became t/ie first man to
walk on the moon . The former
astronaut's boyhood home wants 10
make sure nobody forgets it.
The western Ohio communily of
8,500 residents has been celebrat·
ing the event for the past three
weeks as part of "Moonwalk 94. "
Activities have included an air
show, hot-air balloon rally, a
model-rocket launch and displays

at the Neil Armstrong Air and
" I remember silting tnlenUy on
Space Museum.
my mother's living room couch,"
The celebralion culmina1cs said Zwez, 42. "I stayed up all
tonight al lhe museum with a laser night to watch. It was more apprelighl show, fueworks and a replay hension than anylhing else , not
of the lunar landing and moonwalk knowing what was going to hap on giant movie screens.
pen."
Museum Manager John Zwez
Mayor Don Wittwer said resiwas among lhe residents who hud- denls attended prayer vigils as
dled around television se\S July 20, Armstrong and astronaul Buzz
1969, to watch Armstrong emerge Aldrin walked on the moon and
from a lunar module and plant that Michael Collins orbited in the comfirst step dn the moon.
~_,...,....,..c.;.o.;.n..:t""'ln;.;;ued on page J

:s

WRECK SCENE - Two people were trans·
ported from a two-ca~ crash Tuesday afternoon
in lialisbury Township. Jamie Blaettnar, seated,
wipes away a tear arter she wrecked ber car.
lnl'ormation from lhe Ohio State Patrol on tbe
accident was not available by press time. SOME
detaDs include tbat at about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday,

a pickup truck collided with a brighl yellow Geo
Slorm at lbe intersection or SR 7 and County
Road 75. Jamie and Jessica Blaetlnar were
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospilal where
tbey were later treated and released. (Sentinel
pbolo by George Abate)

•

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�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO T HE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L WIN(:ETr
Publ is her
MARGA RET LEHEW
Controllrr

CHARLENE JIOEFLICH
General Manager
A MEMB ER

of The Assoc iate d Press,

ln! Wld Da il y Press Assoc iatio n and

the Am erican New spaper Publi she r Assoctat io n.
L ETTE RS

OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone num ber. No unsigned leiters will be published . Le tters
stx&gt;uld be in good tas te , addressing iss ues. not personalities

Letters to the editor
When will road construction start?
Dear Editor.
I suppose everyon e read th e
good news headline in the Sunday
Tim es-Sentinel a couple of weeks
ago.
Now the last time I commented
on the road project, I got a little
flak: . Well, here goes.
I could be wrong, for I hav e
been a few times, but it looks to me
like the Ohio Deparunent of Transportation operates on a proposed
time table.
I believe that the fust proposed
starting starting was late 1993.

TheiL th e proposed on e was late
summ er of 1994 . Now the next
proposed one 1s spring of 1995.
Now the lady said that it should
he completed from Rock Springs to
1hc Ritc htc Brid ge by the ye ar
2000.
Now I believe that if they do not
progress any faster in the nex t five
years 1han they have in_the last 25
years? Well it looks hfe we will
have to wait and sec. Right!
Well. as the old radio announcer
used to say, happy motoring.
Virgil Walker
Racine

Page- 2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 20, 1994

Did Stephanopoulos make _
o ut like a bandit?
WASH INGTO N _ Hill a ry
Rodh am Cli nto n apparently is n' t
the on ly person close to the pres iJent with an eye for a good deal.
Only months after the first lady
diSc losed she won big in the futures
market. senior White House ad viscr George Stcphanopoulos se al ed
an $835,000 comm ercial real estate
dc"LI tn Wa,hington, D.C.. The May
23 purchase was fi nanced with a
helow -mark ct Joa n from a bank
ow ned by a man hail ed by Presiden! Clullon as " the most cnlightcncd banker in America."
"George made out lik e a ban J ti," says Stcphanopoulos' real
cs lale age nt Georgia Furio so.
".He's go ing to do terrific in terms
of the real estate market.... I'm not
tryi ng to toot my own horn here,
butldidaterrific dcal ."
More than a dozen banking and
real es tate sources we contacted
be lieve there's something perhaps
too " tcmfic" about how President
Clinton 's mo st tru sted political
advisc r became heavily leveraged
despite a comparatively modest net
worth and annual in come. Yet
thank s to a $668 000 Joan from
Nation sBanc Mo;tgage Corp. (a
NationsBank subsidiary) - at an
inlcrest rate well below what most

co mm erc ial c ustomers pay Steph anopo ulos ts Stlltn g on a
mixe d-use com mercial pro perty
Furioso values at more than a mil -

By Jack Anderson
M" h
IC

and
JB • f ·
ae tnS etn

lion dollars.
That NationsBank is own ed by
Hugh McColl - who has beco me
Bill Clinto n 's good fri end and
bankin g guru ___:: raises ques tions
about spec ial trea tme nt. " I ca n
unequivocall y state I never asked
for an y spec ial treatm ent, "
Siephanopoulos told us. "(Furioso)
handled the negotiations. He handi ed the loan. I was clear, and he
was very clear, not to ask for an yIhing out of the ordinary . Obvi ously he was tryin g to get th e bes t
deal.'' Mc Co ll and Nation sBank
refused to cornmcn1.
Furioso told us he finessed th e
deal by, among other thing s,
"playing one ba nk off an other"
and findin g a "motivated sell er."

LOOK ITs

Editorial roundup
By The Associated Press
.
.
Excerpts of Ohio editorials ol statcwtdc

~md

.
.
natiOnal mtercst:

The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Sunday, July 17
In his three-day appearance before the Senate Judiciary Comm iuce last
week , Judge Stephen Breyer displayed a lilhc intellect, a mature temperament and a solid grasp of the Jaw.
He also helped to explain why President Bill Clinton was so reluctant
to nominate him earlier to the U.S. Supreme Court. Rum or had it thai
Clinton was less than thrilloo after meeting Breyer. After watching 1hc
Basion judge, it' s easy to figure oul why.
Breyer is abundantly qualified lo serve on the nation's highest court,
but for better and for worse, he is no Harry Blackrnun. Unlike Blackmun,
who he was nominated to replace, Breyer is unlikely ever to be accused of
ruling too much with his heart instead of his head. If anything, the gripe is
likely to be that he's 100 detached, too pedantic, too cocksure of hts own
cool analysis of the law.
Chillicothe Gazette, Friday, July IS
It sounds like a great idea: Charge criminals for their own probation
expenses.
.
.
The Legislature passed a bill that would requtrc people convtcted _of
crimes to help foot the bill for theu probauon expenses. The btll, awaitmg
a signature by the governor, would charge people from $20 to $50 per
month . The money would be used to help fund local probauon offices..
We like the idea but wonder if the estimates of the program gcncratmg
up to $45 million a year in Ohio aren't a little inflated.
For starters, many people convicted of crimes do not have a good
source of income. Some do, of course, b~t often a rec_em convtcuon
makes getting a job that much harder. The btll makes provmons for desutute people to do extra commumty servtce or serve more ume, but neither
of these proposals will generate a cent for the state.
Also what will the costs of administering such a program be? It's
already hard enough to get people to show up for their probation appoint·
ments.
The Athens Messenger, Thursday, July 14
Former President Dwight Eisenhower had a classic rejoinder for his
overeager aides whenever they recommended that he take a perilous decision. Boys, he said, Jet's not be in such a hurry to make our mistakes.
Bill Clinton would do well to remember Ike's sound advice before
doing anything rash in Haiti.
That the impoverished nation has become a festering sore in our sphere
of influence is undeniable. And unless the United States takes the lead in
coming to Haiti's rescue, the desperate situation there, which is causing
thousands of boat people to flee to U.S. shores, is only going to worsen.
The trick, however, is for the United States to intervene in a manner
consistent with our national interest and that of the Haitian people we arc
trying to help.

.
.
Springfield News-Sun, Monday, July 11 _ .
The American Medical AssocJaUon IS nght In saymg that current
movie ratings don't provide enough information.
People may know what to expect from an "X-rated" ff!Ovie. ~.ut what
about one labeled "PG-13"'1 What kind of "parental gmdance IS recommended for youngsters under 13? And why?
.
.
The medical association wants Hollywood to_~escnbe the sex or vtolence portrayed so parents can decide whether tl s appr~pnate for thetr
child to see. The description of "Home Alone 2," for mstance would
inform parents that the film "'contains numerous scenes of ? young boy
engaging in violent acts, such as droppmg bncks on a man s he.~d. The
violence looks very realistiC, but It IS shown m a slapsuck context.
.
The descriptive ratings, the doctors recommend, should apply not JUSt
10 the film industry, but also 10 televiSIOn, vtdeos and music recordings.

He den tes scekm g spec1a1 favors percentage poims above the prime
and says Stephanopoulos dek gated interest rate. In March,_ when th e
all day-to-day negotiaUn g authonty Joan was approved, NauonsBank's
Io ~ ~m .
.
..
pri me was a bo ut 6. 7 pe rce nt.
I was lttcrall y wntmg the con- Sometimes banks do offer rates at
lrJCI and ncgouaung the loan whtlc prime for commern a! loans - but
he was gotn g Ihrough that (Whtte - onl y for customers wt th the deepcsl
water). I was so ex tra cru:~ful nolto poc kets an d on a short -Ic rm
l~opard t ze hts postuon, he says. adJusiablc bastS.
.
I was ve ry nervo us about It
Former bank regulators quesuon
bec ause I fc li 1t was a pretty good whether a Joan ol tht s me IS pru dr.&lt;L l, but thc.\c was nothmg cx tr-Jor- dent for a person wtth a net worth
dtnary here.
,
betwee n $5 0 ,000 and $ 100,000,
Stcph anopoul os new property and whose annual In come 1_s
co nsists of an eleg ant two -s tory $125,000. Thi s would provide thm
apart men! , whereh e now ltvcs, and cushion if real estate sltpped Into
an eye wear rcJailcr dow n belo w. another slump.
.
He co ll cc ls enough· rent from th e
" Nobod y maktng $ l25,000
rc ~tl tenani 10 cover hLS monihl y could qualify for the property wtthha nk paymcn 1s and other fees of out th e comm e rctal pr opert y
approXImately 55 ,500.
(lease)," said Furioso. "George
Unul
J un e
I,
1997, would ne ve r hav e bought a
Stcph:tnopnulos is locked inlo a $600,000 home. This is a way for
6.375 pcrcc nl in1ercst ralc, which hitTL .. to bu y somethin g without
seve ra l ba nk ing so urces say is a raising eyebrows. "
lon g tim e on such a low rate. In
Furi oso cl aim s at leas t fou r
fa ct, aft er hea rin g a detailed other local hanks offered a compadesc ription of Ih e numbers and rable rate . He initially promi sed_to
term s of the loan, a NatiOns Bank furnish us th e names of the londtn g
commercial loan officer said It officers he deali wtth to corrobo"docs not fit our produc t matrix." · rate his claim that ey ebrow s
Many vari ables can figure into shouldn't be rai sed. The next day,
the mortgage mix. As a rule, com- however, Furioso had a change of
mereta! loans arc made uo tn two heart. "I feel put off that myself or
George could be tainted because I
did too good a job," he com plained.
Furioso cited Adams National
Bank as one of the financial institutions that had offered a similar rate.
Tom Griel , Adam s' Senior Vic e
President for Commercial Lending,
-----~~
recalled his dealings with Furioso
but contradicted Furioso's version
of events. "It (NationsBank ' s
offer) was so low that we couldn't
come close," Gricl told our
reporter Aaron Karp. "We thought
TONY.4 WI~D!NG!
he was pulling our leg . We told
FflNT'NEXT To
him to run with it." Th e other ·
banks declined comment.
~ALLEN! .
One former senior bank regula- :
tor believes Stephanopoulos'
·
political - not financial - :
asseL~ were key : ' 'If his name were .
George Smith, and he didn't work :
in th e White Hou se, thi s loan
wouldn't have gotten made."
Jack Anderson and Michael :
Binstein are writers fur United ·
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Promoting saving pays off for Clinton
If President Clinton is serious

about promoting "personal responsibility" - one of his most popular 1992 campaign themes - he'll
back medical savings accounts as
part of health reform and go on to
support expanded IRA accounts
and consumption-based tax reform .
All three ideas are designed to
boost America's worsening- and,
ultimately, menacing - savings
rate, while also lowering government deficits and providing individuals with the power to guide
their own future.
Polls indicate there's a potential
political boon for Clinton in the
ideas too - a chance to capture
the ailegiance of voters who distrust the government's ability to do
anything right, especially deliver
on Social Security .
At tbe rate things arc going,
today's disaffected cynics are
going to be proven exactly nght
just after the year 2000, as the huge
baby boom generation ages, federal
deficits balloon, medical costs
surge, and fewer and fewer young
workers are responsible for financing the retirement of more and
more retirees.
Fixing the problem will require
either a significant increase in the
personal savings rate, vastly higher
taxes, deep slashes in government
spending (especially on entitlements), or some combination of the
three.
Increased savings is the leas't
painful, the most voluntary, and the
least likely to victimize the poor
(who will lose jobs if taxes arc

raised and the economy s1alls).
If Clinton gave American s an
opportun ity to expand their savings, he would be doing far more to

Morton Kondracke
earn the allegiance of the middle
class than he would by creating a
new health care entitlement or giving people spending money in the
form of a tax cut.
Yet the administration opposes
the medical savings account and is
at best just thinking about expanded IRAs and consumption taxes.
The Medisave issue arises first,
as part of this summer's health care
end game.
Under Medisave , employees
would be given a choice of accepting their employer ' s health insurance plan or taking a low-cost,
high-deductible catastrophic plan
and having the premium savings
put into a tax -exempt account they
could use to pay theit own medical
bills. What they didn't spend, they
could keep accumulating for retirement.
The key virtues of medical savings accounts, according to their
chief promoter, John Goodman of
the National Center for Policy
Analysis, are that they allow workers to pick the medical care they
want and make them cost-conscious.
Pushed primarily by conservative Republicans (though Indiana
Democratic Rep. Andy Jacobs is
also a supporter), Medisave has

made it into the House Ways and
Means Committee version of health
care reform, but not the Senate
Finance Committee version.
Whether it will make it into Jaw
is a major question. It's opposed by
the administration on lhe grounds
that young, healthy workers will
opt for Medisave, forcing insurance
companies to cover older and sicker workers with reduced premium
revenues .
That objection, however, suggests that the administration is
more wedded to the establishment
and financing of a government
health entitlement system than it is
to the "choice" and " personal
responsibility" ideas that it touts in
other contexts , including abortion
and welfare.
Not only is the admini stration
opposed, but so is Senate Majority
Leader George Mitchell, D·Maine,
and the House Democratic leadership. Probably, though, Medisave
will be approved by amendment on
the Senate floor.
Separate from the health debate,
Sens. John Breaux, D-La., and Bill
Roth, R-Del., plan to introduce legislation on Thursday to re-create
IRAs so that all working Americans (including homemakers) could
put away up to $2,000 and have
either the annual contribution or its
proceeds be exempt from taxes.
IRAs were substantially eliminated in the l986 tax reform act as
an unwelcome " tax shelter," but
since then the U.S. personal savings rate has plummeted from R
percent of GDP to less than 4 per.

cent.
A new survey by Merrill Lynch :
indicates that the average married
couple making $50,000 per year
will need to accumulate $170,000
in savings by age 65 to maintain its
standard of living, even with a pension and current Social Security
benefits.
The average baby boom couple,
however, is saving less than 40 percent of what it is likely to need for
retirement, according to the study.
The Breaux-Roth bill would
cost the government $24 billion in ·
tax revenues over five years, but
mighl generate up to $45 billion
per year in new savings. which
would help lower interest rates and
spur economic growth.
In the longer term, Congress and .
the administration should strongly
consider taxing consumption rather ·
than income in order to encourage .
savings. Sens. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.,
and Pete Domenici, R-N.M., have .
introduced one plan to do so, and .
Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., is working on another.
If he tackles the savings problem, Bill Clinton could go down in
history as a hero. He might also
find many of Ross Perot's voters ·
- who correctly believe that the
country is going broke - coming
his way in 1996.
(Morton Kondracke is execu·
live editor of Roll Call, the news· .
paper of Capitol Hill.)
Copyright 1994, Roll Call
Newspaper
Distributed by United Feature
Syndic.~te,lnc..

NASA must regain prowess lost _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
"That' s one small step for man, llressional and public support for
Its programs.
one giant leap for mankind."
But NASA has fallen far short
The words still resonate 25
years later . I have never been of the mark . Consider its latest
prouder of my country than when
Neil Armstrong became the first
Joseph Perkins
man to set foot on the moon.
Though I was only a boy on July
20, 1969, I remember vividly lhe shuttle mission. The biggest news
flickering televised Image of Arm· this week has been the births of
strong and fellow astronaut Buzz baby Japanese red-bellied newts
Aldrin as they planted the Ameri- and baby Medakas, which, NASA
can flag in the moon's powdery informs us, are guppy-like fish.
Sorry, but $250 million seems
soil.
. .
The historic Apollo I I miSSion, mighty pricey for an orbiting fish
and the eight moon landings that hatchery.
followed were the zenith for
Moreover, not even midway
America ·s' space program. Nothing through Columbia"s 14-day misthat the program has done since ihe sion, two of the four video
end of the Apollo era has even recorders aboard the SI billion
remote! y appr~ached the magni · Spacelab module (located in the
shuttle"s cargo bay) have malfunctude of those miSSIOns.
Indeed, for much of the past nvo tioned. Such snafus have become
decades the National Aeronaul!cs all too common on NASA space
and Spa~ Administration has d~­ missions.
The nation's space program
perately searched for a new mission that would focus. lhe_ talents really hasn't been the same since
and energies of 1ts sc1enusts and the Challenger disaster in 1986,
engineers, while building bolh con- when the space shultle blew up

•

shortly after liftofi', killing ali seven
of her crew members. Sin :e then,
it's been one expensive setback
after another.
In 1989, it may be remembered,
NASA launched the $1.5 billion
Galileo spacecraft, which was to
beam back data from Jupiter. The
probe's main antenna failed to
open, scrubbing two-thirds of its
research mission.
In 1990, the $2 billion Hubble
Space Telescope was launched into
orbit. Not until the telescope was
370 miles above Earth did NASA
scientists realize that its primary
mirror was defective, resulting in
blurry images. An 11-day, $629
million shuule repair mission last
November corrected most of the
Hubble's problems.
Unfortunately, there was no
such rescue for NASA's $1 billion
Mars Observer. NASA lost contact
with the craft last year after it had
traveled II monihs and 450 million
miles to the Red Planet.
It is this less-than-stellar track
record that has done much to

undermine support for NASA's ty from NASA . We simply expect for The San Diego Union-Triproposed space station. Even sup- that if NASA puts astronauts on a bune.
porters of the nation's space pro- space station, they will not face a
(For information on how to
gram wonder aloud if the govern- one-in-10 chance of dying there.
communicate electronically with
ment should gamble up to $43 bilThe space station should be put this columnist and others, conlion on NASA's biggest big -sci - on hold. In the meantime, NASA tact America Online by calling !ence project ever, when the agency officials ought to examine how the 800-827-63M, ext. 8317.)
can't even get a research probe or agency did things 25 years ago.
"'1
space telescope 10 work properly.
They can begin by figuring out Berry's World
Even more worrisome, NASA is how the agency managed, during
bent on movin~ full speed ahead on the Apollo era, to send spacecraft
the space stal!on even though its into orbit with half the staff and a
construction and operation pose fifth of the money (in constant dolserious safety risks . NASA offi- lars) than comparable launches
cials acknowledge a one-in-five require today .
chance that man-made space debris
The nation's space program is at
will smash lhrough the space sta- a crossroads. If it is to regain the
tion's shield once it is in orbit. high esteem it once enjoyed in the
Over the space station's expected corridors of Congress, and in the
10-year life span, there is a one-in- minds of the American people, then
10 chance of a catastrophe that will NASA must prove itself, here and
result in the death of astronauts or now, to be the can-do agency it was
the destruction of the station.
a quarter-century ago. Americans
These odds are not especially remain proud lhal lheir nation was
troubling to NASA administrator first to put men on the moon. Let
Daniel S. Goldin. We will never be us hope that other momentous
able to guarantee total safety, he achievements lie ahead for the
said, in a recent published inter- nation's space program.
~By lfle way, this is also our LATEST F'6lL •
view. But no one expects total safe·
Joseph Perkins is a columnist L---- - - - - - - - - - 1

r::=-=:.:.....:====::..:..:.:.___

Wednesday, July 20, 1994

Thursday, July 21
Accu-Wcathe.- forecast for

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

No change seen in
weather conditions

conditions and high

Ry The Associated Pres.~

W.VA.

IC6

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

01994 Accu· We&amp;ther, Inc.

Via Asrociatod Pross GraphicaNel

'------Weather----South-Central Ohio
To night and Thursday .. .Partly
r lo ud y with sca tt ered thunderstorms . Low ncar 70 . Wind s
Ionig ht so uthwest near 10 mph.
Htgh Thursday near 90. Chance of
rai11 IS 30 perce nt tonight and 50
percent Thursday.

r-----

Extended Forecast
Friday ... Sca ttered thund e rstorms. Lows around 70. Highs 85
to 90.
Saturday and Sunday ... Partly
cloud y with scattered thunder storms each day. Lows in the 60s
and highs in the 80s.

Local briefs... -----.
Continued from page 1

Police reports fender-bender
A Pomeroy woman backed her car into another vehicle Monday
afternoon, causing light damage to both vehicles, according to Middleport police reports.
·
Cheryl A. King, 34, Pomeroy, backed from Vaughan's parking
lot into Pearl Street and an on-coming vehicle at 4:40 p.m. King
was cited for improper backing, records stated.
Donald Hunnell, 20, Middleport, was driving north on Pearl
Street when his car was hit by King, reports showed.

ODOTawards contract in Meigs
A· construction contract for replacing two bridges on US Route
33 in Meigs County have been awarded by lhe Ohio Deparunent of
,
Transportation.
The contract was awarded to Ra12laff Construction of Chillicothe
whose bid for the project was $288,831.89.
The work consists of replacing nvo bridges on US Route 33 from
.38 miles east of the Alhens County line to 2.8 miles west of State
Route 681, and from .85 miles east of the Athens County line to
2.33 miles west of State Route 681. Both bridges are in Bedford
Township.
Completion dale if Nov. 15.

Triple whammy jolt
on Jupiter underway
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
fragmented comet that has been
plowing into Jupiter for days isn't
finished yet: There's a triple
whammy jolt yet to come for the
giant planet.
Fra gment Q2, thought to be
more than 1.5 miles in diameter, is
to smash into Jupiter at about 3:30
p.m . EDT today. It will drill
approximately the same site as two
following comet pieces are expected to hit on Thursday, creating
what one astronomer called ''one
I1cck of a mess."
Meanwhile, new data adds to
the picture of the extreme violence
of each new cornet impact.
Lucy McFadden, a University of
Mary land astronomer, said

Area death
Freddie Houdashelt
Freddie Houdashelt, 71, of Middleport died Wednesday, July 20,
1994 at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
Arrangements
will
be
announced later by Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport.

The D8ily Sentinel
(USPS li3-Hf)

Publi,hcd evuy a.fkruooo, Monday lhr01.1Jh
friday, lll Coun SL, Pomero,, Ollio by the
Olio VaHey 1\Jblilhina ColfCIIUly/Multimedil
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·11S6 .
Second c1111 postaae paid It POmeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Auociated Preu. aod the Obio
Ncwapap« Auociation, NatioDJ.l Ad~ing
Repruentative, BrllDhlm Nc'Wipapcr Sale~,

133 Third Aveaue, New York, New Y(l"ll:

10011.

POSTMASTER: Scud addrca c:baqa lo The
Daily Seulinel, Ill Co\11. SL, Pol05'0y, Ohio
41169.

astronomers in Chile report that
fragment H, which hit on Monday,
created an instant bubble of superheated gas that momentarily was
50 times brighter in infrared radiation than the whole of Jupiler.
"This suggests that the H
impact was just as energetic as G,"
the fragment that is thought to be
the largest, she said. G hit 12 hours
before H.
Already the cloud tops of
Jupiter's far southern hemisphere
are littered wilh blackened patches
left by almost a dozen impacts
from the 21 pieces of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9.
Some of the points appear to
still be bot from impacts as early as
last Saturday. The Lick Observatory in Hawaii released infrared
images of Jupiter that show five
impact points still glowing from
gases heated by collision.
In visible light, a dark mark that
resembles a black eye has made a
dramatic change in Jupiter's
appearance.
Steve Maran, an astronomer at
the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration. said the black eye
mark is the most easily seen spot in
the nearly 400-year history of
humans observing the planet with
telescopes. The mark - larger !han
the diameter of Earth - is so easily seen, he said, that even amateurs
with backyard telescopes may spot
it

Stocks
Am Ele P-er ··-- ------.19 S/8
Akzo·------- ------57112
Alblood OU
114
AT&amp;T -----------531/4

---------.35

Bank OIM·-----------.33
Bob Evua---------.11 3/8
Cbmaplon bd. --------.12314
Cbarmlna SbOP·-·-----~9 112

City Holdina----------..31
Fodtnl Mopl _______.l9 7/8
Goodytlll' T&amp;R
318

-------.36

K-mart ------ --------16
Looda End
---.20 314

Lilllllld IDe_
_,111318
Multimedia IDe. ·-----2!1 Ill
PoiDt 11aDcorp - - 17
Rtllua Electric
.1!1 Ill
Robbluo lc Myen ,
11 114
SboueJ'aiDc•••------·14 7/8
Star 11uk ---.38 518
WtadJ bt'L
---·15 111
WortblqtoD lad.---1!1314
Shick npor1l IN tba 10:30 LID.
quotu provided by Adve•t o

GaWpollL

The Dally Sentinei- Page-3

A stationary low press ure system centered over southern Canada
will continue to pump humid ,
southerly air into Ohio the next few
days. The unstable air will spawn
occasional scattered thunderstorms.
Tonight will be warm and
muggy with low s around 70 .
Thursd ay will be hot and humid
with highs around 90.
A few thunderstorm s moved
across the southwest quarter of
Ohio overnight while the remainder
of the state saw partly cloudy skies.
Lows ranged from the upper 60s to
around 75.
The record-high temperature for
thi s date a1 the Columbus weather
station was 10 I degrees in 1934
while th e rec ord low was 49 in
194 7. Sunset tonight will be at8:57
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:20
a.m.
Around the nation
Muggy , 'humid air blanketed the
eastern third of the United States
today, and sever e thunderstorms
we re e xpected along southeast
coast. A heat wave gripped the
Pacific Northwest.
Flash floods were possible along
with severe storms today from
northeastern Florida through the

coastal Carolinas. Highs in the 80s
and heavy storms also were ex peeled in the Appalachian mountains.
In the Northwest, warm winds
from the east were holding off coo l
air fro m th e Pac ific, intensifyin g
th e fir st real hea t wave in th e
Northwes t. On Wednesday, Portland, Ore., tied its 1946 record of
I02 degrees.
More thund e rstorm s we re
expected today in isolated areas of
the Southwest, where clouds and
rain Wednesday kept highs in the
90s.
In the Midwest, high winds, hail
and highs in the 90s were expected
ahead of a cool front arching from
the Great Lakes to the Texas pan handle. Behind the front. the Plains
states ' for ecast call ed for clear
skies and highs in the 80s.
Highs above 100 were expected
from central Oregon th rough th e
central California valley to south western Arizona. Highs in the 70s
were expected long the West Coast
and in pockets in Colorado and the
Dakotas.
Death Valley, Calif., wa s the
hottest spot Wednesday, at 114
degrees. Pinedale, Wyo., was the
coolest, at 35 .

•m

--TRAINING PROGRAM- Or. James Witherell examines Mrs.
Clara Shenefield, 99-year-old resident of the Skilled Nursing Facil·
ity at Veterans Memorial Hospital, while Jared Sheets observes.
The son of Mr. and Mrs. J ames Sheets of Meigs County, Sheets is
doing a six week summer rural externship with Dr. Witherell in
conjunction with his medical studies at Ohio Stale University.
Sheets will be a second year medical student when he returns to
Ohio State in the fall .

and dissolutions
A ,,rmstrong· ·COntinued
· - on-page-1 - - Divorces
Th e followin g ac tion s to end Cashin, Kittaning, Pa., July 18;

mand ship Columbia.
"The town wa s real quie t,"
Wittwer said. "Nob;&gt;dy was driving the streets."
State Rep. Charles Brading, who
knew Armstrong as a boy, shared
hi s television set with reporters
from around the world that day.
"We in Wapakoneta still feel
the admiration and pride we felt 25
years ago," Brading said.
Armstrong - who now lives on
a farm near Lebanon 80 miles to
the south and rarely makes public
appearances - was invited to the
festivities. Residents hoped he
would attend a July 9 parade 1\fld
were disappointed when he didn't
show.
But disappointment evaporated
a week later when he showed up at
the air show in nearby New
Knoxville. Armstrong thrilled the
crowd of 8,000 at Neil Armstrong
Airport, shaking hands and signing
autographs.
"We in Ohio take pride in the
fact that this is the birthplace of
aviation," Armstrong told the
crowd. "'I take pride in the fact that
to me Auglaize County is the birthplace of my aviation because I

EMS answers
6 calls for aid
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reponed six calls for assistance between
Tuesday and Wednesday mornings.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
6:46p.m. Tuesday, Bradbury
Road, Patricia Cleland, treated at
the scene.
POMEROY
12:33 p.m. Tuesday, volunteer
fire department and squads, Hiland
Road and state Route 7, two-car
accident, Jamie Blaeunar and Jessica Blaettnar, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Michael Blaettnar, treated
at the scene, Robert Burris and
Ellie Bush, refused treatment;
3:26p.m. Tuesday, Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
Sue Pierson, VMH;
8:38 p.m. Tuesday, stale Route
7, Angela Conlin, VMH;
1:41 a.m. Wednesday, E. Main
Street, Joy Farley, Holzer Medical
Center.
RACINE
8:26p.m. Tuesday, state Route
124, Laura Circle, VMH.
SYRACUSE
9 p.m. Tuesday, VFD, Rose
Valley Road, gas odor.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions- none
Tuesday discharge - Crage
Brown, Racine

learned to fly here."
Friends and residents say the
63-year-old Armstrong, who is
chairman of a New York -based
electronics company, never sought
the limelight.
"I admire him for not being
boastful. He 's alway s been
reserved," said Pauline Metzger,
78, one of Annstrong' s high sc hool
teachers.
Born Aug . 5, 1930. in a farm house near W a p~koneta, Arm strong followed up ' those early fly ing lessons with degrees in aeronautical engineering from Purdue
University and the University of
California. He became a research
test pilot for the government in
1955 and was selected as an astronaut in 1962.
In 1966, Armstrong commanded
Gemini VIII, completing the first
rendezvous and docking in space.
He was appointed commander of
the Apollo I I mission to the moon
in 1969.
Wapakoneta embraced Armstrong when he returned to the city
for a parade and high school
reunion a few months after the
moonwallc. But they were kept at a
distance.
Ms. Me12ger saw Armstrong at
a reception .

marriage were filed recently in the
Me igs County Common Ple as
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow Ill:
Divorc es as ked - Jo seph
Bryan! , Langsvill e, from Hel en I.
Bryant, Gallipoli s. July 18: Ali sa
Renee Bonecutt er, Middleport,
from Terry Lee Bonecutter, Point
Pleasant, W.Va .. July l9 .
Di ssolution granted - Toni
Robbins, Pomeroy , and Randy
Robbins, Mechanicsburg, July 18.
Divorces granted - Pamela L.
Cashin, Cheshire, from Kevin P.

Gerard Edwm Carter from Debra
Ann Carter, Jul y 18; Casandra Bennett, Reedsville, from Gregory M.
Bennett, Camp Pendleton, Calif.,
July 19.

• Cans of all klnda
• Glasa containers (all
colors- llda removed
• Newspapers and Inserts
• No. 1 Plastic (liter)
• No. 2 Plastic Uugs)
• Corrugated cardboard
• Beverage Wrap-cereal
box
• Foil &amp; trays- Alum Scrap
• Office &amp; computer paper

ALLCAPS AND
LIDS .. REMOVED
Mctgs County Litter Control
Umon Ave &amp; At 7 Ph . 992·6360

3 DAYS ONLY

PRICES GOOD THURS, FRI, &amp; SAT.

SINGER

#) SINGER
.......... I

SINGER
MULTI FUNaJON

" " '" ·

.. ~···
L-~

--------------- •

MACHINE

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges July 19
Freda Davis, Rosalie Beaver,
Kerri Lewis, Angelia Adkins, Cary
Barker, Mrs. Chris Ramos and
daughter.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walkins,
of Beaver, had a son.
(printed witb permission)

Five couples Issued
marriage licenses
Five couples ~ere re~ently
issued mamage licenses m the
Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck.
Receiving licenses were: Shawn
Allen CIDUiingham, 24, and Leanne
Sue Clark, ,24, both of Pomeroy;
Donald Franklin Hendricks Jr., 34,
and Pauletta Sue Smith, 31, bolh of
Syracuse; Philip Anthony Serevicz,
27, Pomeroy, and Robynn Elaine
Stewart. 24, Mason, W.Va.; Rodney Lee Smith, 20, and Dreama
Diane English, 26, both of Middleport; J uon Michael Boothe, 24,
and Heather Ann Hovatter, 22,
both of Middleport.

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Wednesday, July 20 , 1994

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Reds' win and Astros' loss hikes Cincy's division lead

Wednesday, July 20, 1994
Page-4

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Thirteen
runs. Eig hteen hits. A six- ru n
inni ng.
Ho-hum . No thing new to the
Cincinnati Reds.
'' We seem to tluow one of those
out there every week or week and a
half," Hal Morri s said. "We've
got the kind of lin eup where we' re
going to do that. "
The National League's best-hitti ng team did it agai n Tuesday
night. The Reds scored six in the
first inni ng off Mark Gardner who has beaten every NL team but
them - and ro lled to a I 3-5 victory over the slumping Rorida Marlins.
Th e Reds' offense isn't flashy,

Racine Athletics~ Rutland Reds advance to quarterfinals

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE

The second-round contests in the
Cree k Litt le Leag ue
Tournament Tuesday night resulted
1n th e Rac 1ne Ath le tics and th e
Rutl and Reds elim inating two more
bye teams - the Bidwell Pirates
and Gree n No. I, respective ly fro m the diamondfest.
So far. teams that received frrstround hvcs arc 1-4.
,\ thlctks 2, Pirates 0
P1tclnng and defense was what
vau lted the bl.tclc-shirted Athletics
past t~ c dcfcncll ng champion Pirates
and in10 the lJUarterfinals.
What ki nd of de fense was it?
Bidwell had 10 batters in the firs t
three inn111p In th a t s pa n, th e
Pirates· lone baserunne r - Ni ck
Fisher rcac hed on a walk in tile third
- neve r made it to second base .
Other than that. Bidw ell managed
three fl y O UL~. three popouts and two
groundouts.
J. B. Boso pitc hed two innings for
the At hl eti CS before switching
pl aces with start ing first sacke r
Chris Randolph. The paJf suuck out
three and ga ve up two walks. No
hits were su rrendered be fore the
fourth .
The Rac ine third started with
Kyle Norris being hit by Eri c
Nolan's first pitch. Nter Boso, who
reac hed whe n he beat shortstop
Aaron Sullivan 's throw 10 fu;t after
his fielder' s-choice grounder retired
Norris at second , got to third on
Jason Laudermilt ' s double to left
center field, Russell Reiber's single
to left scored Boso.
Laudennilt, who got 10 tllird on
Reiber's single, scored when he beat
Sullivan's throw to the plate
following the latter's fielding Ryan
Hill's fielder's-choicc grounder.
Th e Pirates played some
effective defense of their own in tile
fourth , when they nailed Roberts at
the plate 10 end a 6-3-2 (shOitSIOp 10
fmt 10 home) double play that kept
Racine from possibly scoring two
more runs.
Bidwell came calling in tile sixlh.
With two outs, Michael Stephens
reached on an error and made it 10
second when Sullivan's bunt was
ruled a hit after Randolph slipped 10
his natural seat in lhe act of fielding.
Craig Swisher then nailed a 1-0
pitch 10 left, but Laudermilt' s throw
10 the plate arrived at Reiber' s min
in time for lhe lallet 10 tag Stephens
ant,l pnisierve tile shuiOut
Nolan, who needed no help from
the bullpen, struck out five and
walked two.
Racine's hitters were Reiber (23), Boso, Randolph (both 1-2) and
Laudermilt (1-3). Bidwell' s hits
came from Nick George (1 - 1),
Steven Conley (double), Sullivan
and Swisher (alll-3).
lnniDg totals
Pinlles .................()()() ()()() = 0-4-5
Athletics ..............002 OOx 2-5-I
WP - Randolph (in relief of
K yg&lt;r

on ly once and stranded six runners

ilieth
see~~~ lcftf:~~~i~~~~~
innings. Green picked up runs in the
fi rst and the fo urth to give lefty
starter Bi ll y McBrayer a I ittl e
breathing room .
On both occas io ns , Gree n's
leadoff hitters - Corey Hart in the
first and Jared Bryan in the fourth
- got sing les and score d. Hart
cam e on on a wil d pitc h during
Bryan's firs t at -bat of the nigh t.
Brya n scored on Bre nt Beegle 's
groundo ut to fi rst.
Despi te fac ing a 2-0 deficit, the
Reds didn 't fold. In the fi fth , Ashley
Miller, who reached on a one-out
walk, scored on J.R. Rife's triple to
right. Rife ti ed the game when he
scored on a wild pitch during Adam
Bullington's at-bat Green's coaches
imm edi ately sent McBraye r to
center field, starting shortsiOp Kelly
Painter to the hill and Hart , th e
starting center fielder, 10 shortstop.
Bullington, who saw Painter for
the remainder of his at-bat and got a
walk out of him, moved up two
bases on as many wild pitches and
scored after Bryan's errant lOss from
the plate to th ird went into foul
terriiOry beyond the tllird base bag.
Rutland got the run it needed in
the sixth when Zack Bolin , who
reached on third baseman Abe
Abrams' ei'IU on a grounder, came
around on tllree wild pitches, with
the last featuring Bolin beating
Bryan 10 the plate.
Facing a 4-2 deficit going into
the bottom of the sixth, Green
showed it had some fight left.
McBrayer. who reached when
shortsiOp Justin Gilmore fell 10 his
backside after fielding his grounder,
scored on Beegle's one-out single to
right.
With Abrnms at third and Beegle
at second (lhe pair advanced on the
late relay following Beegle's
single), Jerod StapleiOn struck out.
Then with an 0-1 count to David
Dodrill, Abrams sprinted IOward the
plate after MiUeJ''s IOssback 10 Rife.
Rife then threw to Miller, who
tagged out Abrams to end the
contest.
Rife, who went the distance ,
fanned II and walked three.
McBrayer and Painter divided 10
strikeouts and eight walks.
The Reds' hitters were Bolin (24), Art Tobin (1 -2) and Rife (1 -3).
Green's hitters were McBrayer (23), Beegle and Hart (both 1-3).
Inning totals
Reds ....................000 031 = 4-4..0
Green .................. .IOO 101 = 3-4-2
WP-Rife
LP- McBrayer

-·-·-·-

--- --- Saving the best for last--------

DENIAL of home plate to Green No. I 's Abe Abrams by Rutland
backstop Ashley Miller is just wha t lhe Reds needed to keep from
batting a sixth time during Tuesday night's Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament contest. This sixth-inning putout, which started
with pitcher J.R. Rife's tossback to Miller after getting an 0-2 count
on David Dodrill, ended the game and gave the Reds a 4·3 victory.
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Tribe tops Rangers to keep ChiSox in reach
By ADAM NA ZIMOWITZ
AP Sports Writer
Co rk or no cork , Albert Bell e
can still hi t.
Belle, facin g a 10-day suspension for using a corked bat, homered and tripled Tuesday night as the
Cleveland Indians beat th e Texas
Rangers 12-3.
Paul Sorre nto homered twi ce
and drove in a career -high fi ve
runs, and Jim Thome and Wayne
Kirby also homered for Cleveland,
which improved to 25-5 in its last
30 games at Jacobs Field.
"It's nice to sec Albert hit the
balI hard ," Cle veland manager
Mike Hargrov e said . " Albert 's

pre tt y strong mentally. When he
gets to the ballpark, he focuses on
what he has to do. He is really able
to have tunnel vision and not have
outside things bother him."
Th at's es pec ially important
these days because of the corked
bat controversy that began last
we eke nd in Chicago. Belle was
su.sp end ed Monday, but he is
appealing and can keep playing
pending a hearing.
Charles Nagy (8-6) allowed
seven hits, walked one and suuck
out six in eight innings before leaving when a ball hit his left knee.
Rangers roolcie HeciOr Fajardo
(S-6) gave up seven runs and seven

hits in five innings fN the loss.
"They hit the pitches out that
they should have hit out," Texas
mana ger Kevin Kenn edy said .
" We made a lot of bad pitches, and
they didn 't mi ss them. He (FaJ31do)
got the ball up and didn ' t have
good ann speed ."
Bell e' s fifth -inning home run ,
his 27th, was his first hom er and
·only his fourth hit in 19 at -bats
since his bat wa s se ized Friday
night.
Elsewh ere in the Ame rican
League, it was Toronto 4, Minnesota 2; Chicago 10, Detroit 5; Milwaukee 4 , Kansas City 3 in 14
innings; California 6, Boston 4, and

Oakland 6, New York 2.
The game between Baltimore
and SeatUe was postponed because
of falling ceiling tiles at the Kingdome.
Blue Jays 4, Twins 2
At Toronto, Paul Molitor tripled
in the go-ahead run in the eighth.
Roberto Alomar reached on a
one-out walk and scored on Moli- ·••
tor's single. Joe Carter followed
with a run-scoring single.
Tony Castillo (5 - I) won with
two innings of scoreless relief. Darren Hall pitched the ninth for his
I lth save. Kevin Tapani (9-6) gave
up four runs on five hits over 7 I/3
(See AL on Page S)

Scoreboard

The Gallipolis hitters were Trent
Thomas (3-4), Chris Toler (2-4),
Stanley (2-5), Eric Humphreys (I3), Paul Covey (I-4) , J.T. Norlhup
(1 -5) and Williams 0 -6)
.
Gallipolis (13 -21) will contmue
tournament play again st Athens
Post 23 today at Lancaster.

AL standings

NL standings
l:aotomDI-

Tum

Pet.

GB

3S
Moo....t ................l&lt;l 'n

.615
.602
.• 79
.&lt;t62
.447

I
12.5
14
IS.S

Plilladolphia ...........4S -19
New Yodl ............. A3 SO
Aorid• ... ................42 S2

Inning totals
Gallipolis: 0 II- 500-030 = I 0-11 -3
McArthur: 000-00 I -180- I = I I-122
WP - Ross (in re li ef of
Brooks)
LP- Williams (in relief of
himself, Haislop and Stanley)

r.-w. Dltbloa

W L

Allan11 .................. J6

Central Dl•lllon
aNaNNA 11 ...... J6 'n .602

lbatoo ................ J3 4t

.564
............44 41 .478
SL Louio................43 47 .478
OU...8)&gt; .................40 l2 .435
Pi~

3.S
It j
I (j
lSJ

Wt~~lem IH'flaloa
LooAnaolca ...........41 46 ..Itt

so .479
San Pnncio&lt;o ........ 44 Sl .463
S..J&gt;ie&amp;o .............. 'rl l B .319

Cotomlo ................ 46

--

3

•.s
IU

Tuesday's scores

Morn...t 4, San llieao 3
Philadelplno S, San Pnncio&lt;o 2
Pitub,uah 13, Allar:u 10
aN&lt;lNNA1113, Florido S
New Yodr. 7, Loll Anaclcl4
St.l...c:JuiJ to, HOUitan o·
Cltio.oSP 6, Colondo I

Commemorative Edition
Of
The Meigs County

W L Pet.
New YO&lt;k ..............SS 36 .604
Ba1Jim..................S3 38 .S82
...................45 47 .419

Turn

Torml0 ..................42 50
Ilootril ...................42 52

SL LaW (l'owbbury 10-8 "Homm
(Swn.toll6-6), I ,35 p.m .
Lot Anaelea (Mutinea 1-6) at New
Yodi (SoborNaa~ t0-4), t ,40p.m.
OU...8)&gt; (D..U 1-1) " Coknolo (IUu

175th

Anniversary Tabloid

:l-4), S:Ol ,....

&lt;B••

San Dieao
6-10) at Mc.llnll
(Jlauy6-2), 7Jl p.m.
Atlanta (OlaYUie 11 -7) at Pil111bursf\

(Nooalol-1), Hl p.m.

Fforicla (W01lbcn 1 -1) at CINCIN·

NATI (Rijo~~ HS p.m.

Tbursday'IIAIDel

DII All.uu (Sm.lb 6-9 ond Mor!Co
12-S)" SL LaW (Oliv... t -2 ond fou.
c:t.tOIO 0.0). 6:35pm.

.4!ii7
.447

Central Dl•il&amp;on
OU..8)&gt; ........ ........ J6 J6 .609
a.t!VEUND ...... .54 J6 .&lt;100
Jl.wu City ...........49 4.5 J21
..............43 49 .467
Milwoukoo .............43 lO .462
W•&amp;ern Dl'blon
Toaa. .....................4S 41 .'484
Oollind .................41 l2 .441
Califmnia .............. .41 l4 .432
Scoltlo ........ ............ J8 l4 .413

GB

2

IOJ

IJj

t4j

I
8

13
l]j

4

s

6J

Tuesday's s&lt;ores

&lt;l.EVEUND t2, y,... 3
Torc~~\0 4, ~ 2
Mitwaukoo 4, Konou Cil7 3 (14 im.)
OU...SP I0, llocroill
Califomi.16, Boalm. 4
Ooklond 6, Now YO&lt;k 2
Baltimore at Scutle, ppcl. atadium
dun•tl"

Today's games
San Fnnci1co (PoRIIJII 1-6) at
l'llilodolphio (W"' 4-7). I:05r.m.

NI!Ws.
Mau Perry. the spons consultant
who represents the Class A Madison Hatters, told the newspaper in a
story published Tuesday that he
spoke to Assistant City Manager
Mike Schierloh twice last week
about selling up a meeting between
Hatters owner William L. Collins
III and Dayton cily commissioners.
"We just pretty much laid it out
that here we are and we want to
come and mee1 w1th everyone as
soon as they let us know when we
can," Perry said. "As far as we're
concerned, tile sooner the bener."
But Schierloh said the meeting
will have to wait.
"I think the issue is the same as
alway s, " Schierl oh said . " Th e
challenge centers around the ability

w••••• 8ped411:

PitlJbUrah (~mith. 9· 7) at Hou•ton
(llamilch 6-4), I :Ill p.m.

Baseball

McArthur beats Gallipolis 11-10 in 10 frames

=

TJab

when he faces the Reas.
The right-hander felt great when
he took the mound Tuesday, raising
hopes he might finally have some
good fortune against the Reds. Six
batters into the game. he was wondering what went wrong again..
The fi rst six reached by h1t or
walk and all six scored . There was
a br~ken - bat single, another th at
just found a hole, and Taubensee's
bases -loa ded sin gle th at ba rely
eluded diving first baseman Dave
Magadan.
. .. .
" That's a terrible ouung, sa1d
Gardne r, now 0-4 in eight career
starts aga inst Cinc innati. "I fe lt·
good and didn ' t take advan tage of
it. I felt! had a pretty good fastball .
Things just didn ' t go our way. Just
one of those nights.
"I made a couple of mi stakes
and I made some good pitches that
they hit , too. The next thin g yo u
know it's 6-0, just like that. "
Every thing seems to happen at
ju st th e r ight tim e for the Reds
these days. Ex ampl e: Taubens_ee_' s
two-run sin gle was his first htt tn
16 at-bats and the first by a Reds '
catcher in 33 at-bats.
Perfect timing once aga in.
"I knew we were slumpin g.
didn ' t know we were 0-for-32."
Taubenscc said. ''I'm glad I broke

Later, Tony Fernandez uiplcd
home a run to break his 0-fo r- 15
slump and help push the lead to I22. It was that kind of a night.
" Murph y' s La w, I gu ess ,"
Gardner said.
John Smiley (I 0-9) got to coast
for a change. The Reds don't usual ly sc ore a lot wh en he' s on the
mound - just 39 run s in hi s 18
losses the last two years. The Iefthander got the_win by going 6 I /3
mmngs and gmng up seven hits,
mcludmg Gary Sheffi eld 's 20 th
homer.
" It was ni ce to giv e J o hn a
lead," Morri s said . "We haven' t
given him a lot of support the last
two years. It was about time."
The Marlin s have los t fiv e
straight to fall to 1-5 on a I 0-gam e,
I 2-day road trip that is their longest
of the season . The loss Tuesday
just made it feel a lot longer.
"They pretty well handed us our
lunch, I'll tell you that," manager
GOOD JOB , JACOB! - Cincinnati tbird base coach Ray Knight Rene Lachemann said. ''That can
(left) congratulates Jacob Brumfield after tbe latter's solo homer in happen against this club. TI1ey can
the fourth inning of Tuesda1 night's National League game against do a whole lot of things offensively
the visiting Florida Marlins, f"bo lost 13-S. (AP)
and defensively . They showed us

In the AL,

The Gallipolis Post 27 AmeriHere is a peek at lhc futwe.
Today - Vin10n vs. Gallipolis can Legion baseball team dropped
Yankees, 6 p.m.; Hubbard's a 10-inning , 11 -10 dcc 1s ion to
Greenhouse vs. Village Pizza Inn, McArthur Post 303 in Eighth DI Strict tournament action Tuesday at
7:30p.m.
Pickerington.
Tbursday - Tuppers Plains
After a scoreless fir st innmg,
Tigers vs . Green No. 2, 6 p.m.;
Gallipolis
tapped out se ven runs in
Tuppers Plains Pirates vs .
B~)
the
next
three
frames and had a 7-0
LP-Nolan
Middleport White Sox, 7:30p.m.
lead
after
five
innings. But the nex t
Friday - Racine Athletics vs .
three
innings
saw McArthur chip
Reds 4, Green No. 1-3
Rutland Reds, 6 p.m.; tonight ' s
away
at
a
lead
that grew to ei ght
While Rutland got to third base winners. 7:30p.m.
before six hits and four walk s
fueled Post 303's eigh t- run Ja ilbreak in the bottom of lhc eighth .
After a scoreless ninth for both
squads and a scorele ss lOth for
Gallipolis, McArthur 's Josh
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Th e
owners of a minor-league baseball
team in Wi sconsin are ready to
come to Dayton to talk about moving their team here and providing
som e finan cin g for a stadium.
according to th e Day ton Daily

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

just incredibly effic ient. They lead
the league in team batting average
(.292) , hits and runs even th ough
only one offens ive player (Barry
Larkin) was chosen an All-Star.
In tha t rega rd, Tuesday's
blowout was completely chamc tcristic.
"I don' t feel like I had a huge
nig ht ," said Edd ie Ta ube nsee,
whose bases- loaded single stoked
the six-run first. "Everyone had a
good night. "
Every starter had a hit and seven
players drove in runs to help the
NL Central leaders reach a seasonhigh 19 games over .500 (56-37). It
wasn't surprising that they reached
a new height again st Gardner (3·3),
who has nothin g but low points

us out of it.' '

PRESERVES SHUTOUT - Th e throw from Racine left fielder
Jason Laudermilt arrives in time for catcher Russell Reiber to put the
tag on the Bidwell Pirates' Michael Stephens, who sprinted in from
second base on Craig Swisher's single to left, to preserve the shutout
and end the first game of Tuesday night' s Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament doubleheader at the Kyger Creek Employees Club field.
The Athletics handed the defending champion Pirates a 2-0 loss to
move into the quarterfinals. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

In the NL,

In the Kyger Creek LL .Tournament,

ovr Starr Writ er

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Today's games
Detroit (Wella l-S) at Chieago (McDoodl7- 1~

KMwu

L3S p.m.

Cit_)' (Gordon 9-S) at MUwau-

koo (Boo.. 8· 7), 2:115 p.m.
DH· Bahimoro (McDonald 11 -6 and
Fmnande.z 6-4) a\ Se~ulc (flanint 6-10
ond eon..... 0-2). Hl p.m.
Tuu (Oeam• 0-4) at a..BV8..AND
(CWt 11-3), 7,:15 , ....
MinnoloWI (Eridton 1-8) at Torooto
(Owimon 9-9), Hl p.m.
Boaton (Nabbola 2-2) at Caliromia
(l.cftwic114-l~ I 0:3l p.m.

New Yodi (Plono 7-3) ot Oollind (On·
tnwaa!-2), 10:3S p.m.

Thursday's 111111es

Batlimani (M..,;.. I :l-4) 01 Ooklanrl

(Dottin&amp; H~ •:Ol p.m.
Chic~1o (Alvarez. ID-S) 11 CLEVElAND (Mulincz 9-4), 70S p.m.
Te.~.u (l.etry I~) at TmmlO (Hcntacn
I HI), BS p.m.
~ (Dalh&amp;ioa S-9) M Milwau koo (Wqpnan 6-3), I:Ol p.m.
New "Yor:k (Koy 14-2) at CaWomia
(Finley 7-l), t0:05 ~.m.

today what they can do offensively.
They knocked us around very
good."
In other games, Phi lade lphia
beat Sa n Franc isco 5-2. St. Louis
stopped Houston 10-0, Pittsburgh
outlas ted Atlanta 13- 10, New York
beat Los Ange les 7-4 , Montreal
defeated San Diego 4-3 and Chicago beat Co lorado 6-1.
Phillies S, Giants 2
Ba rr y Bond s had just s in gled
home a run and Matt Wi lliams and
Da rryl Strawberry were du e up
after him. The San Fran cisc o
Giants were ahead 2-0 in the fi rst
iunin g an d looked ready to ro ll
agam.
That's when Danny Jackson and
the Philadelphia Phillies got in the
way .
Jackson allowed on ly one hit
afte r th e opc n1ng inn ing and
pitched the Philli es to a 5-2 victory
Tu esday night th a t encled the
Giants' nine-game wi nning streak .
The Giants had been 9-0 since
Su·awberry joined them. But a day
after he left the game early because
of a sore left hamstring, he went 0for-4 with two strikeouts.
" We were bound to lose on e
ga me. We ' ll ju st ha ve to sWTI
anoth er one tomorrow," Gia nts
manager Dusty Bake r said.
Strawberry would not start this
aft ernoon' s game in Phil adelphia
so he could rest, Baker said.
Jackson (1 2-4) gave up four hits
in eight in nings , striking out five
and walki ng three . Do ug Jo nes
worked the ninth for hi s 24th save .
The Giants put Jackson in trouble quick ly as Darren Lew is led off
the ga me with a tri ple, Steve Scar-

sonc doubl ed and Bonds s1ngled.
Bonds has 10 RB!s in hi s last SIX
ga mes.
Tile Phil lies swn ect th e SIXth
1nnin g with 1hrcc str aigh t Sin gle s.
cha sin g Bud Bl ac k (3 -1) Da ve
Bu rb;1 reli eved ami Pete In cavigl ia
hit hi s 13th home run, and hi s secom! th ree- run homer in two da ys.
Cardin als 10, Astms 0
Vicente Pa lacios p1tched a onehi tter, retiring the fina l 21 batters
aJtcr Andujar Cedeno 's leadoff singl c in the th ird mnmg at Houston.
Palac1os (2 -7), p11 ch111g on hi s
31st ~i rt hcla y.. struck out c 1 ~ 1 11 and
walked one.
~1ark \VIotcn lmm crcd
doubled d1u1c 111 th ree r11 ns and sc ored
three. Darryl K ilc (6-)) lasted only
4 1/3 innmgs
Pirates 13, Braves 10
h v Bell hit a 1hrce- ru n doub le
in the se ve nth in ning and Pitt sbur gh seesawed past Atlan ta at
Titrcc Rivers Stadiu m.
The Pirates blew a five-run lead,
th en rallied to bea t the Braves for
th e eighth time in I I games thi s
year. Three errors by Atlanta fueled
th e comeback.
La nce Parri sh homered and
Midre C ummin gs we nt 3- for -5
with two do ubles for the Pirates.
Roo ki e Jos e Oliva hit his lOth
homer for the Hr.lVCS.
Da n Miceli ( 1-0) pitched two
hi tless in ni ngs for hi s f~r s t win in
th e majo rs. Reliever Gregg Ol son
(0-2) gave up three run s in on e
mnm g.
Mets 7, DcKl~e rs 4
Rya n Th o mpso n g round ed a
th ree- run dou bl e, cappin g a fi verun rdlly in the eighth inn in c.

'""I

Relievers l1 m-Gou (5-3), Omar
Daa l and Roger McDowell could
nm hold a 4-2 lead.
Kevin McReynolds hit a tworun si ngle that tied it at 4 in the
eig hth . He later sli d home on a
for ceout tu break up a possibl e
doub le pla y, then Thompson rol lowed with his hit down the tllirdbase line.
Josias Man,andlo (3· 1) retired
1hc on ly batt er he faced, getting
Mike Piazza on a grounder with lhe
ba ses loaded to end the eighth.
John Franco worked lhc ninth for
hi s 21st save.
Expos 4, Padres 3
Mon treal 1111 provcd to 11 ..0 this
season again st San Diego, taking
advantage of four errors 10 win at
Olympic Stacl1um.
Short stop Luis Lopez made a
throwi ng err or that set up two
unearned ru ns. and a wild tllrow by
fir st base man Eddi e Williams
cnahled anotltcr run to score.
Pedro M.lrt inct. (7-5) won for
the fir st time '" ' " starts and John
Wetteland got his 15tll uve in 23
tries.
Andy Ashby (4-9) got liulo suppon.

Cubs 6, Rockies 1
Rooki e
Ste ve
Trachsel
improved to 8-0 on tile !Old, winning for the second time this ICtiiOII
in Colorado.
Trachsel (9-6) gave
hilS
in eight inning s. He left
. , . of
a blister on the middle fmg« ol his
right hand.
Sammy Sosa had three hill and
drove in two run s. He connected
off David Nied (9-5) for his 21st
homer.

t.,!i'¥1:

from Page 4)
AL games···-(Continued
-Hipolito
- -Pichardo
- -(3-3:) leading
- -ou - - - - -- mnings.
White Sox 10, Tigers 5
At Chicago, Julio Franco went
4-for-5 and drove in three runs, and
Alex Fernandez stru ck out I I in
seven inn ings.
Fernandez (9-7) walked four and
scattered fiv e hits for hi.s fourth
strni ght victory. Tim Belcher (7- 11 )
worked into the fourth inning, giving up eight runs, II hits and two
waJks.
Lance John son had th ree hits
and Tim Raines scored three runs
and drove in two.
Brewers 4, Rovals 3 ( 14 inn.)
At Milwaukee, Jeff Cirillo hit
his second major-league homer in
the 12lh inning and scored the winning 111n on Kevin Se itzer' s basesloaded single in the 14th.
Cirillo was hit by a pitch from

struck out eight and walked five.
the 14th, advanced on a wild pitch
His ERA rose from 2.73 10 2.8610
and sacrifice and scored as Scitzer put him behind Kansas City's
bounced a single up th e middle off David Cone for the top mark in the
second baseman Jose Lind 's glove.
AL.
Jose Mercedes (2-0) , th e seventh
Athletics 6, Yankees 2
Brewers pitcher, pitched one inning
At Oakland, Calif., Mark MeGfor the win.
wire's three-run homer in the fiftll
Angels 6, Red Sox 4
innin g he lped end the Yankees'
At An ahe im, Ca lif. , Mark
rive-game winning streak.
Lang ston outpitc hed Roge r
The Athletics, who had dropped
Clemens for the first time in hi s ' four of their previous five games,
career and Chad Curtis drov e in
.scored four in the firth orr Jim
lhree runs.
Abbott (7 -7). who has won only
Curtis and Chili Dav is each hit
once sin ce May 25 . He allowed
two-run hom e rs to power the
seven hiL~ in six 1nnings.
Angels.
Pitching for the first time in II
Langston (6 -6) allowed three
days, Bobby Witt (8-8) tluew five
runs and four hits over seven
scoreless innings, allowing seven
mnmgs .
hits. The right-hander, who had
Clemens (R-5) allowed five runs
been sidelined with a strained rib
and seven hits over 6 2/3 innings,
cage muscle, struck out five and
walked three.

THE 1994

Boo.., (Sclo 7-l) 11 Scouto (lohnooo
HI-S), I 0:05 p.m.

Transactions
BasebaU
American Lupe
AL' SuoJ&gt;cl!dod Konou Coy inf..td..Bob u..din lor five pmco for &lt;IIUJinl
the mound: and ChicaaQ calcller Ron
Karkovice and Detroit infielder TOny
PbilliJNI three aune• uch for ma.ing
pbyaical 0111\LKt wi1h W!lpirel.
ODCAOO W1DTE SOX ' Plaood Ron
Kari.oviccl, Cltcher, on the 15-day di sobtcd liot. Roco&amp;rl Dono lohnooa, pii.Cher, &amp;om Nuhvillc fllhc American Aaf&gt;.
ciacion.
NEW YORK YANKEES : Actintod
Mike Oollcto. Wielder, &amp;om rho IS-day
W..blcd liot. Dco;prr.d Dom Pall, pii.Ch·
cr, for . .iprnenL

Nollonal l.oaauo

SAN DIEOO PADRES ' Suoponded

Lu Veau -.,. Firlol Compno ond Lu

VCBU infielder Julio Bnano indcrl'mi~y.

BasketbaD
Nallonrol Baokotbalt AaooclaU...

DETROIT PISTONS ' T..dod Seon Elliou, forwud, to tho San Aa.lonio Spwa
fmlho ri&amp;ttY w Bill Curley, rorwud, and
• IOCOid-nutd pick in 1997.

FoolbaU
NallonatForobaU~

ATLANTA FALCONS: S1ancd Anthony Pbillipt, c:omubac)., and Ricky
Sandas. widls receiver, co ono-ycu COli·
uactl . Re.lcaud Louia Aae, offertaivc

tale, and Howard I&gt;inkinl, lincbld.er.
C1J!VI!U.ND BROWNS' A,.-1 lo
lenTil with &amp;.We Thcmpeon. ufety.

osu basketba(l players'
argument escalates
into car vandalism

·········--------------------·-----Name _____________________________
Address-------------Age _ _Telephone No. _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Anyone Interested in helping with the organization of
this year's season, please feel free to call.
Dave Jenkins- President 992·2117
Lisa Roush - Secretary 992-3486

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Ohio State coach Randy Ayers said
dismissal from the team could be
the punishment for players
involved in what one said was a
shooting.
.
· Center-forward Antonio WatsOn
had a tire sbot out on his car after
an argument involving two teammates, WCMH-1V reported Tuesday.
Watson called police at 3:40
a.m. Tuesday 10 report tllat the left
front tire or his 1985 Ford Thunderbird was shot by sophomore
center Gerald Eaker, the station
reported. Watson IOid police that
another Ohio State player, Greg
Simpson, was also involved, the
station said.
Watson declined to press
charges, a police report said.
The station reported that Eaker
and Watson were arguing at a residence that tile two shared. Simpson
arrived during the argument When
WatsOn went outside and ~ol in his
car, Eaker shot tile car ure as he

$1.50 per copy
Available at

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH

r

and Simpson pulled away in Simpson's car, the station said.
The police report filed by Watson did not mention Eaker or Sunpson.
Ohio State coach Randy Ayers
said that if what he has heard is
true, some of lhe players could be
kicked off the team.
"If all facts check out and if
some things were involved that I
don't agree wilh, then some people
may be leaving our program,"
Ayers told WSYX-TV. Ayers did
not say which players. h~ was !Jillcing about and was still mvesugating the situation.
Ayers told the station he met
witll some of tile players Tuesday
afternoon. Ayers did not return a
telephone message left at his home
Tuesday night
Calls to Watson's house were
not answered.
Alhletics director Andy Geiger·
said the university would release a
statement Wednesday after all of
the players were contacted. He
would not comment !lfesday _night

See Us For
Galvanized
Pipe, Plastic
Pipe, Copper
Pipe and
Fittings.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA

773-5583

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

992-2155

�r
Page-6---The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 20, 1994

AIN&amp;i..,ITIM I'IU:Y· Each of thete adve&lt;tl&lt;ed ~ems~ required to be readily Mlatlle for
sale In each Kroger Store, exc01&gt;t as soecWica!y noted In this ad. ~ we do run out Of an advert~ed Item, we wll offer lW your choice of a comparable Item . when available, reflecting the
same savtnos or a ralncheck which wftl entitle vou to purchase the advert~ed ~em at the adver·
t~ed pr~e within 30 davs Onlv one vendor coupon wla be accOI)ted per Item PIJrcllased.

COPYRIGHT 1994 . THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JULY 12 THROUGH
SATURDAY, JULY 23, 19941N POMEROY.

Wednesday, July 20, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentlnei-Page--7

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

I I .

·

At The corner of
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and Pearl St. • Middleport

esh.

IN THE HUSK

HOME GROWN YELLOW SWEET CORN
,. •" \ .

'.

. ., il

A Cardina l . Affiliated Supermarket

SEARS $1.00

JUMBO SIZE 12

California
cantaloupes
Each
.

Fresh

GROUND
BEEF
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW

SUMMER SPECIAL

Diet PeQsl or
Peps/Cola
1

IN THE DAIRY CASE

LB.

Having Difficulty Finding the Best
Quality in a Color Portrait?
8count package

THERE IS A DIFFERENCE

12-oz. Cans

SHURFRESH
BUNS

rortrail!

2
FOR

ASSORTED VARIETIES (EXCLUDING CHUNKY)

Kroger
.Spaghetti Sauce
30-0z.
l

ASSORTED VA/1/ETIES

Lays
Potato Chlps. . .wz. sag

~~-

"

$899
r~~deO,:~wtst J/$f
~::e~;~:t~-~~~~'!. I.
White Breat1.. . . . . .
WITHBLEACH

"NEW"

Tylenol

FRESH 'SILVER PLATTER" WHOLE

Boston Butt
Pork Roast
Pound

ASSOifTED FlA V01iS

Texas Gold
Ice cream

c

Cood

•

I
I
I Mall to: TYLENOL• $2.50 Refund
I
P.O. BoK 7120
Clinton, Iowa 52736-7120

I
TO obtain vour $2.50 refund, mall
plus:
Extendet! RelieF I1 request

24-ct.

NORTHERN . . . .---.. :;--~ HAMBURGER
BATH TISSUE
Dill CHIPS

VELVEETA
SLICES

1wz.

Limit l Free With Coupon Inside &amp; 11000 P11rthn"
Vlosic Pickles•32 ounce jar

Assorted Varieties
4roll package

Pre-Priced 1l99•Kroh
Reg. or Thick•12 ounce package

SCENTED, FREE OR

BUY ONE GET ONE

I

this ccmpteted

form

$2~/L
_$2~0

Assorted Varieties•24 12·ounce cons

I 1. The UPC Svmbol from any Pactcaoe Of
I
TYLENOl•
I
1 2. Dated cash register receipt from vour pUr
1 cnase Of thiS Pf'Oduct with the Pflce vou paid

I
Circled,
I
1I Name
.

Chilled•Reg., Homeslyle or
Plus Colcium•64 ounce anton

TROPICANA
SEASON'S BEST
ORANGE·JUICE

-----r.=;;:;;r---fl&gt;leiU t&gt;rlnt)

1 Addres
I
I
1

Aot.l, _ _

Cltv-------

I St

111111:--...

b--miiiOl-1-

I

II --~ .._only .. USA .... AI'O/FI'O- Tllll..... II
I miVItDtM::wefiliiiblt~ lM1'; C::.IIRifDPUM11-I
llYAIDIORADIMISI. Noon;qtcwu;w t U •., ..,.a••
1
~----mornocr.tnns_cr_ I
_ . , _~.,_.JI
~--

.....

SHURFINE POP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Sliced•Reg., Thick, Lo Soh or Honey Cured
16 ounce package

Assorted Varieties
12 12-ounce cons

DINNER BELL
BACON .

SEVEN· UP
&amp; PRODUCTS

--•••-or

Diiiiii.E IWANUPACTURERS' tOUPOIIS

/\.II AI\ A

SALE DATES: JULY 17 THRU JULY 23, 1994. Quantity
.,

reserved Not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors All items not avail able in all stores

�Society
scrapbook

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Mrrlicine

Family
Medicine

FUND DRIVE WINNERS

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

un urns more
than just painful
Question: I was worldng ouiSide
the other day and managed tu get a
sunb urn . It has peeled and now
I'm fine. but why does ~ burn hurt
so much?
Answer: The skin is the largest
and. therefore, arguably the most
important organ of the body. It protect s us from injury and helps
mamtam the 1deal environment for
the body's cells. A sunburn is produced when sunlight damages the
deeper growing layers of the skin.
The resulting irritation to the skin,
blood vessels, and associated tissue
causes the inflammation we call a
sunburn.
The skin is rich with nerve endings that keep us informed about
the en vironment around us (feeling
the size , shape and texture of
everyday objects, sensing temperature and pain). The nerve cells are
stimulated as pan of the skin
inflammation of a sunburn and say
"OUCH!" That is why a sunburn
hurts.
Question: Is there any difference
between a sunburn and other types
of bums? Is 11 best to put medicine
on a sunburn or to let it "air"?
Answer: The label "sunburn"
only tells that the damage came
from being out in the sun, not the
extent of the injury. The health
problems associaled with bums are
related to the amount of skin
involved, the depth of burn, the
individual's age and pre-existing
health conditions - such as diabetes - that may be present.
Whether the burn was produced by
the sun, boiling water, chemical
injury or other cause is much less
important
·
A sunburn is typically painful
with or without being touched. The
"sunburned" look and discomfort
improve after two or three days.
The dead, damaged skin usually
peels off in a week or two. This
type of burn is referred to as a
superficial, or frrst-dcgree, bum.
A second-degree bum produces
damage deeper into the skin. Blisters occur as does pain. Even air
blowing across this type of burn is
painful. The healing usually takes
two or three weeks and a permanent mild scar or change m skin
color may result.

A third-degree or "total-thickness bum" damages all the layers
of skm. Touch1ng a new third degree burn with slight pressure
may .give some discomfort, but it's
nothmg hke the sheer agony that
th1s would produce if the bum was
of the less severe, partial-thickness
variety. Healing takes many weeks
and always produces a scar.
Now to address your question
about bum treatment. As a general
gu ideline , if your burn doesn't
seem any worse than a mild sun bum. you can probably take care of
11 yourself. Protect the skin - stay
out of the sun - and take aspirin,
acetaminophen or ibuprofen for the
discomfort. Don't put butter or
other "gooey" substances on the
bum. There are several non-pre scription "sunburn" lotions and
sprays that are soothing, but they
will not hasten the healing of damaged skin.
If you feel sick because of the
bum, or if it covers a large percentage of your body, you should see
your doctor. More severe burns
with immediate blistering or blackening of the skin should have a
doctor's attention today - don't
wait until next week. Deep burns
over a large amount of the body
surface can be immediately lifethreatenin$ and require prompt
hospitalizauon.
About 2 million people are
burned seriously enough each year
to see a doctor. Of these, 70,000
require hospitalization and about
7,000 die. The best way to treat a
burn is to prevent it. Here are two
tips that will help you from having
to deal with the pain of sunburn
this summer:
% Avoid being outdoors during
the pariS of the day when the sun's
rays are the most direct - between
about 10 a.m _and 2 p.m.
% When you go outside during
the day, put a number 15, or higher,
sunscreen lotion on the ex posed
areas of your body.
"Family Me«hcine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolr, D.O.,
Ohio University College or Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
·Athens, Ohio 45701.

Winners in recent fund raising
activities of the Olive Township
Fire Responders have been
announced . They were Angie
D1ehl, Circleville, a camper at
Forked Run State Park. $100; and
Theodore Pullins of Long Bottom;
Dale Roberts of Coolville, Barbara
Barber of Reedsville, Yicki Boggs
of ne lprc, Martha Bailey of
Reedsvi lle, Dave Smeeks of
Coolv ill e, and Patty Ingram of
Reedsville, all frrst aid kiiS donated
by Reed's Country Store.
The Responders which is Squad
90 is a county-owned frrst response
vehicle which is equipped as a
transport capable basic life support
squad . It is dispatched as a first
response unit with another squad.
The purpose is to provide quicker
response times in Olive Township.
It is funded in pan by Meigs County Emergency Medical Service tax
levy money.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

P0 WELL'S
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

7-UP AND
DIET 7-UP
24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

Price
Construction
Co.
Teacher wanting to relocate .
":;,: Desires work in or OUI of educa...: lion. Experience in Elementary
Education, Special Education
Computers &amp; Technology. Call
Teresa 317-856-3965 collect.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1994

RC COLA
PRODUCTS
24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

Community
calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Red Cross
bloodmobile, I to 5:30 p.m .
Wednesday at the Senior Citizens
Center. Anyone over 17 and weighing more than 110 pounds eligible
to donate blood.

\

AUEA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY' WEEI( IN THE
TV TIMES

$

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast •••••••••~; •••

129
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

~I

ij'l
~ I

:ll
~

US #1 IDAHO

~0l.....

Potato••••••

$

COUPON

•·

149
'II

·

'I
I
1

LITTLE RAINBOW

I'I

'

SPORTS DRINKS

••

::

r.• ~~1:~~~'" ~
.-.. .. .. .. .. .... ... ... .... ... ••..
Offer Good lhru July 23, 1994
Umlt 1 per customer

1

lo

-

- - - - - - - - -

1 I•

COUPON

••

GOLDEN WHEAT

::

-

fill_ I

HAULING

==to

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
314193 1 MO

,
NOTICE OF SALE
: · By virtue of an Order of
. :sate Issued out of the
· .Common Pleao Court ot
: ·Molga County, Ohio, In the
· ,case of The Home National
: ·Bank, Ptalnllll, agalnot
· ·Kenneth F. Wallbrown, et ol.,

: Oefendantl,

upon

Public Notice
appraloed
$25,300JlD
Torma olatS.le:
Caah.
The real estate c.annot be
previously conveyed.
oold for leu than two-thlrdo
Deed Reference: Volume of the appraloed value.
304, Page 473 and Volume
Jameo Soutoby
283, Page 811 of the Melgo
Sheriff of Metga County,
Counly Deed Recordo.
Ohio
Said real estote wao (7) 20, 27; (8) a; arc
Public Notice

1

. Judgment therein rendered
· being Caoe No. M.CV-2711 I~
aald Court, I will offer lor
aato, at tho front door of the
Court Houoe In Galtlpolla,

~~~~o~.n ~~r~~ df~:ooJ

11

Help Wanted

WANTED
CO
:
M M UN lTY
SK l LL S
INSTRUCTOR needed to teach community
and personal sk11ls to an adult with learning
limitations in Middleport. Hours: 8 a.m. Sat.
thru 8 a.m. Mon; sleep-over required. High
sc.ho. ol degree, valid driver's license, good
d
nvtng recordr three years licensed driving
expertence, and adequate automobile
tnsurance coverage required. Salary: $5.00/hr,
I
o start. Vacation/sick benefits. Training
provided. If interested contact Cecilia at 1800-531-2302. Equal Opportunity Employer.
44

-~l~,~~~- 1
.-.... ... ... ... .... ... ... ... .. ... ..:•
-

Offer Good thru July 23, 11194
Limit 1per cuatomer

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

COUPON

::

CLOROX BLEACH

:1

79(

I

GAL

'•

I

::
I

~1

••1

1

'1
:.

BEEF
10#

90

Happy Birthday
Jmh!
GueaeWho?

TDD 800-750-0750

~

FmHA Rental Assistance

Equal Houolng Opportunity

n

LSJ

CHICKEN LEG
QUARTERS

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

MIDDLEPORT- Hudson Stnoel- A very neat 2 bedroom
home with aluminum siding and detached garage. Kitchen
cornea equipped. Cal for an appoinbnenl
~5,000

=-

MIDDLEPORT- Broeclway St.- You'N need to oee thio
go1g110111 home In town but on a la~g~~ tot havilg 4
beclroomo, 2 batho, !amity room, dining room, built- -dlohWilohar, 314 baoomen~ deck, gardon opot, carpoll, oloraga
buiklnq and low mainllnlnCe llurnlnum lldlng. All ot ~o
pne.d~ttoeel.

T. BaU is
40 Today!
Happy
Birthday
Tom

•'••
I

•: 12ROLLPKG

.-..-..-...-...-..-..-..-..-..-..-...
o
lo

Located from New Haven, W_ Va_ 1 mile out
Union Campground Rd_, tum lett, llrat houae on
right_ Mr. &amp; Mro. Mcfarland are moving and wlll
be telling the following:
ANTIQUE &amp; HOUSEHOLD: Gibson 19.6 cubic ft.
side-by-side refrigerator, 3 months old; Gibson 30:"
electric range, Kenmore washer like new, 3 pc.
poster B.R. suite, Viet. marble top dresser, chest,
oak rocker, 7 Bentwood plank bonom chairs, maple
table, walnut Voct. kitchen clock, microwave stand,
portable B&amp; W TV, Norelco coffee maker Cob a~
pitcher, plate &amp; etc, Hen on Nest, Carnival, Avon bottles, meat platter, oil lamps, qui~s . linens, Reverse
paintings •. antique picture frames, 2 boxes green jars,
cannong Jars, crock, fans, sleeping bags exercise
bike, gas grill, water hose, 2 almost new 20" cut lawn
mowers, coal &amp; wood furnace.
TOOLS: 2-028 Stihl chain saws, Solo 616 chain
saw, B&amp;D Skill saw, drills, Oxy Acct. hoses &amp; gauges, tap &amp; die set, quality hand tools - Craftsman &amp;
etc., 50 lb. welding rod, Sev. log chains, binders,
cable wench, tool boxes, Sev. ext. cords, 2 propane
tanks, .submersible pump, hoe, shovels, rake, posthole d1gg.er. 7-8 cords of firewood, Jeep transfer
case trailer, axle &amp; wheels, tires &amp; wheels,
McCullough 282 weedeater, car tow dolly 91 ft. 2'
angte Y.".
FARM EQUIPMENT: 4 Ft. bush hog, boom pole, 14'
plow, wood sphner 14 horse Wisconsin engine, 1o
CF. dump cart - heavy duty, 4x6 utility trailer.
MOTOR HOME: 1981 Dodge Lindy 22 ft. motor
horne, 29,000 actual miles, loaded, 440 engine.
TRACTOR: 550 Oliver Tractor.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
LUNCH

MASON, WV
n3-5785
AUCTION, RICK PEARSON
OWNERS: ELMER &amp; CAROL McFARLAND
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH t.D.
Not Retponalbte for Accldento or Lola ot Property
Llcenaecl &amp; Bonded in Ohio, Kentucky &amp;
West Virginia 166_
Real Estate General

Good Only AI Powell'• Super Vatu
Offer Good lhru July 23, 11194
Umtt 1Per CUitomer

I

LONG aonoM- Fantollic Rver view- Thlo one llo1y, 3
bedroom home II .moot In .,. midcle of two bendi of .,.
beautiful Ohio River. Hao caiJIIting throughout. tmmeo:ialll
poaoesaion. Home II lumlohecl.
Muet - S30,000
IIIDDLEPOAT- Hobart Street- 2 bedroom, 1 beth, I atoty
horne wMnylliding.

S10,500

DOmE TURNER, Bmkar-----------~­
BRENDA JEFFERS-------.. --------982-3066
JERRY SPRADUNG"------""--...(!IMII82-3411S
OFACE.------------·------···-··--982-2888

loa Wll"' like "Crar(

Lou Weight

Guaranteed

No Meelings No W..igh Ins

Lose Pounds and Inches

No drugs or chemical'
AH for about

Natural Herbal Tablets

one dollar a day!

1·100-796-6321

446-3896

(all Westera Aata

JESS' COMPLETE

Howard L. Writesel

AUTO UPHOLSTERY
headliners, seat
covers, convertible
lops, Antique Curs.
20 yrs experience.
Boat Seats.
992·7587
41464 Starcher Rd_
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOliNG
QUALITY WORK I
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OHIO
IW2IITFN

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

Delivered
Lo&lt;ally
992-3838
MARTECH
• INDUSTRIES
Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
614-Q92-7878
SR 7 - Five Polnll

......

Downspouts

,'

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

985·4473

Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
limestone - Fill Dirt
Gravel - Sand
Leach Bed
Installation and
Septic Systems
614-992-7878
SR 7- Five Points

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TIIM••d
REMOVAl
•UGHT
HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

Il l :¥""

MORRISON'S
HEATING &amp; COOLING
RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

992-7434

USED RA ILROAD TIES

Howard
Excavating Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Complete House &amp;
Trailer Sites

Driveways, Septic
Syslemc;, Water &amp; Sewer

lines, land Clearing

Trucking: Limestone &amp;
Fill Oiot, Top Soil
Reasonable Ac1tes

COlliNS ·
ENTERPRISES

oCarpentry
•Painting
•Power Waohlngcleanl all ellarlora
with high preaoure
sprayer
•Reaaonable Aateo
•20 Yearo Experience
•Free Estimates

985-4111

212311 mo.

Estimates

992-3838

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

211Z/921ttn

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Wanted to buy·
Standing

timber, all hard
wood &amp; pine.
Call

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addillona
-New garages
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; EX1erlor
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

BINGO

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

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
ClUB
IN POMEROY

Rocly R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189

6:45 P-'"Speclat Early Blrd
5100 PayoH
Thlo ad good lor 1
,_
FREE card.
Lie. No_0051-342

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

s:l C~E~NING

lllMln

614·682·7676

(No Sunday Calls}

SYRACUSE- Located at Lee Cin;le- Ranch style frame home
with 3 bedrooms, all on ona Iocr, carport, appliances, cable
hook-&lt;Jp, paved sire~ good neighbortoood. Low maintenance
home &amp; lawn. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! ASKING
$32,000 Owner May Accept An Offer!

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

INDUSTRIES

614·992·7643

RAQNE· Sharon Hollow Rd.- Sacludad Hunting Cabin on
approx. 20.05 acres. 40128 Cabin has W.B. stove, some
fumill.l18, no water or aloctric. Drivaway to cabin, also caiJIOrl.
Th1s Ia perl""t Deer &amp; Turkey areal Great location for the
H..,tar, or lover of tho outdoors!
-ASKING $17,000

Free Estimates
Restdentiat, Commercial
and

MAR TECH

6/ IMN TFN

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

OFFICE 992-2259

992-5515

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

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

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

MIDOLEPORT- RuUand Straot- 2 story frame homo with
nawor vinty siding !lfld no~V&lt;~r roof. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
gal. floor lu'!'ace, now unit air, 18ar ocroendad porch,
apploanceo, blinds, firaplace, block storage building &amp; wood
storage building, 3 room apt with atorage &amp; cellar below.
Lovely flowara. Storm doora and windows. Vary wal taken
cal8 of.
ASKING $42,000

FLAlWOODS ROA[). Approx. 4 1/2 acnoa with a great
laying building site. TPC water available and ot""tric
available. Almost~ to go, just neada you.
S13,500

I

••,
1

SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1994
10:00 A.M

LETART· SR 338- Vacant traitor tot with soplic. TPC water
available, currantty across the road. ASKING $5,000.

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD- Approx. 7 acl8o of vacant ground.
Moat ia haytand and hao a 9.rut building lite. Water and
aloctric available. Owner Will finance with a rNsonable
down paymenl
S10,SOO

10#

••
••

PUBLIC
AUC710N

ln£ome. Range, rerrlgerator, carpet, AIC, on site
laundry, parking.
614-949-2012 or614-992-6419

Man allva, he's
ready to drive, but
this Is what he
looked like when he
was only five.

I

.................-..-..-..
Good Only At Powen·.,S-;,p,r Vatu
Offer Good thru July 23, \994
••....,. __________ '::.1'!!11_1!!"! :u!l!!"!e~ "'-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

MINERSVILLE- 2 story framo with 2 bedrooms, bath,
N.G.F.A. heal, 80x100+ lot. Home has nawer wiring
carpating &amp; root. Cable hooft-&lt;Jp, front porch of 7X24. Located
on paved alrDot.
ASKING $29,500

GROUND

s

312!./94

NOW OPEN
Water's Edge Apartments- Syracuse, Ohio
Over 62, disabled or handicapped FmHA
1 bedroom. Rents ror $0 to $415, based on

OFFICE 992-2886

•1
'

614-985-4180

Apartment
for Rent

'

::

message.
Alter 6 p.m.

r-----=========-----.

1

1o

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

8

Real Estate General

7YoOZ

••
••,

675-1333

-, ..-

- I'•

MAC AND·CHEESE

I

446-2342

111511 mo. pol.

~·A·A·A·AP•••••~A·A·~··

1 ,I

PT. PLEASANT, WV

Public Notice

1
11

~·A•A•A.AP•••••~A·A·A·~

GALLIPOLIS

I
I

712011 mo. pd.

=~::;~;:===--======='=!

oz.

o
lo

CALL NOW....

I -_I.

O'Clock A-M. the following
lando andtanemanll, to-wit:
The following reet eetate
·altuated In the State of
_Ohio, county of llelga,
Townohlp of Labonon, In
:100 acra Lot No. 165, Town
2 North, and Range11 WeaL
Beginning at 1 point In
30
Townohlp Road
: (Barringer Ridge Road),
· :Which 11 130 feet west of the
: Norlheaot corner of on 8.80
. ·acre lot described In deed
· :recorded In Volume 304,
:· .Page
of the
llolga
;county473,Deed
Racordo·
: thence South 190 feoti
• :thonca Weot 535 feet·
: .thence North 1110 feet to lh~
. ;nonhweat corner of a 1.00
- acre tract described In
: Volume 283, Page 811 olthe
· llalgo County Deed
: R-rdo; thence Eaet 535
• feet elong Town1hlp Road
• 30 (Barringer Ridge Road)
: to the point of beginning,
• containing 2-33 acrea, more
• orteaa,
• Excepting any mlneralo

P-•A·A·A·A~•••••~A·A·A·~

1'I

li
,,

I

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Let us do it
for you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave

1:!12111n

few new members for our nurring team. CoU today to
learn about our NEW o.nd IMPROVED WAGE o.nd
BENEFITS o.nd rign 011 bonur poe/case. Apply Today!
CaU Marilyn Collilway, D.O.N.
·
Morulay-Friday
9:00a.m.· 4:30 P·"'EOE
333 Page STnet, Middkport, Ohio 45760-992-6472

REEDSVILLE - Eastern Athletic Boosters, 8 p.m. Thursday at
Eastern High School.

TV TIMES

., ,......

We W1111t You

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA, 7 p.m . Thursday at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church.

••
,_••

' .

Yean Experience
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Window•
For Free Eotlmste
Call 742-2303

614-992-3470
Umeotone: 15ton &amp;
up S1 o_so ton; 15 ton &amp;
under 511-50 ton
Top Soil 56-SO ton
Gravel 51 LSO ton - ?
Sand? - Low Rateo
And More
10 ton min. on oil.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
Jaw enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
Ronweiter &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

Ovtrbrook Cenler'r uperienced r/aff ir /oQkingfor a

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Free
child's immunization clinic, 9:30 to
I I a.m. at the Tuppers Plains Fire
Department; I to 3 p.m. at
Reedsville Fire Department.

ADVERTISING IN THE

'·

liNDA'S
.PAINTING &amp; CO.

TRI-STATE K·9
ACADEMY

~~
·-

i.1

RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District. regular meeting, Wednesday, 5 p.m. at office_
Public welcome.

-II

•
·
·
.

@'@~-(~
~

WICK'S HAULING
SERVIQ

26

PERSONAL CABLE SYSTEMS
Receive 20 Free Channels for
1 year with purchase.
For details call:
ELLIOTI APPLIANCES
446-8051 - 1-800-377-2532

EVANS BIRTHDAY
Samuel Ray Evans, son of Marlin and Debbie Evans, Racine,
recently celebrated his third birthday at the home of his parents.
Attending were Everett, Charlotte and Michael Grant, Raymond
and Ada Evans, Delbert, Eleanor,
Tim and Elizabeth Lawson, Pam
and Shayne Davis, Ritch Coe, Rick
McKnight, Charles, Marsha, Adria,
Maria Frecker, Elva and Lewis
Hudson, and Scou Anderson.
Cake and icc cream were
served. A Thomas the Tank engine
theme was carried out.

REACH OVER .1-8,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

992-2156

(

Wednesda.y, July 20, 1994

Pomeroy-Middlenr•rt Ohio

,,_

SPECIAL

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM FREE
(Carpet Cleaning Only-Maximum 24o''sq, ft.)
• c&amp;I'J:Itll cleaning &amp; liCOlchgard • drapery
• uph,olsllery
fabric ' general cleaning

SA 124- Raclna- 2 story loame homo with 4 bedrooms, 1
bath, ptastar wans, hardwood ftoonng, F.A.N.G. heat, front &amp;
oic:le poodles, 18ar petlo and ahad, 1 1/2 car gaoage, buill in
bookcase, caltar area, cable hook-up, fireplace.

WHALfY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frii!Tle Repair

IIW &amp; USED PARTS FOI
AU MAlES &amp; IOOO.S
992-7013 OR
H2-5SS30R
TOll FIEEI-IOc.-141-0070
DAIWIII, OHIO
713111111TFN

ASKING $40,000

NEW USllNG- SR 7 just out or Chestar- Ranch style homo
with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, total otactric, carpal throughout
modem kitchen w/clay tile &amp; appliao)cas, also leaturas a o,..;
car gaoage thalia cornplalaly wirad'to hande an handym!lfl
needs. THIS IS AMUST SEE HOME!
ASKING $74,900
NEW USTING- Now Hope Rd.- Nice 1 floor loama home,
features 2-3 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 car garaiJ&amp;. outbuildings
lanced yard, garden area, blinds, AJC, paneling, c•IJI•~ Elac:
H.P. and cellar. ASKING $35;000
NtW USTING- Ranch Foam• Stick Horne on 1.39+ acres.
Horne has 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, perma payne
windows, c&amp;IJII~ Elect. B.B.. haa~ driAad wei, 8"2 car garage
w/door opener, d,...k, nofrigerator &amp; oange, attic, security
oyolllm, New heat pump with AJC and a Primo Star Satellite.
ASKING $59,000
LOOICING FOR AHOME? COllE TO CLELAND REALTY
AND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER!
HENRY E· CLELAND.·---·""""-··"-""'""--· 982-11111
TRACY BRINAGER---····"·-·... -...........8411-2431
SHERR HART.--·---""-·---""_,_,742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111.---· ------·· 982-11111

KAlHY CLEW0--"--·--··--- ---- ""982-11111
OFFICE-------·-·-·-·-·---·-·-·.. 982-2258

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE

Announcements

4-7-t MO

IUILrrY WIIDDW IYiftMI

3 Announcements
Alllcltonote, ""'-· SWF ct
aotna. would ltko to inooi

out

• Cuslom II ada
• Solid vinyl

replacement
windows
• Free Estimates

· •l200 Installed
Call For Details

SWII' toi" componlonohtp, 010
Write: Box C-7, cJo Pl. Pl......l
Rotlllll', 200 llotn Sl Pt
PI-nt. WV 25510.
'
'
HIY ToOting
~Ymouto

and Counealfntl
flour Name 10
~••r Aafled). Planned p1 - thmd of Soutlooo11 Ohio. For 011

==~~~~~~
11 ,.,....... p ......
...

Avollelolo

thmd of Soulheaot Ohio In
Athena oncl L.ogoon. "81111. Fee
Sc
Uva Hoi Olrto 1-:IIJ-1000
Ex1. 11078 $Uti Jilin. 18 + y,.

ProcoHCo.ICI2-M4-liQO.

•VJStT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court Sl Pomer:oy, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AITro•Ow.., I·IOG-291·5600

Rod,_; Bum ott Fll White You

Sltop, Toke

Opal,

Available

Fnoth Pho"""cy.
REDUCE· IKI'n ott Ill white

liMp.

Toke OPAL, ovoltZ:

Fnoth Phormocy, lltddtepcoot.

�Wednesday, July 20, 1994
. ALLEY OOP

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dai

Senti

11

,-

NEA Crossword Puzzle

V' " EAR TllAT SICIU.JM'
Y'BETTE\1. GNE IT
TO ' 1"'1 !

39 -

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATTIE BLVD. ' " by Bruer Beallie

Business
Buildings

IK.1rn oft lot Wh\lo YCHJ
olotp. Tokt OPf.L, available
REDUCE ·

Strut Vow J .. t'lll PtQMnt. C.mdtfl Part., Auguot e. ,_,, age

dlvlslona.

Sholll Hart.

4

Nk:e

IW.rda.

21 Acroo Rt. 233 2

Kenton Lake,

LNv.MMuge.

tall•a.

5.32 KrM, $13,160. 8.14

2 v..r Old Male C.t, Good With
Children Very lovNba.l Shota,
NeuteA~J. lAukemla T..ted, 114-

Give lo Good H~. AKC Aealetertd Chow, Black Female 114-867-62~~-

Khtono, To Good Homo, 614-37'82585.

~,...

800-415-3408.

1148~481 .

Konmoro ,.lrigorolor, lraot hu,
lei mok!', olmond, uc. cond.,

eutt.bte to build on and
claM to 1 blacktop roed, 114-

Mind brood puppleo, 6 wko old,
614-885-4120.
Puppl": Mother Border CofUe,

Fothor: Dolmotlofl, •-2216. 11
Help Wanted
Somoyod
Elkhaund
lllxod _ _ _...:.,_ _ _ _ __

18

Breed. Gorgeou• ...... ~
pro• lmale/l 1 YNr Old, lDwM
A1t1nllon, 14-388--lh51.

Corpontw - , root, dec:ko,
ocld OM, ole, ,_ elllmotoo,
814-11112-2322.

$200 4500 A WEEKI\ I
I!W To Uirgo Exponok&gt;n, lin.

Will Bo lntorvlewlng On
Friday, July 22nd, f.l Tho Supor
I lloOol, 321 U - Rlvw Road,
Found : Blaclt Lab, FemeNI, IW- ~\\\polio, From 8 A.M. ·12 P.ll.
446-46:!8.
Wo "'- Looking For Md
- - -Found: Whhe t.ced H.,..tonj Dopondablo PIOplo, lluot Bo
FrM
to Trav.l To Ptac. Uke
cow. Coli to claim. Mwdl poJ Florida, To111, And lao Vogu
lor od. 304-862·2249.
And R.eum. Traneportatk)n And
U&gt;dgl"'! F"nlohed. On Tho Job
Fotr~d : whh• m1le Cit, Ga~
llpolls F.,ry arM. 3()4..875-5361.
Training. No Exporlanco oory. NO Phone Colla.
loot: Blltlold, Pt. Plouont, hoo
North Carolina llce~e. PINM f.VON SELLS ITSELF\ Polontlol
coli ~1ll·1080 .
Eamlngo 1200 -$2,000 Monthly,
Loet Black I whtt• ao.ton ler· Soli At Wort Horno And lloU
riar, male. 304-67S.1125.
.Qrdor. F- ~..lni"lll1-100-7'42loot: Wolkor Coon Dog, Mootly 4738.
Whito &amp; Brown With Blilclc Spol Bortondor Wontod: f.pply In
On Hla Back. Anew..-. To Name Pinon f.t Tho Mdloon Club,
01 Duko, Vlclnhy: 1111 CrHit I ...........TSe.
Rood, 614-44ti-T1115 or 114-2511Claonl"'/ Ponon For Prlvoto
6344.
I Doy Por W11k.
Rolonnc:oo Roqulrocl, ~7
Y11rd Ssle
3844 After 7 P.M.
Bonnttt

Doll • Bokrt Worllor, 1\atdng
Expo- lfoqulr.d, Evening
Gallipolis
Shift 1·10 P.M. NMd Outgolno
&amp; VICinity
Pononatny, Good With PubliC,
Poy Minimum Wogo, But Nop
3.5 Mlloo Down m, Evorythl"'!l tlablo Dtpondlng On Ex·
VCR, Nlntondo Pool Stlek, porlonca, Brown'o Kl"- l Good Soyo Clothoo, ThuN, Sot, ll8t8,
a a 3 Edla
Worltrnon Contoct.
~f.LL Yord Soleo'Mull Bo Pold In Eam up to $1000 woekly
Advonce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. -olng moll, llort .-, ...,.
the day bolvro tho od le to run. uporlancol, -.upptloo, " Sundoy odftlon • 2:110 p.m. lnfarmotlon, no-Gbllgotlon. Bend
Frtdor. _ , t&lt;lhton • 2:00 SASE: Co_.,. DOpt-50'- P.O.
Box !5421, Son ""folo, TX 1111102.
p.m. Soturdly.

a•-•

-old

Ad., Frlday-Soturdly, July 22-23.
noma, oomo tumlture. l'lltan leble a chalra, girt
,boby clolhll, boy clolhoo olu
4-5, Stalrmuter, and lal1 rl'lON.

PubliC Sale
&amp;AuctiOn

Rick Poo...., -lion Compony,
1utt time ..... ..._.., oomploto
IUCIIon
Mrvlco.
Ucenoocl
• ,a.lo I W_. VIrginia, 304773-1716.

- - Col. Oecor E. Ctlek,
Uoonoo • 754-M I Bondod,

3041183430.

9

Wanted to Buy

Mtlqun- wll buJ ono ploco or
lnlln - d , DobY M~ln,
top dollar pold, 114-11112·i1141.

ur• -

Cloon

Coro Or

Or - ...
SmMh Buick Pontiac:
11100
Eut.., , . _ Oolllpo\lo.

lNcka, tNT -

=n.

Docorotocl · -11" ' · Will .....
old
lurnltcn. Rl..tno f.nllq ..o.
A..- MooR, owner. 814-9122528. We buy IIIII•.
Don' Junk ftl lieU U. Your NonWort.lng llojor Appllan""a,
Color
T.V.'11,_ Rttrlgtfotoro,
F,...,., YCR'a. llk:rowo1ve1,
N1 Concltlonon, Wuhan,
o.- Copy llechlnoo, Etc.

old =1co~nt'=

tt4-21111-1231.
r.. net tilt

t-.

1 buy old turnl-

t - not Ill ...... coblnota,
................. - 2..11110.
J 1 D'o Auto Porto ond Sol•ogo,
trucko.

:t=t"" .....
w...

10 buJ ... or otopo lor
mobile ......... 114-41112·5013.
Troodml\1 In
W.,.ocl

to...,..._

good ....... ~1208.

W.,.ocl To Bur: Junk ,..,..
With Or Wit- MOioro. Coli
Lorry t.lvllr. eM-381-8303.
Top - : ,_,, Did U.S.
COino, Qold Rlnaa. 81\vw Colno,

Clold Co\no. II.U. Coin Shop,

.. _ , . , A - Golllpo\lo.

Wo-

to buy: -.1 moblto

-·~

Employment Services

Noodod OTR dn-. COL, hoz.

Salol -

AVON J AI -

-

..,

or-. -

"' wont 1
••• lloof!yn.

INOTlCEI

31 Homes for Sale
2 bedroom houM

w~111ment

1 •nd 2 bedroom apertmente,
lumlohocl ond unlumlohed,
_.,hy dopooll roqulrod, no
poto, 114-882·2218.
1 Bodrwrn Aportrnont, Portly
Fumllhed, Cia~. Wotor, S.Woge
Pold, 12501Mo. 1'11111 Security, No
Polo, IM-448-M23 Aftor e P.M.
1 Bedroom Apt. ,._r Holzer,
Contnt ,.,r. 12&amp;1. Coli: 814-44821157.

~to

~~lli2olthor
-

2 CQUNSEIDR POIIITIDNS: FT,
VAIIIID IHIFTS, Quolllicltlono:
~.C., ~.C.C., LI.W. L.I.S.W.,
c.c.o.c:. or 1n Md 10r

'::!\.=

-lind--

=

f.nt\Quoo Appro/Nd. Elloto Or
S•Ie, Sentlce 25 YNre Ell.... Joan WhKo, 814-24&amp;8.
DONALD SMITH f.SSOCif.TlS:
FINE ANTIQUES- f.llllrlcln ort,
china, art gl... , allvw, fumllwe,
llcCov ,Rooevlllo, ole. COLLEC.
TtBL.£!1. prlnto, pooton, toola,
po\lory, clocu, boxoo,ltt,. bol·
tin, bookl, lo~,-,.• . f.LWAYS
BUYING ARROivt1EADS. Top

--·nt.

(nolory. 304-1137-2181,
1:00 111111 :001'11:

sees,

~ ~--:.
co• rtlollnfl T-lnlpoltont.

Ollnt- To llellllt R1c'7:/!
Llltor
llltlo-. 1no. ~ : ....
'~

oH

~-0..:;,·-~-

/EdUCitlon

U.O.

Antiques

53

2 olory, :lbr. ol olactrk: oplo., dollar J*d. One piece or one
hundrocl. f.PPRf.ISf.LS, 40
wurw expertence. AeiU call
oht
holiday ... 814-992·2822.
tlvhy far child..., · - to
•or.,
churchM,
echookl.
Who~ con Y04J gol oil thlo for 54 Miscellaneous
$210/rno. Llweland Apar1men11,
Merchandise
eth • Gooroe sr,. Now H.tvon,
WV. J04.882~711 ~DH.
..Hoobd on Phan&amp;ca", llkl new,
$150. 304-4175-4075.
2bclnn. lpto., totel otoctrtc, oppl\ancoo lumllhed, laundry 1SI81 S-10, Gravely, racllner, 1SI81
100m loclllloo, to ochoOt Fonl414. 304-175-at\12.
In town. AN~rc.tton. awllabl.
II: Vll\aae -Croon f.pte. MV 01 2 Rod Wl"'l Bor:l! Cho/ro $125
co\1114482-3711. EDH.
Both; 1 RaG Rocnner $100, oao
Fumlohocl Eftk:lortcy t185JIIo. Both Ronw, 114-4411-22M.
Utllftloo Pold, Shoro Soth, 1107 2 Yoor Old f.mono f.C 1,100 BTU
8oconcl ,...,. Go!llpollt, , _ ExceUeM Condhlon, a200, 1144411 f.ftw 7 ~.II .
448-3861 Loovt -ooge Wll
Rllurn Coli.
Fumlohocl Elllcloncy 7Vt Fourth
, . _ Oolllpollo, 1220111o. 3 TOll lloblie Poek ollr ConUtltnloo Polcl, 114 441 4411 f.ftor dhlorar lnllollod, Rnonclot
7P.M.
f.vollablt, IM-4-, 1-aoo.
:IIU308.
BE'-UTIFUL f.Pf.ATIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES f.T JACKSON 311" K..ror Sondor S\1!10· 10"
ESTAIN:; 1138 Jocltoon Ptkl 5111'1 Toblo Sow St71; 12" 9.1,.
lhlm
to 1285. Wotk to ohoD Bondalw 11110; I" Ryobl Rodlll
&amp; mov\ao. Coli l-25tli. Sow tl'!!li e• S..ro Jolntor $171;
EDH.
IOO'o ot Ook Roloed Ponol
Coblnol Dooro $II Eo.; 3,000 Ft.
Wolnut Lumbor 11.48 To 12.110
PT.; 111111 Dodae Comot eooJ
Now Motor &amp;
11,400; t•
Shooto 418 V4" Dolt ~tp....r
$15 Eo. 814-4411-4311.
110 Whfte Dolt ~. 10"111" 12
·11 R. Long, IM-3~. f.IW
I P.M.
~- a.
Furnlohocl 3 Roomo I Soth, f.lr CondRionwCloon, No Pole, Roleronce &amp;
w.-.
Dryor1 __ Rohlgerotor,
Dopoolt Roqulrod. 614-4411-1518.
Froour coli 114-..,..tl31.
Nlclly Fumlohocl Aporlznont, Mt\Q.. chino coblnot w!glall
1br, next to Ubrery, ~RIOQ, ct.... 1200. DNooar I dro . . .
oontnl holt, elr1 _1!flaronco ,. &amp; mi..- $150. lied lnmo
qulrocl. •~-w.t.ootcc- hoed bOord. Clla11
Oroclouo living. t and 2 bod- top toblo w/4 cllolro
miCIOWIVI t78.
room oport-. 11 Vll\aae Ponloonlc
• altllro,
Mooncl
RI-.Kio Wlckor 3pc. ,_,.. In Mlddloport, From 1300. Phone wto-..a rno2-f3etl . CoM 114-11112-1858. chlno $50. ole. 304-171-144.
.
Ch.a Fr...- tiOOl 11t t11 tM'1
f.ntr I P.M. Or On 11'1 kondo.
Modem 1 lA ept. 114 441 D300.
Collll
10 box, 14 memorr, lnnd
Etncloncy Aportmont, e-.
1720.

·--·

SmoN Local Finn -no PortTinro On Coli Cloonlng Poroono.

71151.

Clrpeted, appUancee tumlahed,
frM . .ter, frM traM pkkup, on

45

P.O.

-r,.no,

-it,m

-.a.u.ee. · -..118.

M '~ !i'7.

0

4004.

46 Space for Rent

30H71Fiet8.
Chovrolot, Fo«f, Oodg• pk;kup
bodo. Sho~ or k&gt;ng. No rull.
JOol-417\1-82118.

arnlfm cauene,

SOME VARMINT STOLE
ONE OF MY CHICKENS
LAST
NIGHT 1!

Motorcycles

THEN HE WENT

IT WASN'T ME!!
I ALWAYS SHUT
TH' DOOR II

OFF AN ' LEFT TH '
HENHOUSE DOOR

WIDE OPEN !!

61 Fann Equipment

11186 lpood

PEANUTS

IF A FLY BALL

COMES MY WAY,
I'M READY~

Building
Supplies

55

Futoot

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

71 Autos for Ssle
:;;;;;;-;;;;-::-::;--:--::=--::::: 111811 cr-t~..to 18ft IICIIp Mor- '

1882 IIG roptlco, $4200, 325 cury oulboordJ trollar lncludod, ·
Pogo St, lllddloport, 114-882· 12,300. 304-eTo-tzn.

ell48.

11108 fl-rd 400 Big Block
Runo G-. lDoko ar.ot,
$3,1100, With Extro Motor &amp;
Tranem'-lon, 114-440-3171.
1f11 Bulcl! Skyiork, 2DR., HT,
PS, PBJ_n,~.!!!!z _n_lcl tor nt
~28.
STORAGE UNKS 3•1100 Oollon
Upright, Ron Enno ~nil-. 1878 ~ ""-· Slant I EnJocklon, Ohio, 1.ac\C).53J.0528.
~ Runo Good, MOO, 114-3711f.ftor I P.M.
Uood 3 ton who\a ...._ Holl olr
cond, JOol-4175-31108.
tm Dodae ""-· cor,
Wf.TER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch 1550. 304-'75-4113 ohor 5:30pm.
200 PSI hU5; 1 Inch 200 PSI 11181 Eldurodo Codllloc 12,100,
132- ~i Ron E..,. Ento.,...o, good ohlpo, 304-417S.a1181.
114-Zit&gt;!\130 ...._-., Oltlo
11112 Z-28 eo.....,, Stooo. 304Whlo IIIII lnoulotocl gorogo &amp;T\1.1388.
door1 llko ._, aizrl I 'ItT, coli
\182-o2113 •••• pm.
188S Dldomobllo Ornoao 78,000
Mlloo, 11,500,114-446-3?54.
Slgno: Portoblo llghtocl chi~
IbM lener ~gn . ~I 1211.
Regular - · 1.aoo.l33
FrM 3483
lolton/dlllvory.
•nytlme.

-~500.

boat on River.
'75-5200 or
175-a878 oftor lpm.

-n-... .

188S Pontiac Grond Prix, IWWiy
Nbull ve engine, outo,
...... good. 51800. 882-2848
·-lngo.

Block, brk:k, - w plpoa, wlndowo, llntota, ok:. Clolzde Win- 1885 Chovv Comoro, eoyt., outo.
tors, Rio Groncle, OH Coli 814- 304-41Tfi.1No ontr 5pm or loovo
245-al21.

-ve.

11186 Fo«f Tompo, Moving IIUII
,_56;;;;;;;;-P-;e;;;trs"ifk:opjr;jjs;a'ile;;;;;~ 51111 SIIOO, OBO,IM-441-025l
Groom and Supply Shop Po4
Grooming. Julie Wobl!. 114-4411- 11181 c..t\aoo :1117, Br&lt;~~~~~lmon,
~
Coooofto, PS; PB,
0231.
Automatic, 102,000 Mil•, Rww

==

Ooodii1,NO,~

~;:.

111811 Pr~oll• -·
18811 ~~~roo. ~l8~~.
ohopo,
1987 21 Fl. 4 Wlnno Ck&gt;Hd a - ,
308 Chivy Motor, Ptuo f.ll fv&gt;.
caworlee, $14,300, 814-4* ·
3040.
'

.....

....

OftN
OTHtR
ftv[)

IVIIO Yomohl Wovo Rumor 800, '
/Dual T,.llor, 114-4411-83114.
,

76

rt,,~o ,N tA ... (

AutO Parts &amp;
Accessories

I a 30 doyo.
Pt-nt.

.

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

IT~ Rl&amp;f\T 1\I::R£ It-!

FRO-II Of fo\E,

Tfi~"-PPtE?

oomblad, 12110; throo 14x7.110"

f')JRIE.D IN Tl\£
roJGH I Wf\Y

aluminum alol:a, $100j 114-tta- '
2328, ... vemee-..

Yollottomo

WOULD I U£
/&gt;80UT nlr\r 7

~R11

opowd ntlocl - · tlroo thin
IIOOtnL - · 11110. I~
0135.

i8

..._rock far ohortbo11 truck m . 380 01c1o 11octto1
engine. 304 815 31151.
Now 11111 tonko, ono ton

~

truck:

0

.-.ncb~- mota,

ole. D i A Aut.:O:
312-3833 or 1

79

7-zo

,.

WAAT !&lt;JI-lt&gt; OF l..IE:.
DO Y&lt;X.l HA-VE.,

711-41110, PI
.

et1 Mopor 383 H.P. nMJtor, d -

Fo..-

r..,_~vE_r

E-ma•l FandEBobT @AOL COM

350 or 400 turbo tronomloolono,

uood ..... -~g

'L."!!·
304....,,

H11'5 15 TtiF ONE
T'"'ING r DoNI UKf

AI!&gt;OlJl BE lNG OUl
IN rt&lt;E SUN

\I

m

__

____

Thursday. July 21. 1994
Periodically in the year ahead, you might

*•
-m:

1817 DodQI DoltG1I. mid
~ope~., 12110.
21141.

•n..

I'-;;;;;;-;;::=:--;;-=~~==•

-

~lOCI Y-1.

lluto, ~

LWB,

~ Topo
~Ilion,
,7,::0,
...~=
Allor IP.II.

be ·privy to some inside informatio~ that
c~uld be profitable lor you. Even rl the
returns are minimal. lhey'/1 still be worthy

Electl'lcltl &amp;

Relrlgannlon

37Tesl

4 Linda Evans

role
5 Paper of
indebtedness
6 Ten-cent p1eces

7 Kilt

8 Part of llllp'o
hull
9H10Scolcla
11 Spout
19 AccCIUf'ltlng
agcy.
21 Etemally
(poet.)

By Ph illip Alder

38Life

Lewis Thoma s wrote . "M istakes
arc at the ve ry bas e of h uman
thought .. fe eding th e s tructure
like roo t nodule s. If we were not
pro v id e d with th e knack of being
wrong . we could nev e r g e l any thing usefu l done ...
Before you debate th at wit h
some on e , see how many mistakes
you can spo t in th e play of today's
dea l
Declaring four hearts . Sou th
won West's spade lead with his ace
and loo k two top trumps, East
s heddin g a low spade on th e sec ond. So uth cashed h1 s s pade km g
before leadin g a low club . scooping
up West's singleton king with dum mv's ace . Now dec lare r exited from ,
the dummy with the ace an d anot h e r diamond Aft er winning w1th hi s

41Kindofr:n&gt;ao
43ContortM
458ingredlllll
46G-•of
youth
47Mentallmege

Pass -1 'I
Open i n~ le ad : a

J

36~n

mond to h is partner' s qu e e n .
Endplayed. West exi t ed with a
s pade . Declarer ruffed in the dum m v. di s carded hi s club loser and
conceded thr e e tri c k s: one heart
a nd two diamonds .
The errors·• First. Eas t s hould
play the diamond j ack. not the king,
a t trick seve n . Secondly. West
s hould have dropped the diamond
queen und e r his partner's kin g .
East wouldn't rise with th e king
unle ss holding th e jack as well . In
both cases, West can r eceive two
club ruffs to defeat the contract.
Lastly. South s hould have exited
from the dummy w ith a low dia m ond, not with th e ace a nd a nother. If East wins and gives his partner a club r uff, South wins Wes t's
diamond exit with dummy's ace,
draws the las t trump and concedes
a second diamond trick. If instead
the defe nder s p e r s i s t with dia monds, dec larer wins with dum my's ace and pla ys a third round,
endplaying whoever wins the trick.

DATE BOOK

48EoiiCI

50- - Wllnt lot
Chrlotm•
51 Ceudl\1
appendltge
52 Chirp
55 By w.y of

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ce•ebroty C&lt;pntr '')PI :Og• ,1m ~ &lt;l 'e CTthJied l oon1 qu o l al &lt; on~ by !.t rlluu ~ VtJOple pa !o t afl(J preaent
Ea ch lt~ th·~ · '" 1tou c •ph tl • :. land :; tu• diH)IJ1l' '
5 C!Ul) E =C

rwav

' AKELPT

LTCCTUM

G R E Z

0 S C U T X YR H

K

cs

0 PH H

0 S X H U

OPDZSRD

Today is

!he 20Js\ d a y .
of 1991 and th e 30fh
day Q( summer

0

Z T X

SCKGGPG

FT

OKG

0 S B K C

DZT

H K. R X K

OZT
GKBT

YXSGD.

P RE VIOUS SOLU TION ··1 w1 11 no1 change because when yo u are successful
and you chang e. you ar e an ldtot ·· - Arno ld Schwarzeregger .
·

T~~:t:~' S©Rc{}lA-~f.~Ss WOII
8AMI
ldiiOd by CLAY I. POUAN - - - - - - 0 four
Reorronge letters of ti-le
scramb led words below fO form four words

I

PO L GES

•IL--.GI'._Y,...O__,A_N..--~1
I. I. I. ..~~'

~:~~:~::~::~:':!_~.,
WH 1 J E S

Anelderlyfriendofminesays
that people should live in such
a way that they wouldn't be
ashamed to sell their parrot to
the town - - - - - .

I

If--r,-T,--.,,s--.,16"'-,.---1 Q
.

_

•

_

_

•

Complete lhe chuckle quoled
b y f dlrng •n The tfliS$1nQ words

yo u develop fr om step No 3 below .

&amp; P~INT
NUMBE~£0 lEI T E~ S
THE Sf SQUARES

IN

•

UNSnAM8lE ABOVE lEITERS
TO GET ANSW ER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Nozzle · Ripen - Wound· Vassal · SPEND
Dad. I need to know how to get nch quick " the new!
marned !ellow confided fo his father "Well, s~n. " lhe da~
replied, 1f you want to get rich JUSt earn more than you
SPEND I"
..

IWEDNESDAY

JULY 20 I

endeavor in wh1ch you ' re presenlly

••e

84

Ea~t

l'ctss
All pass

TODAY'S IIISTORY: On th is day in
1969. Nei l Armstrong a nd Edwin
"Buzz" Ald rin became the firs t peop le
to walk on th e moon.

1 C~N ONLY PRP-'1 TO SOlll DON'T
lOOK AS ABSIJRD liS \-\£ \&gt;O~S ·

•
'·

11181 ~aod lhiPI.
$41100.
or~
oftor lpm.

1m Chivy Plcll~ 3110,
llut-lc, PS, PI, A1111'11 eo.
....., R,... Good, •21. oao.
114-441-4SIO A. . I P.IL Or
Myllono Solurctoy Or Buntley• •

2 Cookout
3 Part of Ian

actress

understand what to 00 to make the relat tonship work . Matl $2 to Mat chmaker ,

P 0 Box 4465. New York. NY 10163.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Crillcal responsi-

72 Trucks for Ssle

~orth

"2 "

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Pelrarch
11304 -13 74 1. poet -sc holar : Anne
Hutchinson 11591 ·16431. Am e rican re ·
ligious leader: Theda Dara (1690-1955 1.

111112 4 o.-, Hondo . . - . b·
Musical
cot\anl Condlloot, I Spoocl
fiT
MM'III ltono Co-a,~
Instruments
Now Tine 311 MPG, 17.000
Bolclwln Pllna Bloclt Studio Htg-r 1111-.114
00211.
Typo.S600,114-S811-8308.
1HI Cl"*'&gt; Z·211, eo.ct. AC,
PO, PW, !~_arrzioo, CO jil-,
58
Fruits &amp;
bloctt, 1 . _ 304-511J.Zi5l
Vegetables
IllS GEO llolro II... new IIIII
undor wonntr. Gilot 1111
milllgoCill: 114o441-oeol

Farm Supplie s
&amp; Li vestock

1 Lounge about

pheasants
35 01 the dawn

'-.....1.-..L..-'-...1....~'-..J

YESSSSS~

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

34Nest ol

.

=·

Schno-.

W4·st
Pas....

July 20, 1994

18.::\o.J."::t

$3518 '""

DOWN

31 Household god
32 Fencer's sw·o rd

Mistakes are
made, unavoidably

BIG NATE

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

::'i.ut'":'naorao:
10tr10xl doa Urtn1l. 111111.15. "-..,.,good, ~a . 72 Suporlor 22' home, :
Point Pluo, ~18811 Dodal Cltorgor, Good ::::; 5, ru,.llke . . ., roof air·
hlonlna, Dodal 413 C.I.D.•
Condition. Mu11 a.. 1110 oao, 14500,
IM-f4t.33of.
·
114 ue eilsi n Hot Homo. '""
4441-eMI.
1PI 2711. llton mc101 home,'
tully 1111-contllnocl, ........... '
11181 Ulatn Town eor, 110. air,
. n~friwat•""-zer, :
laodocf
twl
microwave, mauve inttrkw, ,
AKC Dolmotlon puDDioo. 1 .,_;;.,.,, onlf'
Dl,~~ IIICiy lor rood, 11500..
-~
---as'"'~. rnoloa, 111 ehGio. - - 411 81100 or 1~.at711 o.tl 304.a
rt&gt;i&lt;IM8.
·~ ""
~- Pom, - n • __,._
==--:-:--;-::;--.,:7"-:- · 'Y
- .. ___,..,.
AKC roglotorocl 2 yr old moll 1887 PonUoo Turbo Grand Am, 2
Sltottll, 5100. I COUntry 0...;1, l.oldod, 110,000 111101, 8148
4441
home. :1tJ4.178.S41 •
::: -:6:-l::o.:-:--:-:-::-:--:::::AKC Roglot...t 1887 T·Bird, f.lr, Cruloe, lift,
Pupptoo; 5 Woou Okl With ~. PIW, Blue, Rune
Sholo, h25, 114 ue s:tl4.
Good'-.,.... Good,
446-l.uoriM-44H1101.
w~~'!_.rocl=.lo .~
Services
-N
.U · i 11181 llorlt II Cuolomlud Von,
Wlllto, lteplolon, 814- low mlioge. Z.UAT proloctocl,
441-et12, 814o281-11118.
~-· -.1, 111,000. 81
AKC
ltoglet...t
lllnllltn
Home
SchnaUPr, ..... aid, ....... 11i8 Fo«f .._"11 Connrtoblo
Improvements
304-417&amp;-IZM.
GT, I 8poocl, ~~0.-r~, Dirt
lluo .. Grey. (1&lt;01\anl Cond~
IWIEIIENT .
AKC Yo- Lobi Wonnad. Flnt tlonl
114 441 0416.
WATERPROOfiNG
Sholo. Witt lie Ralcly 711. Totting
U.-ndltlonot tlletllne 1 1 SmoU DoDOd Coil Alor lp.to.
114-2~~~-~tM.
too. ....... -~~ tuoitlehocl.
Coil 1-100-287-GII'II Or 114-ZU'
Floh T111k I Po4 ShoD. :Mit
11481 Roger~~ Wil-ling. E.
Jocltoon ,.... I'Ginl PINiont,
labllahlcl1m.
304-17W0113.
FuH btoadocl . . _ DUIIItiel
lwko old, - · lOW'II-'IIIiiil
bolorolpm.

28 Frisk

(2wcl8.)

1i:.\r.

Transportation

'I J
• K J :l 2
... Ill ~ ~ -l "2

60Simple
61 Coup d 62 - de France

currency
24 Compass pt.
25 Actor Peter -

231nd/an25011ve .......
26NewMealco
art COlony
27Smal._to
2811 llr81d ...
29 Rom1n dote
30Scot, •·t·
33 Fot-

I NT
2•

'87 Yamahl tour-whHier War-

Mlltl. new ...a,... IINI lnlr,
- · · - o r ond curtolno,
$300, will dallvor to -.114-11411-2888.
61 Farm Equipment
Kina S1u Wotorbed, Coblnola,
lllrror,
Uglttocl C1to11t a c1to1no 10 II
- - J400. auoon 8lzo ::-'s'::ln~-~
w.~o.- t200. F 111-'1112! .. t
.
•Bolo, Roo!'- lloalilng Cho..
,
,.:_:.,.."-:::-7.:"-'--:::--:-:::-:c:-_
.
. Joltn 0.... boctthoo, 1MO GIIC
iOio 0111- stu I C1athtna. I t ton ~4 truck 1nd tow11ow
s-12 I 14 IIIIo. Fobrlii r 1 - . Dlvll Uo4, 011 1MBy The Yor~
Nouuhold 'J\IMIIS, 12,....,.., llondor
__;:.._
M-. 1,._2
•
1hru llllllldor.

='

Soulh

BARNEY

rlor, 51800 080, 1,._882-41$11.

OuMn sa. w•••. -...Eacottont
Condhlon,
•oolccuo
Hoodboord, "'1 Poclo 1 Hoo.;
$100, lt4-448-11107.
Rolrtg-on, ltovoo, And
Uryoro,
All f.nd Ga
....ntStoo """
Up,
Will DoUvor• . _ . . _ ,,

agcy .
59 Rec line

\'ulnerablc 13 olh
Dealer: South

1S8t Dodge Rlim V.n 10,000

1981 Honda CB 1100 Cuotom
Wlndohlotd, Soddll BIQI, Now,
1 " - Mlloo, Excollont
Moooey Foruu-r 311 Troctor !lroo
......n1on1 S\200, s--4125.
With BUilt H0t1 I B-. 13,800;
Mull !Ioiii Trucka, boola, ....., 2020 John llOoro With Buoh 1084 Yimaha Venture., dFMMd,
vory cloon blko, 13100 080 614" - troller, ~~~ VW porto a Hoa, S6,MO; 8110 Fo«f With engl._ Ford "''II'-· • - Ana Cultivator, f3,750; 114-286- 1182-2720.
8247.
8622.
11186 Hondo~. -.c1,
tote of chrome, ....., llrH.
Now 518 un bod uttiHy trollor. 63
Livestock
~-417U7114.
-:---:-....,-.,.....,.--- llrlpoo ond murlalt, 211 000
mlloo, coli SM-41112-'IBOi
Nicl Kltchon Toblo &amp; Cltol,. l Gentla Pony'e I One 3 - . h orlglnol
after Spn.
$125; Niclllutch $225; Nlcl Air Old Colt, l14-24&amp;-5087.
CondKionor, f125i. Soltt'o $71; 4 bull CllVII lor brMdlna PI'" 1886 Kow111kl Rll~ : ; ""!'!!
EntMolrxno,. ...,...r 181)· ~ 2 h*k •nd whtte r.c. 2 1800 ..gctloblo. 3
·3401
:
W-mor hOO; Antlq.,.; po\\ad horolo«f; oleo With onor epm or 304-882-2114l
lloytog Wrt- Wuhor, Bulft In colvoo by oklo; 814-882·111511.
Honda
125
4-whoolor,
noec~o
:
1121 Jtoo; 1114-3n.:mo f.ttor e
Boby Bull Col"o For Solo1 Two minD&lt; rwpal,., 1350. 304-882·.
P.M.
Holototn, One .lorooy, 614-24&amp;- _34_38_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Ptutk: Ionon far pon- 11551
ri~ 155/box,- box,_.
.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
stu.... 1.aoo.5:n.3453 64
Hay &amp; Grain
for Sale
onytlmo.
,......--....:.,,...,.-,.-.,..,.___round bolao hoy. :J04.8i5. 1983 17 112 Rlnkor Mere Cruloer'
Ph•h couch, toveeeat, lounge
eMir, chuooel gr•y wflh
140 H!l_ Trlm, llerlne "&lt;f.:~:
mouvolbluo -Ito, Nko now,
Walk tnru Opon .
Condtuon, .,. ... ....
.
51100, 814-tii:I-ITSe.

44 Anglo-Saxon
money
45 River in
Belgium

8 Monarch

... J 7 ,i :l

Mlloo, $4,IJOO; Con Bo So;; f.t:
Golllpollo Dolly T~buno, 825
Third f.vonue, Golllpo\lo, 1144441-2342.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1

AA K

11000 OBu, a...:

$3200 make otter. ;JU4-0~2383.

74

6Q H~,

¥A K (/ 10
t Ill H I

1887 Aatro van, high milage,:
now u... now ~~ ookfng

42 Least cooked

1 Law deg .

4 Young goats

22 Units ol
Siamese

FAST

SOI 'TII

Ml-6088 aveninga.

82
Kina .... Wllorbed dh llghto
....rmt.-,1..._._

s c:m.

'81 Chewy wan, air, PS.l PB;

D

5 112mo.
304-TD-11431.
Raglot- Rottw- pupptoo
larllla,l250, 114-J112.21111.
Jonnlngo a~. Good

\lilf~

WEST
AJ! ll4
'IJ9 Bj
t Q 9 r,
4 K

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

0

0

lllnlohn
old, .. -

w-

t r\ -; ;I
"' r\ (/ II li

~.700.

304 II8W84 -5pm.

uu New.~wz
Grovoly troator a . __Dolt •
Poplor • - · Lawn-· IJood
oorpol. :~~~a. ...._. 304-e'/S1878 :111r., aaooo or trodo 1ar
a1-r or 4WD. - - .
3317.

short bed, 1111 grMn,

11 /fl~:l

1-\t. ~s A G.H \IJf-10
GOT BITIDJ -eh' HIS

Answer to Previous Punllt

12 Your and my
131rrilat e
14 Jacob's brother 46Shaggy
15 Medieval poem 49 - Earp
53 Singer 16 Arizona ci t y
Adams
17 Units of energy
54 Rani and 18 Breathing
56 Ordinanc e
organs
20 What mascara 57 lager
58 Information
is put on

• 0 2

EEK &amp; MEEK

19114 Chovy 4.3 kyt., 2WD,

Malo IIMall pup, 1twko old.

•

extro

==-='l ~ ~. :; :;

lmplcjlf.

Business
Opportunity

- . -Inti I Mlll"'l high

To

Frwe Delivery.

Chair,

011.uitl211tl.
A .ICAHO __.... f.aencY
:c.~ In Subol.....

~·
Whit
AM
: EaplilootCI.

21

Apartment
for Rent

I Shlrlor

!lpOIN. 3QU75.1421.

AVONI M

44

e&gt;

1300. 30'HI95-3703.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comploto home lumlo~l~i;·
Houra: Mon-Sm, 8-5. 111
0322, 3 mlloo out Bulavllla Rd.

Refrlger~tor SU; Retrtae,.tor
0....1 Molntono-, Polnll"'/1
Froet Free $150; Refrtgen.tor
Yord Wort. W I - W Sldo By Sldo Wu 12115. NOuttorw Ctoonod light Hou\1"1/,
$195; Nice EloCirtc Rongo,
3
bedroom
houee
on
Uncoln
Commertcal, Reeldll,.lll, Sieve:
Mlcrcwovo Dvon On Top, 12110;
Helghto, 114-tll2·715811oftor 5pm. Eloctrtc
..........MI.
Ronge 30 Inch 195;
Eloctrtc Ronge 40 Inch $125;
o-ge. Portoblo Sawmill, don' 3 Br., No Poto, $21MIIonth, Moytog
Wrt"'lor Woohlr, Nice
houl your to tho milt juot f125/Dopoolt, 114-446-3817.
Squore Tub,_ 1175tt':·
Automatic;
ooii304-17S-tt57.
Woohor s.. ;
• $71;
42
Mobile
Homes
Whirlpool Wallhet U
New, 1
Mltla P•ula'• Day c.,. Center
Voor Wornnty $205; Ooo Range
11-F I f..M. -e:30 P.M. OuoiKy
for Rent
30 Inch 115; Gao Rongo 3tllntlt
Loving eo.. For f.Q Cltlldron
Our 11 Gool. Port-limo, Fu\1- MilO 2 Br, 1 milo South ol $95; SkoGGII f.pllllanceo, Tl Vlno
nme, F.c:l. Aealatllnce Available. Eureka, on St. Rt .7. No pete, StrMI, Clilllpol/o, IM-4411-'13118,
Or t.a00-415-3488.
Coli For Information Or Vl.tl. In- roloroncoe. 814~-fant IToddlw 114-448-eZn p,.
2 Bodrooma Fumlahod, On Cloy Solid cllorry wood cur1o
School,
Schoologe,
au Chopot
Rood, 1300/11\o. Plu. c.blnet, ex c. cond., 33 112Jl72'",
Schoo\,8-..220.
1300. 304-6711-2788.
1300 Olpooh, 114-~08.
SWAIN
2 Bodroorno, 11:., No Polo,
[)epoejt
And
Aeter.rlcea, AUCTION I FURNITURE. 82
$400/Mo., Wo"""!, Dryor; 2 Bod- Olivo St., Golllpolla. N- &amp; Uoocl
room Hou•, ~umlshld, No furniture, hMie,., Wntem &amp;
Polo, 1350/llo. Dopoolt, 614-TW· Wort booto. B-3158.
WIU Bobyolt One Child In My 4345.
Homo, Rodnoy Aroo, EJt.
52 Sporting Goods
S2501Mo. + Dopco\1,
~ With A.taroo1011, 814- 31 Bodroomo
Bedroom, $200/Uo. + Oepoeit, Golf clubo a bog. Proleoolonol
8...2411-01104 Or 614-~.
ciUbo, tlu ,_ bog. 304-e'/SWJQ otoom -.r corpllla - . ,
710\1.
to tlnloh my .. vrnon~a on ,._ bod,_, mobllo home,
IOCOIIIICirtc, -Iaiiy lumllhed, Rornlnaton 700 BDL, 30-011
ctoorw,l14.ft2~ .
..ond . _ . requlrocl, wlrocoll
pod
&amp;
owing.
114-1112·2014.
Romlngton 67'0, 12 geuge
Fmancial
wtahelfe. All ..c. cond. 3M-e~

1-ltlono lVIII-

loJ 531, K.wr, OH 41143.

Help Wanted

41 Houses for Rent

locotoclln Now Ho __
tory &amp; phone numbor: Sox R·t8,
e10 Pt. Ptouont Roolotor, 200 - . tl3,1100. 304-182·25113.
lloln 91., Pt. Pllloont, WV s a.ctrocm Ranch, 1 Both, At25550.
t - Gorogo, l Unottochocl
OWNER OPERATORS Your Gange, Z0X311 WortohoD. BidTroct0&lt; a Ftotbod For Dodlcotocl well, SM,OOO, 114 388 -181a:
High Poring Lonoo. Homo Often 3 Bodroorno, 3 Acroo, I Mlloo
Pt .. w.-. Pionty 01111\ao. From Raccoon P•rtc, aH,500,
Now Offici • Exprou T,....,... 114-3711-2240.
r.tlon HI00-4111-7272.
3111'., 1 both " - on quiet
Ownor/Oporoloro
Cordlnol Frolght Corrlaro lo dlaocHnd raod, Hovon Holghta,
lot · - lo 100x108'. S21,500,
hiring experilriced Q/o'e to run wlocllolng
11101112' lot 132,100.
flatbed, •m percentage of flat lancl.'304-4182-3323.
grooo ro-uo pulling compony
fr~lllre or pulling own treller,
4 l i e d - l Story N:. 2 112
heehh l,.wance w/dentlll 6 Yl- Solita, LR, DR, FA With ~Eat·
oton onllablo, p\aiM In KHchon, Doof,.b\a Ho'll"boronlloblo, bob-toll t....r.,_ hoocl, CloM HMC, 114-441'41415.
ovolloblt, lull cord oyolom,
wootdy
Hltlemonta,
rldor I Roomo Md 5oth, Fuel 011
~rom, Unw ' -· t.aoo-220- Fumeco; Runt Wotor; Hook..Up
For 2 -~~ -..~.Good Slu
Gorden,
1 krellll ""'" Cltopot
0wnor/Dpor.tan
Rood, 814-388-0812.
CordiMI Frolght Conloro lo , _
hiring In the von dlvlolon pold Approx ICf'e kit, comer 10M
wleKpendo,
loodOd or omply mlloo '"'"""" WI'Mx70 trailer
lng poy, otop poy, hlllh ln- 130,000. Comp Conlly .....
.urance wldental • vhlon 1v11.. - n bv oppolntrnent only,
•ble, bob-taill lnaurance eval.. 304-4!TU\18t.
able, fuel c.rd •yetem, oo, pey
toll aptem, Pf'OIIIpf 1nd ~ Eototo SoH-ni Solo: S
cu,... weekly •enJerMnts, rkllr - . Aorooge, Sototlto Dloh
~ram, dme homli. 1.aoo.2» -contoct Tam I.Dftlo "' 1-aoo.
114&amp;-1702 Or 112-3U-11473 f.ltor I
P.M.
Port dmo LPN 0&lt; RN -lion
ovellablo 11 Pornoroy Nurolng For 111o by _,.r. log home,
oncl Aohobi!Kotlon Co ..or on J. 1880 aq. •.• full biiiiMI ..
II I 11·7 ohllt. Thlo pcohlon lo wllomlly room -bumor s
for 1 nuiu committed to - - · 2 khchono, 3 bathOl
dallvoring oxceptlonol quoiKy Cl"- .-.. Vlocunt, . , . , _ .
care for G&amp;.~r gerlatrtc reekMnta. colllng, ..... ,.,.,.._, largo
Wo viler on OIICOI\anl bonoiR deck,
32181
outbuilding
pocklge, comperHIVI Ulary and • - t o c l - room, 2+ ocrooln
woodad .,.. cloee to town,
• etotile, ~&lt;~pportivo wort llolao School lllllrtct, doytlmo
vlron.-. r&gt;er.ono - n g to 814-tll:z..Zitl,
ovotng 114-11112ehare CW1 thle t•m of RUrMIS
commHtod to ..., llonc\anl of 71:13.
-'1\vo outcome, ploooo colt Now 3111'., 2 bothL..on epprox.
a14-tll:l.eeoe or opply I n 11 3117118 Rockoprlngo Roed, llac, MI,OOO. 11044,..2178.
Pomeroy. E.O.E.
Now ranch llyto . _ Planto
IIUb-diVIolon, Sbr., 2 both, llono
POSTf.L JOBS
&amp; dock, oltllng an 2
ltlrl $11.41/llr., far nom and on
~-- .,. ... 1131
Nice 3 br. •pl. In Mkkll1p t,
............ ' -· colt 2111-7811am ut. WV548, ~~om-~pm,
Sur&gt;-FII.

Sond -

11

Wanted to Do

DHKl Vf.LLEY PUBUSHING CO.
-.rJMndl thol you do bu-.
Lbc:ol phyolclan'o onlcl occoptlng oPIIIIcotlora far tho . _ with poop1a you kmw1 and
NOT to oond througn tho
pcohlon al - modlcot · - moll until you hlvo lnnll\glltod
lentlrwceplloneld, computer ••· tho
ollarlng.
porlance holplul, PO Bo• 41t,
Racine, Ohio 4577'1.
Real Estate
Noodod Now: Componk&gt;n To
Uvo In Frw Boord, No Stnngo,
My f.ge, 814 446 3418.

fNit ., 1tf. verifiable u:p., home
moot woekOndo. SEnd work hi•

Rentals

.~'

388-IISM.

Ff'. I' Qli f N1-,'1/~ pf'FR.

$35.

black &amp; while. 304.e7'5-14lt.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VICinity
Oonge s.-.112m1. on Jortcho

IC,..,
Ad,

Au u~o~~ul- AT r

Household
Goods

Corpot 15.00 Up Vlnyt $4.411 To
8 f.d/olnlng loto. 2 ,..,,.•. f.\\ To $6.50 In Stock, Oi4-446-'Jl44,
Mollohan Carpeta.
Go lo t ,~UZ.~· f.ll Utllhloo
Avollablo, e
31157.
Cn~am lov ....tlaiMper, $100.
Exc. cond.
Tr11ller lot1 •
•crMge In Com~&gt;Uor dlok,
Pomoroy, prlcl lo n.gotrobie, 30ol.a75-2t83.
tor rent or ule, 0' Brien • Crow GOOD USED APPUf.NCES
R:::&amp;z 114-41112·2720, ....,lngo Walhere, dryere, r•P_rtger•toq,
e
-3581.
r~ngee. Skagge Applla.-.ca, 7e
Wanled to buy. two or rnc:JN VIne Strwt, Call6~13fiNI, 1·

Cocker Spanlal pu~py, lrno. old,

Frtdoy, Soturdoy, Eui'MI Bohlnd
Old Cia St.tlon. Toyo, Clothoo,
Cookie Kool "'d Stond.

S1

I'M 1}\IN&lt;-1 Up

6~6253 .

3 puppln, 12 wks old, Ph
Bull/Chow mix, 614--'Jil2-l410.

Lost &amp; Found

ext,.,

or

514,570.
Roybum
,.a110nable I'Mirlctlone. lnfor- 3 air condltlonara, 11,000·18 000
'
mallon mailed on r.queat . 304- BTU. 30~5-!5408.

«tl-1'264.

8

AdJoin•

t\181 Chev. SllviBdo 0111ondod
.,.b, !50 outo., 43,000ml.,
gsrage kepi, tookl new,
512,5il0. 304-57G-238l.
19!11 Chivy S·tO Tohoo, V-41, f.lr,
f.~M Coutllo. Shlrpl 814-

Merchandise

From

N.tlonal
Foo.ot, 122,000, lt4--446-a751

2
calico, khten .

6

Mltoo

72 Trucks for Sale

lady wCHJid llu •

nlco
llnloll lpilrtment or hooM It
rea-.onabl.
prlce,
Prtftr

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Clll

304-7lls.oo60.

Giveaway
month cMd r.maa..

Eldo~y

Commort:ial building for ..m In
Mlddtoport, tile old llolgo Wit- Pomeroy,
lllddlep(m
foro bulldlng, 114-882-:MSI.
Syr.cuH, 014-812·288CI.

Fruen Pharmacy, t.lldd'-Poft.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

47 Wanted to Rent

Aviv

40Shrewd

ot consideratton.
CANCER (June 2t..Juty 22l Don't let it
be said ol y&lt;Jur aHitude today that II an
tdea didn't origrnate with you. tt's bound
1o be at little consequence . Associates
rt)ighl not share your opinion . Trying to
p;itch up a broken romance? The AstroGraph Matchmaker can help you to

mvolved has potential , provtded the nghl

people run 11 . You 1111 th e b1ll. but two
associates m1ght not

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Don 't gel

b ilities should be given prionty today .

tnvolved 1n a pro1ect today that can pro·

be ca use you co ul d lose your zest for
tackling problems early and end up doing

duce only nominal rewards regardless of

a hall-baked job.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) There is a
poss•bility you might yield to pressure
today and do somelh.ng to please anoth·
er that opposes your best 1nteres1s II you

o.re to work

PISCES (Feb. 26-March 20) II !he re is
something about which you are enthust·
ashe and hopeful, don't waste your time

take this route, neither person is likely to
benefit.

always looks at life through a negative
lens.

LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23) Today your
problem is n~ likely to be one ol having

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19j In order lo
be successful today. you must be llexible

how smar1 you are and h ow will1ng you

today lrytng 10 sell a friend on 11 who

an enlarged ego. On the conlrary, it could

and open -minded . One particular proce-

be a lack of sell-assurance. which might
be more defeating than its opposite.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) Be on
guard Ieday il you parlic1pate in some
type ol friendly compelition. because lhe
person you may be pitted aga•nst could
be someone who can't bear losing.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec. 2t)
Financial trends might be a series of ups
and downs lor you today. Your abilily to
generate income looks good. Your tendency to extravagance looks bad.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . t9) An

dure m1ght not work. bul a combrnatton .. ,
may.
TAURUS (Apr/120-May 20) Person.s who
are in accord With your ideas and opinions will be treated with consideration

and respect today. Those who disagree
wrtri you. however. mrght no! receive this
treatment.

GEMINI (Mey 21..June 20) In your com·
mercia! affairs today. conditions aren 'l
likely Ia be optimum. However, they could
still be advantageous, because !he benefits will outweigh the negatives

Models Inc {CC)

Amenca Ton~h i /CCI
Now

/CCI

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wennesday, July 20, 1994

Ohio Lottery

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
advances

EASTMAN'S

495
Pick 4:

0546
Super Lotto:
10-13-19·32-35-41
Kicker:
103688

Page 4

•

u

Pick 3:

ot1ce t e

•

en tine

FOOD LAND
(

1••

Vol. 45, NO. 55
Copyright 1994

It's B.L.T. Time!
3 Varieties

Tenderbest
Bacon

Tenderbest Bacon

$ 49

Jif Peanut
Butter

17.3-18 oz. Jar

Stokely's

12 oz.
Pkg.

~ 00

Corn • Peas •
Green Beans

Cottonelle
Bath Tissue

c

PORK
ROAST•••

LB

Box

Food land
Grape
Jell

c

32 oz.
Jar

ood\and
Margarine Spread

Fresh Baked

BLUEBERRY PIE

Chocolate
M··lk

Plastic gallon

Lemonade

1/2
Gallon

Asst. Rounds

HAGAN ICE CREAM

ss

2/$5 2
230Z.

99

$

Lemonade Stand
1/2 gal ctn.

1/2GAL CTN.
We Reeerve tt1e Right to Umlt Ouenttti11 • Prtcea EHectlva Thru Sit., July 23, 1994 ·USDA Food Stampa end WIC Coupona Acca•u•d • Nilt Reaponalbla

lly GEO RGE ABATE
Senlinel News Stall
The Meigs mines operation and thu s th e area 's econo my_
could poss1bly be Jeopardi zed by
lcgtslallon deve loping in a U.S.
Senate energy commiuee. oflicmls
sa1d Thursday.
American Electric Power is the
only company in the country that
has "captive" mines, also known as
affiliate min es for its power-pro·
du ction, ac co rding to Ron
Sylvester, spokesman for U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland, D-Lu casville.
"Senate Bill 544 would force
companies with captive mines to
se ll the coal to itself at market
prices," Sylvester said.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
number of first-time appli cations
for state unemployment benefits
shot up by 27,000 last week to the
highest level in nearly six months,
the government reported today.
The Labor Department said the
number of initial claims in the
week ended July 16 totaled a seasonaiJy adjusted 392.000, up from
a revised 365 ,000 the previous
week. That figure initially was
reported at 363,000.
Last week 's increase foiJowed
another big rise of 21 ,000 the pre·
vious week, an indication that the
·nation's job market might be showing some instability after months of
strong employment reports. Most
economists were expecting the lat·
est report to show a decline of
about 8,000.
The Labor Depanment had no
clear explanation for the increase,
but indicated that devastating
floods in the Southeast could be a
factor. The reporting period included a week in which automakers and
their suppliers idle some plants.
The Department's seasonal adjust·
ment factors should take into
account those fluctuations, but the
numbers sometimes still are affect·
ed.
The increase was the biggest
since Jan. 29, when a rise of
408,000 was recorded.
The weekly numbers frequently
fluctuate widely and most
economists do not consider them
the best indicator or hiring !Tends.
They more closely watch the Labor
Department's four-week moving
average, which smooths out weekly
bumps and dips.
That number was up, too, rising
10,000 to 363,500 from the previ·
oils week's revised 353,500. That
was the highest level since May 28
and the biggest increase since Jan.
29, when the weekly average rose
14,250.

Incident may
have been a hoax,
Gallia sheriff says

Heritage House

Foodland
Orange
Juice

Federal bill cou ld kill state
" Wh en the affiliale mines of
AEP were es tabli shed the Securi ·
tics and Exchan~e Com mi ss ion
mandated fuel costs be ftxed at the
cos t of minin g," sai d B.J. Smith,
spokeswoman for American Elec·
tri c Power. Southern Ohio Coal Co.
is a subsidiary of AEP.
" Th e Metgs mines co uld be
jcopard iled based on language in
th e leg is lati on, but at thi s time
Meigs would be exempted. But thai
co uld change ," Smilh said . "We
think this is unnecessary additional
legislation since lhe SEC regulates
at the federal level and the PUCO
reviews the fuel cost and can disal·
low any of these costs at a state
level."

If the legislation continu es to
move forward. AEP would ask that
th e curr ent mines be "gra ndfa ·
thered" in, according to Smilb ..
"They perceive a risk of abuse
but it can 't be because our costs are
scrutinized by a commission every
six momhs," Smith said.
"AEP officials arc curr entl y
talking with Washinglon officials
to ensure the mines' futures. When
the Clean Air Act of 1990 cut Ohio
coal production it' s very poss ible
that o1her mining companies in
other states want to get Ohio out of
coal production because we arc the
fourth largest user in tile country,"
Smith said. Since the fed eral act
Ohio has dropped from the lith

1or Typogrephlclll ar Plctorlel

Errore.

A restaurant manager's claim
that he was robbed at gunpoint
early Sunday morning appears to
be contrived, Gallia County Sheriff
James D. Taylor said this morning.
"We now have strong indications that the repon was fictitious,"
Taylor said. "The whole thing just
smelled bad from the beginning."
Taylor said inconsistent stories
and other evidence has led the
department to believe the robbery
was fabricated. He declined to
elaborate because the incident is
still under investigation.
Sidney D. Shaner, 24, 40 Lin·
coin 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 Esc~;~rt pulled off the
side of Fairfield-Centenary Road.
The vehicle looked disabled,
Shorter reponed, and he stopped to
see if he could assist the two men.
Shorter told deputies one of the
men pointed a sawed-Qff shotgun at
him and ordered him out of his
vehicle. They then stole the money
from his car, tied his hands behind
his back and left the scene, Shorter
told deputies.
More than $3,000 was in the
vehicle.

largest producer to the high teens.
The Meigs mines coal is more
ex pen sive because of high -cos t
long-wall mining equipment and
the largest trealrnent center for coal
in North America according to
Smith.
SOCCO would be exempted by
an amendment that protects compa·
mes wJth an agreemenl with a state
commission - the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
"SOCCO's agreement with the
PUCO lasts for 15 years. but two
other AEP captive mines - Central Ohio Coal and Windsor Coal
- lose tl1eir PUCO agreement at
the end of this yea r," Sylvester
said.

" If these lw o coa l co mpani es
(Central Ohio and Wind sor) shul
down prema tu re ly, wes tern coal
migh t come to AEP and huy 0111
the Meigs Mines - shuuin g them
down," Sylvester said . "There is
not a here and now threa t to th e
Meigs mines. but it's posSible 10
lose t11c mines."
SOCCO has fully complied with
original laws and lh cn the 1990
CIC&lt;J.n Air Act, Sylveste r said. The
company is spendin g more 1han
$800 million in slalling scrubbci&gt; at
Gavin to reduce emissions of local
high-sulfur coal.
The bill has not passed the Senale and has not even been presented
in the House of Rcprescntati ves yet

according to Sylvester.
In the ' 60s and '70s . AEP
in vested hun dreds of million s of
doll ars inlo deve loping capt iv e
min es whe n th ei r coa l suppl )
siJrunk to just two doys carry over
i!Ccording 10 Sylvester.
"The recent legislative ac ti on is
a response to a 1992 U.S. Court of
Appea ls decision 1ha1 affirmed the
SEC's role in es tabli shing prices
for affiliate coal compan ies," Smith
said.
Smith co ncluded, "The bollom
line is the customer's over-aU electric bill. While the fuel rate is one
part of that, Ohio Power customers
enjoy rates that are well below the
national average."

State board clears·way
for appeal of lawsuit

21,000

Foodland
Macaroni &amp;
Cheese

2 SeeUona, 12 Pageo 35 cento
AMultimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 21, 1994

Jobless
claims up

14.5- 15.5 Oz. Can

12 Roll

Bone-In
Boston Style

Tonight, partly cloudy.
Low In 70s. Friday, chance or
rain SO percenL High near ?Q.

EMPTY POOL- The Middleport village pool was deserted on
a hot mid-summer arternoon yesterday. The pool needs al least
$80,000 for repairs or the 42-year-old structure will never open
again. Area groups are holding fundraisers lo try to save it. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Middleport fights for swimming pool
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
Temperatures rose to 95 degrees
wilb high humidity, but no one got
wet in the Middlepon village pool
yesterday.
Now, tile community must raise
at least $80,000 to open this 42·
year-old structure or the pool will
stay dry ~ forever, according to
village officials.
A week ago, the village applied ·

[or a Division of Naturall{esources
grant that may pay for half of the
$80,000 needed to re·oJle!" the
pool. Within ~ month the v1llage
should know 1f the grant w1ll be
approved according to Mayor
Dewey Honan.
The mayor added, "We need
the pool. We've already had voe
person drown m the nver thts year.
It's never made a profit, but most
Continued on page 3

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~
Floods and blizzards share some·
thing in common with a legal battle
over school funding : The state
Con !Tolling Board will pay for dis·
asters and lawyers out of the same
bank account
·
The board, at a special meeting
Wedne sday , reversed a decision
made 48 hours earlier and cleared
the way for Atiomey General Lee
Fisher to appeal the state's loss or a
school funding lawsuit in Perry
County.
But since the State Board of
Education previously voted against
appealing the decision, controllers
agreed 4-3 to dip into their cmer·
gency all-purposes account for the
$250,000 needed.
The fund includes $7.5 million
to help cities, counties and town·
ships pay for a string of natural dis·
· asters in the last year. Another $7.2
million will repay money loaned to
help Columbiana County out of a
financial problem.
Sen. Roy Ray, R-Akron, sug·
gested tapping into the emergency
fund for the appeal after Sen. Ben
Espy, D-Columbus, said use or
education department cash was

she said. He fought to establish
rural enterprise zones and to enact
depressed economic area linked
deposit legislation.
He also served as chairman of
the Ohio Riverfront Redevelopment Task Force. He serves the
30th Senate District which com·
prises Columbiana, Guernsey, Har·
rison, Jefferson and Tuscarawas
counties.
Sen. Long's I 7th District
includes three house districts in
Scioto, Ross, Pickaway, Vinton,

waive competitive bidding rules to
hire the lawyers.
0' Brien said information I he
board lacked at its Monday meet·
ing was available Wednesday. For
example. it was told lbe stale faces
an Aug. 14 deadline for filing a
notice of appeal.
Common Pleas Judge Linton D.
Lew is, Jr. ruled July I that differences in per pupil spending among
the stale's 612 districts unconstiiU·
tionally deprive students of funda mental education rights.
Fisher is app ea lin g at Gov .
George Voinovich's request. Ney
opposes appeal as a waste of tax·
payer money that will delay solv·
ing school problems, especially in
the Appalachian counties lbat make
up his Senate districl.
William Phil lis, head of th e
school coalition lbat flied the lawsuit. said he believes lbat most policy makers understand the system
is faulty, and that there is no politi·
cal will to change il.
"I think most of lbem are t.•J?·
ing that the (schools) wiJJ p···~ ' · ail
and force systemic refonn. Only a
few of them arc gutsy enough to go
public with that," Phillis said.

0. J.'s defense on the a'ttack
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ O.J. number and the $500,000 reward.
"O.J. wants to confirm to the
Simpson claims authorities aren't
public
that he is innocent of all
looking hard enough for the "real
charges
in this matter and that he is
killer" - and he's putting up
most eager to get to trial to prove
$500,000 to get the ball rolling.
Simpson, accused of murdering his innocence," his business attor·
his ex-wife and her friend, is ncy, LeRoy Taft, said Wednesday.
He said his client "feels he is
mounting his own investigation,
compelled
to undertake his own
complete with his own squad of
investigation
at his own expense to
delectives, a nationwide toll-free

Democrat gubernatorial
hopeful to visit county
Democratic gubernatorial candi·
date State Sen. Robert Burch of
Dover and Meigs County native
State Sen. Jan Michael Long (DCircleville) will be honored at a
fundraising picnic on Saturday.
According to Meigs County
Democratic chairwoman Sue Mat·
son the event will be held at the
ho~e of Henry and Mary Hunter
near Chester from 4-6 p.m. A con·
tribution of $15 per person will be
accepted at the event and children
under 12 will be admitted free of
charge.
"The Ohio Democratic Party's
coordinated campaign is based
soley upon grassroots efforts,"
Maison said. "The Democrats do
not have big business in their hip
pocket as the Republicans do, and
therefore must depend on tile people for the financial suppon neces·
sary to conduct a winrung and successful campaign."
"Rob Burch has been the working man's friend in the Ohio Senate
and will be the Working Man's
Governor when seated in the Statehouse," she said. "We must keep
State Sen. Jan Miclulcl Long in lhe
17th District. These two men are
vuy deserving of our support."
Burch, 43, was elected to the
Ohio Senate in 1984. Since th~
time, he has actively participated in
the areas of environmental pl'Qtec·
tion and economic development,

inconsistent · with the school
board 's stand against appeal.
Controlling Board president
Colleen O'Brien said relying on th e
emergency account was appropri ·
ate.
" It 's for expe nses that are not
budgeted or are unexpect ed."
0 · 8 rien said.
" In this case because lberc was
a concern that the funding source
would remain the Department of
Education, the members said we
will ulili zc thai fund to guaranlee
that the spec ial counsel and th e
appeal can go through." she said .
Fisher will hire the Dinsmore &amp;
Shohl law firm of Cincinnati 10
handle the appeal and two olhcr
pending cases.
Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Bob Ney, R-St.
Clairsville, said the transaction at
the unusual emergency meeting
was sleight of hand.
"Whetller you're for appeal or
not, I think the process here was
like a magic show," said Ney, a
member of the board.
Ney had engineered the board's
rejection at its regular meeting
Monday of Fisher's reQue st to

Jackson, Meigs, Gallia and
Lawrence counties. He was elecled
to the Ohio Senate for his second
four-year tenn in 1990.
He serves on the following
standing committees of the Ohio
Senate: finance, judiciary, agriculture, education, and retirement and
aging. He also serves on numerous
sub-committees as well as four
committees of the National Confer·
ence of State Legislatures.
The event will be held rain or
shine, Maison said.

~-Local

pursue all mformation leading to
the arrest and conviction of the rC&lt;J.l
ki ller or killers in this case.''
Lead defens e lawyer Robert
Shapiro contended in court papers
that authorities have ignored evi ·
dcnce pointing to Simpson's in no·
ccnce.
The papers cite a series of
Continued on page 3

briefs---i

Man held on auto theft charge
A 29-year-old Chester man was arrested Wednesday night by
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies on a warrant charging auto theft.
J. Craig Bolin was charged in connection with the reported I heft
of a 1983 Chevrolet Malibu owned by Charles Burton , Pomeroy,
Saturday afternoon.
Bunon had parked his car on Titus Road and was approximately
one-quarter mile from the vehicle picking up cans when he
observed his car go by, said Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souls·
by. He had left the keys in the vehicle, Soulsby added.
The car was located by deputies across the county line in Gallia
County on Ward Road, Soulsby said. Following an investigation, a
warrant was obtained for Bolin's arrest. he added.
Soulsby said an investigation is continuing and another arrest
may be made.

Theft charges pending against man
Charges of theft are pending against a Vance Road resident for
the alleged Jheft of electricity from Buckeye Rural Electric Cooper·
ative.
According to a Meigs County Sheriff's Departmenl report.
BREC employees were checking meters when they discovered that
an Ohio Power Company electric meter had been installed at the
Harrisonville-area residence. The BREC meter had been removed in
April.
Deputies learned the Ohio Power Co. meter had been stolen earlier from a vacant trailer on Kingsbury Road.
An investigation is continuing, Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
The suspect's name is being withheld pending the filing or charges.

Gallia man to be evaluated today

SEN. ROBERT BURCH

SEN. JAN LONG

A Gallia County man who allegedly used a rifle to hold sheriff's
deputies at bay for several hours June 13 will undergo psychiatric
evaluation today to see if he is fit enough to stand trial, Gallia
County Sheriff James D. Taylor said today.
Otis W. Wells, 49, Garland Creek Road, Crown City, returned
Wednesday from Athens, where he has been receiving psychiatric
treaunent since the incident He is presently incareerated in the Gal·
lia County Jail and faces a charge of felonious assault
Taylor said this morning that, pending approval of the prosecu·
Continued on page 3

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