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                  <text>July 24, 1994

Inventory a key issue
in personal computers

MYSTERY FARM- This ,..~ek's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Ga llia County. Individ uals wish ing to participalc in the weekly contesl may do so by guessing

~te farm's owner.

Just mail , or drop off your

to the Galli polis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Callipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Senlind, Ill Court St., Pomern)', Ohio, 45769, and

~uc ss

you may win a $5 prize from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and
telephone number with your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
en tries should be tu rned in to th e newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case of a tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Meigs County farm will be featured by the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.

J!

Cotton prices down
WASH INGTON (AP) - T h ~
cotwn c rop is progre ss ing
11c·ll d ~s pit c re cent ll omhng tn
Cicu rgia and Alabama and prices
sh,•wcd a dec line, the Agriculture
J lJ l)-l

NEW NU RSING DIRECTOR - Marilyn Conaway has
been named Overbrook Center ' s

nursing

director .

Co naw ay gra duated from
Hockin~ Technical Collo;ge in
Ne lso nvill e. She has been an
H.N. fur 14 years and has
wurk&lt;d in long-term care since
I9K6 . Conaway enjoys crocheting, sewi ng, re~ding and camping with her family.

Department says
Current estimates place the 1994
cotton produc ti on at 18 million
bales.
Two new reports by USDA's
Econom ic Research Service said 82
percent of Lhc clomestic crop was
usab le, compared with 78 percent
tn 1993 and a fi ve-year average of
71 percent.
" In mid -Jul y, 74 percent of the
crop was rated good or excellent,
compa red with 62 perce nt la st
year," the report said. "Although
some acreage has been affected by
nood ing ... these early season condition s suppo rt favorable crop
prospects."
U.S. crop production was high CS L in Louisiana, Arizona, New
Mex ico and Mississi ppi, followed
by Georgia, with the highest yield
of its five-year average. Alabama
couon progress was somewhat
lower than its five-year average.
The Co mmerce Department
fo recas t May colton mill use at
95 1,000 bales, up about 7.5 percent
from April and up 9 percent from
May 1993.
" Mill business is reponed continuing well, especially for denim ,
with mil ls operating near full
capacity," th e report said.
"Des pite the dramatic rise in
domestic cotlon consumption, the
share of fiber use on the cotton system has remained relatively stable."

By EVAN RAMSTAD
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Big personal
computer compan ies have been
changing the way they make the
machines. ll's an Important shift even critical, as iUustrated by market reaction to QU.lfterl y perforl)lance reports during the past
week.
Analysts consistently looked
beyond sales and profit figures to a
number that could yield a clue of
future performance - inventory
level.
Co mpaq Co mputer Co rp .,
despite sa les grow th and profits
that continued to lead the PC industry, was punished on the stoc k market because its inventory had doubled. Its shares finished the week
down $3.25 to $30.75 on the New
York Stock Exchange.
On the other hand, Apple Computer Inc. got a big boost not just
for its surprising profit but also for
cutting inventory . Apple stock
closed up $2.62 1(1. to $30.87 1(1.
thi s week on the Nasdaq Stock
Market.
Because sales growth for personal computers is believed to be
slowing, analysts worry about a
company that shows a potential to
be left with unsold product

IBM, the No. I PC se ll er, thi s
spring was stuck with $600 miIlion
worth of perso nal computers afte r
cranking up production to meet big
demand in the fourth quarter of last
year. Distributors didn't ha ve room
to begin selling newer IBM mod els, leavi ng th e th e com pany to
resort to deep di scountin g, even a
large auction, to get rid of them.
To keep inv entory down, PC
makers have been shifting 10 production known as just-in-time manufactu ri ng . In stead of relying on
forecasts created months be fore a
product hits the street, compani es
aim to gel as close as possible to
huilding a machine when they have
an order for it.
"There's a consta nt focus at
companies like ours and manufacturers to move to just-in-time manufacturing and distribution to have
as little inventory on hand ," said
John McKenna, president of Entex
Information Services Inc., a large
wholesaler of PCs and networked
systems to Fortune 1000 compa nies.
IBM has been transforming its
production lines for the past year.
All of its PCs in Europe and about
hal f in the United Stales are now
made under a just-in-time process.
Compaq made the shift ahead of

Hays joins
Farmers Bank
and Savings staff
POMEROY - Paul M. Reed,
president, Fanners Bank and Savmgs Co., has announced that Randall C. Hays has joined the bank
staff as vice president and manager
of the lendtng functions of the
bank.
Hays graduated from Marietta
High School and the Uni-versity or
Cincinnati, and has worked in
banking since 1980, most recently
being employed as assistant vice
president by Peoples Bank in
Athens. He also recently graduated
from the Ohio School of Banking
at Ohio University.
He has resided in Rutland for
the past 16 years with his wife, Jo
Ann, a teacher in the Meigs Local
School District, and their two children, Amanda and Alison.
Hays has been active in the local
communities and is a former member of Rutland ViUage Council. He
and his family attend the Middlepen Church of Christ.

JUST DO IT.

New Shipment of

fOOTBALL
CLEATS

Farrt1ers are concerned
about replacing lost income
year rule.
Disaster-affected farmers (any
crop) should review their options
with the ASCS office at446-8686.
Lisa Meadows is the county
uecutive director or the Gallia
Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service.

IBM. Its rapid growth has even
allowed it to make suppliers pay
for warehouse space to be near its
biggest factory in Houston. . .
Just-in-time manufactunng IS a
tncky process that still requires a
deft feel for the market and strong
ties to component suppliers.
Eve n the PC makers that have
long practiced just-in -time manu facturing. the direct-order companies Dell Compu ter Corp. and
Gateway 2000 In c .. occasionally
stumble.

Be aware...

Vol. 45, NO. 57
Copyright 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 25, 1994

j

Automatic, air cond., power windows,
rear defogger, cassette, cruise control,
remote trunk release, air bag.

$14,795
3.1 Utre V-6, 4 speed, auto. trans., cruise
control, rear defogger, cassette, P. win., P.
mirrors, split folding rear seat, air bag.
Much morel

$15,488
*lncludea $500 Rebate &amp; $400 Under Age 30 Rebate

,. 1994
GUNDAMS
Auto. , air cond ..

lilt, C!158 .. cruise
control, rear defogger, driver's
side air bag, anti-lock brakes,
balance of 36/36 bumper to
bumper warranty. Low Miles.

342 S.calllllve. ·

Gallipolis, Olio
P\. 446-4290
H011e 446-4511

AS LOW AS

$11,990

IIATI PAlM

A

INIUIANC~

a good neighbor, Stale Farm is there.®
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company
Home Office: Bloomtnaton, Illinois

'

'

4.0%

1994 BUICK
PARK AVENUE

New Car

SAVE

Financing
On Selected
Models

$4500

Patrol probes vending
machine operations
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The State Highway Patrol is investigating a stale ofricial and the
owners of a vending machine company over claims they shortchanged a program to aid the blind
by $253,900, The Columbus Dtspateh reported.
Ronald J. Miller, a program
manager for the Ohio Rehabilita:
Lion Services Commission, and Al1
Razi and Marcia Majidzsadeh,
owners of Nationwide Equipment
Enterprises of Columbus, are bemg
investigated, the Dispatch reponed
Sunday.
.
.
In March 1993, Nauonwtde
Equipmenl was awarded a sixmonth contract to operate vending
machines at 13 slate-owned rest
stops in Delaware, Madison!
Auglaize, Hanc~lc, Wayne, Miam1
and Wood counues.

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) The only survivor of a plane crash
that kiUed five people walked nearly a mile through a forest and along
railroad tracks before he found
someone to help him.
Charles Blake, 19, of Beaver,
was in critical condition today after
surgery Sunday at Ohio State University Medical Center in Columbus. He had a broken elbow and
burns over 18 percent of his body.
State Highway Patrol Dispatcher
Ernie Messer said the single-engine
Piper Cherokee left Portsmouth
Regional Airport in fog around
7:30a.m. Sunday,turned southwest
and srruek the tops of several trees.
The plane hit the ground and burst

'

·~

A Gallia County man died Sunday evening from injuries he sustained when a tractor roUed over and pinned him underneath.
Henry F. Scarberry, 70, 1944 Coal Valley Road, Vinton, died
from multiple fractures, a Grant Hospital spokeswoman said this
morning.
According to a repon rrom the GaUia County Sheriffs Depanment, Scarberry was mowing along the south s1de of Coal Valley
Road Sunday afternoon when the tractor slid over the edge of a
steep embankment and ovenurned.
Scarberry was transported by LifeFlight emergency helicopter
service to Grant Hospital in Columbus.

Lafayette Mall • Call_ipolil

SHOWJ(N

;

,.'' '

Vinton m·an killed in tractor mishap

The Shoe Cafe

PRACTICE DEFENSIVE DRIVING.
Watch out for the other person.
For pointers on auto safety,
me, your State Farm agen~t._ __

'

MAKING DONATION- The Rutland Eli Dennlsoo Post 467
or tbe American Legion Saturday donated $300 to tbe Rutland
Youtb League ror construction of concession buildings. Here,
Mark Tillis, len, rll'st vice commander or the post, gives a check to
Andy Vaughan, preside11t orthe Rutland Youth League.

1994 BUICK CENTURY

A

•.:,•

Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Portsmouth plane crash
victim in criti.cal conditipn

-~

I

1 Soction, tO Paget 35 cent.

Five die in smash-up

$11 395

Automatic, air conditioning,
rear defogger, 8,000 low
miles.

80s.

ent1ne

Contnued from D-1
What does this mean to people
who expecl to receive lump swn
dislibulions? It means !hat decisions
with respect 10 the disposition or the
lump sum distribution wiU have to be
made much sooner than before. It
also means that both employer and
employees must be more aware of all
of the options available. Your finan cial adviser can provide information
on the best course of action in your
individual case.
Bryce and Mark Smith are investment brokers with Ad vest, Inc.,
in tbe Gallipoli~ office.

$

Tonight, partly cloudy.
Low In 60s. Tuesday, chance or
rain 40 percent High In lower

•

15" aluminum wheels, spoiler, air conditioning,
cassette, tilt wheel, delay wipers, rear defogger,
power door locks, anti-lock brakes.

Whenever you're driving
and wherever youtre bound...

CAROU

Pick 3:
603
Pick 4:
7128
3-12-22-24-35-38:
Kicker:
738228

*Includes $400 Under Age 30
Allowance!

1994 SUNBIRD LE COUPE

RANDALL HAYS

store manager.

By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - The purpose of
failed acreage credit is to provide
planted acres credit for a crop !hat
failed because of natural disaster or
other weather-related conditions.
In tim es of natural disaster ,
farm ers a re concerned about
replacing lost income and in
re ceiving planting credit for the
lost crop to maintain their production history and protect crop
acreage bases for participating in
USDA commodity programs.
Failed acreage: Producers must
file a report of failed acreage with
1heir county ASCS office within 15
days after the date the abnormal
condition occurred or was obv1ous,
but before physical evidence of the
crop is destroyed.
There is a nominal fee charged
for a field visit to inspect the planting and caring of the crop, and 10
verify disaster conditions. This fee
is refunded once the disaster is verified in the field.
Planing credit: Farmers who
have crops that been damaged so
thai Jhey cannot be harvested
(failed acreage) may apply for
planting cr~dll. Fatled _acreage ts
considered planted for hiStory credit The county ASC committee will
substantiate the disaster and deter·
mine the planing credit
Burley tobac co producers
should note beginning with the
1994 crop year the fail acreage
option will allow for history credit
when a crop is lost due to natural
disasler and no tobacco will be
marketed. This could be an important option to producers who must
have a history credit to keep from
losing quota under the 2 out of 3

()hio Lottery

ankees
inKC
ournamen

CHECK RUNWAY - Mike Chasteen, Iert, from tbe Greater
Portsmouth Regional Airport, and Robert Hancock, from the
National Transportation Safety Board, take a tour or the runway
Sunday in Portsmouth after a plane crashed into a hillside about a
mile away from the runway, killing five of the six on board. (AP)

1994 SUNBIRD
CONTEST WINNER • Five-year-old Kyle Hunter, Crown
Cit y, was named winner or the "Indy" Elfmobile given away
rccenlly by Big Bear and the Keebler Cookie Co. Pictured left to
right arc Mark Spires, local Keebler sales representative; ~unter
and his mother, Mary Lee Hunter and Brennen Hughes, B1g Bear

---------or--------..

Commission documents show
that 37.5 percent of gross receipts
were to go to the state. That money
was to be used to help blind people
establish their own food businesses
at rest stops.
Two three-month extensions
were to be allowed if Nationwide
Equipment complied with contract
provisions. The contract was
extended for one three-month period but canceled Dec. I.
State records showed Nationwide Equipment owed $120,395 in
underreponed receipts, $104,588 in
bounced checks and $28,917 in
unpaid bills for cleaning the rest
slop vending areas, the Dispatch
said.
Complaints, dating to April
1993, included the company's fail·
ure to stock machines, to repair
broken machines and to keep vending areas clean.

into flames.
/
The pab'ol identified'the-dead as
pilot Bernard P. Allen, 58, of
Lucasville; Gary A. Timmons, 42,
and his sons, Bradley A. Timmons,
19, and Bryan W. Timmons. 14, all
of Piketon : and Richard Blake,
Charles' father, of Lucasville.
Richard Blake's age was not available.
·
The group was headed 10 Alabama for a NASCAR race at the Talladega Speedway.
Charles and Mary Lou Jarvis
called 911 al 7:40a.m. to report
what sounded like a plane crash
near tlleir home.
Mrs. Jarvis heard a cry for help
and ran across Ohio 335.

"I yelled, 'Are you from th e
plane crash?' and he said , 'Please
don 't leave me,"' Mrs. Jarvis told
The Columbus Dispatch.
She ran back home and dialed
911 again.
By 8:30a.m., Mrs. Jarvis and a
deputy sheriff had found Charles
Blake.
" He said, 'There are five others,
all dead , and one's my father. ~ "
Mrs. Jarvis told the new spaper.
"Unfortunately, he was right"
Messer said investig ators
believe Charles Blalce survived
because he was thrown from the
plane, which crashed in a hilly,
dense forest less than a mile from
the airpon.

lnvesugalors from the r:cderal
Aviation AdminiStration and th e
National Transportat ion Safety
Board were 1nvcstt gaong.
The Rev . Marvm Fra sure. who
owned the plane with Allen. " '"'he
doubted that fog played rn uclt of a
role. Frasure, of South Shore. Ky..
is also a pilot.
" We know Lh1 s area," he told
the Dispatch. " I can ' t sec Bernie
making any kind of a tum without
being sure of his altitude. He dtdn' t
have to sec: he cou ld nv the InStru ments. Somethin g fool ed him, or
something went wrong. "
Portsmouth is m Scioto County
in southern Oh1o. ahout ~0 mtles
south of Columbus.

Simpson's defense wants own DNA tests
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Blood
scrapings, hair samples, cells of tissue and three liule leuers: DNA .
That's the latest battleground in the
O.J. Simpson case.
Prosecutors hope so-called
genetic fingerprinting can tie Simpson to the slashing death of his exwife and her friend.
Simpson's lawyers want a share
of the blood found at the scene of
the slayings and at Simpson's
estate so they can conduct their
own tests, but the prosecution says
there's not enough to go around. A
hearing was scheduled for todjty.
"There's absolutely no legal
authority in California for forcing a
split of samples.'' said Alameda
County prosecutor Rock Harmon,
who has used DNA evidence in
numerous cases.
But William Thompson, a professor of social ecology at University of California-Irvine, noted !hat
double-checking is routine in other
areas of science and can catch or

prevent enors: ''Right now, we use
more stringent scientific methods
to diagnose sb'ep throat man we do
to send someone to the gas chamber."

· Prosecutors planned to begin
DNA testing of their evidence on
Tuesday. They gathered blood, hair
and tissue at the scene where
Nicole Brown Simpson. 35 , and
Ronald Goldman, 25, were stabbed
to death on June 12 . The results
will be compared with samples
taken from Simpson, 47, who has
pleaded innocent to two counts of
fust-degree murder.
Defense lawyers also planned to
ask prosecutors today to lum over
nearly all their reports and leads.
They claim that prosecutors were
so eager to bag a celebnty, they
overlooked information that would
exonerate Simpson.
They asked for police repons on
prowlers and burglaries in Ms.
Simpson's neighborhood in the six
months before Jhe slayin~s : a
search of computer records for a

match to unidentified fingerprints
from the slayin g sce ne : police
reports of similar unsolved killings
in the state over the past year and
criminal histories of everyone
involved in the case.
They also asked to see reports of
any internal investigations invol ving detectives assigned to the case
and hospital records on anyone bitten by a dog in the 24 hours after
the deaths. Ms. Simpson's dog led
a neighbor to the bodies.
DNA - deoxyribonucleic acid
-defines each individual's unique
genetic code. Some sciemists call
DNA testing the greatest forensic
breakthrough since fingerprinting.
Others argue it is subject 10 con tamination and laboratory error and
cannot be !rusted.
"If I were guilty I don't think I
would want duplicate testing,"
Thompson said. "I would sit back
and wait for the prosecution laboratory results and then argue that
there was error in the testing."
In another development , two

survey s found that blacks think
Simpson is not getting a fa1r shake.
A Princeton Survey Research
Associates poll conducted for the
Aug. I issue of Newsweek magazine found that 60 percent of black
Americans believe Simpson w~s
framed , compared to 23 percent for
whites . The 461 whites and 251
blacks were polled from July 2022. The margin of error ts plus or
minus 4 percentage pomts.
A poll conducted for Time magazine and CNN found that 63 percent of whites believe Simpson will
gel a fatr trial , while 61 percent of
blacks said he will not. The poll of
600 adults was conducted July 1314. lls margm of error is pi us or
minus 4 percentage points.
Meanwhile, lead defense lawyer
Raben Shapiro said Sunday that a
$250,000 reward offered by a New
Jersey businessman , Bernard W.
Gimbel, for information exonerating Simpson and leading to the
capture of someone else was "verv
generous.''

New documents suggest clash in Whitewater case
WASHINGTON (AP) - As
hearings on Whitewater are about
to begin, newly obtained docu ments suggest sharp disagreement
between Treasury Secretary Lloyd
Bentsen and his department's lop
lawyer over cenain aspects of the
Whitewater investigation.
The documents prepared by
Jean Hanson, the Treasury counsel,
urged that Bentsen go before
Congress last March and say he
knew in advance that White House
orficials had been briefed improperly about an active Whitewater
investigation.
But Bentsen gave no such testimony when he appeared at the
March 3 House budget hearing.
Instead, he denied knowing in
advance about the controversial
White House briefings conducted
by Hanson and Deputy Treasury
Secretary Roger C. Altman.
The documents, obtained by The
Associated Press. highlight one
more potential embarrassment for
the Clinton administration as the
politically charged Whitewater
controversy unfolds with longawaited hearings this week in both
the House and Senate.

The House Banking Committee and answers drafted by Hanson for
begins its inquiry Tuesday, while Bentsen, especially concerning a
the Senate banking panel will rol- conb'Oversial White House meeting
low with separate hearings on Fri· in February.
day.
For example:
Republicans are mistaken, howQuestion: "Mr. Allman is the
ever, if they think Democrats, who deputy secretary of the Treasury.
control the Congress, will allow a He didn'l tell you about the Februno-holds-barred attack on the presi- ary meeting?"
Answer: "I now believe that
dent.
A memo, drawn up by the Ms. Hanson and Mr. Altman conHouse committee's Democratic sulted with me in advance of the
staff, suggests a defensive sb'ategy (White House) meeting on Feb. 2,
1994."
and then a counterattack. Errors in
Hanson then suggested Bentsen
judgment will be conceded. but
then it will be argued that no effon -say he "had not previously rccol·
was made by the administration to lccted" discussions about the briefimpede the investigation of White- ing.
water - the president and Mrs.
At another point, Hanson sugClinton's former Arkansas land
gested
·that if Bentsen were asked
venture.
·why
Hanson
was involved in the
"While Whitewater is a series
White
House
meetings
that he reply
of poor judgments by people who
that
she
attended
the
meetings
"as
should have known better, it is not
a
resull
of
a
specific
request
by
a conspiracy to shield the first famsenior
Treasury
orficials"
and
that
ily from criminal prosecution or
financial injury," said the staff Bentsen again "had not previously
memo.
.......
The Treasury documents concerning Bentsen's testimony before
the House budget panel last March
consisted of proposed questions

recollected that discussion.· ·
The scenario as outlined by
Hanson's draft questions was chal lenged by Bentsen 's office Sunday.
And an administration source, who
spoke on the condition of anonymity, insisted that the dummy Q-anctA series concerning Whitewater
was never actually given to the
treasury secretary.
It was "Jean Hanson trying to
put words in the secretary· s mouth
which he did not recall," Edward
S. Knight, a senior adviser to
Bentsen, said Sunday.
He added that Bentsen stands by
his original statement on Whitewater: That he was not aware prior to
March 3 that Hanson and Altman
had conducted the series of briefings for key White House officials.
Hanson has refused 10 comment
on any aspect of the Whitewater
case and her attorney, Harvey Pin,
could not be reached Sunday night
for comment. Messages were left at
his office and home.

__ -----·---..
,..~·~·"'

~

Small crowd on_ hand for pool fund raiser
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Middlepon's first try at raising
money to save its aging pool was
mediocre at best, a rund-raising
organizer said Monday.
On Friday arternoon, a local
charitable gr0up donated and
cooked 67 pounds of beans and
made loaves of corn bread ror a
crowd that never showed up, Councilman Jim Clatworthy said.
"I was disappomted in the
crowd, but we made some money,"
Clatworthy said.
Only about 60 people ate at the
benefit diDner, in which all village
officials even showed their support,
Clatworthy said.
"The community just did not get

behind it," he added. "I think peo·
pie care for the pool. It's not the '
end for the pool it's just a start."
Clatworthy challenged other
groups to dream up more successful fund-raisers.
Also on Saturday, members of
tbe village park board gathered
about $300 from a yard sale and
baseball tournament, said Bob
McClure, a member or the park

board.
"
"It wasn't great but it was
decent," McClure said. Another
yard sale is slaled ror Aug. 1-3.
On Friday, the Meigs County
Commissioners pledged $5,000 out
of the 1995 budget 10 help repair
the pool, McClure added.
The village has applied for a

Division of Natural Resources
grant !hat may pay for half of the
$80,000 needed to re-open the
pool, Mayor Dewey Horton told
The Daily Sentinel in a previous
interview.
"We need (the pool)," Honan
said. "We've already had one person drown in the river tllis year. It's
never made a profit, but most cities
don't make a profit."
The facility loses at least
$12,000 a year and nwneious families own pools, Horton added.
In March, state officials ordered
new steel suppons, upgrades for
the electrical system and replacement of wood steps with cement
ones. The estimated cost or
repairing the 60,000-gaUon, above-

ground pool includes $25,000 for
the electrical system, $10,000 for
wall reinforcement, $10,000 for
floor steel, $10,000 for deck cleaning/cover, $7,000 for new stairways, $2,000 for new railing ,
$10,000 for engineering and $6,000
for contingencies.
A new pool could cost about
$350,000 and the current facility
could last 10 more years with
repairs, a state official said. But the
repair costs could be held 10 a minimum with donated supplies and
work, Horton added.
The village may have 10 put a
levy on the ballot this fall that
would help pay for the pool repairs,
he added.

MEIGS EMS AWARDED GRANT- Tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services was awarded a $12,133 state grant
Friday ror trainln11 11Dd equipment. State EMS Director Rodger
Glick, right, presents the cbeck to Meigs Director Bob Dyer. The
money ill pari or a $1.8 million grant generated from safety belt

noes.

•

•

•

�Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July 25, 1994

111 Court Street

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

ROBERT L. WI:&gt;IGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMDLR of The As&gt;actated Press. Inland Dally Press Aswc ta LLo n and
the Amencan ;-.iew spapcr Pu blisher A. ssoc Ja!lOn

LETil:R S OF OPI I' ION are welcome They should b&lt; less rhan 300
words lo ng Al l le tt.Crs are su bjec t to edtttng and mus t be stgned with name.
address and le !ephone number No um tgned leners wtll be pu bli shed Leuers
shoul d be 1n good ta.sle , add re ssmg tssues. oot perso nalJIIe s

Oh yeah, don't forget we've
gotta pass GATT this year
By WAL TF.R R. '-fEARS
AP Specia l Correspon dent
WASHI\'GTO:'-i - And. by th e way, President Clrnton "-Ou ld like
Congress 10 ge t that worldwide trade agreement ratified soon.
That' s abou t the tone of tbc admrn tstration campatgn for approval of
the General Agreement on Tanffs an d Trade. It 's low-key . no ec ho of the
rntense dri ve for til e \'ortll American Free Trade Agreement rn 1993 Th e
Whr tc House wants GATI approva l mrs year, and that ma ) take a push
later. But health care ts tile main event now .
Actuall y, later won' t be long. Congress is schedu led to recess after
Aug . 12 for its sum mer vacation, alt hough mere's talk of postpomng rtto
IICI on health care. The lawmakers return after Labor Day, w1 th on ly a
month or so before adjournment.
.
GATI rs broader than NAFTA , rn volvrng 123 natiOn s; more complt ·
ca ted, running 22,000 pages, and lon ger rn the makrn g, seven years of
bargarning. But it is n01 stimng tile son of controversy the other dea l did .
. There arc disputes to be argued and settled . but they tend to tile tec hmcal, over thin gs ltke spec rflc trade terms. subsidiZed fann .exports and tarrff offsets, without th e polrtical and someumes dramatiC punch of the
:'-iAFT A struggle.
,
..
Organized labor battl ed to beat NAFTA. On GATI , meres opposttton
among umons of tcxule and apparel workers, but no solid front House
Democra ti c leaders are backrng GA TI; two of them broke w1tll Cltnton to
oppose NAFT A Ross Perot's trade people don't like it, but he's not out
front as when he was bu ying televrsron ume to argue thai under NAFTA
there' d be a grant sucking sound as U.S . jobs went south to low-wage
'Jlcx reo.
Cl inton told the Na uonal Governors Association on Tuesday that
:-&lt;AFTA is worktng superbly , with U.S. trade to Mexico growing more
rapidl y man wnh any otller country, five- fold in automobile sales alone:
'\ow, Clinton saii*Jc needs Congress to approve the GATI legtslatton
thr s year . "It w il~te a half a millmn htgh wage JObs rn Am enca
between now and the end of tile century," the president said.
· A majority of the governors already had endorsed tile pact, extending
and broadening tile world trade agreement, reducing tariffs by .about onethird. and creaung a new World Trade Orgamzauon to enforce tiS terms.
Cntics have said tlley would sacrifice American sovereignty, but Mick~ Kantor, the U.S. trade representauve, said that's not so. "I think we are
;1l; protected as you can be,'' he told the governors, moreso tllan under tile
prior G ATI terms.
. .
.
: The president's trade talk was an astde m a health care speech. He s
pu shed periodically for GA TI approval . Clmton and hts stx colleagues at
tlie economic summit in Naples said they were determrned to raufy GATI
fl'y Jan . 1 and otller nations should do the same. While he was mere, Clin·
ll)n went joggi ng in aT shirt tllat read ''GA TI Now '94."
.
·· The GA TI legislation has not yet been proposed. The Whtte House
c;pects to do that early in August, guided by preliminary decision s in t~c
congressional committees tllat already are constdenng the agreem ent. It s
&lt;f&gt;ne that way because once the btllto implement the accord has been forl'!lally proposed rt can't be altered or amended, by tile administration or in
tile House or S~nate. There has to be a vote to approve or reject, witllin 90
aays.
.
~ That spec ial procedure is called fast track . II ts granted for trade deals
~ause otherwise, negotiators would have to hedge every bargam pend·
il)g an okay in Congress.
• The most uoublesome issue involves the cost of lower U.S. tariffs.
Under congressional budget rules , there have to be cuts or Jaxes 10 offset
all estimated $12 billion reduction in tariff revenues over the next five
'f.roiS.

: There were suggestions tllat the rule be waived or altered to count the
{i-occeds of increased exports under GAIT, but tile key senator on the
citse said that wouldn't work, couldn't pass.
• Sen . Daniel Patrick Moynihan , chairman of the Finance Committee,
p;.odded the White House to move more urgently on GATT, say ing delay
could breed opposition.

•

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice presidenl and columrrist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

:Berry's World

AS HING TON - Congress
hJ.S spe nt more than S34 million on
" sc rewworm researc h" thi s year ,
\CI 11 could n't find S ~ 6 mrllr on to
hurld " ncv. ,c hoo l for th e Puyallup
ln diJfl tnbc
In :\o&gt;c mhe r 1991 . v. e repon ed
thJt lhe trl he's Chref u ~t hr School
1n Ta,oma, Wash , wa.; a dea thtrap
- an unso und mr; hmash of con"""· rubb le . cia) ules. plasu: r and
brr cks . The Burea u of Indi an
Alia~r s had bee n warned that the
I'" c -s tory burld1 ng cou ld collapse
.n hr gh ., mds and large secuvns of
bnck could fall off at any lime. Yet
the age ncy wou ldn 't even mstall a
ic nce around th e build.mg 10 reduce
1h e rrsk of children bein g hit by
iallmg debns.
A few weeks after our co lumn ,
BIA finall y de termin ed th at the
bu rldrn g was an " immed iate haz a rd to health and safe t y" and
ordere d th e sc hool to relocat e to
tc mp o ra r) fac ilrti es within a
month
After near ly three years. th e

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0 1994 by NEA. Inc

"Hey' A T-shirt with no graphic and no
message. GREAT GIMMICK!"

•

I

tn be IS sti ll wruung for tile funds 10
budd a new sc hool. Conditr ons are
' o deplorable at American Indian
,c hool s that Chtef u sc hi "as only

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

c onun~cd fundmg rs be rn g used IO

Aceu-Weather" forecast for

Jmc th'e JX SI out orMeXICO.
\ cv. wtu 1e House Chref of Staff
Leon PJnctiJ. v.h o has bee n burred
rn buJcct boo ks for the past 18
m on th s~"' ill scc tile human face of
those budget dec r&lt;rons thi s week .
Rc prc ,entJtr'c' ol the Puyallup
trrbe plan to nuke thc cr case lor a
nc u. ~ h ool h L1ll'C lO PlD ~ tLJ and hts
~ uccc ~sor :b bud'::!.c l Jt rcrto r. Allee

Irs ted as No. 8 on tile BIA 's priori- Rtv hn. 3t J ml'~..·Un~ lL' dt..;cuss the
tv lr st for new sc hoo l constructi on 1996 bud' "'
(unds in 1991 . Sin ce men, all seven
In the m~Jn :t m ~ th ~ Lflbe I S
sc hool s ahead of Chief u sc hi ha&gt; e opcraun g: , ts pre-!\. · l 2 ,:l_~lss c ..; out
rece tved tlleu funding .
o! cramped tcmr L~ r J r :· IJ t: d tu cs.
ThiS was supposed to be the Ekm c ntan s..:hu 0\ , tuJt..·nts w3 11
vear that Chi ef Leschr 's tum finall y outSide tn .t hc rJln to u'c porta·
CJ mc. But rn the name o;f def1 crt JOhn s be ca use t h c ~r ma ke-shift
rcduclion. the Clt mon admini stra · schoo l doesn·1 ha'c hJ!h roo ms
uon rece ntl v shrunk BIA' s budge t
The seventh and c1ghth f: rJders
for f1 sc al /e ar 1995. BIA suhse - v. cre fortunate to gct ··port.:.l- c!Jssquent ly decrded not to request an y roo ms" wrth budt- rn bJthrooms.
new sc hool construCti On funds.
But the h t ~h . . . :ho..'~-..'1 -tuJ,:nt' u-.(' ~~
But tile hud ge t-c runching drdn' t vaca nt e iCml'nlJ r" -.~o. h L'~'l r .·tng
.rl fect scre wworm resea rc h. The le ased lO the lrlPC r:• J I,J,·,ti
,crewworm has alread y bee n eradr- Cath olrc church. B J&lt;~C f.ted ru cs
cated from American so il , but the suc h as se~c n cc lJi"l ' l 1 br :ut ~"- ath-

WIL LWE EVER

WALK ONTH£

M&lt;lJN A6AiN?
Wf'Vf €fiT
10 L£ARN
TO WALK

HEI?E,
FIRSr.

Legal Defen se and Educational
Fund (which is not pan of the
NAACP). The- LDF is the most
vigorous and skillful protec tor of

Nat Hentoff
civil right s in the country
appearing often before tile Supreme
Coun and lower couns. It has had
considerable succes s in voting
rights, employment discriminatron ,
housing, and capital puni shm ent
cases.
Speaking in June before the
Anti -Defamation League's 8Ist
annual National Commission meeting, Elaine Jones cited Khalid
Muhammad's work as the Johnny
Appleseed of undiluted bigotry as well as Minister Farrakhan's
sharing of those views. Elaine
Jones said:
"Every one of us in the civil
rights movement has a moral obligation to denounce anti Semitism .... The cause for which
Martin Luther King fought, and to
which the Legal Defense Fund is
committed, is the grand moral princtple that every American - no
matter his or her race, counlry of
origin, creed or gender - should
have equal rights under the law and
enjoy an equal degree of respect,
acceptance, and opponunity in our
society.
"I could not credibly denounce
racial discrimination against
African American s unless I was

opposed witll equal fervor to any
otller form of invidious discnmination."

She read to the Jewtsh group a
lcuer she wrote about black ant iSemitism that was prmted in the
Amsterdam News. a black newspaper in New York : " In the face of
injustice, silence be speaks an insid ious form of assent, a tacit sancuon
that combines vital support with a
patina of easy self- deni al. Over
time, silence converts bystanders
into accomplices."
The Amsl e rdam News rs not
srlent in these mailers , being an
admtrer of Minister Farrakhan. The
headline on its account of Elaine
Jones' speech before the AnuDefamation League was: "NAACP
splinter group's head attacks Farrakhan.' '

In real life, these days , rs the
"splinter group" the Leg al
Defense Fund or the NAACP?
Elaine Jone s then spoke to
whether Jews should have ref mined
from ope nly criticizm g Khalid
Muhammad's speech: "I implore
you to ignore that sort of advice.
Nothing can give greater license to
a program of bigotry tllan the suggestion that the victims real ly don't
mind. That was what the slave
owners said of tile slaves, and what
segregationists said about ' therr'
Negroes."
She also said it was tim e for
Jews and blacks to again work
together in projects "to try 10

~·

Let's face it. The U.S. Postal
Service is an unmillgated disaster.
That's called a generalization.
To which you might respond:
"So, what's new?"
To whrch I would reply: "A
lot." Specrfics follow.
Neither rate increases nor
automation nor ever-lengthening
ZIP codes can speed the mails on
their appointed rounds . A system
with 40,000 different offices and
800,000 employees has become a
shambling fiasco.
Now, we all had teachers and
coaches and parents who taught us
not to kick someone when he's
down . But whether the public,
Congress and other interested parties try sweet reason, tighter work
rules, loud screams or long-suffering patience, things continue to
deteriorate. Given the provocation,
who wouldn't jump onto the heap?
America's frustrated postal patrons
just want a little consisrently DUstworthy service, which is exactly
what we don't receive.
last summer, I probably bored
many of you by wnting about mail
that didn't get forwarded, week
after week, phone call after phone
call. This summer, the annual
whine will again open on a personal note but will elevate itself quickly onto a more statistical plane
before ending where it belongs with you.

A friend in Anniston, Ala., not an exceptional case. It was a
wrote a lc!ler to me, correctly relatively minor example of
addressed save only for one small endemic failure .
Just a few days before tile letter
glitch in the ZIP code, on June 21.
had tortoised its way from Anniston to me, The Washington Post
Hodding Carter Ill carried
one of those understated
It was postmarked rn Anniston on front-page stories which deserves
June 22. Twelve- 12 - days Armageddon headlines. Based on
later it had made those 800 or so information in the Business Ma rlcrs
miles northward to Washington. Review, a newsleucr , it sa id that
where it was postmarked on July 4. just six out of 10 first-c lass letters
Nine days - 9 - later, it was were received on Jimc in Washingdelivered to my office, which is ton."
about 20 blocks away from the
That put the nation's capital at
main post office.
the bottom of a pathetic heap,
The Jette! was not of critical though others were almost as bad.
importance, but it mattered to at New York City's mail made it on
least two people, the writer and the schedule at a 61.6 percent clip, and
recipient. He wanted me to make Philadelphia's got there as intended
some corrections on an enclosed 68.1 percent of the time.
set of recommendations and return
There were brighter spols,
them no later than July I. The writ- though none where the percentage
er, who happens to be a newspaper- hit above 89. Long Beach, Calif.,
man (about which more later) as led with 88.7 percent on -time
well as a friend, also asked for sug- delivery . Wichita, K.an., logged in
gestions for various tasks we had at 88.7 percent, and Greensboro,
set for ourselves at a meeting in N.C.'s, rate was 85.7. The national
North ,Carolina earlier in June.
average , according to the survey
Once upon a time, a decade or taken last spring, was 78 percent.
so ago, I would have Ueated the That means that more tllan one out
wayward episode lightly. After all, of every five letters did not reach
it saved me a little work, since the its destination on time.
deadline had long passed, and my
Those are disturbing statistics.
friend and I didn't have to argue Another set of numbers leapt off
about the merits of my recommen- the screen and into our throats a
dations. But as many others have few months earlier, when it was
learned i'n recent years, mine was revealed that letrers had a bad habit

MICH.

WOt ld .'\ h llJl " :\rC' !Hlll -CXJ S! Cnt .

Ncvc rthc lc 'i" . man y s tuclcnt s .11
Ch1l'l I L""l h1 dr c hc.ni ng th t.: ol.lds
o n th e n ow n. Thoug h Amcr1can

.and dmp -out rates than

llthn ,.· tllllll" group m the coun t!\ . cmnllnwnt :1t Clnd L~.:sc hi h;as
~1f1lll l \ \ 1ripk d -.. 11u.:e 19()1 to nearl y

:t il )

•

IMansfield 178' I•

lnil ran s sul lc r rrom hi gher un cmp h l) lll L' Ilt

PA

IND.

()()!) \ll Hicll\ '&gt;

•

ln tlian l;l!lllil ''" ii ;J v~..: 1.11 lea s t un c
ulco hol r( rT IC IIlhl'f , Chi ef Lcsc hr
Vvas Jmnorcd hy til ~ governm ent 111

WA SH INGTON (AP) - The
workplace is no longer srmpl y a
place where people earn a l1 ving.
It' s rncreasingly becoming a place
where they fall victim to violent
crime.
A Ju sti ce Department report
released Sunday says nearly I mrl lion violent crimes occ ur in th e
workplace every year , with about
10 perc ent inv olvi ng offender s
anned with handguns.

198'1 rm lt;i~&lt;ll ): one olthc 47 most
cf l"cc tr vL~ antHiru~ and anti -alcohol
program s rll i\lllcr ica - 1hc onl y
tribal schml 10 he selected lor an

W. VA .

award.

" Just gctung up in tile mornin g
is hard enou gh lor a lot of these
kids,' · Jay Sr mchen. a Chief Lcsch1
sc hoo l board represe ntati ve , told
ou r

rc por1 c r Au stin

Jenkin s

" We 've got our dys fu nction.U !'am .
rl ics, our al coholrcs and our dru g
add icts. Ami " lot of that co mes
fro m th e low se lf-esteem Na11 vc
Americans h•1vc abou t thcmsc lvc.'
10 begrn Wllh."
RUN LIK E II EL L. - Wrth a
U.S. invasion of Harll on the hon zon, Rep. Bill Richardson. D·N M..
sat dow n for a fr vc- hour supper la st
week wi th Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras
and his chi ef of staff, Brig . Gen.
Phillippe Biamby , in Port -au Pnnce.
In an effort to mak e small -talk
wrth Cedras, the bruti sh comman de r o f the Haiti an milit ary,
Richardson asked Ccdras whr ch
sports he lik es to pla y. ''I' m a
diver." Cedras repl 1cd. Richard son
asked the boisterou.s Biamby th e
same que sti on.
' 'I' ve wk cn up track ," Bramby
responded, •· so I can run when the
(U.S.) Mannes start in vadin g."
" We know you ca n beat us in
an invasion," B1amby added.
"Hell. the Domini can Republi c
could beat us."
Jack Ander so n and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

define tile nation' s agenda" instead
of continuing on their se parat e
ways.
A frequent charge against Jew s
from many blacks - not all of
them by any means members of tile
Nation of Islam - concerns what
str ikes them as uni fied Jew ish
opposition to affirmative action.
Elaine Jones told tile Anti-Defamation League:
"A generation ago our differences were fram ed. in so mewhat
abstract terms. Today we have a
quarter century of experience to
inform our views. and a considerable body of Supreme Court deci sions which narrow the terms of tile
debate. I beheve that where we arc
able to arrive at a shared analysi s
of the relevant fact s, we would
often be able to reach agreement on
what sorts of affirmative action arc
and are not appropriate .·· ·
It' s up to Jewish organizations
to make the next move. When A.
Philip Randolph , Roy Wilkins and
Whitney Young were still here,
they forged black-Jewi sh alliances
of equal res pect. Elaine Jones is
willing.
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authoritv on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of Riehts.
(For information on how lo
communicate electronically wilh
this columnist and others, con tact America Online by callin~ IHOO-H27-6364, ext. 8317.)

of disappearing in Chicago by the
tens of thousands . Over a period of
a few months, nearly 70,000 pieces
of undelivered mail were found in
the Windy City. About 3,000, some
from as far back as I 988, were
found in mid-April in the trunk of a
car belonging to a letter earner.
Another 40,000 were found in the
back of a letter carrier's truck on
Feb . I 0. On March 18 , close to
20,000 pieces of undehvercd mail
were found in the base ment of a
former postal employee, some of
them dating back to 1979.
The powers that be uuered all
the right words. "Unacceptable,"
said Postmaster General Marvin
Runyon after the Chicago revelations. Mail performance in Washington will begin to improve
"within the next several months,"
a postal spokesman said, echoing
Runyon's promise two years earlier
that Washington would soon
become the "showplace" of the
sysrem.
. But that's the point. The promises are old and familiar: The performance is bad and getting worse.
Hodding Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, edi·
tor and publisher, is president or
MainStreet, a Washington, J).C.·
based television production company.

ShoWf1rs T-storms Rain
V~a

Flurri6s

Snow

Associated P19ss GrsphicsNet

Ire

Sunny Pt Cloudy

&lt;Cl994 Accu-Wea1her, Inc.

Extended forecast
Wcdnesday ... Dry . Lows mid
50s to lower 60s. Highs 75 to 80.
Thursday .. .A chance of showers
and thunderslorms. Low s around
60 and high s 75 10 80.
Friday ... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Low s around
60 and highs 80 to 85 . _

--Area deathsWilliam Fry

That amounts to about one-sixth
of all violent crimes in Amenca , an
average of about 971 ,500 per year
from 1987- 1992, acco rding to the
study released by Lawrence A.
Greenfeld , acting director of the
Justice Department's Bureau of
Ju stice Statistics.
But that's to be expected, said
Wesley Skogan, professor of poliucal sc ience and urban affairs at
Nonhwestem University .

Gilbert and Thelma Shirk.
Services will be held Wednesday at I p.m. at Fisher Fun eral
Home m Middleport with Father
Bernard Krajovic officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
Friends may call Tuesday from
7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Five people killed in
weekend accidents
By The Associated t&gt;ress
Traffic accidents claimed five
lives in Ohio over the weekend, the
State Highway Patrol said Monday.
The patrol counted weekend
traffic deatlls from 6 p.m. Friday
through midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
AUSTINTOWN - Kevin J.
Perrett, 25, of Canfield, driver of a
go-cart hit by a van on a city street
in Mahoning County.
CIRCLEVILLE - Isle M. Morgan, 54, of Vinton, Va., driver of a
car that collided with a truck on
Ohio 56 in Pickaway County.
DEFIANCE - Cathie Thomp-

William F. "Bill" Fry, 68,
Mason, W.Va., died Saturday, July
23 •. 1994 in Lancaster. He was
rettred from the mamtenance
department at Philip Sporn Plant
after 37 years of service and was a
member of Mason United
Methodist Church. He was also a
member of Smith-Capehart Ameri- Corinne Hager
Units of the Meigs County
can Legion Post 140 of New
Corinn e "Tin" Hager, 78 , Emergency Medical Service reportHaven, W.Va ., and Stewart-JohnPomeroy, died Sunday, July 24, ed I9 calls between Saturday and
son VFW Post 9926 of Mason.
Born Jan. 15 , 1926 in West 1994 at Pomeroy Nursing and Monday mornings. Units respondColumbia, W.Va., he was the son Rehabilitation CenJcr.
ing included:
A former training supervisor for
of the late Sam and Alah Knapp
Myers Cleaners, she was born in
MIDDLEPORT
Fry.Survtvors
.
. Iud e h'IS wt'f e, Pomeroy on Sept. 23, 1915, daugh9:21 a.m. Saturday, volunteer
me
Vivian V. Ferguson Fry of Mason: ter of the late Earl W. and Daisy fire department 10 Stonewood
Apartments, auto ftre, Blue Streak.
three sons, Mike (Jane) Fry of Needs Brown.
She was a member of the First Cab. Co.;
Pomeroy, William F. Fry, Jr., of
7:36 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Hartford, W.Va.. and Mark A. Fry Baptist Church of Pomeroy and
piano
for
the.church
in
addiplayed
Center,
Mannie McMillan, Pleasof Mason: one brother, Sam Fry of
tion
to
the
Rock
Spnngs
Methodist
ant
Valley
Hospital:
Pomeroy: two grandchildren and
Church.
In
addition,
she
was
mem11
:14
a.m.
Sunday, N. Second
two step grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his ber of the Rock Springs Grange Avenue , Shirley Rou sh, Veterans
parents and one sister, Mary Louise and the Meigs County Senior Citi- Memorial Hospital:
zens.
11 :2 5 a.m. Sunday, Beech
Rickard.
Survivors include three sisters Street, Anna Welch, Holzer MediFriends may call 6 to 8 p.m.
Monday at the Foglesong Funeral and brothers-in -law, Martha and cal Center;
4:49p.m. Sunday, N. Third
Home in Mason where services Jack Greenaway of Pomeroy, Ruth
and
Donald
Tate
of
Middleburg
Avenue.
Jean Fisher. HMC.
will be held I :30 p.m . Tuesday
with the Revs. Damon Rhodes and Heights and Mabel G. and Howard
POMEROY "
Bennie Stevens officiating. Burial Bailey of Jacksonville, Fla.; a
6:19p.m. Saturday, Second
will be in Sunrise Memorial Gar- brother and sister-in-law, Richard
dens where a military service will E. and Maxine Brown of Chilli- Street, Dora Wining, VMH;
cothe, and several nieces and
7:35 p.m. Saturday, Grant Lifebe held.
nephews.
Flight to VMH for Kyle Bailey,
She was preceded in death by Children's Hospital:
Lucy Lake
her
husband, Harold John Hager:
7:34 a.m. Sunday, Children's
Lucy Virginia Gregg Lake, 81 ,
two
sisters,
Edric
P.
Tomlinson
and
Home
Road, Irene Davis, VMH:
Pomeroy, died Sunday, July 24,
Frances
M.
Brown,
and
a
brother,
sunday
I 994, at Pomeroy Nursing and
Earl Raymond Brown.
8:31a.m. Sunday, state Route 7
Rehabilitation Qnter.
Services will be held Wednes- and U.S . 33, Tim Shaffer, VMH ;
Born Dec. 14, 1912, in Middle10:08 a.m . Sunday, Pomeroy
port, daughter of the late Minnie day at I p.m . at Ewing Funeral
Home
in
Pomeroy
with
the
Revs
.
Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center,
Milhoan Erlewine, she was a memPaul
Stinson
and
Keith
Rader
offiMary
Gee
, VMH:
ber of the Middleport Presbyterian
ciating.
Burial
will
follow
in
Rock
1:18
p.m
. Sunday, PNRC,
Church, a graduate of Middleport
Springs
Cemetery.
Josephine
Mallory,
VMH:
High School and the Columbus
Friends
may
call
Tuesday
from
10:45
p.m.
Sunday
Laurel Cliff
Beauty Academy and a partner in
Road, Emma Fox, VMH:
the former Erlewme Beauty Shop 7-9 p.m. at the funeral horne.
12:18 a.m. Monday, Wolfd Pen
in Pomeroy.
Road, Katherine Hall, HMC.
She is survived by two daugh- Harry Tate
ters and sons-in-laws: Judy and
Harry Tate, 95, of New LexingRACINE
Paul Barrows of Athens and Karen
ton,
died
Friday,
July
22,
1994,
at
I
:34
p.m.
Saturday, Main Street,
Roush and Cllarles Nease of Middleport; six JUllfl(lchildren and two Good Samaritan Hospice in Tammy Clark, VMH:
Zanesville.
8:28 p.m. Sunday, Third Street,
great-grandchildren.
Born Aug. 21, 1898, in Kyger in
Ronnie Pickens, treated at the
· Other survivors include two sisGallia County, the son of the late
ters, Farie Kennedy of Middleport Hugh and Nora Jenkins Tate, he scene.
and Dolly Bailey of Springfield; a was an auto mechanic in the New
REEDSVILLE
brother, A.E. Erlewine of Long
Lexington area.
I
1:54
a.m. Saturday, Number
Bottom and several nieces and
He is survived by wife of 75
Nine
Road,
Raymond Smith, St.
nephews.
years, Flossie D. Rife Tate: son, Joseph's Hospital, Syracuse transShe was preceded in death by Wallacc Tate of New Lexington;
her husband, Jessie F. Lake, in two grandchildren: four great- ported;
12:45 p.m. Saturday, Kaylor
1981, and by two sisters, Marie grandchildren; one great-great
Road, Altce Board, St. Joseph's
grandchildren; and three step greatHospital.
grandchildren.
The D8ily Sentinel
He was preceded in death by
RUTLAND
son, Luther Tare in World War II;
(USPS lll· Mf)
7:26 a.m. Rutland, state Route
and three brothers, Worthy, Harlow
Publi1hed every a!tuooon, Monday lhrouah
143, Aldena Welsh, O'Bieness
friday Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio by the
and Homer Tate.
Memorial
Hospital.
OhiO Valley PublilhiDJ Company/Multimedill
Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Monlac., Pomeroy, Ohio 4S169, Ph. . 992-2156.
SecoDd c1111 pt)sta&amp;e p&amp;d at Pomeroy, Ohio.
day at the Roberts Funeral Home in
TUPPERS PLAINS
New
Lexington,
with
the
Rev
.
5:40
p.m. Saturday, stale Route
Member: The Asaoclated Prtu., and the Obio
Roger Grace officiating. Burial will 7, Mary Marcinko, St. Joseph's
NewJpaper A.uociation, Nalioaal Advatiling
Repreaealllive, Bra.oham Newspaper Salea,
follow in the New Lexington Hospital, Po'lneroy assisted:
73~ Third Avenue, New York. New York
Cemetery.
7:56p.m. Sunday, stare Route 7,
10011.
Lorena Frecker. Camden-Clark
POSTMASTER: Seod Ptreu clwlges to The
Memorial Hospital.
Daily Seultacl, 111 Cowt SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
•s769.

104 in 1934 . The record low was
52 in 191 I.
Sunset today is at 8:53 p.m .
Sunrise Tuesday is at 6:24a.m.
Around tbe state
Fog covered much of the Nortlleas t today , while the Midwest
dawned cloudy and cool.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms were expected in pans of
the Nortlleast. with te mperatures in
tile 90s along the coast and in tile

Cloudy

-------Weather-----South-Central Ohio
Tonight ...Panly cloudy with a
20 perce nt chance of thunder storms. Low in the mid 60s. Mainly
southwest winds Jess than 10 mph.
Tuesday ... Variable cloudiness
with a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms. High in the lower 80s.

By The Associated Press
Little chan ge in the weather is
expec ted for the beginning of tile
week.
Partly to mostly cloudy skies are
expec ted Tuesday. Thunderstorms
will again be possible almost anywhere in tile state. Highs on Tuesday will be rn the uppe r 70s and
tower 80s.
The record high temperature at
the Columbus weather sllltion was

thunderstorms were forecast from :
Lake Michigan to nortfiern Ohio.
The Plams lrkely will be cloudy.
wi th stro ng storms from Kansas .
and Nebraska 10 Arkansas. Tern - :
pcra turcs were e.&lt;pected tn the 80s
Intens e heat was expected to
grip tile Southwest, with tempera - ·
turcs in the IOOs and I lOs tn some
spot s . The Pacific slate s were :
expected to be marnly sunny and
dry wit h tempera tures in the 60s
and 70s.
'

80s farther inland.
A cluster of thunderstorms will
likely push through the Tennessee
Valley and toward the coast, and
another batch of storm s was
expected to develop near the Gu lf
Coast. Temperatures were expected
tn the 90s.
In the upper Miss1sstppi Valley
and northern Great Lakes, cold air
was expected to slide in and drop
temperatures tnto the 70s. Iso lated

Crime on the rise in the workplace

• IColumbus leo' I

80'

/\ltlmu gh ', IJIT IC -, tat r.'itic:-; sl1 ow
that th ll'C -IIIJJJ th " nl all Am cr1 can

A black response to black bigotry
When I was young, and antr Semitism was as common in
Boston as Saturday night baked
bean s, mere were )ewr slt leaders
who advised the res t of us to say
nothing: " If we pubhcly criticize
th e anti-S e mites. we will cau se
more anti-Semitism." But silence
encouraged the bi gots, as I found
out when I was punched in tile face
one night.
Wh en some Jews prepared to
picket the NAACP' s June summit
meeting - with Louis Farrakhan
the prized guest - Carl Rowan
accu sed th e m of overreacting,
adding that such actions serve "to
rncrease rather tllan dimintsh anti·
Semitism in black America."
Rowan is hardly alone in advising Jews to be more restrained .
Still, it is hard to be silent when
among tile publications available at
some of the gathering places of The
Natron of Islam are "Jews and
Their Lies" and that perennial
model of calumny, "The Protocols
of the Elders of Zion ."
So, when Minister Farrakhan
says - as he did at the summit " We don 'l get in your family business , you stay out of ours'' silence is unnatural when part of
his business is to make Jews appear
to be eternally diabolic.
But Farrakhan - and those at
the NAACP summit who consider
him worth legitimizing - hardly
speak for all blacks. Elaine Jones is
Director-Counsel of the NAACP

conditions and high temperruures

IClll' l rc lrh . "'' cla ss room s anc1

Mailing letters is still a gamble

...... ...
......
·.·.l··.·.·.·
... ...

Thunderstorms possible around Buckeye State

Tuesday, July 26

1\

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Vital federal funds denied to Indians

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLE:-iE HOEFLICH
Gen&lt;ral \1ana~&lt;r

Monday, July 25, 1994

Hospital news

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions - Leo
Story, Pomeroy; Katherin_e Moore,
Symcuse: Walter _Lee, Midd!eport:
Josephine M. Da~~tel, l.angsvtUe
Saturday discharges - none
Sunday admissions - Mary
Gee, Pomeroy: Josephine Mallory,
Pomeroy
·
Sunday dischar_ges ~ Wa~ter
Lee, Middleport; Eh Wbue, Racme

Francis Scott Key wrote the lyrics
to "The Star-Spangled Banner," but
the melody is that of an old English
drinking song, "Anacreon in Heaven."

son, 44, of Defiance, passenger on
a motorcycle that collided with a
van on Ohio 424 in Defiance Coun ty.
LEBANON - Roger L. Smitll,
35, of Lebanon, driver of a motorcyc le killed on Ohio 48 in Warren
County.
SATURDAY
LORAIN - Jason D. Stewart,
12, of Lorain, driver of a go-cart
that collided with a car on a Lorain
County road.

EMS logs 19 calls

,-

"The workplace is l11e place l11at
people in the labor force spend a
very significant time of tllerr ltfe,''
Skogan said. "That's where you
are when you 're out of bed.
·'People spend much les s of
their time walking around on the
stree ts after dark," he said . "It
could be tllat as a fraction of your
waking life, workplace crime is
actually QUite low."
An es timated 8 percent of all
rapes, 7 percent of all robberies and
16 percent of all assaults occur at
work, said tile report based on data
from the National Crim inal Victimization Survey of U.S . households
during tllosc five years.

On average, that meant 13,100 :
mpcs, 7Y,IOO robberie s, 264,200
aggravated assaults and 615,200 :
si mpl e assaults happened at work
eac h year . In addition, 2 millron '
per sonal thefl&lt; and more than '
200,000 car tllefts occur each year
while people are at work.
.
" When you're at work. your .
property rs more at risk than when
you' re at home," said James Alan ·
Fox , dean of cnm tnal justice at .
Northea stern University. "Your•
pocketbook ts on your desk where
it might be taken. That won't hap- ;
pen at home."
·
The survey has no information..
on homrc1des, since it rs based only:
on Interviews with victims.

Zaire reopens
border crossing
GOMA, Zaire (AP) - Some
3,000 Rwandan refugees set off for
home after Zaire reopened the border crossing, but there was no sign
the one million starv ing people
crammed into squalid, disease-ridden camps here were ready or even

Meigs announcements
Taylor-Harper reunion
The 26th annual Taylor-Harper
reunion -will be held at I p.m. Sunday, July 31 at the home of Ben
and Ruby Rife, 39000 Leading
Creek Rd., Middleport. Potluck I
p.m. followed by business meeting.
Bring genealogical items. For more
information call Ruby Rife at 9923464.
Free Clothin~ Day
Free clothmg day at the Salvation Army, I 15 Buuernut Ave.,
Pomeroy, will be held Thursday
from 10 a.m. to noon . All Meigs

Stocks

County residents are welcome.
Homecoming to be held
The second Kerr's Run home coming will be held at the grange
hall on the Meigs County Fatrgrounds Saturday from II a.m. Jo 7
p.m. Those attending are to take a
brown bag luncheon plus a dessert
for the dessert table. Viola Brown
Hunt is chairman of the reunion
with Helen Brown Harrison as cochairman.

able to head back en masse.
As many as II ,000 refugee$
have dted in recenl days of cholera,
hunger, exhaustion and dehydration, their corpses filling several
mass graves. Aid workers planned
K&gt; start digging six more pits today,
fearing thousands more will dte
before tile international aid opera·
tion is fully underway.
But refugee officials said they
were maktng tentative progress. ,
" We may now be turning the
corner, reaching rock bollom, "
Ray Wilkinson, spokesman for the
the U.N. High Commissioner for.
Refugees said today . "Hopefully
soon we may be able to be climbing out of the abyss that we' re now

Flower show to be held
The Wildwood Garden Club's
annual nower show will be held
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Betty Milhoan .

in."

More people were returnin g
home to Rwanda, he said, and air
and land supply routes were being
established to bring more relief
supplies to those who were staying.

Am Ele Power ·--..--.. --.29 718
Akzo ·--..--..--..... -., .......59 114
Ashland OU - .. - ................ -.35 114
AT&amp;T ._..... _ .. _____ ., __ .54 114
Bank Ooe.--..--.. -· .... --.32 718

Bob Evans--..---·-----..21 7116
Champion Ind. __ , __ ..... -.22 114
ChiiJ'IIIIog Sbop ...- ....·-..--.. 9 314
City Hokllug .... - .....--..--.. -..31
Federal Mogul.-................-.29 3/8

Goodyear TatR __ ,_.,, __...,36 114
K-mart ---·---·-..·----·--....16 3/8
Lands End ---·--..... - ......... 19 114

Limited lnc, ___ ,............ - .... 18 314
Multimedia Inc. ,_..........--.29 518
Point Bancorp ·--.. - .....--.. --11
Reliance Eledrl&lt;-.. -·-··--·191/8
Robbins &amp; Myers·-- --- ..--.. 20
Sboney's Inc ....... ________ ,l3 3/4
Star Bank
518
Wendy Int'L -----------15 318
Worthlugton lod .....--.. --.19114
Stock reports are the I 0:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest of

Alzheimer's support meeting set
The Alzheimer's Disease and
Related Disorders support group
will be held Wednesday from I 10
3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center. Susan Bowers w1ll
speak on hospice.
Scout judging to take place
Projects' of girl scouts will be
judged Saturday at tile Junior fair
building on the fairgrounds Saturday starting at 9 a.m. Outstandmg
girl and troop applications wrll he
taken that day.

7~H,9:1~

NORTH

CliWlt llllr . SJI!'/9llf . l:l ~ l: l $ lPG )

lRUIE
1:20,9:20 lliULIIId'.SIO'/!DII,1:20 l:lO lPG)

._.,.

THE CUE NT

.., '"""

"""'

7:00, 9:)0 laD..!" Jlllr. SM'/1111. 1 :00, l:JO (PC1)

TRUE IllS

oo••m1 •-•••r..,,

7:00 , 9: 4~ l»olLY !WI' .SNr!fiUit, 1 :00, l: ·~ CR)

HNGELS IN THE OUTfiELD
7:10 9:10 DIUU' WIT.Siti'/IUI.1:10 1:10 II'Cl

OISNEY S liON KING
7:10 9;00 D\ILT Mf. Mr(I!Ut.l;IO l:OO (G)

SPUD

oo "I'&gt;H

110 ...,,.

•••r

7:10,9 : .10 DkiLY 1Wf.Sid'/9.1U:10,l:JO (RI

------·-----.38

Gallipolis.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
July 22 discharges- Martha
Fortner Tina Scarreu, Mrs.
Eldridge' Stanley and son, Melvin
Boster, Kelly Kingery. Tammy
Barker and Bobbi Cook-Leach.
July 22 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Mitchell, daughter, Gallipolis.
~
. .
July 23 discharges - Vtckt
Cadle.
July 23 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Barnett, son, Jackson. Mr. and
Mrs . David McCarty, daughter,
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Moore. son. Gallipolis.
July 24 discharges - Mrs .
David McCarty and daughter, Mrs.
Jay Moore and son, Mrs. Philip
Mitchell and daughter, Connte
Scurlock, James Smith and James
Jones.
July 24 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Addis, son, Crown City. Mr.
and Mrs. PhiUip Denney, daughter,
Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. John Hatfield, daughter, Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
(Published with permission)

Commemorative Edition

Of
The Meigs County
175th
Anniversary Tabloid

,,

g_

.

, Complete Medical/~urgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

Jobn A. ade,

......
.....,Drive
PI.PIIIasallt,WI.

Cd 104-171-114411ar Appt. or IDior•atioa
Mt•lttr of Itt• PPO &amp; ftdtrt~IMogul PPO
. ·-"·- ...... -

$1.50 per copy
Available at

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH

/

�Monday, July 25, 1994

The Daily·Sentinel

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 25, 1994
Page--4

On the Kyger Creek LL Tournament's final day,

Racine, Gallipolis teams defeat Tuppers Plains nines
The Galltpohs Yankees did more than JUSt become
the firs1 club to wm back·to-bacll; Kyger Creek Ltnle
League Tournament champtonsh•ps for tiS county
smce the. Middleport Braves and the Pomeroy
Yanke-:s did 11 10 ~e 1976 and 1977 seasons.
Sun~ay mght s 3-2 lllle-game vtctory by the
Brown s lnsurance· Sj&gt;Onsored Yankees over the
Tupj)Crs Plluns T1gers m the conclusiOn of the 28th
edt tiOn of the dtamondfest made them the ftrsl

Gallipolis-based team in 19 years to win the Gallia
County-~ tournament
. .
,
lOtb-mnmg notes: The Galltpohs Yankees Cody
Lane won a Wil;;on A 2000 glove for pitching a noh1tter 10 hJS team .s ftrst-round wtn over Mason County
Bar Assoctatton m addibon to a trophy for being the
tournament strikeout arllst. He had 36 ~ in his club's
five contesiS ... the Gallipolis Mariners T.R. Rodgers
got a new bat for httttng the tournament's first homer

in his team's Joss to the runner-up Tuppers Plains
Ttgers ... the Tigers' Eric Smith got a new bat for htl·
llng four homers in the home run derby prior 10
Sunday's consolation game as well as a trophy for
bemg the top home run hiu.er. He had six in helping
push his team to the title game ... the Racine Athletics'
Jason Laudennilt was honored with a plaque recognizmg the left fielder as the tournament's top defensive
p!ayer. .. Laudermilt and Smith were named the tour·

nament's top hitters in recognition of each player getling nine hits....after the championship game, Yankees
head coach Dtck Kuhn was treated to a substantial
removal of his hair by his players ... teams.getting fustround byes lost su out of seven games 111 thts year's
edition. Quarterfinalist Green No.2 was the only such
team to survive the second round The first half of this
century's final decade shows bye teams sporung a 2527 combined record.

Yankees top Tigers 3-2
in championship game

A's defeat Pirates 16-3
in consolation contest

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stall' Writer
In the championship game that the Gallipolis Yankees ended up
winning 3-2 Sunday night, the battle of the no- hit princes - the
Gallipolis Yankees' Cody Lane and the Tuppers Plains Tigers' Eric
Smith had gems seven days earlier and 15 strik.eouiS per hurler in
each game - was, if not heading to another no-hitter, at times the
pitcher's duel that was expected.
Why? After Michael Rodgers' game-opening groundout to
shortstop, Smith fanned Micah Kolcun and Robby Kuhn to end the
Gallipolis first Lane, who retired shortstop/leadoff hitter Josh Will
on a back-to-the-hill bouncer, struck out Matt Bissell and second
baseman/No. 3 hitter Kirt Spencer swinging to finish the Tuppers
Plains first.
But Gallipolis drew fust blood when Lane, who beat third sacker
Josh Broderick's throw to first for an infield single, moved around
on a walk to Justin Jones, a wild pitch during Jeff Mullins' at·bal
and a wild pitch during left fielder/No. 8 hitter Wes Larkins' at-bat
Tuppers Plains erased that 1-0 lead when Smith singled by
grounding Lane's 2-1 pitch into cenler. After Malt Edwards' double
down the left fteld line got Smith to third, Broderick's groundoutto
first got Smith home with the tying run and moved Edwards to
third.
Edwards scored the go-ahead run on Matt Caldwell's single
down the right field line. But the Tigers' bid for the third run was
snuffed when Larkins, fielding the ball after Jcremc Osborne's
single to left center, fired to Kolcun at third to retire Caldwell and
end the inrting.
Each starter got two more strikeouts each and one groundout to
lake control of his half of the third.
However, wild pitches hurt the Tigers in the fourth, as Lane, who
got aboard on a walk, took advance of three such pitches to erase
the Tigers' 2-llead and create the game's ftnal deadlock.
While Lane retired the Tigers in order in the fourth and fifth,
Tuppers Plains survived putting two runners in scoring position
with a wild pitch by stranding them when Robby Kuhn grounded
out to third to end the Gallipolis fifth.
But the Yankees got a repeat of their early second-inning
exploits on the basepaths. Lane beat Broderick's throw to ftrst for
his second hit of the game. Jones walked for the third lime in the
contest
Then Mullins - his one-out, two-run single in the sixth inning
of Saturday's semifinal game against the Racine Athletics gave
Gallipolis a 4-3 victory- hit a flelder's-choice grounder to second
that forced Jones at second, but Will's throw to first was off the
mark, and Lane scored the eventual game-winning run. Jimmy
Wiseman lined out to Bissell. the new second baseman, who
stepped on second base to end the Gallipolis sixtlt.
Despite the 3-2 margin, the Tigers were knocking on victory's
door when Will, who beat Kolcun's throw to ftrsl for an infield
single, got to third on Spencer's groundout along the first base line
- Lane fielded it and tagged Spencer out as the latter passed by and a wild pitch during Wes Crow's at-bat However, Crow's backto-the-mound groundout ended the affair.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
The Racine Athletics, rebounding from a 4-3 final-inning loss to
the Gallipolis Yankees in Saturday's semifinal contcst, struck early
and often en route 10 a 16-3 mercy-rule win over the Tuppers Plains
Pirates in Sunday afternoon's consolation game.
Despite their successful history in getting plenty of runs out of
six-batter-plus innings in this tournament, the Athletics wasted little
time but plenty of batters in getting their early lead.
The ftrst inning saw shormop/leadoff hiuer Kyle Norris and No.
2 hitter J.B. Boso score on two errors and one wild pitch ,
respectively, before catcher Russell Reiber, the middle hitter in their
lineup, came to the plare. In all, Racine sent up eight batters in that
frame and got two runs.
But in the bottom of the inning, Boso struck out two of the ftrst
three hitters he faced in the bottom of the frrst to give the Racine
lumber another chance to get plenty of batters to the plate. And
plenty was what Racine got.
The second inning was the stage for the Athletics' sill-run riotJamie Baker's two-run homer came after four runs were squeezed in
among the preceding 10 pitches from Pirate starter Brad Willford.
After Racine picked up two more in the fourth to put the Pirates
in danger of a mercy-rule loss in four innings, Tuppers Plains,
facing first baseman-turned-pitcher Chris Randolph, needed two
bauers to gel on the board and force Racine to play at least one
more frame.
Joe Brown, who started the Pirates' fourth with a flare single to
right, got home on Matt Grubb's one-out single to right center.
Grubb scored when he took advantage of the confusion Reiber,
Racine third baseman Tommy Roberts and Norris were having
about who should be thrown out on the rundown when Grubb and
Ben Wolfe were in the vicinity of third base.
Chastened by their coaches, the Athletics responded by getting
six runs out of 10 batters in the fifth. In the bouom of the ftfth, the
Tigers, despite cheers from their fans generated by such derring-do
as Brown's hurdling Reiber at the plate and returning to touch it
hefore Reiber could tag him - Josh Connolly had the single that
got Brown home - fell when Connolly was caught in a rundown
hetween second and t11ird and tagged out.

Lane, who pitched one inning and won in relief of Kolcun in the
Yankees' semifinal win, fanned nine and walked none in his
complete-game perfonnance. Smith and Spencer combined to strike
out I 0 and walk four.
Kolcun's fifth-inning single carne among his three !rips and was
the only other Gallipolis hit.
The Tigers, who beat the Tuppers Plains Pirates 12·2 in
Saturday's semifinal game to get to the championship game, got hits
from Caldwell, Edwards. Osborne. Smith (all1-2) and WiU (1-3).
Inning totals
Gallipolis Yankees ................................................010 101 = 3-3-0
Tuppers Plains Tigers .............................................020 000 = 2-5-1
WP-Lane
LP-Smith

.'

.. - ..' "
'-"

SINGLE SCORES TWO - The Racine Athletics' Jason Laudermilt heads to first after hitting a single to right field to score teammates Kyle Norris (in tbe upper left third of the photo) and J.B. Boso
in the second inning of Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament consolation game near Cheshire. The hit brought borne tbe first
of tbe six runs the Athletics got in the frame to help them beat tbe
Tuppers Plains Pirates 16-3 in rive innings. (OVP photo by G.
. Spencer Osborne)

'~~iW· ~;v
.,._._

ARRIVES AT THIRD- The Gallipolis Yankees' Cody Lane
arrives at third base ahead of catcher Malt Edwards' throw to third
baseman Josh Broderick in the first inning of Sunday's Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament championship game against tbe Tuppers
Plains Tigers at the Kyger Creek Employees Club field. Lane scored
all of the Yankees' runs in pushing tbem to a 3-2 victory. (OVP photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

Reds' Central Divison lead slips to one game
Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament
Hall of Champions
Year
Champion
1959 ....................Doc's Fine Foods
1960 ............... Sommerville Motors
.......................... (Point Pleasant)
1961 .................... Pomeroy Redlegs
1962 ...................... Pomeroy Pirates
!963 .... ................ :.Gallipolis Tigers
1964 ................. Gallipolis Red Sox
1965 ................ Middleport Yankees
1966 ................ Middleport Senators
1967 .People's Bank-Point Pleasant
1968 ............... McArthur Merchants
1969 .................... Fruth's Pharmacy
..........................(Point Pleasant)
1970 ........................ City Ice &amp; Fuel
..........................(Point Pleasant)
1971 ................... .New Haven Cubs
1972 ................. Daniel Boone Hotel
..........................(Ripley, W.Va.)
1973 ........................Green Senators
J974 ........................ City Ice &amp; Fuel
1975 ..........Johnson's Supermarket
1976 ................... Middleport Braves
1977 ................... Pomeroy Yankees
1978-85 .................... no tournament
1986..............Tuppers PlairJS Tigers
1987 .... Mason Co. Bar Association
1988 .............. MiddleflO!! Cardinals
1989 ............ Hubbard s Greenhouse
...................................(Syracuse)
1990 ........... Hannan Trace Wildcats
1991 .............. . ............... Coolville
1992..............Middleport Cardinal s
1993 ............................... Bidwell #I
1994 .................. Gallipolis Yankees

Cubs' rotation.
"I would imagine you need a
guy like me on a team," said
Bullinger, a fill-in staner who combined with Randy Myers on a fivehitter Sunday that led the Cubs to a
3-0 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
"We had absolutely zilch going
for us ." Reds manager Davey
Johnson said. ''It was just one of
those days."
Just another stan for Bullinger,
too, who has made 17 relief appearances and seven stans so far.
"He's been absolutely perfect"
Cubs manager Tom Trebelhorn
said. "I don't think we have another Jim Bullinger (on the roster)
who can do what he's done."
And with Anthony Young still
questionable because or a sore
elbow, and Steve Trachsel's blister
not quite healed, Bullinger knows
he's always on call.
"I always come to the park feeling like I'm going to get in a game
somehow," said Bullinger, who
pitched in place of Trachsel. "Usually I get at least a day's notice
before a stan. It makes it a linle bit
tougher mentally, but it's something I have to Jive with now."
Mark Grace went 2-for-3, hitting two doubles and driving in a
run. He has hit in 10 straiaht
games, batting .488 (21-for-43) in
tltat stretch.
.,
"That's when I know I'm
swinging the bat well, when I get
those extra base hilS," Grace said.
"Right now I feel as good as I've
ever felt at the plate."
Bullin~er (5·2) went eight

'

'

YANKEES WIN TITLE- The Gallipolis
Yankees knocked ofT tbe Tuppers Plains Tigers 32 to capture the Kyger Creek Little League Tournament championship Sunday night and end their
season with a 17-5 mark. In the rront row are (LR) bat boy Matt Wiseman, Charlie MulliTJS, Wes
Larkins, Jimmy Wiseman, Robby Kuhn, Allen

innings, al101"!ng five hits. He
struck out four and walked two.
In seven starts this season,
Bullinger is 3-2 with a 2.66 ERA.
Myers pitched the ninth for hts
20th save.
Pete Schourek (5-2) struck out
10 in six innings, matching his
career high. He gave up four hits
and walked five.
The Reds have won three of
their last six games and are 5-5
since the All-Star break. Johnson
isn't worried.
"The guys have been playing
their butts off," Johnson said.
"You can '1 maintain that over 162

games."
Eddie Zambrano singled to lead
off the Chicago fourth, the ftrsl hit
off Schourek, and scored on
Grace's double for a 1-0 lead
Zambrano singled to start the
sixth and reached third on Grace's
second double of the game.
Schourek intentionally walked
Sammy Sosa to load the bases, then
willed Glenallen Hill to make it20.
Schourek got Marie Parent to hit
into a double play, forcing Grace at
home, and struck out Steve
Buechele to end the inning.

Big Bend Youth Football league
Is Organizing For 94·95 Season.
Purpose: To teach basic skills and to develop an
understanding of basic football rules for 5th and
6th graders. To foster good sportsmanship and
positive attitude.
Structure: Develop as many teams as there is an
Interest for.

Signup Dates are: July 16, 10 AM-1 PM;
July 21, 6 PM-8 PM; July 28, 6 PM-8 PM;
August 2, 6 PM-8 PM.
Location: Strike Zone on Front Street, Pomeroy
Players: Cannot be 13 years old prior to September 1,
1994. Copy of birth certificate required.
Fees: Fees for each player is $14.00 membership and
1
$36.00 equipment use.
I am interested In having my sQn or daughter participate in this year's football season.
MAIL TO: B.B.Y.F.L. BOX 190, POMEROY, OH. 45769

·····------------------·-···-------·
Name ____________________________

•

Address-------------

GENERAL TIRE SALES
:

~

IHours M-F 8-5 Sal8·12l
Middleport, Ohio 45760

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

'

Kanou City ...........S I 47
Minnooou ..............46 Sl
Milwaukee ........... ..45 S)

Baseball
NL standings
Eutun DlvWon
Tum
W L PeL
MomreaJ ................ro T1 .619
Atbnu ..................S9 39 .602
P!Uhdclpu. ...........47 l2 .47l
New Yodt ..............45 l2 .464
Aorido ................. ..4S l3 .459

U
14
15

..

40
42
ll

..lll
..176
.474

5I

.474

l3

.448

I
II
II
13.l

U

Colondo ............ ....47 S3
San Diego... .... .39 61

2
10

.470
.390

58

.420

Setulc ....................40 S6

.417

S

Saturday's scores

ISJ

Wtslnn Dlvlll~
Loo Angdcl .......... .48 lO .4!10
San FnnciJco ........47 52 .47l

1.!5
13
14.S

2
5

Califomi.a ..............42

GB

Cen&amp;ral Dlvlllon

CINCINNA11 ....... ..l7
llouotm ................ ..17
PiuJhurah ..............46
SL LooiJ ...............46
Chi&lt;ago................. .43

.S 20
.474
.459

Weltern otwllton
TClU .....................~ S2 .469
Oallind .... ..........44 54 .449

San Frtnci.aco 4, New Yolk 2

Tonight's games
. Chi~••o

(M~Dowell 8-8) 11 K1n..1
Cny (AI'J'l"'' 6-6), I:Ql p.m.
Minne~ou (Eric:i.aon 8· 9) at Tcllll
(Bohanon 0-0). Hili p.m.

San Diea&lt;&gt; 7, 1'\Uladclphia I
Mmtn:al2. Los Angdea 0
H...- II , PiWbwJth 0
Colondo 5, florid• 4

Tuesday's games

Sunday's scores

CLEVELAND (Lopez 0·0) 11 Balli·
mtR(McDonlld 11-6~ Ul p.m.
CliVElANil (Mutincl9·Sl II Balli·
mons (Oquiat 3-2), 7:3S p.m.
Bo•ton (Nabhob: 2-3) at New York
(Key ll-2), 7:0l p.m.

Mmtreal7, U. Anaclt:~~ 4
Ptliltddpltia 5, San biego 3

San Fn.nciloo 8. New York 6
Otiago 3, CINCINNATI 0
Ho.lMlOil 13, Pirubw,h 1
Aorida 6, C:Mondo 4
Allanlo 8, SL LooiJ S

Seaulc (Converse 0-2) l l Detroit

(Wcllo 3-6), 7:0l p.m.
~ilwaultee

Tonight's games
Ailladell!hil (Schilliaa 0.1) at fluid•

(We~~then f-1),

I :OS p.m.

Chia1o (Ban.b 8-8) •t Piutburah
(Ncoale ~8), 8:05 p.m.
11cualm (Swindell 7-6) at Cll'•iCIN ·

NAT! (Smiley 10-9), I:Ol p.m.
Mootnal (Wartiba. 7-S) at Athnt•
(Smob6-IO), Hili p.m.
Now YOlk (Saborhaacn 11 -4) at St.
LoW (Oli""" 2-~~ I :OS p.m.
Lot A.nacloa (Martinez 8·7) 11 San

Fnncilco (l'or!upl9-61 II ili p.m.
Colorado (litl 3-4) 1~ San Diego
(llcnco 6-11 ), II ili p.m.

Tuesday's games

Lol AnteJca (Honllitcr '·4) at San
FriiRCilco (VanLindinah•m S-1). 4:05

p.m.
PhU•dolphi• (Wott 4- 1) at Florida
(llooah l-9), 7:3l p....
Cbi&lt;IJO (Y..... 4-6) .. Pi!UbwJh (l.

Smith 9·1), 7:35p.m.
Howum

(llamiach 7-4)

11 CJNCIN·

NAT! (Rijo 9-4). 7:3ll'-m.
Montnal (ILwy 6-2) 1t Atlanu (Mad-

duo 1:1-S~ 7:40J'.m.
New YOlk (P. Smith 4-9) "SL LooiJ
(I'OIIciol2·7),1:3l p.m
Colondo (Tbompton 0·0) 1t San
llqo(SIIIIIoa :1-7).10:05 p.m.

-DioWH
TWLPd.CB
New Yadt ..............60 36 .625
a . -.............54 41 .s61 s.s
&amp;-...................A1 SO .415 13J
T.......................47 SO .41S 13..l
Datrcd. .......... _......A3 55 A39
II
C•lniDiv-

Cbiclp..................S9 31 .601
CLI!VI!lAND ........l6 39 ..119

l

Philadelphia, 13-4, .765, 3.26; S..berht-

1"'- New Yock. 11-4, .733, 3.04, Maclt·
er, Atlanta, &amp;.3, .7V,l.74; 0. Maddu1.,

Atbnu, 1:1-S, .122. 1.11, Rijo. CINQN.
NAT!, !1-4, .692, 3.10.

York, 23; Myen, Chicaao. 20;
McMichael, ALiarU., 19; Wc:udand. Moo·
treaJ, 18; HudM, Hcmton, 16.

K.w:u City 6. Detroi14
Toronto 4, Tc.u~ 2
MinnCMJtll I 0, Milwa\llulo 6
New Yolk 6, Cllitmti14
Oakland 7, Baltimore 6

A!l.nllll, St. Louis 5 (12)

Colo..do, 9-~• .818, 3.01, K. Hill, MooU'~, 14-4! .778, 3.11; Danny Jtck1011,

Sunday's scores
Booloo8.Seanlc2

aNaNNA T1 3, Chiu8o I (13)

ton. 23; Cbyton, Stn Francitco, 23;
Lulrin, &lt;lNCINNATl, 23.
PITCHING (11 dociaiaru): Frocman,

Jl7, Rijo, CINCINNATI, 136, G. Mad·
dux. Allanta, J ll; Gltvinc., AllanLI, 126;
Saberhaacn. New York,_llO; f111ero,
Montreal, 119; P.J. Marunet. Montreal,
118.

OU...so 4, CLEVELAND~

Saturday's scores

gio, HOUitm., 29; D. Uwil, San m.nciloo, !1; Cur, Flmidt, '11; Mwton. Holt-

DH: Boston 6, Suttle S; Suttle 6,
Boo..,.3(11)
aJ:VE!..\ND II. OUc.go 2
Tormto 9, Tc.u~ I
Oakland 6, B&amp;ltimore 3
Kuu:u City 4, Dc:trat I
Minne.o&amp;a S, Milw•ukca I

New Yodr. 7,Califomia 2

AL standings
Age _ _ Telephone No._.......:..
·· -----------

milt, Chris Burris, Justin Burris, Kyle Norris,
Chris Randolph and Ryan Hill. Standing are Wes
Thoene, Josh Baker, Tommy Roberts, Russell
Reiber, Jamie Baker and J,B. Boso. Behind them
are coaches Dwight Hill, Gary Norris and Bill
Porter. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Scoreboard

many teams according to the level
of interest. Players cannot be 13
years old prior to September I. A
copy of the child's birth certifiCate
must be available at sign-up date.
Fees are $14 for membership
and $36 equipment use.
Anyone interested in helping
with organization this season
should contact league president
Dave Jenkins at 992-2117 or secretary Lisa Roush at992-3486.

FUN FOR KIDS

Skinner and bat boy Adam Adams. Standing are
teammates Richard Mullins, Justin Jones, Jason
Johnson, Micah Kokun, Jeff Mullins, Cody Lane
and Michael Rodgers. Behind them are coaches
Dick Kuhn and Derry Adams. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

ATHLETICS TAKE THIRD- Tbe Racine
Athletics took third place in tbe'Kyger Creek Little teague Tournament by beating the Tuppers
Plains Pirates 16-3 in Sunday afternoon's consolation game and ending their season with a 23-S
mark. In tbe front row are (L-R) Jason Lauder-

BBYFL registration set for Thursday
The Big Bend Youth Football
League will have its final sign-up
Thursday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at
the Strike Zone on Front Street
The purpose of the league is to
teach basic skills and to develop an
understanding of basic football
rules for fifth- and sixth-graders
graders as well as to foster good
sportsmanship and a positive attitude.
The structure is to develop as

'

.~

l.::,,';;._'·

Boso and Randolph combined to strike out nine and walk one.
Willfond and relievers Brown and Cowdery combined to strike out
four and walk five.
The Athletics' hitters were Jamie Baker (3-4, double, HR),
Laudennilt (3-4, double), Norris (2-3), Hill, Randolph and Thoene
(all 1-4). The Pirates' hitters were Brown (2-3), David Rankin,
Corey Whitlatch (both 1-2), Connolly, Cowdery, Shafer and
Willford (all 1-3).
Inning totals
Racine Athletics ..................................................... 262 06 = 16-11-3
Tuppers Plains Pirates ............................................()()() 21 = 3-8-4
WP-Boso
LP- Willford

After Cubs' 3-0 win,
CHICAGO (AP) Jim
Bullinger is such a good b&lt;~Cicup, he
may never make it in the Chicago

J

(Bones 9-7) at Toronto

(Guzman I0-9), 7:35 p.m.

Olicaao (Alvara \I -S)

1t

Kantu City

(Gonion 9·6), I:OS p.m.
Minnetol.l (DeJhaies 5·10) u Teau
(Brown 7-8), 8:3S p.m.
OU.llnd (Ontiverot S-3) 1t California
(Fmley 7-9). I O:OS p.m.

NL leaders
BATTING: T. Gwynn, San Dieao,
.392; BaaweU, Houlton, .362; Morria,
CINCINNATI •. 349; Juatice, Atlanta,

.333, Alou. Monual .. 332; Conine, Aori·
do,.33J, ~'inn. U.. AnadCI. .321.
RUNS: BaaweU, Houaton, 18; Gri•·
10m, Montreal, 79; Bip:io, ~. i1;
Lankford, St. L.ou.it, 75; Galunaa. Col-

orado, 75; Bondi, Sin Francis~o. 74;

A\ou, Monll&lt;ll, 611' McOriJT, Allanlo, 61.
RBI: Baswell. Howton, 91; Bichcue.
Colorado, 90; G1lanaa•. Color1~o_. 12;
Piazza, l..ol AnJclcs, 79; Nan Williams,
Son fnncUco. 7'/' MooN, CINCINNATl,
1S; McOrifl, Atlana, 7~.
HITS: T. OwynB, San Dicso, 138;
Morria, CINCINNATI, 111; Bichono,

Col&lt;rldo, llfr. OalamJI. Colotado, 129,
Baswell. HOUlton. 126; Ccninc. Aorid1.
126; AI&lt;JU, Monue.a.l, 120.
DOUBLES: Big:io,. HOUlton, 36; L
walt .., Manual, 36, Bidxao. Col&lt;ndo,
ll' I. Bdl. PiuabwJh, 29' Ba&amp;wdl. - ·
ton. !I' Morrit, CINCINNATI, 21, T.
Owynn. s.. Di'IO. 21.
TIUPU!S' R. Sand.,, CINCINNATI.
I; Bu.llu, Loe Anael•, I; Cayton, Su
Fnnciaco, 6; D. Lcwia. San Fnndloo, 6;
lO lftl. tied wi.lh ~HOME RUNS: M.au Williamt, San
Pnnciaco. 36; B•awell, HoUlton, ll;
B....Ja,San FnncUco. 31' OalamJI. Col·
orado, 30; McGriff, Al1anu, 21; Sma,
Cbicaao, :1'' Mi!dlcll, CINCINNATI, :14.
STOLI!N BASES, 0D-. MoobMI.
32; D. Sandon, CINCINNATl, 32; Bia·

STRIKEOUTS : Denot, Stn Dioao,

SAVES: D. JonCI, Philadelphia, 26;
B«:l, Stn Franciaco, 23; Franco, New

AL leaders
BATTING: Thcmaa, Ch.icaao, .37o4;
N~w York, .371; Lcflon,
CLEVELAND, .364; BoUo, CLEVELAND, .3SO; Molitor, ToronlO, .346;
BDW, New Yod, .343; Wewt, Tcua,

O'Neill,

.33H.
RUNS: Thomu, Oticap, 99; Lofton,
CLEVEL.AND, 92: Oriffey, Sullie., 81;
C1nseco, Tout, II; Belle, CLEVE-

LAND, 77, l'billipo, Dclmi~ 77, B - ,

CLEVELAND, 74.

llBJ: Puckett, Minnuou, 92; Belle,
CLEVELAND, 90; Carte~, TOft!ftto, 19,
Th&lt;:ln'!"· ag::~~ 17; franco. OUe~ao.
86; SltiTI.,

, 10:

80.

c.n..cco, Teua,

lOTS: Lclton, CLEVELAND, 141;
Molitor, Toronto, 132; Rollo, CLEVE·
LAND, 129; Thomas, Chicaao._l27;
B1cra•. CLEVB~ND, 1 ~; Onrfoy,
Seau.lc., tl.S; P1lmtiro, B•huacn, 120;
Pucltot~ lofinnaola, 12&amp;, Pmtco. Cbica-

&amp;•·OOUBUS:
J:ID.
'
Knohlau.eh, Minnuota.
39' BcUc, O.EVELAND, 33, Thomao,

ctuc:1go, 30; Fryman, Dcuoit, 29; N"Wson, Milw1ukoe, 21; BnrJI, Cl.fVE·

Minn-..

u.ND. 21: Pudt ...
21.
TRIPLES: L Johnson, Oticaao. 13;
Coleman, K11t11a City, 11; Lofton,
CLEVELAND, a, A. Dioz, Milwoukoo, 7'
McRae, Kuuu Cily, 6; While, Tororuo,

6' A. C~lc, Minn....,, s, Brad1 Ander""'· IIIJIUDore, S, Samuel, DMlil, S.

HOME RUNS:

Orirfcr, Scanlc, 36'

Thoma•, O.ic1ao. 35; Belle, CLEVE·
LAND, 30; Canaoco, Tu... 26; Fi.W.,
Detro~\, 25; ~· Vnfhn! 801ton, 21:
PabnGro, Bllwnon. 2 ; SlC111, 01k1an4.

21; Caner, ToiUIIo,-21' C. Davia, Calirornia. 21.
STOLEN BASES: Lofloa, CLEVELAND, S4: Coleman, 1C.1111u City, .46;
Ni-. ....... 36; !Cnd&gt;baolt, ....,__
u, 29; Bllllr Andotaon, Bdilmon, 36; L.
Jahnto11, Clliuao, 24; M~l.aa,ltaaau
Cily, ;zJ; A. Colo. - · ;zJ; larilr,

OUllnd. 23.

•

Pfi'CIIINO (II dccilioao): !toy, New
Yoct. ll-2, .112, 3.36; B - OokoJOo J0.
2, .133, 3.12; N. Clult, CUIVELAND,
11·3, .716. 3.12;. Muaiaa., B·hinon, 144, .771, 3.02; Cone, E1J11u City, 14-4,
.711,l.69i M. P. .z. Now York. I·S,
:m.169: AI•...., Cbit:aao. u-5, .617,
3..0,R.lohnoon,S..alo,lt-S,.WI,137.

sntXI!OUTS: R.

a-.

Jobal4la, Seaule,

11~ Clomool.
152; PialoJ, c.Ji.
fomio, 129; " - " ' r ....... 1~ Awi'"· Klaolo Cily, 12&amp;.
Cfty,
t t6o a.-...
1111; """""""'
CbiCIIO.IIO.
SAVES: Lee Smith, Baltimon, 31;

c-r......,

- · ltaNu City, 20; Apilora,
Mi.nnaaoU;. 20; l!ckonloy. OUiancl, 16;

Ayala, Soulla, IS; ~uttall, CLEVE·
LAND,
Oralie, Caliramil, 13.

TIGERS CAPTURE SECOND - The Tup·
pers Plains Tigers captured second in the Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament arter losing 3-2
to tbe Gallipolis Yankees in the title game Sunday
night and end their season with a 24-2 mark. Sealed in rront is bat boy Aaron Gillilan. Players
kneeling behind bim are (L-R) Matt Bissell,
Nathan Marcinko, Matt Edwards, Joe Marcinko,

Jeremy Gillilan, John Cook, Josh llroderick and
Jer.eme Osborne. Standing are Steven Weeks,
assistant coach Gal• Osborne, Josh Will, Kirt
Spe_ncer, Wes Crow, Eric Smith, Matt Caldwell,
asststant coach Doug Bissell and head coach
Danny Spencer. (OVP photo by G . Spencer
Osborne)

PIRATES FINISH FOURTH -The Tuppers
Plains Pirates fell 16-3 to tbe Racine Athlehcs in
the Kyger Creek Little League Tournament's consolalioo game Sunday afternoon to take rourtb in
tbe 10-day diamondfest and end their season with
a 9-4 mark. In the front row are (L-R) Dustin
Kebler, Ben Wolfe, Jeremy Connolly and Corey

Whitlatch. Sianding are Brad Willford, Wes
Shafer, David Rankin and Joe Brown. llehind
them are coaches Roger Willrord and Mike Connolly, Not pictured were teammates llrian Cowdery and Matt Grubb. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

AN IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING
TELEPHONE SERVICE ASSISTANCE
GTE Telephone Operations offers assistance to help
certain eligible persons obtain new lelephone service,
if they currently do not have it, by allowing them to sign
up for service without paying the usual uplront charges,
such as deposits and service connection charges. GTE
also offers assistance to eligible persons, once they
have obtained service, by discounting the monthly
access line charges lor local service in the amount of
$3.50 and waiving the $3.50 lederal subscriber line
charge, for a total of $7.00 per month. This assistance
is called "Telephone Service Assisla~ce."
You are eligible to receive Telephone Service
Assistance, whether you are a new customer or ali
existing customer, if you are currently a participant in
any one of the following programs:
1) The Ohio Energy Credits Program:
2) Supplemental Security Income if you are receiving
it on the basis of blindness or disability; or
3) Both Medtcaid or Medicare.
In order to receive this assistance, you must complete
an.application, documenting your eligibility in one of
the above programs, and return it to GTE's offices. You
may oblain an application either from our business
office, located at 100 Executive Drive, Marion OH 43302,
or from lhe public agency which administers the
assistance under whtch you qualify for Telephone
Service Assistance. Your eligibility will be reverified no
more than once a year.
There are some restrictions on the services Ia which
you could subscribe if your receive Telephone Service
Assistance. The Telephone Serv1ce Assistance
discounts and waivers apply to flat-rate, unlimited
calling local service only if Usage Sensitive Service is
not available in your service area . II Usage Sensitive
Service is available in your service area, you must take
this service in order to receive the telephone assistance
discounts and waivers. With this service, you would pay
a flat monthly charge for access, plus you pay for usage
in the same manner as you pay for long distance
service.
A typical Usage Sensitive Service monthly rate is
Band 3, where it is $8.36, plus the lederal subscriber
line charge of $3.50, totaling $11.86. Telephone Service
Assistance rates would be only $4.86 per month plus
charges for each call made by the customer, based on
time of day, distance and length of conversation. The
non·Telephone Service Assistance flat rate would be
$13.93 plus $3.50 federal subscriber line charge,
totaling $17.43 per month. (There are six rate bands,
and rates would be higher or lower than this example,
depending on which band the customer is in.)
If you make a lot of local telephone calls, it may be
cheaper for you to sign up for nat-rate local service, 9118n
though that service would not be subject to the
discounts or waivers.

If Usage Sens1Jive Service •s ava1lable in your area
and you lry it, but tater decide you do not like the
service, lor whatever reason, you may switch to flat-rale
service at no charge. II you do switch, however, you will
not gel the discounls and waivers lhal apply to
Telephone Service Assistance, and you will nol be
allowed 10 change back lo Telephone Service
Assistance lor one year.
In addition to the reslriction on lhe type of local
service to which you may subscribe, you would nol be
permitted to take any other telephone services except
lor Touch Call1ng, 9-1-1 (where available), long distance
servtce, 900-blocklng, 976-blocking, and toll-blocking
services (where available) and any other service
determined by the Public Utilities Comm1ssion ol Ohio
to be beneficial to customers with handicaps or medtcal
conditions. or in life-threatemng situations. You would
not be permitted lo rece1ve any other optional services.
Also. you would noJ be allowed to have any olher
lelephone lines in your household .
GTE also o"ers another Type ol assistance to help
certa1n eltgtble persons obtain new telephone service.
This assistance provides a waiver of the deposit
requirement, a full or partial waiver of the service
connection charges. and a temporary waiver of the
$3.50 federal subscriber line charge for a number of
months, depending on lhe total amount of lhe wa1ved
deposil and service connection charges. This
assistance IS called "Service Connection Assistance."
You are eligible to receive Service Connection
Assitance if you do not already have telephone service
at your household, and il you are currently a participant
in any one of the !allowing programs:
1) The Ohio Energy Credits Program;
2) The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP);
3) Emergency HEAP;
4) Supplemental Seclurity Income; or
5) Medicaid.
In order to receive this assistance, you must lollow
lhe same application procedure as with Telephone
Service Assistance.
Unlike Telephone Service Assistance, !here are no
restrictions with Service Connection Assistance on the
grade of service to which you can subscribe or on the
optional telephone services for which you may sign up.
You would not, however, be allowed to have any other
telephone lines in your household .
If you have any questions or would like further
information about this assistance, you may call GTE's
offices at 1-800-483-4600, or you may call the Public
Interest Center of the Public Utilities Commission at
466-3292 (in the Columbus area) or 1-800-686-PUCO
(outside the Columbus area). TIY-TOO hearingimpaired customers may reach GTE at 1-800-552-~
or the Public Utilities Commission at 1·800-686-1570:

u,

\

•

I)

�Page-6--The Dai ly Sentine l

Monday, July 25, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport , Ohio

~ Monday, Ju ly 25, 1994

·An n
Landers
I 994 l iJ ~ A r&gt;y~le ~
I ,mes Syodoc ate an d

(_ reators

D~ a r

Ann

S ~ noo c ale

Land~rs:

I am a

manicurist and nail care consultant.
T he letter sig ned "Fed Up in
Cali fornia" infuriated me. "Fed"
made several derogatory remarks
about long fmgemails. which I found
personally insul ting.
Each one of my nails ts now ove r
14 inc hes long . Yes. that s
right -- over a fooL long. My natls
arc not dirt cau:hcrs, and ne ither arc
they monstrostllcs. They pose no

interni st with long c laws. Her
attempt to examine me was cut short
when I walked out. Even rubber
gloves would not have protected me.
There is no way she could have
pcrfonned a competent exam with
such long nails.
W hen I see mo ther s with
extra- long nauls. I think of the tasks
they have to perform and wonder
how they manage. I also think of
the scratches that are inevitable on
their precious liule babies.
How C4Cl employers allow long
nails in the health care and food
preparation tndustri es? They are
de fm itc ly a hazard, and rubber
gloves won't fi t over the talons. Sign
me -- SHORT AND SWEET
DE AR S AN D S: I, too. am

mystified. Keep reading:
Dear Ann Landers: I'd like to
add to the letter from "Fed Up," who
said lon g fmgernail s don't be long in
the workplace.
When I needed extra money, I
took a job at a nursing home near
the hospital where I worked as a
nurse. There were several practical
nurses working at this home, Two
of these women had ex traordi nari Iy
long nai ls with fake gems imbedded
in or glued onto them.
Part of the nurses' JOb entailed
putting their fingers in some rather
deli cate places. I can't im agin e
an ything m ore uncomfortable or
more un sanitary, -- OCE AN
SPRINGS, MISS.
DEAR OCE AN SPRINGS :

Eagle Scout awarded
Adam Smtih son of Robert and
Barbara Smith, 'Pumero). rccctvcd
hi s Eagle Scout award in a recent
ceremony at th e Sacr~d Hea rt
Cat hoI". Churc h.
The youlh "J" csc ortcJ 10 the
fro nt uf tllCchurch lly Eagle Scouts
Todd Smith h1 ' bro ther. an d
Stacey Shank foli o." tng the mvoca· b , G. , C rbs Adam gave
tLon .. l ~rgc 1 ·
th e sco ut oath. . ,
,
The· cercmon1, mcludcd
the pres
·
scnta uon of the Eag le co ulptn ,
ccrli ftcate, and a mtntaturc f'.ag lc
pin by Atlam tu lm mother.
Ohio Rep. Mark Ma lone, DSouth Poi nt, presented certificates
from the Ohio House of Rcprescnta ti ves. the Ohi o Sena te and th e
u.s. Congress 10 th e ne w Eagle
Scout·
Making up the ceremonial court
we re Pa t Wood, troop committee
cha irm an; Bob Arm s, ass istant
scoutmaster; Do n Frymycr, scout-

Th e Community Calendar is
publi shed as a free servic e to
non -prorit group s wi s hing to
a nnoun ce meetings and special
e vent s. Th~ calendar is not
de signed to promot~ sales or
fundraisers or any type . Items
are printed as space permits and
ca nnot be guaranteed to run a
specific DUJIIber of days.
MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club annual picnic 6 p.m. Monday
at home of Donna Jenkins. Mem bers will tour garden of Janet Bolin
at 5: 15p.m. before meeting.
POMEROY -

Patti and Scott

master lor troop 249; Tom Reed ,
troop commlltee member; Waller
Wa lker, c ub scout commtss toncr,
Dtck Smarr, council comm~ sston e r ;
Ed Burkett. Me tgs County s oldest
S
Ad
Wh
·
Eag 1c cou t;
am
1tc, sen1or
patrol leader; and troop 235 from
Chester. . .
.
Sm1th JOtncd the loca l scoutmg
progmm tn May. 1990. He became
a Tende rfoot in September, 1990; a
seco nd c lass seo ul in Ja nu ary ,
· Marc h.
199 1; a f'trSLc 1ass scout m
199 1· star rank in Jul y; 199 1; life
k' A .
d0 d
f
ran '" pn 1. 1992 ; an
r cr o
the Arrow '" June, 199 1.
_
. Offt ccs whtch he had held dur
1n g ht s yea rs tn sco utm g h ave
mcludcd quartermaster, asSistant
patrol leader. p atrol leader. troop
gwde , and scmor patrol leader.
h. E I
.
S .h
F or ts age pro)ect, m•t
pamted fife hy drants m Pomeroy.
He IS now a JU niOr asmtant scout
master.

ATT AINS EAGLE SCOUT RANK - Adam Smith, right,
receh-ed his Eagle Scout award in a recent ceremony at Sacred
He:trt Church. He and his brother, Todd, also an Eagle Scout, are
only the third set of brothers to reach this rank in the history of
Pomeroy Troop 249. Todd earned his rank in 1990.

Neither can I. Where were their the harp al my cousin's wedding. The
ftrst thing I noticed was her lovely
supervisors?
short
nails. You guessed it. We feU
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a 31in
lo
ve , and I marrie d her
year-old male who has been reading
your column since I was in high the followin g year.-- FOX RIVER,
school -- and I don't hide it under ILL
DEAR FOX: How delightful. You
the sports page.
That letter on long fing ernails might say she nailed you!
is life passing you by 7 Want ro
brought back some memories. When
l was in coUege, I was very much improve your social ski/Is 7 Write for
taken with a girl who had unusually Ann Landers' new booklet, "IIow to
long nails, I suggested one evening Make Friends and Stop Bein g
that she file them down to "normal" LanLiy." Send a self-iUldressed. long,
length. To spite me. she let them busi.Mss-siu enve/o~ and a check
grow much longer.
or mtJney order for $4.15 (this in Finally. I got fed up and told her cludes postage and handling) to .·
it was me or the nails. She chose the Friends. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
nails. The following week, I met a JJ562, Chicago, l/1. 606 1/ ~5 62. (In
beautiful young woman who played Canada, send $5.05)

TUPPER S PLAINS - Vacation Bible sc hool. "Code Je sus ,"
theme at St. Paul Unitcd Methodist
Church. Monday from 6:30 to 8:30
each evening through Friday . Three
years of age throu gh sixth grade.
Everyone welcome.
POM EROY - Train show at
Meigs Library , full week through
Jul y 3 1, noo n to 9 p.m. Monday
through Friday, noon to 5 on Saturday, and I LO 5 on Sunday . No

charge.
POMEROY - Meig s County
Vetera ns Service Commi ss ion,
Monday. 7:3 0 p.m. at Mulberry
Ave, office,
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Presbyterian Church VBS , July 25-29,
10 a.m. to noon .
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club's annual picnic, 6 p.m, Monday, home of Donna Je nkins .
Me mbers to tour garden of Janet
Bolin at 5:15p.m. before going to
Jenkins home.
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club, Monday. Burkett Bar-

ber Shop, Social hour and trading
session to precede the 8 p.m. meeting. Refreshments. New members
welcome.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Chapter. Ohio Association of Public Employees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
at the high school.

Tlllf ly- fi vc shut in call s were
re ported and card s were .stg ncd
wh en th e Re edsv ill e Unttcd
Methodist Women met recentl y at
the home of Mrs . Emma f1u rst.
Mr.s. Durst read "Fri en&lt;hhtp'' tu
o pe n th e meet ing co ndu c ted by
Mrs. Grace We ber. prc.s ltl cnt. It
wa.s decltled not LO purchase· a new
doo r for the church at thic Lt rllC.
Mrs. Francis Reed w~J s n~unc d to
get th e church door p"in1 cd The
fall proJ eC t will be the sa le o l
rx;:cans.

A game was played and pm cs

were awarded. Refreshm ents we re
served to th e above nam ed and
Mrs. Pearl Os born e. Mr s. Paulin e
Brewer, Mrs. Glad ys Th omas, Mrs.
Nina Boston, Mrs. Nancy Buckley,
Mr s. Di ane Jon es, Mrs . Lillian
Ptckens. Mrs. Thoma s rece ived the
door pri ze.
Th ere will he no mee tin gs in
Jul y or August. The Sep temhcr

Unpaved stroot. Utilitias sho uld bG avail able.

ASKING $9,500
LONG BOTTOM-SA 248- Lovoly, woll ca rod lor country
home that features 7 rooms, 3 bedroom s. 10+ acre s with

Iorge yard . Many nowors &amp; Lroos. Laf\lo field wtlh Ptno Trae
Grove . The home includes blin ds, curtains, wood shutters,
newer plumbing, cei ling fans, handmade Birch cabinets, built
1n hutch 1n dini ng ro om, large front porch w/awning, cover!Mt
patio area, 1 ca r garage, attic space, nice ca rpe ting, newer
repairs th ro ughout the home, buill in range &amp; oven, dispo sal.

Sevoral outbuildings. TPC water. A WONDERFUL PLACE
FOR A FAMILY TO GROW UP lNLL CALL FOR AN
APPOlNTMEN TLL
SA 124 REEDSVILLE - 3.75+ acres of vac ant ground.
Approx. 200' road frontage. Approx. tOO' Rtver frontago,
II 00' + doplh .
ASKING $8,000/acre.
RACtNE-Gr99nwood Rd.- .57 aero with 1986 Modular Home.
3 bedroom s, full bas eman! with garage, central air/heat
pump. newer carpe ti ng, sm all outbuildings. range and

docking .

POMEROY - Meeting on
Sugar Run Grade School Cultural
Arts Center and Children's Museum Monday 7 p,m. at Meigs County Public Library . Main Street.
Architect and representative from
regional historical preservation
office to speak.
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Racine Area

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Women's Fellowship, Thursday,
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Church of
Christ.

rece nt meetin gs of TOPS (Take off
pounds se nsibl y) Ohio 570 held al
the Carpen ter's hall in Pomeroy.

Best TOPS losers were Vlfginia
Dean and Ruby Fowler. with Judy
Neace and Am y Clchtnd as run ners- up . Be rnice Durst and Linnie
Aleshtre were the best KOPS losers
wit h Kev in Vinin g bein g the best
tee n loser.

had prayers to open the mccungs.
Angela Sharp and Pcg t Vmm g led
m the TOPS pledge. Vmtng and
Ltnda Gnmm were the wmners of
the gadget gifts for the two meetin gs.

Ruby Fowler won the wish howl
contes t and was th e best lose r for
June. A Iunny money auction was
planned for July . Mi ss Summ erLime will be :1nnoun ce d in two
weeks, it was reported .

will he ill til e ciHJ rch with
Mrs. Jo nes as h u.'i t C ~s .

TOPS
Lose rs were recog nize d at

REEOS Vll lE -Approximatoly 4 acros of nico laytg land.
Owna r Will Split . 1 aero $6,000. 125x359 approx.
COME TO CLELAND REALTY, WHERE WE HAVE
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONELII
HENRY E. CLELAND,.,.,.,,.,.,.,.,. ,.,.,,,.,,.,,.,.,.,,.,.,. 992-6t91
TRACY BRlNAGER..,,,..,,,.. ,.,.,,., ,.,.,,.,.,.,.,. ,.,.,,949-24311
SHERR! HART.... , .... , .. ,. .. ,,.,. .... , ...... , .... ,., .... , .742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND Ill,..., .... , ....,,,.,,.,.,,.,,.,,,. 992-6191
KATHY CLELAN0 .................... ,........................... 992-619t
OFFICE.. ................ , .. ,.,. ....,.., ...... ,..,.,,,. .. , .., ...,. 992-2259

NOTICE OF DRAWING
JURORS

~·······~···········································~

i• CD SPECIAL i•
•

I

....•..............................................

~

17MONTH

Public Notice
West on Pearl Street and 62
feet Nort.h and South on

Ohio Valley BanK.

FO,C

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Call s )
V12J12/tfn

J/4193 1 MO

MORRISON'S

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

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

QUALITY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992·7474
POMEROY, OHIO

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM

• carpel cleaning &amp; scolchga rd ' dra pery
•
fabric • general cleaning

992-7434

..,.,...

TOP EMPLOYEE Tammy Price has been named
Overbrook Center's ~mployee
of the month. Tammy has
worked in the nursing depart ment since August, 1990, and
working as a nurs~ for nine
years. She graduated from
Buckeye Hills in Rio Grande
in 1985_Born in Pikevill~, Ky.,
P. ice bas liv~d in Gallipolis
for 20 years.

Announcements

liNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out ol
painting. Let ua do it
lor you, Ve ry reaaonable,
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Alter6 p.m.
614-985-4180

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

985·4473

550 PIIQI S~ . Mlclchport

u.. •ertuy"

Board Eligibility:
Otthopaedic Surgery

Board Cettilication:
Orthopaedic Surgery
General Surgery
Thoracic Surgery

v
l~A ~-

Price
Construction
Co.

231, Page 207 , Meigs
County Deed Records.
Parcel 2: The following
des crib ed real utate

HOLZER CLINIC
ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY
Holzer Clinic's Board Certified and Board eligible Orthopaedic Surgeons offer
the highest standard of palienl care and provide s/a/c-ofthe-art Or!hopaedic
techmques such as ARTHROPLASTY (Joml replacement). Our orthopaedic
physicians studted in nationally recogmzed training programs. They perform
;om/ repmn and replacements with an experlise usually found only in large
metro medical centers, but they maintain "hometown care and convemence."

situat ed in the County of

Meigs , State of Ohio,
Township ol Sutton and In
the incorporated VILLage ol

Holzer Clinic
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ortlwpaedics Department
446-5401
Genera/Information
446-5411

conditioner
2 ~argo otalnloll 11111
fables
2 stalnfeoo stool but carlo
1 wood top work table
1
portoble
ftre
eX11ngulshera
Mlac. dlahll
Knives, forks, spoone
Jeckson
automatic

dishwasher .

Water's Edge Apartments· Syracuse, Ohio
Over 62, disabled or handicapped FmHA
1 bedroom. Rents for $0 to $415, based on
Income. Range, refrlgentor, carpet, AJC, on site
laundry, parking.
614-!149-2012 or 614-992-6419

Sharp cash regioter
(27) feet north and south
Mise, polo and pano
along Third StreeJ and
Booths- 8
eighty lour (84) laet east 1oge1her wlth all oupplleo,

roo 800-750-0750

Racine, being twenty-seven

and west along Pearl Street

flxturee, merchandise and

o!l ol th o north side ol Lot mlocellaneouo equlpmen1
Number Thirty six (36) In localad In and around the
premlsea,
said Village of Racine.
Parcel 3: Being a part of
Said real esta1e woo
' Lot No. 36 Ln the appraised Ill $47,600.00
i Incorporated Village ol Penonat property woo
• Racine, Meigs County, Ohlo, appraised Ill $6,600.00.
i bounding 84 feet Ea$1 and Termo of Sale: Caoh
I

!

IT! ACREAl DEAl

I

I
J

~

FmHA Rental Assistance

Equal Houolng Opportunity

11

n

111

ClA~~IFIED

GRACE

Trailer Sites

992·4103

@ ' @~-cf~

,..,, •._:

Father:

Au.tr~~lllan

MAR TECH
INDUSTRIES
Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
limestone· Fill Dirt ·
Gravel· Sand
Leach Bed
Installation and
Septic Systems
614-992-7878
SA 7 - Five Points
4/l)'lfrl

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEmCE
·Room Additlona
-Nawgaragao
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

Pomeroy, !i~\e.,.•,

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

Junato Gym Good Cond"lon, U-

Driveways, Septic
Systems, Water &amp; Sewer
Lines, Land Clearing
Trucking : limestone &amp;

Klttana, To Good Home, 814-3192585.

992-3838

PuppiH to glvHway, rNdy to

'""I"

go, 814-185-4120.

814-992-7878

JJJ,..,. SINd, MIMkpotl, Oldii4511111-IIPJ.U12

SR 7 • Five Pointe

··-

formation.

liNGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB

IN POMEROY
6:46p.m.
Spaclol E•rly Bird
StOO P•voff
Thlo H good for 1
FREE Cllrd.
Lie. No. 0051-342

11-

EOE, Sublocl To Drug

6
Lost &amp; Found
Found: Bluo Tlc:k Huntlng

Eom up to SIOOO weekly
noDog, oxpotlonco, frw-auppiiM, troeLincoln Pike, 614 448 8602.
Information, no-obligation . Send
SASE: Cascada O.pt-50 PO
lool: 3mo. old Dachahund Bo1 5421, Son Angelo, TX MG02:
puppy, brown WNr1ng whitt fiN
collar, Gr.or Ret 3~5-4452. Eooy Wortcl E1collont Poyl Aoumble Product• At Home. Can
Toll
FrH, 1-800-417-6588 Ext
7
Yard Sale
313.
•
.

::-""7-:::'--:=-:--:7"~--::-· 1 proceaalng mall, etart now,

- - - - -- -

Gillie -Melga Head Shf1 Ia Ac:·
- - -- - - -- - cepUng Appllcatlona For Tht

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

SIIMJITfN

Clll For liON lnlormatlon On
Mow To Start A Profl..lonal
Driving Career That Pa ya. 1~

614-258-1651

212311 mo.

Howard L Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Jocklon, Ohio

Small Smo. old Female 112 -Training Ia Fret At Fulfillment
Chlchuahu•tl2
Pomeranian
365 Days Of Emeloymont.
Puppla. Kitten to good home. Of
Ask J.B. Hunt For Details.

985-4111

71lt.1ltmN

Comfort Inn
605 E. Main St.
One MI .. From
State Route 32

&amp; S-nl
O.ytlme 3()4..475-4461, 845-2197.
..venlnge 364-571-2281.
Scr..n .

-carpentry
.Painting
•Power Waahlng •
cleana all exterior•
with high pre81ure
aprayer
•Reasonable Ratea
•20 Year a Experience
•Free Eotlmatea

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; US£D PAllS FOil
AU MAKES &amp; MOOOS
992-701J 011
. 992-SSSl 011
lOU fR(( I·IOfH41-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

IIONOAY, JULY 25
IIHILnas Start
Promplly AI
tO A.ll. And 6 P.ll.

croee.

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

JESS' COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY
headliners, seal
covers, convertible
tops, Antique Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boat Seals.
992·7587
41464 Slarcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

EOE

FREE TRAINING
AT J.B. HUNT

207ll.

Reasonable Rates
Estimates

SHill &amp; TREE

Residential
Concrete
1nd Masonry Work
Porches·
Sidewalks
Driveways

Ortv.,..

KHtono, 2 Whlto~ 2 Yellow, 814446-161G Ahor 4 1'.11.
KHtono, 6-llwko old. 304-el'll-

Fill Dirt, Top Soil

949-2168

MARTECH
· INDUSTRIES

3844 Aftor 7 P.ll.

Kiul Away, 114--U1-1308.

. 614·682·7676

1lii:DD1FN

CINNng Person For Prlv•l•
Home. 1 Ot y Per WHk.
Raterenc11 Required, 614-4~

Four Puppln, 112 Collie, 112 Am Y11r Driv.,.. Eam In EJ.
Chow, 5 Mont~. Good Whh caa Of $2,000.00 Per Month
Form Anlmalo &amp; Chlldran. 514- And Comprehensive Banellta.
446-4832,
Stop By And VlsH WHh Our
Rec:ruhar AppUe.tiona
FrM puppl... CotUW Aottwel~r Orivw
Ba Aeeapte-d. Pleau Bring
ml1, 8 wooko old, 514-11112-1710. Will
Any Relevant Employment In·

Service
Complete House &amp;

FREE ESTIMATES

USED RAILROAD TIES

614-256-1119 Ahw 4 P.ll,

Wlttl

Pupproo, Ch-

992-2269

•

Collie,

Baby.lner My Home, M-F, 7:50
-3:30 P.M. Mercerville 1790 Are1 .

Potential Orlvara Ara C.lllng On
J.B. Hunt For Fr~~a Training In
2 storm wlndowe, good cond., Your Aru. J.B. Hunt Ia OO.rtng
28x54 t/2. 304-675-4005.
F,.. Training To Orivara And
3 Kltta,... , 1 Whita ISpota, 1 Pays A Full Driv1r1 Wage When
Grey, 1 Gf11y &amp; Whha, &amp;14-446- You Are A Oualllltwf Single
Drtv•.
8824.

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe

•UGHT
HAUUNG
•RREWOOD
BILL SLACK

~L
Wlllll Yo11

THE

Reglatared
Reglatared

tor ha
rtgular tNcfing 1tatf: Ch1pt11 I
Teacher It Salem Center
Elementary and Chapter I
laacher at Sall1bury El•m•n·
tary.

r;x;:r:,l

Backhoe Service

TRIM••tl
REMOVAl

Help Wanted

'We
O.nbrook c.,_,., "fHI'N•c.4 •uJf;, loolUtgfDI',
f•w llftl . .,..,., for IJIU' •urriJig - · CIIII todll1 14
k11111 GbtJIIt.,.,. NEW IIIII IMPROVED WAGE IIIII
BENEFITS IIIII rip 1111 bolllU pockiw•. Apply TodaJI
Cllll Mtuil1• Co,..,way, D.O.N.
Mlllfllii,.FridiiJ
9:00 .... - 4:JD , ••.

1 'fAr Old Male Dog, Molhar:

tena, NMd To Ba
A Caring Owner, 81

Howard
Excavating Co.

ENTERPRISES

Giveaway

Shepherd. Good Wllh Chlldnon,
Good Wllch Dog, 614-3811-9036.
2 Gray Whlto, 4 llon1h Old Kl1-

Water hauling

Call

" ,:J.

\I
''

.

NOW OPEN

Glasa front pie case

,I

,.

for Rent

General commercial meat
slicer
Sears New window air

4

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843-5264

~·

Ra cine , Ohio . The above
five feet is the portion of Lot
No. 36 owned by the former
Grantor s which was not
conveyed by their deed to
Everett Roush and Grace
Rou sh recorded in Volume

•s•

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

1i

MALCOM W. LENTZ, M.D.

Strul Vour JNne PagMnt. C.rnden Pa rk, Auguat 0. All
divisions. Nice awarda. C.ll
Shollo Hart. 304-l'li!&gt;OOflO,

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel aervice, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
Ronweiler &amp; Shapherd
Stud Service
By eppt. only
614-667-PETS
12J2JIIo

Help Wanted

the follo wing ....c.,lCI•

Llv. Hoi Olr1t 1-900-263-1000
Ext. 5078 $3.91 /Min. 18 • Vra

Procell Co. 602-PM-71120.

TRI·STATE 11·9
ACADEMY

9112-2096

than my own trom thla date.

4-7-1 MO

3/2S/94

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

11

AI ptr Article 8, Trans .. ,.. l nd
Vact~nciu, Section 9, POI1ing,
3 Announcements
of th• Nag~llited Agt'Hmant
between ttl• ULTA and the
I, Benjamin C.rroll, will not t. Board of Educt~tlon, the Malg•
responalbfe tor any debta other Local School Dl•trlc1 Ia ~tlng

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE

PICKERS NEEDED

EDWARD W. EISSMANN, M.D.

FREE

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

Fr•EodmThird Stroat excepting
712Min
therolrom 27 teet North and
South along Third Street
and 84 teet East and West
lo~e WIIP!
July 11 , 1994 along Pearl Street off olthe
Guaranteed
To All Whom Lt May north side ol satd Lot
Parcel 4: Being twentyConc ern :
Lose Pounds and Inches
On Tuesday, the 2nd day two (22) loot ofl of tho North
of Au gust 1994, at 8:30 side ol Lois No, 33 and 34 Ln Natural Helbal Tablets
o' cl ock, a. m., at the office of the Village ol Racine, sold
1·800.796·6321
· th e Commi s sioners of 22 feet extending the lull
;· - ~~
DOG
Juror s of Meigs County, depth ol aald Loto No . 33
Ohio, Ju rors wiLl be pubLicly and 34 betng a total depth
Public Notl~e
GROOMING
drawn for the September ol2381eet Excepting parcel
1994, Te rm of th e Common sold lo Everett Roueh and
J\
AU IREEDS
The real estate cannot be
Pleas Court of said County. Grace Roush as deacrlbed sold lor tess than two-thirds
•
by
·.Wallace Bradford In Volume 238, Page 441, ol the appralaed valua. Tho
t.O.McCoy Meigs County Deed peraonat property will be
,..,
Su1a1 Gilmore
••
Commissioners of Jurors Records .
sold at boot price
1
992·5316
The Jury Commissioners
AUDITOR'S PARCEL I 19- obtainable.
have announc ed that tha 00528, 19-00529, 1!1-00530,
Jamea M. Soulsby,
drawing will be held at1he end 19-00397
Sheriff of Melgo County,
Meig s County Bo ard of
Ohlo
DEED REFERENCE :
El ec t io ns: 11 2 Mulberry Volume 324, Page 215, (7) 18, 25 (8) 1 ; 3l't
Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Meigs County Deed
(7) 25: n c
Records.
And the following
Public Notice
personal property and
Public Notice
fl)(tures upon the above
LEGAL NOTICE
premises:
The
Rutland Board ol
NOTICE OF SALE
"Lll Falla" Pop Machine
Township Trustees Ia
By virtu e o f an Order of
Sunbeam lce-0-Matlc
Sale issued out of the
Regular 4 penon tables - oeeklng qualified bldo to
butld a fence along a
Common Please Court ol 9
disputed fence line. In
Meig s County, Ohio, In the
Small 2 person table - I
26 Years Experlanca
accordance wlth O.R.C.
case of Gary J . Wolfe,
Dining room chairs- 34
Roofing,
Vinyl Siding,
971
.07
the
lowest
Plaintiff, against Sonya
Moblla Salad Bar · I
reoponolblo
bidder
agreeing
Wolfe, et al ., Defendants ,
Porches, Vinyl
High chair - 2
upon judgment therein
Star Metal Sandwich to lurnlsh tho tabor and
Replacement
ma1orfaf, and buiLd ouch
r endered, being Case No .
Cooler
Wlndowo
lenco
according
to
the
1 94-CV-2 Ln sold Court, I will
GEToaster
spoclllcollons
proposed
by
For
Free
Eatimate
offer for sate, at the front
Frymaster Charbroller
the board will receive the
door of the Court House In
Call 742-2303
Soulhbend stove &amp; grill
Pomeroy, Ohio, on the 29th
Toastmaster Deep Fryer work project. Bids will be
712011 mo. pd.
accepted !rom July 11 10
day of August , 1994 , at w/2 grease pane
July 25. The property, open
10 :00 o'clock A.M. the
Walk-In cooler &amp; freezer
11
following lands and
Signature upright lreezer Aug. 5, 11194, Ia owned by -:=:H:e:lp=W:a:n:ted==:;
Mo. Edith Clork and Ia r
tenements, to-wit:
(green)
The following described
located on Now Ume Road
Bunn Coffee machine
tn Rutland, Melga County.
premises , situated In the
Microwave oven - 2
For
further tnlormatlon on
p
Village ol Racine, County of
Hot fudge warmer
this project, pleaae contact
omataes ' eppers
Meigs and State ol Ohlo:
Star metal stoom tabla
Parcel 1: Situate In the
OiHord H!lll
Farm
Kenmore upright freezer the Rutland Township Clark
or the Rutlond Boord ol
II
Village ol Racine , Meigs (white)
County, Ohio . Being the
Townohlp Trualeos.
247·2063
lee cream keeper hand
we s t five feet off the
dip freezer
(7) 11,18, 25; 3TC:__ _ __!=====~.;....;--.1
easterly thirty five feet ol
Shake machine w/mlxtng
Lot No. 36 in the Village of cups
44
Apartment

I,

k

Fre e Estimates
Residential, Commercial
and
I

W-:

Additwnally, Holzer Clmic's Rehabililation Facilities provtde all necessary
rehahtlitallon and therapy, both before and after surgery

Minimum deposit : $2,500.00. This CD Is automadaoUy reaewable.
Penahy ror early withdrawal. This oiTer expires 71l'Jf94.

SAYRE TRUCKING
6J.H42·2138

Revised Cod e, Sec. 2313.20
Offi ce of Commi s sioners
of Jur or s . Meigs County,
Ohi o

Fru it bas ke ts we re won by
Ales hire and Maida Long. Ph ylli s
McMi llian and Shirle y Van Meter

Jame s said the youths were
sending a message to the puppy's
original owner, a IS-year-old runaway girl who gave the dog ils
designer name and who has since
returned home to her family. The
boys wantcd her out of the neighborhood, he said.
" I couldn ' t sleep for two
nights, " James said. " Every lime
I'd try to sleep I'd see his whole
body a ball of ftre."
On July 6, three veterinary surgeons at Auburn's College of Vete rinary Medicine moved the
puppy' s scarred eyelids so he ~an
blink.

ASKING $44,900

COMME RCIA L and RES IDENTIAL
F REE ESTIMATES

992-5515

POMEROY- Poonl l ano- 4.5+ acres of VACANT GROUNDI
F1olhng ground th at is mostly wooded. Immediate Possession .

Public Notice

MIDDLEPORT Me igs
County Scottish Rite Club meeting
at Middl eport Masonic Building
Tuesday at 7 p.m . All Scottish Rite
Masons welcome.

CaD Westen Auto

Joe N. Sayre

ASKING $11,500

is ca used by th e1 r consumption of a

m ~c ti ng

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - Gucci mal cruelty ," said Doug James. a
was beaten, doused with lighter Spring Hill College professor who
fluid and set ablaze . Now the saved th e pup . " He ' s big -time
puppy has two lawyers and a team down here. It's funny when I go
of Auburn fJniversity veterinarians places, people say, 'There's Gucci,
There's Gucci. " '
on hi s side.
He 's been on television . He' s
James witnessed the May 20
been on the front page of the news- burning of the little animal , then 3
paper in Mobile, the city where he month s old, by a group of young
was tortured and rescued . He ' s males in a downtown Mobile
been the featured guest of honor at neighborhood.
a Mobile bar, which donated the
"Suddenly I saw this little guy
money from it s $2 admission burst into name, .. James said.
The dog, a chow mix, ran under
charge to the local animal shelter.
" lt would be great if we could a hou se, where he continued to
use Gucci 111 the spokesdog for ani - bum until James rescued him.

~

- 2 sloty frame home
sttuated on two lo ts. lnd udes 3 bed rooms, 1 bath, N.G. ftoor
furnace, Columbia gas, most woo d floors end cab le.

certain mollusk.

Abused pup, Gucci, becomes media pet

•

POMEROY- Located on Condor Sl.

Fla mingos are nol naturally pmk.
bul wh ite. The hue of pink Oamingos

HARRISONVILLE - Har ris&lt;,mville Senior Citi~e n s Club,
Tue sday , noon , at townhou se.
Potluck dinner.

---------Society scrapbook----.- - - - - REEDSVILLE UMW

OFFICE 992-2259

donors se lect an work during a preview recepti on, sponsored y Bi g
Bear. on Thursday evening, Octobe r 20.
In Pomeroy anists can pick up
entry forms at the Pomeroy Cham ber of Commerce or Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center.
Foothill s Art Fes tival is a program of the South ern Hills Arts
Council. Artists may call the Co un cil at 286-635 5 or write Box 149,
Jackson . Ohi o 45640 fo r furth e r
infonnation or entry fonns. Registration deadline is Se ptember 12.
The festival will run from Fri day, Oct. 21 to Sunday, Oct. 23.

Community Organization (RACO).
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park , Tuesday.
New members welcome.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofin g

Reaso nable Rates

Community calendar------Anderson. fea turin g Len ny, will
co nduct Bi ble se houl at Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road, Monday
th ro ugh Frid ay. 6 toR p.m. For
tra nsportati o n ca ll 992-7690 or
992-2384.

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Meigs artists invited to
exhibit at foothills festival
Meigs County artists arc in vited
to ex hibit their work in the 13th
Annual Foothills Art Festival to be
held at Canter's Cave 4-H ca mp
lodge in October.
Regi strati on form s are now
availabl e. Arti sts are inv ited to
e xhibit in the categories of
Oil/Acrylic, Pastel/Drawing , Photography , Prints, Three Dimensional Work and Waterco lor. Juried
booth spaces are ava ilable to
exhibiting artists.
The s how is profess ionall y
judged but not juried. Artists of all
ages and ex perience arc encour aged to entcr. Entrants arc limitcd
to 4 works per category. Entry fees
are $5 pe r p ie ce or $ 16 for 4
piCCeS.
A total of $1,210 in cash prizes
sponsored by GTE will be awarded. Doz ens of purcha se award

The Dally S entlne i-Page-7

Real Estate General

'Fed up in California' scratches the surface with complaint
hazard to others.
It has taken five years for my nails
to geL this long. aild I plan to let
them grow indcfinitcly. I'd love to
have nai ls in the 18- to 20-inc h
range. Some people don't like my
nai ls, but I like them, and that's all
that maucrs. -- SAN FRANC ISCO
DEAR SAN FRAN: The concept
of 14-inch fi ngernails is more than I
can grasp. How do you buuon a
blouse? Put on pantyhose? Thread a
needle? The list uf questions is
endless.
My readers had a lot to say on
this subject. Take a look:
Dear Ann La nders: "Fed Up in
Californt a" barely scratched the
surface of the problem of long
fmgcrnails. I once had a fe male

Pomeroy- Middleport, Oh io

Following Poohlono:
Peroni Lnvolvomont Coonllnotor
• BS ln Sodal Wortc /Rototocl

~Al;-;L-;Y;:a::ni;-;So::::Ln:-;;ll:-uiii-7::B:-o-:P-.ol":'d':'"Ln ~:' ~,!:"~:!:' ~::::::::::
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Worl&lt;lna Wllh Fomllla Wllh

tht dawo before ttM ad Ia 1o run. Young Chlldr.n.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.

Friday, llondoy od"lon · 2:00 Dlaobllltln Coonllnotor - BS In
p.m. SOiurctoy.
Spoclll Noodo IRolatod Floid Or
Equivalent

EJperience

Plut

ThrM YeaN Experience Wortt.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick Pooroon Auction Compony,
lull Umo ouctlonoar, complete

Lng Wllh Famllloo With Y"""l"
Chlldren.
Gollto And llolgo County Sub111Hu1o Bua D~vora- Roqulru A
Close C /COL Or Wllllngnoso To
Obtoln COL P~or To Employ-

auction
earvlce.
Ucenud ment.
t188,0hlo &amp; Wnt VIrginia, !04773-~85,
Contntct Ollila County Cook School
AuctlonMt Col. Ooc:or E, Click, Roqul'" A High
And Prior Food SCinJLco
L&amp;cenM I 754-IM &amp; Bonded, Olplomo
Ex porto,..,
304.jjG5-3430.
All AppUcenta Uu81 Pa.. . . A
9 wanted to Buy
V11id Ohio Driver'a Llcen .. And
Carry Auto Liability Insurance.
Antique• wUI buy OM piece or Drtver'a UcenM And Criminal
entire houaehold, O.by Martin, Record Chocko 0,. Proopoctlvo
top dollar p~~ld, 814-192·'71141.
Employen Are Requl,..d By
law. Emr,loyment Applk:allona
Ctoon Late llocfol Cara Or A,.
Avtl ab" At Galllt -Melga
Trucb, 1N7' Modela Or Haw.,,
Start't Woodland C.ntara
Sm"h Buick Ponllac tiiOO Hud
OHico, 30811 State Route t110
Ellllom Avenue, GoLLLpotla.
BetwMn 8 A.M. And 4 P.M.,

.

O.Corotod etonowar., WILl tolo- llondoy .f'~day. For Add"lon•t
phonao, old Llmpo1 old 1hor- Lnformotlon Call 6t4-446-66ill.
mom.tera, old ctocu, antique GoUla -llolgo Head Start II An
Equal Opportunlly Employor.
tumltW"I. Riverine Antlquee.
Ruu Moore, owner. 114-882· l..oc:al phyolc:lan'o oHico , _
2628. We buy •etat•a.
occ:opllng appllcotlono lor tho
poshlon of medical a_,...
Don' Junk HI SoiL Uo Your Non- tan11,....ptlonat,
II•
Worklna llojor Appb,..o, perienc. helpful, computer
Color T.V.'o
Aolrigorotoro, Racltw, Ohio 45711.PO &amp;:ox 451,
"'-uro. VCR'o, lllcrowovoo,
Air

Condit-.,

~~~

Wuhon,

Mochlnaa, Etc.

J a o·. Auto Porta and Sotvogo,
llclo buylna junk ..... tNCico.
304-7"7U343.

Want to

buy HI

of otopo

rnobllo home, 114-11112-5053,

lor

Want to buy: Homo 01 troller on
1ond contract. 304-4'7'-1335.

Wantocl To Buy: Junk Autoo
Wllh Or Wllhout llol-. Colt
Larry Uvoiy. 114-38t-11303.
Top Pald: All Old U.S.
Cotno, OoLd RLna'!! SLiver Coino,
QoLd Colno. II.T.:o. Coln Shop,
151 5ocond A...,uo, GoULpotto.

Wantod to bciy:

uaocl mobile
IJ4.448.017ll

-

Employment Services
11

Help wanted
AVON I All Anaa t Sht~ay

Spoora, :IOWl&amp;-14211.

AVONI

•lllra
._r, llthor

All 1r111. -

money or want

NewTarmlnal
Cardinal Freight Carriers Inc. I•

hiring

OWI'lllr/operalorll

••perlenc..:t
tor

the

van/llltbod dlvlalon, pro'"abto

pay progrlm, aCCUrlltl w..kly
uttltmlnta, medical Int. •nilable_ rider progr1m 1nd time
home, no up fiont money to
..... on. CaU Boyd, HIOG-220242~

Now ecceptlng rM\II'n. from

Ciao A COL ooml trudc drlvon.

Servicing Mven elate aru, our
locltly
· homo
WV boood
flrm
gota d~voro
lor tho
wllklnd. Send reeume to Box
C-11 'II. Pt Ptt Roglotor, 200 llaln
St, Pl. Ptt, WV 25550.
Ownw/Operatcn
Canforo II

CarciNI Fratght

hl~ng uporloncod OTR'o to run
llltbod, •m• porcanllgo ol
a- ........ fiClLLlng compony
or pulllng own ....
hoofth lNuranco Wldantot a vialan ovaltoblo, buo ptotoo

r,.,..,.

IYIIIIble,
avaU1ble,
WHicly
~ram,

n•.

bob-tall

Insurance

fuet Clrd tyetem,

oottto..nta,

rldor

u.. home. 1.S00.220-

Palt-nmo Uno Cook, Afternoon
W0)'-&lt;)111 llorl[yn. 304-112·2141 ' Shlft, AI&gt;PIY At Hotldoy Inn, Golor l.jJOI).G112-13M.
tlpollo, NO Phono Cotto Ptoooo.
1

�Page-8--The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy -

Monday, July

Middleport, Ohio

Classified Line Ads

3 papers

Tribune 446-2342 Sentinel992·21 56 Register 675·1333
'1

BEATTIE 1!1.\"D. '" hy Brure llt·allit·

Help Wanted

NMdetl OTR drlver, COL, haz.
mat.. lyr. verifiable txp., home
moat

w..kenct. . SEnd wortr. his-

tory &amp;'phone number: Box R·18,

tJo Pt. Plea1118.nl Register, 200
Main SC., Pl. PIN . . nt,. WV

25550.

Needed: 2 Sale• Persona Self
Motlvat.c:t Some Experience In
Retail SaiH A Plus . Good BaM
Plua

Commission .
Gallipolis,

OH,

Apartment

2 story, 2br. all otectrlc apts.,
carpeted . . appllancos fum lshod,
trao wator, freo lr&lt;~sh pickup, on

10 Wooden Frame Wlndowa,
IJarlous SizAa $100; 22 Antique
Glas9 Panos, Slzt 13120, $150,

s1te managomanl, hol1day ac·
li 'o'ity fiX ch il dron, close to

614·::156-&amp;445 .

pllcalions tor Cer1 ili&amp;d Nursing
Assistants. Apply 11 36759
Roekspringa
Rd., Pomeroy.

$210/mo Laumland Apa11m1mls,

1832

2 bo •~-::
, p:-:r;i n:=g a,-.$1"01"'oa:-:-c.;"""""ba"b'"""y
bod, $30; ban lnet, S:ZO; call 61.t.
992·2624.

7 P.M

Over

3 days
6 days
10 days
Monthly

15 words
15 words
15 words
15 words

or less
or less
or less
or less

1

6.00
1
9.00
1
13.00
1
1.30/day

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

Position Opening · Clinical Q.
elstants • Chlldnn'a Residential

Will tteam clean carpets choap
to linlah my peymenta on
cleaner, 014-992-4536.

Treatment Prognm, Crlsla ln-

Financial

tmanllon Unlt, And Crt ala Une.

Shin

Work.

High

School

Graduate /Equlnlent, Valid
Orlvar'a Ucenu, First Aid And

CPR All Roqulrod. R..ldontlol
Experience Whh Emotionally
Dia1rubed Chlld,.n Or Aduh1
Preferred. $5.1V Ptr Hour.

Send R..umet To: Pe~SDnnel
Department Woodland C.ntere,
160, O..lllpofle,
3086 State
Ohio 45631.

Rout•

Rtven.wood care center, 111:1

Wathlngton St., Ravenawood,
WVa. 26"164 Is curntntly accapt-

lng appiiCIItlana tor Nuralng A..

alalonta (Will Train) Applleolloruo
may bo otulnod llondayThurtdiY 11-4. Rlf...nc:u , .
qulrod. No phone calla pluoo.
RESPITE
CARE
WORKER
NEEDED: Would you bo willing
to ear• tor ,..OM with a.mlng llmltatlono In tholr home on
'" "u needtd"" blalt? Sal1ry:
$6.00/hr., high achool dogNo,
valid drlvor'ollconoo, good ~~v­
lng NCOrd, 3yN lleonood drtvlng
ea:pwlen..IU'Id
adequ.te

1utomobll lnaurance required.
Conloct Coclllo
EOE.

1~·2302.

RESPITE
CARE
WORKER
NEEDED: Would you bo willing
to care for .,....ont with IeemIng llmh ..lan In their hofM on
an •u noodod" boalo? Solary:
Whr. Hlah echool d.gr• vtlld
d~ver'o 11conso, good d~vlna

21

Business

RESPITE
CARE
WORKING
NEEDED: Would You Bo Willing
To Cllre For P.,.on, Whft
wrnlng Umllllllon In T!.lr
Home On An .. At. N••d"
Boalo? Salary: 55.00 !Hour. Hl~h
School DegrM, Velld Driver 1
Uconoo, GOod Drtvlng Rocutd,
ThrM YNI'8 IJcenMd Driving
IEJrportonco
And
Adoq...,ta
AutomobUe ln.... ranee A~ulr.d.
Conlllct Cocllla AI 1-800-1531Eq..l
()ppoflunhy
2302.
Employer.
Rootauront Soaldng Enorgellc
IEJrportoncod I Wal Groomod
Paroono For Uuftlplo Oponlngo.
Send Aeaunw &amp; Ref.,.nce To:
CLA 322, cio Galllpollo Dolly
TrlbUno, 8215 Third Avo,_, Golllpolla, OH 45831.

1988 Schultz 14x70 mobll home
w/axpando, 3br., 2 bath, nice
large lot 1 unanachad garage,
nice ,..laenl aroa. 304-842-35'02
after 5pm Of leave message.

Herdwar• buelneu tor ule due
to lllnea, rueonabty priced.
304_.82-3S44 ..-1182-2343.

c--

WANTED:
RESPITE
CARE
PROYIDERS Are you willing to
.t~•• your home with per.one
with dov---ol dloobiiHioo.
II lnt.,.atod~ovldlng o
llablt and au
ve home on
o llmHodl,. 111 -~ cOfltoct
Coclllo 1-400-531-2302. ..OE.

a..

Wortwr Noodod For
lnMII I
Small Trollor PaR. Drlvoro
L1cor.a A Uw1. lloma Ell·
-In
PlumbCorponlry, Rani Plul HcM.rty

-lc.

p,e143neeae

18

wanted to

,

Do

All real estate acNertlslng In
this newspaper Is sut&gt;Jed to
the Federal Fatr Housflg Ad
of 1968 whk:h makes n Illegal
lo advertise •any preference.
lmtatlon or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex lamUial status or national
origkl, or any l~en1kln to
make any sudl prelerenca,

Nmlallon or dlxrtmlnallon.•

TNs newspaper wtl not
knOwtllgl)' accept
ad\.lertlsemenls tor real estale
whk:h Is In violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed thai all dwellngs
advurUsed In this newspaper
are a\l.ulabla on an equal
owonunlty basis.

Real Estate

31

Homes for Sale

2 br. &amp; 2 car garage ap~~r1ment
In Middleport, $13,!M)O, Cllll for
mo,.lnformatlon, 814-ti2·537'0.

3 Bedroom Ranch, 1 Bath, AI·
tac:hed Garage, 6 Unattached
Garaga, 20x30 Workshop, Bidwall, $55,000, 614-388-8816.

:MS....Z

Lots

&amp;

Kenton Laka, AdJoins National
Forrest, $22,000, 614-446-8751
LNveMastagt.
5.32 acrn, $13,160. 8.14 acres,
Raybum
Rd,
reaaonable reatrlc11ona. lnfor·
matlon malted on rvquost 304675-5253.
$14,570.

9 AdJoining lola. 2 Acres. All To
Go 'ro 1 Buyer. All Utilities
Available, 614-446-3657.
Trailer \ote &amp; acreage In
Pomaroy, price Is negotrable,
for rant or sale, O'Brien &amp; Crow
RHIIY, 614·992-mO, evenings
614-1192-35611.
Wantld to buy· two or mora
acrH, suitable to build on and
close to a blacktop road, 614849·2481.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

2 Boclroomo In Gallipolis,
Reference. Required, 814o441·
1300.
Charming Counll)' Cottage , 2
Bedroom,
living
ffoom ,
/kitchen -Dining Area, Bath,
Carport, All Electric, S4001Mo.
No Pols, 614-24&gt;-5053.

Two Or Three Bodroom Hou se

311r. Nnch, Galllpolo Forry, call

In Gallipolis. O.poah And
Rel•r•ncn Required. No Pete,
S.nd Nama And Phone Number
To: CLA 321, clo Gallipolis Daily
Trlbune.L.~.25 Third Avanue, Galllpolla, ut1 45631.

d.. d-end road, Ha.,an Heights,
lo4 wlhouH It 100x105' , $21,500,
wlodlolng 1501112' lol 532,500.
llllland. 304_.82-332:1.
Country setting: 3 Mil• From
Galllpolle, Large Kltchan, 2 Or 3
Bedrooms, Urge Bath, 1 112
AcrH" CHy Sc'-la, 114-379234:1 tor Appolntm•nt.

In Gallipolis, 1 BR, Porch,
Parking, Good NolghborOtp, 'Ref Required, No
Call Earl Tope, 614-446-

Unfurnished house, 2 br, nice &amp;
clean, no pats, dliJp. required ,
614-992·3090.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Eatat•

Settlement Sale: 3 12x65 2 Bedrooms, Gas Heat,
Houooa, Aerugo, Sotollllo Dlah Deposit And References R•
-Conlocl Tom Lonlo AI 1.-. qulred, 10 Mlnulu From Gal845·1702 Or 1112-328-W13 Allor 5 llpclis,
Juat
~acantly
P.U.
Remodeled. No Pets, $250!Mo.
For eale by owner- Jog home,
1860 oq. ft ., lull - · n t
wttamlly room, woodbumer, 3
bodrooma, 2 knc!. ... 3 balM
CJA, central vaecum, cethaden~l
coiling, olono l~oploco, largo
dock,
3Z.56
outbUilding
wlhtlled work room, 2• acm In

614·367.()115.

2 Bedroom, Total Elaclrlc, 1 112
Mllaa From State Route S88,
Aefarancn. Deposll Required.
614-446-3413.

Bedroomt, AC, No Pete,
Daposft
And
Refarancee,
woedad II'U clou to town, $400/Uo., Woaho~ Dryor; 2 Bod·
U.lgo School Olatrlct, daytlmo room Hou.., ~umlthtd, No
114-902-2318, evelng 614-992· P•ts, S350/Uo. O.poelt, 614·797·
4345.
7133.

2

3 BMtrooma $250/Mo. • Dapot~lt,
F..- Solo By Ownor: 3 BR 1 112 1 Bedroom, $200/Mo. + Oeposh,
B•th, 2,10cJ Sq. Ft., 1 stOry, 2 614·24$-0904 Or 614-2~9011.
Flrwplocoo, Goat Htol, Cont. Air.
L.ortot D~vo. Walking Dlatonce 44
Apartment
lo hotpl1ol, $85,000. Shown By
Appolnl.,.nt, 814-446-1208.
for Rent
For NJe or poulble lind contract, email one bedroom houaa
304-773-51153.
'

IDr ulo, .517,000 or ..,,
nocwmo., 3 ooaroom, lull
- . .... coli 814-114~2405 attor 3pon.
·
- . 10.14oc., 2 mlloo from
~onl_.lon. 304-

-J.31311.

New !'Inch etyle home, Plant•

1 and 2 bedrocm apar1menta,
furnished and
untumlsh~,
NC:urlty deposit r~qulred , no
poll, 814-992-2218.
2
Bedroom•
Untumlehecl,
S1ova, Refrlger•tor, AC 112 Mile
from Oavrn $250/Uo. $200
Dopoolt, 814-307-o43B.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Plko
from $222 to $285. Walk lo ahop
&amp;· movloa. Coli 114-446-2568.
EOH.
Country Side Ap1rtment 588 2
Bodrooma CA, WID Hook-Up
5350/Uo. Oopooh Roqulrod, 614-

440-4222.
fumlllhocl 1 bodroom apartmont, all IAIIItloa lumlohod

,.,.,_

$250/mo., 814-84~2528.

c.-

Fumlahod 3 Rooma &amp; Balh,
CINn, No Pete1 Reference •
Dopooh RoqulrtCl 814-446-1518.

bedi'OOift hou• on
IDrtna Avo, - o y . vory good
oi&gt;ndlllon, lorgo lol, O'lfrlln 1
"e.~ 114-182-2720,
avonlnga
2-3589.

Chest FrHzer $100, 814.446-C141
Af19r 6 P.M. Or On Weekend•.
Caller 10 box, 14 momory, brand
now, $.43.95, 814-992-8166.

Small furn ished 1br. apt., Mt.
Vornon Ave., ground floor, no
pets, no HlJD, $250 plus
electric, ref9rences &amp; deposil.
304-675-2651.

Concrete

45

Furnished

Rooms tor nml ·week or mom h.
Star11ng at $120/mo. Gall Ia Hotel.
614-446-9580.
Sleepinq rooms with cooking .
Also trail er spaca. All hook-upt.
Call aflar 2:00 p.m., 304·7n5651, Mason WV.
)

Acreage

Parle, 559,500, 814-311-2240.

eubodl¥lllon, 3br., 2 beth. atone
on front I doctl, olnlng on 2
kite. 114 418 M33.

· RC&gt;dnoy
Aroo, 814bportonc:ocf
With Aoloro&lt;1ooo,

Fanns for Sale

Acra, 5 Mllea From Raccoon

w-

Will ...,_. Ono Child In Uy

33

Small
Yord1
hooa,
Pals,
0161.

3br., 1 bolh houoo Of1 quill

Applo II GS Comp&lt;Jlor ond lmageWrller II Printer, 2 dltc.
drives, mouaa, and software.
$800. 614-446-6656

Nice 3 br. apt. in Middlepon,
614-992-5658.

21 Acru At . 233, 2 Miles From

- 1 Ualnton--, Palnl!ng1 lloclulor, 2 car garogo, 2 bolha,
cent,.l air, nur Chettar, 114Yord Work Wind-.
oua... Cloanod Ught Houllng, 1185-4281 01
eommortcal. Rooldontlal, 8th0:
New 3br., 2 IMth, on approx.
loc, US,OOO. 304-57&amp;-2175.

·~

New Air Conditlonod 1 89droom, Convenient To Shopping
&amp; Theatre , $255/Mo. + Utflilles,
614-446-2957.

Antique Singer Hwln\;machlne,
"" · cond, worko,
00. Oak
was hstand, $80. OuHn size
double wedding ring qulh
handmade l oca lly, $225. 01~
Royal typowrltar, workl, $60.
3o.1-tl9S-3636 after 1pm.

Plait~

Septic
Tanks, 300 Thru 2,000 GalloM
Ron Evans Enterprtsee, Jackson, OH t-800-537-9528.
&amp;

Country blut couch &amp; recliner,
$250. 304-675-6t47 INve maesage.

Room OHic~r
Itt With
Privata Toilet In' Mo&lt;iarn Are
Proof Bldg. Ca ll Morris Haskin•
614-446-2631 Or 614-446-2512.

3

Marhart Rental &amp; Storage Unhs,
5x10, 10x10, 10x15, 1Dx20, 10x30.
304-6 75-2460.
Moblla Homes Or Lots For Rent,
614-446-1279.

Hammond organ with speeker;
old ceda r ch111; two 26" glrt'a
bikes; ampllller; Yamaha dfghal
synt hesizer; 22 rifle wtth 8COpll;
used doore and windowe; '81
AMC Concord station wagon;
6t4·m·2445.

JC Penny camcorder, $250.
Rosy·Boa onako, $50. 3~7S9710.

King Sba Waterbad, Glaaa
Cablnet s,
Mirror,
Ughled
Headboard $400. Quean Size
Wa1erbed $200. froozor $75.
Sola, Recliner Rocking Chair

Office Space For Rent: Owner
Flexible On Terms I Space.
Total Spaco 3,600 Sq . Fl. A.vall·
able. Good Location Cloao To
Brldga, Call Dave Wiseman AI
Wiseman R1al Estate, 614-446-

614--867-5245.

3644.

Nice Kltc!.n Tabla &amp; Chalra
$125; Nlca Hulch $225: Nlco Air
Conditioner, t125; Sofl'e $7S j
Enlertalnment
Center
190;
Woodburner
$100;
Antique
Maytag Wrlngor Washer, Bulh ln ..
1926 $100; 614..:179-mo After &amp;
P.M.

47

Wanted to Rent

Wamed To Rem: 3 Or Mora Bed·
room Home Needed By Profastlonal Family Aeloeallng In Galllpolla /Gallla Co~mly Area , 3()4..
523"340.
Elderty lady would Ilk• a nice
sma ll apanment or house at
reasonable
price.
Preter
Pomaroy,
Mlddlepon
or
SyracuH, 614-992·2886.

Merchandise
51

Household
GoOds

Carpel $5.00 Up VInyl $4.49 TQ
$0.50

In

Stock,

614-446-i'\44,

Mollohan Carpeta.

USED APPLIANCES
Wash1n1, dryan, refrigerators,
ranges . Skag~ Appliances, 76
VIne Street, Call614-446-7398, 1·

0000

600-4~3499 .

Kenmore refrigerator, frost trea,
lea maker, almond, axc. cond.,

$300. 304-a95-3703.
LAYNE "S FURNITURE
Complete home furnishings .
Hours: Mon-Sat, 9-5. 614-4460322, 3 mllea out Bulaville Rd.
Free Delivery.

largG Sago Palm (Fem Palm)
And Tall Cactut Tree For Buelnese Or Lar9• Hgme $45 &amp; $15
Respacllvaly, 014-245-8448.

Nori Track exclser. $400.00. Uke

newt 614-446-6816
Plastic lenore for portable
signs, SSSJbox , MC:ond box free.
AAA
Signa.
1_.00.533-3453
anytime.
Oueen Slze Bed New Hndbolrd
And Frama $150; 8 Ft Amlque
Showcase $75; Sunray Gat
Oven 2 Years Old $250; GE
Washer
tlOO;
Frigid.. re
Rofrlgeretor $150; 2 Naw Gu
Healers 1 Vented 1 Unv.nted
Paid $900 Will Socrlllca Quaz.or
Floor l. V. $150, 150 Milk Cral•
$1 Each, 614-3fi7-7'Q01.
Oueen Size water bed w/Book
Case Headboad. $200.00 114245-5697

~

.lt'JF

tras Included, like new, muat
sacrilico, $600 llrm, coli 614-W~
2859.

,...

56

63

Pets for Sale

3 ReglsltliCI &amp;alai•

10wkl
old, lamolo, $6010. 114-lu.U.Z2.

••c

Akita 1 ,,.,,. old malo
1.: ••
, lorgo.
• 304-'
oablo
• WMa,
vory
6J5..0253.
AKC BaeHtt puppfa. S WMkl
old, $100, F.A. lanoclum, 114-

667·3858.

f.O!~ngoEach,

IM-2116-ml

AKC Nglotorod 2 yr old melo
Shaltlo, $100. n - a country
homo. 304-117&amp;-1418.
AKC Rtglatorwd Baaolt Hound
Pupplao, 5 Waolul Old With
Shota, 5125, 614-448-3354.
AKC
Roglatorwd
Dalmotlon
Pupplot, Vol Chockocf And
ShOll, 304-175-$553,
AKC Roglalllrocl malo bull
Cockor S"panlol puppy, lholo
and wormod, $125; AKC Rogl•
tared black and tan Cocller
Spaniel, ,.male, 3 yre. old, 171;
614-1112·2445.
AKC. Brtt1any aponlol. Fomalo
oronga and Whtlll. IM-245.atl7

full bloodod Boaglo pu.,.,
&amp;wko. old, no,_,., 180. 304882-2442 •fler 5pm.
HAPPY JACK FLEABEACDH:
Eloctronlc Dovlce Controlo
fiNo In TM Homo Wltho&lt;l P•
llcld•
Palllntocl
~n
Crootao Bum 01 Uahl FloiJo
Con' Roolol. R-o Ovomlahl.
J D NORTH PRODUCE 114-41411133.

:104-1175-4:101.

74
Transportation

71

st;.r;' """"

1185 Hondo Aoponcada, loadod,
tote of chrome, new tires
81rlpae and muriela, 29,000
original mllee, call 614..g92·7803
after5pm.

mlloo, ftOO. 304-t71-11161.
1V1II t;!odgo bpon, llont I En-

75

-~.I opud

76

11Z100, .,.__~.,

Fruhs

Vegetables
Conning IO!ftlloU,., aolo, pick
your _., Hany Hll, I.Oiart
Folio, 814~47-2142.

~=:f.~

,_"!''t

....

58180&lt;114-112--

55
Building
DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:
Supplies
FINE ANTIQUES- American art
china, •rt glau, ellver, tumlturt;
McCoy Roaovlllo, ole. COLLEC- Block, brick. HW• plpee. wlnTIBLE"S- p~nta, pooloro. lool•. dowe, llntele, etc. ClaUde Mnpottary, clocka, boxaa, jara, bot- llro, Rio Grando, OH Cell 114IIH, bookl, to~1 -~tc . ALWAYS 245-5121.
BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top
dollar paid. One ~ec• or one 56
Pets for Sale
hundrod. APPRAISALS,
40 ::----:--:-~--:~-.:~
yNrt expertence . Please calf Groom lnd SUPDIY ShOD-Pet
614-992·2822.
Grooming. Julio Wabb. IM-44110231.
54
Miscellaneous
Pamporod Palo by Sonyo, dog
grooming, bothlng, au Merchandise
304-1182-3730.
10.1011 dog ko~ 516.81.
.
Point Pluo, 304-67

'12 Superior 22' motor homa,
IIHpa 5, runa llkll new, roof air
condhlonlng, Dodgo 413 C.I.D.,
$6500, 814-1148-3301.

11n

-

22' motor
Mlf~ntalned, must

Coachman

East

I 'I

I A

Pas~

Pass
Pass

4•
Pass

Pass
Pa~

K

\

,..

1'

~IL.l-ING

l,.jf~

IL

01

"'

~ ~
i

if:' .,

l:

,1

,-'

~

~
~
~

ip
~ Q

0

Mt/

BORN LOSER
~

AOOJ\ 11J£ fN&gt;J.£. 51,1.5 IN OUR
CJ.\Lro\ .' .

~

.,..

M, '(£~, WE:
~S€.1:&gt;
TAAI WIT~

AAVE.. NJ?U...OY

"'

::,0

flOW (.J)II..,f.. '1tX.l

I!

Who 1s th e be st bn dge player no
l onger a li ve' Oswa ld Jacoby and
Howard Srhen k en come lo mind .
Today ·s d ea l was played by lhe latt er .
An ambitious auction reached an apparen t ly impo ss ible fiv e clubs . After
West l ed the h eart king, how did
Sc henken try to make lhe conlrar t'
Srhenken had that invaluable knack
of being able lo predicl h ow an oppo·
n ent would defend . Her e. see ing that
h e stood no chance if he wun Wesl"s
lipe nin g lea d, Schenken dropped I he
four . But W est. Wald emar von
Zedtwilz, was susp icious. He didn"t
fall for the Bath Co up; instea d, he exi t·
ed with a trump .
Still facing defeat. Schenken won in
h and a nd imm ediately led the spade
four Thinking d eclarer had a guess
coming up. von Zedtwitz matched
speed with speed. Instan tly he played
th e two . Yet Schenken had no option;
He ca ll ed for dummys queen

~

~NGTOTI{E:~~

/&gt;6 1-\lr.\S ?

~E
(:£111~ -

excellent b ridge p laye r .

LANGUA.C£1

'·
'

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

:·

BIG NATE

·,,
~E "5

uETTIN&lt;O READY FOR

Hl$ HIGH $C.HOOL

R.EVI'!ION .

'

~·

·...,

&lt;•..

lo oppraclato, 114·62-3431.

11811.

~·

1187 Toyota motor home, 22'
5500 m~ ... new condltlon i 81
truck-c~~mper, sl•p• 4, $200; · ~·

peace
47Gaunl
48Tei 50Has debls
52 Mao - -lung
54 Ethiopian lllle

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebr•ty Ctpher cryplograms are crealed lrom quolahons by famous people pasl aod prnenl
Each letter m the ctpher stand$ !or anoth er rodl!y '5 ciJH 8 fK/u.l l5 S

0 I C G,

"R

S R V V

B f I C,

CGICVG

BIOGOIS

R

DTEfRMT

UTHETFRVIHT
PREVIOUS SOLUTION . ""l"d much ralh er work and show I ca n sllll do a bJI.
ralher lhan iU SI gel congr alulallons on lhe pasl ."- S1r John Gtelgud

Ttll11 ltfAIU

PUUIII

O Reorronge

letters of
four Krambled words
low to form fou r words

2

GUF E D
D I M y D ,...
1---r.:--r-:-..--.-~':'

Friends were discussing the
differences between past wars

--J.L-...J.. .....J.~

and present war capabilities
One insightful guy said that

I

16 17 I I

~-

L-.- - ' - - " ' - ·

r --::-:--:-:-::-:--:--:---, modern wars consist of guided

1---rU_XrP~E_LrS--.--11 missiles and ••• --- ••• people.

l

I I I I
B

19
_

e

Co mplete the chuckle quoted
b y f1ll•ng in the m1~smg words
'--'-...L..-.1.-.....J._...L..__, you de .... elop from step No. 3 bi!low
_

_

_

_

PRIN T NUMBERED
LETTERS
UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

I'

IIIIIIIII
SCRAM-LITS ANSWERS

Juggle - Ideal- Drown - Kettle - OLD AGE
"Yes, I want to live a long life," one not so smart cutie
said to her friend . "But," she added, "I sure don't wantto
reach OLD AGEl"

JULY 25l

W(WAY,A'&lt;&gt; l
WAS ~INtNEl,
OJRS IS AN
tNllVRil-.1&amp;

Home

R

F 0 T F

FORMA

I MONDAY

ROBOTMAN

·~-r

SOGM

DTfFGEGN ."

ruffed a hearl in lhe dummy. ruffed a
spade in hand and claimed 12 tric k s
when the kmg f ell . There were two
spa d e winners sittmg in the dummy,
on which declarer cou ld throw his dJa·
mond losers.
In the cold light of day, von Zedtwitz
made a mi stake B ut pu s hing oppo·

nents into error is one hallmark of an

~E.LJTRAL

-·

- Jackaon
42Mualcal
instrument•
43German
submarine
44Goddeu of

the more so as I have done a little motor·racing training.

1171 Wlklerneu Camper 24' Air .... '
Condhlonorl Roll Out Awning, ··.:~ :
Fair Condit o'b 52,500, 614-3811-

81

North

it h e ld,Sc henke n drew th e
l--------~::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~----------~ l astWhen
trump, unblocked his spade ace,

Services

&amp; Livestock

LO~E ..

Improvements

61

Fann Equipment

BASEMENT
W.UERPROOFING
Unconditional litetima guanntN. local referenc• furnished.
Col 1..01).247.0576 Or 114·237·
0481 Aog.,. Waterproofing. Establlahad 1175.

'71 2 - - IIUmpor pul lrollf,
eeca~
doar,
.... valble
dlvldot, good - · In good
oondblan. cau otlan, odd

houro, 114-111248111.

row, txcellenl oonllhlon,
114-112-41072.

- - · 11,100,
111 - Dodge
I7J:J. 114-4414211.

-

CI.C
Genan.l
Home
Mamtenanee- wallpaper, etorm
- . , roofing and complala
home r.palr, complete window
Nllllr, ..,.....,. wlllllng and
mabllai home tept~lr. Few fr• ....
tlrnolo coli Chol, 814-892-11323.

1•

-a'

·~

ASTRO·GRAPH

Curtlo Homo lmpaovomonto. No
Job Too Big Or Small, Vure Ex·
porto- On Oklor IN-r . ,•
Hornoo. Atldblono, Foundollona,
/Batha,
Aoollng,
Khchona
AepleelfMnt Wlndowa, lnaured,
Froo Ellllmotoo. 114-367.0516.

11100.

=-... -· .... -

~ Z24, ...... tlrtlod J&amp;E Homo Ualntonanc:• point·
PW, POL,
• - o , lng, vinyl aiding, roofing and
drYWall. froo ootlmlfn, 6~62·
4232, u• far Joe or Eart.

Two 12,000 BTU FrldgldoiN Air
Conditioner• • 04, 614-441·1205.

Antiques

t," ·

Campers&amp;

home, fully

""1'1'

~'SU"Aa.~-'.:
I,...
I' , .. '-I'

Motor Homes

Suppl1es

John DooN •
E.l. - ·
wHh S3l oom hood I ...,..

Woodbumer; 1088 ellwer truck
Iepper; truck tool box: &amp;'t4-ft86345.

79

IN fiJ,ANGf,

'M A ,_ ,.,.: Cv F"OM

PAYING MY

&amp;

814-ft2..30i0.

Farm

'P
..L

PAYING MY AUTO
INSUt(AN(,e. ANI&gt;

New gaa tenks, one ton truck
wheeliJ radlatort, floor matt,
ole. D • R Aulo, Rlploy, WV. 304312-3833 .. 1-400-273-11329.

2.2

Orand""' ~

1117 _

C.OMPAN

350 or 400 turbo transmlsslons 1
uaed or overhauled, guaranteaa
8 I 30 dayo. 304-675-48110 Pt
Pl....nt.
'

' " - .,.._

-~,ooo llllloo, 12.4111,

&amp;

Auto Parts

Of PAYING My

1

~~ Al- T~

Accessories

....

:=.: ........

~· M Lj(~

I\

I'

Wantod to buy: 25-IIOhp oulboord motor. 304-675-26111.

--...h lunda1117 n,.,_,
·~ 4
AIC, amllttt. good

Ti-1E FAST LANE ..

COLOR FOR EVER'( N161-li 1

Motors

ono - · -lful lomlly cor,
!"art 0111, 17,~mlloo,t. !Ol Vol,

~

SILVER~ PINK 1 ADI~~ERENT

INSUflAN

19i0 Vamaha Wave Runner 500
/Dual Trailer, 614-446·9364. 1'
'

57.

1IU OIM Dalla Ill, 4 clr. - .

-

SUDDENLY 1M IN

r---------------------------------------------i.

1987 21 Ft. 4 Wlnn. Closed Bow
305 Chivy Motor, Plus All A£ -oorlao, $14,300, 814-4463040.

..

~=~lui ~=~•I"" Rc:~ ==-'A&amp;:'"'~
I.e...,
~~~-12,~

58

DISHES ~

1188 Pro-M..ter Base boat,
1988 1~:fo:;2; motor, axe.
ohopo,
.
95-3335.

11111 Ford Torn~ Uov~ 111111

Portor Grand Plano, 1 - 1187
Klmboll Plano, Excallont Condltlonl 51,200, 114~111-11117.

&amp;

20 Wa1erlng
place
23Epoch
25 SOolhed
26Nev. time
27Negallve
voles
28 Breaklatl11130for whol
reason?
32Esaanlial
33Golocoun
34 Frosty
37f-relagcy.
39 Thai money
unit
41 Politician

I am wril in g this column the day af·
ter form ula I Gran d Pnx dr~ver
Ay rton Sen na was killed . He was ar·
guab ly the bes l motorracing driver
ever. It is alw ays tragic when any
sport lo ses its best participant. I al·
ways admired ht s excellent driving. all

1

BLUE : GREEN~ YELLOW 1

1883 17 112 Rinker Marc Cruller
140 HPh Trtm, Marino Radio
Wllk T N Opon Bow Go;;(l
CandHion, 614-446 -9569.

oo-.,. ..,_,,

• 14-441

Boats

--,r-"""'~~.,

..-

Go out
at the top

for Sale

1IU a-y camon., lcyl. aulo.
:104-11711-IMO aftllr 11pn or ~a~

"

SUPPER

1330.

lie=

1

LOOK, NEW

1111 Suzukl300, $1750. 304-675-

1111 Eltlurado c.dl11aa 12,1110,
good a!.po, :104-II"IS.atlll.

oa
-·

TH ' COALS?

PEANUTS

11115 Suzuki RM125, like now
51100 nogollablo. 304-882-3499
attar 8prn or 304-882-2847.

!1': AII•IP.U.
R..,. · 1100, 114-379-

West

Opening lead : •

l

1171 lwoll Skvtarll, 2DR., HT,
PS, PI, n ,ooefnil, nice IDr till
ago, SIIIGO. 304-11715"-4828.
1113 Dodgo Coronal 311, Vl
3otMf. oloi\dord, 41,000 OCJIUII1

9 Poolry lool
10Wink
11 Soft drlnkl
16 Doapalrlng

By Phillip Alde r

Motorcycles

1981 Honda CB 900 Custom
Wlndehlald, Saddle B1g1, New
Tlrao1 ' - - Milts, Excollanl
Conahlonl 51,200, 614-446-4525.

Bo"t • -

::;,..

'

-:1111:-:11=-=ca-...,.-~._=-=oao=.,...,,.•"'u,..,.1
4023.
IIIII u.... ng, ec.t .. aulo., PS,
exc. Interior, 14to0. 304-4713110.

441 111111 or
torPaoo,lwl

Musical
lnstrumems

Pick-Up

1m Honda Goldwlng 1000, A·1
cond., 29,000ml., $2000, taka
unt or CJ Jeep on trade. 304"IS-1564.

Autos for Sale

ran•

WHO WAS
IT'S A
YOU TWO
SECRET
DRAGGIN' OVER

YOU AN' MELISSY WAS
AT TH' GOSSIP FENCE
ALL
MORN IN '
LONG !1

'87 Yaltllhl four-wheeler Warrior, 51800 OBO, 614-992 ..511.

oalt &amp; poppor; illoo toy . . - . , 1:~=:-:-:=:--::----::--­
AKC,_c:_homplon blooclllftoe, 114- ~ T - Cor, ..._
867-a4114,CooMIIo.
.
,
_......1 ~-·
114-

57

4x4

J.. Station
"8' Compau pl.

4 Brown kiwi
5 Scrap
6 Baseball player
- Blue

rr-+--+--11--1
South
1 ..
3 ..

BARNEY

Rod 11187 S-10 Chevy Blazor 4x4
air cond., PW, Pl, sunroof 111i
whHI,
axcellont
co.ndlilon,
pricla under book value, must
ooll, 614-388-9&amp;11.

CIT Wlh
Roglatorod
Mlrnof, • - • bodJ ond tn.
Pupploo, 114-44
.
torlor, ..... CIT .............. 1
Schnouzor pullllioo, - - lllaoll lnlarlor, runo good, $1328,

Toy chest wlhutc:h chnt of
drawora, boby crtb, atrollar,
seing, walker, carMit. 304.8754548.

18fl5 5-10, Gravely, recliner, 1981
ford 414. 304-8715"-5162.

&amp; Gra In

Square Mlel hlr. 304-tTWIIO.
Sl:nnr for ...., t1.50 per ....

2351.

S.cllonal tofa with recliner on
both ands, Ilk• new. 304.6751969.

53

Hay

Pie-,

al.-..., - · .......... In
• - Sldera EIKIIatiJiiL 304I"IS-11121 or 1~

Romin91on 700 BDL, 3().06
w/reeotl
pad
&amp;
ewing.
R•mlngton 870, 12 gauge
wlahalls. AU exc. eond. 304--615-7951.

SOUTH
• A 4
'I A J 4 2
+ R fi
"'AKQ I0 3

18t2 Chevy 112 ton 4x4 Sll~
vorodo, loaded, 33,000 mllo s
black, wf3SO engine $1 4 500 •
614-oi92·5072.
•
'
'

~
1114
warllar,
• Calle
•
Full bloodod Booglo puppln, 1IU ca-r.., rod y,e aulo,
•••· :;:::~......: il
6wlul old, MOaa. l!IW~'ISIIO with -•boiONipm.
-,
14-"IIU·

J1cklon Avo. Point
304-1175-20153.

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans EntetJKtee•,
Jackson, O~o. 1..eoo-537-0528.

WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 lncif'
200 PSI $19.95; 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32.50; Ron Evans Entel'l)ltMI,
614-286-5930 Jackoon, Ohio

•8 63
tA97432

Anawer to Prevloua Puzzle

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South

&amp; 4 WD's

446--2342.

AKC Uln. Plrw. I Wookl Otd,

Sola, Matching Recliner, Good
Con dition, 5350; Twin Borl With
Box Spring &amp; Uattr-. $100,
614-441-1781.

Sporting Goods

Livestock

64

304-576-2223.

1888 OUC 2 112 ton, I I 2 OI&gt;Ood,
22' a,.ln boclldiiiiP w111t ta ..,
hoiii,_C_IIGU(IIIclwMI
Bod), ~OliO llll1oo, -.
liking
...,,ooo, 114 1112 1072.
Chain _ _ , ....... ..

52

EAST

• J 9 1

.. 7

• J 6

Miles, $4,0"00·, Can Bo ~ ..n· AI·.
1980 Dodga Ram Van~ 60 000
Gallipolis Dally Tribuna, 825
Third Avenuo. Gallipolis 614-

Nk:e 24 Month Urnoetn Bull, 1
Yoarllng Black 1 Whho Foco
Hettera; I'M-MI-4053.

AKC Cockw Sponlal pupploo, 10
wks old, ehota &amp; wonned. f100.

Refrtgeralor S95; Refrigerator
Frost Free $150; Ratrigerator
Sldo By Slda Was $265, Now
$195; Nice Electric t·unge,
Microwave Oven On Top, $250;
Electric Range 30 Inch $95;
Eleelrie Range 40 Inch $125;
Maytag Wri11.ger Washer, Nice
Square Tub, S175j Automatic
Wash•r
$95;
uryer
$75;
Whirlpool Washor Uke New 1
Year Warra nty $205; Gaa Ra~g•
30 Inch $95; Gas Range 36 Inch
$95; Skaggs Apr,llancaa, 16 VIne
SlrMI, Galllpola, 6M-44J6.7398,
Or 1-800-499-3499.

SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 82
Olivo 51., Galli po lio. Now &amp; Uaed
furniture, htaterl, Westem &amp;
Work boots. 614-446-3159.

~ ~A. tnc

t~=========~======~~~~~~

Sean; DliiiUII Ergometer EXtr·
else Cyc le Uke New S75, 814.
245-5078.

Signa: Portable llghtod chang•
able lettsr aign. Special $209.
Regular
$390.
F,.e
lit·
teno!dellvery.
1-&amp;0G-533-3453
anytime.

Wm+

1984 Ford Convoralon; also 1g7g
Dodge Conversion; good condilion, 814-949-2526.

~.&lt;o&lt;~fL' U\t'f
CII!K14

Vans

1978 Chevrolel

t """-'1

Rafrig•ralore, Stova, Waehere
And Oryera, All Reconditioned
And Gauranleed! $100 And Up,
Will Deliver. ti14--66i-6441.

Sawing machlna, worka aood,
$35; efect.rlc chain uw, $!5; t2
horse rld1ng moW'IIr, $650; 014949·2526.

WF:ST
• K 8 2
• K Q I 0 95
t K J 5

PARAOOA IS
f.X!T (OJEF2W
-n1E PJl.JV

()JIVERSAL
~?

Short Wheel Besa. Lots 01 NeW
P1r1tl614-446-2640.

Wllllomo _Cnii:"=.~car:" ~
- - , ---,-:....,-- canning
fann, srrac-.._l!!_tlll, -

RCA camcorder, whh $400 IX•

10
... 9 H 5 4 2

HEY I CUIVIDIJ A'JD COI..t?:RESS
YEAI-\ .. EV£1&lt;.~
HAlt. FIIVP&gt;UY ~D aJ A
[,((£PT aJE G/J"(
i-1£ALTH c.?R£ R.fVJ . - -"""'--L

Trucks for Sale

73

-lao
Prix, _.,.
Cotlpor.-od I!Maloo. 11wko rabUIII
VI Orand
.,.,..,
oulo,
old, $50. 304-1175-2015.
- . . , . gaoc1, 5111111. 304King alze weterbed with llghta
ancf mirror, 6 drawere under. Fioh Tank I Pol Shot&gt;. :Mt! 1112-1 eveitlngo.
neath, new maftreA •nd liner,
heater, comtortar and curtalne,
$300, wUI dallvor to ,.UORibl•
arraa, 614-.G40.2888.

EEK &amp; MEEK

Chevrotvt, Ford, Oodg• pic kup
beefs. Shon or loog. No rust .
304-1175-6286.

·~-,---,-,---,-­

35

Tomporory Woril, Uuol Hovo
Exporlonco In H&lt;Miao And
Uobllo Ropolr, Roof,
FloorO And Pointing, 114-N31118.

WANTED:
RESPITE
CARE
PROYIDERS Alo You Willing To
Share Your Home With Perwone
With Dovolo_.tal Dloabllhloo.
II lnl-tod In Prvvltllng A
I!Ooblo And Suppor11ve HomO On
A Umhod /Roopl1o Boalo,
toct Coclllo AI 1.-.1531-2302.
Eq""l Opportunity EmpiOpr.

614-446-8720.

Rooms

Fann, 38 ecr.., Crab CrNk Rd,
IUhlble tor houMS, farming &amp;
hu..-:ing. Small ca bin. $37,000.
304·743-3855.

lor datallo. 304-875-3328.

Truck drtvon wanlocl to hout local, call &amp;14--.2-2541.

1985 Skyline 14r70, 3br.. 1 bath,
CA. dock, $10.200 080. 304-67&gt;2503 or 675-4935.

IN011CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommend• that you do buainna with people you know end
NOT to aend money through lht
man untN you have Investigated
the oHarlng.

New Home: 3 Bedroom•, 3

•eon.

1975 2br., $2000 or lrade for
decant Blazer or 4WD. 304-8953357.

Opportunity

Small Local firm Soalllng Part·
T1mo On Coli Cloanlng l&gt;er.ono.
Sond Rooumo To SCCS, P.O.
Box 538, Korr, OH 45643.

T!. UnlvoNfty Of Rio Gronclo lo
A&lt;;c;optlng Rooumoo for Tho
Poeltlon Of SUbo1huto ToacMr
In Child Dovolopmonl cantor,
High School Olploma Or Equlvalonl Raqulrocf, PNvlouo El·
porlenc:o Worillng With Young
thlld'*' p,.ferrM. s.nd Leiter
Or lnt...ll And Raauma By
Augull I~ 11114 To Phylllo
PHK Olrwctor Of Hum1n
Rnourcoo, URG, P.O. Bo• NV,
Rio Grondo, OH 418111. EEO /AA
Employot.

0175.

1996 Clayton Winner II 14X65. 2
BR. 1112 Balh. After 6PM. 614·
441..0757

record, ttv• yeara lken..cl
driving exper•nce 1nd adeo

quato automobllo lnaunnco
cov.r1ge r~ulrw:t . Contact
Codllo ot t.eoG-531-2302. Eq""l
Opportunity Employor.

1913 New Moon 12x60 2 Bed·
rooms. Gas Hut, New Carpel,
Like New Through Oull 614-44&amp;--

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments al Vill age
and
Riverside
Manor
Apar1mtJnl s m MlddltJport From
$232-$ 355 . Call 614·992·5859.
EOH.
Mode-rn- ,E"'H;;:ic-clc•n
-_c_y- ;A-p-a""'
rt _
m_• ...,nl,
Count ry Selling, Call A. Her 5pm.

lances
44Japaneoe1 CommuniAmerican
callons agcy.
45 Recede
4 Requesl for
46 Construction
reply
beam
8 Pan points
49 Waffle brand
12Depoall
51 Chimney
13 A state
carbon
14- con lendere
53 E•haust
15Frultlarma
checking
170klahome lawn
accot.mt
18- Allo. CA
55 Bodies ol water
t9Sups
56 Columbus· ship
21 Actress- Balin 57 Had lunch
22 Sen I through
58 Princely llalian
alube
family
24Jams in
59 - St. Laurent
26 Galled horse
60 Bsndleader
27 Tide type
Brown
29Scamp
31 Nullroe
DOWN
35ToiTV
36Sanilary
1 Olsmal failure
38Declaras
2 Turtle shell
40 Rodent-ridden
3 01 repealed
41 Battle with
periods

$12,500. 304·576-2383.

Ah Conditioner tor Sat 1 , •l.o

1967 Cas tle 10x55 w/4d ox pando In llvlngroom, 2br., 1
bath, $1SOO. 304-695-3395 attor
5pm or waakends.

7-25·94

I0 6 5 3

garaga kept, looks new, eK1ras,

6 P.M.

$100; trampollna wlpada, 1l112',
$150; Wuriltzor tun maker cuotom organ, model 545 has built
1
In cnBene recorder, aouble k.y
board, $500; Nordic lrock, Wka
naw, S2QO, 614-992-2064.

ALDER

Ul8D Chev. Silverado axtended
350 auto., 43,000ml.,

4 wlndo-w
- al;r--c-on- d"CI1""1o_no_ro_.-:304--,.,..

num r!JC opper,
• ze
aAI. um
bedI , $100;
liner I8',
I truck
k t bad lull

PHILLIP

cab,

50 White Oak logs, 10"K6" 12
.1£1 Fl . Long, 614-3'79-2720, Aher

One
Bedroom
Apartment Across From Park,
AIC, No PGI!s, No Smoking,
$350/Mo ., Plus Securlly DeposJt,
614-446..e776 Days; 614-446-0Sn
Evenings.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

L.ONG TIME, NO SEE ..• !

WIZE"R? WUA.T'5
WIWNG WITH VOU?

ACROSS

1984 5·10 Twin Cab - Wrecked .
&amp;14-441·1205.

n3-5846.

Furnished

"lOU SEE? HE'5
RIGHT WHEJU" A
KING SHOULD BE...

ON j.iiA THIWt'ltE!

1080 V~kswegen rlckup, 4 cyl.,
4 sp, $1500 or wll trade tor larger truck, 614·992-8897.

3 Ton Uobllo Paek Air Con.
ditJOilBr
lnslalled,
Ananclal
Ava ilable , 614-44H308, 1-600287--630 8.

Washer, Oryar, Refrlge,.lor,
Fraolor call 614--25&amp;.1238.

I OON"T REM£M6ER
5EE1NG YOU AROUND
MOO•...

IS words

1068 GMC 112 Ton 25' Sloat
Freme 814-446-3243 After 8 P.M.

$50 Each· 1
Horn $190; 1 E:ncyc lopo dle Set $25; 1 Ponable
Silwng Machine S5Qi 1 Ch11t Of
Auto loots $75; 1 tlilcycle $25,
ca .1 Bo Seen At: 422 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Autos for Sale

72

Fnmc h

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ALLEY OOP

M Camero, red, excellent condi·
tlon. low miles, must ull,
$15,000 614-742-2549 Of 614-675- .
5063.

2' Cash Reglatara

25, 1994

$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 per wd.
$.0Sjday

71

roof
304-675•

6th &amp; Goorge St , Now Havon ,
WV 304-882·3116 EOH .

Furn ished EHic1ency 701 Fo urth
Avonuw. Gallipolis, $220 /Mo.
Ulilit 1os Paid, 61&lt;1 · &lt;1·16-4416 Attet

EOE.

patio
$300.

W JCCIISSOriiiS,

Furdshed EHiclency $165.'Mo .
Ulillr les Pitid, Sha1e Bat h , 607
Second Ave , Gallipolis, 614-4464416 Al1er 7 P.M.

Pomeroy Nul'lling &amp; Rehablllta·
lion Center It accepting ap-

to·x20'

st o res ,
churches.
schoo ld.
Wnero can you get all lhls for

in town App liCations ava i l&lt;~ble
at Vdlage Green Apts . M49 or
call 614 Q92·J711. EOH .

Phone t.:alla.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

pliances
lurni shud,
ldundry
room tac i'i lies. close !o schoo l

No

54

for Rent

2bdrm. apts ., lola! electric, ap-

Bring

Rnuma
To:
Nate
Com·
munlcations,
1502
Eastern
Avenua.l

44

25, 1994

Monday, July

of 1mpoftance on a one-IO ·one bas1s.

*• -

bodo- -- ..... .........

--azez,_,._ _
plckor, 12 rolltod, $2GCIO: com .. _
_........ dmt

. - ; 2 • ., ....., .....,
~

63

..........m:·
Uv81toclc

"1111 c.tAIIIa SOY
loodocl, CD, • L

--~

&amp;.~~~=

111'1
Q II
•• ,
lup- 1 -

:,

Aon'o TV Sorvlco, apoclallzlng
In Z.nlth olao oorvlclng mosl
othtr brand&amp; Hot.an c•llt, also

_,. appllonco ropalra. WV
304-11143t80hlo614-44&amp;..24S4.

cuaa. 82

.OliO AIIIUII

Plumbing

olol. 114-2116-111 \

==-,. . .,

&amp;

Refrigeration

Pwnpo, At Condhlonoro

El~rtc.. n:

,1~-11301.

Roofclonllol

.,

.."
~·

Electrical

com-.:lal

!!Iring, now oorv1co "' ropalra
llaRidonour- UElconood lllcfrtclan:

A'blr
"WJ 'Birthday
Tuesday, July 26. 1994

Heating

c..••

-

&gt;:'

&amp;

llllo,PIWI-~AIC,
CMao, Til, Allll'll ....... El- ,,...,.,., H...lna And Cooling.
lnl4aAIUon And Sorvlce. E~
callonl
II,JOO, 114- Cortlllod.
Rooldonilol, Commar·
ttll-.

84

~

Matchmak e r 1nstantly revea l s which
signs are romantically perfect for yo u
Mail $2 to Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper . P .O . Bo• 4465. New York . N . Y.
10163.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You could be
very adept today at negotia ting matters

Two tmportant new friendships might be
eslablished in lhe year ahead. Neilher
acquaintance will know the other, ye t
their mores and values are Comparable
lo your htgh slandards.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Conditions are a
lnfle unusual today, and it's possible
somelhing unexpecled m1ghl develop
lhal could prove profilable ft&gt;r you. The
way this occurs may be a bit mysterious.
Know where to look for romance and
you' ll lmd il . The Aslro ·Graph

Yo u'll have lhe edge and know it. yet
your 1ndinahon to be fair will be strong
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Savings cou ld
result today by doing some of the work
around your place yourself Study what
needs mending to determ.ine whether il
has to be farmed out. If nQt, give it a try .
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov, 22) Stlualions
lhal appear 10 be loo difficuillor olhers lo
manage are. likely lo be delegaled lo you
loday . Take conlrol of SJiuali ons if you
see compftf;\ions faltering.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21)
Hunches shouldn"l be ignored loday in
situation s where there is so mething of
materjal vall.1~ at stake_ Your intuition is
compatible llliilh your logic.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Oon'l be
afraid lo ask direcl queslions loday if
you're involved with friends in something
wilh ramilicalions you don"t fully compre·
hand.
AOUARtUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Some

type of gam co uld come lo you loday
through tw o different sources . One IS
relaled 10 your ca reer. lhe second 10 a
confidential arrangement you have with
another.
PISCES (feb. 20-March 20) You have
the ability to ma nage and direct others
today without being dictatorial or unduly
lorcelul. They"ll lollow you beca use of
what they perceive you to represent .
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) A ioinl
e ndeavor in which you 're presently
involved has strong probabilities for success. provided neilher you nor your assoCiate tips your hand prematurely
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your abilities lor handling mailers lhal require
negotialions are very good loday . lllhere
is something th at can be finalized or
firmed up, contact the persons involved.
GEMINI (May 21 -Juna 20) Today you
m1ghl tle raced w1lh lhe lask or redOJng
somelhing lhat wasn"t handled correclly
1he firsllime around. This lime you'll take
real pride in ooing il prope~y .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your better
abil~ies are apl lo come lo lhe fore loday ·
should your crealiv ily be c hallenged .
Don'l operale In a mode that subdues or
bridles your imaqination.

..

IC1rlcal, WV000301
:104411-1711.
'

.I

\

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Modeling
course
completed
Cindy Lewis, 13 yea r old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lewis, Jr., and gra nddaughter of
Mrs . Anna Mac Lewis, the lat e
Roben Lewis, Sr. and Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Imbod en, all of Middleport, ha s completed a 13 hour
course in advanced modeling with
the John Robert Powers Modeling
School of Columbus.
Lewis will be a student at Meigs
Junior High School in the fall
where she will be active '" the
cheerlcading program . She IS also
an active member of Hope Bapt1st
Church of Middleport. Local buSI -

Monday, July 25, 1994

Conflict over Confederate banner heats up

CINDY LEWIS
ne sses and indi v•du als spon sored
Lewis in the modeling course.

MYRTLE B-EACH, S.C. (AP)
- One hundred and twenty-nine
years after Lee bowed to Grant at
Appomattox, this town of miniature golf courses. amusement parks
and packed beaches is where
Southerners are taking a stand on
the Confederate battle flag.
Thousands marched here Saturday as tounsts watched from side walks and simmered in traffic jams.
"DixiC, we're gonna bring your
flag down." sang the predominantly black ant1 -fl ag marchers. Th e
pro-llag group, all white, launched
ilS rally with rebel yells and chant ed: "Never take it down'"
Deep in the sea of rebel flag s,
some shouted racial slurs and wore
T-shirts reading "You wear your X
ami I'll wear mine;" "It's a white
thmg;" and "The original boys in

.the hood, " depicting Ku Klux
Klansmen.
"The Confederate flag says the
same thing to me !hat lhe swastika
says to my Jewish brothers," countered the Rev . John Hurst Adams, a
bishop in lhe AME Church.
With anti-flag se ntiment growing and supporters digging in their
heels across the South, a showdown loom s in South Carolina.
Civil rights leaders threaten Labor
Day demon strations in the resort
town of Hilton Head Island and
promise an economic boycou if lhe
banner continues to fly over the
statehouse, as it has since 1962.
"This would be one more feather in their hat. We're not going to
let it happen," said Michael Parker, taunting black marchers wilh a
portrait of a Klansman on horse-

back bearing a flaming cross .
Both sides agree the slllrry blue
"X" on a red field is a powerful
symbol; what it symbolizes
depends on who's talking.
"It's heritage, it's honor, it's
glory," said demonstrator Sherman
Todd, 31, who wore a flag T-shirt
reading: "It's A Southern Thing.
Y'aU Wouldn't Undersland."
"It represents the scars and
stains of our past, not our future; it
symbolizes divisiveness instead of
unity," U.S. Rep. John Lewis, DGeorgia, sa1d recen~y.
Throughout the region. battle
lines are being drawn.
Democratic Gov . Zell Miller
seeks re-election !his year after stirring bitter debate in 1993 with his
unsuccessful drive to change the
slate flag in Georgia, which incor·

International agreements protect Social Security for workers abroad
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager, Athens
Some years ago, an American
working abroad counted among the
risks the loss of Social Security
protection. Since foreign jobs were
subject to the Social Security payroll laX, they were not earning the
credits necessary for Social Security retirement, survival, and dJsability benefits and Medicare protection.
Today, thousands of such workers are protected by agreements
between the United Slates and 16
foreign countries. Many of these

workers are receiving a higher benefit than otherwise would have
been payable, or receive a benefit
where none would have been
payable as a result of the se agreements .
A 17th agreement, between the
U.S. and Greece. is expected to
take effect before year's end. Preliminary discussions regardmg possible agreements with Japan and
Korea are planned fort this year.
Since 1978. the United States
has concluded bilateral Social
Security agreements with Austria,
Belgium, Canada, Finland, France,
Germany Ireland, Italy, Luxen -

bourg, the Netherlands, Norway,
Portugal, Spai n, Sweden, Switzerland , and the United Kingdom .
r 'he agreements have two main
pufJJOSes. First, they help fill gaps
in benefit protection for workers
who ha ve d1vided the11 caree rs
betwe en th e Unit ed States and
another country. For exa mpl e, if a
worker has earned some Social
Security credits in the United
Stales, but not enoug h to qualify
for a benefit, the U.S. Social Security Administration can count the
worker' s credits under the other
country's syswm to mak e up tt1c
difference.

If a person meets the minimum
elig•bility requirements based on
combined credits. he or she will
receive a partial U.S . benefit
proploptional to the amount of
credits earned in lhc United Slates.
The other country can also use lhe
person ';s credits from both countries 10 help meet the eligibility
requirements for its social security
benefits.
The agreements also eliminate
dual Soc.al Security coverage and
contribution liability . This can
occur when a person from one
country works in another country
and is required to pay social securi-

ty contributions to both countries
on the same earnings. Each agreement sets out rules that assign a
worker's coverage to just one of
the two countries.
U.S. Society Security agreements apply to the United States
retirement, survivors and disability
insurance program. About 44,000
people are now receiving U.S. benefits that would not be payable
wilhout the agreement.l. The contribution exemptions provided by lhe
agreements save hundreds of millions of doUars a year for employers and workers in the United
States and the other countries. In

Herman. Emma Hoffman and Caroline Volz giving an update on
their various families.
Given special recognition were
Ethel Orr, Chester, and Louise
Ewing, Zanesville, for revival of
the Theiss reunion. Also given particularrecognition, in honor of par-

ticipation 50 years ago in World were also gtven to the oldest men
War II , were Woody Paul. Paul present, Blylhe Theiss and Melvin
Hoffman , Bill Davis, Bill Young, Wcnderoth; oldest women, Lomse
David Yost, Clifford Beaver, Ken- Ewing and Ethel Orr; youngest
ncth Thei ss and Bdl Wagner.
boy , Tyler McVay; youngest girl,
Game s, to include all age Rachelle Davis; traveling the greatgroups, were played with all partie· est distance, Dorothy Salmon sen
ipating receivmg a prize. Awards and Sam Chapman Florida; most

the close ol the program, David
Yost, Racine, identified and gave
an explanation of family connections for all of the pictures.
A potluck dinner was held at
noon. Those attending came from
Florida, West Virginia, Maryland,
Kansas, Illinois, and Ohio.

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1 Section, 10 Pagea 35 cent.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 26, 1994

A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Middleport OKs $1.3 million '95 budget
•

By GEORGE ABATE

Sentinel News Staff
Middleport passed 3 $1.3 million proposed 1995 budget at its
regular council meeting Monday
night. The budget is expected to
end 1995 with a $68,713 surplus.
The bud~et was approved 4 - 1.
with Counctlman Paul Gerard dis·
senting and Councilman Nick
Robinson abstaining.
Next year's $1,385,580 budget
was prepared in June by ClerkTreasurer Teri Hockman and
accounted for income earned this
year and last, Mayor Dewey Horton said.

The four heavy snows cost the
village $25,000 this year, which
had not happened in the previous
fouryears,hcadded .
Gerard questioned how the vii lage could expect to end with a
$68,000 surplus.
"Are !he numbers we have realistic? Does anyone think we'll have
this much in surplus?" Gerard
asked. "It seems !hal the payroll is
just as big next year."
The surplus is from refuse and
meter funds growth. and costs will
be held down, Hockman said.
This June, the general fund l)ad
a balance of$22,678.05, while rune

of the 18 funds had defiCits . The
largest defiCit balances were
$10,175.R3 in recreation fund and
$8,927.84 mpubhc transportation.
The village ha~ been plagued by
paymg bills that are months old 10
get out of its financial constraints.
Counc1l had cancelled giving
longevny ra1ses based solely on the
employee's years of experience,
Honon added.
In other business, the council
also concentrated auention on savmg lhe village pool.
Th ·ll
h
1
e VI age as a ready applied
for a grant !hat would pay for half
of $80,000 m repatrs needed tore-

open it Other grants may also be
sought, Horton said.
The village park board present·
ed the council with a check for
$365 in money raised for the 42year-old pool from a softball tournamcnt and yard sales. A town
meeting will be held at 7 p.m. on
Thursday, Aug. 4 in council cham bers to look at ways to raise money
and get more volunteers.
Bake sales, tag days, yard sales
and even putting an item on th e
water bill stubs where people could
pay more ~tan their bill to help the
pool all were discussed . The mon ey
that is donated for the pool will

Zoning dilemma prompts
Pomeroy public hearing

only be used for ~lat purpose and if
the pool can not be repaired the
money will be return ed . Horton
said.
The connell also passed a resolution thanking the Order of the
Eastern Star for donating money
from a bean dinner for the pool.
The co uncil also thanked Park
Director Tim Shane for hi s hard
work.
In other park news, the board·
reported that the min ia ture golf
course will have new holes
in stalled, and any businesses that
would like to spon sor a hole can do
so for $150.

A 'purr-feet' rescue

firefighter Michael VanMeter.
Blaettnar then appointed Wayne
Davis and Rick Blaettnar as
liaisons between the fire depart ·
ment and Dills Fire and Safety of
Ravenswood, W.Va., for outfitting
of the new fire truck. Council ratified the appointments.
Also, Blaettnar said state and
village workers would start removing portions of sidewalk on Main
Street ncar Nye Avenue in August.
The sidewalks are ~angerous following a slip on the road earlier
this spring, he said. In addition,
contractors hired by the state are
continuing to examine the slip on
Main near Nyc, he noted.
During open discussion, council
members George Wright and Bill
Young noted that street repairs
were needed on roads including
Wyllis Hill, Pleasant Ridge, Ann
Street and Spring Avenue. Blaet·
tnar indicated work crews would
perhaps continue road repairs by
Thursday or as soon as possible.
Blaettnar also commended street
supervisor Jack Krautter for the
repairs on Wyllis Htll Road, notmg
(Continued on Page 3)

'

"

RESCUim KITTEN - A member or tbe Meigs County
Humane Society, Fred Baloy, above, climbed onto tbe roor or
RiteAid Monday morning to save this kitten. This eight-week·
old killen was Ukely thrown ooto the roor by youths or haterul
owners, said Sharon McLead, humane society investigator.

ftled Monday in a Cincinnati feder- speech."
The Klan likely will seek anothal court. Greenwood asked U.S.
District Judge Carl Rubin to issue er permit for a cross this Christmas,
an order that would permanently their lawyer said.
"I think lhe decision ... is clearprevent Cincinnati from interfering
with the Klan when it wants to ly a victory for the First Amendment, for the free exercise of reliplace a cross on Fountain Square.
The city's lawyers opposed the gion and the concept that a public
request. They are defendmg a city forum, once opened, can't be
ordinance that forbids displays with closed to the views of people who
symbols that could be percetved as may be regarded as hostile to the
"fighting words" that could incite · establishment," said Benson Wolobservers to violence.
man, an ACLU lawyer who repreIn the Columbus case, the sented the Klan in lhe case.
appeals court rejected the state's
Judges Nathaniel Jones and
argument !hat allowing the wooden Robert Krupansky joined in the
cross on Capitol Square violated appellate court's unanimous opinthe constitutional separation of ion, which was based on the coun's
church and state by creating the 1993 ruling in a Grand Rapids,
appearimee lhe state was endorsing Mich., case. That ruling said the
a religion.
Constitution allows a private orga·
"In a public forum, the religious nization to display a religious symcontent of private speech is abso- bol - a menorah in that case -on
lutely irrelevant for First Amend- a public, square, as long as aU pri·
ment purposes," Judge James vate groups are afforded equal
Ryan wrote. " ... The Klan's dis· access to the public forum.
play of a Latin cross is private

Abuse perplexes
humane officials
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News StafT
An eight-week-old kiuen was
rescued from the four-story roof
of RiteAid Monday morning by
a member of lhe Meigs County
Humane Society.
The black-and-white kitten
was alen but emaciated, infested
wilh ear mites and fleas after the
rescue, said Dorothea Fisher,
president of the Meigs County
Humane Society.
Fisher called Fred Baloy,
who took a ladder and climbed
up to the flat, tarred roof and
snagged the cat, Fisher said.

The cat could have been
there for one day or three, but
would nol likely have survived
the sunny Monday, Fisher said.
"If I keep it I'll name il
Fred," Fisher added, referring to
the kitten's savior.
People who abuse animals
usually have a history of being
abused. she added.
"I've been in this business
for 25 years. Why do people
beat their children or beat their
wives?" Fisher asked. "I have a
very dim view of my fellow
man."

Citizens should not have pet.l
if they can't take care of them,
she said.
"God says we have dominion
(Continued on Page 3)

Simpson DNA test results
to become battle of experts

'Av...,. selll111 prier per (lll&lt;k bastd on an KJ. RtJ~~olds survey of all oudet
l)p&lt;IICI'OSS Ohio (1""'11'!- April, t991). Pri«s ..m..., by
~y 1nd oud&lt;t type. Cbeck lht prier wherr you buy cl81"flt1.

15 mg. "tal'''
O.Bmg. nicotire av. per
c•garene by FTC method.

·~--..1.---------

ent1ne

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
state will challenge a U.S. appeals
court's ruling that the Ku Klux
Klan has the right to displ~.y a cross
outside the Ohio Statehouse in
Coltul!buS.
Rob Biesenbach, a spokesman
for Attorney General Lee Fisher.
said an appeal of the 6th U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals' ruling Mon·
day would be filed with the U.S.
Supreme Coun within 90 days.
The state is worried that allowiflg the display "poses serious constitutional problems," Biesenbach
said.
For the last two years, the Klan
has waged a similar fight in Cincinnati. Both times, a federal judlle
ordered the city to let lhe Klan display a cross at Chrislmas on Fountain Square, a public square downtown.
Scott Greenwood of Cincinnati,
an American Civil Liberties Union
lawyer representing lhe Klan, cited
the aJli)CIIate ruling in arguments

® For about the same

Tonight, partly cloudy .
Luw ln 50s. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High ln lower!!&amp;.

4-8-30-31-32
738228

State to mount appeal of decision
allowing Klan cross at statehouse

Baptist women
hold workshop
Twenty women from Jackson.
Cheshire, Patriot, Rio Grande,
Pomeroy and Racine met at the
Bob Evans shelter house at Rio
Grande on recently for a workshop
on American Baptist Women's
Ministries programming for 199495.
The program opened wilh a welcome from President Arlene Tracy,
Rio Grande, A new theme song,
"No Longer Strangers" was presented and sung by the group.
The morning session was spent
with reports and distribution of
materials from the AB W Ohio
State Conference held in June at
Dennison University, GranviUe.
Delphine Dale , Ironton, was
speaker in the afternoon using the
theme, "One Spirit • No Longer
Stranger." She emph~ized three
points - stop and tlnnk, look m
the Bible, listen with mind and
heart
Anita Holley, Rio Grande, lead
group singing _and Donna. S~d~rs
was soloist, wnh several mspmng
songs.
Contributions were made to the
State Officers Training Fund and
the new slate project.
.
AnJIOUIICCIIlenl was made of the
Association fall rally on September
17 to be held at Pomeroy First Baptist Cburch.
The meeting opened with a "free
hug" mixer led by Martha Lou
Beegle, Ra~ine, and closed with
prayer by Mrs. Dale.

BASIC

Pick 4:

lead

the zoning resolution was original·
By JIM FREEMAN
ly passed.
Sentinel News StafT
The review board will meet
A zoning question resulting in
Pomeroy Mayor John BIaettnar' s Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the
calling for a meeting of the vil- Pomeroy Municipal Building. The
lage's zoning review board was meeting is open to the public,
among lhe items discussed at Mon- Blaettnar said.
"We hope the issue can be
day's meeting of the Pomeroy Vilsoon," Blaettnar comresolved
lage Council.
mented.
Blaettnar called for the meeting
Council authorized the construe·
to hear .a zoning dispute in the viltion of a 55 -foot radio tower on
lage's Mulberry Heights area.
A house on Mulberry Heights, Breezy Heights for use by the
in an area zoned as urban residen· Meigs County Emergency Medical
tial, is possibly being purchased for Service and the Radio Amateur
Emergency
Service
use as an office - a violation of Civil
(RActs).
the village's zoning ordinance,
Emergency Services Director
Blaettnar said.
"The agent for the buyer has 'Robert Byer said the tower would
been informed and has requested a allow better communications durhearing before the zoning review ing emergencies and would benefit
. the village because a village anten. board," said Blaetblar.
Council members indicated they na would be placed on the tower.
In personnel maners, council
have received calls from nearby
property owners opposed to the accepted lhe resignation of police
business being located on Mulberry Pauolman Scott Jonas, effective
Heights across from Veterans Friday due to new employment. In
Memorial Hospital.
addition, Blaettnar appointed Bracy
Although the area is zoned Korn as third lieutenant on the
urban residential, the area houses a Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Departdoctor's office put in place before ment, following th~ . resi~nation of

Gene Kelly
hospitalized
stroke
after
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gene

Kelly, the acrobatic danc~r who
slllrfed in Hollywood mustcals of
the 1940s and '50s, was hospitalized after a mild stroke.
Kelly, 81, was in stable co.~di­
tion and "resting comfortably at
UCLA Medical Center after his
stroke Saturday night, nursing
supervisor Susan Davidson said
Sunday.
Kelly's publicist, Warren
Cowan, said doctors described the
stroke as mild and "in such a ...
minimal way that I don't believe
that there was any permanent damage.''
Kelly choreographed and
danced in such musical hits as "An
American in Paris," ~~singin' in
the Rain," and "On the Town."
Kelly also had several serious acting roles and directed "Hello,
Dolly!'' and other ftlms.
He attended a July 16 concert
given by opera tenors Placido
Domingo, Jose Carreras and
Luciano Pavarotti

245

Vol. 45, NO. 58

the united States. lhe exemptions
apply to Social Security contribu·
lions and also contributions for
Medicare hospital insurance. In the
other eountnes, the exemptions
apply to Social Security contributions and, in some cases, contributions for olher programs.
People do not have to do anything about receiving benefits
under an international agreement
until they are ready to apply for
benefits. A person who wishes to
do so can apply at any Social Security officer here or in a foreign
country.

generations present, Ethel Orr wit~
four; largest family present, Lena
Chapman family .
Twenty first-time attendees
were recognized and given a special welcome.
There was a display of family
pictures, without identity. and at

Pick 3:

hike

Copyright 1DM

-------------Family reunion---~--------THEISS
The fourth annual revised
reunion of the Reverend Luben and
Marie Louise Hille Theiss' descendants was held at Sll!r Mill Park,
Racine, with 150 family members
and friends attending.
David Kucsma of Racine, master of ceremonies. extended a welcome and !he invocation was given
by James White, Mlddlepon.
Mrs. Maye Mord, Pomeroy, presented a brief history of Marie
Hille Theiss. She told of the difficulty of gathering a young family
together for travel to a distant
country after her husband had
already come to America, burying
two children in Germany before
leaving, hardships of her life and
the personal strengths to keep
going for over 90 years.
.
Family groups were recogmzed
wilh descendants of Julius, Henry.

()hi;;-L~tte~y ~-===-·_,-=.:---

Reds

porated lhe battle flag in I956.
There were demonstrations at
this year's Super Bowl in Atlanta.
and more are expected when
Atlanta hosts the 1996 Olympic
Games. Last week. Holiday Inn
Worldwide asked its franchises to
remove the Georgia flag, and flag
foes are pressing McDonald's to
take it down from Georgia restaurants.
It came down from Alabama's
slate Capitol last year. Soon after
taking office in 1993 . Gov. Jim
Folsom decided not to challenge a
coun ruling against the nag.
In Tampa, Ra., lhe county cornmission replaced the seal that
included the nag earlier this year.
And in Mlssissippi. which made
the rebel emblem pan of its flag in
1894, there have been court challenges.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
hearing 10 help decide whether O.J.
Simpson's lawyers can conduct
their own DNA tests on the prosecution's evidence is shaping up as a
duel between expertS.
So far, the circumstantial case
a11ainst Simpson in the killings of
hts ex-wife and her friend largely
rests on blood found at the crime
scene and his estate.
Genetic fingerprinting tests originally were scheduled for today.
But Simpson's lawyers asked for
an emergency hearing out of fear
that the tests could consume the
blood samples and leave none for
the defense.
Judge Lance Ito ~ Monday,
to delay the tests until Thursday to
give a defe~~SC expert lime to get to
the Maryland laboratory where the
tests, will be conducted. He also
said the expcn could have the lab
hold 10 percent of the blood sam-

pies for possible testing later.
Ito said he would convene a
hearing in about two weeks at
which expens will educate him in
the exotic technology of DNA test·
in g. Then he 'II decide if the
defense gets a portion of the samples.
DNA - deoxyribonucleic acid
- encodes each individual's
unique genetic makeup. Some scientists call DNA testing the greatest forensic breakthrough since fin~erprinting. Others argue it is subJOCI 10 contamination and laborato·
ry error and cannot be trusted.
"Since I sense that this is the
critical physical evidence, I think'
we need to be very clear on what
we're doing here,' 110 said. "The
record is not complete here. I do
not have enough sctentifrc evidence
to make a ruling at this point''
Monday's hearing was just lhe
beginning.

NEW EMS VEIUCLE FOR SYRACUSE Mary PlckeDli, chief or the Syracuse squad, was
presented keys to a new vehicle Monday afternoon by Meigs County Emergency Service
Director Robert Byer. The new vehicle will
replace a 1986 model, which will now be used

(

....

for patient transfers by the EMS. Cost of the
new vehicle and all its equipment was approximately $74,000. From the left here with Ptekens
and Dyer are Doug Lavender, captain, Eber
Pickens Jr., assistant chier, David Lawson and
Eber Pickens Sr. (Sentinel photo by by Charlene

Hoenich)

In other action . the council ·
• voted 5-l, w1th Robinson tlisscmin g. to withdraw from the Big
Bend Water DIStri Ct. This was the
second reading of th e ortlmance. A
meeting will be held at 7 p.m.
Monday, Aug. I in council cham bee~ to d1scuss the different options
for water service.
·
"I think we should ta ble th e
third reading un t1l we hav e a
chance to review th e options"
Gilmore said. "I think we need to
be careful about locking ourselves
out of what we might want to get
back in."
(Continued on Page 3)

Legislation
drops ban
on assault
weapons
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
compromise crime bill proposed by
top negotiators drops a ban on
assault-type weapons that had been
approved by lhe House and Senate.
The weapons ban was only one
of the major items still in dispute as
conferees prepared to resume work
on the bill this afternoon after a
six-week delay.
President Clinton was meeting
this morning with members of the
Congressional Black Cau&lt;;us, looking for com100n ground tin anot!&gt;Q,r
area of lhe bill: racial implicatio'\,
of the death penalty.
A provision in the House-passed
crime bill would allow use of
statistics to prove racial bias in
death penalty cases. But even a
compromise version that would
rcslLict it to federal cases, among
other limits, could not attract
enough votes in the Senate to overcome a threatened GOP filibuster.
To mollify the provision's supporters. the White House has
offered to impose an executive
order implemenung part of the
compromise and to appoint a commission to study the problem.
The chairmen of the congressional judiciary committees, Rep.
Jack Brooks, D-Texas, and Sen.
Joseph Riden, 0-Del., distributed
their proposed compromise crime
b11l to fellow negotiators Monday.
Congressional aides say it left out a
lot or major issues because Brooks
and Riden could not agree, including the weapons ban and how
prison funding will be distributed .
Brooks adamantly opposes the
firearms ban, which would affect
19 named types of firearms and
scores of copycats and other rifles,
shotguns and pistols that lhe government says meet the characteristics of assault-style weapons. It
would limit magazine capacities to
10 rounds. At the same time, it
would exempt 650 named flfearms
and all guns legally owned when
the law took effocL
The Senate passed the ban as
part of its crime bill, and lhe House
passed it as a separate measure.
Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.,
said he would reintroduce a version
of his House-pa~sed bill at the conference, saying, "I'm cautiously
optimistic that we'll have the
votes. •'
~s for prison funding, Senatepassed legislation would require
states to implement such rules as
requiring all prisoners to serve at
least 85 percent of their sentences.
House-passed legislation would
distribute the money to all states
while setting aside a portion as
bonuses for those with such rules.
The Brooks-B•den agreement takes
neither side, sources said.
Another potential issue is feder _
al court funding. The Senate bill
authorized $300 million to cover
increased work from lhe biU's new
laws. The House approved no
money, and the Brooks-Biden proposal leaves it out.
Monday, U.S. District Judge
Maryanne Trump Barry of the
Judicial Conference of th~ United
States, urged House Spe.aker
Thomas Foley. D-Wash., to restore ·
the funds. Rep. William Hughes
D-N.J., said he would try to get~
money back in.
(Continued on Page J)

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