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Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

FDA to decide whether cigarettes qualify as drugs
By PA UL RECER
AP Science Writer
WAS HINGTON (AP) - Feder-.
al scientifi Cadvi sers arc taking up a
ques tion that could change smok mg habit s for years to come: Arc
cigare ttes drug-delivery system s?
A Food ami Drug Ad min istration sc ienti fic advisory panel meets
T ucsd:Jy to deliberate the nature of
Cigarettes and to vote for a recom mendation that could lead to FDA
regulation .
It " an un portan t step in a system atic process started by FDA
head Dr. Da vid Kes sler - and
g&lt;llnm g spe ed ancl pub lic support
- that some hope wi ll al l but put a
"No Smokm g" sign over America

one day.
"The find ings of thi s adv isory
comm ittee will be very importan t
as the age ncy dcc1dcs whet her
n icol inc-c ont a i n1 ng c i ga ret tcs
should be reg ulated ," Kessler said
in an interview.
K c~s l c r took up a regulator 's
sword again st th e tobacco dragon
111 February when he suggested to
Cong re" that law s c rcatmg th e
I'DA could be interpreted to give
the agency authority to contro l dislflhuuon , snlc nnd promot ion of
cigarctLC s.
That int erpretation would pu t
c1garc ttcs m the same class as thou.-.aruJs of pharrnm.:cuLicals, medical
tk vJccs and foods regu lated by the

On Tuesday, the same comm ittee addresses the habit itself.
" The purpose of the committee
meeting is to look at scientific data
on th e effec ts of nicotine on the
body," said Kessler. " What arc its
addictive properties' At what doses
is nicotine addicti ve? Is the re a
leve l below which it is not addictive?' '
The age nda an d witnesses for
the committee were be ing withheld
un til Tuesday, but if the mee ting
follows the usual pattern of FDA
sc ienti fic deli berations, committee
members will hear hours of testimony from peopl e with all shades
of opi nion. Experts eventuall y will

have to vote yes or no on spec ific
scientific questions.
Tob acco compani es already
have signaled where they stand .
In tes timony be fore Congress,
tobacco exec ut ives de nied th at
cigarette smok ing is add icti ve or
even dangerous. And in an adverti sin g ca mpaign, th e co mpanies
have att.1ckcd what they say is an
organized effort aimed at outl awin g
cigarettes . So me ads as ser t th at
cigarette smoking is a civil ri ghts
iss ue and that the govern ment is
trying to tra mple Ameri can free doms.
Ke ss le r sai d th at eve n if
Cigarettes arc found to be drugs , his

agency wou ld not seek to totall y
outlaw them.
"Prohibition is never going 10
work, " he said, notin g that there
are just too many adult Americans
- about 45 million - who smoke.
Ins tead, the FDA ch1 cf is looking toward the future. He wants to
keep cigarettes out of the hands of
the next generation.

Jonathan Lyo ns rece ntly cele bra ted his ni nth blflhday with a
pa rty at the home of his mo ther,
TamrJ Lyons, Rac ine. A poo l party
sv ith a base ba ll theme was carried
o ut.

J ONATHAN LYONS

lly ED PETERSO N
Social s~c u r it y Man'ager Athens
·
'
You have said goodbye to the
. and now
gang down at the o ffICC
you're starting your own businesS:-.
And you're operating it from your
home. No more rush hour traffic.
No boss looking over your shoul dcr. You' re on your own.
Whether it ' s a lifetime career
change or just "'"
·d short-term venture
to help you care for your children
or an aged or ;tiling parent, you' ll
need to follow some bas ic business
reporting rules . No mauer what
kind of business you are operating,
·
you'll have to pay Soc ial Secunty
taXes. When you work for someone
else, your employer pays half of
·
d h
· 1S
the Sacta ecunty ta xes an t e

other half is withheld from yo ur
pay. When yo u' re on your ow n,
you pay all of the wx .
Now that you' re self-employed
it is im portant to keep your Soc t'al'
Sec urity reporting current. As you
cam money and pay Social Sccuri ty.taxcs, you' re earning credits to
qualify for Soc ial Security benefits.
(You' ll need 40 credits to be eligiblc for rctircmenL) You may think
it will be years be'orc
'' you' ll collec t
Social Security , but it could come
sooner th an you expe ct. If you
shoul d become disabled , you and
your famil y co uld collect monthly
benefits. Or if you die, your family
members could be eligible to col lect survivors benefit. But if your
Social Security tax es arc not current, yo u and your family could be
ineligible for ben efits.

~ s a self-e mployed pe rso n
yo u II report your eanungs when
yo u fil e your federa l meo me tax
re
turn . If yo.u r ne t .carnongs
arc
$400
11 .
. or more, you WI report your
carnm gs on a Sc hedul e SE (self
e mp~oycd) . Yo~r net carmn gs for
Soc ial Secumy arc your gross earnmgs from your trade or busoness,
monu s all of your allowable buSI ness dcducuons
Th
S .. and
1 S dcp.reCiauo. n.
t
. c current OC Ja ccunty tax ra c
IS 15.3 percent on net earnm gs
from se lf-empl oym e nt u~ to
$60 ,600 . If you r net carnm gs
exceed $60,60G, you contonuc to
pay the Med1care portiOn of the
Soc1al Sec unt y ta x, wh1 ch 15.2.9
percent, on the res t of your earn mgs.
Alth ough as a self-em ployed

Reader's opera glasses have seen better days
lly ANNE B. ADAMS and
Claremont, N.H., who's talented, 03743, Attention: Mike.
DE AR JEAN : We call ed our replacement panel for his 31-ycarNA NC Y NASII ·CUMMINGS
has a sen se of humor and the
DEAR ANN E AND NAN : local liquid embroidery expert and old range that has pullout burners
DE AR ANN E AND NAN : I patience of Job.
Quite a few year s ago, liquid she told us that Tri Cbcm is still in and two eye-level ovens.
have a pa1r of antique French opera
We know this because Nan once embroidery was big and everyone business and carries both the metal
Write to " Ask Anne &amp; Nan " at
glasses that we re a gift from my toted a bag full of her Ma' s 1950s was pa inting with tube paints . and plastic tips. She said your paint P.O. Box 240, Hartdand, VT 05048.
so n ~ in ~ law . Some lady, long before
sun glasses, which he managed to These paints were made by Tri should be just fine.
Questions of general interest will
my tim e, dropped and scratched adju st to fit her. He would be Chern , and I bought a lot of them.
You can order tips from: Geor- appear in the column. Due to the
th em. Unfortunately, there IS no happy to put new lenses in your Then I had to go to work, I didn't gia Smith , 15 We st St. , North volume of mail, personal replies
manufa cturing mark on them, opera glasses and, in fa ct, your usc my paints and they froze up at Walpole, NH 03609 or write to the cannot be provided.
31though the dealer believed that local optician could probably do it, the tip.
company for a dealer ncar you. The
they w ~ r c of French origin. Can too.
I've tried everything and written address is Tri Chem Inc., I Cate
Anne B. Adams and Nancv
anyone refurbi sh them? - VITA
It' s hard to estimate the cost to the company, but my letter was May St., Harrison, NJ 07029.
Nash-Cummings are co-authors
C., Opelousas, La.
STUMPED : GLASS PANEL or "Ask Anne &amp; Nan " (Whet·
without seeing the glasses, but he returned to me . I hate to lose 50
DE AR VITA : We trust what thought it would run $50-$100. His tubes of painL If you could help, I FOR FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan :
needs refurbishing arc the lenses. address is For Sight Opticians. 229 ·sure would appreciate it. - JEAN RANG E - C. Lamar Aldrich of Two Prize Problem-Solvers
There is a spl endid opti cian in Washington St. , Claremont , NH DYER, Wabash, Ind.
Baton Rouge, La., is looking for a Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).

person, you pay both the employer
and empl oyee poruon of the Socml
Security tax, there arc two income
tax. d.ed
. ucuo.ns that reduce your. tax
li ability. F ~rs t , your net earnon gs
from self-employ ment arc reduced
by an amount equal to hal f of rour
total self-employ ment tax. Th1s 1s
similar to the way employees arc
treated under the income tax laws
in that the employer's share of the
Soc ml Sec urity tax is not considered income to the employee.
Second, you can deduct half of
your· se lf-emplo yment tax as a
business expense. This is similar to
the deduction allowed to employers
on the Social Sec urit y ta xes they
pay for their employees.

ASK ANNE 6 NAN

To order, calll-800-888·1220.
Copyright1994 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

•

Patient diagnosed with oral cancer inquires on treatment
DR. GOTT
PETER.
GOTT,M.D.

By PETER H. GO'IT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I've been
diagno sed with oral cancer and
have undergone surgery eight times
on my tongue. What information
can you share on squamous cell
carcinoma?

DEAR READER: Squamous
cell carcinoma is a type of malig nancy arising from the cells of the
skin and the lining of body cavities.
Like any cancer , it will spread
uncontrollably unless treated .
Symptoms depend on the site of the
tumor, as well as the extent of the
metastases (spread) at the time of
diagnosis. \
For example, squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity is usually
diagnosed earlier (because it can be
seen and felt) than a similar tumor
in the lung, which may not be recognized until it has grown large
enough (or spread) to cause cough,
blood-tinged sputum, weight loss,
and a shadow on the chest X-ray.

The treatment for a malignancy
depend s largely on its size and
location : surge ry, radiation,
chemotherapy, or a combination of
the se method s are usu ally
employed, with varying results.
With respect to your specific
case, I suggest that you discuss
your condition and prognosis with
your oral surgeon (or an oncologist), who is the person most famil iar with your particular wmor.
To give you more infonnation, I
am sending you free copies of my
Health Reports "Viruses and Cancer" and "An Informed Approach
to Surgery." Other readers who
would like copies should send $2
for each report plus a long, self-

addressed, ' stamped envelope to
P.O. Box 243 3, New York , NY
10163 . Be sure to mention the
title(s).
DEAR DR. GOTT: Please
explain the cause and symptoms of
radiation pneumonia.
DEAR READER : Radiation
does not cause pneumonia, a lung
infection; it causes pneumonitis,
lung inflammation. This distinction
is important because pneumonia,
being an infection, is usually cured
by antibiotics, whereas pneumonitis is ordinarily helped by conisonc
drugs.
Large doses of radiation, such as
those required to treat cancer, produce inflamed tissues , much the

same way that strong sunlight causes sunburn. The X-ray therapy may
lead to pneumonitis, cough, excess
mucus secretion, short wi.ndcdncss,
and shadows on the chest X-ray in short , all the symptoms and
signs of pneumonia, without
microorganism s being present.
Untreated radiation pneumonitis
often progresses 10 pulmonary
fibrosis, permanent and severe
scarring of the lung s. Because
steroid drugs reduce inflammation,
they are often useful in alleviating
the pulmonary changes of pneumonitis.
Excessive doses of whole-body
radiation of the type that follows
nuclear disasters, such as the Cher-

nobyl incid ent , cause ev entual
death because vital tissues, notably
the bone marrow , are dam aged,
leading to diseases su ch as
leukemia.
Therefore, in this country, the
most common cause of radiation
pneumonitis is cancer therapy; in
these instances, the lung inflammation is merely the price one has to
pay for receiving the treatment for
cancer. The judicious use of cortisone is the accepted antidote for
this unavoidable complication.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-6364, exL8317.)

Owner to give away southwestern Ohio restaurant in essay contest
By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio
(AP) - A small restaurant-bakery
that has nouri shed in this south·
western Ohio community is up for
grabs to the person who can best
put their hunger for the business on
paper.

Pam Moon , owner of Carol's
Kitchen, has decided to give the
restaurant away to the winner of an
essay contest She will stay on as a
consultant for six months.
"It's been a labor of love," said
Ms. Moon. "Maybe that's why I'm
not willing to turn my back and
walk away.''

.Hemlock Grove contest
winners announced
Cont es t
w1nncr s
were
announced following judging held
at a recent meeting of the Hemlock
Grange.
Golda Reed, Eva Robson and
Margaret Haning judged the
entries . Winn ers were Ro salie
Story, dress-a-doll , patriotic picture, pillow cases and toy; Leota
Smith , echoes of the past; Bob
Reed, bird house; Muriel Bradford,
a quilt quilted by one person, and
Sara Cullums, a quilt quilted by a
group.
Durin g the meeting the charter
was draped for Eli zabeth Roberts.
Mrs. Bradford gave the home economics committee report and plans
were made for a picnic at the next
meeting.
Ziba Midkiff gave a legislative
report on health care. A donation
was made to the .grange's deaf pro-

Powell graduates
from basic training
U.S. Air Force Ainnan Jason L.
Powell is currently attending the
Air Force Heavy Equipment Operators and Paving School at Sheppard Air Fo(ce Base, Texas, fol lowif)g graduation from basic training at Lackland AFB , Texas, on
June 7.
A 1993 graduate of Southern
High School, Powell is the son of
John and Debbie Powell of Racine.

The restauraot, which opened in agers.
1984 and grosses $300,000 a year,
" I'm 45 years old. I'm ready to
sells soups, salads, sandwiches and relax, have a little fun , spend some
baked goods.
time with my family," she said.
There are 14 tables inside the
Ms. Moon said she dec ided to
two-story brick building, which give the restaurant away in an
features a patio and greenhouse- essay contest because she wanted it
like dining area with a fountain and to remain in caring hands and saw
massive rubber plants that fonn a it as a way to help other owners of
canopy over the tables.
small businesses.
Ms. Moon bought the restaurant
Contest entrants must pay a fee
seven years ago. She works there of $199 apiece and in 250 words or
about 70 hours a weelc and employs less explain why they want ~ OII;'D
17 workers , many of them teen- Carol's Kitchen and what they will
II II II t!t II 1111 11 .1111 11 11 1111 t!t t!t 1111 .1111 t!t t!t
"'\. "'\. "'\ "'\. ~'\. ''\. • ., ' '\. •'\. ~, . , . , •'\. . , . , . , . ,

gram following a report by Golda
Reed. Reported ill were Jame s
Weber, Leo Story, Ruth Frances,
Etta Cullums, Bernice Hawk, and
Wallace Bradford.
Eighteen members from Albany
Grange and one from Star Grange
visited at the mecting which began
with a potluck dinner. Aran~e ­
ments were made for Racme
Grange to visit Hemlock Grange on
Aug. 4.
The lecturer from Albany
grange presented the program
which included a hillbilly wedding.
Group singing of "America" and a
reading, "Ragged Old Flag" concluded the meeting.

11

'"'\ '"'\
~
~
f!t

HEALTH FAIR :.
•\

-.,

Friday

August 5, 1994
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

HOLZER CLINIC

Bob's Market

Meigs County Branch
ISO Mill Street.
Middleport, Ohio

&amp;
Green Houses
Mason, WV.
Location will be
closing at noon
Tues. Aug. 2.
Will reopen
Wed. 8 am

II!!, t!t

FREE TESTING:
- Height
- Weight
- Blood Pressure
- Pulmonary Function

-.

II
...,

- Hearing Test
- Blood Sugar
- Vision Screening
- Skin Cancer Screeening

11
·; '

Rosann Miller-Wethington. a
bring to Yellow Springs. The winner receives the restaurant mort· contest organizer and head of
gage free and up to $100,000 in WEA V, said contest judges will be
looking for originality and commu·
start-up money.
Proceeds from the entrance fees nity spirit.
"We want people who are able
will be used to pay off the mortgage and create a loan program for to visualize a dream," she said.
small-business owners in the region "Nobody is going to be excluded
through the Women's Economic for bad grammar."
The contest is limited to 10,000
Assistance Ventures, a local nonentries.
profit or~:anization.
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled local public
hearings In Case No. 94·987·GA·AIR, In the Mattar of the Application of
Columbia Goa of Ohio, Inc. for Authority to Amend Flied Torlfhl to tncreoat
the Rates and Chargea for Gsa Service. Tho hoarlnga are scheduled for the
purpooe of providing an opportunity for Interested membero of the public to
toollfy ln thlo proceeding. The local hearings will be held as follows:
Mansfield, Ohio · Monday, August 8, 1994, at 7:30 p.m., at City Hall, City
Council Chamboro, 30 N. Diamond Street, Room 75, Mansflold, Ohio 44902.
Parma, Ohio. Wednoaday, Auguat10, at 2:00p.m., at City Hall, Council
Chambera, 6611 Ridge Road, Parma, Ohio 44129.
Toledo, Ohio • Tuoaday, August 16, 1994, at 2:00 p.m., at Toledo
Government Center, City Council Chambers, Firat Floor, 1 Government

'"'\

Center, Toledo, Ohio 43624.
Athena, Ohio· Tuoodoy, Auguot 16, 1994, ot 3:30 and 5:30 p.m., at Atheno
t!t
Public Llbrory, Mooting Room, 30 Homo Street, Athans, Ohio 45701 ,
Springfield, Ohio · Wednesday, Auguat 17, 1994, at 6:30 p.m., City Hall,
• ..,
~ Forum, 111 Floor, 76 Eoot High Street, Springfield, Ohio 45502.
It\ Columbus, Ohio. Thursday, Auguat18, 1994, at3:30 and 5:30p.m., Public
Utllltloa Commission of Ohio, 180 East Brood Stroot, 11th Floor· Room 11A,
1\ Columbuo, Ohio 43215-3793.
'
By 111 application, Columbia Goa of Ohio, Inc. Increase which would
'
generate approximately $47,499,000 In additional groaa annual rovonuoa, or
t!t
4.11 percent, for 111 gaa aorvlca. Thla amount of Increase has been agreed to
• ..,_ by moot of the parties partlclpotlng In prior Columbia rata caoea. Tho
1\ agreement lo supported by Columbia; tho atafl of tho Public Utllltlta
Commlnlon of Ohio'; the Office of tha Conaumera' Counael; the tnduttrlal

It\

It\

Energy Coneumera; Honda of America Mfg., Inc.; Enron Acceaa Corporation;

-.

tht city of Toledo; the Bay Area Council of Govornmenll, the Greoltr
1\ Cleveland Schools Council of Governments, and tho Lake Erie Regional
1\ Council of Governments; tho Ohio Farm Bureau Federation; and lht
., tnduatrlal End Uaera·Ohlo. The city of Parma oppoa11 the company'a
-., appllcatlon. Tht major luuaa ln the caao ere:
-.
a) whether thololrit lnvtatlgatlon conducted by tho Commlaalon'a atafl and
t!t
tho Office of tho Conaumora' Counael meet tho raqulrementa of Ohio low;
...,_
b) whether thelotntlnvoatlgatlon'a ftilure to conaldar the coat of aorvtcato
1\ Permo rooldonto and to make tho direct aaalgnmont of coata end tho
'-\'-\

aUocatlona necaaaary to aat rataa appropriate to Parma conaumar~ eauaea
the propoaed ratee to be unreaaonable and unlawful;

c.) whether tho joint agreement of tho portloa Ia rtaaonoble and lawful In
adjullmtnta In tho form of an experlmen1at weather
odjuatmont and a temporary beat ralt revanue rider;
t!t
d.) whether tha ratomoklng method uaad tn theJolnt agreeman1 of the
"'\. partlaa ta unroaaonablt and unlawful.
Further Information moy bt obtolnad bv contacting the Public Ullllllaa
LC;:::o::,::m:,::;ml::!ll~lo:.:.!no~f;:::Oh,::::lo~,1~80:-!Ea::::•::.:tB::;ro::o::..;dS:::tr::::ee:::.1,;:::Co::,:lu::,::m.=bu:::la'.:::O;:::hlo::..;4::::32:.::15-:::3:.:.!793~.'--...J

l\ ·recommending

fRIDAY AUGUST 5. 1994

1\

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--·-----

Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati,
Cleveland
post wins

Pick 3:
1-3-1
Pick 4:

6-2-7-7
Ruckeye 5:
14-20-23-32-35

Page4

........ ..............
.-

•

Kess ler said that most people try
smoking in their teens and often are
hooked before they realize addie.
tion is possibl e. Hi s goal is to keep
cigarettes away from the young so
th ey never become nico tine
addicts.

Home businesses still pay Social Security

Ninth
birthday
celebrated
Attend in g were Larry and Joy
Clark. maternal grandparents, Lola
Cbrk, grea t-g ra ndmoth er , Max
Hill , Jr , Wendy Clark , and Sicanna
Ohlinger. Penn y and Rieanna Barker, B. J. Mamhout, Michael Wamsley, and Joey and Gran t Phillips.

FDA .
Kessler said the Food, Drug and
Cosme tics Act specifica lly defin es
a drug as someth ing " intended to
affect the structure and function of
the body . " That co ul d in clude
ni cotin e, th e most ac tiv e of th e
hu ndreds of chemical compounds
in c1garcttc smoke, he sa id.
Alread y the agency regulates the
sale and promotion of two nicotinedciJVcry systems: chewing gum and
nicounc patches. T&lt;xlay, an advisory com mitt ee was to co nsid e r
Wll e th er it sho ul d recom me nd
approval of a third nicoti ne source,
a nasal spray . The gum, patches
ami spray are all designed to help
smokers kick the habit.

-r-

Monday,August1,1994

l

I
!

Tonight , p:t rtly cloud y. Low
In 60s. Wednesda y, part ly
cloudy. lligh' In the KOs.

I
i
•

j, _ _ _ _ , - - - - -

- ..--.--•.J

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 63

1 Section, 10 Pagea 35 conta
AMultimedia Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 2, 1994

Copyright 19114

Five inmates indicted in riot-related killing
PORTS MOUTH (AP) - Five inmates have been indicted on kidnap ping and aggravated murder charges in the strangulation of a guard during
last year's 11 -day riot at the Southern Ohio Correctonal Facilit y.
If convicted , they could be sentenced to death .
A sixth inmate was charged wi th conspiracy, and one inmate , Kei th
Lam ar, was indicted on charges that he killed five other inmates.
Guard Robert Vallandingham, 40, and nine inmates were killed during
the April 1993 riot at the maximum-security prison in Lucasville.
The lates t indictments bring the total number of inmates charg ed in
conn ection with the riot to 48. Eleven have pleaded guilty or have been
convicted at uial.
Monday's indictments were the f~rst in Vallandingham 's death .
"Today 's indictments in the murder of officer Robert Vallandin gham
bring us one step closer to closing the loop of justice on the tragedy of the
Lucasville prison riot," Gov. George Voinovich said.
" Although tbc sadness of the loss of officer Vallandin gham will never

fully subside, I hope these indictments bring some sense of relief to h1 s
fa mily that, to the extent poss ible under or judicial system, justice will be
served ."

Wanda Vallandin gham , mot her of the slain guard, said she wou ld
attend the arraignments of the five inmates Thursday and Friday in Scioto
County Common Pleas Court but mi ght not sit th rough them.
" How would you feel if you had to sit and look at the pe rson who
ki lled your mother or fa ther or brother or sister or son or daughter?'· Mrs.
Vallandingham said. "And the hardest part is there will be so many of
them."
Mrs. Vallandingham said she undcrstOOLI why the indictments took so
long to obtain.
"We knew at the beginn ing that 11 was going to be a long time," she
sa id. "B ut we would have ratl1cr they gone slowly and be sure in stead of
jumping into someth ing and not ge tting what they needed."
Indicted were:

• Carlos Snnders, \ I, ol Cuyahoga Coun ty, lor aggrava ted murder and
kidnapping Va ll &lt;md ingham and aggravated murder in the death ol inm ate
Bruce Harri s.
• George Skal7es. 4R , of Logan Co unty, for aggra vated mu rder ami
ki dnappi ng Valla nding ham , aggrava ted murder and kidnapp ing Inm ate
Earl Elder, aggravated murder in the d e&lt;1 ~1 of inm ate Dav1cl Somm ers .
• Jason Robh, 27, of Montgomery Co unt y, for aggravated murder an d
kidnapping Va ll andmgham, aggravated murder in the dea th of Sommers.
• Kenneth Law , 29, of Mahoni ng County, aggravated murder and kid·
napping Vallandingham .
• James Were, 37, of Lucas County, agg ravated murder and kHinappm g
Vallandingham, aggravated murder in the death of Harri s.
• Stan ley Cum mings, 3R, of Cuyahoga County, wn spi racy to commi1
aggravated murder in Vallandingham 's death:
• Eric Scales, 27, of Cuyahoga Count y, for aggravated murder in the
death of inmate Bruce Vit.ale.

Senators
to zero in
on diaries

Sprucing up
Facility improvements made
as officials prepare for fair
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
With the Meigs County Fair just
two weeks away, there is flurry of
activity at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds as preparations are made
for the six-day fair that opens Aug.
15.
The secretary' s offi ce is being
renovated, five large trees ncar the
hill stage area have been cut down
in preparation for constructing a
new access road in to that area,
some landscaping is going on, and
the buildings and barns are being
repaired and cleaned.
New partitions, paneling, ceiling
tile and flooring are going into the
interior of the secretary' s office,
which has been insulated, air-con ditioned and equipped with new
heating units. Electrical work is
being completed and lines installed
to handle computers, which will be
used in the o;&gt;ffice for the flfSt time
at this year's fair. The new roofing
and vinyl siding give the old building a like-new appearance.
The Meigs County Agriculture
Society contracted with Ray Smith
Construction to do the work on the
secretary's office, and Eblin E!ec-

tric to handle the electrical work.
The remainder of the work is
being done by Ted Smith, fair grounds maintenance foreman, and
hi s c re w. Th e five large tree s
betwecn the secretary's office and
the Rock Springs Grange Hall were
removed and hauled into the midway area , where the wood was
offered to anyone who would come
in with a chain saw, cut it up, and
haul it away.
The large trunks were preserved
and will be used as de molition
de rby bumpers around the area
inside the race track used for that
feature at the fair .
While some of the trees had to
be taken down to make way for the
new access road, others were taken
out because they were "old and rotten" and posed a safety hazard,
according to Smith.
There has always been a problem for entertainers 10 get to the
hill stage because of the congestion
in that area when the cam1val ndes
and gam e and food booth s are
operating. Smith said those problems will be alleviated with the
new access road.

A NEEDED FACELIFTING - The old sec·
r etary's ofrKe on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
is undergoing needed renovations. A new roof is
going on, with some vinyl siding put on above

The road will com e in ncar the
dog kennel , and circle behind the
rest rooms and the grange hall to
the side of the stage. Entertainers
will be able to pull right in there
and unload their equipment, said
Smith.
Some new drains are going in
place behind the restrooms near the
grange hall to take care of the
water problems resulting from the

road change.
Lot s of th e el ec tri cal work
The senior fair building has a around the fairgrounds is being
new roof as does the hog barn , a · upgrad ed thi s year in th e fair
ne w manure pit has been erected board 's effort to improve facilities
ncar the horse barn, and some areas and elim inate problems during fair
where trailers are parked during the week .
fair have been leveled out.
General mowing and clcanmg
By order of the Meigs County up of the grounds is underway and
Health Department, the old toilets will continue up until the time the
have been torn down and portable 131 st Meigs County Fair opens,
ones will be used in their place.
Smith said.

Senate leader offers
modest reform plan

Shunned
candidate
starts fast
COLUMBUS (AP) - Independent gubernatorial candidate Billy
Inmon entered the second day or
his hunger strike, vowing to continue until Gov. George Voinovich
agrees to debate him.
Inmon, refreshed after a shower
and shave at the nearby YMCA,
spent an uneventful night under the
stars on an air mattress. He has a
sleeping bag, portable radio, and
campaign literature to distribute.
Lt. Gov . running mate Norm
Myers and a minister from Colum bus spent the night with him as a
security measure.
''They felt that there was only
one time they were needed, that
one person definitely didn't have
the right motives," Inmon said.
"Once in a while a person
would run by and wake you up, a
siren would go by , or somebody
would want to toot the hom m support. They' re starting to blow the
horn and wave at me . I really
appreciate that other than at 2 or 3
o'clock: in the morning,'' he said.
Inmon said he has not eaten
since 7 a.m. Monday.
Not that there haven't been
temptations. Inmon said one radio
reporter brought over fresh cinna·
mon rolls, while another munched ·
break:fast on an adjacent park
bench.
Another radio station brought
scales on which Inmon weighed in
at 216 pounds.
" They're going to be back
every morning for the weight
watch," he said.
A TV crew stopped about 3 a.m.
Inmon is equipped with a red,
white and blue umbrella. There was
a 40 percent chance of scattered
thunderstonns, including the possi·
bility of heavy rainfaU.
"I'm serious about winning the
governorship of Ohio. The debates
have made many elections ...and I

the brick exterior. Inside work includes partition changes, new walls and ce iling, and new
flooring. The contract for the work went to Ray
Smith Construction.

FASTING ~ Obio independent gubernatorial candidate Billy
Inmon did a little paperwork as be took up residence on a Statehouse lawn park bencb in Columbus Monday. Inmon, wbo was
hired and fired as manager of tbe Ohio State Fair by Gov. George
Voinovith, began a hunger strike in an attempt to force the governor Into a debate. (AP)
believe these debates will make the
difference in this campaign,"
Inmon said Monday at a news conference outside Voinovich 's office.
Voinovich, a Republican, has
decided to debate only Democratic
candidate Rob Burch and forgo any
debate that includes Inmon .
Neither Inmon or Burctl, a state
senator from Dover, has been able
to match the $6 million-plus
Voinovich has raised for the Nov. 8
election.
Inmon paid $20 for a penn it that
will allow him to remain on the
Statehouse pounds during the fasl
The busmessman from Willard
said he will not eat or go home
I

again until Voinovich debates all
candidaJes in the race. He ate a last
meal of ham, eggs and toast before
beginning his fast.
" I realize that my next steps
could be the first steps to even
death,'' Inmon said. "I'm saying
give me the freedom to be heard or
give me death."
Voinovich hired and fired
Inmon as manager of the Ohio
State Fair.
The Voinovich campaign said it
was foDowing League of Women's
Voters' guidelines that require can·
didates to have at least 15 percent
recognition in an independent poll
for inclusion in a debate.

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton in sists on a health
reform plan that covers vinually all
Americans , but many se nators
don't like hi s idea of forcing
employers to foot most of the bill
for insurance premiums.
After weeks of daily meetings
with his colleagues, Senate Majority Leade r Georg e Mit chell ha s
come up with a delicately balanced
compromise he hopes a majority of
them will approve and the president won't veto.
In a Senate speech today, the
Maine Democrat was detailing a
proposal aimed at providing uni versal coverage without relying
immediately on mandates that
specify what percentage of insurance cosl~ employers must pay.
Instead, Mitchell would impose
a mandate only as last resort if
more than 5 percent of Americans
lacked coverage just after the turn
of the century.
Even if the mandate were
imposed, Mitchell hopes employers
would find it easier to swallow. His
plan was expected to require
employers to pay 50 percent of

their workers' insurance premiums,
not the 80 percent share Clinton
would have required.
Even before Mitchell 's plan was
out, however, Republican s were
attacking it. In an hour-long televi sion show beamed via satellite by
the Republican National Committee, Herman Cain, chief executive
officer of G()(jfather' s Pizza and an
outspoken opponent of the employ·
cr mandate, said of Mitchell's triggered approach, "It docsn 't matter
whether you kill me now or
whether you phase in death over a
period of time."
The show, moderated by RNC
chainnan Haley Barbour, portrayed
all Democratic plans as " Clintonstyle" and said they would lead to
rationing, lack of choice, huge
wxes and millions of lost jobs.
Barbour dubbed the mandatefree, bare-bones approach of Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R•
Kan., " tbc American option ," and
said Republicans were for the kind
of health reform that "builds on
our unique system ... without wrning the sy stem over to the govcrnmcnL"

DeWine accepts invitation
to debate opponent in race
COLUMBUS (AP) - Republican U.S . Senate candidate Mike
DeWine will accept three invitations to debate Democrat Joel
Hyatt before the Nov. 8 election,
DeWine's campaign said.
DeWine, Ohio's lieutenant gov·
ernor, has agreed to debates on Oct.
14, sponsored b.y the Dayton Daily
News and WHIO-TV; on Oct. 26,
sponsored by The Cincinnati l'osl
and WCET-TV; and on Oct. 27,
sponsored by the Ohio League of
Women Voters and to be broadcast
by WBNS -TV in Columbus.
"These three forums will provide Ohio's voters a chance to see

the very real differences between
Mr. Hyatt and LL Gov. DeWine,"
DeWine campaign spokesman
Barry Bennett said in a statement
Monday.
.. Hyatt will also will accept the
debate invitations, but three
debates are "too few, campaign
spokesman Dale Rutland said.
DeWine previously declined to
meet Hyatt at two debates because
independent candidate Joseph
Slovenec also had been invited.
DeWinc's campaign said it turned
down those invitations because
Slovenec was not a major candi·
date.
.~

lly LARRY MARGASA K
A ssociat~d Pre s.~ Writer
WA SHINGTON - After sc orn ing the Treasury Dcparuncnt's top
lawy er for her contrad1cllon s and
omission s, senators in ves tigating .
White water arc int e rroga tin g
anoth er Trea sury o ff1 cial about
diaries he disowns.
Treasury Chief of Staff Joshu a
Steiner, who testi fies today, wrote
in his diary that a longtime Clinton
friend, Roger Al tman , was " under
in tense pressure" from the Whi te
House to remain as overall head of
the Whitewater probe .
Wh 1te House offl c1als already
have tes tified there was no such
pressure on Altman.
Re id Wein garten , Steiner' .s
lawyer, said on Jul y 25 th at such
references were "off-hand , impres sionistic" and sometime s record j
wee ks after th e fac t. " He never
purported to quote Altman. He is
not purportin g th at Altm an told
him th is."
Steiner' s appearance follows the
antagoni stic questions that bo th
Democrats and Republicans on the
Senate Banking Committee threw
Monday at Treasury general coun sel Jean Hanson.
Senators hammered away at her
contradi ctions with other administration offi cials and her failure to
correct Altman' s Se nate testimony
of Feb. 24 - e ven thou gh she
knew it was incomplete.
Hanson' s answers were so dam aging to hersel f tha t Se n. John
Kerry, D-Mass ., said it' s "almost
as if you ' re setting yourself up to
take the fall for Mr. Altman."
Altman is deputy treasury secretary, but last fall and winter he also
was acting chief of the Resolution
Trust Corp. The RTC was investi gating civil wrongdoing in the fail ure of Madison Guaranty Savings
and Loan - a failed thrift tied to
Clinton' s form e r Arkan sas land
venture.
The RTC al so sent memos to the
Justice Department, as king that it
consider criminal prosec utions. The
memos, called referral s, said the
president and fir st lady Hill ary
Rodham Clinton cou ld be witness es in a criminal probe.
In a separate development, The
Washington l'osl reported today
that when Whitewater-related doc ument s were removed from the
offi ce of deputy White Hou se
coun sel Vince Fos te r 's offi ce
immediately after his suicide last
year, they were taken by Mrs. Clin ton's chief of staff to the first fami 1y's personal residence.
The Pose said the documents
were tran sferred to the Clinton s'
private lawyer five days later. It
quoted their lawyer , Da vid
Kendall, as saying neither th e president nor Mrs. Clinton reviewed the
documents.
l'lanson testified that she violated "no rule, no law , no ethi cal
standard," and did not personally
know the president and Mrs. Clinton.
She said her briefings for White
House officials on the investigation
were "entirely appropriate and
necessary" so officials there could
be ready for news leaks - com·
mon in RTO investigation s, she
said.
The hearing got progressively
worse for Hanson as the day wore
on. Early in the testimony, Sen.
Christopher Dodd, D-Conn. asked
a series of questions on whether
Hanson or any other administration
official impeded the investigation.

..

�Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, August2, 1994

TUesday,August2, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

RACO agrees to make
frog jumping contest
annual July 4th event

Wednesday, Aug. 3
Accu-Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH

The' Daily Sentinel
111 Cou rt Stree t
Pome roy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publi&lt;her
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER o f The Assocuted Press, Inland Datly Press A ssol' l aUon and
the Amcncan Newspape r Publisher Assoctallon
LETfERS OF OPINI ON are welcome They should oc le ss th an 300
words long All letters are sUbject to editi ng and must be s1gned wi th name,
addrc~s and t.c lephone number No unsigned lct1crs wtll be puhli shed Letters
sho uld he tn good taste . addresstn g 1ssucs, not perso nali ties

Congressional baseball
an oasis in partisan times
By ALAN FRA M
Associated Press Writer
WAS HJ NGTON - In the gnp of a steamy sum mer in the capilal,
Democrats and Republicans arc bracing for a showdown that's all about
clout, strategy and walloping the other side.
Since early July, lawmakers from each pany have met separately three
mornin gs each week to prepare. One day recently, the GOP sess1on. got so
boisterous that one lawmaker tWISted h1s knee, another damaged h1s rotator cuff and a thlfd bruised his arm.
The climax comes tonight, when - weather permitting - the two parties face off in the 33rd annual congressional baseball game. And in a season that's seeing health care and Whttewater inflame partisanship on
Capitol Hill, the game is expected 10 provide a calming respite from those
passions and replace them w1th an athleuc ~~!Cns •ty of tts own .
" This game ts really a grudge match, sa1d Rep. Dan Sc haefer, RColo., manager of the Republican team and an 11 -year veteran of the congressional contest. "We play really hard. I've seen guy s break thcu legs ,
tw1st their ankles and cut their fingers on someone's spikes."
The frequent injuries that occur during practices and in the game are
largely a funcuon of the physical condition of the mostly middle-aged,
sedentary people who play.
.
" I've told my wife that it's getting tougher to bend down," sa1d Rep.
Jack Fields, R-Texas, who at 42 is one of the younger participants and
who plays third base. "I ' ve also nouced that my eyes aren ' t as good ,
espcctally on fly balls."
.
But that won't stop about 20 lawmakers from each party from playmg
in the chanty event, which is sponsored by the Capitol Hill newspaper
Roll Call and is played at a ball field in suburban AJexandria, Va.
.
AJI but Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., are members of the House. The senes,
whtch Republicans lead 21 -10 with one tie, is taken seriously enough that
House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., has prom1sed lawmakers that the chamber will fmish business Tuesday in time for the 7 p.m.

g~~~ most, the real allure is the camaraderie with their colleagues, away
from the political pressure cooker of a Congress that' s only three months
from Election Day.
''The more we do together in a social setting, the more we begin to
understand each other," said Rep. Wayne Gilchrest, R-Md., an outfielder.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Alan Fram has covered Congress for The
Associated Press since 1987.

Letters to the editor
Board ignoring junior fair?
Dear Editor:
Did you ever want to vote for a
fairboard member or president of
your choice? Now is your chance.
Most people arc no! aware that you
must buy a voting pass for $13.
That is only $1 more than the
advertised membership pass.
Yau can only purchase the voting pass at places like Sugar Run
Hour Mills, Meigs Co. Fair Secretary office or from a member of the
Meigs Co. fairboard . Voting takes
place the ftrsl Monday in Novem ber. You must have your pass with
you to vote that day_
Our youth in 4-H, Scouts, FFA,
FHA, etc . have just about been
pushed out of the junior fair. The
county fair should be a place where
the youth of our county can exhibit
their accomplishments and show
off their hard work. The fairboard
allows us so little time for our 4-H
shows.
Last year fm example, our 4-H

horse show was scheduled at 8 a.m.
That meant our children had to be
at the barn no later than 6 a.m. to
prepare. Then our show ring was so
bad from the previous nights "commercial show", that we had to wait
for over an hour for our ring to be
usable. Most of the youth shows
are crammed in lhe early morning
spaces to allow more time for the
"commercial shows". If it wasn ' t
for our youth exhibiting their ani mals and projects at the fair, do you
think anyone would even buy a
pass to auend? NO!
Help gel the Meigs County
Junior fair back to promoting our
youth and county achievements.
Buy a $13 voting pass and exercise
your right to vote on a fairboard
member or president th¥ you know
will put our youth first once again.
Please note: We do appreciate all
the fairboard members who try to
keep the youth at the fair.
Pam Milhoan
Albany

Upset with news articles
Dear editor:
Your Sunday edition (July 24 ,
1994) cootained two front page stories which left me angry and frustrated.
The fir st concerned the comments of Meigs County Board of
Commissioners Preside nt Fred
Hoffman about a budget deficit and
resulting service cuts or a sales tax
increase as the only soluuons for
Me•gs County's financial position.
What makes me angry is that once
again we have an elected and highly paid office holder ref using to
assume the responsibilities of the
office which he holds.
The Commissioners have the
power to make the decision of "cut
or tax" and then allow the voters to
express their approval or disaproval of that decision at the poDs.
nstead of making the decision, the
Commissioners have "graciously"
indicated that they wiD "allow" the
voters to decide, thereby avoiding
personal responsibility.
What frustrates me is that we
have no innovative solutions proposed for our financial problems
from our elected offiCials, only the
old standard "cut services or raise
taxes" solution offer by Commissioner Hoffman. What are we paying these office holders so much
money for?
The second story concerned the
letter from the Meigs County

r.

y

Department of Human Services
(DHS) commenting on the recent
court entry ordering them to pay
court costs in child support cases.
What makes me angry is that the
letter was reported as "unsigned".
Everyone knows that Michael
Swisher is the Director of DHS. It
seems only natural to assume that
he had to have read the letter
before it was issued or he is not in
control at DHS . Why didn't he sign
the leuer and take direct responsibility?
What frustrates me is lhat we, as
voters, have no power to hold tltese
bureaucrats responsible. They arc
responsible to the vety office holders who will not take responsibility
for their own decisions (above).
Not only does the DHS bureaucracy refuse to take responsibility for
its words, but it has the audacity to
claim to be saving us, tlte lliX payers, money by using state and federal funds instead of county funds.
As I recall, I paid state and federal
taxes last year. so how are they
saving me money? Robbing Peter
to pay Paul won' t solve anything.
If the office holders and bureaucrats of this county won ' t take
responsibility for anything, perhaps
we as voters should take the
responsibility ourselves and tum
them OUt
Lin Coleman
Pomeroy

Order your faux analog garage now!
What' s wrong with Ame rica'!
Chec k out the cover of the August
1ssue of W~red magazine. It shows
Ro byn and Rand Mi ll er - the
brothers who created the cnchantmg Interactive puzz le . My st wi th the cap ti on "From ga rage
start -up to the ftr st CD-ROM
superstars."
They're on th ctr way to thei r
firs t mllhon , and you're not. Why?
· The y had a garage start -up. Yo u
d1dn't.
Of course. they hve m Was hmgton state. There's a garage glut m
Washmgton slate. But what about
the rest of us0 I hardly know anybody w1th a garage any more. We
park on th e street, 1n car port s.
Those lucky few who rent , lease or
own a garage have it packed to the
ceil ing wi th ca nceled checks and
old Vamty Fa trs. Th ere's barely
room for a car. much less a workslatiOn to create the int.cractive artifac ts of tomorrow.
Amen ca, what happened? Has

the garage gone the way of the log
cabm and the hula hoop'! Tom Edtson worked long thankless hours at
h1 s workbench to create the proto-

Jan Shoa/es
gara ge for the mvcntors of the 20th
centu ry . Was it all fo r noth ing?
Wasn' t the fir st Apple computer
bUi lt in Steve Jolls' garage usmg
only a shoebox and hatrpms? Sure
It was' When Microsoft formed in
Bill Gates' garage, he didn ' t even
have a car. The Wri ght broth ers
built thetr firs t airplane in the fam•ly garage, before the car was even
mvented NAS A began in a garage
in Houston, bUtldmg the f~rst space
capsule out of re frigerator parts and
some old hqUtd oxygen Mom had
lying around . What about Nirvana?
Was n' t th at the ultim ate garage
ba nd 0 We arc ex pe ri encin g a
severe garage shortage. Is it any
wonder setcnce and musiC are in

such tcmble shape?
Remem ber the refrain we used
to chant? "We can put a man on
the moon but we can' t - fi&lt; the
pqtholes on my street/end poverty
as we know it/program a VCR/ftll
10 the blank." Now that the 25 th
anni ve rsary of the moonwa lk has
gone, we must face facts. Not on ly
can't we put a man on th e moon
any more. we can't even get htm in
a garage.
Wh at whin ing catchall catch phrase will replace the man-an-themoo n metap hor? " We ca n take
pic tures of co met dam age o n
Jupiter, but we can ' t make a fatfree hot dog?" " We can build an
mformation superhighway. but we
can't make a trul y odor-free kitty
litt er?" Th ey ju st don't c ut ·iL
Without garages to brainstorm in,
where will tomorrow's catchphrases come from?
Now it' s been revealed that the
mao-o n-th e- moon missio n was
almost aborted at the very last sec -

l~'flt~~ TO Aro'Jltf ~ 'PNW ~E4R"RIGW UP~~ e,,

j

ond. Technology fa1led our astronauts. They had to pu t the module
down by hand An heroic a~tronau t
pilot gripped a sweaty joystick and
crashlandcd a screaming bucket of
bolts in the noi seless vacuum of
space. If our fl yboys hadn' t prac ti ced ma ny long ho urs in their
garage at hom e, none of th1s woul d
have been posstble.
Su re , the moon shot gave us
Tang, laptop compu t.crs and My lar.
Ye s. it was B1g Sc1c nce a t its
bigges t; microprocess mg met the
uni verse. But let's not forget what
made 11 all pos stble, the lo wl y
garage, and all it represents: stick to-it-•vcncss, the old can-do sptri t,
thrift, hum iltty1
Every day, m o ur brave new
world of telecommunicauons, I sec
smartl y dressed young professionals carryi ng little card s th at pro claim them to be media consultants. They're just cyber-liars You
don' t have a garage to consult in ,
Mr. lnt.cracuve Multimedia.
There is hope. Wired informs
me that old analog synthesizers arc
hot ne ms among amateur mu sic
producers. Eve n if you can't afford
one, there are COs with samples of
every old synth there 1s. As Wtrcd
puts 11, ' 'Load the sounds in to your
own sampler. and you have instant
faux analog."
Can' t we manufac ture in sta nt
faux VIrtual reality analog garages?
Those of you with actual garages
be!ler gel to work on this pronto .
To put it plainly: Without garages,
we have no future. They say
you 've got to be cruel to be kind .
Sometimes, I'm afraid you ' ve got
to be digital to be analog.
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989DUCK or write Duck ' s Breath , 408
Broad St .. Nev ad a Cit y, CA
95959.)
lan Shoa les is a synd icated
writer for Newspaper Enterpri s~
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con tact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, exl8317.)

Keep politics out of Federal Reserve
I don'tlike the idea of knocking
Pau l Sarbanes, but I'm going to
have to do it A little bit, anyway.
Unless you are an astute student
of pubhc affairs. the name is probabl y unfamiliar to you. He is the
senior United Slates Senator from
Maryland, a Democrat, a Harvard
Law graduate, a former Rhodes
scholar. and a decent fellow . He is
a bit too much of a predictable liberal for my moderate tastes, but no
impartial person can que stion his
honesty and integrity.
Combine these sterling qualities
with the fact that he is a native of
Salisbury, Md. - about 20 miles
from where I grew up - and you
can see why I am uncomfortable
knocking him.
It's just that when it comes to
the economy, m my judgment, Paul
Sarbanes is wrong, wrong, wrong.
As a member of the Senate Banking Committee - and probably the
new chairman, if he is re-elected
this year - Sarbanes champions
easy credit and a hot economy_ He
believes we worry too much about
inflation, and he routinely slams
Alan Greenspan when the Federal
Reserve Board chairman presents
his state-of-the-economy reports to

Congress.
The Fed, for those who have not
studied up on it, is the nation' s central bank . Its main fun ct1on is to

Joseph Spear
ensure economic stability, so that
we can make basic financial decisions without fear that inflation
will cat us alive. The Fed accom pli shes th•s primarily by adjusting
the int.crest rates it charges to private banks it loans federal money
to. H1gh rates brake the economy;
low rates speed it up.
For months , the Fed has been
peering into its crystal ball and seeing signs - rising commodity
prices, slow vendor deliveries,
increasing factory orders - of
encroaching inflation. Four times
since January. it has voted to hike
interest rates, and this has severely
perturbed Sen. Sarbanes and some
of his legislative colleagues.
Earlier this year, Sarbanes and
Sen. Jim Sasser, 0 -Tenn., issued a
joint statement condemning the
Fed's rate hikes. "It seems that as
the economy comes up for air, the
Fed shoves it back down ," they
said. During a recent Greenspan

appearanc e before the bank ing
co mmitt ee, Sarbanes di splayed
political cartoons that lampooned
the Fed c hairman as a Gl oo my
Gus.
Nothing better illu strate s th e
value of the Federal Reserve System, as currently constituted, than
these pcnodic exchanges between
politicians and regulators.
The Fed, thank heaven, is virtually independent Its members are
appointed by the president 10 14year terms. The Senate approves
the appointments, but that is the
extent of its involvement in Fed
business.
Can you imagine what the economy would be like if the system
were politi cized? Sa ban es and
Sasser arc both up for re-election
this year. How nice it would be if
they could order up full employ ment and a sizzling economy by
slashing interest rates. What do you
think they would care about most
- the prospect of rampaging inflation, or their political fortunes?
It utterly confounds me why hberals seldom stop to consider how
inflation cr~ates economic uncertainty, dampens investment, stifles
research and development, dn ves

up the federal defidt, depreci ates
savings and destroys dreams. Inflation dec imates private pe nsiOn
plans - less than 10 percent of
whi ch co me with cost-of-livin g
adjustments - and devastates people, mainl y senior citi zens, who
subsist on fi xed mcome.
But of course, Sarbanc s and
Sasser don't have to worry about
this, do they? Thanks to a very generous pension plan, which comes
with an annual COLA, the taxpayers will take care of them until they
e&lt;pire. According to the National
Ta&lt;payers Union, Sarbancs would
imm ediately begin co llec ting
$77,627 a year if he chose not to
run for re-election and would take
in a total of $2.65 ·million if he
lived to be 83. Sasser would earn
about $2.4 m1llion if he chose to
retire.
Hu;zzas for you , Alan
Greenspan. And a hundredweight
of hoots for you, Paul Sarbanes.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate eledronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Desperate Clinton may deal on health care
Every poll on health care reform
now shows that the American peopl e favor a gradual approach ,
almost guaranteeing abject failure
if the White House and congressional leaders try to ram through a
comprehensive plan.
The most sen sible thing for
Clinton to do is to embrace a compromise plan such as that developed by the bipartisan "mainstream group" in the Senate, but
Clinton may not be able to do this
liberal
w1thout
alienating
Democrats - until they face the
prospect of passing no health biD at
all this year.
In the House, Majority Leader
Richard Gephardt, D-Mo, is fashioning a health care bill that,
according to a draft summary ,
includes a mandate that all employe rs contribute to "most of the
health insurance coverage for all
employees."
Such a bill almost certainly cannot win a 218-vote majority in the
House - and Gephardt faces the
prospect that for only the sixth time
in the 103rd Congress, conservative Democrats will join with
Republicans to defeat the rule
under which health care is to be
considered, forcing him to puU his
legislation off the floor.
Defeat of a rule requires
Democrats to abandon their leaders
on a crucial party-line issue, and
such a development on health care
would be a stunning signal to tiberals that they have no hope of pa&lt;!Sing Clinton-style comprehensive
health care reform this year.
That would force them to decide
whether to compromise or " take

the issue to the country " in the
When President Clinton sug- Republican pollster Frank Luntz
1994 elections. Polls indicate that if gested to the National Governors show, similarly, that most Amerihardlinc Democrats do "take it to Conference on July 19 that he cans think Congress should delay
the country," Republicans will might accept 95 percent coverage passage of health care reform and
as "universal" and might consider fear that a bill passed this year
dropping employer mandates , would harm. rather than help, their
Morton Kondracke howls of protest went up from lib- own health care.
Clinton political advisers once
erals, and Cli'nton was virtually
clobber them.
accused of selling out. His wife, thought that a health entitlement
In the Senate, similarly, it's Hillary Rodham Clinton, didn't was the Democrats' key to winning
almost certain that Majority Leader seem happy either, and Clinton back disaffected Ross Perot voters,
George Mitehell, D-Mainc, can't retreated, claiming that his appar- but Luntz's poll indicates that these
get 5 I votes for his version of ent flexibility was a media misper- are the most opposed to comprehensive coverage of all voter
health care, which is somewhat ception.
groups,
by a margin of nearly 60 to
milder than Gephardt' s. II contains
Even when Mit.chell and House
a "hard trigger" automatically Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wash ., 30percent
Yet the Gallup poll shows that
imposing employer mandates if 95 went to the White House to tell
percent of all Americans aren't Clinton (and, afterward, the TV by 60 percent to 30 percent, Americovered by the year 2001 . ·
cameras) that early universal cover- cans also want Congress to pass
Out of 56 Senate Democrats, age was unattainable, the message some salt of health care reform this
nine are all but certain to oppose obviously didn ' t get through to year. Obviously, they want somethe Mitchell plan, according to health care maximalists.
thing other than the Clinton bill,
well-plugged-in health lobbyists, as
So, for the moment, even such· and the best vehicle would seem to
are all 44 Republicans except per- pragmatists as White House Chief be the bipartisan Senate bill, the
haps Sen. Jim Jeffords (Vt.), giving of Staff Leon Panetta are sticlting latest version of which is being
Mitchell only 48 votes.
with the official line that the worked out by Breaux and LieberThe nine are Sens. Max Baucus administration wants something man.
(Mont), David Boren (Okla.}, Johrt close to its original plan.
It lacks mandates and price conBreaux (La.), Howell Heflin (Ala.),
Surely, the White House's pri- uuls, depending on market forces
Benneu Johnston (La.}, Bob Kerrey vate polls show what all public to expand coverage and contain
(Neb.), Joe Lieberman (Conn.), polls show: that Americans increas- costs, but adds a "soft trigger" to
Sam Nunn (Ga.), and Richard Shel- mgly disapprove of Clinton's han- reconsider mandates tf goals aren't
by (Ala.). In addition, Jim Exon dling of health care (by 59 percent met. This is what the country
(Neb.), Dianne Feinstein (Calif.), to 34 percent, according to Gallup} wants, and voters will be justifiably
and Kent Conrad (N.D.) are con- and that by 63 percent to 32 per- ticked if Congress and Clinton
sidered doubtful for Mitchell, cent, they want Congress to move don'tdeliverit
reducing him to a possible 45 gradually to universal coverage,
(Morton Kondracke is execuvotes.
tive editor of Roll Call, the news·
not aU at OllCe tltis year.
Despite the dim prospects, indiA series of state surve ys by paper of Capitol HiD.)
cations are that only a decisive
defeat on the House and Senate
Today 's Birthdays: Actress Beatrice Straight is 76. Former Sen. Paul
floor will convince liberal
Laxalt (R-Nev.) is 72. Actor Carroll O'Connor is 70. Actor Peter O'Toole
Democrats that their dreams of
is 62. Actress Joanna Cassidy is 49. •
mandated universal coverage can' t
Thought for Today: "A beautiful soul has no other merit than its own
be realized this year_
existence."- Friedrich von SchiUer, German author (1759-1805).

IToledo la4' I
!Mansfield 181 '
IND.

85'

•

The Racine Area Commumt y
Orgamzation officially dubbed the
vil lage's July 4 frog jumping contes t an ann ua l eve nt and made
donations to two community organizations at the group's Jul y 26
meeting.
The regular mon thl y mcc tm g
got underway wi th the Rev. Aaron
Young giving grace before the dmner, whic h was allended by 23
members and five guests.
Follow ing the dinner, the bus•ness mee tm g was opened by
RACO Pres id ent Kathryn Hart.
The secretary's report was read by
Lilltan Weese and Tonya Hunter
gave the treasurer's report
Fo llow ing the success of the
Jul y 4 frog jumpmg contest, members dcc1ded to make the contest an
annual part of the Fourth of Jul y
celebratiOn.
Members also voted 10 purchase

I•

-

• ICo lu mbus las' I

WVA

leo

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

Vm Assoc1ated Pt6SS Grspl11csNet

Chance of storms remain
in picture for Wednesday
The record-high temperature for
Thunderstorm s produced strong this dat.c at the Columbus weather
wmd s and heavy downpours in station was 99 degrees in 199 1
porti o ns of north east Ohio while the record low was 50 in
overni ght, the National Weath er 1976. Sunset tonight will be at 8:45
p.m. and sunrise Wedne sday at
Service said.
Scattered power outages were 6:32 a.m.
reported in Summit County.
Weather forecast:
An inch of rain fell in about an
Today ... Partly cloudy with scathour in Doyles town, in Wayne tered thunderstorms. Severe storms
County, and Barberton , near with heavy rainfall possible. Highs
Akron . The official measurement at from around 80 northwest to the
the Akron-Canton Airport was .75 upper 80s south.
Tonight... Partly cloudy . A 20
of an inch.
Skies will turn mostly clear percent chance of showers or thunacross northern Ohio toni ght, fore- derstorms central and south. Lows
casters said, while partly cloudy from around 60 northwest to the
skies will prevail elsewhere. A few middlc 60s south.
Wednesday ...Partly cloud y. A
locations in central and southern
Ohio may see a shower or thunder- 20 percent chance of afternoon
storm before midnight. Lows will thunderstorms northwest. Highs in
range from around 60 in the north- the middle to upper 80s.
Extended forecast:
west to the mid-60s in the south.
Thursday .. .Scattered thunderPanty sunny skies are expected
for much of the state on Wednes- storms. Lows in the 60s and highs
da y, although th ere is a small in the middle to upper 80s.
Friday .. .A chance of showers .
chance of afternoon thunderstorms
in the northwesL Temperatures will Lows in the 60s and highs 75 to 80.
Saturday ... Fair. Lows in the 50s
reac h the mid - to upper 80s
and
high s in the middle to upper
statewide.
70s.
By The Associated Press

Meigs announcements
Bible school slated
A community vacation Bible
school will be held Aug. 8-12 from
5:30-8:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church , Pomeroy. Supper will be
provided for those attending the
Bible school which will have as its
theme, "Together in Jesus' Name."
Community yard sale slated
The Long Bottom Community
Association is holding a yard/bake
sale Thursday and Friday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Long Bottom
Community Building.
Vacation Bible scbool planned
A vacation Bible school themed
"Trail of Treasures" will be held
between Aug. 8 and 12 from 6:30-9
p.m. at Hope Baptist Church in
Middleport.
Middleport sets pool meeting
Middleport officials will hold a
meeting to discuss saving the village pool at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
village council chambers. Ideas and
volunteers are welcome.
Dunfee reunion set
The families of the late Floyd
and Gamet Dunfee will be held at
the home of Betty Biggs, State
Route 124, Pomeroy, Sunday, bas-

kct dinner atl 2:30 p.m.
Music program to be held
A dinner and concert will be
held at the Reynolds Opry House
Sunday, I p.m. Proceeds will go to
support Out of the Blue Band. The
band will play for a square dance
Friday 8 to I p.m. at Skateland ,
Ripley, W.Va.
Bible school underway
A Bible'school is bemg held this
week at the United Pentecostal
Church, Middleport, Third Avenue,
at 7 eac h evening . Age s nine
through 12 will have a campout
Friday.
Legion to meet
Racine Post 602, American
Legion, Thursday, 6:30p.m. meeting, meal to follow.
Spaghetti dinner set
A spaghetti dinner will be
served at the American Legion hall
in Racine Sunday beginning at
11:30 a.m . Cost for all you can eat
is $3.
Syracuse VBS next week
The Syracuse Nazarene Church
will hold vacation Bible school,
Aug. 8-12 from 9:30 am to noon.
Theme will be VIP Club.

Couples file to end marriage

End----------···
·-------.30

MallS.--

1!

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.

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-----------.38

T li ESOAY, Al ·GliST 2, 1991 -

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(,:u·l SC'out Aw&lt;:~n l "'
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Bq.!; T111w Wrt&gt;s lhng

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Dairy .l ud ~ m g
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111 :1111 a . m .

Middleport mulls water dilemma
Members of Middleport village government met Monday night
to talk about how to solve vi ll age water problems, said Mayor
Dewey Horton.
The council will hear from the Leading Creek Conservancy District and Ga llia County Rural Water Di str1ct about the costs for
expanding water lines into the v•llage, Horton said.
Ohio Environm ental Protec tion Agency' s Jeffrey 0. Chns lcr
wrote village officials a letter staung the village must compl y with
state rules by Dec. 31, 1995, Council Pres1dCnt Bob Gilmore sa1d.
The village can choose one of three opti ons - abandon three vil lage wells and purc.llase from an outside supplier; add new chlorination facilities, which the village docs not have space for; or, rai se
the wells three feet above the 100-year flood plain, Gilmore said.
The village will not eliminat.c the Big Bend Wat.cr District as an
option yet, he added. He will push to table the third and fmal reading of an ordinance that Middleport would leave the d1strict with
Pomeroy, Gilmore said.
"We have no preconceived notions," Gilmore said. "I'm open to
what's best for the community."

" Reli!{ions &amp; S••nwr

Citi•"'' .1'1~/J t "
Sht' I'JJ BrTt·din!!.. &amp; S howma n ship

c ()() p. m.
.&gt;:

three "Welcome to Racine" ban ne rs for eac h town entrance and
voted 10 sell refreshments at a local
a uc ti on a nd cate r a pic n1c for
money -making projects.
It was no ted th at htg h wa ter
marker signs have bee n pai nted and
numbered.
In additiOn, con trib ut iO ns of
$100 and $1,000 were made to the
Rac in e Fal l Fesu va l Comm 1ttec
and the Rac ine Museum/Cross Mi ll
proJeCt, respectively.
Mary Powe ll , dtrecto r of th e
Meigs County Park Distnc t. dt stributcd broc hures and disc ussed
the Battle of Buff1n gton Island
Encampment Days to be he ld at
Port land on Sept. 9, 10 and II
The Pledge of Allegiance, lead
by the Rev. Ken Moher, adJourned
the meeting. The nex t meetmg will
be held Aug 23 at 6:30 p.m. at Star
Mill Park.

1.110 p .m .

1-11 Dt• m o n :-. t ratio u :-.

:!· llll I'

Al'li vit w' 1\ltl ;!.
Sty l•· Ht·v i•·w

Ill

Ma w St :q.!,t'

1-11 At'ro Sptt t't' l&gt;t· mo n . . tr·atw n s
Flt' ltl
Swm t· J utl ~ in J,!:
Sh ow An· n a

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:\: 00 I' . Ill .

Panel nominations sought

A breaking and entering at a Pomeroy home Saturday remams
under investigation , accordin g ~m e ro y Police Department
reports.
V
Beverly Fetty 's home at 106 Union Ave. was entered by removing the air conditioner. A videocassette recorder was taken , records
show. The residence was dusted for fingerprin ts, official s said.

Eli gible farm ers in Ath ens, to become nommccs for the FmHA
Meigs a nd Vint on co unu es arc county committee.
"Farmers tn these counties, servmvited to become nominees for the
Fa rm ers Home Admini strati on Ing on th e co mm ittee, pl ay an
(FmHA) count y committee, FmHA important role by assisting tn the
County Supervisor, David P. Urwin process of loan application s and
announced todav.
reviews," sa1d David Urwin .
As a res ult -of the 198 5 Farm
Nommating petitions mu st be
Bill , two of the three mem bers of re turned to th e Fm HA co unty
FmHA county commiuccs must be office by Sept. 14.
elected. The third member is desigAdditi onal in fo rm at ion and
nated by the FmHA county offi ce application forms for those who arc
111 determimn g the e hg•b ility of
mterested in becomtng nominees
applt ca nt s for ce n a tn types of for the county committee are avru lFmHA loans.
ab le at the FmH A county office .
Generally, farmers who arc rest- I 0233 Albany Road, Athens, Ohio,
dents of these counties are ehgible or by calling 6 14/592-662 1.

Racine man backs into car

Today's livestock prices

Pomeroy break-in probed

A Racine man backed his pickup truck into a parked car in Powell 's parking lot at 7:09p.m. Saturday, according to Pomeroy Police
Department reports.
Robert James, 18, Racine, had no damage to his 1991 Chevrolet
truck and he was cited for failure to maintain control, records show .
Erica Rob1e, 17, Pomeroy, report,cd her 1984 Chevrolet hatchback had moderate damage to the rear end after James struck her
car.

Middleport boy wrecks car
A Middleport boy backed his car the wrong way on a one-way
street, reaching a speed of 30 miles per hour, when he lost control
and hit a Pomeroy utility pole, according to Pomeroy Police Department reports.
Tyler Wolfe, 17, Middleport, had heavy damage to the rear end
of his 1989 Ford Fiesta after he smashed into a pole on Condor
Street at 12:05 p.m. Saturday, records show. Wolfe was cited for
failure to maintain control.

Mood grim as invasion looms
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
- The mood at Haiti 's pre~idential
palace was grim as the military installed president vowed to fight
back against a possible U.S .-Ied
invasion. "Haiti is on death row,"
said one politician.
Official bluster mixed witlt private resignation under President
Emile Jonassaint's newly dec lared
stale of sie~e - He acted after the
U.N. Secunty Council OK'd setting up a multinational force, if
necessary , to oust Haiti 's military
rulers and restore democrauc gov ernment.
Arl!entina became tlte first Latin
Amencan nation to volunteer publicly for the mission. President Carlos Menem said Monday he was
requesting 600 troaps for the force.
Madeleine Albright, the U.S .
ambassador to the United Nations,
said 14 countries have offered
troops. but she has not named

them.
Jacking up the pre ssure e ven
more, the Dominican Republic
agreed Monday to allow international surveillance of its border
with Haiti, a step the United States
hopes will stop the fuel smuggling
that ha s weakened a U.N. trade
embargo on Haiti.
The accord provides for U.S.
military helicopters to patrol the
border along with 88 international
observers under the control of the
U.S. Atlantic Command.
The Pentagon has said six Huey
helicopters and surveillance and
communications gear will be dispatch ed for the mi ss ion to the
Domimcan Republic, which shares
the Caribbean island of Hispaniola
with Haiti.

•

COLUMBU S (AP) - Direct
li ves tock pri ces and rece tpls at
selected buying points Tuesday by
the U.S. Departm ent of Agricul ture:
Barrows and gilts: mostl y 50
cents lower; demand ltght to mod-

Couples issued
licenses to wed

crate.
U.S . 1-3. 230-260 lbs., country
poin ts 38.00-4 1.00.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 41 .50-43.00.
Prices from The Prod ucers Livestock AssociatiOn:
Cattle: st.cady to 1.50 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 62.0065. 10; select 55.00-62.00.

Three couples were recently
is sued marriage license s in the
Meigs County Probate Court of
Jud ge Robert Buck . Rece iving
licenses were:
Clmton James Batley, 28, Long
Bottom, and Carissa Dawn Hill , 23,
Racine; Terrell Joseph McNickle,
3 I, and Tricia Carleen Wolfe, 22,
both of Racine ; Howard Melvin
Lawrence Jr., 23, and Sharon Elizabeth Bryant, 22, both of Long Bottom.

NOW

f

I

Hospital news

H
I

•

E
I

can be.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

-1naurance
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Auto
Companieli

oG

~~~~~ ~~~~.~--~

I

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LIES.,....
"" TRUI
,.,..,_.,.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - none.
Monday discharges- Don Cul lum s, Pomeroy; Donald Vancooney, Middleport.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. 1 - Howard
Thoma, Devin Palmer, Garrett
Bowman , Vtcky Wilcm, Janelle
William s. Mahalia Heath, Mr s.
James Angel and daughter.
(Published with permission)

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EMS logs 8 calls

One.-----------.33

Gallia fair schedule

Local News in Brief:

Dissolution asked - Wtlttam R.
The following actions to end
marriage were filed recently in the Donohue, Pomeroy, and Shane M.
Meigs County Common Pleas Donohue, Hamden, July 29.
Divorce asked - Sandy M.
Court of Judge FredW. &lt;;_row III:
Chapell, Pomeroy, from Richard
Units of the Meigs County
Lee Chapell II, Clifton , W.Va ..
Emergency
Medical Service reportJuly 29.
The Dally Sentinel
ed
eight
calls
for assistance
Di vorcj:S granted - Rebecca J.
(USPS ZIJ-961)
Roush and Edward R. Roush, July between Monday and Tuesday
Published every arternooa. Monday through
28;
Mark Edward Boyd and mornings. Units responding includFriday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Obio by the .
ed:
Tammy Louise Boyd, July 28.
Ohioo Valley PubliJhina Compa~~yJM'ullimcdia
MIDDLEPORT
Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio 4!769, Ph . 99l-l t56
9:39 a.m. Monday, Race Street,
Second clMI postaae paid al: Pdmcroy, Ohio.
Virginia Hindy, Holzer Medical
Memba: The Auociated Pre11, I.Dd the Obio 1
Center.
Newap.aprr Auoc1ation. National Adverti.IIIIJ '
POMEROY
Rcprcaealative, Branhtlm Newtptper Salel,
Am Ele Power ·-- - -----.315/8
733 Third Avenue, New York, New York
12:08 p.m. Monday, Willow
Akm------- - - ------.61 718 Creek Road, Ron Jeffers, Veterans
!00!7.
Ashland 011--------- -.35 Ill
POSNASTER. Sud addrclls chu.aet to The
AT&amp;T ·--------- - - --.541/1 Memorial Hospital.
Dilly Sentinel, Ill Cowl Sl, Pomeroy, Ob.io
REEDSVILLE
Bank
518
&gt;15769
8:25 p.m. Monday, Number
Bob
EvaD11-----------·ll
518
SUISCBIPI'ION RATES
Cbamplon lnd.------- - .11 3/4 Nine Road , Candy Mayes, VMH.
Br Curler or Motor Rou.l•
Ome Week. ........,......................................$1 .60
Cbarmlna Sbop- ------ --9 318
RUTLAND
Ooe Month.................. .. ......................... .$6.9l
City Holdlng ••- ------- .31 1/4
1:2~
P:m.
~onday, State Route
0" Year.... .,......... ......... . . .... . - · $13.20
Federal MCII.UI.---··--- -.17 318 124, Vagil Wmdon, VMH;
SINGLE COPY
Goodyear T&amp;R - ------ -.35 3/4
PIUCI
3:20p.m. Monday, Meigs Mine
Dally..................................... .. - -ll ceou
K-mart ----- --------·" 1/1 31 , Paul Cooka, O'Bleness Memo-Laoda
3/4
Subltribal DOl deliria, to pay tho c.ri« IMY
Limited 1nc.--- ---- ---·l9 3/8 rial Hospital, Mark Rogers, HMC.
remit Ia ldYIJICe direct to The Dally SellliDcl
TUPPERS PLAINS
on a lhree, aixor 12 month bMil. Credit will be
Multimedia Inc.
l/4
11:34 a.m. Monday, volunteer
a,jven carrier Cldt w«:t.
P..nt Bancorp ·----- ------17
Reliance Electric ---- ------10 fire department, Baker-Smith
No 111bl&lt;ripllon~ by 111111 permitted In .....
Robbl111 &amp; Myen...-- ----18 314 Road, electrical ftre at the Terrell
where home carrier Kf'Vice llavaillble.
Sboney'• ln&lt;.. - - -·-·-----·14 3/8 Me WiUiams residence;
InoldeM. . C....cy
Star Bank
3/4
4:53 p.m. Monday, VFD, State
t3 Weea. .......................... ................... .$2!.14
Wendy lnt'L ------ ----·15 1/8 Route 7, ,auto fire, owner Earl Rus26
$&gt;43.t6
Wortblngton lnd·-----..,-.111/2
ll Weetl .............................................. $14.76
Stock reports u-e lbe 10:30 Lm. sell;
Oolold• MeJp
10:59 p .m. Monday, Blake
quotes provided by Advest of
Road,
Lorene Carroll, SL Joseph's
~-:r.- ~::::·.·.::::::::·.::~::::·:::::::
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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

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�Tuesda~August2,1994

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

On the NFL camp scene,

TUesda~August2, 1994

By The Associated Press
Though the Washington Red ski ns appear close to signmg flfstround draft pick Heath Shuler,

In the NL,

Reds edge Giants 4-3; Astros beaten

....
CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN- With San Francisco shortstop Royce
Clayton gaining on him from behind, the Cincinnati Reds' Deion
Sanders finds himself caught in a rundown between first and ~ond
base in the fifth inning of Monday's National League game m San
Fran~isco, which the Reds won 4-3. However, Sanders wasn ' t so
lucky this time, as be was tagged out. (AP)

Dave Burba (2 -6) started the 1 team phys1clllll and was to undergo thoughts on it change almost every
hour. Sometimes I hear it'll last a
mmh for tlle G1ants and retired one an MRI today:
.
bauer before walking Hunter. After
"They thmk Hanson tore h1 s week, so meu mes that we won't
Brumfield stole second and Tony anterior cruciate ligament. When I pl ay until nex t spring and someFer nande z walked the runn ers talked to him on llle mound he said times that there won't be any strike
moved up on a groundout
he fell and heard everything pop," at all.
Frey relieved and walked p.nch- Reds manager Davey Johnson sa1d.
"There's a lot more at stake that
h1ttcr Brian Dorsett, and Brumfield "It certamly took the luster off the what I do ind1vidually. I just hope
tllat1f n happens, everybody comes
carne home on ball four.
wm. "
·' It was a s1nker - just hke any
Hanson's replacement, Chuck out of it OK and lllatthe fans don't
other of my si nkers. It wasn't a McElroy, allowed the Gl3llts to ue quit on us."
Maddux would also be m hn e
stnke," Frey sa1d . " Normally 11 it at 3, giv.ng up John Patterson's
would have been a walk and I RBI double and a bases -loaded for his third postseason appearance
if the Braves win llle NL East or
would have moved on to the next walk to Strawberry.
Williams' homer was the 200th earn a wild -card berth. What he
guy."
might fail to reac h is a third
Johnny Ruffin (7-2) gotllle win of his career.
for the Reds witll two inn10gs of
Elsewhere 1n th e NatiOnal straight 20-win season 1f the strike
hitless relief. Hunter, Boone and League, 11 was Atlanta 4, N~w happens Aug . 12.
Maddux leads tlle majors with
Hal Morris hit solo homers.
York 2; Montreal 3, St. Louis 2 in
Apart from Will1arns ' homer in 10 mnings; Chicago 8, Flonda 5; 185 innings pitc hed and a 1.70
tlle fiflll, Reds starter Erik Hanson Colorado 8, Houston 3; and San 'ERA.
Fred McGnff hit his 28th homer
had shut down tlle middle of San D1ego 5, Los Angeles 4.
of the season leading off the second
Francisco's lineup . Barry Bonds,
Braves 4, Mets 2
.
William s and Darryl Strawberry
Regardless of whether there w1ll off Mets rookie Jason Jacome (4 went JUSt J.for-10.
.
be a baseball strike, Greg Maddux 2).
Jacome , in hi s six th major The Reds had buill a 3-1 lead m 1s almost cenam to wm h1s tllud
tllc s1xll1 inning when Hanson, who straight Cy Young Award.
.
league start, gave up two runs on
had allowed only four hits, twist.ed
He showed why once agam f1ve hits while striking out three
and walking one in seven innings.
his left knee trying to field a sacri- Monday night
fi ce bunt by B1ll Sw1ft.
Maddux (14-6) p1tched an eightNew York lied llle score in llle
Hanson had given up a base hit hitter for his major-league leadmg second when Jeff Kent led off with
to Manwanng to lead off llle sixlll ninth complete game, leadmg a single, went to second on Joe
before facing Sw1fl. While attempt- Atlanta past the New York Mets 4- Orsulak's single, and scored on
ing to field th e bunt, Hanson 2. He struck out e1ght and walked Jacome's infield hit.
slipped and was carted off the field one as the. Braves won for the
Bobby Bonilla h1t a two -out
and taken from Candlestick Park fourth ume m five games.
homer in tlle eightll, hi s 20th of the
by ambulance. '
"I'm prepared for (a strike) if it season.
He was examined by the Giants' comes about," Maddux said. " My
(See NL on Page 5)

Three homers help Indians
record 6-2 win over Tigers
was a 2-0 count, and he threw a
p11eh lllal he obviously didn't want
to tllrow. It was a forkball tllat he
just happened to get up."
Cleveland ended all doubt by
scoring tllree in llle eighth on a solo
homer by Baerga, his 16th, off
Buddy Groom and a two-run shot
by Ramirez, his 15ll1, off Joe Soever.
"Obviously, you can ' t replace
Alben in the lineup," Sorrento
said. "He's too valuable, one of llle
best in the business right now. But
I think the team was ready to
accept the challenge. We're just
going to have to pick up tlle slack
for six or seven games."
Jason Grimsley (4-1) y1elded
two runs and six hits in 7 2/3
innings, matching his season h1gh
with eighth strikeouts. Enc Plunk
got the last out in llle eightll, and
Jeff Russell finished .
Lou Whitaker scored both
Detroit runs. He doubled and
scored on Travis Fryman's single
in llle ftrSt, then homered, his 12ll1,
leading off llle lllird.
The Tigers left the bases loaded
in the flfsl when Tettleton popped
to short and Alan Trammell flied to
deep left.
"I didn't feel like I was in control early," Grimsley said. "After!
got through llle first couple innings,
I had more confidence and was
doing a better job keeping tlle ball
down.
"I try not to even look at the
scoreboard. Whetller I have a I 0run lead or. I'm five runs behind,
I'm not gomg to change the way I
piiCh. It's hard to keep our lineup
down. There are so many weapons
we can throw out there atlllem."
In other games, Toronto beat
Boston 6-2 in the first game of a
doubleheader before Boston won 43 in the second, Baltimore beat
Minnesota 1-0 as Ripken played in
his 2,000th consecutive game, New
York beat Milwaukee 8-3 and
Kansas City beat Oakland 4-2.

Jays, BoSox split DH
On the night Cal Ripken
reached a b1g number, Joe Carter
auaincd a prelly nice milestone,
too.
Caner hn his 300tll homer as ll1e
Toronto Blue Jays beat llle Boston
Red Sox 6-2 Monday mght in llle
opener of a doubleheader. Boston
came back to win llle second game
4-3.
"I plan these things out. You
only hit 300 once," said Carter,
who had asked the Boston grounds
crew to retrieve the ball in the
event of a home run.
Carter was presented with the
ball between games.
"That was a big one," he said.
"You never wan l to lose track of

those.··

Carter has said in recent weeks
lllat his goal was to get to 100 RBis
for the sixth straight season. The
two-run homer over the Green
Monster in left field, an eighthinning drive off Steve Farr,
increased Carter's total to 97.
Pat Hentgen (13-7) pitched a
six-hitter for his sixth complete
game. Aaron Sele (7 -7) allowed
seven hits, tllree unearned runs and
five walks in seven innings.
"I piiChed myself into and out
of a lot of jams out there," said
Sele, who gave up three runs in the
first. " I got myself into trouble in
tlle first inning trying to tllrow too
hard."
Mo Vaughn homered to cap a
four-run first inninR in the second
game. Nate Minchey {2-3 ) called up from llle minors between
games of the doubleheader - was
helped by ll1ree double plays.
Boston's first five baners all had
hits against Brad Cornett (1-3).
Minchey allowed eight hits in
seven innings and Ken Ryan finished for his 12th save.
Orioles I, Twins 0
Ripken became just llle second
major leaguer to play in 2,000
(See AL on PageS)

rookie coach Norv Turner doesn't
yet have ll1c quarterback from Tennessee penciled into the starling
lineup.

VOU WERE GOOD! - Yelena Piskum of
Belarus (center) gives American Shannon Miller
(left) a congratulatory kiss and a few words or
encouragement rollowing tbe noor exercise com-

In theAL,

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Take
Albert Belle out of tlle Cleveland
Indians' hneup, and what's left?
Plenty, says manager Mike Hargrove.
''A lot of teams in baseball
would swap for the lineup we had
tonight," Hargrove said after the
Indians hit three home runs and
beat tllc Detroit T •gers 6-2 Monday
night.
Belle, who leads Cleveland willl
35 home runs. 98 RBis and a .359
average, began serving his six-day,
seven-game suspension for carrylOg a corked bat to the plate m
Chicago on July 15.
But the Indians were detcrmmed
10 show tlley're no one-man team.
Paul Sorrento turned the game
around w1th a two-run shot in tlle
seventh, and Carlos Baerga and
Manny Ram1rez put it away with
home runs in the eighlll, sending
the Tigers to their fourth loss in
four tnes at Jacobs Field.
Cleveland ended its tllree-garne
losing streak.
.
.
"You're not gmng to enJOY
your trips here so much," Detroit
manager Sparky Anderson satd.
"Shows you what a new stadium
will do for you- if you've got a
good ballclub."
Detroit starter Mike Moore (1010) was dominant for tlle first half
of tlle game. He blanked the Indians until the sixth, when Kenny
Lofton bunted for a single , stole
second and tllird, and scored on a
wild pitch that bounded just a few
feet from catcher Mickey Teulcton.
Lofton's hit was only ll1e second
one allowed by Moore.
But '" the seventh, Ramirez
doubled before Sorrento drove a 20 pitch 430 feel into the bullpen in
center field for his 13th home run,
puuing Cleveland ahead 3-2.
"The key to hitting is getting
into good hiuing counts," Sorrento
sa1d. " He was around llle knees
most of the game to lllat point. It

·

Shuler remains a no-show; Hill signs pact with Chiefs

Page-4

By ANNE 1\1. PETERSON
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
W1th the smke deadline less than
two weeks away, the C1 ncmnati
Reds aren' t p1cky about the way
they w1n games
The Reds increased their lead 10
the NL Central to 3 1/2 games over
Houston with the help of a passed
ball , beaung the San Franc1sco
G1ants 4-3 Monday.
The second -place Astros lost to
Colorado 8-3 Monday night.
"Atth•s point of the season, we
have to go out and put (wms) on
the board so th at Houston can't
catch us," sa1d Jeff Brantley, who
pllched the nmth innmg for h1s
13th save.
The G1ants, trailing Los Angeles
m th e NL West by I 1/2 games,
also arc concerned about a strike.
" If there IS a work stoppage we
certaml y want to be 10 first place
when 11 happens ... ," said G1ants
third baseman Mall W1lhams. who
h1t hi s maJOr lcaguc-lead10g 41st
homer Monday.
P10ch runner Jacob Brumfield
scored the go-ahead run in the
ninth mning when Steve Frey's
p1tch bounced off Kirl Manwar10g's glov e
Brumf1eld was running for
Brian Hunter, who had walked.
" You could sec when it hll off
h1 s glove it was time to go," Brumfi eld said . " He (Manwanng) had to
move for that puc h."

The Dally Sentlnef-Page-5

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Washington Post reported
today tllatllle two sides had agreed
on most of the details of an eightyear contract worth more lllan $19

million.
"We've all been lllrough these
deals where close doesn 't end up
happcn1ng , so I'm just kmd of
holding my breath, and we 'II JUSt
see what happens over the next 24
hours, or couple of days or, who
knows?" Turner sa1d.
Turner has said Shuler must be
in camp early th1s week m order to
compete for the starting job, and he
hopes to gel h1m some playmg lime
1n Monday 's exhlbll1on game
agamst Buffalo.
"lthmk we can get h1m ready to
play some 1n that game," Turner
said. "They don'ttcnd to be overly
com plicated m pre- season. so I
think it would be a good opportunity for h1m."
The Redskins released offensive
lmeman Mo Elewomb1 in a move
thai cleared salary cap room to s1gn
Shuler.
Chiefs
Fust-round draft p1ck Greg Hill
IS wasting no time gcuing mvolved
with his new team.
Hill, a runnmg back from Texas
A&amp;M, signed a four-year contract
willl Kansas City on Monday mghl
for a package worth about $3 million, and will jom the team as 11
travels to Japan for a pre-season
game.
Cowboys
The two games Derrick Lassie

started for the Dallas Cowboys last
year arc probably two more than he
w1ll appear m this sea~on.
Lass1c, who replaced Emmill
Smith durmg the Super Bowl
MVP's holdout in 1993, injured llle
quadriceps tendon in h1s right knee
dunng Sunday night's exh1bit10n
VICtory over the Mmn eso ta
V1kmgs.
The second -year runmng back
from Alabama likel y will be out
three to four month s, and be placed
on InJured reserve, meaning he
would be ineligible for tllis season.
Rams
Los Angeles fou nd ou t that
th1rd ·yca r quarterback T.J. Rub Icy's problems tllrough the first 10
days of lrainmg camp are more
than psycholog•cal
Rubley, who started seve n
games last season, has tcnd1nius m
his right elbow and wi ll s1t our at
leas t one week of pract1cc. The
team suspects the ulnar nerve is
either pmched or damaged.
There was spccu lauon that Rub ~
ley was feeling tlle pressure from
llle acqUislllon of Chns M1ller and
Chns Chandler.
/
Bears
Seco nd -year tight end Chris
Gedney has recovered suffiCientl y
from last year's broken collarbone
and inJured heel to be named tllc

starter for Ch icago's exhibitton
opener Friday agrunstlhc Eagles.
Gedney caught 10 passes for 98
yards as a rookie last season but
missed nine games.
Eagles
The Philadelphia Eagles, the last
I'JFL team to bar the med1a from
weekday prac u ces. w1ll all ow
reporters to watch the team' s prac l!ces ll11s season.
49ers
The San Franc1sco 49crs could
be dow n to one healtlly ughl end
for tllelf exhibition opener Friday
night at Tempe, Anzona .
Head coach George Seifert s;ud
backup t1ghl end Ted Popson was
given an IRJection to try to reduce
pain and swelling from a lower
back problem. He is not expec ted
to play against llle Cardmals, joming startmg ught end Brent Jones
(ankle) and backup Brett Caro lan
(Hamstnn g) on llle sidelines.
Bryce Burnell IS the on l y
healthy 11ght end in camp.
Saints
Dave Cad1gan 1s another v•cum
of lllc NFL' s salary cap.
Cad•gan, the New York Jets'
No. I p1ck 10 1988. worked o ut
recently for New Orleans and was
1mpresSJ vc However, head coach
Jim Mora sa id the team doesn't
have enough money under the cap
to afford h1m .

petition Monday in the Goodwill Games In St.
Petersburg, Russia. Miller won gold medals in the
~am and noor exercises and took silver in the
vault and uneven bars. (AP)

At the Goodwill Games,

Miller captures four medals
in wome11's gymnastics finals
ST. PETERSBURG, Russ1a

But Nunno appealed to the judges,
arguing tllat they had not awarded
wing to prove after losing an allher enough points based on llle difaround title for the flfst time in two
ficulty of her routine. The judges
years.
revised Webster's score to 9.725,
So she went out Monday , a day
moving her up to lllird.
after the loss to Russia's Dina
It was one in a series of scoring
Kochelkova, and won two gold and
errors and computer gliiChcs during
two s1lver medals in tlle individual
the tllree days of women's gymnasapparatus finals in women's gym tics .
nastics at the Goodwill Games.
"The judges were absolutely
Coach Steve Nunno gave Miller
wrong in evaluatinR her base
a pep talk after the loss to
score," Nunno srud. "They didn't
Kochelkova.
know what her amount was worth.
"After yest.erday," Nunno said,
I wasn't going to be denied out of
"we had a little discussion and I
another medal for the United
told her, 'You still have another
Stat.es."
day of competition to go. You have
There were problems Monday at
the opportunity to redeem yourself
the Yubileiny Palace of Sports,
and show lllem who is tlle best in
venue for the short-track and figure
the world.'
skating competitions.
"And today she did that,"
Workers were still pouring
Nunno said. "She beat Kochetkova
water on ll1e concrete floor to make'
in each event."
the ice, but unseasonably hot
Miller, the most decorated U.S .
weather was slowing llle freezing
gymnast in history, won gold in the
process. Practices were moved to
balance beam and floor exercise
an adjacent rink, where the ice was
and silver in the vault and uneven
soft and brown.
bars. That brought her medal total
"I can't imagine having a comfor tlle Games to five- two golds
petition as big as tllis one and havand three silvers.
in!l preparations like this happen,"
srud American skater Elaine Zayak.
Organizers insisted the ice
.;,&lt;C_on_ti_nued_fro_m_P....:.ag_e4_)- - - - would be ready for Tuesday's
Dave Gallagher had a two-out runs over 5 1/3 innings . Randy short-track events and WednesRBI single in the ninth for llle final Myers pitched tlle ninlll for his 21st day's figure skating.
In other events Monday, Olga
save.
run.
Pat Rapp (6-7) gave up four hits Sedakova of Russia won the gold
Expos 3, Cardinals 2 (10)
in the solo competition of synchroMarquis Grissom won it for ll1e and six walks over four innings.
nized swimming. Becky DyroenRockies 8, Astros 3
Expos with an inside -the-park
Lancer
of the United States was
Lance
Painter
pitched
four-hit
homer off Rich Rodriguez in the
second.
Dyroen-Lancer teamed
ball
over
five
innings
and
Mike
bottom of llle lOth.
willl
Jill
Sudduth to win lllc duet
Kingery
had
four
hits.
Grissom 's lOth homer hit the
competition.
Jeff
Bagwell
hit
his
3
7tll
homer
glove of Gerald Young in deep
In women's volleyball, the Unitcenter field. Young tried to make for ll1e Astros, a two-run shot in ll1e
an over-the-shoulder caiCh, but ll1e fourth lllal tied Jimmy Wynn's club ed States beat Germany 3-0, China
defeated Cuba 3-1, Japan swept
ball caromed along the wall as record.
Painter (4-5) struck out two and Peru 3-0 and Russia downed the
Grissom, who never hesitated, beat
Netherlands 3-0. Wednesday's
walked
none.
shortstop Ozzie Smith's relay
semifinal matchups are: United
Pete
Harnisch
(7-5)
gave
up
home.
States vs. China, and Russia vs .
nine
hits
and
six
runs
through
5
2/3
Rodriguez (2-5) retired just two
Japan.
batters. John Wetteland (3-6) :;ol innings.
Padres 5, Dodgers 4
the win despite allowing St. Louis
At
Los
Angeles, Tony Gwynn
to tie the game w1th two outs in llle
and
Brad
Ausmus
h1l run -scoring
ninth on Geronimo Pena ' s lith
doubles
and
Luis
Lopez
had lllree
homer.
hits.
Cubs 8, Marlins 5
Joey Hamilton (8-5) allowed
At Chicago, Chuck Crim was
three
runs and eighl hits over
victorious in his fust start in seven
seven-plus
innings, striking out
years as the Cubs sent tlle Marlins
four
and
walking
none.
to tlleir seventh straight loss.
Mike
Piazza
drove
in two runs
Rick Wilkins and Rey Sanchez
for
the
Dodgers.
each drove in two runs in a five-run
Bip Roberts opened the game
first inning.
with
a single off the glove of Orel
Crim (5-4}. a last-minute
Hershiser
(5-6) and scored on
replacement for the injured Mike
Eddie
Williams'
single.
Morgan, gave up six h1ts and four
(AP)- Shannon Miller had some-

WHITAKER SCORES - The Detroit Tigers'
Lou Whitaker slides past Cleveland backstop

Sandy Alomar Jr. to score in the first inning of
Monday night's American League game in Cleveland, where the Indians won 6-2. (AP)

· Scoreboard
Now Ymk 8, Milwau.k.oe 3
llallim010 I,
0
Kanlu City 4, Ooltlond 2
DH: Toronto 6. 801ton 2; 801ton 4,

Baseball

Minn-.

NL standings
Euten~

Tum

Tomntol

L
Moouw .. ...........66 J8

Atl"'ta ..............63 42
Philldelphia . .. ....51 54
New York
.SO S4
Aonda . .... .. .. ..... .4.5

PeL

GB

.635
.600
.486

3.5

.481
.429

60

15S
16
21.5

Central DhllkHI
CINCINNA11. .....62 43 .590

Houo"'" .......... ...S9 47 .557
Pililbursh ......... 49 SS 471
Chict~ao ... ... . ......48 .56 .462

3.5
l2.S
13.5

SL l...ouit ., ........... .47

14.S

S7

4S2

Wtlttrn Dlvlllon
U.An&amp;e!CI ..... .S2 S3 .495

s., Francilco ....... 52

S5
S7

.486
.472

San Dieao ............42 66

.389

..... SI

Colondo

I
2S
11 J

CINONNATI4. s., FranciJco 3
AO...a 4 , New York 2
Montreal], SL l...ouit 2 (10)

Colorado 8, H~ 3
OUcafO 8, Florida .5
San Dieao j , l.ol Anaelcl4
Florida (Aqwno 2-1) at Oti~so {FOIl-3),_2:20 pm

CINCINNATI (Schowd: 6-2) u San

franC1JCO (Bu.lkcu 6-7), 3:3.5 p.m.
St lou.i.a (Urbani 2-6) at Montre.l
(l!illl4-5). 7 · 35~p .m .
Piaabwah (White 3-.5) at AW.dclphia
(MIII'IO&amp; 7-3),

7:35p.m.
AllanLI (Mcn:kor 9-3) al New York
(Ranlinacr G-4), 7 :40p.m

Colcndo &lt;G.ea HmU ).lO) 11 Hout·
"'"(Dnbak lQ.6),1:0S p.m.
San Dicao CK.rueaar 2.2) at U. Ana•
... (C..dio&lt;U 7-6). ill.05 p.m.

Wednesday's games

Detrott (Oullicboa 4-.5) at CLEVE-

UNI&gt;(Moorio 1().6). 7:05p.m.
New Yolk (KanuaUcclU 7-6) at Milwo.W.. (S&lt;:ontan 2-5~ 1:05 p.m.
Ballimom {M1.a11m1 ~~~)at MnnCIOIa (Pttlido U), l :llS p.m.
Oakland (Van PoppeJ 6-9) tt K.an.. a
Ci.ly (C011e IS-4). 8:0.\'p.m.
OUe~ao (Bac 10.2) st Tc.Ku &lt;Rosen
11-6~

1.35 ~.m.

S01tllc (John.on 11·6) at C11ifomta
(Lollwid! 5-9). 10:05 p.m.

n

l'hilodclpllia

(loWon tJ.S), 7:3S p.m.
Att.nta (Aney 7 -3) •t New York

001101 ll·7l. HO p-m.

Basketball
Nat\011al Baskttball Aaodatlon
BOSTON CELTICS . Signocl Pervis
ElliiQl, CGJta,toa mul1.1ycu contract,

DETROIT PISTONS: Aoquin&gt;d M&gt;d&lt;
West. c:cntcr, from the PhoaW. SWll for

1996 and 1999acoond-round Wan p1ck1.

Wednesday's Kames
Toronto (Leiter 6-J) 1t Boston
(VonEII"""'d 1-l), l :05 p m.

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS ·
Named Johnny Davis uai&amp;tant cosch.

"Minn...,.

Bollimote (Fanondez 6-6)
(foponi 9-7). 1·15 l"m.
New Yodr: (Hitchcock 3-1) at Milwtuk.. (Minndo 1-4), 2:0! p.m.
Detroit (Bch:hcr 7-13) tt CLEVEUND !11•11 11-1), 7:05 p.m.

(Piovtilt 2-5~ 1:35 Jl.m.
S..tlle (Plenuna6-11) at California

a........ 6-7), 10:05 p.m.
Transactions
BasebaU
Amtrbn 1..-p•

Football
Nat.lonal Football Ltaauc
ARIZONA CARDINAL~ · Waived
Gerome Gtniner, delen~ive linanan CINCINNATI BENGALS : Waived
O.tdl Mile.' fUfUlU1I back.
HOUSTON OILERS Si&amp;ned Todd
McNm, numin&amp; baclt.

-

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS · Sianod
Greg Hill ruruuna bact, to • four. year
MIAMI DOLPHINS· Wa1\l'cd Kclly
S&amp;GGft'cr, quarterback.
NEW YORK GIANTS: Wt~vcd faa
Nye., wtde teCCIVCI'.
WASlDNGTON REDSK.INS : W11ved
Mo Elewootbi, offCIWvt Lacl.le..

BOSTON RED SOX: Op&lt;ionod Enc
Wedge. cal.chcr,IIJ Plwtucbt of thclnla'naliooal I...cague. Rccallcd Nile Minchey,
pilhcm, from P.wtucka.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Placed
Muir. Mc:Owirc, fuat bucman. on the 1.5day diaablcd liiL R.ocallod Ent1c Youns.
outfielder, from Tacoma of the Pacific

Hockey
National Hockty Leque

DETROIT RED WINGS: S~~J~od Mitte
KruahclnyW, forwanl., 10 • em&amp;- year oontnct.

FLORIDA PANTHERS: Named
BJ')'tn NwTay pncn.l manaaa-.

.,'

BIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL LEAGUE
5th an• 6th grade boys and girls

Colorado (Nu~G 9-6) at Houstoa

(R&amp;ynoldo l-4), 1:05 ,. ...
!Mt• (A.hby 411) .. t...

s...

Ana..

""(Aaacio 11-1), IO:JS l"m.

AL standings
lui.,. Dlvldoo
T..,.
W L Pet.
New Yodt .............65 J8 .631
BatDm................ ..$7 46 J51
a.........................SI S4 .416
Totan~co ................ ..$0 55 .476
o.n.iL ................ ..41 S7 .457

GB
I
15
16
II

CentniDI•W.

Chicaao.................62 &gt;12 S96
CI.I!VI!UND ......60 &gt;11 JIJ
ltaoouCty ......... ..$9 ~ .557
.so S5 .476
. . . . _ ............47 S7 .452

Mil-..........

W..... DI ......
T.,. . .................SO 55 .476
Ookland ................A7 S7 .452
Colilamia .............44 62 .4tl
Scoaulo ....................AO 62 .]92

Monday•• Kores
a.J!VI!UND 6, Doonoit2

NL action ...

Cout I..capo.

Flond• (Hammond 4-4) at Chicaao
(Bullinp 11-2). 2:20 J'ln.
CINCINNATI (Roper .5 - t) at San
Fnna... &lt;Bla'* .. Bs , ....
SL Louil (Connicr 2-1) a Mootnal
(llcndia 4-3), 7:35p.m.
II

kah 7·S~ 70S p.m.

Oakland (Wiu 1·1) al Kans .. C1ty
(Ddea .. 2-0), I Ill p.m.
Cbic110 (Pcmanda. 11 -7) at Tcua

Today'• games

Pilla..... (Coduo 4-9)

Tormto (Stewart 7-8) 1t Boom aJca·

Ia

Monday's scores

\a'

Tonlgbt's games

Df•llllo•

W

Natkmall..apc
COLOK.AOO ROCKIES Optioned
Mart Thompaon, pitcher, to Colondo
Sprinp of lhc Paciftc Cout Leap. Re.called Mi.kc Hukcy, pii.Chcr, from Colondo Spnnp.
NEW YORK METS Optioned Ju.an
Cutillo, piu:hor, to NOO'olk of lho lmor·
nauonal lcaaue. Recalled Dooa Lm\.01'1,
pitcher, from Norfolk..
SAN DIEGO PADRES · AIIIBRC:d
Sean Drinkwater, thtrd bttcmen, and
Gq t....Rocca, ahorutop. to Rancho CvctmOfl&amp;l of the Calitorma League.

I.S
4

12.5

tl

2.5
6.5
I.S

SIGN UP
Aug. 2 and 4, 6 to 8 p.m.
Aug. 6, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
at
Big Bend Health and Fitness
87 Mill Street, Middleport
Questions
Call David Jenkins, 992·6534
Usa Roush, 992·3486

.,.

..,

WE GOT HIM! - M.L Carr (Jert), tbe Boston
Celtics' director of basketball operations,
announces the signing of 6-foot-10 center Pervis
Ellison at a new s conference Monday in Boston.

The 27-year-old University or Louisville product
played for the Washington Bullets in the last four
seasons. (AP)

Ohio hands Pennsylvania 35-20
setback in Big 33 all-star game
By ALAN ROBINSON
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) - This
year, Ohio played its flfst string.
Its image as a high school power
stung last year by a televised 36-6
loss to Pennsylvania i~the Bi~ 33
game, Ohio had a maj1lrl recru1ting
effort to make sure it didn't happen
again .
What happened was a 35-20 victory lllat restored Ohio's national
reputation - and probably made
Pennsylvania wish it were playing
Maryland again in llle annual summertime all-star game.
"We really didn't understand
what lllis game was all about last
year, " said quarterback Scott
Mutryn, the Oh1o MVP.
Pennsylvania understands now
why Ohio has long rivaled Texas,
California and Florida as a producer of major-college talenl
The Mutryn-led offense turned a
succession of big plays into a 21-0
halftime lead and, witllout a Ron
Powlus-lype quarterback or a bi~­
play running back, Pennsylvania
lacked llle weapons to mount a Significant comeback.

Actually, this game was won North-Soutll game.
when Ohio recruited coach Chuck
The Ohio coaches even enlisted
Kyle, who directed Cleveland St. the aid of Ohio Stale recruiting
lgnauus to three consecutive stale coordinator Larry Petroff to select
championships, and he brought a team that was far more loaded
along the Boston College ~ bound with playmakers. both offensive
Mutryn.
and defensive, than last year's.
Mutryn played nearly every
He got them.
down, rankling the Pennsylvania
Kevin Huntley, a Wisconsincoaches. Both teams are expected bound receiver,twice beat Pennsylto bring two quarterbacks and play vania defensive backs for touchthem; Pennsylvania backup quar- downs.
terback Brian Kuklick played more
Mutryn also set up Ohio' s first
lllan a quarter.
two scores wnh big-play compleThe Ohio coaches association tions of 73 yards to Andy McCulalso made sure the state's best lough and 46 to Dee M1ller. And
players, including 10 Ohio Stale two of the biggest Ohio plays of
recruits, made llle trip to Pennsyl- them all were mterceptions by
vania. Last year, many top players Ohio State recruit Damon Moore.
passed up the game for Ohio's

Honda now
available in
chunky style.
4 in stock for immediate delivery

(Continued
from Page 4)
____
_
. AL games •••_;__

•

...•

..'

•
;

!

&gt;

;
•

•

:
•
••
:

•

or

Miller scored 9.824 in llle vault
to finish behind Liliya Podkopyeva
of Ukraine with 9.831. On the
uneven bars, Svetlana Khorkina of
Russia won with 9.862 points,
while Miller had 9.850.
Miller won llle beam finals with
9.875 points. She _started with a
front somersault to the bar and
ended with a full twisting back
double somersault In between, she
added a pair of reverse splits and
had a series of a back handsprings
followed by two back aerials.
Miller rounded off tlle competition willl an outstanding floor routine, which earned her a score of
9.937.
"I knew I had to come in and
hit my routines ," she said. "I tried
to do my best in both competitions.
And it seems I got better as the
days went by. I got more used to
tlle equipment I knew it was going
to be a challenge.' '
Another U.S. medal was won by
Marianna Webster, who gained a
bronze in the beam behind Miller.
But not without a fight by Nunno.
Webster was originally listed in
fifth place willl a score of 9.625.

:
•

••

:
•
:

straight games, getting a startding
ovation from the 27,712 fans in the
Metrodome when he carne to bat in
the ftrSt inning.
Always the reluctant hero, he
waved to the crowd, then waited a
moment before taking off his helmel to acknowled$e the appreciation. Ripken, tratling only Lou
Gehrig's streak of 2,130 games,
went 0-for-4 .
Arlllur Rhodes (2-5) pitched a
seven-hitter a day afer being
recalled from Triple-A Rochester.
Baltimore scored an unearned run
on Mark McLemore' s single in the
second off Pat Mahomes (8- 5).
Yankees 8, Brewers 3
Melido Perez (9-3) gave up five
hits in eight innings and Mike Gal!ego hit a two-run homer, t~ing the
game in the ftfth against Bill Weg-

man (8-4). Paul O'Neill's sacrifice
fly scored the go-ahead run for the
visiting Yankees.
Perez hit Kevin Seitzer just
below the left eye with a pitch in
the third. Seitzer left under his own
power and was taken to a hospital,
where he was diagnosed wuh a
sinus fmcture.
Royals 4, Athletics 2
Mark Gubicza (7 -8) allowed
ll1ree hits in eight shutout innings
as Kansas City extended its winning streak to I0 games, the club's
longest in 16 years. Jeff Montgomery got his 24th save after
making a lWO-run lllrowing error
with ll1e bases looded in llle ninth.
Ron Darling (10-10), who had
won his six previous decisions,
allowed three runs and nine hits in
seven innings for visiting Oakland.

The Honda Passport

Athens

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810 E. STATE ST... - ATHENS, OHIO

New Car
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594-8555

Used Car
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594-2114

"
•

�Page

~Th e Dally Senti nel

Tuesday,August2, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,.August 2, 1994

Mainstreamin·g special education students causes problems
Ann
Landers
''1994 LusAr-.yeles
Tomes :; ynaoc~!e il.lld
C •e.~J ors

s .,,,o.ratt-

Dear Ann Landers: I am a
teacher who loves her job, but
today, I had a very tra umatiC
experience.
.
One of our special education
students had a tantrum in the
hadlway. It took three teaehers to
control him while he kicked,
screamed and tut us. One teacher's
glasses were broken, and another
was shoved to the noor.
More than 100 childien watched

the tantrum . The problem child has
made other scwes in the classroom
that have proved highly disruptive.
I realize that special education
mainstream ing is in vogue for
problem children, but what about the
others? How can they recei ve a
quali ty edu cat ion when suc h
interruptions take place regularly?
These evwts leave the childrw, as
well as the teacher. upset all day . I
am still shalcing.
Shouldn't ctuldien feel safe when
they come to school? I ann not
convinced that including all kinds
or children in the same classroom
bCllefits anyone - including those
with special needs. How about the
rig hts or the average child to learn
in a stress- free environment? --

CONCERNED TEACHER
DEAR TEACHER: A child who
has frequent temper tantrums is not
ready for mainstreaming. Moreover,
it is unfair to the other students as
well as the teacher to subiect them
to such disruption. It should be up
to the principal to call the shots.
Dear Ann Landers: Thi s
appeared in our local newspaper, and
it really touched me. Will you print
it so it can get the national coverage
it deserves? -- ROYAL OAK ,
MICH., READER
DEAR ROYAL OAK: It touched
me, too, and the message is a good
one. Here it is:
The following letter was written
on behalf or a dog nanned Jack.
On March 27, sometime between

6:00 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., your car
hit me on Griswold Road . I would
lil!:e to make it clear that it was not
your fault I was in the wrong place
at the wrong time. I should have
never been in the road that night. or
any night, but none of that matters
now.
I would like to tell you a little
about myself. I was an SO-pound
tricolor collie. To those who loved
me, my nanne was Jack. I was the
compan ion, the protector and, most
or all , the be.~t friend or four liUie
girls. Oh, how I will miss playing
with them and getting those gentle
hugs and kisses.
The reason I am writing is to tell
you that you should have takw five
minutes from vour busy life to let

my owners know that! was hit You
see, I was still alive when you left
my broken body on the side of the
road. If someone had known sooner,
maybe I couJd have been saved.
If this happer1s again, I beg of you,
please don't drive away! Try to fmd
the owner or the animal you hit, so
no one else will feel the shock that
my lov ed ones did . -- JACK,
SADLY MISS ED BY FOUR
LITTLE GIRLS IN ROYAL OAK.
MICH.
DEAR JACK: It's not every day
that I print a letter from a dog. Your
message is a good one, and I'm sure
it will make an impression on the
millions or pet lovers who rcail this

llv CAROL LAHY

'correspondent
Ambassadors of Me igs Coun ty,
The Shady Rive r Shufn ers. have
danced thei r wav in to the hearts of
ll ud1ences throughout the states of
Oh10 and West Virg m1a. The clog gcrs d;111ccd tllcJr last performance
on the Founh of Ju ly. Appropnately, thi s performance took place at
hom e in Meigs Coun ty at the Dave
Di les Park m Middleport.
Th e Shady R1vcr Shuffl ers
hcgan wit h a sma ll gro up of 20
members in 1987 under the d ~rec ­
tion of Gerald Powe ll. The group
was to grow in numbers and stage
presen tation fo r the nex t seven
years wi th the pass1onate commitment of Paul ette Harrison.
Spectac ular costumes, compli cated da nce ro utin es and many
hours of prac tice produced a stage
show that was performed not only
throug hout th e reg ion at county
fairs but also th e state fair . The
schedule did not stop there. Audiences in Mari etta cheered as the
group performed both at the Stem-

whee l fes ti va l and Muskin g um
Park. Thousands of people at the
Circl ev ill e Pumpkin Show were
thrilled with the variety and enthusias m of thi s group from Mei gs
County.
Members can look back fondly
a t th e ir j ourn eys to pe rform in
Washington D.C. and Dollywood,
as well as th e ma ny honors
bes towed upon the m. Howev er,
som ething more important hap ·
pcncd in the eight years that the
group entertained . Friendships and
I ifelong tics were mad e as th e
mcmbers all learned about dedicati on, hard work and representing
your community.
Represe nting Meig s County
throughout the season at every fair
and festival, this group demonstrated what being a team is all about.
Few people ever left without that
wondcrful warm feeling that comes
when an audience feel s so much a
part of the performance, whether
generated by the youngest or oldest
dancer, or perhaps the addition of
the beautiful young woman who

FINAL PERFORMANCE- Little Brenna Hemsley opened the
Shumers' July 4 final perrormance at Middleport by redting the
pledge to the Rag. She was assisted by Michael Blaellnar.

Promoters cancel Woodstock commemorative concert ·
lly DA VID B AU D!':~
Associated Press Wnter
AL BA NY, N.Y. (AP) - The
times they are a-changin' . Not even
for auld lang sync is the Woodstock generation willing. to sit in a
field for two days and hsten to the
rnus1c of its youth.
A nostalgia show at the same
Beth el farm where the historic

Woodstock concert took place 25
years ago was canceled Monday,
after baby boomers stayed away in
droves.
Only 1,650 people bought tickets for the Aug. 13-14 show. The
promoter, Harry Rhulen, had hoped
to sell 50,000 at $94.69 apiece.
" We quickly determined that
people are just not interested in this

event." said Harry Rhulen of Shea
Entertainment Inc. "If that was the
case, why should we bother to put
it on?"
Promoters of the larger Woodstock '94 concert 60 miles away in
Saugerties - also scheduled for
Aug . 13 - 14 - still had about
100,000 unsold tickets Monday, the
day sales were supposed to end.

Exchange student recall experiences
"My year in Italy as a Rotary
In te rnat ional Exc hange Student
made me appreciate America a
great deal more."
That was the statement made by
Adam Sheets, son or Mr. and Mrs.
Jam es Sheets, who spoke to the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Monday night. He was introduced
by hi s mother, Rotanan Jenmfer
Sheets.
Sheets, who will be junior at
Meigs High School this year, went
to Italy last September, stayed with
three Italian families during the
year, and auended the Majaornana
Scientific School.
One of the most important
things he learned this year was how
to speak Italian, but he pointed out
that there are many dialects in the
language .
Rotary is much different in Italy
than here, he said. It is more fonnal
and apparently more restrictive.
Sheets said he was not given the
pri vil ege of attending a Rotary
meeting in Italy, but he d1d
exchange the Middleport-Pomeroy

Rotary Club flag with the Italian ing the day.
club.
They were amazed at the high
Sheets extended his appreciation cost of lodging, he said. Occassion-to the local Rotary club for the all y they stayed at youth hostels for
privilege of being an exchange stu- $10 a night, but in the high cost
dent. He was interviewed on the areas , the hostels cost as much as
district basis before being selected $50 per person per nighL
as an exchange student An Italian
The trains ran regularly and on
student had previous! y come to the schedule. It was pointed out that
district making the exchange possi- one or the reasons was that, during
ble.
the Hitler Era, Hitler said if the
At the end of his stay in Italy, train isn't on schedule, "Shoot the
Sheets was joined by his brothers, conductor."
Jared and Aaron and a friend of
At one point, the men had loadJared's. The four men purchased a ed their 55-pound back packs on
21 -day Eurorailpass which permit- the train and, as the other men
ted them to travel anywhere in approached, the doors closed and
Europe without further expense for the train departed with Adam and
the 21 days. They traveled through· the four packs. He had to call his
out Italy, Austria, German, France. mother in the United States.
· Switzerland and Belgium to see as
She said "get on the train and *o
many sights as possible.
back to where vou left the others.
Jared and Adam showed slides
All in all , it was a great experior these experiences to the club.
ence, he said.
Because of the high cost of
Jake Kobel of Gallipolis, who
lodging, the young men cannped for had 23 years or perfect attendance
several nights, but they also slept at Rot.ary. was the guest. Jon Peron the train at night and toured dur- rin, prestdent, presided at the meetmg.

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

Drugs are everywhere. They're
«JS'f to gel, easy to use and fi/en
easier to getlwolced on.lf you haw
queslioiiS abow drugs, you need AM

CLUB
IN POMEROY

They planned to extend sales and
relax parking rules to try to atuact
a c rowd closer to their goal of
250,000.
The Bethel show was troubled
from the start. Rhulen bailed out
the original promoter, Sid Bernstein , when it became clear Bernstein didn ' t have the money to pull
it off.
The lineup featured many original Woodstock artists - Melanie,
Richie Havens, Sha Na Na, Canned
Heat - who are no longer popular.

Shea Entertainment said the
1,650 people who bought tickets
will receive refunds . Rhulen, a
local in surance executive, expects
to lose $2 million.
The Woodstock festival or 1969
became famou s in part becau se
tens of thousands showed up unexpectedly, swarmed the gates and
got in free.
But the $1 35 tick ets for the
Saugerties show and restrictions on
what fans can bring into the show
have turned some people off.

181.

Salesman'• samples: large supply
ol new first quality bath &amp; hand towels with wash cloths, new Dght flxturoe .

Infant to Toddler

11

"We are both very private peo- Donald Trump told a crowd outside
ple living in the glare or the public the Fifth A venue complex of
media," the statement from MJJ expensive apartments and upscale
Productions explained. "We both boutiques. "They're very happy
wanted a private marriage ceremo- now.' '
ny without the distraction of a
Jackson , 35, made no comment.
media circus."
His publicist, Bob Jones, said the
Rumors of the marriage were singer is "very happy ... lil!:e any
first reported July 10, after the newlywed."
judge told the Dominican newspaThe marriage has the blessin~ or
per Listin Diario that he had per- Priscilla Presley, Lisa Marte's
formed the 15-minute ceremony.
mother , said Priscilla's publicist,
The celebrities' publicists Paul Bloch.
"She said, 'Please assure everydenied the report. But a Dominican
immigration official said Jackson one I'm very supportive of Lisa
was in that country on May 26, and Marie and everything she does," '
Donald Trump was rumored to said Bloch.
Presley-Jackson and musician
have lent the newlyweds a New
York " love nest" in his glitzy Danny Keough announced in April
they were ending their six-year
Trump Tower in New York City.
Tabloid photos purported to marriage and would seek joint cusshow the blushing bride with a dis- tody or their childnen, Danielle, 5,
guised Gloved One at Disney and Benjamin, I. It wasn't clear
World. Their honeymoon hideaway Monday if the divorce was final.
Authorities in Los Angeles and
turned out to be - surprise Santa Barbara counties have been
Trump Tower.
"I've known this secret for a investigating child molestation
long time," real estate magnate allegations against Jackson since
last AugusL

----Community calendar---Tbe Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non -profit groups wishing to
announte meetings and special
events. Tbe calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fuodraisers of any type. ltema
are printed as space perm ill aod
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
TUESDAY

POMEROY - Fraternal Order
of the Eagles AuxiHary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday with potluclc at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepon
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. Work in the E.A. degree. .

WEDNESDAY
ALFRED - The Orange Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m., Wednes-

day at the home or the clerk, Patty
Calaway.
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township trustees Wednesday,
Pageville townhall.

mURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
officials and community, save the
pool meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday at
council chambers.

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•Painting
•Power W11hlng claano exterloro
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I prayer
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unlimited income pote[ltiall
2. Must want a permanent job with an
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3. Must desire advancement.
4. Open Floor-Sell Both New and
Pre-Owned.

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
OPENING AUG. 2
Something New for
Melge County
Tuea. thru Sat 1~
Name Brand Tools,
Toye, Fenton,

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6. Must be willing to learn and follow
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Blinds • Vert icals • S h a de s

W2&amp;'TfN

PUBLIC NOTICE
The regular quarterly
meeting of the Meigs
Metropolitan Housing
Authority Board ol Directors
scheduled lor July 27, 1994
In the Council room at

Middleport VIllage Hall was
canceled due to a tack of
quorum. The public meeting
hoe been rescheduled tor
l::========-=========~
Auguot
4, 1994Hall
at8:15
p.m.
at tho VIllage
Counctt
PubliC Notice
room tn Middleport, Ohio.
Public Nollce
Tho mooting ts open to the
(fo.
Auguot 18, 1994, beginning pubtlc.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Jean Trussell
In compliance wllh at 10 :00 a.m. In the
Metgo
Houolng
Authority
Auditor'•
Office
of
the
Section 5705.27 of the Ohio
Revi sed Code, the Meigs Meigs County Courthouae. (8)1; 1TC Executive Director
Meigs County
County Budget Commlnton
Budget Commloalon
wilt hold public hearing• on
Nancy Parker Campbell - - - - - - - - the 1995 budget• ol all
Howard Frank
townahlps , corporallons
Things .. buzzln'ln lhe
John Lontea
and all other potlllcal
aubdlvlslons. The Budget (B) 2; 1TC

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992-6215
Pomeroy, ~~\eoo.•n

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It' s a way to
light up a room
992-5311

4113 II Jo:ECH ST. MIDDLEI'O RT OH

Call

The study was conducted by A.
Judson Wells, a consultant to the
U.S. Occupational Safety and
Health Administration and a volunteer with the American Lung Association. He also is a former Environmental Protection Agency consultant who has studied pass ive
smoking since 1981.
His fi~ures were based on a
mathemattcal analysis or previous
studies showing the risks of sec ondhand smoke. He said his study
employed a new method devised
by the EPA for its lung cancer
report He is the ftrSt to apply the
method to heart disease.
Mter calculating the number or
heart-disease deaths blamed on secondhand smoke. he arrived at the
number of heart attacks by simple
multiplication. "There are three
times as many heart attacks as there
are heart deaths." he said.
Researchers studying the problem argue that a wealth or data on
such a link has been produced since
the surgeon general's report.

and provided the board with preliminary budget documents.
OVAL is the only state-funded
regional library system in Ohio. It
serves the citizens and libraries of
Athens, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, and Vinton Counties with
programs of services developed by
those libraries.
Wanda Eblin serves on the
OVAL Board as a representative of
the Meigs q oWtty Public Library.

,,

Jondng C'lllfn
u"-W•o4

FREE ESTIMATES

Docoratln
Sal.. and
lnsralatloa

(No Sunday Calls)

...

tn Memory
In loving memory of
"Our Mother &amp;
Grandmother"
IVA G.
JOHNSON

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
CO MMERCIAL and RESID E NTIAL

7122104

3/25194

2

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

985-4473

614-985-4180

Citadel lawyer Dawes Cooke Nazis in World War II. They had
had argued that the head-shaving is asked that Faulkner get a bob simian important pan or the cadet expe- lar to the haircut given women at
rience.
service academies.
"What it means is a symbolic
Last month, Houck ruled The
relinquishing or individuality," he Citadel's all-male admissions polisaid. "Many cadets describe it as cy unconstitutional and ordered
the most humiliating moment of Ms . Faulkner, 19, into the corps.
their lives. For us to say to Ms. She began attending classes in JanFaulkner that she be treated differ- uary. The school is appealing.
ently would hurt her chances for
Also Monday, the judge ordered
assimilation into the corps."
Ms. Faulkner to live in a private
Faulkner's lawyers countered room in the infirmary, not in the
that shaving a woman's head is a barracks . And he rejected her
traditional method of humiliation, request to form a sexual harassand noted that the French did it to ment committee to monitor her
women who collaborated with · progress.

An internship with Kent State
University gave Lauren Hess the
opponunity to learn ftrSt-hand the
workings of a regional library system in August and September was
approved by the board. Karen
Bowling, networking services
assistant, was apProved to travel to
McHenry, IDinotS for Follett Software training. Oirector Eric S.
Anderson also reported that the
state budget cycle was beginning,

cover a window

1-800-BLIND-11

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

Work'

OVAL trustees support leadership project
The Board of Trustees of the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL) held their regular monthly
meeting at headquarters in Wellston on July 21.
The board approved support of
two Ohio Regional Library System
projects. The firSt. Library Leadership 2000, focuses on training
potential library leaders. The second will be a Rural Library Symposium at Dear Creek State Parll: on
Oct 13-14.

ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enlorcement,
personal protection,
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
Ro"weiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
6t4-667- PETS
1217/10"
II

Clu.. ifiedo

WANT ADS

paign by the tobacco industry. In a
series of full ·page newspaper ads,
Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds
have questioned links between secondhand smoke and lung cancer.
The new study focuses on heart
disease, which it said is a more
serious problem.
·'Heart disease appears to be by
far the major mortality risk from
passive smoking," the study concluded. "Practicing physicians
would do well to warn their at-risk
heart r.aticnts to avoid smoky
rooms.
Stanton Glantz of the University
of California at San FllUICisco, who
had done one of the earlier heart
disease estimates, said the r.ew
study was a much more sophisticated analysis than any previous ones.
"This very large number or
non -fatal events means you could
be having a very important effect
on medical care costs," Glantz
said. "It's a lot more expensive if
somebody lives through a heart
attack than if they die."

TRI-STATE K-9

HONEST ...

Heart disease the major death
risk of secondhand smoke
By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
NEW YORK (AP) - About
4 7,000 nonsmokers will die from
heart disease this year and 150,000
will have non-fatal heart attacks
from inhaling other people's
cigarette smoke, a study says.
Earlier studies had estimated
that secondhand smoke was
responsible for 32,000 to 37,000
heart disease deaths a year in nonsmokers.
The new figures are projected
from an analysis or 1985 data that
showed that secondhand smoke
caused enough heart disease in
nonsmokers to kill 62,000 Americans that year and cause 200,000
heart attacks.
A decline in smoking and an
increase in smoking restrictions is
responsible for the decline since
then, the study said.
The findings, to be published
this week in the Journal of the
American College of Cardiology.
appear amid a public relations cam-

It's not just a way to

Shop At
Home
Serv ic e
Day Or
Night

\

Public Notice

GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
BOX CLA 107•825 THIRD AVE •
GALLIPOUS, OHIO 45631

Commission will meet en

Water hauling

One mHe out Rll43
from Rl7

5. Must have professional attitued and

Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, S.C . (AP) Shannon Faulkner's hair is the
price she must pay to become the
fir st female member of The
Citadel's corps or cadets.
US . District Judge C. Weston
Houck ruled Monday that the statesupported military college can
shave Ms. Faulkner's head when
she joins the corps this ran, since
the law acknowledges no difference between men and women in
the way they wear their hair.
Ms. Faulkner declined to comment. "I'm not talking about anything right now ," she said.

992-2155

ARNOlD'S
PlUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOliNG

I

614-992-2176
S R 7 - F ive Points

US ED RAILROAD TIES

7131/'Dl fTF N

614-992 -2176

8/13/ttn

lly BRUCE SMITH

THIS YEAR'S EDITION

S R 7 - Five Poi nts

Made
• So lid vinyl
replacement
wind ows
• Fre e Est imate s
• $200 Installed
Call For Deta il s
• Cus t om

61 1 ~ ~

chadel's female cadet will get head shaved

CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD IN

949-2168

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

1""""""""

THE 1994

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

MARTECH
INDUSTRI ES
Backh oe Work a nd
General Hauling
Limestone - Fill Don
Gravel - Sand
Leach Bed
Installation and Se~t1c
Systems

212311 mo. Pd.

SHRUB

The Da lly Sentlnei-Page--7

Howard L. Writesel
ROOANG
NEW- REPAIR
Gu«ers
Downspouts
Gu«er Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4111

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

At. 248, Chester

Several items were discussed at
the July meeting of Racine United
Methodi st Women conducted by
Lee Lee.
Jane Molter opened tile mee ting
with prayer and members repeated
the UMW purpose. Reports were
given by Chris Hill and Clara Mac
Sargent, secretary and treasure r.
Th e penny fund collection was
taken and sick calls reported.
Carpet samples were s hown
with no action being taken. UMW
District annual day will be Sept. 17
at Hamden, district enrichment daK.
Oct. 13 at The Plains, and UMW ·
a nnual confe ren ce , Nov . 10,
Columbus.
Members voted to rent a table at
the Racine fall festival , Sept. I 0.
Sewing and craft making will begin
in the church social room Sept. 12
beginning at 9 a.m .
·
Lucille Cardone gave a report
on her week at the 1994 West Ohio
Conference UMW Church School
of Chri stian Miss ion at Ohio
Northern University, July II
through 15. She was sponsored by
theUMW.
A picnic will be. held for all
church members Aug . 22, 6 p.m.
and will be hosted by the UMW .
Eve lyn Holter gave a home
products demonstration following
the meeting . Get well cards were
signed and refreshments served by
Margie West and Lee Lee.
Attending were Opal Diddle ,
Kay Spencer, Clara Mae Sargent,
Alic e Wolfe, Etta Mae Hill,
Dorothy McKenzie, Jane Molter,
Margie Roush, Lucille Cardone,
Chris Hill, Margie West, Martha
Dudding, and Lee Lee.

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES

11/J011211n

3 FAMILY YARD SALE
Wednesday, Aug. 3

Jackson and Presley husband and wife
By JEFF WILSON
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
kingdoms of Graceland and Neverland are joined.
Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie
Presley have confirmed what they
denied for II weeks: that they were
sec retly married and are "very
much in love."
"My married name is Mrs. Lisa
Marie Preslcy-Jackson ," Elvis' 26- ·
year -old daughter said in a statement relea sed Monday by Jackson 's production company.
" I am very much in love with
Michael, I dedicate my life to being
his wife," the statement said . "I
understand and support him, we
both look forward to raising a Cannily and living a happy, healthy life
together. "
The pair said they lied for the
sake bf their privacy, eluding entertainment reponcrs for nearly three
months after a quickie ceremony at
a judge's house in the Dominican
Republic on May 26.

6:45p.m.
Spa~; tal Early Bird
5100 Payoff
Thle lid good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

YARD SALE WED., AUG. 3
2 136 Cour1 St., Syracuse
Mtac. boya clothing lizea 5-10, gh1a
10.12, men's X-large ahlr1o, mloc.
household Items, books, Nlntendo

Landers' booklet , 'The Lowdown 011
Dope." Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a chec*.
or money order for $3.65 (this
includes postage and handling)
to: Lowdown , clo Ann Landers,
P.O. Boz 1/562 . Chicago. Ill.
6061/ -056 2. (In Canada, send

Racine
UMW meet

used her hand to sign, "God Bless

the U.S. A." Pride is what we all
felt as The Shady River Shufners
pe rform ed th eir Star Spangled
Patriotic Numbers.
Thanks needs to be offered to
the audiences who confirmed that
all the hard work was appreciated.
A big round of applau se needs to
· be given to the parwts and friends
who pro vid ed rides, costumes,
mu sic and support . Grateful
acknowledgment is presented to all
oth e r community groups who
added to the variety of shows during the eight years.
The Shady River Shufflers have
fini shed their last season . Every
member can tak e wide in the
knowledge that their work and ded ication to this team will lon~t be
remembered. Their representation
of Meigs County during their travel s portrayed an image of Meigs
County and her people that we can
all be proud of. Best of luck to all
the members in their future endeavors ... Keep Clogging.

column. Thank you for writing.
Gem of the Day (Credit David
Frost): TV is an invention that
perm its you to be wtertained in your
living room by people you wouJd
not, under ordinary cin:umstances.
have in your home.

$4.45.)

Shady River Shufflers remembered

Pomeroy- Middle port, Ohio

614·992·7643

Westen Aula

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

992-5515

992-2096

Free Estimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial
S...8-1

550

Howard
Excavating-Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Complete House &amp;
Tr~iler Silt:!S
Driveways, Sepllc
Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
Lines, land Clearing
Trucking: Limestone &amp;

Fill Dirt, Top Soil
Reasonable Rates

enler 1/aou inlo the joy

Estimatt!s

of thy Lord."
Matt25 : 21

Sadly miaaad by
children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren &amp; great-greatgrandchildren_

992-3838 '""'"

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

In Memory

In Loving Memory of
JACK L. CLARK
who passed away
Aug. 2, 1987,

992-7434

We live our Uv• to-

STAR GUITAR

gether

Thinking we will never
part,
Then the Lord tak•
one of ua to Ha1111an
And there'• oadn•• In
our hearta.

614-367..0302
Ampe, Gultara, Strlng1,
Kaybowde, Drumo,
Plano &amp; Guitar L11oono.
Cheahlra, Ohio

The wor11 thing that
could happen
When you got called
away,
I luet ell han and
wonder

DOG
¥)_::GROOMING

Lord what have! done.

The life wa oh•ed to-

by

•

S1sa• Gdmore
992-5316

t.•

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

If you were a flower

Reasonable Rates

You -uld eUII be
The only flower I'd pick
Seely milled by
wlfa •d t.mly.

Joe N. Sayre
'SAYRE TRUCKING

614·742·2138
314-113 I MO

Ouln

Racka,

Wood

LatQa L1dlaa, Toye. August 11t,

2nd', 3rd, 4th, 511'1 , 6th. 1914 State
Roule 141, Gallipolis, Ohio .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Monlh Old Whitt Colllo Pup,
Malo, 614-441·13211.

3

:-;---,----~~:---3 flmlly garage aale, 2 mllae on
5 young dueb; 4 older ducks, 2 HyHII Run Rd. Pomeroy, Mon.
femal .. , 2 malee. 814-367-0370.
Aug . 1 lhru Fri. Aug. 6, Q am ,5
Boogla dog, 114-11411-2!147 It no pm.
anewer IMve menage.
3 family - ralnJehlne, Aug. !J, 341
F.male Full Bred Siberian Rutland St., Middleport, lounve
Hueky, Preferably To Good chair, porch awing, patio chal,.,
Home, L.ota Of Room To Run, lampe, chlldl tor wheeler, ..wn
614-381l.Q003.
mower11, little lyk.. playhouae,
d,... ., elothee," mlac ..
Khlena, To Good Home, 614-ln2586.
6 lomtlr rord oolo Aug. 1, 2, &amp; 3,
comer of 124 6 Bratlbury Ad.,
Khtena, etta, bam cats-all children~ &amp; adutt c6othla, mlac.
klnda, co~~. HJI81. 304-882·
3281.
685 G.nenl Hartinger, MidAug. 1-2-3 Mdepr..da,
Pori Groat Dano, 614-843-516!! dleport,
curtalnt,
home Int., clothl"i,
after 8pm.
ml.c.

Pupplu, 6t4-44U744.

All Yard S.ln Must 81 Paid In

Lost &amp; Found

6

loot:

Raccoon C,..k County Park,
614-379-2548.

Advonco. lloodtlno: t :OOpm the

day before tM ad It to run,
Sunday edition- 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
.thkm
tO:OOa.m.

S.Jurcrar.

Aug. 3 6 4, third houM wnt of
hlgh,..y goroga on Rl 7.

Ailg. S-8, Ebtln1, Bo'"" Add.,
lova aut, Wg rug, coff•

table.

---:~=-::-:::::-­
Aoguot
4 &amp; 5, 3t7TI Sr. 325 ono
loot: Aool Whh HoM In VlctnHy
milo
from
Rl. 124 homo lntorior,
01 Stale Routo 588, i. eo.. Mlll
boddtng, cun11111, clothing,
Rood, l14-4411-1116!l.

HAUliNG
LIMESTONE,

bume,

-Boxn, CIOChH. Mana, lldlea,

Giveaway

Crooll Ad,

7

You are • apeclllf pereon
And thay are YOI'f f-.
The on• we lova don't
evarda
They'll elwaya be with
you,

flowll'l

4

tng

heart.

Gallipolis
__ _ _ _c_n......:y_ __
&amp; VI 1 It

2 black klnono, Owko. old. 304&amp;7W188 ovonlnga onor 7pm.

2888.

Forever will uva In my

Yard Sale

lan. l.oee Exce.. C.an Flowe,. 3 Van Seal1 _..
l5;pr fin Baby Crtb Stro!'ter
Shop vac' Sma~ Tables · Knick:
Knacks, 2S" Color T.V., E.nrciM
Bike, Crafts, TrH Skirts, Wood
Yard Decoration~, Photo AI·

Small bUlan hound, F, o" LMcf..

memorl•

of

· U'IIY 0 ..

lbt For Good. I Loat 20 Lbe. In
5 Wka. Eating Righi Without
Dieting. 3 Min. Aeccwded Mnuge. $U5 !Min. Muat 81 18 To
Clll. M~00-2SS.55l3.
V1rsallle blind avail le tor
•t
part t••, .... ncn and n
lub
work. All typee ot mua c, 8142
)67..030 .

}\

•

7

yre. plu•, Proc.U Co., 002·a54- Anllque POCalo Grater, Cl8t Iron
,..20,
Klltlll, Tripod Plant Holdera,
MID lEAR RESOWTION
Tooll, Gardening, Noll!, Sow
Bladn, Etc ., F"ance, tom~~to
7 ft1 p

Chlld'o Pot, Mila Cf1oc:o.
loll ub1Mloalng Slnco Sundoy
71241N, LOot SMn In VlclnHy 01

And now wa are ap.n,
All
lhoM pracloue

IICrll

BNutlful Glrta, Exchlng, P•aolonatolll Tolk to 'om live, 1·900484-9000, ut . 8904, $3.99. t8

loet- box of black rubb.r boote,
lost between
Pomeroy &amp;
SyracuH 1r.h, 614·812-5238,
ranrd offered.

gether

In a thoul8nd

3 Announcements

·~"~;::'!

IUIIEIDS

1-800·796·6321

112M In

Announcements

"WeU done; thou 6ood
and failhful ••"'ant ...

2

Page Sl, Middleport
FreeEotima...

fn)

7131194.
"We won't be at home
In thla body Apart from the Lord
we ehell beUntil by Hla grace we
ere eummoned
To dwell with the
hoata heavenly_"

Lose Wal"l Ultt •uary"
Guaranteed
Lo se Pounds and lnche,
Natural Herbal Tablets

3

Rutlond,

014-7'12·

Yard Sale

typewriter, entertainment center,
much mora.

A,uot

o.._ .. Jo. Monday,
1111 &amp; TuNday, Augu• nd,
9am.&lt;forf&lt;, 112 mila paat Rvo
Potnll, SR 7 tawonll Chill•.
loti ol good clothoo, oil olz•;
fumlt11e; waeNng meehlne;
toyo; blcyclo; TooppO.woro; roNor

Gallipolis
lkatoo; If...,.; mtoc.
&amp; VIcinity
Throo llmtg. ::::2; Aug I, I
Ad, 1 112
F1mlH11: Auguot 2nd, 3rd, om-a pm, Ill

A.ddleon TownhouM, ~S.

ALL Yord Salol Muot Be Paid In
Advonce. DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dar boloR the od Ia to Nn.
Sunday odHton - 2:00 p.m.
Ftlday. Monday
2:00
p.m. Saturday.
T-. Wod 2nd 3rd, 1-5 4118
Bulavttlo Ptke, Tum In SMne
Club omowoy.
Wod I Tlturo, ur(lt Yanl Salo, 1
IIllo E. 01 Poflor, On 160. LAlla

"""ton -

Ollltoct

mtlao from Flw PainiO. high
chatr, walk•, ltroiW, ballf ...
--.otot_,.rgo_,

1acU11, men, children, lnt.nt

mtoc.

o-z.

llnl
- ,_..
out
M3 3,Salo
4, I,1:00,
gao4 ""'
Franklin wood bi.lmer, ~

otd bottlao, lolo ol mtac.

Aug.. 2nd, 3nl. 127 South Thlnl
A-uo. Mlddlapofl, Ohio. 1
A.M. To 3 P.M. LAIIo 01 11abr
hoo, Llltlo Boyo And MI ....
lo.-.

-.

�I

Tuesda~August2,1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

TUesday,August2 , 1994

The Dall y Sentlnei-Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

:ALLEYOOP
: VESSIR, WE'RE GOING

NEA Crossword P uzzle

... THIS P""-ACE HAS SERVED .
MOOV I.o.N IWYA.LTV FOR AS

• TO PUT EVERYON E IN

MOO TO WORK!

LONG A6 I CAN R:EMEMBERI

38Wai ls
39 Egg - yang

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER
BEATTI E BLVD.N by Br uce Beattie

7

KIT 'N ' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Merchandise

72 Trucks for Sale

3br. houH, Maeon, 1325/mo.

pluo dopoolt. 304·77:1-5834.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnlly

For Rent 3 Bedroom House In
Ka011uga, Fenwd Yard, Carport,
$275/ll"o. Sl75 Dopoan 514-4401207 11-5 Monday ThN F~day. Or

womeoe c lothlnt,

&amp; VIcinity
Community Yard Sal•l.eon,
Wed-Thur, Aug l -4, iam- ?

Yard S.l ... :r.Jl4 Jett.raon Ave.,

Mo rt-Tu .. Wed, Aug. 1-2-3. FumJ..
turt, ckiha, loya, ml.c
_._ c-_

Tl40.

PubliC Sale

Rick Paarwon Auction Company,
full ume •uctlonMr, compt1t1
auction
aervlce.
UCenMd
t66,0hlo 1 Wool Vlrglnlo. 304773-fiT 95·

Audlonoor Col . Oocar E. Click,
Llcanaa I 7S4-114 &amp; 9ondod '

304-8~3430

wamed to Buy

C*n Lila Model C.ra Or
Truckl, 198'7 Moda.. Or Newer,
Smnh Buick Pontiac 1GOO

E..tom Awonue, Gollipot/o.

Decorated lfoneware, Will •••
phonoo, old Iampo old ,.,...

momaton, old c1ocka, arllquo
fumltl.l"..

Riverine

Antiqun.

Run Maore, DWFW'. 814-1122525. W• buy 1.t1tM.
Oofl't Junk It! Sail Ua Your N~

Working

Color

Major

TXt

Applllncea,

Rotrigwatora,

Frwzerl, vcR·.. Microwave•,
Air COOdlllonera, Wuhert1,

Oryaro, Copy Machlnoo, Etc.
614-236-12311.
J &amp; D'a Auto Parte and Sllnge,
alao buying junk cars &amp; trud. a.

304-773-5343.
Wanl to buy approll . 112ac. land
or Jot tor trailer. 304-882-2MS or

304·7n-552l
Old clgarallo llghleta, milk bol-

t...

fountain pena, aiiYefW'IInl,
mafbte1, ltontwl,., magazlnn,

Star Wa111 and Stor Troli noma;
Otby lla~ln, 614-41112-11141.
Wonlad To Buy: Good, Uoad 4
Fool High Chain Link Fonco.
Complolo, 6145-446-8402.
WaNed To Buy: Junk Aut~

With Or Whhc&gt;&lt;a llotoro. Coli
Lany llwllly. 614-388-1303.
Top Pr- Paid: All Old U.S.
Colne. Gold Alnga Sllvw Colna.

Ca dl

r nal F,.lghl c...l.-. Inc. 1o
experlenc«t
ownorloporoloro
for
tho
•anlflatbod dlvlolon, profftablo
pay prog ram accurolo wookiY
'
I~

':!t •1~~

2421

pa1

Saloamon Wontodl &amp;tabtlohad Local Co. Looking For

to advertise •any P""""'"""·
lmllallon or -I\OIIon

o.
2br.,

3 Pe1.1e to Help U• Grow lnlo
ruh:hy ~~::·w~:~·~~~~=~
and Wed. Only, 10-5. lmmldlete
Slarto A,. Ava 11lablo 614-446·1'141,

based on race, cobr, relglon,

w..nerfdryer,

omo, 110 up

I monoy lo

..... on. C.ll Boyd, 1~220No

a&lt;lvo~laomerlsfor root oolate
wtllc:tl IS In vtoll.tlon of the llw.
Our readers are hereby

Informed thai 1111 d-.gs
adve~lsed In tiU n o - r

ng oxpon.-d C11A'o to run
llalbad, oom porcontogo of

::m, ·=11= 1j__.~

wmtook
2

Rootourant llgra.-lllgh hourly
roto, paid Qcalfon, lloo
unliormo, !roo food, and many
clhor tnngo banltno, vory
Naaonablo
hoepUallzollon
available, managomont oxporloneo hlghl[. doolrablo but
nol roqulrad.
1 uo bo JOUr
omployor ot 111 cholco. Ploloa
•nd ..Uer of lnterMt lnd
r.aume to Box A-2t, cJo Pt.
PI ..Nnt Aeglet~r,
lbln St.,
Pt. PlooaanLwv 200 _
25550
~

be over 35, avallattt. 10:00 am

to 7, 114-41V2-2433.
Drl¥0111 Wantad. Slrolgll 1ruclt
daM D lk:., 21 or ower, curNnt
ohyolcal, aood d~wlng 111C01d. 1·
~84-5172 -03113.
labyolllor' Floxlbla Ibn Rill~
And Dopondablo 614-448-

w-.

no.......,.,

TliS
wtl""'
knowllngly """"1'1

and Wed Only, 10-5, 61.....
4553.
Own1r10Deratora
Cardinal Frologht Ctrrlaro II
hi~

-on

1012.

make any such preference,
Imitation or cllctlmlnalloo."

Pr- GuaHflod ApiiOintmon••Qualhy Pl'owon PYOduct. Eocotlonttncomo Potanllal. Coli Tuoa.

Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avonuo, Gollpollo.
Tempor•ry Work, MuM Hew
Experience In Hou• And
llobllo Homo Ropolr, Root,
Employment Services Fioo111 And PolnllltJI, 114-1113--- - -- -:---1 5168
·nc_y_:-:-Homo:--- "'E"'conoml--,,coHelp Wanted
~V,..oca
_
11
GRADS
~mpocl
Toachw.
Ohio Homo
AVON I All Aro11 I Sl'll~oy Quallllcallono'
Economlca C.nltlcatlon. Notify:
Spooro, 30W'I&amp;-14211.
Supt. Off., Galllo Jack11011 YinAVON! All ar-. Hood ollro ton JVSO, P.O. Bol 151. Rio
mon.y or want a carwr, elthlr Granda, OH 45m By Aug. 10,
way-&lt;:oll llorllyn. 304-1182-2645 11114: 814-:145-5334/EEO.
or 1-600.992-6356.
Wantad: 1111iablo bobyoiHor,
Aa por Artlclo 11 Tranolorw and hc~n varlablo, Pomoroy arwa,
Vacanclol, Soctton B, Pootln;, In my hcmo during achOOI yoar.
ol tho Nogcllatod AgrMmonl othor tlrnoo floxlblo. Sand brlaf
tho MLTA ond tho raaaumo to Gaily Santlnof, PO
Board of EduCIIIOil, tho llolgo Box 7'211-M, Pomeroy, Ohio
local School Dlotract II pooling 457118.
tho totlowlng .-ncloo lor IIi
NgUiot toaclling otaH: Fou~h 18
Wanted to Do
GrOdo 11 Pomoior Elomontory, ::-:-~~.....,-..,.,.......,.,.-­
Chaptw 1 II lloklo Junior High Babyollllng In My Homo,
(Etmonlary co~ltli:otlonl, JuniOr Choohlra Arwo, 514-317·7848.
High FootbaU COOCh ond A lint Junior High VolloybaH Gonorwl Malnllnonco, Palrllna.
Coach.
Yard Work Wlndowo WoohOCI
AVON .. SALES
GUll.,. Cloanod Light Hauling,
Polontlal S200 -12,000 Monthly. Commorical, Rollldo,.lal, Stowo'
Fonlaalic ,Oiocountal lanofMal 1,14-446-4148--.,---·- - - - -Fioxlblo Hou,., Torrlory Op- ~ Portable Bowmlll don,
tlonot 1-800-742-4738.
haul yow toao to tho mill juot
Awn Wanta lndlwklu•l8 lnta~ call304.e75-1ll7.
tad In Eamlng II -$14 /Hr. No Mlaa Paula'a O.y ea,. Center
Door To Door. 1-IOG-889-61144.
11-F 8 A.M. ,a,30 P.ll. Oualhy
ConlriCior with llconoa to build Loving Caro For All Chlldron
neW homel. loti Ire IVIIIIble Our 11 Goal. P•rt· nme, Fullto ola~ lmmadlatoly. Send Time, Fad. Aaolotonca Avolloblo.
ror lntonnatlon Or Ylolt. InNIUIM lo Box C-28 % Pt Coli
font /Toddlw 114-146-6227. p,..
PI-nt Roglllor, 200 llaln 81, School,
Schoolago,
B&amp;A
Point Pl ........ wv 25550.
School, 614-446-1224.
Drtnr tar my pe,..,...l car, muM

Grit Cook Evonlng Sl'lllla Pluo 2
To 3 llomlngo, Etporlonc:ad
Proforl'ad; Courlor S...ico.
Evonlnal Pluo s.turdoy MomIna, CaM 114-446-3382, 11-4
Yfooldlyo.
. . - . ()ponlngo For Pa~
limo And Fua llma LPN'o.
Compolllvo
Dllloronllol
With EtfiOIIor-. Conlad The
Dlnal« 01 Nunlng, - c.r.
-454131,
Drt.., ~.
GoiMpollo,mrOhio
t-7112. Equol GpponuniiJ
EmployOr.

~~~:' :::.:~~

~-· Ing.
0 u..ldo ft-1
~ea. No Cod
I -1

groa revenue pull I~ comJ)IIny
frallera or pulling own trailer,
hoaMh l,.uranc» wldanlll &amp; viIlion av•lt.bla, bue ptat•
evall•bll, bob-t•U tneur•nc.
avallablo, tuot card oyatam,

Will do bockhoo work, 114-111:1·
15858 or 814-002-3171
Will De -

Ina.

6 Trallor Polrl·

Aeuom~ble

Rata..

ROloroncoe1 Exporloncad, Fr•

EatJJnlllel, I'IIJ.388-8240.

WIM ataam to llnloh mr

oorpola choop

poymonto on
. . . . . 11Mt2.....US.
Fmanc1al
21

McCoy Roaevll'-. etc. COLLEC.

TIBLtrs- printo, -'"'"· loolo,
ponery, ciocka, boxee, ,. bot·
Ilea, booko, loY?,. ~lc. 11
ALWAYS
4345.
BUYING AAROV.ttEADS. lop
2 Badroomo. All Eloclrlc, dollar paid. Ono ploco or ona
WIOIMo. 614-361'-1802.
hundrad. APPRAISALS, 40
Y.. ,. experience. Pt.... call
2br. mobil hom., alloloclrlc, AC, 614-992-2e22.
••

·•

All real estate adverllshg 1n
thiS neW!Ipllp6r b aubted to
he F
t
ed8ral Fair Houstng Ad
ot 1968 which mak8s nllegai

h

!1 ryor;

0

An11ques

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATEs,
FINE ANTIQUES. Amerlc.tn •rt,
chine, •rt glaa, ellv.r, lumhura,

-

..., oval- on an equal
opponunlty basb.

31

Homes for Sale

waahllr/dryer,

H'l

lla80n,

no

5751.
AC,

Merchandise
lumlthad,

$250/mo. plua
~.:.:-ll~eterence, depoah. 304-

44

abo.., otorago building, comor

~. June Sti'Mt, Syrecuee, 114-

it2-77'35.

5pm.

A

150,000 BTU Gaa Furnace,
80,000 BTU Goo Fumaco, 1

partment
for Rent

Usad 3 Ton Packogo Air Condltloner, 1 u ..d Eloct~c Fur-

1 •nd 2 bedroom ·~rtmente,
tuml•hld
and
untumlahed,
MCurhy •poafl r.qulred, no

n•ce, Metal Door fr•moa, A•
aortld Slue, &amp;1~308.

palo, 614-1192-2218.

1981 GMC IN&lt;k with log badl·
11178 log trallor; 2 .....,; oot o
oklddOf chalnoi_ call 114-1112·
5380 01 et4-w2•.., 20.

1br. opanmont, Bollomoad Add~
lion, nowly 1111110dolad, 110 palo.

304 ., 7~1388 .

1985 5-10, Gravely, recliner, 1AJ
Fonl4•4. 30W75-5162.

1br. duplox . 2br. &amp; 1br.l .nor.
dabla rent, eome utllh 11 Ineluded. 304--875...C100 or ~~
2051
1br. lurnlllhad oportmont,

::s-,

tcrMnad porch, ulllhy room,
new ruol, 3 Cllr Glrate wlapC.

14!5 lC Auger Bl•ekhawk, Mavrick pump shot gunt 12ga. 2 blr·
Nil, 15' ..V"' Hull boal, lraUII',
10hp motor. 304-475-4338 after

3 bedroom t,.n., for f"'nl, 614446-oa26.

2 Onhlng TabiN, 1 Wood. 1
Stool&amp;With Lal Drawore/1 La::Z
~-s :P."'wtng Supptoo, I

c:

bod,_,. ....__ 111 _:..~ - - •
mod
garogo, 3 112 ;;;;;.;;' ~ u;~-·~
g~~rn, AC,
Ad, Pomoroy, 114-812-4501 _
utiiHioo pald'r S360/mo. pluo
Bod
do-h. 304-f 11-611311.
3
r - Ronctl, 1 lllth, AI·
tochocl
GIIOJIO,
:101130 2 Roomo &amp; Bath, No Khchon.
Worbhop, I 112 lllloo Out •1110. 1200/llo. All Utllhloo lncludad,
114-388-11811.
114-446-7733, Botwoon 1,30
3 bodraom
ronch,
2
~~a~LA,
~' 00 ·
•• hon ·~r
..,
11 m1•• room, u•c
wl'"nlng 2 atory, 2br. all aloclrlr&gt; apia.,
arM, IIOiar hoe w.tar, deck. 01rpeted, appUanc:ea lumlahed,
3

54 Mlscellani!OJ.Is

304-773-

trw weter, fr• tl'llth plc:kup, on
lfla man•g•m•nt. holiday acUvHy tor chlldran, c._ to
ltorw, churches, echoold.
Whll,. can you get all thla lor
$210/mo. Uweland A~rtmanla,
eth I Goorgo SL~ N- Hawon,
WV. 304-1182'3718 o.OH.

41

I

Eapo-

...

-oory.

31

Homu for Sale

2 - - • 2 - garogo opt.
In Mlddtoport polrl •
waNpopor, ttdoti, 114-112-Gnt.

all.

1994 by NE-'. 1nc

Miscellaneous

3-whMllr

:'J04.5~27'04.

llaylog Waahor, Konmoro Dryor
Sat' f100 S60 Eoch 514-4487538 5:30P.M. To 8:30P.M. Only.
Moving lint Sell F•: l(lrv~

Walorbod With Ook llookctli:
HNdboarct. 1250· End Tebla
S35; Coffoo Tablo ~o; Largo Anllquo lllmor $65; Hooolor Cupboord $125; Ook Sorpontino

ahowroom

446-1062.

3861·

304-

175--JI21 or 1-600-2 -391l
International 250 OIHel Tractor
&amp; Bueh Hog $2,950; 130 MF

Dloool Whh Blado $3,650; 5600
SooPomorP-gy,
132 Buttornul, Ford 17 Hund.-.d Hou,.., S9,B50,
~.
oy.
614-28&amp;-6522.
Largo 0oa Houoa Stping Slonoo, 11C245-0tl10. ~ 63
LIVestOCk
Slct. by aide almont~ f"'lrlger8for
torula $28&amp;, ll4-&amp;8744tl

extraa

Chain Saw boro • chain• to fll
almoot any oaw. Boa! prlcoo In

:::.~'i' With Mirror $150; aru. Sldera Equ~mlnl,

New l~ular Jaarw, MIN., all
liz•. S•turd1y, July » S.turdoy, Auguot 5, dally 9arn-2pm.

12QO CC,

condhl-, •o.ooo "eo. 5•• - 4503. -· u
~.-

,----,.,....,,--,----,--2 year ~d Roglstered quaner
hCir'H gelding, 614-667-6630.

J

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
o,..y Bull Calvoo, 614-24&amp;Upright, Ron Evono Enlo1't2":' 06t0.
JackOon, Ohla, l-4100-531'.•
One cow re11dy to . have cal~ 1
SUNQUEST WOLFF TANNING hlter due to have nit; 1 heller
BEDS- Com-rclo~ Homo colt, 1 Horlord Bull 2 yrw. old; 3
Unhe from $1M.OO, Lampe- Bugle pupe, 2 112 monlha; 1
Lotlon. 'ccnaor...._ Monthly Be~gll pup 6 montha: 614--D92·
pay...,to low u $18.00. Call 300711-614-337-11113.
TodoJ- FREE NEW Color Small Ouo~or HOIMII 3 YoarOid

Transportation

2~1.

1SII2 Honda 250X $2,650, 1141DG2 Yamaha Wenlor, Excelant
Condition, $3,000, 814-245-0601.
Hond 250 ~-- wh11 lor
•
,...... r
• exo
~oond, $2,000. 304-675--871 3 altar

,: '

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale
14ft. Stan:r1ft, SOhp ~
molar, wllr~ller, runa
,

$1:100 nogollablo. 304-&lt;176- 112.

16" Opon Bow Walk Thru
Wlndohlold 1111 HP More. OB,"
Power Trim, 6~17, 614441..ol48 E.Jtrul

=

44HSIII.

lllyt.ag · - I drvor, bath

worlt

aroot.

1200 "' - ;

Oootw illchon contor 1280 - ·
t.alto $10, 114 - 1 1 .

S1

.::-a:.

Fonl
- . Eldorodo:
loodod
$2300.
11111 Codllloc

Musical

$2100. 1104-4711-2440.

Instruments
t&gt;Orto.- On Oldor IN-r
11111 Dodao Shldow, Alltomotlc liomoo. Addttlono, F.....,.lono,
Slar Guitar· ampo, guHa111, lAC, Good'Condftlon, $1,1811514- Roofing,
Khchont
/Sathe,
otrtnp, kofboordo, druma. Alao 3884133, 114-:141-41215.
Roplacamont Wlndowo. lnourod
DlanO ond guMar 1 - 114Froo Eallmat• 114-381-oste, '
1188 Fonl Tompo LX Laodad,
~1'«102, Cl*hlro.
S21150 oeo, 111111 o;;d.,; Omnl,
I Spood, 83,000 llliite~'li'ico Car
Fruits &amp;
58
$850,1-7,
ott.r bnnda HouH 01111, aflo
Vegetables
oomo apflllanc. rwpolrw. WV · ,
111811 Oklo Cololo 8l, Guad 4, 304-67W3118
Ohio 514-446-:1454. •. .
Now Paint, a-tco, 15,000 Mlloa,
$4,800, 114 441 0302.
82
Plumbing &amp;
11110 lllrdo Mlo1a Spon ConHeating
-blo. Aad With lllilck; lntorior, Loodad, 18K Mlloo, loot OJIor,l14-44f.l1131.
. F-man'o Hoollng And Cooling.
lnotollotlon And Sanrlco. EPII
11111 Bulcll Algal 22.000 lllloo, Conlflod. Aoaldontlol, c:omnlllnt CondHion, Gno Owno~ 114- clot 114-25&amp;-1611.

l:.""~n~ :::':n=-':':J"

441-1112.
' 114-lfl2.

~ wamlld to Rent
-41_H_o_u_ses--fo_r_R_e_nt--l Worlad To Ront: 3
Bodroom Homo Noodod 11J ....,.._
~ otonol Fomlly R_.ng In 0112
...
oom
~lpoilo /OaiiLi County .WO, 304ptuo ..,__ 304•
112W340.
-

o....,.

Rotrlgorotorw, ltov-, ~
llrp111, All Rocondlllonod
And Oaurent- 1100 And Up,
Wlllllollwr. 114-111-U41.

-

THEY WENT OVER
PINEY SPRINGS
PAW
'

TO

Lb&amp;.
SUO·
10 Lb&amp;. 17.00; HaiJ
...... .... Lllo.;
.8H Lba.i IU1h l•ne
Lb&amp;.; llwloh ~
I

-.:.114-441

.31.

Artuo
7tlllpruco St, O.illpofio,

72

Trucks lor Salll

84

Electrical &amp;
Retrlgeratlon

1!177 Fonl Plcii.Up, I CVII,.., Hoot P'""po, Air Condltlonora, ·,
... S?OO, 114-311'-1'230.
Fumocoo · llallw Eloct~clon
1m Chovy Plclt.Up ll'OO, 114- I'M 411 e3oa, NIOCJ.2174301. ' '
4411-elll&amp;
Rooldlrllat or COftln~~Riol
, _ oarvlco or _,.._
1180 Vol~ lluck • " - · •...Iring.
otor
oloetrlclan . .
4linn,
op., runo aOocL no - · 1'1,0011 Rlclonour u-Eioctrtc.t wv~
114-ld'-1117.
1104-l'n-1756.
'

-

10Freshvv ater

of nine

1 Type of hoop
2 Slots

a

3 Dry red wine
4 Type meas ures
5 Mus ica l gro up

6 Wild ox
7 Ceq a u -

fi Sh

111975
Wimbledon
champi on
17 Dis trict in
Germany
19Singing YOICC

8 Su mmer (Fr .)
9 Vile

l •
P&lt;1ss

Dbl
f) •

22 Reg rei
23 Arc hitec t -

Pass
All pa ss

van der Aohe
24 Bridegroom 's
attendant
(2 wds )
~+--i-__j,_--l t 25 Fern features
26 Evergeens
, 27 Washable
28 Faded away
29 Edges
31 Fashionable
beach re sort

Op eni n g lead : • K

THEN I'LL VISIT HIS
CHICKEN COOP

,

t

Count on her
brilliance

PeA~ "'· e~N
_/

o~ .

fFNie.
C:.OM/' STFIP
PSY Cttl ATF.I.fT,
AN5Wt,S
YOU/t

AutO Parts &amp;
Accessories

Curtle Home lmprovlmlnta. No
Job Too Bl~ Or _Smol~ Voara Ea·

DOW N

35Cowboy -Rogers

FOR AN ANSWER 7

C

=

w orkers
32 Roman 56
33 Female
sandpiper
34 Wind around
p lane
36 Aruba and
Barbados

SltOUL.D I WAIT

SlookCraft
Jot boo~ -r
~Ha
-• 1,.00 fut tor my~.._ __:
·~
oy or poallll.., ....,... • .
codo. 304-e75-31l7.
·

PI-nt.
Budgat Prlcad Tninomlalono,
Uood &amp; rwbulft, II typoo, 01111·
lno ot Ill; ownor 114-246-fl877.
aU.!IN-2938, 114-3711-22113.
New gee tanka, one ton truck
whlale ncbtore. llocr mata,·
ate. D i R Aut.:o:l~-~- 304372-3133 or 1
:tn:fl:wl.

~

JOHos pital

Today' s dea l bea r ~ su rn e si mi lari a tr ip
ti es to yesterd ay's . Decla r er uses a
41 Opposite of
defender's signa ls to wo rk ou t the dis
yep
tribu tion and fi nd the winning line, but
42 Honey bee
a we ll tim ed fal seca rd mi g ht "• ''" 11-.-.-1--J----j-...j
genu s
PEAN UTS
lhro wn her off th e tpck
43 Warmlh
44 F1shmg reel
The declare r was Danielle Allouche I'LL STA'&lt; 1-lERE BEl-liND
GOOD MORNING, 11-lAIJE A
46 On the ocean
Gavia rd from France . She was co m·
48 - Lan ders
TI-llS TREE , AND YOV
LOVE NOTE FOR '(OU !='ROM
petm g m the Phili p Morn s Europea n
49Greek letter
Mi xed Tea ms Champio nship, held las t
TAKE THI5 NOTE OVER TO
M'f WEIRD BROTHER .. HE
50 - - CIO
Marr h in Rarcel o n ~. Sp;t in
LITTLE RED-HAIRED GIRL
THINKS '(OU'RE KIN D OF CUTE
So uth 's agg ress ive fo ur -spa de re·
s ponse to her partn e r's take-out double go t her lo t he impo ssiblc -loo kmg
CELEBRITY CIPHER
s la m.
Cel&amp;bflt,' Crpt'ler cryp1ograms are c reated hom quota11on s by lam ou ~ ~f! C plo pa ~ l 1r \rl I " ~" ~ *' " '
Eact1le tlt!r m the crph er stand s for anolher Toda~· ·s clue R eau'* l l
Wes t le d t he hca rl km g, und e r
whi ch Eas t s ig na led with th e 10 ,
U N N
H D L
D W TLZH
' IE L HHV
X A SO
strongly sug ges ting a d oubl eton. West
s witched to th e cl ub kin g, Eas t dro pH D l E L
J T
H E A H D HLNN J TB
J z
ping th e two to s how a n odd number.
FRANK &amp; ERNEST
pres um abl y three .
AW TL
GWENA
J z
0 v
H 0 L
~~:!:.!~~;,::.:.:;:::_:_________~--------------------:-:--:---,'
Occ la rer won wi th d umm y's c lub

26611.

5 6 30 dlyo. 304-e'lll-48110, PI·

25 Dawn

37 At a dist cmce
40 Prepares tor

;;:---:-:::-::-:--:-:---:----:

350 or 400 turbo tranemlulona,:
uaed or ov...,.uled, guer~ntMd ·

54 Superl ative
ending
55 Conven t
dwellers
56 Cas tor's mot her

By P hi l li p Alder

. oo~s

p!YC.t-IIAT,Y ~Ave "'
~ G
rr, • 1 ~:: j
A N AMr; rO, S"OMt.O,..t. 2
Wf'tO /S ALTe,NAT~t..Y ii
DAF:/rJ(j ANI&gt;
~

Y \."AUT/OU~,
~

~

•

~

....._

......_ fl)(l,~, Tt-le
''G• lt.J(j-ylr.JQA ''

QU~.fTIONS

vr~

f'

SY rJ/),OM~!

~
®

g
~

ace. cashed the A K of d ia monds, dis
ca rding clubs fro m ha nd. and ruffe d
th e diamond five. dropping Wes t 's
qu een. Con cl udin g t ha t Wes t had
starte d wit h 1·6-3-3 distribution . South
cashed her spade kin g before ruffing a
hea rl in th e dum my Now came th e J.
· 10 of di amonds, on which South threw
he r la s t club and a heart Decla re r
ruffed a cl ub in he r hand and, at tn ck
II . trumped he r las t hea rt. the quee n,
w1th dummy's spade ace .

.

So ulh was le ft
es ho ve rin g
l _:;;;:;.______.,!:::::~~~~!!!!~~~-===~~~~~--_::.&lt;_:·~:::.::"'~N:,:"~'~:..:-r~H~A~v:_5~,i;8~-=l;__J' ·s pad

BORN LOSER

r

WH~T I ~ Ttlt~ DIS!-\ 2

~

,...

~

'(£"~-\ ? WUL, IF

1&gt;\':JituR, ZAT l~ Z£ CHI(.f(Et-1
~~ Bl£U 1
£VERY·
ON£ KNOW~ lE
CORroN BLEU 1

YOU 'RE
S/1\~R.T, f-\0\:J COME.
YOU DOt-IT KJ.I0\&lt;.1 HO!:l
TO SP£tL I3U£ 7

with th e Q-Bof
ove r East's J -6.
Dec la re r coul d lead e ithe r dummy's
s pade nin e o r c lub s i x to a vo id a
trump lose r and win 12 tr icks.
Beautiful card-readmg. bu t suppos e
West drops the diamond quee n on the
second round of th e suit. The n South
would have placed him wilh 2-6-2-3
distribution and dra wn two round s of
trumps, fallin g to de fe at.

BIG NATE

POW!

"'oNc.H
MVN0 -1

MUNCH
MVNCH

I 'VE GoT TO fi ND
A (lETT ER

PLAC.E

TO KEEP MY
"c.« EEZ. IXlODLE S "

'AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

WN ~ ML E

S 0 J N A E L T . '

G L TALNN

DWNXLZ .
PREVIOU S SO LUTI ON . "A pess 1m 1s t 1s JUSt an optlllliSI wt1 0 t1a s Lf'r n
around."- (Former NBA coach) Chuck 'The Pnnce of Pess1rn1 sm· D&lt;lly

'~~:t;~'

S©\\otllA-"' £ifS"

0

I

GLAV UR

I

WOC N L

I

Thenewb1g s hot in o ur o ffice
was hurrying aro un d . A colR
league rem a rked th a t we a ll
m
reach the future at th e ra te oL
. -- - - -- - - - - - . sixty minutes an hou r no matte'!"
BERE L T
what we do or wh o . • • - -

I PI

I

.

_

_

lA 01 v 13

I: .~

. •.

lO

1--T~-,~_,~_,,,--,.1-T'I"'s-l
"

•

.

_

•

L.-L-..L.....JL-...i.-

8

Comp le te I he chuckle quolen
by fdl&lt;ng 1n the m&gt;!.S ong w or d ~
L-...1 you d evelop hom step No J below

"

_

P~I N T NUMBERED IErT ERS IN

TH ES E SQUA RES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Sinful - Aware - Brisk • Yankee · WEAKNESS
A new colleague was very inept in many areas . We
were trying to find a strong point he had but anoth e r
colleague sugges ted we find his stronges t WEAKN ESS .

ROBOTMAN

I'M llt&lt;.'ON\IN6 lttO'(B\IG~'*'1\-\E C\JTt$1' I MOG.T
LM~~LE ~\Jf'ER ti~RO

THE:.

UN\~

l 1 •

ASTRO-GRAPH

te c1iv e o f a p erso n y o u love I S an
admirable quality . pr ovided y o u d on 't

mailing $1. 25 to Astra -Graph , c/o this

newspaper. P 0 Box 4465 , New York . overdo 11 There ·s a big dilleren ce
N.Y. 10163. Be sure to state your zodiac

between sheltering and smothering.

s ign.
PISCES (Feb. 211-March 201 There's a
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) For lhe s ake possibility today you might demand agree-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

of your ego it might be advisable not to

ment fr o m on e who lov es you ev e n

s et difficult goals lor yourself Ieday . lhough he/she thinks you could be wrong .
Unless things c ome easily, your best

Your tone of conversation leaves a lot to

tnlenltons might be totally ignored.
be des ired .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Don't ignore : ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Flanery is not
your conscience today ~ il warns you not 1 likely to make an effective method ot per·
to become romantically involved with

suasion today . Persons who are your tar-

someone you know you should avoid. II gets will innately know ~ your statements
m1ghl be trying to tell you something.
·· are sincere. Deceit is counterproductive .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Try not to TAURUS (April 26-lloy 20) It might be a
let material considerations come ' good idea today to avoid stores that have
-between you and 1 cloae friend today. : merchandise you know you c an't afford .
Wednesday, Aug. 3 , 1994
Vour rolltlonohlp 11 much more lmpor· Your sales restslance could be at a very
The year ahead could be a good one lor t.enllhln monty or worldly gooclo.
low ebll.
_
acquiring material possessions , yet you SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) II you GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Even 11 you
shculd be carelul not to buy items that are meet someone new today be friendly and . have to go someplace today you don't
dlflloullto get rid ol in case you later sociable, but don't be excessive . You'll be . constder very Special .. be sure to look your
decide to sell them.
more appealing if you play a little hard to best, because there s a posstbthly you
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Instead of being get.
may run into someone you 'll want to
practical in financial maners today, you CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Co-worl&lt;- Impress.
might be lnlluenced to waste your money ers will be peeved today 1f you look upon CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) The resulls
loolishly by a lriend whose judgment is !them as labor-saving devices by trying to rmghl not be very sattslacloty today II you :
worse than your own. Leo, treat yourseH . gel them 10 do work lor you lhal you _lei your emotions and feelings govern I
to a birthday gill. Send for your Aslro- · should be doing yourseH.
. your 1nlelect. Base your evaluations on a.
Graph predictions lor the year ahead by AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Being pro- logrcal premise.
.

.

WOAD
GAMI

1411•4 ~y -CU',:..:..J~IlA_!~;;;;;.;;;::-:::;;:::Rearrange letters of th•
four scrambled words below to form fovr words

_

oont-

Wllllomo

Rentals

4 ..

I'M GOIN' OVER
TO VISIT LUKEY ,
MAW

Fow Wlndo 11112 n boat with·
Inboard 1 outboard. 304-tf12.·

- ·

Brtdo'o lhoo Sl• 12 •13,
Wooltdlyo: 114 ... , _ f1l.

BARN EY

2011. Wellcrllft 200 Cldllc:, 110.
cond. 3CM·773-tMt

76

53 Escape

Vul nerab le: North-South
ll ra iPr : Wes t
South
West Nor th t:asl

185

m
N- Holland bollor, 501
mow.r, whlll rake, 304--675--

26Wilder

•J 7 .\ 4

~l'OO tor

-1 a-tn-,H.,-a-~y-c:Dav
-,ld
--..,
--8=-pon
--oter

61 Fann Equlpmem

• J G 4
\' I 0 3

•

51 Ac tress Za dora
52 St oo l pigeon

card

• KQB 5:l

165

or &amp;14-112-6328 ovenlngo.
1S88 Suzuki 4 Whoolar 230 Ea·
collonl Condition, $1,700, 11424• •5113
-~
.

drama

50 Alphabets

23 Gr ad ua te deg.

s

feather

4701 musical

EAST

• Q 7

45Lighl - -

14AIIianc e in its .
15Camer a part
16 Unique thin g
18 Sound fr om
a pooc h

21 Fortune-te lli ng

3

SOUTII

1988 Honda 250X, muat ... to
eppreclete, 114-m-24U . , .

Merchandise

For .....

-Hoolth~
-lo111y·
Home
ond Hurling,_
. __ Cotnllol- ..,.., tuN
lin., port tlmo _ . oVollablo.
oal Phytllo at 114-714-

-.

r54

c

w....._ _-.

Business
Opportunity

Real Estate

3-WhHIW,

JO ~~

· ~·871)2

~-

1 Mist
5 Hub of a wheel
9 Dr ug agcy.
12 - - arms
13Siep - - '

190cean
20Toward sh elter

.. I 0 9 2

I ~~~~==~=~::1::=======~j~~.~;~~GoodShapo,

ION~ •

- . . . . . Call 141t-'131-4715
Ell. Ft432, I A.M. .f P.M. ~
Dayo.

Hondo

KawaNid

Block, brick, _ . , olpoo, win21 cubic fl Unlco upright d:l dow., llntela, ate. Claude _,.,,...
froozo, $100, runa good, 614- • tars, Rio Grando, OH Call 614-

m.

Gi'.rx:B

f)

FOI&lt;. H£AVY

Motorcycles

110

7221.

---llapo, Oporal-- No

74

S:::

~ E~OH~-~~~~~~~

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLET PUBLISHING C:O.
rocommondo tr.t JOU do buolnooo with poop1o rou k..w1 and
NOT to oand , _ , tlwougn tho
moll urlM JOU have lnvoollgotad
tho olforlng.
Boat High Lumbor Coort. Stool
LOOICINO FOR CHILD CARE? Building Doo-hlp Opportunttr. WIH Ouallflod
CCRN -CIIIId c.r. Bulldor IDoolor In 0pon
1o A Cornmun11J Arooo. Polontlol lllg PI'Dtlla
F - Salol And CoriOtructlon.
You In ~Ina c.r. To , _ - - Clll1-.sn-22'71 (3031 7fl8-41M, Eal. - To &amp;eo How Wo Con Holp.
VENDING ROUTE: Won, Qol
Rich ~ick. WIN Got A lloodv
IIAJOR TEI.£PHONE lnltollon,
C:O. Cuh lncomo. Prlcod IO llol. f.
Hiring. Tact&amp;'
..... -

Mlln, M,aoo; Can Bo ~ At:
Galllpollo Gaily T~b&lt;mo, 825
Third Awonuo, Galllpollo, 114446-:1342.

3-hp Truy Bill Tufty gordon tlllor,
71 Autos for Sale
56 Pets for Sale
IIIIo now, S350, 114·71112·2502.
3 bodroarn, all aloctrlc homo,
1m Monto Corio, 4112 big block.
Spring
Avonuo,P-roy,
l"xn· Courtatan
Kaahlmar -;:Groom=::--:.::-:nd;--;:Su--DDI-::-=y:.;:s"-ho-p--=Pet.., ahow car cond., 11king $5000
S30.000, 114-ltft2-:!1113 ... 114Orlanlal Rug SJSO; Doacono Grooming. Julio Wobb. 114-448- nogotlobla. 304-67&amp;-1338.
ltft2·7304.
2bdrm. apt.o., total llloctric, ap- 9onch $110; - r d lllllor Flo« 0231.
pllo.-o tumlohocl, loundry
Dodge Axpon, Slant 8 En3 bod,_, 1112 balho, 2 ruom locMHioo c,_ to ochool Clock $315; ~-- Whh Pomporod Polo by Sonyo, dog 1fl76
gino, Run• Good, $600, 614-!INllroptocoo, lull b o - , hoot In town. ApDf{c;ilono ovalltblo lllrror $345; 814-3811-0104.
pump W/CA, corpolad, patio, ot: Village Creon Aplo. ..1 or Air Condh""- tor Solo, olao ='lno~hlng, all broodo. 2720 Aftor 5 P.ll.
campers&amp;
~arago, IOx200 lot, Horton 81, calll14-41112-3711. EOH.
11178 Z·28 body, robuln Bomo 79
Waahor, Oryor,__ Rotriganttor,
Wamor 4opd, 4-11 roorand, body
•eon. 304-773....s881.
3 Room Fumlehed Ap1.rtment, Froozer col 514-...,.1238.
Motor Homes
&amp; lrlorlor good, $800. 304-375:lbr. ronch, Oalllpollo Fony, call Cantral Hoot, AIC P~voto Park- Applo 11 08 Computor lm1448.
"72
Suparlor
22' motor homo,
lor datalto. 304-e'll-3328.
lng, All Utllhlol Fumlthocl, ill· ogoWrnor II Pl'lntar, 2 Dlolt 2 AKC Roglotorod Gormon
tleepe I, rune like new, roo1 air
Shopardo,
t.molo
2y111.,
malo
capt Eloclrlc, 814-4411-2102. I
11171 Chryolor LaBoron, good condhlonlng, Dodgo 413 C.I.D.,
Dnvoo.llauoa &amp; Softwore, 1450,
14mo., aood tompormorl, good ohopo, nlca &amp;-clean, $600. 304- $6500,
I room I llundry I balh,2 /12 Fumlllhod ENicloncr 516511110_ 814 Ua 0205.
114-1141-3301.
w/chlld,.,.,
woll
carod
tor
lomlly
17W211.
acr"!i bldg, big rod bam, 114- Utlllloo Pold, Shore Ba1:'4 ~~7
Boby
Bad
And
llanr-,
,lnlorl
polo,
aood
brooding
otock.
$300
lll2-~l57.
Sacond Avo-...Galllpollo, 1
18 Fl. HI Lo All llatal Compor
Cor Saa1, Glboon upright tor boTh or S200oo. 304-675-3127. 1181 Eldurado Cadllloc $2,100, $2,700,
114-Ml'-1881.
'
F
lo ...,
4415 Allor 7 t&lt;ll.
good ohapo, 304-&amp;7S-6Vfl8.
or 10 ..., ownor· tag homo,
F--l!!~u. Fl., Good Corid~
1860 oq. I., lull hnmont BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT llonl. p
: 114-1112~38 Or AKC rwglllorod Boxor malo
1m
31 ' Corrtago Camp.-,
1181 Plymouth TC3 $500, 614- Doublo Axlo, Now Hot Wator
wlllmlly room._ woodbumor, 3 BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Soo AI 405 Pogo St-, 111c1o pupo, llwn with block maok, 12 3'19-347.
wka. old, rMdJ to go, t225, eMbod-, 2 kncho,., 3 balho. est••Es
dlopon, Ohio.
Tonk, Hldo-A· Bod Solo, Sf11115-3107.
C/AI control voccum, ao-ol
~· , 531 Jackoon Plko
1112 Bronco; 1180 0-50 Pick· Sf•, Good Condhlon SoOn·
collltJI, otono llroploco, llrgo trom S222 to $285. Walk to ohcp Iaiiy bod otrotlor, wolkor,
Plantz Sub. BulavlltO Plk0:
dock,
321156
outbuilding I movloo. Call 114-440-2568.
AKC rwalo1wocl Slwpol Up; 11185 Honda Shadow Boloro $3,100, 114-448-1365.
OWing,
pt.oypon,
.
cllocololo I - rnotoo lor ow 5:00P.M. 614-245-11556,
wAiutad work room, 2+ ecret 1ft EOH.
wooded .,.. dole to town, Fumlahed 3 Room• a Bath, Callor 10 box, 14 mornorr, brond - · 114+111-2121.
11112 Oldomobllo Ill Rogoncy, 11177 Skylark, 11 112 ft' good
Moklo SchoGt Dlotrlct, cloytlmo Cloln, No Poto, Roforanco 1 ..w, S43.15, o14-DG2-11fl8.
AKC Nglot1111d Schlppolko 54,000 Mlloo, All Power. Supor condhlon, phone after &amp;:00, 614-5~·2311, -no IM-Itft2· Dopoolt Roqul111d. 114-4411-1519.
pupploo, 2 llllloo,1 lomalo, Cloln, Will Toko Gunt, 1001t Or Mt-3087.
7133.
- . S250
1--.2601 Pool Toblo In Trodo. 514-256- 1f78 St•n::raft, 26ft., •II conNicely Fumlohod Apartmont,
8411
ovonlngo aftor II or wookondo.
lllnod, oloapo 1, good -.1.
Raducod to $13,0001 2br. 1br, noxt to Ubra:Y., porklng,
w~. In New Haven, centnl h..t, •lr, ,. erenee ,...
AKC Roglatorod Wolmoronor 1184 Eacot1 Automatic, $450; 304·7T3-5244.
c - to ochcot 304-1182-381
qulrod. 114-446.0338.
11171 Toyclo Coootia, 4 Spood,
pupploo. 304-4'n-7lll0.
18111 Vlk~dL a".:I&gt;-Up Campor,
$300, Aok For Rick 614-245-o812. $800,
614il.
Tlmo ohaN COndo lor oolo, WY Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bod·
Floh Tank I Pel Shop, 241S
llld ruort, third week ol room •P~artmente .. VIllage
JaokHn Ave. Point Pki...,t, 11111 Oklo Col~_: gooo, tooko 1881 Yotlowotono Campor, 35M.,
Jenuary, 514-112·7856.
M•nor
•nd
Rlvenlda
304-t75-2GI3.
good, $1800. .
aftor Wf.l-4ft. ell:l)llndoa, IXC. cond,
Apanmorlo In Mlcldtopo~. From Couch,
Froo
4pm or "•v• meaage.
304-682-2247 or 882-206t.
HAPPY
JACK
FLEABEACOH:
32 Mobile Homes
S2324356 . eou 614-11112-5851. hampotor.
Etoctronir&gt; Dovlco Coni- 1887 Comaro Rod 525 Mlloo On 1112 Pallmlno Poi&gt;-Up Now
Couch, cholre, ·2 lompo, S400- F - In Tho Homo Without Poo- Aebuln Engine 6 Trana., Stereo, Canvat, 91ove, Fletrl~tor:
Diomond cluotor, 1100. au- tlcldoo.
Potontad
Doolgn Morol114-1192-61151 Allor 5.
Sink, Fwnace, SIMpt e, Exc:eJ!
121132 otnc.-typo r_,, .,.... lor
Comtortor -~
~'llllll. Cruloo Bum Of llaht Flou
lont CondHI~ 514-445-1611 A~ ,
1887
Chroylar
LoBaron
2.2
Con,
Roolot.
R-fto
Ovornlaht.
room oddhlon or office, wood
lor4P.M.tl,ow.
,
Encyciopodlo
Brlllanlca
I
Turbo,
Good
Condlllon,
$2,700,
J D NORTH PRODUCE 114-441tramo, muol bo .....,ad, $1500,
114-388-f725.
Growing
Up
with
Scton;:
114-llla-2247.
1133.
Tr-ood compw, otoapo I , oat~ :
$1750, will toll tor $1100. 4
2885olwfpm.
HAPPY JACK FLEAIIEACOH: 1187 Plymouth Sunda-, 4 contalnod, $1200. 304-11111-3361. •
dovlco
llou .._ I apood, AIC, amltm. aood
Fow P235•7Sx15 tlroo on Ford oloctronlc
~H~ 14,000 mlloo. $2415,
In
tho
without
pootlcldoo.
Services
514-992·1U35.
truck rtma •lllub ~ 1100,
Pollntad doolgn -~~· buret
114-1'12·2502.
of light tlolo can, rwolot. 1987 P011tlac Turbo Grand Am, 2
R-fto ovomlghl. RlQ Food I lloo!,_ Loodld, 10,000 MIIOI, 114- 81
G.E. 20 Inch T.v. nu!l; Supply,
114-IW-2164.
Home
llomoru 20 Inch S l - T.v.
441-ne8.
Uko S24U6i_ RCA 13 lmprovemems
1181 Bluo Camaro Good Cond~
T.V. Lillo - . .,34.11; llaQ.
novo• VCR Whh Aomoto Pt.lll;
BASEMENT
lion, v~ u, 14R'=po~lln,
Nawty t'Ointad,
alblo
Sharp VCR 118.111; Ootd ltor
WATERPROOANG
,
VCR With Ro-o IIS.tt; loore Roglot- Oolmallon pupploo, awn.. 114-446-4114.
UnCOndhiCXIOI lllotlmo guoran- •
VCR 111.11; Sharp VCR SJII.IIil' VII ehockod 6 ohclto, 304-117&amp;roloroncoo tumlohod. •
1988 Chovy Cavlllor, lc:yl., too. local
~lvonlo VCR 111.16; oil
111163.
1-800-287-0578 Or 614-H'l!- '
4apd., good -.l.:.t ~no good, Coil
Tochnotagy J12 IIIII lloYo110,
0488 Aogono Wol-ftng. &amp;- '
$2450 OliO. 304-lro-o3A.
Oalllpollo;a-t-oG!IO.
t•bllshad 1871.
'
11811 EXP, 1.8 11., I 111-, good C&amp;C
Hoi Point Air ~•""- 11,NII
Gonoret
Homo
condition, $11'00, oM-1112-2411.
BTU Ylry ~ Condition, 114llllrlona.- watlpoopw, otorm
44114210.
dooro, ruotlng ond complato
AKC, cltam- 11811 Ford E8cort ar 1
homo ropalr, comploto wi,_
plon blood - . oxcallorll ... t\ll~
~100,
I
' Npolr, pro..... Wuhlft9 and
poolllon, oll-groJ, bluo oyoo,
mobllo homo rwpolr. For ll'oo oo11112 F, .14-ft2.7201.
11811 Lincoln TOWII Car, $4500. lhnato call Cr.t, 114-H2-&amp;323.

lorSa~

E-wtl~

!I H

1981 Dodge Ram Yen eopoo

Cotolog, 1-800-4112·111117
Maro, Bruko For Kldo, 614-3711Uood C.IJIII, 1_
_
2835.
2075
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Cra oman 18" Scrol Saw, 200 PSI S1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI :::::-:=:~-::::-::::~:-::::-==
Sloroo And CD Playeil' Nlnlando W-~:on Evano Entorprlaoa 700 Boln Of Whoat Straw $1.50
With 16 Ta- Fc&gt;r ora lntoro 1141130 Jackoon, Ohio
' Bolo, Good Graa Hay Squaro
motion, 614-3117-'1446.
Baloo, Ollvor Groin 0~11. 614245 -6622.
TV
&amp; -• 111
55
Building
2
anlonnao
~•. lllrty
now, roa1011obly prlcod, 614-1192Supplies
Squaro boloo hoy. 304-&lt;175-3KO.

~":~a car

em

rTS Ct&gt;UED Af.J
' E-U3CJIIJ MASTE-R'

$5300nog. 814-11112-7584.

2 Aeh Tanka,1 Sat ot Bunk
~~~·l.to,Wolg:Cu:."", h

2241 •"• 6:00.

HE- SHJT AVJAY
ra;: 1\115 I-JEW

K. J

"""f)

1g88 112 NIHan Htrd Body 4x4,
87,000 mil.. , excellent condition
lnelde • out , well maintained,

Kawaoald 4-whoolor,

HouM, ~umlahed, No
Palo, S3SO/IIo. ~ft, 114-l'W-

room

hiring

!:~~"':'!"· ~'t!:l::

53

\AXJRKtffi

Rebulh, 30ot New Tl,.e, 814--441·

Work boolt. 614-446-3158.

from

t 1\

1660 Aftw 4,30 P.ll.

Olive St., Gelllpolla. New &amp; UMd
fumlture, hNIIfll , Westem &amp;

Raclna, 614-114i-

EEK&amp;M EEK

$1500, 514-1'12-3315.
1!177 Jaop CJ5 All Flbollllaoa,
Body Now Soft Top &amp; Blklril Top

Chair Poll Lamp End Tabloo,
614-446-01'13.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62

2 B•drooml, A.C, No Pete,
r;&gt;tpoeh
And
A•f•rancea,
$400/U0 W h
0
2 8 _....

New Terminal

OUp .1

One

2 bedroom Mobile home In
Recine efW!a, 614-i92· 5858.

¥4

1m GMC box body Yin, uMd
tor fiN mart1.1t1, good llhape,

lf)A&gt; SliG H A 814 G

0322, 3 mil• out Bulavll&amp;l Ad.
FrM O.llvery.

24&amp;-oi04, &amp;14-250-4801.

R 2 94

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home tumlshlnga.
Hou111: lion-Sat, 11-5. 614-446-

Rattan FumllureR Gr..a For
Pallo Of Game oom Couch,

Help Wanted

/Nfli'-NA&lt; IONAL
t1oli~E Ft.Y CoN IIENT,oN

dry.,.., ...tngeratora,
AppllancM 11

Mx60 2 Br, 1 mile South of
Eureka, on Sl Rt.7. No pete,
114-258-60n.

t==========r.=========j
r------•-•1 ~- oct.ootln

\'roKSci'JAC~Y. I Dorv 'r

APPLIANCES

Super Single Walerbed
Completa $7&amp;, One Queen Size
Waterbed Complete $150 Call Atter 3p.m. 614.o245-9252.

011

Chowrolol, Ford, Dodo• pickup
bods. Sho~ or long. No Nil.
304-&lt;175-Q286.

'f~I N~ ~AI-JD IN&lt;\ T e £

800-411i-34W.

C2!SOIMo. FrM Weter, Sewer, 614-

11

USED

Golllpoii•L Walor, Traoh Included, Hlferencee Required,
S2SOIMo. $100 Do-h. 614-4460761.

2 bedroom lreller •cr

___
&amp;_A_u_ ct
-,-lo_ n-:---

I

Vlno St-. Call 614-441i·T3i8, 1·

2 Badroom Country Salting,
"Yo u bel we save ·e m' This plane 's ma de out o f
a lumtnum ca ns recyc le d fro m previous llig htsl

(

Skeg~

rang ...

.....,.no.,

Yard
Sei..Southsldlt
Community C.nler, Aug . 4-5, 8am6pm. 1982 Mercury/ Nndmade
quin a, old chum, m ec. 304-e75-

9

w..here,

Mobile Homes
for Rent

10x50 Furnlahed, 1 Mile From

Yard Sa iH 5 Maple St., Mason.
Thur-Frl, Sam·5pm.

8

GOOD

2 Bedrooma. Air, Cable Aval""
abla, Ovorlooklng Tho Ohio
Rlv.r, In Kanauga. Dopostt,
ReferencN R~ulred. Foster'•
Mobile Home Perk, 614-446-1602.

Pt. Pleasam

19117 5-10 Automatic 50,310
Mlloo $4,500, 614-446.01124.

Mollohen C.rpate.

Phona Number.

42

Household
Goods

Carpot $5.00 Up Vinyl $4,4g To
16.50 In Stock, 61~11144 ,

614-3711-2441 Laavo Name And

5 tamllly QlriQI . . -..Aua. 4, 5,
&amp; e, e,oo All Paol Lifo
,.llldaoc:o, CR 48, Suec- road,
n.w ~cnk: ta~. rnacr1me
chair~, men 6
Jot• of mlac.

51

Answer to Previous Puzzle

40 A ctor Joh n 41 Okina wan
seap ort
44Cook 's vessel

.

. I

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Meigs County Development News
" Proud of yesterday and planning for tomorrow"
lSI \I

By Julia Houdashelt-Thornton,

1'.1()4

Economic Development Director

Wed nesd ay, Aug . 24 at the
Senior Ciu1cns Center al ldO p.m.,
the re will be a counly -w1dc meetin g for th e town ship tru stees, vil lages official s and COUJll y commisSIOners.

In lastm onth"s column I Includ ed a qucsuon and an swer sect1on
concern in g the Rural Enterprise
Zone I hope you read this and arc
in s upport of th e ta x incentive ;
bttau. . r on Aug . 24 1t 1s up to our

co u111 y off icials 10 vote on and
hopeful ly pass the necessary resolullnll s to JnJLial c Lh1s business
i nl:c nti vc for location and expan Sion .

July 26.
Dunng that lour we stopped at
Darrell Norris greenhouses, where
Darrell explained his operation and
c urrent water need s and more
importan ll y hi s upcoming water
needs . Li sa McDaniel and Dan
Neff then ex plaincd 10 us the need
to accumulate as much information
as we could from all of the growers
concerning their water usage during the previou s five years and
expected usage for the next five to
10 years, and more Jtnportantly, the
number of emp loyees they have
and will need.
The economic developm ent dol lars arc based on jobs and so 11 is
also required that we accumulate
informalion from local hardware,
lumber, accounting firms, propane
gas companies, sanitation and fuel
companies, etc ., as 10 their depen dence on the growers for their busi ness's income. I am urging both the
growers and local businesses to
mail this information to myself or
Mr. Simcox or we will not even be
able to proceed wilh the initial
grant application!
The Junior Achievement Lunc heon was hosted by Nancy
Larkin s, teacher at Eastern High
School on July 14. Jumor Achieve ment is a program to bring our stu dents and bu sinesses tog e ther.
Local business leaders actually
come into the classroom and
explain profit and loss to the student s with the margin usually
amazing the students. Volume sales
arc usually at quite a lower profit
margin than retail sa le s for
instanc e. Hopefully, Ms. Larkins
will be able to involve many of our
local businesses in the program. I
regretted to hear from Ms. Larkins
that til&lt;: P.S. Express entrepreneurial class has· been canceled. This
class gave the students the opportu nity to work with computers, the
public. profit and loss. and the
intricacies of printing in a classroom selling. Not many business
owners have thi s opportunity. I
hope this course or another similar
10 il will be offered by Ms. Larkins
in the ncar fu1urc.
Rita Jones, exccuove director of
the Hocking County Tourism Association, met with Meigs County
Park Districl Director Mary Powell
and myse lf on July 21 to offer her
ideas and advice concerning establishing a working village near the
Portland Civil War battle site for
re-enactments. David Gloeckner
and Austin Jones are very interested in this venture, and so I have
arranged a meeting between them
and Barbara Bayless of the Ohio
Arts Council on Aug. IS to discuss
possible funding and guidance as
an added attraction to preserving
our heritage.
Gale Lesley, festival director for
Bob Evans Farms, met with chamber secretary Patty Calaway and
myself on July 22. Ms. Lesley had
been a speaker at our craft/artisan
seminar during May. Ms. Lesley
has offered a Meigs County Day to
be held at the Adamsville Village
on June 25, 1995 in conjunction
with their 19th annual antique car
show. 11Iis is both a very gracious
offer by Ms. Lesley and quite an
opportunily for Meigs County artisans/craft persons to show their
stuff1 I will be mailing the application forms and booth information
to our artisans/craft persons shortly.

Tuesda~August2,

Prospective tenants
set for drug testing
EUCLID (AP) - Drug testing
of prospcc uve tcnants in a recently
renovated apartment complex
could begin as early as next week,
officials sa id.
Because the 167-unit Summerwood Commons complex In suburban Cleveland is operdi.Cd by a pri vate group, the requirement is
legal . hou s in g officials and a
lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union said .
Summcrwood Commons was
known as Euclid Hill s when it was
condemned by the cily more than a
year ago.
"Anything and everything was
wrong with it," says Kory Komn,
Euclid' s director of community services and economic services.
" Every aparlrn c nt suite had a
(housing code) violation."
Police were frequently called to
Euclid Hills because of drug-related incidents and domestic violence.
Eucl id police Chief Wayne Baum -

[very bu s1ncss must diversify
w1 1h the chang1ng times. That is
why Jeff Thornton. the Meigs
Count y Chamber of Commerce's
ag nhu siness chairman, EliZabeth
Sc haad aud Lynne Crow of the
Gove rn or's Eco nom ic Develop men! Outreach Team. and Hal
Knccn of the Meigs County Exi.Cn' ion Office met with area produce
fa rm ers on July 5 to discuss the
Th e following land transfers
possibilities of exporting their
were recorded recently in the office
crop&lt; 1n1o Canada.
of Meigs County Recorder EmmaBoth the pros (higher price per
gene Hamilton :
pound) and cons (inspection, label Affidavit, Patty L. Hudson ;
ing and refrigerated shipping
deceased, to Bernard W. Hudson,
requirements) were discussed. The
Middleport lot;
maJority of our area farmers partic Affidavit, Rolland K. Cmbtrcc,
ipated and openly discussed the
deceased, Beulah M. or Bulcah M.
existing poor relationship between
Crabuee, Columbia , .882 acres;
the brokers in Piusburgh and them Deed, Beverly K. Jones 10 Greselves. It is sad to sec such hardgory Alan Jones. Columbia, .882
working· individuals, who arc
•
acres;
becoming a disappearing breed,
Certificate, Sharon Ann Pooler,
being taken advantage of.
to William Pooler Jr.,
deceased,
Also in July, our Common Pleas
Chester;
Judge with Probate Division JuveDeed, David A. Ferry 10 Family
nile Juri sdiction - otherwise
Homes Incorporated, Salisbury
known as Judge Buck, his daughter
parcels;
Jackie and I - traveled to the
Deed, Robert L. and Carolyn
Juvenile Bool Camp facilily in
Smith 10 Curtiss and Kathy H. AllCuyahoga County. This facility is
man,Sutton, 1.0916acrcs;
an experiment currently funded by
Deed, Harrisonville Grange # 17
federal dollars to put our youth on
to
Jeffery
L. and Lisa Virginia
the right track. A 70 percent theraLewis,
Scipio
lot;
peutic and 30 percent military stratDeed, Bill E. Buchanan to Bevegy is implemented, along with
erly A. Buchanan, Olive parcels;
parenting classes and a nine-month
Deed, Mary A. Hawk to Warren
followup check on the boys after
H. Calaway, Orange parcels;
they arc returned to their home.
Affidavil, E. Jeanne Braun,
This type of a facility has proven to
decea
sed, to Kenneth K. Braun,
be very successful mainly due to
Pomeroy
parcels;
parent mvolvcmcnt and the folDeed,
Harold and Virginia F.
lowup program. Sen. Jan Michael
Evans 1.0 Troy Eugene and Tammy
Long is pursuing legislation to
Lynn Boggs, Lebanon, 2.269 acres;
build more of these facilities in
Affidavit, Melvin Cross,
Ohio and to secure funding dollars
deceased, to Carol Cross, Salem,
from the state, because the federal
one acre;
dollars arc running out and the proDeed, Walter, Walter Jr. and
gram will be discontinued othcrJeuie
Jewell to Jettic Jewell, Salem
w•sc.
parcels;
On July II , Debbie Roush, DarDeed, Walter B., Waltcr Jr. and
rell Norris and rn yself met with the
Jcttie Jewell to Walter Jewell Jr.,
Tuppers Plains-Chestcr Water DisSalem parcels;
triCL Board to identify the water
Deed, Randall D. and Kcllie I.
capacity dilemma faced by Racine
Snider
to Neale G. and Marcia J.
and Letart Falls bedding plant
Knight,
Middleport parcels;
growers.
Deed,
Robert and Mary E. GraDon Poole, general manager,
ham to John W. and Mildred A.
explained that due 10 the recent and
Krider, Lebanon, 2.2616 acres;
continued bedding plant industry
Deed, John W. and Mildred A.
growth and the current line size,
Krider to John R. and Janet A.
several residences were without
Krider, Lebanon, 2.2616 acres;
water durin~ the peak )l.rowinR seaDeed, Harold Emerson and Olita
son. Poole forecast that without a
F.
Heighton
to Tom E. and Connie
larger line replacement, and anothL.
Roush,
Salisbury,
1.50 acres;
er storage tank, that next year's
Mary
Oliver
to James
Affidavit,
water needs can not possibly be
Oliver;
met. George Mara, P.E., currently
believes that an estimated 10,000
feet of six-inch line at a cost of
$50,000, a l)oostcr costing $35,000
and a storage tank: costing between
$100-125,000 will be needed. Keep
in mind these figures have not yet
been related to the questionnaires
mailed 1.0 the growers asking what
My husband and I experienced
their expected construction will be
our
flfst trial as 4-H judges on July
during the next 5-10 years and if
27.
We
really enjoyed it and would
they are aware of other growers
Dave
like
to
thank Cindy ~veri and
who would like to be connected
Chip Haggerty of the Extension
Grate
with TP-C Water.
Office
for
both
asking
and
assisting
Don Poole and Bill Nease, TP-C
of
Water Board member, feet that a us. We were really excited to see
grant must be attained to correct the inlercst, talent and hard work of
Rutland
the problem due to the h.igh cost of our youth in the vegetable and bedFurniture
the project. Boyer Simcox of Buck- ding plant industry. We never
imagined
that
there
would
be
so
eye Hills Hocking Valley Regional
Give a man a fish, and you feed
DcvCiopment District is adminis- many excellent projects. The docuhim for a day. Teach a man to
mentation,
interviews,
po~ters,
distering our grant application. Mr.
fish,
and you get rid of him on
Simcox invited Dan Neff, DireciOr plays and canning abilities of the
weekends.
of the Governor's Office of participants was outstanding.
On that positive note, I would
Appalachia, Lisa McDaniel~ EcoMorticians tend to look on the
nomic Development SpeCialtst, like to leave you wim this month's
bright
side. Everyone is a
quote:
"Quality
is
never
an
acciMeigs County Commissioner Fred
prospective
customer.
dcn~
it
is
always
the
result
of
high
Hoffman, Bill Nease of the Home
•••
intention,
sincere
effort,
intelligent
National Bank and TP-C Water
Income is a trifling matter Board member, Hal Kneen, Meigs direction and skillful execution; it
especially after taxes.
County Extension Agent, and represents the wise choice of many
•••
myself to view the affected area on alternatives." - Willa A. Foster
Keep in mind that each of us
can be one of all the people who
can be fooled some of the time.

gart sa1d. Police also invcstigaled a
homicide there .
National Church Residenc es ,
which was established in 1961 by
four Pre sbyterian churches and
operates about 9,000 apanrnent
units in Ohio, began a $6.3 million
rcnovalion in January.
Public agencies such as
metropolitan housing authorities
would probably face a legal challenge if they tried to screen appli cants for drug usc. But NCR can
reqUire the drug tesling because it
is a not -for-profit corporation, not a
public agency, said Kevin O'Neill
of the American Civil Liberties
Union in Cleveland.
Angelina Ornelas of the Hous ing and Urban Development office
in Washington said it appears pri vate developers may conduct drug
screening, but only if they pay for
It and apply the test equa ll y to
every person.

Meigs land transfers posted,
Deed, Elsie G., James E. and
Mary Oliver to James E and Mary
Oliver, Orange, I 1{2. acres;
Deed, Thomas M. Theiss to
David E. and Rebecca S. Ball, Sutton, 60.3446 acres;
Deed, Herman E. Moore to
James and Connie Casey, Rutland,
one acre;

Deed, Joseph Edward Willison
to Carolyn Yvonne Willison, Olive,
I acre;
Deed, Robert L. and Carolyn
Smith to Orley Yore, Sutton parcel;
Deed, Hazel Evelyn Lawson 10
Robert Lee Jr. and Deborah Kay
Lawson, Letart, part interest;
Deed, Sarah J. Fowler 1.0 James
A. and Elizabeth L. Gheen, Middleport parcels;
Affidavit, James A. Smith,
deceased, to Vada Smith, Salem,
· 3.039 acres;
Deed, Vada Smith to Cart and
Dorothy Smith, Salem, .587 acres;
Deed, Vada Smith to Geraldine
Moore and Dorothy Smith, Salem
parcel;
Affidavit, Chloris A. and Bryce
H. Taylor to Florence Deeter;
Deed, Harold and Virginia F.
Evans 10 same, Lebanon;
Deed, Florence P. Goff to Kevin
Alvin Goff, Olive parcel;
Deed, James P. and Rhonda L.
Conde to Michael L. and Edna L.
Will, Salisbury, 1.005 acres;
Deed, Jayrnar Incorporated 1.0
Lester and Carol Manuel , Letart,
I00 acre lots;
Deed, Brian D. and Kathleen
Manicke 10 James L. II and Julie K.
Melrose, Orange, 5 acres;
Deed, Luther and Elizabeth Bartoe 10 Elizabeth Bartoe, Olive.

Ohio News in Brief:COLUMBUS - J. Wesley Trimble has resigned as administrator of the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation, the agency
announced.
His resignation is effective Sept. I.
Trimble, who was appointed as administrator on Sept. 22, 1992,
announced his decision to the bureau's board of directors during a
meeting, the agency said Monday.
During Trimble's tenure, the bureau has seen significant
improvements in its claims management operauons, fmancial performance, relationships with consumer groups and internal operalions, said board Chairman Michael J. Knilan s.
Trimble gave no reason for his re signation, said Brenda Proctor,
a spokeswoman.
He could not be reached for com mcnl. There is no tel ephone listing in his name in the Columbus directory.
Knilans asked board members John Hodges and Frederick
Matthews to serve as a transition committee until a new admini slrator is appointed. The board is expected to appoint an actmg aJministraiOr at 1ts Aug . 24 meeting.

Celebration puts town in debt

Two electrocuted during installation
COLUMBUS - Three men were mstalling a citize ns band radio
antenna on the roof of a trailer when it touched a service line, electrocuting two of them and injuring the third .
Brian K. Johnson, 27, of Orient, was admiued 10 the Ohio State
University Medical Center's bum unit and was in serious condition
after Monday's accident, spokesman Bob Fi!Zsirnmons said . He was
bumed over 40 to 50 percent of his body.
James W. Boyd, 27, of Oricnl, died about 9:45 p.m ., Fitzsimmons said. Boyd was brought 10 the hospital by helicopter.
Wayne K. Bentley, 33, of Orient, died about 9:42 p.m. after he
was brought to Grant Medical Center by helicopter, said a nursing
supervisor who did not give her name.
Bentley was working on the roof of a trailer at the Dot Mar Trailer Park on U.S. 62 when the accident happened about 9 p.m.
Johnson and Boyd were on the ground and were trying to hand
Bentley the antcnna, a release from the Pickaway County Sheriff's
Office said.
The accident occurred ncar Harrisburg, aix&gt;ut 15 miles southwest
of Columbus.

Ex-inmate sues Summit deputy
AKRON - A former Summit County Jail inmate has sued a
deputy who was convicted of sexually assaulting him in his jail cell .
The suit, filed on Monday, seeks $40 million in compensatory
and punitive damages from former Deputy Nicholas J. HiiiOn for
assaulting the inmate. The suit also states that Sheriff David Trout'
man and the sheriffs department did not properly supervise Hilton.
HiiiOn pleaded guilty in ApriiiO anemptcd sexual battery. Hi liOn
was accused of masturbating on the inmate on Jan. 28, after the
inmate refused to perform oral sex on him.
The inmate, who filed the federal lawsuit using the pseudonym
John Doe, is seeking permission from the judge to keep his name
secret from the public.
His auorney, Gary Rosen, said h.is client is now serving time at a
state prison and revealing his name could put him in jeopardy.

REAC·H OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!
\

...

Police pressing charges
against Klan protest~rs

BOWLING GREEN (AP) Police have used videotapes of a
June 18 Ku Klux Klan rally here to
arrest two people and they are
looking for six others, The (Toledo) Blade reported.
The arrests were made after LL
Tom Brokamp watched videotapes
of the rally at the Wood County
Courthouse.
Bowling Green police said the
two arrests were the ftrst after-thefact arrests of protesters by their
department.
"In looking at the tapes, I just
decided there was some criminal
charges there, and I got the green
light from the bosses and the prosecutors to go ahead," with an investigation, Brokamp told The Blade.
Three people were arrested on
misdemeanor charges at the rally.

Two signed waivers ~and one was
tried last month, found guilty of
disorderly conduct and fined $100.
But Brokarnp identified members of the anti-Klan crowd, including several members of the Detroitbased National Women's Rights
Organizing Committee, whom he
said committed crimes at the rally.
He contacted police agencies in
Michigan, Columbus and Toledo to
identify the individuals.
Saturday, Brokamp went to a
Klan rally in Dayton, and made
two arrests.
Marveeta Davis, 23, of Detroit,
was charged with inciting to violence, a third-degree felony. She
allegedly spit on a man wearing a
pro- Klan shirt.
Ms. Davis was transported to
the Wood County jail Monday .

The acquaintances met at the
door of the psychiatrist's office.
"Hi,' said done, "you coming or
going?" "If I knew that," said the
other, "I wouldn~ be here."

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Page 4

Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
In 60s. Thur,;day, partly cloudy.
H lghs In the 80s.

•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. IW

WAPAKONETA - A month -long celebration 1.0 mark the 25 th
anniversary of native son Neil Annstrong's moon landing has put
evenI organizers in debt.
Low attendance at the anni vcrsary events left organizers of
Moon Walk ' 94 about $73,000 in the red . Annstrong grew up in this
west-central Ohio town and now lives in Lebanon - about30 miles
nurthca.-;1. uf Cinci nnati .
"Museum attendance has been very good. But the programs
were really disappointing, especially the concerts," said John Zwcz,
co-chairman of the event and manager of the Neil Ann strong Air
and Space Museum.
An estimated 3.500 people showed up for a grand finale on the
anniversary of the moon landing. Organizers had hoped 5,000
would ati.Cnd.
Armstrong did not al.lcnd any of the events in Wapakoneta
although he did make a surprise appearance al an air show in nearby
New Knoxville on July 17.

Ohio Lottery

Reds win
5th straight'
contest

workers' comp bureau chief quits

By

==--=;____J

1994

2 Sectiono, 14 Pageo 35 oenta
A Multimedia Inc. N-o paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 3, 1994

Copyright 1994

Treasury testimony irks Senate panel chair
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Anned with incomplete and contradictory Whitewatcr testimony from Treasury Department witnesses. the chairman of a
Senatc committee today admonished Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen to
ensure that his aides be more forthcoming in future appearances hcfore
the panel.
Sen. Donald Riegle, chainnan of the Senate Banking Committee, sa1d
Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman, during 10 hours of testimony
Tuesday, "acknowledged answers not as complete as they could have
been."

Riegle, D-Mich., also questioned the statements of Joshua Steiner,
Beni.SCn's chief of staff, who disavowed his frank, and potentially damaging, diary entries about the Whitcwater matter.

-,l lhink that 's a problem we can'1 have again from anybody in the
Treasury Department, whether it's Mr. Alunan, Mr. Steiner or anybody
else who comes before this committee," Riegle said.
He asked for BenL&gt;cn's assurance that he would direct his staff to give
the committee "direct, full complete answers."
"That certainly is my intention and my direction to anybody representing Treasury,'' Bentsen. replied.
Alunan faced more grilling today from the House Banking Commiti.Ce,
which resumed 1ts own hcanngs on the Resolulion Trust Co.'s invcstigaI.Ion of the failed Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan.
The Arkansas thrift was owned by Clinton's business partner in the
Whitewater land venture, and criminal referrals said the president and his
wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, may have benefitted from improper actions

Scholarship recognizes
local FFA leader's efforts
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Hard work and, talent paid bff
for a Letart Falls woman who
has earned a national scholarship for her work with the
Future Famiers of America.
Eighteen-year-old Stcphanie
Sayre was honored as one of 10
recipients of the $1,000 Business Men's Assurance Co.
scholarship -out of 2,616
applicants. Sayre is the only
winner of this award from Ohio,
said Sean Keane, a BMA representative who presented the
award to Sayre Tuesday afternoon.
"Stephanie so wonderfully
possessed the qualities we were
looking fov - good grades,
agriculture-related training,
~haracter, .leadershil'. an~
mvolvemem m many acuvmcs,
Keane said. "Today' s costs of ·
education are rising yearly and
we want to help young people
pursue careers in agriculture."
Sayre plans 1.0 attend her first
year of college at the University
of Rio Grande and latcr transfer
to Ohio Statc University, studying veterinary medicine.
"It's an agriculture-based
career and it's something I want
to stay close to, and it's also a
career in medicine which I also
want to pursue," Sayre said. "I'd
describe myself as outgoing,
confident and easygoing."
Sayre graduated fifth in the
1994 Southern Local High
School class with numerous
activities, including drama,
yearbook staff, National Honor
Soceity, band, choir and student
council, to her credit.
The 1993 Meigs County
Junior Fair Queen, Sayre also
won the grand champion honor
for her exhibit of 10 pounds of
tomato at the Ohio State Fair
last year. She has served as
- chapter president, secretary and
reporter for the Racine Southern
FFA.
Even though the FFA wasn't
considered the "in" crowd,,
Sayre said she's learned a lot
from this experience.
Her father, Aaron, who owns
the 21-acre produce farm the
family runs, is the director of
the Racine Southern FFA chapter. The FFA is a national orga. nization of 427,000 members in
7,500 local chapters.
"She's a special kid. She's
one of the only ones that I've
taught that has learned everything," Mr. Sayre said. He has
cased his daughter into management of tile ·rann production and
she has done admirably, he

added.

"In the classroom, it's bookwork and memorization. Out
here it's hands-on and you learn
things through trying," she said.
"Most of the time when they
think of agriculture
think of

ns

~nsure_passage.

• When congressional negotiators
putlhe finishing touches onlhe sixyear, $33.2 ~illion Ie$islation last
,Week, many predicted 11 would pass
1J1e full House and Senate early this

Association sets schedule
for Middleport River Festival
ncrs the possibility of adding new
events. Sumo wrestlin g suits and
karaoke could even lie added if
enough interest is shown, Dooley
added.
The community group pur chased two banners for $400 1.0 be
posted at each end of the village.
The banners can be used for about
eight years, he said.
A three-on-three basketball tournament, sponsored by Pepsi, will
also be held from I0 a.m. 10 5 p.m.
on Second Avenue between Walnut
and Coal streets.
Some area craftspeople have
already committed to setting up
area."
booths at the festival, Doclcy said.
Much of this year's celebration Basket makers , bear makers, herb
will be sponsored by Don Tate GM vendors, miniature train collectors
Center in Pomeroy.
and stone polishing artisans are set.
"Once we secured assistance
''I'm conccmed that we get our
from Don Tate it was incredible," local craftspeople involved," DocDooley said. "It's almost incredible ley added. "When this was first
what you can do."
started that was what this was for ,
The assured funding gives plan- and we want to keep that."

By GEORGE ABA.l'E
Sentinel News SUllY
Excitement is beginning to build
over plans for this year's Middleport River Festival.
Plans for the Sept. 17 event,
including a schedule of events,
were presented at the monthly Middleport Community Association
meeting Tuesday night.
"There's been a lot of people
working hard to get this together
this year," said Association President Tom Dooley. "One of the
nicest things about the festival is it
shows community interest - not
just in Middleport but the whole

Local craftspeople should contact Johnsons' Variety Store, which
will co;ordinate the crafts portion of
the program.
Two music groups from outside
the area will be added this year,
Docley added. The festival will utilize 1.w0 stages for shows - a
street and park stage.
The schedule for the festivities
will be at the street stage:
11 :30 a.m.- pet parade.
12 p.m. - queen crowning.
12:30 p.m. - Dec and Dallas.
I:30 p.m. - Satin &amp; Lace pompom squad.
2 p.m. - Kim BaLey.
3 p.m. - Dazztin' Dolls baton
group.
3:30p.m. - The Back Porch
Swing Band.
4:30 p.m. - New Vision Trio
gospel group.
5 p.m. - Specks of Blue bluegrass band.
(Continued on Page 3)

Ex-area bank official sentenced
to two years on federal charges
FARM TOUR - Stephanie Sayre, in the foreground, leads a
tour ol' the 21-acre family farm. Here, she picks Hungarian Hot
peppers ror Keane in the background. Sayre has managed the
produce operation for two years.

Following his incarceration, Sargus saiJ.
GALLIPOLIS - A former
Ohio Valley" Bank vice president Berridge will serve five years proBerridge later returned· to the
was sentenced 1.0 two years in jail bation and begin paying restitution court and pleaded guilty without
Monday, nearly one year after on a schedule to be established by making a statement. and lhc plea
pleading guilty 1.0 bank fraud and the U.S. Probation Department.
was accepted.
Berridge faced a maximum
intentional misuse of social securiBerridge pleaded guilty last
penalty of $1 million and 30 years August to using fictional names
ty numbers.
Michael Berridge, 38, Dublin, in jail. Sargus declined to comment and security numbers to create
formerly of Gallipolis, was on the sentencing handed down by loans; he also added unauthorized
remanded into the custody of the District Court Judge Sandra Beck- amounts to actual loans and kept
U.S. Marshal Service after being with.
the funds for his own usc.
The former banker was sched"I think it's always unfortunate
sentenced in the U.S. District Court
uled to be sentenced two months when a person is placed in a posiin Columbus.
U.S. Attorney Edmund A. Sar- ago, Sargus said, but an "unusual tion of trust and they abuse that
trust for personal gain," Sargus
gus Jr., said this morning Berridge wrinkle" delayed the case.
At his original sentencing, said.
will have to serve more than 22
months of actual incarceration. Berridge made a statement indicatOVB estimated a loss of
Federal sentcnces do no allow time in~ he did not believe he was $86,500 from the acts of fraud,
off for good behavior during the guilty. Aftcr hearing the statcment, which took place over a nine-year
first year, he explained, and only a Beckwith refused to accept the period. Berridge was dismissed
guilty plea and set the case for trial, from the bank in July I 991.
small amount for the second year.

Voinovich
jeers Inmon
protest fast
NATIONAL SCHOLAR - Stephanie Sayre, or Letart Falls
at right, accepts a national scholarship award from Sean Keane
or BMA Insurance. Sayre earned tbe scholarship as one or 10 in
the nation for her activities in tbe Future Farmers of America
and her stellar academic record.
farming. But there is biotechnology and ethanol-production
involved now."
Sayre started working on the
family fann in the third grade
and has earned the respect of the
other workers as crew chief
through her hard work, she
added.
"Being younger (and in
charge) is difficult," Sayre said.
"Most of them are m friends

and I don't want them mad at
me. It's kind of awkward. They
say I'm a slave driver."
As the manager of the operation, she had to adjust to not
being able to ask her father
questions because he told her it
was up to her.
"Running a fann well takes a
lot of common sense, and timing
is
here," Sayre said.
"!like
own boss."

House delays crime bill action
' WASHINGTON (AP)- House
Oction on a crime bill providing for
,000 more police officers and
ens
of new death penalties is
;
delayed as supporters 9C111111llle to round up enough votes to

a1 the S&amp;L.
Bentsen !Old the Senate panel thai it wasn't umil March 3 that he dis covered Altman , then acting head of the RTC, had met with While House
staff about the Madison investigation.
"I have turned the Treas ury Department upside duwn, I have turned
my memory ins1de out, we went lhrough thousands and thousands of doc uments and can't find one wnttcn briefing to me on these White House
meetings ," he said.
He took responsibility for his department's actions, but noted that Alt man had since recused him se lf from the Madi son investigation .
"Whal you have here is a unique conflue nce of Circumstances lhJI.
when you strip away all the rhetoric, resulted in actions that broke no
criminal law , did not violate the ethics rules and did not in any way effect
the Madi son case,'' Bentsen said.

week.
But concerns have been raised
that a diverse group of lawmakers
objecting 1.0 various features of lhe
bill may torpedo it by rejecting
rules under which the House is to
vote on passa$1:.
Objectors mclude conservatives
opposed to the bill's ban on
assault-style weapons and black
lawmakers upset by the exclusion
of a provision that would have

allowed minoritr defendants to
introduce statistical evidence of
racial bias in death-penalty cases.
"Until we have (a House majority oO 218 in blood, there's concern,'' said one Justice Department
offiCial working on the bill.
To allow supporters to round up
votes, lite House leadership put off
Rules Commiuee action on the bill
originally scheduled for Tuesday.

COLUMBUS (AP) - For independent governor candidate Billy
Inmon, the third day of his political
hunger strike began today with
temptation, an ear ache and a 2pound weight loss.
Inmon is fasting outside the
Statehouse to try to force Republican Gov. George Voinovich to
debate him before the Nov. 8 election.
Temptation for Inmon, a fanner
Ohio State Fair manager, came
from a radio station that brought a
chef to his park bench to make
omelettes. He declined to break a
fast he started Monday. and was
not upset with the stunt.
"It was all in good fun," Inmon
said today. "They began 1.0 make
omelettes for people who stopped
by."
Inmon spent an uneventful night
under the stars. He left the grounds
brieny foc a morning shower, shave
and change of clothes at the nearby
YMCA which has sent him a free

I

pass.
Inmon said he has developed a
paiaful ear infection that he
auributes to exposure to damp,
open-air conditions. He does not
intend to see a physician, but asked
a supporter 1.0 bring him some ear
(Continued on Page 3)

CANDIDATES MEET- Gubernatorial candidates Rob
Burch, a Democrat, left, and independent Billy Inmon right spoke
with the media Tuesday on the Statehouse lawn i~ Col~mbus
where lnmoo was in the second day of a hunger strike. Burcb sup:
ports Iamon 's demand that Republican Gov _ George Voinovicb
toclude Inmon in any debates. (AP)

.

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