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10

The Dally Sentinel

Monday, August 8, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Braves
stop
Reds

Palm readers can't read through the lines of life, Ann say
Dear Ann Landers: I'd like lD
respond lD "Troubled in Holland,
Mich.," who was concerned about
her young daughiCf's shon lifeline.
I can assure her that she has
nothing lD worry about.
SeverJ.! years ago, my niece, who
considered her-sdf a serious psychic.
looked Jt my palm and observed
that my !Jfclinc was unusual ly shon
She then showed me hers. \.'hich
was much longer. She d1cd before
she rr,Ichcd age 60. and I arn still

" t 994 L :&gt;sAngeles

l 1mes S i·ncl•cale and
C •eot! ors Synd•ca ts "

gomg strong at 86. -- ANTI HOKUM IN MICI-UGAN
DEAR ANTI: As I said before --

by Bob Hoeflich

Can you believe that Katie and
Bob Crow will be marking their
50th wedding anniversary this
coming Sunday? Doesn't seem
possible . A public reception is
being held by their sons and daughters-in -law from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Carleton School in Syracuse.
Quite a few of our residents had
the pleasa nt c•pericnce of being
aboard the Mississippi Queen for a
seve n day trip recently.
They did the trip as panicipants
in th e Classic O ne program of
Bank One and were accompanied
by Maxine Griffith, bank employee, who se rves as tour leade r on
many of these trips.
The group boarded at Cincinnau
to go down the Ohio, Kentucky
Lak c{l'cnncsscc Rivers to Cha ttan ooga , Tenn. The cruise was
billed as the Big Band Cruise with
the bands or the late Glenn Miller
and the late Guy Lombardo providin g th e mu sic . The Miller band
played three nights and the Lom bardo band for four and I'm told
the music was "just wonderful."
Besides the lu•ury of the MissisSippi Queen to enjoy . the group had
some interesting ground tours
including stops in Loui sville, Ky.,
starting at the famous Churchill
Downs; Shiloh National Military
Park in Sh iloh, Tenn .; Florence,
Alabama, and the U. S. Space and
Rocket Center in HunLwillc, Ala.

was talked into having my palm
read. I was told:
I. My ex-husband would die of a
heart attack within the year. He is
still very much alive.
2. I would meet or already knew a
man named Arnie who drove a large
blue lumry sedan. I'm still on the
lookout [or Arnie.
3. I would be driving a bigger,
better car within a year. I kept my
old car for 10 more years.
4. I would be promoted to a high
position. I worked in a smal l family
business, and nobody was ever
"promoted" until somebody died.
5. A relative would leave me quite
a lot of money. No one ever left me
a dime.
Not one thing the palm reader tDid
me panned out-- CJ. IN ARIZONA
DEAR CJ .: I have hundreds of
letters from people saying that the

Dtar Ann Landers: I'm writing
calm down 'Troubled in Holland,
Mich." When I was young,
someone read my palm and told me
I would die young. I didn't let it
worry me. When I was in my early
30s, another palm reader told me I
wou~ soon be stricken with
a serious illness but would
recover from it. Both statements
were false . I am now HO and in the
best of health . -- Still Here in
Ohio
Dear Ann Landers: About palm
readers: Twenty -f1ve years ago, I
lD

Beat of the Bend ...
,.\ rc· yn u one of those people
"'ho have one of those concrete
):C C\ C wh1ch you cos tum e to the
nu1c ·' for hohdays' 1
II so. you might want to give
your goose c"c llcnt exposu re at
the Me igs County Fair where it will
be: v1cwed by hundreds of people.
A new feature thi s year will be a
hcst dressed concrete goose contest
and you can usc a Christmas, Eastcr. Halloween, or patriotic theme in
cllstunung your goose for the competition. There will also be a mis ce llan eous costuming category in
which anything goes.
If you'd Iike to enter in the fun,
you must register this Wednesday
m Thursday when the secretary's
office o n the fairgro un ds wi ll be
open to accept all open class entries
from I0 a.m. to 4 p.m. There will
be cash premiums and a 'best of
show" will be se lected from the
entire "flock" of costumed geese.

palm reading is not a science; it's a
parlor game that can scare the
daylights out of a person. My mail
turned up a surprising number of
leuers from people who share this
view. Keep reading for more\ln the
subject:
r

Locals taking the cruise included Robert and Addalou Lewis,
Billy and Be uy Thomas, Rachael
Down1c, Abbie Strauon, Dorothy
Davis and Clara Mac Davis. Clara
Mac Davis of Middleport was
jo in e d by her son, William and
wife. Mary Ann. of Lima. and
Maxine Griffith's sister and brother-in -law, Janet and Herb Jones,
Columbus, also JOined the group.
Altogether there were 21 Classic
One members from our general
area making the trip.
I don't know if you'll be seeing
Wallace Bradford at the 1994 fair
or not.
Wally wa s so active with the
fair for years and although he gave
up serving on the board he was
alway s here on there on thet
grounds. This year, however, he is
recuperat in g from a hip replacemelll operation so his attendance is
probably "iffy". He is doing well
following the surgery, however.
His wife. Muriel, a former fair
board secretary who has also
helped out in the fair board office
during the fair since retiring as secretary, probably isn't going to be
on hand thi s year either. Shucks!
Live entertainment docs come
high doe sn't it? I understand
ad mission to the Barbra Streisand
conccns was m the neighborhood
of S250 per person. Seems like
that would be an awful Jot of groceries. Oh well , easy come, easy
go, I guess. Do keep smiling.
Bob Hoenich is a former general manager or and regular
co lumnist lo The Daily Times
Sentinel.

palm readers they had v1sited missed
the mark by a mile. This one has a
new angle:
Dear Ann Landers: I was
interested in your conclusion that
palinistry is more a parlor game than
a science. Call it what you want. 1:
made a lot of trouble for me.
I had my palm read si• months
ago in Indianapolis. The woman !Did
me I would be moving tD a smaller
city "soon," which turned out tD be
true. She then said I wou ld have a
car accident at a busy intef50Ction.
(She named it)
That "busy intersection" was one
I always used on my way to work
and back. I made a special effon tD
be extremely careful when I
approached that comer, but damned
if a woman didn't run a yellow light
at that very spot It cost me $840 tD
get the fender dents out

What do you have to say
about this, Ann Landers? -JUST
WUNNDERRIN'
IN
BLOOMINGTON,IND.
DEAR JUST: Sorry about the
fender, but it may be that whenever
you approached that intersection,
you became slightly unhinged. I'd
say you subconsciously set yourself
up for that accident. Never
underestimate the power of
suggestion .

Is life passing you by? Want to
improve your social slllls? Write for
Ann Landers' new booklet , "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check
or money order for $4.15 (this includes postage and handling) to:
Friends, clo Ann Landers, P.O. Box
ll562, Chicago, 111. 606JJ4J562. (In
Canadn, send $505)

Community calendar
The Communily Calendar is
published as a free service lo
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sa les or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

vacation Bible schoollhrougn Aug.
12 from 5:30-8:30 p.m. at St. Paul
Lutheran Chuch.
Bible school to Aug. 12 6:30-9
p.m. at Hope Baptist Church.
RACINE - Racine Board or
Public Affairs meeting Monday, 7
p.m . at Star Mill Parle
PORTLAND - Bible schoo168:30 p.m. at Portland Church of the
Nazare ne until closing program
Friday at 7 p.m.

SYRACUSE - Bible school,
Syracuse Nazarene Church, Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m . to
noon. Theme "VIP Club".

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Cou nty
Chamber of Commerce, Tuesday,
noon to I :30 p.m. Meigs Mine 31,
Parker Run Portal on state Route
124. Lunch provided by Southern
Ohio Coal. Short surface motor
tour of the Parker Run Portal and
impoundment.

MIDDLEPORT - Silver Run
Baptist Church, Bible sc hool , 6-8
p.m. Monday through Saturday.
RACINE - Southern Volleyball informational meeti ng, Monday, grades 7-12, at high school, 6
p.m.
POMEROY -

Community

IS BETTER

TO PERFORM - The Renet:tions Trio, of New Haven, W .Va.,
wiU be at the two-day fourth annual Gallia County Gospel Sing 6'
p.m . Aug. 19 and 3 p.m. Aug. 20 at the Gallia County Fair~rounds
in Gallipolis. Thirty to 40 groups from Kentucky, VirgiDta, Obio
and West Virginia will participate. Admission is rree and a concession stand and camping will be available. Some seating is available,
but lawn chairs are suggested.

''I

CAlCUlATOI!

THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF
399

ROLL
BAG

499

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS

SUPER VIEW SOLAR

799

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BASIC 3-SUBJECT99""

NOTEBOOK

CALCULATOR

COLLE GE RULED

120SHEE1S

379

79

35MM COLOR FILM

RITEAID
HEAVY DUTY
BATTERIES

24 f)(PQSURES

"C" OR-o· - 2 PACt\ OR 9 VO...T -

KODAK GOLD
SUPER 200

ORAL-B ADVANTAGE
TOOTHBRUSH

e

CENTRUM
VITAMINS
SILV£R 1CIO'S

~NGLE

419

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

ADVANCED CARE

•

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149

OUTRAGEOUS
HAIR CARE &amp;

COO.. SPORT. ~0. FRESH 00 MUSK 00

DEOD FRESH. SPORT SCENT OR MUSK 2 250l. OR

STYLING PRODUCTS

LADY POWER STICK ANTI-PERSPIRANT
SOUO OR AOLL-QN 1 5 OZ

B OZ. TO 15 OZ. SIZE

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CHOLESTEROL TEST

• 91'4t~Tl •FAST RESULTS 1~ ...m~vTE S
• EASY TO R£AD '*SULTS • TOll F"RH NUMOlA IOANSW!:A OUESOONS

Nathan Rothgeb
celebrates his
first birthday

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

339

25 UG TABLElS OA KAPSEALS 24'S

GELTABS OR GELCAPS 50'S

!!'iS"

BENADRYL
ALLERGY
MEDICATION

lOO'S PLUS 30 OR

EXTRA STRENGTH
TYLENOL

REGULAR OR ANGLED

Nathan Fred Rotbgeb, son of
, Todd and Beverly Rotbgeb,
Langsville, celebrated bis first
birthday on July 15 at !be home of
bis parents. A "Winnie the Pool!"
theme was carried out
T ho se
attending
were :
grandparents, Fred and Pauline
Hoffman and Libby Rothgeb; great
grandparents, Ima and Floyd
Kingery; Mike and Vicki Hoffman,
David, Katby. Lian. and Marice
Hoffman, Jon. Tami, Trevor and
Jordan Buck, Jo Beth Rothgeb,
Wedzel Kingery, Nick Smith and
Donna Houck, Jason and Jake
Proctor.
Those sending gifts were: great
grandmotber, EDen Smith; Ted and
Dolly Spires, Terry Rothgeb,
Carlos, Pat, Shawn and Shane
Swisher, Anita Short

4-5-15-23-25

Page4

RITEAID
..a9
12HOUR
I .
NASAL SPRAY
1 oz

COLGATE
SHAVE CREAM
IRISH SPRING, REG.

OR WITH ALOE 11 OZ.

WE RESEffoiE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUNI4TITIES

SOM£ ITEMS MAY NOT Be AVAII..A8Lf IN At.L STOA£5

.. ....... ... ....... ... Photo Center ·········••··•·•······ COKE &amp; DIET COKE
12 pk. 12 oz. cans

COKE &amp; DIET COKE
6 pk. 20 oz. N/R

COKE &amp; DIET COKE
2 liter

HERR'S CHEESE CURLS
7 oz.

Beverage items plus applicable taxes and deposits
BEVERAGE pqiCES ARE f OA NON-REFRIGEAAT£0 PAOOIJCTS ONI.V

For the Rite Aid Pharmacy near you...call 1-800·4-DRUGSTORES ,.

Low tonlghl in SO .. , (.' ltar,
cool. Wednesday, partly _\unny,
high in 80s.

•

enttne
Vol. 45, NO. 61
CopyrlghtteM

t Seetion, tO Pagoo 35 cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 9, 1994

Middleport pulls out of insurance plan
without health insurance, Horton said. 1 hts t-naay, tnc VIllage may meet
in special session to talk with a local insurance agency about gelling
accepted for insurance.
"We're doing the best we can to ensure the village will have comparable coverage and it's something that we can afford,"l-lorton said.
The group self-insured plan - the Ohio Government Be nefits Plan was designed for larger employers and had cost $88,200 a year, Horton
had said in previous interviews with The Daily Sen linel.
The original administrator of the insurance group allegedly stole from
the fund and reponedly fled the country, Council Pres1dcnt Bob Gi lm ore
said.
Horton wi ll meet today in Marietta with other members of the insurance group and withdraw from the plan. At the end of July, the vi llage
had a premium balance of $29,993.77 in the account, with claims m July
and August still outstanding, he added.
"We can get out when we're solvent. I[ we' re not solven t we can't get

By JIM FREEMAN
• Sentinel News Starr
Voters in Pomeroy will decide a
· l-mill renewal levy for ftre protection after Pomeroy Village Council
Monday night approved placing the
i~sue on the November ballot
Council approved the third reading and acceptance of the resolution placing the issuebefore voters.
Council also gave third reading
and approval to a loan agreement
with Farmers Bank for the purcltase of a new fire/rescue truck for
the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department
The village is taking out a loan
for $145,963 at 5.25 percent interest to pay for the $195,963 truck,
which should be delivered in
·
September following outfitting,
In other fire department matters,
council ratified the appointment of
Eric M. White to the fire department
Mayor John W. Blaettnar noted
that work is progressing on the slip

on East Main Street ncar Nyc
Avenue. State agencies are now
doing the work, he said.
Blacunar also said village workers would start working on pothole s throughout the village as
soon as work was completed on the
municipal building roof.
Two citations were issued followed building code inspections by
Village Administrator John Anderson, Blaettnar said.
The monthly financial statement
by Clerk Kathy Hysell contained
the follow balances for July:
General - $71,570.15;
Safety- $6,710.14;
Street- $19,341.16;
State highway - $6,476.81;
Fire - $46,979 .50;
Cemetery- $1 I,577.49;
Water - $62,694.80;
Sewer - $54,036.69;
Guaranty meter - $18,359.99;
Utility- $176.75;
Fire truck - $37,087 .26;
Cemetery- $7,212.77;

Cemcte'ry endow me nt
$38,1 I8.57;
Police pension - -$644.08;
Building fund - $4,770.93;
Recreation- $2,412.89;
Permissive tax - $3,541. 74;
Law enforcement - S1,168.62;
Total- $391.592. 18.
Disbursements and receipts for
July totalled $113,748.14 and
$73,758.86, respectively.
In other business, council:
• Approved the minutes of the
July 25 meeting.
• Accepted the mayor's repon of
$3,933.
• Paid bills.
• Approved purehase or a pipecutting saw [or $824 for use by the
water department and al so th e
sewer and street department. Funds
for the purchase will come from the
water and sewer fund.
• Agreed tD send a lener of commendation to Patrolman Scott
Jonas, who resigned July 29.
(Continued on Page 3).

out:" Horton SaJd,_ ad~!i~g that some commu nities in the plan will be stuck
unul debts arc paid . I vc talked to the employees and they know not to
go to the hospital unless it's an emergency."
. One Vil lage employee:, who a~ked to remain un1d cnuficd, said going
w1~0utmsurancc will be ro ugh, espcc•ally for those with children.
" . ThiS msuranc~ that they had, I've n ever used It," the employee said .
.
I m hopmg that! II not have to usc 1tm the nc.t si• months."
Co uncil also voted to try 10 recoup money and claims costs from the
old msurancc plan .
Big Bend Water District
. In other action, council tabled the third reading of an ordinance that
wou ld remove the v1 llagc from the Big Bend Water Distri ct.
Counc1l deadlocked on what action to lake, wi th Gilmore and council
members Beth Stivers and Nick Robinson voting tD wait before leaving
the diStrtct. Councilmen J1m Clatworth y, Mick Childs and Paul Ge rard
(Contin ued on Pa~e 3)
.

Readying for the fair BEF sales
may top
$1 billion:
chairman

Lennox Lu, a 2-year-old tro11ing filly, warms down after a
workout Monday morning. Lu's trainer, April Swatzel of Rock
Springs, said she has jogged the horse between three and four
miles to get ready for next week's Meigs County Fair. The lilly
will compete in its first Meigs fair race next Thursday. Swatzel
said sbe bas worked with race horses for eight years. (Sentinel
photo hy George Abate)

Anti-food tax activists file election petitions
!&lt;ID'S
KNAPSACK

CLASS OF 1931- The Ch.. ter High School Class of 1931 celebrated their 64th year or graduation from high school at a gathering recently at the Chester firehouse. They were joined by two of
their teachers. Pictured left to right, they are seated, Bertha Smith,
teacher, Fred Smith, John Bailey, and Pauline Ridenour, and
standing, Earl Knight, teacher, Opal Wickham, Irene Parker, Virgil McElroy, Betty Davisson and Nellie Parker.

Buckeye 5:

Pomeroy to place one-mill
fire levy on this fall's ballot

PRICES EFFECTIVE AUGUST B THRU 14, t994

'

955
Pick 4:
5636

. ...

DARWIN - Bedford Town s hip Volunteer Fire Department
Committee meeting Tuesday at
7:30 p.m . at Bedford Township
Hall.

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

Pick 3:

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
The village of Middleport will pull outof its.emp loyee insurance plan
.
today, officials decided at a regular counc1l meeung Monday n1ght.
This action cou ld mean a loss of more than $10,000 m already-prud
premiums and employees going at least two months with no health insurance, Mayor Dewey Horton said.
.
. .
Council also agreed by a 4-3 vote tD wall before re~ovmg ltsel[ from
the Big Bend Water District This vote was the flfst ume Horton had to
break a tie since he took office last year.
In other business, residents soon will have to pay more for building
permits - the first increase in 32 years - because of new federal flood
rules, Honon said. If the village does not c.omply the federal government
could raise the rates or cut the village' s flood insurance, he added.
Insurance coverage
'the village's 22 employees and their. families
-.. may go two month s

'MIDDLEPORT- Vacation

MONDAY
POMEROY - Bedford Townshi p Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m.
township hall.

Ohio Lottery

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - From each of
the state's 88 counties they came:
petitions tD repeal a food tax. And
tD each county they will return: tD
detennine how many valid signatures they contain.
Opponents of a 1992 tax on soft
drinks filed petitions Monday to
place on the Nov. 8 election ballot
a constitutional amendment to
repeal the penny-per-can levy and
prohibit future wholesale taxes on
food .
Numbers from the Stop Taxes
on Food Committee were impressive: 109 boxes of petitions from
88 counties with 707,353 signat~s.

Tax OllJl()nents need valid signa-

Lures of ·34 7, 765 registered voters
from atleast44 counties.
" We'll be shipping them out to
the board of elections just as fast as
we can make copies of them. That

will probably be on Friday," Sec-·
retary of State Bob Taft said.
"We 'II give them two weeks to
cenify the signatures and get back
to us the number of valid signa-

tures . That's the procedure, " he
said.
The petitions were the first submitted for the Nov. 8 ballot in
advance of Wednesday's deadline.

VOinOViCh stands firm not to debate Inmon
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovich still won't
debate independent gubernatorial
opponent Billy Inmon, who has
said he will starve himself if he is
denied an opportunity to debate
Voinovich.
Meanwhile, a minister who
joined in Billy Inmon's hunger
strike had to be revived Monday
after collapsing. Inmon, a former
Ohio State Fair manager, has been
encamped outside the Statehouse

since Aug . I, refusing food and
drinking only water.
Inmon said he will not e&lt;~L until
Voinovich, a Republican seeking a
second consecutive term, agrees to
debate him. Inmon said Monday ..
that he was feeling all right after
eight days without food, but he
appeared weak, gaunt and sunburned.
Voinovich has agreed to debate
Rob Burch, the Democrat seeking
to unseat him, but has refused to

debate Inmon. He has said Inmon,
who was hired and fired during
Voinovich's ftrstterm , is a disgruntled e•-statc worker who would
tum a debate into a sideshow.
Voinovich's campaign renewed
the no-debate pledge in a lengthy
statement issu ed Monday after-

noon.

'

"In effect, he is holding his
health hostage. In doing so, he is
threatening me," Voinovich said .

Another pote ntial issue deal s
with casino gambling on the Black
River in Lorain, a propo sa l that
Elyria developer Alan Spitzer
backs.
Taft's office us ually closes at
5:30 p.m., but the law sets no specific hour as a filing deadline. He
said there has been some di sc ussion with Spitzer' s group about an
after-hours deli very.
"![they're going to file late ,
we 'II have someone here, " Taft
said, even if it means an II :59 p.m.
filing.
The pop tax ballot issue would
do more than lift the levy on carbonated beverages that legislators
imposed to raise almost $70 million a year.

..---Hoopla for 3-on-3 hoops'---.
High court decision
wins attorney's praise
A Pomeroy attorney Monday
praised a recent decision ty the
Ohio Supreme Court which ruled
unconstitutional a section of the
Tort Reform Act of 1987 that
allows the reduction of damage
awards in personal injury cases.
By a 5 -2 vote, the justices
reversed the appellate court and
upheld the original decision rendered by Jud~e Donald Andrew
Cox in a Gallta County case lried
and appealied by the Pomeroy law
ftnn of Porter, Little &amp; Sheets.
In the case, Sherry A. Sorrell
was injured by a customer, James
S. Theviner, while working as a
cashier in a small stDre.
A Gallia County jury awarded
her $10,128 for medical expenses,
lost wages and pain and suffering,
but the defendant asked that the
judgmcnl be reduced under the
1987 law by the amount which Sorrell had received from workers'
compensation beneftts, said attorney Jennifer Sheets.
These beneftts totaled approximately $14,000, which meant Sor~U would receive nothing from the
responsible defendant, she added.
The case was tried in June 1990
by Sheets and Frank Poner. Following the trial, a separate hearing
was held to detennine if the jury.

award would be reduced by the
amount of the workers' compensation benefits.
Shee.ts argued at that hearing
that the law was unconstitutional
and Cox agreed. However, the
defendant appealed the decision tD
a coun of appeals, which reversed
Cox's decision and ordered the
reduction.
Sheets appealed to the Ohio
Supreme Court and was assisted in
the appeal by the Ohio Acadcm y of
Trial Lawyers, of which she is a
.,
member.
The Ohio Supreme Coun found
that the law violated the provisions
of the state constitution providing
rights to lrial by jury, due process,
equal protection and open courts.
Justice A. William Sweeney, writing for the majority, criticized the
atmosphere in which the General
Assembly adopted the law.
"The staliite was enacted to cure
a supposed 'insurance crisis,'"
Sweeney wrote. "There is no
demonstrated evidence from which
to conclude that a 'crisis' ever
existed or that (the statute) cured

this 'crisis.'"
Sheets noted that workers' compensation benefits do not cover
pain and suffering and the jury's
(Continued on-Page 3)

The Pepsi three-on·tbree tournament will be held on Saturday, Sept. 17, during the Middleport
River Festival. Posing in front or a display in the Don Tate Motors' showroom are Middleport
Community· Assodation President Tom Dooley, Don Tate Manager Roger Jessie and Robert
Cadogan or Time·Out Productions. Applications for the benefit competition will be available at
Don Tate Motors in Pomeroy and Locker 219 in Middleport. Tbe 18 to 24-year-old age category
~U compete for the $1,000 cash pr~e. However, other age groups may also choose to compete in
tllls casb·prize round. Tbe deadltne IS Sept. 13. Cbecks or money orders should be made to Time
Out Productions.
.

NATHAN ROTHGEB

'

From AP, Starr Reports
The board chairman of Bob
Evans Farms Inc. predict s the
sausage and restaurant company
will top$! billion in an nual sales
within three years.
Daniel E. Evans told 2,020 people attcnrting the annual stDCk hold ers' meeting Monday at Ihe Bob
Evans Farm in Rio Grande he
anticipates annual sales will grow
by $100 million in each of the ne•l
three years.
Sales for the fiscal year ending
Apnl 29 were aboul $700 million .
"This has been a goal of mine
for a long time," Evans said of the
$ ! hillion mark : He said the goal
w1ll be reached m pan by acquisitions.
He said Bob Evans, which purchased H1ckory Specialties Inc.,
about 18 months ago, "is aggres Sively looking for acquisitions." He
said the company hopes to make at
least one purchase eac h in the nc•t
two years.
Shareholders will see a divi dend of 7- l/4 cents per share in
September, thanks to a 12 percent
after-taxes boost in reve nue ove;
the same period in 1993 , Eva ns
satd.
The dividend pa yment is a 7
percent increase over the amount
paid for the ftrst quaner of 1993, he
added.
Net sales for the first quarter
were $197.7 million . up II percent
from the $178.4 million posted in
th e first quarter of 1993, Evans
said. Net income for the f~rst quarter was $13.2 million, compared to
$11.8 mtlhon earned during the
same period a year ago.
Company officials attributed the
increase tD additional restaurants in
operation a nd higher whol es ale
prices on increa sed po und s of
sausage products sold as part of
BEF's [ood products group.
Increased margin s were a lso
noted in the company's charcoal
and liquid smoke products.
BEF operates the Bob Evans
and Owens Family restaurant s
chains in a 19-state area, as well as
a Mexican specialty restaurant
known as Cantina del Rio. During
the ftrst quarter, e•pansion saw the
opening of three full -s ized Bob
Evan s restaurants, two "small
town" Bob Evans restaurants operations designed for smaller
communities - and three Cantina
del Rios.
That brought the tDtal number of
restaurants in operation today to
319, compared to 293 a year ago
"Depending on weather a'nd
availability or sites. our plans call
for the opening or 45 tD 50 restaurants this ftscal year, which more
than doubles the number opened
last year," Evans said.
Of those, 15 will bew the fullsized Bob Evans restaurants 25
will be of the "small town" variety
and I 0 will be Cantina del Rios
'
In other business, shareholders
approved the election of Larry
Corbm, Stewart Owen s and Bob
Raybold as members of the board
, of directors, each to serve threeyear t~nns. ~he company's longterm _mcenuve plan, which has
been m effect for the past decade
was approved for renewal.
'

�...
Tuesda~August9,1994

·Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genoral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Assoc.ated Press, Inland Dady Press Assomuon and
Newspaper Publisher Association

the Amencan

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subjectw ed1llng and must be Signed with name.
address and telepbone number No uns1gned letters wil! l&gt;e pubhshed Letters
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personalilles

A hard case to make
for invading Haiti
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
.
wASffiNGTON - Short or a crisis that thrcaiCns Amcncan lives, or
an intema!Jonal vlllam menacing hrs nerghbors, Pres1dent Clmton has a
hard case to make for a U.S. invasion or Hartr.
He's trying, saying that U.S sccunty is !Jed to democracy, open markets and the rule or law, and that they arc put at nsk when an elected government is ousted.
..
.
.
.
His critics don ' t see that as grounds for mrlitary acllon. Chnton says rl
is a bridge he hasn't come to; admim~trallon policy soli counts on toughened economic sanc11ons, harsh warnmgs, and the threat or armed mtervention to force Haiti's military bosses to qurtm favor or the elected president they ousiCd nearly three years a~o.
.
"We have kept force on the table, ' Clinton said. "We have conunued
to move 11 up as an option as the dictators there have been more obsunatc."
.
. d sed th
.
At Clinton's urging, the u_N, Secunty Cour~erl en or,
at opoon,
ror a U.S.-Ied invasron by an m1emauonal force that hasn t yet been lined
up . That was aimed at intensifying pressure on the mrlltary regime to
y1cld.
. ·
·
1
But the message would be more convmcmg wrth a c ear consensus at
home, and that's lacking. The Senate unan1mously adopted a resoluu~n
on Wednesday declaring that Congress should approve any mvasron. It s
not binding.
That doesn't mean that Congress would say no. And whrlc Clmton sa1d
he would welcome support there, the White House position is that he
could act on his commander in chief powers, wrthout advance approval.
That's a position that doesn't change w1~ pre~1dents. G,corge Bush got
approval ror action against Iraq, although he d S3ld 11 wasn I rcqmred.
Then, Democrats insisted otherwise. Now rt's Republicans.
Sen. Alan Srmpson or Wroming, ror example, sa1d Cllnto~ made a
critical mistake by not commg to Congress,rlfsl, before gcumg U.N.
endorsement. "International support rs rme, S3ld Sen. Bob Dole, the
Republican leader, "but it is no subs~lllte for the support of Congress and
the American people."
.
When troops are committed in a crisis, that backing usually follows,
quickly . And presidents dcfme cnses. That's what happened when Republican presidents ordered the mvasrons or Grenada and or Panama, and m
the Persian Gulf War agamst Iraq.
But in a longSianding situation like this one, it is. bctiCr to rally support
in advance, especially when the arm rs to avord mrlitary act1on .by making
it a compelling lhrcaL That's lacking in this case.
_
. .
"The American poople arc slliiiO the darlc about how mvad10g Hal IllS
in the national inLCrcsts," said Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who,.sponsored
the resolution asserting congress1onal authorrty. .
.
.
The administration maintains that there arc vrtal Amerrcan mtercsts at
slake but the case hasn't always been clear. Among those arguments: ..
__:The refugee problem, whkh Clinton's special advisory on Ha111,
William H. Gray, says stems directly from the repressive government.
Gray said the way to solve it is 10 restore elected president Jean-Bertrand
-Aristede. But since Clinton changed U.S. refugee pohcy on July 6, to pro'. vide nearby havens but not U.S: admission 10 Haitian boat poople, the !Ide
pf refugees has dwindled 10 a tnck.lc.
. The Republicans argue that the. refugee ,problem siCms from the worsening or already impoverished hvmg cond111ons because or the cconomrc
sanctions, and from !he administration's po~icy sh1fts on ~yl~m. . .
_ The safety or more than 3,000 Amerrcan cruzcns sullm Hartl, who
could be at risk. "We have Americans living and working there, several
t.housand of them," Clinton noted.
.
.
--~ ·
But they are not being di~y lhrcatened at thts pomt- Were that 10
happen it would be a provocauon bound to sur support for U.S. acllon.
rrafficking from Haiti, cited by Gray a month ago, altho~~h
there hasnli been much talk or it.laiCiy ..Gregg said no drug ~ficlr.er m
his right mind is going 10 be us10g Haiil 10 the near future, With U.S.
Navy ships Slanding ofrshore.
.
_ A menace 10 hemisphere democracy because or w~t happened m
Haiti_ That's the point Clinton stressed Wednesday mght If you look at
the possible ramifications or that on. other ~untr1es 10 the Carrbbean ~d
in.Central America and South Amcnca, that IS where our nauonal sccunty
iniCrcst is,'' the president said.

. '- Droll

&lt;

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R_ Mears, vice president and colum-

~ nist for The Assodated Press, has reported oa Washington and
~ natiooal polillcs for more than

••

~Letter
•

l

; Dear Editor,

30 years_

to the editor

Getting involved

. ..
• It is rare when a CIVllian comes
: 10 the aid of a polioe offiCer. When
to make a statenlent concern• ing an arrest, people usually say
: t11ey do 1101 wm~t 10 get involved or
: t11ey are afraid to get involved. It is
; even more rare when a civilian is
:willing 10 as.sist a police .officer
• during a physical confronta110n, but
:such an incident took place Thurs:day nighL
• An orfrcer involved in a physi:cal situation on Main Sttect was
~assisted by a motorist who had
'been observing the disorderly coniduct of a subject and had gone 10

:asked

get the police; but this was -not the
end of his involvement When the
offrcer tried 10 make the arrest, the
suspect turned violent. The
motorist got out or his vehicle, and
helped the officer subdue the suspeel until officers from Meigs
County and Middleport could
arrive_
I reel this type of action should
be recognized and commended_
The Pomeroy Police Department
would lilr.c 10 express its apprccialion and thanks 10 Mr. John Boord.
Capt. James E. Stacy
Pomeroy Ponce Department

!Today in history
;By The Asllociated PrHII
: Today is Tuesday, Aug_ 9, !he 221st day or 1994. There are 144 days
:Jeft in the year_. . .
• Today's highlightm hiStory:
~ On Aug. 9, 1945, during World War II, the Unired Stales exploded an
latomie bomb over the Japanese city or Nagasaki, killing an esumated
~74.000 people_
&lt; On this dale:
: In 1790, the Columbia retumcd 10 Boston ~ after a three-year
+-oyage, becoming the first ship to carry the Amencan flag around the
:wot'ld

•

'

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Area deaths:--

Wednesday, Aug. 10

TUesda~August9,1994

Flornell Hazelton

(Kendall) Hanna, all or Columbus;
one brother, Paul Martin or ColumFlomell "Floss" Hazelton, 76, or bus; sisters-in-law and brothers-inReynoldsburg, died Monday, Aug. law, Jrm and Vada Hazelton, Wib
8, 1994 at Mount Carmel Medical and Ruth Young, and Joe Gibbs, all
Cenler. She was a member or the or Pomeroy; and many nieces and
Lad1es Auxl11ary V .F. W. in nephews.
She was preceded in death by
Reynoldsburg. She and her husband are from the Pomeroy-Mrd- her husband, Harry E. Hazelton.
Friends may call from 2-4 p.m.
dleport area, butlert in 1946.
and
7-9 p m. Wednesday at the
Born Feb. 21, 1918, she was the
Schoedmger
Hilltop Chapel, 3030
daughter or the late Guy Martin
W.
Broad
St.
m Columbus. Serand Hazel Russell Martin.
Survivors include one son, Jim; vices will be II :30 a.m. Thursday
one daughter, Geanni (Michael) at the Schoedinger Hilltop Chapel
f'rfe; one grandson, Andrew; three with Pastor Thomas E. Rhoades
SISters, Kate (Leonard) Bragg, officiating. Burial will follow m the
Mrdge (Dave) Sneller, and Ann Sunset Cemetery.

Accu-Wcather" forecast ror daytime conditions and
MICH

Trial lawyers score on
health
Super-lobby1st Tommy Boggs lobby lSI for the !rial lawyers.
"pam and suffering."
scored a stunning victory for his
A widely cited Harvard study
Cahforn1a, for instance, hmits
client, the Associatron or Trial round that the avemge U.S. doctor non-economic damages 10
Lawyers or America on Aug. 2, but spends $15,000 per year in mal - $250,000; Massachuseus and
m movmg to gut medical malpracMaryland, $500,000; and Michitice reform nauonwidc, he may
gan, $225,000.
have overreached
The medical providers and busiTwo or ATLA 's most consistent
ness lobby , the Health Care Llabrlicongressional alhcs, ScnaiC Majority Alliance, has been urging that
ty Leader George M1tchc ll, D- pracucc rnsurancc, and premiums s1milar limns be passed as pan or
Mainc, and House Judic1ary Com- for anesthesiology and obstetrics nalional health care legi slatio n
mince Chairman Jack Brooks, D- can go as high as $200,000 per while ATLA has been righting
Te&lt;as, produced nearly identical year.
against them.
The rate at which doctors gel
he&lt;rhh care bills potentially cancelNow. Mrtchell and Brooks are
mg out state crrons, many quite sued has increased tenfold in the backing a provision for federal law
e&lt;tensive, 10 bnng malpractice past three decades, and the average 10 pre-etnpt state limits, but Bo~gs
award 1n winning lawsuits has claims the measure will not w1pe
claims under control.
Wllh1n the sweeping national mcrcased from $40,000 10 nearly out state award caps unless
conf11c1 over health care reform, $150,000 over the past 20 years, Congress passes its own cap. The
malpractice reronn rs a theater or taking inflation into account.
HCLA counters that federal lawcombat where fighting is espec1ally Lawyers customarily collect suits are certain to be filed against
fierce and expensive, although 1t's between 30 percent and 50 percent stale limits, claiming that Congress
more obscure than the contcsl over of a victim's award, plus expenses.
opposes caps.
To avoid lawsuits, doctors ortcn
employer mandates and pnce conIf ATLA prevails in Congress, it
prac1ice · costly "defensive will be Boggs' second major tritrol s.
It p11s the tr1al lawyers, who hll- mod1cmc," ordenng tests and per- umph this year.
gate on behalf or vic~ms or medi- forming procedures that wouldn't
On June 29, the Senate fell three
cal m1 stakes and collect huge con- ordinarily be necessary. A recent votes shon or the 60 voles necestmgency fees when they win, study by the consulting firm
sary 10 break a filibu ster led by
agamst hospitals, doc10rs and mal- Lewm-Vm indicates that reforms another ATLA acolyte, Sen. Fritz
practrcc rnsurancc compan1es, to control defens1ve medicine could
Hollings, D-S.C., against legislawh1ch often pay huge sums when save $4 billion per year.
tion limiting awards and legal fees
Over the past several years,
they lose and also pay a lot to
in productliabihty cases.
medical groups have won various
msure themselves agamstloss.
In another demonstration or its
Boggs, partner rn the lobby-law limits on malpractice suits in most power, ATLA intervened with
firm of Patton Boggs &amp; Blow and states, including specific dollar then-House Ways and Means Comson of former Rep s. Hal e and limits in 15 states on so-ca lled
mince Chairman Dan RostenkowsLllldy Boggs, D-La., is the icad "non-economic damages." such as ki to slice a $350,000 cap on non-

Morton Kondracke

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

Pomeroy-Middleport, f'hlo

I

R ~t

reform
econom1c damages out or the
health care b1ll approved by the
panel's health subcommntee, on
the grounds that Brooks' committee had jurisdiction over the topic.
To gam influence, ATLA con tributes lavishly to campaigns $4.4 million during the 1992 election cycle and $235,000 so rar in
this cycle, accordmg to Federal
Election Commission filings. The
health industry is spending just as
lavishly, but it has numerous objcclrves in the heallh care reform
f1ght, whereas ATLA 's money is
narrowly focused on product liability and medical malpractice.
Despite a close relatiOnship
between A1LA and President Clinton, the administration's health
care bill contained some measures
so ught by the health industry ,
including 33 percent hmrts on
lawyer's fees and a mandate that
parties try modialion before rilmg
lawsuits.
The Clinton bill contamed no
limits on damage awards, but the
Senate Fmanoe Committee wrote in
a $250,000 limit indexed 10 inflallon. Mitchell's bill, naturally, contains no such limit and eliminates
slate caps. House Majority Leader
Richard Gcphardt, D-Mo., has yet
to deCide whether to incorporate
Brooks' measure into his health
care bill.
Boggs' success on Aug. 2 With
Mitchell and Brooks stunned the
health and business lobbies.
"This ought to be called the
Mitchell-Brooks Trial Lawyers'
Full Employment Act," said
Wayne Sinclair, senior vice president or the MMI Companies, a
malpractice insurance firm . "It
amazes me that the trial lawyers are
not only trying to block reform, but
they've gonen greedy."
With any lucie, overreaching
will rebound against the lawyers. In
the House, Rep. Vic Fazio, DCalif., is working on Gephardt 10
keep Brooks' provisions out or the
House leadership bill and safeguard
his state's reforms. In the Senate,
numerous
amendments
to
Mitchell's bill will be proposed.
Mitchell's wilhngness to compromise on employer mandates
1mproves the chances that some
health care legislation will pass this
year, but it would be a shame if it
contained a windfall for lawyers.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, Ute newspaper of Capitol HiD,)

II r~! ~~ T!IW~II Ee?C~!s~n~:p~ Hill,~!ati~~litical

i_g
sti
First thmg I want to say IS, 1f the
more responsible members of lh~
Republican Party had any sense o
decency, they w~uld rssue an abject
apology to the Vmoent Foster r~rly and then reure to th.e Washrngton Mall for a recantauon c~rcmony reatunng the consumpuon or
barrels or ca~c substances. .
Second thmg ! want to say rs,
the scruffy collcx;uon or pohtrcl3ns,
preachers, radio blabberJOCks,
scribes and slcazords wbo have tormen ted the Foster family for l.o
these many months wrth tbe•r
relentles.s crusade to make ~methmg smrster or the poor man s.su•c1de are damn lucky th1s •~ .a
democracy. If 11 were a drctatorshrp
and I were El Jcfe, .1 would stnp
these creeps to therr BVDs and
lock them m pillones on the Whl~
House lawn and let them bake m
the summer sun unlll Labor Day.
This motley crew hasn't shut up
since July 20, 1993, the day the
deputy counsel to the prcsrdcnt
drove to a C1v1l War fort on the
banks of the Potomac and f1red a
bullet into hrs bram - and the
medra have led. the way. The New
York Post raised the omrnous
specter that Foster had been murde red or, at minimum, his body

~amp al d Wa~hington Times fell
. o;unste~n
behind the Post as did
0
Ill

Rus

h "Truth Detector"

J

0S8

ph Spear

'

who repeated an irresponsible ailegalion that Foster had died in
another location and that his body
had bctn taken 10 the park where it
was discOvered.
Then God's self-appointed prolocutors weighed in. "Suicide or
murder?" ask&lt;:P Pat Robentson on
h1s television show. ''That's the
ominous question ... concerning
vincent Foster's mysterious
death." Jerry Falwell posed similar
questions on his "Old Time Gospel
Hour" broadcast. Indeed, Falwell
took the disgusting campaign a step
further when he began hawking a
v1deo suggesting that Bill Clinton
was involved in a suing or murders.
The narrator or this nasty bit or
conspiratorial bilge is Larry
Nichols, the roJTncr Artansas state
employee who first accused Clio100 or being a womanizer. In recent
months, he has been welcomed to
th~ microphones by 150 radio lalk
h
h
· h'
r d Ll
s fJW osts to au rs un oun c

Starve trek:the
We do a lot or things wrong in
America, but when we hold a walka-thon for quadriplegics, we don't
usually demand their participation_
Unless tax dollars are involved, we
never require contributions 10 a
charity fund from those for whom
it's intended. We don't make victims or a disease contribute to their
own demise. Well, we might subsidize tobacco growers, but that's not
quite the same thing.
Attitudes are changing, though_
The powers that be have decided
that it's time ror those lazybones in
Zaire to walk back home 10 Rwanda. Never mind that they're starving and dying. The deep thinkers in
charge of this operation apparently
figure thai a 50-mile trelc wiD weed
the shirkers from the truly choleraridden. Those who survive the little
hike will get food and shelter ror a
reward.
Spokespeople for this idea from
hell shrug orr criticism of it It's
just another one of those "tough
choices" we're always whining
about. What else can be done?
There are too many people 10 feed,
and most of them arc going to die
anyway. Wby not speed the process
along with a lillie old-fashioned

Li,;.bau~h

escorted around lilce a visiting panjandrum by Rep. Dan Burton, RInd.
Robert Fiske, the special counsel for whose appointment the
Clinton critics had screamed,
employed rive physicians and
seven FBI agents, interviewed 125
witnesses, conducted microscopic,
DNA and laser tests on the evideuce and concluded that Foster
killed himself. Still the critics
sniveled
Rep.
a former insuranoe
salesman who apparently fancies
himself a rorens1c expert, took to
the House noor to challenge the
report. "I'm not saying he was
murdered," Burton said. ''I'm not
saying he didn't commit suicide,
but there arc questions that lead
one to believe that the body was
moved."
On the anniversary of Foster's
death the family issued a statement
deno~ncing the "despicable"
rumor campaign especially the sto.
read b "ihose catlin them~~:f Christlan ministers" ~d the
"shameful statements on the House
Ooor by a legislator who, in our
view is purposefully employing
'
·
d
d
1
outra~eous mnuen o an specu a-

Burton,

hexed

social Darwinism? Ir all who are
lcrt at the end of the uek are deathmarch crossing guards and media
observers, fine. They can afford to

/an Shoales
buy their own lunch. The whole
venture could even tum a profit.
We don 'I give suobe lights to
epileptits, or candy canes to diabetics. Should we make the starving
power-walk to their food? The
notion is bizarre, but I guess it's an
idea, like "compassion fatigue,"
whose time has come. Once I
would have said the starvation consultants in charge don't quile get
the conoept. Now I think they get it
more than I do. They're taking
America's can-do pragmatism 10 iiS
logical extreme. Take Barbra
Streisand's recent act or genaosity.
She sold tickets to her concerts 10
charities at race value; they in tum
scalped the tickets and pocketed
the difference. That's philanthropy
in the '90s,lr.ids. It's a mighty long
way from the soup line.
But what do I know? Ir I put my
palm out and asked for a quarter,
I'd be shunned and feared as a panhandling lazy drug addict If I put

ends." Their "fervent hope,'' the family said, is
''that this matter now will recede
from public view and that the ramily will be left alone."
But the slimcballers who daily
g~thcr beneath the Capitol dome
would have none or that. On July
29, Se~ate banking commiuee
R~pubhcans, led by Alfon~e
D Amato of New York, Connie
Mack or Florida and Lauch Faircloth of North Carolina, probed the
Foster death. AI one point, they
were told a Parle Police mvestigator
was not present and thus could not
testify a~~ the doltish Faircl?lh
mto.~ed, The cover-up conunucs_
.
•.
It turned o~tthc mvesllgator had
gone on vacaoon.
.
Maybe I wo~ld pillory them
across the street m Lafayette Park,
lcst.thc melting grease destroy the
Whrte House lawn.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association,
(For in forma lion on bow to
communicate electronically witb
Ibis columnist and others, contact America OnUne by calling 1800-827-6364,ext.8317.)

generation

my palrii out and aSked for a billion
dollars for research, I'd be showered with quarters. It's not even
considered begging, if the sum or
money asked ror is large enough.
However, we must make sure
that most money raised doesn '1 go
to the cause for which it was
intended. It must all go to staff,
three-color brochures, lobbyisiS
and fund-raising slralegies.
If Johnny needs a new kidney,
Mom and Dad aren't going 10 be
given the bucks to ~o buy one.
They must sweat for rt They have
to rorm their own charity; appear
on local television to appeal 10 the
community at large; organize volunteers to go door 10 door, holding
out donation cans decorated with
Polaroids of liUie Johnny; and pray
that the pennies collected wiU add
up 10 the prioe or a new organ by
the time Johnny's gives ouL If 11
works to the best, the media will
feed us the human-inlerest story,
and we'll all feel warm and fuzzy.
If it doesn't work, well, tomorrow's another news day, isn't it?
The moral? Tough love is the
answer 10 everything. We'll never
fix the homeless problem by
pulling the homeless in homes.

That's wimpy socialism! We're not
going to fix it by making them
build their own holJles, either_
That's simplistic! No, we must
make the homeless build an offroe
building for those who are working
on the homeless problem_ If the
media are there for the groundbreaking, we could raise minions!
Thf!'s whatl'd do, if I had 10 make
some tough choices_
Welfare reform! Reduce the
cycle of dependency! Make the
sick work for a cure! Weed out the
surviving truly needy. Force them
to pay interest on any charity we
grudgingly bestow upon them. In
other words, down for 10 push-ups.
buster, or you'll get no painkiller
rrom me.
(fo receive a complimentary 1an
Shoales newsletter, call l-800-989DUCK or wrile Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St-, Nevada City, CA
95959_)
lao Shoales Is syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically ,..1111
this columnist and others, coatact America OnUne by caiUnal800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

IToledo I 71' I

IMansfield 176" I•
IND

•lcolumbuslab•

I

mta

~
WVA

Showers T-storms Rain

Flumes

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

Via Assoc1a/sd Prsss GnJphJcsNM

C1994 Accu-Woethar, lnc.

Ctlilly temperatures on tap
for tonight throughout Ohio
By The Associated Press
Expect a chilly night across
Ohio tonrght, the Nallonal Weather
Service said. Lows most places w1ll
be m the 50s.
Most or the state will sllart with
sunshine on Wednesday but clouds
will build up from west to east during the day. Temperatures will
remain on the cool s1de for this
time or year, ranging rrom the low
70s in the north to low 80s south.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 98 degrees in 1930
while the record low was 51 in
t989. Sunset tonight will be at 8:37
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
6:38a.m.
Weather forecast:
Today ... Variablc cloudiness. A

chance or mainly mornin~ showers
or thunderstorms cast. Hrghs from
70 to 75 northwest to the mid 80s
southeast
Tonight...Becoming mostly
clear and cool. Lows from 50 to 55
north 10 around 60 rar south.
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny
early .. Then increasing cloudiness.
Highs 70 to 75 north to 80 to 85
south.
Extended forecast:
Thursday ... A chaflCe or showers
and thunderstorms west and
south ... Fair elsewhere. Lows from
the mid 50s northeast to the mid
60s southwest. Highs from the mid
70s northeast to the mid 80s south.
Friday and Saturday ... A chance
or thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 50s to the mid 60s. Highs
upper 70s to the mid 80s.

Filibuster threatens debate
over health reform proposal
1

By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
Associated Press Writer
W ASH!NGTON Arter
decades of fitful sllarts and failed
attempts at national health insurance, the Senate is opening debate
on a Democratic bill designed to
secure health coverage for at least
95 percent or Americans by the
tum or the century.
Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell on Monday promised "a
very vigorous and informative
debate," and expressed hope that
"it can be conducted free or some
or the harsh rhetoric that has
occurred here over the past several
days."
That hope seemed sure to be
dashed.
Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas,
invoiced the threat Monday of a frlibusler, saying "no amount of finger-pointing ... will stop me from
opposing something that is an
anathema 10 everything I believe is
right for America."
Another conservative, Sen_ Jesse
Helms, R-N.C., saying "haste docs
make waste,'' introduced a resolution urging Congress 10 put action
off until next year.
Democratic leaders remained
mtent on pushing the Mrtchell plan
and a companion bill in the House
through thrs month before the lawmakers go home for a delayed summer break.
"This is a very historic week for
every American," Health and
Human Services Secretary Donna
E. Shalala said at a White House
briefing where the administration
released reams or statistics on the
I 5 percent or Americans - almost
39 million people - who now lack
insurance.
The 1,410-page Mitchell plan

The D8ily Sentinel
(USPS llJ-96t)

Publi1hed evtSy Mternoon. Monday throuah
Frida~. Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio by the
otuo Valley Publilhlaa CCimpuyiMuiUmedJa
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Secoa:l clau poataae paid at POmcfOy, Ohio..

Meillber· The AIIOCIIIM Preu, IDII the ObJo

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733 Third Avenue, New Y&lt;lrk. New Ycrt
10017.
POSTMASTER: Scad addtcu chua• lO The
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SINGLE COI'Y
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Dally......................................... --» cen11
Suboeri'&gt;en not iloolri aato pay lhe cotricr ~
remit in advuce direct to The Daily Se~el
00 1 thtee. ail: or 12 momlh buil. Credit wtll be
aivca e.ricr each week.

No IUbltCripllo.. by mall permitted In . . .
where borne Clrritt 1«\'ioe 11 available.
Moll S.hocrlptlau
looldt Melpc-r,

J2 14

H~:!::::::::.::: Mdoo
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1:!:~~
c-.,.
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~:ki;·.·:.~::::·.::::::::.·::::::::·::::::::··::::~.~
52 weea ......................... , ..............$88.-40
I

would overhaul insurance rules and
provide subsidies to help millions
of Americans buy private insurance. It would require employers
with rewer than 500 workers to
orrer wide choices or health plans,
including the option of buying coverage through community-rated
coopera!lves. Larger firms could
self-insure, but would also have to
offer choices between fee-for-service care and managed care.
1r 95 percent or Americans were
not covered bY. the year 2000 and
Congress rarled to take other
action, employers with 25 or more
workers would be required to pay
half their insurance premiums starting in 2002 in states with more
than 5 percent uninsured.
President Clinton was meeting
at the White House today with
business leaders who have
expressed support for employer
contributions 10 health insurance,
universal coverage and conurinment of medical costs.
The Congressional Budget
Office was to deliver to Mitchell
today its official verdict on the
costs or his proposal. Mitchell has
said it would be deficit-neutral.
But congressional sources said
the majority leader was making
last-minute changes to reduce the
costs or his promised subsidies,
which originally provided help ror
pregnant women and children up to
three times the poverty line. The
cutorr now may be scaled back to
240 percent or poverty. The poverty line is currently $14,764 for a
family or rour.
Mitchell planned no votes
before Wednesday at the earliest.
Today 's curtain-raiser was solely
ror opening rhetoric rrom both
sides.

But some liberals were hoping
for an early showdown vote on
1 Mitchell's watered-down employer
mandate, which is crucial to the
Democrats' hopes of gelling an
even tougher bill through the
House.
The House debate on Majority
Leader Richard Gephardl' s plan ~
including an expansion of Medicare for the poor, the jobless and
some small business workers. and a
mandate on employers to pay 80
percent or premiums - won't start
until next week ai the earliest.
Meanwhile, a bipartisan group
of 10 House members were fmishing work on a bill they hope could
garner more support than the
Gephardt plan:

1

One-mill fire levy
(Cootinued from Page 1)
;-Discussed the need for road
repairs.
Present were Blaettnar, Hysell
and councilmen William Haptonstall, Larry Wehrung, George
Wright a!ld William Young. Not
present were couf1Cilmen Scoll Dillon and Jobn Musser.

U.S. offers aid to Haiti if dictators step down
By DAVID MORRIS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Secretary or
State Warren Christopher sai d
today the United Surtes will continue to press but stop short or setting
a deadline ror Haitian army leaders
to step down.
A pledge Monday or $15 mil lion in aid to Haiti - most or
which wrll be g1ven only artcr
e&lt;~led President Jean-Bertrand
Anstide is back in control or the
government - is an "unambiguous signal" that the United States
is committed 10 restoring Aristide
to power, another U.S. offrcial said.
"We are not giving them an
ultrmatum or setting a deadline at
the present time," Christopher told
reporters in Shannon, Ireland,
where he stopped on his return
from the Mideast
Deadlines tend to result in postponement of action until the deadline arrives, he said. The United
States wants no delay, he said.
''We thmk they should leave
immediately and will be continuing
to be exerting pressure," he said.
Aristide, a Roman Catholic
priest and Haiti's first democrallcally elected president, was ousted
by the army in September 1991.
The United Nations has authorized the use or force to overthrow
the Haitian anny leader, Lt. Gen.
Raoul Cedras, and restore Arisude
to power. A U.S J Marine task force
is stationed orr Harti's coast, but
administration officials have said at
least a month would be needed to
prepare a multinational force ror an
mvasron.
The aid agreement was signed

Monday at Haiti's embas sy rn
Washington.
The $1 S million will come from
the sale or U.S.-donated wheat
flour m Haiti. About $3 m1llion
will be made available immediaiCiy
to reed children, the elderly and
disabled.
The rest or the money, ror JOb
creation and adminisrrative costs, is
to be held in a banlc account unul
Aristide is back in power, U.S. and
exiled Haitian orric1als said.
Withholding most or the money
will ensure that it ends up m the
right hands, said Ira Kurzban, a
U.S. lawyer workmg ror the
deposed Haitian government
Last year, the Unrted Slates provided $20 million from wheat sales
m Haiti, but a senior foreign aid
official, speaking on condition or
anonymity, said the de facto government in Port-au-Prince [roLe
some accounts before all the
money could be used.
Aristide called Monday's agreement a new step toward "building
a nation or reconciliation, a nation
or justice, a nation or peace.''
U.S. officials said the aid agreement is a first step 10 helpmg stabilize Haiti's economy.
J. Brian Atwood, administrator
of the U.S. Agency for International Development, sa1d the aid would
send an "unambiguous signal"
that the Umted States is serious
about relllming Aristide to power.
"Wrth the restoration of constitutional government in Haiti, there
will be many more events like
today's, many more occasions ror
agreements between the govern ment or Haiti and the government
or the United States," he said.

Speaker predicts vote
this week on crime bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - Supporters of the $33.2 billion crime
bill hunted for kindred spirits as
House Speaker Tom Foley predicted a vote this week on the measure
that would ban assault-style
firearms and help put 100,000 more
police on America's streets.
President Clinton and con~res­
sional leaders expect the bill rtself
to pass with large bipartisan
majorities, but the stumbling block
remains a vote on the "rule" that
sets procedures for fuU House voting on the crime package.
"There are Democrats, regrettably, who arc resisting the rule, l
think unwisely, and I'm sure there
are going to be Republicans who
will support the rule and bill,"
Foley, D-Wash., said Monday.
Clinton, Foley and other bill
supporters cranked up their armtwisting Monday. Some backers
said they were within five to 10
votes of passing the rule_ But a
senior administration official said
House leaders gave Clinton a list or
20 members they needed his help
in lobbying_ The sources spoke on
condition or anonymity.
"We're picking up support on
the rule day by day," Foley said,
adding, "I think we'll get it on the
floor this week_''
Clinton also kept up public pressure on the National Rine Association and other groups trying 10 prevent the bill from getting to the

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - Direct
Ohio hog prioes at selected buying
points Tuesday by the Ohio
Department of Agricullllre:
Barrows and gilts: fully 25 10 50
oents lower.
u_s. t-2, 230-260 lbs., country
points 4 LS0-43-00, a few 43.25;
plants 42.00-43.75.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 38_()().4 L50.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
' Cattle: 1.00 to 3_00 hi~r­
Siaughter steers: chorce 62_0068.00; select 58-00-64.50.
Slaughler heifers: choice 62.0065.50; select 50-00-62.00.
Cows: steady; all cows 50.15
and down.
Bulls: lower; all bulls 58.25 and
down_
Sheep and lambs: 1.00 10 2.00
lower; choice wools 69-00-72_50;
choice clips 70.00-74.00; feeder
lambs 63.00 and down; aged sheep
30.00 and down,

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Mason County Fair
WEDNESDAY, AUG_ 10
9 a.m. - Fair opens
I 0 a_m. • Open sheep show
II a_m_- Greasy pole climb
I p.m _- Pedal tractor pull
I p.m. - Commercial feeder calf show
2 p_m_ - Livestock judging contest
3 p.m. -The Spetrs (gospel)
4:30p.m. - Hannan High School Band concert
4:30 p.m. - Carrie Hall
5 p.m.- Market lamb show
5:30 p_m. - Missy Smith
6:30p.m. - Mike Durst
7 p_m_- Little Mister and Miss Mason County
7 p.m . - 4-H Leaders Memorial Award
7 p.m. - Junior and open dairy show
7 p.m. - Demolition dtrb}
7 p.m .. Youth horse show
7 p_m, - Junior style show
7:30p.m.- Stephanie Moore
9 p-m. - The Speers
II p.m.- Gates close

Middleport exits plan
(Continued from Page 1)
voted againsl wartrng, sayrng the village should gel out or the venture
before costs mount Horton broke the Lie.
.
.
G1lmore suggested getting more mronnation before making more deci Sions.
[· t
"
"If we pull out of it (the water distncl), we may be out o ll •Orever,
Gilmore said.
In September, council wrll hear from the Ohio EnvlfOnmental Protection Agency, Leading Creek Conservancy D1stnct and Galha County
Rural Water D1stricl. The village w1ll meet w1th Buckeye Hills Reg10nal
Development Authonty at 10:30 a.m. on Monday, Aug. 22 in counc1l
chambers lO discuss [unding options.
_ .
.
Clatworthy sard rcsrdents have told h1m ronnmg a water drslrlct wrth
Pomeroy was a bad decision.
.
"There's absolutely no way that I'll vote for the )JCOPie or Middleport
to pay for repairing lines m Pomeroy," Clatworthy sard.
Under current plans, the waiCr district would have wells in Syracuse
and water would be pumped to the two villages through one Pomeroy
line, Horton said.
The village was originally concerned about resolving the waiCr problem quickly because the Ohio EPA had said the village's wells may not
comply. But the village has some breathing room since the wells do comply, Honan added.
"Whatever decision we go with, we're going to pay more a lot more
monthly. A lot with a cap1tal L," he said.
Building permit fees
Counc1l also voted unanimously 10 comply w1th sllncler federal rules
about construction or buildings in the flood plain. Following the federal
mandate will cause an increase 10 building pennrt costs because or the
added procedures, Horton said.
The village has not followed the federal rules since 1968, and with
future noncompliance, the ~ovcmment may not cover ind1vidual sites or
the entire village, Horton S3ld.
"As long as we make a good faith effort no (existing) buildings are
currently m jeopardy or losing msurance," Horton said.
No private insurance company would give flood insurance 10 the village, he added.
In other business, council:
• appointed Arnold Johnson as new building inspector, taking the place
or Harold Chase who will retire on Sept. I. Johnson will be paid on a perccnJage fee basis, not from village payroll, Horton said. This appointment
was for an indcfmite amount or time.
• agreed on the fmt reading or a striciCr curfew rule that follows state
guidelines. Enforcement will not be changed, but the new rule will make
it tougher for mmors 10 get away wrth lonenng.
Curfew hours are from II p.m.-6 a.m. on weekdays and mrdnight-6
a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. This penalty is a fo\lflh-degrcc misdemeanor.
• will not appeal the bu1lding or a tavern by Winfred Dent at the old
Cedar Bar. Dent sbould get his liquor liceuse rrom the state.
• listcd the mayor's court receipts for two weeks at $2,70 1.81.

House floor so they can change the
package devised by House and
Senate conferees.
''That b1U has been held hostage
for I I days by certain special interest groups," Clinton said during a
ceremony honoring nine people
with the President Medal or Freedom.
He lobbied Democratic and
GOP lawmakers by phone last Special singing slated
The Southern Statesmen will be
week and planned more or the
featured
as special singers Saturday
same, plus personal meetings, this
at 7:30 p.m. at Ash Street Freewill
week.
"For the next few days, he'll be Baptist Church in Middleport.
doing what he needs 10 do to get
the votes," spokeswoman Dee Doe Rutland council to meet
Rutland Village Council will
Myers said at the White House.
meet
tonight at 7 at Rutland Civic
"You' II see a lot or lawmakers in
Center.
Public invited.
and out or here.''
Unless some Republicans buck
their uadition or voting en masse Band open bouse scheduled
Eastern High School and JUnior
against most rules, the Democrats
wiD have to provide all 218 necessary votes out of their 256 members. That means they can lose only
38 and still pass the rule.
Am Ele Power ......_""'"""-·-.30 718
The chief Democratic opponents
Akzo ... _,_,_,,,_,. __________ "_,_,...,_62 1/4
or the rule are NRA-backed gun
Ashland 011 ,.__....,., _________ ,36 3/4
control opponents who want that
AT&amp;T _,.._., ___________ "---·---- .53 314
ban stnppcd from the legislaoon.
BIIDk One------------"·"-.32 S/8
Bob Evans ..._""""""------.20 liZ
Champion lnd_ ·----·------·---.22 314
Charming Shop ....-..... _., _____ 9 liZ
City Holding , ____ ,.,.___ ,,._.._____ ..Jt
(Continued from Page 1)
Federal Mogur_,__ """"""'""'-·----·26
specific award for Sorrell's pain
Goodyear T&amp;R ---··--·- "--.33 114
K-marl----.. ------..--..---·---------.... 16 liZ
and suffering would have been
Lands End ................,__,.,.,.. ,_,.17 718
completely wiped out if the law
Limited Inc.
In
had been upheld.
Multimedia
Inc.
314
"This would have been blatantly
Point Bancorp ·------------17
unfair," Sheets said, "and that is
Reliance Electric -------.20 518
why this case so clearly pointed out
Robbins &amp; Myers" ..--.. ·----.t9 !14
Shoney's lnc_. ..,,.,____________ ,._.J4 J/8
the inequities and problems with
the 19871aw."
Star Bank ...._.._·--------..----·--·40 liZ
Wendy lnt't....... _"_,.,.............. 15 J/8
Sheets, who said she was
Worthington lnd, _____________,.,.__ ,2[
pleased to have a part in the case,
Stock rtports are tbe tO:JO a.m.
praised the Supreme Court for its
quotes
provided by Advest of
decision which "will help insure
Gallipolisthai injured people in the state or
Ohio receive fair compensation ror
aU of their damages."

Meigs announcements

Stocks

h1gh students and parents mterested
in band are invlled to an open
house Thursday at 7 p m. at the
high school to meet the new hand
director.
Bible school in progress
Pomeroy community Bible
school is underway at the St. Paul
Luthemn Church. Classes are being
held from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. and
will continue through Friday. The
school is sponsored by St. Paul,
Trinity and Pomeroy United
Methodrst Churches and all children are welcome. Transpofllation
chairman rs the Rev. Bob Robinson, 992-5788.

High court decision

------·--··--·-"-·--·18
--"-------.28

Slale Aula's already
loiN prem1ums can be
reduced even more by
msunng bolh your car
and home with the State
Auto Compan1es.
·
lei us tell you 1ust
how much your savrngs
can be.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Virginia
Phalin, Pomeroy; Eleanor Blaettnar, Pomeroy; Kimberly FoUrod,
Racine; Gladys South, Pomeroy;
Clyde Johnson, Ponland.
Monday discharges - Nell
Graves, Pomeroy; Roy Ellis, Rutland.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug_ 8 - Maggie
Griffin, Maxine Wallace, Lisa
Detty, Dollie Mooney, Marquilla
McOintic_
(PubUsbed with permission)

GAN

c~ ·

RNEij~

surance services

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

JJ

State Auto
'lnaurance Companies

�1

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Brewers romp; Indians,
White Sox post triumphs

Tuesday, August 9, 1994
Page-4

Expos edge Pirates;·Braves down Reds
By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sror ts Writer
ILhad Lhc ri of a

rmore.•'&lt;

speech . and considering Jhe play of
1hc Montreal Expos it may have
been

''The Expos arc having an awe, so now we're r ·
wild
"Fred

inning Monday night in Riverfront Stadium.
The Braves won, 6-4. (AP)

OUT AT TWRD- Atlanta's Roberto Kelly
is tagged out at third base by Cincinnati's Tony
Fernandez after a Jeff Blauser bit in the third

Scoreboard
•

Montreal (Ructa 6--3) at Pittsburgh
(Liebca 6-6), 7 ;3.5 p.m.

A.merlc:u t.e.p
At A Glance

to. Angele1 (Undioni 7-6) It

By The .\aOC:Iated Pr..
All

Time~ [lJT

EutiMvlalon
WLPcLGB
.......70 4C .636
NewYod
9
Ba!Wnc.-e .........61 49 .555
a...., ...........54 59 .418 11l(l
..........53 59
.473
18
Toronto
............51 61
.455
21J
Detroit
Centnl Dlvldon
W L
P&lt;L
GB
....66 45
595 .
Chicago
•
Cl...!and .........65 46 .586
Kanau Wty .......63 50
.558 4 't 4
..... ..52 60 .464 I f2
Milwaukee
........51 60 .459
15
Minna&gt;CU
Wat Dlvllktll

Te.us

W
.. .52
........ 50
....... 46

L
60
61
63

P&lt;L

GB

.464
.450
.422

Oakland
I J(l
SeauJc
4 1(2.
Califomd
......46 6'7
.407 6 1{1
Mond•,-•aGam•
Clcvdand 6, T~\0 I
Milwaukee 12, Dclroit4
Minncacu 5. Boooon 2
New Yc:rl: 6,1b.ltimore S, II imina•
Seaule 14, Teus 4
California 6, Kuua1 City I
Chiu&amp;o 2, OUJand I

TueiUJ'• Gama
Milwaukee (Eldred 11-10) 11 Detroit

&lt;B"'ll"""l · l). 7:05p.m.
Clcw:land O,.opcz 1-1) II T&lt;Wmto
(Stotdcmyre6-7}, 1:35 p.m.
Baltimore (Moyer 4- 7) at New Yorlr:
(Abbou 9-7), 8:05p.m.
But\a\ (Ocmcn~9· 7) at Minnc:80(a
(EricUon 8-11), I:OS p.m.
Se~nle

(CUmminp 1-4) at Texas (Bohanon 2- l), 8:35p.m.

KatWI City (Appier 7-6) ll California (Andenon7-5), IO:OS p.m.
Chicago (Alvlft::Z 12-7) 11 Otkllnd
(Reyea 0- 3), IO:OS p.m.
Wtdne.day'a Gama
Cin'dand (Grimdcy 4-2) at ToroolO
{Guzmm 12-10), 12:35 p.m.
Chic.~ga (Hm 11 ·2) at Oakland (Ontivc:r-tM: 6-3). 3:1S_p.m.
Milwaukee (Honea 10-8) 11 Deu-oit
(Wel114-7), 7:05p.m.
Bah.imcn (McDonald 13-7) at New
York (Key ! 7-3), 7:35p.m.
801lW (Selc 8- 7) at Minne&amp;Ota (Dcatlaies S-12), 8:1n p.m.
Seaule (Convene 0-5) at TeJ.U
(Brown 7-9).1J5 p.m.
Km..l City (Gordon 11.·6) 11 California (Finley 9--1 0), I 0{).5 p.m
N•don•l Leaave
At A Glance
All Ttmet EDT
Eaat IH•bion

W L

l'tL

. . .72 39
........66 45

.649

Atlanu

Now YOlk

.......54 56

PbiloddphU

.... .52 60

GB

.595
6
.491 !11(2
.464 21J 1(2

.446 221/2
....50 62
Cenlr•l Di•"lon
WLPd.GB
.... 65 46 .586
CincinnaLi
!{l
...... 65 47
.580
....52 59 .468
13
Pi.ttaMa-Jh
14
....51 60 .4.59
St. LoW~
!6
..........49 62 .44 1
Chialao
WatOhWon:
WLPd.GB
Aorida

"""'""

Loc Anplcs ...... .56
San FranciJco ...... !li3
Colondo
........ .52
Son o;.l"
...... .45

ll
60
62

.505
.469
4
.456 5 1/2

69

.395 12 1/2

Moncby'a Game&amp;
M~ l. PiwbwJk 2
Colorado 7, Loa An Flea 6
New Y~ 3, Philadelfhio 2
SLI.ooia II, ~lorida
Atlanta 6. Cincinnati 4
S~n Fnnci.co 5, OW:.ao4

Wednadly'a Gama

Son Fmncioco (Vanl.ondingharn 7-2)
at Oli.cago (BuW 8-11). 2:20p.m.
St l.ouiJ (Waum 6-5) at Flcrida
(Weathen &amp;- II), 7:35p.m.
New York (Sabcthagczt 13-4} at
rhiladclpha (Wcat4--9), 7 : 3~ p.m.
Monual (Pc:Martincz.I0-5) It Pitts·

bWJh (N01gle 9-n

7:35 ~m.
LoA Angeles (Orus9-7) 11 CincimaLi
(Smiley 11- lD). 7:35p.m.
S1n Dieao (Bftae~6-ll) at Houslon
(Kite 8-6). 8 Ol ~m.
Atlanta (Glninc: I 3-8) at Colando
{Ritz 4--6), 9:0!5 p.m.
Monday'a SpoMI Tranaadlona
BJ The ANodaled Prca~

AUTO RACING
~
NASCAR
JUNIOR JOHNSON A ASSOCI·
ATES--Announcod thlt Twnmy KmdaU
will replace Jimmy Spencer ror \he up-coi\'Ung race at Watk:Ua Glen
BASEBALL
American Leap
CAUFORNIA ANG~&gt; An·
drew Lo rraine, pitcher, to Vancouver of

the Pacific Coast Leaaue. Rccallcd Mike
James, pitcher, from Vancouver.
Of.IR.Orf TIGERS-Activated Mike
Hcnnemlll, pi\Cher, fTom the IS-day d.Uablc:d l.isL Optioned John Flahc::rty, c.l.ch-

er, to Toledo of \he lntcmatiooal League.
KANSAS CITY ROY ALS-Plocod
Dave Hendcnon. outfielder, on the ISday disabled list, n:troac:Live to July 30.
Purehued the coalnet of Dwayne Hm.ey,
outfielder, from Omaha of the Amc:rican
A11ocialion.
SEATILE MARINERS-Renllod
Bob Welll, pitcher, from Cal&amp;ll)' of the
Pacific Co11l Lel&amp;_ue. Opuoned Roaer
satkdd,fitclls, to CalgU)'.
Nation• Leaaue
f':EW YORK METS-Signed Kyle
Kessel, pitchc:r, and Sammy RCJd.risuez,
catcher.
FOOTBALL
National FootbaUIAqut
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Re·
siped Franklin Thoow, tiaht md.
TAMPA BAY BUC'CANEERSWaived Scott Holstein, punter. MarkUI
Paul, aafety; Muk Vlwc, quattc:rhlck.;
Paul White, cornerback; and.Oermaine
Williama, fullback.
!JOCKEY
National HocktJ Lague
LOS ANGELES XINOS-Acquimd
Rualan Balyr.hin, defememan, and 1

1996 aocond·round 4nft choloc: &amp;on the
Winnipeg Jcu for Brent Thompson, defenseman .
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-O'Neill, New York,
. 360; Delle, Clevela nd , .158; Thomu ,
Chicago, .357; Lo£ton, Cleveland, .351;
Doags, Nc:w Yotk, .l44; Moli1-0r, Toronto,

Lofton, Oeveland, 104; Griffey Jr, Seattle. 90: Belle. Cleveland, 89; Can.scca,
Teus, 88; Phillips, Detroit, 87; Molitor.
Toronto, &amp;3.

RBI - Puckclt, Minnuou, 105;
Thcmaa,

HJTS-LoiiM. Clc..lmd, 159; MolitOr, Toron\o, 151; Bello. Cleveland. t4S;

.

Thomaa, ChicaJO, 140; BaotJI, Clevehnd, 137; Knobl111cb, Mioncaou, 13.5;
Griffey Jr. Scaalc_ 13l; Franco. OUeaao.
135; CRipk..,,lllllimo.._ Ill.

DOUBLES-Knobltud!. MiMCIOll,
44; Bdlc. Clcv&lt;lond, !5: Frymon. Doaoic
34; Thomu, auc.go. 33; l...oflm. Cleve-lond, 32; Puckca. Mlm..... 32;
Qcvcllnd, 31; Nmciro. Bohim...,l!.
TRIPLES-Uotuuoo, Chicaao. 14;

(fllduel 9 7). 2:20p.m.

St. Louil (fewbbury 12·10) at Flori-

a•...,.

da (Gardner 4-4), 7:35p.m.

New Yod (RanlinJe:r 1--4) It

PbiloddphU (Schilling 1-8). Bl p.m

Scioto Downs results

.J

•
•
•
•

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)Party Secret won Monday night's
feature at Scioto Downs, pacing the
mile in 1:564-5 and paying $19.60,
$9.40 and $4.80.
Mac Crusher finished second,
retnming $11 and $7.20 and thirdplace Tyler's Big Mark paid $2.8(1.
A crowd of 2,268 wagered
$214,007.

: Volleyball drills
to begin Thursday
•

OUcaso. 101; Bclk, Cleveland,

Te~.u, 90.

s.n fnnc:Uc;o (Black 4-2) at Chicago

:

.l43; WClarlt, Tnu, .32S.
RUNS-Thoma•, Ch.icaao, 105;

101 ; Carter, Torooto, 101 ; Franc;o, Olicago, 97; Sictra, Oakland, 90; Canscco,

o.t, ....... -utod
TINtebJ'a GlmCII

Cincinnati (Jarvis 0-1). 7:35p.m.
San Diego (Aahby S-11 ) at HOUlton
(Reynold• 8-4), 1:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Smolu:. 6-10) at Colorado
(Niod 9-6). 9:05p.m .

The Meigs Junior Varsity vol• leyball ~ will have practice for
girls entering grades nine and I0 on
• Thursday, August 11 at 9:30 a.m.
at l.he high school.

••
0

sai·d aflcr hilling two home runs
and driving in four runs to lead the
Atlanla Braves to a 6-4 victory
Monday nighl over the Cincinnati
Reds.
But lhc victory did nothing 10
enhance Atlanta's position in Jhe
NL East because the ExJ&gt;Os won for
the IRth time in 20 games. They
beat Pittsburgh 3-2 to maintain a
six-game lead over the Braves.
Steve Avery was looking ahead
as far as Po ss l.blc wt.th a strt.ke
looming Friday.
"I hope we can win the next
three in Colorado and take our
chances coming back after the
strike,'' he said after striking out a
career-high II balters in eight
· nnm
· gs.
S·hutout 1
Avery (8 -3 ) allowed jusl 1hree
hl.ts but threw 118 pt.IChes. So, st·ttl.ng on a 6·0 lead, he LOOk a seat 10
slart the ninlh inning and wa1Chcd
the lhrill-a-minule Atlanta bullpen
do what t't's done all seasonma ke a game out of 1·t. Braves
relievers have 13 losses and 13
blown saves th.is season.
Mark Wohlers started the ninth
by giving up a walk and a pair of
hits, includinu Kevin Mitchell's
" Stanton came on
RBI single. Mike
and hit Hal Morris with an 0-2
PilCh 10 load the bases.
Greg McMichael relieved and
g ot Reggie Sanders to fly out.
Lenny Harris hit an RBI grounder
before Thomas Howard doubled
sharply to the gap in left-center for
two runs. De ion Sanders 1hen
grounded out, and McMichael had
his21stsave.
Elsewhere, it was Colorado 7,
Los AnReles 6; New York 3.

Philadelphia 2; St. Louis II, Flori:
da 1 and San Francisco 5 Chicago
4. ·
'
McGriff his 3lsl and 32nd
homers off John Roper (6-2).
Expos 3, Pirates 2
Moises Alou' s three-run homer
left visiting Montreal (at 72-39
baseball ·s besl team) 33 games
over .500 for only the second time
in franchise hisiOry.
Gil Heredia (6-3) made his sec·
on d consecu l.1ve s 1rong s 1ar 1 to
place of the injured Jeff Fassero,
allowing Piusburgh six hits in
seven innings. John Wetteland
pi1Ched the ninth for his 23rd save,
striking out Don Slaught to end the
game with two men 00 to wrap up
&lt; urth tr · h ·
1he Expos . •O
s rug 1v•clorv .
Sieve Cooke (4-II) checked the
h.
· M
·
Exros on two tiS untt 1 arquts
Gnssom
·
·
d
th
·
th
smg1e to slart e stx .
W il Cordero doubled ahead of
Alou's 22nd homer.
Cardinals II, Marlins I
· f rom man Todd Ze.l1 e got a up
f
b .
ager Joe
Torre. ..- ah. onner h atung
.
champmn - ...,,en tl two omers
and drove in a career -high six runs
. (3-2) to h'ts
to help Rheal Connter
· Ma 14
ftrst vic lOryld smce
Y ba· k . tl
"He to me 10 stay c a 1II e
longer," Zeile said of Torre. "And
it paid off. Six RBis doesn't hap penveryoften.''
Loser Rich Scheid (1-3) was a
last-minute replacement for seheduled starter Chris Hammond. who
has a fracture of the fibula in his
left leg.
Mel5 3, Phillies 2
Bobby Jones won his fifth
straight decision and Jim Lindeman
homered, doubled and scored

Lwice.
Jones (12-7) allowed 10 hits and
two runs in 7 1-3 innings whil e
striking out four. He is 8-1 on the
road this season.
Reliever John Franco gm Mickcy Morandini 10 ground imo a double play to end the eighth. lhen
pi1Ched out a jam of his own making in the ninth for his league-leading 29th save.
Danny Jackson (14-6) allowed
three runs and seven hits in seven
mnmgs.
Gianl5 5, Cubs 4
Todd Benzinger had a pinch-hit
homer wilh one out in the cighLh
inning at Wrigley Field.
Benzinger, balling for Dave
Martinez, hil a 1-0 pilch off Dan
Plcsac (2 -3) for lhe game-winner
in10 an IB·mph wind.
R' h M
1
(4 3) · •- thp1c
thtc · ante cone
ki
· d .. ed
up . e wm, wor ng two- If s of
an mrung.
Rockies 7, Dodgers 6
c harlte· Hayes • RBI stngle
·
f
· h · ·
capped a our-run ntnl -tnnmg
bl d c 1 do 10 en d a
11 th
f.ra Y atcna
1 ·c o orak Th
·
tve-game osmg fstrea
. e wtn
h three
averted a sweep
· · · o tLe A •-game
1
series by v!S!ung os nge es,
h
·
h
d
bl
f
w tc got a lwo-run ou e rom
Mi'· f'tve-run etg
· hth for a
..e p·taua m
6 31 d
- ca ·
Howar d Jo h nson ha d an RBI
·
· hh
'
Danny
smg 1e, an d ptnc
- tiler
Sh ea ffer h.tl a lwo-run d ou bl e o ff
Todd Worrell (6-5), whose blown
save was the 2 I st ·m 40 opportuni·
ties for the Los Ange 1cs bullpen.
After a sacn· c·ICC an d an mlcn.
Ha
· 1
ff
tional walk, yes smged o Jim
Got! to make a winner of reliever
Bruce Ruffin (4-5).

......
UNIFIED TEAM -The Meigs County Special Olympics Unified Softball Team placed
third in an invitational tournament Saturday
and is now qualified for state competition in
September. Members or the team indude, from
left: front row - Alisha Highland, Steven Deba

!1-3 . .786, 3.82; Mussi.na, Baltimore, 16-

5, .762, 3.06; Cone, Kans•• City, 16-S,
.762, 294: MPc:rt:z, New Yolk, 9.-4, .692,
4.03; RJohnwn, Se~ule. 12-6, .667, 3.31;
Wcgmtn, ~Wwaui.ec, 8-4, .667, 4 .35;
Sanderson, Chicago, 8-4. -~1. 5.09.
STRIKEOUTS - RJohnson, Seattle,
189;. Clcmcna, B~a~a:~, 161 ; Fml.cy, Cali·
fonua, 146; Hcrugm, TarootD, 143; Appicr, Kansu City, 137; Cone. Klnlll City,
132; JMcDowell,OUcaco..l21.
SAVES-LcSmith, BaiLimore, 32;
Mantgomery, K.utua City, 26; Aauilen,
Minnesota, 23; Ecltenley, Oakland, II;
Hall, Toronto, 17; Fencn, Milwau.koe. 17;
RusiCll, Qeveland, 17.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING-TGwynn, San Diego,
.392; Bagwell, Houswn, .368: Morria,
Cincinna ti, .341; Alou, Montreal, .335;
Mitchell, C in cin na ti, .327; LWalker,
Montreal, .323; Jefferies, SL Lou.il, .323.
RUNS - Bagwell, Houuun, 103;
Grissom, Mootreal, 93; Bonds, San Francisco, 89; Lankford, St. Uluis, 8.5; Biagio,
HouslOn, 14; Alw, Montreal, 80; l...a.J:k.in,
Cincinnati, 17: GalaiTiga, Coloudo, 71;
TGwynn, San Dieso, TJ.
RBI- Bagwell, Houston, 116;
Bichette, Colorado. 94; MIWill.iaml, San
Fnncisco, 93; Piuu, Loa Angclea, 91;
McGriff, A tlanta, 90; Oalanaga, Colorado, 85; LWilker, Montrea1,13.
HITS - TGwynn, San Diego, 1S9;
BaeweU, Houlton, 145; Morril, Cincinnau, 145; Bichette, Colorado, 143; Co~e, Florida, 140; Alou, Montreal, 137;
Bi'tJHouJtOn, 135.
UBLES-!.Wolkcr, Moollell, 44;
Biggio, Houaton, 41; JBcU, Piuabu.rJh,
35; TGwynn, San Dic!o. 34; Bichene,
Colorado, 32; Bagwe I, Houston, 31;
Cordero, Monllell, 30.
TRIPLES- DLcwia, San Fnnciaco,
9; RSandetl, Cincinnati, 8; Kingc:ry, Col·
o_n~do, 8; Butler, Loa Anaclea, I; Mondo11,

CINCINNATI (AP)- Deion
Sanders spent the ftrst few hours of
his birthday in police custody
today, charged with two misdemeanors for an altercation with a
guard at Riverfront Stadium.
The Cincinnati Reds outfielder
was arrested afler allegedly ignoring a police officer's warning and
driving his motorcycle through a
restricted gate following a game
Monday night.
The officer allegedly was
dragged several feet and suffered
minor injuries. Sanders was arrested and charged wilh failing to provide a driver's license and resisting
arrest. The first-degree misde meanors carry maximwn sentences
of six months in jail and a $1,000
nne.
Police wiU talk to more witnesses and prosecutors 1oday before
deciding whether to add an assault
charge, Lt. Fred Ramsey said.
Sanders was questioned at Jhe
downtown police headquarters,

Thirty-six athletes from Meigs
County recenty competed in uack
and fteld events al lhe Area 8 Special Olympics held at Ohio University's Peden Stadium in Athens.
The athletes returned home with
several medals and ribbons. Panicipating were:
Amy Jo Davis - second place
softball throw, fifth place I 00meter walk;
Chesler Anhur - second place
800 meter race, third place standing
long jump;
Jennifer Arthur- third place
pentathlon;
Mike Bissell - ftrst place running long jump;
'
Amy Boggs - first place 50meier dash, third place baseball
throw;
Don Buffington- second place
100-mcter walk; second place softball throw;
Jacob Cade - fourth place 50meter dash; fifth place standing
long jump;
Deidra Carle10n - first place
25-mcter wheelchair race, first
place wheelchair distance ball roll;
Brett Counts- third place softball throw;
Sharon Fikc - second place
100-meter walk, ftfth-place softball

"Basically, he (Sanders) said,
'You can't !ell me whatiO do, you
can' t talk to me that way,' " Ramsey said.
Sanders disputed that.
"That definitely was not said.
I'd never say, 'I'm Deion Sanders
and you can't do this to me,' "
Sanders said after his release at the
Justice Center. "I dido 't iniliate
this."

Sports brief
TENNIS
MASON, Ohio (AP)
Unseeded Ivan Lendl easily defeated 16Jh-seeded Jaime Yzaga 6-1, 63 in the first round of the $1.72
million ATP Championship.
Other seeded players advanced
easily except for 15th-seeded
Andrea Gaudenzi of Italy, who was
upset by MaliVai Washington.
Winners included lith-seeded
Yevgeny Kafelnikov, No. 12
Wayne Ferreira, and 13th-seeded
Cedric Pioline.

SERVING YOUR AREA
FOR THE LAST
49 YEARS

row - Chuck Kinnan, Michelle Snider, David
Karr and Steve Deha; third row- Betty Smith,
Coach Phil Show, Brent Larkins and Jacob
Cade; fourth row - Bob Authcrson, Ken Napper, Richard Stewart and Byron Wal5on.

Keith Friend - first place I 00metcr walk; third place standi;-tg
long jump;
Jennifer Gray - ftrst place 30~
meter motorized wheelchair
slalom;
Jessica Gray - first place 25meter whcclchair race;
Joan Hart - second place 50meter dash, sixth plaFe running
long jump;
Melissa Hart - second place
softball throw;
Mandy Jeffers - fust place 50meter dash; third place standing
long jump;
Jeremy Johnson - second place
50-meter dash; fourth place softball
throw;
Sandy Johnson - first place
shot put, fourth place standing long
jump;
David Karr - first place shot
put, third place 100-meiCr dash;
. Roger Lance - second place
50-meier dash, third place softball
throw·
Ch~is Lee - second place 50meter dash. second place standing
long jum!);
Marsha Mace- first place softball throw, fourth place 50-meter

RESIDENTIAL,
COMMERCIAL, INDIVIDUAL
&amp; FARM SALES &amp;SERVICE

WANT REliABiliTY
AND SERVICE?

BANNER BEARERS - Members of the Meigs County delegation to Area 8 Srecial Olympics in Athens recently won several
medals and ribbons. Here, from left, Joan Hart, Cbester Arthur,
M~mdlv Jeffer, DiU White, Sharon Fike and Sandy Johnson proud·
dispi~•Y the Meigs County banner during opening ceremonies.

PASSING THE BATON- The Meigs County delegation in
Area 8 Special Olympics won first place in tbe 400-meter relay
race. Here, Marion Snider passes tbe baton to David Karr in the
final leg of tbe event.
dash;
Sara McCarty - second place
I 00-meJcr walk, Jhird place softball
throw;
Jeff Oliver - second place pentathlon;
Mary Rankin - second place
25-mcter independent walk, third
place softball throw;
Jessica Simpkins - third place
100-meter dash, third place softball
throw;
Kim Smith - fifth place softball throw;
Maurice Smith - first place
softball throw; second place 400meter race;
Mike Smith - third place pentaJhlon;
Marion Snider - firs1 place

800-mcler race; fust place running
long jump;
Michelle Snider - first place
pentathlon;
Bill WcaJS - fust place softball
throw. fourth place 100-meler
dash;
Mark Weber - ftrst place 200meter race, second place softball
throw;
Bill While - second place I 00meter dash, third place 100-meter
walk;
Nicki Wilson - fust place softball throw, third place 100-meter
walk.
Also placing first in the 400metcr relay race were Chester
Anhur, David Km. Marion Snider
and Bill White .

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· , 129.
or.t, 29;

Dl.,ca,l'hihdclphil. 27; Bcclt. Suo FlUcisco, 26: Wetteland , Montreal, 23;
McMichael. AL!a.nt.t, 21: Myers, OU.C.ao.
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ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)
- Heath Shuler's professional
debut was neither spectacular nor
disastrous. And that, as far as Redskins coach Norv Turner was concerned, made it a success.
Shuler completed 4 of 10 passes
for 4 7 yards and one imcrception
on Monday nigh! in Washington's
13-11 loss 10 the Buffalo Bills. The
No . 3 pick in this year's draft,
Shuler didn'l practice until
Wednesday because of a contract
holdout
"I'm SUTJ&gt;rised we were able to
get the ball snapped with him ,"
Turner said. " Heath has had four
practices. What he did today assimilate the play calls, the fonnations, who is going where, look a1
Jhe coverages. make Jhe throws is phenomenal."
Shuler did have trouble getting
the ball snapped once, when the
Redskins were called for a false
start on his second play. But his
biggest problem was what he did
with the ball when he got it.
in his first two series, he took
over in bad field position. In his
third, the Redskins managed only 5
yards and a field goal after starting
on the Buffalo 20 yard line.
His fourth J&gt;OSSCSSion, from the
Redskins ' 43, lasted only one play.
Facing pressure from James PatiOn,
Shuler was intercepted by Jeff Burris. ,
"I Jhought as far as knowing the
progressions, knowing the routes, I
thought I did a very good job,"
Shuler said. "All the plays we ran,
I felt totally comfortable. That was
Jhe game plan going in. I knew all
the plays. I was ftnc with them .
"Norv ' llllked to me. He said
'You don'l have to go out and do
anything spectacular. Just stay
within Jhe system.' And that's what
I tried to do."
Shuler needs more time to get
comfortable with the NFL. Jim
Kelly's problem is just the opposite.
His 34-year-old throwing arm
has developed tendinitis , but it
dido 't show against Washington.
Kelly completed his first seven
passes and was 9-of-12 overall for
141 yards and one touchdown during his two series.
"The shoulder felt excellent,"

ladies golf
winners named

PRICE OF

PRICE INCLUDES

1·8G0-837·8217

..

•

Cirillo and a solo sho t 10 Jo se
Valentin.
Detroit, which had Jed 3-0. got a
home run from Danny BautisLa, his
founh of the season.
Angel Miranda (2-5) snapped a
five-game losing streak , winning
for the firsl time si nce July 3. He
pi1Ched ·six innings, allowing three
runs on eight hits"
Yankees 6, Orioles 5 (II innings)
Al New York, Luis Polonia
ca me home on Randy Velarde' s
two-out sing le in the h&lt;mom of the
II th.
Mark Eichhorn (6-5) retired the
firsl two baiters in the lllh before
walking Polonia. Danny Tartabu ll
was hit by a pilch before Velarde
looJ&gt;Cd his winmng si ngle 10 righlcenter.
SLevc Howe (3·0), the fiflh Yankees pitcher, was the winner.
Mariners 14, Rangers 4
Al Arlington, Texas, Tino MarLinez went 3-for-5 and drove in a
career-high six runs for Scaule. Jay
Buhncr added a two-run homer and
run-scoririg single.
Reliever Bob Wells (1 -0), maktng hi s American League debul
when he came on m lhe third with
tltc bases loaded, went four innings
for the vic lOry.
Texas sLarter John Dcwncr (0·6)
took the loss.
Angels 6, Royals I
Tim Salmon homered for 1hc
third slraighl game and Mark
Langs10n (7-8) pitched a four-hitter
as California handed visiting
Kansas City its third straight loss
after 14 consecutive victories.

The lcfl-handcr struck out six
and walked one.
Salmon's homer in the eighth
came afler Chad Curtis had singled
and Chili Davis walked.
Iodiaos 6, Blue Jays I
AI Toronlo, Kenny Lof10n
lriplcd, doubled and singled,
mcreasing his AL-leading hit total
to 159, and scored once in Cleveland's victory.
Charles Nagy (I 0-8) allowed six
hits over seven innings for the vic tory . AI Lci1Cr (6-7) took the loss.
Twins 5, Red Sox 2
In Minneapolis, Matt Walbeck
capJ&gt;Cd a lhrce-run Minnesota rally
in lhe sixlh with a two-run single.
Kevin Tarani (11 -7) got the win,
allowing two runs on seven hits,
striking ouf three and walking one
m seven innings. Rick Aguilera got
Lhc final three outs for his 23 rd
save.
Rick Trlicek (1-1), making his
ftrsl major league slart after J&gt;OSting
a 9.72 ERA in II relief appearances, LOOk Lhc loss.
White Sox 2, Athletics I
Jack McDowell ( 10-9) struck
oul 10, walked none and scanercd
seven hils to lead visiting Chicago
10 vtctory. Ttm Ramcs drov~ in the
wmning run with a one-out single
in the ninth inn mg.
Ozzic Guillen led off the ninth
with a single off reliever Ed Vosberg (0-2), was sacrificed to second
and moved up to third on Vosberg's wild pitch. He scored the
winning run when Raines bounced
a single over the head of third baseman Scmt Brosius.

Bills edge
Redskins,
13-11

4 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

180; Rijo. Cincinnati. ll9; GM.dd... Ju.

By BOB GREENE
AP Sporl5 Writer
After struggling through a scoring famine al home, it was time for
the Milwaukee Brewers 10 feast on
the road.
In their seven-game homestand
that ended Sunday. Lhe Brewe rs
totaled only 13 runs. Againsl Lhc
Tigers on Monday night in Detroit,
Milwaukee scored I 0 runs in the
seventh inning in a 12 -4 victory
over Detroit.
"How can you JXJSSibly explain
that?" manager Phil Gamer asked.
'·After seven games at home where
we were begging for runs, we slart
a road trip like this."
"I don't get it," Garner said,
"but I am going to enjoy it."
In other games. it was Cleveland
6, Toronto I; Minnesota 5, Boston
2; New York 6, Baltimore 5 in II
innings; Scaule 14, Texas 4; California 6, Kansas City I; and Chica go 2. Oakland I.
The Brewers beat Tim Belcher
(7-15), who losl his sixth consecu tive slart by allowing eight runs on
cighl hits and four walks in 6 2-3
tnrungs.
"Right now, all of the wheels
are really coming off," Belcher
said. "I have never been through
anything like this. I just keep
telling myself that I can't ever get
back 10 winning if I don't go out
there.
The Brewers had already scored
three runs by the time John Jaha
chased Belcher with a three-run
homer. Reliever Joe Boevcr gave
up singles to the fust 1wo baucrs he
faced . a three -run homer to Jeff
It

throw;

BUY FROM AN L.P. GAS DEALER WITH EXPERIENCE

Los Angeles, 7; Cayton. San Francia-

co, 6; TFemandcz, Cincimati, 6.
HOME RUNS-MaWilliams, San
Fnncisc:o, 42; Baswell, Houston, 39;
Bondi, San Fnnciaco, 37; Mc:Oriff, At·
h?ta , 32; G.tanaaa, Colorado, 31;
Mitchell, Cincinnati, 30; Bichcne, Colorado, 27.
. STOLEN
BASES-OSanden.
C~t~ciMaLi, 38: Biggio, HoultOn, 37: Gri&amp;som . Montreal, 35; C1n, Florida, 32;
OLewis. Sa n Fnncisco, 29; Bonds, San
Francisco, 29; DeShields , Loa Angde~,
27.
PITCHING (12 Oecisiona}-Frccman, Colorado, 10-2, .833, 2.8lt-, Sabcdlagen, New Yort, 13-4, .765, 2.81; KHi11,
MontJUI, 16-S, .762.3.32; GMaddu•, At·
lanta. 15 · 6 • . 714, 1.63; DnJacltso11
Philadelphia, 14-6, .700, 3.26; Merckcr:
Atl.ant.t, 9-4, .692., 3.45; Reynold&amp;, Houl·
lOn, 8-4, .667, 3.00; PJManinc::z., Momroal, lO-S, .667, 3.64; Drabek, HourLon,l26, .667. 2.84.
STRIK..EOUfS-Bcnca, San Diqo,

then taken to the Hamilton County
Justice Center 10 post bond. He was
released around 2:30a.m. EDT.
As he lef1 the Justice Cenler,
group of friends and relatives,
including teammate Jose Rijo, sang
"Happy Birthday" to Sanders,
who turned 27 today.
Sanders said he was stunned
that his encounter with the officer
escalated iniO charges.
"How many guys have gone 10
jail right from the stadium?"
Sanders said.
The altercation occurred afler a
6-4 loss to the Atlanta Braves.
Sanders was 1-for-5 with three
strikeouts and a groundout that
ended the game.
Ramsey said Cincinnati police
officer Herb Kohus was guarding a
restricted pedestrian cnuance and
slOpped Sanders as he tried to drive
his mo10rcycle through it. The gale,
not far from the Reds' clubhouse,
is for vendors only and leads 10 a
sidewalk on Pete Rose Way.

II, Sandy Johnson and Marion Snider; second

Meigs athletes compete
in Area 8 Special Olympics

Deion Sanders arrested after incident
Coleman, Kanua City, 12; Ldton,tJavc·
land, 9; ADiaz, Milwau.kec, 7; McRae,
Kanau City, 6: PDion.ia. New York, 6;
White, T oronlD, 6.
HOME RUNS--Griffey Jr, Seattle,
39; Thomaa, Chictgo, 38; Belle, Clc•eland, 36, Canaoco, TCAu, 31; Fiddcr, Detroit , 27; Caner, Toronto, 26; CDIVU,
California, 26.
STOlEN BASES - Lofton. Cleve hnd. 58 ; Colemtn, K•nan City , 50;
Ni.loo, Bartoo, 42; Knobl•uch, Minneao-11, 33; ByAndcnon, Baltimore, 31;
ACole, Minnesota, 29; M(;Rac, Kansu
City, 28.
PITCHING (12 Dccisiona) - Kcy,
New York, 17-3, .850, 3.19; Ben:. Olicao, 11-2. .846. 3.90; MOark, Cleveland,

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

RACINE RASCALS • The Racine Rascals
junior softball team recently finished in second
plue In tbe Wellston Park Tournament by
dereatlna tbe Jackson All-Stars. They were
clereated lnlbe c:bamplonsbip game by tbe Boyd
County AU..Stan from Kentucky. Pictured are,
J.r, front row, liallon ~oush, Macyn Ervin,

second

Chcrissa Barnes, Tilrany WiUiams;
row·
Kayla Stover, Kati CumminB, Kim lhle, Tiffany
Barna. Third row-Stacy Lyons, Dena Sayre,
Sarah Brauer, Misty Sellen; and Back-Mike
Ible and Kevin Ibl~, assistant coaches, and
Coach Todd Cummins.

Winners in the Tuesday Morning Ladies' Golf League at the
Meigs Golf Course for July and the
fust week in August were recemly
announced. Winners were:
July 12- Norma Custer, low
gross; Mary Froendt, low net;
Donna Nease, low putts and chip
in.
July 19- Donna Nease, low
gross; Clarice Krautter, low net;
Joan Childs, low putts; Nellie
Brown, chip in.
July 26 - Debbie Sayre. low
gross; Nonna Cuslel,low net; Margaret Follrod, low putts; Clarice
Krautlel, chip in; Margaret Follrod,
chip in.
Aug. 2 - Debbie Sayre, low
gross; Nellie Brown, low net; Debbie Sayre, low putts; Margaret Foilrod, chip in.
The league meets every Tuesday
at 8:30a.m. at Meigs Golf Course.

...

....

·1·.- ';

'

-,&gt;:,
~

&lt;

·~

.~.·~ 'tt::(_~~

ON THE RUN • Buffalo Bills safety Henry Jones (20) tries to
catch Washington Redskins running back Frank Wycheck (22)
during first quarter action at Orchard Park, N.Y., Monday night.
The Bills won, 13-11. (AP)
Kelly said. "So Jar, so good."
Steelers
Pittsburgh hopes pulling a contract offer off the 1ablc wi II get
kicker Gary Anderson imo training
camp.
Anderson, who is refusing to
honor the ftnal year of his contract,
was told Monday the Stcclcrs have
withdrawn !heir $812.000-a-ycilr

offer.
"The offer's off the table,"
Tom Donahoe, the Stcelcrs' direc tor of football operations, said.
"Once he gets inlo camp, we'll be
happy 10 talk to him."
Anderson set an NFL single season accuracy record last season
by making 28 of 30 field goal
attempts.

Meigs team places third
in unified competition
The Meigs County Special
Olympic Unified Softball Team
competed in an invitational tournament Saturday at the JFK Municipal Park in Reynoldsburg. The
Meigs team placed third behind
Morrow and Delaware counties in
unified competition out of II regulation and unified teams participating from across Jhc stale.
A unified softball team is comprised of ftve Special Olympic alhlctcs and five non-disabled partners. A unified softball game is
played in accordance with the
American Softball Associalion
rul~. Unified games provide a
unique opJ&gt;Onunicy for children and
adults with developmental disabilities to participate in competitive
sporting events alongside their nondisabled peers. Unified sports now
include softball, bowling, basketball and golf.
The Meies Countv Special

Olympic program is seeking business, organization and individual
sponsorship to enable one or two
unified softball teams to represent
Meigs County at lhe Ohio Special
Olympic State Team Softball Tournament in Massillon on Sept. 10
and II, said CarleiOn School Director Steve Beha.
Groups and individuals wishing
to donate can contact Bcha at 9926681 or mail a check or money
order to Meigs County Special
Olympics, Carleton School, 1310
Carleton Street. Syracuse, Ohio
45779, payable to Meigs County
Special 01 ympics.
Irina Privalova took the
women's 100 in 11.02 ; Mikhail
Shchennikov won the men's 20kilometer walk in 1:18.45; and Ana
Biryukova sailed 48 feet, 10 1/4
inches to win the women's triple
JUmp.

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

SIGNUP
Aug. 14

10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
at
Big Bend Health and Fitness
87 Mill Street, Middleport
Questions
Call David Jenkins, 992·6534 or
Lisa Roush, 992·3486

I

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6--The Dally Sentinel

Tuesda~

August9, 1994

Military wife wants some credit where credit is due
Ann
Landers
1994 Los Angeles

t r.mes

S~·ndtea l e

ano
Cr eators Svndoca re·

Dear Ann Landers: Why are
military wives always shortchanged
when it comes to the sacrifices we
make for our husbands and
families? No one ever gives us the
credit we deserve.
My husband has an important job.
Family and friends never tire of
patting him on the back and
congratula!ing him on the job he
does. His parents brag about him

constantly. They keep praising him
and raving about his compelence,
his energy and his brilliance. No one
ever says a word to me about the
part I play in his success.
Why don't these people realize that
behind every strong man there is a
woman who is just as strong or
maybe stronger? That woman takes
care of the kids, the house, the
finances, the relatives (his as well
as hers) and possibly a career of her
own while her husband is gone for
weeks , even months at a time.
That woman may have to pick up
and move the house and family five
times in six years. She must adjust
to frequent schedule changes due to
the demands of her husband's job.

She must be both Mom and Dad Base near Omaha. I was enormously
when he's away. She is also expected impressed with the cheerfulness,
to cook and clean for all the strength and non-complaining
relatives who decide they want to altitude of those women.
visit each new base (even though
The lovely wife of Gen. Lee
we just saw them two months Butler, then-commander of the U.S.
before).
Stralegic Command, told me she had
I realize that my husband's job moved 28 times in 32 years.
Here 's a 21 -gun salute to all
means he may fight in a war or two,
but at least he lcnows that no maua military wives, wherever they may
what happens , his loving, be. They deserve the respect of a
supportive wife will take care of grateful nation.
Dear Ann Landers: As a parent
everything. It's time we gave credit
where credit is due. I'm sure you and grandparent, I am well aware of
have guessed by this time that I am 'educational apathy." While it is true
--A MILITARY WIFE
that parents should be the most
DEAR MILITARY WIFE: A few influential force in the lives of their
years ago, I spoke to several hundred children, once a child enters the
military wives whose husbands were educational sys1em, things change.
stationed at the Offuu Air Force
I recently ran across an article that

describes the rela!ionship between
the teacher and student perfectly.
Would it be possible for you to share
it with your readers? -- SOUTHERN
ILLINOIS
DEAR S. ILL.: Thanks so much
for a point of view that
is beautifully expressed and
demonslillres extraordinary insight.
Here it is:
"I've. come to the frightening
conclusiOn that I am the decisive
element in the classroom. My
personal approach creates the
climate. My daily mood makes the
wealher. As a teacher, I possess a
tremendous power to make a child's
life miserable or joyous. I can be a
tool of tonure or an instrument of
inspiration. I can humiliate or

humor, hwt or heal. In all situations,
it is my response that decides
whether a crisis will be escalated or
de-escalated and a child humanized
or de -humanized." -- HAIM

--,-

lost Wtlf!t ll• ·erazy"
Guaranteed

GJNOIT

Gem of the Day: Parents never
fully appreciate teachers until it rains
alJ day.
What's the truth about pol, cocai~. LSD. PCP. crack. speed and
dow~rs? 'The Lowdown on Dope"
has up-to-the-minute lnjormalion on
drugs. Send a self-addressed, long.
bu.riMss-size envelope and a checJ:
or monty order for $3 .65 (this ineludes postage and handling) to :
· Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O .
Box l/562, Chicago, Ill. 606JJ .
0562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)

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GATHERING DUST,

'SHE TV' scheduled to debut on ABC
By lYNN ELBER
AP Television Writer
LOS AN GEL ES (AP) - Boy,
have Bonnie and Terry Turner got
a lot of nerve.
Th e produ cers of "SHE TV"
want viewer s to laugh at sketch
co medy with a female viewpoint.
They wal)l them to laugh between
10 p.m. and II p.m., the dead-serious wnc of newsmagazines and
dramas. They even want them to
think about what's making them
laugh.
And, get this, the Turners are
doing this in the Tuesday slot when
audiences expect to see the toughgu y crimebusters of "NYPD
Blue."
"SHE TV ," debuting Tuesday,
Aug. 16, on ABC for a six-week
summer run, features just three
men - Nick Bakay, Carl Banks
and Elon Gold - among its eight
regulars, turning the usual malefemale ratio of such sketch shows
as "Saturday Night Live" on its
car.
Jennifer Coolidge, Linda Kash,
Simbi Khali, Becky Thyre and

Linda Wallem arc the other perform ers in the hour-long show,
whi ch promi se s sexy, topical
humor with a " female voice."
The premiere episode will
include spoofs of "NYPD Blue,"
" Beavis and Butt-head" (we meet
mom s Mrs. Beavis and Mrs. Butt·
head) and dayume game shows in a
sketch titled "What Do Women
Want?"
We also hear Barbie boyfriend
Ken whine about how tough it is
being the only man in a doll's
world_
,
Estelle Getty, Teri Garr, George
Hamilton and political satirist AI
Franken arc the scheduled guests.
A future episode includes the
rarity of male impersonation as the
lovely Coolidge plays lovely
romance icon Fab1o.
But male-bashers need not apply
to "SHE TV:" those expecting a
femini st ode to female superiority
also will be disappointed, say the
creators. The plan is to try for a
fresh approach to issues that aiTect
both sexes.
''We (fe not excluding men from

the fun ," says Bonnie Turner.
"Strong enough for a man .
Made for a women," deadpans
Terry Turner.
The husband-and-wife comedy
writing team, whose credits include
"Saturday Night live" and the
movie "Wayne's World," took a
tandem interview break from
putting finishing touches on the
first hour.
The Turners share executive
producer credit with George
Schlatter of "Laugh-In" fame: the
show is from Carsey- Werner Co.,
which produces "Roseanne" and
"Grace Under Fire."
AJI the players know that "SHE
TV" must quickly fmd an audience
if it wants to make a midseason
comeback. But there is that odd,
unhappy fact that comedy is
uncommon in the last hour of
prime-time lelevision.
"Ten o'clock has turned into the
fear hour," Bonnie Turner says.
"It's like fear-based programming,
alJ news and one-hour dramas.''
Terry Turner adopts a somber,
mock -anchorman voice: ''These

homes were built on a chemical
dump and everyone died. Is this
going to happen to you? Tune in.
These people thought they were
taking aspirin and they all died.
"Grim," he concludes.
"It would just be nice to laugh
at 10 o'clock at night," Bonnie
Turner continues. "At least viewers will have a bcller shot at not
being completely depressed when
they watch the local news."
Here's a comforting thought for
groundbrcak1ng "SHE TV's"
chances for survival. Timing is key
in comedy, and the Turners say the
series' timing is good.
''There are a lot of high-profile
women, Janet Reno, Hillary Clinton, two women on the Supreme
Court, ' ' says Terry Turner. And
now, "There's someone to make
fun of them," says Bonnie Turner;
finishing the thought.
That includes equal opportunity
jabs at Democrats and Republicans,
liberals and conservatives, Bonnie
Turner insists: "We're not politically correct. Our flfSI job is to be
funny."

.ADD. DOUARS

TO YOUR POCKEl

WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD
Public Notice

'

Public Notice

•
:·

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho
Educational
Monagoment Information
- System (EMIS) County
Board Profile for Flocal Year

FIIOil~II~:TtNG

- """"
AWARD- Ohio Power and ColumbuS
..-

Southern Power were recently recognized ror their work to reror'
est the state's woods rrom the Ohio Department or Natural
Resources. Pictured are, at lert ODNR Director Frances Buchholz·
er and Ohio Power President Carl Erikson. AEP's Ohio-based
companies have planted more than one million trees on company
sites since 1990 and 255,000 this year. Individuals who want ui
have their properties' rerorested should contact Rick Meier at662:
3700,
'

6; 1m for

the Melga County

"' Board of Education will be
available to tho public as of
August 15, 1994. This
profile tncludeo data on
otudont demographics, stall
demographlco, financial
reaourcea,

and

expenditures. Anyone may
vlow thlo profile by
Inquiring at tho Meigs
County Board Office at 320
1/2 Eaot Main Stroot In
Pomeroy.

Carole J. Gilkey

Study: Male characters dominate TV cartoons

First birthday
celebrated

Kyle Gregory Johnson recenUy
celebrated his first birthday.
His mother, Kay Johnson, threw
the party that had a Sesame Street
theme.
Those auending the Gen.
Hartinger Park party included:
grandparents Jim and Betty Johnson, Carol and Angelia Edwards,
Bob, Sherry and Willie Johnson,
Barb and Tommy Varian, Nora
Rice, Donna and Kayla Gheen and
Lorraine McCauley.
Sending gifts but unable to
auend were Danny and Tina Geary,
Holley Geary, Mac and Bea Stewart, Mark Johnson, Linda Lamben
and Nana Beach.

KYLE JOHNSON

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Television cartoon characters that
reflect gender slereotypes may be
helping mold the career expectations of the children who watch
them, researchers at the University
of Dayton said.
A new study by the researchers
shows that male characters dominate canoons. It suggests that the
kinds of jobs children expect to
have when they grow up may be
influenced by the stereotypes in the
cartoons.
"It makes a girl and a young
woman think that their aspirations
are somewhat limited in terms of
career choices," Eugenia Zerbinos,
an assistant communications pro-

fessor who helped conduct-the
study, said Monday.
"We're not saying canoons are
the only factor. But it's one variable."
Peggy Charren, a children's
media consultant based in Cambridge, Mass., believes stereotyping in cartoons can have an effect
on children.
"At that age, you stan to get a
feel for what you can do," Ms.
Charren said. "When the male cat
does tricks on skis while the female
cat talks about how nice she looks
in her ski outfit, it gives you the
feeling that males not only have

more fun , but can do more -things."
The study concluded that both
male and female characters were
portrayed stereotypically . Male
characters often were more active
and adventuresome, while female
characters were more compassion·
ate and confined to domestic roles.
Only 13 percent of the female characters had jobs, and male characters never were shown as caregivers, the study said.
Nancy Signorielli, a professor of
communications at the University
of Delaware who has studied the
effects of television on children,
said the study's findings make

Treasurer

Melgo County
Board of Education
(B) 9, 12; 2TC

sense.
"I really find that there is a relationship between watching television and having certain views of
the world," Ms. Signorielli said.
''And the kids can pick up on these
stereotypes that are in the programming."

arrangements and what materials
they used.
Juanita Will had a sunflower
and Black-Eyed Susan
arrangement in a brown jar. Evelyn
Holter had red and white gladioli in
a blue pitcher and Dorothy Smith
had a pmk Queen Anne's Lace in a
basket with miniature flags for
patriotic arrangements.
Evelyn Hollon used pink gladioli and barberry in a tall glass vase.
A miniature arrangement was
prepared by Betty Milhoan using
tansy and chamomile flowers in a
pitcher alonp; with a Victorian

base.

Belly Snow had a bouquet of
red cock's comb in a pewter pitcher. Peggy Moore had zinnias, thistie and bridle wreath in a white
vase.
Specilnen exhibits included a
pass1on plant and an orange Arizona Rose by Mrs. Will and an
orchid gladiolus by Mrs. Hollon.
The hostess then served refreshments to members and guests
including Edith Sisson and Bill and
Betty Snow. Janet Theiss won the
door prize.

There she is Miss America - minus heels
By JOHN CURRAN
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
- The Miss America Pageant is
kicking off 73 years of tradition
along with its high heels.
. This year's swimsuit competiuon will have conlestants frolicking barefoot together in a beachtheme production number, instead
· of teetering down a runway on
· spike-heeled pumps.
"I'm sure there will be many
people who think it's a step forward. That's not really the reason
for doing it," pageant chairman
Leonard Hom said Monday. "We
look each year to change the telecast, add something, make it more
exciting.''

The costume change struck at
least one feminist as, well, cosmetic.

"So finally they're getting rid of
the shoes. Big deal," said Myra
Terry, president of the New Jersey
chapter of the National Organization for Women. "Let's have a
Miss America contest based on
being a well-rounded person, on
your character and your integrity,
not about the way you look for one
minute."

Traditionalists, however, can
take hean: There are no plans to do
away with the swimsuit competition for the 74th annual pageant on
Sept. I 7. And heels could make a
comeback next year - Hom said
there was no pressure to ban the
pump and contestants haven't complained.
"Whatever comments are made
about the swimsuit are the same
ones made since 1921. Some people like it and some feel we should
get rid of it," Hom said.

The experiment will benefit
contestants because high heels
don't let the foot function normally, said Dr. Rosario LaBarbera, a
spokesman for the American Podiatric Medical Association.
"You'll get a better, more natural shape to the legs. When a person wears a high heel, it gives a
flexing of the calf and a different
shape. You' II see a more natural
gait," LaBarbera said.
But Miss California of 1979
didn't like the idea of losing the
high heels.
"For me, being of the old
school, I'd feel it was unnatW111 not
to have them," said Deanna Hardwick. "If I were to go onto the
beach (with heels), of course that
would feel stupid. But let's face it,
the swimsuit, m the fonnat that so
many people view it, is not natW111
anyway."

A Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, September 1, 1994
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The Meigs County Public Parents may aucnd all perfor-~Library is sponsoring a creative mances.
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.. The workshop will be conducted and costs $10 per student Students
:l!y '"The Imagination Factory", an may register by contacting the
::educationally themed art and drama Meigs County Public Library at
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explore theater through acting
The workshop fulfills all
·games, improvisation, vocal requirements for Girl Scout and
expression and body movement. Cu_b _Sco.ut theater badge/drama
''l'hcy will also create original skits acUv1ty pms.
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Water hauling

Gutters, etc.

New

Manco·Go Karls
3H.P.&amp;Up
Parts &amp; Service
Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
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742-2455

Public Notice

1- ·

FOR SALE

Homes,' Roofing,

Fr•Eollm712Mfn

PROBATE COURT OF
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In tho Malter of
In tha Matter of
Clara Jane Sandoro
John Andrew Sanders
NOTICE
NOTICE
Rovlltd COde, Soc.
Revised COde, Sec.
2717.01(A)
2717.01(A)
Notice
to hereby given
Notice Ia hereby given
that John Andrew Sandoro, thet Citra Jane Sandon,
Caoo No. 28575 of 109 Ceso No . 28576 of 109
Spring Avo., Pomeroy, OH Spring Ave., Pomeroy, OH
45769, has applied to the 45769, hao applied to tho
Common Pleas Court, Common Pleaa Court,
Probate Division of Molgo Probate Division of Meigs
County, Ohio, for an order County, Ohio, lor an order
to change name to Pullins.
to change name to Pulllna.
Said application wilt be
Said application will be
heard In said Court, at 1:30 heard In aald Court, at 1:30
p.m., on tho 9th day of p.m., on tho 9th day of
September, 1994.
September, 1994.
Susan Pullins
Susan Pulllno
(8) 9; 1TC
(8) 9; fTC

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Specializing In

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

the tunc, "Sweet Geor~ia Brown."
A word to the wise.........
Meigs Sherilf Jim Soulsby again Betty is a regular partic1pan1 and so
is cautioning residents to be far hasn't missed coming up with a
extremely careful about giving out correct title.
credit card, checking account and
social security numbers to tele- . Talented Stephanie Sayre of the
Racine area for the second straight
phone solicitors.
Some of these solicitations may year was grand champion at the
be quite legitimate, Soulsby says, Ohio Stale Fair last week with her
and if a smooth-talker gets hold of tomato exhibit. Her tomatoes will
you there might be a tendency to be auctioned Thursday afternoon
go along with the offerings. And and Stephanie is hoping for a good
bid since she's in the process of
then COfi!C the regrets.
accumulating
assets for college.
In one recent incident, a resident
was contacted about buying prodIf you have a July copy of
ucts and ended up taking a $299.50
order to be eligible to win a big "Guideposts," a story which
prize which was to be awarded. begins on page 34 has some local
The resident gave her account interest.
The story deals with the experi· number at a local bank, the number
ences
of Jerry Mercer of Columbus
· of her last check and on the basis of
and
his
financial problems in oper,that a check was processed for the
ating
his
own company, an air carilmounl on her account.
Beware. Don't give out the rier service ending with an inspirainformation and then you can have tional conclusion.
The malerial is copyrighted and
'no regrets.
for that reason, it cannot be repeat.. · · Middleport businessman, Bob ed here. Jerry is the son of Roy
Gilmore, has been contracted to be Mercer and the grandson of the late
a regular writer for the Awards and Mrs. Blanche Mercer, formerlv of
Engraving Magazine, a national bi- Pomeroy and later a resident of
monthly trade publication known Walled Lake, Mich. Some of
Jerry's cousins include the Roger
sometimes as "A &amp; E."
Bob will be writing about his Morgan family, the Virginia Smith
. various experiences involved in the Heilman family; Gladys Morgan
·operation of his business, Middle- family and the Mildred Morgan
pan Trophies, and will wrile under Gaul family.
You might want to borrow a
the by-line of ~'Lazy Day" which
copy
and read the story .
. was at one time his CB handle. His
fU'SI piece is scheduled to appear in
Don't forget. You register open
the October-November issue. Best
class
entries for the Meigs County
of all, Bob will be well paid for
Fair
this
Wednesday and Thursday,
authoring the articles.
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the secreAdd two more names to those tary's office on the Rock Springs
who correctly identified last week's Fairgrounds. By the way, will I be
.aong title. They are Belly Denny seeing you at next week's fair?
Meantime, do keep smiling.
of~'ddlepon and Jean Wright of
Bob Hoenicb is a rormer gen}'om roy. Their correct entries eral
manager or and regular
~ · sly got sidetracked and their
columnist
to The Dllily SentineL
·.names were not included in the
,priginal 13 who correctly named

arrangement of dried herbs and
flowers in a painted floral lamp

Sin~er · Bis-sell were Margaret,
Dante!, Roger and Barbara, Delben
and Donna, Dwight, Glenn and
Tammy Bissell, Devoia McKee,
Frank and Frona Bissell, Megan,
Trenton and Darek Randolph, and
Betsey, Ryan and Dyana
Hawthorne.
Offspring present of Opal
Singer Hollon were Jim and Rhonda Hollon, Shannon and R.S.
Walker, and Rick, Mickie, Chasatie
and Rickie HoUon.
Friends present included Mary
Persons, Gladys Spencer, Elson
and Dorothy Spencer and George
Genheimer.

614-367-&lt;1302
Ampa, Gutta..., Strlnga,
Koybo•d•, Drumo,
Plano a Gulhlr Leeton a.
Chohlre, Ohto

by Bob Hoeflich

Ms. Zerbinos planned to present
the findings Wednesday in Atlanta
at the Association for Education In
Journalism and Mass Communication annual convention. The group
represents about 3,000 university
journalism .and mass communications teachers across the country. ·

-----Family reunion_,;;,;,_...;;.....,;,._....;,;;,...
. The 2Is_t annual He~ry Guy · Singer, Chris, Sherry, Joshua, KenSmger re_uruon .--:as held m July at neth and Stephanie Buck, Jerry and
the Sen1or Clt1zcns Center '" Robert Singer.
Pomeroy. Jeff Smger and Roger
Offspnng present of Susie
and Glenn B1ssell enlertamed with Singer Birth were Lloyd and Dora
muSIC. A potluck dtnner was Lipps, Art and Toni Smith and
enJoyed.
Leota Birch.
. Descendants of the original famOffspring present of Mary
dy members met. Offspnng present Singer Holter were Mattie, Pauy,
of Arthur Smger mcluded Gmyum, Peggy, Tootsie and Char he
Nathan, Nate Jr., DanieUe and Jeff lawrence Susan Gates Rex and
Singer, Perry, Eleanor, Harold and Ethel Cooj,er.
'
Neva Singer, and Sylvia Reiber.
Offspring present of Golda
From th1s klan were Homer and Singer Long Krackombergcr were
Sarah Parker, Roxann Harris, Mary Jane, Melissa and Adam
Megan Varney, David and Geral- Dempsey.
dine Singer, James and Mark
OffsprinR present of Margaret

STAR GUITAR •

Beat of the Bend ...

.

Wilqwood Garden Club holds meeting
The Wildwood Garden Club
recently held its annual flower
show at the home of Betty Milhoan.
Janet Theiss opened the mcetin~
. with the poem "Sweet Mysteries'
and "This Day" by Ralph Cushman. Each person told what lndependcnce Day meant to them for
roll caU.
The flower show's Fair calcgqncs were dtscussed. Dorothy
Smtth and Evelyn Hollon prov1dcd
fl-ower arrangements at the11
church. . . .
Each mdiVIdual showed their

Natural Herbal Ti!lJiets
1·800·796-.6328

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In tho Maner of
Kathryn Suzanna Sanders
NOTICE
Revised Code, Sec.
2717.01(A)
Notice to hereby given
that Kathryn Sandero, Cue
No. 28574 of 109 Spring
Avo., Pomeroy, OH 45769,
haa applied to tho Common
Pleas Court, Probate
Division of Meigs County,

Ba(khoe Service

-

fllllillr.

QDALrrY WIIDOWIYSTEMS

u.a.w....

0.CNilltvl.

• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 lnsla lied
Call For Details

s.ln.H

lut..atlolo

Cal Weste111 A1to
992·5515
Free Estimates
Residential. Commercial
and Industrial

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

·viSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Pom9rc:1. Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tromm Ow1er 1·80()-291-5600

GRACE

Delivered
Locally

Jl. 'Ioucfi of Cfass

ENTERPRISES

Custom WindOw Coverings

992·3838

Blinds • Verticals • Shades

992·4103

!JI. I/1 rn o

Shop At
Horne
Service
Day Or
Night

BINGO
EVERl THURSOAl
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POUEROl

h's not just a way to

cover a window
It's a way to
light up a room
992-5311
1-ll()()...BLIND-11

WHALEY'S AUTO

PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW I. USED PARTS fOI
All MAllS &amp; MOOOS
99l-70UOI
992-SSSl 01
TOll REI HD0-14&amp;-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

483 BEECH ST. MIDDLEPORT OH

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 PayoH
Thla ad good lor 1
fREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

7131/IUfTFN

ti/OIIIWn

KINGS'

Home
Improvements

Ohio, for an order to change

namo to Pulllna.
Said application wlol be
hoard In said Court, at 1:30
p.m., on tho 9th day of
September, 1994.
Suaan Pullins

(8) 9;

lTC

Heinz says
ketchup
still king
By MICHAEL HADDIGAN
Associated Press Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP)
Ketchup is king, the nation's
largest ketchup maker says.
But salsa lovers contend the
spicy Mexican condiment is ill hot
pursuit of the American standard.
The Pittsburgh-based HJ. Heinz
Company released survey results
Monday showing ketchup to be as
common as salt and pepper, with
almost all American kitchens
stocking ketchup.
Sllsa could be found in only
about half of the kitchens, the survey said.
"Ketchup is still king by more
than two to one," said Heinz
spokesperson Nancy Newman.
"People would rather go out and
buy a bottle at dinner time than
serve dinner without it"
Others say Americans' !P'?wing
appreciation of Mexican d1shes is
fueling consumption of ketchup's
fiery cousin.
"Watch out bland. Here comes
hot and spicy," said editor Dave
DeWiu of Albuquerque's Chile
Pepper magazine.
DeWin said salsa - a Mexican
condiment that contains tomato
sauce, onions, hot peppers and
spices - passed ketchup in total
sales in 1991 and ketchup manufacturers have been feeling the
pressure ever since. DeWitt's
71 ,000-circulation magazine in
Albuquerque, N.M., follows trends
in fiery foods.
Although Heinz downplayed
competition between ketchup and
salsa, a press release announcing
the results carried a graphic showing a smalJ jar of salsa dwarfed by
a towering ketchup bottle decorated
with a crown.
"I think 51 percent market penetration is incredible. It points up
salsa's increasing penetration of the
condiment market," DeWitt soid.
Ten years ago salsa could be
found in only about 20 percent of
American homes ; said John
Roberts of the National Association
for the Specialty Food Trade.
About I 00 salsa makers are among
the trade association's I ,500 members.
Ms. Newman said Americans
consume about I0 billion ounces of
ketchup annually. Salsa consumP.tion reaches only about only 4 billion ounces each year, Roberts
said.
·Heinz was one of 20 food manufacturers that paid for the surver of
2,000 American households. Nmety-seven percent of respondents
said they had ketchup in their
pantries while only 51 percent said
lley had salsa.
Dave Jenkins of NPD Group,
the market research fmn that performed the survey, said researcheJS
in 1993 mailed questionnaires to
female heads of household in 2,000
homes nationwide.

mo

~D-1

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES
Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
614-992-2176

SR 7 - Five Points
8113/tfn

331 S1 Happy HoRow Rd.
Mldcleport, Ohio 45760
NewHomae,
Addlllona, Siding,
Painting, Garagea,
Porchea, Pole Barna
Call Uo For An Eotimala

BISSEll BUilDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992-7643

992-7434

Howard L. Writesel
ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
GuHars
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Howard
Excavating-(o.
Bulldozing &amp; Bnckhoc
Service
Complete House &amp;
Tr:1iler S1lcs

Drivc\'Jays, Septic
Systems, Water &amp; Sewc1
Lines, L1nd Cle.:uing
Tr ucking: Limestone &amp;

Fdl D1rl, Top Soil

Reasonable Rilles
Estimates
992-3838 ' ""'"

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
OPENING AUG. 2
Something New tor
Melga County
Tuea. thru Sal 1-G
Nama Brand Tools,
Toya, Fenton.

FREE ESTIMATES

Come and aee.

949-2168

One mlleoutRt t43
from Rl7

rw'1 . . . TfN

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room Additlona
-New ge111gea
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting aloo concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992~215

Pomerqy, 0~1~

:J.j GROOMING
i

•

i,

IU BREEDS
/Jy

7mltmo.

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES

oCarpantry
.Painting
•Power W~thlng­
cleana all axterloro
with high prenure
aprayer
oReaoonablo Roteo
•20 Yearo Experience
•Free Eotlmateo

985-4111

~

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

985·4473

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

Card of Thanks

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2131

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES
Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
Limestone - Fill Dirt
Gravel - Sand
Leach Bed
Installation and Septic
Systems

3/4'-'31MO

TRI·STATE 11·9
ACADlMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel service, rupa a
young dogs lor sale.
Rottweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
61 4-667-PETS

614-992-2176

SA 7 - Five Points
8/13Jtln

Gibbs and families would like to thank
everyone. Their thoughts and prayers
concerning our recent camping experience
In Canaan Valley W. Va.
Special thanks to all the search units,
helicopter pilots and individuals who so
unselfishly gave their time to search for
Ryan and Christopher. Also a special thanks
to our family's and many friends who came
to our homes and phoned us and prayed for
our safety.
We'll not only remember our camping
experience for years to come but will
remember all the love and kindness shown
to all of us.
'
God Bless You Alii
Ryan Hill
Christopher Randolph
GafY Git1bs
Dwight and Lorna Hill
Steve and Julie

}\

~X

212311 mo.

1

DOG

S•sa• Gilmore
...
I/ . · 992·5316

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

~

~

(No Sunday Calls)

HEATING &amp;COOUNG

614-742-30110
304-nJ-11545........,

Price
Construction
Co.

26 y..,, Experlenco
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porchea, Vinyl
Replacement
Wlndowa
For Free Eatlmata
Call 742-2303
712f111 mo. pd.

LINDA'S
-PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; Exterior

Take the pain out of
painting. let uo do it
lor you. Very re...
onable.
Free Eallmatea
Before 6 p.m. leeve
•meaaage.
Alter&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180

3121i/M

,,.,.,

Announcements
3 Announcements
BHutllul 01~.. belting, pelon.telll T1lk to 'em lve 1·100484..0000, ext. 8104, 13:". 11 "-'
yro. pluo, Pr-11 Co., 102·tll4l1120.
IIID YEAR AESOWTION
7 -Oily Dltt Plan. Loot Exceoo
lbo For Good. I loo1 !1C1 lilt. tn
5 Wko. Elting Righi Wllllout

Dlottna. 3 llln. Rocordod Ago. l1.1l5 lllln. lluot Be 18 To

eon. 1-~UWSI-6533.

4

Giveaway

I Pupploo PI~ Oo~ Alltlftor

&amp; Po~ ChOw. 1~ A*&gt;:
Kilt..,. to good homo.
FIW 1111 dirt. 304-675-2021
011 cool! IIOYIJ IXCIIItnl

dillon, 814-1112-2•78.

eon-

�Tuesday,August9,1994

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

·-'.LLEY OOP

~
•

WIZE~ TELLS
VOU ' ~£

e011. ,.._

GON"'-'

\

COUPLE OF )

llD /Oo NEW

REASONS !

PA.L-'CE !

.-

·

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

.. THE MOST IMPORTANT ONE

15 TO G/Oo iN MORE RESPECT

FIWM THE CI TIZEN S! T~EY

MUST BE M/OoDE TO 11£/0ol.IZE
Tl-iA.T

35Rabbil
36 Platform

ACROSS

T~E

c.D'I/EI2NMENT 1$
Yll/O,L TO
THEIR WEL L · BEING .'

"850LUTEL~

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 Jest
5 Resign
9 Actor Shepard
12 Govl. farm

39 Cares about
40 Assn .
41 Haze
42 Barbec ue part

agency

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
Kitten To A Good Home, 1514379-2552.
Kitten, To GOOd Home, tiJ4;.3~
2585.

"'Kick Ma Whlla I'm Down"!
OWnor Mull Soli Nowl "Lol"o
Talk Buslneas"t a.. utltul, Large
Two Story On Corner Lot. 816
Main Sl. Pt. PIMaant. Three
Bedrooms TWo Full Baths
Kltch•n, Dining, Living, FamilY
Roome, Llrga Utility Room Air
Condlllonl&lt;[ $69 !100.00 ·614448-2205.
'
.

Slam... mother cat with 2 kJt·

Ions. 304-675-3732.
250 6.
Young roosters, 514·985-4288.

Lost &amp; Found

Found: Keys At Oa llla County
Fairgrounds. ldenltty And Claim
At : Gallipolis Clly Pollet
Oepartmen1 .

Yard Sale

7

2br. apt., $375/mo. lncludn new
appll.ances and 111 utllhltl,
newly redecorated, refartncas,

WAif." up, CAp.L~£&lt;'
IN F••f'&gt; ~~~-"" r !

deposit. 304~5-4650 or 304-

675-6196.

2br., 1st. Uoor, khchtn appliances, washer/dryer hook-ur.
w/atorage, no pets, l&gt;t. Ple ... n ,
3 bodroom ronch, 2 bolho, LA rafarencas required. 304-675family room, khchtln wlc:lnln9 6357.
arN, aolar hot water, deck:, Fuml1hed EHiclency $150/Mo.
tcrNned porch, utility room, Ulllllloo Pold, Shoro Solh, 607
new root, 3 ctr gan~ge wlapl. Socond Avo .• Golllpollo. 614-146abon, wtorage building, corner 4416 Aft Of 7 •.II.
~-#.\': Stroll, Syrocuu, 614Fumlehld Apartment 2 Bedroom•, $205/Mo., Ulllltlu Paid
3 bedroom, all alectrlc home 701 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, 614~
Spring
Avenue Pomeroy: 448-4oti6Aftor 7 P.ll.
$30.000, 814-092-2913' or 61~

Washer, needs pump, ti14-992·

6

71

NORTH

Autos for Sale
Bare"'• equ1, tinted wll'h

h•dllght COYWI1 dect~lJ,
taU over paymentl.

HARD
lV SAV

mOrnlnge.

AH· •F

92' Vipor LS 4 DR. PII1ICI
Shopo AIIJFil rodlo. Co_,l
end Dlac: changer. $16,000.00
614-4487500

MF

Whllo Uncoln T-n Cor 1881,

So w~~r ?"
W/1{,

WEST
.. 8 7 5 1
Y6 5
• Q 6 3
Oo9 B 5 2

10t h. And 11th, l ampe, ShHts,
Blankets, Home lntarl01, Crahe,
Drapes, Curtains, Bar Stools,
Di shes, Etc. 250 Stale 51.

Murt Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad 11 to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

"'l"m dieting .. how muc h to wire 1ust the !ridge?""

ALL Yard Sales

Wodnesday August 10th, g A.M.
1 till Mi. Out Goorges Creek Ret

11

11

Help Wanted

AVON $$SALES
Polonllal $200 ·$2,000 Monthly.
Fantastic Discount•! Bonefhsl
Flexible Hours. Terrhory

llonol. 1-BC0-742-1738.

ap.

Drlvors Wantod. Straight truck
class D lie., 21 or ever, curnnt
physical, good d~vlng rac;ord. 1·
800-184·755H1393 or 304-484·
1188.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
453 Grant 91., Middleport, Wed,
Tl'lura,Aug. t0·1l

AU Yard Salaa Uuet Be Paid In
Advance . OudUne: 1:00pm the
day beforw the ad Ia to Rln,

Sundoy odnlon- 1:OOpm Frldoy,
llondoy
odlllon
10:0Ga.m.
Saturdly.
Moving ul• August 10-12, 512
Eao! Main Slroel, Pomoroy.

Thuroday ond F~doy, Auguo! 11·
12, bahJnd talrgrounda on Crww
Rd. IOam-lpm.
W.d . Aug. 10, ~. June St. Ru•
tic Hills, Syn~cuae,JAnle Con-

for Sale

Help Wanted

Nlod Sabyslllor In My Homo,
Matura Non-Smoker, For 1
Child, 614 446 481t.
Noodod- bobyllllor lor two
children In my home or Derwin
area. reterenc• nec....ry, call
614-69&amp;-1153, ..

•v• meeuge.

Home Economicl
Ampoc:l
Toochor.
Qualification•:
Ohio Home
Eoay Worttl Excollont Payl A. Economlca Cortlfleollon. Nollly:
umblo Produclo AI Homo. Coli S&lt;tpl. Off., Gollla Jactcoon VinToll F-, 1-800-167-11566, Ext. ton JVSO, P.O. Box 157, Rio
313.
Grandi, OH 4$674 By Aug. 10,
Ellalblo Gonllomon looking Fot 18t4; 614 ~ 4 5-5334/EEO.
~~mpanlon, F~ond. 814· 13
Insurance
Home Cal"' Aid••
Home care aldea needed lor

homo vlallo In tho Goillpollo
aroo. May load lo lull·llmo pool·
lion wllh bonotno. Coli 614-569·
41711o opply.

V1c:ancy;
GRADS

AMERICAN
NATIONAL IN·
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO 015·COUNTS
UFE &amp; HEALTH
3114-586-4257

1972 14X70 tralltr; 2r ,round
abovl ground swimming pool
everything lncludod· 6t4-84i
5350.
'

$22210 Coli
$285. 614-146-2588.
Walk to shop
llrommovlaa.
EOH.
1W2 Buddy 2 Bedroom For
Nicely Fumlshod Aportmonl,
Sala, 614-146-1400.
1br, next lo Ubrary, par1dng,
1987 Riverview 14.00 Total central heal, air, rofannce reElectric With Hut Pump, 3 Bed· quired. 614-446..0338.
roomt, 2 Bathe1 ~nfumlshed
Set On Rented LCJI, Read'f TO Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed~
Move Into, located 7 Mllea On room apanmantt at VIllage
end
Rlwrslde
SR 180, Call Anor 5 P.M . 614- Manor
Aporlmonls In Mlddloporl. From
388-l!872, Or 614-446-1090.
$232-$355 . Call 614-11112-!18!19.
1987 SchuH 14'1711' Wllh Ex- EOH.
panda loaded wtth extr88
refrigerator etova, washer: Nlca 3 br. ape. In Mlddl•port,
cenln~ l air. S.t up In Quail Cl"'ek 614-1192·S858.
on comer lot. Will not Hll on Ont &amp; two bedroom lp1, 125
lend conlroc:l. $16,500.00 614- Cote Sl., Middleport, Ohio, 614245-a013
1112-7511.
3br., 2 both, on 120150 lol, Hondoroon, wv. 304-678-4024.
Unlurnlohod Upotllre .lportmonl
3 Room•, Bath, t1 Cedar Strllt,
LIMITED OFFER I Now 14x80 Vary Cloan, $30011lo. Wolor
only maks 2 poymonto, no Pilei, 614-388-BCOO.
paymonlo oftor 4 yooro frao
dollvery &amp; Mt up, owner tlnanc· Very Nice 3 Bedrooma, Stcond
lng ovolleblo. 3114-"ISG-65110.
Fl~r1 • Ovorlooklng City Pork,
$30wooo. No Polo, DapooH &amp;
Nevtr
llvlld REPOSI
In, atlllOnly
hat4 new
NEW BANK
loft!
home wa~nty, tr.e dallvery 1

nolly rtsldenca.

" ' llfl, ownor flnonelng ovoll·

8

lblo. 304-785-71111.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

lnllka Spocilllal lor 1111 1111a1
llotropoJHon
Aulhorll"y.
Port Omo politlon I hounl 1
m -5785.
wook. Dutl.. lnciiido oppllcotlon
Auctioneer Cot Oscer E. Click, Intake and clerical dutlea. Pret.r
Uconso I 754-94 &amp; Bonded, computer experience tYDing,
304-895-3430.
filing, knowtodgo of SoefiOn l
Ronfll .lalotronca Pragram ond
lho abHhy IO lnlomllll wllh tho
9 Wanted to Buy
public. Rooumoo wiD bo occopClaan Lale Model Care Or lod II lho llligo lllllropoiHon
Trucks, 1987 Models Or Newer, t-loualng Authoilty office, 237
Smith Buick Ponllacl 1900 Raco Street, Middleport, Ohio,
Eastern AYenue, Galllpoi 1.
9:00am-4:00pm. llondoy lhru
Frtdoy until Auguat 15il 11194.
Decorat.d .toneware, wall tel• Molgo llotropomon
ouolng
phones, old lampa 1 old ther• Aullior11y 11 on Equal Employmomatere, old clocu, a,..Jque mont OpportunHy Employor
fumlture. Riverine AnUqLIII. which prohlbha dtcrlmlnallon
Rust Moore, ownar. 814-992· beeaute ot race, cfMd. color,
2526. We buv estatoa.
national o~gln, oox, ogo, hll&gt;dlcap, pollflcol offlllolion or
Don 't Junk ttl Sell Ua Vour Non- bolloto.
Working

Major

Houof,

Appllancee,

Color T.V.'aL Ratrigaratora,
Freezera, VCH't, Mlcrowavee,
Air Condltlonera, Waahe,.,
Dryaro, Copy Machlnn, Etc.
614-256-1238.
J &amp; D'o Auto Parto ond Sllvago,
1lao buying Junk cars &amp; lrud.a.
304-773-5343.
Old clgoratto ll9hloro, milk bot·
ties, fountain pens, allverwera,
m~mlea. t1oneware, magazlnte,

LOOKING FOR CHILO CARE?
CCRN -&lt;:hlld C.IV R11001rca
Nolwork 11 A Ffoo Communby
SoJYico Which Would Anlo!
You In Locollng Coro To Your Noodo. Coli HI00-577-2278
To Sot How Wo Con Holp.

Ooby Morlln, 614-Bi2·11141.
Wlntod To Buy: Junk Autoo
Wllh Or Wllhout lloloro. Coli
Lony Llvoly. 614-388-~ .

MAJOR TELEPHONE CO. Now
Hiring. Taehnlclane, lnllalleN,
Acct ISorv Ropo, Opomore. No
Eaporlonc:e - r y. F0&lt; 1~&gt;­
fonnollon, Coli 1-211-7311-4715
Exl. F11432, I .l.M. ·I P.ll. j
Ooys.

Star Wera and Star Tr11i hama;

Top Prlcoo Pold' All Old U.S.
Colne, Gold Rings, Sliver Colna,
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Galllpoll1.

Employment Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

AVON I All Arooo I
Spooro, 304-675-142!1.

Shl~oy

AVONI All treat. Need extra
money or want 1 ca,...r, tither

woy~all Mo~lyn .

or HID0-11112-635ti.

304-882·2G45

ApJIIIcatlonl Arw Baing Accap-

iod For Till Following Port·Timo
Po•ltlona:
EVENING
SUPERVISOR
fTE.lCHER • lloilroa In Educ.
lion And 1 Yur Prtvloua b·
portonco Worl&lt;lng Wllh Chlldron
Roqulrod.
EVENING TEACHER • High
School Olplomo Or Equlvolont
And Provlo.. Exporlonco Wort!·
lng Wllh Chlldron Roqulrod. A.
ooclo~ lloilrM Pret.riod.
Houre For Both Pooblons Mondoy Thruugh F~doy 5:00 ·10:00
P.M. No Benefhe. O..dlln• For.
AppUCIIIono Augull17, 11194.
Pot:ltlona Av1111bl1 Augu.t 23,
1994.

Send Interest Latter And
Resum• To Phylllt M1eon,
DlrK1or Of Human RMDurcet,
Unlvtrslly Of Rio Grande, P.O.
Box 969, Rio Grande, OH 45874.
AA IEEO Employer.
.lo por Arllclo e. Tre•t.ro ond
Vaeancl"~

Section 9, of th•
Negollatea Agr•emtnl between
lht MLTA and the Board of
Educollo!'1 lho Molgo Locll
School uurl~c:l lo pooling lho
follOWing voconcy for ho regUilr
loochlllll o!off: Toachor otMIIgo
Junklr High School.
Att•ntlon mature lnclvld~aola
wfth edre time on their hlnda. If
you're
a
rlllr.d
eenlor,
houuwlt.Jhwt.nd, etc., you
lillY. be luat the peraon we're

looking lor. McDonold'o A...
touronf locotlono In Hlndlroon,
WV ond GoUipollo, OH currontly
hoi lull ond port-limo poolliono
available t.twMn 5am-11pm.
We're extr.-nelv Uexlble about
tailoring hours to fll your nelda,
In-houSe lralnlng prog_ram .o no
experience Ia rwqulred, competl·
llvo woau, pold blrlhdoyo oil,
frM unlforma, automatic rate

,,.,._In 110 doyo, vory lllrerll
pold v-ion plon•..ovon for
pm·tlmoro.. H lnt-tacl, ltop
by Mcl)otwkf• of Henderson or

Golllpolla ond pick 11f1 an oppllcallon.

Malnlononce !Cour~1 _Poohlono
Avolleblo, Apply: unro Vollay
Sank, Moln · Otllca, 420 Thlnl
Avonuo, Galllpol~ OH 4&amp;131. E·
quol OpporlunHy ~:rnptopr.

Malgo County Soon! of MRIOD •
school aga lnttRJctor nHdld to
t.. ch 11 Corloton School. Muot
have current valid Ohio ~'t. of
Educatlon teaching cerdtlcale
and hava or be eligible to obtlln
Ol'llo O.p't. of Education multl-handlcoppod Clfllllcatlon. Sind
resuma by Augult 11 to : Carlolon School, 1310 Corloton
Slrlol1 P.O. Sox 307, Syroc.. o,
Ohio 457711.
NowTormlnol
Conllnol Frolghl Carriero Inc. lo
hl~ng

ownarfopal'ltcn

IXPI'"iancod
for

the

vonlllelbod dlvlllon, profHoblo
PlY program, accunte wMkly
Hl:tlemtnta, medical lne. aYIIJ.

obla, ~clor progrom ond limo
home, no up front money to

..... on. Call Bo,d, 1-800-220-

242\

DllnlriODinltoro
Corclnol Frllght Corrlonl 11
hl~ng oxporlonCod OTR'oto Nn
llltbid, 11111 - - g o of
; . - rovonuo pulling oompony
frallllra or pulftng own tnller,
heatlh lneurence w/dental &amp; vJ.
elon evallable, bile• plata

evallabl1, bob-tall lneurance
IVOiilbil, fuol cord lyollm,
wMidy
oollilmonto,
rldor
program, tlma home. 1..S00.220242\

-wort&lt;

Poroon To u ...ln
&amp;
Cooking, e Ooyo Weok,
Rotoronooo Roqulrod , 114-4464821.
POSTAL JOBS
811rt $11.41 lllr. For Eum And
::=ncotlon Into. Coli 1211) 781Exl. 011581, t .l.ll. -II P.ll,

Furnished

lotS

&amp;A

H-•

Vl•f1 ::a•'

Wrl-

4345.

Real Estate

2 Bodr""!"!1 AI Eloctrlc
$25QIIIO. I1-H802.
'
2br. Ualllr, $3000. 304.a75-2Ge3.

31

Homes for

Sale

3 bodroomo 1112 botho 2
llropioCH, tuh booomont h..i
pump w_~J corpolod, 'polio
garogo, ~ .'!&gt;.! 1 Norton 81;
llooon, 304-r ,._._

"'"~~-

2br.

treller, rot.renCH &amp;
dopooH, 1110 trellor lot ovollobil, Lacuol Rd on rtghl. 304175-10711.
Beck of New Hann, below

Haven
Heights,
3br.
w/applancee,
Wisher/dryer
5.881;. ':,,500, terms avail:
able. 48 -3503.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

11 Nlntondo T-; Full Size
Com Conlor Works, 1 Yoor Old;
72 Compoct Dloco, m P•PII'
bock Books 114-146-711111.

awn.,.

Loaclld, Vtry Clean, 1

80,000 Mlloo, 114-4411-1134.

TH' FRONT

'

YARD'S ALL

1187 Chev. S.10, 4cyl, 4apd., :
bWck l ellver, lhlrp, $3800. ·

-":~::;===========-j:========~
:;
54
Miscellaneous
Merchandise

C.mpar
Size
Retr1gtr11tor,
Aporlmont Size Eloctrlc Stove,
Color T.V., Mlcrowovo 514-2581238.
'
Chlol Typo Froozor, Works
Good $50. 614-141-133i.
Conctota &amp; Plao!lc Sopllc
TonksL 300 Thru 2,000 Gollono
Ron ~vena Ente!'DriHa, Jack·
oon, OH 1-800-637-t528.
Evans

&amp;

Electric
Charger, Good

Jenning•

Wheelchair a
Chair, Uke Ntw, 814-4Q...8207.

Gonion Mumo: Yonow, Whfto,
Onlnge And Purpla. Taylor'•
sony. Patch, Karr Rood, 614-24~
1104ll
Kina Brand Cole &amp; Woodbumer

Wll~ Blowor, Uko Now, $150;
114-446-1831:

And
Will O.Uvor.

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Up~ghl, Ron Evono ~n1orprt111,
JlcUon, Ohio, 1-80().537-9528.
SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEDS- Now Commorclo~ Homo
Unfto from $111t.OQ. LompoloUona- Ac-riM. Monthly
poymonto u $18.00. Coli
Today~ FREE NEW Color
catalog, 1-801).482·91&amp;7
Tondy DMP 133 Doi·Molrlx
print•, $7&amp;. 30+e75-3125.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
200 PSI $11.85; 1 Inch 200 PSI
132.60; Ron Evono EnloiDifooo,
614-288- 5830 Jockoon, Ohl~

55

Building
Supplies

61 Farm Equipment

Annual Chalnaaw chain 1111
Muon Counly Fair Wook Oniyl
Sldlro Equlpmonl. 304-a75-11121.

Choln Sow bare &amp; cholno to 111
llmoet any uw. BMt prices In
area. Sid.,. Equipment. 3Q4..
675-11121 or 1-8C0-2n-31117.
Ford Ma)eraon dl•ll tractor
$2360. 304-67U2Ba.
'

International 250 DIMe! Trector
&amp; Suoh Hog $2,1150; 130 MF
Dlnol Whh Bieda $3,8110; 11600
Fold 17 Hundrod Houro, IUSO

614--2&amp;8-8522.

•

:6-:3:---:-L-:I_v~est.:..:.O:.C:,k:..:...,,__
2 Purobrod Alplno Bucko, 140
Each; 1 Roglo!ored Alpino Suck,
Slack &amp; WhHo S80 614-258-

6265.

'

3yr. old
Roalo!orod
boy
Thoroughbrod fiiTy. Joks So.,..
rvllil, 304-a75-3030doyo, 304875-4232 evenlnga.
uv.. tock Houllng, Anyllmo
Anywhlro. Producoro HllloborO
Evory Mondoy, Calt Trtppla
Crook Trucking, Chucll Wllllemo, 614·24~6098.
Ono cow roady 1o hive calt 1
htlfer due to have calf; 1 t.ll.r
cal~ I Horton! Bull 2 yre. old· 3
Booglo pupo, 2 112 monlho·' 1
Booglo pup o monlhl; 114-lil:z322111-614-337·11113.

64

H

&amp;G

::---:-a,.;y:...._,__
ra:..l:..n:..__
Square bat•. $1.25 to $2.00 per
bolo, llfolla, clover, orchlrd
grooo. 304-67~3t80.

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

Block, brick, MWor plpoo, win·
dow., lintels, ttc. Claude Wifloo '84 Chryoler Now Yorllor, 2.2 litre
toro, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 614- tu.rbo1 p. wlndowo, PS, PS, lift
WnMJ, lront - 1 drlvo, 88,000
245-5121.
011111, condblon, con 11411115-111A onor Spm.
56 Pets for Sale
Groom end a ••
1tlt Muotang, ecvt., outo., PS,
IIJD. inl......, $4200. 304.a75~Qroomlng. Julio 1 b. I

r.t Silo:=

~Pomporod Pall by Sonyo, dog
grooming, bothlng, Ill brooclti.
304.a82-37:10.
10rr10rr8 dog ksMOI, $1111.t5.

Ptilnt Plua, 304-875-4084.
AKC Garmon Shoslord olud 11,.
vlco. 304.a7HI3f.
AKC
Roglotorod
Boxor
pu~,lawn1 and brlndln, both
porerlo on proml- chomplon
podlg,.., 814·7112·2208.
AKC RogloiiNd Chow Chow
Puppy, 10 Woau Old, Shoto,
Wormod ey Ylllnorton, 114-.JIIS.
8438.
AKC Roglltonod Fomoil BIIMI
Hound. Rod ond Whlll. .llmoa11
1144111-1337

,_old. m.oo

'

~=~~~~~~~
11173 Dodao Coronol 48,0110
original m1Too'l_4_!'ow tl;.~~-•
of now porto, .,.. firm.
;os.

5840 ...nlngo.

WHAR I PUT

CLEAN UP

TH ' FRONT

AUNT
LOWEEZY

:

1t87 Ringer, STX $_31200, 1e111:
Chovy 112"Ton, $2,8&lt;10, 114-14681158.

RN • WV liconM lor ochool
nu,.., must have BSN or wUIIng
to puraue, approved medlcala
pn&gt;vldor. Two pooltlono •
Hortlord a Vocational. Tond to
- . of apocill ltudlnto,
ochool
houre,
contracted.
Ooodllno lor olllllvlng Aug 11.
Sind leiter oflnl-• to tho
llooon County Boord of Ed.,..
lion, 3Q7 8th St~ Point Pl-nl
WV Alln: Corol "· Miller.
'

grade
54 Rant and 55 Camp sight
garments
56JFK sigh!
20Words of
· understanding 57 Partly open
58 Slangy
2~ Bernstein. for

18Women's

affirmative

short

"K q 6

Y KQ 104l

32Actress-

DOWN

Ward
33- Sumac
34 Chemical suffix

1 Campus area
2 Soviet Union
(abbr.)
3- fixe
(obsession)
4 Herb

5 Monarch
6 Arrow polson
7 Thothlng"s
8 Small child
9 Oceans

1e81 S-10 AutomoUc 80,310
Mlloa $4,1100, l-.o824.
:
1t88 GMC P.U. $4,119&amp;; 1et:Z:
Font P.U. 811\llll5i)ffl Font P.U. •
Lo~l Sharpr 1tw Font Bronco ·
$1,0115; 1t84 Dodgo Corovon ·
$1,tm; 1N1' Font .lor..lorl Yon :
S3,11115i 1985 Ford P.U. $2,71!1;
1188 &lt;Ohovy S-10 414 S3,tN:
1t88 Toyolo P.U. $2,3811; a&amp;il
Auto Sll01, Hlghwoy 180 N. C

'lOU KNOW, A STOR'f'
A60UT 50MEONE LIKE
JOI-lN TI-lE BAPTIST ..

1StVO Nl111n .plckup truc:k. AIC;

wllh 1 cop, $3500, 114-1112·2082
avanlngo, Roymond Con•lll. .
Chovrolal, Font, Dodge- plckUR
- · Short or long. No ruot.
304-675-6286.

Vans

John the Beagle

'

FRANK &amp; ERNEST
m

1i8t Dociao Rom Von 10 DOO'
~~ $4,11"00; Con 8a ~AI: •

-ollpolla Dally Trtbllno. 125.
Thin! Avonuo, Goillpollo, 114-·

Pa ss

Pa ss

Pa s~

2 •
J •

l.

Pa ss

Pass

Pass
Pass

-.~

47Armbone
48 Fable'o kln
SO New Deal

agcy .
51- M11h111l

the maJOrity of the ACBL me mbe rs hip
was expanded
Ce lebrolv C1pher crvo1ogram s are oeated Irom quOI;J ioOf15 lly lamous people pa~1 a11d presenl
Eact' tette• 1n ttm C1phe r s1ands tor o.~ n(f me · rooay s cruf' VII eQPdls M
The May iss ue contain ed todai s
d ea l. an exce ll e nt exa mpl e of th e
Scissors Coup
s0
K 0 F R H C XS A 0
·so TBK
North"' two -diamond cue -bid
s howed a good hand. u s ually with
SO YSUXRKE :
LDPSBOUD
LDPDBX :
heart support. South was n"t ashamed
of hi s overca ll. but he co uldn"t think of
SO VDBUD
another r eb id to make . However. ' WBAOBOSWSXE
when Nort h issued a ga me invitation ,
TSOFXRO
ARRLTSHH
South went on w1th a lacrity.
West led hi s lowe s t diamond. Eas t
won with the kin g and Immediate ly
U 2 C K U 2 S H fi
swi tc hed to th e club three .
PRE VIOUS SOLUTION "ll lnere ts any larce ny 1n a man . golf w11i bnng 11 out . ~
Ea st 's int e ntion s we re c lea r . He
- Paul Gailtco
(1 1994byNEA h tL
planned to win the fir st round of
trumps. lead a diam ond to hi s part ·
ne r" s queen and receiVe a club ruff to
WORD
defeat th e contract.
UMI
Edlrod by CLAY R. ,Oli.AN
Was there any way for declarer to
thwart this dastardly sc he me' Yes.
iearrange letters of the
there was . as long as East had both
four Krombled words bethe quee n and jack of spades.
low ro form fovr words
After winning the club switch . de clarer cashed dummy" s s pade ace,
BODMIR
played a spade to his king and led the
1
2
spade nine . When West played a lower
spade . dummy "s d ia mond jack wa s
discarded.
By cutting the defe nders' communication. South e nsured that West never
gained t he lead and East never re ·
ceived a club ruff. The declarer lost
only three tricks one spade, one heart
=:
··1 th1nk we should be proud
and one diamond .

'~~:~:~' S©tt~lA-"t!fS"

Motorcycles

'81 Yamohl Worrtor, 350CC, 2 ;
Willll drlvo, 118W fnlnt Uro, Ill .

()

II8W anglno ono yoor 0001 $18041 .

0

~

I

1182 Hondo FT 500 Excollanl
CondHion, 11,1100 Mil-, $1,ooo, ,
080,814-441-0043.
1183 Hclnda ....._ IOOoo, .....
cond. 30WlS.a117.

O

I

BORN LOSER

1110, ~ "itX.J \o.O.X._\)
ME IT111E.
l.Oti(£:)Tlo.IE.EX '

1881 VII Mag,. 1100 CC RI!JIII
a-u s..por Claonl a llalr:hln(j
Full Foca 1111111811, Ugi111;
1\'a,""r llorol 13,000, - -

Of

11181 H.D. 883 S - o r E.C'
lmmaculoil Condlllon. lolo 01
Extru, No Drwrunore( 114-3888401.

I

1 I 1 I I

IJriVlEII

---.I_s-rs-...o_A~-ll

~

15M.

I
. .
I. I. , Is

of our little mistakes ... one not
so smart chap informed his
friend ."That way we don't have
to admit we make ....•.. •

v·

I
Ir-T,-::6-rl-::7,.-,1--1..--..1-1 0
L.........I...._.I-..L.......I.__J "'

1m ~ .lopon, Slant I Englne, Rune GoOd, $415, 8~
2720 Allor 8 P.M.
1m 01c1o Cutllll. 304-675-

38111.

I PONT
OII&gt;N "T MAI&lt;E THE I'ILL~
5T/OoR TE}o.t'l_ fRANCIS 0
&gt;IHAT lito! lt.IJUSTICE I

~304;;;;:.a_7=71::-Hc:.:-:-::-....,-,:---:-:-­

1981 Civyllor Cordobo $500
114-4411-11158.
'
Eld~ndo

Codllilc $2,100,

good lhlpo, 304-a75.a1181.

11182 Oldomoblil tB Rogoncy
AKC Rogllt1rod Poodle, whHo, 84,000 Mllao, An Pow•il· supor
Cllln, Will Tou Guno, oat Or
hoi .u lhdo, - · - · 014- Pool Toblo In Tredo. 114-:~Si:
1112-2508.
8413.
AKC Roglot•od Wolmoronar
pupploo. 304-G78-7JIIO.
1885 Muo!ong LX, 11,8041; 114448-l!W.

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF

BIG NATE

••reme.

1111 Old8 CUI:iaa
280
onglno, va, outo., now com41~
,.,., tlm11111, bock &amp; front
brokiiS.now DICk !ramo, $2100.

1t81

...

46Anowpolaot~

'

446-2342.

8'14-0&amp;2~t

IY
2•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

114-~ .

1m Joop CJ5 .lU Flbooaill•
llocly Now Soft Top I Blkiril T.,i.
RebUilt, 304 Ne• TINa, 114-441·
1660 After 4:30 P.IL

74

East

compri s in g in struc t ional materia l fo r

a. 4 WD's
$2500

North

The Amer1can Co n t ra c t Bridge
League controls tourn ament bridge in
North America . IFor deta rl s . call BOO·
467 · 1623 I The ACBL publi s hes a
m on thly ma gazone. ca ll e d The
Bulletin. which gives \ourname nt re ·
s uit s and conta in s many int eresting
a rticle s . Ju st re ce ntly . th e sectio n

1m Jeop CJ-5, 304 otondonl
traneml11lon,
5532.

Wt"s t

More
for the majority

5-10 pickup INCk, bilok, V-ll
Tohoo pockogo, 114,110Dml. 304675-2190.
.

73

South

By Phillip Alder

uu.. ot Holzera, &amp;lt 448 lass. ,

I MEM" . LOOK
..T SOI"IE OF
THE LOSERS

wHO DID
t'\AK.E IT I

Gludron 15 Fl. Ill HP Good Ski
Boot $1,500, Nogotleblo, ,,...._ ·

1315.

76

.. .

Auto Pans It
Accessories

~·
'

'

360 or 400 lll'bo troMmlulono •
uood or ovllhoulocl g..-00r1·'
I I 30 doyo. i04:1178-41110 Pt ,
Pl....nt.
•

ITUESDAY

.ROJIOJ"M AN

Serv1ces
81

10Land meao~n
11 Faahlon
17Broed
19Sundlly
speech (oblif.)
22Relgn
23 Medlc:el
24 TV'I tlllldng
horael2wdl.)
25Firot·m•
(2 wds.)
26threa (Sp.)
27Soclal
misfit (ol.)
28Baoebalill'
Nolan 29Among
30Young girt
32Warbled
35Thatledy
36Decorum
38- d'Azur
39 Extinct bird
41 Chicken
42Foem
43V.P .'o bosa
44 By the time-IOPhOinll
45Edlbla

•utll•

Opening lead • 3

YARD

TH' BACK
YARD

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondHional llflllmo g.....,.:
111. Lacll rolarono11 furilllhld.
Coil 1-~ Or II4-2U
0488 Rogn Wotorproollng. Ealabllohllf 11178.

ASTRO·GRAPH

12" punch box, 1 - omp
punch, 130011., w/Syr. worronty.

sure to state your zodtac Stgn

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your matenal
prospects look encouragtng today . espe ctatly tn arrangements where you do bUSI ness w tth persons who are of the oppostte
gender

304-682-~.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Do not dele·

S&lt;ti&gt;-F~.

Rlllouront Mgre•.fllgh howty
rota, paid vacatiOn, lrM
unlforomo, lrM lood, ond mony
olhor lrlngo bonlllta, vwy
........blo
hcrapllallzolloir
IYiiilblo, - ' IX•
porlonoa highly tlaalrabla lrul
not rwqulrwd". Lot ua bl your
Mtpioyer ol 1a1 _.._ llrid llltar ol l n l - ond
ruume to 8o1 A41, o/o Pt.
Plouont Roalotor, 200 lloln 81.,
Pl. Pillllnl,"WV 255110.

THAT'S

GOT TO DO IS

CLEANED UP,

304·7'73-5302 doyo or 304·773-

C ,~ bv NEA. Inc

NOW ALL YOU

44

POSTAL JOBS
81ort $1t.4Uir.1 foro OJJIJII ond
opplicallon lnJO. call 211-7818301 ut. WV548, llm-&amp;pm,

53 Barely passing

16 Direction

I •

)!ARNEY

1184 Dodao Plclc.Up, 2 WD, 318

614-446-1 j~~§.~~~~~~~
----=-----And
45

Umberto 15Jacob' s son

Vulnerable Both
Dealer . Ea st

4425
Evenlnge.
Roforancoo
Roqulrod.

Rooms
creage
Roomolor ronl· waok or month.
Gena1111 Maintenance, Prii.Wing
Yold Work Wlndowo Wooho:l 120 wooded 1c,.1 wlmlneral ~=~~~ at $120/mo. O.llla Hotel.
Guttoro Claanod Light Hauling, ~fthlo, $375 por acre, 1 112 milts 6
1580.
Commertcal, R11ldentlal, Slave:
o R1 1 South ol Tuppor Plalno Slaoplng Roomo $15 Por Ooy.
014-440-4148.
114-V85-4188.
• Cono!ructlon Worlcare Wolcomo,
Georg• Portable Sawmill don't 5.J2 IC,.., $13,160. 8.14 ICIOS Efficiency
Kftchon,
Froo
haul your loga to tile m{JI juiJI $14,5711.
Rayburn
Rd' Loundry, 814-388-1172t.
Clll304-175·t957.
reasonabl• rH1rlctlona. lnfor:
mallon mailed on ,.,.uao!• .,,A SIMplng room• wHh cooking.
Handy m1n, lnlarlorlexterlor
• .,
._..... Also tniller tpace on rtvar. All
6
hook-upo. eon ohor 2:00 p.m.,
75-5253.
palntrng, light hauling &amp; car·
pontry. lluto body worK &amp; polnl· River property naar Syracuse, :J04.7T.J..S651, Mllon WV.
lng. 304-895-3830 or 304-675ocro lot, 20x40 building wllh
Space for Rent
7595,
rvnovotod one bodroom oport· 46
Mlta Paula's Day Care Center mont, $28,500, 814-898-6002.
3 Room Office Sullo Wllh
11-F 8 .l.M. -11:30 P.M. Ouolhy Wonted lo buy· two or mora Private Tollot In Modern Aro
Loving Care For All Children
oulllblo to build on ond Proof Bldg. Coil llorrlo Haokino
Our 11 G01l. Part·Time, Full· ocroa,
cl011
lo
• blocklop rood 814- 814-448-2631 Or 814-146-2512.
Tlmo~ Fed. Anlolanco Anllobll.
84G~2481.
'
Clll r-or lnformallon Or VloH. In·
Marhart Rental &amp; Storage Unite,
lanl /Toddlor 614-141-6227. p,..
51101 10x10, 10x15, 10x20, 10x30.
School,
Schoologo,
B&amp;A
304 ...75-2410.
Rentals
School, 814-448-l!22(.
Moblll Homo Spoco. In Rio
Profnalonal TrM Servlca, lO
Gr.nde, 114-441-3817.
y..,. Exporlonco, 114-388-11643, 41 Houses for Rent
114-317·7010.
Q Wanted to Rent
Ouolly Cloonlng Affordable 2 Bod100m Flrll Avonuo, GolProfooolonal
Prlc:ee, One Time I'W•kly llpolla, Stove. Refrtge111tor, Rllponllbla
lltwteii.IY, YNra Of Experience, Reference, Depoatt, No Pita Couple lookinJI For \lory Nlcl 3
To
$2951Mo. 114-258-1528.
' Bod,_, Or l.or111r
FrM Eotrmoln, 614-3n.2199.
Ront. lluol 81 GOod Concltion,
3
Bedroom
In
Oalllpollo,
614814 448 4034.
Ouolfty Cloonlng At Affordoblo
Prien Ono llma, W11kly, 446~003, Or 014-441·1409 2 P.ll.
-a
P.M
.
BhiM,Iy, Monthly. Freo EoMerchandise
llmoiH, 614-3711-2111!1.
110 Pl111 Slreol, Golllpollo, 2 Bod·
roomo,
Unfumlohod,
Corpotod
Sun Vall.y Nuraery School.
'
Chlldcaro 11-F 81~:30pm AgH Gu F...,.... 114-446 44111.
Household
2·K, Young School Ago Durlng Now condHion, 3 boclroomo rof 51
Summ•r. 3' O.p pw W••k Min· dop, no polo, 304.a7~8162. ' '
Goods
lmum 114-146-3657.
Romodollng 3 Bodroomo In c.rpot ss.oo up
To
Will babyoft, family otrnoophoro, Chlolar, AVolloblo Mid Auguo!
811.50 In Stoell, a
11144,
G-.b~or Eolalll, ony hour.
$275/Mo. O.poatt, Rtftrenee•, Mollohan Corpota.
304.a75-61811.
11-1-4881 Aftor 5.
GOOD USED APPU.lNCES
Will do backhoe work, 814-992·
Woohoro, dryon, rofrlgorolcrra,
5858 or 614-11112·3173.
42 Mobile Homes
rong... Slurggo Applloncoo, 78
Vlno St-, Coil 114-448·7:1118, 1·
Will do houookoeplng,
for Rent
800-1111-3411!1.
nlngo. 304-675-4n4t.
a Bod1001111, Air, Coble Avoll·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
obt., Onrloddng Tho Ohio
Compilto
homo fum~~~~Lo.
Financial
Rlvor, In Konouga. Dlpooh, Houro: llor&gt;SII,
t-5. 1
RIMrlnCII Roqulred. Foot•'o 0322, 3 mn.. out Bulovllil Rd.
Mobfil Homo Paik, 114-1411-1802. F,.. Dlllvory.
Business
14m2 Bod-. a a.thl Wllh
21
SWAIN
I Drvor, o.-11 lt.- AUCTION 6 FURNITURE. e2
OpportunHy
qulrod. $3110111o. ·No lloto, 114- Olivo
St., Gill polio. Now &amp; Ulod
381'71115.
INOTICEI
fumhWI, hool.,., - . . &amp;
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI9HING CO. a bodroom Mobile homo In Wort&lt; boolo. 614-4411-31118.
NCOmmtndl that you do buaJ. n--•n..,.. 1 ...J1'-- ·•aRa
11111 wllh people you k.- ond
~
' ~•·•-·
53
Antiques
NOT lo oond monay lhrouo~ lho . a bod,_,trolor In Roclne, 814moll unll you hovo lnvoeiTgolod et:!.ao31.
tho olflrlng.
::-::-:---::-:-:-=:-:-:-a Bedroom, Tolll Eloctrlc, 1 112
llty Cllanor a Loundry In Ool· Millo GaUillollo On Stoll Ro..o
llpollo Aroo. Eotobllohod · Von 1181, $2lllilllo., $200 0.110111,
R-. Excollonl Condhlonl 114- Rotor- Roqulrod. 61~
682·7302, 814-682·3111 Aftor 6 3413.
P.M.
2 Bodrooml, ~. No Polo,
And
Raferencea,
VENDING ROUTE: Won~ Got Oepoett
Rich Quick. Will Gal A Sloody $400111o., Wu"'!, Drm; 2 Bod·
Cooh lnc:omo. Priced to Soli. 1· room HouH, r-umlahiut, No
IOI).j120-f782.
- · $3a011o. Dlpooll, 114·717-

35

Rick Pearson Aucllon Company,
full Um1 auctiOf"tMr, complete
auction
urvlct.
Ucensed
1166,0hlo &amp; Wosl Virginia, 304·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 530 Jackson Pika

45 Radioactive
element
49 Pressingly
52 Not outwardly

13 Capable of
(2 wds.)
t4Aulhor

22 Fishing pole
24Aima27Digll
31 Actor Calhoun

OoA J I

72 Trucks for Sale

0 Room B~ctc Wllh Full aa...
ment, And Central Air, In Gat~
llpollo, P~co Radueod 614-146·
1828.
'
Accomodatlona for 3 men·
ahowar, cable TV, microwave
refrigerator, prlvalt entrance, lri
32 Mobile Homes
lllddlaport, 614-992·7791.

"

• A 8
tAKI0 85 4
.. 3

• 9 7

G92-T.I04.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

• J 9 7 3
• J 2
•KQ\0 76
EAST
.. Q J 4 3

SOUTH

Loododl Automollc, Loo!bor
Solll, E1collonl Condhlon, 1
OWnor, 80,000 Mlln, $7,000, 814448-1425.

I

8·9.,4

AA 10

Answer to Previous PuzDI

37 Climb down

All1111illl.llo U.OIItolng In

'lOur
'Birthday

lhllno_.,IIIIJblod lo
1118 Fodlrel Flllr HOUIIIIg ACI
ol11168 wlllch ....... lllogll
l o - "OIT1 pnot-...,
lmllollon o r blood on *1, color, rollglon,

are nngmg today . don 't let 11 upse t you .
because tt mtght b e due to all the ktnd
th1ngs tnend s are say tng about you
behtnd your back
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) If yo u
have n '! been as cons td erate a s you
shou ld be toward s a love d one lately .
make amends today Hug s and k1 sse s
have magtc that works .

gate cnttcal asstgnments today to tndivtduals who have yet 10 be tested. Instead. ARIES (March 21 · April 19) Make your
manage matters for yourself . because yo u needs and concerns secondary to those
ol your mate today. especrally 11 the rela·
could be luckier lhan they'll be
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) Follow the ttonsh1p has been oft kilter lately and you
dtctates of your co mpa ssionate n ature want 11 back on course
Ieday If you leel moved to do somelhrng TAURUS (April 20·May 20) You "re
for a loved one. without any thought of presently tn a cycle where SltuatLons that
personal gam 1n return . 1t could be a beau- affect your career and ea rnings should
begin showing impro11ements . Be both
lllul expenence

Wednesday. Aug. 10. 1994
Don "l be learlul aboul elevating your SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Oon "t hopelul and gratelul.
be reluctant to express your gratttude GEMINI (May 21 · June 20) II you"re a n
stg hi s m t h e year a h ea d wh ere your
.
unanached Gemini who's been hoping 10

...,,_....,.o,.-nal
orl!;n. or ony to
rnllco ony _ , pnlonnoo,
llmlllrlon orcllalr*•IDn."

career goals are concerned . At this point today to a fnend who has been qutte ktn:ct
tn lime , you 're in 8 better achievement to you recenlly . Your acknowledgm~nt w111

be a g reater g1h than what was g1ven to
.
eye Ie lhan you may rea Itze .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Make il a point to ~o~PRICORN (Dec . 22 .Jan . 1 9)

Thllno-1MII not
~aocope

aMI'tlllmentt for ,..llltlle

~~~~~:~t:n~~~~~ ~:s~;:~~r::::;;o~~

which II In Ylolollon ollho low.

aur..-. .. -y

·

Challengtng

Sl~uations that h~~e

strong

"d d lpoh elements ol lroendly compelolron could
Ianee Io lh ose you pra1se, provt e
ey

...,_In

hfonnedthlt
.. ct1 ··~·
lhllna-r

are SnlOOre. Leo. 'treat yourself to a birth- prove very enjoyable

~or

you today . It yo.u

lnumph - and lhere tS a chance you Will
day g1 II . S en d for your As Iro· Grap h pre·
. b d
·lh
. ·
f
h
h d b
·1·
- •1 WI 11 e one w1 grace.
d oclrons or I e year a ea
Y mat ong AQUARIUS (J · 211-F b 19) 11
S1 .251o Astro·Graph. c/o lhis newspapet.
an.
• ·
your ears

... av-ononoqull
opportunlly b-.

.

find someone new, get out and circulate
today tn places that are frequented by
nice people . You might meet someone
special.

CANCER (June 2hJuly 22) You have a
special gtll today for being able to conclude mailers successlully. withoul leav·
1ng yoursell or others feeling short ·
changed.
0 1994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE loSSN.

;
·,

EGGA N E

Comp lete ohe chod le qooled
by !dlrng 1n tl'le m1ss•ng words
L-....L-L....J.-..L__Jl-..J ·;oou develop from step No. 3 below
.

•

e

.

.

•

•

•

PRINT NUMB ERED t[ ll[R \ I
IN THE SE SQUAR ES

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

B' B'

9~

Kitten • Valid- Came I · Offend. DEFECTIVE
Automec~anictocustomer, "ltisn'teasy bemganauto
mechan1c Its d1sturb1ng to realize that every car 1 see

dunng the day is DEFECTIVE ."

AUGUST91

�- - - --

Calendar --------spring-sG-ran-ge-mee-ti-ng_-:-Thursda~y.

- - - --

The Communi ty Calendar is
publ ished as a free s~ r v.ice to
non -pr ofit gro up s w1 sbmg .to
announce meetings and speCial
even ts. The ca lendar is not
des igned to pro mote sa les or
fund raisers of an y type. Items
are printed as space permits and
ca nn ot be guaranteed to run a
spec ific num ber of days.
TUESDA Y
DAR WI N - Bedford Town ship Volunteer Fire Department

TUesday, August 9, 1994

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally SenHnel

....;.._-- Community
Co mm ittee meeting Tuesday at Tuesday, 4:30p.m. at the township aoout street festival.
7:30 p. m. at Bedford Township hall.
t
THURSDAY
Hall.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Missionary serPOMEROY - Big Bend Stem- vice 7:30 p.m., Thursday at Hysell
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM regular meeting Tuesday, wheel Festival Committee meeung Run Holin ess Chu rc h. Speaker
7:30 p.m. with work. in the FC 7:30 p.m., Wednesday at Carpen - Mike Thompson.
Degree. Members urged to attend. ter's Hal l. Public invited.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Refreshments.
RUTLA ND _ Rutland Fi re Publ ic Library Tru stees special
CHESTER - Chester Town- Department Ladies Auxiliary meets meeting Thursday, 1:30 p.m. at the
ship Tru stees regular mee tin g at 7 p.m. Wednesday at fire hal l library .

PO MEROY _ Eas tern Hi gh
School golf team practice at Meigs
Co unt y Go lf Cou rse at 9 a.m .
Thursday .
TUPPERS PL AIN S - The
Tu ppers Plain s VFW Pos t w•ll
meet at 7:30 p.m. Thurday at post
home.
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock

8 p.m. Bring iaems for fatr booth.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
AA , 7 p.m Thursday, Catholic
Church , Mul be rry Av enu e,
Pomeroy .
SYRACUSE - Big Bend Girl
Scouts make up judging Thursday
at 5:30 p.m. 81 Syrac use Park. near
tennis courts.

, 1J'

H o o d b i r t h d a y ..
celebrated
Brandon Todd Hood recently
celebrated hi s first birthday with
two panies.
His grandparents, John and
Crystal Hood, threw a party that
was attended by Judy and Tyler .
Stewan, Belly Reed, Tyson Lee,
Todd and Sandy Hood, and greatgrandparents Milton and Freda
Hood. Cake and ice cream were
served.
The second party was thrown ~Y
his grandmother Kathy Hood wuh
a Barney theme.
Attending were: great-grandparents Ken and Lois McElhmney.
'great-grandmother, Eileen Landaker, Kandi Bachtel, Kayla Bachtel,
Tara and Tori Wolfe, Marshall
Wolfe, Patty Laudermilt and children , Nora Ri ce, Cathy Swartz,
Toby Swartz and Steve RadsviCL
Cake and ice cream were
served.

Society
scrapbook
GOOSE CONTEST
.
New to the Meigs County Fair
lineup this year is the best dressed
concrete goose contest
.
The categories of costummg for
the contest to take place m the
Coonhunters building are Chnst- mas, Easter, Halloween, Pab"Jouc,
and Miscellaneous. Prizes of $2 for
first, and $1.50 for second w1U be
awarded.
Entries are to be place Saturday
by noon and the judging w_1U ~e
place in the afternoon. The Judgmg
is closed to the public.
BASIC TRAINING
Jason P. Burke
Navy Seaman Recruit Jason P.
Burke, son of WiUiam E. Burke ~f
CoolviUe, recently completed bas1c
training at Great Lakes, Ill.

~!t

...,;~.:v
t""'
'

.

IVERDALE

EGISTER
FOR

F
REE
DOOR PRIZES

By JIM FR EEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
The Meigs Local Board of Education approved a new _three- year
contract with th e Me1gs Loca l
Teachers Association at the board's
regular meeting Tuesday.
The contract, retroactive to Jul y
1, rai ses the min imum ann ua l
salary for new teac hers from
$17,000 to $17,200 and crea tes a
new pay ste p for te ac hers with
more than 25 years expenence.
Superintendent Willi am Buckley said the highest paid teacher's
annual salary will increase from

HOTDOGS
&amp;PEPS!

SUMMER SELL-A·THON
SHOW
PRICING

tiAUHOMES

•By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
The many stereotypes that prevail about miners just aren ' t true,
Southern Ohio Coal Co. offi cials
told a group of about 20 members
of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday.
It's not as dirty , dangerous or
dismal as people think, said Mike
Lively,
superintendent of
SOCCO's surface operauon.
"And we don't mine coal with a
pick and shovel any more;" Lively
said.
New technology, especially
sophi sticated computer- dri ~ en
machines that requ1re extens1ve
training, has replaced antiquated
techniques, Lively added.
"It's just like it is with mechanics," Lively said. "You just can 't
pull your car out behind a tree anymore, you need to understand computers and elecuonics."
SOCCO's Denny Evans and
Manager Jim Tompkins thanked
the chamber for its help during the
last four years - from the Clean
Air Act through last year 's llood
disasler in Meigs Mine 31 .
"The chamber has always supported the mines and vice versa.
Labor and management conunue to
worlc together," Evans said.
"One can't exist without th e

. ;"'J,;l .

~ 0~

NICE

RENTAL
SPACES

I

AVAILABLE

NEW HOME PAYMENTS

$31,450 to $}2,680.
.
In conside ration ol th e new
salary schedule, MLTA withtlrew a
$68,930 arb itratio n gr1evance
against the dtstr1 cl, Buckley S3!d.
MLT A ap proved th e co nt~ac t
Tuesday prior to the board meetmg,
he said.
Buckley said the contract represents a "win-win" deal be tween the
district and MLTA.
. .
Adm inistrators an d pnn c1pals
arc not part of th e unio·n and were
not included in the contract , he
said.
.
The board is currently negouat-

ing a contract with the Meigs Local
chapter of the Ohio Public Schools
Employees union , Buckley said.
Th e board also met with Bob
Hudak, county school psychologist,
and parent Teresa Dun fee to further
di scuss Attenuon Def1c1t D1sorder
and Attention Defici t Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADD/ADH D).
Hudak said symptoms of the
disorder may include attention span
(or lack of) impul si vity and hyperactivity , and added that anywhere
between three-to- fiv e and I0- 15
percent of children may be affected.

Dun fee repeated an offer she
made last month to hold a free
works hop for district teachers to
update them on ADD/ADHD..
Buckley and Board Pres 1dcnt
Larry Rupe commented that hold1n g a work shop may prese nt
scheduling problems since the proposed work shop would have to be
scheduled around classes. Dunfee
said she would be willing to con duct the session at any 11me convenient for the teachers.
In personnel matters, the board
hired Mary Grim as assistant jumor
high volle yball coach and Carson

Mine update
presented
to chamber

NEW 14• WIDES ON DISPLAY STARTING AT

s

s
97
Starting at
SPECTACULAR * PRICING
* ON ALL HOMES *
Per Mol.

144 loiS. - 10.25% APR -10% DDWI

A Racine man charge d with
grand theft auto was convicted
Tuesday by a Meigs County jury
on a lesser, misdemeanor count of
theft.
Thomas Swann, 35, was
charged in the October 1993 theft
. of a 1966 Diamond T pickup truck.
from property belonging to
William Amos on Douglas Road in

·By
Dave

Grate

of
Rutland

..,._-· .
VISITING THE MINES - Members of tbe
Meigs County Chamber of, Commerce, left,
learn about the Southern c;&gt;h10 Coal ~O- ~pe~a­
tion Tuesday from Mike L1vely, who IS pomtmg
in the photo. As superintendent of surface operother. We need to all work together," he added. "When you hit the
switch, remember us because there
wouldn ' t be electricity without it."
The 200-square-miles of mines
at the two mines should be used for
the next 20 years, Tompkins said.
The boundaries for th e mining

ations,
monitor operations seen in
Ibis photograph. Raw coal from Mines 31 and 2
in the right foreground is transported down the
hill to the preparation plant, where the coal is
separated and washed, Lively said.

operation - since it does not have
rights to mine outs1de the property
- extend from Raccoon Creek in
the west to Leading Creek in the
east and down into Galli a County,
he added.
Any coal that has a higher than
1 percent sulfur content is consid-

crcd high sulfur and needs sulfur
abatement procedures , Tompkms
sa id. ln the future, more sulfur
reduction may be done during the
wash stage, he added.
This year the local mines have
experienced no lost 11me due to
(Continued on Page 3)

Orange Township , according to
Meigs County Prosecutmg Attorney John R. Lentes, who represented the state in the trial.
Steven L. Story, repre senting
Swann, said the jury sentenced
Swann to the lesser charge after 1t
was demonstraled that the vehicle
was not a motor vehicle, according

to Ohio law . The truck had not
Swann is to be sentenced Thursbeen started in more than 10 years day before Meigs County Common
and ownership of the truck was not Pleas Court Judge Fred W- Crow
determined, Story added.
III.
Story said the misdemeanor ' In addition to the theft charge,
theft charge carnes a max1mum Swann is being held in the Meigs
sentence of six months in jail com- County Jail awaiting trial in county
pared to two years in prison for the court on charges of domestic viooriginal charge.
lence and resisting arrest

Meigs County on display at state fair

•••

Sometimes we forget to turn
oft the sound when our mind
goes blank.

•••

Most people aren't greedy. All
they want Is as mueh money
as their kids think they have.

•••

The way to gat ahead and
stay ahead is to use your
head.
• • •
Our friend won't fly on account
of his religion. He's a devout
coward.

TRADE-INS WELCOME. We'll take AFFORDABLE FINANCING
mobile homes. cars, trucks, boats,
SPECIAL FIRST·TIME
jet skis, motorcycles or any_thing
HOMEBUYERS PROGRAM
that doesn't eat for this promot1on!
s514 TOTAL DOWN
Bring your ca~h._ check~o.ok, piggy
bank or trade-m t1tle! Th1s 1sthe sale
you have been waiti~g for!! There
will never be abetter t1me to buy!!!

For the third year, a Meigs
County booth is bein~ displayed
at the Ohio State Fatr th1s year.
with the theme "Where the Road
Meets the River," commemorating the county's I75th anmver-

Our Models

-SM

It Heats
It Cools
It Saves

1/2 foot map of the coun.ty
forms the focal point of ~e display, with the letters.. 1n the
words "Meigs County betng
made of different types or wood.
The colored map shows all
state highways, historical si_tes
and boat ramps, said Me1gs
County Park/Tourism Director
Mary Powell. The ~ooth also
features 1oeal indusb"Jes, touriSt
attraCtions and enlarged pictures
or various festivals within the
county, she added.
The booth, a project of the
Meigs County Park/Tourism
office, will be on display unul
,4.ug. 21, manned by volunteers
working half-day shifts. In
return for manning the booth
and handing out Meigs County
literature, volunteers rece1ve
passes to get into th~ fair and
parking passes, she satd.

~~~~- , ---

HOMES

-- - - -

664

95

HOURS:
66A

93

385·4367 or 1·800·466·7671 L---.&lt;)~-----'=528 --=:..._1

**Thursday Till 900 **
**Friday till9:00 **
**Saturday Til19:00 **
Closed Sunday

Pa ksiT 15m Director Mary Powell is seen with
STATE FAIR DISPLAY - )\ltlgs ~ounl!t a:the
Slate Fair until Aug. 21. Ttm will be
tbe Meigs County_ booth t~at thwillhbe thdlS.apll~e fair and 11 will be located in the Buckeye Building.
the third consecullve year .or e oo

Ohlo

AboUt 50 pecijile have volunteered, she added.
The map and letlers were cut
out by Dale Han or Racine, with
the assistance of Forrest Neigler,
also of Racine. Mila Raymond

did the art work and wOod for
the display was donated by the
Facemyer Lumber Co. of Middleport, PoweU said.
Also on display are products
from local greenhouses and

farmers, crafts and a mine display. A vacation packa$e from
the Royal Oak Re~ort 1s bemg
offered as a door pnze.
The booth is located in the
Buckeye Building.

742·2211

'

ly leave to Betty An n Wolfe for the
f11st semeste r of the 1994 -95
school year and agreed to pay Joy
Be ntley for prov 1dmg summe r
school at Mc1gs H1gh School.
In other bus•.ness, the board: .
. • Apprm ed adv eru smg lo~ three
p1 anos and an old metal bulldmg
for sale.
.
.
.
• Approved granung a nght -olway to Columbus Southern Power
Co. across property at M~1gs High
School. The n ght-of-way IS needed
for power hne relocatiOn for the
Rock Spnngs to F1ve Pomts seg(Continued on Page 3)

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News :itarr
Rutland voters will decide on a
five-year, 2.5-mill levy thi s fall .
·fo llowin g village cou nc1 l ac tiOn
Tuesday.
Th e $30 ,000 that wo uld be
raised over fiv e years wo uld be
used strictly to buy a used backhoe
and used truck, Mayor JoAnn Eads
said.
' "I wish it would pass. We do
need the equipment," Eads said.
Recent, smaller levies to ope rate
the village street li ghts have failed,
she added.
Gladys Barker and Jud y Denney
cast the two votes against putting
the iss ue on th e ball ot. Duane
Weber, Dick Felty, Steve Jenki ns
and Danny Dav is all agreed to put
the levy on the ballot .
"We wanted a 1.2-mill levy at
the beginning of the year to JUSt
tum the lights on," Barker said. "If
we would ask the people for just
enough to run the lights, then they
would later spend money for anoth-

er levy. We're not going around
talkin g th is sluff down , e ve n
though they say we arc."
Barker said she would have likely vo ted for a smaller lev y that
wou ld turn the lights back on.
Village Clerk Sandy Smith said
the town desperately needs equipment.
"It's council 's obligation to put
a levy on to raise enough revenue
to run the village,'" Smith said. "We
need to give the people the right to
dec ide if it's necessary."
The used equipment the village
intend s to buy includes a backhoe,
truck and any other equipment that
can be bought with the levy money ,
Smith added.
In other ac tion, council agreed
to renew the water contract with
the Leading Cree k Conservancy
District. The board agreed to conltnuc the contract at the current rate
which is $2.65 per I,000 gallons of
wai.C r, Smith said.
Council also heard from Home
(Continued on Page 3)

DEP official defends
pulp permit issuance
A West Virginia environmental
official defended the state's decision to issue a permit for a proposed pulp and paper plant in
Mason County.
.
The permit allowed the_ di Scharge of 10 times more d10xm
than the amount mention ed in a
permit draft filed earlier this year.
David C. Callaghan, director of
the Division of Environmental Protection said he ordered the change
allowi~g the additional discharge
due to a mistake in state polluuon
regulations.
Callaghan told the Charleston
Gazette that the amount or dioxin
produced by the plant would still
be so minimal that 1t could not be
harmful or even detected by company monitoring.
.
Tbe change amounts to mcreasing the dioxin discharge to one
'I pound in I 0,00~ years , DEP
Deputy Director Eh McCoy sa1d.
Callaghan said he believes the
penn it is safe and defensible.
"There are a lot of people who
are against this facility, and there
aren't any (permit) conditions that
the people wo are against this facil -

ity would approve of," he said.
Environmental and labor groups
critical of the $1.1 billion project
remained skeptical of the permits
and the process DEP used to
review and issue them.
Wendy Ratcliff, the agency's
new environmental advocate, said
DEP bungled the matter by issuin g
two of the three permits late Friday
and then refusing to release copies
of the permits to the public until
late Monday afternoon.
Radcliff said that DEP Water
Resources Chief Mark Scott, engi neer Dwight McClure and public
information officer Brian Farkas
are on vacation this week.
Radcliff said the issuance of the
permits did not give people adequate time to respond or ask questions.
Environmental and labor groups
worry that Parsons &amp; Whittemore
Inc., the parent group of Apple
Grove Pulp and Paper, will not hire
unionized local workers and will
dump dioxins into the Ohio River.
The proposed mill will employ
approximately 800 people.

ODNR funds now available
for local recreation projects

~ large, wooden 6-1/2-by-4-

dellverv to your lot

RIVERDALE
Right on Rt. 33 .
Between Logan &amp; Nelsonville

The Electric Heat
Pump With All

*180 monthS -11.75% APR

lndudes: Appliances and

Local artisans had
hand in crafting
booth showcase

we Recommend

Crow as junior high football coach.
both for the 1994-95 sc hool year:
The board also gave penn•ss1on
to Buckl ey 10 hire a tulor for a
handi capped student and h1red Sara
Oxley for extended service for the
state-mandated IMPACT program
fo r at-risk junior high students.
In addition, the board hlfcd the
following teachers: Cheryl Halley,
Chapter I at Meigs Ju nior Hi gh
School; Sheila Harris, second grade
at Rutland Elementary; T1m Curfman, fifth grade at Sa lem Center
Elementary.
The board also granted matemi -

Rutland will seek
equipment levy

Racine man convicted on lesser charge

"Nice seledlon Of Repos on Display"

Guidance
counselor. to
student: "Your vocational
aptitude test indicates that
your best career opportunities
are in a field where your family
holds influence."

AMutdmedla Inc. Nawapaper

Meigs Board approves teachers' contract

0

PECIAL

2 S.Ctlono, 12 P•IJM 35 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 10, 1994

Copyright 111114

FREE

HOMES

•

Vol. 45, NO. 611

Aug ust lith, 12th &amp; 13th
BRANDON TODD

70s.

en tine

N'TMISS THIIXCITIMINT
'I

Low to night In 50s, cloudy .
Thursday, partly doudy, high in

•

Applications for recreation project funding made possible through
the passage of Issue I will be
aecepled by the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources until Oct 15 ,
Meigs County Board of Commissioners President Fred Hoffman
said today.
Hoffman said $177,2 12 has
been allocated for Meigs out of $40
million made available by the state
through the new Ohio Department
of Natural Resources Natureworks
recreation program.
.
The local funding is avatlable at
$35,442 per year over a five-year
period, Hoffman added.
.
Applications can b_e submitted
by the county, townsh1Jl5. v1llages,
park districts or for JOIDtly-spon sored projects. The money can be
used for acQuisition, development

or rehabilitai.ion of areas for recreation purposes, Hoffman said.
Projects will require a 25 percent local match, with grant funds
being available for up to 75 percent
of the total project cost
Program guidelines may be
obtained by contacting the ODNR
or the Meigs County Commissioners. Afier this year's October deadline for submission, applications
must be submitled by July 1.
Applications may be obtained
by contacting ODNR 's Office of
Real Estale and Land Management,
Fountain Square, Building C-4
Columbus, Ohio 43224. The phon~
number is (614) 265-6405_
Hoffman said any Meigs County
entities interested in obtaining
recreation project funding are
ur2ed to nanicinatP..

•

'

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