<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9859" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9859?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T01:45:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20298">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ce3605693de743e14a3ffbd26b3fb30b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9cdb86247abdaffba7eb785015e0392b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31554">
                  <text>•
Page-E6-Sunday Times-sentinel

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

--~----------------r-----------------1

'" August 28, 1994

,,

Grandparents share experiences with grandchildren
By FRANK .lSHER
Associated Press Writer
HERON POND, fll. - For one
precious week, Margaret Ambe~ is
hiking , swimming and explonng
the forests of southern Illinois with
her II-year-old granddaughter
Katie.
There are no worried parents, no
rigid schedules.
''This is an imponant ume in
her life growing up," Amberg, wbo
lives in Bloomfield Hills, Mich.,
said recently as she watched the
gi rl scamper away on a nckety
wooden bndge. "She's been a little

girl, and it's not going to last much program inspires an appreciation of
longer."
nature. Some, like young Daniel
"I'm used to seeing my parents Ziluca, who lives in a New York
all the time and not my grandma, City suburb, haven't spent much
so I like to spend more time with time in the woods before.
ha," said Katie Amberg, who lives
"Well, there's not much of this
in Anaconda, MonL
in New York," Ziluca said while
The Ambergs are among 54 admiring Heron Pond's towering
older people and their grandchil- cy press trees and moss-covered
dren at a camp organized by Elder- · swamp with his grandmother,
hostel to bring the two age groups Samantha Monheit, who lives in
together. The Boston-based Elder- Southern California.
hostel sponsors activities for older
It was the fm;t time the two had
people around the country.
spent much time together alone.
Besides bringing families closer
''This is a neunal zone, a zone
together, organiZers hope that the to share and experience and have

fun without any other pressures,"
said Curtis Caner of Southern Illinois University's Touch of Nature
environmental center, where the
group stays and plays.
Not all of the children live far
from their grandparents, but that
hasn ' t made the experience less
meaningful. Chris Fletcher, II, of
Waukegan came with his grandmother from Rockford.
"We see each other more often
than most grandparents and grandchildren do, but you know we ' ve
never really had any quality time,

when it's just the two of us," Chris
said.
While the families get accustomed to the sights and sounds of
the outdoors, they'll sleep in a
lodge. Later in the week, they have
the option of camping under the
stars.
Jean Smith of Burlington, Wis.,
said just the short time she's spent
with her 10-year-old grandson so
far has made a big impact. The boy
lives only about five miles from her
home, and they see each other
about once a week.

"He's more at ease with me.
We're just having a good time, a
closer feeling, which is what I
wanted," Smith said.
And for Gene Lyons, a Cornell,
IU., farma, it was hard to tell wbo
was having a better time: Lyons or
his two grandchildren.
"I'm going to have fun watching Granddad and Grandma teach
the kids how to canoe," he said
with a chuckle.
The camp costs $290 per adult
and $225 per child between the
ages of 9 and 13.

Paris burning? - Hitler asked his
chief of staff as Parisians literally
danced on a powder keg.
For days German demolition
teams had been placing explosives
and mines in the Metro, the Louvre, Notre Dame, Napoleon's tomb
under the golden dome of Des
lnvalides, beneath the four le~s of
the Eiffcl Tower and all 45 bndgcs
over the Seine.
Von Choltitz, the very model of
a proper Prussian general in monocle, Iron Cross and polished booL~.
kef&gt;! delaying the demanded desolatton with the alibi that he fusthad
to evacuate his 20,000 troops, who
would be needed for the final
defense of the Fatherland.
Both the shooting and the party
were still going on when Marvin
Rosvold, a 22-year-old fighter pilot
from Norfolk, Neb., arrived a day
and a half later. Grounded with ''a
bum knee" after being shot down

and rescued a week before, he "put
on a tic for the fust time in months
and hopped aboard a Red Ball
ex press deuce-and-a- half (supply
truck) bound for Paris." Sipping
free champagne in a wicker chair
outside the Cafe de Ia Paix, Marv
was surprised at how much of the
fabled gaiete Parisienne survived
the occupation.
Kiosks outside the Opera advertised dozens of plays and movies,
nude reviews at the Lido and Casino de Paris, horse racing at
Longchamps. Also this stark notice
from the Resistance: "A chacun
son boche"- to each his German
- declaring open season on all
Germans, even those who had surrendered .
France may have capitulated,
but Paris during the occupation
never surrendered her pleasures
and diverSions. The couturiers still
had their showings, and hair dressers flourished. Retired racers

from the Tour de France pedaled
bicycles in the basement to keep
the generators humming in the
movte palaces along the Champs
Elysees.
Topless lovelies coiffed like
Madame Pompadour descended the
glittering staircase at the FoliesBergere. Edith Piaf headlined the
revue at the Moulin Rouge. Mistinguett displayed the legs insured
for a half-million fflj.llcs by Lloyds
of London at the Casino de Paris
and begged the audience to bring
food 10 her ~enL Sacha Guitry revived hts role of Louis Pasteur.
Maurice Chevalier entertained
over Nazi-controlled Radio Paris.
Unknowns Zizi Jeanmaire and
Roland Petit made their debuts at
the Paris balleL La Comedic Francaise never missed a curtain until
the Uf&gt;rising, when it became a field
hospttal and stagehands emptied
the scenery loft to erect a barricade

in front of Cafe d'Universe, topped
by a pissoir, a sidewalk urinal.
It was verboten to employ Jews
and blacks in the theaters and
music halls. Yves Montand, whose
family name was Levi, put aside
his Stetson and worked as a hatrdresser. Josephine Baker, the black
singer-dancer, withdrew to a rented
chateau that became a safe house
and observation post for the Resistance.
Brothels reopened under stricter
German health controls and with
prices trebled. Forty of these
"maisons closes" were reserved
for soldiers of the Wehrmacht, 60
served the general population.
Piaf lived on the top Ooor of
Madame Billy's because it had a
coal allocation for central heating.
Here in the final months of the
occupation she composed "La Vie
en Rose.''
German officers who had studied at Harvard, Stanford and

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. West Virginia's director of air
quality has gotten a 90-day extension of an earlier deadline to decide
if he will approve an air pollution
permit for the proposed Apple
Grove Pulp &amp; Paper mill, the Huntington flerald-Dispatch reponed.
Director Dale Farley will have
until Nov. I to make the final ruling, after the pulp and paper company agreed to the extension.
The original application for a
permit to "construct stationary air
· pollutant sources" was filed May
13, 1991, but the project was put
on hold while the state legislature
considered changes in air and water
quality regulations.
Two other state permits, for
wastewater discharges and a sanitary landfill, were granted earlier
this month to Parsons &amp; Wloiuemore, the Rye Brook, N.Y.-based
firm thai plans to build a $1.1 billion plane along State Route 2 in
Apple Grove.
The latest permit application
was ftled April I8 and wtthout the
agreed extension, Farley· s failure
to rule within 90 days - by midJuly - would have allowed the
project to go forward.
In the agreement, Farley said he
was still unable to make a determination on the application by Aug.
2, the date the company agreed to
the extension.
Jesse Adkins, a member of Farley's staff, told the Herald-Dispatch that a public hearing will be
held on the permit application. A
30-day public comment period is
also planned.
Farley was not available for
comment.
According to the air quality permit application, the pulp and paper
mill would create four "fugitive
paniculate emissions including fly
ash and on-site truck traffic."

ll~trl rfe~u-iee?

For Rome, Farm, Business, and Industry

Personal
income up 0.5
percent in July

Complete Line Of Atlanta Heaters In Stock!
All J'or The
(_!..ow Priee Of

•Rent Free Tank
WITH APPROVED CREDIT

THIS INCLUDES 200 'G'IL. OF PROPANE
OFFER EXTENDED THRU AUGUST 31, 1994

RUTLAND, OH. - TORCH, OH. - McCONNELLSVILLE, OH. - THE PLAINS, OH.

(614) 742·2511

1·800·837·8217

3862
Super Lotto:
16-18-29-34-43-45
Kicker:
790473

i

WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans' income rose 0.5 percent in
July, the sixth straight increase, and
easily outpaced a 0.2 percent
spending rise, the government said
today.
The Commace Department also
reported that disposable income income after taxes - rose 0.5 percent in July.
Both income and disposable
income had risen a mere 0. I percent in June.
Consumer ~nding, which nepresents two-thtrds of the nation's
economic activity, was up for the
third straight month - and in five
of the last six months. But the July
rise was less than the 0.5 percent
advance in June and 0.6 percent
gain in May.
Income last fell in January when
it slipped 0.6 percent.
The combination of incomes
and spending meant that Americans' savings mte - savings as a
pen;entage of disposable income was 4.1 percent in June, up from a
revised 3.7 percent the pre'vious
month. The Commette Department
previously pegged the savings rate
at4.pen;ent for June.
The July figures for spending
and income generally wae in line
with analysts' expectations and
appear to reflect an economy growing at a moderate~.
The economy expanded at a 3.8
pertent annual rate in the second
three months of I994.
Wages and salaries, the most
closely watched component of
income, increased $15.3 billion in
July after a $5 billion rise in June.
Government wages and salaries
rose $1.6 billion in July, after
declining $1.5 billion the previous
month due to a drop in buyoots for
government employees who left
work.
Spending on tong-1astin~ items
such as cars and appliances
declined 1.1 percent in July

Low tonight In 50s, clear.
Tuesd&lt;~y, p3rti.Ysunny , hl~h in

mid 80s.

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pageo 35 conto
A Multimedia Inc. N-o paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 29, 1994

Middleport
readies for
river festival

Decision pending
on air quality OK
for pulp facility

ttla~tt Reliabilt't;?

ND FURNITURE
AND BO
E GAS

786
Pick 4:

Permit
delayed

Over 40 Years 01 Dependable Service

•200 Gallons
of L.P. Gas

Pick 3:

Vol. 45, NO. 82
Copyright 11194

O~ford universities gathered at
Harry's New York Bar on the four
days a week when liquor was available to practice their English.
With olympian detachment,
French intellectuals danced a daring line between co-existence and
collaboration. Georges Simenon
still spun his Inspector Maigret
mysteries and had five of them
filmed by Continental, a German
company. Cameras rolled at Marcel
Pagnol's Marseilles studio.
Andre Gide, from Nonh Africa,
regularly contributed to the fascistrun Figaro. Jean Genet premiered
his "Notre Dame des Fleurs."
Four days after the Normandy
landings Paris saw the opening of
Jean-Paul Sartre's "Huis Close"
- No Exit - while the playwright, like Dickens's Madame
Defarge during the French Revolution, worked up a list of writers to
be purged as collaborators after the
war.

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS

•Normal L.P. Gas Tank
·Installation With
25 Feet Of
Copper Tubing

~

a

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL

•Heating and Water Heating
•Lift Truck Gas Delivery
•Grain Drying and Cooking
•Construction Heating

Nebraska
whitewashes
West Virginia
Page4

Allied troops liberated Paris 50 years ago ... - - - - - - - - Contlnued from E·S
made love, and also died. No more
volleys echoe d from the Mont
Valerian prison where Gestapo fuing squads had executed 4,000
Frenchmen, but there was still
fighting inside the city. Pockets of
German defenders held out in the
Ecole Militaire, the Quai d'Orsav.
the Champs du Mars at the foot of
the Eiffel Tower. Panzerfausts,
bazookas, whooshed from the Luxembourg gardens.
In the Place de Ia Concorde,
Sherman and Panzer tanks engaged
at close quaners hkc rue-breathing
dragons and even played bumper
car. A shell took a bite out of the
Arc de Triomphe . Smoke curled
from the Majestic hotel and the
Crillon lost one of its Corinthian
columns to - legend persists - a
passing tank gunner whose radio
warned of "fifth column activity."
Whitehead's jeep "crawled
through the corridor of cheering
people to within a block of the
Luxembourg Palace, when
machine-gun fue erupted. We took
cover behind a tank as answering
guns rattled from windows and
rooftops. The crowd melted away
as if a blast from a furnace had hit
a snowbank."
A few hours later, Whitehead
witnessed a topless show not billed
on the posters for the Folies-Bergere: ''The Maq~is marched four
ladies down th~street with their
heads shaved and swastikas painted
on their naked breasts. The crowds
jeered "salaude" -slut- and
spat on them for fraternizing with
the enemy."
Covering Gen. Charles de
Gaulle's triumphant parade down
the Champs Elysees the following
afternoon, AP reporter Hal Boyle
saw "mothers grab their children
and run into doorways as French
patriots in the line of march began
firing at snipers on the rooftops."
He was inside Notre Dame when
more gunfire "c ut short the Te
Deum service but did not disturb
the composure of the gaunt, 6-foot4 general striding rigid and erect
toward the main altar."
For the next few days Paris was
"a shooting gallery," Boyle
reported. "Most of the Germans
had been flushed from hiding, but
there was a continuing vendetta
between the Resistance fighters and
the holed up Miliciens, the fascist
militia. Patriots armed with
Tommy guns, captured German
rifles and pistols whirled about the
streets at 60 mph seeking fascist
hide-outs."
It was a double miracle that
Paris survived at all. Supreme
Allied Commander Dwight D.
Eisenhower had ordered the U.S.
Ist and 3rd Armies to head straight
for the Rhine, bypassing Paris to
avoid "prolonged and heavy street
figh~ing that would result in the
destruction of the French capital"
and to delay clogging his supply
lines with food and fuel for a
wartime population of 3.5 million.
But convinced that powerful
Communist factions in the Resistance were armed and plotting to
take control of the city, de Gaulle
in Algiers forced a change when an
uprising began against the German
Kommandanture, and the historic
cry went up: "aux barricades."
Leclerc's 2nd Armored Division, the only French unit in the
Normandy campaign, was divened
to Paris with two battalions of the
U.S. 4th Infantry Division right
behind. De Gau lie flew in and proclaimed the liberation before a
tumultuous crowd at the Prefecture
of Police across from Notre Dame.
The second miracle somehow
touched the heart of Gen. Dietrich
von Choltitz. kommandant of
Gross Paris, who had leveled Rottcrdam, Holland, and Sevastopol,
Russia, but could not burden his
conscience with the destruction of
what he had come to revere as "the
most beautiful city in the world"
The fuhrer was in a fury in his
bunker among the fu trees in Rastenburg, Germany. "Paris must not
fall into the hands of the enemy,"
he told Generaloberst Alfred Jodi
over and ova. "If it does, he must
find nothing but a fteld of ruins." _
Swearing his generals "on an
officer's oath to defend Paris to the
last cartridge," he screamed telephone commands for mass Luftwaffe raids, re-aiming the Y-bombs
at Paris instead of London and
summoning "Der Karl," the huge
mortar used at Stalin grad that could
hurl a 2 1/2-ton shell five miles,
from the Russian front for the fmal
blitz that would avenge the firebombing of Hamburg.
"Jodi, brennt Paris?"- is

Ohio Lotterv

The Middleport Arts Council is
organizi ng thi s year's food court
beginning at II a.m. Sept. 17 at the
ann ual river festival. The food
co un will be locmed in The Peo ples Bank new parking lot.
The following organizations
will provide fooJ: Domino's Pi1.:za,
The Subway Shop, The Sweet
Shop, The Middleport Arts Council, The Middleport Commun ity
Association and the list continues
10 grow.
The Daughters of Job organiza·
tion will host a spaghetti dinner in
conjunction with the river festival.
Any organizalions who want to
save a space to sell foud, contact
Johnson's Variety S10re.
ACCEPTING DONATION- Tom Dooley,
left, accepts a microwave oven from Dr. Nick
Robinson for the Middleport River Festival.
Dooley, president of the Middleport Community
Association, said this is one of many donations

that will be woo by those who enter the contest.
Tickets are available at Middleport businesses.
All the prizes will be displayed in the Middleport Department Store during the week before
the festival- Sept. 17. The grand prize is S300.

New Eastern principal looks
forward to innovative programs
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Clayton Butler described himself as a fair and firm man.
As Eastern High School's new
principal he said he looks forward
to innovating new programs and
setting higha goals for all students.
"Everyone needs to be challenged," Butler said.
Immediate goals include updating the school's programs, adding a
computer lab, increasing the tech·
nical education of students and
making the best atmosphere for
students 10 learn in.
Butler said he will seek grants to
acquire more computers for the students.
"There are few jobs you can get
today that you don't need to be
proftciont with a computer," he
added.
His administrative philosophy is
based on supponing and encouraging teachers, Bulla said.
.
CLAYTON
"They set their goals and my job
is to help them reach them," he
Butler said he will use corporal
added.
For example, at a previous punishment - but only after talkschool he helped a music teacher ing about it with the student frrst.
Today's students must acquire
establish the first electric piano
teaching lab in the state, Butler skills and be more prepared for getsaid.
ting jobs than any generation
Fairness is the cornerstone of before, Butler added. An increashis relations with students, he ingly global marketplace and
added.
shrinking world make this even
"I'm very fair, but I expect them more importanL
to follow the rules," Butler said.
"Students are functioning at a
"You won't be tardy very long at much higher level than they were
this school."
30 years ago," he said. "With the
Now, if the situation' requires it, job market changing so drastically,

BUTLER
they have to be skilled and be able
to change .... I don 't think teenagers
are as bad as what people think. I
just think we're more aware of
what they do."
Current students' devotion to
extra-curricular activities highlight
their dedication, Butler added.
"If you stop by here any evening
the kids are working hard. They're
not apathetic," Butler said. "Nothing will teach you to adjust more
quickly than spons."
COntinued on page 3

Tickets will be available for sale
at the Middleport River Festival.
The tickets are available at $5 per
book, which will buy six tickets.
Local businesses are supplying the
prizes. The grand prize is $300.
In conjunction with the Middlepen River Festival will be a "Concen in the Park." The show will be
at 6 p.m. Sept. 16 at Dave Diles
Park. C.J. and the Country Gentlemen will perform until 7 p.m. The
Middlcpon American Legion, Arts
Cou ncil and Community Association are sponsoring the event.
The food and concert will be
provided free to the public, but a
donation to help "Save the Pool"
will be accepted,-

Court order ends
CSEA stalemate
manner."
lly JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News stall
Hoffman also wrote a letter to
A court order filed this morning Swisher instructing him to transfer
by Judge Fred W. Crow lll of the $3,235.34 from the CSEA fund
Meigs County Court of Common in10 an account which can be used
Pleas ended a deadlock involving for the fees and costs billed by the
the filing of child support cases clerk of courts.
from the Meigs County Child SupSwisher said this morning he
pon Enforcement Agency.
had not seen the order allowing'
Crow's order followed a request CSEA cases to be filed but said the
from the Meigs County Board of office would begin filing cases as
Commissioners to lift the order. No soon as possible.
CSEA cases have been filed since
In response to Hoffman's letter,
July 8, on which date Crow ordered Crow wrote this morning that the
Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer to suggested plan would be satisfactorefuse CSEA cases unless provi- ry.
sions were made to pay security
"As explained in the first meetdeposiL~ 10 insure payment of court
ing
between the commissioners,
costs.
county
clerk (of couns), prosecutThe new order permits Spencer ing attorney,
judge and the head of
to file CSEA cases as soon as back
the
deparunent
of human services,
coun costs are paid and as long as
the coun was only concerned with
monthly bills are paid in a timely
the Meigs County Child Support
manner.
Enforcement Agency ... paying the
Commission President Fred court costs they incurred," he
Hoffman, in a letter sent to Crow wrote.
after Friday's meeting of the Meigs
He added: "After being told by
County Board of Commissioners, the depanment of human services'
said the board met Friday with representatives that they 'could not
Ohio Department of Human Ser- pay the coun costs', the coun was
vices representatives, Meigs Coun- forced to issue its order. Since the
ty Deparunent of Human Services court knew the child support
(DHS) Director Michael Swisher enforcement agencies of many
and Prosecuting Attorney John R. other co~ties in the state pay coun
Lentes. and hammered out a solu- costs wtthout any problems, and
tion 10 the payment of ba.ck coun further, that the Meigs County
costs.
Department of Human Services'
DHS will usc its own money, Child Suppon Enforcement Agenfrom state-mandated maintenance cy fund had a 1993 carryover of
of effort funds , to pay the back $240,000 plus. And then, seeing
court costs and will set aside the that the department of human serentire maintenance of effort vices transfer:red $I04,000 plus, to
amount for 1995 (about $10,000) tts own pubhc assistance fund for
for securing future court costs, various purposes and charges, it did
Hoffman wrote.
not make sense that the Meigs
We feel this is a good solution County general fund should not
for several reasons, Hoffman receive coon cost funds."
wrote: "I. It will provide new · A contract was signed by the
money into the county genentl fund commission, Swisher and Spencer
since these funds wtll be coming on Aug. I. Under the contrac~ the
directly from the CSEA budget; 2. clerk of courts' office will bill
If monthly costs are billed monthly CSEA each month at the rate of
to DHS by the clerk of courts,
$108 per filing. CSEA will then
CSEA will have these funds specifrepon the bills to the state for reimically set aside for this purpose; 3. bursement at the C]j[Ient rate of 66
It wi 11 assure you as judge of the
percent. The conll'!tct is expected to
common pleas coun that the costs place about $25,000 of new state
assessed by your court will be col- money into the county generai
lected in a timely and efficient fund.

Inmon hospitalized

FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL- Luke Lcnvery,
nrst day or school at
Carleton School Monday mctrning Ill Pomeroy.
Meip and Eutern school diStricls bid the first
day or the 1994-95 year today. Southern Local

5, boards the btl! for bls

Schools will open next week. Lowery's mother,
RIUa Smith, said &amp;bat be bas PJ'OII'essed tremen·
dously in his schooling. Lowery bas cerebral
palsy and bis speech skBls blve grown. (Sentinel
photo by George Abate)

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - For
27 days, gubernatorial candidate
Billy Inmon sat at a Statehouse
bench asking Gov. George
Voinovich for a debate. Now the
independent candidate is making
his plea from a hospital bed.
Inmon, 47, had been on a wateronly diet since Aug. I and vowed
not to stop until either Gov. George
Voinovich 4ebates him or until
Inmon dies.
Inmon, who passed out Saturday, was hooked up to a bean monitor and oxygen machine Sunday
night while receiving intravenous
fluids and sipping water-diluted
fruit juices.
From his hospital bed, Inmon
said he was not ready to give up his
fight or his hunger strike.
"I would like to meet with the

•

governor either face-to-face or with
key members of his staff to see if
we can reach a settlement on this
and find out for sure, does he want
me to die or is he willing to
debate?"
Yoinovich, a Republican, has
refused to debate Inmon, calling
him a disgruntled former state
employee who is not a serious can- •
didate. Inmon was fired in 1992 as
manager of the Ohio State Fair.
"We've been concerned about
his (Inmon's) health all along, and
we hope that he fully recovers "
said Caryn Candisky, Voinovi~h
campaign spokeswoman. "As far
as the goveroor's position on debating, it remains the same."
Inmon passed out Saturday
Continued on page 3 ·
)

�a

e•,•)'

Nklnday,August29, 1994

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August 29, 1994

Tuesday, Aug. 30
Accu-Weathe,. forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

III Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

fiMl.lTIMEDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLI CH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inl and Daily Press Aasociation and
the American Newspaper Publisher AssociatJon .

LE11"ERS OF OPINION are we lcome. They should be iess than 300
words long. All letter&gt; arc subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and L&lt;lephone number. No unsi gned Je tl&lt;rs will be published. Lett.&lt;n
sbould be in good taste, addressing iss ues, not personabtJes.

Conflicting claims
for/against pop tax
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Passage of a Nov. 8 ballot issue dealing
with taxes on soft drinks and food would: (a) cut money for schools; (b)
have no effect on schools; (c) lead to a worse tax: (d) none of the above.
Such conflicting claims will appear in legal advertising for the constitutional amendment
Competing groups submitted arguments for and against the amendment to Secrelllry of State Bob Taft last week. .
.
About the only point on which the two parues agree IS that llle amendment would repeal a penny-per-&lt;:an wholesale taJ&lt; lllat the state levied on
carbonated, nonalcoholic beverages.
They disagree about Jhe effect of scrapping the levy that raises about
·. $65 million a year.
_
. .
.,
"Repealing the soft drink tax wtll not affect eXtstmg state programs,
said the Stop Taxes on Food Commit,~, Jhe group that_cilculated petitions to place the issue before voters. The revenues go mto the General
Fund and are not dedicated to any specific area."
oPponents of the ballot issue, designated Issue 4, disagreed.
"If passed, Issue 4 will reduce state funds available for education and
children's programs in Ohio," said State .~udgct D1rector R. Gregory
Browning and other opponents of repeal. The soda pop tax generates
$130 million per budget perioo, which is needed to support education and
other vital programs for children." _
Voters will have a chance to wetgh bolll arguments. Texts from each
group are part of legal advertising lllat ~ill appear once a week for three
consecutive weeks in newspapers statewtde.
Arguments also are printed in at least 10,000 pamphlets distributed to
the public through libraries, county elccuon boards and le&amp;lslators.
Taft's office does not edit the arguments.
"We are not responsible for verifying Jhe claims. We put these in the
legal advertisements as submitted by the various parties," said Maureen
Brown, Taft's spokeswoman.
The Stop Taxes on Food Committee contends the amendment is needed to close a loophole Jhat a court ruling created. It said llle decision lllat
upheld llle pop tax would allow legislators to levy wholesale taxes on
food, food ingredients and food packagmg. .
"Hidden, wholesale taxes on food are ulumately passed on to con, sumers. The sort drink tal&lt; already costs consumers $70 miUion annually.
Future wholesale food taxes could cost us hundreds of millions of dollars
more per year," the committee said.
Amendment opponents said the pop tal&lt; was enacted to balance the
" state budget and prevent cuts in school funding.
"Passage of Issue 4 could result in harmful cuts in education and olller
state programs - or it will necessitate the adoption of another tax hike
more objectionable to consumers.'' Jhey said.

~- Today

in history

By Tbe Associated Press
· Today is Monday, Aug. 29,llle 24Jst day of 1994. There are 124 days
"' left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on Aug. 29, 1944, 15,000 American bOOps marched
down the Champs Elysees in Paris as the French capital continued to celebrate its liberation from the Nazis.
On lllis date:
In 1533, llle last lncan King of Peru, Atahualpa was murdered on
orders from Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizarro.
~In 1632, English philosopher John Locke was born in Somerset.
In 1809, American aulllor Oliver Wendell Holmes was born ill Cam"bridge, Mass.
In 1877, the second president of llle Mormon Church, Brigham Young,
died in Salt Lake City, Utah.
In 1896. the Chinese-Amencan dish chop suey was invented in New
. york City by the chef to visiting Chmese Ambassador Li Hung-chang.
In 1943, responding to a clampdown by Nazi occupiers, Denmark
~ managed to scuttle most of its naval ships.
In 1957, South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond (lllen a Democrat)
: ended a ftlibuster against a civil rights bill after talking for more than 24
hours.
.;. In 1965. Gemini V, carrying astronauts Gordon Cooper and Charles
~ (Pete) Conrad, splashed into lhe Atlantic after eight days in space.
In 1966, the Beatles concluded their fourlll American tour with what
~ turned out to be their last public concert, playing before 25,000 fans at
":" Candlestick Pari in San Francisco.

......

......
.... .

.... .
...
...

"For 'ShOw and Tell' today. I have brought
some weapons-grade plutonium recently
obtained from the former Soviet Bloc."

"

•

•

•

NAR split over rap on organization
agency created at the heigh! of the
Great Depression - was conwvcd
to give banks greater mcenJtve to
lend money to low- and moderate income buyers by insunng marl gages that wouldn' t survtvc the pn vate market. Yet under th e plan
being considered in Congress last
month, bu yers wi th tn co mc s as
high as $71,000 per year would be
allowed to insure their home mortoffices in the past several weeks, gages - with a govemmerll guaralong with a number of others not antee - for a downpaymcnJ of as
little as 5 percent. This woulrl
nearly so charitable.
allow
poten tial hom eb uycr s to
What did we do that so rattled
theNAR's foundation? On July 18, avoid the stringent downpaymcnt
we reporJed on a congressional standards of the private markcl, as
effort to increase Jhe size of mort- FHA rules even pennit borrowers
gages the Federal Housing Admin- to finance their closing costs and
is tration is allowed to insure first-year mortgage insurance prefrom the current level of $151,750 miums. The rules also let realtors
to $172,625. If approved, llle plan sell more houses.
would expose American tax payers
According to an estimate by a
to billions of dollars of financial financial adviser retained by a pn risk. while the benefits would fall vate mongage insurance company,
mainly to realtors and high-income real!Drs stand to gain an ex tra $222
home buyers in wealthy areas. million per year in fees if the FHA
NAR has lobbied in favor of the · limil were raised. 11 would also put
measure, which is part of a larger, many private mortgage insurers out
administration-backed housing bill. of business, as their jobs would be
The FHA - a government taken over by the FHA. Since

WASHINGTON
The
National Association of RMitors is
a house divided.
A recent co lumn we wrote has
kindled an uproar at America's
largest real estate lobby. So irked
were the folk s at NAR that Jhey
devoted a full page of their Aug. B
ne wspape r, Rea ltor News, to
rebuking our story . "NAR to
columnist: Hit the road, Jack," the
headline read, followed by an article urgi ng readers to speak' out
against us.
The NAR membership did
speak up, but not, perhaps, as Jhe
NAR chieftains envisioned.
"Congratulations and thanlc you
for calling the National Association
of Realtors and, unfortunately, far
too man y members of the real
estate industry what they really
are." a letter from a Philadelphiaarea realtor began . "There are
many responsible industry mem bers who agree wholeheartedly
with your characterization of 'organi?.ed real estate· and their political

ment with the NAR '"lind its
actions." read anolller letter. from
an Oh io realtor. Dozens of similar
se ntiments have nowed into our

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

machine."

" 1 would like to let you know
that not all realtors arc in agreeM9feil'l'1"

g,-,.,; M-m\.

oleW5·~&lt;l

M::!VBe. iF We BuiLT
Tr-leM a Basl{eTsaLL
CO\IRT

we C0 VLD k:eeP

TlieM oFF C·5ftjf'J.

IToledo I 70" I

1992, the Realtors Political Action
Committee has showered more
Jhan $135,000 on members of llle
House and Senate bank.ing committees, which originally approved the
FHA expansion.
Critics argue that the government is taking a goo d risk by
expanding the FHA, smce the fund
has alway s been solvent. Yet a
hi gher ceiling mean s increased
exposure for taxpayers should the
fund default in the future. Although
the Mutual Mortgage Insurance
Fund has improved its fiscal footing in recent years, it lost a total of
51.4 billion as recently as 1988.
And even though Congress sough!
to tighten thefund lllrough legislative changes m 1990, 11 has so far
fai led to reach the capital reserve
requ irements mandated by
Congress.
"We have concluded that in
addition to economic factors, poor
program management and waste.
fraud and abuse contributed to ihe
losses sustained by FHA's fund "
in the 1980s. auditors at the General Accounting Office wrote in u
June 30 report on the fund.
'"
Even those readers who dis·
agreed with our conclusions stood
by us on the factS. One Colorado
realtor wrote to correct NAR' s
claim that a buyer only need s a
$52.254 income to qualify for a
house worth $172,000. What the
NAR forgot to include in its calculations, this realtor wrote, is thai
the lower figure doesn't take into
account the taxes and insurance
premiums that figure into the qualifying numbers.
Unfortunately for realtor s,
Congress has already put the
breaks on their hopes for an
expanded FHA. In a recent HouseSenate conference report, SenaJc
negotiators convinced their House
counterparts to accept a far lower
FHA mortgage ceiling than they
wanted. Under the latest agree·
mcnt, the ceiling would be raised
by only $650.
Meanwhile, the NAR mighl
consider putting its own house in
order before it calls out the troops
again.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

I read the news today, oh boy
"Twenty-five years ago," the
ad read, "Man walks on the
moon .... Festival near Woodstock
attracts 400,000.... Don and Doris
Fisher open a store specializing in
blue jeans. The name IIley choose
is an allusion to the generation
gap." And so llle Gap was born.
That's the rest of the story, as Paul
Harvey might say : one more
anniversary to celebrate compulsively, right up lllere with D-Day,
llle Nixon resignation, Chappaquiddick, and yes, llle birth of llle Generation Gap itSelf.
As blue jeans themselves went
from somellling worn while slopping hogs to an overpriced fashion
statement, a special store for blue
jeans no longer seemed strange to
the American consumer. The Generation Gap may have gone the
way of Generation X, but both Gap
and Credibility Gap remain.
The more things mutate, the
more things stay llle same. Every
weeit. in response to something
I've written, I get nasty anonymous
messages on my answering
machine. If 25 years ago the cruel
words would have been screamed
in my face by some drunk Republican, it's still the same message.
Today's Republicans drink at
home, lllat's all. Even Democrats
only leave the house to accept kick-

backs.
Speaking of sex and its conseThings haven't changed that quences, are laid-off rocket scienmuch. So why are we shocked all tists responsible for the new mamthe time? Stories about Woodstock mary enhancement system called
the Wonderbra? This thin)( is flyin)(
off the shelves! Some worried feminists say this scientifically engineered push-up device is evidence
'94, for example, noted with alarm of a return to a '50s-style objectifithat many of the fans who attended cation of women. Olller feminists
were on drugs. Gosh! Stop the pooh-pooh this concern. Nowadays
presses! Does it take a rocket scien- women aren't compelled to look
tist to figure out lllat young people sexy, they insist. It's a matter of
often attend outdoor concerts in an personal choice.
altered state?
It's all right to look like a
And what happened to all the pumped-up genetic experiment
rocket scientists anyway? Well, now, as long as you're ironic about
one fonner rocket scientist found a it. (Ask Arnold! Ask Madonna!)
niche in the toy business. Richard Modem cleavage can equal leverJ urmain, laid off by the aerospace age. Give yourself pennission to go
industry, invented an 8-pound doll for it.
with a microchip that makes it emit
Today even the timeless desire
a high-pitched scream at random, a to make oneself attractive crosses
scream lllat can only be sJOpped by lines of gender and ideology. Car"feeding" llle doll, sticking a key los llle Jackal, the terrorist who had
in its back and holding it there for his fingers in every bombing, sky30 minutes.
jacking and machine-gunning
This doll is being used in sex known to man, was fmally captured
education classes, issued to teen- this summer, caught while under
age girls for a couple days, to show sedation for liposuction. Twentythem what parenthood is really five years ago, he'd have gone
like. So, again, dolls are still willl down in a blazing shootout; in Jhe
us, only now they're not played '90s llle last surviving nemesis of
wiih, but painfully endured. That's the free world is brought down
what family values are still all while having his love handles
about.
removed.

/an Shoales

1ust last Sunday I read a story in
the paper: A man bit a dog in Ventura, Calif. Once upon a time,
"Man Bites Dog" would have
been llle ultimate news story. In the
'90s it didn't even make the front
page. Now it's got to be "Screaming Wonderbra Bites Jackal" or
"Blue Jeans Popular Willl Fonner
Rocket Scientists, Says New Poll"
to make the grade.
Is Jhere any bUiy new news any
more? When I read that an okapi at
Denmark's Copenhagen Zoo had
died of hyperventilation after listening to some singers rehearsing a
Wagner opera. I held out some
hope. But the article didn't mention
which opera, or even what aii okapi
was. At least the headline could
have read, "Fat Lady Sings! Stunted Giraffe Topples!" Alas. We
have no imagination. Some lllings
never change.
(To receive a complimentary
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St_, Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
Ian Sboales Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columoist _aod others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827·6364, ext. 8317 ,)

American politics thrive locally
Seventeen years as a small-town
newspaper reporter and editor
taught me a lot about the importance of local affairs, but 17 years
in Washington had dulled memory.
Now,
to llle reader
response
to
my lllanks
recent column
on postal
service horror stories, 1 am back in
touch with reality. Columnists and
'ld
commentators may bUl reputalions by bloviating on the fate
of
the w.Orld · but the average ct·u· zen
Cares most •bout backyard 1'ss ues •
and lllat is •where he concentrates
.his attention.
It's traditional American common sense. A government that tolerates potholes, doesn't collect the
garbage or deliver the mail willlill a
reasonable time is unlikely to be
very successful at larger ventures.
It is hard to imagine Washington
playing the world's policeman
whennooneseemstoknowhowto
re-establish law and order here at
home. Improving llle basics is the
way most of us can contribute to
improving the "big picture" as
well.
A Ialer co Iumn w1'II deal wtt. h
llle specific response to my piece
about the mail, which has been
overwhelming. So far, correspondents have written from 34 stales,
ranging from Florida to Washington, Arizona to Connecticut. The
Ieuers have been bolll thoughtful

•

and outraged, commendatory and
critical, and they continue to pour
in. Most, including many from
defenders of the postal service,

Hoddl·ng
111·
1'
_ Car"er
have been underscored by a determination lllat things can and will
improve.
A1most all re-assert the open
secret of contemporary American
life. Too many of the underpinnings of civic life are deteriorating
and have been doing so concurrently 1'or
' Lwo decades and more. What
appears in relroSJX:Clto have been a
golden era of nsing expectations
. met by 1mproving
.
bemg
public services in llle 1950s and 1960s has
been succeeded by dry rot
For lllat matter, the phrase "the
service economy" is a conttadiclion in tenns in most places. Ruthless cost-cutting and layoffs may
have improved efficiency and the
bottom line for American retailers,
but they have made shopping a less
pleasant expen'ence for thel'r cus·
tomers. Minutes-long waits while a
cheerful recorded voice comes on
periodically to thank you for your
patience are commonplace in dealing with lhe airlines. "Service sta·
lions" have been replaced by selfserve pumps.

Not survrisingly, few people
actually beheve Washington can or
should do much about any of this.
Echoing the environmentalists,
they may lllinlc globally, but Jhey
know they have to act IocaUy.
That is why what appears from
the perspective of llle nation's capital to be a steady decline in political participation and citizen
involvement in public affairs
proves on second look to be J.ust
the opposite. There has never been
as much organizational activity at
the local level as there is now.
Whelller the issue is clean air or
safe streets, drunk driving or school
refonn, Americans are mobilizing
in record numbers. The national
press concentrates on the lobbying
lllat affects Washington. The truth
is lllat far more ener~b and man
hours go into the 10 ying that
affects city hall and local enterprise.
That's cause for cheer and hope.
Many may be cynical about nationa1 politics, but many more are
channeling
concern into action
·
within
their communities. What
appears at one levellD be an almost
European resignation about public
institutions turns out on a deeper
level to be an energetic detenninalion to tum them around.
The United States is such a vast

.

country and our J!Overnmental
structures are so diffuse that it's
almost impossible to keep them all
in focus. It's easier in my business
to tellllle familiar stories of crime
and corrup u·on ·•
uoan t·t t·s to tty to
keep up with all the local initiatives
to do something about them. But
lack of media perspective doesn't
seem to matter to the legions of
l·nvolved c1·u·zens who are refusin"~
to take therr· commun1'ty's Iroubl""
...,
Iymg
· down. And m
· acung,
· ·•
ore
u•ey -r
forcing us in the news busines~
final!
1 "( to pay attenu·on.
·
0 course• thA~
~~ are some pro"..,.
Iems that cannot be dealt wit~
effectively on llle local level alono.
sorne areas are too poor to .pat
even for minimal public serv1~e
for instance. Air pollution reqwreJ
· 1 and nattona
·
1 1aws an.,...
reg1ona
enforcement. The interstate high·
way system is just that. In olllet
words, we still need to devise
nationwide policies to deal will!
·
· problems, whic h mcans
nabonw1de
enerrz·ing Congress at the federal
leve ·
•,
Hoddiog Carter Ill, formet
State Department spokesmaJ!
and award-winning reporter, edi;
tor and publisher, 1a president of
MalnStreet, a Wasblnl!loo, _D.C.:
based television production com•
pany •

'

IND.

• IColumbusl75' I

Ice

Stnny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
0 1994 Acru-Weath9f, Inc.

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight... Mostly clear. Low 55
to 60. Winds light and variable.
Tuesday ... Partly sunny in the
morning ... Willl increasing cloudiness and a slight chance of after. noon showers and lllunderstorrns.
High 80 to 85.

Extended forecast
Wednesday ...Chance of morning showers otherwise fair. Lows
from the mid 50s to llle lower 60s.
Highs upper 60s and 70s.
Thursday ...Fair. Lows 50 to 55.
Highs in the 60s.
Friday ... Fair. Lows in the mid
40s to around 50. Highs in the mid
60s to the lower 70s.

--Area deathsley, Karl and Charles Duncan; and
sister, Edilll Davis.
Graveside services will be at
1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Graham
Cemetery, with the Revs. Rex
Young and Dave Fields officiating.
Arrangements are being made by
Foglesong Funeral Home . There
will be no calling hours.

Nina Irene Wyatt, 80, of
Cheshire, died Sunday, Aug. 28,
1994, at Overbrook Center in Middleport
Born Dec. 20, 1913, in
Cheshire, to the late Osmer and
Maggie Brechtel Frecker, she was a
former store owner of Wyatt and
Ihle Service Station and a homeAgnes Lease
maker.
Slle is survived by a sister, Neva
Agnes Norene Lease, 64, 130
Ihle of Middleport; sisters-in-law, Third Ave., Gallipolis, died Sunday
Virginia Wyatt of Pomeroy, Kate Aug. 28, 1994 at her residence She
Smith of Columbus and Eunice was a self-employed cosmetologist
Chase of Nocomas, Fla.; a brother- in Sawyer, Mich., and retired in
in-law and wife, Sam Jr. and Helen 1987.
Wyatt of Zanesville; several nieces,
She was a member of the Grace
nephews and cousins.
United Methodist Church,
She was preceded in death by Women's Auxiliary American
her husband, Euj!ene E. Wyatt.
Legion Wee-Chick Post in New
Services w11I be at II a.m. Troy, Mich .. Women's Auxiliary
Wednesday at the Bilchfield Ftmer- Post 4464 Veterans of Foreign
al Home in Rutland, with Tim Wars of Gf!llipolis, Emblem Club
Vaughan officiating. Burial will #199 and was also a Girl Scout
foUow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery leader for several years.
in Cheshire.
Born Nov. 12, 1929 in Leon,
Friends may call between 5 and _W.Va. she was the daughter of the
8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral late Hugh H. and Nina Norine
home.
Paynter Graham.
Survivors include two daughters, Sally (George) Baskin of
Frances Johnson
Frances M. Johnson, 81, of Humble, Texas and Nancy
Hartford, W.Va., died Sunday, "Benny" Gooldin of Gallipolis; one
Aug. 28, 1994, at Pleasant Valley son, Douglas (Julie) Lease of West
Care Center in Point Pleasant, Chester; four sisters, Margaret
(Emerson) Heltzel of Princeton,
W.Va
Born Aug. 7, 1913, in Maggie, W.Va., Charlotte Anthony of BarW.Va., the daughter of the late boursville, W.Va. Sue (Fred) Fill' James Madison Duncan and Hattie inger of Gallipolis, and Evajane
Josephine Rings Dtmean, she was a (Harry) Carry of New Haven,
W.Va; two brothers, Hugh
homemaker.
(Shirley)
Graham, Jr., of Gallipolis
She is survived by her daughter
and
Andy
(Juanita) Graham of
· and son-in-law, Elzanna and Ray ;
Wellston,
and
eight grandchildren.
Fields of Hartford, W.Va.; daughShe
was
preceded
in death by
ter, Virginia M. Gibbs of Hartford;
her
parents;
her
husband,
Richard
son and daughter-in-law, Thomas
Lease,
on
Feb.
4,
1987,
and
"Tiny"
M. and Barbara A. Johnson of
Mason. W.Va.; brother, Melvin M. one sister, Dorothy A. Graham.
Friends may call 3 to 9 p.m.
Duncan of Mason and sister, CharTuesday
at Cremeens Funeral
·lotte VanMater of Elyria; five
Chapel
where
services will be held
grdlldchildren and one great-grandI
p.m.
Wednesday
with the Rev.
child.
David
Hogg
officiating.
Burial will
She was preceded in death by
follow
in
llle
Gmvel
Hill
Cemetery
her husband, Thomas Middleton
in
Cheshire.
Johnson; brothers, William, Stan-

OEA plane crashes in
Peru; five agents missing
WASHINGTON (AP) - Res- Peruvian jungle but held liUie hope
cue teams were trying reach the site for finding the five agents aboard
of a Drug Enf&lt;reement Administra- the plane alive.
The missing agents were
•tion plane lllat crashed in a dense
assigned to "Operation Snowcap."
a program aimed at stemmrng
cocaine traffic from Peru and
The Daily Sentinel
Bolivia.
(USPS lll-MI)
DEA officials had not yet
Published every afteraooa, MOilday throup
reached
the site of Saturday's crash
Friday. Ill Court Sl., PofM'O)', Ob.lo by the
to confinn whelller there were any
OhiCJ Valley Publithia&amp; Coqtay~uhimedia
(DC., Pomeroy, Oblo 4~769, l'b. 992-21S6.
survivors, but "it does look bleak
S&lt;coad ciMI poltlllt plld •"'""""Y· Ohio.
from the air," DEA spokesmdn
BiD Ruzzamenti said Sunday.
tolembtro The Auoc:tlll&gt;d Pno&amp;. llld tile Oblo
New•pll)ft Alloclllllioa. Natioul Adwttislq;
The -twin-engine DEA transport
ReprCKDtalhe, Branham Newspl!p• Sales,
plane
was traveling from ~ant_a
133 Third Aveuue, New York., New York
Lucia when it lost contact wtth 1111'
10017.
traffic control, a DEA statement
POSTMASTER: Send dtrell chuaea to The
said.
Daily ScDtinel, Ill Cowt St, Pomeroy, Ohio
45169.
DEA aircraft and Peruvian military officials were searching the
area around Pueno Pizana in the
foothills of the Andes mountains
about 285 miles northeast of Lima.
They spotted wreckage of what
was believed to be the downed
plane on Sunday, the DEA state·
mentsaid.
The five DEA agents included
two pilots and !hree . agents
assigned to the anu-cocame program Ruzzamenti said. Their
name; were not being released
pending notification of relatives .
The anti-cocaine program was
begun in 1987 to allow DEA agents
to help law enforcement officials
combat cocaine uaftic in Peru and
Bolivia.
,_

By Tbe Associated Press
Clouds will make a return
appearance throughout Ohio Tuesday . Showers and thunderstorms
will be likely in the northwest with
decreasing chances for precipitation in southeast Ohio. Highs will
range from llle mid 70s northwest
to the lower 80s souiheast.
The record high at the Colum bus weather station was 98 ill 1953.
The record low was 39 in 1965.
Sunrise Tuesday will be at 6:57

a.m. Sunset Tuesday will be at8:08
p.m.
Around the nation
Warm temperatures covered
ll!OSt of llle country today, with
clouds and fog over parts of lhe
East.
The Northeast was expected to
remain warm and sunny, with temperatures in lhe 80s, while the Deep
Soulll was expecting more sultry
weather and temperatures in the
90s.

Much cooler air over the mountains of New England was expected
to cause afternoon clouds and a few
showers, especially in northern sections.
Pleasant weather, with low
humidity and light winds, was lilceIy from the Middle West into the
Ohio Valley and eastern Great
Lalces. Temperatures were e~pecl·
ed in the 70s.
Temperatures in llle 80s were
were expected from the Middle
Atlantic Coast to the Central

Plains, with thunderstorms possibly
severe in llle southern Appalachians.
The West was likely to be seasonably warm, with temperatures in
lhe 60s and 70s near the coast and
80s farther inland. Temperatures in
the Southwest were likely to range
from the 90s to triple digits in the
deserts. Afternoon showers were
expected in the Rock.ies.
The hot spot in llle nation Sun·
day was Lake Havasu City, Ariz.,
with a high of 113 degrees.

Tornados leave four dead in Wisconsin
W.VA.

Nina Wyatt

•

Warm weather will continue in southern Ohio

OHIO Weather

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BIG FLATS, Wis . (AP) Trees snapped like toothpiclcs were
.festooned with pink insulation.
Power lines lay across roads littered with shards of glass and
splintered boards. The volunteer
fire department's building was
gone - along with one of its
trucks.
Chainsaws buzzed nearly non stop Sunday as residents and volun·
leers cleared downed trees and
picked llleir way through llle rubble
left by tornadoes that ripped
through the state, lcilling four people and injuring more than 40.
Big Flats - a wooded area of
potato farms and vacation houses
- suffered the worst damage Saturday. A tornado gouged a 13mile-long swath through the landscape and turned this small central
Wisconsin town's main street into a
tangle of metal, lumber and trees.
"The best description I can give
you is that it looked like a bomb
went off," Deputy George Cooper
said. "Trees and houses are just
leveled."
Classes for 85 elementary
school students were canceled
today so the building could be used
as a command post to coordinate
cleanup. About 100 state Conservation Corps workers and 40 members of the Nationa! Guard were
sent to help.
The tornado killed a couple
whose bodies were found in the

Announcements
Bradbury cllllbing giveaway
The Bradbury Church of Christ
will have a free clothing give-away
from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday at the
church.
Stlversville revival set
The Stiversville Word of Faith
will hold a revival from Aug. 31SepL 3 at County Road 31 in Portland. Pastor Dav1d Dailey will hold
the meetings at 7:30 p.m. each
night.
Racine cbkken barbeque set
The Racine Volunteer Fire
Deparunent and Auxiliary will host
a chicken barbeque and ice cream
social at II a.m. Saturday at the
rue hall.

wreckage of their home. Twentytwo people were injured and two
remained hospitalized in serious
condition today, aulllorities said.
Adams County officials estimated damage at $4.5 million, with 24
houses destroyed and more than
170 damaged. About 500 homes
were without electricity.
The town hall was leveled; only
the concrete vault where public
documents are stored remained recognizable. Hundreds of yards
away, sheet metal siding lay
wadded like paper.
National Guard Capt . Scott
Meske said the building wa s
crushed "like a soda can."
Next door, the volunteer fire
department's building looked "like
someone took it, crumpled it up,
and threw it in the potato field,"
Meske said.

Trucks were being stored at firefighters' homes, but one truck was
missing.
"It's gone," firefighter John
Weisenberg said . "Nobody can
fmd it"
In Eau Claire County. about 60

Seventeen die on Ohio
roads over weekend
of Marion, driver in a truck-train
accident on a Marion County road .
DAYTON- Joe M. Young.
34, of Union, driver in a one-car
accident on a Montgomery County
Road.
COL UMBUS - Richard A.
Douglass.,
57,
hometow n
unknown, in a one-vehicle accident
on Interstate 670 in Franklin County.
ELYRIA - Josephine L. Basseu, 77, of Wellington, driver, and
Patricia Hill, 13, of Wellington, a
passenger, in a two -vehicle accident on Ohio 58 in Lorain County .
COLUMBUS - A pedestrian
hit by a car on a Franklin County
road.
ZANESVILLE - Diane L.
Brown, 54, of Zanesville, a pedesIrian struck hy a truck. FRIDAY
WASHINGTON
COURT
HOUSE - James W. White, 17, of
Washington Court House, driver
SATURDAY
and Dale Sharpe, 44, of WashingCALDWELL - Rick Antill, ton Court House, driver, in a two34, of Caldwell, pedestrian struck car crash on a Fayette ·county road.
on Ohio 564 in Noble County.
FRANKLIN - Rebecca F.
Dunworth, 16, of Franklin, passenger who fell out of a vehicle on a
Continued from page 1
Warren County street.
CINCINNATI - Anlllony PanRecognizing the high rate of
gallo, 80, of Cincinnati, passenger students with parents on welfare,
in a one-car accident on a city Butler added lila! all students must
be treated the same and given llle
street
MARION- Paul Bentley, 69, same opportunities in school. For
lllese students, Butler said he hopes
to develop job skills.
"Development of role models is
very important," Butler said .
"Teachers and coaches should be
Tbe Pomeroy-Mason bridge good role models."
will be closed for a few bours Ibis
During his 20 years in the teachevening, according to an official ing profession, Butler started as a
from tbe Oblo Department of social studies, math and science
Transportation.
teacher, coached basketball and
Tbe bridge wiii be closed to later became a principal.
correct a paving problem.
His most recent post was as
princiral at Woodsfield High
Schoo in Monroe County. This
school has now consolidated with
anolllcr, Butler said.
Buller's resume includes graduUnits of the Meigs County ating from Defiance High School,
Emergency Medical Service logged Defiance College, and St Frances
eight calls for assistance Saturday College in Indiana. His wife is an
and Sunday. Units responding elementary school principal and
Buller has two children.
included:
He hopes to help teachers innoMIDDLEPORT
vate.
2:21 a.m. Saturday, Middleport
"If a teacher comes up to me
Police Deparunent, Kenny Morriwilll an idea lllat's new I'm willing
son, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
7:19p.m. Saturday, Overbrook to try it," Butler said. ''The world 's
Center, Everett Delany, Pleasant changing to fast for just doing
things the way we've always done
Valley Hospital.
things."
POMEROY
3:08 p.m. Saturday, Union
Avenue, Joe Bonecutter, refused
treabTient;
2:48 p.m. Sunday, parking lot,
Sally McDowell, VMH.
REEDSVILLE
3:07p.m. Sunday, Forked Run
State Parle, Dalton Wilcox, St.
Joseph's Hospital.
RUTLAND
10:02 a.m. Saturday, Main
Street, Todd Snowden, VMH.
SYRACUSE
5:46 Sunday, Laurel Cliff Road,
Greg Hibbbbs, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:06 p.m. Saturday, state Route
681, Lela Cremeans, PVH,
Reedsville assisted.

By The Associated Press
At least 17 people have died in
traffic accidents on Ohio roads this
weekend, Jhe State Highway Patrol
said today.
The patrol counts weekend traffic deaths from 6 p.m. Friday
through Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CANTON - Anges P . Loomis,
37, of Massillon, driver in a onevehicle accident on a Stark County
Streel
CINCINNATI - David A.
Zimmerman, 31, of Cincinnati, a
driver, and his passenger. Cynthia
A. Gray, 40, of Cincinnati; Dorian
Hooks, no age listed, a driver, and
Thelma Rae Newman, 54, of
Goshen, who owned llle car Hooks
was driving, in a two-vehicle accident on Interstate 275 in Hamilton
County.

Livestock report
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Ohio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday by llle Ohio
Deparunent of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: late sales
1.00 lower, instances 1.25 1.50
lower.
'
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs .. country
points 39.50-41.00; a few 41.50
early; plants 39.75-41.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs .. country
points, 36.00-39.00.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: steady to 2.50 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 60.0068.75; select 53.25-64.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.00..
67.00; select 50.00-65.25.
Cows: uneven, 2.00 lower to
1.00 higher; all cows 53.00 and
down.
Bulls: steady to 2.00 lower; all
bulls 58.75 and down.
Veal calves: steady to 35 .00
lower: choice 22.00 and down.
Sheep and Iambs: 1.50 lower to
2.00 higher; choice wools 42.0077.50; choice clips 62.00-78.50;
feeder lambs 71.00 and down; aged
~beep 39.00 and down.

New...

Pomeroy-Mason
bridge to close

Inmon

Continued from page 1
night when he tried to stand. He
was taken to Grant Medical Center,
Wildwood garden club
where he was in fair condition SunThe Wildwood Garden Clubt1 day night.
will meet at I p.m. Wednesday at
"I feel very, very weak, and I
llle U.S. Route 33 park.
first need to regain a little of my
strength," he said Sunday. The
VFW auxiliary sets meeting
Willard businessman lost 34
The Ladies Auxiliary Post 9053 pounds- from 216- during the
will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. fast.
Thursday at the post home. All
Inmon's permit allowing him to
members should attend, inspection protest on the Statehouse grounds
will be held and dues must be paid has been tenninated in light of his
for next year.
medical condition, said Ron KeUer,
executive director of llle Capitol
SHS boosters to meet
Square Review and Advisory
Southern High School Athletic Board.
Boosters will hold a clean-up day
can request another per·
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the high mitInmon
from
the
board, which oversees
school for SHS booster conces- the Statehouse
grounds, Keller
sions.
said.
Inmon's doctor said llle candidate would remain in the hospital
for several more days, but would
have no lasting effects from the
Am Ele Power ........................311/l
fast. Dr. Thomas Harder said
Akzo ............- .........................621/l
Inmon was mildly to moderately
Ashland OU ........................... .37 Ill
dehydrated
and had low porassium.
AT&amp;T ................_................_.__ss 118
Inmon's
wife, Kathy, said she
Bauk One ...........- ................-.35 1/l
will
uy
to
convince
her husband to
Bob E•aos-..- ..... - .................20 3/4.
pursue a more traditional campaign
Champion lod.-...................-221/4
Ch~r~~~log Shop ........................8 3/4
strategy.
City Holding .......- .................31 3/4
Inmon's running mate, Norm
Federal MOKul ....................... -29 318
Myers, said he is willing to go
Goodyear T&amp; R ..................... .34 3/4
along with whatever Inmon
K-mart ...................................-17114
decides. "He'll do what is best for
Lauds End ...-........... _ ........... -20 Ill
llle campaign," Myers said.
Limited IDC......................_....._.. .. .. 20
The governor has agreed to
Multimedia Jac............. -........-......31
debate
Rob Burch, the Democratic
Point Bancorp ..............................17
Reliance Electric ..................._.._...20
candidate. Burch campaign
Robbins &amp; Myers................... l9 Ill
spokesman Jim Bleilcamp blamed
Sboney'slnc-. ......................... 13 718
Voinovich for Inmon's condition. .
Star Bank. ___.............................-...42
"This situation could have been
Wendy lnt't. _.. ........................ IS 718
resolved
weelcs ago with a simple
Worthington lnd ................... -21 1/4
affirmative
answer from George
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest or Voinovich in response to what we
GaUipolls•
consider Billy Inmon's very reasonable demand for a debate,"
Bleikamp said Sunday.

EMS logs 8 runs
over weekend

Stocks

--· ..

__..

··-

--

~

-

miles northwest, a tornado blew a
house trailer 25 feet off its founda·
lion and into a building containing
farm machinery, killing a 3-year·
old girl. Her mother and sister, who
also were inside, were trapped
beneath the trailer hut survived .

)
1.--

\

.or- ~-~- ~·

,. Co•P,Iete Medical/~urgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Thr~at Including

John A. Wade,
.

..........t.wnt

.

.

.

.

.

.

. . . . . , . . . . .

il

.
I
·I

CaD ...,._1144 far 1111. ar lab•ll"•lll
a......;..
~lll;.;...;.;.'..;;of.;.;.;.le;..t•-·-'-"
......' ......
) ••_..._..._._....:.·-·-'-"-.....
.
il

Straigfit- Tuc~r &amp; 1?.pusfi..
!funeral J{ome
Ravenswood, wv. (304) 273-2152
Preneed • Atneed • Postneed
SERVING JACKSON fiN.) MASON fiN.)
and Meigs (OH.) COUNTIES

JOE ROUSH

RUSSELL STRAIGHT

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, August 29, 1994
Page--4

1'
t

In Kickoff Classic,

Nebraska blanks WVU 31-0

(

t

IT DIDN'T MATTER that the potential touchdown pass to West Virginia wide receiver Tony
Minnifield (bottom) wa~ broken up by Nebraska
wrnerback Daren Schmadeke at the goal line in
the final minutes or Sunday's Kickoff Classic in

East Rutherrord, NJ ,, or even that Schmadeke
was flagged ror pass interrerence. The Moun taineers still didn't get into the end zone, and the 1
Cornhuskers won 31-0. (AP)

At K-C Raceway,

Williamson, Hickle post wins
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Taking !he lead on !he first lap
and leading from flag -to-flag, Dave
Darland of Walton, Ind. held off a
hard-charging Jimmy Stinson on
!he last lap to claim !he 30-Jap Loctitie/United States Auto Club nonwinged sprint car feature Saturday
night at K-C Raceway near Chillicothe.
Darland, !he current ace of Indiana's non-wing sprint car contingent, had a rough road to !he feature . After suffering mechanical
difficulties on !he first lap of his
qualifying heat, Darland's Earlywine Racing/Valvoline #36 was
forced to qualify through the Bmain. an event Darland won rather
easily despite numerous caution
.
periods.
Darland stated in victory Jane,

"The car was perfect We had trou- loop it in front of seventh place
bles early. and we broke here last slarter Jack Hewitt The two enlanyear before feature time. The crew gled cars were stalled in !he middle
did a helluva job setting up the car. of turn s three and four with
I could run it anywhere. All I had Hewitt's front nerf bar sitting preto do was put it out front and keep cariously in House's cockpit.
House, perhaps one of the
it there . The track was in great
shape. This was the first time that I fast.est cars on the track, went to !he
really got to race here and I like !he tail with Hewiu, who rciUrned after
high banks. The cushion tonight changing a flat right rear.
gave me somelhing to lean on."
K-C points leader Tracy
And lean on the cushion, Dar- Hoover, winner of the third heat
land did; putting the Competition and racing for only the sewnd time
Welding machine high on the rim without a wing, wiped out his front
against a lhread of clay !hat wore end in the altercation, but was able
very thin in !he waning stages of to join the field 14 laps down after
the race.
making repairs.
Several olher cautions, one that
The complexion of the race
changed somewhat, when on the included Cary Faas and another
fJISt lap several cars carne together, that involved Ken Rice and Hewitt,
causing championship contender plagued the first eight laps of the
Tray House, Chesterfteld, Ind. to
(See K·C on Page 5)

By TOM CANAVAN
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP)- Tommie Fmzier took a trip
to !he Downtown Athletic Club on
!he eve of the 1994 Kickoff Classic. and the sight of the Heisman
Trophy must have inspired the
Nebmska quarterback.
Frazier rushed for 137 yards and
Ihree touchdowns and threw anolher Sunday as No.4 Nebraska started its "Unfinished Business" season by dominating No. 24 West
Virginia 31-0 at Giants Stadium in
the opener of !he college football
season.
"No one is talking big," said
Iackie Zach Wiegert, part of a massiv e offensive lin e that he)ped
Nebraska post a 468-89 advantage
in total offense. "But we think we
have a good team and we want to
get back to play for the title. ··
The Cornhuskcrs had that
chance la st year in th e Orange
Bowl agrunsl Florida State, but the
national tWe sailed away with an
errant field goal in the closing second~. It was !he only blemish aft.er
an 11-0 regular season.
The nucleus of that team is back
and it had little trouble handling a
West Virginia team hun by graduation.
Last year, a bowl game between
the two undefeated teams might
have been a great way to decide the
national champion. But it was a
mismatch on Sunday, especially

the way the Cornhuskers' defense
harried sophomore yuartcrba cks
Chad Johnston and Enc Boykm.
Neither had mu ch e&lt; pcrie ncc
coming into the game and they
were running ragged most of the
afternoon. They were a combmcd
6-of-19 for 46 yards and two interceptions.
.
On the other side, Francr wa&lt;
simply running to daylight . especially around left end on the opuon
keeper. The junior sandwrchcd
touchdown runs of 25 and 27 yards
around a 12-yard TD pass to Reggie Baul in the second quarter as
the Huskers opened a 24-0 halftrmc
lc~d .

looked very go&lt;xJ. Besides singlchandedly outgammg West Virgrnia
on the ground, he also completed
eight of 16 passes for 100 yards.
He also threw two mterccption s
deep in Mountaineer territory.
" I made some plays, but I also
made some bad ones," said Fra zier, who got a glimpse of the Hcisman in a trip to New York City
along wi~t teammates and former
Nebraska greats Johnny Rodgers
and Mike Rozier. " ... But my teammal~~ played great by blockrng for
Ill C.

And if that continues?
Well, Fraztcr didn't want to
think about that.
"I don't worry about the Hcisman Trophy," he said. ''I'm con cerned about winning week in and
week out. If the Heisman com es
I'll be happy. If it doesn ' t,,;
d ocs ~ :t. Just as long as my team

Frazier capped hi s 12 -carry,
137-yard effort with a 42-yard TD
scamper in tlle fourth quarter.
After that. the only thing of
interest was whether West Virg inia
would be able to avoid rls first
&lt;hutout since 1986. It could have, wins."
but coach Don Nehlcn clcct.ed to go
f'ourtccn of West Virgi nia 's 57
for a touchdown on a fourth -and- offcnstve plays went for losses,
nine situation at the Nebraska nine with Nebraska rcgistenng ei ght
in the closing minutes and sacks.
·
Boy kin's pass was int ercepted in
West Virginia's Robert Walker.
the end zone by Sedric Colhns.
who g:tincd a school-record 1.2~0
"What's the difference?" asked yards last season, was held to 46
Nehlen, whose offense did not get yards on 12 c&lt;uTics.
the ball in Nebraska territory until a
The only bright spot for Wes t
fumble was recovered in tlte fourth Virginia was all-Big East punter
quar1er. ''Why go for !he licld g«tl Todd Saucrbrun, who averaged 60
at that point? We just wanted 10 yards on nine kicks, including a
school-record 90-y:trder in the first
execute a play."
While he wasn't perfect. Fmzicr quaner.

Baseball
International League
standings

S.turd.J

.ll: L f&lt;J. llll
5~9

-

Ouawa (M~ .) ............. 6!

a-P.wruclte&lt; (Boo.) .... 76 60
6!

500

Syncuu: (for.) ···--· ... 67 69
R"""""" (BolL) ........ 63 n

.493
9
.467 12.S

Scranton-W-0 (Phil.).58 78

.426

Next week's openers

8

18

Watern Dh1tkMI
Riohmond (Aol.) ........7~ 60 -~~6
O.arlotte (Cl~)~:_:_:·_···7S 61 .SS!
.S
COLUMBUS '(NYY).73 63 -~37 2.~
N&lt;rialk (NYM) ..........6l 71 .471 10.5
Toledo (Dd.) ............ .59
.434 16.5
s.-clinched diviliat Iitle

n

Saturday's scores

...Riduoond
p.,.... 4, COLUMBUS I

Sunda,.

Atlanl.. al Detroit., I p.m.
CLEVELAND at CINCINNATI, I

Wilburn, comerblck.

p.m.

HoullOa at lndian1polia, I p.m.

Kanau City a1 Nc:w Oricam, I p.m.
M.inncaou at 0roc:n Bay, I p.m.
Aliladclphil II N.y . Gianta, l p.m.
Sr..nle at WuhinfOn. I p.m.

Tampa Bay at OUct.ao, 1 p.m.
Arizwa at L.A. llunl, 4 p.m.
Dall.u II PiUiburgh, 4 p.m. (lUX)
New England at Mianu. 4 pm.
N.Y. leta at BufTalo.. 4 p.m.

COLUMBUS 14, Richmond 6. romp.

San Diego 11 Dawer, 8 p.m. (J'NT)

Syne&amp;liC S, Oltawt 2

MondoJ
L.A. Rlidcrl at San Franciloo, 9 p.m.

Tokldo 4, Owltae ]
Nodolk ~- Rodoala-4

(ABC)

Scrmton- Wilke~-Bun: 6, Pawt»cket 0

Sunday's scores
COLUMBUS 9, Riclvnond 3
Otulouc 10, Tolcdo 6
Synruae 16. Onawt 4, S 1!2 inninga,

....,

Rocht:a~t:r &amp;, Norfdk 4
P.wtucket 8, Scn.nton-Wi.lke~ -Batre 2

Transactions
Baseball
Artm'k:an Ltapt
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Sianccl a
two-ye~r pllytr devtlopmmt ag.reement
with the Prince William Cannons of the
Carolina l.uguc.

Tonight's games

Football

Rochellelal Syncu&amp;e, 7 p.m.
OtarlOUCIIl Toledo. 1 p.m.

COLlJMDUS at Ridmond, 7 pm.
PaW\llCtiCitl OU.wt, 7:0S p.m.
Norfoll: at Scran(on-Wilku-Bme,

7:30p.m.

Football
NFL exhibition
final standings
£uttm Dh•lalon

.ll: L I U: 1:4 1:&lt;1.

IwD

lnd.ianapol.ia ...... 4 0 01.000 10

'I

Buffalo .....-....... J l 0 .7SO 62

Y1

New &amp;Island .... 3 I 0 .710 9'1 l7
N.Y. leta ........... 3 I 0 .710 70 Ill
Miomi ............... 3 2 0 .600 IOl 117
Cntrall&gt;hllllon
CI1!VELAND.. 3 I 0 .710
Hounm ............ 2 J 0 .400
CINCINNA11 .. I 3 0 .2SO
Plol.ll&gt;wJh .. ... .... I 3 0 .250

Ntdontl Foolbtll U.ate
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Waived
Perry Cuu:r and Mote Richardtm, cornert.ckt; OW Swuu. quartaback; Darryl Hudy,lincbacker; and O.vid Wilk.ins
defcmive and. Sipod Karl Dunhu dcfcnaivo md. Pbaxl Outiacm Heant, 'nm·
nina back, on l.bc pllyaictUy·u.nable·topaform Ut.
ATLANTA FALCONS : Wtivcd
Milch O.vil, lineb.ckcr; Bryan Addi.lm,
ufcty; Tpflka hchon tnd Thomu
4dCNive end~; 11\d K.e:ilh A1e.s.
tnd Alai KthniuVIIu. autrda . Pltced
Ccny Di.Ia~,Oride receiver, oo injured ra-"""~
BUFFALO BILLS: Walvcd Eddie
t:uller, fllnni.na back; Olen Youna.
linebacbr; John Puella, dcfrmivt~ lineman; Sean Crocker mel Filme.l Jciwon;
defen.li.vo b.cka; tad Cnit, Hcndtickaon
111d larry O.tn:U.i, ~11111ive liPcmen.
CHICAGO BEARS: Trtdod Jim
Schwantz, lincb.ckl!l', \o Ibm n.n.. Cowboys'"' .. ....tY&lt;looed 1996 d..tl pid&lt;.
Woivod Keilh J....,;,p, CW. end
CLEVELAND BROWNS: .Wtivo4
Brad Goobcl, q»tnezb.cll; l4:1rifl Johnton, dcfcnaive llcUe; Man:w I..ee. run~f
Andy Mcedlam. tackle; Rod
·
d, pard; Patriclt Rowe. wide ro-c:c:ivcr. and Pmcy Snow ,linclbKkc:r.
DAu.AS COWBOYS : Wtived Do·
wane Douoa tnd loo1enh Collins,
liDcbec.ken; Malt Joyce.. offauive linemtn; Linduy Chapman and Tony
Ricbtrdaon, nnnina ba(;b; Danca
SIUdaill, ..ray; Col"""' BcU ond
Dt:Yil, li&amp;bl Cllldl; and Shelby Hill. wide

wu.ma.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

7l
93
12
11

~3
(JJ

74
10

WfllenDIY. . .
L.A. Raid. . ..... .. 1 0 .100122 113
Seattle............... 2 2 0 .SOO T1 51
Denver.............. 2 3 0 .400 102 116
Kanw Gty .. .... 2 3 0 .400 71 93
San Dieao .. .
1 4 0 .200 90 116

..:a::

J...,

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
f.alltra DlvllkNI

o.u.u...............

\t 'l
3 0 .400 10 10

w""""'"" . . .

78

~Gion~ ...... ., ~ ~ -~

2
1 3 0 .250 S4
Pltilodolphio ...... I 3 0 .250 l9
1 3 o .no 6A

....w.. .............

Central DI.,Wo.
0..... lloJ......... 3 I 0 .710
Chiaao ... -....... 1 I o .7!0
~............ 3 2 0 .600
f)euoil.............. 2 2 0 .500
Tompa Boy ....... 2 2 0 .500

n

13

7~

fi1

70

~I

97
71
61

19
13
Ill

San FnndKo ... 3 I 0 .710 70

~3

w...... DI•loloo

Allon~ ..............

3 2 0 .600 91 101
New Odea.nl..... I 3 0 .2.50 61 &amp;I
L.A. Rlml........ 0 4 0 .000 42 95

Edllbldon ftnales
f111daJ

Adonb lll. Philodelphi.a 12
aNONNA1138, Ooor.i&amp;l4
N.Y. leu 10, Tunpo BaJ9

~

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Waived
Paul JUJtin, quu\Crbad; Rodney CUIWII'
1nd Willitm Houa\on, Nnnina btc.b:
Jdm Ray, olfmaive Lld.le; Kipp Vaden,
offcnaivc linanan; Lanou Taic:hdman, dofcnaivc lincmtn; Kenny McEn1yre aad
John Reece. defenatve bleD; and Deton
Pcinta, wide ro::eivcr.
_
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Waived
DunAan Andcnoo., dc:f'c:naivo md; TI'CV'Or
Cobb, rmnin&amp; boclt: Tun Neville, fUUII:
Kcilh Tnylor, clc:tcnaive. tickle; andllury

receive.
DENVI!ll BRONCOS, Tnded T... -

my Mtddo•, quu\Gtbt(;k, to lho L.A.
llama fm tl995 foanb-ra.and dnft. pick.
DETROIT LIONS: Ploced ltovio
Scott, cometbt.ck, on injured ,..erve.
Waiwed Vtuahn Bry-. ~; Eric
Oreon tDd lichtrd Woodley, wido rocci.VGR; Kylo Moen tnd liD* Wilaon,
delauive endl; Joha OaJ•by, rwmiDa

- GRRRN
U&gt;d """'
lllomooon,
. .: ond.
BAY
PACI.EfS
Phud
Sammy Walbr, COIMrbaclt, on iaju.RMI
n»cne. Waivad Dea1ail' McNabb, full.
Ed ~ Laoco z..., ...
"""aft'awivolioomoo; a.....t c-,
linohodor, end Bill Sdu.oode. ond Wille
lludo, ..w. ........ Aoqw..d &lt;lwloo
Jordan, wide nw::aiver, rrom lho LA.
Rtldm ror aa \lnd1u:lotod 197S" draft
pid&lt;. f'llood A...., Tort.., pnl,.., 1he
plo,.lall}'-....bl&amp;&lt;o-pod..... lin
HOUSTON OILERS, Woived Lee
Oitlaadanor, wide! roccivcr, Jctf Ned,
auu:l: Sbtwn Harpa", offonli.YD t&amp;c.k1o;
l.aou10id IWI. linebocltcr, cnc1 F.mon.e1
Martin tad Tony Brown, cometbteka.
Placocl Tcnuny Swwen, liJht ond, tnd

a..-

LDS ANGELES RAIDERS: Waivad
RJ. Kon and Cary Brabham, dafon~ivo
btcb; Randy Jordan and Darict: Gainer,
runnina htcb; lOOn Mortm, wide JIOCI!iv-

rr. and Alberto While, ddmaivc lineman.

LOS ANGELES RAMS: Placed
Emcat Janca, linoht.ckcr, oa injurod ro-ICJ'Ye. Waived Clevcltnd Guy, runnin1
bock; Kielty Bndy, tiabt md; Duryl limley, cornerback; Bill Schultz:, ofl'enaive
lincmtn; Mtrc Bouu.c,. dcimaivc tackle,
ond DonJ Boytin, uf«y.
MIAMI IJOIJ'IBNS: AMOWl&lt;Od !be
n:tinmolll of Jolin otranfohl, linolood&lt; ...
Waived Mtd: Dennit, olfeuive ~ac:kle;
Aaron Crtver, nnnina bt(;k; Danori.t
Johruon, wide re.cGvcr; Gccqe lloob,
ddCrlliw tackle; Jty Willitnu, dcicnaive
end; tnd Reb Coma, tigbt end.
MINNESOTA VtkiNGS: W•iv•d
p.,. B...W.,liaoboWo; C.., Blondwd,
placWci:cr; Lamar McOria.a, urcay;
Rabat Slaten, fullback; tnd Mike Wclll,
offcna:ive lincmtn.
NEW

ENGLAND

PATRIOTS'

Wai'f'od Troy BmwD, kick R1b1mar; Dion
lAmbert, ufe&lt;y; Jolin WuhinJIIao, dcfCI!·
1ive llctle; Mike Stalal, offcmive llctle.;
Joe Bun:b, Ol!rllm'; Mario Hcmy, wide mceiver, ud Paul Fruciaco, ti&amp;ht a~d.
NEW ORLEANS SAINtS: Wtivod
Eric Mallin, wide ftiCCivcr, Regie Pftle-man,linobodlcr, RoJ&lt;C Nellon, auud; fine! Bynl. """""'d&lt;; Alon Kline, Ood&lt;le;
tnd P•U Evan•, liabt .end. Pit cod Tom
llkbtu, otraWvo flnanu., un injuml maervc. Added Mid CampbeU, baht end,
and Ralpb O.wkinl, NminJ bac[, 10 the
d...t.,.,....lol "1""'NEW YORK GIANTS: Wai..,od Gary
HarTell and Eric Weir. wide recciven;
Millm Jonet and l..corl.rd R•y. dderu:i'f'e
ends; Ivory Dilltrd, 1tclde; and Sh1wn
Smith and Pete Shufelt, lincbackcn.
NEW YORK JETS: Wa1ved Jeff
Bloke. quutcm.clt: F...! Leota. fullboclt:
and Chico Nel.loo, ufcty. Reached an i.ojury acUlcmcnl wil.h Damon Pieri, aafdy.
PHILADELPinA EAGLES: Wtivcd
Bruce Walker, dcfenaive tackle; Joey

Hickey, tia,ht end; Eric Aoyd, auard: Tun
GarlU:Ir:, wide receiver; Ma.D.ua Thomaa
and AI Woot«~, running back.&amp;; and Jock

Jono., linaba&lt;*"· Pl•ood eo~, Ba.ro~ow,
llnebtcket, on injured tciCIVe. Claimod
Mike FIM, oHcn&amp;ive liDcman, off waivers
from lhrl P\ttaburah. Steelen..
PmSBUR.dlt STEELERS: Wtived
Dovid T....twdl, kid&lt;or,. !Wody C..ohbcrt,
runruna t.ck; Eiben lillia, Wl~ re.cavcr;
Gary Brown and Tim Simpaon, llck.Jca;
Regie Bamm. Wuhcker. tnd Andy Kdly,quo,....clt.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Wai..,cd
D1ncn Benncn, punter, R11 Smoflt,
JUud; Alphoolo Taylor, dcfau1o;e ltc:kJc;
am. ThClrrlll, wide n:cciver, and Damion
Lyora, camerbaclr:.. Placed l&gt;uTet Krein,
lincbaclr:cr, and P..amcaa
oft'maivo
ttcklc., lm injwal raavo.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Woivod
John Mew. fullback: Bryce Bu.meu, liaht
md; M.artiD Htrriaon tad Junior Dryut,
dcfcn1ivo linemen; Gany P•y. center;
Shtumbe Wri&amp;ht·Piir, runmna btck;
Dtmien Ru11ell, ufcty; tnd .(lfcn:r.o
RrowninJ. ~ naiYCII'.
Sl!A111.E SEAHAWKS: Waived J.o.
Lo Ltna, comcrbac.k: Scou Lockwood,
runnina btc.k; Rickey Shaw, orrcruive
tackle; Stcvo Oordoa, center; Larry
Wialwn, W'ety; Oriondo
Me\; James McK.aiaht, wide receivu;
and Maa. Wcmcr,dcf'Cinlivc tKLlo.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS'
Waivod Vidal MUla, lincbac.l cr; Roacr
1~ ~ Tyree O.via, wide mcaver. Pao Pienon. 1ackle; Imel Sltn·
ley, delena:ivc. mel; and Jimmy Willlama,
Unobtdlot. Pltced Ltwrance Dtwacy,
wide ftiCCiivcr on tho phJ~icaU)'"unabl•~a­
podmnliat.

cmcnc..

w...... .,......_

WASIUNGTON REDSICINS: Woived
Orca HuntinJUIII, center; Codric Smith
...s T,.... Riuh,......,. bocb. ...r Domen Wriaht, wide. ~ver.

MIDDLEPORT PHILLIES -The Middleport
Phillies Pee Wee girls' sortball team celebrated
the 1994 season with an end of the year party at
General Hardnger Park arter completing the season with a nne 25-3 overall record. In rront are
(L-R) Amber Vining, Ian Hindy, Stephanie Wigal,
Abby Harris, Amanda Neece and Chasidi Biggs.

In the second row are Monica Moon, Amber
Gardner, Melanie Blevins, Heather Boyles, Marjorie Bratton and Heather Friend. Behind them
are coaches Brenda Vining, Stan Moon and Greg
Vining. Not pitcured were players Crystal Leach,
Erica Bryan and Brandi Tobin and coach Sara
Bratton.

Maracaibo beats Northridge 4-3
to win Little League World Series·
It was as if !he Little League World
Series were suddenly shifted to a
rainforest
For more than lhree hours, the
Ph/11/es end season
skies opened and a downpour
with 25-3 record
turned the baseball diamond into a
something
resembling a kayak
The Middleport Phillies Pee
venue.
It
reached
!he point where
Wee girls' softball team celebrated
fire
fighters
had
to pump water
the 1994 season with an end-offrom
the
Lamade
Siadium
field.
lhe-year party at General Hartinger
It
was
well
worth
the
wait for
Park after completing the season
Venezuela.
The
team
from
Marawilh a fine 25-3 overall record.
caibo
beat
Northridge,
Calif.,
4-3
The Phillies were presented gifts
Saturday
to
give
Latin
America
its
by head coach Greg Vining for
fll'St
Little
League
title
since
Montheir achievements this season
Mexico, won in 1957 and
while 8 question and answer game terrey,
1958.
was played with prizes going to the
Northridge was attempting to
player wilh the correct answer.
become
the third straight team
Each girl was then presented a
from
California
to capture !he Litcard with their individual statistics
tle
League
championship.
And the
on them, along with a record and
team
of
IIand
12-year-olds
was
scores of all games played this seatryin~
to
lift
!he
spirits
of
a
comson.
Individual trophies were pre- munlly devastated by an earthquake last January.
sented to the players in addition to
"We had a zillion aftershocks
third-place trophies from the
and
I think the kids felL that while
league. The Phillies won fli'SL place
they
were on the field, nothing was
in the Southern Tournament ar.d
gomg
to hurt them," said
fli'St place in !he Big Bend Pee Wee
Northridge
manager Larry Baca,
League tournament. The Phils fmished third overall in the league
with a 13-2 mark and posted an
overall I 5-3 mark.
Plaques were presented to the
assistant coaches Stan Moon, Brenda Vining and Sara Bratton for the
outstanding job !hey did coaching
the team. Greg Vining was presented with a _softball bat lamp before
the evenmg concluded with a
mother-daughter game.
By KELLY P. KISSEL
WU..LIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) -

DOJINIIG CHILDS ""
MULLEN MUSSER .
INSUUNCE
111 Second St., P01111r0y

YOUR INDEPENDENT
IGENn SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

•

recalling those unsettling days .
"The mall was gone. Most of their
TVs were gone. Baseball provide&lt;!
something to do."
Norlhridge looked strong early
on against Venezuela. Justin Gentile's palm ball shut down
Venezuela for most of three
innings. Then came the long rain
delay, and when play resumed he
threw five wild pitches and gave up
seven hits.
"He had real good control of it
(the palm ball), but after we went
back out his other pitches were up
a lillie bit and he seemed not as
sharp," Northridge manager Larry
Baca said.
Gentile and Cesar Hidalgo of
Venezuela were in command until
a storm dropped nearly an inch of
rain on the field within 25 minut.es.
Gentile had a 3-2 count on Efflnson
Mom, with two out in the top of the
third, when lightoing streaked the
sky.
The rains came hard, then came
hail. The field, at the bottom of a
natural amphitheater, filled with 18
(See SERJES on Page 5)

arm

GENERAL TIRE SALES
43•'4'4*ii8;1ii;ti:(;1(;i:t3i:u-..
1614-992-71611

IHoursM-FS-5 SatS-12\
465 North Second Avenue Middleport, Ohio 45760

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s

Adams,Jsner, Kress, Baker among Skyline race winners

By S~OTT WOLFE
SenltneiCorrespondent
Jumpm_g from hts mstde second
row slartmg spot, retgniDg track
champ ton Bob Adams Jr. of Racine
claimed another big win in the late
model division Friday night at Skyline Speedway. In the process,
Adams wrapped up his ninth track
championship at the speedway.
Jack Kress claimed the Economodified main, Kirk Isner took the
hmtted fat es, Chns Stotts !he V-8
Pure Stocks and Mike Baker the
FourCyhnders.
. The track was fast and so adhestve that m many cases the powerful Late Mbdels were lifting bolh
front wheels off the ground exciting the turns.
Allhough no one spotted a full
moon, it was one of those exciting
nights. Billy Childers, last week's
winner, jumped into the early lead,
but a lap five tangle, involving the
top ftve cars sent Childers and
Larry Bond to the tail. A few laps
later Jay Jenkins literally ran !he
• off hrs
. car, breaking the
wheels
center of the rim and sending his
.
wheel down McGtll . Road and into
!he trees a quarter mtle a way
·
Adams assumed command of
the top spot, however. a few laps
th
.
J ff B
I
atcr ano er caullon saw e
urdette get .11 stdeways rn front of
Dan Mornson and Scon Wolfe in
· c·tty 1M ar k' s Auto/Ebe r•.s
lhc Twm
Citgo car to bring out the second
yellow.
J ff Wood f Ath
d II
e .
o
ens gra ua Y
moved mto the second posttton
w~th a great run from hts fifth place
slart, !hen after Momson dropJ1ed
out Wolfe moved mto the thtrd
slot, only to lose hrs brakes one lap
lat~
.
ood conu nued to pressure
Adams for the pomt, but each ltme

Adams would edge further ahead.
Larry Bond began a flat-footed
charge from the tail to move into
the fourth slot by lap IS, then one
lap later took command of ~tird,
where !he veteran finished behind
Wood and Adams. Burdelle himself made a charge off the tail to
finish fourth as did Scott Wolfe's
McDonald's/Precision Automotive
car, which suffered a Oat with just
five laps to go, but salvaged a seventh behind Mike McDaniel and
Ryan Cline. Larry Slathers was
eighth, followed by newcomer
Greg Mitchell and Rod Newell.
Adams posted fast time, while
Childers claimed the dash and
heats went to Dan Morrison and
Randy "Buckw heat" Shutts.
The Modified A-main came
from a Hollywood script as Marictta's Jack Kress swapped the lead
numerous times wilh Jody Adkins.
Time and time again Kress worked
Adkins high and low, passing
briefly in one tum, on ly 10 have
Adk.
b k1
. h
lead ms come ac o reg am l e
F·. 11
. h f'
tna y, wtt tve 1aps to go
Kress shoo k Ad'-'
b
ouns .for good
D
L d
h •h ut
ave an rum got mto I e unt
wilh Bob Adams Jr. wilhin striking
d' ta
. ,
h w·lh bl k
rs nee tn aoun . ' a an et
over the front runners, Kress survived to lead the Landrum, Adkins
Adam J0 h B d
f · I tl. '
~ ur ette retg 1 mer
across s,the stnpe
r T 'bb · f . h d
.·
tm n Y mts e a strong
stxth, ahead of Jay Foster, Buck
Hutton, Rtck Vcnham, Kemp·
Kelly, Andy Bond, Shawn Holliday
and Roger Wilson.
Heats went to Adkins and Roger
Wireman.
Kirk Isner is having a banner
year in the limited late division,
making another clean sweep Friday
night as friends and crew again

brought out !he brooms for !he seventh time this year. Ed Venham
was again runner-up followed by
Kevin Haught, Todd Smith, Roger
Cozad, Roger Garnes, Mitch Brunton Rick Hudnell, John Williams
and' Bill Shuster.
Venham and Isner won the
heats. '
In the V-8 Pure Stocks, Chris
Stotts of Darwin in the Precision
Automotive Special, came from
etghth place rootmg out Mttch
Gillian and Don Ro~s to take the
early lead, then bhtzmg to h•s second strarght wiD and the 1994
potnts champtonshtp.
Ed Gtlltan had a strong charge
from tenth to second, then holding
off Conard Newman for the second
slot. Ross. was fourth ahead of
Mttch Gtlltan, Ja~ Ruller, Randy
Buchanon, Kevm Tanner, Pat
Grlhan and Bnan Whrteman.
Ross and Eva n Chtchester
clatmed the heat~.
Mike Baker sto~ed to the_ front
!hen became a survtvor to wm the
f
·
Four-.c ~ 1·tn d er
ender- ben d tng.
ftnale. Baker clatme the wiD over
·11 D
E 1R
D
B1 d · or an,R ar M
eeves,
oug
J
Bou tnot, oger ay es, w ho
ff
·1· Cf'ff wh· 1
came o the tat_. 1
tt ey,
Steve Reeves, Krtss Meeks, Sieve
Cunningham and Bert Aora
·
Baker and Reeves won the
heats.
Racing
continues each Friday
.
. at
Skyline Speedway before culmmating with the prestigious "Harvest
SO" paying $2 500 for Super Late
'
Models.
SUMMARY
Late Models
Fast Time: Bob Adams Jr.
Dash: Bill Childers, Jeff Burdette, Bob Adams Jr .. Larry Bond,
Jeff Wood, Jay Jenkins.
Heat:Dan
Morrison,Mike
McDaniei,Dave Hilton ,La rry
Stathers,Rod Newell
Heat: Buckwheat Shults, Scott
Wolfe, Rick Miller, Rob Erdy, Rob
LeMaster.
Feature: Bob Adams Jr. , Jeff
Woods, Larry Bond, Burdette,
McDaniel, Ryan Cline, Wolfe,
Slathers, Greg Mitchell, Newell.
Limited Lates:
Heat: Ed Venham, Mitch Brunton, Todd Smilh, Roger Cozad.
Heac Kirk Isner, Kevin Haught,
Bill Shuster, Rick Hudnell, John
Williams, Jerry Tolson.
Feature: Isner, Venham, Haugh~
Smith, Cozad, Garnes, Brunton,
Hudnell, Williams, Shuster.
E-Mods
Dash: Jody Adkins, Jack Kress.
Tim Tribby, Dave Landrum,
Shawn Holliday.
Heat: Roger Wireman, Kemp
Kelly. John Burdette, Bob
.
Adams,Jay Foster
Feature: Kress, Landrum,
Adkins, Adams, Burdeue, Tribby.
Foster, Buck Hutton, Rick Yenham.
V-8 Pure Stocks
Heat: Evan Chichester, Mitch
Gillian, Rod Cunningham, Chris
Stotts, Ed Gillian,
Heac Don Ross, Pat Gillian, Jay
Rutter, Roger Dunlap, Kevin Tanner.
Feature: Chris Stotts, Gillian,
Conard Newman, Don Ross, Mitch
Gillian, Rutter, Randy Buchanon,
Pat Gillian, Brian WhiteTanner,
WINS GOODY'S 500 -Surrounded by well-wishers, Rusty Wal·
man.
lace or St. Louis, Mo. celebrates his victory in the Goody's 500 SaturFour Cylinder Pure Stocks
day night while standing on his Miner Genuine Draft Ford. Wallace
Heat:
Steve Reeves, Roger
took the lead with 40 laps Jert. (AP)
Mayles,Bill
Doran.Kurt
Stacy,Howard Miller
Heat: Mike Baker, Earl Reeves,
Doug Boudinot, Kriss Meeks, Ben
Aora
Feature: Baker, Doran, Reeves,
Boudinot, Roger Mayles, WhWey,
By MIKE HARRIS
work him over," said Martin, who Steve Reeves, Mecks,Steve CunBRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) -A ha~ a victory and two seconds in ningham, Bert Flora.
year ago, a sore neck and 8 fast his last three starts.
Ford cost Rusty Wallace a victory
With the Winston Cup series
at Bristol International Raceway.
moving to Darlington, S.C., on
On Saturday night, Wallace had Sunday for !he Southern 500, Dale
no aches and pains and he had the Earnhardt leads Martin by 201
The Meij!S Junior Golf League
fastest Ford, turning !he tables on points, with Wallace just two ended earher this month with a
defending race winner Mark Mar- points behind Martin in third.
four-man scramble and pizza pany,
"Dale's gtlt to have a little wilh !he team of Mick Barr, John
~n
Martin beat Wallace, who was problem for me and Mark to get up Matson and Robert Harris taking
then driving a Pontiac, by 0.14-sec- on his rear end, but !here's a lot of the win.
onds last August. This tune, it was racing left," said Wallace, who
Prizes were given for each place
Wallace by 0.16-seconds - about leads the season series with six vic- plus drives and putt awards.
I 1/2 car-lenglhs.
Jason Lawrence won putting
tories.
"IL was a real good finish for us, honors, while league Standing were
"I remember last year," Wallace said. "I led pretty much the as tight as the car was," said Earn- announced and trophies awarded to
whole race until Mark got me at the hardt, who was third and now has !he various participants. In the 8-12
end. But my neck was still real sore seven top-five finishes in his last age group, first place went to Gar10 starts as he tries for a record- rell Karr and Adam Chevalier. Secfrom the crash (in July) at Talladetying sevenlh driving title. "This is ond place went to Andy Davis, Jeff
ga, and I just couldn't keep up the
pace. This lime, I felt just fine all
the same car we won with here (in Brown and Brandon Baumgardner
night."
April). We just misread the race- and Jeremy Roush. Third place was
At that, Wallace may not have
track. Let's go to Darlington and taken by Marc Barr and Carson
had the fastest Ford on the track
sec if we can win one there."
Midkiff.
In ages 13-16, ftrSt place went to
Darrell Waltrip finished fourth,
Saturday night. It was Geoff Bodine, wming off a dominating victofollowect by Bill Elliott, Daytona Steven McCullough and Jason
ry a week earlier at Michigan, who
500 winner Sterling Marlin, Roush. Second place went to David
led the most laps - 168 of the 500 Michael Waltrip and Todd Bodine, Anderson and Clay Crow. Third
place went to Josh Price and Adam
trips around the .533-mile oval.
!he last competitor on the lead lap.
Grim.
But Bodine dropped out while
Pole-winner Harry Gam. in !he
Medalist trophies were awarded
leading Wallace with 45 laps
midst of a pre-retirement tour at
remaining when his car burned a age 54, led the first 88 laps and to Jeremy Roush (age 8-9), Garrett
piston.
stayed in the hunt until a tire prob- Karr (12-13), and David Anderson
"We were really cruising,"
lem late in the race knocked him (14-16). The Eagle trophy was
Bodine said. "It's a shame we
off the lead lap. He wound up awarded to Barr. The birdie ttophy
went to Mike Franckowiak. The
didn't finish. It looks liJce the water ninlh.
par
ttophy went to Anderson.
pump broke. All the water came
Kenny Wallace, Rusty's brother,
Ladies Leque
out, we overheated and it burned a
substituting for the injured Ernie
Winners
in !he Tuesday Mornpiston.
lrvan, fmished 13th in his fJISt race
ing Ladies' League at the Meigs
"It makes us feel good - not in the Robert Yates Racing Ford.
good !hat we fell out of the race,
There were numerous crashes in County Golf Course on Aug. 9
but good that we were this competthe race, which was slowed by 12 were Norma Custer, Low Gross;
itive. This is where we've been trycaution periods for 73 laps, with Joan Childs, Low Net; and Nonna
ing to put this team," Bodine said.
every car running at the end Custer, Low Putts. On Aug.16,
Given the opportunity, Wallace sporung tire marks or dents. But no Debbie Sayre was Low Gross and
Margaret Follrod was Low Net and
held off Marlin over the final 25
injuries were reported.
Low
Putts.
laps.
Track officials estimated the
The
Ladies play each Tuesday at
''Rusty's pit stops were aweattendance at 74,800, a Bristol
8:30 a.m. at the Meigs Golf
some and he had a fast race car. I
record.
Course.
just didn't have enough time to

--

Sun J.cboo, NMinS beet, on inj\U'Od

LA. Raiden 24, HOU!oft. 23
N.Y. Gianu 1:1, 0Uc.so21

[utfn Divtdon

IwD

......

Gmrn Ba)' 24, New England 20
· Buffalo 24, Kanaat Ci1y 3
Wu!Uni'OO 22, Piu.bonJI&gt; 21
San Franciaoo 13, Se.anJc 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1

Scoreboard
Minneoou l I, MWni 16

Monday, August 29, 1994

Rusty Wallace slips past
Martin to win Goody's 500

Meigs County
notes from the links

neartr

.

HE'S OUT- The slide or Maracaibo's Lewis
Gonzalezis wasn't in time to prevent his being
tagged out by Northridge shortstop Matthew
Fisher in the second-inning steal attempt in the

Little Lea~ue World Series championship game
Saturday night in Williamsport, Pa., where the
Venezuel~ns notched a 4-3 win over the Calirornia-based squad. (AP)

Little League World Series ...
inches of water in the left and nght
field comers.
"We went up to !he room and I
talked to the kids about how important the game was for them ,"
Venezuelan manager Ramon Dias
said. "It's been so long since Latin
America won. And, apart from that,
it's a big deal for the country.''
Baca said !he first 2 1{2 innings
took a lot out of him, but he managed to catch some shuteye in tlte
locker room during the rain delay.

After the delay, Mora doubled
to the right-field comer and took
third on a wild pitch. Two pitches
later, he scored on Esteban Avila's
single.
In the fourtlt, Guillermo Quiroz
reached on an error, moved to second on Hidalgo's single and scored
two wild pitches later.
Northridge tied it in the bottom
of !he fourth after Malhew Fisher
walked and Matthew Cassel and
Peter Tuber singled to load the

K-C Raceway action ...
race. On the next try, the hapless
Hewiu rode over Troy Links right
rear as spinning cars blocked tum
four. Hewitt went airborne off turns
three and four, but only the veteran's talent was able to keep the
Hampshire #63 on all fours.
With each wave of the green,
Darland would gradually build a
lead on another high flyer, Tony
Elliou of Kokomo, Ind. Wilh Darland holding a comfortable lead,
the spotlight shown on two areas;
the race up front between Elliott,
Stinson and Charlie Fisher for runner-up and the determined charge
of House from the back of the
pack.
House walked the highspeed
tighttope, running one groove higher than !he other high runners, at
one point passing seven cars in five
laps.
Two olher worthy charges carne
from Todd Kane aboard the
Dwight Reidling/Hale Chrome #50
and
Gar~
Fisher's
Kent
Evans{Hooster Tire #79.
Kane came from 15lh to eighth
at the finish, while Fisher stormed
from 18th to ninth.
On the 15th cin:uit, House and
Staab appeared to make contact
coming down the back: chute, sending Staab into a series of nasty flips
and bringing out the red Oag. Staab
emerged unscathed. but his Gaene
Engines #44 was out for the night.
On the restart Darland again distanced himself from the rest of the
field, while Stinson pressured
Elliott. House resumed !he charge
from the tail, working feverishly
for eight laps to get by !he high-flying Gary Fisher and Kane. The
next seven laps were classic Hollywood.
House closes in on Kalitta
USAC's two top point men
embroiled in a good old fashioned
shoot-out. Running a clean, hardfought race, both competitors
earned !he position, but when the
air had cleared, House passed Doug
Kalitta on the last lap to pull within
six points of the USAC Championship point standings top spot.
Kalitta now leads 1,512 to l,S06,
while Kevin Thomas remains in the
hunt at 1,419.
During laps 19-21 Darland
closed in on a pack of slower traffic, erasing a huge lead and allowing Elliott and Stinson to lhreaten.
Stinson, nephew of Charlie Swartz,
appeared to be one of the fastest
cars on the track at the finish .
Elliott's expertise was able to
repell the daring youngster for
many laps, but with lhree laps to 8tJ
Stinson moved into second and
quickly closed the gap.
Stinson was one lap too shon as
Darland won by five car lengths at
the finish. Elliott was third ahead
of K-C's 1993 winged champion
Charlie Fisher, Kevin Thomas,
House, Kalitta, Kane, Fisher and
Jerry Nemire.
Four outstanding heat races
went to Eric Gordon, House, local
Tracy Hoover and Tony Ellioll
who edged Troy Link by inches in
a bonzai pass right at the start fmish line. Darland won the True
Value Master Mechanic Tools Last
Chance Semi, while Kevin Thomas
obliverated the track record with a
13:880 clocking. The former mark
was a 14:026 set last year by
Elliott.
In hot laps, Greg Wilson, Ben-

(cominuedfromPage4)

bases. Michael Frost's grounder
forced Tuber at second, but Mora's
bad throw to first for the double
play let Casse l score behind Fisher.
In the Venezuela fifth, Elio
Perez singled, advanced on a wild
pitch and scored on Avila 's second
RBI sing le of the game. Avila
scored on a wild pitch.
Spencer Gordon hit his second
home run of the Series in the bottom of the fifth, but the so-ca lled
''Quake Kids" went down 1-2-3 in
their last at-bat.

(ContinuedfromPage4)

ton Ridge, Ohio bicycled in turn
three, where his nose dug into Ihc
track and went end-for-end numerous times before coming to rest in
!he parking lot catch fence.
In the semi, hard-charging
midget driver Jimmy Kite, Stockridge, Georgia, making his firstever sprim car appearance in Glen
Niebel's #20 V-6, drove it a little
too hard into Iurn four, clipping
Rusty McClure. Kites mount
stalled in the multi-car tangle, leav ing Mike Adkins with no place to
go. Both drivers were shaken,
while Adkins and Wilson were
reportedly transported to Ross
County Medical Center.
In the companion 15-lap UMP
Modifipd main, Pomeroy's Rick
Williamson took advantage of early
leader Tim Tribby's misfonune and
powered on to the win. Williamson
had to withstand the charges of
1993 point~ champion R11h Crace
Jr. and third place fini , l!,·r Jack
Fink in Moe Beeler's n72. Rounding out the top ten were Dean
Ecker, Jerry Porter. Jerry Bragg,
Benny Hickle, Lonnie Kidd, Mike
Huntley and Jim Pertusct.
Pomeroy's Benny Hickle
claimed the first heat, while Fink
claimed !he olhcr qualifier.
After a short dry spell, John
Reeser returned to victory lane in
the Super Stock A-main. Reeser
defeated Dean Osborne, Carl Coleman. Rick Owings, Fred Hardbarg-

er, Tommy Mossbarger, Bill McElfresh, Steve Bobo. Bob Callihan
and Jerry Hemm ing.
Heats went to Owings, Jerry
Hemmmg and Osborne, while
Steve Bobo took !he B-main.
K-C will host the make-up for
its $3,000 to win Late Model $2,000 to win Sprint car double
championship Saturday evening.
Super Streets will also be on the
agenda.
SUMMARY
LJMP Modifleds
Heat: Benny Hickle, Mike
Huntley, Jim Pertuscl, Jerry Bragg.
Heat: Jack Fink, Bud Frazier,
Dean Ecker, Dave Landrum.
Feature: Rick Williamson, Bob
Crace Jr., Fink, Ecker, Jerry Porter,
Bragg, Hickle, Lonnie Kidd , Mike
Huntley, Penuset.
Super Street Stocks
Heat Dean Osborne, Steve Day,
Rob Smith, Bill McElfresh.
Heat: Jerry Hemming, John
Reeser, John Remy, Carl Coleman.
Heal: Rick Owing, Bob Callihan, Tracy Ross, Dean Collier.
B- Main: Steve Bobo, Fred.
Hardbargcr, Kenny Morehouse,
Tommy
Mossbarger,
Rick
French,Robert Thornsberry, Dick
Goode, Bret Gibson, Bob Trego,
Bob Dean.
_
Feature: Reeser, Osborne, Coleman, Owing, Fred Hardbarger,
Mossbarger, McElfresh, Bobo, Callihan, Jerry Hemming.

Now Stocking A Complete Line of
Hoosier Raised Whitt Letter Tires
60 and 70 series
lniro~ al

Raisl'll \\'hill' Ll'tll'r
Tin·s 2J5-75-15
Sail' 'Ill Oft' l~q,:ular Pril'l'

Complete Line of Uniroyal White
Sidewalls and Black Sidewalls
See Don Hysell or Randy Jewell for all
your Auto Needs
• Computer Wheel Balanced
• Brakes
Drums &amp; Rotors Turned
• 011 Chal)ge
• Batteries

o

Tune-Ups

o

Shocks

• Struts
o Exhaust Work
• Front End Repair

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
State Route 124

Rutland

742-3088

�Page

~The Dally Sentinel

Monda~August29,1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August zg, 1994

Woman's 'dreamboat' boyfriend is tickling more than her fancy
he's driving me crazy.
Last night, he actually tied my
hands and held me in a chair while
his best friend took off my shoes
and hose and tickled the bottom of
1994 , lOI Angltlts
my feet with a feather for what
nm.. Syndteate and
·•
C rUIOfs SyndiCal&amp;'
seemed like an eternity.
When they finally untied me, I
used some words I didn't know I
Dear Readers: I am on vacation, knew. Now Bud is mad at me and
but I lta\lt /eft bt/Und SOmi' of my
says I mad e a big sc ene' over
favorite co/lUll/IS that you may have
nothing
. I claim that what he did
missed tilL first time around. I hope
was
not
normal. He says I'm the one
you enpy ti!Lm. -- Ann Landers
who is loony.
Our Ann Landers: Please settle
It took me months to get this guy
our first fight "Bud" and I have been
to
notice me and ask me out. This
dating f&lt;Y four months, and I really
f~t fight is killing me. What do
love him. The problem is that lately
he has become a tickling maniac. At you make of it? -- STll..L RA TILED
DEAR STILL RATTLED: Your
first, I tllought it was funny, but now,
"dreamboat" has a streak of sadism

Ann
Landers

80th birthday
celebrated
Eleanor Boyles celebrated her

. MasSar.

tennis. It also made a serious dent in
our sex life. Harvey was so afraid of
dying while having sex that he was
impotent most of the time.
Two weeks ago, Harvey caught
the flu. My father was out of the
country. so we called another
doctor, who put Harvey in the
hospital until he was better. While
he was there. he decided to have a
complete physical. Harvey was seen
by six doctors and received a
perfect bill of health.
When we asked spedfically about
his hean problem, we were told that
his hean is perfect. This so baffled
us that the following week we flew
to the Mayo Clinic, and Harvey was
seen by a top cardiologist. The
report was -- "no hean problem. and

no evidence that there ever was one."

' When my husband thinks of the
years he has wasted "being careful,"
he could wring my father's neck.
What should we do about this? -EIGHT YEARS KAPUT
DEAR EIGHT: Nothing . The
original diagnosis was worth what
your husband paid for it It's always
a good idea to get anothec medical
opinion. Even a doctor who isn't
related can be wrong.
Dear Ann Landers: I just became
aware of a situation that I thought
happened only in soap operas. My
mother has a thing going with my
father-in-law.
They don't have the faintest
notion that anyone is aware of it I
am not sitting in judgment, Ann --

ELEANOR BOYLES
Nieces and nephews, Adam
Butler, Jim, Donna, Missy, Mandie
Lancaster; and friends, Edna Fitzpatrick, Marilyn Robinson, Clara
Follrod, Nina Robinson, Norma
Swartz, Russell and Eloise Archer,
Faye Watson, Sarah Estella Caldwell, Nellie Parker, Buck and Jean
Keaton.

staffing we currently have, we canBy DEBORAH HASTINGS
Associated Press Writer
not control every area."
LOS ANGELES (AP) - MostStorage unit auctions, in which
ly. it's junk. Broken appliances. old the contents are sold lock, stock
clothes, floppy old mattresses. and barrel to the highest bidder, are
Sometimes, it's dead bodies, cash the junk dealer's mainstay.
in shoe boxes, letters from Charles
Mike White, a former cop and
self-proclaimed "junk man," says
Manson.
So goes the trade of the junk he wants to open a secondhand
dealers, who make a living buying shop and get out of the scavenging
other people's castoffs and end of the business.
reselling them at swap meets al)d
"Any moron could do this," he
says. "All you have to do is drive
yard sales.
It can be lurid as well as lucra- around and haul the stuff away.
tive work - this month, an unwit- With the economy bad like it is and
ting scavenger bought the contents people getting laid off, you could
of an abandoned Northridge stor- stan a whole new career. Basically.
age unit that contained three bodies people just don't know about it."
;n steamer trunks.
Two years ago, White, 41,
And for many, it's is tax-free. bought the contents of a storage
Dedicated and savvy scavengers unit and discovered boxes filled
say they can earn $40,000 to with handwritten, jailhouse corre$100,000 per year, most of it in spondence between murderer
cash and all of it in a market not Charles Manson and his attorney,
monitored by the Internal Revenue · Irving Kanarek.
Service.
White says he wants to use the
"We are aware that in numerous material for a screenplay or a book.
industries , income may not be Another junk dealer "offered me
reported,'' said IRS spokesman $5,000 for it, but I turned it down,"
Keith Kimball. "But with the he said.

Auction attendees share stories leave it here than to haul it away."
Ed Zaha~off, a regular bidder,
resembling folklore - the man
got
a ghoulish surprise Aug. 10
who found $12,000 worth of Egyp tian coins; the woman who found after paying $2.300 for a 5-by-10
$200,000 in a shoe box; gruesome foot cub1cle at a Northridge U-Haul
discoveries of severed hand s, a lot. While removing his new purchases - stereo equipment, silk
lone leg.
In Los Angeles County, about clothing, housewares - he came
40 junk dealers travel the auction upon a rank, oozing steamer trunk.
After peeling away layers of
circuil Storage yard owners know
them by name. On any given day. plastic and duct tape, he found a
three or four auctions arc held rotting corpse. He called police.
They found two more.
within a 100-mile radius.
The coroner's office has called
Don Temple, owner of five local
storage yards, said he opened the in an archaeologist to help identify
frrst Los Angeles facility 24 years the dead, and police are trying to
ago and knows most of the auction find the renter, who lied on the
storage agreement then skipped out
regulars.
"I call them 'The 40 Thieves," on the bill.
he said, laughing. "The same people show up every time. Some people buy only furmture, some people
buy only tools. Then they take it to
the swap meets."
Renters abandon belongings for
myriad reasons, Temple said:
"Some go to jail, some ~et
divorced, some were just stonng
junk and realized it was cheaper to

-----------Names in the n e w s - - - - - - - - - - ••
•:
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Not
' even rumors of a shower scene on
- "NYPD Blue" can persuade Den- nis Franz to shed some pounds.
"I'd love to say that I'm going
. to get in shape for it, but the most
• I'll probably do is skip breakfast,"
: says Franz, who plays Detective
.. Andy Sipowicz on the hit TV
_ series. "So what you see is what
· you're gonna gel"
;
He's had other things on his
• mind, Franz says in the Sept. 3
; issue of TV Guide.
· "I was thinking mustache,"
says Franz, who shaved his facial
; hair for two summer TV projects.

"I only had about two weeks to
grow it back and the more I kept
checking the mirror, the slower it
seemed to be caning in."

NEW YORK (AP) - The
secret to being a better boyfriend,
according to Johnny Depp: Put
yourself in her shoes. Or at least
her hose.
"All guys should try to put on
pantyhose just once," Depp says in
Seventeen magazine's October
issue.
Depp plays transvestite director
Ed Wood in the upcoming movie
of the same title.

~--Community
Tbe Community Calendar is
published as a rree service to
· non-prorit rroups wishing to
' announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
; designed to promote sales or
r.udraisers or any type. Items
· are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
, speclftc number or days.
MONDAY
RUTI..AND - Rutland Garden
Oub, open meeting and guest night
7:30 p.m. Monday at Rutland
Methodist Church. Janet Bolin,
demonstration on nower arranging;
Linda Hensler, regional director, to
talk.
POMEROY - Special meeting

'"Ed Wood' made me realize
exactly what women go through to
get dolled up for a date," he says.
"Guys just shower, put on some
clothes, maybe shave." Not to say
Depp completely disliked dressing
like Wood, who directed such cult
favorites as "Plan 9 From Outer
Space" and "Glen or Glenda?"
Depp says Wood's widow told him
on the set one day that he looked
nice in drag- and just like Wood.
"That made me very happy."
says Depp.

surgery to remove a minor skin
cancer from his lip.
"The procedure was suceessful,
Mr. Turner is in excellent condition, there were no complications
and he is expected to make a full
recovery," a Turner spokesman,
Mike Oglesby, said after Saturday's operation.
The broadcasting magnate told
smdents at Georgia State University Saturday that he was about to
have a piece of his lip removed and
that he was "scared to death."

ATLANTA (AP)- Ted Turner
was in excellent condition after

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Fans of
"The Dick Van Dyke Show" are
just going to have to settle for
reruns. Rose Marie says there's
never been plans for a reunion.

calendar---

of Pomeroy Village Council 7:30
p.m. in council chambers to discuss
and take action on Pomeroy •s participation in the Meigs County
Rwal Enterprise Zone program.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission
meeting 7:30 p.m. in veterans service office.
POMEROY -Meigs Junior
and Senior High School cross
country teams meeting in high
school lobby after school for those
that have not had a chanee to join.
992-7552 for more information.
TUESDAY
RUTLAND - .•Leading Creek

Conservancy District monthly
meeting Tuesday at 5 p.m. Public
invited.
PORTLAND - Regular meeting Lebanon Township Trustees
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the township
building.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Eastern Athletic Boosters meeting 7:30p.m. at
Eastern High School.
PORTLAND - Revival 7:30
p.m. through Saturday at
Stiversville Word of Faith on Bald
Knob-Stiversville Road featuring
Joey Walker from Huntington,
W.Va. Pastor David Dailey invites
public.

"Dick always said no," says law. The Godfather Of Soul was
Marie, who played corned~ writer ticketed after he apparently drove
Sail y Rogers on the show. 'I think into a bicyclist, police say.
he just wanted to keep those shows
"There's a conflict as to who
in a box with a pink ribbon."
was at fault because it happened at
Marie returns to TV this season a four-way stop intersection,"
to play the feisty owner of a major police spokesman Chester Huffman
league baseball team in the Fox sit- said.
com "Hardball."
The biker was knocked to the
"My agent said, 'You don't pavement Sunday but refused medhave to read for the part. The pro- ical treaunent
ducers just want to meet you,"' she
Brown, who lives in nearby
says in the Sept. 3 issue of TV ' Beech Island, S.C., was cited for
Guide. "You know how I interpret failure to yield right of way_ He's
that? At my age, they just want to due in coun Oct. 3.
see if I have my teeth and can see
Brown spent two years in prison
and walk."
for aggravated assault and failing
to stop for a police officer. He was
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)- James released in 1991 and completed his
Brown is back in trouble with the parole in October 1993.

REACH OVER 18,500,

HOMES WITH

By COUNI'RY LIVING
A Hearst MaP.zine
For AP Spec181 Features
The garlic mystery continues to
fascinate medical communities
around the world and researchers
are sbldying it as a possible preventive a~ainst several forms of cancer
and htgh blood pressure.
World production of garlic has
doubled in the last 25 years, Maggy
Howe wrote in an article in the current issue of Country Living, and
the garlic authorities in Gilroy,
Calif., the self-proclaimed garhc
capital of the world, reponed that
American garlic production has
quadrupled during that time.
Attendance at the annual Gilroy
Garlic Festival has reached
135,000 for each of tli_e past five
years. The garlic lovers gather to
eat garlic, trade recipes and
exchange remedies.
"Garlic can lower your blood
pressure and can be used to prevent
stomach and colon cancers," said
Loyce Lombard, the garlic festival's administrative secretary. "In
addition, it can repel fleas from
animals and, believe it or not, we
have a recipe for garlic dog food
biscuias."
The medicinal powers of garlic
were reponed in 1722 when four
Marseilles thieves were sentenced
to bury piasue victims. French legend recounts that the thieves never
fell ill because of their liberal use
of an "aromatic vinegar" made of
crushed garlic and vinegar. It is
now known as Four Thieves Vinegll!'.

Medical research is now
altenlpting to substantiate what the

Gilroy garlic enthusiasts are saying.
Garlic's use as an antibiotic during World War I led to the discovery of allicin, a natwally occurring
sulfur compound found in garlic
that gives garlic its odor and pungency. Researchers now believe
that allicin may be the root of some
or even all of garlic's therapeutic
value.
A long study was conducted in
China, where diets are rich in all of
the allium vegetables - chives,
garlic, leeks, onions and shallots.
Dr. William Blot, a research scientist in the National Cancer Instilute's division of etiology, found in
. November 1993 that eating these
vegetables starting at an early age
and continuing throughout one's
lifetime resulted in the reduction of
stomach cancer.
The National Cancer Institute
now endorses the use of garlic as
protection against stomach cancer.
Dr. Michael J. Wargovich, associate professor of medicine at the
Univeroity of Texas Anderoon Cancer Center in Houston, is interested
in garlic's chemo-preventive
agents.

Wargovich, a leading researcher
of colon cancer, said hts worlc has
led him to "suspect that the sulfur
compounds in allium vegetables
work with the liver to help stimulate detoxification of such environmental insults as exposure to foodborne toxins and carcinogens as
well as other environmental carcinogens, like cigarette smoke."
Preliminary studies of laboratory animals fed raw garlic suggest
that garlic may be able to lower the
artery-clogging
low-density
lipoprotein (LDL) or "bad"
cholesterol and raise the hi¥h-density lipoprotein (HDL) or ' good"
cholesterol. Garlic may also aid in
the prevention of the early stages of
hardening of the arteries.
Garlic now also is being
researched for its ability to dissolve
blood clOIS. Dr. Eric Block, professor of chemistry at the State UniverSity of New York at Albany, has
patented ''ajoene," a natural chemIcal compound that is derived from
garlic and available in capsule
fonn.
Block said ajoene helps to
"inhibit clotting and seems to
make the blood platelets less
stick ."

THE BEST

ISA
WANT AD

ADVERTISING IN THE

TV TIMES

-II
••
••
-

AUEA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEI( IN THE
TV TIMES

CALL NOW....
GALLIPOLIS

446-2342

PT. PLEASANT, WV

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

7

TRI-STlTl ~-9
ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience, • _
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel service, pupa &amp;
young dogs for sale.
Rottweiler &amp; Shepher11
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

Howard L Writesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NtW L USED PARTS 101
All MAlES L MODUS
992-701! 01
992-SSSJ 01
TOll liEE I-IOCU4H070

949-2168

DARWIN, OHIO

1212Mn .

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

dlohooloclothoo, mloc.

Home
Improvements

614-11411-:le~O .

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

33151 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mlddloport, Ohio 45760

NewHomea,
Addition•, Siding,
Painting, Garagea,
Porchaa, Pole Barna
Call Us For An EsUmsta
614-7 42-3090
304-n3-9545 .,.,

8

•uctlon

I!MI,Oillo •
Auctlonoor

Custom Winaow Coverings

Sealed proposals will be
received by all pre -qualified

p,.,.,..,

2013--0r
llobllo Homo.
In Oollla County And On 1 To 2 ot l.ond, &amp;14-441-4m, 114-4461542.

Transportation, Columbus,

and sections by malnt&amp;lnlng
and upgrading existing
highway signing.
· rho date set for
completion of this work
shall be as set forth In the

bidding proposal."
Plans and Specifications

OFFICE

POMEROY- Peacock Avo.- I 112 story frame home with 3
bedrooms, one bath, new thanna payne windows, otec. B. B.
haat, romodelod in 19110-91, nower wiling, plumbing,
windows, carpet, front porch, side docking, blown-in
insulation, lorcad air llloc. furnace in luO baS&lt;Jmenl
ASKING $27,500
POMEROY- Union Tem1oe- 17.912+ acres of vacant ground.
Immediate posoeS9ionl Graal building silAII ASKING $25,000

JERRY WRAY TWP ROAD 348- Approx. 73 acres of vacant land with 2
DIRECTOR OF
story bam, stocked pond, old houoe silAI with wall, appro•. 20
TRANSPORTATION . acr&amp;s pasture with balance in Trnbar, abundance of walnut
(8) 29, (9) 5; 2TC
Get a return on your investment from sale ol timbeli
ASKING $40,000
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
OPEN WAITING UST
The Melgo Metropolitan
Houolng Authority Ia
announcing the waiting lilt
foe Section 8 Rental
Asolstance will be openad
effective September 1, 1994.
All houoeholds lnteruted In
receiving a11l1tance may

obtain an application at our
office located at 237 Race
Stroel, Middleport, OH,
Monday thru Friday, 8:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. beginning
Thursday, September 1,
1994.

JeanTruuetl
Executive Director
(8) 29, 30, 31; 3TC
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Meigs County Boa~d
of Revlalon has completed
Its work and the books are
now open for public
lnopectlon.
Meigs County
Boord of Revision
(8) 29, 30, 31
(9) I, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9; 10TC

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Years Exi&gt;erience
992-4447 or 742-2360
..,.,m

SR 7 just out of Chester- Lovely, ranch otyle home that
features 3 bedrooms, Master BR wtth bath, buUt In dry sauna,
atrim doors, skylights, cedar cloaet, fireplace, carpet
throughou~ modem kitchen &amp; appliances, 16&gt;32 inground
pool, also features a 1 car garage that ia completely wired to
haruJe all handyman nevds. THIS IS AMUST SEE HOME II
ASKING $74,900

Director.

.

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

992·2259

are on file In the l:&gt;epartment

of Transportation and the
office of the District Deputy

phonoo, old lompo old thw-

1 anllqu.
mometwa, old clocu,
tumhura. Rlverlrw An11qwe.
Ruu Moore, owner. 814-1112·
2528. w. buy--

"DAZZLING
DOLLS"
BATON CORPS

•Room Addition•
-New garage•
·Eiaclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
·Raaflng
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992~215

Pomaroy,

Guaranteed
Loee Pounda ond lnchee

Natural Herbal Tablt;!ts

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY
992·2086
550 P"98 St, Mldchport

FrMEstlm-

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

gro~~uter wall was demolished after a 60-foot section collapsed in July. Engineen decided the entire wall was dangerous and should be demolished.
The prison opened in 1834 and closed in 1984.

BUY·SELL-TRADE
Something New For
Malga County
Tuee. Thru Sat. 1-6
Name Brand Toole,
Toya, Fenton.
Comesnd Sse.
One mile out Rt 143
lrom Rt 7.
8111/1 mo.
·~ .:.oo--- · · ·

HAUUNG
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

'SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
314193 I MO

1

Card of Thanks

992·4103

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

t:lr

I

1

BINGO

Memorial

Hospital

erJ1lloyees,

Rutland

American
Legion,
neighbors and friends
and a special thanks
to Dr. Spencer.
Thank you
Kenneth and
Virginia Michael.

•

Bofono

P.M.

114-307-

Wonted To Buy: Jlllk Autos
Whh Or Whho\1 llotonr. Cal
larry Uvoly. 814-388-0303.
Top Prlceo Pold: .lit Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Rln~ Sll- Co1no,
Gold Colno. U.T.&amp;. Coin Shop
151 S.COnd Avenue, Galllpolla. '

614·992·7643

CLUB
IN POIIEAOY

0

Star W1ra end Star Trefi Hema·
Ooby Martin, 814-tm-JII.tl.
'

FREE ESTIMATES

EAGLES

Wari:Mt lo f'lnl Of buy on land

contl'lct: 1-211c. In country tor
tr~~ller lot. 304-175-.2682 or S7S.
8863.

(No Sunday Calls)

6:45p.m.

Employment Services
·P

,_

liNDA'S
-PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. let us do it
you.

Very

reaa ..

onable.
Free Estimates
Before.S p.m. leave

Announcements

HOME
IMPROVEMENT

3 Announcemems

Roofing, Siding,
Concrete, Room
Additions, Etc.
P.O. Box 220 Bidwel~

OH4S614
(6141 388-9865

After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

-

&lt;'""•

u•·woo~

O.ctratlva
Soln tnl
Insl•atloa

CaU Wes1e111 A1to

Spoora, 304-675-1421.

New Companl Coming lneo
Aree. We Are Fhneu Center
Dedicated To The NNdl Of
Today,• Woman. We Provide
Tann ng Bodl, Aorobk:o, W.lght
loss Training, Physleel Fltnen
Trelnlng. Grour, And Prlv.te I•
ttructlon Anleble, Alao Child
Coro Focllhy. Thlo fscllhy Ia
Open For Woman Only. For
More lntorm.. lon C.ll ~~~
3401. Scheduled to Opon ~
Iober 1st.

All oiMo. AVON Nmlng ~
olbllhlo.:::lual your c:opollll-.

:=,lvn
~-=~ or.,~
1102.t3541.

5 Solos Ropr-lllvM Naodod
Demonatr~~te

to

Chrlstma

Around tho World and Gifts. No
In-ling, No Collec:Ung, No
Dellve~ng. Booldna Portloo
CIIU
llory
814-l41-tl211

Wool&lt;dop 6-7p.m.

Wlll nol bo IMponolbJe lo&lt; &amp;ny
other thin my own,
Mildred Slur_-n, 4C11 FIIOI Sl,

Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,
Boom poles,
Parts &amp; service

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

742-2455

992-SSIS
Free Estimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial
6--9-1

11 Help Wanted
AVON t All ArMo I Shl~oy

debts

FOR SALE

... message.

'snc~111

MANLEY'S

API 2, Point Ploount, WV.

81bplnor Naodod

~':!.~m-e~~ Voi-

2 thrwe month old yellow &amp;
whhe, ktttena, 614-992-5000.

Noodocl To
Practlc:o, lEa·
porlonoe
llaoumo To: NocOooory.
CLA 325, clo Oolllpolla DollY T~buno, 125 Thin!
Avsnuo, Golllpoilo, ON 45631.

8 Rooma &amp; Beth Home, F,..l
Vou Mu.t Tur Down, C.rry
Away, Clean Up, 814-3811-11383
After 12 Noon.

Approx.

3doz.

quan

Automatic dryer tor parts. ~

67H114.

Rooumo To: CLA 321, clo Ga~
Dally T~buno, 125 Third
Avonuo, Golllpallo, OM 45131.
llpollo

on.... cot..,

tan mele German
Shepherd, excellanl welch dog,
to good home only, 614-9853906.
Black

Dontol Anlotont
Join Out Family

Aoolltant Po~ nmo Ealara Dental
pertoncod
Proforod,
$;d

suitable tor apple butter. j(M..
895-3821.

&amp;

A 100 Pound 8111nce WhMI, D5, 814-448~V38.

Drtverw to lran.pon •ra. 11411112-21101 bolon •:30 p.m.
DtiVOJW

FREE TRAINING
AT J.B. HUNT

Colllo, noodo

home. 304-578·2!H7 after 5pm.

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Spayed, block "'malo,
Husky mil, 6mos. old,

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped

6

Purobrod Robbho 014-245-5457.

ahots. 304-875-88M.

Chowhod all

Lost &amp; Found

11u. ...... good

drlvlng raccnl, lor dodtcoted
Nn Joekaon, 011 to Delrott, 111.
304-1175-a710 oftor 5pm.

Male, part Oermen Shepard piirl
good country

rJQ

Bolorw -Aftor

Giveaway

4

Hand Ttwown Potter Ouoll Whh

Potontlol Drlvw. Ate Coltlng On
J.B. Hunt For Froo Trolnllljj• In
Your ArM. J.B. Hunt Is OlfWina

Frwo Training To on..... Ani!
wt..
You Are A OUIIIflotf Single

Pap A Full Drtvera W.go

onvor.

Bill Slack
992·2269

Oppar1unnlos - Exlsl
Whhln ~.B. Hunt'o ~
Flatbed Opondlons For D"-i
To Earn Sts~lng Pay Up To 211
Canto Pw IIllo, llogulor 11a1sao
To 34 Cantil p.,. lllo1 ~·
- - Equl-nt CPrtmlr1ly
Connntl...ta),. TIUPI!Iv Poy,
Pannsnontly roalanod Equip.
mon1, On ·Boord" eom,.,....

FOR SALE

Flnl Yoor Drtv.. Eom In Ea- • Of $2,000.00 ,.,. llonlh .
And ComPNho..lv. llonelllo.

Found· black puppy .t mouth of
the S~ade, 814·085-3548.

and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Olhor

Andlloro.

7

New

Yard Sale

Manco-Go Karts
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Sales Mull Bo Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

3 H.P. &amp; Up

Parts I Service

Morris Equipment
A special thank you to
so many wonderful
people who have
been so good to us
while Kenneth was a
palient at Dr. Hosp~al
North, for the money,
the flowers, the fruit
baskets, cards, and
most of all, all the
prayers that was said
for us. Cannot name
evetyone but a few of
them are Veterans

&amp;W-258-1238.

Old cigarette llghlll'li, milk bot·
tlu, fount.ln pene, allvwware,
marbles, .tonewart, m~UIM8,

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

3125194

IF YOU'RE THINKING ABOUT SELUNG YOUR HOME,
THINK ABOUT CLELAND REALTY, YOUR HOME TOWN
PROFESSIONAlS. WE HAVE PLENTY OF BUYERSI
HENRY E. CLELAND........................................... 892-6191
TRACY BRINAGER............................- ..............848-2439
SHERRI HART...................................................... 742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111...................................... 892-6181
KATHY CLELAND................................................ 892-61111
OFACE............................................................... 992-22511

Junlc hi Sell Uo Your NonWorking lleJor Appllanceo,
Color T. V.'o Rohlgerltonr,
F_..,., Vch·a, Mlcrows..o,
Air Condltlonoro, Wuhero,
Drvo10, Copy lbehl-. Elc.
Don,

_ , Call
0657.

ENTERPRISES

for

"lose Weighl Like "Crazy"

~ ·s

Small Buck 9toYa Flrwplttee In-

YOUNG'S
cARPENTER SERVICE

RACINE- Nica 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch home, sitting
on 2 shady Iota. Full basement, N.G.F.A heat, enclosed rear
porch, lots ol at01age and closet space, lluit cellar in
basemen!. Many other features.
ASKING $72,500

COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) - What would the former inmates of the old Ohio
Penitentiary think? About 5,000 pecple caused a downtown traffic jam trying to
get to the pison.
.
A line of cars !llreiChed for seven blocks Saturday as people walled to get a free
piece of the wall that used to Surround the prison.
Chunks from the wall, along with certifiCBieS of authenticity, were given away.
Officials had to call off the giveaway about two hours before the scheduled ending because of the crowd.
•'There defmitely will be another opporttmity for people to get a ~ic:ce o~ rock,''
said Gretchen Hull, spokeswoman for the Ohto Departtnent of Admuustrauve Services, which owns the site.
A date for a second giveaway has not been set. But .officials aren't ~ncerned
about running out of rocks - about 9,000 tons of limestone are sull on the

GRACE

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thle ad good for 1
fREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

MIDDLEPORT· RuUand St- 2 stoJY frame home with newer
vinyl siding &amp; newer roof. 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, gaa noor
furnace. new unit air, lllllf sciiiiiiMid porch, -wliancea, blinda,
fireplace, block storago building &amp; wood storage building, 3
room apt. with storage &amp; cellar below. LovelY flower~, atonn
doonl &amp; windows. VeJY wall taken care of. ASKING $311,000

Thousands jam streets to
get piece of prison wall ·

Backhoe Service

EVERY THURSDAY

HYSEll. RUN RD.· Lovely 1 1/2 alory frame home with 3-4
bed100ma, 2 baths, 27 + acras with lrae gaa. large dock, 2 car
garage, 52x40 bam, pond, pasture &amp; hayfield- most land
lanced. Home is wotllakan care of with hardwood &amp; carpet
Hooling, cantllll air and an unusually claep fireplaca.
ASKING $89,500

RICHMOND, Ind. (AP) - Alex Wodtka fmally got the chance to thank the
"family who got me my heart"
The 4-year-old was 18 months old when he received Corey Hughes' hean during an Aug. 22, 1990 transplant operation in St Louis. Corey's parents, Heidi and
Robert Hughes, donated their son's organs after he died in an accident two days
shy of his 2nd birthday.
While the identities of donors and recipients usually are confidential, Alex's
parents, Beverly and Kevin Wodlka, wrote to the Hugheses shortly after their son's
operations. They have kept in contact ever since and decided they wanted to meet
each other.
They met for the first time Sunday in a hotel room in Richmond, the halfway
point between the Wodtka's home in St. Paul, III., and the Hugheses' home in
Frederick, Md.
The Hughes, who were visiting family in Ohio, expect to be moving overseas or
to the West Coast soon with the Anny, and don't plan to be in the Midwest again
for awhile.
"I wanted to some day be able to thank these people," Beverly Wodtka said.
When the HUgheses and Wodtkas met, they pulled out scrapbooks of their families and began sharing stories as Alex and his brothers, Daniel, 10, and Brian, 8,
put on the Baltimore Orioles T-shirts the Hugheses brought them.
"I guess there was a loop there that wasn't finished," Robert Hughes said of
why he and his wife wanted to meet Alex and his parents.
Officials with the Indiana Organ Procurement organization say they hope the
Richmond reunion will help publicize the need for donors. The benefit to recipients is obvious but donor families also gain a great deal from organ doqation, said
Stan Meadows, spokesman for the group.
"A lot of donor families say they use the donation to make sense of the chaos
that's in their family," Meadows said.
"While their loved one has been taken away, knowing that they're providing
life to someone else helPS them in their grievinR process."

Water hauling

Now accepting new
students. Girls Ages 4
and Up. Develop poise
and self confidence
and have a great time.
lastooor· Nancy W. Swa111
Classes
beginning
September.
CaU 992-3796

GREENWOOD RD.- RACINE- .57 acre with 1986 modular
home. 3 bedrooms, lull basement with garage, central
air/heat pump, newer carpeting, small outbuilding, range &amp;
d&amp;cking.
ASKING $44,900

Shop At
Home
Service
Day Or
Night

nat just a way to
cover a window
It's a way to
light up a room
992-5311
50-55% off
1-800-BLIND-11
Blinds &amp; Verticals
483 BEECH ST. MIDDLEPORT OH

ol

WAS-7-27.06 on State Route

Decorated .tOMWII,.., . .u tat.

Blinds • Verticals • Shades

,...---,= ,--

bidders at the office of the

1 and other various routes

Click.

E.11t1m Avenue, Oalllpoda.

No . 94-688
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Hocking , Me igs , Monroe,
Morgan. Vinton Counties,
Ohio for Improving section

E

Cleon Lito - . . Corw or
Trucka, 1987 llod... Q- Newer,
SmHh Buick Pontloe 1100

Jll tfoucli of Cfass

Washington, Athens, Gallla,

Oocor

wanted to Buy

9

992-4119 AI Tromm Owtter 1-80Q-291-S600

August 19, t994

1994 for Improvements In:

"&gt;

Col.

UcenM t 754-04 &amp; Bonded,
304-IIS-3430.

Contract Sales Legal Copy

Ohio, until 10:00 a.m.
Tuesday, September 13,

••rvlce.
UcenMd
Wool Vlrglntl, 304-

7n-5785.

Columbus, Ohio

Department

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick PNreon AucUon Comptny,
full lime •uctlortMr, oomp&amp;.te

"Look for the Red and White Awning"

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE Of OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Pick-up ovslloble.

l :oo-?

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'
110 Court St. Pomg~cy, Ohio

Public Notice

Ohio

Some-

thing
r everyone! Oonatlona
appr-=l•tl&lt;l, 814-041·207'1 or

Real Estate General

I

Yard Sale

lnoldo - · ulo, I to II, 13 0U
9ti'MIII, POIMioy, "Pf*' Uontey
''· Run.
Raclrw ArM Community Or·
Qanlutlon. Sept:embl:r 1-2. St.f
IIIII Port!. 30" &amp;ton, rohlgtntor,
...,,...,, ond tlbiiO, poll, paM ,

KINGS'

713 1,_11TFH

&amp;'1MW JFN

Parents of donor, recipient
meet for first time

YOUR MESSAGE!

Garlic being studied as preventitive medicine

Card of Thanks

The fa111ily of
MICHAEL R.
HUBBARD
wish to thank all of
Michael's friends for
the prayers, . love
and support they
offered to him since
tho time of tho
violent
attack
against him and the
support they have
shown his family at
tho time of his
death. Also, the
thoughtfulness
In
giving of the food
and gilts.

I'm just numb from the shock.
Should I confront my mother with
the facts or pretend they don't exist?
--ZAPPED
DEAR Z. : Confronting your
mother will serve no useful purpose.
There would be denials and
accusations, followed by icicles and
estrangement
l..on£some? TakL charge of your
life allli turn ic around. Wrile for
Ann Landers' fli!W lxlokkt, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being
l..on£/y." ~end a self-addressed, long.
busi.ness-siu envelope and a ci!Lck
or mon£)1 order for $4.15 (this includes postage and handling) to:
Friends, c/o A1111 Landers, P.O. Box
11562, C/Ucago, Ill. 606/J-()562. (In
Canada, send 15.05.)

Junk dealing a lucrative, sometimes lurid, business

·' 80th birthday Aug. 7 at the home of

- her daughter and son-in -law.
:. Richard and Aorence Ann Spencer,
Dogwood Drive, Tuppers Plains.
. Following a picnic at noon, the
: group took pictures, reminisced
and played games. All of Mrs.
Boyles' children , grandchildren
· · and great-grandchildren were pre.. sent for the observance.
Attending were her son and
daughter-in-law, Phillip and Sharon
• Boyles, daughter and son -in -law,
, Starling and Sandra Massar, her
brother and sister-in-law, Bernard
. and Janet Sturm, and a sister, Bernice Hawker
Grandchildren and great-grand .· children attending were Tim
; Spencer, Dan, Sheila, Kirt,
•Danielle and Tiffany Spencer;
Brenda, Heath; Katie and Tyler
·:suck, Joe, Laurie, Matt, Ashley,
JeSSica and Janae Boyles. Kevin,
,Deana, Michelle, Miranda and
: Benjamin Buckley, and Chuck

an inch thick and a yard wide. To
tickle for fun, for a few seconds, is
OK. But to tie a girl's hands and
invite a buddy in as part of the act is
pretty sick stuff, and you'd better
recognize it now before the look
graduates to whips and chains.
. Dear Ann Landers: My husband
IS so mad at my father, he'd like to
kill him. Here's what happened; Two
years after we were married,
"Harvey" suffered a dizzy speU and
had severe chest pains. We called
my father, a physician,&lt;in the middle
of the night Dad examined Harvey
and told him he had a heart
problem. He instructed Harvey to
"take it easy" and cut out all
strenuous activity.
This meant giving up handball and

1

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

the day befor11 tht 1d Is to run.
Sundey edttlon - 2:00 p.m.
Frlday. Monday edhlon • 2:00
p.m. s.. urdly.

Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

Stop By And VIII With IIIIo,
O..r Dttvor Recrun• ~~p­
PIIcatlonll WlQ Ill ~ed
Pt- Bring Any Rolovani
Employmonl fntonnatton.
TUESDAY, AUOUST 211
MIOIInp Start

PromptlY lt

1 P.ll. 3 P.ll., 5 P.ll. And
Comfort Inn
1105 E. Uoln St.

7 P.IL

I-350R~

Jlckoort,Ohlo

=·

0., Call For Mont ln""-Uan
Farm Equlpmont l llloe. Solo: On How To Sto~ AProlonkJnel
Turn on 141 On m, Go To Plch- Dttvlna Carow That P8y&amp; 1-lold Road, Fl10t Bluo On
EOE. S..b(ecl To Drug
Right, Sapl. 2nd, 3rd, 4th.
Moving Solo: E..IYihlnt Prlc:od '!'raining lo fiN At Fir~
Roosonoblo
112&amp;
Socond
~':'~'t::
Avenut, H, No Earty sa..a. :...,38581 ~
Sapt. 111, 2nd, 3rd.
alntl Rloldonl To ~lfr. Alii
J.B. Hunt For Delillo.

742-2455

STAR GUITAR

0:

61W6NI3112

Ampa, Gulla,.., Strlnga,
KeyboW8, DNma,
PI.no • Gultllr I.Aieona.
CIMahlre, Ohio

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VlclnHy

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repcir
Specializing In
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.

742·2443
11'11/1 mo.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy
AI Yard Silos Uuot 81 Paid In
•--- ~-ell ,_, I :I)C)pm tho
~··~-. day bofon tho ed lo lo Nn,
Sunday edhton- 1:00pm J!lclp,
........, edhlort 10:000:m.
Slturdlly.

Dur"P

TNCk Dttvor ..._ Fw

AaDhoH. COt Roqulrod Aller 1

P.ll. &amp;~.eon,
EARN EXTRA 1$ or PO he

n· =i=~::.-.::z

IMnt,
E $300 kit. 104 114
1148or1-l'l3-1041.

Ellm up to ttooo woetar llulllng
- •t lloono,
11M now,
1104-'"'tcl,
~
_,nfonnollon, no oblptton:
Send SASE: "oKICio ""-40
P.O. Bo1 5421, sM a.:::: =
111102.
- - . r&amp;
1;;;;~=--=:===­
FIELD REP. IINVESllCM'IOR To
Aalll O..r Aoct llepe. With

==-A~.:'..':"~~~
ln~lvo Skllla Noc~

Plln-nm. Flolllllla ....,.:
Plltlont Rllornil ~ Call
Ront1 1-1142 NIO.

�8-The Dally Sentinel

, Page

llonda~August29,1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

llonda~August29,1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

41Tavern
42- Knlevel
I Clooet material 46Namelor
Ireland
&amp;Clothing
48BOI
12 Bacterium
13 Harmful thing 49 Stamen part
5201omounl
14 E1ploa1on
53Aatray
15Turn
54Appral808
16 Assail
55 Narrow straels
171ndlanapolls
56 Goose genus
loolballer
18Caln's brother
DOWN
19Bo Derek"a
number
20 Not so much
1 V.I.P.
24 Garman dlslrlct 2 Worn away
26 Eagle's nett
3 Pegs
27 Singer - Davlo 4 Border on
30Card suit
5 Corded cloth
32 Singing ayllable 6 Garment lor
33 Transport lor
Julia Child
E.T.
7Axorsaw
l4Fracas
8 Foolball player
35 Slippery one
Y.A. 36 Fireplace part
90ne - 38Wyan Lonely Number
40 Seafood cholca 10 Delerforate

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

:1t

42 Mobile Homes

Help Wanted

: Full-Time Expert1nc.cl Person
•To Assist In Busy Office. Re&lt;:ep-

' tlonlst Outl" To lnc tuct. : Ana.
· Multi-Line Phone, Patient Greet·
~lng
!Scheduling,
lnsuranc.e
.,verlfk:atloo, Ovw ·The -Cc:lunter
, Payment Colltctlon. Strong Or·
• ganlz.tional Skills With ltten' tlon
To
Detail.
Ahtura,

tallo n driver'• llcenu and
home' phone. Pay atart1 1t s.-.25
por hour, 32-40 hours per WiNik.

Ma n-Friday,

LIGHT DELIVERY. cash paid
"Jus t wha t l" ve a lways wante d .. a coHee tab le
Housing

Dealer
Immediate
Opening•
For F=ullHas
Time
Service Ptrson
Must a. Knowtodyabloln Malnt.
And Repair Of Manufadured

Homes.

To: CLA
328, c/o Gallipolis Dally Trlbun~ 1
S.nd Roswno

book abo ut o th e r co Hee ta bl e

18

Wanted to

Do

4$631.
NNd

7595,

aomeone wfth own
trantpor1atlon to c ltan home
and onlct wMkly, 014 ·992-«Kt2.

Now A&lt;coptlng application• lor
pa11-tlmo locully momboro to

teaoh Eng lith Composlt 1on a~d
COmmuricatton Skllll, 11 alllf I
D.are• requlr.ct, Docto11111
prelered. Day tnd avenlng claa.... Stnd lntern1 letter tnd
resumn to Phyllis Ma.on, PHR,
Director of Human Resourcea,
Unlverahy of Rio G,.nde, C.mpu• Box 96i, Rio Gr~ndll, Oh.

4S674 EEO/AA Employor.

Now ~Iring experienced deckhands, R &amp; W U1rint, Inc .,
banalttt I · ~Y. work 28114

tchedule. Call tor

•~l:llon

to
EEO

bo mollod, 1.-.28l

WF

Now Taking Appllcatlont At Gal·
llpollo &amp; Point Ptoaunl,
Domlno'e Plua.

lng.

304-ai~S-3630

or JOUJ'5.

1.:,::::::____-::---:---::

Proflnlonal Trw Service, 30
Vears £xperlence, 81...388-9643,

614 .367•7010 .

Cleaning

Quality

Affordable

FrH Es1fmatn, e-14-31'9-2199.

Sehool.
Chlldcare M-F 8am..a :30pm AgM
2-K, Young School Age During
Summer. f Daya per Wtek Min.
lmum 814446-3657.
Sun

Vallty

Nursery

Wlll do babystttlng In my home
In Aaclnt, Moni:far through

Frida~.

614-9411-2371 anytlma.

Wlll do bebyalttlng In my home
In Rac:ln•, hn• f'lflrenca 6

Anybody

TlmH WoM!y 8Pleasant VIIIIY Nurwlng Clre 8p.m. or Ttkl Care of Elderly
Center II now ecceptfng IP" Poo100n Twtco Wtokl~ 614-245pllcatlont for CNA'1, full-tlme 5446 Anytlmt.

and pert.Unw pwltlone avaiJ.
able, mlaf: be able lo work 12hr.
shlfte. Contact Shliron Skldmo,.,
DON,
304-675-5230
AA/Eot:.

POSTAL JOBS
Stort $11.41 ~r. For Exom And
Application Info. Coli (218) 71188301 Ext. OH581. I A.ll. -II P.ll.,
Sun -Frl.
POSTAL JOBS
Stlrt $11.411hr.1 . lor o1om and
application lmv. call 218-711118!101 axt. WVIW&amp;. 8am·8pm,
Sun..frl.

Rootou,.nl -king Khclten and
Claarlng
Pli'IOIIII .. F\ollbll
Hou,.•• wrttl to: CU. Box 330

'II.GaiMpolla Dolly Trlbuno 8211
Third Avo. Golllpollo, 011. 45831
Sal" Pooltlon : Locol lbnufoo.

tur'8d Hduslna 0..111' Hilt lm-

medlota Oponlng For FIAI Tlmo
Sal" Poonoon. Soleo ExDOdonco
p,.f8rrad- Excollonl Potontlol.
Sond RHumo To: CLA 327, c/o
Galllpollo Dolly Trlbuno, 825
Third Avonuo, Galllpolla, OH
45831.
TELEPHONE
TALKERS
NEEDED. Cooh pold woakly. No
experience

nacenary.

:J.4

Financial

21

Business
Oppor1unhy

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r~commenda

thlt

you

do bull-

.,_ with pooplo you koow and
NOT to oond money through tho
m•ll until you h1ve lnvwtlg..ld
tho ollorln~
Dry Cloanoro I laWldry In Gltllpollo Area. Eotabllahed Van
Route. hc:ollan1 Condhlonl 814882·7302, 614-4182-3111V Aft01 8
P.ll.
VENDING ROUTE: Won, Got
Rich Quick. Will Go1 A S t CU/1 lncomt. Prlcod lo Soli. f.
800-820-4353.

Operalort,
Sec-Computer
operalor, Saln pef"'C)M, N...
~ont. Lite aummerltall. Send

TillS newspaper wtl not

13

88X

knowtlngly """""'
a&lt;f\lanlsemercalor real estill
wllk:t11s In vloltllon of the law.

Schools &amp;
Instruction

advllllloed In IIIII

you. LOVING CAREGIVERS, 1·

800-281-41651

Wanted to

Balo,. &amp; aftor ochool

Do
Do~

Coro1

Now Haven, 1:30am-echoot ana

after ahf;oof.lpm, klndtuprten
holl.&lt;flyo wotcomo brNkflll &amp;
after echool •nac~• provided,
cr•tlve proJectl &amp; loving aY.
......olon. :104-882·3121.

Eltpa- Gullarlot OMng ~none In There Home.
For lion Information, 114-441·
0138.

1m Conccn 121:15, 3 ceiling
Fana. Wuher,
Dryer,
Ap.

pllancoo, Control Air, Undorplnnlng1 Outbuilding,_ IIO&lt;el 114-

440~433 Ahlf 7 P.ll.

1 tnd 2 bedroom

lumlohod

expando, centrW air, 10'x41'
porch on comer lot, excellent
cnclhlon, phone 614-241-388.1.

1i88 14170 F'-~-• Rolloo-

-tlon., 11c. ktt, 2br., 2 full balh,
grut cond., chy watw, eewer
oyotom, oloclrlc I pllono hoolc-

up, 2 outbulldlnge, porchoo,
nlco location, 125,000. 3QWt5.
3381 1ft11' lpm.

11188 Clayton Trollar. 2 Bod_,., 1 112 Batho. 14124
Room Addhlon. Sltuatod on I
112 Al:roo. Lottrt, OH. Eltcolltnt
CondHion, Ulto " - 814-2473883 Evonlngo.
1D88 Dok Wood mobllo homo,
14170n~::-

304-41

OIC concl,

.
3br., 2 beth, on 120d0 lot, Hlndoroon, WV. 304-6711-411a4.
UIIITED OFFER! 14•80
only ma1to 2 poy..-o, no
payment• 1ft• 4 ,..... hi
clollvert I aot up, - - 11,_
lng ovollabll. :104-755-88ell.
NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 Ioiii
Novor lived In, otlll hU ,_
homo womanly, hM clollvwy I
Ill up, ftnanclng IVOIIablo. 304-7!15-nlll.

33

Fanns for Sale

Hour~ Mon. ~ Sat u Wed. g..a:
Don'1 Forget Our REPO. Sec-

apt~rtmente,

and

2bdrm. aptl., tottl etectrk, ap--

plltnceo lumllhocl, laundry
100m bcllhleo, ctc. lo ochoof
In town. Appl&amp;cetlonl evallabM
at : Vlllall" ·c._ ApCo. t48 or
calllll4-tlt12-3711. EOH.
38 Wool Apt. 2br, 1 both, potlo,
lo groc:ort otorao &amp; ,.,.,..
ping clfii"!J.._wator, - • · lrooh
provldod, ...,tllmo. EQ..I Hou•
lng Opporlunhy, 1114-441·11108.
Fumlohod Efflcloncy 1150/llo.
UtiiHiot Paid, Slltro Bath, 807
Second Avo 1 Galllpollo, , , . _
4416 Aftor 1 P.ll.
Fumllhocl EHicloncy, 701 Fourth
Avonuo, Oolllpolla, $185/llo.
UtllltiM Pold, Shoro Both,614446-4416 Aftor 1 P.ll.
BEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jockoon Pllto
hom 12221• S285. Wolk to ohor&gt;
&amp; movloo. can 814-448-2568.

Dryer,

Color

T.V.,
Microwave Stove, frMDr, Air

Motorcycles

•QI08 3
•7 32

•KJb J2
• /\ J 4

oK J 6 5

"'"

BARNEY

4•

MOSEY!!

Take Interesting Trlde, Aleo

Birch

Lano. Oolllpollo. 614-4411-1822
Boat Ahor Oalk.

~partmente

pass with a decent suit. " But that is
only partly right. With almost all
hands. you should make your normal
respons e a t the one -leve l. True , be ·
cause you are a pas sed hand, your
partner might pass. But he shouldn"t
if there is any chance of game.
A jump s hift by a pas sed hand
shows a maximum pass with length in
the s uit bid and in the suit partner has
bid. Classically. you have five cards in
the s uit you have bid, four cards in
partner's suit and most of your points
in the two su its . This is called a fit ·
showing jump .

NO WONDER I'VE
6EEN HOME A

YOU DON'T NEED
AN EXCUSE , SIR ..
WE 'RE ON SUMMER

LOT LATE L'f.

VACATION

53
Antiques
,.,-.....,--,..,--,:..--..,.-.,Hooaler cabinet "HIIere", neede
minor "'polr, $125, 114-1182·2471.
Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 Coppertone Stove Top, Oven,
Dlthwaaher, Doubl• Bowl Sink.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

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

(#(/} i? •·;:c;..

1 Vur Old 24x4 Abovt Ground

Ace-•
Admlrol

Pool, Whh All
Aloo, 18 Cu. Fl.,

Ralrlgorato~ Good Condition,
Aoklng: $170, 614-388-11060.
10 KT I 14 KT Gold, 6,._

~ 11 ,.y roiAMf
IS ,;~Ve'', ANI:&gt; ....

FAMOUS
FIRST
MSETINGS

3358.

~tY,

TttiS PL.ACt
If A MfSS!

.·. . ·.•.·

'•

::::;:::: : )::: ': :. O•fi4oyNEAI•'I;

8·2,

'Tt"'AVf$

...... E·ma11 FandEBobT@AOL COM

BORN LOSER

UI'Q

.... 0

oo-o

"""'0

Aug . 29, 1994

Nlct 2 - - . , 4 112 IIIIM

Homes for Sale

Spring
Avanuo,Pomoroy,
$30,000, 614·992·21113 or 814992-7304.
3 bodroom ranch !ltlllpolla
Ferry, cell for dl1aTt•. 3~7'So
3328.
4 Bodroomo, 1 Bath, Kllchon,
LR, DR, In Good Locollon, C1ooa
To Sch~1 Buol,_ Soctlon,
614-4-4fi.T.Izo,
304-71111-71111
$3!,1100 Nogotlablo.
Brick Home On Two Ac:rM CIOM

To Galllpollo. ThrM Bedn&gt;0111a,
1 112 Bo1ho, Famly RoomR=
Stont FINplact, Uvlng
,
Dining Room, I.a.- Eot·ln
KHchan, Baoamonl, 1Wo Cor At·
tochod !ltrago, Hoal Pump.
Groon Elomontary, OAHS. 114440-11590, 814-441-7110.

WEL L,1Hf.RE'5
A BALL GAME
AN OLD 1'\01/IE.

From O.lllpolle, City Schoolt,

CUio.

0338.

One bod- lurnlahod aport•
ment In u:'e:Actll614-1192·
5304 ore
.

1Wo
oplllmont,
UIIIKiot paid, privata partdng,
rtv. view, $350/mo., $200
dopoolt, no poll, 614-1tl2oll724.

Rentals

45

Real Estate

BIG NATE

EOH.

41

fl14..388.8688.

2br. houH, M..on, $2Wmo.
pluo utllhiM. 304-~.

3 Bedroom Fot Ron! In
Vllltao Of Rio Orondo, Dopoo1t
&amp; Rolaronc:oo Roqulrod, 114.:J71.
2720 AFTER I P.M.
LoVIIy 3 N;,
- homo
In
-oy,
oqulppad
kllchon,
g&amp;N!IO and corport 1 W.tl '-"·
upl dopoalt and ,...,...... ,...
qu rod, ctU 114-1116-4441 ollar
1:110 pm.

hokft 20-30 CIHI can pop,

12$0, 114-11112-40112.

A TALK

Orongo And Purplo. Tovtor'a
Berry Patch, Kon Road, 814-245-

11047.

Gordon tllloro, &amp;hp T101 Bin, 5hp
Glbaon, both good concl, o304T/3-5338.
Laoor 1211 (Applo compollblo)
COIIIp&lt;Jior,
""'::'; 7!1--8013.
-monualo, $150.

11eto1 lntulaltd fn&gt;nl onl,..,_
df..oritJ'ldiO, good llltpt, 140,
6
-3401.

Aoom8 tor rent • wull: ar monl:h.

Slarll~

... 4

at $120lmo. GoUla Hotol.

1!110.

Stooping Rooma $15 ""' Doy.
Conatructlon WarUn Wtlcoma,
Froo
Elllclency
Kitchin,
t.au.-y, 614-:188-1T211.
SIMping """"" whh cooking.
Aloo trOIIor on rfvor. All
hoot&lt;..,pa. Coli ollor 2:011 p.m.,
304·7n-515t, M11on WV.

46

Space for Rent

3 Room Ofllco Sullo Whh

Prlvatt ToiiM In Modern R"

Proof Bldg. Coli llorrlo Hultlno

614-44f.21131 Orl14-4...ut2.

ov.r 60 Panomo Kllchon Corpot

In Stoc.. 30 P111ornt VInyl In
Sloclt, llollohon Corpot, At. 7 N.,
814-44f.11144.
Plntburgh Palnto -

ptln4 17.11

aat.

cofllna

L8ta redWooCI

or codor otaln $3.118 gal. Paint
PIUI, 304-8~.
Quoan Silo Waloobtcl 1150, 1143711-2728.
Refrlgef'ltOI'I, Stew•, w..hln
And llfyoro, All Rtconclltlonod
And Oouront- $1011 And Up,
Will Dollvor. -11-6441.

callll14..48-26118 oltor 2:30 p.m.

-·

Sloy Wo1111 In Your -~~ Homo
Whln Tho Eloclnc Gooa Off
Thlo Wlntor WHh An Emlllro
lloblo Homo Woll Fumaco Thor
U.. No E - y . CoN ntlt'a llobllo Homo KTQ I Ct.O
At 1114-141-1411, 0r 1.-.an.
58117 For Dotolll.

SmtY

._

-

~ Wanted to Rent
H.M.C• .__.ng For Aporlment Whh

- · - lloquirod.

8...-

Kitchen 1 Bldroom, lathroorw,
LA, For Undtr t;a:50r11o., Netr

Otlllpolt. Nolallbor-.No t.aaoa, 114-4tl·12iltl.
Wont to lnupontfve houoa
or lrolltr In oountry whh land
and OUII&gt;&lt;IIIdna. Wllllrtglo malto
r.palro,I1U4U182.

Merchandise

PS,
PI, Auto, $500, 080, 814.24611228.

Musical
Instruments

Conn. Trunopot lor -

concllllon.
Evonlngoi

Good

814-446-3132

fnrcfl, IOW7!-U12.

otc. D' R Auto, RlPIIV. WV. 304l12-.u•1~

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Art.. Cor.- Pltno,
WI Concllkln, atiOIJ• 8naro
Drum $1011,114-441-7110.
Ludwta 8naro Drum Ktt, Ex.-.
t:andltlon t:tDO. Itch
Trombont/F 1tor&gt;. E l t -

1111 Dutdlm.. Cornpar 30'
Front Kttchon. ltiC, M'"-t,

58

.......
lntarlot, -- · · ,
. _ Awnlnat.
ltd,
llublltr
Roof,- Cleat rio oloolt,

Fruhs&amp;
Vegetables
-

Household

Goods

OWNER WILL FINANCE TO
OUALIFlED
BUYERJuot
Mlnuta To Holar, 3 I J oon-.
1 112 Bttht, LR, DR1• KHchon,
Full B a - W IFP.- Roof,
Ntw Corpot All Thraugh Enllro
Houoa, Now Plumbing. Col 5142~14 Altar 1:011 P.ll.

Trlbuno Photogrophor Avalloblo
lor w-..ao I Olhor EY111to
C.U Kavln 114-448-11511 Aftor 5
p.m.
Wll labyoft, lly Homo
R t - Avallabl!, llothlr 01 Sl1 room• and •unclry, beth,
~. Ploutnt Homo. Hlo Gnndo,
big rod bom, bulldna, 2 112
ConltMVIHo .Aroa, 814--~.
Kt• an New Llmll lid., Rut·
land, 814-Jt1247117.
WIH bldwlll, t.mlly ltm~ 1p.We,
o.-..n. Estatoa, any hour. ..... ~.!ham, ldlchen, d&amp;nlna,
:104-4!7UNII.
llvtng, IAINiy N10111 homo In lilt): 2br. aM _..... _.., -•·,
dltpOot, · - 10 . _ , and
....
Will bobyoft, Loon oroo. :J04..4S8- -.138,000,114-112-3431
..
Muon, no pott.
tB81.
814-111:1-5710, oalt lor lonny.
1~304-c:..:..:.77W:..::...:.=._ _ _ __

-=·

Kllchon llblt W/2 lotYot, I
chalro, 13!0. Matching hutcll,
1380. Sold _.-1y or
logolhtr. 304-e7!1-2113.
LAYNE'S RJAN'TUAE
Cornplott homo fumlthlnat.

HouiW: lion-Sal, N. . , . . .
1!322. 3 mllot out Bultvllo Rd.

FrM Doltvert.

"lt-\1\T LOOKS Ll Kt:
ll" GOES 1\-IE

HOT

liME ..

l!Pg~~ Exctltnl Condhloft, 113,500. l1t ••• ae.

jilcll

Serv1ces

otreody

, _ - _,. plcUd dally,

Wlltltmt - .
- - Ohio,
tMtiZ'IMI
or ·
t14a4111
Slobtrl
Ohio.
"
" -Forma,
plcll -l'or1tand,
M/bu.,

ASTRO-GRAPH

For -

61 Fann Equipment

by _,.. 1111 01111

CUt- etoin, 120,000 hlahwav

---·7143.
mlltt,

. . .ltnl

--atlaoi,

72 Trucks for Sale
u Ford E-lnt ltolorr

=.=a.
a ......
1tml

oowlon tlump, ..

=14~1:".-=-·

82

-

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Clllmlll, Ford, Dadgt, ........
- . Short or tong; NO rut!.
30H?W2111,

•
-~·-

plclwp.
For

Clwv.

-~

Tuesday. Aug. 30. 1994

1N7 ~. . .10 Pickup """""
60,301 111101 14,500, -

otll!4.
1111 a.to Tallo!, loodld, btl! on
~ u L, 11'1417-G132 -

A str o · G raph Mal c hmak er tn slanlly
reveals whiCh signs a re romanhcafly per-

your tnsltncls tor tole rance wtll dommate ,
dealing with persons others ftnd too dttft-

I

tcct !or yotJ . Matl $2. to Matchmaker. do cu lt to contend wtth mtght be a ptec. e of
thiS news pape o. P 0. Box 4465. New cake lor you today .
York. NY 10163.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Co nditions
LIBRA (Sept . 23· 0ct. 23) Ambtlious m general might I.Jndergo an 1mpress•ve

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

run, good tlllo, - ·

5I

SClMt 0\PI'~D ~OT 005S
Ci\NDL'tS DR TO KlllTht

St£ 1\1f\T LONG
LINI: 0%R \HI:~

...,.,

=-.~--•

ROBOTMAN
l\L'('S J%T I'll GO G£:1 L--of"''&lt;IA
LOO\&lt;.It-IE&gt; FOR \JS ~ ~0\JI'I.t

Condlllon$300~

-

--..1

"- gao tanko, ono ton trud&amp;
whooll. ndtal-, mtlo,

o.notnhonll ~,.~1431
Soli For $2110, •
20.

-

,-

~HOW.

1tiG Cadillac, , _ pan '" - oornploto c~ lor 'Tt or
- · 1171' Pty..-h .......... '1Z 0111101 240Z. - · flU,
aood.IWIIl111fo - l o r pick up 814olltl2-4002.

Alita I C... Ulto "-·
Otrnolnhonll380, 814-251-IUI.

COMing_..,-.

AND. Of COU R~ E,
' i'oARNE Y "

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: John Locke
(1632·1704), philosopher; Oliver Wen·
dell Holmes (1809-t894), poet-essayist;
Ingrid Bergman 0915· 1982), actress;
Charlie Parker 0920·1955), musician;
Richard Attenborough lt923·l, actor·
producer-director, is 71; Dinah Wash·
ington &lt;1924· !963) . singer·

Rototlller, excellent condiUon,

, _ condhlon, 3 btdroome, rwt,

dop,nopoto, ~.

'51

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
t957, South Carolina's Strom Thur·
mond set the U.S. Senate filibuster
record by orating for 24 hours, tR min·
utes in opposition to the Civil Rights
Act.

A ~OAP OP£RA

Poltlltc llonnovtllo

-

Oard1n Mume: Ytllow, Whitt,

Fumlshed
Rooms

Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom Noor N.G.H.S. Slovo,
Rofrigorotor. Wotw And Troth
Paid $325 Pluo S325 Dopooft,

Fow drawer. alld•top cooler,

84

Electrical

&amp;

Refrlgll1ltlon

There might nol be many lree ndes. lor
you in the year ahead, yet your possibili ties for making your mat1&lt; in the world are
b'tler than they have been loo qUtl e
some lime . Establish meaningful objec·
lives and proceed .
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) In ordel Ia
&amp;ucceed today . you must have lhe
courage of your convictions. If you truly
believe in something. don"t tet others ere·
Bile doubts in your mind. Know where to
look lor romance and you"ll find it . The

•'·'

obJeC trves can be fullilted today if you 're

transformation today_ Things whrch werP.

wr lhnq to pay the pnce _ Vrclory has ns
cost but the achievements will be worth

too hard to accomplish yeslerday could

rt

and satiSfaction.

SCORPIO !Ocr. 24-Nov. 22) Parttcopale

TAURUS (Apri120.May 20) An old lnend

1t1 tn vo lvements today that afford you

tor whom you 've had very little trme lately
is beginning to question the relatronship .
He/s he would be enormously happy to

pleasure. but are also meaningful II you
reel something is useful. you'll do it well.

now

be accomplished with relative

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebnly C opher cryptograms are creal&amp;d from quotalton' by lamous people . pas! aod pteten4
Eadllener on the cophet s1aNb lor anolher TodBy "s clv6 L 8qUII/s Y

ONDOKN

RDKW

ICDVJR

v
J

0 .

R D

IKK

R

C N

C N

X. W

IJLRPXJY

X

GIJ

J 0 H,

AIL

SIS L .'

J NZN U

YUDHXJY

X A,

KDDT

S D

BIGTADJ.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "When I see a play and understand it the first lime.
then I know it can't be much good." - T.S. Eliot .

'~~:~.~,

0 four

A:eorronge

S©\\(llA -!£ £~s·
ldlto4 by CLAY

letters

of

WOlD
lAIII

I'OUAN

th•

scrambled words be·
low to form four words

FE END!

I II T 1
NA L G D

DATE BOOK

In Uk:Jdleport. From

3 br. ope. In lllddlopor1,
IIWIU858.
Fumllhocl
Small
Houot,
J27!1/mo. + Utllltloo, Poortdng. No
Pita. CtU Bolorw 7 P.M. 814'441-

because of the known double fit. When
you have a double fit , usually you can
make a game with less than the nor·
mal point·count requirement.
West led the club king and switched
to the heart thr ee . After winning
East"s king with his ace, how should
South have continued'
The only danger was if East could
gain th e lead early and push a heart
through declarer"s remaining J ·4. To
keep East off the lead, South played a
spade to dummy's ace and finessed
his jack. Even if it had lost to West's
queen, I 0 tricks were guaranteed: four
spades, one heart and five diamonds.
But when the finesse won, South
claimed an overtrick.

TodayistheWstday
of
1994 and the 70th • . ···•
·.. ·'&lt;". .
. ..·
day of summer
·· . ·

52324355 . can 814-1112·56511.

Nlco ltvlf 1o1 on ,_, Rtclnt,
Ohio, grool far ctmplng, bottlng1 .. IIOhlng, hoo oaHip far
I1IClDIIO
- ·,_r
outbuilding,
.81..
don
opoct,
pOill Olflct,
bonlt, g.-ry, 114-1411-211111.
REDUCEDI 27ac., commen:lal
glri!IO, 3111'. homo,
Sandhill Ad. Somorvltlo -~.
30H75-3030 or tsn-3431 Joan

The North hand in today's diagram
is a textbook exa mple. And South, de·
spite minimum count. jumps to game

Al..,.ldo

Stove, ~~tr•lo!1 W11er Fur·
nltho!L
illo. NO Poto, 114446-4iwo.

l

Perhaps you answered "a maximum

MISSING SCHOOL 7

1-8Q0.287-a08,

19Story
21 Art deco
llluotrator
22Beget
23- of approval
25 Hlgheal point
26 JacOb's oon
27 Coffee cupa
28Typa of helrdo
29Fuel
31 Zoo animal
37Tiner
39Dangero
41 Roblno and
ay I
43 ndlallncl
44 Ouler tpa&lt;:e
45AIIowo
47Depand (on)
48Trlbe
49 Orlvero' org.
SOSieelara"grp.
51 Seoame
52 Actress Gardner

You pass. your partner opens, say,
one club and you make a jump shiif\ to
two diamond s. two hearts or two
spades. Wha t does your bid mean'

f.lE'( MAI\CIE . YOV WANNA
f.lEAR THE EXCUSE I'VE
COMe UP WIT~ FOR

houu,

and

Pa ss

You pass,
then jump

PEANUTS

1011,0011 BTU Gao Fuma- 112%
EHiclancy, 811% EHicloncy, 1800-287-41308, 614-446-41308.
150,000 BTU Gao Furnace,
80,000 BTU Goa Fumaco, 1
Uaocl 3 Ton Paclto.ll" Air Condltlonoo: 1 Uood Eloctrlc FUJnaco, ilotol Door F..moo, b.
EOH.
aoned Slzoo, 814 4461308.
Clotn 3 Roomo &amp; Bath Fur·
nllhocl, wotor ond t.. lh poldl 58" IIW blado, 304-5711-4024.
Portor Area. No Potol 814-3888000
Clotn Unlumllhod 3 Roomo
and Bath, upatolro, wator pokl,
la4al E.!..~!!.&lt;, . No Poto, . Go~
tlpotlt. ,_..ooo

llanor

Pass

By Phillip Alder

Now 223 Rlflo, ARtS Sl~la Bulh
M..ter, Full Mllltery Conngu,.
tlon, 20 Inch Hoavy BarJOI, Con

Rango Hood,
814-44fl.6308.

Pass

Opening lead : • K

Blcclt, brlclt, p i - tliln- . lln1olo, tic. Claudt Win, _ Rio Orando, OH Call 814245-a12t

52 Sporting Goods

54

11 Com pall pt.
12Swedlah
singing group
17 Blue shade

Vu lne rable : East -West
Dea ler: North
South
West North East
Pass
Pass
I•
Pass 3 t
Pass

Condhlontr, Ulac. 114-258-lr.la.

Have Severe! SKS'e, I

EAST
•QI09
•K97
·~
•QI098 54

SOUTH

Fumllhocl 3 Roomo a Bath,
Clor10, No Polo, Rtt.ronco a
log
houoa Dopooll Aoqulrod.ll14-441-1518.
wlbanmenl I .p:ic •ptem,
county wotor pond, bon\, OUI· Fumllhocl Aportmont 1 Bocf..
building, Boti.ll R~L_f70,000. room NIO, UtiiHIM Poold, 83V
Second Avo, Oolllpotlt 8,._
304-417~271 or 871-1lll&gt;O.
4418 Alt01 7p.m.
Oroclouo living. 1 ond 2 bodoldor

WEST
a4

• AK76 2

THAT'S ENUFF PLOWIN'
FER ONE DAY, AUNT
SUKEY 11 LET'S MOSEY
ON BACK TO TH' BARN It

Wtsher,

2 Roomo I Balh, No KHchon,
1i88 Cllyton 3 Bedroornt, Ex· $200/llo. AH Utllhllt Included,
ctllent Condhlon,IM 388 8538. &amp;..._7733, a.-n 8:30
1i87 SChultl 14170 tlilth 7&gt;&lt;20' -8:011.

e14-446-41&gt;U. ..,..

houl your lo tho m II luot
can-t!NI7.

74

tion.

Apar1ment
for Rent

871-6241.

Eltpa- wlU e~~rw -for ....
w/,.,_.encee
derly, ooo1c and clo oomo houao
claanlng. 304-4-..
Gonorol ltalntananco, Palnt[ng1
Yard Work Wlndowo Wunoa
Guftaro Cloanod Light Hauling,
Commoricol, R-'dantlot, Stovt:

o.orgoo Portabll Sawmllll don1

44

unlumllhod,
~~eurhy diPQIIt required, no
tru, big llvlngroom w/celllng polo, 8f4.111:!·2218.
fan, tongue a grove ftoor, 2
large bldl'OOIM •ceiling
1br. lurnllhocl apl., groat concl.,
kitchen I dlnlng II'N
romodolod, good jocotlon, cor·
floor, I"'IW applllncM,
mtr tth ' llaln, N;, utllftiM
wuher, wuhlr 6 di'YM'
paid, dopooh roqulrod. 304-e7!1$5,000, Iota olpoulbllhloo,
61131.

CJ!llloflulily bull.

3 bedroom, all electric homa.

ment tnd tlnanelaJ tid guarantMCI to gr~dUIIN. AlrNity CW·
tlllod? can uo. Wo havo work lor

014-367..(1632.

Eloclltc, 2 BedJOOma, Ulto " - 1Wo Bedroom $250/llonth, City
Through Out Aloo " - Corpot, School. Dopoolt and Rol.,.neoo

am av alable on an equal

31

HOIIERIIAKER
conlllcallon
e l l - ollrtlng ooon. Employ·

18

na-

our readers are hefeby
lnlormod thai all ct-.ga

Insurance

AMERICAN
NATIONAL IN·
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGEtfl"
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AIITO OISCOONTS
UFE&amp; HEALTH
:104-llllo4257

15

&amp;14-441-017&amp;.

to advertise •1111y preference,
lmHaUon or cbcrlmlnatlon
baaed on race, color, relglon,

Announcer.Boa~ra

"'auma to CEO WBGSIWBYG,
P.O. Box 47'0, Point Pleasant,
wv. 25550.

14160 liTI Compl•ry Total

for Sale

All real ootolo advor1lslng In
thll no_..llloubjo&lt;S to
lhe Fode10l Fair HouH&gt;g A&lt;S
ol1968 which makes n lllogal

ugo.
WBOS am 1030, WBYG 1m 99.51
Manager,

Work boott. 614-446-3159.

e

Showw StoU. Prlvoto l.al 111111
From
TOINn.
Ra,.,.nc•
$30Mionth. HUD Wolcomo 614448-1&amp;00.
------------

r THIN!&lt;. VJt'R£ PeiJ)'r 7D
VJITU:SS A 1-.JWJ ~:£
IIJ AM£RICAIJ RX..ITICS ...

A. DIARY (A~ IAPII&lt;.f OR
f'REFil&lt; AIJ ADI/\IIJIS112AT10 1J
TI-llS£ DAYS.

18111 !lto Trocltor, 58,000ml.,
5opd, convortlblo, J70DO OBO.
:104-4175-8124 oftor 6pm.

Olive S1., G1lllpolfe. Nrw &amp; Uled
furniture, heatere, Western &amp;

'

•AQ I098

room 1Pirtrnent8 at Vln•a•

lan'Mial stalus or nllbnll
origin. Of ony lnlonllon lo
make atPf ouch pta!.,.....
I!Titatlon Of -hilton.'

614-992·7624 •nd l.. v• m....

32 Mobile Homes

2Uoc.1 .2br.
unflnlonoa

can

Chriotlan, 304-e75-e424.
Wonted: Full And Part Tlmo
Sa ...men, M.-1 Be Experienced
In Estimating All Ph- 01
Rooldontlal llomodollna Coli
614-446-4514 I A. II. ·5 P.ll. II-F.
Wanted: RaHabl1 babyaltter for
one child. Hours vary. Pomeroy
arn. It lnter"'ed piMU ctll

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 112

14x70; Walk Around

Or S.le

Prien, One Tim• IW..kly
/Btwookly, Yoara Of Experience, 1i75 F1kmont 'Mx70 Wildt ex·

Part-time eaahler, mult be experience, 614-i49--~.
18y,... old. Cnwtord't Groc~ry, WIII Do Houso Claanlng lor
Handereon. WV.

VIne Sti"Mt, Cilll 814-448-7388, 1·

800-4 tn-34118.

L:=========r~:::=~=======~
Stove,
Buln O•rden
1n St~1ubBulhAl10
In
I·
Mk:rowave,
Handy man, lnterlorleKterlor
painting, light hauling &amp; Clr·
pantry. Auto body "'"~ &amp; point·

825 Third Avanue, Gallipolis, OH

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
WalhoroL. drtoro, rolrlgorat"':!,
rang•. :J. .OOI Appll1ncet, fD

8" 94

•.1

1888 Joop Chan&gt;bo llmhed,
120,000ml., vory good cond.,
$7300. 3fi4..882.:J570 an .. 5pm.
1888 Dodao Rom Von 60,0011
Mlloa, S3,11l011· Con Be SOon At:
Galllpollo Dally Tnb&lt;lno, 8211
Third Avonuo, Oolllpotlo, 114440-2342.

5858.

books ."

NOH'III
• A 1.1 7 !)
• t) 5 L

EEK &amp; MEEK

aood cond.l woll malntalnod,
nu new 101 de • ovt. 304-1753411.

Nke 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile
hornet In lllddloport, 814-1192·

6~24 .

&amp; 4 wo·s

IV88 4WO GIIC Blout, very

Kanauga, OH, 814-+18-14Tl.

Sed outfH, w. .tler, $600, tmlll
laib" wl2 chain, or all
S750 .can aoa 8:00-4:00, Flm
Stroot. Apt . 305-C. Point
Pl ....nl.

S27Simo. pluo SSG dopoalt. 304675-5541 after lpm.

Vans

1V87 Chivy Aoln&gt; von, 14800
BI4-IV2·31V4.
'

wood

..... home, outak.lf'tai of fien..
derwon, WV, uiiiiU• pakt,

wHkly. Need small cart l know
area well . Ca ll Christian, 304-

Manutactuntd

, Toklng Appllcatlono,

2116-6403.

$3!0/llonth, Avallablo Sopl. 1,
614-711'J-1157.

S&amp;m--4pm for appointment.

Local

dopoolt, 7ml.

Alt Eloctrlc, 2 BodrO«n, Poortly
FumiMed, Ullge Cour1hou•
Off Rl. 33 N.LNo Poto, Ho HUO,
Dopoelt ond . . loronco, 6 - h
Minimum
L..ue
Aequlrwd

must be ab le to work .any shltt
Incl uding most weekends. Must
ha'tle clean pollee record, good
wori&lt; hist ory, r11 ll 1~1 transpor·

614-669-2Bi'l

~

=
Do

8

H ~ t p wanted : Soc url1y guard•

Call

1m Mooed S7!1; Nlco Ouoan
Sbe Bec:froom, Sfollte, 195; for·
ced Air Gu Fumac:t~ $50; Pwt·
ablo llotal Khchon Cablnot S20i
Nice 24' Above Ground Rouna
Pool With Doell. Ulto " $3,000, Set AI: 61 Perch Sl,

3 BedJOOm llobllo Homo, Nice
t
Sottlng, $275/llo. +

llpo lls , OH 45631.

73

:zbr. mobil homa, CA, an ap.
pllanc.o lumlohod, 1300/mo

pluo utllhiM,

'.Tribune, 825 Third Ave nue, G•l-

Household

Goods

out Sandhill Rd. 304-all6-34a3.

: Motivated, Wht'l Good Com, munlcallon Ski lls. Apply To :
CLA 329 Clo Ga llipolis Da lly

S1

for Rent

An1wer to Prevfou1 Puzzle

ease

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec . 21) You , hea•lrom you today
cou ld be temarkably successful Ieday in GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) Involvements
an rwangement where you stnve to do that pertain to your caree~. finances . or
somet hmg for another. You have the abit- both, should be g 1ven maJor cons•dera• lion today . These could be the areas
''Y to accompliSh what he/she cannot .
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan . 19) You where you'll be the most fonunale .
s houldn·l have any problems making dil· I CANCER !June 21-.luly 22) A plan you
!!cult decisions today. because your judg- j recently devel_oped has gooct potential,
mcnt 1S ve ry sharp . You 'll be able to and others thmk so as well . However.
undorsland both sides of any issue.
you must take the Initiative and do someAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) The prob· thing about illoday .
ab•I•110S 101 personal gain a1e higher than LEO !July 23-Aug. 22) You moghl reap ·
11:-; ual lur you today . In !act. your chart
benefits today through someone you've
•nd1c:t tes you might reap rewards from
helped in the past. You may have forgot t·.vo ur11elaled sources
' ten about the Incident, but this person
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Because hasn"t.

A XC L Y
.---M-O_T_M_I_C_ __,

I had just found a new apartMent and discovered that rent
and mortgages are out of sight.
I have friends who call their
house a h1gh-rise apartment

1-.....,---.-....--..:.._,..,....-1 because of the • • • • 5

O Complete
by hll1ng

rent.

the chuckle quoted
1n the missmo words
L--1-.L_J_..l..._Jl-~ you develop lrom step No . 3 below .

PRINT N\JMIIEIEO lETTERS IN
THESf SQUARES

UNSCRAMIL£ ABOVE lETTERS
TO GfT ANSWft

SCIIAM-lm ANSWERS
Agency · Front · Lunch · Fiscal. CHOICE
I den ·t try to blame someone else for my problems. 1
believe that the reason people blame things on previous
generations is that there's onl~ one other CHOICE.

�-·

Monday, August 29, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Baby boomers· can avoid retirement 'sticker shock' through planning
By ED Peterson
Social Security Manager, Athens
Memo to baby boomers: it
see ms that maJor hfe transitions do

not. REPEAT DO NOT, get any
ca.sH'r.

A cc onl m~ to

a 1933 survey, 12
l"X' rcem of n~w l y wc.-d s find the tranSitt ll n tro rn s1 ngle hfc to married
ltfe dtff i.: ult. 2.1 percent of new

l'"r''"t' ftn d th e transition from
tx·mg " CllUJlil' 10 havwg k1ds d1ffi -

cult ; but 36 percent of people aged
60 and over find that the adjust ment from working to retirement is
difficult.
The survey did not state the reasons for each, but common wisdom
might suppose that money is a fac tor in each case:
- two cannot live as cheaply as
one:
- three or fiv e cannot Jive as
cheaply as two;
- and golf course dues and exotic

travel cannot be paid for with ticket
stubs from Grateful Dead concerts.
So what ' s a boomer with the
Great American Retirement Dream
to do?
For a generation to whom CD is
more likely to mean compact disk
than certificate of deposit, the
answer may not be welcome: save.
Put a linlc something aside .
Recently, a series of focu s groups
was conducted across the country
by the National Academy of Social
Insurance. Among _the findings was

this interesung tact: there was
"deep disappointment from some
who said that they had been led to
believe that Social Security by
itself would be sufficient to sustain
them at the standard of living at
which they were now living. These
participants had the notion that current earnings would completely be
replaced dollar for dollar by Social
Security benefits."
Social Security will form a solid
foundation for most workers retire·
ment plans. Social Security retire-

menl replaces, on average, 42 percent of a workers pre-retirement
income. But Social Security is and
was always intended to be part of a
"three-legged" financial stool for
retirement. The other two legs are
private
pensions
and
savings/investment income.
However, less than 59 percent
of all employees panicipate in an
employer-sponsored pension plan
and only a little more than half of
all people are actively saving for

--- -----Ohio Lotterv•

OSU opens
season with
easy victory

retirement. Some people are clearly
selling themselves up for disappointment and another difficult life
transition. Don 'I be among them.
Begin planning early for retirement.
A significant first step would be
to know just how much you can
expect from Social Security. You
can gel that information through a
Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate StatemenL Call Social Sec urity's toll-free number at 800-7721213 for more information.

Pick 3:
517
Pick 4:
5258
Buckeye 5:
4-8-23-27-29

WINNER5-Veterans Memorial Hospital Administrator Scott
Lucas, assisted by Doris lhle, hospital administrative assistant,
Thursday drew the names of winners of $25 Kroger Store gift certificates awarded by the hospital as a part of the hospital's activities at the Meigs County Fair. Winners are Patsy Ward, Union
Ave., Pomeroy; Chris Hill, College Road, Syracuse; June Marshall, Leading Creek Road, Middleport, and Wendi Krautter,
Welchtown Road, Pomeroy. Winners may pick up their certificates from the Women's Auxiliary Station in the hospital lobby.
They will be required to furnish identification.

threatened with large bills for the
prisoner's food, other expenses and
even the cost of the bullet if they
refuse consent.
Kidneys and corneas are the
" overwhelming majority" of
transplants in China, the report
said. Other orgWJs are transplanted,
but the success rates are low.
An estimated 1,400 to I , 700
kidneys from executed prisoners
were used in transplant operations
in 1992, and the number probably
has mcreased smce then, the rights
group said.
Human Rights Watch-Asia is a
private group that promotes human
rights and monitor abuses. Its
report was timed to coincide with
the opening of a meeting of the
World Transplantation Society in
Kyoto, Japan.

Cairo: Mother of cities, and of urban problems
out planning or government services.
The air is polluted, grime and
desert dust cover everything, traffic
is a nightmare. The honking of
taxis, buses and private cars seems
10 subside only on Fridays, when
the din is replaced by Muslim
prayers blaring from the loudspeakBy G.G. LaBELLE
ers of more than 1,000 mosques.
Associated Pres.~ Writer
Coexisting with the sprawling
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -The
slums
are 1,000-year-old mosques.
thousands of people coming to
modem
hotels WJd office buildings,
Cairo to argue strategies for curbcafes
where
men discuss the day's
ing world population need only a
events
over
water
pipes, bars where
look around to see the scope of the
the
young
imbibe
rock music and
problem.
Greater Cairo's population_ has beer, and suburban-style homes
grown from I million to 14 million and tree· lined streets.
Cairenes crowd the streets at
since the 1920s. An estimated 5
night,
carrying their children or
million live in what Cairo bureautugging
them along. Young couples
crats call "informal settlements"
- slums that have sprouted withEDITOR'S NOTE - More than
15,000 people are expected in
Cairo for the U.N. Conference on
Population and Development that
begins Sept. 5, The city embodies
many of the problems they would
like to solve.

Milad Hanna, a former chairman
stroll beside the Nile, the lifeline of
Egypt. Because of the famous of Parliament's housing committee,
Egyptian sense of humor, the mut- sees Cairo as the victim of its own
ters and growls of urban life often success - and of misdirected govdissolve into laughter with a well- ernment policies.
timed remark.
It is not only the nation's capi"I can't find a city anywhere tal. but the center of everything
that's more full of life than Cairo," else: business, education, the Musfonner Mayor Youssef Sabri Abu- lim religion.
Taleb once said. But he added:
For years, the government has
"From this comes all our prob- poured much of its resources int.n
lems: housing shortages, an Cairo, Hanna said, increasing the
exploding population, pollution, city's lure while doing little to
lack of cleanliness, traffic, every- develop other areas.
thing."
Cairo was founded in 969, and
''Cairo is Jiving at the expense
by the 1300s the famous Arab trav- of the rest of the population of
eler Ibn Batuta had named it "the Egypt," he said in an interview.
mother of cities." In many ways, it
also is th~ mother of urban problems.

Two artists share the same
dream _
Coming from different backgrounds they make some new
music. Lamar. of African descent,
was born in Youngstown. He
moved to Meigs County at 2 years
old. Lamar went to Salisbury Elementary and began singing_ He
sang in the choir and other small
groups,
Roger is of Hispanic descent,
but in the eyes of their music they
see no color - thus the name
"Colour Blind." Their music is for
all audiences.
The group joined four years ago.
Roger was trying to put a group
together when he met Lamar, the
son of Helen and James Williams
Sr.
The duo decided they would
achieve the same goals together
and began hard work towards
reaching their dream. In the spring
of 1991, Roger had to move to F&gt;aiJas, Texas.
Lamar then married in July
1992 to Amanda Bissell and they
left for Dallas, beginning to perform. The duo, away from singing,
work for a computer company.
With "La Familia Productions,"

By JAMES 0. CLIFFORD
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- The
transcontinental trek ended with the
van rolling under a welcoming banner reading "The Lard Car." The
exhaust coming out of the tailpipe
had a whiff of doughnuts rather
than the usual diesel miasma
The four women on board called
themselves the "Greasy Riders."
And what was in the rank never
saw the inside of an oil well.
The women fueled their 1984
Chevy van with used french fry oil
from fast-food eateries for a lrlp of
more than 3,000 miles that started

COLOUR BLIND
Colour Blind began to gel more
shows.
Radio station 100.3 KLML
plays several of the band's songs.
Colour Blind has also begun to

work with producer Charles "Duke
Vunsion from Louisiana.
With strong beat and soul-full
ballads they prepare to give the
world a culture shock.

Rutland Street Festival slated for Sept. 3
The Rutland Fire Department
and Auxiliary will host an annual
street festival and fish fry from It
a,m.-10 p.m. Sept. 3 at the frre hall.
Food will be served starung at
11 a.m. and will include: fish, hot
dogs, sloppy joe's, ice cream, pop
com snow cones and cotton candy.
A pi~ baking and cake decorating
contest will be held also. The
entries will be accepted at II am.

and judging will be held at 11;30
a.m. Winning entries will be auctioned at 6 p.m, with the celebrity
aucllon.
Prizes for the pie baking contest
will be $25 for f~r.~t place; $15 for
second place: and $10 for third
place. The cake decorating contest
will have prizes of $35, $25 and
$1 5 for firs[, second Wld third
Cartoon characters will be pre-

sent at II a.m. Sept. 3 giving autographs to children. Craft tables are
still available and to register, call
Kimberly Willford at 742-2103.
The Gold Wing Motorcycles
will cruise in at noon. Pure Countrv
Band will play from 4-6 p.m. and
1·9 p.m.
A dunking machine and kids •
games will be held all day . Come
and support the local fare depanmenl

' ~\-~
'

Aug. 10.
"This is great, exciting," said
Sara Lewison, 37, who was at the
wheel when the blue van pulled in
late Saturday. "We met some really great people."
It was part of a "Fat of the
Land" project designed to prove
the feasibility of using vegetable
oil as a vehicle fuel. It works only
with a diesel engine, but doesn't
produce the usual diesel smell.
The van averaged 24 mpg, about
what it would on regular diesel
fuel, Lewison said, and they had no
mechanical problems with the fuel
system.
It's not the farst time vegetable

or animal fat has been poured into
a fuel tank. Diesel fuel based on
soybean oil has been used in
demonstration projects around the
nation. Overseas, some countries
require the use of vegetable- based
diesel fuels in areas where air pollution is a concern.
''Rudolf Diesel, the guy who
invented the diesel, experimented
with vegetable oil and the Army
ran a tank with it in World War
II," said Florence Dore, who drove
the van for part of tbe trip and
served as spokeswoman.
This trip, the women said, was
the first cross-country demonstration of a recycled cooking oil fuel.

downs, pets who were too much
work after the thrill wore off.
That's the story of Bogie, the
undisputed king of Gregory's jungle. He had three previous owners
before Gregory bought him.
~es~it~ his traumatic past,
Bog~e h11 11 off with Gregory right
away, jumping on his hand to be
petted, nibbling gently on his
shoulder to show affection.
Gregory begWJ his bird collecting 15 years ago with two small
finches. But the fmches multiplied.
Soon, his house was filled with the

birds. Gregory sold many of his
finches and used his profits to buy
other feathered creatures.
Birds do not like everyone, but
they Oock to Gregory and he uses
them to teach neighborhood children about animals.
;
"You kind of wonder whether
you're a bird person, or if the birds
pick their own people,'' he said.
He does not train his birds, but
they perform their own tricks: They
kiss him gently with their beaks
and nibble on his eyelashes.

"~

• &lt;

,;·::.

_,_;..;_t'lc,

Air Force Ainnan Jason L. Powell recently graduated from Air

Force basic training at Lacldand
Air Force Base, San Antonia,
Texas.
The son of John M. and Debbie
L. Powell of Syracuse, he is a 1993
graduate of Southern High School.
RACINE GRANGE
Racine Grange 2606 elected
officers at its recent meeting at the
grange hall.
Elected were: Dorothy Smith,
master; Chuck Yost, overseer:

Emma Adams,lecturec; Laura Circle, steward; Helen Pickens, assistant steward; Geraldine Cross, lady
assistant steward; Mary Easlerday,
chaplain: Jean Alkire, secretarytreasurer; Mite Duhl, gatekeeper;
Nita Yost, ceres; Mary Kay Yos1,
pomona; Barbara Dugan, flora;
Mary Easterday, Chuck Yost and
Emma Adams. executive committee.

The meet,ing was opened by the
Pledge of Allegiance and closed in
the fourth degree.

t Section, 10 Pogn 35 conta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 30, 1994

Copyright t994

A Multimedlolnc. N-paper

Pomeroy Council
approves rural
enterprise zone
Pomeroy Village Council
approved county membership in
the Rural Enterprise Zone pro~
at a special meeting Monday rughL
Mayor John Blaettnar said council unanimously approved aU three
readings of the resolution as an
emergency measure.
"I'm very much in favor of
this," Blaettnar said. "If we are
going to move in this county, it is
absolutely essential."
The Rural Enterprise Zone program, administered by the Ohio
Department of Development, is
designed to promote economic
development by offering tax incentives to companies willing to move
into the county.
Blaeunar commended county

~..

Economic Development Director
Julia Houdashelt -Thornton and
Prosecuting Allorncy John R.
Lentes for their role in promoting
the program.
"This will benefit all communities," Blaettnar added.
Present were Blaeunar, Clerk
Kathy Hysell and councilmen Scoll
Dillon, Bill Haptonstall, John
Musser, Larry Wehrung, George
Wright and William Young.
Before the county can be considered for the program, it needs to
be approved by all 12 townships,
the county's five villages and by
the board of county commissioners_
Currently, county membership
in the program has been approved
by Pomeroy and II of the county's
12 townships.

Southern Local School District
- 4 mills, three year renewal levy
for current expenses;
Pomeroy Village- I mill, five
year renewal levy for fire protection;
Racine Village- .7 mill, five
year renewal levy for fire protec·

Thursday's election filing deadline.
In addition, voters will elect candidates 10 four county offices.
Tax issues to be decided
include:
Letart Township - I mill, five
year:renewal levy for fire protec- . tion;
tion;
Rutland Village - 2.5 mills,
Orange Township - 2 mills, five year levy for current expenses.
five year renewal levy for ftre proIn addition, voters will select
tection;
candidates for county commission·
Lebanon Township - I mill, er, county auditor, common pleas
five year renewal levy for ftre pro- court judge and county court judge.
tection;
Fred W. Crow III Wld Patrick H.
Scipio Township - lfl mill, O'Brien, both incumbents, are runfive years renewal levy for main- ning uncontested for the office of
taining and operating cemeteries;
common pleas court judge and
Salem Township - 1/2 mill, county court judge, respectively.
five year renewal levy for mainNancy Parker ~-Campbell, a
taining Wld operating cemeteries;
Republican, is the sole candidate
Sutton Township - 1 mill, five for county auditor.
year renewal levy for fire protecThe only contested race is for
tion;
one of three county commission
Eastern Local School District scats. Vying for the seat are Fred L.
4.4 mills, two year renewal levy for Hoffman, Republican, and Jack R.
emergency requirements of school Slavin, Democrat.
district;

Health reform plan
battle continues
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
health reform plan offered by
House Republicans could make
standard health insurance so expensive that many people would be
driven into minimal-coverage
catastrophic plans, congressional
analysts say.
House Republican Leader Bob
Michel of Illinois proposes expand·
ing the availability of catastrophic
health insurance plans that would
kick in after an individual had
spent $1,800, or a family, $3,600,
on medical expenses in a year.

To cover out-of-pocket expenses, Michel's plan, developed with
Sen. Trent Lou, R-Miss., would
allow individuals to establish taXsheltered medical savings accounts,
similar to Individual Retirement
Accounts.
But, in a tO-page analysis
released Monday, the Congressional Budgel Office cautioned: "In the
long run, the existence of any ~
of catastrophic-plus-MSA (medtcal
savings account) option that would
be attractive 10 a larl{e number of

Continued on page 3

&lt; ,,

Choose any term from
29 to 59 months.

13 Month CD

----Society scrapbook----MILITARY NEWS
Brady- 0. Johnson has graduated
from the U.S. Air Force Academy
at Colorado Springs, Colo. and has
been commissioned as a second
lieutenant in the Air Force,
The son of Larry G. and Gloria
].Johnson of Rutland, he is a 1989
graduate of Ohio Valley Christian
High School, Gall1pohs.

Vol. 45, NO. 83

Ohio tax hits both
poor and rich

":.

;-

high In 80s.

ent1ne

Meigs County voters will decide

Bird lover feathers nest of kindness in city
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Chris
Gregory has brought a bit of the
wild kingdom to his central city
neighborhood.
Dubbed the "Bird Man of Forest Avenue'' by residents, Gregory,
40, is a construction worker and
plwnber who raises exotic birds.
"These birds are my friends, my
babies, my family," he said.
More than 25 birds live with
him, including a pale pint Moluccan cockatoo named Bogie, fmches, quails and cockatiels.
Many of his birds are hand-me-

Low tonight In 60s, chanc• of
ralll. Wednesday shower s likely,

•

11 levy issues on Nov. 8 following

WINNING ENTRY - Mary Grueser of Pomeroy won the 19incb television given away as tbe door prize at Overbrook
Center's, Middleport, bootb at the Meigs County Fair.

Minimum deposit: $500.00

Minimum deposit: $2,500.00

Ohio Valley Bank

Member FDIC

These CDs are automatically renewable.
Penalty for early withdrawal. These offers will expire on 9/2/94.

'

RAIN

....,..,

.,,..,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio is one of the toughest states 10
avoid taxes in, a Georgia economist told the state's tax study commission.
Consultant Sally Wallace on Monday urged the Commission 10
Study the Ohio Economy and
Structure 10 exam_ine both en_ds
of the income spectrum when ll makes recommendauons on revising the state tax structure.
Unlike 27 other states, Ohio does not have a standard deduction
or zero-bracket amount for its personal income tax. That means
low-income individuals who would not be taxed in many other
states are here, she said.
"Ohio tends to get relatively low-income people into the system
quickly," said Wallace, an assistant professor of economics at
Georgia State University.
.
.
The state has nine tncome taX brackets, the htghest of whtch •
imposes a 7.5 pm:ent tax on income in exeess of $200,000. Only
California, with a highest rate of 11 perrunt, trnposes a b1gger tax
on its wealthiest residents.
"The burden for high-income taxpayers is '~bti to many
stales " Wallace said.
J
Ohlo is the only state in the nation that u .
i~e
taxes for state, municipal and school district [liii'JK}ses, allace Slld.
"The three-tiered structure may encourage high-income individuals to locate aaoss the border in other states,'' she said.

:rax

'

..

SECURING
STUDENTS'
SAFETY
Rutland Councilwomen
Gladys Barker, foreground, and Judy Denney are trying to keep
area school children
safe. This weekend the
two installed the stop
sign at the corner of Hill
Street and College
Avenue near Rutland
Elementary. Top photo Rutland Elementary
students enjoy their
first recess period after
returning to school from
a summer ofT.
(Sentinel photos by
George Abate)

Man critically
injured in accident

Race issue boils over in- court
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Robert
Shapiro glared at the silver-haired
lawyer to his right and started
speaking in the low, slow voice
thai, according to his media-advice
guide for lawyers, plays so well on
TV.
"This issue arose not by something Mr. Simpson's lawyers created," Shapiro insisted, addressing
the judge but looking right at
Robert H. Tourtelot, who represents Detective Mark Fuhrman.
Shapiro was talking about race,
which had been the stuf! of media
leaks and court papers until the
issue boiled over m the courtroom
during Monday's nationally televised hearing.
The defense denied raising the
race issue "per se," insisting that
Fuhrman's past actions - like
seekin~ a police disability pension
by cl81ming that working in black
and Hispanic neighborhoods made
him mentally unstable - have
betrayed him as a racist

Spending
pattern
revised
Southern Local Schools too•
action to ensure they keep up with
payments to gel out of the state
loan fund at its regular meeting
Monday nighL
Following the recommendation
of Superintcndcnt Bobby Ord, the
board voted unanimously to revise
the district's spending reduction
plan for this school year,
The board also handled a num ber of personnel matters:
- Accepted the resignation of
Rose Ann Jenkins as substitute
teacher;
- Approved Sharon Rhodes as
a substitute cook for this school
year;
- Rejected the proposal by
Joyce Ritchie to establish onehour-a-day sessions of venture capital aide at Racine and Letart elemcntarics;
- Allowed the 12 monthly
employees to take Aug. 19 off for
Fair Day.
In other action. the board agreed
to change the deadline for the frrst
semester for open enrollment to the
first Friday in the first full week in
October.
The board agreed to:
- Sell the following items at
the following prices, 25 cents for
light bulbs, $1 for ballast and $1
for light fixtures.
- Store the air compressor at
the bus garage. The hot water tank
and scrap metal will be given to
Mr. Sayre and Mr. Foreman.
- Purchase limestone for the
senior and junior high schools.
Handbooks for the senior and
junior high schools were also
accepted.
Any snow days over five
calamity days will have to be made
up before the end of the school
year. This satisfies the changes
made this past spring in ORC
3317.01 by the General Assembly.
Termination of pests was also
voted on. The board agreed to
employ Dodson Brothers Exterminating Co_ for this year's bug control at $171 per school and $256.50
for the high school. The cosL~ arc
the same as last year.
Members absent were Clifford
Tom Roseberry and Janet Susie
Grueser.

Meigs voters to
decide levy issues

'Lard Car' completes cross country run

Colour Blind
artists share
same dream

11111111
1 ::a ~

Page 4

China uses prisoners' organs for transplants
By RENEE SCHOOF
put to death since 1983, when the senL
Associated Press Writer
number of death sentences began to
Human Rights Watch-Asia said
BEIJING (AP) - Executed grow under a series of anti -crime Chinese trials often arc unfair including coerced confessions and
prisoners are the source of most crackdowns.
Corruption and drug-trafficking the growing use of torture Ill the
organ transplants in China. and the
donors sometimes are still alive arc among crimes punishable by 1980s - leadmg to a high ri sk
mnocent people arc executed and
when their organs are removed , a death.
human rights group says.
A secret Communist Party - become organ donors.
Executions appear to be sched- directive in 1983 said some antiThe group urged China to ban
uled according to transplant needs, government actions were punish- the use of prisoners' organs. and
Human Rights Watch -Asia said in able by death , Human Rights sa1d fore1gn governments should
a report scheduled for release Mon- Watch-Asia said. But it noted that bar thetr citizens from getting
day . It said prisoners' consent is no executions of dissidents have organ transplants in China and
rarely sought or is coer~~d in the been reported in the pastl5 years.
should stop cooperating in Chinese
last few hours before death.
The group cited government transplant research .
In some cases, kidneys have documents, medical journal articles
It also urged China to abolish
been removed from prisoners the and statements by doctors and oth- the death penalty.
night before their executions, and crs as evidence that executed pris·
Executions in China are usually
some executions have been deliber· oners are the source of most organs by a bullet to the back of the head.
ately botched to keep the bodies used in transplants in China.
Human Rights Watch-Asia said
alive longer and improve chances
Chinese government offices families either are not informed
of organ transplant success, the were closed Sunday, and a tele- about the organ donation or are
rights group said.
phone call for comment was not
In other cases, medical person- answered
nel aucnd the execution and swiftly
The government long denied
remove the organs after death is that executed frisoners were used
announced, il said.
as a source o organs, the report
The number of executions in said. But it said that in 1993, China
China is a state secret. But Human told the U.N. Commillee Against
Rights Watch-Asia said "tens of Torture that organs occasionally
thousands" of people have been were removed with prisoners' con-

:~q(~~~
-·= . . Tl-~

Tounelot lashed back, accusing life is being destroyed day by
the defense of trying 10 shift atten- day." Tounetot said. "Whllt Mark
tion from O.J. Simpson and the is experiencing is a result of having
killings of his ex-wife and her been falsely accused of being a
friend by destroying Fuhrman's ractst and a bad cop."
name.
Judge Lance Ito said he would
"The only people calling Mark rule on whether to release the infora racist are these attorneys for the mation after reading written argudefense," he said. "We're going to ments.
fight back. By the time of the trial
Simpson, 47, has pleaded innoin this case, the entire world will cent to the June 12 knife killings
know that Mark is not a racist.''
Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
At the hearing, Simpson ;s Goldman. Jury selection is 10 begin
lawyers requested police and mili- Sept 19.
tary records on Fuhrman and three
Fuhrman delivered some of the
other police investigators. They most incriminatin~ testimony at
said they need the records 10 see if Simpson's prelim mary hearmg:
Fuhrman, who is white, had racist that he found the glove behind a
reasons to lie about finding a guest house on Simpson's estate
bloody glove outside Simpson's the morning after the killings, and
mansion.
!hat it apparently matched a glove
But Tounelot accused "desr,er- found near the bodies.
ate, snooping defense attorneys ' of
Discrediting Fuhrman would
character assassination.
serve several purposes for the
"The lives of two innocent defense, legal analysts said.
human beings have been tragically
taken in this matter. Now a third

A Middleport man was critically
injured Tuesday afternoon when
the house he was demolishing fell
and trapped him for nearly a half
hour, according to accident reports.
Norman Milliron, 69, Bone Hollow Road, had removed at least
two of the walls when the Hysell
Road home's roof caved in at 1:30
p.m. Monday, said Bruce Swift
captain of the Middleport Volun:
teer Fire DepartmenL
"Evidently he got a hold of
something that he shouldn't have
and it came down on him," Swift
said. "You could see he was pinned
by the rafters. The entire we1ght of
the roof was on him."
.When emergency crews arrived,
Milliron was already unconscious
Swift s&lt;!id. About 15 people includ:
ing neighbors joined to lift the roof
employing inflatable bags and
winches .
"I was most concerned about
gelling the roof off him," Swift
said.
Grant Medical Center's LifeFlight II flew him to Columbus,
where he was listed in critical condi_tion ~~ press time this morning
Wtth IDJUnes 10 the head and entire
body, according to a hospital official.

Inmon plans to tour state after recovery
From AP, Stair Reports
Gubernatorial candidate Billy
Inmon is changing his campaign
strategy to include a tour of the
state when he recovers from his 27day hunger strike.
Inmon, 47, an independent candictate, remained in fair condition at
G1'8nt Medical Center, where he
was taken after he collapsed on
Saturday. He began the water-only
diet Aug. 1, vowing oot to eat until

Republican
Gov.
George
Vmoovich agreed to debate him.
Nonn Myers, Inmon's running
mate, said Monday night that as
soon as the candidate feels better,
the~ will begin a tour of the state.
'We will be visiting towns and
cities around Ohio,'' Myers said.
"Not necessarily the largest one,
but one that would be benefiCial to
our campaign."
Myers said the campaign has a

•

list of potential sites, · but he
declined to identify any until the
schedule is solidified.
Inmon is drinking diluted fruit
juices and some chicken broth. but
it would be a while before he could
eat solid foodJ; Myers said.
Inmon's blood pressure dropped
Sunday night and doctors were
waiting for it to stabilize before
releasing him, Myers said.
"He continues to improve."

said Dr. Thomas Harder. ''Right.at
the moment he can sit and stand
without becoming dizzy. He's still
a little unsteady on his feet.''
Inmon invited Voinovich or
some of his staff to meet with him,
but Inmon has not been contacted
Myers said.
'
"I didn't think they would. I've
said From the beginning that
Voinovich wouldn't debate him

Continued on page 3
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="364">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9736">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31556">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31555">
              <text>August 29, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2496">
      <name>frecker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="441">
      <name>graham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5507">
      <name>lease</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3493">
      <name>wyant</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
