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I

Ohio Lottery

r

Farewell party held
or Rev. Grace

Davey
....

•

The COilgregations of the Kacme

and E11$t Letart United Methodist
Churches said farwell to their
minister of the past nine y~ with
a potluck dinner and a roast on the
evening of June 25.
Reverend Roger Grace along
with his wife.Sue and three sons
Todd, Scott, and Ryan will be
moving 10 his new appoinlment in
New Lexingron the first of July.
The gathering began at 4 p.m.
with friends, people frpm the
community, and congregation
-.members (!rapping by to .wish
Reverend Grace and his family
well an~ 10 share memories of the
past nine years. The potluck dinner
was served at 6 p:tn. at the church's
new .shelter house located behing
the Racine Church building. MCI!t

for the dinner was furnished by the
Ervin Farms of Oak Grove in
. Rac.ine and was slow cooked
during the day by Howard, Herbie,
and BuddyErvin alo!lg with John
Dudding and Bob HiD.
Followin·g the dinner everyone
gathered around to "roast" the
departing pastor. · Making
presentations at the roast were
several ministers from the area
including Reverend Paul McGuire,
Reverend Keith Rader, Reverend
Kenny Baker, Reverend Sharon
Hausman, and Reverend 'Florence
Smith.
A special award was given to
Reverend Grace by Bud Rose of
Ravenswood Branch of the
Steelworkers Union for his part in
assisting tb.e families .or the

.,
I

•

"

steelworkers through the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish of
which Reverend Grace is the
OUtgOing director.
•
1
Also niaking presentations were
representatives of the Racine
chun:h including Lee Lee, Mariam
Bell, Karen Walker, Fred Smith, ·
Sue Garee, Bob Hill, Jackie
Wagner, and the "Roastmaster"
G(lt)' Walker.
The evening was topped off by
music from Mike and Marce Follin,
long time friends of the Grace
family from the Columbus area
The Reverend Kenneth Molter
wiU become the new pas10r of the
Racine and East Letart United
Methodist Churches effective July

Pick 3:

Allison
killed

247
Pick 4:

8451
BuckeyeS:
6-7-16-34-35

Page4

•

..

.'
..
Vol. 44, NO. 53

'

'

MiddlepQrt adopts $1.7 million operating budget

I.

PARTON MORE THAN A . SINGER· Dolly Tenn~ on Saturday July 10. Partqa ·w~u spend 1
Ryan Terzopplous. .
Misty Puckelt.
Parton, shown In this Mareh 1993 me photo, reported SlO million to turn the town Into a
First grade • Ty Ault, Alisia
Fourth grade • Kendra Cleland,
broke ground r... the ftrst of·ber three planned smaU-!ICale NashviUe. (AP Photo/File)
Burton, Curtis Jewell, Ashley Dustin Erlewine, Roben Johnson,
country
music concert halls In Pigeon Forge,
O'Brien, Kindra Snouffer, Eric Montgomery, Aulllmn Slater,
Matthew Strong, Paul Will, Angela Carl Rickard.
Wilson, Kara Buffington, Brandyn
Fifth grade - Orion Barett, Lisa
Bumgardner. Thurien Carter. Joel Bias, Scott Colwell, Amber
Clelland, Jaynee Davis, Kelly Gardner, Tawny Jones, Stephanie
Freeman, Nicole Harper, Amanda Kopec, Brandy Laudermilt,
Hoyt, Annette Pridemore, Xantha Jeremiah Smith, Laura Payne,
Smith, Brandi Thom11s, Jordan Michelle Fort.
Williams.
Sixth grade • Candy Barnett,
Second grade • Kayle Davis, Beth Call, Lori Kinnison, Jessica
air-conditioning and no bugs."
Marii! Drenner, Michelle Drenner, Priddy, Kim Ritterbeck, Hope Seventh Avenue Shines on Fifth
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Can
Snyder, known for showy Gimme a Break- Noi
Robyn Freeman, Josh Price, N:ea.ce, Rebekah Smith, Bridge~
NEW YORK (AP) - It's a day ;
Seventh Avenue dress a table as costume jewelry, created a
Brandon Ramsburg,Jeremy Roush, Vaughan.
off
10 a bad start when you put on a ;
well as it dresses fashion's elite? "Midsummer·Night's Dream"
Nichole Runyon, Ben See, Chris
Salisbury Elementary
clean
shirt and find that half a '
garden setting with fantasy chairs
Smith, Cody s"mith, · Jennifer
First grade - Jeremy Banks, Tiffany &amp; Co. thin!Cs so.
Isaac Mizrahi, Maria Snyder, and chandelier which ·she had button was left in the laundry. ·
Zielinski, Jassiline Carter, Misty Johnathon Bobb, Nicole Butcher,
Take heart. There's something ·
Clay, Katie Jeffers, Kyle Hannan, Ben Collins, Jesse Gillette, Peter Anna .Sui and Richard Tyler were seulpted. She added table linens
called
the Diamond Z buuon ·that's
Jennifer Stepp.
·
Kling, Pamela Martin, Tia Pratt, invited by the Fifth Avenue , and chair cushions in a red, qrange
virtually unbreakable. A spinoff of
Third grade · Carrie Abbott, Jenny Proffitt, Jessica Rosier, emporium 10 try their hand at. the and fuchsia fabric of her design.
Tyler put a canvas sail on the high-tech applications such as
Tiffany Summer Table Setting
Stephanie Bell, Maggie Roseberry, Felisha Stumbo.
Jessica Roush, Clara Sanders,
Second grade - Marc Barr, Show with a theme of "Fashion floor and built a "Campaign aerospace · and automotive
Matthew Williamson, Jonathan Dawna Brumfield, ]ohnathan and Color" incorporating the Blues" theme atop it with ol(j industries, the ceramic material
Wilson, Emili Payne, Nichole Diddle, Ashley Eblin, Juley Eblin, store's china, silver and 'other table maps, tripod stools, folding cots called TI'Z is supposed 10 have 2
Runyon, Beth ShaJ1er.
Melody Felts, Ashley Fields, Jon accessories. It is on view through and plenty of other nautical 1fl times the strength of steel.
The Diamond Z butiOn is made
paraphernalia.
D.H.2 • Chuck Aeiker, Lester Halar, Chris Haning, Bubby Haye, Sept 4.
by
Coors Ceramicon Designs Ltd.,
Mizrahi's
"Midnight"
teamed
a
Anna Sui, who says her offiCe is
Aeiker, Jennifer Brickles, Jessica Meghan Haynes, Timmy Hubbard,
a
subsidiary
of ACX Technologies
Davis, Dustin Fellure, Jodi Reeves. Josh King, Shawna Manley, black lacquer grand piano with a filled with sunflowers and
Fourth gtll(je. Andy Davis, Mike Jennifer Morgan, Heather Riffle, white linen and silver picnic sunflower motifs, built a "Summer in Golden, Colo. So far, it's on
setting. "I brought the picnic Tea" setting on the theme. The shirts from Ike Behar and
Day, Hollie Griffith, Sarah Houser, Jason Rosier.
Brenna Sisson, Michael Stacy, Third grade· Bobbi Burson, Levi indoors," he said, "because there's patiQ table was covered with a Nordsti'om's private label.
Now, about thread that won't
Adam Shank; Kelly Canan, Tiffany Gillette, Mindy O'Dell, Amber .
crocheted black cloth and set with
Day, Nicholas Dettwiller, Ashley Proffitt, Joey Martin, Chris Rupe.
Whobrey,Jason WithereD.
china in a sunflower design. A ravel ....
Hann,ahs, Curtis Hanstine, Andrea Fourth
grade
April
Twelfth grade - Debbie Alkire, silver tea service on a gigantic
Liz Taylor Calling
Krawsczyn, Chris Pickens, Blankenship, Shandi Bobb, Sarah Tim Baker, Lorri Butnem, Linda silver tray dominated a sideboard.
NEW YORK (AP) - Costume
Shannon Price, Ashley Thomas, Clifford, Sandi Gilkey, Brandy Chapman, Wendy Clark, Leann
Said Sui:
jewelry
isn't new 10 Avon, but a
ChristopberWard.
Graham, Abby Hubbard, Grace Cundiff, Kelly Doidge, Carlton
"Do I have silvet'l No.
collection with design input from
L.D. - Dustin Butcher, J.D. Kitchen, Car~ Midkiff,Heather · Drummer, Ben F11ckler, Kimberly
''Do I cook? No. .
Etizabeth Taylor is.
Fetty, Heather FranckoiVi8lc,
Grueser, Tim Heldreth.
Whaley.
"Do I eat at honie? No.
The upseale pieces, which will
Fifth grade - Amber Blackston,
Fifth grade - Beverly Burdette, Allsion Gannaway, Billy !]laze,
"This is a whole fantasy thing.
sell
for about $40 to $200, are to be
Tod Daniels, Melissa Davis, Sara Marjorie Halar, Tiffany Harder, Autumn Griffith, Traeey Grueser, Who has time for tea?"
available in November through
Fife, Amber Perkins, Ryan Pratt, Morgan Mathews, Kim Peavley, Charles James, Lori Kelly, Gary
Kerr, Kevin Lambert, Kelly Ouchless Shoes
Wes Thoene, Julie Spaun, Mike Anna Story, Marissa Whaley.
Avon sales reps· and its direct-mail
Williamson, C.D. Ellis, Jennifer
Sixth grade ·Lacy Banks, Tricia Marcinko, Billie Marcinko,
catalog.
NEW YORK (AP)- Finally,
Shrimpliil, Adam Thomas, Davis, Meredith Felts, Tamra Michelle McDaniel, Courtney cushioned insoles that help absorb
"We'll look 10 some of her most
Whitney Thomas.
O'Dell, Joel Tremblay, Kelli midkiff, Lorena Oiler, Stephanie the shock of mean city streets memorable film roles, such as
Price, Rick Price, Jennifer Proffitt, without cramping your feet.
Sixth grade - Stoney Day, . Lightfoot.
'Cleopatra,' for inspiration," says
Jennifer Heck, Missy Darnell, Amy
Meigs Junior High School
Tammy Queen, Rachel Reynolds,
Audrey
Yanthis-Lucas, general
They're from Dr. Schons and are
Johnson, Kristina Kennedy, Stefani
Seventh grade- David Anderson, Regina Rider, Angela Searles, made of wafer-thin Poron, a high· manager of Avon's jewelry and
Pickens, B.J. Smith, Kasey Lauren Anderson, Rachel Ashley, Tammy Searles, Emily Shain, tech foam. The styles for high-heel accessories unit.
Williams, Jonathan WyatL
Mick barr, Billi Jo Bentley.• Virginia Shuler, MeliSa Sisson, dress pumps and casual shoes are
Avon is the world ' s largest
Rutland Elementary
Michelle Bissell, Carly Chasteen, Lisa Snyder, Rian Spencer, part of a new line of foot comfort manufacturer and marketer of
First grade · Jessica Anderson, Joe D' Augustino, Ginger Darst, Christopher Swanson, Sheryl products for men and women fashion jewelry. Miss Taylor has
Tyler Barnes, Joanna Bowersock, Brad Davenport, Terra Dowler, Thoma, Rusty Triplett, Katrina available at relail in mid-July. They long been known for•her love and
Heidi Gilmore, Randy Hudson, Crystal Eblin, Jason Frecker, Turner, Michael Vance, Michelle have a suggested relail of $4 to $9 acquisition of precious gems.
Don Hysell, Nicole McDaniel, Danielle Grueser, Jenny Hayman, Young.
each.
Christina
Miller, Melissa. Myca Haynes, Mike Leifheit,
Richmond, Matthew Salser, Steven McCullough, Wendy
Miranda Stewart, Jamitha Willfo.V. Shrlmplin, Zinnia Spears, Charles
Second grade· Kerry Allen , Trader, A.J. Vaughan, Nancy
Ashley Bartrum, Brandon Black, Whaley, Melissa Whaley, Sandra
Brook Bolin, Hollie Ferrell, J.R. Young.
Hawk, Jessica Justice, Mallory
Eighth grade • Jo~n Barnhart,
King, Steven McDaniel, Rachael Lillian Barnhart, Jo.sh Butcher,
Morris, Samantha Tilley, Casey Desiree Clemons, Jenny Clifford,
Tillis, Allison Williamson, Nicki Amy Clonch, Taryn Doidge, Anna
Wines, Kenny Zuspan.
Fink, Whitney Haptonstall, David
Third grade - Bradley Baylor, HeighiOn, Betsy Houdashelt, J..ibby
Announces the Opening of His Medical Practice in
Aaron Bowersock; Erin Bush, King, Aimee Kloes, Erin
Gabriel Jenkins, Ryan Kauff,_ Krawsczyn, Shawn Leach, Tim
Darrick Knapp, 1olin Lentes, Lewis, Josh Marshall, Michelle
Melissa Richmond, Amber Miller, Scott Mitch, Jessica
Snowden.
McElroy, Stacie Price, Stacy Reed,
Fourth grade - Adam Barnett, Cynthia Sandy, Amber Slaven,
Derrick Bolin, Skip Dodson, Randy Smith, Beverly Stewart,
DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF DISEASES OF THE BRAIN AND NERVES
Stephan;~
Stew•n
B
J
Workm
Alison Hays, B.J c Kennedy,
"
.
.,.., . .
an,
Bethany McMillin, Beatnce Allison Williams.
Morgan, Tiffany Priddy. Elizabeth
Meigs High School
Smith, Trish Walker.
·Ninth grade - Amber Bennett,
Fifth grade· Tiffany Halfhill, Anne Brown-, Jake Gannaway,
Sara lhle, Amanda Miller, Joshua Alison Gerlach, Michael Hawley,
Sorden, Adrianne Tilley, Brooke Michael Jarvis; Dorothy Leifheit,
Suite 13
Williams, Shawn Workman.
Lori Russell, Kim Smith, Cynthia ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Office Building
Sixth grade .. Jamie Barrett, Stewart' James D. Wh'te
I •
Robby Diddle, Ben Fowler, Justin
Tenth grade. Sarah E. Anderson,
2520 Valley Drive
Jeffers, Matthew Justice, Alyson Juanita Arthur, D;~vid Feuy, JIIITO&lt;j
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
Patterson, Melissa Priddy, C!ay10n Folmer, Kelley Grueser, Heidi
Office Hours: 9 a.m. • 5 p.m., Monday throu&amp;h Friday
Tromm.
'
Huffman, Kimberly Janey, Mandy
L.D.- James Haning.
Jones, Lisa Montgomery, Shilo
'
D.H. ·Samantha Marshall.
Moore, Adam Sheets, Kelly Smith,
For appointments, call:
Salem Center Elementary
Brent Smith, Brian Smith, Jason ..
First grade - Donald Barnett, Taylor, Stephanie Thomas, Crystal
(304) 675-25.51
Robert Council, Adam Jones, Vaughan, Lisa Yeauger.
Aubrie Kopec, Corey Longstreth,
Eleventh grade - Matthew Clark,
Amanda Priddy, Josh Ray, Jessica Trl!ci Cro.w, Paul Davis, Brian
Smith, Philip Smith.
Devoll, ~rystal Donohue. Dawn
Second grade
Rac!lel Erwin, Tiacy Fife, Jason George,
Argabright, Lindsay Bolin, Ashley Danielle Gray, Meron Grueser,
C::olwell, Austin Cross, Kelly Joan HIJft, David Herdman,
Johns10n, Krista! JohnsOI'l, Shenell Heather Howard, Heather Hudson,
McKnight, Jennifer Priddy, Melissa Jeffers,~ McDonald,
The family of professionals
' ,·
Amanda Smith.
Jason Miller, Charles Parker, Cora
Third grade · Josh Bass, Melissa See, Stephanie See, Shannon
•
Kirk, Josh Napper, Jarrod Ogdi~. Spaun, Tony a Thornton : Jeff
2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340
Jessica Schuler, Kristy Puckett, Tracy, Marlo White, Kevin

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ,
A $1.7 million operating budget
for 1994 was adopted by Middleport Village Council at Monday
night's meeting.
The projected receipts fall
$130,196 short of being enough to
cover anticipated expenditures dur·
ing the year, according 10 the budget figures.
Estimated receipts for 1994 are
$1,528,400 with an expected carryover balance from this year of
$55,104, making a tolal of estimat·
ed funds available for operating the
village next year of $\,583,504.
Al)ticipated expenditures, bow,. ever, IOtaled $1,713,700. · The new
budget is about $9,000' less than
that adopted for the current year. In
1993 that total figure was
$1,722,950.
.
The 1994 budget was described
by Mayor Fred Hoffman as a
"planning mechanism, a wish list"
in prep8111tion for the actual appropriations wbich are made in January.
The budget passed by a vote of
four to one.
Councilman Paul Gerard voted

Comfortable shoes, unbreakable
buttons and Av~n jewelry to come

KRIS

G. MuRTHY, M.D.
NEUROLOGY

.

PLEASANT.VALLEY HOSPITAL

r

1 Section. 10 P•oe• 35 centa
A Multimedlolnc ..Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 13, 1993

Mullln1ecla Inc.

Meigs local honor roll announced
The following students Jiave
recently been named 10 the honor
roll for the Meigs ·Local School
District for the fourth nine week
grading period: .
Bradbury Elementary
Sixth grade - Jenni Howerton,
. Jessica Johnson, Timothy Justice
·King, John Davidson, Jessica Cale,
Austin Carr, Jason Harris, Melissa
Holman, Marc Jones. Becky
Johnson.
Fifth grade • Seth Baker. Staeey
Brewer, Mindy Halley, Renee
Stewart, Bethany Boyles, Sarah
Bniuer, Ashley Burton, Brant
Dixon, Crystal Leach, Nick
Michael.
.L.D. - Jason· Boggess, Lester
Lowery, Crystal Wells, Kim Bush,
Brooke Hart, Daisy Spears.
D.H. • Tammy Pletcher,
Shawnita Johnson, Penny Napper,
Georginia.Spears.
Harrisonville Elementary
First grade • Tasha Boring, Kevin
Butcher, Scott Chapell, Michael
Clark, Maegan Dodson, Erin
Doughty, James Hensley, Courtney
Kennedy, Sarah Lee, Shane Lewis,
Mark Maue, Derek McDaniel,
Bobbi Napper, Billy Reeves,
Matthew Wandling, Holley
Williams, Charley Williamson,
Joshua Yost. Ashelv YounJl.
Second grade· Justin Allen, Ben
Bookman, Wesley Call, Derrick·
Fackler, David Hall, Jami Hayes,
Crystal Jacks, Jessica King,
Christopher McDaniel, Jessica
PreasL
Third grade • J oeline Allen,
Ashley Burbridge, Samuel
Canterbury, Tasha Green. Ben
Haley. Afnber Haning, Jennifer
Reeves, Stacia Sims, Rees Wyant.
Fourth grade - Mark Browning,
·.Christopher Dodson , Amanda
Parsons, Albert Steams.
Fifth grade - Raina Bennett,
Jason Miller, Kyle Smiddie, James
Stanely, Adam Walker.
Sixth grade- Lisa Crawley, Jason
Preast, Franco Romuno.
Middleport Elementary
First grade - David Boyd, Page
Bradbury, Kenny Carsey, Candace
Casey, Jamie Chapman, Katie
Childs, Jeremy Dingey , Jennifer
DuM, Ryan Frazier, Tyler French,
Ashley Halley, Malissa Hoffma~.
Jessica Howell, Kim Johnson, Beth
Landers, Jonathan Larkins. Ashley
Payne, Erica Poole, John Roush,
Angie Smith, Donnie Staggs, Ruby
Sti:wart, Rhonda Wagner.
Second grade - Carrie Darst,
Peter Ditty, Casey Dunfee , Zac
Gilkey, Cole Haggerty, Lucy
Howerton, Andy Hysell, Brooks
Johnson, Will Kauff, Amber Lee,
Tony Martinez. Alisha Mohler,
Heather Phalin, Nikkie phillips,
Abram Sayre, Stephanie Schwab,
Jeremy Selby, Joshua Simpson,
· Carla Smith, Jimmy Smith, Angel
SlOne, Emily SIOry, Sammy Stout,
Beth Wilfong, Hannah Woolard.
· Third grade - Andrew Baker,
Erica Bryan, Trevor Buck, Charle
Eakins, Delana Eichinger, Heather
Fetty; Michelle French, Heather
Fry, Erin Gerard, Joshua Glaze,
Tiffnay Hall, Erin Hartson, Corrie
Hoover, Staesha Kennedy, Joshua
Lynch, Nickolas McLaughlin,
Richard Michael, Monica Moon,
Erin Rals10n, Jacob Smith, Rebecca
Smith, Tyler Stewart, Brandon
Werry, Tara WyatL
Fourth grade - Whitney Ashley,
Jessica Chapman, ,Nicole Evans,
Chasity Fowler, Abby Harris ,
Michael Hawkins, Joshua Hayman,
Derek Johnson, Jeremy Jones,
Jason Knight, Zachery Krautter.
Carrie Lightfoot, Tiffany Qualls,
Justin Robson, Amy Sarver,
Brooke .Smith, Donnie Smith,
· Chasity Stewart. Ian Story, Kathy
Taylor, Rachel Taylor, Stephanie
Wjgal.
Pomeroy Elementary
D.H.l - Melissa Clark, ~mber
Armstrong, . Meagan Gt~ens,
Jessica Gray. Courtney Htcks,
Robbie Johnson, Kathy Jones,
Charlie Richards, Amber Pierce·,

Low toaJabtla 601. PIJ'IIy
clOI!dy. H!p Wedntlday ID 801.

RECOGNIZED FOR WORK ·Middleport
Recreation Committee members, len to right,
Arnold Johnson, Skip Johnson, and Bob
McClure were recognized for their hard work

and interest in developing Hartinger Park by
Middleport ViUage CouncU Monday pight. Here
Mayor Fred Hoffman, right, presents plaques to
the committee members.

About 230 - underground
employees at th' Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Mine 31
are still off the job today as company officials continue to monitor
water levels in the mine.
'
A significant amount of water
was discovered under ground in
Meigs Mine -31 at WilkesviUe Sunday evening. The cause of the
water problem has not yet been
determined, B. J. Smith, American
Electric Power public relations
director, said this morning.
"The water flow has. stabilized

and we should now be able to more
accurately de~ermine what the
problem is at Meigs 31," Smith
said.
.
.
Again ·employees of Meigs 31
who work underground have been
asked not to report to work until
notified, she said. Employees at the
office and surface operation at the
mine are working today.
T.he water problem at Mejgs ·
Mine 31 in no way affects operations at Meigs Mine 2, ~~tcording 10
Smith.
She said that the company is

working 10 determine the extent of
the flooding and to formulate its
plan to bring the mine back into
production.
Meigs No. 31 is working with
officials from the United Mine
Workers of America , the Federal
Mine Safety and Health Administration, the Ohio Division of
Mines, and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, .the public
relations director said.
Meigs Division has a total work
force of 815, according to Smith.

Midwestern flooding: 'We're
in a Third World country'o

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Ne\ts Staff
What was labeled Friday as "the ·
biggest seizure of firearms and
money in this county's history"
ended with a guilty p!ea 72 hours
later in the Meigs County .Court of
Common Pleas.
Robert D. Fife, 67, of Middleport, accused of two counts of
receiving stolen property and one
count of trafficking in food stamps,
pleaded guilty Monday afternoon
in front of Judge Fred W. Crow lll.
Under provisions of the plea
agreement, Fife will forfeit approximately $185,000 and about 3,000
rifles, shotguns and handguns
seized . from his South Third
Avenue home and business to the
Law Enforcement Trust Fund
where they will be distributed to
the Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office and the Meigs County Sheriffs Office.
In addition, Fife forfeited
approximately $60,000 from bank
accounts and all personal propeny
of which he is unable to prove
ownership. He will retain approximately $120,000 from bank
accounts ai\d all real estate includ- ·
ing his home.
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes recommended Fife receive
three consecutive 18-month sentences and that the sentences be
suspended due to Fife's age, lack
of a prior record and his cooperation. Lentes also recommended that
a pre-sentencing investigation be ~
held.
·
Fife' became impatient as Crow
repeatedly asked him if he under- .

upper Midwest as residents and . said. Branstad said he will ask the
National Guardsmen piled sand· government to declare all of Iowa a
bags to tty to save homes and busi, disaster area.
.
nesse.S.
The nooding has caused at least
Des Moines and other cities 19 deaths, 13 in Missouri. The Red
have been brought to a near sland- Cross said more than 7,600 'homes
still. About 250,000 people in and were damaged or destroyed in Minaround Iowa's ·capital were without nesota, Wisconsin, South Dakola,
running water after floodwaters Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri
knocked out a water treatment and Illinois.
plant over the weekend.
No looting has been. reported,
Dama~ across the region will but some residents still feared losfar exceed the $1.2 billion in aid ing their belongings . In West
anl)ounced by President Clinton Alton, Mo., Michael Payeur
last week, Gov. Terry Branstad refused to leave his waterlogged
home and relied on supplies
brought to him by boat by his
daughter.
"'There's looters out here," he
said. :'They can get in and out."
Water Patrolman Don Carnahan
A Racine woman was treated at Veterans Memorial Hospital late
navigated the West A110n area with
Monday night for injuries suffered in a one-car accident on East
care. "You got to watch the road
Main Street, Pomeroy.
signs," he said. "They'll sure cut a
Accordil\8 to Pomeroy police, Kimberly J. Follrod, 29, of
hole in the boat."
Racine, w~ pulling from the.Eag!I:S parking lot onto East Main
Vice President AI Gore visited
when she either went to sleep or lost control and struck a handi·
Lemay, Mo., and Grafton, Ill., on
CALDWELL, Ohio (AP) - A
capped sign and then a ~tility pole. She was taken to the hospital by
Monday. The water was so high he
the Pomeroy squad, was treated and released.
had to duck when his boat passed man sentenced to prison with· no
There was moderate damage to the front end of her 1990 Ponti,
under power lines. He also took a chance of parole for 165 years in
ac. It was towed from the scene.
helicopter tour and said in wonder, the slayings of five outdoorsmen
"You can't even tell where the should have been given the death
Mississippi begins and the farm- penalty, relatives of some of his
victims said.
land ends. '
Michael C. Hnddles10n of Racine is not the person by the same
Thomas Lee Dillon of Magnolia
.Gore talked 10 the president by
name from Point Pleasant who has been charged witll burglary.
phone and then assured residents pleaded guilty Monday to the
thete would be a "forceful, coordi- aggravated murd~r &lt;;Jf the ~en ~ho
were hunting, f1shmg or JOggmg
nated response."
alone
in eastern 'Ohio between
More rain was forecast for today
The budget for 1994 was approved when Pomeroy Village CounApril
1989
and April 19J12.
.
and Wednesday, but the National
cil met in special session Monday evening. r
Dillon,
43,
showed
no
emouon
Weather Service said it was. not
The only other matter of business discussed was a problem with
expected to raise water level~. ·as he entered his pleas before Judge
hig~ grass and weeds in the Union Avenue area from which several
Some Mississippi tributaries were John Nau in Noble County Comcouncil members have received COil) plaints by residents there.
slowly falling. The Des Moines mon Pleas Court. t~au sentenced
Attending the mC~;ting were Council members Beuy Baronick,
River was 7.8 feet above flood Dillon under a plea agreement that
John BIIICUJiar, Scou Dillon, Larry Wehruiig, Thomas Werry, BiD
stage at Des Moines on ·Monday allowed Dillon to avoid the death
Young, Mayor Reed and Cleric Kathy Hysell.
.
. but was down nearly a foot from penalty.. .
Mayor's court followed
the
7
p.m.
meeting
ar'l:30
p.m.
Killed
w&amp;re
Gary
Bradley, 44,
Sunday's reconl'cresL
..
of Williamstown, W.Va.; Claude

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) Residents carrying plastic jugs
lined up for their five-gallon
rations of drinkin(_~ater in the
flood-stricken Des~oines area,
and hundreds of Midwesterners
were inoculated against waterborne ·diseases.
' 'I feel like we're in a Third
World country," said Ed Conlow,
a resear..cher for the Iowa state
House.
The rain -swollen Mississippi
River and its tributaries continued
to swallow up land today in the

..---Local briefs-----~
Racine ma,_ in jured

Clarification

Council approves budget

development fund, $17,050; mini·
golf fund, $8,800; revolving loan
fund, $22,000 and refuse fund,
$114,000.
Hartinger Park
A repon o~"i;;ii;ovements and
activities at Hl~if~ger Park was
given by the Middlepon Recreation .
Committee members, Arnold Johnson, Skip Johnson, and Bob
McClure.
They reported that income so far
is about $10,500 with increases in
every area over the 1992 season.
Last year's season tickets to the
pool brought in only $765 while
this year the sales totaled $3,000.
Concession stand sales are also
under better control this year,
Arnold Johnson said, with proceeds
from those sales being well above
former years.
They reported an average daily
attendance at the pool of 100.
McClure talked about night swimmin$ and proposed extending
evemng hours 10 every night except
Sun_day and Wednesday. He also
talked about lhe .possibilitr of having family nights, and mghts for
adult swimmers only.
Continued on Page 3

Seizure of guns, cash
results in guilty plea

0

230 miners still offjQb

a~inst the budget on the basis that
"1t needs to reflect actual revenue".
He asked, " why should we tell
people we want to spend $130,000
more than we have," to which
Mayor Hoffman replied "it shows
you need more money."
According to tile budget the
major shortfall comes in ·the.general fund where the estimated funds
available total $454,464 and the
anticipated expenditures total
$620,600 , a difference of
$166,136. Other funds with deficit
balances are the water fund with
estimated available funds of
$211,400 and anticipated expenditures of $215,700, a deficit of
$4,300; the sewer fund with estimated funds available of $167,300
and expenditures of $175,600, a
deficit of $8;300.
Other funds in the budget most
showing surpluses were the fire.
truck fund, $61,300; street maintenance fund, $106,500; cemetery
fund, $31,100; recreation fund,
$28, 750; publ fc transportation
fund, $179,800; Arts Council
$6,000; Issue 2 fund, $8,000; meter
deposit fund, $10,000; frre equipment fund, $28,600; econOII)IC

.
. . . r
stood his rights, at one pomt staung·
he wanted to get the plea over with
because he has a sick wife and is
sick himself.
Sentencing was scheduled for
August 23 at 1:15 p.m. following a
pre-sentencing investigation.
Fife was arre3ted Friday on the
charge of trafficking in food
stamps following an investigation .
by the sheriffs department and the
prosecuung atiOrney's office. He is
represented by atiOrney D. Michael
Mullen.

Acting upon a search warrant,
officials recovered some food
stamps along with the frreanns and
money and determined some of the
items were earlier reported stolen.
Other items recovered include
approximately 50 videocassette
recorders, numerous television sets
and other electronic equipment,
about 30 musical instruments and a
couple dozen crossbows.
Upon Lentes' recommendation,
Fife was released on his own recogniZance.

TALKING WITH ATTORNEY- Robert D. Fife, l~ft, meets
witb his attorner; D. Michae.l Mullen, before pleading geilly to
barges of recetving stolen property and trafficking in food
stamps. Fife forfeited almost $250,000 and 3,000 guns as part of
the plea agr~ment. (Sentinel p.hoto by Jim Freeman)
•

Victims' families want
harsher penalty for killer .
Hawkins, 49, of Mansfield; Jamie
Paxton, 21, of Bannock; Donald ·
Welling, 35, of Strasburg; and
Kevin Loring, 30, of Duxbury , ·
Mass.
Sbme family members were
upset that Dillon was allowed to
plea bargain out of a possible death
sentence.
"I still want him dead," said
Bradley's wife, Beth. "Whe~ a
man pleads guilty to murden~g
five people and then plea bargains
for hiS own life, it's not fair."
Jamie Paxton's mother, Jean,
said Dillon was a coward.
"We were ·~ life sentence
the day he decided tolall our son,"
she said. 'l l think he's a pathetic
coward, He hils taken the cow&amp;r\l's
way out of everything.''
Dillon earlier had told reporters
\

that he killed all five men and said
he would plead guilty in exchange
for an agreement by prosecutors
not to seek the death penalty.
Noble County Prosecutor
Lucien Young Ill said the plea
agreement was the most practical
solution, although he would have
preferred Dillon be sentenced to
death.
·
"'I kind of felt like he ought to
die:" he said.
Dillon's attorney, Roger Synenberg ,. said . Dillon felt some
remorse.
"He has some regrets about
this, but he's also got to put it all
behind him," he said.
In a telephone conversation with
an Akron Beacon 1oumal reporter .
in March, Dillon said he had a
compulsion to kill.

I

�I

Commentary

~:::~~:-~
-:.~·:!.~'~~or~~~~- More rain expected Wednesday

•
Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

OHIO VJc:1tlv r

Tuesday, July 13, 1993

IICH.

~entinel

The Daily

•

Where do you like to sit in . cbu.rch?

IToledoI 83" I

group that isn' t SCattered and off in morning?
.
.
the next coqnty.
· Listen to a couple of guesses :
.
Pomei'OJ, Ohio "
·
Some churches put cushions on from pastors:
· ·
'
DEVOTitD TO THE ll'frBRB8T8 OF 11IE IIEIOIJ.IolASON AREA
only the front pews in an effort 0
• "They are the ones who want •
get the congregation to sit up close. .. to see what their neighbors are ·
The only other place besides wearing alld doing. You miss the ·
church where people make a dash 'people show' if you sit down '
for the bacl:: seats is in the college front. What about the 'main show' :
classroom. Professors speculate in the chancel? It's the same every ·
am
forced
to
change
.my
seat
on
the
ROBERT L. WINGEIT
bus or in a theater because some- this is because students feel they week. It's not like a sports event :
Publkher
body near me is wearing perfume I are less likely to be called on there. where the action is always chang- ·
The back-benchers are usually ing. So there 's no reason to be .
find offensive. But, of course, youCHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
not
the better students. Students down front."
~
·
can't get up and move in church
General Manager
who
sit
in
the
front
rows
have
been
•
"Some
people
sit
in
the
back
·
Controller
without the risk of huning somebody's feelings."
.
found to have a higher grade-poi~t because they want to be close to
B11t churchgoers don 't like to be . average. They are the ones who are the door where they can get out .
.LETJ'ERS OP Ol'INION are welcome. They sbould 6e less than 300
told what to do. They want, for interested in the subject
·
quicker. They don 'tlike to have to :
words. All !etten aie subject to editing and must ~ sig~d witb name, .
This may apply also to the up- rub elbows with others after .the
. address and telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
example, to sit where they please..
should be in good Wte, addressing issues, not personalities.
Mini sters would prefer that fronters in church.
service."
Who are the people who make a
• "When people sit in the front :
peopl sit together and closer to the
front . It is easier to speak to a run for the back seats on Sunday of the church, you know they ~
big givers or their pledges are pa1d .
up to date. ,It is the small or delinquent contributor who hides in the
back."
· Whatever reason people have
for sitting in the back, those who sit
in the front probably get more out
of the service .
Tberc are fewer distractions
By The Assoc:lated Press ·
within their rapge of vision. for one
Excerpcs of recent Ohio editorials of national and slalewide in1erest:
thing.
.
Not only can those up front hear
The Columbus Dispatch, July t:2
what the preacher is saying, they
The military base-closing ·commission is one of the best ideas the I
,
also
can see him up close. This is
government has had in recent years.
1
important.
The commission was charged with deciding which installations should
The farther away you are from a
be closed and allernately which should remain open. Congressional
speaker,
the less you absorb of his
influence - you vote for my base and I'll vote for yours - was deftly
message-no
matter how good the
bypassed. Members of Congress and the administrntion could on! y vole
sound
system
is. A srudy bas indithe entire list up or down.
cated that for those in the back of
U.S. Rep John R. Kasich and Sen. Byron Dorgan are proposing a joint J.:.~OIIOiill
auditorium less than 50 percent
effon to set up a commission that would review the 400,000 non-military
of what the speaker says sinks in, ·
buildings that are federally owned with an eye toward closing some o(
even though they can hear every ·
them.
·
1 word:
Would the process work as well with civilian operations? It's worth
Despite this, people will sit
serious consideration to find out.
wherever they want in church.
So I don't imagine there is much
hope of segregating the perChillicothe Gazette, July 9
fumewearers in a section of their
Studies liave recently related education to income level. Thnt's no
own.
George Plagenz is a syndicatsurprise to many. But a study out Thursday (July 8) tied education and
ed
writer for Newspaper Enterincome to life expectancy, a link which strikes us as tenuous.
prise
Association.
High school graduates tend to live ty;o to five years longer than J,...:,;;.;;;;..;,,;;..;;..;.;.:..;.;.;...;..;.;;.;.;;,..;:.;.;..;;.:~:.:. ..;. :,:...:.;;.;;.;.;.;;.:;....;.;,:..;;...;.,;;...:..;.;.;.;...;.;,..:.;.;,~;;.;;.:;.;;.:.;;.;,;.::..J
dropouts, says the study. Another fmding says that the poorest Americans
- those who make less than $9,000 a year· tend to die at rates three to
seven times higher than those who make $25,000 or more. .
We fmd it specious to draw a direct link between education and health.
Behavior and environment are the only facts that can directly affect a
Are American children exposed wjll be exposed to higher, !tOt out" Times Beach, Mo., and order- 1990, the Federal Aviittion Adminperson's health. Education affects behavior, but that's still not a direct
to dangerous levels of pesticid~s in lower, levels of harmful pesticides. ing its 2,200 residents to abandon istration banned smoking on all
link.
That's because the most car- their 'homes and property. The domestic flights.
Go back to school if you want to improye your income. But if you want the fruit and vegetables the~~?
cinogenic
peslicides are produced agencY. declared the town contamiIt is three years later. Yet air
t
to improve your chances of a long life, quit smoking, cut down on Some may be, but probab
nated
with
dfoxin,
which
at
that
passengers
continue io complain of
most.
That's
the
conclusion
of
a
alcohol, fat and salt, and get some exercise.
·
time was re'puted io be the deadliest itching, burning eyes. They cough;
new study by the National Acadechemical known to man.
they sneeze. They get headaches:
my of Sciences.
Times Beach was one of I ,200 they get sore throats. All of which
Though the academy's study is
The (ZanesviUe) Times Recorder, July 6
hardly definitive, it nonetheless by plants themselves to ward off · locales identified by 'the govern- had been attributed to on-board
President Clinton's handling of the Iraq situation was, for once, provided a pretext for Environmen' predatory insects.
ment as "dioxin-tainted." Several smoke.
excellent. There was no public agonizing, bluster or indecision.
hundred million dollars were set
By tocusing on tooocco smoke,
It
will
not
be
the
fli'St
time
that
tal Protection Agency administrntor
Whether the strike was warranted is another question. 011 the basis of Carol Browner to announce that the government environmental policy aside for cleanup.
government regulators missed the
what's been revealed, the sttilce seems to have been a reasonable act.
In 1991, the government did an real cause of poor cabin air quality.
Clinton administration plans "a has vielded unintended conseThe imponant thing for the country is that Clinton seems ·to have dramatic shift in policy to reduce quences. Over the last decade, the about-face, saying that it had great- Simply, airlines aren't pumping
recovered from the ineptness that plagued the first few months of his the use of pesticides."
American people have witnessed ly overestimated th·e danger of enough fresh air into their planes.
· The American Society of Heat.
This is yet another example of one environmenlal false alarm after dioxin exposure. Dr. Vernon Houk,
administration.
the
assistant
surgeon
general,
upon
ing
Refrigeration and Air-CondiMaybe some equilibrium can even be restored in his relatiolfship with how government environmental another. Here are four of the more
whose
recommendation
Times
tioning Engineers specifies a stanCongress and we can stan seeing some progress on the serious issues that policy is informed by political dis- oulrageous examples.
tortion of science. It mattered not
Asbestos: Back in 1987, the Beach was razed, admitted, "It dard of a minimum or W cubic feet
face the country.
to Browner whether the scientists EPA issued an order that more than looks as though the evacuation was of fresh air per person per minute
presented hard evidence that pesti- I00,000 school buildings through- unnecessary; if (dioxin) is a car- for the typical office. Bv comparicides are harmful to children's out the country be inspected for cinogen, it's a very weak carcino- son, the person flyirig coach on,
say, a Boeing 74 7, gets only 7
health. To her environmentally cor- "friable" asbestos the dry1 crum- gen."
In
1990,
the
Natural
Alar
:
cubic feet of fresh air per minute.
rect way of thinking, pesticides are bling material that can become airResources
Defense
Council,
a
lefty
With adequate ventilation on
evil and therefore' must be stricken borne.
The agency stoked public hyste- environmenlalist outfit, scared the airplanes, passenger health comfrom the food supply.
But it' simply is irrational fCilr the ria by wildly estim.ating that as bejeebers out of parents by warning plaints would diminish. The govDear Editor,
but if I would have been here I government to funher restrict the many as 15 million school children them that their children were eating ernment misled the flying public
I'm a girl who has lived in would have been there helping to use of pesticides. In 1990, the Food and .3 million teachers, administrn- apples treated with the allegedly into believing that tobacco smoke
Meigs County since the day of my support the rights of all black citi- and Drug Administrntion analyzed tors and staff were at risk _of deadly chemical Alar.
was the problem.
birth: I have always felt that our zens.
NRDC's call for an Alar ban
One would think that the govmore than 19,000 domestic and asbestos exposure.
Mayor, Police Department, and
To ihe Mayor, Police Depart- imported foods for pesticide
Later, the EPA acknowledged was based on "evidence" that the ernment policy-makers would have
Sheriffs office have done their job ment, and Sheriffs Office - you're residue . Some 99 percent of that the asbestos scare was apple growth regulator caused learned a lesson from environmenwell. That is, until I found out that very lucky that there wasn' t any domestic foods were well within overblown. The · science on tumors in laboratory mice. What tal false alarms of the last decade.
the Klu Klux Klan was to meet in prolestmg, much less killing of the safety standards; 96 percent of asbestos showed no evidence that the alarmisfs did not let on is that But Browner's remarks about pestiPomeroy on Saturday, June 26, members of the Klu Klux Klali.
imports
low-level expo~ure to the substance the mice were given daily doses of .cides suggest that the Chnton
1993. It really disgusts me that our
All men were created equally,
And it's not as though govern- in such settings as schools resulted Alar that w.ere 280,000 times administrntion is doomed to repeat ·
county .officials would let a hate and 1f none of you are smart ment food safety standards are lax. in a higher incidence of asbestos- greater than the amount a human the past.
group come into our county and.not enough to sec the truth in that then The EPA sets allowable levels for related cancer.
would consume.
That's lameniable, because the
even try to stop them.
The
Alar
scare
cost
apple
growyou don 't deserve to be a member pesticide residue 100 to 1,000
public
will continue to have diffiTo put the risk into perspective,
I know that in the Constitution it of mankind.
ers
many
millions
of
dollars
and
times lower than actual safe levels. the odds of succumbing to lung
culty discerning between real and
says everyone has the right to FreeAnd to all the people of Meigs
There's another perverse aspect cancer from smoking just one needlessly frightened the public.
fictional health hazards.
dom of Speech, but it also says that County - No one was hurt this time, to the pesticide issue. If more cigarette a day were 1,000 times
Environmental tobacco smoke:
Joseph Perkins is a columnisteveryone has the right to equal but what will happen next time if American families tum io 'natural" greater. The odds of dying in a uaf- Government regulators sought a for The San Diego Union-Trirights, no matter what the color of our county officials let this hate foods, as a result of the Clinton fic accident 10,000 times greater.
culprit for poor air quality aboard bune and a syndicated writer for
group
come
back?
your skin.
adminislration's dramatic shift in
Dioxin: In 1983, the EPA went commercial airplanes. Tobacco Newspaer Enterprise AssociaI wasn' t in tow,n when the meetKelly Osborne, pesticide policy, children actually to the extraordinary step of "buying smoke was an easy target. So in tion.
ing of the Klu Klux Klan was held,
Long Bottom
Will "Thank you for riot wear. ing perfume" signs be joining
"Thank you for not smoking"
signs?
The First Unitarian Church in
San Francisco has reserved four
pews on Sunday mornings for pea..
pie who don't use perfume and
don 't like to be near those who do.
I saw. the problem developing
15 years ago when a woman told
me the reason she didn't go to
church was that she couldn't stand
the perfume some churchgoers
wore.
Under the headline "Perfume:
Whiff of Controversy," I wrote:
"I thought I had heard every reason people could give for not going
to church. This was a new one.
''Then I discovered others ·had

111 Court Street

the same gripe. 'Some women wear
·so much perfume they hold you
smellliound,• said one.
" I am sympathetic. I sometimes

, , , lManslield lM·I·' .

------Weather-----

--Area deaths-Andria Arnold

' '

a l
0
b_ 6.

"

~

£ '

GUESS WHICH SANDBAGGER DOES
NOT LIVE IN DAVENPORT, IOWA.

.. .

I'

I

Joseph Spear
I am sitting there disguised as an
ordiqary repllrter. I'm thinkillg:
What the hey is going on here?
The radio spectrum belongs to the
people. It says so in the Communications Act of I 934. They say they
are going to raise $7 billion over
the next five years by selling part
of it. That will pay for eight days of
interest on the .national debL Why
sell? Why.not lease? .
Yeah, lease the spectrum and
make the millionaires who rent it
pay a user's fee. Three percent of
gross i~c~me, say. The spectrum is
worth an estimated $300 billion a
year. With lease and user's fees,
that would pump $10 billion a year
in to the Treasury and the public
would still own theit own airwaves.
I slip into a men's room, tie on
my Glopman cape, put the Glopgun
mode-selector on BI; slink into the
hearing room, and zap about three

Morris Neal

Audria Marie Jeffers Arnold,
who died Swiday, July 11, 11)93 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant, W. Va., was preceded in
death l)y ~ husband, Willard'Ray
Jeffers. His name was incorrectly
provided to this newspaper by the
· funeral home for the obituary
which appeared in Monday's edition.
·

Morris Rucker Neal, 75, 34
Riverside Drive, Cheshire, died
today, July 13, 1993 at his residence.

He was a retired conductor for
Conrail Railroad Com~y and a
member of the Cheshare Baptist
Chwr.ll.
He was born March 12, 1918 in
Galli a County, son of the late
Clyde and Irene Craft Neal.
Survivors include his wife,
Mary Jane Rothgeb Neal; one son,
James (Jerrie) Neal of Cheshire;
one brother, James M. Neal of
Columbus; one aunt, Clara Craft,
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was also
preceded in death by two brothers,
Harold and Charles Neal. ·
He was also a member and past
master of Silam 11456 F&amp;AM of
Cheshire; past patron of Cheshire
Chapla 114~ Eastern Star; member
of the Scottish Rite Valley or
Columbus: member of Chapter,
Council and Commandary, all of
Gallipolis; member of Ala!(din
Temple of Columbus; member and
past president of the Gallipolis
·Shrine Club; member of the Hill. bUJy UniJ: member of the Venice,
Fla., Shnne Club and member of
the Gallipolis HAM Rallio.Ciub.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and
7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home.
Masonic services will be 8:30 p.m.
- Wednesday. Services will be held
I :30 p.m. Thursday at the funeral
home with the Rev. Harold
Tracewcll officiating. Burial will
pc in Gravel Hill Cemelery.
In lieu of flowers, contributions
can be made to lhe Gallipolis
Shrine club, P.O. Box ~2. Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631. Donations will be
used in the Shrine's crippled chitdren hospitals and bum institutes.

Kathleen Foulkrod
Kathleen L. Foulkrod, 40, of
Pomeroy, died Monday, July 12,
1993, at Veterans Memorial Hospi-

181.

;_.

-Upset with Klan's visit

L

Chance ci ra1n 50 JXI'CCDL
Exteacled rorecut:
Thunclay throuall Saturday:
Fair throuj!h the period. Lows
60-65. Highs an the 80s.

South-Central Oblo
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the upper 60s. Wednesday, panty
· cloudy with scattered thunderstorms. High in the upper 80s .

Letters to the editor

0

A cold front lowered the tern and humidity throughout
Ohio on Monday. By early this
morning, ~~ were in the
upper SOs m ihe noiiltwest and 60s
or 70s elsewhere.
·
The m:ord high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

W. VA.

Joseph Perkins

~

80s.

87"

Pesticides scare is a false alarm_·_ _..;....____

room in the House of Representa·
ti vcs. The pols are discussing a bill
that would permit the sale of the
radio spectnnn to privale interests.

By TIM A•oocletecl Pml
•
Showen and thunderstorms are
expected to return on Wednesday
IIIII last tlwough the night. ,
Skies should rema in raostly
clear until later tonight. Lows
tonight will be from the lower 60s
in the northeast to the upper 60s in ·
the $0UthwesL
Highs Wednesday will be in the
perature

an

As an adolescen~ I would often
polish off a stack of Batman,
Superman or Spiderman comic
books, then fall asleep and dream
of being blessed with pretematU1111
powers so I could fir around the
neighborhood defendmg truth and
dispensing justice.
As an adult, I ima~ine myself
wandenng the world m search of
hypocri~s. preJ,eJtders and impostors armed with sO'me son of device
that will inslantly turn them into
.piles of glop. . ·
Call me Glopman . Call my
weapon a Glopgun.
It is a high-tech device with
three modes: SG, for shimmering
glop; TG, for temporary glop; Bl,
for bright idea. If hit with a beam
while the Glopgun is set in the SG
mode, the target is history. A TG
beam will turn a rogue into mush
for 24 hours. The Bl mode is for
well-intentioned chowderheads
who simply need to have their
thoughts rearranged. "H~' they'll
say, "I just had il bright i ."
In my fantasies, I spend a lot of
time. dn Capitol Hill. Yes, I am
busier than an appendage-disadvantaged paperhAnger.
Picture the scene: A hearing

""·

IHD.

Excerpts from other
Ohio Newspapers

Berry's World

•

George R. Plagenz

A cape, a glopgun and a

The Dally SenUnel · PJG• 3 ·

Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt, Ohio

'

Born on May 4, 1953, in Phults
City, Fla., she was the daughter of
Donna M. Luce Taylor of Middleport and the late James T. Taylor.
She had just completed nurain•
aide ttaining at Pomeroy Rehabilitation and Nursing Center. She
attended the Middlepm Church ci
the Nazarene. .
Besides her mother; she is survived. by ,her husband, Stephen
Foullcrod. of Pomeroy; a son,
Stephen Foulkrod, Jr., of South
Windsor, Conn.; a daughter, Mindy
L. FOIIlkrod of Pomeroy: a brother
·and sister-in-law, Thomas and
Bonnie Taylor of Seattle, Wash.;
two b~others, Daniel Taylor of
Dover, Fla. and Brian Taylor of
New Mexico; a sister, Debra Ferguson of West Columbia, W. Va.,
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at II a.m .' at the Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport. Buri. a1 will be at Beech Grove Cemetery
at Pomeroy. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Thursday from 7
to9 p.m.

Livestock report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _
Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Tuesday
by the Ohio Department of Agri·
culture:
Barrows and gilts: 5Q cents
higher: demand moderate. '
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 1bs., country
points 44 .25-45.00; plants 45.2S!
46.25, a few 47 .00.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 45.25-46.00.
Receipts Mon~ ~.600. Estimated receipts T11
y 7,500.
. Prices from The Producers Livestock Association: ·
Cattle: 2.00 to 3.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 70.0075.00: select 58.00-71.00. 1
Slaughter heifers: choice 68.0073.50; select 58.00-72.00.

•
IDISSIOD
•

l'he Daily Sentinel'

solons. "Hey," they say in unison
"I just had a bright idea. Why noi
rent the spectnnn and charge user's

hypocrite population of the planet
is substantially reduced.
:
Back in Washington, I'm in the : ·
fees?~'
Senate_listening to the pols debate · ·
..!- few days ago, I ventured to · campa1gn finance reform. All they ·
VIenna, where a full one-folirlh of talk about is how much things are ·
the. world's most notorious hyp- costing, i.e., television ads. And ·
·
ocntes were attendmg the U.N. I'm thinking:
Conf~rence on Human Rights.
Wait a minute, the radio ~ttum
They represent such models of belongs to the public. Why should
human rights purity as China, Iran, rich slation owners make millions ·
Syria and Iraq . Just before I on the political process? Make
arrived, they had hooted former !hem provid_e free air time for legitpresident Jammy Carter off the Imate candadates. Let advenisers
stage . Now they were whining and cable users indirectly subsidize
about the West trying to enforce campaigns. I zap them with a BI
their own human rights values on beam. You know the rest
cultures with different standards.
On my way out, I spot Sam
And I'm thinking:
Nunn, the Georgia Democrat who ·
Wait a minute, this is politically lately seems to think God wants
correct garbage. Fundamental him io run the country. I switch to
rights transcend culture. They TG and zing him. He dissolves into derive from a Higher Power and a mound of mush, but he:ll shonly
are ours by natural law. Are the congeal back into the· same old
.
Chinese delegates, for example, Sam.
I blow on the barrel of the Glopargwng they have a cultural right to
crush demonstrators beneath lank l!un ani! say: "You want to be prestreads? The Glopman begs to dif- aden!, senator, you got to run for iL
fer.
Think about it, and I 'II be back."
Joseph Spear Is a syndlcattd
· . Within seconds, the floor is covwriter
for Newspaper Eaterprise •
ered with piles of shimmerinl! glop.
Association.
It's messy. But the upside ts, the

CLEVELAND_(AP) - There
was one·ticlcct sold·naming all five
numbers drawn in Monday night's
Buckeye 5 game, and the winning
· ticket as worth $100,000, the Ohio
Lottery said.
The ticket was sold at Lantern
Beverage And Car Wash in Jefferson.
Pick 3 Numbers
2-4-7
(two, four, tcvcn)
Pick 4 Numbers
8-4-5-1
(eight, four, five, one)
Buckeye 5
6-7-16-34-35
· -'
(six, seven, sixteen, thiny-four,
thiny-fiv'e)
The jackpot for Wednesday's
; Super Lotto drawing will be $16
• million.

P\lbllobod ._, ollonlaoo. MooUy lbroup '
""""'· lll c- sc.......,.. Olllo bl' lllo
Cillo Valley N&gt;llol!lq ~y/MIIltlmodla
Ill&lt;: .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45'769. I'll. 992-2156.
&lt;llllpouppold .........,.0111•.
M ........: The Alloctolod ,..,, .-1 flo Ohio
Newtplpef Allodii.Joa, Nllloul AdWI'tlllll

RepreHa~vt. Brubam Newtptper s.....
73l Third Avetnae, New York. New York
IQOa7.

POSTMAS,'IER: Scad lddteu chaDJet to The
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Stocks
Am Elc Powcr....................38
Ashland Oil... .....................26 118
AT&amp;:r................................. 62 3/4
Bant'Onc, ..........................57 3/11
Bob Evans ...............;.......... 18 1/2
Charming Shop............. .... .J2 1/4
Chmp Industries ................. 13 1/2
CitY, Holding...................... 2S 1/2
Federal Mogui ...,....... .........w
GoodyearTIU ..................40 718
Lands End......................;...29
Umited Inc....................... W 518
Multimedia Inc ..................35 3/4
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S11r Blllk ...........................36 114
Wendy lnt'I ........................ l4 518
Wonhington Ind.................28 3/4
Stock r~ports are the 10:30
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Kemper Securltlea, Inc., cit
GaWpolls.

station was 101 in 1936. The record
low was 44 in 1940.
·
Sunset today will be a 9:01
p.m. Sunrise ,Wednesday will be at
6:15 a.m.
Arouad tbe nation
A high pressure system brought
slightly cooler temperatures into
the heat-weary Northeast today as
the South continued to bake.
In the Pacific Northwest, unseasonably cool weathec chilled $Ollie
areas, with Spokane, Wash., dipping to48 degrees early today.
Meanwhile, a heat advisa'y was
posted today for eastern North Carolina, where temperatures were
forecast to reach .well over I 00
degrees. The region endured 'its

lOth consecutive day of 99-degree
and hiJher tcmperatUreS Monday.
Ram and some thunderJtoims
were expected today in perts of the
Mississappi and Missouri valleys,
but not ·enough to worsen the
already devastating Hooding in the
upper Midwest, forecasters said.
A 1ow pressure area over the
central Plains also was expected to
bring heavy thunderstorms. The
Gulf states· were to be hot and
sticky with some thunderstorms.
The high pressure system was
forecast to spread sunshine over
most of the Northeast and drop
temperatures into the mid-80s after
some triple-digit heat during th~
past week. In the mid-Atlantic

•

:

Cool weather was forecast to
remiQa in the Na1hwes&amp;. with lem·
pill'luurcs as much as 15 dep-ees
below normal, and some showers:
California was foru:ast to be sunny
and pleawat

.

.

1be nation's high temperature
Monday was 112 degrees in Bullhead Caty, Ariz. ·
. Temperatures today were forecast to be in the 90s for most of the
South, Southwest and West, and
the 80s in the Nonheast and Midwest. Northern Midwestern .and
Plains ~!Btes .were expected to be
mostly m the 70s and 60s, with
some 50s in the Pacifac Nonhwest. •

Middleport
...
.
Continued from Page 1
· Phins ·are moving forward on
getting a fenced in area for smaller
children. They playground equipment is still available from
McDonald's in Ripley 11nd the
committee noted .J11ans for moving
it into storage urllll the money can
be obtained for a fence and permanent inslallation ~~ the park.
The costs of lighting at the park
were also discussed and it was
noted that even with the Henry
Swift fund which brings in $I ;ooo
a year for that purpose, a shortfall
ofabout$800isexpected.
The committee also proposed ~
Middleport yard sale to be held at
the park on the first Saturday in
August. Council agreed it was .a
good idea and encouraged the commitiCe to move forward on the project. There will be no charge this
year for participating.
The commiuee was commended
for their work at ·the park and Skip .
Johnson and Arnold Johnson were
presented plaques by Mayor Hoffcounted b;r Meigs County Sberl" Jaiaes M.
MONEY EVERYWHERE - More than
man in recognition of their hard
Soulsby,
pactured here, right, hi&amp; deplltles lad
$185,000
In
cash
was
taken
from
the
Middleport
work and dedication to the park
personnel
from the prosecutor's omee, It was
home
of
Robert.
D.
Fife
during
Friday's
search.
development.
stored
In
a
vault at Farmer's Baak. Plctared
The
bills
were
stashed
In
duft'el
baas,
drawers
Other Business
here
with
Soulsby
counting aaoaey is SpeCial
bouse.
After
belag
and
pocketbooks
around
the
Tom Dooley, president of the
Deputy
Bruce
Swift.
Middleport Community Association, reported on fl(!tivities of that
group.
He said that the Catfash Festival
will be held on Sept. I 8 and that
Meeting slated
Scramble slated
cabin in Racine.
this year the stage where enterta,in- · A mixed
There will be a special meeting
golf scramble to benement will be presented will be on fit Joe Hill will be held on July of Shade River Lodge No. 453,
Legion to meet
the T intersection of North Second 24th at the Meigs County Golf F&amp;AM, Chester, Friday at 7:30
American Legion Forty and
and Mill. Demonstrations will Course. Hill is the 14 year old son p.m. with work in the fellow craft
Eight will meet tonight a1 7;30 p.m.
again this year be held in Diles of former Meigs County business- degre(l. Refreshments. All fellow
Parle, and a. festival queen will be man Pat and-Nancy Hill of craft degrees invited.
Dance plaDIIed
·
selected.
Pomeroy and is suffering ·from a
There will be a dance at the RutDooley also talked about the very rare form of cancer. The tourDance slated
land Americ~ Legion Half on Satplanned Mei$S County Showcase nament will be a mixed scramble
There will be a round and urday from 9 p.m. to I a.m. with
and the possibility of purchasing with a blind draw. Price, is $40 per square dance Friday at the Tuppers music by Pure Country and Then
advertiSing in the Ohio Magazine . golfer and that includ~ cart. steak Plains VFW Hall from 8-11:30 Some. Public invited. .
to .P~&lt;!mote local festivals and dinner and beverages. For more p.m. with music by CJ and the
acbvattes.
information call the Meigs County Country Gentlemen . Melvin Cross
Ice cream social
·
A bid Rn the North Second St. Golf Course at 992-6312. Tee off will be the caller.
The Salem Township Voltmteer
paving project was &amp;abled pending will be at 9:00.
Fire Department will have an ice
further information . The bid was
Reunion
cream social Saturday from I 1 a.in.
from Tom Maley and Sons for
Physicals set
The annual Charles and Alma to 7 p.m . There will be rcifresh$77,047.22, about $7,000 over the
Beginning next week, sports Hinzeman Snyder reunion will be ments anti Ii ~~rtainment
estimated cost. Hoffman noted that physicals for the Southern Local Sunday at Star Mill Park. Lunch including Sheila i:iei:8yil and more.
at the next meeting bids on the School District will be held at the will be served at noon. Bring a cov- u
Park Street paving project will be office of Dr. Douglas Hunter ered dish.
.Hymn sin1
There wall be a hymn sing at the
ope;~- mayor reported that Bill according to the following schedSwimming lessons
Hazel Community Church in Long
Bro)lllling, a viUage employee, has ule: Friday, July 16, 1993, 1 p.m. to
Swimming
lessons will be Bottom on Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
7
5
passed the test to qualify for his
p.m.- th and 8th grade girls and offered at Middlcpon Pool Monday
Class I water system operator's boys; Friday, July 23, 1993, I p.m. through July 30 from 8-9 am. for with Linda Damewood. Etsel Hart,
to 5 p.m.-9th and lOth grade girls
pastor, inviles the public. Everyone
license. The village has been con' and boys; and Friday, July 30, swimmers; 9-10 a.m. for advanced welcome.
tracting for the service for several l993, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.-11th and swimmers; 10-11 a.m. for inlermeyears to meet state requirements.
12th d · 1 d bo
diate swimmers and 11 a.m. to
• QueStions on tax abatement, dis·gra e gar s an
ys.
· noon for beginners. Further inforSPRING VALLEYCINEMA
continued a couple of years ago
Athletes must bring a sports mation may be obtained by calling
446 ·4524
.. " .
after being an option on new con- physical card completed and signed
Ryan
Cowan
at
99:p999.
sttuction in the village for several llo/ a parent or legal guardian and
years, were discussed after the wear shorts and tee shirts. Physical
Preaching and singing
mayor reported h\1 had received cards will be available at the high
Faith Full Gospel Church in
three inquiries. The matter will be school or at Dr. Hunter's office
Long
Bottom will have preaching
referred to the viUage solicitor for a prior to the exams. Examinations
and
singing
Friday at 7 p.m. with
decision on whether residents who will be done free of charge on these
Pastor Steve Reed and local
built during the tax !Jbatement peri- ~re days only,
singers. Public invited . Fellowship
od but did not apply during that
will follow.
time, can now make application.
Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSOINS
The need for trimming bushes
Trustees to meet
on village propeny .across from the Elizabeth Hobsletler, Rutland.
Salisbury Township Trustees
Alan King property on Front Street
MONDAY DISCHARGES .
will meet Wednesday at 6 p.m. at
was discussed. The mayor's report None.
the horne of Ed Durst, Noble Sumshowed receipts of $5,269 for the ·
Holzer Medical Center
mit Road. ·
month. .
July l2 discharges: Mrs. Jack
Attendmg were Mayo~ Hoff- Corder and daughter, Heather
.
Reunion
man, Clerk-Treasurer Tera Hock- Dunn, Michael Beaver, Betty
The Cozart reunion will be held
man, and Council members Dewey Baker, Winnifred Young, Georgia
Sunday at noon at Bill Cozart's
Horton, James Clatworthy, Judy Chapman Anna Daniels and Judith
~------Crooks, Gerard, and Jack Satter- Smart. '
field.
July 12 birth: Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Werry, son, Racine.

I

---Meigs announcem-ents~---

·.

7

&gt;,

!

I

"' '

nospital news

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

Squads· make 8 runs
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls for assistance on Monday.
·
·
At I 1:01 a.in ., Reedsville FirC
Department, Tuppers Plains and
Pomeroy units to Route 248 at
Long Bottom, motor vehicle accident, Daniel Drake and Danyel
Draice to Camden Clark; 4:12p.m.,
Pomeroy units to Village Green
Apartments, Kathryn Faulknard to

Veterans Memorial Hospital; 7:57
p.m. , Rutland to Salem Street,
Betty Hobsletler to Veterans; 10:50
p.m., Middleport to General
Hartinger Park for David Dadson
to Veterans; I 1:03 _p.m., Pomeroy
to Route 124, John Coffman, treated but not tiansported; .11:25 p.m.,
Pomeroy to 'Second Stteet, motor
vehicle accident, Kim Follrod to
Veterans, Middleport assisted at
I I :37 p.m.

Mlcks Barber &amp; Style Center
120 East Main

.

Pomeroy

Announce• They Have~ Barben Worklq

• Mick • Freel • Chris
· Stop and See Them
Open 8·5, Mon•FI'i. 8·4 Sat.

RIVERFRONT BARBE.
216 E.

Ohio 992·69

'

17
*DRAWINGS. PRIZES*

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-Discount alipa lor supplements
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CLOSED THURSDAY
'

~

Slates, a Sllllecl front could brilll

i*l),., thUJilk:nlu IUS.

•

�"
r

Sports

.The Daily ·Sentin~l
.

TUesday, July 13. 1993'

.

p~~

Injuries suffered in
crash kill Allison
'.J~

ByJAVREEVES
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. {AP) - .
According to a !ale bullelin, Davey
Anison died this morning of
injuries he suffered when a helicopter he was piloting crashed in
the infield at Talladega Superspeedway, his racing 1e1111 said.
. The 32-year-old stock c:ar driver
died in B~ingham, AJa;, hospital
at approxunately 8:30 a.m., EDT,
according to a spokeswoman ai
Robert Yates Racing in Charlotte.
The accident ioot place Monday
when Allison and another driver,
Red Farmer, flew to the speedway
to warch test driving.
Farmer, the only other occupant
of !he helicopler, was in CArraway
Methodist Medical Center in Birm·
ingham. He was in critical but stable c!&gt;ndition after suffering a broken nb, collarbone and nose.
An .investigator from the
Nauonal Transportation Safety
Board was in Talladega to son oot
conflicting accounts of what happe ne~ m the 3 p.m. crash in the
track mfield.
Speedway president Mike Helton said Allison went down while
attempting to land in an area not
normally used by helicopters. The
chopper came to rest on its side
near a chain-link·fence just yards
away from a garage and a media
center.
''They crashed on landing. It
just went out of control," Helton
said Monday flight "It didn't real-

1y hit anythiog.' '

But V.H. Steed, an off'lcilll with
the Federal Aviation AdministratiOn in AOanta, said the agency was
told the helicopter was laking off
when it went down.
"The repon we had was that he
was departing and hit a fence,"
.
Steed said.
Smitherman .said Allison sustained an acute subdural
hematoma, a.n injury deep in the
brain. Allison, h1s face bloodied, .
appeared QnconSCJOUS when he
arrived at the hospital aboard a
helicopter ambulance.
.
Farmer was -conseious but dis.orienled, officials said.
· :'Red crawled out and they were
trymg to get Davey out, but they
h~d to get emergency units to cut
h1m out," Carolyn Yates said after
tallcing to her husband .Raben, who
owns the Ford Thundelbirds driven
by Allison on the Winston Cup circuit. "The helicopter hit a fence
and it turned upside down."
A cousin, Donnie Johnson, said
Allison purchased the helicopter
only three weeks ago. He and
Farmer had flown from Binning- .•
ham to the track to watch racer
Neil Bonnett's son David, who was
testing a Busch Gmnd National c:ar
on the 2.66-mile tri-oval about 50
miles.east of Birmingham.
The crash was only the latest
tragedy to strike Alabama's first
family of racing.
Last July 19, Allison was
involved in a spectacular wreck at
Pocono International Raceway in
Long Pond, Pa. His car flipped 12
times, leaving him with a broken
right arm, broken ribs and a concussion.
After spending five nights in a
hospital, he qualified his car for dle

DAVEY ALUSON.

race the following weekend at Tal-

ladega.
•
Bobby Allison was critically
injured in a 1988 crash at Pocono
and had to retire as a driver after 84
career victories -leaving ~im tied
for third on the Winston Cujllist. .
Last year, Davefs younger brother
Clifford was killed in a wreck at
Michigan International S~way. ·
Allison finished thud in the
Slick SO 300 on Sunday at Loudon,
N.H., to move up to fifth in the ·
Winston Cup standings, 323 points
behind leader Dale Eamhar4L Allison finished third overall the last

woyears.

Allison was scheduled to race in
Die-Hard 500, to be held at the
s
way July 25.
Farmer won. his first race in
1949 and has more than 700 vicrories oil various cilcuits. He is crew
chief for Allison's Grand National

Red Farnier. Both were nown to a Blrmln1ham
hospital, where Farmer was listed in stable con-.
dition. All1son, who suffered a massive bead
injury among other Injuries, died earlier .today,
(AP) .

CRASH SCENE - An uaidentiried person
walks pll8t the wreckage of a Hughes SOOC bell·
copter oa the inr.eld of the TaUad~a SpeedWay
Monday In Talladega, Ala. The helicopter, ftown
by Wlaston Cup star Davey AU!son, crashed at
the track, seriously injuring Allison and racer

.

"

.

Akron seeks to lead MAC in gender equality

Athletic director Jim Dennison
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Whenever the NCAA's gender equity said the subject requires some eregoals are mentioned at the Univer- aLive thinking.
"In our five-year plan, gender
sify of Akron, the Zips' athletic
. · Sports briefs
equity
and cost containment are our
department says it's ready to com·
team.
'
BasebaU
top
priorities,"
Dennison said.
The crash was the second this ply.
NEW YORK (AP) - Moises
Gender
equity
is based on ·equal
"We've put a lot of work into
year to hit the Winston Cup cilcuit
Alou of the Montreal Expos, who
athletic
participation
and funding
it," said Dawn Moore, an assistant
Defending champion Alan Kulwichit six home runs and drove in II
opportunity
for
male
and female
ki died along wuh three compan- athletic director.
runs last week, was selected the
"When gender equity be9ame a • students based on· enrollment. At
ions in a plane crash April I near ,
National League's player of the
Bristol, Tenn.
· buzzword over a year ago and peo- Akron, male and female enrollment
week.
ple starred talking aboot it, we sat is about the same.
The MAC, like the Big Ten , has
down here and tried to come up
with our own plan of how we want- set a percentage of a 60-40 mtio for
participation and funding over the
ed to tackle the issue."
'
President
Peggy
Gordon
Ellion
next five years.
By FRANK ELTMAN
was playing minor league baseball ieconls for most catches in the fust
said
Mid-American
Currently, Akron funds seven
Conference
Steve Young may miss the in the Chicago White Sox -system three years {215) and four years
women's
school
presidents
have
asked
the
and eight men's varsity
opening of training camp. Troy for the past three weeks, became (308) of a career, feels he's worth
MAC's
gender-equity
task
force
to
sports,
not
counting men's and
Aikman· may not miss as much the first of the Raiders' six draft as much money as the Falcons paid
take
a
leadership
role
in
recom
women's
indoor
track. In tenns of
camp as everyone thought he picks to come l&lt;f terms and joined some free agents they signed dur- mendations it will make to the 10
ac
tual
participation
numbers, the
would.
the team late in !he second of two ing !he offseason. Also in the Fatpresidents next month.
Akron
percentage
currently
is a
Young's contract with the San workouts Monday. .
cons' camp was running·back Eric
"I'd like to see the MAC set the male-dominated 75·25 mtio.
Francisco 49ers expired after last
- The Seattle Seahawks' top . Dickerson, acquired last week in a course with the gender~uity issue
· "Of course, there are two reaseason, and under league rules he draft pick, quarterback Rick Mirer, trade with the Los Angeles Raiders. rather than follow it," Elliott said.
cannot participate in camp until a and six other 1993 draft choices are
Young, who has never missed a
new one is in place. The' 49ers • still not signed. Rookies and some day of training camp, made $2.5
camp opens Wednesday.
veterans report to camp Wednesday million last season When he led the
"We have every intention of in Kirkland, Wash., for physicals. NFL in passing and was named the
him being in training camp, but it Mirer, of Notre Dame, was the sec- most valuable player. He guided
takes two to do a contract," said ond player chosen in this year's San Francisco to a league-best 14-2 ·
Leigh Steinberg, Young's agent. draft.
· .
regular-season marlc and a berth in
"We also h~ve every intention of'
- New Orleans Saints coach · the NFC championship, where the
having him compensated fairly.''
Jim Mora said it could take the 49ers lost 30-20 to the Cowboys.
Aikman, the Super Bowl MVP, entire preseason to decide on his
"He was the MVP of the
threw a football for the first time No. I quarterback. Bobby Heben league, which distinguishes him
since undergoin~ back surgery June left the Saints during the offseason from other people so that we're
19. He downplayed tile short tOsses and signed with Atlanta, leaving probably looking at a contract that
as an insignificant step in his reba- the competition between Wade would be a liWe bit trend setting,"
bilitation.
. Wilson, Steve Walsh and Mike Steinberg said from his Newpon
"Just standing there throwing, I Buck. "I donlt think it makes any Beach, Calif., office.
didn't expect to ~~el ~ny pain or difference wh.atsoeve.r," Mora said.
Carmen Policy, president of !he
any d1scomfort, A1kman said "Our team is comfortable with all 49ers, did not return a phone call
after making several dozen throws. three guys.''
seeking comment on the status. of
"It really doesn't test the back all
- The Green Bay Packers will the negotiations with Young. Stein·
that much, at least in my opinion." have aU their dnift choices in camp berg said he talked by phone with
The Cowboys are hoping to Wednesday when free agents., Policy on Sunday and planned to .
have Aikman in practice the second rookies . and selected veterans meet with him today or Wednesweek of August after the team report. The Packers spent $30 mil- day.
o
returns from an exhibition game in lion to b~ng in defensive st;lrRegIn Irving, Texas, Cowboys
London against the Detroit Lions. · gie White and six other free agents coach Jimmy Johnson was pleased
In other NFL training camp in an attempt to improve on a 9-7 with Aikman's workout
news:
finish last season.
"He's much farther along than
- Quarterback Billy Joe Hobert
-Wide receiver Andre Rison is what anybody ever anticipated. I
left his baseball bat an Sarasota, participating in Atlanta Falcons really feel optimistic and somewhat
Fla., and reported to camp with the workouts despite a contract dis- realistic that he'll be tllere for the
Los Angeles Raiders. Hoben, who pule . Rison, who owns NFL opening ballgan\e," Johnson said.

NFL camps to qpen Wednesday

sons for that,' ' Dennison said.
"Number one is football, which
throws everything out of whack.
The other reascin is the number of
sports.
''About 72.5 percent of ·our
scholarships go to men and 27.5 to
women. And, the basic difference
again is football . Out of the '199
sc holarships {this year), 88 are
football ." ·
Dennison said thai if football
were excluded from Akron's gender-equity mix, the male-female
. percentage would drop to about a
66-34 ratio.
Dennison said the only war to "
reduce the current percentages IS to
increase the number of women's
varsity sports.
Akron's five-year plan calls for
adding women's field hockey, soccer and swimming teams at an
additional cost of aboui $500,000
annually.

THE ·;l993

Drysdale's intimi~ator, lovable-guy
personas remembered at funeral. _
By KEN PETERS
GLENDALE, Calif. {AP) Give Don Drysdale a baseball and
he was an intimidator, an iniense
competitor who gave no quaner.
Off the field, he was warm and
friendly, adevoled family' man who·
loved to laugh.
That was the portrait painled by
those eulogizing Drysdale, at
memorial services Monday for the
Hall of Fame pitcher.
There were solemn ·tributes,
with many. including Dodgers
pitcher Ore! Hershiser and broadcaster Dick Enherg, unable to fight
bijc k tears. .
..
"He was a modem-da hero,"
said Hershiser, who in 19k8 broke
Drys dale 's 20-year-old major
league record for consecutive
scoreless iMings.
Reading a leuer he had written
to Drysdale's children, Hershiser,
his voice breaking, said: "He not
only was a great pitcher, but his
very hei~g personified greatness.
Everyone in this game needs a
mentor, and I've had one of the
greatest ones you could ever
have.'"
1
Drysdale greeted Hershiser as
he came off !he field after breaking
the n.cord and congratulated him
for keeping the mark in the
Dodgers family.
Enberg, who worked with Drysdale after the pitcher moved into

the broadcast booth, said: ''There great, great sense of humor; he
was an expression he used over and loved to laugh and have a good
over - 'If you hurry in and out of time.''
the clubhouse, you 'II hurry in and
Drysdale, 56, who staned with
out of the game. You have a the Dodgers in Brooklyn before
responsibility to your teammates they moved to Los Angeles, died of
and to the fans.'
J, a heart attack. Authorities said
"To some of us, he may have Drysdale a~tly died the night
hurried in and out of life too soon of July 2 m his Moatreal hotel
and didn't give us enough time to room. His body was found the next
tell him that we loved him.''
day.
And there was humor, as Bob
More than 1,000 people attendUecker, at the request of Drys- ed the services Monday at Forest
dale's widow, Ann Meyers, Lawn chapel. ·
The services were the second·in
recalled lighter moments from
two
weeks for a Dodgers great
Drysdale's life.
"I remember the fust time Don elecled to baseball's Hall of Fame.
touclieil riie; it was riglilhere,''- A week earlier, RoyCam~lla; a
Uecker said, pointing to a spot on catcher for the Dodgers m Brookhis neck where Drysdale - who ! yn, died at age 71. Drysdale
hit a major league-record 154 bat- attended memorial services for
ters during his career - nicked Campanella June 30 at Forest
Lawn-Hollywood Hills.
,
him with a brushback pitch.
With a side-arm delivery that
Uecker, the broadcaster who
gained more fame with tales of his made him toush on right-handed
undistinguished baseball career hiuers, Drysdale was 209-166 with
than he did playing, recalled how, a 2.95 ERA in 14 seuons with the
in his final major league game, he Dodgers from .1956-69.In 1962, he ·
won the National League's Cy
faced Drysdale.
"We had been out together the Young Award.
Among his achievements was
night before and, before the game, I
found out that as Drysdale was · his string of 58 shutout innings in
going over our lineup card, he saw 1968.
Drysdale is also survived by
my name and asked, 'Who's that?' ·
That aggravated me .... The first silos Don Jr. and Darren, daughter
lime up, I singled, right between Drew; and a daughter, Kelly, from
his legs. Then I stood on fust base a previous marriage.
and apologized to him . ... He had a

In pre-AU-Star Game festiritles,

Gonzalez beats Griffey in home .
r_u n contest; J~ckson lauds Bonds
•
" Baseball needs ~arry Bonds to Michael "has done for the NBA,"
do things like that," Jackson said. Jackion said. "But to do that he
" He's ripe to take the next step; needs some big moments that
The game always needs a player everyone will remember. He needs
like that.''
10 know more about drlrnL ''
' It's not that Bonds hasn't had
At. the All-Star festivities, Reghis chances, either. In the last three gie helped Michael with some bat·
playoff series with Pittsburgh, ling tips before the celebrity~
Bonds combined to· hit .191 with Jackson also gave some Hall of
on11 homer and three R'B Is in 20 Fame advice to Tom Sellecte'and .
games. Some say Bonds can't join Bill Murray.
the elite until he has a really big
Jordan also took some infield
show of his own.
·.
,
practice and looked good, particu" !don't mind if people expect a larly going back on high poptjps in
lot from me," Bonds said. ~ ·1 the hot Baltimore sun.
expect a lot from myself! '
"He bandies the ball good,''
Bonds is working on his third Jackson said. "Watch him handle
straight NL MVP award,·and a lot the ball, the way he moves. He is a
of people think it should be four in natulal ." a row. Bonds, signed to a six-deal
Despite all its problems off the
for a record $43 .75 'million as a field, Monday was a good day for
free agent, is hitting .348 with 24 baseball. In the heroes game,
homers and 71 RBis for fll'St-place Brooks Robinson made a neat play
San Francisco.
.
moving to his right, while in the
"Barry can follow in the foot- ho01e run derby Juan Gonzalez
steps of Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio beat Ken Griffey Jr. in double
and Mickey Mantle like I did," ovenime• .
Reggie said. "He's already on ·the
Griffey hit the br:ick warehouSe
cover of all the magazines ... on beyond the right-field wall and
ESPN and CNN every night That's . Gonzalez hit a ball ball 4.73 feet
what I always looked for, a little into the second deck in left Bonds
exposure no matter what they did OK , but he didn't steal the
said.' ·
show.
Bonds was mobbed by about a
hundred kids when he arrived at
Camden Yards at 9:30a.m., but
that was nothing compared to the
crowd - young and old Michael Jordan attracted when his
entourage made it to the press gate.
Jordan participaled in the celebrity
home run derby.
·
ByJOEKAY .
"Barry can do for baseball what
CINCINNATI (AP) - · The
Cincinnati Reds spent more than
they wanted to try to buy a pennant They've gotten an expensive
lesson - all their money couldn't
even buy a winner.
The National . Lea~e·s biggest
payroll - $42.8 million - has
won only half its games &amp;~ .the All·
Star break. Instead of staying with
the front runners in the NL West,
!he Reds are so far. back they're
already thinking of next year.
The most troubling part: They
can't say exactly why it didn't
work.
'.tThere's not one thing you can
put your finger .on," All-Star outfielder Bobby Kelly said.
· "I've got no idea, no idea at
all,'' said pitcher Jose Rijo, who
. hasn't won a game since May 22.
"To .put it mildly, it has been a
nightmare," said geoeral manager
Jim Bowden. ·
·
Call it the Ni(lhtmare on Pete
Rose Way. Even m 1989, the year
the Reds got swamped by Pete
Rose's gambling controVersy, they
went into the All-Star break with a
winning record and a chance .to win
it all.
.
No such hopes this year; The
biggest payroll in club history is
45-45, their worst record at the AllStar break in five years. They
haven't been in fifth place at the
break since 1984. Their 14 1/2game deficit is tl)eir biggest sinCe:
. 1983.
They haven't played like a winning team or acted like one, either.
Think of the lasting images
from the 1990 championship lellll:
pitcher Norm Charlton running
over catcher Mike Scioscil!lp score
a meaningless run ; the :·' N.asty
Boys" bullpen saving and snarling;
Eric Davis dama~ing his kidney
PRE-GAME CLOWNING- Seattle's Ken Grlrfey Jr. (leh) and' while making a divmg catch.
Cincinnati's Barry Larkio clown around during All-Star Game
This year's.lm8$es: Rijo squirtworkouts Monday at Baltimore's Camden Yards, where the mid· ing a water gun m the dugout ;
summer classic will b"e held tonl1ht. (AP)
.
· pitcher Tom Browning waving
from a house across the .street during a game at Wrigley Field; players lounging on the field and jolting
while a trainer tries to lead them in
pre-game stretches.
A whole different mindset.
"
These
guys are more of a Fun
By ROB GLOSTER
receiver and current NBC commenBunch
than
Nasty Boys.
·
. BALTIMORE {AP) - AI tator Ahmad Rashad in the mom.'
"It's
a
little
different
now
for
Kaline sheepishly asked for a sou- . ing. He swung a black Reggie
some reason," Rijo said. "The
venir picture. Ken Griffey Jr. came Jackson model bat.
over to rub shoulders. Reggie JackAfter 25 liners and grounders clubhouse is more relaxed now and
son whispered hitting tips in his and foul balls; he hit one into the there's a little bit more fun/'
The attitude didn't change much
Fans and cameramen followed third row of the left-field seats.
~is every step:
"Just getting warmed up now,'' when Bowden changed managers,
• At the Sllowcase for baseball he yelled at Jackson, his personal replacing Tony Perez with Davey
~past and present, the center of
tutor for the day. "I need some golf Johnson after 44 games. A week
after he anived, Johnson was holdattention was a 6-foot-5 right-han- pitches to tee it up.'' •
der who gave up baseball in high
Batting practi~e pitcher Bill ing a tealn meeting ·to discuss the
school.
Swaggeny, an Oriole hurler .in the lackluster play, just as Perez had
His Chicago White Sox uniform 1980s, happily gave up Jordan's done before him.
It took an infusitln of minor-lealiad No. 23 and the name Jordan on first homer at Camden Yards.
guers
before the All-Star break to
the back. His tongue shot out after
"He took me out of Camden
get
them
playing well. The Reds
every swing, carefully lickipg his Yards, now I want to take him 1t(Jp.lip. Sweat trickled down his on-1,'' Swaggerty said with a won seven of their last ·10 to reach
forehead.
laugf.. "Between {Dave) Winfield . . 500, and seemed a lot more
: Even on a field loaded with Hall and Jordan, those are the biggest enthused with the yOUI)ger players
around.
qf Famers and AU-Stars, the loud· strike zones I've ever faced."
"Guys are focused," ootfielder
est cheers were for Michael Jordan.
Jordan, who was .recruited to
Eresh off a weekend golf tourna- play baseball at Clemson and South Reggie Sanders Said. "We're stanment, Jordan tried his luck in a Carolina, kept his feet together and ing 'to have more fun. Befote,- we
c·e lcbrity home run derby and his hands back- a style more suit- weren't doing that -. we were lr:ind
of going through the motions."
'ailded some luster to Monday's fes- able for softball.
No ooe has accused the pitchers
tivities on the eve of the AU-Star
"Widen his stance about·a foot
!Jf
going
through the motions. They
dame.
·
or a foot and a half, and he'll slam
.
: If baseball was worri~ that Jor- d~~ the ~U,'' said Steve Garvey, JUSt haven't pitcbed well.
Check out the records and
~ would steal the hmehght from
m1xmg h1s sports metaphors with
earned run averages: Rijo 6-5,
us own stars, those fears were . gusto.
IJilfounded. He did, however, tum ··
Jordan moved to second base 3.27; Tim Belcher 7-5, 4.05; John
some of the sport's legends into and took a few ground balls from Smiler 3:9, 5.62 (out with a sore
s~-.suuck fans.
.
Jackson, yelling iasults at Rlishad· elbow); T1m Pllgh 5-9, 4.94. Throw
in Rob Dibble, who has walked 22
. I w.anted to have a p1cture as he scooped up grounders
in 22 2-3 innings, llld the numbers
talcen w1th ham,'' saad Kalme, the
· ·
suggest more of an expansion
Hall of i'ame outfielder. "He's
maybe the greatest athlete that's ' Then back'io "the batting cage pitching staff than one expected to
for 36 more swings and another press the Atllnta Braves. .
ever lived. He's bigger than life.''
"If your pitching doesn't come
Wearing blue shorts, a white homer. And then- OON'T READ
gplf shin and black baseball spikes, THIS, PHIL .JACKSON - ·Jordan through,.it doesn't m•uer what
Jordan took balling practice with took the mound and pitched to team you have," Bowden said.
· actors Bill Murray, Jim Belushi and Belushi. The tongue jumped out "It's pretty diffiCult to win if you
can '.t get the other team out"
Tom Selleck and former wide every after pitch.
•
· By JIM DONAGHY
BALTIMORE {AP) - Reggie
Jackson sees a lot of himsclr in
Barry Bonds. ·
"He's good !~king, weil-spoken and the best player i!l the
game," Jackson said. "He does
everything well and everyone
knows about him.''
.
Those are some of the awibutes
"Mr. Oc'toher" prided himself on
as a player.
·
.
Bonds wQuld like nothing more
than to finally provide some dnurui
of his own tonight ·in the All-Star
game {8 :35 p.m. EDT) at cozy
Camden Yards . Mark Langston
starts for the American League and
Terry Mulholland for the National
League.
"This can ·be Barry's show case," said Jackson, who enters the
Hall of Fame on Aug. I. "The All·
Star game, the playoffs, the World.
Series ... this Cl!!1 be his time like it
was my time. He has as much ability as anyone who has ever played
the game.:•
1ackson knows about this subject like Sinatra knows how to
change a note. Reggie grabbed the
summer and fall by the throat more
than just aboot anyol)e, bitting an
All-Star home run off the power
transformer on the right-field roof
at Tiger Stadium in 1971 and three
home runs in one magical 'world
Series game at Yankee Stadium
against the Dodgers.
" I still watch the replay of those
games and still get the same feelings.
·•

Hall of Famers tout
Jordan's ballpark skills

ear.

The Meigs County Fair. Tab Is Coming
August 13, 1993.
Advertising Deadline Is.
August 5, 1993.
CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

,992·2"155
'

Reds' trying to
buy pennant
lesson in futility

BOOM! - Detroit sinner Cecil Fielder
watches the flight or tile hall during the borne
rug contest Mooday at Baltimore's Camden
Yards, held as part or the pre-All-Star Game

festivities. Fielder, who feli snubbed wbea he ·
wasn't picked for tbe American LeagH 11quad
last year, is seekln1 to prove be belongs this
year. {AP)

Nelsonville-York downs Gallipolis
Yankees in Hubbard LL Tournament:
Nelsonville-York defeated the
Nelsonville came back with a
GallipOlis: Yankees in the opening big three run fifth after holding the
. game of the Bill Hubbard Memori- Yankees scoreless in the top half of
al Little League Tournament at the frame. Flynt Smathers led off
Syracuse's King 'Field Monday with a walk, Joshua Levandafsky
night.
.
·
doubled, Joshua Blevins singled,
then after a force oot and strikeout,
~owever, a driving rain storm
claimed the second contest, forcing l:(evin Lindsery walked and scored
a postponment of !he championship on singles by Noah Watkins and a
round from Wednesday to Thurs- fly out by Bateman.
Schultz retired the side in the ·
day.
Chester had a 7-0 lead over top half of the si"'h and final round
Racine fall by the wayside as the with the score tied 7· 7.
Schultz then led off the· sixth
two will start a new game today at
6 p.m. Sylacuse Hubbaril's Green- with a single, but a 4-6 pick off
house will meet Monday night's play and fly out by Smathers left
winner, the Nelsonville-York NelsonviUe with just one out in the
bottom of the sixth. Flynt Smathers
Roclry Boots team, at 7:30.
Wednesda,Y's only contest pits singled, then .following a walk to
Pomeroy agamst the winner of the Levandafsky came home with the
Rac:ioe-Chesler game at6:30 p.m. ' winning run on a steal attempt and
Thursday's consokJtion game fielder'~ choice. Nelsonville
begins at 6 p.m., while the champi- · claimed the 8-7 win to advance to
the semi-finals just as a rain storm
onship begms at 7:15.
Scoring single runs in the fust began brewing in the background.
Smathers and Schult combined
two innings, Nelsonville-Rocky
for
nine strikeouts and four walks.
Boots took 2-'1 leall into the sec•
Lane,
c1espile pitching well, sufond' inning, where Gallipolis scored
fered
the loss, fannin-g six and
its fust run to close tht: gilp at 2•1. .
Nelsonyille recovered that run walking four.
Raius hit, postpone action.
and scpred one more to lead 4-1
Chester took a 3-0 lead in the
after t11ree frames. ·Gallipolis blew
the gam,e open in the fourth. when top of the first on a lead-off walk to
Ronnie Haynes singled, then after Beau Bailey, Matt Edwards' fieldtwo strikeouts, Justin Jones walked, er's choice, an error on Wes
Jason Johnson walked and Jerrod Craw's hit ball and singles by
Ball singled. AJ. Johnson doubled, Adam Sanders and Dustin Huff.
Cody Lane singled and Jeremy Ball man.
doubled to round out the six-run • Eric Smith fanned the side in the
innin~. The score now stood at 7-4
bottom of the fust, strilr:ing out the
with JUS! two rounds left.
heart of Racine's line-up.
In that frame Shawn Schultz
Bailey led off the second with a
came on in relief of staner Travis single, Edwards singled, Sanders
Smathers.
singled and Smith hit a towering

a

'Eight Minute War' leaves .Nitz,
Brown bruised after 10 rounds
Brian "The Blitz" Nitz of
Middlepon recenOy fought in a tOround "Main Event" prize fight
against Glenwood "The Beast"
Brown in St. Louis, Mo.
The fight hecame known as the
"Eight Minute War".
Nitz had previously learned that
Brown had been ranked 17th in the
nation, .hOwever, because of recent
~uccess, Brown's rating {27-1) had
Improved to fourth in the world.
Brown is scheduled for a title
fight next month, but found that he
had his hands full with the local
spariing ace Nitz.
Nitz dominated the first two
rounds with a powerful body attack
l!nd several key uppercuts that sent ·
Brown to the ropes. In the third
round, Brown landed an overhand
right that sent Nitz down.
As the fight resumed, Nitz landed
several startling blows to Brown. ·
As the two exchanged punches,
Brown caught Nitz with another
right that. sent Nitz back on the
ropes. The refereee stopped the
fight.

Meigs ladies' morning
golf winners announced
Winners
w~re
recently
announced for the July 6 action in
the Tuesday Morning Ladies' Golf
League at the Meigs County Golf
Course.
Becky Anderson won the low
gross and putts, while Jolinne
Childs won low net, and Julia
Hysell had a chip in the hole.
· Action continued this morning at
the club.
. FQr funher infonnalion or to get
involved in the league, caU the club
or 992-332~.
Jack Demp5ey, in winninJ. the
heavyweight title from Jess Willard
in 1919, was outweighted 245
pounds to 187.

Nitz recieved only a bruised eye
and despite !he referee stopping the
fight in Brown's favor, Brown
went to the hospital where he was
checked for a broken nose and
bruised ribs.
Nitz's' strong showing earned
him a spot in another "Main Event"
frght against Latrell Fingers on
August 27th for an eight roonder in
St. Louis, Missouri.
..

home run to give Chester a 7-0
lead.
1ust he fore Racine had its second chance, threatening lightning
and and torrential rains hit King
Field, forcing a rematch for
tonight

By
Dave
Grate

of
Retlt.d
.
fel'lllt•e
You caft•t choaae Your 11naaton,
but lhafa only fw. Th.y proiNobly
wouldn't have choeon you.

.-.

You'll know gender equality Ia
here the day you cen h1111e your
car fixed at Ml'8. Goadwronch.

•••

Do we nHCI ' 2-week vacation to
recover from 50 wHka of work,
or 50 week• of work to recover
lrom • 2-woek vacation?

•••

Fewlhingo •• hanlor Ia atomach
th•n th• Mnoy•nce of a good

example.

•••

Aa - gel older, our bod!" gel
1horter and our anRdotee gal
longer.

••••

C01111 O.t to R1tlolld
F1rititure for A •cOOL• Deal

Air ColllltlaHn,
Refrigerators 111d Freezers.
01

•

•••

A•' Till Jl•st fiNn

c.... ••• 111., n.. a.n!
1 SHOWROIIMS

11 WARIHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
R1tlalld, Ok.

Rt. 124

742·2211

HOLZER .CLINI
is pleased to announce

the REOPENING of the

Holzer .Clinic Optical Dep~rtment
on Thursday, July 15, 1993
Ophthalmologists Howard Greene, M.D., and N. Bozkir, M.D.,
are joined by Optician Kent Saunders to offer you
1

one stop eyt-clltr Stnlice.

Check us Out!
0 Complete eye-ex1111lnatlon
0 Full line of frames and lenses
0 Contact Lenses
0 Reasonable prices
0 On&amp;-stop convenience

..

The Optical Department is conveniently located in Ophthalmology
on the Second Floor of Holzer Oinic.

Open 8 a.m. II) 4:30p.m. Monday through Friday
Call 446-3421 fo~ an appointment

HOLZER CLINIC
90 Jackson Pike

••

�•.

.

.

-

.

By ·The Ben

The Daily Sentinel

Country ~est~ri(top ten In the service

Tue8day, July 13, 1883

0

Mr: and Mrs. Robert Lee and
Mr. and Mn. lima Lee of MansWhaley, Florida, attended the field visited llltir Mit, Norma Lee,
runa'll ol their brother-in-law, Doa reeently. Mr. and Mn. Paul Kloel.
Updqplf. He was lilt .bushend of Syr~CU~e, and Mn. Pluline Alkinl
EleanOr Gilkey~were guelltl of Slella Aikins and
.Dick Knopp, NC..V Clrlisle, and Ruby Diehl to bclp ce1ebn1e llltir
-Bill KnopP, -.:&gt;aYtc&gt;n, spent 1 few birthdays.
.
·
days bere visiting old friends and · Mr. and Mrs. Junior Payne,
relatives. · . .
. Columl!us, visited Mr. ilnd Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkiril visited Kevin Payne.
Mr. ~ Mrs.' Bob Gib5oll and Ray
Wind CWk visited ber grand·
Allcire: Columbus, =ently.
. m~. ~Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gilkey,

AIIIIOit all ollbem

Columbus, and Mr. I,Pd Mn. Babe

The Faithful Servan11 Sunday
School Class of Racine First Baptist Church met recently at the
home or Bob and Martha Lou
Beelge for a potluck dinner and
class meeting.
Auending were BiD and Laura
Cozart, Mary K. Yost, Sam and
. Mary Curtis, Lin and 'Mildred Hut,
Harry and Joan Pickens, Iohn and
Naomi Stobart, Nondus Hendricks,

George and Beillah Neigler, Betty
Sayre, Jeanette Lawrence, Esther ,
Metcalf, Dale McGraw, Dave,
Lindil·and Seleiul Spencer, Bob and
Martha Lou Beegle.
The blessing was given by Sam
Curtis.
.
A short business meeting fol•
lowed din net with a ':~:X trip
scheduled in August disc ' .

TAMMY QUEEN

Tammy Queen
•
receives.
scholarship

rponiC.

To . celt~brate

birthday ·

Freda Smith and John Holliday
recently visited Miss Clenuna Vale
of CardinJIOn. Sbc will celebrate
her 89th birthday on July 23. Canis
may be sent to her at 4011 Mariol'l
Street, Cardington, Ohio43315.

uici American ·.

.

•Alcoholism: Huw to Recoglliu It. •
Huw to Deal Witlt II, Huw to C'oft·:
qiiD'It" will gi~~e you die tllllll'm. ;
Send a se/f-addrmed, long,
ness-me tllvelope twl a clltck or•
mo~~ey order for $3.65 (tlris illcludt.sl
pos/Dge twlltaNUiltg) to: Alcohol,!
c/o AM Laitdtrs, P.O. BoJC 11562, ,
Chicago,///. 60611.()562, (Ill Ca~~- '

Cr.ol!ED SuNDAY

'

ca}.end af

CODY ORION SPENCER

Cody Spencer
observes birthday

MASVINGO, Zimbabwe (AP)
- Princess Diana was just another
charity worker as she helped ·feed
children suffering through.. the
worst droUght in tlie region's histo-

Cody Orion Spencer recently ry. The princess spooned corn,
celebrated his fll'st birthday at the · peanut and bean stew into lilt chilhome of his parents Brian and dren's battered enamel bowls MonNancy Spencer in Hilliard. A few day.
.
Wednesday
at
8:30
am.
at
the
condays
earlier he also celebrated his
Few of the children knew who
Community Cale~~dar Items
rerence room of Bank One.
birthday at his grandmother's home Diana was.
ap~ar two days before aa event
in Pomeroy.
"To these people she i.s just
and the day or that evmt.Items
POMEROY
•
Amateur
GatdCnThose
auending
or
sending
gifts
another
muruntu (white person),".
must be received well In advance
said
farmer
ProSPBh Rusike.
ers'
Club
meets
Wednesday
at
6
.
were
his
parents,
Brian
and
Nancy
to assure publlcadoD in the cal·
The
estranged
wife of lilt heir 10
p.m.
at
the
horne
of
Mrs.
Charles
Spencer.
formerly
of
Pomeroy;
endar.
Blakeslee for a potluck garden pic- Norma Baker, grandmother, the British throne made a four-day
nic. Speaker will be Harold Kneen, Pomeroy; Neuiw Moore, great visit to Zimbabwe. ·
TUESDAY
extension
agent, on growing plants grandmother, Syracuse; Angela
·MIDDLEPORT · Vacation
and
flowers
in containers.
Baker, aunt, Pomeroy; Mr. and
LOS ANGELES (AP)- A man
'
Bible School at Victory Baptist
Mrs. Richard Baker and family, accused of stalkinf Janet Jackson
Church in Middleport throu$11 Fri·
MIDDLEPORT • American Reedsville; Mr . .lind Mrs. Kyle . got two years in pnson for sending
day rrom 6:15-8:45 p.m. mghtly.
·
Balloons will be released after lilt Legion Feeney Benneu Post No. B.ur Iey, TempIe, Texas; Mr . an d threateningletters.
Frank
Paul
Jones,
34,
was
senworship service on Sunday. The 128. Middleport, will meet Mrs. David Broshear and family, tenced Monday after adnriuin he
theme is "Digging ror God's Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the post Hilliard; and Mr. and Mrs. Tudor had "made alot.~f mista!Ces.'~'1 He
Truth'' and dinosaurs will be Ce;a, home. All members are urged 10 Fernando and family, Hilliard.
tured. Transportation wiD be avail·· auenil.
On May 16, lilt Spencer family
able by calling Dwight Ashley at
· returned to Pomeroy for Cody's
992-6926.
CHESTER • Past Councilors . baptism. Reverend Keith Rader
Club No. 323, Daughters of Ameri· performed the baptism at the
'
RACINE • Southern High Alb· ca, will have a picnic and annual Rocksprings United M~thodist
Ietic Boosters·will meet Tuesday at meeting Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the Ch h s · 1 f 11
be
urc · pecta am Y mem rs
7 p.m. at the high school. Officers home of Beuy Young with Mae prrsent
were"grandmother Norma
will be elected.
·
McPedc as co-hosteSs. Bring a COV· B k
d
1
d th
' .•
ered dish and table service as well
a er an grea gran mo er
Nettie Moore.
BURLINGHAM • The Bedford as gifts for lilt games.
Brian and Nancy are both former
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
THURSDAY
residents or Pomeroy but now
menl Committee will meet Tuesday
ANTIQUITY. Vacation bible reside at 4811 Jeaneuel Road,
at 7:30 p.m. at the Burlingham
State Auto's already
school at Antiquity Baptist Chtireh, Hilliard, Ohio 43026.
'
Modem Woodmen Hall.
.
low pr1111iuma can be
Thursday through sunday rrom 9
red!
ad even more by
POMEROY • Nonna Torres of a.m. 10 noon. Theme is The Great
Th Hi
(H · ) G h ·
insuring both your car
e nes emes en etmer
the Meigs County Health Dc;part· Dinosaur aunt Classes for ages-six
·and
home with the s~ta
ment will spe8k at the TOPS meet· through hi~schoot Call Terry family reunion will be .held Sun, ,
•
.
-•
.
day,
noon
to
5
p.m.,
at
the
Senior
Auto
Companies.
Shain
ing on Tuesday.
• • 949•
.or huormatiOn.
Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights,
Let us tell you just
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun·
REEDSVll.LE ~ Olive Town·· Pomeroy. T~e descendants of
how much your savings
ty Board of Elections will meet ship zoning commission meetS George and Elizab~th Brown
Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. at the offtce.
Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Heines and Michael and Lucretia
can be.
Sponagel .Genhcimer arc asked to
ReedsviUe Fire House. .
take family pictures and albums 10
. POMEROY • The Meigs Athlet· .
ic Boosters will meet Tuc;sday at
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- the reunion. Those attending are
7:30p.m. All parents are urged to ty Democratic Executive Commit- also asked to take a covered dish,
tee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. drinks, and table 'service. Anyone
attend.
with questions may call Willird
at lilt Carpenters Hall.
Hines,
Pandora Collins, or Marty
POMEROY · Meigs County
Struble.
Republican Executive Committee
POMEROY • Tbe Pomeroy
will meet Tuesday at ,1 p.m. at the Group of AA and AIAnon will Golf winners named
214 EAST MAIN
Meigs County Counhouse.
· . meet Thursday at 7 ·p.m. at Sacred
POMEROY
Winners in the Tuesday morning
Heart Cathohc Church. Call 992Ladies Golf League at the Meigs
. REEDSVILLE • Eastern Band 5763 for mm: information. ·
' . .. 992-6687
County Golf Course were Becky
Boosters meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
RUTLAND • Leading Creek Anderson, low gross and low plilts;
the high school band room.
Conservancy District meets Tburs· Joan Childs, low net; Julia HyseU,
WEDNESDAY
day at S p.m. at lilt office. Public • chip-in-hole.
I ..........
c....,..fllll
POMEROY : Pomeroy Mer- welcome.
Starting time has been set· back
chants Association will meet
from 9 am.IO 8:30am.
• • :-7
.

• A.lt ........... co•ty J'OU' ad nu . .tIN pea; 1kl ~
• Roooi.. olioeoutforadopai&lt;lia ..._ .
• Fno Ado; Cl-WIIJ ...t F..... ado ...-15 ...,...., willloo .

....
• Prioo ...... r.....

sc~a,..t........

caplt.oi!O.-io dolll&gt;lo priM

- •7po!Miitoo1Jp0ool)'uool
• S..tiMI io 1001 ,.,...u.lo (or ....,r. .

1:00 p.m. Solllrday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00p.m. Tuesday
i:OO p.m. Wedneoday
100p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

·

Clouified page• corJer the
fofWu,intJ telephone eschall(le&amp; ...
G.Wa Coanty Melp County Muon Co., WV
' 614 'Area Code 614 Area Code 3M
Area Code
446-Golllpallo .

~port/

S67..o-wr.

64s-Anlolo Jllll.

Pomeror
985 Cs rer
843-Portlaad
247.........rtFaDo
949-Roclae

379-ll'o!...

742-Rad..d

na..,vu....:.

Bopp1 Atio

Ia M-rioa
Yord Soleo
• A eluolt'tod ad_..
"' plaood la ... Cdlpolio Dolly
T..U..... (.m,t ClUolt'..t DloplaJ, a..CoN or Lopl
Nooieeo) will aloo appaor hi.... Pomt PlaUaat Bop,_ ...t
... Dolly S..IIMI, ......... • - 18,000 1oo-

24$-RioC.....

2sr..c., .. tllll.

675-jPL 1'1-

FREE EniUTES
915-4472

J&amp;THOME
IMPROVEMENTS

6
10
Monthly

Rate

15
15
15
15
15 .

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

56-PatohrSalo
M\Miical lutnMeall

$ .20
$30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

Ratet aJe for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

Frulu a Voptob._
For Sale or Trade

1· \1;\l ~ I 1'1'1.11·::'
,\ I I\ I ~ I ()CJ,
qv

311-llot.lla u - ror Sale
»- r .... (or s.Ja •

ll'utodto BuJ
U......k
Bay a Crab!

- Burl• ., Buildiafo
35- Lou t1: ~-

charged for each day u ~te ads.
f------;;-;;:.::;=;:;::;;;;;;=r.----"""j 56- Baal Eo~o~e '~~'""""'
1\1\1\1:-

s-1

a- r..r R•t

-

Mot.lla

-

A,.n-t r.. 11.1
FIUIIiohacl R....

Moloreyclel ·
Boaro a MoiWin (or Sale
Auto Parll a Acct0010ri•j
Auto Ropolr

-s-r..R.t
2-lall_,-

3- Aaaou.~•ll
~Ci~way

•

ll-B.tpll'......
12- Si•llo• ll'utod
13-t-14- Bu.;- Traiai"l
1s- sclooolo a

$- BapPJ Ado

Pablo Picasso ranks as the most prolific painter of all t11111. In a
carMr that lutad 78 yeeni,,lt has been estlmllad, PlcaAO produced
about 13,500 paintings or daalgna, 100,000 printings or engravings,
34,000 book llluatratlona and 300 sculptures or caranilcs.

6-IMl...t Foud
7-IMlud Foud
&amp;- Put.lic Solo a

••tructioa

,.......

16- Radio, TV a CB Repair
17- Miocalta-18-ll'aateciToDo

9- ll'aatod to Buy

Bl .I.LETI:\ BO.\RD

aForliliaor

Aa... forS.Io
T,..W r.r S.lo
VaBI a 41VD'o

4i- U... r..r R.U

•

c..,-.Equl.......

47- Waatod to R•t
48forR•t

:-LI\\1( 1·.:'

.•

Eloctricol a Rerr·ipn•lio~

53- Aatiqtioo
54- Mioc. Merebaadioe

c-atBauliaf
Mobile Home Repair

ss- Biaildi"l SuppliO.
Public Notice

poo

Pl. .~ ... a Boati"f
E..... w.,

sz- SJ'O!"'aa Coodo

BULUnl IOARD DEADLINE.
: 4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Fro• Foundatioa

Roof

Inside and Out
Free !OatiiiiiiiH,
LO!fCoata.
Work Ciusranteed

CALL 992·6123

Public Notice
If for any r•••on
Campbell Tronoport...on
Comp1111y, Inc. laUe to 110t on

your clolm within 110 dayo,
then you may oubmlt It to:

United S11tt11 Co11t Guard

Nollonol. Pollution Fundo
Center, 4200 Wlloon Blvd.,

Suite 1000, Arlington, VA
22203-1804.
(7) 5, .. 7,
12, 13,14,
15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 26,

MIRACLE CRUSADE
Meigs Jr. Hlgtt Auditorium
Sat.,July 17th, 2 P.M.
Evangelist Michael Vance
Special Music

27, 28, 20, 30; (812, 3, 4,
5,6, t, 10, 11,12, 13,3otc

614·949·2911 or
614-593·5010

Dependable

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

WUIII

. $•
DDCODLIII .
lI
CHESTER
PT. PLEASANT
•
•·
.5-4222
. 176·7264
•
L-----------------------------------------J~•
~

'·

I'

In Loving Memory
of
NICK GAUESER

'who pa818d away
·. one year ago,
July 13th.
hilly mlaeed by wife,
· Margie, and fll!llly.

••••••

INTERIOR

:;jj~

FREE ESTIMATES
T11ke the pal" out of
painting. Let me do It
tor you. •

31904 Leadl•1

CrMkload
Middleport, o•io

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES .

.614·992·7144

614·915·4110

. 4/29/93 ,,.

6111W:Il1

mo. pd

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE
SEPTIC SYSTEMS;
HOME SITES and
• TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLE.-G,
DRIVEWAYS INITALLED
liMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

111/'92/1 mo.

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone

Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

'992-3470
OWNIR: loll Wlciltnham

m11mo.

. 5/10/93

985·4181 .

6·9-93-dn

RIVER VAllE,Y
CONTUCTORS
FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.

Low Cost
Inside, OUtside, Top
to Bottom

PH. 742·2217
&amp;.30.1

mo. pd.

J&amp;L INSULATION
.
Free Estimates
Replacement

Windows
VInyl Siding
Roofing
C.ll ua for
Special PrieM on
Siding and Window.

992-2772
Ja1111a Keeaee, owner

B&amp;f

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT llRES
205-75R15"11u-' Pow XTM RWI.
205-75R14"11a- Pow XTM RWL
215-75R15".Fir-neOWL
235-75R15" Flr-ne OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING 'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 1121113

Truck1ng
We Haul Gravel,

Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-3290
or

614-698-6500 '

7nllln

.Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES, •

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SA 7

985-3406

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

992-7878

3/8/lln

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

,

~·
SNODGUSS'

UPHOUTERY
UCIHE, OHIO

"Helping You To

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL
Reaso11able .
Rates
JOE SAYRE

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
' FREE ESTlMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sandoy Calls)
2112/92/tfn

~--------~--------~ "

Reeover Your
lnve•tmeol"

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE"COMPANY

614·742·2996 .
I •4 •

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

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

Box 189

FOR SALE

St. It, 7
Claeslaire; OH.

MORRIS
· "
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

Call 614·99 2· ·
6637

DALTON

CMHIIII

Far•

Remodellig llld Atptlr

.

....

1 ••

EAGLES
.· CLUB
IN j)OMEROY

P1inllng, Experienced

6:45p.m.
., Spacial ,Esrly Bird
00 Payoff
Thl• ad good for 1
FREE card.

Fr• ElllmalH

Lie. No•.006H2

614-446-8568 ~II

'1

.UNLIMITED ONE ,
MONTH TANNING

$25.00
WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

FOREVER
BRONZE

Tacllenllle Rd •

RtKIH

949~2826
1-17-113·1 mo.

·,

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264 .,..... lin

WAYNE

EVERY THURSDAY

Chester, Oh, 45720

'•

Pomeroy, Ohio

HELP
.WANTED
.T•ato Pickers·
&amp; Packers
Paul Hill
61.·247·2012.

numbing

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl, ~AND,
. LIMESTONE, TOP S.OIL
r. FILL DIRT

Help wanted

Letart Falls

LINDA'S
PAINTING

36970 Ball Run Road

and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
FREE ESTIMATES
50734 Bigley Ridge Rd.
long htto•, 0~. 457•3

.C. YOUNG
992-6,215

··~~~~;;=.~

'

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

:J-16-13-lln

WICK.'S HAULING
SERVICE

.SIZED UMESTONE

Kanauga, Oh.

In Memory

949·2168

Service ·

5-24-1

Stone

AMVETBINGO
Every Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Hard Carda $40/game
$1.'15 Cover All. Minimum 12
cards. Bring ad for free card.

2

FREE ESTIMATES

Cloo.,t Sunday
949·2104·

Reasonable Rates

Up~oluory '

a,'·

11

l.D.C. ~llir Center

PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra 116· M-F 1-3 Sat.

Middleport,
PoNroy, Racine,
Rutlaad, Mason
Areas

Qua

:-/early impossible, in fact. Because every Thane 'XL 1200
Weathertron '·heat pump is designed. tested and manufactured to,last. Equipped. ~ith the legendary Climaluff'compressor and exclusive Spine Firi' coil, the XL 1200 will run
for years, regardless of the weather. It provides cooling effi.
ciency up to 13.0 SEER. And both compressor and coil are
covered by Thane's IO.year manufacturer's limited warranty,
plus two yeam on all parts. So for reliable,
year-round comfort, it's hard to stop ·
the XL 120~. It~ Hqrd To Slop A Thm.e.·

Aulhorized: Brlgga I.
Str1tton MTD, Ryan,

'

· RATES
Words

Gutters
OownaJ)outa
Gutter C.._nlng
Painting

LAWN . CARE

•Painting Services

·•The Area's Number 1
'
Marketplace
Days
1
3

NEW-REPA)R

1

~===============================;1•we

.

.

./

ROOFING.

Wlllll lllEY
Parts tllll Sarvkt
Mowtn • Cltala Saws
WM4taters

PH. 614·992·5591

Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobile Homes

.

·IT'S HARD:.
TO STOP
A TRANE~

· PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
.'· UNES
,eiSEMENTS &amp;
. (HOME SITES
._UUNG: Llmeatona,
D!rt, Gravlll and Coa.l
LICENSED ond BONDED

How.nl L

. HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG ,··.

4~•

576-'Applo c....
773-M882-N.w &amp; ....
895-Le&amp;ort
· 937-Bdolo

· 667...(;ooi.Wo

-r..... rorllat

1

~

·

ror ...... - daJ ...... ia ,.,..,. Coli bofon 2:00 , .••
daJ ..... pdlle.-.. t o - - l i o •

"We thought it might make an
interesting headline- Hollywood
Comes 10 HoUywood," said David
NASHVII,.LE, Tenn. (AP) Rubin of David Rubin Casting. "It
Country singer Sammy Kersh&amp;?~ was really sort of a whimsical
spent the night bagging sand arter a choice. But, at the same time, we .
weekend concert in flood-ravaged knew that the tenitory was likely to '
Des Moines, Iowa.
produce die right kind of kids."
·
With Wiler corning over a nearThe children are 10 ~ with
by dam, emerge~y officials gave Costner in "The War, ' a movie
lilt musicians 3l)· minutes Saturday about a Vietnam veteran who :·
night 10 pack up and get their bUck comes home to a small town in''
out of town.
Mississippi to find his children :
Kershaw then went to a nearby/ embroiled in a feud wilh neighbor- :
stteet where he, guitarist Jim Gaif:' hood bullies.

.

~ftC............

.
.r ... -

rtor fonl&lt;loJ (ct.ock

Plan reunion

•

··

• .u. .... -~poidlaod_ ...,

• 0

Stop&amp; CoMpare

UCINI
MOWER CUNIC

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

MONJ.y Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wednooday Paper .
Paper

POLICIES

HOU.YWOOD, Ala. (AP)- A,
HoUyWOod, Calif., casting company had one reason for goinf to Hollywood, Ala., in search o youngsters 10 be in a new Kevin Costner
movie.

Mushy Stuff

COPY DEADLINE

MoN. thru Far. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.S-12

•

The sled-dog command "Mush!" is a
The name of Whitney Ashley corruption of "Marchons!" !meaning
was unintentionally omitted fro~ a "Let's go"l, which French Canadian
recent photo of the ritualistic team sled drivers would yell to their dogs
of Star Junior Grange.
to sta~l moving.

t
•
ommum
y
C

To place an ad
Call992~2156

I!

-

-co.,
....
Rt•odelint--ehra ...

. 12-JCI-92·tlo

CLOSED WEDNESDAY

;

.

USED RAILROAD TIU

' SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm
Fri·Sat 5·11 pm

CoN.rn..u

Gerard, Meigs County
Republican County Chairman has
announced that the Republican
rally which had been scheduled for
Saturday has b,een canceled and
will be rescheduled for a later date.
"We had planned to have the
rally at the county garage, but the
extreme heat and· weather conditions caused us a lot of concerns.
We decided it would be beuer a lit·
tle later," Gerard said.
The Republican . Executive
Committee will meet ~ at 7
p.m. and new dates will be discussed at that time.

· IILL SlACK
992·2269

(304) n3-55B5

ada, settd $4.45.)

Pat~!

-FIREWOOD

Mason, WV

All alcoltol problem? Huw Cllll )ION :

Meeting canceled

. •UGHT ""'u1.

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets

busi-:

Women's
Fellowship
meet held

..........

.R&amp;C llCAVATIIG
BULLDOZING

lltlp yowse/f or SIJmtOtte yolt /o~~e? '

•'

IISSEU &amp; IIIII
COl miCTION

'

:

CllOUL"

Group singing was IICCOIIIpanied by
LiUian Hayman II the piano.
A style show w.as presented
with Martha Lou Bcelge desaibing
the modelS. Florence Adam.s had
devotions and Mary CUrtis offered
lilt benedi~on. Tonya Hunler was
pbotogqlllhcr..

Name omitted

I. . " Chattahoochee," Alan
Jackson
2. " No Future In The Past,"
VinceGiU
3. "Money In The Bank," John
Anderson
•
4. " A Bad Goodbye, " clint
Black wiih Wynonna
5. "Somebody Else's Moon,"
Collin Raye

Gem of the Day: One Of tbct
muons my Wife and I ha~ ~
nearly 60 years of I happy mprria&amp;e;
is b«'c•t,.. twice I wcck I whisper;
thnx: liUle words in ber car •• "Let's·

Mother-daughter fete held
"2ortraits of Love• was the
theme of lilt amual molhtr~­
ter banquet at the First Bapust
Chtm:h of Racine. Tbe event was
· planned by the Board of Deaconess. The meal was catered.
Approximately 120 guests weie
in attendance and were welcOIIIed
by Mary Kay Yost. The invocalion
was offered by Marjorie Grimm
and mothers and daughters were
introduced by Barbara Gheen.

up ·

woman's needs,~ Buiqlelll '
.men were primarily in_,mi'MI in1
their 0W11 needs and how bell 10
lhow off their virility.
\
I've oome ·to the CGIICialioll lhll
European men seem sexier 10:
· America~~ women Jw•• they .e
from a diffinn&amp; culllft. '011 cali be IIlii m American 1nen ..ICCQIIln&amp;
to ~
-·
other wordJ,
"different"
hu Illt.
tendency to be perceived ll.
"better." My JICIIOital oa-v.tioD il,
that eorne men 1rc woodclfallowft.
while odten a~e limply awful, 1114'
geopaptyhaliOdting 10 do wkb iL '
- OUfSPOKBN IN PASADENA ,
DBAR PASADENA: Yau Ifill my:
mind. Thanks for a li=nsible m-:

Faithful Servants meet ·recently

Marine Pvt. Talmon S. Lip6. "Wiien Did You Stop Loving scomli, son of David A. and
Me," George Strait
Georgina R. Lipscomb of Star
7. " Tell Me About It," Tanya Route 124, Pomeroy, Ohio, recent·
Tucker with Delben McClinton
ly completed recruit training at
8. " It's Your Call, " Reba Marine corps Recruit Depot, Parris
.
¥cEntire
Island, S.C. He is a 1991 graduate t
9. " The Hard Way ," Mary- of Me\gs High School.
Chapin Carpenter
· . 10. " We'll Bum That Bridge,"
Brooks &amp; Dunn
That archetypal figure of the Wild
.
West, Billy the Kid, was born William
(Source: Cashbox magazine)
H. Bonney in Brooklyn, N.Y.

. Best-selling cou,ntry western
singles of ~t~e week: ·

men were much IIICRICIIIili~ to a

.

.

spe~

If you feel something is:n 't right,

•

1113

Page &amp;·

Harrisonville happenings

.

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
· •TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. I. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
• (614)
667·6628
I

. 4·1

..

DO IT

YOU,RSELF

&amp;CONTUCTOR
SPECiAL

WAYNl
DAL ION

Steel Wood Grained T,extured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
Track, Lock, Spr!ng..and Hardware.
,
WHILE THEY LAST! .

These Sizes 011lyl ·

·8x7 ........... $175
9x7 ........... $189
16x7 ......... $296
Won't .........

�•

•

1993

Ohio
Arlf

CJ~JrlCL'fl't•r

h

SNAFU® by,Brute BeaUle

•2

3f Homel fOr Sale

ALLEYOOP

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

71

·The
.'

,

NEA Cros~word Puzzle

BRIDGE

AuiO• for Sale

----~------------ ·'
uon.•.a.t.ollH4t a-. '

_Food....__ ....... ,

'

ACROSS

:,.::--:lo::..,.::::
.
-::-_-:AI;:m::-;lg::,-:,-:4:-:-•:-::loool-. ;

'

:T-il: po....... . -. -

PHILLIP
ALDER

-

.

15 lloat
COtltpltent
16 Actren

PROCALLIOUSI.QI1f.

exonc-LADIES UVE , _..
NORTH

SttnclJ -

7-12-11

17111111ng
18 GUido'• high
note
20 Cltcltel
21 Tlle ...m

+Q~

"A
Jl
+K10g72

GIRLS UVIIII
24hra., I on 1, 1-ze&amp;.ai:l

+JH

ut. 1444, $3.1111 por m1n muot
bo t1 yra,. ProcoN Co. toa-0115,
.

:i4 HRS IDAYIH

Bo 18 YIL ProcoN Compony,

'"

SO:Z.e31.QI1f.

for Rent

SOUTH

--=-.. -

+Kgs.
"Q816 2

2bdrnt. lpto., lOIII oloctrlc, op;

lum-,

plio-

loundly

West
Pass
Pass

Household

Goods

- - 11Wf12.1858
lot ..... In oftor
Pt.
PI-nt.

Pass

a

Employment Services

Mlaa Paul1'1 Dly Clrl cent.- 1
Block Woot 01 HMC On Jocklon

:;'.'::1n~~ :i~;: ~~~n.:

11 eonc.m For YOIW Clllld'o
Caro. Coil Uo For A VloM. info..
'AVON• ALL AREAS! Slloro your /Toddllra 114 141 1227. P THE GAY CONNECTlON 1;1101). limo wfth ... YCOI'H low tho cha a11r1 ·/School Age 814-4411224.
,
1110.3337 $2.50omln. ,.. moot compony.1.-..e:l-13111,
100'• ol txchlng mt~n In your
oru tonight. Got phono t'o. CCI
BOCA FL.

ltory houooL amoll birn, 1 mill

St-.·14-4-7.
'
unrt;
:i..:;.:.-·
;;:::::;::0:::;-:;:;:;:::::-:-::::::=:-

Pt-nt, $31,000. 30W711-48JII.

1120

34

UtutU• ,.td, IM Ut 4411 .1fler
1 pm.

~o:'"'~·~·~!!~~~~:_-I

~

Fum'-hed Ap.rtment, 1br nell
porltlng, ......~ - .
114 411 OS31,

33 Fanns for Sale
to
Mini linn 2S 10,.. 10 , _ 2

out Jorrloo Hd, -oofto Pol,_. Fumlohod oHicloncy, $1115/mo.,

Business

Fourth Avo.,

Gollipollo.

Fum- EHicioncv
$185
UtiiHioo Pold Shira 8oth, 1107
Second, Gill(pollo, 114 441 4411
Aftor7P.M.
·
Fuml- EHiclonc'l t185
UtiiHioo Pold. Shora loth, 107
8econcl, Gallfpolil, "114 448 4411
Aftor7P.M.

Giveaway

2 Cut1 Kltt1n1, I WMD CMd, •1
Blac"' 1 Yellow, Near Woodl1nd
DriYI, 81'1 41'18 8281 After 4:30

P.M.

Clydo

• Buslneas
Opponunhy

INonCEI
m«t lnfonna.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CC. 114 ue 3438
reaon ... ncla th81 ~ dD bull- lion.
-NOT ta
- 001\d
poople
routhrough tho IAiot 1 ·- g o tar homo conmonoy
otrucllon on RlybiWn Rd.
INIII unlll you hove ln-igllod ,._,.blo
rootrfctlono, ._,.,
the offorlni.
....,, lnfonution mau.d on ,.
Vonctlng Routo: For Soil. q - , 304-171-1213, pioloo no
Strang, Solid Cooh Buolnooo. olnglo wldo tralloro.
High 'l'rlftlc, Looot Locatloni.
1.01o "" ..11 &lt;~n a..... Rood,
- Equ!Pfi*L 1-284 13113. 304.e7Uilll.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
NoW eom.-111- unno,
from t1H.OO, Ll!llpl, !Aliano,
Ac-loo, -.thly pi~·
iow 11 $18.00, coli lodoy FREE
NEW Color Cotolog, 1 - - 1117.

k-, """

Full Bloodod Chow; Molo, To
Noodod Ful~limo,
Good Homo, Coli Evonlngo, 114- Bobyolttor
DoNy Only. In our Homo, Muot
448-7551.
H.vo Own Tronoportotlan, 114. Gtwon Eo~y Amortcon Choir, 251·1131 .
~ Bhopo, 114-4411-28711.
Comfort Air lo Grawi!!Q QuiCkly
KMtono to good homo. 114-4411- And Wo Nood Exportonco
PooPt. To Grow With IJo, Wo
8471
KhiMo, All Colora, Nood Homo
lmmtdl1tt1y,

814~6-0811.

t fomolo puppy, 614-1185-3383.

Lost &amp; Found.

Found: -ding l'lcturao Found
At Hollllno I Tonnor On Stroot,
(GoiUpollol 114-441-8982.
Jac:kaon Pike cioN to Star
Bank;1bllck

bull,700

AngUli

Lbo. Clll814-446-34116

Arw Naw Looking Far lnllallers

And Sorvlco Tocllnlelono. Muot
Hovo 3 Yoo,. Expo.- And
Do Ouoifty Work. Ptoooo Coli
114-141-0114 To Mlkl Appoint·
mont For An lntoiYiow,
Domlno'o Plzu In Pomeroy 1o
now ._!&gt;ling oppllcotlono for
drtwr. only.
··
Eooy Wortli Exi:OIIont Poyl ,.._
oornblo Pnoclucto At Homo, CoK
Toll FrM, 1..aoo-tl7-8511, Ext.
313,
Eldlrly woman

to lltay from

Loot: omoll ohort
Rot Torrllr clog,
tomolo, chlld'o
2013.

7

hotrod, block,
vory trlondly,
pot, 114-1112'

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
1 milt out 218 Wldne.cY.y, baby
e~~rrltr, walker blth tub, CIOihlt,
two 30x11 wall cabln.tt, garden
hand looll, Iron 1kllltl1, 1011 of
mi~IIIMOUI Htmt...

Bop,wornen't

12·1•
ck»lhH.mlcs.

chalrl,booka,ewlno

HI 11t.
houa1 befor. Jumf:KI't St.At.l'lt

ALL Yud Soloo Mull 81 Pold In
Advonoo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

the day Mtorw tha ad Ia to run.

Sunday ldttlon

2:00 p.m.

e

Friday. Mandoy odftlon - 2:00
p.m. S1turd8y.

Gorogo Sol~; Julr 12th, 13th,
14th. Good Clothln~, Mloc.
Homo, 2 Mll11 Out S.R. 554
From Chnhlra, 194 Sllngy

Creek

R01d,

Rooldonco.

c.

Holl•r'ld

RM• eomeone

7pm~7am,

7 nlgiM

por-k, 114-1111-4212, Miry,
lmrnodloto Oponlngo For Port
limo RN'o And LPN'ob'iAII ShlftL
Com~hlv• W.~,

tt.rentlel
With Exporlonc&lt;i, Equot Oppor.

tunfty Employor. Contoct Tho
Director ot Nursing, Plnecresl
eo.. Contor, 1'11f Plnoc:Drlvo, Golllpotlo, Ohio 45131
81"-446-7112.
Notionol Publlohlng Firm Noodo
Pooplo To Lobol Pootconli
From Homo, $800 /Wk. Sot Your
OWn Ho&lt;lra Coil 1-l'I0-7377,
(1,41 Min 118 Y,..l Or Wrlto:
PAASE -33F, 111 S. UllOOinway,

N, AIWora IL 10542.
No Exporloncol $800 To $1100

WMkly_ /Pot.nll•l

Proe...lng

FHA .llortgogo Rotundo, Own
Moura_ t-501'1141-0503 Ext.2t3.

24 Houre.

Not To Ll!o To Moko Eliro
Monoyl Soli Avonl Muo! Uvo In
Golllopllo Cfty Umho Or South
Of At. 351 GoNio County. Stort
Froo For " Umhod limo, 1-100551-1801.
Port' limo c..todlon"opply l:ti012:00/.M, Mon-1'~, "'· PH. p,...
byt-n Churoll, 8th &amp; Moln st,
P_olnt Pl0111nt, 304-f711-2t70. '
Tho Rutllnd Townohlp Truotooo
are tlklng applle1tton. far gr~n
dl;g.,. hH' cemM:er'- In Rut·
,.nd Town.ttlp. Dlgg•re

m•

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity ·

ramovo - n ond cl- orovu.
ramovo • • - dirt, c~b oro••
and diW• up folklwlng burtal.
Sond raoumo with prtco to: Rut·
lind Townohlp, P.O. · Boa 321;
3 lamlly, July 15thha.tpm, 16th,· Rutlond, Ohio 45771 by Auguot

8-2pm. B1by clot H

houoohotd, mloc.
St
.

400

ctothla

RutloiMI

3, 1183.

-:--::--:---::----::----:e-

Bouthwootom Communfty Aotlon Cottncli, lnc.'o occupotlonol
All Yard Sal.. Muat Be P1kt In tl'lllnlng progl'llm It now ecctpt·
• Advonoo. Do!tdlino: 1:00pm the lng J.T.P." C111lllod Mo_,
doy botoro the od 1o to Nn, COunty raoldenco tlyra ot ogo
Sundar odHion- 1:OOpm Frldoy, ond up to troln faf 3mo. It
Mondor
odftion
10:ooo .m. lo4.2Mtr In tt. following
Soturdoy.
pooltlono; laod oorvlco, library
pogo, 1 - I molntonco: A
Yord So.._ July t8 I 17, tum flrot boood poymont will bo
rood loft out WMPO tram Midlvon to hoi w1 t ~tlon
dtopon Hill., 5th
5t houoo.
rono pioloo
lunch. II plntoroot
coli tho M..an County Job Sor·
vic• .. 304-6'75-0857 to uk for
Public Sale
8
-llo on quolllylng. EOE.
&amp; Auction
Shuatlon
Rick Polroon Auction Compony, 12
full t h tuetlonMr, comrMte
Wanted
auction
aervlce.
UctnMd
t61,0hlo l Wool Vlrglnlo, 304- Exporloncod Col11flod Homo
1'13-5785.
Hoolth Aldo, Will Cora For E~
~ In ThiN Homo. 114-38J'o
9 Wanted to Buy

Profaastonal
Services

23

Rentals

1112~211.

am.a fumlahld 1pt, 1 bedroom,
ciHn, good locotlon, rafl dop,
no ,..., 304.f75.all.

'-louo
2 bod,_ "'*· corpet~
rlngt:
retrtg.nlor,
llrnltr ot!llooli/tora, on lito

monagor. EOH. 304-tltl2·37tl or
by todoy, Lou~ond Apto,
lth 81, Nlw Haven, WV.
-

e

Scholoroh~Loono,

Etc.

Cuot

17

6 Food

conaumer

7 Smeer

11173 Noo1on Combot 810 mclor•
cycll, $1000; 2S Point Lono

NoW Coli FumMu..: Toltloo I
Cholro, Hutcho., Cu,Yod Gt.ooo
Chino Coblnoto, look Coooo,
Etc. AI- VIII~ F•mKwo,

=:·: -~-=~4::
4311.

.

PICKENS FURNITURE
NowNood

I WAIN
FURNITURE. 12

Olltielf., Gotllpollo, NN I Uood
tumtture, heltn WMiem a
Wortl boote. 11'i 44'1 :till.

w.-'r. DrYOr, llolrlgonttor,
COlo&lt; .v. ,,_.,, Ali' eon-

(Unooln Hllll, Pornoroy.
.
.
1178 Hllrlly Dllvkleon Sportatw,
~Tf.12111.

Poodloo, Cockor lponlotlt Dolmotion,
Col~.
.... 1171 Honda CB'IIO, OIC. CO,l.'dJ
Groyhound,
U1C1
• ......., 1,211 ICtu8l mNoo, 2 now hllll'lllla, ottw utru, $1200.
Doohund,
-n
T - . ~7~.
Hlmllayon Kltton, Potbolly Pig. 1110 tod Horloy Dov-.,
304-441-G«M or f!M.:tla7.
E•otutlon onglno, ~000 mlfoo,
Pullt&gt;loo. mbtod Chlluohuo l uoolilnt ocii1dltlon; $10,000,
DoCholtoind, old. S04-41'11- 114-1112-1144.
7732oft• 'lpnt.
tH2 Y-ho 200 81-l 4
Whootor Eacofllnt ~ on,
11,11111 Ann. 114-2!11-e2!1t, 114'141 1172.
FJml Supplies

-...... .

--;.;r.;;:

&amp; L1 veslock

dftlonor,
Collu
Ro'"-"tor, lllciowove, 114251·~31.

53

1
I

'

HA ~A I-lA I-lA HA !!

YOU, 616 BROTI-4ER?

•

'
:
;
,
·

..

FRANK AND ERNEST'

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

L.H

Antlquaa

M~ tAS~

YO\Jil f'tA,
Of I&gt;OGTO,S.

Buy or 1111. R - Anllq-,
1124 E. Moln Slroot, on Ill. 12_~
Pornoroy. Ho&lt;lra: M.T.W. 10:w
1.111. to 1:00 p.m., Suncloy 1:00'
to 1:00 D.m. lf4.9112.21illl.

l'M ll~ALt.Y
A QVAC.tc.

Miscellaneous

Merehandl..

Two bodroom In Mlddlopott,

.....,

21Hintll'l
22 Tie
Z3Wh81e
24 lluNien ""' •
25Aicetl
COIMIIry

Pass

2+

3"

28 Spruce

East
Pass

Nortb

.

28 """ n.301order
31 Acl
37Tiklluntot
31 An •ltlllcleM

Pass
' All pass

41 lilolqullo

=r:"'

43s-.d .......

44YII-45 Tlllloa 118m
47=ulln
41 Author ol
''Picnic''

.__,_.._...1-..1.-'1....

'

11113 Kowaookl KX 12J, oxcollont •
... $2400,114-11112·3532.
-

75

'f'OU'Re AT CAMP, AND 11MNOT!

HELL.O? 01-4 , IS THIS

:

wolcMD

Bridge is full of opportunities for
plays that mislead an opponent. Some
41 PI8JWfllltl
-SimOn"
·o~these plays are barefaced swindles,
50 ~tleco
·but others give the opponent a losing
lilt tb&amp;IOI
option that doesn't exist without the
52 Drfnlt llowly
false-card . On our first board of the .'
54 llocltl Cerol
second session in Turkey , mY partner
(New York expert Jim Krekorian) "n+-lf--+~
didn't miss the chance lor a manda- ~
tory false-card.
After an auction that felt as if it had
stopped in the middle, I led the club lllr+--t-+--1-+king. Declarer won with the ace and
played a heart to dummy's jack. Kre•"
korian was ready: he dropped the nine.
Note that if he plays the live, de·
clarer is bound to continue with the
ace, l&lt;illing my king. She will draw the
last trump, play on diamonds alld win
' V I B
TMUOVOB
RI
MIFORMU
at least nine tricks: one spade, live
hearts. two diamonds and one club.
DIE 0
FOTM
F 0 G
Y E I M N
8 R F 0
When. the nine appeared, South was
presented with a losing option. She
CTVD
FEGG· B . '
XIIGCO
played a low diamond to her queen;
then she led the heart queen. She was
STDYTWUO .
hoping to pin the 10 in East's hand.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The most beautilul thing In the world is a
Also, she was allowing lor the possibilballpark filled with peop)e.'' - Bill Veock.
ity that East's nine was a singleton.
Here,· though, the play cost South
de~rly. When the heart ace didn't drop
10, South returned to diamonds.
Krekorian ducked his ace until the
third round, cashed the heart 10 and
r&lt;'tutcned a club. Declarer ruffed and
tried a spade to the queen, but East
won with the ace· and played another
Now South had only eight tricks:
EMSTUK
spade, lour hearts, two diamonds
one club.
'
Keep an eye open lor false-carding
opportunities.

PEANUTS
1

..__

28·1!-"t

By Pbillip Alder

Vlnrt In itock 1-4.41 Yd.

54

I

.,

Ohio, 114-tlz-7171.
Up
otolm BR
untum. ooUot ovo. $310 • Por -..
lltllkloo pd. Dop, ...... All....
~· l14-44&amp;-43fi or 30W75;-

I

7-13

BORN LOSER
50 [ ~YI'o.YI'o.~IP FE£
ANIH.O ro TilE
I
/IIE£T1116S f..'/f.RY
W€£1&lt;. ...

Furnished

Rooms

Grant~,

I

AA!&gt; [ W£ CfF A. FEW f'O()I!&gt;S
11£11£ HID
I
1\JTOO"
Ftlol

R....rch For Your Ecluc.ltion.

For DotoUo Colll14o210o1400.

~

TH€/1£ ...

Real Estate

VARNE

I

OUR LANGUAGE

~

Finlnolol Ata

By Jeffrey McQuain
Anything easily lien! or· flexible
may be described as SUPPLE ( "the
supple body"J . If you need to find a
rhyme or two for the adj ec tive
SUPPLE, one is COUPLE.

. A' loW~T 15
ATERRil&lt;£
TIIIII61C
MIHb

Q. Should we use "preventive" or
"preventative" as the ~orrecl adjec- 1
live• Please address this use.
. ·

ONe WHO 61VE5
'lOU 20 ~'M-IEN
SHe V\6116~ .

~E

All real estate advertising In

1his newspaper Is sublect lo
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which mokesli ~legal
to advertise "any preference,
Amltatlon or discrimination
origin, or any Intention to
rriake any such preference,
UmUalion or disa-lmlnallon.·

knowing~

51

Donor· Two bodroom ho.-o,
$121/Jno., $125 dopooH, ono yur
looM, 513-254-10811 bofafo
I:OO.m or oftor 1:30pm.

based on race, color, relglon,
.sex famiNal status or national

This newspaper will not

Hay

Merchandise

42
·

accept

attverll!ements lor real estale
whiCh Is In 'ollolaUon or the
law. our readers are hereby ·1
Informed that all dWeAings
adVertised In lhls newspaper

Household
Goods
VI'RA FURNITURE

lolen1 Llwn Mvw.r, 14 HP, 114--

388-84111.

114-4414151 Or 114 441 4431
"110 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT4.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

Mobile Homes
for Rent

New 111 lanka, OM 1on truck :
whuli radltltort floor mate,
otc. D l R Auto, R(ploy, WV. 1'12·3133 or t.-273-1321.

Hoy lot lllo, round flO.
C::
~· Sq.... - . tt.al.
..
~1311111t.

\

Motor Homes

-

1172 20 ~ Ft. Win btgo Motor
Homo, -.contoiMd, AC,

. . _ 4,1-4,100, 114-2116-1(llll.

Coblo,
~''\:::n Rl-I
ln
Ko._,
Relw:l'ela fl~ulred, Foeter'1

Transportation

Moblll H- Porte, 114-4411-11102.
2br, moltll homo, com-IV
tumlohod f300/t!l0. 30M7$o
ms or m.4m oftor Spm.
3 bod,_ trallor lor ront. $2101
31 Homes for Sele
-.. pl.. dopoolt, Country
2 lodrwm Homo AI Eurakl Moblll Homo Pork, 114-1112-2117.
Ovortooklng Dom. NoW Roof,
Siding, Wot~lntolnod, 2

Autos for

saa.

CAV'N A~C.I~NT

1111 Hotldo homo, gOod ;
oand. 304.f~.et82.
'

•

2t I( Prowlor 11171 - · llr '
$2100 OBO. 114-4411-17113 oltor 7 .
p.m.
1

... ~OST ftARtO

~tRA\E; IN All

IS IT TllUE

I&gt;.N' All

~ND Mf:!
::::r--~1

Lola, $32,500, 11~ t18 '1033.

2 bedroom home w•h 2 ICreeln rl!'fllll:l:::"'::"~==:=::------~---:~==::"j
booutlful oonlng, 304-

'

Joooboon 11 liP Riding-·
•~• • etrotton Engino,

Good, For Porto,

m.

Motor

1M-3M-

•tll:ll.
wlndowo - . . nnltloo both
tubo, kltci.Oii olnlto, iiilii\1 ~lno '"1'1"· ~ :ilolnt
- · WY.
•
KIIia Fllooll
Buy E n - FlM
Kllllra
lot DOlO.
homo 1 yord..
G111rontood' eflliatlvoll Avolllblo
:::...:"- .... CNp, 1!111

11'11-1421.

1

r~~·~lc~:h~o~g~:=g~d~~·II00~
'::·~1==:

111711W Rlbblt Dolooi2116-MM.
11171 c-o -ltod On Lol
lido, -GoodDftw,
- li4-44i-1021.
C.. lluno
Good,
Corto, lll!wP- PS
1111 -

•

II=Gifl:

l::'.."'r~,-91:;

P-

lcww•wllo

1N4 El Comlno~VI, 301, PS,
PI, ollto, olr1 • : . , _ tlroo,
IAI· point, Iff- l . ~711-

Building

Supplies

Gronct o- I.E, 13,000
mlloo. lll't.,~uilii,' -.Ho, tit.
JOM71-touu.
~

'

uWATERPROOFING
- lllotlmo -

' ASTRO·GRAPH

too. Locat rolo!rancoo fumlohod.

Coli l~.QI'/I Or 114-23JI.

~ w_.,...o. . . b-

1171
~~~~00l
·iiiji~i;;;-ji0
Curtlo Homo lmprov-110.
No

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Job Too lla Or &amp;moll, Y- Ex·

ourod. "froo Eotfmoteo. 1,.....,_ ·
.f

And •

V.Cuum Ctoonor llopolr, , _
Plclt-IJD.And Dotivoo'V. Goorgoo
CrH1&lt; llood,11+441-02M.
Ron'o TV fleMoo, opoclollllna
In Z.nfth a1oo . .
.1110111

o~

= ..

'':f.
~ ~ -wv

--.atll0hlol14-44f.a484.

•plio Tlnlt Puntlllntl 'i:ht~':'
Co.- EVANS ENTE
,
.Mollaon, OH 1~

Wednesqay, July 14, 1993

I

Ill-. ...,..
............ ...... Cllitdo' Wlnlllo - . OH Colt ""'

56

"Saaaaaaay ... thla doesn't look •polled."

I

Pets for Sills

"

Send tor your. Astro-Graph pred•ct•ons for

. lhe yea• ahead by mailing $.f .25 a nd a long,
self-addressed. stamped envelope to Astra·
Graph. clo !his newspaper. P 0 . Bo• 4465,
New York . N.Y. 10163. Be sure lo s late
your zodiac sign

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Lefl 10 you r own
dev1ces today your creative instincts and
imagination should be very fru ilfu l This
m1ght nol be true. however. when you feel
you must Incorporate the ideas ol assOCI·
ates.

VIRGO (·Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) II looks like
you·re go1ng to break into that group of peo·
pie with whom you·ve always wanted to

eslablish a friendly rapport. You' ll be sur·
pnsed as to how much eve ryone has in
common.

lloofl, bl'lolt, -

-

I'.&lt;!&lt;: ItiE NT?

BASEMENT

r- " ' - · · h!tfnl ~~~oltor lpm, 114 -~Dovfo

..,_

buy ono p - or comp!Oto 24,000 BTU window tlr conhouoohold, coli Coby Mortll!, dftlonor, I yur old, 1110. 114614-1112·11141.
24UMO.

Home

fROKI 1'. fREA~

proveml!ntS

• - · ...

l - . , , -lc
.....
Mllbol
( -Sl13.
.... frio). - · '
AAA ..... 1-elto.fll
' ' " Gfdo Roroio, "· "· AC,
~...!!"'
tar oolo, cruloo, w~~J• a• :h,
• ~·:"~~~._.._ o r

Miscellaneous

1m

por•l,~"Mr:Ori.
....-~ =-~lono,~-r
0
RoollntL Ktto.... 181111L~

~...: ~'b~.,2;'t 1N2
01111

81

IN.IUR\ES
S&lt;:RIMS~AW

••
'·
_
~----~~-------Services

Food LTD, AC, P_!, PI, runo
- · f710. ~~~~- or
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JULY 131

TII'SEM&gt;! ... SO ~~~~til' !'R~IEI100 SUSTAIN~Q
1'~ 1&gt;. DANGtR T' MESELf
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STO\IIAWA'IS

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•

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__

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Vema/ • Mumps • Brine - Kettle - PAVEMENT
Youngster, "Mommy, why does it rain?" "Wall d8ar"
·.i the mom answered, 'ij gives us flowers and apples:' .
"Oh,' the boy sighed, '$o why does ij rain on the PAVE·
ME NT?'

!TUESDAY

llulch """ so. • 7lt Good
mllld Mr otovw, ..d.rd 1 1171 IT 440 Dodao
-grooo, 30W'N471t.
ill
000 D!!tlnol $10,100. Want SOld F1rot M,IOO
Tokio. ID1 Gion Drtvo, 81'"'!' tar - : " . - F""" llollool Pilla On Routo
from orWOgan
in - · ·
2017
171-2tt17.
110.

2 bedroom furnlahed mobiAt
homo, :104-i-2.

I

BH.o4.KIN6 HER HEiAD.

campers&amp;

Com tar lOll coli: 114-3'1'1.zl111

am avalabte on an equal
opportunlt)' basls.

1711-1011,

&amp; Grain

A. Dictionaries list both terms as .'
being acceptable, but the shorter form ,
is preferred. PREVENTIVE, meaning
"concerned with stopping or preventing, " first appeared in 1639, and the
longer PREVENTATIVE came into
use 15 years later as a synonym. You
can tell people thai the shorter form
is older, but it won 't prevent them
from using PREVENTATIVE.
,

NO, THE O.E WHO KEEP8
l.COKINS- ATi/'kf ClAD AND

w-. .

I

Antlq- ond "ood lurnfturo, no
Item too large « too 1m111, will

5 Fleur'CI.. -

The false-card
was mandatory

/

Food c - . Noturol Fooclo At -41_H_ _ _
f _R_nt_.,.
Whotoollo Prtcoo. For Into Coil
OUS8S Or
114o210o1400.
12 room houni 1 a 2 bedroom 45
Sovo Yoora I llonoy On Your lplltmontl, B14-lftl.e333.
Homo
Mort~ogo
Wlhout
Roflnonclng. C.tr 114~116-1400
For Dotolo.

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8 llefiiOtltld
10 Blue llltmenl
11 Futwe ,
LL.BI.' •••
12 Dtlp
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10 Howden

42C:aara'

llollohln Corpoto, At. 7 N. 114441-11144 1112 Coi!IOI $10, All

AUCTION l

of 3r&lt;N. rwnt In Pomtw;. *112 5158,
Dognood,· M11on. 112,000 tlrrn, lfl•lpmor•aU:ndL
1011 togothor. 1144411-2711.
Ono
bodroorn opot1monto,
Approxlmlt~1 ocra 101._ 4110 $221i/mo. lnchtdoo utllltloo, 1100
mile out
hiKN I a a d noiHI. eecurlt)" dlpoeM, no pMaj 114-

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35 lloweble door

Glblott
4 Fruit diCIJ

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BED .CHECK II

.I

H&lt;Mira: Mon-Sot, H. lf4.44t.
0322, 3 ntlloo out BuLI¥1111 Rd.
Froo Cotlvory.
Uvtng Room Butt., 2 Plec•,
Uood, $271· E.Z Box
.1373,
Roctlnor - · · t1N, 114-181-

Pt-.

2 loto: 1501100, -

6

LAYNE'8 FURNITURE
Comploto homo fumlohlngo.

Houalhokl lUmia~. · 112 mi.
Jonlaho Rd. Pt.
wv,
.... 30W711-1410.

Financ1al

--TtLL AFTER

MIZ. LEDBETTER-IS JUGHAID OVER
HERE?

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUOQET PRICES AT JACKBOH
- . Colll14 441 2511. EOH.
Fumllhld 11r, Utllttl• Paid,
$2251month, No Polo. 281 Stolo

lelllng

2 Clnlor ol
lhlekl
3 TOntlllnd

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

Spm• .

ESTATEI, 138 JICkton Pike
to """"

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33
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32
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34 Fortun•

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CALL TClUR DATE NOW! 1 -

GIRLBIIJ UYEIII

;

,.

In the year ahead you .might devote your
efforts and energies in a new direc tion
where your work or career is concerned. II

looks like you rpay become involved in
something both intnguing and profitable.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Because others
will be paying close allention to you today.
your words and ideas will ca~ry consider·
able weight . Be sure what you espo use
leaves the type of impression you · feet is

most desirable.
"'-,
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Things you SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Try lo devole
handle for others might not work out as well time to mental projects today . You're espe'as you ·hope loday . so don 'l gel too cially gifted in this area and you could come

well rounded out today. but you 're likely to

be !he sharpes! al doing tasks lhal al low
you to research . probe and detect.

CAPRICORN

(Dec .

22 -Jan .

191

Partnership arrangements could produce
(l"lutual benefitS lor per sons with whom
you're mvolved today . The results might not
be optimum. but they should be quite good.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 191 Wh ile at
work Ieday there is a chance you might
devise a better way of doing something that
will enhance productivity . make your job
easier and cut cos ts.
•

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) Today you
tend to draw strength and ideas off ol
frie nds with whom you 're fnvolved . II they
are optimistic and enthusi astic, it. could
have a dramatic. positive ellect on your atti·

lude.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) An abraSIVe sil· .
uation from the past might be favorably ter·
minated today as your attention shifts to
new interests. HOwever, the ideas that moti·
vale you aren't apt to originate with you .

TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) Oon't be alraid
to1ask· quesiions today if someone is teach·
ing you 'Something you do not fully grasp. II

involved. However, you should get straight up with a r'lew spin lor a fatigued endeavor. might be necessary to review this material
A's in managing your personal inierests . SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec. 21) ' two or more times.

Cance1 . treat yourself to. a birl]1day gill . Generally speakJng your assets are rather

-...

•
•

Biograpl1y

Primenews iCCI

at tt1e lmprov

•

�'
•
TIJeaday, July 13, 1993

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.Restaurants lobby to save
b.usiness meal deductions

RIBBON CUTTING • Sweet Greetings
Bake Sbop, Main Street, Ppmeroy, celebrated its
Grand O~ning Monday morning with a ribbon
cutting ceremony. Tbe .business is open dally
with the exception or Sunday and TbursdiiY·
Some attending tbe opening ate: EUzabetb and

Harold Lohse, Steve Dunfee, Vicki Ferrell,
Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed, Paul Reed, owner
Tom Dooley, Paul Kloes, owner Jim Sheets, Joe
Clark, Joanne Williams, and Paula Thacker,
Meigs County Economic Development Director.

WASI:IINGTON (AP) - · In
$outhfield; Mich., Reid Ashton is
afmid President Ointon 's 1M package is going to kill his upscale
restaurant business. In Maryland,
waitress Jan Bergwall fears losing
her job. And Bozeman, Mont .•
restaurateur Parker Leach s;tys he
stands to lose $160,000 a year.
As lawmakers return to Wash·
ingiOn today from their July Fourth
recess, t!te ears &lt;1f many will be
ringing with complaints about at
least one aspect of Clinton's deficit
reduction plan: cutting . the
deductibility of business meal.s
from 80 percent down to 50 per_cenL
"They're assessing me and
excising me to death;' said Ashton, owner of the Golden Mush·
room restaurant in the Detroit suburbs. "Why does the government
think they should ruin my panicular kind of business?''
Meetings were arranged during
the recess with the offices of a
dozen.key lawmakers. includi~g
House Ways and Means Comm1t-

Condemn
biography

as fiction

IMPRESSED WITH COUNCIL - Upon
invitatimi, Nancy HoiUster, Director of tbe Gov·
ernor's Office of Appalachia, spoke to directors
or the Middleport Arts Council on Friday to dis·
cuss the council's next step and possible future
options. Hollister stated that of tbe 29 county
region sbe deals with she was "most impressed"
with the Middleport Arts Council and its thorough procedures. She urged the council to maintain its high quality or services and programs

and to r.emain a recognizable entity in Middle·.
port as well as Meigs County. Hollister was not
only 1m pressed witb the dedication and entbusl·
asm or the organization but tbe cooperation of
Middleport VUlage government as well. Pictured
with HoUister, seated at tbe bead of the table,
are: Nancy Cale, Susan Baker, Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman, Mary Wise, Jeanette
Thomas and Erica Russell, Intern at Marietta
College.
•

Handwriting expert:
Shakespeare wrote play
NEW YORK (AP) - A handwriting expert has concluded that
an unsigned play known as "The
Second Maiden's Tragedy" is the
work of William Shakespeare.
Charles Hamilton, a 79-year-old
who in 1983 cjetermined that the
purported diaries of Adolf Hitler
were fake, has studied Shakespeare's penmanship for decades.
Ten years ago, using five known
signatures as a comparison, Hamiltori concluded that S!J¥espeare tiad
handwritten his own 2 1/2-page
will.
Then, about five years ago,
Hamilton saw a photocopy of "The
Second Maiden's Tragedy" in the
rare document room of the New
York Public Library.
"My hair stood on end," he
said Monday.
He spent a year comparing the
play with the 1616 will and con-

eluded that "every curve and twist Shakespeare's standards.
In "Second Maiden," a tyrant
and curlicue of every letter is the
is repeatedly rejected by a
king
same."· ·
David ScottKastan,-professorof beautiful woman. She kills herself
English and comparative literature when he sends soldiers to kidnap
ai Columbia University, cautioned, her.
The king takes her body to his
"Most scholars still believe that
the will is not in Shakespeare's quarters. The maiden's ghost seeks
help from her true love, who poses
hand."
Still, he said of Hamilton's find- as a mortician ·and covers her body
ing, "It would be foolish to dismiss with ,&lt;poison. The evil king kisses
the body and dies. The maiden's
it out of hand."
In 1611, Shakespeare co-wrote a true love, himself a deposed king,
play. performed under the title is returned to the throne. .
"Cardenio." No confirmed
Tbe original "Serond Maiden"
manuscript of "Cardenio" has ever manuscript is at the British Library
been found. But in the 1700s, the in London.
untitled manuscript known as
Hamilton's findlngs will be pub" "Second Maiden" emerged in a lished this fall or next spring hy
' private collection.
Glen bridge Publishing of LakeSome scholars, including wood, Colo.
Hamilton, believe they are one and
"I wanted to have an airtight
the same. Others have argued that case when the scholars start to
"Second Maiden" isn't up to bellyache," he said . ."1 expect to
take a beating.''

·Panel urges Congress to
save Civil War battlefields
WASHINGTON (AP) - A fed'cral commission wantS Congress to
spend $93 million by the end of the
century to save important Civil
War battlefields from encroaching
developmenL
The commission proposed a
seven-year plan to help states and
private organizations buy land to
prevent construction of shopping
malls or apartment complexes on
historic battlefields such as those at
Antietam, Md., and Gettysburg, Pa.
" Towns are creeping out and
taking ever more property that otherwise should in some way be protected," said Kent Masterson
Brown. a Lexington. Ky., attorney
and amateur Civil War historian
· . who chairs the Citizens Advisory
Commission for the Gettysburg
National Military Park.
There are proposals tQ build
housing on ridges within view of
the Gettysburg battlefield; where in
1863 Confederate forces were
turned back during their deepest
penetration of Union territory.
"You are losing historic property, you are losing views. Instead of
seeing terrain and _farmland, J:'OU
are seeing, potentially, housang
developments," Brown said.
· At the Antieiam Battlefield
National Park, outside Sharpsburg,
Md.; a developer sought to build a
small shopping center on private
• land near a home where Abraham

Lincoln posed for a famous photograph ·in 1862 with victorious
Union Gen. George B. Mc(:lellan.
The controversy was averted
.when a private foundation agreed
to purchase the land, Brown said.
In its report · to Congress
released Monday, the Civil War
Sites Advisory Commission recommended that lawmakers provide
$70 million in the next seven years
to help buy land near 50 of the
most significant battlefields to keep
developmental bay.
"The nation's Civil War heritage is in grave danger. ll_is being
demolished and bulldozed at an
alarming pace. It is disappearing
under new buildings, parking lots
and highways," panel chairwoman
Holly Robinson wrote in the
report's introduction.
The commission also recommended that $17.5 million be spent
during the same seven-year period
to pay private property owners for
restoration and easements on historic battlefield sites.
The panel proposed giving the
Resolution Trust Corp. the 'uthori·
ty to deed over lliStorically significant pror:eny it obtained m taking
over fatled savings and loans.
RTC's inventory includes 321
acres near the site of the Battle of
the Wilderness in Virgini3 and an
additional 421 acres near the Rich·
mond National Battlefield Park.

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Walt
Disney's widow and daughter
released a letter from former FBI
Director William Webster saying
there is no evidence for a new
book's claim that Disney told the
FBI .about suspected Hollywood
communists.
Lillian Disney, 94. and Diane
Disney Miller, 59, issued a leuer on
Monday from Webster staling that
he reviewed the files and there was
no evidence for biographer Marc
Eliot's claims. Two fonner agents
also said there was no such evidence.
·
"Walt Disney: Hollywood's
Dark Prince," portrays Disney,
who died in 1966, as an anti·
Semitic, alcohol-abusing snitch.
The book cites government documents in saying that for 26 years
Disney was an FBI informant,
reportmg suspected communists
among actors, writers, producers,
directors and union activists in
show business.
New York-based Carol Publish·
ing, whose Birch Lane Press
released the book, said "Hollywood's Dark Prince" was meticulously reported and checked by
lawyers.
Eliot issued a statement saying
he stood behind his work, and his
publisher, Steven Schragis, called
him "a scrupulous researcher who
has presented all the facts of Walk
Disney's life, both good and bad."
Eliot's book also alleges that
Disney gave tlien-FBI Director J.
Edgar f!oover scripts and let him
make changes in a few movies and
in an episode of "The Mickey
Mouse Club" television show.
·
"I am distressed to learn of .a
new book about Walt that actually
invents incidents that never happened, distorts our life together and
distorts other incidents well and
honestly covered in previous
biographies," Mrs. Disney said in
a statement.
"For a total stranger to presume
to know him, to try to demean his
memory and to subject our family
- especially my mother - to this
level of stress and heartache is
completely unforgivable," Ms.
MiUer said.

members of .Congress," said Marl::
Gonnan, a lobbyist for the National
rant owners to meet in Billings, Restaurant Association . "But
Mont., with an aide to Sen. Max things have change~. l!"d t.l!e(re
mad. I've never seen 11 like this.
Baucus, D-Mont.
By proposing to lower the 80
. Restaurant executives and ·
servers picketed outside the Man· pe~ent 1M deduction to 50 ~roo~l,
hauan office of Senate Finance Clmton hopes not only to bring m
Chairman Daniel Patrick Moyni- $16 billion over five years but to
· give his budget package some pophan, D-N.Y.
And televisi9n sjJots were aired ulist appeal by targeting th~
in at least 15 cities featuring Berg- ' 'three-martini lunch.''
But restaurants are fighting
wall, who urged TV view~ to call
a toll-free number and be connect· back, using two of lobbying's
ed with their senator's office to favorite toOls: a grassroots appeal
that portrays low-income waitressregister complaints. .
es
and minority employees - ·not
"Our people are in the hospitaliwealthy
businessmen - as Clinty business. They try to keep very
ton's
victims,
and a disputed study
cordial relationships with their
that claims the industry will lose
165,000 jobs if the provision pass·
Swordt'JSh Saga
·
es.
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) The battleground is a·conferepce
Swordfish, large saltwater fish commiuee that will begin meeting
found mainly in the Atlantic Ocean this week to iron out differences
and Mediterranean S~. have an between House and Senate versions
average length of 8 feet and weight of a package of 1M increases and
of 250 pounds.
s~nding cuts intended to cut $500
The largest swordf'ISh taken on a billion from the federal deficit over
hook and line was a 15-foot speci- the next five years.
men weighing 1,182 pounds,
The fight brings together the
caught off Chile.
clout of the food service industry,
The strong, sharp-edgell, the Hotel Employees and Restau·
"sword" forming its flat up\le~ rant Employees International
jaw, and its back fin, distinguish Union, American Express and oththe fish from marlin· and sailfish, ers in a fonnidable coalition.
which it resembles.
For the nexfmonth, the issue
Sw'ordfish, which eat squid, becomes an insiders' game, says
menhaden, herring and mackerel, Bob Juliano, lobbyist for hotel and
have a firm, weD-flavored flesh and restaurant workers union. The strat·
are a favorite target of harpoon egy is to have urban House memfishennen.
bers whose districts will suf£er .
from the provision contact Speaker
'The 33 Micronesian islands in the Thomas
D-Wash,, and say
Pacific Ocean that make up the Re- they can'tFoley,
support
Clinton's packpublic of Kiribati total only 266.square
age
without
some
relief
for restaumiles, but they are scattered across a
rants.
2 million-square-mile area.

Man returning appliance
know-h.ow to Meigs County

Pick 3:·

All-Stars
romp

1t5

. After more than 15 years experi- repair and servicing for all major
ence in appliance sales, service and household appliance's in Meigs
delivery with Rutland Home Fur· County and surrounding areas.· He
nishings in The Plains, Dave Hysell also offers discounts for senior citi·
of Reedsville is returning his zens.
Hysell, his wife, Diane, and
expertise to Meigs County as prodaughter,
Angie, currently reside in
prietor of Dave's Appliance SerReedsville.
vice.
Dave's Appliance Service is
I .stress quick service and the
available
Monday through Friday
lowest rates including one-half
from
8
a.m.
to 8 p.m. and Saturday
hour free labor for diagnosis,
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. by calling
HyseU ·said.
Hysell said he offers in-home 985-4425.

I

Low tonlgbt around 70, rain.
Thursday, partly cloudy, hlgb In
80s.

2 Sectlona. 12

.

P~ 35 cenla
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 14, 1993

MuiUJMdialnc.

State maga·zine official

addresses Meigs Chamber

•tured left to rigbt, with Riggs and Triplett are
tbe other officers installed; Jon Perrin, vice pres·
ident; JeiT Warner, secretary, ~nd Lloyd Black·
wood, treasurer.
.
~

Rotary officers iQstalled for 1993-94 term
Officers were installed for the Owen II, Maithew Parsons, grand· aged continuation of the programs.
Riggs also thanked members for
1993-94 year at Monday night's son of Fultz, and Edna Maxine· meeting of the Middleport- Coats Gaskill. Mrs. Gaskill pre- helped with the events and gave a
Pomeroy Rotary Club held at sented the Robert Coats pin to special commendation to Dick
Heath United Methodist Church, · incoming presidnet Triplett. This Vaughan for his special efforts and
has been a trdlliltion for the past materials for the events. John Rice
Middleport.
. · Installed by Charles Blakeslee, twenty years as a memorial to the was complimented on the program
senior active member, were Gene late outstanidng Rotarian, Robert for the past year and Riggs also
thanked Dick Owen and Joe Young
Triplett. president; Jon Perrin, vice Coats.
Riggs reported on accomplish- for handling the crippled children
pr~sident; Je~fc W:ar.ner •. secretary;
.LI?y\I' B~~ spr~:r.; alld mentf of the past year including '. and. adult fund during the year .
Bernard ·Fultz, director at large. · raising the membership from 14 to Riggs was given a round of
Gene Riggs, immediate past presi· 21, the creation of two new Paul applause for his leadership of the
dent, presented the gavel to Harris fellows, Charles Blakeslee club. In turning the gavel over to .
Triplett. The officers make ilp the and Gene Riggs, the pancake Triplett he encouraged the new
breakfast, the adult basic education president to build on the excellent
board of directorS for the club.
Guests at the meeting were banquet, and the junior high record of the past year.
Women of the church served the
Susan Oliver. Jim Vemnari, Dick achievement banQuet. He encour·
dinner.

•

APPLIANCE REPAIRMAN - Dave Hysell, owner or Dave's
Appliance Repair, offers in. home repair or all major. household
appliances, low rates and senior citizen discounts. Hysell, shown
here-with his new delivery van, has more than lS years experience
in appliance sales aitd service.

~ . , ., ,

.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
ASS04:iated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Democrats.and
Republicans in the House blame
each olhertmo.the delay in passing
a. budget bill that contains what
both say are long-overdue reforms
in Ohio's workers' compensation
system.
Minority Leader JoAnn Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, and some of
her colleagues held a nejYS -conference Tuesday and accused majority
Pemocrats of not being serious in
saying they support change in· the
Bureau of Workers' Compensation.
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, promptly responded in a
news release that Mrs. Davidson
and others "seem more interested
in news conferences than they do
negotiating."
The flap involves legislation
that was left in a conference committee when lawmakers adjourned
July I for a three-week recess.
· The Legislature is trying to
brinp; chanp;es to. the employer·

I

finmi'ced insurance program ·that
has been under fll'C because of constantly increasing costs.and delays
in the payment of benefits.
The joint committee meets
Thursday, in adv.;mce of the Legislature's return July 20, to try to
work out differences in the Senate
and House versions. The legislation
also contains the budget of the .
Ohio Industrial Commission, which
hears ap)&gt;CIIIs of bureau rulings.
The two agencies are operating
on interim budgets that expire July
20.
Mrs . Davidson, Rep. Louis
Blessing of Cincinnati, a House
conferee, and other GOP leaders
said Democrats have expressed
support for reforms ~ut have not
followed through, indicating they
don't woot a b~l.
They said Riffe sent out letters
endorsing the same reform concepts that were in the employerbacked Senate version . Blessing
said if Riffe is serious, "all we
have to do is vote h ouL"
'
•
,,

Consumer prices
-remain
same
in
June
.

. WASHINGTON (AP) - The
That's would be welcomed by
cost of living was unchanged in the Clinton administration, ·which
Jiine, held back by falling fruit and is counting on low interest rates to
v.egetable prices, the government keep the economy going at the
said today, reporting the best infla- same time that h1gher taxes· to
!fun news in more than two years.
reduce the federal budget deficit
· It was the first month without an wiD be crimping growth.
increase in the Consumer Price
The June repon was even bener
Index since March 1991, at the low than anticipated by economists,
pOint of the recession, and followed ~ho were 8.redicting a gain of 0.1
a tin)' seasonally adjusted 0.1 per- percent or .2 peroonL
.cent gain in May, the Labor
Prices hadjumped0.5 percentijl
Departnletlt.said.
·
January arid again posted a worriToday's report, on top of Tues- some increase 1 0.4 percent, in
d~y·s news that wholesale prices
April, sending jitters through the
fell 0.3 percent last month, • bond market. But economists said
squelChed any lingering suspicions the latest two inflation reports are
among· economists that inflatipn evidence that the earlier reports
was set to ~lerate this year.
were aberrations.
.. It also puts off, !! ~~ Ulltillate
With both ~nomi~ growth IU,ld
this year, the poss1b1hty that the demand sluggiSh, retailers have .lit·
Federal Re:serve would .~udge tle tee~ay to push prices higher,
short-term mterest rates h1gher, they said. •
.
economists believe.
' .

Pleasant Valley Hospital Introduces Krls G. Murthy, M.D. aS the newest member of our medical staff. Dr.
Murthy Is a neurologist spedallzlng In the diagnosis and treatment of diseases and disorders of the brain
.
and nerves. His ofllce In Suite 13 of the Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Olllce Bulldlng prollldes patl_ents
with convenlenf access to the hi-tech diagnostic Imaging seiVIces of the PVH Radiology Department,
lndudlng MRJ, MRAnglograPfly. SPEer Nuclear Medldne, crScannlng and EMG. all of which wifl aid him
In the diagnosis of a wide variety of neurological disorders, Including stroke. headaches and pain. dementia,
epilepsy, myopathy (multiple sclerosis, mysthenla gravis. etc.) and Other movernent"ttlsorders such as
Parkinson's Disease. For appointments,, call (304) 675-2551.
Welcome to the family of professionals. Dr. Murthy!

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The family of professionals
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340
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Buckeye 5:
1-8-19-27-29

Page4

Val. 44, NO. 54

t

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News StarT
Marilyn Jacobs, sales representative for Ohio Magazine, spoke at
Tuesday's general membership
meeting, of the Meigs County
Chamber of Comm~e.
Jacobs is encouraging the purchase of a full page two-color
advertisement in the magazine to
promote Meigs County's Showcase
m October. She stated the magazine is sent to 95,000 subscribers
each time it is printed and that it
also is available at newsstands.
Jacobs stated the magazine is a
tourism, eravel and attraction maga'
zine for the state.
The cost of this page, according
to Jacobs is $3,145. Members of
the showcase committee have
presently accumulated approximately $1,000 towards the cost of
the page. Businesses throughout
the county will be contacted to consider contributing to the advertisement.
.Jacobs encourages the promotion to run in conjunction with the
Paul Bunyon Festival in Athens
County. She said this would be an
ideal time to promote the county
and inform subscribers what is
available in the county.
This promotion would run in the
August 20 edition of Ohio Magazine.

Tourism discussed
Mary Powell, Director of the
Me1gs County Park District, spoke
about upcoming events in the county and the importance of de)l&amp;loping t.Qurism in the county.
Events pertaining to the county
include a booth at the Ohio State
Fair in August as weD as the Meigs
County Fair. Volunteers are needed
to work at both booths and further
information about this may be
obtained by calling Mrs. Powell at
992-2439.
Another event in August would
center around Buffington Island
near Portland where one of the battles with Morgan's Raiders was
fought. This is the !30th anniversary of the battle. Mrs. Powell
hopes to make this event an annual
one to bring attraction to the site of
the battle. War reenactors and additional events' including live entertainment and cruises on the P.A. .
Denny are planne~. The park district is working closely with the
Meigs County Historical Society to
bring the event together, Mrs. Powell stated. These "battle days"
would be observed August 13-15.
The showcase will be October
15-17 at the Meigs County' Fairgrounds and Rock Springs. Mrs.
Powell said that already there are
over 100 groups and festivals
which will be represented at the
showcase . The purpose of the

showcase, according t&lt;&gt; Mrs. Powen is to create a media environment
tQ promote the county in this part
of the state.
Hlgbwliy report
Steve Story, reporting on the
progress of various highway "corridor" developmentS, stated Meigs
County was the best represented of
all counties involved at the recent
annual meeting of the Southea$1
Ohio Regional Council. That council works with representatives or
th·e Ohio Depanment -of Transportation to be better informed of
highway projects and their status.
Story also reported that work on 1
the first segment of the
Ravenswood Connector from Rock
Springs to Five Points would be let ·
for bid in the spring with paving to
stan soon after.
· ·
Levy kick-otT announced
Sosan Oliver, Executive Director of the Meigs County Council on
Aging, announced a breakfast ·
meeting for Thursday at 7:30 a.m.
at the Senior Citizens Center to
officially kick-off the levy which
will be placed on the ballot in
November for the center and its
programs.
The meeting was hosted by the
Senior Citizens Center whose staff
prepared a 6reakfast for the general
membership.
. ·
The next meeting will be
August 10 at noon.

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Parties blame each other
for refor,m stalemate

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Pick 4:
3297

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NEW OFFICERS • Gene Rig&amp;s, lert, presented the gavel to Gene Triplett, new president
or tbe Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club during
installation of new officers Monday night. Pic·

We come
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Ohio Lottery

AL

tee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski,
D-Ill. Leach led a·group of restau-

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Riffe said that unlike the Senate
proposal, the changes he supports
are designed to produce a more
efficient system, including
prompter hearings and payments,
but they would not cut benefits.
"I have made it very clear from
the outset that cutting benefits to
injured people is not reform," the
nooded rivers in central Iowa, ~Busing some res·
SHORE UP DIKE - Volunteer sandba~gers
speaker said.
idents
to evacuate. (AP)
work to short up a dike in West Des Momes,
"House negotiators offered a
Iowa, Tuesday. Heavy _rains swelled already .
compromise reform package and
budget on July 1 and it was refused
by Mrs. Davidson and her caucus,"
he said.
The committee met last week
city of St. Louis di saster areas,
By AARON WATSON
The president c~l &gt;liOrt a visit to
and reviewed several areas of disopening the door to grants, lowASS04:iated
Press
Writer
Hawaii to tour the flood-stricken
agreement, asking employer and
Efforts to res!Ore drinking water interest loans and other federal aid.
region today.
union negotiators to work to
resolve them. They reportedly have to 250,000 Iowans survived anoth- ·
been trying to do so behind the er rounll-of heavy rain as volunteers working under floodlights
scenes.
GRQNDY. Va. (AP) - Picket said Tuesday the union anticipated
Blessing said conferees have piled sandbags around the Des
Moines
Water
Works
overnight.
lines
on the first day of the coal that none of the companies would
been hampered by I_abor's influ·
·
·
The
bloated
Raccoon
and
Des
strike
in southwesrVirginia were try to produce coal by hiring
ence.
Moines
rivers
had
stabilized
this
peaceful
in contrast to a walkout replacement workers.
"We'D meet one day _and agree
morning
after
a
downpour
Tuesday
The union said CONSOL has
four
years
earlier, but miners had
on something. The -next day, they
morning
and
missed
tile
brum
of
not
increase.d security arid state
other
things
to
worry
abouL
·
(labor leaders) will say no, we
heavy
rains
overnight.
New
rains
troopers
are limitin&amp;, their response
"You hate to face the heat out
can't agree on this," he said.
began falling in Des Moines.al dayJ here," said Larry· Brown, a miner to periodic patrols tf' the mine sites
break but were not serious e\\Jugh for 19 1/2 years. "It's cool inside." with a single cruiser.
to threaten newJloods, forecasters
Gov . L. Douglas Wilder said
Temperatures in the 90s Tuesidle~ said.
day greeted pickets, whose num- Tuesday he will send extra troopers
Downpours swelled the raging bers were limited by the United only if there are outbreaks of vioApproximately 230 miners were
.
still off the job at Meigs Mine 31 Mississippi River and its tributaries Mine Workers to about a dozen at lence.
"The company knew we were
Wednesday as the company contin- across the flood-ravaged Midwest each of the three CONSOL Inc.
coming out on strike and didn't
ues to work to detennine the extend on Tuesday ani;l this morning.
mines.
In southwest Kansas, Dodge
of the mine's water problem and
"The mines are shut clown and h~ve a lot of _security out there,"
develop a plan to brmg the mine City waS especially hard hit Tues- · not producing coal, so there aren't sa1d Del. Jackie Stump, D..Council
day night, wi.th flash flooding any problems," Vir.$inia State and a UMW international represenback into produclinn.
tative. "I don't anticipate any probMeigs Mine 31 was shut down sweeping about 15 cars and ·tem- Police SgL Curtis L. Bruley said.
Sunday night after a significant poranly trapping a woman and two
. The Virginia walkout is part of a lems.''
"We have peaceful picket lines
amount of water was discovere.d small children inside a sedan. Res- spreading UMW action against
cuers had to bfeak the car's win- some of the nation~s largest coli! with no violence," said UMW Disunder ground.
B. J. SIJlith, director of public dows to get them ouL As much as 5 producers. So far, 16,000 miners in trict 28 President Donnie Lowe.
affairs for American Electric inches of rain fell and wind hit 74 seven states are on the picket lines "If they don't send a lot of troopmph at the Dodge City airporL
Power'~ Fuel SUpply Division, said
over job Security issues.
·
. ers down it will help us keep
Heavy rain was continuing early
· ·
this morning officials continue to
The UMW started its selective peaceful picket lines."
today
in
parts
of
western
and
south
monitor the water levels but that
In 1989, the union used civil
strike against CONSOL and other
there is no time frame on when the central Kansas. On Tuesday, Wood members of the Bituminous Coal disobedience in its strike against
problems will be resolved or when River got 3.3 inches of rain, and oo Operators Association on May 10. Pi~tston Coal Group. Some 1,000
workers will be called back to inch fell in just sh minutes at
Brown.and other miners stood mmers were on the picket line as
work. She said she expects to have· Papillion, south of Omaha, the outside the entrance to Virginia the company hired replacement
·some additional information to National Weather Service said. Pocahontas No . 3 mine holding workers and extra security guards
Adel, Iowa, about 20 miles west of blue posterboard signs with slogans to keep its mines Opcflltional. .
.release ThW,Sday.
Meanwhile, office and surface Des Moines, reported 1.75 inches such as " UMW l;lere to Stay. "
Several hundred state troopers
in 20 minutes.
employ~s at Meigs Mine 31 are
Most motorists passing the picket were sent to the coalfields. The
President Clinton declared 222 line honked their horns to show unipn was fined $52 million for
working, Smith said. Operations at
· Meigs Mine 2 are in no way affect- · Midwestern counties - including support for the miners.
vi?lating couit orders limiting pickthe entire state of Iowa - and the . , UMW spokesman Jim Grossfeld eung.
ed by the water problem:
·
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Rivers.stabilizing in Des Moines
Coal strike hits Virginia

Miners still

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