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                  <text>.·

Poineroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio

Ohio Lottery.

Tigers and
White Sox
advance

You'l Notice t
Savings ••• •

Pick 3:

524
Pick 4:

0930
Super Lotto:

•

2-14-21-29-45-47

Page4

Kicker:

578420

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PURE CANE ·

FOODLAND SUGAR

c

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5 LB.
BAG

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,e

1m

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

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44, NO. 80
..,.....,.Inc.
Vol

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FROZEN FOODLAND

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Limit 1 With Coupon &amp; $10.00 Additional Purchase ·

FRIED CHICKEN

~--········-~·-···············•1
FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON
1m

COCA·COLA PRODUCTS:

25

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I

oz.

BOX

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2

LITER
BOnLES

Goodthru
7/24/93
:

-VEGETABLES

1

Limit 2 With Coupon &amp; $10.00 Additional Purchase

HOT WHEELS FOR HOT MEALS - ne
Melp Couaty COIIIIdl aa AJID&amp; tool! dellfti"J ol
a DeW Cl'llck WedDIIdiJ llflenooa lor Ill bomedeUved mnl pi'CJII"am. Tbe truck l'eaturel eooled
aad heated compartmeats oa a lou·wheeldrlve, Claevrolet S-10 pickup truck claassla.

FOOD LAND

1

1

1
1

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----~--------~----------------,
I IN·AD COUPON I
C·39J7 I

99

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1

ro

RETAURW.•L OUAI&lt;fROATSCOMP.+.N•
&amp;'B SPRING ER [)Rfll[ lOr.I BAAO llliM'&gt;IS &amp;:11l8

~~vau.: w1c 199300C

With
Coupon

I

15!16oz.

I

The Meigs COIJIItY Council on
Aging (MCCoA) received a new
truck Wednesday ror its home
delivmxl meal pogram.
Pun:hued by the MeigS County
,lJQKd 9f .~i!lhe•n, tbe aew
iriii:li:~feauau two COIIIJ!II1I!Iei!S.
&lt;Iii heatcCJ inl"ti\C odJet c:coled, on
a four-wheel-drive, Oaevnilet S-10
pickilp truck chassis.
Started in 1983, the program
was responsible for delivering
36,182 meals in 1992.
.
There n Clllmldy six rour.es in
Meigs Couhty. At this time the
routes arc: through Syracuse,
Racine and vicinity; out Stale

16 oz.
CANS

1
1

Goodftekol7/18-7124
Only at FOODLAND

~~------------------------------~
ULTRA
10 oz.

CEREAL

Lrs£·:&gt;

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•

RINSO

L-------~----------------------~
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

FOODLAND FROZEN

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EXPIRES 7-24-93

FOOD LAND

OUNGE
JUICE

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BACON

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(OMFC) wiN reimburse you for lhe value of lhis c:ou·
pon plus Be I 900mllled In compliance With OMFC
Rede~llon Polley C-1 . lnc:Orpprated herein by ref·
erenoe. Valid only K redeemed by relaJI dlstriJutors
ot our merchandise or anyone spadlcally authOr·
lzed by OMFC. Void wherelaxed, reslrtcled or prohibiiM Cash value 1/2~.

Mall to O•Cir M1yer Food•

Corpor~tlon,

Box 8500, KlnklkH, U.. 80$02
P56.0Nl60

BATH

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FOOD LAND

WITH THIS COUPON
I
OFFER CODE 1563001350 I

ICE
CREAM

···········~···

OLLY FARMS

18 Piece
Chicken

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4 ROLL

TENDERBEST LEAN
USDA CHOICE

Y2
GAL.

CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
- EasiCm Associared Coal Corp.
and Peabody Coal Co. have
accused the United Mine Worlcers
of violating the Racketeer Influenced and Conupt OrganJzations
Act
'
The Peabody Holding 'CO. su~
sidiaries Wednesday fllc:d a lawsuit
in U.S. Disuict Court saying the
union has engaged in ac:ts violence in West Virginia. The
·Peabody companies said they are
seeking an injunctiQR to prevent

$

or

'''

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A tuberculosis sltin-tcsting clinic is scheduled for Monday from
S· 7 p m at the Tuppers Plains F~re Station.
.
~g ro the Meigs ~IY Tu~osis Office. the public
is urged to take adVIIUge or dns fn:e sernce. All food handlers !"''I
requilcd to have yearly tuben:ulin skin tests. Any students emermg
Jcindergarten IX college can get their skin tests a1 this cl~ic.
Funds for the clinic, conducted by Connie ~hnik. R.N., are
provided through the tuben:ulosis levy llld lha'e 11 no charge.
For more information, contact the Meigs County Tuberculosis
Office 81992-3722.

VELVET
SUGAR FREE

ICE CREAM

EAGLE THINS

POTATO CHIPS
13.514.5 oz.
to Limit

1893 • USDA Food

$ 99

1

The Middleport Parks and ~ecreaaion ComDIItleC IS InVIIIng people to use Hartinger Park ~IX yird sales on SaiUrday, Auk. 1.
Shelrer houses 8lld picnic tables are available on a flfSI·COOie,
f lfSt·SUVed basis.
For more information, call992-6589.

Motorcycle impounded

A vandalized mororcycle found parlted in the m~' s resuoom_ ll
the Racine Hydro Plant was impounded Tuesday rught by deputies
of the Meigs Cqunty Sheriff's DeplrlrncnL
No 11p were on the mocorcycle-

BIG BEND

DLAND

$ 99

.

Y2 GAl.
.

EASTMAN'S

Middleport Yard Sale slat~d . _ _.

$ 49

.VELVET ICE CREAM SANDWICH...... Box

Reserve the

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TB test clinic planned

·-

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funher Violence.
EasiCm Associated spokesman
Mike Hcnon in Charleston said
most of the 'damages the lawsuit
cir.es occurred at the Tygart River
mine in Marion County and the
Federal No. 2 mine in Monongalia
County.
"I( you review the damage in
the last month IX so. it's been in the
millions" or dollars, Henon said.
UMW spokesman Jim Grossfeld
in Washington. D.C., did not
immediaiA:ly ·return a message Jc(t

--Local briefs---

Cubed Steak

LB.

Route 124 to Rutland and back
through Harrisonville on State
Route 143; outlying areas behind
Pomeroy through CJiestu into Tuppr,n Pllins; pan or Pomeroy and
tJlrouah Lauiel Cliff, OUt-U.S. 33 I
off to outlyini ~.,eas; part of
Pomeroy and thrQJJgh Syracuse;
part or P'onl«oy and tJuough Middleport, down Stale Route 7 to Gallia County.
The purchase of the uuck will
allow the MCCoA to combine at
least three routes and 10 expand the
Home Ddiveri:d Meal program in
the Long Bottom and Reedsville
area. Six-to- 10 individuals who are

Deer•vehicle wreck reported

..

A Poincroy m•'r vehicle SUSiained lllilllente, disabling damage
Wedne3day afternoon when it struck a clellr in Sutton Township, the
Gallia-Meigs Post or the Stille Hi.Rhway Patrol1eportcd.
Joseph F. Lievins,• SS, 34244 Crew Road, was westbOund on ·
State Rou~e 124 when he struCk and disabled the deer. The clellr was
' disposed of by the responding trooper.
No injuries were reported. The vehicle was towed from the

scc:nc.

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and WIC

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Windows will be open and fans
churning in the Meigs County
Courthouse during the next eight
worlting.da~s while the courthouse
air conditioner undergoes repair
worlt.
The Meigs County Board Qf
Commissioners, during its reBJIIar
meeting Wednesday. decided 10 ·
.teturn thC unit's faulty comp
•
to its manufacturer to be rebuilt
after several cylinders in the compressor failed.
Commissioners opted to have
the compressor rebuilt a1 no cost to
the county inslead of purchasing a
new unit at an estimated cost of
$5,000 to $7,000.
Courthouse employees were to
be notified or the repair wat via a
Jetter from the commission to
offJCC holders.

Hi&amp;bway departmeat update

Renewed a contract with
Services filr thC
the commission on the Mei~s county's self-insured jnsurancc
County Highway Department s plan;
e
Issue n.-ving pojects. Bctrer than
- Paid bills in the amount or
one-foiu;th of the paving wort has $203,852.26;
.
been been COOiplcled, he said.
;_ Met with representative of
According to Euon, Pomeroy the Leading Creek WaJA:r Consel:·
Pike, Texas Road IIIII a por1ion of vancy District who discussed the
Swnncr ROlli have been completed possibility of receiving granll fur
and ·sec:tions of Kipgsbury Road extending water lines.
will be closed next week for ' In addition, Commission Vice
paving.·
President Janet Howard explained
Motorists using Oak Orove the commission, while discussing
Road in Sulton Township may the purchase of a freezer fur the
have 10 find detours when county storage of dead dogs at the dog
crews begin bridge replacement pound, decided to purchaSe a new .
work Monday. Eason said.
freezer which was given to the •
Workers will remove a bridge infirmary while the infirmary 's
over Bowman 's Run al the north older f = was given 10 the dog
end of the road and ~ it with pound.
a new, wider bridge, lie said. The
Present were Commission I'IW·
work may IBicc up to two weeks to dent Robert Hartenbach, Howard,
complcre.
Commissioner Manning Roush.
Other actloa
Cleric Mary Hohstetter was absent
In other action, commissioners:
due to a death in the family.
,.

J;:npeer Robert Eason updaled

-

Medica~ Claims

Man charged with pointing rifle
at marijuana-hunting.helicopter

currendy getting frozen meals will
receive a hot lunch.
Currently, I 88 individuals are
enrolled in the program. Ail are
handicapped, 63 percent are 75 or
older and 58 pcn:ent' are coosidered
to be low inc001e. ·
"This is the gJe81CSt projectl've
been involved in," Commissioner
t-1anning Roush said. 'Tm proud to
be part or it·
Susan Oliver, MCCaA director,
said Meigs County is unique in that
the commissioners directly support
the senior citizens.
''This sets an example for Olher
counties," she said

JIM FREEMAN
, Sentinel News Staff
A Radcliff man was 1IITCSied and
charged with aggravated menacing
in Meigs County Wednesday after.
noon after allegedly pointing a rifle
at a heli!:OJller inYOIYOd ·iB-marijua·
na eradicatioil operapons.
OffJCCrS m6ved In and anested
Randy Tolley. 40, after the pilot
and spoiler radioed a man on the
ground in the vicinity of Salem
School Road in Colwnbia Township was pointing a rille at the heJi'&gt;..
copter, Sheriff James M. Souisby
said.
Tolley said the rifle was not
loaded and claimed he was only
looking at the helicopter through
the rille's telescopic Sight, Soulsby

'

•
said.
The incident occurred toward
"He nevertheless was charged," the end of a three-day county-wide
Soulsby added.
marijuana eradication sweep.
A .30-06 Browning semi-autoAlthough a number of plantS
matic rifle and a .44 Magnum wen: seized, as of presstime Souls-.
~olver and ammunition ror both
by did not have figures for thefutarllls were confiscated by offi. exac:uwnbCr or Plants clinfiscated.
cers at the scene. Thc·camooflaged
The plants will be destroyed,,
rifle was equipped with a telescop- Soulshy said. · ·
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ic sight and a fOlding bipod.
Soulsby said the naijuana eradA number of marijuana plants ication .PrOJram is an operation•
were found in the vicinity, Soulsby involvinytbe Ohio Bureau of:
said. However there is nothing to Criminal Investigation and ldentifi-.
connect the pesenc:e of the plants cation (BCI). the Ohio National·
with this incident, he added.
Guard and the Meigs County Sher··
Tolley was released on bond · iffs Dctmtment
;
pending a hearing in Meigs Ccunty
The BCJ received grant money"
Court. Aggravated menacing is a to pay for the helicopters, Soulsby;
first-degree misdcrncanor.
said.
'
::

Coal op~rators accuse Weakened levees, forecast
UMW of intimidation worry Midwest residents

TISSUE

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P.O.

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12 oz.
CAN

HOME BEST

C!

To the retaltar: OScar Mayer FoOds Corporation

c

BOX

Here, fr- left, couot, commlislonen Manning
Roush aad Jaaet HIIWird take delivery of the
truck. from driver AnJielo Oliva while Susan
Oliver, MCCoA director, ud Alice Wamsley,
autritioa coordluator,look on.

MCCoA receives new truck
for meal delivery p.rogram

·······················~·······
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Courthouse workers facing heat
while air conditioner rep,a ired

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1 Secti9n. 12 p - 35 _,..
AMulllmedlalnc.ljolll ~'"' u

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 22, 1993

...

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Good thru
7/24/93

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at his home Wednesl!ay seeking
comment
Two Eastern Associated subsidu.ics, Colony Bay Coal Co. of
Wharton, Boone County, and Martinka Coal Co. of Fairmont. also
are plaintiffs.
The companies allege UMW has
"regularly and routinely ...
cn!la!led in acts of violence and
inllmulation ranging from damage
10 the physical facilities of employees to violent altacks upon employees••,

They cited whal they said were
m«Xe than 50 incidents involving
atwnpled murder, arson, exlllrlion.
ltidnapping and obstruction of, justice at Eastern Associated and
Peabody Coal operations in West
Virginia.
Eastern Associated is based in
Charleston. while Peabody Coal is
·llased in Henderson. Ky.

By The Associated Press

In Des Moines, Iowa, officials
said
the water sysiCm was ready. •
River engineers arc keeping
watch on hundreds or miles of lev- 8lld offiCe wuters goc the all-clear
ees in the Midwest, afraid that the to reun today, provided their fire
nood walls - mushy from long sprinklers worlt. And nmning water
could be back in some homes
exposure to high, surging water today. 12 days afkr the taps went
will disintegrate.
" We just have to be very cau- dry.
Aller months ol steady rain, the
tious:' said Joe Schwenk of the
Army Corp of Engineers in St. . levees along the Mississippi and
Missouri rivers are thoroughly
Louis.
Drenching rains in parts of the soaked. and the danger of a colMidwest overnight IWKI more thun- lapse could persist long after the
derstorms in today's forecast also rivers begin falling. The Corps is
watching for sips of erosion or
worried OffiCials.
disintegration.
" We are going to have another
Because of the nooding. the
crest coming down,' : said Larry
Missisippi
is closed to traffic for
Crump. Corps spokesman at
535
miles
l'rom
St Paul, Minn .• to
Kansas City, Mo., along the MisCairo,
Ill.
The
shutdown
began in
souri River. "I don't know when il
stages
on
Juilc
25.
is going to come, but it is a pauem
Transportation Secretary federi.
that has repeated iiself over and
co Pena said when the Mississippi
over and over.· •

is reupened. ·'barges will create
wakes which will further weaken
levees that are very sensitive right
now."
.
Pcna, who was in Keokuk,
Iowa., on Wednesday to cxamille
flood damage. said tl!c effects or
the Midwest disaster are being felt
natimwidc.
· ·we' ve already seen ships
leave the West Coast without the
grain they're supposed 10 have,':
he said. Also affected, he said, is
the auto indusJry's just-in-time
delivery system, which puts~ II{
facllXies as they're 1Wded
•
Hooding since the start of Jooe
has contributed to at least 33 deaths
8lld caused $10 biUi&lt;l!' in c!amale,
left 16,000 square miles of farmland under water and damaged
m~n than 22.1XKJ Ijames.
•

Voinovich,will use pulpit t~ implement reforms
.,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich is con cemed that a new llw streamlining
Ohio's workers• compensation sys1em won't effectively be put into
practice.
Voinovich on Wednesday
signed the legislation that he said
wiD improve injured worlcers' medicai care, make benefits easier to
obtain and eliminate wasiA: fraud
and abuse.
'
But he said, "Legislation by
itself docs nothing. It is in the
implementation and management
that lrUC gain will come. •'
The governor • in a sta~emcnt •
did not mention the .Bureau of
Workers' C001pensation bOard of
directors.
· However, the law gives tbe
board authority to implement major
portions of the bill, such as managed health care. Spokesman
Michael Dawson confirmed
V'oinovich was speaking about the

include five representatives of
unions - which'foughtmostofthe
rcfonns in the Legislature - and
five employer reprcseiltatives. That
means some reforms could be
blocked by tie votes.
. Voinovich acknowledged thai
the law gives him no power over
the,\'Ill"&lt;'- .
. .
· But I will usc ~ pulptt of thiS
. office to see that leg1sla11ve mtenl
~s carried out and our system is
Improved,"' he added . .
~ohn Hodges. pres1dent of the
Oh10 AFL-CIO and a member or
the board, said .~ go~ can do
as he pleases. We will
• hdo as the
law says and he won t ave anything 10 do with it,"' he added.
Hodges and other ~_leaders
denied claims by Vomov1ch a~d
employer groups, such as the Oh10
Chamber of Commerce, t~l the
bill will improve_ l~e quahty of
medical care that IRJured worltcrs
receive.
bOard.
·
Under managed care, the burellu
A newly constituted hoard will is authorized to create a network of

health-care·providers and negotiate
fiX reduced group raleS for workers, who coold be assigned to doc·
tors. ·.
However. some lawmakers have
said there is. no -mandate.
.
. Rep
-

Marc Guthrie, U· Heath, who'
served on a conference committee
that wroiA: the final version of thC'
bill. said this was his understanding.

--

Meigs fair passes go on sale.
Season l*SCS and membership ~ive gate admission ~ free park,;
tickets for the Meigs County Fair. IDj! for yow car dunng the entire
Aug. 16-21 on the Rock Springs fau-. are $1 o.
Fairgrounds, went on sale WednesThOse tickets are on sale at Joe's
day.
Country t1ar"et. Main Street, RutDan Smith, president of the land; Waid Cross Sons, Racine;
Meigs County AgriculiUJe Society Baum Lumber Co., Chester· Stipr
which stages the fai l , said that Run Flour Mill, Swishcr:Lohse
membersllip tickets in addition to Pharmacy, Oloix:kncr's R~
granting admission to the fair give all of Pomeroy; Nila Jean Rirchie
the holder voting privileges. The Tuppers Plains; Whaley's Grocery·
membership tickets sell for $12, Route 681 . Darwin; Helen Barr;..
and arc available from the Sugar Syracuse; Dorsel Larkins, Long
Run Flour Mill. Pomeroy, or any Bottom; Dans 290 North Second
boar~! member. They are available
St., Middleport; Five Pointt·•
only to individuals, not comparties Express, Route 7, ncar FlatWOOds
9' organi&gt;ations.
Road, and Reeds Country Store'
Regular season passes. which Reedsville.
•,

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
11 i Court Stleet

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' THE MEIGS-MASON ARBA

, ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGAREI' LEHEW ·
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All lette1&gt; are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publi.sbed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not peoonalities.

Quashing hints of inflation
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
Seems willing to tolerate sluggish economic growth in order to stamp out
the ftrSt hint or increasing inflation, analysts say.
.
Economists drew that message from between the lines or Greenspan's
semiannual repon to Congress on Tueschiy. They said he clearly signaled
that the cenb'al bank's next move will be to nudge up short·leml interest
rates to dampen price pressures rather than trim rates. to energize growth..
"It.looks to me like the Federal Reserve· wants mflabon lower and ts
willing to sacrifice growth and jobs for another year or two in order to
permanently and forever put inflation fires out," said economist Allen
Sinai of Economic Advisers Inc.
Jn .lestimony Tuesday to the House Banking subcommittee on economic jp'Owlh, Greenspan repeate&lt;!IY ~amed of the harmfullong·tef~!~ ef~eets
of mflation. He appeared to dtsmtss concern about the economy s disap·
pointing growth so far this year.
.
· "This is not a vibrant economy by any means, but n's clearly not one
that is about to tilt over into a significant state of weakness or contraction,'' he said
The economy is maintaining "a pace of growth that should yield fur·
!her reductions m the unemployment rate," he said.
-.. .
Despite the mildly reassuring rhetoric, the Fed's economic projections
are decidedly bleak. In February, the cenb'al bank had predicted the gross .
domestic product would grow between 3 percent and 3.25 percenl Now tl
projects growth of only about 2.5 percent.
The unemployment rate, at 7 percent in June, will decline to only about
6.75 percent by the founh quarter of this year, according to the latest projection. The rate will be a little better by the fmallhree months of 1994,
between 6.5 percent and 6.75 percent, it said.
"That kind of rate wouldn't upset most economists, but the general
population and politicians will stiU be upset. Those kinds of unemploy·
ment rates signal a significant amount o( distress out there," sa1d
economist Mark Zandi of Regional Financial Associates in West Chester,
Pa.
·
Clinton administration officials are counting on low interest rates to
offset the growth-cramping effects of higher taxes in their -~ bud·
gel. They nevertheless went out of their way to avotd criticizing
Greenspan.
.
"I think the Federal Reserve must look at the situation and make a
determination on wbat is wise," said Laura Tyson, chairwoman of the
White House Council of Economic Advisers.
·
However, she told reporters, "right now there is no concern" _within
the administration that the economy is poised to produce more inflation.

ll:rscl~ :\&gt;\~ "2.2.

lhu (~1'1':\ -:5 v.\ "')'2-1----

Wettne~y. duij 21, 1993

Page-2-Tlie Dally'Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
'Nsdr•• l•r;.,wly 11, 1993

.
.
.
.
Presidential vacuum IS under repair . ·
.

.

The Lost Generalioo figured the
Hoover vacuum would endure for
the ages - a vacuum (){ presidential leadership that would neva be
suroassed. No such luck. ·
. In the '70s, '80s and '90s, the
Now Generation heard all about
presidential leadership vacuums:
our nightly news verilably reverberated with (as philosopher Ross
Perot might note) giant S!lckin_g
sounds: Nixon's was about crimt·
nality: Caner's, governance; Reagan's, scandals (S&amp;Ls, HUD, Iran·
contra); Bush's, the recession. And
Bill Clinton's leadership-vacuum,
as celebrated in our nightly news,
seemed to be about everything at
once: genocide in Bosnia, refugees
fleeing Haiti, a middle-class tax
cut, assoned appointee snafus, a
sordid travel offiCe smear. '
So, in the third week Qf the sixth
month of his presidency, Clinton
moved to fill his real and perceived

leadership v~id by doing, of all
things, some right things:
· ( 1) He wrapped a supportive
arm around embauled Surgeon

Martin Schram
General nominee Joycelyn Elders,
a target of cqnservatives because of
her {l'Opensity for s1atin~ contrO·
vers1al but Sensible posttions on
abortion and sex education in
impolitic and inflammatory ways.
(2) He $Ummarily fired F)ll
Director William Sessions, whose
ethics, judgment and leadership
were flawed; and nominated J11dge
Louis J. Freeh to succeed him.
Now the FBI can be Freeh at laSt.
But then. Clinton stood
fonhrightly.before an flllditorium
full of mili!Bry brass and
announced a contro~~rsial policy
O!l homosexuals in the military.
Unfortunalelv, his new POlicy was

THIS UNIT'S EQUIPPhD
WIT~ All Tilt

lATEST...

WLICf
•

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Friday, July 23
Accu- Weather"~ 'forecast for daytime conditions and ·
MICH .

a less-lhan-fOlthnght oompromise.

is a homosexual. But if the ques·
Hoist by his own politically mal- tion is ever privately and unoffi·
adroit perard, Clin1011 tried to split- cially asked or a homosexual in the
the-difference on a basic principle. military, there is no answer tht!t can
Sa.dly, that can '·I be honorably be both honest· al\d free of JCOP·
done.
ardy.
.
Clinton's compromise, fash·
An aff11'111ative answer may be
ioned to please the· Joint Chiefs of re~ to a military superior wbo
S!Bff, has been labeled: ''Don't will have the riltht-to summon for
ask. DOn't tell. Don't pursue." interrogation die service man or
Under the new policy, a bornosexu- woman who admitted to being a
al cannot ¢ely tell the honest truth homosexual. Tiie man or woman ·
about his or her sexual preference wiD then have io swear that he or
and still -serve honorably in our she will never participate in a
armed forces. So, a bel1er moniker homosexual act - on or off the
might be: "DOn't asl::. Don't tell. military base- or be subject to
But if you are asked, please tell a dismissal.
lie."
Clinton was no doubt cowed
The proposed policy specifies into his split-the-difference comthat the military will no longer promise by the Senate Armed Secindulge in witch hunts 10 discover vices Committee chairman, Sam
homosexuals in their midst - a Nunn, D..(la. I bave admired much
significant smaU step for man and about Nunn over the years. but find
womankind. The mililaiY officially ·· his unnecessarily veh~ment prewill not ask an inductee if he or she serve-the-ban mindset distressing. I
can't help but wonder what Nul)n
would have been saying today if
Clinton had given him the job he ·
coveted: secretary (){ stale.
Today, Nunn and others tall::
about the need to preserve unit
cohesion and warn that homosexuals may compromise nalional security. But Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.,
has the best perspective on that. ·
The Viemam War hero noted that ·
only by completely lifting the ban
can we assure homosexuals that
!bey can continue to serve honorably if they are foreed out of the
closet - so they need not yield to
national security blacl::mail to preserve their careers. So, too, the
octogenarian hawk, Barry Goldwater, who once chaired Nunn 's committee, says the ban on gays should
be lifted, IUICOIIditionally.
.
So there's at least some good
news tonight: Our presidential
leadership vacuum is under repair.
For now, we've got a partial vacu·
urn . We may yet clean up the
decades of debris in the Oval
Office.
Martin Sehram is 11 syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

PA.

lMansfield Iss•
IND.

• l Columbusl 86'

Consumer Reports

Yonkers, N.Y., several weeks ago;
and seven New Jersey teen-ager.;
have been charged with a series of
sexual attacks on two 14-year-old

girls - kids repon that gangs of
boys often chant rap lyrics that
demean women.
Does that mean that I want to
censor music? No. Another kinship
I feel with poor Tipper: She was
pilloried by roc I:: musicians and
record producers as the worst thing
since Carrie Nation, when she
never mentioned censoring so
much as a doo-wop, a jack-thebooty or a bodddeeeee. All she
wanted was a labeling system for
music similar ·to the one used with
movies. That way she'd know if a
record was mus1c she wanted her
children to listen 10, or would they
have to listen to some misogynist
singing about having sex with their
cousins.
What I want is for adults to realire just whose hands and influence
these kids are in. With fathers gone
in many cases and schools doing

Razel Boggess

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, July 22, the 203rd day of 1993. There are 162 days
left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on July 22, 1893, WeUesley CoUege professor
Katharine Lee Bates wrote the original ver.;ion o~ h~ ~ "Americathe
Beautiful" in Colorado Springs, Colo., after bemg tnspired by the VIew
from Pikes Peak.
On this date:
.
In !587, a s'econd English colony, which vanished under my:w=nous
circumstances was established on Roanoke Island off North Carobna.
In 1796 Cl~veland, Ohio, was founded by Gen. Moses Cleaveland.
In J8d English troops under the Duke of Wellington defeated the
French at the Battle of Salamanca i.n Spain.
.
In 1916, a bomb exploded dunng a Preparedness Day parade m San
Francisco, l::illing 10 people.
.
In 1933. American aviator Wiley Post completed the ftrSI solo fl1ght
around the world in seven days, 18 3/4 hours.
. .
In 1934 a man identified as bank robber John DtUmger was shot to
death by federal a~ents ~u~ide 0'ica~o·s Biograph Theater.
· In !942, ga&lt;"'me rall«;&gt;ntllg mvolvmg the use ~f coupons began along
the Atlantic se..ooard during World War II.
·
In 1943 50 years ago, American forces led by Gen. GeorgeS. Patton
captured Palermo, Sicily.
. . .
·
.
.
In' I975, the U.S. House of Representauves JOtned the Senate m voung

.

joints, tendons, muscles and ligastrengthen the bOnes and help ward .ments than do spons that involve
off osteoporosis.
.
twisting, turning or pounding up
Mile for mile, walking burns and down pavement or court. Still,
almost as many calories as running before you start a regimen of fit·
does. Of course, it generally takes ness walking, it's wise to take a
less time to run a mile than to walk few precautions:
it, so running bums calories faster.
• If you're more than 45 years
But walldng vigorously two miles a old, out of shape, or have a chronic
day, three times a week for a ~ health problem, coosult a doctor.
could help someone who wetghs
• Before you begin to walk fast,
I 50 pounds lose 7 to 9 of those warm up by walking slowly for a
pounds, even. without a change in few minutes. Then stretch your leg
diet. The heavier you are to start muscles gently, without bouncing
with, the more you •u lose.
· or straimng .. Stretch again when
Wall::ing poses less risk. to your workout is finished.
' .
• Begin \Yith walks covering
less than a mile, 81. a pace that lets
you carry on a conversation with------------------------l"i:i~~h~M~In----l out effort. Increase dislance and
~
Berry's World
speed gradually.
to restore the American citizenship of Confederate Gen. Roben E. Lee.
• If your feet hurt after your
In 1981, Turkish extremist Mehmet Ali Agca was sentenced in Rome
walk, massage them with ice for 10
10 life in prison for shooting Pope John Paul n.
minutea, ~lif'~~;f~11 '
Ten. years ago: Samantha Smith and her parents returned home to
day or twO·. Don't resume w · g
Manchester, Maine, after 'completing a whirlwind tour of the Soviet
until the pain has abated
Union. Diana Ross, wbose Cenb'al Park concert had been rained out the
• ·Avoid walking on uneven surnight before, returned for an encon:.
.'
.
.
. .
faces, which can put undue stress
Five years ago: Iran aild Iraq satd they would send thelf fore&amp;gn mtnJS·
on the calf muscles and soles or the
ters to New York to meet witli U,N. Secretary-General Ja:vier Perez .de
feet. ·
Cuellar after Jtan said it would accept a U.N. c~·ftre resolution.
For a petson. weighing 150
One year ago: Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar escaped from his
pounds, an hour-loilg brisk walk of
lu~ury prison near Medellin.
·
four and a half miles would bum
432 calories. Thai's about the same
Today's BUtJ:lda~s: Rose Kennedy is 103. Seri. ~iU~ Roth, R-Del.,
is 72. Senate Minonty Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., IS 70. Smger Margaret
calorie-consumption as an hour of
Whiling is 69. Actor-comedian Orson Bean is 65. Fashion designer'Oscar
low-impact aerobic dancing or
de Ia Renta is 61. Actor Terence Stamp is 53. Game show host Alex Trepl'aying !lDlf (carrying clubs). In
bek is 53. Actor-sjnger Bobby Sherman is 48. Actor&lt;omedian-director
comparison, an hour of running (at
Albert Brooks is 46. Actor WiUem Dafoe is 38.
8 mph) would consume 936 calo. Thought for Today:·"America! ~erica! God shed his grace on thee.
ries,
but
swimming , 20
And crown thy good with brotherhood. From sea to shining sea!" :....
•
yards/minute or playiriA beginner
From "America the Beautiful" by Kalhilfine. Lee Bates (1859-1929).
tennis would use only 288 calories.

.

•

stalion was 104 in 11101. The record
low was 50 in 1966.
Sunset today will be at 8:55,
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
6:22am.
· •
Arouad tbe utloa
Rains drenched pans of the sod·
den Midwest overnight and more
lhunderstonns were forecast today
as the weather picl!ife showed little
change from the last few weel::s.
High pressure .hovered over the
Great Lakes this morning, slowing
an area or rain across the mid-sec-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Residents from Cincinnati today
said they were not consulted in an
agreement allowing Cincinnati G~
&amp; Electric Co. to mcrease thetr
rates about 5 percent.
· Founeen members of the group
Communities United For Action
attended a hearing with the staff of
the Public Utilities Commission of
Oliio. The hearing was held to
allow groups to express concerns
about the agreement.
The agreement was made
between CG&amp;E and its business
customers but also affects the rates
of residential.customers.
"We have not been invited to
heru:,ings. This type of issue con-

Hospital news

s

Membcf: The Anoci•ted·Preu, 'and the Obio
Ntw5 paper AssociaUon, Natioual Adverti51ng
Reprucntative, B:ranham Newspaper Salea, ~

Dakolas.
Unseasonably cool tempera!UJeS
persisted in pails of the West, while
the Southeast sweated under hot
temperatures and high humidity.
Heat advisories were ·posted for
most of Arlcansas and Ml~issippi,
and parts' of North and .South Car-

olina. A critical heat alert was post·
ed for Alabama, except for !he

coasL

EMS responds .
to five calls·

stantly tells us that we're not
important," Roy Schomaker, a
group member, testified.
The residents brought signs that
read: "No Deal" and "Freeze
Profits, Not People.''
Under the agreement, residential .
customers would pay $22 million

UnitS of Meigs Cl"iimty Emer-'
gency Medical Services responded
of a $41 million increase in electric to five calls for assistance •
rates and $10 million of a $19 mil- overnight. Units responding
lion increase in gas rates.
include:
·
Evidence from the hearing will
Wednesday- 10:15 am. Syra· ·
be submitted to tbe PlJCO, said
to Third Street for Archie Lee
Jeff Van Niel, assistant anomey cuse
who was transported to Veterans''
general representing the commis- Memorial H.ospital: 12:35 p.m.
sion staff.
Middlepon to South Founh Street
for Tim Yates who was transpOned ·
to Holzer Medical Center: 2:5 I
p.m. 'Rutland to Harrisonville for
Estimated receipts Thursday 8,000. Sadie Karr who was transported to •
Prices from The Producers Live- HMC; 5:49 p.m. Middleport to
stock Association:
· Overbrook Nursing Center for ~
James Spencer who was transport·
Cattle: Sleady.
Slaughter steers: choice 68.00- ed 10 VMH; 7:45 p.m. Syracuse to •·
Second Street for Velma Miller
72.75; select 62.00-68.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 66.00- who was transported to VMH.
Thursday- 2:18 a.m. Racine to '
72.50: seleet 60.00-66.00.
Third
Street for Kevin Dugan who
Cows: 50 cents lower; all cows
was
treated
at the scene.
53.25 and down.
BuDs: 3.50 higher; choice 66.50
anddown.
•
Hospital news
Veal calves: steady; choice
VETERANS MEMORIAL
90.00 and down.
Wednesday admissions - Ruth .
Sheep and lambs: 2.00.to 3.00 Mann, Pomeroy, and Helen Jeffers, ·
higher; choice wools 52.00-56.50; Syracuse.
choice clips 50.00-54.00: reeder
Wednesday discharges - Mary
lambs 59.00 and down; aged sheep Hindy, Middleport.
34.50 and down. ·

. Livestock report

r:ts

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock·pricls and
at selec(eil buying points Th
y
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: 50 cents
higher; demand moderate.
U.S. 1·3, 230·260 lbs., country
points 42.75-43.50: plants 44.50·
45.50, a few 45.75.
Soned U.S. 1-:4. 230-260 lbs.,
country points 43.75-44.50.
Receipts .Wednesday 7,400.

Lottery results
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Wednesday night's Ohio Lottery
'Selections:
Super Lotto
2-14-21-29-45-47
(two, fourteen, twenty-one ,
twenty-nine. forty-five, forty·
· seven)
The jaclcpot is $24 minion.
Kicker
5-7-8-4-2-o
(five, seven, eigbt, four, two,
zero)
Pick 3 Numbers
5-24
(five, two, four)
Pick 4 Numbers
0-9-3-0
(zero, nine, three, zero)

n

Fair weigh-ins slated
All ju!Jior fair members who.
plan_to .exhibit a m.~rl::el p¢n oJ
poullry or rabbits at the 1993
Meigs County Fair, Aug. 16-22,
must bring their projects to the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds Saturday
sometime between 7 and 8 p.m.
All poultry will be banded and ·

Group supports levy
Members of the Board of
Trustees of the Meigs County
Elderly Housing Corporation voted
at a recent meeting to suppon the
one mill levy for the Meigs County
Council on Aging which will be on
ballot in November.
. Approval was given 10 the purchase of new air conditioners for
the aparUnents and to pave a portion of the parking lot.
It was noted that there are three
vacancies !'I The Maples, the 45
apartment complex on Mulberry
Heights _which· provides independent living for low-income senior
citizens and handicapped individu·
als. The complex was buill with a
loan from the Depanment of Housing and Urban Development in
1985.
Members anended a cookout
and entertamm~nt. pl~nned by the
res1dents at the mvltabon of Evelyn
Clark, manager.

.

rabbits
will for
he the
tattooed.
order
to • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. - - - - - . ,
be eligible
JuniorInFair
market livestock sale, the projects must
be identified at this time.
Member.; may also participate in
a fitting and· showing clinic sched·
uled for Saturday hom 6 to 8 al the
\
fairgrounds. There will be speakers
on hand to meet with the members
in the areas or beef, ~· swine,
rabbits and poultry. Top1cs to be
discussed include getting ready for
•
the fair, showmanship techniques
.
and project judging.
Your fine jewelry is designed to last a lifetime Additional information may be
obtain.ed from Chip Haggerty at the .
with the proper care.
Meigs County Ex1ension Office;
That's why we offer a complele range of jeWelry
992-6696.

GIVE. 'EM
.

THE WORKS

services. We sell,
design, restring,
clean. polish,
· ·epair and check · ·
r loose ~Iones
1 parts. And
we're
)Ugh, all your
1elry will look
md new.
io come visit us.
d ask for the
··~ We care.

R CLEARANCE SALE

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10017.
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•

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.'

'

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.,

•

LAY·AWAY NOW FOR .B ACK·TO.SCHOOL
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•

Highs today were forecast 1n the
90s across the South, risinl llbove
100 in pans of Texas and the deiCrt
Southwest; in the 60s in northern
New Engb1nd and the Northwest
coast: and in the 70s and 80s elsewhere across the lower 48 stales.
The nation's high temperature
Wed!!eiday was I 07 degrees It
. Coohdge, Ariz. The low tempenl·
rure was 26 at Truckee, Calif.

are supposed 10 provide victims of employment or other. personal
cenain offenses with some infor- information about victims ,who fe.
mation, but the commission found retaliation by a defendant.
the lists of crimes are inconsistent.
-Requiring thai victims' propThe bill would exlend notifica• eny taken during an investigalion
lion rights to victims or al( felonies be PJ'OIIIptly returned.
and cenain misdemeanors:
. -'Recommending couns miniOther proposals include: .
mize contact between victims and
-Requiring law enforcement defendants, providing separate
agencies to adequately notify vi~· . waiting areas if possible.
iims at aU stages or the judicial proThe Legislature is in recess, but
cess, including arrest, bail hearings Greenwood said he hoped commit·
and possible pretrial release of . tee hearings could begin during the
defendants.
.
summer.
-Requiring prosecutors, if
asked by victims, to prpvide notification (){ subsequent court proceed·
ings and appeals.

rysburg, andRep. Tim Greenwood,
R-Sylvania, were joined by Sharon
Boyer of Columbus, whose son,
Kevin, was shot to death in
September 1990. Ms. Boyer represented the in1erests of crime vic·
tims. ·
"We are in this process through
no fault of our own. The ripple
effect of crime on victims is devas·
tating," Ms. Boyer said.
"Even if the victims can't be
actively involved in the process
-itself, the right to be informed, to
be notified of critical stages of the
process, is crucial," she said.
Prosecutors and couns lllready

Raze! (Ray) Boggess, 61, 42
Butlles Ave., Columbus, formerly
of Pomeroy, died Saturday July 17,
1993 at Veteran's Memorial Hospi·
tal in Dayton.
' ·
Born Oct. 13, 1931 he was the
son of the late Charles and Osa
Boggess of Racine.
·
He was preceded in death by
one son, Charlie Boggess; five
brothers, Charles, Benny, Denzel
and Glenver Boggess, all or
Racine: and one grandson.
Survivors include one son, Dar·
rell Bidwell; two daughters, Mrs.
All~n Fay Carter, Oak Hill, and
Joyce Polcyn, Rio Grande; one sister, Marie Spaun, Racme; and f1ve
grandchildren.
. Lester Rose
· Services wiU be at9:45 a.m. FnLester E. Rose, 74 , of Columday, July 23, at the Vetera~·s bus, formerly or Meigs County,
In an article in Wednesday's
Administration Protestant Hosp1tal died Tuesday, July 20, 1993, at his paper titled "Fa_cemyer delivers ·
Chapel in Dayton. Burial will be in residence.
lumber /ecrure," Robert Facemyer
Daytqn Veteran's Me&amp;porial Yard.
}:le was a retired State·of Ohio is quoted as saying Facemyer Lumemployee, a veteran or World War ber Co. produces flooring. In ~diStella Frank
1,
and a member of the National tion he is later aUnbuted as saymg
Funeral services · for Stella Horseshoe
Pitchers Association, "a considerable
'
amount" or 1urnber
Rosella Frank, 93', of Pomeroy,
who died Tuesday at Overbrook the Whestone Horses~oe Club, a returns to the United States as fmCenter, Middleport, will be held at past officer of the .New Ro_me ished products after being exportII a.m. Saturday at the Ewing Horseshoe Club, was 10duct'1 10to ed. Neither is true, Facemyer said.
the Oh1o Horseshoe ~tchers Hall .
The information was published
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
•
was
wmner
of
the
,
as
submitted to The Daily Senlinel
of
Fame
and
The Rev. Herbert Grate will
Gulf
Coast
Semor
Olymptc
m
and
wllS' not written by newspaper
officiate and burial will be in Sut·
Flonda.
taff
ton Cemetery, Racine. Friends may
He is survived by his wife or 50 s ·
call at the· funeral home Friday
'
years,
Lucille Rose, two sons and
The correct number for more
from 2 to 4 and 7 10 9 p.m.
daughters-in-law,
David
and
Karen
information
concerning classes for
Born on July 7, 1900 at Chester,
Rose
and
Allan
and
Patty
Rose,
a
lifeguards
at
the Middleport Pool is
she was the daughter of the late
daughter
and
son-in-law,
Carolyn
•
999.
The
Daily Senlinel apol7
John Myers and Barbara Meager aild John Tilley, all of Columbus; 992
ogizes for the error.
Mycr.; and resided most of her life and another daughter and son-inin the Chester/Pomeroy area. She law, Judy and Paul Castle of
The Meigs County Senior Citiretired many years ago from Hilliard; eight grandchildren, and
zens
Center won an award for the
Swisher and Lohse Drugs where four great-grandchildren.
most
patriotic float in the Rutland
she worked for 25 years. She w.as a
Funeral services will be held at Ox Roast
Parade on July 5. The
member of tl'lc Chester Umted 10:30 a.m. at the 0 . R. Woodyard
.Jnformation
was not submiued to
~ethodtst Church and auended.th.e .--Funeral Home, 1346 South High ''The Daily Senlinel
at the time the
R10 9mnde College and Oh10 Um- Street, Columbus. Graveside ser- original story wa:; published.
ver.;lty. .
.
vices will be held at 1:30 p.m. at
She IS survtved by her husband the Gravel Hill Cemetery. in
of 74 years, Ralph J;ra.nk of Cheshire. Pastors John Meade and
Pomeroy, an~ severlll meces and Jim Young will officiate. Friends Plan benefit shower
nephews. Best~es her parellts, she may call at the funeral home Thurswas preceded 10 death by four SIS· day from 7 to 9 p.m. and Friday
A fire benefit shower will be
ters, Vida Weber, Oma. ADen, Ada from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
held for Carroll and Fernie
Stansberry , Mmme Wilson, and a
Woodgerd at the Columbia Townbrother, Alba Myers.
ship flfehouse Sunday, Aug. I from
2 10 4 p.m. T!leir house and aU lhC
Nancy J, Mays
contents were lost in a recent fife.
The
Athens
Association
of
Foot·
Nancy J. Mays, 37, of South ball Officials will he conducting an
Point, died Wednesday , July 21, Adult Education class for any indi.·
19&lt;113, in St. Mary's Hospital in viduals interested in officiating
Huntington, W.Ya .
football.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
She was born March 27, 1956,
Tbe
firSt
class
will
be
Thur.;day,
July 21 discharges · Samuel
in Gallipolis, daughter of Roy and July 29th, 1993 at 6:30 pm at
Maurita Miller of Pomeroy, who Meigs High School. Successful Sowards, marilyn Watson, Mrs.
Robert Lee and son, william
survive,
completion of the classes will
A graduate o'f'Eastern High enable the applicants to satisfy the Eggers, Minnie Lyons, Almeda
School, she received a b~chel«;&gt;r's Ohio High School Athletic Associ- Deuie, Lizzie borders, Nell Higdegree from Ohio Umverstty, ation requirements to officiate high gins, mary Saunders, John Lewis,
Gary Rains, Jack Stanley an~ MarAthens, and a master's degree from school football.
jorie Graves.
'"·
For further information contact
July 21 births • Mr. and Mrs.
The Daily Sentinel
Dave Jenkins, or any other local Kyle O~yer, son, Cheshire.
' (USPS 11,1-HO)
rootbaU offteial.
Published every a!tcraooo, Jdonday throuah
Friday. Ill CourfSt .. Pomeroy. Ohlo by lbe
Ohio Valley PubliJhlna Company/Multimedia
Inc. Pomeroy. Ohio .4S769, ptL 992·21!'j6.
s~nd clau poataeC paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

lion'of the country.
·
Flash flood waJChes were issued
for parts of soulhem Iowa, nonhero
Missouri and eastern Nebraska.
Thlllldmtonns were also expected
to threaten Minneso!B and the

Residents protest rate agreement

Officials to meet

the high end. Someone 45 years
old, for example, would need to
exercise vigorously enough to keep
his or her pulse between 123 and
149 bents per minute. Push your
pulse into the zone for 20 minutes
at least three times a weel::, and
your cardiovascular systeq,~ will
become stronger and more efficient
Walldng has all the other advan'
laj$eS or aerobic exercise. II can
ra&amp;sc the level of high-density
lipoprotein, the "good" cholesterol
that provides some J.&gt;rotection
against heart disease; tt can help
lower .blood pressure; and, as a
weight-bearing exercise, it can

'------------..J

Marshall University, Huntington.
She was a speech pathologist for
the Dawson-Bryant School District
in Coal Grove and a member of the
American Speech Hearing Association.
·
In addition to her parents, she 'is
survived by her husband, Sam
~ys.
'
Services will be held 10 a.m.
Saturday at Central Christian
Church m Ironton with the Rev.
Larry Greenwood officiating. Buri'
al will follow in Highland Memorial Gardens, South Point.
Friends may call 6-9 p.m. Friday at HaD Funeral Home in Proc·
torville and from 8:30 a.m. Saturday at the church.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Crime victims wbo now may feel
ignored by police and the. cour~
could get information aboUt thelf
assailants and protection from them
under a bill introduced in the Legislature.
The propoSal contains recom •
mendations from the Ohio Criminal
Sentencing Commission to expand
exist!ng laws dealing with the
rights of victims as criminal cases
move through the justice system.
Three members of the panel out·
lined provisions of the bill at a
news conference Wednesday.
Sen. Betty Montgomery, R-Per,

Corrections

Vigorous walking's healthy benefits
· Walking may 'Jack the drama of
· a 26-mile marathon, the power of a
bicycle race or the exuberance of
an aerobics session, but it can be as
good for your bean as those more
strenuous activities.
Although health benefits accrue
from even a leisurely stroll, a vig·
orous pace wiD provide the biggest
payoff. To help you attain cardiovascular fimess, walldng should be
brisk enough to push your pulse
into a •'target zone.''
~
Calculale that zone by subtract·
ing your age \iOill 220, then multi·
plying the result by 70 percent for
the low end of the zone (fJJ percent
for beginners) .and 85 percent for

.

of thunderstorms west Saturday.
Lows in the 60s. Highs iri th~ 80s.
Chance of showers or thunderstorms Sunday and Monday. Lows
in the 60s Sunday and upper 60s to
low 70s Monday. Highs 85-90 Sunday and upper 80s to low 90s Mooday.
'

Area deaths .

good just to keep the violence con- such as sexual identity and healthy
tained to the haUs, who's minding relationships either at home, in
their moral education - the syco- schools or in other socilll settings.
phantic jackals in the recording In some families, discussion is still
industry who produce degrading an option. I don 'I think any of us
albums? "Great, Ice, whatever you has definitive answers for the oth·
say! 50 ,half-naked girls pawing on ers.
you instead or 2C17 Hey, we'D just
One thing we do know is that
rent a bigger sludio.'' ·
teen society is driven by peer
The strongest adult influences approval. It takes one-on-one adult
some of these kids have in !heir inleraction with a kid to help him
lives are people who just want their or her become stro!)g enough to
money: Welcome to manhood, resist peer pressure. Yet just one
guys. The admission is a spons kid able 10 resist peer pressure can
Jacket, a $175 pair of court shoes be a powerful example to other
· and a case full of COs telling you kids.
Responsible adults must become
that real men demean women.- And'
what do young women see? That to involved with these kids, even if it
be ·"in" among their peers, young means coming away from our own
men have to show how much ihey families sometimes. The kids aren't
disrespect young women - and to going io come to the role models,
have. a boyfriend, a girl just has to so the role models will have to
go along with it. I'm unsure just come to them. How? There are
what girls make of this, or if they scores of opportunities in every
identify with some of the assertive community to interact with adultfemale rap and rock stars, and if starved kids, and lists of kids who
they do, just what kind of influence need us as close as the nearest
THAT is on male-female relation- Boys cir Girls Club, Big BrothersBig Sisters office, or_othec youth
ships.
Psychologists and social work- · services agencies.
Sarah Overstreet Is 11 syndiers lament the lack of discussion
between kids and adults or issues cated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Associatioll.

Sarah Overstreet

C1993 Accu·Weathet', Inc.

VVeather

South-Central Obio
. Tonight, partly c.loudy. Low in
th~ mid-60s. Friday, partly sunny.
High in the mid-80s. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
E,tended forecast:
Saturday tbrougb Monday:
Mostly fair wilh a slight chance

Jy The Associated Press
Another ,couple of days of dry
weather are in store for Ohio.
Today through Friday will be
generally clear, except partly
cloudy over the extreme southern
counties. High temperatures both
days wiD range hom near 80 in the
northeast to the mid-80s south .
Lows tonight will range· from the
50s in the north to the mid-60s far
south.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

'

Bill expands crime victims' rights
..4!J!\

What today's youths really need
I'm beginning to fe&amp;l lilce Tipper Gore must bave felt Members
of the "My-Baby-Does-the-Hanky·
Panky" generatiOII, we hit middle
age doing exactly wbat we skewered grown-ups for when we wece
young: criticizing the music l::ids
listen to. Fossils 'R' Us.
(I .guess I'll know I've really
made it when rapper Ice-T sings
that he wants to commit a four-letter sex act on my 12-year-old
nieces, as he crooned he'd like to
do to Tipper's on one or his
albums.)
Fossil or not, it doesn't seem
like much of a stretch to conclude
there may be a link between music
videos portraying teen-age boys
pulling down girls' swimsuit tops
and dousing them with beer, and a
recent incident in one .of New York
City's public swimming pools: A
group of boys surrounded a 14year-old ~irl and ripped off her
bathing suit top. II was also report·
ed that witnesses said one of the
boys sexually molested her. _
As these types of incidents grow
- a group of 9-to- 13-year-old
boys ANti girls were accused of
throwing a 12-year-old girl to the
ground !!.".~ fondling her in

l

~
Vta Associllled Pr~~ Graphic5Net

3

Dry weath.er will remain tw-o more days

OHIO Weather

.

The Dally Seiltlnei-Paga

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

992·3785

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The Daily

Sports

By BEN W ALXER
• AP Bueball Writer

I

Gallipolis White Sox, Tuppers Tigers head into quarterfinals
Green #1.. ..........001 000; t-2-2
Gal. White Sox ..420 01x; 7-4-2
WP- Siders
LP- Preston
----'-T.P. 'Jligers 13, Vinton 1
The Tigers tool&lt; five innings before they lived up 10 their name, at
least offensively. but a run here and
a run there over time can pay off,
especially with quality pitching ef·
forts from Steven Whillock and
Matt Bissell (combined 13Ks, six
walks).
Tuppers Plains drew fll'Sl blood
in the first when J.T. White, who
doubled to Ially his learn's fll'Sl hit,
scored from third on a wild ball
four to Whitlock. But after Whit·
lock struck out the side in order in
the bottom of the first, the Tigers
wasted a chance to get more runs in
the second when Vinton pitcher
James Oiler got Jeremy GiUilan on
a called third strike with Josh
Hager on third and Abe Rach on
second.
·The Pirates made their Meigs
County guests pay for such waste
in the bottom of the second when
they saw Jarred Oiler put his single
10 maximal use with .a steal of second base and a two-base advance
on as many wild pitches 10 tie the
game at 1-1. But once again, Whitlock had struck out the side.
The Tigers went ahead 10 stay in
the third when Whillock, who got
aboard on a two-out ground-rule
double to left field, scored on Jeremy Coleman's double to left.
The Pirates got runners to third
base in the fourth and fifth, but
only in the ~ixth could they get another run. By then, Tuppers Plains
had put the seven-run riot it had in
the lOp of the sixth in the book.
The Tigers' hitters were Bissell,
White (both 2-4), Whitlock (1·2),
Jeremy Coleman and Justin
Delacruz (1 -3). The Pirates' hitters
were Jarred Oiler (2-2) and Keith
Stout (1-3).
James and Jarred Oiler combined to strike out six and walk
three.
Inning totals
TuppersPlains ... 101 317; 13-7-1
Vinton ................OIO 001; 2-3-8
WP- Whitlock
LP-JamesOiler
Quarteri'inal slate
Tonight - Gallipolis Rockies
vs. Gallipolis Yankees, 6 p.m.;
Ky~cr Creek#2 vs. Middleport
Wh1te Sox, 7:30p.m .
Friday - Point Pleasant FOP
vs. Bidwell #I, 6 p.m.; Gallipolis
White Sox vs. Tuppers Plains
Tigers, 7:30p.m.

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jnning of Wednesday's game in Municipal Stadi·
urn. Oakland won, 7-2. (AP)

SLIDES INTO SECOND • Oakland's Ricky
Henderson dives Into second base as Cieyeland's
shortstop Felix Fermin takes a throw in third

Bengals
ink Mark Duper; settle with Brown
.

•

WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) The Cincinnati Bengills have added
experience to their wide receivel!i
corps by signing Mark Duper and
agreeing to terms with Eddie
Brown.
Duper, a free agent who was
released last week by the Miami
Dolphins after 11 seasons, signed
with the Bengals on Wednesday for
an undisclosed amount. •
He reported 10 training camp at
Wilmington College, but he may
not get in much practice for awhile.
He broke a bone in the little fmger
on his right hand Wednesday while
catching hard tosses.
Duper was sent to Cincinnati for
examination and treaanent. Trainer

.DOUBLE TROUBLE- Guitar rocker Stevie Ray Vaughan may . ty. Siders chalked up 13 strikeouts, while Whitlock had 12 in their ·
be gone, but Double Trouble, better known in local circles as Gal·
!()Pjided victori~s S.li~inst Green #1 and Vinton, respeciively! in:.:
lipolis White Sox pitcher Tim Siders (left) and Tuppers Plains ~er Creek Lllll&lt; '--&lt;"j;u~ Tournament second-round actmn: ,
hurler Steve Whitlock, made an appearance Wednesday night at
(OVP photos by G. Spencer Osborne)
.
··
the Kyger Creek Employees Club field in northeast~rn Galli11 Coun,.,

.

•

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI
Kevin
. Mitchell is at least· a week away
· from getting back in the Cincinnati •
Reds' lin~up.
First, ~tchell has to prove to
manager D.avey Johnson that his
pulled hamstring has healed
enough to let him run. Then, .he'll
have to serye his two-game suspension from the team for his club·
house altercation with Johnson.
Mitchell is eligible to come off
the disabled list this weekend during a series in Florida, but 1ohnson
doesn't expect him back so soon. .
The Reds go to Houston for a
three-game series next Monday
through Wednesday.
"If he can come back toWards .
the end of the Houston series, I'd
be amazed at that," Johnson said
Wednesday.
Mitchell can bit- he's taken
batting practice the last couple days
without problem. He just can't run
very well, and Johnson's in no
position to add another hobbled
player 10 the roster.
The Reds already have Bip
Roberts, whose sore thumb prevents him from hitting effectively.
The Reds activated him anyway 10
use as a pinch runner and lateinning defensive replacemenL And
shortstop Barry Larkin has missed
the last four games with a tom ligament in his thumb.
"I've got too many specialists
right here," Johnson said.
Mitc~ell ran a couple of short
sprints Wednesday and reported a
little tighmess. but no pain.
"I'm surprised it healed so
fast," he said.

IIIST1014 . IISTlOH

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ing Lenny Wilkens, but he suddenly changed his mind and became
the coach of the Atlanta Hawks,
who fired Weiss after last season.
The Clippers then coUrted Rubie
Brown, but he will remain in
broadcasting.
They then returned to Weiss whose five-year NBA coaching
record is 183-227 - after contaCting him earlier.
Weiss said at a news conference
Wednesday that he dido 't mind not
being the Clippers' fust choice.
'' My wife had a couple of dates
before she asked me to marry her
and the marriage has worked out
very well," he quipped. "! don't
see any reason why this can't work
out very well."
Clip~J!!rs general manager Elgin
Baylor. wouldn ' t talk about the
lengthy process ·that ended in
Weiss' hiring.
"The fact is we have Bob now
and we have someone we are very
happy with. It would serve no purpose to talk about why it took so
long," Baylor said. "Bob under- ·
stands that we were talking 1o a lot
of people."'

I

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Store Hours; 8:30 l .m. 1o I p.m. Monday through Frldav
8 : 30a.m ~ to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. SundaY

GALLIPOLIS
Prices

Paul Sparling said that, in the worst
case scenario, Duper could be out
two weeks.
Brown, who was snubbed on the
summer free agent market after
eight years with the Bengals,
accepted a $1.1 million offer with
no money up front, The Cincinnati
Enquirer reported today. The newspaper said he is expected to be in
training camp by tonight or Friday.
"They've both been great players," general manager Mike Brown
said. "The question is, 'Are they
boih still gOod players?"'
As half of the "Marks Brothers" receiving tandem with Mark
Clayton, Duper caught 511 passes
for 8,869 yards and 59 touchdowns

in 11 seasons with the Dolphins.
He sa ill he doesn't think he's
slowing down at age 34.
"!· think I'm just as fast as I
have been, !.can still catch, and I
can think as fast as 11,11y receiver in
the NFL," he said after a brief
workout Wednesday.
Mike Brown said he hopes the
two veterans can show the younger
receivers a few tricks.
·
"(Carl) Pickens, for example,
could use some work on running
patterns," he said. "He won't run
them exactly like they do, but he'
can see things they do, compare
them with what he does, and
maybe try out a few things that
work."

Royals 8, Orioles 6
'
Felix Jose lined a two-ou~ tworun single in the ninth inning and
Kansas City won at Camden Yants.
Kevin McReynolds and George
Brett began the ninth with singles
off Gregg Olson (0-2). With two
outs, Jose hit his tie-breaking single.
Olson, who had converted 17
straight save chances, gave up a
two-run single in the eighth to
pinch-hitter Rubie Brooks .
Cal Ripken homered and drove
in three runs for Baltimore. Billy
Brewer (2-1) struck out the side in
the eighth after giving up David
Segui's home run, and ,Jeff Montgomery closed for his 28th save.
Mariners 10, Yankees 3
lay Bohner marked the fifth
anniversary of his trade from the
Yankees to the Mariners by going
s;for-5 in New Y mli:.
. .
Bilhner hit his 18th home run,
doubled and drove in three runs
with his first five-hit game. He was
traded in 1988 by the YankeeS for
Ken Phelps.
Tino Martif!ez had a go-ahead,
three-run homer in the eighth
inning. Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 24th
home run, and second in two days.
Jimmy Key (12-3) had his ornegame winning streak stopped.
Erik Hanson (8-7) gave up no
earned runs and six hits in his fifth
complete game.
Red SOx 4, Angels 1
Roger Clemens won his second

straight start since being sidelined
with a groin injury.
Clemens (9-6) gave '!!'~ hiu,
sD'UCk out seven and w
none
in· eight innings. Jeff Russell
worked the ninth for his 24th save.
The Red SOx have not lost since
Clemens returned from the disabled
list. California's loss at Fenway
Park was its fifth consecutive
defeaL
Carlos Quintana gave Clemens
all the support he needed with a
two-run double in thC fust iMing
off Chuck Finley (11-7). Ernest
Riles homered and drove in two
runs.
Twins 7, Tigers 2
1eff Reboulet singled three
times and Minnesota compleled a
three-game sweep at Tiger Stadium. The Twins hit five doubles,
one by Dave Winfield.
Kevin Tapani (5· 11) allowed
two runs in 6 1·3 innings. The
Twins set a major I~ record for
the longest streak w1thout a com·
plete game. They haven't had one
in 94 games, lnaking a tie with the
1991-92 Yankees.
David Wells (9-6) lost his fifth
straight decision. Mickey Tettleton
hit his 26th home run for the
Tigers.
Athletics 7, Indians 1
Scott Hemond hit his fust major
league homer and drove in five
runs, leading Oakland over Cleve·
land.
Hemond had a three-run homer,
a two-run double and a single.

Reds notes.

ITPOI

Tt•llln.at, or
4 Cylntiir Ill
,, 11111&amp;1

Clippers' new coach
an eternal optimist
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bob
Weiss has one attribute that would
seem to be needed by the Los
Anf.eles Clippers.
'I am an eternal optimist," the
Clippers' new coach said.
A pessimist probably wouldn't
have taken the job.
The Clippers have been a starcrossed franchise for most of its 22
years, and developments haven't
been encouraging this summer.
The team let one of its steadiest
players, forward Ken Norman, go
as a free agent. Forward Danny
ManQin~, the Clippers' best player,
will be m the fmal year of his contract and probably will shop himself around in 1994.
The Clippers did malce the playoffs under Larry Brown' the past
two seasons, their first appearances
in the postseaSO!l since 19?6, when
the franchise was located m ~a­
lo and called the Braves.
Brown , however, quit on M iY
20 and became the Indiana Pacers·
coach.
The Clippers then had difficulty
finding a'replacement. ·
They were on the verge of hir ·

Toronto-Chicago, Kansas Cityor Seattle-New York.
These days, almost every game in
the American League looks like a
possible playoff preview.
. And, in the latest meeting of
division leadet:S, the Toron10 Blue
Jays btat the Oticago White Sox 4·
l Wednesday night at Comiskey
Park despite losing starter Jack
Morris to an injury.
. Ellis Burks !l_PCned the second
inning with a hne drive that hit
Morris in the right forearm and
glanced off the little finger on his
left hand. Morris retired the next
three batters, then ,left the game.
X-rays were negative, and Morris' hand was put in a splint. He
was to undergo a bone scan IOday:
Toronto won for just the fifth
time in 18 games, and moved onehalf game ahead of Baltimore in
the AL East. Chicago, leading the
AL West, lost for only the third
time in 12 games.
In other games, Kansas City
beat Baltimore 8-6, Boston downed
California 4-1, Seattle stopped
New York 10-3, Minnesota defeated Detroit 7·2 and Oakland beat
Cleveland 7-2.
AI Leiter (6·5) retieved Morris
and shut out Chicago on two hits
for five innings.
"I never had to do that before,"
said Leiter, mostly a starter in his
career. "For one thing, the whole
relieving thing is new to me. It's
tough coming in and getting
warmed up when you've got
40,000 people watching you.''
"But I found myself in a situa·
lion where I could get some
innnings and hopefully do the job
and get a win,'' he said.
Chicago scored in the eighth off
Tony Castillo on a grounder by
Robin Ventura. Duane Ward
pitched the ninth for his 23rd save.
Toronto scored twice in the second against on Wilson Alvarez (8·
6) on a sacrifice fly by Darnell
Coles and an RBI single by Devon
White.
.
The Blue Jays added two runs in
t~e· seventh on a single by Joe
Carter and a sacrifice fly by John
Olcrud.
Ballimor~

In Kyger Creek LL Tournament affairs,
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Starr Write~
Victories by the Gallipolis
~bite Sox and the TuppelS Plains
T1gers completed second-round
play in the Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament Wednesday
night at the Kyger Creek Employees Club field between Addison
and Cheshire and set the table for
the baseball holiday's two-day
quarterfinal series, which wiU start
' ('tonight,
.
"G Gallipolis White Sox 7
Greenl1·1
The White Sox, whose only
chances 10 face the Middleport club
of the same name in 1993 will
come if both advance 10 Saturday's
semifinals and both win or both
lose on that day, moved in10 the fi.
nal eight with a potent combination
of early offense and rock-solid
pitching.
Tim Siders fanned 13, walked
four and gave up two hits - Matt
Preston's third·•Ming double and
his fifth-inning single. Preston,
who started and lost for Green,
struck out three and walked two in
two innings before giving way to
Lewis, who struck out seven and
walked one in three frames. They
gave UJI hits to Bo Shirey (2-3),
Siders (1·1) and Dambrough (1·3).
The Sox sent each batter in its
lineup in the fust, and they got four
runs to continue their domination
of their opponent that they started
in the top half of the inning with
Siders. The, cente~iece of this rally
was left-handed h1tter Joey Darnbrough's two-run homer to center
field on a 2-2 pitch. No. 2 hitter Do
Shirey missed his chance 10 get on
the home run wagon when he
scored on a wild pitch halfway
through Darnbrough's at-bat, but
the Sox weren't disappointed about
that, or anything else in the frame.
Green had a chance to score in
the fust after two errors got Lewis,
the No. 3 biter, to second. But during Jason Moore's at-bat, Lewis
tried to steal third base, and catcher
Dustin Wade's throw to t11ird sacker Seth Rodgers was in time to nail
Lewis for the inning-coding ouL
The second saw Green waste another opportunity when wildness
by Siders allqwed Andrew Nibert
10 get 10 third. But Siders made uo
for it by striking out the side; incllll\ing Matt White, before another
wild pitch got a run home.
After a third inning which saw
Preston's reaching on a double pay
off in the form of a run scored as a
result of an error, Green never got
past secOnd the rest of the way.
Inning totals

Jays top Chisox; Morris injured _

209 Upper River Road

446·3807

Wtdnuday , Jul't 21, let3.

Reardon on a roD
.
When Jeff Reardon comes iniO a
game, runners stop going places.
Reardon, the.Reds' setup man.
hasn't allowed an inherited
baserunner to score this season .
He's come into games with 26
aboard, and none of them has
crossed home plate.
Although he took the loss
Wednesday -in a 4·1 victory by the
Chicago Cubs, his mark stayed
intact. No one was on base when he
came iniO the game and had a rare
off-nighL
·
Reardon's inherited-runners
mark ' is the best in the National
League, and it's not a Ouke. He's
come into games with the bases
loaded and gotten out of it.
His biggest challenge was Monday night, when the Reds brought
him in with the bases loaded and
nooe ·out in the ninth. He retired the
next three batters on a strikeout,
pop up and fly ball to 'keep his
record intaCt.
·
"I used to take a lot of pride in
stranded runners," Reardon said.
• 'I was always pretty good at
stranding them."'
Those were the davs before
managers started limitinll him to
one-inning save opportuniues. He's
one of the all-time best at closing
games - his 365 saves rank second all-time to St. Louis' Lee
Smith's 388.

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. Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel Pag•

McGriff homers twice . as .
Braves.pound.Cards.14·2 ~·
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By CHRIS SHERiDAN
allowed only four hits in six
AP Sports Writer
ipnings and became the third
It hasn't taken long for Fred Braves pitcher to reach double fig.
McGriff to endear· himself to ure in wins.
Atlanta Braves fans.
Elsewhere in the NL, San Fran·
McGriff, in his second game cisco edged Montrea14-3, Philadelwith the Braves, hit two home runs phia shut ou1 Los Angeles 7-0,
Wednesday- giving him three Houston downed Pittsburgh 5·3,
.since he was traded from San Colorado beat Florida 64, Chicago
Diego ~ as Atlanta pounded the beal Cincinnati 4-1 and New York
St. Louis Cardinals 14-2.
' defeated San Diego 5-2.
How happy and excited are the · Giants 4, Expos 3
.
fans?
· Dusty Baker waited all year to
When McGriff carne to bat for call a suicide squeeze, and when he
the second time Wednesday, a finally did it worlcedperfectly.
majority of the 45,122 in attan"I'm not a ·squeeze type dude,"
dance stood up to w&amp;lth. When he Baker said. .
·
sent a shot over the left field fence
Nevertheless, Baker made. the
for his second homer in as inany at· call in the seventh inning at Canbats, the fans bowed in praise.
· dlestick Park with' Kirt Manwaring
McGrifl, who has a 12-game at the plate and ·Mark Carreon on
hitting streak, is 4-for-8 with three third. The pitch from Mel Rojas (4runs and five RBis since Atlanta 7) was high and tight, but Manwaracquired him Sunday from San ing managed to drop it in front of
Diego for three minor leaguers. He the plate.
had three RBis in Wednesday's
"I either bunt it, or get hit,"
game, helping second-place Atlanta Manwaring said. •' I didn ' t have
stay nine games behind San Fran- much choice."
cisco in the NL West race.
Former middle reliever Bryan
Can Atlanta make up the differ- Hickerson. (5-1) pitched seven
ence?
.
strong innings to earn· his {ifth
"I've·got to believe we can, or I straight victory.
wouldn't be here. San Francisco Pbillies 7, Dodgers 0
has 1Q cool down," McGriff said.
Tommy Greene pitched six-hit
Francisco Cabrera hit a grand ball for 8 1-3 innings, and Philadel·
slam and Terry Pendleton and Ron phia took advantage of Orel HerGant added a home· run and two shiser's uncharacteristic wildness
RBis apiece. Greg M8ddux (10-8)

man single in tbe second inning Wednesday at
Riverrront Stadium. Tbe Cubs won, 4·1. (AP)
Cubs 4, Reds 1
.
· · At Cincinnati, Jose Guzman (97) allowed just two hits for seven
innings and Rick Wilkins' RBI
double
keyed a three-run eighth
Cowboys
inning
agamst
Jeff Reardon (2-3).
Defensive tackle Tony Casillas
who
had
allowed
only one run In
was scheduled to undergo surgery
his
19
app:arar1ees.
on his left elbow today to remove
bone chips. Coach Jimmy Joh!JSon
said Casillas will miss two to three
weeks of practice.
Cbiers·
Cornerback Albert Lewis, who
missed much of last year with a
forearm injury, fractured the arm
· again and will be lost indefinitely
to the Kansas City Chiefs. Coach
Marty Schottenheimer said Lewis
would have surgery today.
Giants
Defensive end Eric Dorsey was
admitted to The Hospital for Spe·
cial Surgery in New York for treat·
ment of an irritated disc in his
back. Dorsey has been bothered by
the back problem for the past two
weeks. Fellow defensive lineman
Erik Howard is expected back
either late this week or early next.
He has not practiced yet because of
a back problem.
Steelers
First-round draft choice Deon
Figures practiced for the frrst time
afier si~ing a four-year deal worth
$2.8 million. In other moves, veteran defensive end Kenny Davidson
I
agreed to a new contract Secondround pick Chad Brown, a
linebacker from Colorado, and AllPro halfback ·Barry Foster are the
only players missing.
,/ Fast 375 ms CD- ROM drive ...
49ers
Mervyn Fernandez said he
Kodak Photo CD compatible
hopes to win one of four roster
,/ SoundBiaster Pro 8-bit sound card \;;;;;===r-----""f'===""if=n="F.J
spots for wide receivers on the San
,/
MS-DOS 6.0, Windows 3.1, MPC
Francisco 49ers although Jerry
Works, America Online, San Diego
Rice and John Taylor have locked
Zoo
Animals, World Atlas and
up the first two. Others vying for
Reference
Library
backup spots are Odessa Turner,
Mark Seay and Troy Kyles.
,/ Intel 25M Hz 486SX processor
Eagles
8
Linebacker Scott Kowalkowski
":
and defensive end Mike 'Flores
signed one-year contracts.

SAFE AT TtDRD ·Chicago's Rick Wilkins
dives back to third base under Reds' third base·
man Chris Sabo after advancing on a Jose Guz·

NFL training camp briefs

.'

.•'

By FRANKELTMAN
Associated Press Writer
For years, NFL defenders have
been trying to catch Thurman
Thomas.
Now, it's the running backs who
are chasing him.
Thomas agreed to a four-year,
$135-million contract Wednesday
that makes him the game's highest·
. paid running back and should allow
him to finish his career with the
Buffalo Bills.
His agent, Leigh Steinberg, said
the contract essentially doubles the
existing 10p contract for a running
back, that of Detroit's Barry
Sanders, who makes approximately
$1.7 million a year.
The NFL's 1992 rushing leader,
Emmitt Smith, is holding out with
the Dallas Cowboys, also demand·
ing a $4 miUion-a-year deal.
Thomas' contract calls for him
to receive $4 million this year. His
salary drops to approximately $2.8
million for each of the next two
years before jumping back 'to about
$4 million in the final year. .
"I think I've got at least four
more years in me that I can perform at the level I. have been," said
Thomas, who. last season became
the f1rst player to lead the league in
combined rushing and receiving
yards for four straight seasons.
•
Thomas rushed for a career-best
I ,487 yards last season, his fourth
straight 1,000-yard season and
• third-highest in the league behind
Smith and another holdout, Barry
Foster of Pittsburgh. He also led
the AFC with 12 touchdowns.
Browns
Defensive tackle Michael Dean
Perry walked out of the Cleveland
Browns training camp. Perry left
camp shonly before a 3 p.m. workout after apparently arguing with
coach Bill Belichick. Perry could
not be reached for comment.

at Los Angeles.
.
Greene (12-3) sbUCk out six and
wallced two before leav.in,g witb
one out in the ninth favonng his
right leg. The Phillies said he had a
mild sb'ain of the right groin and
was not expected to m~s a stan.
Hershiser (7 ·9) walked a sea·
son-high six and uncorked three
wild pitches as he lost for the fifth
time in six decisions. ,.
Astros 5, Pirates 3
.
.
· Forget about Doug Drabek and
Greg Swindell. The ace of the
Houston staff is none other thai)
Darryl Kile.
'
Kile, a third-year pitcher who
entered the season with a· 12-21
career record, improved to 11-1 by
winning his ninth consecutive deci·
sion.
··.
. .
The· visiting Astros scored four
runs in the fifth against Stevq
Cooke (5~6). Steve Fi11ley had a
two-run double, Chris James hit a
sacrifice fly and Luis Gonzalez ha&lt;l
ari RBI single.
Marlins 6, Rockies 4
,
Colorado may not 1\ave a bette~
record than Florida, but despit~
Wednesday's loss, the Rockies,
have possession of the Surf n' Turf
Award - a framed animated pic 1
ture of a marlin and a mountain,
engaged in a tug-of-war.
~
It was awarded to the Roclcies
for winning the season series 7-5. '

Lading Quslily 11 CIIJIIIU# Pt/111
LIFESTYLE FURNITURE SHOWCASE
END OF SEASON PATIO SALE!

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•ARIELLE 5 PC. DINING PATIO GROUP .
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'" store.

48 :,;,..

Racine Senior Girls win
The Racine Suns senior girls
softball team ran its record to 8-0
with a 16-1 five inning, mercy rule
win over Alexander.
Racine scored four runs in the
first inning on base hits by Jennl!'er
Cummins, Michelle Brown, Jessika
Codner, and Michelle McCoy.
Alexander scored its lone run of•the
evening in the second on ·a single
by Merkle and an RBI single by
Blair. ·
.
Racine came back with a run m
the bottom of the secon don a Jennifer Lawrence single and two
errors.
.
' th' d
Neither team scored 10 the If ,
but in the fourth Racine scored

three runs on two errors and doubles each by Brown and Shelly
Winebrenner.
In the fifth and final inning,
Racine scored eight more runs as
Jodi Caldwell led off the inning
with a line drive double. Winebrenner drove her home with a
double, then with two outs Racine
had eight straight hits to claim the
win.
Those eight hits came from
Tassi Cummins, Brown, Codner,
Sammi Sisson, Caldwell, McCoy,
Winebrenner, and J.Cummins.
Racine next plays the Middle·
port Angels Thursday.

·Meigs drops 14-3 L'egion game
pitches. They closed out the scorBy Dave Harris
GLOUSTER- Pickerington ing in the ninth by adding five
scored II runs in the final two more runs.
Bret Hoovler picked up the win
innings to break open a close game
in
relief
of starter Eric Cornwell.
and roll to a 14·3 victory over
Mike
Vance
suffered the loss, JereMeigs in the first round of the 8th
my
Dill
and
Mlirk
Stanley also saw
District American LegiOn Tourna·
action
on
the
mound
for Meigs.
ment Tuesday evening in Glouster.
Pickerington
had
eight hits,
The two teams were suppose to
Andy
Takos
and
Jason
McLean
have played on Monday evening,
had
two
singles
each.
Meigs
had
. but the game was postponed due to
by
Andy
Grueser
three
hits
lead
rain . Meigs was to have played
Wellston in a late night contest with a double.
In other action, Glouster erased
Wednesday. McArthur and Gallipolis were scheduled to have fin· a 5~ deficit and defeated Athens 76. The big-hit was a seventh inning
ish~d their suspended game, fol·
lowl!d by the winner of that game grand slam off the bat of Bruce
against Glouster. Wellston and Lanning. Lancaster also pi~ked up
Meigs were to play in the final con· a first round win with a 14-3 win
over Wellston.
test.
Pickerington scored a single run PICKERINGTON. : ... OI2 000
in the second and two in the third 065· 11 8 I
000
inning lo take a 3·0 lead. Meigs MEIGS .................. OOO
300-3
3
7
battled back in the seventh inning
to tied the score at three taking
Eric Com well, Brett Hoovler (7)
advantage of three walks, two wild
and
Tyler Green
·Pitches and an error.
Mike
Vance, JeremyDill (8)
But Pickerington scored six runs ·
in the eight on two hits, four wallcs, iind Billy Jones
W·Bret Hoovler
L·Mike
two Meigs errors and a pair of wild
Vance

Moni!Of

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SHOWnMES
FRI
SAT

The Racine Suns enior League
softball tearil
the record to 9-0
with a 26-10 slugfe lover Rutland.
Together both
s had a total
Qf 38 hits. Racine unded out. 24 .
hits and Rutland ad 14. Racme
. liad to come fro · behind in this
contest after trai · g very early 4-2.
· Racine went p 2-0. but Rut·
land went
4·2 in the bottom
the frame. . iler, Allison, and
Ginger rode h9me on Missy SisSon's long hom~ run.
.
Racine t09lc a 7-4 lead m the
'second, but utland came back to
take an 8-7
.
, In the th .· d inning, Racine took.
the lead~ good on ·two errors, a
base hit b Shelly Winebrenner1
and line 've home run by Shem
SlOver.
ine led 11-8.
) Racind~s defenSe tightened ~
lleld Rullilnd to two runs the rest of
the war,' while scoring IS more
times o their own.
, . Everbl!dy on the Racine team
6ad at leaaJ one hit. Sammi Sisson
led with Lbree smgles and a '!Dubie, '
tassi Cummins had four singles, ·
$iova- a home run and sing_le, and
· Michelle McCoy three smgl.es.
·Other hitters were Jenny Cummms,,
Jess (:opdner, Jodi Caldw~ll.
Shelly Winebre!l~er, Jenntfer

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1987 OLDS CUTLASS SUPRE~E 2 OR.

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auto., bucket seats, air c~nd. This car
has less than 35,000 miles - It is pne .of a

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

992·21.55

7

�By The Bend

Ohio

Clinical depression more than blues
· Dear Au l.t!!den: You RICelllly
PI'Nis!w! a IeGer from a - wt.&gt;

dcsc:ribcd benelf as joyless, useless,

frieodless, hopcieaa IUid "lick IUid
lirecl of beiDa sick IUid tired.. you
comclly rqllied that she 1101111dcd
clinically depressed IUid emphasized,
"There is help for you, but you must
scetiL'
Depression is a serious, disabling
medical disorder that affects
approximately one in eight aduliS.
This means about 11 million people
each year. Clinical depression is not
the 'blues,• nor is it due 10 pcnonaJ
weakness or moral defeeL It exists
in men and women of all racial,
etlmie, educational, social, inc:omc
and age groups. Yet today, only one
out of lhrec people with dqJrcssiocl
is diagnosed IUid aeated correclly.
This is a ll'llgedy, because once
identified, depression almost always
can be aeated successfully, either
with medication, psychodlerapy or
a combination of bo!h. Most people
recover within a few months.
The U.S. Public Health Service's
Agency for Health Care Policy and
Research rccenlly released new
clinical guidelines on depression

Ann

of being sick and tired 10 aend for iL
It could change your life. Remem·
bee, it's fn:e.
Dear Ann Landers: A couple of
years ago, I wrole 10 you about my
husband's olftee affairs. You lidvised
me to have a serious talk with him
and get professional counsclin&amp;. My
husband •said I was mentally
unsiSble, and things went from bad
10 worse. Finally, I worked up the
courage 10 file for divorce.
My husband is a Vet:'J powerful
man because of his jOb, and he can
be very intimidating. The judge was
a female, and this is what I got:
No child custody.
Alimony until I remarry (if I do

miserable. Stgn me •• CORAL
SPRINGS, FLA.
DEAR C.S.: At the risk of boring
millions of readers 10 death, I will
repeal die Ann Landen formula for
women who are in unhappy
maniages. Ask yourself this question: Are you beaer off wilh him or
wit/tout him?
•
Apparenlly in your case. you were
bella' off with him, but this is not
true in every instance. No woman
should stay with a man who is
involved with drugs or who is
physicaiJy violenL She could end up
dead.
On the other
wom!ID who
has no marketable skills and four
children under 10 should not tush 10
divorce cowt because her husband
doesn't pay enough aaention 10 her.
Wltot's the /ruth about pol, CO·
caine, LSD, PCP, craclc, speed and
downers? 'The Lowdown on Dope"
has up-to-the-minute information on
drugs. &amp;lid a ~If-addressed, long,
busiltess-size en~/~ and a chec/r.
or money order for $3.65 (this in-

help
and health care
workers deJect, diagnose and tteat
major depression in dleir patieniS.
These guidelines include a brochure,
developed to help people with
depression as well as family and
friends, that explains symptOms and
treaunent oPtions.
For I fme cqly, send I postcard so).
Half of the proceeds of our home
10 Depession Guidelines, Dept. AL,
when
it is sold. ·
P.O. Box 8547, Silver Sping, Md
I
must
move out of die house in
20907. •• A. JOHN RUSH, M.D.,\
four
months,
and if it is not sold, I
PANEL CHAIR, DEPRESSION IN
PRIMARY CARE: DIAGNOSIS am obligated 10 pay for half of the
AND TREATMENT, AGENCY mortgage until a sale is made.
My advice to women in mY
FOR HEALTH CARE POLICY
situation
is this: Stay with the
AND RESEARCH
reptile,
even
if die siltJalion is lousy.
DEAR READERS: This booklet
oonlains a gold mine of infonnation. · Almost always, it's better than
I urge anyone who feels depessed, tearing your life· apart IUid ending
joyless, friendless and sick and tired up alone, fi~y wrccl::ed and

hand./

cllllks postage and luuidUng) to:
Lowdown, clo A1111 Landers. P.O.
Boz 11562, Chicago, l/1. 6061]0562. (In CaiiOda. ~nd $4.45.)

-

Home flower show scheduled Pomona grange inspected
The Rutland Garden Club will

hold a "Home Flower Show" with
the theme "Country Living" on
July 29 at the home of Mrs. Vrrgii
Atkins, 37120 New Lima Road.
Arrangements are to be placed by 5
p.m. with judging at 7 p.m.
Classes for the specimens secuon include: rose, hybrid tea; zennia, one stem; marigold, large one
stem; gladiola, any color one spike;
and any other annual or perennial.
For the potted plants section,
classes are available for: window
box, one or more varieties; blooming plants, other than African violet
(can be hanging basket); cacti or
succulent; and African violets in
bloom.
Junior horllculturalists may
compete in: marigold. any variety,
one stem; and fresh wayside flowers, collecuon of ftve m separate
vases.

The senior artistic division is
open to Rutland club members
only. Classes include: "Hospitality
Country Style," a design suitable
for informal dining table; "Welcome," entrance hall, creative
mass, special class; "Country Remedy." design in a botlle; "Colonial
Beauty," design of choire appropriate to placement in living room,
television, end tables, coffee table.
The invitational division will
offer: "Country Kitchen," a destgn
in a kitchen utensil.
In the junior artistic division
classes will be: "Down a Country
Lane," including wayside material.
Tbe educational category will be
a display of silver plants to add 10
flower beds.
Horticulture and invitational
classes are open to all olher clubs
in the county.

Community Calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AI Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church. Call 992·
5763 for to formation.

SATORDAY
RACINE • Circle-Zirkle
reunion, Saturday, noon, Star Mill
Park, potluck dinner. Bring recipe
for dish you provide.

RACINE - Racme American
Legion Auxihary wtll meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home.

BARLOW - Mid-Ohio Valley
Steam Engine and Antique Power
Show, Saturday. Barlow Fairgrounds, Saturday and Sunday.

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
KANAUGA • Liberty Moun a round and square dance at the , taineers wtll perform Saturday at
American Legion Annex, Mill the DAV Center in Kanauga.
Street, Middleport, on Thursday
with music by CJ and the Country
ROCK SPRINGS • Kerr's Run
Gentlemen wtth Frank Boles, state Reunion. Saturday. 9 a.m . to 6
champion, on fiddle. Admission ts p.m ., Rock Springs Fair Grounds.
$3 couple or $2 single. Everyone Bring picnic basket
welcome.
POMEROY - Rock Spring s
ELEANOR, W.VA.- Liberty United
Methodtst Church, tce
Mountaineers wtll perform Thurs- cream social. Saturday. 6 p.m., by
day at the Puti]am County Fatr in the dtp or pmt Peach, banana .
Eleanor, W.Va.
pineapple. lemon. chocolate and
vanilla. Homemade .pies and cake.
pOMEROY - Tbe Metgs Coun- Public invited
ty Pubhc Library Board of Trustees
vltll meet Thursday at I p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS • The Kerr's
Run
wtll be held at the
DEXTER - Meigs County Meigsreunion
County Faugrounds grange
Women's Fellowship meets Thurs- hall Saturday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
day. 7:30 p.m., Dexter Church of Bring your own picnic basket.
Christ. Bring craft or talent. Public Viola Brown Hunt and Helen
invited.
Brown Harrison, Columbus, are cochairpersons.
TUPPERS PLAINS · Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 meets
RACINE - CarmeVSutton Unit~
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
ed Methodist Church will have
gcncrostty day "free clothmg" from
FRIDAY
9 a.m . to l p m. at the Carmel
SYRACUSE • Dance, London Church at the mtersection of
Pool, Friday, 8:30 p.m. to mid- Carmel and Pleasant View roads
night. Mustc by H&amp;K Sounds . just off Bashan Road.
AdmiSSIOn IS $2.50 per person.

Annual inspection of Meigs
County Pomona Grange was held
at its recent meeting at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. A carry in
dmner was held wilh visitors from
Athens and Gallia Counties.
Arthur Crabtree, master, conducted lbe meeting and recognized
Roger Greer, deputy master of Gallia County and inspecting officer;
Lowell and Florence Ashcraft,
deputies of Athens County; and
Patty and Opal Dyer, deputies of
Meigs County. Albert Kerns, master of Albany, and Dan Evans, master of Huntington, were also introduced'.
Six applications were read and
approved.
The Fifth Degree of Pomona
was exemplified with Patty Dyer.
master.
CW A chairman Opal Dyer,
announced that winning entries in
the state bakmg contest were:
juniors age 5-9, Chelsea Montgomery; youth, Allen Smith; adult,
Patty Dyer. Fourteen pounds of
eyeglasses were turned in from
Meigs County.
Patty Dyer, legislative chairman, cautioned about animal activities and environmentalists questionmg lhe youlh about pro]CCts at

the upcoming county fair. Sbe also
reported on Opuon 9 about timber
cutting.
The juniors are planning a fair
booth and eight juniors are going to
Fnendly Hills Grange Camp.
All subordinates reponed on lbe
various projects and activities.
Rock Springs. Hemlock and Star
Gran~es are displaying booths at
the fmr in August.
Any granger wishing to go by
bus to National Convention needs
to contact Patty or Opal Dyer soon
for reservations.
Hemlock Orange will be host at
the September meeting.

bachelor of sctenc&lt;~, in nutrition,
summa cum laude; and Carol Lynn
Fisher, Racine, with a bachelo~ of
science in business admintstralton,
magna cum laude.

'

.,

RATES

PHARMACY
TOPICS

To place an ad
Call992~2156

BY YOUR
.SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

COPY DEADLINE

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ada ouYide the coUDty your ad nuu mull be prepaid
• Receive dlleollbtfor ada pa~d in advaoee.
• Free A.d.i Giveaway aad Fouad acb uoder 15 wordt will be
run 3 dar• at no eharp.
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(or errore ftnt day ad runt ia paper). CaU before 2:00p.m.
day after publicatioa 10 make correclion
• Ad. tlaat lft\111 be paid m Ml•uce an:
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Card of Th01tu
Happy Ada
' Ia Memoria111
Yard Sale.
• A claailitd .dverli.ement placed in the GaUipolil Daily
Tribune (ucepl Ctu.ilied l&gt;ioplay, 8UJloeu Card or J.osol
Notice~) willa lao •ppear in the Point Pleuant Repter and
the Daily SeatiDel, re~~th.iDt over 18,0oo bo•ce

Women •r• getting taller. In Gr•dm•'• day, only 5 percent o1
American women were 5 f~ 6 lnchea or taller; now 25 percent ore.

...
...

Antloflllgralna drug, •umatrlpllln, hoo been •pproved by the Food
and Drug AdmlnlatraUon. It'• aid to work fa•ler than the atandard
treatment for migraine aymptoma.
When patlenta with a aerloua lllne11 aay they want tq lclll ,themaelvea, the "cure" may be 1-tment for d!!Praulon, uya the paychlatrlat who heada the American Suicide Found•tlon, •n educ•tlon·
al group that alms to prevent aulclde. When 1-'ed, moat patlant.a
wantto live.

...
...

New, non~nvaslve procedure to t•t for congenital dlaordflra In the
fetua ls allfer than chorionic vlllua aampllng or arnnlocentula. n
t81la fetal cella found In the mother' a bloodatr1111111.

DAY BER&gt;RE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
I :00 p m. Wednesday
I 00 p m. ThW&gt;day
I:OOp.m. Friday

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wecjnesday Paper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.B-12

Cla•si/Ud page• COller the
following telephone e%chonges...

...

446-G.Wpotl•
S67-Cheoblre
3811-Vialoo
24S...Rlo Gr011de
256-G.,oo Dlo&amp;.
643-AroWa Dill.
379-Walnul

992-Middleporlf
98S...a-..r
843- Porllood
247-Leoart F.U.
949-Raciae
742-Rullood
667-Cuot.I.Ue

•

Sill 15HER LDH5E

--0

--A.

•
•

Phar-mnc:v
II.....
................
,..,

Remodeling and Repair
Painting, Experienced
Free Eatimat.a•

•

•

•
Pll.

E. ~Uilft

......····

F,_.., lei'WIIIi

'--

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION .
•New Homes

Free Estimates
446·2845

----OJILtot:OO,....
s...uy tii:OIUft. to •·aa .....

•IIESCAII'TIOIII

614-446-8568

Young's rh&lt;~in
Fencing

"' 111·2111
"'"'-fiDI. OH.

Dance-Legion Annex

•Complete

Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio
7:00 til11 :00 p.m.
Friday, July 23
George Hall at the organ.

FREE ESTIMATES

:::-:~~=~re

882-New RaTeD
895-l...r:tarl
937-Bull'alo

CLASSIFIEDS
REAL

32- Mobile Homo for Sale
33- Farm• for~le
34- BIUiueM Bulldmp
35- Lo" &amp; Acreage

GET RESULTS - FAST!

2-ln Memory
3- A~mouncemea"
4-Civuway
!;- Hoppy Ado
6-- Loat and Found
1- Loat and Found
8- Pubhc Sale &amp;
Auction
~ W..,led 1D Buy

56- 1Peta for Sale
51- M111ic:al hutrumeD&amp;I
s&amp;- r,.,.;., &amp; Veplab...
5~ For Sale or Trodo

I· \ll\1 -...1 1'1'111 .~
,'i. I l \ I· .~ I I H .I,
'I"P

62- Wanted to Buy
63-- LiTet~k
64- Hay ci. Cram
65- Seod &amp; F~l1ilber

THI\,l'&lt;&gt;HI IIIII\
Autot for Sa&amp;e

Trueka for Saki

41- HoUiel for Rent

II- Help Wanled
12- Situaliou Wanted
13- ]oJIUnace
14- Bu.IDCN Tralaiq
15-- Scboola &amp; lnatruction
16-- Radio , TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miacellaoeoua
18- Wooled To Do

Reasonable
Rates

JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE
614·742·2138

Huge Garage Sale
Friday 4th 9-4
179 Oak Dr.

LAYNE' FURNITURE
MATTRESS OR
BOX 'SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR
...... .
FIRM . ........... ... .. .

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Famtly night
wtll be held at the Middleport Pool
Sunday night from 7 to 9 p.m.

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
On Ju•·• 6, 111U, at
approximately 6:00 A.M.,
the M/V lt.A. V•t.al
accidentally dlachargMI an
unknown quantity of
number 2 dlnel fuel at mlle
poat 237.5 of tha Ohio Rlvw.
the •fleeted .,... lnclude
mil• 237.5 to mHo 242.5 o1
tho Ohio River. Campbell
Tr•naportatlon Comp•ny,
Inc. Ia tho -~~~~~ of the WV
fi.A. Veatal, wiJich Ia tho
dulgnated oour• ol tho
aplll purauant 'to tho 011
Pollution Act of 111110.
C)alma •rlalng out of thia
aplll may bo aubmiHed fo
Campbell TranaportaUon
~mpany, Inc., P. 0. Box

124, ChBflorol, P•. 15022,
Attn.: Don Grimm or by
c•lllng Campbell Trant·
portaUon Con::&gt;anY •t 1412)
483·1516 from 1:00 AM to
4:30 Pill, Mondey through
Friday.
, If for •ny ra.. on
Campball Tr•naportadon
Company, Inc. flllla to act on
your claim within 110 deya,
then you may aubmlt It to:
United Statoa Coat Guard
N•tlon•l Pollution Fundo
Center, 42ot Wll1on Blvd.,
Sullo 1000, Arlington, VA
22203-1804.
(7) 5, .. 7, t,ll, 12, 13, 14,
15, 16, 11, 20, 21, 22, 23, 26,
27, 21, 28, 30; (I) 2, 3, 4,
6, 11,10,11,12,13,30tc

2

Wanted, one good
hearted woman to forgive imperfection in
the man that she
loves.
Wanted, just one
chance to tell how
much he still loves
her. He can't be sorry
enough.
"
I love you with all my
heart.
· Yo~;Jr One and Only

1

PLUMBING
t!~~~~lng

42- Mobile Ho~ne.a for Rent
v•• &amp;4 WI&gt;'•
U- Farnu for Real
Motorcycle.
I ',_. _,., &amp; Moton for Sale
~Apartment for Rent
45-- Fumilhed Room•
to-~u&lt;o Par" &amp; Acci:OIOirieol
46- Space for Rent
1 - llUIO Repan
47- Wanted to Rent
CampiDs Equipment
~ Equipment for Rent
4~ For late

\ILII&lt; .II \\111:-t·:

po
Plumbm~

51- Hoiuebold Goodo
52- Sporling Good.

53- Antiqueo

54- Mi.c:. Mercbaad~te
55- Bwld;og Suppli..

&amp; Hu.ting
8l- Excava liD&amp;
84- Eleclncal &amp; Refr~~n1tio~
General H•ulin1 )
Mohi.le Home Repair
Upholltery

:;;.a,

Middleport, Ohio
614·992· 44
thl

Our Thanks to
Meigs County
Engineer Robert
Eason and the
Meigs County
Highway Dept.
men, who blacktopped County
Road 25. You did 1
great Job. We, as a
family, want to say
a big thanks, we
appreciate you.
The "'arclnko,
Hartung, Thomas,
Combs and
Frederick families.

WILLARD MY LOVE
TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY CARLING
AND ALL I CAN DO IS SAY
HOW VERY MUCH I MISS YOU
ON THIS YOUR SPECIAL DAY.
THERE IS NOTHING I CAN GIVE YOU '
BUT l KNOW YOU WILL NEVER FORGET
I GAVE YOU MY HEART AND ALL MY
LOVE THE VERY FIRST DAY WE MET.
I WISH YOU WERE SITIING HERE WITH ME
AS YOU WERE FOR SO MANY YEARS
WITH ME lOOKING AT YOU WITH EYES FULL
OF LOVE INSTEAD OF ALL THESE TEARS.
I'LL S~ HEf'\E DARLING THINKING OF YOU •
AND IN MY MIND I'LL SEE
YO HAVING AWONOERFUL BIRTHDAY
f. MY.LOVE JUST YOU AND ME.
I'LL REMEMBER THE SPECIAL LOVE WE SHARED
THAT NOTHING OR NO ON(: COULD TOUCH.
SO HAPF!Y BIRTHDAY MY SWEET SWEET
t
HUSBAND
I CHERISH YOUR MEMORY SO MUCH.

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.
WHATS LOVE GOT TO
DO WITH ITR.
AND

TOM HANKS lEG RYAN
IN
SLEEPLESS IN SEATILE P.G.
U&amp;-1018

.

•'
l

YOUR LOVED AND·MlSSED SO MUCH.
YOUR WIFE, JERRY

•

PRIVATE
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTION
"Mathematic• Ia the
alphabet with which
God hea written the
Unlverae. "-Gali/eo
By Topic
By Appointment

949-2814
7trll1 mo. pd.

GREEN·UP
RECLAMATION
SERVICE
IJl /\!I

&amp;

8~~ekt1oe

SLptw
H1)

Wor k

sy~;t('m~;

DrrVt'WiiY!&gt;
n n~~ill1 ·~; Ponds

~('('dHHJ

k. MLIIdli11U
Trt'C lkrnov&lt;ll

2/15/~3/tf n

11

ON !11S 73rd.

~

SNODGhSS'
UPHOLSTERY
IACINE, OHIO
You To

"Helping

Recover Your
lnvealment"

614·742·2996

614·949-2988 or
614·593-5010

949-2168

James Keesee, owner

5-24-1

3-16-93·11n

GENEUL

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

HAULING

Parts and Service
Mowers • &lt;hain Saws
Weedeaters
Authorized: Briggs &amp;
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
t.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96· M-F 9-3 Sat.
Closed Sunday
949·2804
4/26/tln

WAlKER ALLEY

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-~878
1n11 mo.

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

, R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES

·
~~8~~~~J~s
HAUUNG:

&amp;
Limestone~

Din, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591
12·5·tfn

EAGLE LANES

36970 Ball Run Road

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585
' SUMMER HOURS•
Sun.-Thur 5·10 pm
Frt·Sat5·11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992-3470

CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Addition•
-Gutter Work

-Electrical and Plumbing
-Booting

.... nterior &amp; Exterior

Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·10·92·lfn

I

5120193

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULIN~
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30.92·11•

Blf1ng
True
Vje Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-3290
or

OWNER: Jeff Wickersham
5/10/93

YOUNG'S

992-2772

614-698-6500
7fl/t1n

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES, ,
LUTHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
3/8/lfn

UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

$25.00

.

Tackervllle Rd.
Racine

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
20S-75R15" Tiger Pow XTM RWL
205-75Rt4" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
215-75RI5" Ftreotone OWL
235-75R15" Flreatone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING'EXHA~ST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS•
6128193

949·2826

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

FOREVER
·BRONZE

6-17-S:l-1 mo.

(304) 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

Help Wanted

AUTOMOTIVE SALES
'

'

(614)
667·6628

614·985·3373

LUCAS
BIRTHDAY
JULY 22, 1993

985·4181

Phone Evenings

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF MY
:LOVIED HUSBAND

.

Au~o., air, AMIFM stereo. This Is a Special!

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

'FREE ESTIMATES

· Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Free Estimates,
Low Costs.
Work Guaranteed

J&amp;L INSULATION
Free Estimates
Replacement
Windows
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Call us for
Spec Ia! Prlcee on
Siding and Windowa

NEW-REPAIR

Inside and Out

Leadtng
Creek Road

L Writesel

.ROOF INC,;

Roof

~j
38904

Howard

From Foundation to

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

Card of Thanks

In Memory

J&amp;THOME
IMPROVEMENTS

•DOZERS
'
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

992-2156

992-2156

l

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

l.p,,;nti••n SeiVtces
lntA,;,,,; &amp; Exterior
985•4473
Pa10t Mobtle Hon1es1
L..-~---l...;1221V3
_ _,
and Alumtnum Stdtng
I•Pcower Washing
FREE ESTIMATES
50734 Blglay Ridge Rd.
long Betlom, Oh. 45743

CALL

•

21- Bu•iDeM OpportuDJty
22- Mooey&lt;o Loao
23- Prof,..ioaal Service~

~----(:J:i!iSii~miSr----~36- Real Eatate WaD&amp;ed
1\ l \ l \1.:-

•Gar•••

SAVERS. ...

1992 PONTIAC LEMANS 4 DR.

773-Muan

HAULING

Annivers
celebrated

TIJPPERS PLAINS - There wtll
be a round and square dance at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Post Home
Fnday from 8-11:30 p.m. wi~h
music by Smoky Mountam
Drifters. Public invited.

675-1'1. Pleuaol
458-Lcoo
576-Apple Grove

Pomeroy

TIME

DARWIN - The descendants of
Tommy Gilkey and Milda Jane
Hudnall wtll hold a reunion Sunday
at the roadstde park on Route 33
south of Darwin. A pollock dinner
will be served at noon. Those
attendin$ are to take their own
table semre and folding chairs.

t •l\ \\( .1\1

Galli a. County Melp County M010n CO., WV
Area Code 614. Area Code 6'14. Area Code 304

Diabetics know they'll find the lnaulln, 1811 atrlpa and everything
else they need at...

'

The staff of the Christian pubhcauon, 1be Fishermen· s Net, celebrated tts second year wilh a staff
breakfast in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The publtcation is supported by
Hillside Baptist Church as an out·
reaching mimstry. It ts sent to 35
states and three other countries as
well as over 60 ctties in Ohio and
West Virgmia.
The staff consists of Rev. James
Acree, Mrs. Betty Acree. Mrs.
Rachel Hood, Mrs. Tina Justus,
Mrs. Debbie Clonch, Lmda Jones,
Mrs. Belinda Dean and Mrs. Sandi
Jones.

Daya
Words Rate Over 15 Wonts
1
15
$ 4.00
$ .20
3
15
$6.00
$ .30
6
15
$ 9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13 00
$ 60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
RatE::~ are for consecutive runs, broken up days willl&gt;e
charged for each day as separate ads.
Buslneaa C.nd-...$17.00/lnch per momth
BuUetln Board.-.$6.00/inch per day

Taklnglnaulln at bedtime aeema to work better for Type-It dl•bellca
than the aame doH In the momlng. ReHarch at Houaton VA hoapltal found fewer ' adverH raactlona and beHer control of gl~coH
levels.

.
: WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

MIDDLEPORT - Dance, Fnday 7-11 p.m. at the Middleport
Legion Annex on Mill Street.
George Hall will play the organ.

LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church will have preachmg
by Pastor Steve R!le~ a_nd local
singers 7 p.m. Publtc mvtted. Fe!·
lowship will follow.

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

OSU graduates announced
Two Meigs Countians graduated
with honor from Ohio State univer·
sity last month. They are Jared
Andrew Sheets, Pomeroy, with a

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-9

.

1. Must want To make excellent money •
unlimited Income potential.
2. Must want a permanent job with an
aggressive organization. •
3. Must desire advancement.
4. 'open Floor • Sell Both New and PreOWned
5. Must have professional attitude and
appearance.
6. Must be willing to learn and follow
Instruction

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED APPLY TO

GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
BOX CD 102- 825 THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

RIVER VALLEY
'
CONTRACTORS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top
to Bottom

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and mACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
mAtLER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

PH. 742·2217

992-3838

S-30.1 mo. pd.

Qua
Stone

SIZED LIMESTONE

· FOR SALE
Call 614·99 2· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cllesllire,

FREE ESTIMATES

6/81'92/1 mo.

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES .

CLUB
• IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
'Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good tpr 1
FREE card. .
Lie. No. 0051·32

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Acc1dent • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843•5.&amp;u•u,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garagls • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FJU:E ESTIMATES

614·992· 7 643
(No Sunclay Calls)
2112/92/::n

�.. .•

zz

'·

/

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1993

!P~•:g•::1:o:
·
~n.~:D~-~~y~Se~
·
:n:tl~ne:I::~::::~------------~~~P~o;m~e~ro~y~~~~~d~drle~~~rt~,O~h~lo~
·
====~~;.;7,;~~~;:~~;:::--~~~ti~~~~~e~s~~~,j~~~~~z~
~
~~~1~~~
i
I
Announcements

SNAFU® bY8 ruce u eatbe
·

;t8

Wanted lo

35

Do

Lots

1 lOri

Will Do Bobyalttlna In My Homo
Or Your Ei&lt;~- I
RefiNw XI ... 4tl2ttl

-

11M U'!!ntJ

21

24

Real Estate

Antique• end u•d furniture, no
hem too llrge or too am1U, will

::::o;:... ol:.""~~lchla~

Annuo, Alhona, Ohio 45'101, By

buy one pltct or complete Wedneeday, July 28, 1813.
WOII&lt;o Old Clll Aftor 4:30, 614- houoohold1 colt Ooby Ma~ln,
Houey Clinic Aldo nolldod part.
814-11112·11101.
441.em.
limo lo -'&lt; In lomily plooolng
1 · Gonnon Shephard, Chow Dlcor1l.,ct ltOI'IIWII'W, olllimpe:, office In aie~P1 GaiU. and
Prtlr.rrobly Counloy Homo, 114- 1ntique furnhlolra, rm~ll pouch Lawrwnce CouniiM. Mull hlva
thonnornlloro, fllnorlli ani~ high ·ochool dlplomo or oqul•·
441-11121.
q -. Rlvortno Antlq-. R- a.. ncy; good communication
2 -~~ cola, 1 llgor otrlppad, 1 M~. owner. We do lp- Hlll1; accwKY wtlh tlgurw;
anngo l whho, noy Qooc1 h..,. Prtllaola, 114-112·252e.
medical oHica 11paMnol hotp.
, _ 3044'15-241t.
lui; will t,.ln mal... Individual
~ l D'o Auto Porto ond Solvogo, who t8 Mnattlve to reproductlw.
2 fon8 hllirtld lllnono, opprox. lloo buylna (uM cora l truc~o. 1111111 of cllonlo. L.Oolllng lor
llwlul. old, to Qoocl homo. 304- 304·773-5343.
.
oomoono who Ia loii....,.Motod
175-1118 .. 175.eZS8.
~,---,--,--..,-----1 Junk cora, ·~ condhton, 614- ond can g,_ In lho poolllon 11
111111 arl-. PooRion '*lulr11
2 Puppllo, To Gl-wa~, 114- lm·1553.
l,.nopo&lt;totlon.
:lll'-7115, 114-:MIJO.Gm.
==-=:..:,:::;:.....,..,,C7"".~--- rollablo
Smoll dirt bl.., 50 -~~~. coli WoHdoy,
ond SlliurdiJ
hOunl lrtl to loa IXpoetod. Trovol
3 oquorlum cllflah, mull como 114-112·38'72 IIIVI m -.
ond glllhlm, IM-i41-28il.
Plld to out of ~unty onlcea.
Top Prl- Pold: AI Old U.S: Send -.rter of lntertlt, r•u•
4 LAing Holr KIHon~Gray Wllh Colno, Gold Rln~ Sllvor Colno, 1nd two employment rer. .nc..
WGoodhllo Fill, I W11 Old, To Gold eolno. M.T.$. Coin Sftop. to Pllnn.c:t P1r1nthood or
Hom11 Only1114-448-0317. lSI Socond Avonuo, Golllpollo.
South-.01 Ohio, 3111 Richland
Aln&lt;Jo, Athono Ohio 45701, by
Etkhound, good with llldo, 614- Wanlod: Oood Ulod Atumlll\lm Wodnllday,
Ju 1y 28, 111t3.
318.e34t.
B,.kl For Sollott, IM..245-562l
JOB OPENING NOTICE
Glv.awty: To Good Hom~, 5
Molgo County BoiFd ol Montol
Monlho Old Lob Mix, H11 Hod ' Employment Services
Rllordollon ond Dovolopmonlol
All Sholo, 114-441-:lm.
Dlllbllhl•
School
ogo
lnotNCior to 111ch
3
tooMo, Monlhl,
~ 1 Help Wanted
at Clrlllon SchOOl. Mull hln
Klllono, All Coloro,~d Homo ..;_;=..;.:...:.;::;_;_:..:;,;,;;;.:..__ current volld Olllo Dopmmonl
lmmodlalll)', IM-44
e.
"AVON' All AREAS! Sllaro your ol Eduction TIIChlng Corti!~
limo whh uo. You'll lon tho clio, ond hoVI "' bo ollglb!O to
Mother ""I and 3 khlono to good company. 1-l10C).18:1-13H.
obtain Ohio Doponmont ol
homo,I14-111241V7.
Educollon Mutt~ndlcopPocl
IIH Chovrolol Colobrlty Sllllon C.rtltlcatlon.
Send r..ume- bv
Snow Whho KIHono, 114-441- W1gon, 88,000 Mlle1, Afr, Crul•
July
2T
to:
c o - School,
4207.
(J
Control, Good Condllton GoN
1310 Clrlllon Sl-, PO Bo1
To Hlaholl Blddor, Cln SH AI: 307,
Sy,.c._, Ohio 457111. AHn:
Ameran
Fln~nce, IMLost&amp; Found
6
K1y DIYII, Director or EdUCI•
441-4113, Boaldo Plln Hut, Glll- tlon.
,
'
f;ound: Black Labii Brown Coltor, llpollo,
Vory Frlondty. ullvltto Plko,
OWN INCOME No
AI pw Artlcto 'I T,...,.,. and NAME YOUR
A.... 114-387-4543.
Work Homo. Prolllo
v... nc~oo. Soct on a, Polling. Soiling.
O.lly."Gr- BIG Fall. Loom Tho
Found: young Elllllound, SA of lho Nooollollad Au'""'"""' Sacroto
N-. U (212) ZIH100
o
n
·
tlioo
MLTA
ond
tho
Bl1,-llo,IIW7W34t.
Boord ol Education, tho Molga· Exl2117.
Loco! Scllool Dlllrlct Ia pooling Notional Publlahlng Firm N ~: -and
- ·Homo
Sundry,
Mfd. tho lollowlng ......... lor Ro P.oopla
d'-1
Enlortofn.
· To Lobo! Pool cordi
rnent Contw, ......._. omol ,.gular t-hing llatl: Occu,... From Home. S800 /Wk. Sel Your
tiona!
Work
Adjuatmont
at
Own Houra c,oa 1-100--7377,
g..y
clog, 114-i4tl-27i5.
Molgo Hlall School, Occu,... (1.41 Min 118 Yro+) Or Wrllo:
Loot: llc&gt;!l (Bol Black I Whno, llonol W"ork AtUIImont at PAASE -33R, 111 S. Uf'tCOinwty,
Larp DOa WRh Rod Collar, llotgo Junior HI (now ,.... N. A,.ora IL 11064:1.
Family Pol, Vlclnhy: Charclola lion}, Vocal lluo T110hor 11
Lako, Colt If lfpUnd: 814- Motgo High ond Molgo Junior Now Tolling Appllcollono AI:
Hlg~ Sc:lloolt Hood Foolblll
441-11135.
Domlnoo PI~ 1 _,Gotllpolla, I
CO.cft II Molgo High School Point Plaaunt, wv.
Loot: Family Dog O.rk Gormon 1nd Flekl Cart Director.
Shophord, I Yoor Old, Doo ~
PHP Network Ia offering you M
11r, Hilde MediCitlon, F'1mlly
ATIENTION
opportunity to vet •h•d In
Po~ Vlclnlly: Rl. 160, Porlor Due To Exptnllon Lllrg1 N• -th... h1rd tlmH. lntwnted
Aroa. Plalll can 114-:M7.ol2ll. tlonot Conum Now Hoo 5 peraon1 report to the Pomeroy
Pootllono Opanod,
MUnicipal Building, Thurtdlf,
Loet: Ski Mllter Wltll" 1kl, nNr
lmmodlololyll
22. Opportunhy dncrlptlon
Loon on Konowhl Rl-. II Mull Bo Nool And Dopond •. btl. July
boglno at 8:oopm to M IDIIowod
fOund plaaoo coii30W75-IOIID.
No Exporlonco N-11oy. SIC· by quollllod lntorvlawo. No ••·
r.llry, W.ltr-. Or Otlw Public pertence nec.tHry.
Yard Sale
7
Rllotod Jobl Hotplul, · But Not
Roqulrod. $200 To $500 A Wooll Sal,.. now (lweloy 110,. In MldTo Sttrt. Bonue Plllne -And Pakt dtoport, lull limo, llart lrnHolldoya. No Phono Clllollll For modiltoty. Appllcotlont lokon
Galllpolls
10:0Dam-noon,
lnlorvlow 811...... Mr. Moplo, bltWitn
,&amp; VIcinity
Frldav.;,':); Zlrd From 8:00A.M. Thured•r, Frkl•y •nd S•turdlly.
To 12
AI Tho Empl01mont Acqulahlono Fino Jowoioy, 111
1 Dov Only! F~day July 23rd. Rt. Offlca, 45 Olivo St-. Go~ IIIII SINO!, Middleport, Ohio.
Mt AI: Sparlllo Supply. Fum!· Upollo. OH.
Somoono To Linin Fr11 Boord;
lura, Clothing. Glaoaworo, I AVON I All Aroat 1 Slllrloy . For Sola: 5,000 BTU AC; 80 Oido
1. CUI:e .alack Ktnen, Ftmllt 10

"""'Ill

•-n

a.,..,.,

-r

Spe~re, 304-t'71-142i.

Cu1111S, 614-446-3411.

2 Fomlly: Solurdor., Jurv 241h, COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC.
171 Churoh St. 8 dwlll, Olllo, TORS WANTED: Two llv•ln In·
I:OD-5:00 P.M. Lall 01 Nlco Olruc:lora (wMkdoyolwookondo)
Clolhll, Cratt1, Sl11 3 Forrn111 nHded lo INch community and
Uke N1w, Houlolhold hem1, peraon•lekllleto on• 1dult whh
Fumlture And Much Mora, Cln·

dlvelopm.,tal

dltabllttl•

In

Molgo COunty. Hourt: (I) 40
ftral\wk: momlnglovonlng houro,
M.f';
-IH&gt;VIr
roqul.-d;
Thurodoy, Friday, Sllurdly, July daytime houro off: (2) 32 hi'IIWk:
22nd, Z3rd, 24th, Clothing, lobi' Soli8unl· llioop ovor·'*lulrtld;
~omo Houllhold Good• Tooll
lnfot"ma Mttlng. V1rioua aldlla
"l.olo '01 Mtocl Ill ' Put' ond tal- nooilod. Ht••
.,, achool
caM Aulo Ptr18.
degree, Yllkl drlwer'a llcenet
goOd driving record, thrM yt~r8
. 5 Femlly Ylrd Sill: 3 Sofaa, I
Chllrl, Slvlf'll Tlbltt, Kitchin

Toblo, 2 Cholra, Enlortolnmonl
Conlor, Small Pull Clmpor,
Tooto, Lg. Ping Pong Toblo, T.V.
Sol, 4·75ox11 l Ply. nr11, Now
R-po Mounted On a Lug
Budd Whoolo Now Wool Cooll
Mlo..- wooa1 O.Wia Or Qulin
Sla .1111, Blcyct111 • C,.fto,
Clothlna ·AR Slz•, 3 MIIH 0u1

IIlio frouto 218 .tel. Wllllomo
Hollow Rd. Lg. Yoll- Building
Friday I Solunlly, I ntt Dark.
ALL Yord Salol Mull Bo Pold In
._......
.
DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. ·
1ho daV boloro fho ad Ia to run.
- W odlllon • 2'00 p.m.
FridaY. Monday odnton • 2' 00
p.m. Sllurday.
Frldl~y 23rd, Sll,.day 24th.
4t1
goo Crook Rood. Mite.
Fum., Hlrid Home M1de Crane,

Dl-ii Limp, Clolhll, Toyo,
Much

ore!

Sh-lrlng Rldgo, South 01 Go~

III)OIIa, Trunkl, Toy., Tooll,
dthef MIIC. hMnl 1 SIIWdly

8:00 -1:00

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity
111 Yolo Sl-, - 0 1 . Ohio,
"Thurlllloy l Frldoy, July 22 l 23,
clolftlng. lurnhuro, mloc.
All Yord So!M Muot Bo Pold In
- -· .,....,.., 1:00o&gt;mlho
day llaloro tho od Ia to run,
SUnday -ton- I :OOpm Friday,
Monda,-

ldllon

10:DDa.m.

Saturday.
Friday and Sllurday, long
• - In R&lt;Aiand, turn ~hi ol
grwcle echool, eiKtrvnlc , •.,..
OIN blu;·Homo tntorlcr, cloth•
ond mloe, Rain concoto.
. I

the Federal Fair Housing Ad

ot 1968 WhiCh inakes " UlegaJ
to advertise ·any preference,

limitation or dlscrlrrilnauon
based on race, color, religion,

artvtng IXptrience, and lde-qutll 1utomoblle ln1ur1nce

Tolamarkllor IAtcopllonlll ond
Outaldll Sal11m1n Pothlon.
Sind Reeum• To: CLA 281, cJo

Golllpolla Dolly T~buno, 825
Third Avonuo, Golllpollo, OH
4il831.
WAHTED: Ful~tlrne omploymonl
In your hom• u I Hom• Slf·
vlcH

Worker wtth

Communlly

Buckeye

Sorvlcll.

Wo

prowlde Mlary piUI bentlhl lnd

o dolly

room ond boord rolo.

You prav. . 1 home, gulcltnce

ond lrlondlhlp In • !amity ol·
moophore. Roqulr11 oblllly to
INCh poraonol living aklllt ond

C0¥11181 roqulrld. Sllll"f:
$5.00/hr. to llort. II lnloroslod
collt-1100-!131·2302 no lolor lhon
7127!!3j ••k '"' Chrllly. Equal
Opponunlly Employor.

' • to I he growth
a commHment
and dtvelopmtnt or two lrt-

Exporloncod Floral Doolgnor lor

604, J1ckeon, Oh 45840, no liter
lhon '11Z1113. Equal Opportunity
Employor.

lou I Flowor Shop. Sand
Rnu1111: clo Box C:~ 1 200 Main

dlvlduota wkh mental rllordo·
lion. HOmo mUll "- In llolgo
County. CGnlact Chrlllly II 1·
800-631·2302 or wrh• P.O. Box

St., Point P11111n1, wv, 25550.
Exporloncod
Phlobotomlll, 12
Situation
Mull Hovo R-nl Exr.::rlonco In
wantlid
All Al~l 01 P obolomy.
Gorlltrlc
Exparlonce
Ia A Pluo. Wtrw to do: drywall l block
Eorly Morning Houro; Company
Clr; Approx. ZO Hrw IWHk M.f'. ...... 304-t7S.t5t3.
Thil II Nat A Job For Racont
Grodull• 01' Boglnnlrtl. Wo 18 . Wanted to Do
Artl Looking For SOmootll Wlio
Bobyallllng In my homo, M.f,
Ia RollobiO And Cln Work ocrNorth Point Groda
WRhoUI SUparvlaton. Sind School, from
Klndwg~rtetW w.lcome,
Rnum• To: P.O. Box 33, G1l·

hl'll ,.rlrtncM, 304475-4112.

llopllo, Olilo 4il831.
SERVICE: Topping,
Fruth Pharmacy, 1 raglonol drug ,E&amp;R TREETr~~
R.mov~t, Hedge
chain In Ohio &amp;Wllllllrglnlo, Ia Trimming,
Trimming. Fr• Ettlmate11 lf4INking
candldl1•
for 387-N5TAftor 4fl.m. ·
Management
lf'lllnN.
Our
program con-'•tl of • combiM· Gono,.l Molnlononco, Palnt!ng1·
tlon ol on tho lob oxpa~onca Yard ·Work Wlndowl Woonoo
ond
pllnnod
lnol""'" Gull- Claonod Light Hauling,
llon'damonolrollon. Succ:-lut COmmorlcal, Rllldonllal, Slo¥l:
oondldol11 wRI ht¥1 tho ....,.,. 114-44&amp;-1851,
tlal ol p l l - In on -lint
man- or 1n1nogor co~ Goo- Portoblo Sowmll.li don,
11811111 upon Muro nlld. Prior hlul your toao fo lho m II luat
181111 oxporlonoo and/« eoliop 0111 3CIW75-1157.
or un!VIrtllty training hllplut.
Roaumoo lhould bo oubmlnod .lohnoon"a Trtll Sorvlca, l~rn­
no Iaior thon ~ 11 to Dlroctor mlng. l ramon!, '"'"· ohrubo,
hodg~~, ..... oatlmot•, 304 Ill
of Humen RIIOUn:et, Frulh 331f
.. 1-IOQ-421-7318.
Phlrmocy, ROUio \ Box 332,
Point Ploolonl, WV 25550. No llloo Paula'o Doy Clrt1 Cantor 1
lolophono
collo
, . -•. Ulock Wool 01 HMC On Jockoon
EEO/ADA omployor.
Plki M·F I A.M. -1:30 P.M. H
Ouollly And Exporllnco to .Tho
Full-nmo Dnlci.S.Ioo Poolllon, 11
For Your Chlld'o
Wllh BonoiMo, Somo To:t¥11 R• Clrt.Concern
Coli
Uo
For A VlaM. lnllnt
q~lrtld. Sind AIIUmo To: CLA
114 448 1221. p,...
280, c/o Golllpollo Dotty TrlbU!!!r /Toddlora
cftoo- !School Ago 114-448o
125 Third Avonuo, Golllpollo, "" 8224.
·
. .
451131.

sex lamlllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such prelerence,
limllatloh or discrlmfnaUon:

This newspaper will not
knowing~ accopl
adVertisements for real eslale
Which Is In vlo!fttlon or the
lllw. Our read&amp;rs are'hamby

'

'

'·

'

..

~

.... . '

\?E.~

.

~\

o

I

1

Saato. Cllrnllo Control, Power •
Loclul, Etc. AIIIFM Slllltle. LoHidt en. owner,..~
Bouahl- Clr,- To Bolt~ •,
ExcOIIanl Conclhtonl loalul' ,
4223 Allllr
5:00 P.M.
Good,
Aalrlng:
1'14-446';, ,

l:·=·

~ ..... .,

"'"-'w"T

r~~C&gt;~,..,~.,~-~EA.~""~====r~;;;;~~~;;;;~
51

Household
Goods

Living Room Suha, Z Piece.

Two lladroom In Rutland, Novor Ulld, $275; E·Z Boa
doi'OIR ond ,.,_.,... ,.. 111!011- 1Rocker, filii, &amp;14-tlfl8.
qulrld, no poll, coli 814-1112· 1273.
2elt after lpm or onytlm8 llollohon CIIPIIo, Rl. 1 H. 114W-ndL
~- ht2 carpo1 $10, All
Ylnylln Slock $4.4tYd.
42 Mobile Homes
Now Qak Fumhuro: Tablll l
for Rent
Chalro, Hutchot, curv·od Glaoo
Chino Clblnllo, Book CillO.
2 - - tumlohod . . - Etc. Rlnr Yolloy Olk FumRIKo,
homo, 304..7MSI2.
3H3 Gooraoo CroH Roo~~ ~ "J"
4.
2 Bldroome fumlahld, . Air, =to, Ofilo Phono: I
Clblo Avallabloiil ~ I
e.
Rolor~-R=rk,~t_;:
PICKE!i!,':,IJ,!',!!ITURE

-

11 """"''.,..

Bod""'""',

-

Bllho,
3
123tllmonlh Dopoolt Roqulrtld,
You P3 UtiiMIII, In Port.,, •••
v_.
2

,_,v_..

2 5101'1 loa Howo, 4
hdrooma. f 811h1 1 hHmlnt,
Doubto Clr Blraga On 4.1
........ - · b t y prlcad. 1143711-Hto, 114-Hl'-1734.
2br houu, on 1.1 .crae,
ramodotod, cRy _., I !llrbogo
ptckup, lml orr At 2 an lhomll
Rldga, l24,oqD. 304-815-3080

luv•mt~~a~.

-oorn. 1 iiZ both IHochod
go,.go, 183 Mtnon Ad, Clmp

3

Conloy, opplloncll lndudod.
304.e7!&gt;-163f.
3.41 ocr11, 44124, 3bdrm2 2 1/Z
bltho, lull loa-. wHn otfd.
lng glooo ouloido lnlranco, \iar·
tillly lumlahod, lront poreh,
largo -ood dock ov-lng
,.Yino Iron horn 60'1132' buildlng

whh

cemtnl floor, 10•• 12•

utDHI bulldlngl locat.d McOrMh
Rd., uol .off SR33, 8 mltoo Norlh
ot omoroy, Homo Notional
Bonk, Roclno, Ohio 45m.
Phono 114-141-ZZIO.
4 room i both lull lla,.._nt, 11
Burdono Add"lon. can lor ..,.
polnlmonl304-f75-M81.
5 bedroom brick homo, 1 112
loath lloctrlc and olr,
lomliy room wllh llrODiaco, n1co
lavollol. IM-44&amp;-113111:
Golllpollo Forry, _,_ lol, Ill
brick, 3br, ldlchon WI ook
coblnoto, -mont l corport.
Somorvlllo R11Ny. 304-t18-3030
ort75-3431.

-.... lpll., lclal oloctrlc, apo
plilncM luml-, loulldry
room llcllhlao c._ to In town. Appti'cOitono ...llablo
II: Yllla114 c.... Alt1o. 1141 or
colt IM-9112·3711. EDH.
.
~Flim 1
1
1 """""" Apon·
ment,- Shlnl Bith, Utiiii:IM P1ld
$20ti/Mo. 7111 Fourth, Qolllpolla,
114-441-44t&amp;AIIor7P.II.
Apartmont lor ront In Pl.
Pluunt, 114-1112·5858 after
5pm.
BEAIITIAIL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 131 Joclulon Pllul
· from $2011111o. Wlllk to lhot&gt; l
movloo. Colt Itt 141 21111. EOH.
Fuml- Apart_,, 11w, noll

to Ubrtry, ,-rtdng, a.nl•lhut,

air, l'ltltencn. .,.

ue 0338,

~~~--...,.;,.7:..P·.c.m.c..----~­

Fum!- otllclonoy; 11e8imo.,
120 Founh Avo., Golllpolil.
Ullllloo paid, 111 Ul Uta oftor
7
:,.::pm.c.·;..·:--:-=.::-:---..,.--,
Furnllhod
EHtctancy
11118
Ulllllll Pold, Shora Botft, 107
Socond, Golltpollo. 114 ue Ute
Allllr 7P.II.
Fumlahod
Enlcloncy
tl118
·UIIIMIII Pold, Shora Both, 107
Socond. Go!Upollo, 114 141 Uti
Aftor 7P.II.
·
Q,..louo Mvlng. 1 ond 2 bodroom lpl~monla II VIllage
Minor
and
RI11Mal9

Houoo • tand tor aala, 3.75 · :fO':.~:M~~~rom
acroo, 2m! o,. Chondl.,. Rldg41
Rd, Gl~nwood, WY,I20,000 firm.

MldcUeport, Ohk», IHch St, 1

oftor 4pm.
room offlcloncy . lumlahod
oportmonl, utllhlao paid, "''· '
Houoa IDr Mil, hll 2 luml- d_.. 304-882·2i1811.

~-618-2321

lpirtmentt, lmmedlttt pot ....

Ilion, phoi)IIM-if2·:1937.
HoVIn, tbr, lumllhod
HOUII FOr Boll: 2 Bodroomo, mrtmonl, diP, l raf. 30.'882·
6
Family Room, Full Booomont ~;;;;.:'·--.,..,...,.--::-:-,:-Wllh Flropllco, 114-44141181.
Newly romodolod 2 bedroom
opl, Eoolom Avo, !l.illtpollo, Rol
32 Mobile Homes
• oocurlly dop • muoL 304411·
for Sale
;,M:::sa::..-:-:--:-----...,...
Nlco 2 bodroom oportmont lor
11115.64 pw ~h. now M' wide ronl In
114-lm·~,
mobil• h&lt;ttM, lncludn dtllwlfY,

Pornoror.

atlw 5pm or.........

53

Antiques

Buy « 1111. Rlvwlno Anllquoo,
1124 E. Moln Sl111l, on Rl. 124,
Po-r01. Houro: II.T.w. 10:.00
o.m. lo 1:00 P.IIL, SUnday 1:00
to 1·00 p m 114-112 2521
.
. .
•
.
54 Miscellaneous

~

l
l

72

TH' LEFT

1171 Ford Bronco Auto, SttraO, "'·

.

11,200, 814-4411-7132.
.
.
•m .loop CJI, modlllad, looko
• r... g...t; "'"· 30447S2AI70.
11160 Chovy 4x4 SIIVIrodo, 350
auto., drlvo ,,.In porlact, 12200.
304-875-!1815.

•
,

'
'•

. 1882 S.IO Sport WHh "83 V.. .0,. ':
dual

giM,

exh1U8t,

cragw

t

~

whoolo, S2200, 114-i82-3537. •.

1181 5•10, IXC. cond., $2116 :

OBO. 30W82-3Z21.

AKC Roalollrtld Booglo Pupo,
Mila 150
Shoto, Slovo
Sl1ptoton Dayo: 114-441-4172,
Anytl-: 114-256-1111.
•

• ;

18111 5-10, Runo Good, Hfllft ,

MIINgt, $2,000, 8M-25e-e341. • _&gt;

Floh Tonk, 2413 JOclulon Ava. 18111 ton Chevy truck W/S!11111
Point Ptoaun1, 30W71-2013, · utiiRW bod, 350 wi 4op, PS, Pit
lull fino Tropical lloti1 blrdo, AC, 1mffm cauett• I nnt: ~~~'"""
tm~IIMIImllll 1nd euppl•.
IXC. cond., 16000 firm . 304418.Z· &lt;'
3501
• ' ,.
.

13,300. 114-446-8172 Doyo, 114- •
441-1421 Enning•.

$8-.

..STAG~

,

Vans &amp; 4 WD's
l
==:.;:.;~~;,.,;,~.:..,..,.... (
11m Chov. 4x4, Truck, Good En- '
gino, tilt G,.hlm School Roodr-!
G1Hipolla.
. ,,

,

Pfl.t

), \

~·~.-L tMv~

Q

~\ ;

_

74 Motorcycles _. ,.,..,,_.,....--..:...;...:..:..

~

'83 Yam1hli Mulml, thaft drtv·;

ISO CC, $600; 814.e43-54e0. .

IJtONY!
•

.,-,

'

r lliiS 1\lJI!'.IbiTY ...,.,.,,----..-.,.

76

I I

.

'i H,l.TE. THE

I

Today
is theand
203rd
day of 1993
the
32nd day of summer.

J

:

.

MO~TY

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
! iHJ NK ITS Ff2SloJO.I i:t:lR
WH512E 'GU GO WHSN YCll.l
R'O'A 1-19-4 9CI-ICX&gt;L.I

wc'pe qc)INEi TO MA~ A
· cou.,.ll3tl: AT QA.YQAMP

'TONC/flSlCMI.

·l,

·

Ia•••

WAA\00

'(OJ 'II~T.

l.W(?Ii'S

e-

150• 11'11\IIS
SUIT!

u--

sq,.,.

~

...

I

I.,

. '" '

-!

'

•• '

-

•"

til

.. :::C:'"·

_

'

.

'

81

..

82 nglilll
ICiiOOI
83 .,
M Conlldelltl

22 lrtodilvll

tow••

t:.'o1 NNE
25 Mild lor

IOidiar

85 Flgurl 1111111
- ThorUI
18 Pllttlme

cologne
33 YeRow ochor
34 ActorDullll
38 Agile
37 Sullen

3 '"-'" olaye
4 Kind
5 Coollln hot
11t
8 ActorJuilll
7 Puto out of

DOWN
t Become worn

I IIIIth rdo
10 Conllruc·
lion .....

(2w._)
11 Clltl
111 Willi to lite

bottom
21 - lite """"
·MIOII
Chrllll'nll
23 Frotll
25 GoYI. IMII

.,ork

2 Evaluate

a-n,

28Cryol ...
3D Hllr ltrlt
31 A Scott
· 32 a-!1 horolnt JIIII31T. . .
. 3111ecklna
40 Type ol pelm
lrM
....-t--+--1 · 43 Devlllatld
41 Aullrllln

s~it

Vauvenargues, the French moralist,
silted that great tholllbts come from
the heart. Preslllilably be felt that
thou(lbts and emotions are inten:Gtl·
nected. However, at the brid&amp;e table
we abould try to stop our emotions
from cloudinfl our thoughts and bur
judgment.
In today's deal, South spotted the
critical snippet of IDformation that
provided the key to succeu. Against
the contract of three no-trump, West
led the heart five. What was South's
plan? .
·
First, be tried dummy's heart jack.
(West might bave underled the K·Q.)
n o - . East produced the qu.n. It
would bave been nice to duck two
rounds of hearts, trying to caier to a 53 division with East's baYing the dla·
monel ace. But South realized that If be
did that and the defenden switched to
spades, be would almost certllnly be
defeated, losing one diamond, two
hearts, and at least two spades.
So South won the flnl trick and im·
mediately dislodged the diamond ace.
Tbat put East on lead, and the delead·
ers took their three beart trickl. Then
they ~ted In spades.
South cashed his diamonds, Ieeming
that West bad beaun with a singleton.
Tben be casbed dummy's club ace,
played a club to.hill king and flneaed
dummy's club 10 succeulully to land
the contract.
"Nice guess," said North.
"Not really," repUed South. "I knew
West bad started with four hearts and
one diamond. U..be bad five spades aod
three clubs, s~ly be would bave led a
spade, not a heart. He m111t have bad
four carde In each black suit aDd an
initial 4-4-1,4 distribution. Hence my
play In clubs.•
·

July 22,

~,G'• Hd contained, $1215. \

poe•-

Norm · Eul
3NT
AUpuo

1

75-1731.
',.
comptllo 111-up, olllrtlng, llopo· Ono bedroom apartmonta,
ongtno l t.. namllolon lor V.t
Nlw
Four
Barril
C.rburator
l
and e months lol rem, 1~1-~14:...•:.:4=:1,::!111=::·::---:-c-c-::,- ~~ ....n......
83446:1.5.
1:1211/mo. 1 . - ut~loo, StOO ;
tm ·1888 302, ToUt v.a Ford ~
110urhy dopooh, no p111; 114- for 1111- IB' round pool with
$185, 114-388o.D2fi1.
I
f
10.50 Trallw, Awning, Undor· 11112·2211.
· now pump and motor; •_,1111
New
gn
t1nkl,
one
ton
truck
l
Farm Supplies
pinning, And Porch, 814-441-1117.
111111 ladl11
ond mon'a
whool'!, rodilloro floor mote •
Ono bodroom opl, Mloon, WV. .lh:.:l;.:rt~•:c;l::.*:.lm=--t8.=12.:;...,...,..,::--:
&amp; Livestock
Mx70 T..Mor 10.28 Addition tl751mo pluo &lt;AI!Hiao, roloronco ;
1 WV. ~ c,
ole. D" RAuto, Riploy,
Largo l~ 1 KRchon, FR, 3-4 BR, 1 raqulroo,1 ~-773-5054.
Foi Solo: King Wood l Colli
372-31133 or 1~27:J,:832t.
.. M
.-'1
Both 2 w-n Doctuo Covertld
S1on Whh Smoll Ami Wood
Porch, "Good Shopot~ 111,!100, 45
Furnished
And Coot, lloko An onort COli : - : - : : - - - - -......... 1 79
Campers&amp;
114-241-81111.
114-441-11117 BoiDra 2 P.M. Wed 61 Fann Equipment
MotorHDmes
Rooms
Or Aftor 5 P.M . Thruldoy.
14, 72 · Hottypark 3 Bodroomo, 2
450 a 350 Jahn Deer Dor.ere,
Balhl, Ulllhy Room, Eltctrtc, Air Rooma ror r.m .. WHk or monlh. Gtn..ta NUirlllon Product• cliaNI Mglne, I WIJ mlnu11 1975 1n01or home, 21ft., ciNn.
COndllonlng, 114 441 11107.
~:7.:2 11 tl20-. Glllla ito1al. r..1u~ng Amino Acid Body blado.._wonch, rollover conoP1. low mll1g41, -ely tor tho rood
1
11580
·
Building, wolahl loll and 111
11113 tZXIII 2 Bodroom Trollor, 1 ·
•
bumor lormufoo, Avollablo ox· ~~~
..=fi~~=88~7.~~~~~~~304=~~7~5..2~1116=Z.~~-----­
Both, Window Air Condlllonor, llllplna roomo wMh cooldng. cluolvlly at Rho Aid Phormocy. Hydnutlc olt SM.50 b!.'!'iloe or 50 tell Hottdor motor homo,
Sl,aoo, 080, 614 Uti 1521.
AIM tlllller IPMf, q hook~~· The Mfe way to diM.
ga! · tt:zs. ~ldortl Equlpmonl, cond. 304.e75-!116Z.
•
••
tr-'lor
s
ooo
QBO
Clll
lftW 2:00
p.m., 304·773- Holpftot Bod Cronk·Typa, 814- Hondlroon, WV. 304-t75-lll21.
•
1•"• ••~ • • 2
• 11111 111
loH Mollord Flight L compw
304-818-288e.
• 100 " ' ·
w.atn:
J.D. 45 Cwnblno Lillo Modll 2911. Pontoon boot, tohp ·e...,:
19112 Folrrilonl Townhouao Mx70 47 Wanted to Rent
JonMrot 2 tiZ T
Pu
2 Wllh 234 Com Hotd'!, Rllllr ruclo, :19ft. Somorvlllo R11Hy
304-875-3030 or 175-3431.
·
All Etoctrlc, Control Air, 2 Bod112 Air Holor 1.: $100, e,Zf5t Good Condlllon, 114-24..5624.
'•'
room, 81th H11 Gtn:ltn Tub,
W.nllng to rwnt· 211M' 3 bedroom 1103.
Manure.. · ~·r, Fertlllzlr
Good CondHton, 114-388-8113.
- . ln cloon and good concllPlow l Dloko,
Services
llon, pror.r prlvalo lOlling, 114- KIIIO Ftoull Buy EniDr- FIN Sf'NidorlcFord
corn P kora.
Hor
1181 Holly Pull, . Mx72, 3br, 2 112..2421, 11 no · - jlloiN Klltora lor plio, homo l yord .. Bollora, Now . Hoiland Rotuoo
blth, ••king $11,000. 304-675o ._,. mung• on mae~lne.
OUir~~nteecr ertectlwell Av•ll•bl• Now Hoilond 241 Hoyblnd, Ana1
5218 """ 4pm.
Poinl Plllllnt ~. 1511 Olhw Equlprilont At Howo"t 81
Home
lilt Sunlhlno14xBO mobllo
Kanowha St.
.
Fl!'ftl MIClhlnery, .lecUon, Ohio,
Improvements
home, .totll lltc, 3 bldroome. 2
King wood 111d coelllov• wllh 814-281-!11144.
tun bithe,laundry room, ltov..
blower, good condition, IM·IQ2· M•- Forguoon 1118 T,..tor,
BASEMENT
raf1 ,dllhWIIher, 111,800, toe.lecl
fill.
WATERPROOFING
&gt;
S4,ISO; 136 MF Wllh Loodor
zc • ,,.,tor park Pt. Pn, :104-1111- 51 Household
Mlgnovox TV, 25" ~o. U50; 17,550; 1110 AUla Cholmoro Wilh Uncondnlonot lllllimo g.ua,.if'
3711 oftor 5:30 PM.
VCR Sol,. LXI~~~. romolo, __y.,._ Round lotor, 17,1150; tM. locll rtlmnc• twnflh
Goods
114-211-852:1.
Clll 1.,DD-2S7-o571 or 814-23
19M Redman 14x70, 3bdrm., I,...
1110; IM-iiZ-5347.
0481 Rogora WaJ-IIng. Eacludn ll&lt;lrtlng1 alopo, blocka,
VI'RA FURNITURE
loblllhod 1175.
Now 11011 3 ton
otr c..,. 63
Livestock
111'. warronly, nom-nlrtl In114-441.:11!511 01' 114 441 4421
dHionor 11,215, tn'ii:ilad. Gaa =--:::~..,.,.;.,;,.:..;;...;.,;.;.___
ou,.nco, and I yoar ol lrll lol
"to DAY SAME AS CASH
Homt lmprawMM~ntt. Ho
ronl, Ill lor only tt77fmo., coli 1• OR RENT-.2-QWH (NO DEPOSIT) - . 114-8-.
Two Whlll Nubian Goolo Ono Cul11t
Job Too Ita 01' Smoll, Y11,. El·
aoo.e37-3238.
0o11 Wogon Whool Bunk Boda, Two Yoor Old Bred; Ono Yllrl- . parlance bn 01c1or IN-r
Mon .... - lnctudod, 1150. """ tng Not Brtld, 114-246-6575.
Homoo. Addhlono, Foundallono
2 tralla,. buill Into doubla wldo, OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGs:
3 bedroom., 1112 bltht:, m1ny Wrougl1t Iron Toblo W/4 Cholra; 4411-8587.
Uood John Ooo,. Boltor, 2 R- Roofing, Kll&lt;:hlno /8-. t..:..J
txtnl, PJICid on lnaptetlorl, Fon Bock Rocking Choir 168; Phllllnla lor Nil; compllle corn Plantar, 114-4411-11111 Aftar ourod, 1',.. Eorl ..loo. 114-:117·
0518.
304-882-:1317.
.
Gordan Arch Woy'o St28.oo
oupw alngio -orbod; 114-1141- _4_P._M_.- - - - - " - .
'
O.vlo Sewing Mochtno And
Mobile hoi'M, 10X50, $2800, 11464 Hay &amp; Grain
Boddlng ·Twin IIIII Sat'"· Full 28!4.
882-4732 aner lpm.
V~euum C&amp;.ntr Rlpair Fr•
Stl SOl Qoloon SMe Sill; 4 Pol':!'.!'!" machine, SS, llko now
Pick-Up And Dttt..oy, oOorgoo
Str1w,
$1.501blle,
from
WIQon
In
Drawer Cn.Oii 144.11; Clr Bod'o 21' a:18", ootor •aale, ~20V:
Crook Rood, 114-4411-02114.' .
33 Fanns for Slle
Bunk lod'a, Pollor hda. Fu~ 1220W, IOhL Holdog machine, lllld, 518-2733.
Llno 01 Soulhwollorn Vaooo ....m bW'I warmer, 88, Uke n.w,
Ron't TV Sorvi.., opoclollzlng
Mini linn 23 acroo, tO rown 2 ••rtlllj!
lncloni Many color - • • · ·2rx11". Hot point
In Zlnhh .•too oorvlcliiQ moot
1101'1 hoU..
. • omoll barn, 1 mtto Bhopa 1 AtI 120.00;
Transportation
81111 Slarilng AI -ntor daOD lrvw. 2 baallota,
othl~ brandt. Houu Cllla, lito
out Jorrlco •d. ovlrloolul Point U.oo. 2 Looatlono
IOml lpptil,... ropoh, WV
·IMido A..q llko - · ' ~21:12 llillr
PIH11nl,l35,000, 304,1'15-4llll. -ton 01' 4 Milot
OUt 141. 7:30pm.
304-llt-.23111 Olllo ·-2454 .'
Qpon U.ll. To I PJI,IIon .s.t.
34 ' Buirness
. . - ....., bod, watklr, high _71=--=Aut--o_a_fo,.,.r_Sa;,;,...l•;,_..., Saf"la Tonk Pumplna flO Gallla: . ·
CO. RON EVAIIIlNTt"PNIIQ , ..
Ch,_ G - DlnoCto ~With - · :.!.,'; pon, ... 1111, _,.... :::;... ~
Buildings
d,.olftiiallt!, Bovo ahort ..r. 1
-mono No Motor Or Jockoon, 0H 1.f00-817..121. , ' ,
4 Colortld Ovor •ullod *21;1T, 4 '· ~15-4141.
Tr•namlulon, Fllr Concltion,
Elloollanl CondRioh.
111"172' Cldor Sldod llodullr Chalro,
1600, 114-211-1314.
Will build patio - . . . dock . •
ti18,114-44HI24.
ecrMnltlf roome put Up yt~ •
Building. - . . Stato 01 Ohio
VCR,
balllanl
Condition, Uo1111 1181 lmpoll wRh gtldl
Flnr And Hoohh Codoo And ADA
.or tronor' ll&lt;lrtfnt. i!V l
On,W
--.GOuld .. dortiy"' :lng
Standarda For School, Olllcll,
lft2.
.. :(
21 •For ~Ina 1100, · - ...
,.
..
cor,
tl50,
114-llta·3501
or
Etc. Could Bo Convortod lnlo
Homo. 4,152 Sq. 1'1. I RoornoJ 3
- · FIMtaoa Truck Topper, 114-'I'IZ.2341.
84 Electrical &amp;
" ·•
litho · wn Bo R-od. ,..
For 7 Fl. od Truck, Slldlna ll7l Chovwolll ca~, 4••
WI-., Rollod Rool, S156,
~
lllng: bii,ooo. For Morolnl-..
Relrlgaratlon
. :~
114 441 1111.
motor, turbo trlln~mla , good
LAYNI'SI'URNITURE
!Iori Clll: 304475-1135:
.motor l bodJ. 30W71-11314.
Compillo homo lumllhlngo.
R11ldonllal or commorolll ~
Comlhorclol Building For Sail Houro: lion-Sot, N. 114-446o Air
eoOdMiono•
lotiy
Or LNao, 338 Skol1d Avonuo,
0322, 3 mill out lulavPia Rd. lwlng, 111 Yda Oood u.'-t .Cir- ttl2 Buick Park Avo, oxo. cond., ~~",:; "tr..:.~
1101, Bar Stoolo, Boon Bag. 814- St5qa. 304-4111-ttllallor lpm or Rlcfonour Eilctrlut ·
Phone: 114-441-2122. 10 A. II. To F,. Dollvary.,
lin. •
i141i-3217.
anytime--·
·
. ~..78,1788. . ' IY'{,II0030f.
•.
I P.M.
I

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80ii8C'·

tw-+-+-+--1 ·

47

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motller'ellde

411 Iovitt Union
(llltlr.)

SOIIIIurl

51 Silllllllll
52 lluc:k-up
54Cterln

''Othtllo''

55 o..... ,....
58 Mmtullde

51 Cuckoo

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher C:I"J1)tograma.,.. cr. .ted h"om QUOtetlons by famous peoJ)ie, put and pr._..t
Eacn lettet In 11'16 C!Pf* alands lor anotl'lel'. TD&lt;My's clue: 'f tJqual• H.

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CBSKMS •
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Lou Gossen - he , is one ot my herbes .

Whatever he wants to do,
Underwood .

I am there. Just tell me when." . -

-::~~~, S@~dllA-~t.tfs·
::::
1411o4
CLAY I . POUAN _..;..._ _ _ __
~.

Roorrongo lalllirt of
0 lour
Kromblod words

aow to form

tho
bo·

four words.

C H A" R R E

® ................. MIN.

I

Auto Pans &amp;
.''
Accessories
· "
=-~~~::..-tm Mounloln-. I 11211. truck

..

rt~P~Ct

18 Zoil horolnl

IWR!

!

;

15 ..... clloil
18 Chrletntat
t1 Cllch
18 111111 poet
20 AlpMbet

Cllla.l\
PUe 1toti'IY

'

EvenNde, .• h~or...w/ lr•lltr, ,.

1ner 4:30.

I

utt~eu.

••

=-::::::-fo.;-.r..:sa.:.te;:..,..._,.,..,;· ·
1988 TX17. bau tr.ck.-, 7Dhp- 1
$6200. 304-67

•

BORN LOSER

,

••

75 Boats &amp; Motors

~

~tAVY
01'1 Ttt~

.

11181 Hondl 4· WhHitr. 300.--'~

Good condHton. 12,600. 304175-2457.
19111 KXID, runo aooc1 tootuo
dlclnt, $430, ·~3-546e.
1888 Yalllliho 4 WhHior, Prlcad
·To Sill, Clll Aftor 1:00 P.M. &amp;14446·1.,.7.
1980 H1rl1y O.v . .on 883, New
Condhlon, 614-441-1107.

Ju1.cr

8UT

L-v.._

.'

r~remeu:.!

,

A nw:.~:,

1"1

,....- Pl-OT ¥/IT~ ~)CTirA
rM~Me. !'lOLl&gt;
TM~ NUANCe

73

(302)

*". -

r,.,e

.•
·'

Chovrolll, Ford, Doclg• pickup :
bodo. Short or tong. No Nil. )
304-t7H2111.
(

f::O

v..

FRANK AND ERNEST.

ttto Chevy 1500 plqkup, 112 ton, ;'
lwded, 11.000 mllee. 304-8823121.
;

";'A-

WIU 1 - ttl~ Ford

I

18116 5-10 4 Cyllndor 5 Spood, I
Bilek Ext. Grwy lnl. Rune Good, ~

P-

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

41 lllllchlavoue
bore
13 Goodbye In
lbdt1d
57 Tllil o1

13 lllllllloll

By PiiiiUp Alder

PEANUTS

Trucks for Sale

Weoi

The key
to the key

DAB TO

ol-.

S.11 Pofntt, $2001 114-448-10321

... .....t .....t

z•27 Surltlt
znctuJ.nc.

JEST A. LITTLE

AFORE YOU
START
TRIMM IN'

'"'"· Rio Grando, QH Clll 114- 11t1 Dodge Shldow Convart- '
ob~, Whlo, Aulomotte, CO-• •
24 5.!121.
::Pt;::oyo
~r,,:$~7,20:;..:0~,8:..:14-:..=256-=-,:16:.:1,;.8·:_-=.
:
56 Pets lor Sa
,
Ia
18111 Ftroblrd, loldod, T~- l
=~==:;.::~..:_~~=~ low mltll. 304418-1188.
'
IOX10xlh dog lulnnol, pold $300
•
now, tt50. lifoo, oxlra 1
18111 Pontloc O..nd Prix, bluo l1
houn wl hi--'
1 s
'- door, loodod 33,000 mlllo,•
118-&amp;B37 oM7sPm~ '
·
vory oood condldon, now tt ..o, l
11\Drlil 080, 114-1112·:zaotl, ,
ciroom ond Supply Sho.,.,... -nlnao.
•
llh blahl E
Groomlno. All ......,,,
'
1Julio Woiib. Cllll14 448 o:.t3t.
si:od AI~ ConciM~::.- p1: ~
.CFA Roglalorod Hlmallyan Kit· PS, AMIFM SlortiO, Rod, t,ii :
lono, 2 Fomoloo, Firat Shoto, 11111,114-4*7521.
. ,· 1

1a5r.:J! .

.r:..r...

OpeniDI lead: • 5

dowe, Unlele, etc. d1ude Win·

K.K:a Potland, ·7 1'1. Boo, 13 ·1'1 .
Rlllcutotod python Dlchohund
MerchandiSI
Pupploo, Hlmollyon KHtono,
Cockar Pupoloo. Skunk, Baby
11180 Ford Van ' 1m ·Mon- Coono, Floh Supplloo Much
llclrlo,
or SMDD!bo1h. Morot814-367·0117.
Dok dlnlngrown ouho, oxc. fiT
Musical
cond., roun&lt;l ball l claw tobll,
tilde
S2300 wtl to lui
Instruments
tttoO.
7M1ahftw 5prn.
Bacft Stradlvartua Silver Trwn2 EloctM Foyoro, Hot Food pel.
excenent concltlon; port.
Tlble, SnMZt Guard, S.lld Btr,
-CD
ployor wlhl· AC odoplw,
Rogtllw Uahlod Sign, 114-1182· hoadllhonoo,
two 50 won
75fl, IIWG·18ZS.
lptakMW, IUbwoofer; 114-IKtZ3 112115" pool, comp!Oio wtlft 3157.
laddorh
ltltw, aolor covor, 5B
Fruits ,&amp;
IYiryt lng lor 1250, 814-lm·
1841.
Vegetables
4 Fl. King Cullor Pull Typo
B,..h Hog, Good Condhlon, COnning . Tomi3- Airudy
Picked II... 8rll!a Own Con114-2511-tl301, IM-25U206
tllntrl, $1 luafMf, B1uahm•n
4 R. King Kullw BNih Hog F-. 7 1/Z 111111 Stoto Ffoulo 7
1200; i.erP Ponoblo Sllol Dog Soulft 01 Qolllpolla, 114-2511Cnto S18, IM-1711-Z21B.
11535.
600 boord pll- mlxod CanninG Tomatoe1 1 For s...
lumber, 011kt cherry, . .lnUI. 3Q4.. 13.00 iluahll, Pick Your Own!
182..21ft.
Bring Conlolnlrtl. Don R. Hill
F-. Lllorl Folio, Ohio, COli
hi e Hlfln ..oragt buildlsx•· 114-247-Z532.For Dlroctlono.
·
:.!':"::.it~blo~~~s:.r• ~: Cloning tomat-, $41 buahll;
q_•utpmo.,., Hondwoon. 304-675- lnlh com, tt.tl/ ·doDn· coli
,. 21
114-IH·S868. WIIUomo ~orm,
Sy,..u11,0hlo.
Antiquo DIOICin Phm Bullal,
Choln Clblnot, 114-2~-8181.
HoH Runner Boono, . pic~ your
own
Ulbuohol,
Dlckod
Bar S1oolo MO; Dlnollo Wllh 3 tttlbuthot, 3oill abova tfondor·
·
~;lraWJs::~=lc~r.w=::~ aon on ~gnl.
' $40; Wall. Air COndHtonor $50; 2 Tamo Btockborrl11. S2.75 Ouarl,
Hou01 Trail.,. nroo l Rlmo, Wo Pick PluH Clll Boloro You
Both 120; Round IIIIo! Tobll COmo, 114-:MI7-G415 (Choahlrt). .
WRh Umlwllla 135; 114-387·7243
Anora P.M.
.
59
For Sale
Ea~ Amwlcln Couch, Good
or Trade
ConiiRion, Ext,. Slip eov• Ineluded, One Aecllntr, Two Ught
Flxturtll, (Ono Exrty Amorlc:in)

=·

SNG
!NT

11115 ~ Star, 13600. 304.e71- I
55
Building
3100 ore75-550e. .
~
ltH DociP.:, Omnl 5
Supplies
•• 000 111
.. '"~
~.
, •••"'"'• I ~ ,
Block, brick, ..... plpao, win- 1704 01' 114-258-1131.
' •·

ti-hold lumlahlng. tiZ mi. &amp;M-Mt.o:zoo.

----------1

~~~·

..........ourt
ectiOn

28--

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

ca... '

1 -·u

44 Sctnt

I PIIIIJIIIMd

IICIIon

+Kez

Deb II, ~
lroughlm,· PS, PI, PW, Powwr ~

•

42 RoMol

~

24

SOVTH
+A74
.A 78
t K J 10%

:0.
~~~~S:i.!~.::l!' :,
oago.

rail. -trod. 304-t18-1fl2 after

Dopcioll, CIIIIIM..24U441.
~~..'.,.'·~ ~ ":..'::
Mpolll,. Nloo FIAt
No
,...., MUll Hovo Cl'odl
Rei.
.•. , _., Socurlly Dopoall. 1ft.
qulro AI: I2Y Soi:ond Avonuo.
Golllpollo Qhlo, .

+as

t74

''

1.. Oldlmoblle

llodroom- t5 Min. From
Golllpollt~ . MOO Ront MOO

.QIOSZ
tAUt

i

Zlulloom houM In Hlndii'IOftw
~ r.madtlld. ~~~ 6
~

EAST

+K 101

w,:

0

\' ••

EEKANDMEEK

-iol• .

0

Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. P11111nt. WV,
co!I30W7S·M50,
AKC ..
Chow
Flm81
, 2 ChMile•, Pupploo,
Will Hold3
381-il
·
SWAIN
.
Wllh
DopooH
Alldng:
St:ZS
-$150,
advertised In this newspaper
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12 PonnH On Promlloa, 6M·775Nl
b•- ho loll lor · t
are ava11able on an equal
tl::om~.;. ~.:..n Ath.':. : Olivo St., G•lllpolio. HIW l Ulld '11171, Chllllcolhl.
opponuni!y basis.
Pomeroy~ tutmon., .,.._;112-2181. hlmhure, h•ter~,· Weatam a Mlnl1ture Plnacher AKC, 3
w
.."i:ork:::C.:b:::•=ot~o:::.l::'=-•=";::•::::n7111=·~=-~ -oo,
--·
bIt &amp; ton, 1200. lli:h,
~
44 Apartment
WI- IDryw 1200; Living 304-!1711..24+!.
31 Homes for Sale
R00111 Sulll $100• YICuum
for Rent
Ctoanor StDD,i 111i Clrohom AKC Old Englloh Shoop Dog,
2 Bedroom Homo At Eurolul
School R•-' uolllpoll 1
Poodlll, DIChohund, Booton
......,
·
T.,lor, Mlnotu,. Groyhoond,
Ovarloolllng O.m. Roof, tbr oponi1WII, Point Pla-nt,
Now Siding. Wll~olntalnod, 2 fum-, cllan, no polo. 3114' Whl~pool dryor, $15. 304-t11- Colilo, llul Pclnl Hlrnoloyan lllt111-1311.
44311.
tono, lllno Bird. 114-441.o404.
Loll, $32,500, 114-441-4033.
Informed that all dwellings

.

.

"; \7~ t;;\' •.

11pm

All,.alesllte advonlslng tn
lhls newspaper Is sub)ec:llo

-•tna

11115 aw..lor llh Avonuo, 1 •
Ford F-t$0 plckup/rJ,ray !'&lt;"ctf
- · OCIOII
Cooll
Glllld Slatton,
·~
, . . . Ford' LTD e-n Ylc.
~ 1111 ~· ~ Cilllton,, ,
: ;..11'r,- 30Z. .._ 12400, 114-:

• y ~

....

41 Tho (Gel.)

1 Type ol

14 Ahlc8n .

tQUS
+AQIOS

114-Mt-2871. 1

•
•.. a.~~~ :

HOUilea for Rent

.J4

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Gum Wlnl To Totk? 1~
21ft Ext. T2Bt f3.H Por Min.
MUll loll Yrs. - · eo.I02·
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"Unbreakable? Hmm ... perfect for my gamel"
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11 Help wanted
Middleport
MISTRUI MADONNA LIVE 1·
Howlv Clinic- - P a r t ·
too-1115-tna S218+.
mtn. t.aotJ.685. !1 _ _ _.;;;_.;..:..:.;;;...;.;!.
&amp; VIcinity _ __ nroo "To Worlc In Family Plaft.
11f0.MC.YISA
nina Olllclo tn · Molao, Bollia
OHIO'I !)QNNEeTION ·ALTER· ~uly Z3 and 24, 11e Norlh Flftft And ~- Counll11. llull
Hovo High .School Dlptomo 01'
NATIVE 1·800·-1 SZ.SO. Annuo, Mlddloport, Dlllo.
Equivalency; Good Communicamin th/1111 llr.otvtoo dlliollno llovlng 1111- 312110 SR 325, tion
SldUo; At- Wllh
toO'• ollling~-11110 In · LlngoviUo, Ohio, Friday '
FlguNO; Modioli Olllca Ex•
your aroo today, CCI BOCA FL
Soturdor, Jutv 23 • 24.
poilonce HolpluJL Wt• Train llo·
REWARD lor onyono -.111ng
luro Individual """ Ia SanoRivo
To Roproductln Nooda 01
l holplng pr-ut• poroon or 8
Public Sale
Cllanlo. I.Dolctna For Soonoono
&amp; Auction
Who Ia Solf·Mollvalllll And con
1 - t - from my gOrdon,~
DolGrow
The PooRion AI oil
Blank-hlp, Galllpollo Rick Poaraon Aucllon eompon~; A~-.InPoollton
Roqulr• Rll~
Ferry.
lull limo auttlonllr, complato able TrarwponatWa. W•kde~,
THE GAY CONNECTION 1·1100- ouctton ..,.lca. LlconMd Evontna. And Salurday Holn
1110.3337 12.50-mln. 18+ 111111 188,0111o l W111 Ylrglnil, 304- Arw To Bo Expoclod. Trovol Paid
100"a or oxchlng mon In yOUr ,7'13-:..:;:5785~:,·- - - - - - - To 9ut 01 COunty OlllcM. • • lonlghl. Galphono I'L CCI - Utlar Of lnt.,..t, ·R•ume And
BOCA~
9
Wanted
to
Buy
Two ermlnl Ro..,_nMl To
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11114 Eacort, good oond., StiOo.lo,
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Autos for Sale

1111 Dllaun 310 lloaon, 41p., ~

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·

Business
Opportunity

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11111go Coull!!: ao1aro .,.,.,
euGi ICrt. Rerrl: 1.. bMutfful

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2Q2 Ell. 1004 13.-ln. llull

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OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.

Okte Olrlo Gl~a .
Till tou- llw, uoo -1017,
ut-wHh21, "-" por min,
loa 11 ,.., Procllil Co.
GIRLStll UYEIII

lot':~on.

trallora.
IEYERAL 7- ACR£ PARCELS:

In Conn~

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Kll' 'N' CARLVLE®
by Larry Wright
'

&amp; AcnNige

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

""'--..ll-..:;i)~. .,....,,&lt;)&lt; 1·
• ' ' ' C' '

AS TRO. 0 RAPH

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whicii"are governing you in the year
. • your colleciive objective. t-ioweyer, il can be
Send lor your Astro-Graph predi clio ns done.
to~~y by mailing $1 .25 and a long, sell· AQ~ARIUS (Jan. 20·Fab. 1~) You could
addressed , stamped envelope lo Aslro · be a very ellec11ve promoter!salesperson
Graph, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, today if you sugarcoat the hard poiots with
New York, Ill. Y 10163. Be sure lo stale tacl, ftumor and charm . Use the soH sell for
your zodiac sign.
besl resulls .
YIIIGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You're anolher PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It mighl seem
one _of the signs lhal could reap material . like you're required to do so much tor olh·
benefils loday. in bolh small or .large ways. ers loday ihal you're leh little lime to fend
Persons who have your inlerests at hea n lor yourself. Be ot good cheer, it all bal·
· ances out. Give now. receive later.
! could be yoUr benefactors.
6)~
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 22) Today one of ARIES (MirCh 21·Aprll 18) Things look
~
..
Y9UF best assets is your imaginallo ri . encouraging for you and lor the one closest
Properly utilized 11 could pul you steps to your Mart today . Events will help
ahead of your compe~tion . Envision possi· slrenglhen bonds and each will be more
biiHies, tel them envision obslacles.
appreciative of!he other.
·:
Frldooy, July 23,1983
I SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Developmenls TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Your desires !O
'
behind the scenes IOday could prove lo be tunher your ambilious interests are urgings
ln~olvements with larger organizalion~ helpful IIi you where your career is con- you should lry lo gratify loda~. Financial
could prove commercially benellcialfor you corned . 1wo friendly advocales are trying lo cond111ons look promls&lt;ng If you re Wllhng to
in the year ahead . Don 'l be reluclant 1o 1 eng~neer something exc11ing.
.
work lor what you get.
roach the big guys if you leel you !lave . SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) An old GEMI_Nt (May 21·Jun~ 20) Generally
:;,.thing they sllould know about.
. friend who lives ala distance from your pre- speaking the aspects 1nd1cale you could be
Lib (Jut 23·Aug. ·22) Be sure 10 check , sent residence is ea~r to gel in touch with rather fo rtunate today, _b~l not necessanly
your ans!.ring machine. as well as your • you. This is a person who has broughlluck 1n ways or 1n areas you 1mt1ally presume...
mai x IOda beCause some unex acted and good fortune into your lile previously.
CANCER _(June 21.July 22).Your probablh·
lbonews .:~ld be forthWmJng. H.J: posi· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jon. 11) In a joint lies lor do1ng somelh1ng prolllab~ today are
::thoUghts ai.:r keep haplng. Get a jump endeavor today bolder measures than much bolter than usual, e~pec1ally along
· on tile by understanding the lnlluences usualll)ighl be required in order lo achieve , hnes wh1ch are already Yletdlllg returns.

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1993

~~~~~~~~

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1934 , "Public Enemy No. 1," John
Dillinger. was killed by FB·I agents as
he left Chicago's Biograph movie !heater.
TODAY'S SPORTS: On this day in
1926, Babe Ruth caught ·a baseball
dropped , from an airplane above
Mitchell Field in New York.
TODAY'S QUOTE: "What I wanted
to do was lo pain! sunlighl on the side
of a house ." .- Edward Hopper

• ~~~~~~rs-J~~~~ETTUS I'

6 GET
UNSCRAMBlE l!Tl!RS TO I
ANSWER

r I' r 1 r I' 1
1

·

1. I I I I, I I·

SCRAM-Lns ANSWERS
Gemini • Ebony • Rajah · Renter • BEHERE
Last summer wh1le on vacation I saw this sign at a
gas stalion on the edge of the desert: "Don't Ask Us
For Information. II We Knew Anything Do You Think
We

Blair

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Pomerov •cldlepor"., Ohio

.

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----......-.__.Names .in the news---·--11J Vill8 Pleli ilelil
Tllomp10n, who wu minorit;

the lOll YICaled
AI Gore.

couuelto &amp;K Seute wa-.•111
commluee -ill &amp;K 19'701 llld lti1l
praclicellaw, bll llld ~
JOlea in .....
IIIOYll!&amp;,
indodioa "Die Hlld 2. .. He plays

a.._

·a ~ \Vbile a... cbiel rLIliff
in Oint Eutwood't lalest movie,
"In dill Line oCFile.•.•
HiJ lira liiCIVie rule -

• himself in ''Marie," awrins Sluy
SJ*ek. He wu the lawyer for a
T - puule llllllnl c:hairwom·
an wbo eqiiiiOd a cadi-for-e~
cy acandll;

EN VOGUE

LOS ANGELES (AP) -. En
Vogue led the contenders
. for the
1993 MTV Video Music ..Awards
with seven nominations. R.E.M.
and Aerosmith followed wilb five

representatives will castlJallo!s.
About 200 representatives of
record labels,.joumalists, vlde_o
producers, radio stations.ll!ld mOVte
studios seleeted the nommees.

Gabriel ·)n contention for the
best video award. The nominations
in 22 categories were announced
Wednesday.
·
1be lOth .annual awards ceremony will be broadcast live on M1V
on Sept. 2.
·
More than 700 music industry

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)Fred Dalton Thompson, who
divides his time between the law
and the movies, is considering
another ljne of wUk: the U.S. Sen·
ale.
· .
·
The 50-year-old Republican said
Tuesday that he will form a committee to explore a bid in 1994 for

. each.·
.
.
The three Join Pearl Jam and
Pel.ef

BURBANK, Calif. (AP)- Bob
Hope Ills Aped wilb Nile to do
anolber ~ oC 1V speciah, .
The 90-year-old comcdlan will
do II lcut dm:e hours of specials
next saeason, the networl: said
Wednesday,. •
In May, NBC U4 Hope'IJII¥
reeent special, "Bob Hope: The
First 90 Yem." Hope expressed
irrilalion at the lime t!lll his Yearly
contraCt ·was up at the end of dill
monlb and ;NBC hadn't l!eeided
whether to JeiiCW,
Hope's dauJlller ai!d prollucer,
Lilida HOpe, said peil of dill problem was diat NBC was "on a :youth
kick."
'
Hope has been wilb NBC since
1934, when his variel)' show premieml on radio.

~· discussion included the
effect on people, wildlife, air, soil
and water of !he area. Maps from
1be Athens County Soil and Water
District were used to show the
pl'Oltimil)' of lbe proposed medical
waste incinerator site to the village
of Coolville, lbe SIIITOilnding (arms
and farm ponds, 1bc wetlands along
lbe Hocking River, the Four Mile

Creek, many other small tribu·
taries, lbe l)eavily forested hills, the
Coolville Boat Dock-Park, the Desonier Nature Preserve, and the
Wayne National ForesL
Speakers included Dick Gillilan,
Dorolby Rader, Nancy Cole, Garnet Griffin, Kennit and Ray Cole,
Pam Russell, and Frances Hcnder- 1
son, all of Coolville.
Additional information on the
proposed project and its effeet on.
the area is being obtained from the
Ohio Division of Natural
Resources, Divisions of Fish,
Wildlife and Forestry, the U. S.
Corps of Engineers, Environmental

I

Epstein made the swim Monday The California woman.:;:e ~0 '
three days short of his 58111 ~- . when she completed 1be ·
m
day and his. wife, Vivian, said it 1987 in a li~ O'ler '!O hours as
was his birthday present to himself. part of•a medical experiiDCIII to leSt
"I was not worried," she said the body's ability to cope with
Tuesday from Denver. "He had cold.
.
.
.
taken many preeautions and. he . Colt wore no wetswt or insulatdoes not do things that are ltfe- tnl body.sreasc. · ·
..
threatening, he does thinss that are
"I?on'.t e~en. c.ompare us~
life-enhancing."
·
Epstem Slid. ' This IS no WilY cpm•
The swimming distance from pares to ~hat Lynne Cox accomthe Russian Big Diomede to the plished." .
·
.
d
U.S. Little Diomede is estimaled at
The men kept an atrplane an
four to six miles depending on cur- helicopter on standby In case of
grease.
. .. 581'd rents.
'
mc:dic:al emergency, and were
"It was not an easy sw1m,
The ftrst to make the crossing traded by a boaL
Epstein, who swam with fellow
The two wetsuits w~re not
adventurer Joe Oakes of San Fran- was endurance alblele Lynne Cox.
1
enough
to prevent Epaletn from
cisco.

"The sleeves are 1 or 2 inches
longer lban usual and should hans
out below the jacket."
At Chane!, the white shirt,
paired with a boucle suit, is nearly
knee-length with extra-long French
cuffs and chain cufflinks.
"It's a very fresh way to update
a Chane! look," says Anne Fahey,
public relations manager for
Chane! in New York. "The impor.
tant part is they're long, usually
under a little Spencer jacket or
chissic short sweater set. It's lbe
contrast of long and short that
makes it new."
What's so appealing about a
shin that defies customary ptopoi.
lions?
"There's an oversized quality
that makes you look smaller,"
Weiss says. "II emphasizes the
present vision of women that's
somewhat waif-like, tender and
vulnerable. The hair is softer, the
makeup is more natural, and it all
reminds you of a child putting on
her parent's clothes."

It's kiclcy,IOO. .
Anytime you wear a shirt~!
loose under a vest, "you're looking
my comfortable inti IPM&gt;' 11 dill
same time," says CasSie H~;
public relations IIIIIIIICF for
't
m San Francisco. "11tcre's nodt g
like pulling out a white shirt on a
hot smnmer afternoon to make :you
feel refreshed."
If man-tailored leaves you gen:
der-bent, lbere are white shirts with
a softer touch. Designers including
Osatr de )a Renta, Dill B!Qs llld
Rep1111 Pol1tr R courtins romance
with nowing Victorian poet's
blouses.
"You can update wbllever you
·have simply b1 adding a new
poet's blouse wtth a son ruroe,"
says Porter, who includes white
shirts in all of her collections.
•'The key words are soft and feminine, more than they've been in
many years."
Weiss calls these romantic
sl)'les "~ B)'I'OII all .over apin.
The white blouse or &amp;llirt i&amp; at its

in finals

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ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) Ste'le Irwin un be expected to ask
for hi&amp; caddy for advice at the Col;
orado()pen.
It's his dad- Hale Irwin, a
three-tim~ winn~r of the U.S.
Open.
Sieve Hale, an 18-year-old collese student, hat caddied for his
radter on ~~evaal occasions, but this
i&amp; the first lil1le Hale Ills mciJXOC8led. Hal~ Irwin rmislled fourth in
the Colorado Open as an amateur
in 1967.
''1'11 be there in an advisory
~I)' if needed,'' the elder Irwin
smd, "but it's his IOUntlllient"
The toUrnament beJins today at
ln:-"emcss Golf Club.

members. Manents of silence were
observed for recently deceased
member, Gerald Douglas. Albed.
Prizes were won by Anna
Skeels, T_uppers Plains; Mutha
EUioa, Alfred; Sue Breedlove, Garnet Griffin, and Mike Simmons,
Coolville, and Robert Henry,
Amesville.
Plans were made for participating in the Coolville Founders' Day
~ and olber activities there on
Aug. 7.

losing some agility and mental
sharpness to the cold. He said that
!IS they approached U~ Diomede
tl became harder for htm to hear
thC boat c:rew yelling directions to
lcecptheswimmersoncoursc.
·. To hear beaer he rolled over on
hts back. "Then of course the
directions were reversed. I had an
even hanler time."
The two swimmers were local
heroes when they emersed from
the sea II Little Diomede.
'"'bere were about 2S little kids
all excited to see us," Epstein said.
"The swim cap looked like a bel·
met around my head. They called
me robot man."

peak because it personl(ies the
dandy, Edwudian ~uality that's
running through fashton Ibis year.
It's certainly a natural with the new
Ion frock COlliS... .
rryou're ready to catch the
trend, you 'II encounter snappylooldng wltite shins in a variety of

~ a designer venion, be pre-

pared to pay top dollar. Richard

Tyler's wltite cotton corset blouse
With FRincb cuffs is $690. An all. cotton poplin shirt from Chane!
retails for about $S7~ to $640. For
diose with slimmer wallets, Ralph
.Lauren offers a ~Y of blouses,
some with asc:ots, monogammcd
Fienc:h c:uffs, stand-up collars and
pleated fronts, from about S9S to
$396. Shins from Esprit and Resina Porter are se-aJiy under $100. For $50 or less, I. Magnin offers
collar and cuffs in cotton, lace or
chiffon. Otherwise, consider your
soulmate's white dress shirt or·
press your white nightshirt into
daytime duly.

resources in the United States,' ~ onto the dect' of the S4-foot boat ' Another bui.kling houses two dozen
Cohn says of Vermont's c:ache of that would have held 4 S men for small craft. from a sailing canoe to
artifacts, which tell, amonglolber eight wec1cs at • time.
a child's boat, while a third
stories, of Benedjct Arnold's battle
An 18th century ship of French describes the participants in the
with British Gen. John Burgoyne in design that hundreds of visitors war:s Lake Champlain theater l!fK)
October 1n6 at lbe Battle of Val- watched l!eing built sits on th~ ,the hardships lbe soldiers endured,
cour Island.
lawn - ready ~ be climbed on. especially from cJjliC&amp;'!C. .
Cohn recently oversaw the
removal of a Revolutionary Wu
cannon from the boltom of Lake
Champlain IICIW Orwell. acroa the
lake from Fort Ticonderoga in New
York. ·
Cohn has brou&amp;hl the Revolutionary War and its soldiers on
Lake Champlain closer to life with •
a full-size replica of the baaleship
Philadelphia, which is docked just
down the hill from the museum.
"If you want to ask yourself
what did a Revolutionary War 8_1111·
boat on Lake Champlain look like,
you don't have to usc )'OUr iniaBI·
nation," Cohn said, .as he IIIIJ.lPed

TEEN DANCE

Friday
. July 23rd ·
a:ao - 12 midnight
London Pool In Syracuse
Music by H &amp; K Sounds
Admission *2.50

•

Low toolgbt In 60s, partly
cloudy. Saturday, blgb ID 1101.

•
Vol. 44, NO. II
Mulllmedi•Jnc.

BEACH GOERS TRESPASS • George Harrison complained Ia
Hawaii's Maui eirnlt Court on Tuesday, July 10 that he feels
''raped" by neizhbors traipsing by tb! bouse wbi~h be built oa
Maui Island, not knowing the property mcluded a nght-of·way fCM:
others to get to tbe shore. The former Beatie wants tbe pat~WIIY
moved, and may sell tbe stale if it isn't. (AP Photo'Terry O'Nedl)

•
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19th Snyder
reunion held

About SO family members
Those attending were Carl, Carattended the 19111 annual Charles olyn and Nildci Robinson, Evelyn,
and Alma Hinzeman Snyder ,Carmen, Jenny, Jane, and Joa!l
reunion held recently at Star Mill Manuel; Earl Holman, Donna and
Parle in Racine.
Brady Sayre, April Still, -Debi,
The group enjoyed a covered Tara, Myca, and Jeff Michael,
dish dinner at noon. Sam Shain Ruth, Sam, and Emily Shain.li Ruth .
conducted the business meeting and Arnold Johnson, Jerry Kowe,
with reports being given by Car- Clara Powell, David Graham,
olyn Robinson; secretary, and Sampson and Jean Hall, David and
Frances Rowe, treasurer.
Janice Lawson.of lbe Racine/SyraOfficers elected for the 1994 cuse area.
reunion were Jane Teaford, presi~
Bill Snyder, Judy Nelson, Virdent; 'Pete Snyder, vice president; ginia Rowe, Charles Shain, Kathy,
Robinson, secretary, and Rowe. Mike, Matt. and Kay Ia Salser,
tmiSurer.
Anthony Cindy and A. J. Rowe,
Reeognized and presented gifts Middleport; Morris and Joyce
were Pete Snyder, oldest man; Wolfe, Bidwell; Mel, Joe, 1oey
Clara-p'owell, oldest woman; A. J. Bobbi Jo Holman, Crystal Bamete,
Rowe, youngest boy, and Kayla Kerry Withenauer, Westerville;
Salser, youngest girl. Evelyn Verdina and Pete S11yder, Patsy
Manuel was recognized for having Helton, Delaware; and Connie
the most family members attend- ~ansom, Marengo.
ing, and Connie Ransom for travelThe 1994 reunion will be held at
ing lbe farthest to attend.
Star Mill Parle on 1uly 11.

Poet's comer

Earthen Vessels

Still !bey could be used
To hold nowers from the field.
As he dug beneath the sand
He found to his surprise;
A vessel beautiful and.rare
A treasure to his eyes.

by Myrtle L. Bennett

With gentle hands the potter
Placed each earthen pot;
Side by side on lbe shelf
As be cleaned away each spot.
The potter toiled to reclaim ·
The work of a forgotten hand;
As he bought to lighJthe vessels
Buried beneath the sand.
Some were covered with moss
Others with soil were stained;
But when he brushed away the dirt
A new vessel he had gained.
Here and there were cracks
Others needed a bit of clay; ·
S~~ were damaged beyond repair
These be threw away.
Some were mis-shapened as they
came
Fresh and new from the potter's
wheel;

"What a pity,M lboughtlbe potter
As he made it's surface shine;
"To be so very beautiful
And not worth a dime."
This lovely bit of an
When scrubbed and cleaned well;
Was lovely only to the eyes
It was but an empty shell.
We like the lowly vessels
.Tho stained ~ grown old;
Must go to the Master Potter
Let him our lives remold.
Don't be like lbe hollow shell
That sits on the shelf all day;
While others sow the seeds
That will bloom along the way.

Free TB skin
tests offered
There will be free Tuberculosis
skin testing and test reading by the
Meiss County Tuberculosis Office
at the following locations.
Tuppers Plains Hre Station Q
Monday, skin testing, 7 to 9 p.m.;
July 28, skin test reading 5 to 6
p.m.
Chester Fire Station Q August 2,
skin testing, ~ to 7 p.m.; August 4,
skin laSt reading, S to 6 p.m.
Middleport Fire S tali on Q

August 3, skin lesting S to 7 p.m.;·
August 5 skin test reading, 6 to 7.
p.m.
.
Reedsville Fire Station Q
August 9, skin testing, 5 to 7 p.m.i ,
August II, skin test reading, 5 to 6
p.m.
,
Cards wiU be issued at lbe skin
test readings. These testings arl .
open to the public. For furth~r,
information call the Meigs County.;
TB Office at992-3722.
"

1 s.ctlon. 10 P"!!N 35 c.ta
A lolultimedlil Inc. Newap....,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 23, 1993

••

Coal company
Local power officials to meet
awaits EPA okay with OEPA for mine discussions

"Southern Ohio Coal Company
is awaiting notification from the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency to bepn implementing its
plan to remove excess water from
its Meigs. No. 31 mine as a step
tow~~ ~turning its. employees to
work , smd B. J. Sm1th, AEP direc·
·tor of public affairs just before
noon Friday.
•
The water removal plan
involves pumping the excess water
to nearby reeeiving streams. The
company continues !(\drill holes
into the mine and is installing
pumps in preparation for the stan
of pumping, the late morning
release said.
"At this time, company officials
cannot predict when the mine will
resume full production," Smith
said. In the release she indicated
that company officials are meeting
with local Uniled Mine Workers of

America representatives to develop
a timetable for calling employees
b~k to help with bringing the mine
back into operation.
.
"Throughout thi~ process our
effons have been focused on getting our people back to work," said
1im Tompkins, SOCCO vice president' and general manager. "We
have developed a water removal
plan that will help dO that with.lim·
lied, short-term environmental
effeet."
SOCCO has employ.ed an eco·
logical consultant to collect and
assess baseline information on the
receiving streams. The consultant,
will also provide the monitoring
necessary to evaluate any effects
associated with the pumping, he
said.
Smith said that the company
will advise area residents of llle
pumping schedule.
·

Coal strike turns deadly

.

.Police say man killed
LUNDALE, W.Va. (AP)- A
nonunion subcontracJor working at
a strikebound Arch of West Virginia mine was shot to death on his
first day on the job as he drove by a
line of pickets, state police said.
Edd1e York, 35, of Dingess was
shot Thursday as he' drove from
Arch's Orlan Mine along Slab Fork
Hollow in Logan County, said
Trooper Ric Robinson in South
Charleston.
The sJ¥&gt;oting occurred near lbe
company's Ruffner Mine, Robin. son said.
Authorities said it was the first
strike-related death since the United Mine Workers began its walkout
May 10.
"Up to this point there has been
rock throwing, name calling, but
now we have somebody killed,"
Robinson said.
' 'We're still receiving informa. lion here based on news accounts
and we assume that the police are
investigating and will get to the
botU)tn of it," ·said UMW
spokesman Jim Grossfeld in Wash·
ingt6n. "We've been very clear
throughout the talks that violence
has no place in any contract dispute
at any time."
Arch Mineral Vice President
Blair Gardner, said Arch of West
Virginia and its parent company,
Arch Mineral Corp., will offer a
$100,000 reward for infor.mation
leading to the arrest and conviction
of the ~rson who shot York.
"This ~nds the pretense of a

peaceful UMW A strik~." Gardner
said. •'The circumstances .of this
tragedy point to a conspiracy to
commit murder conceived in a
UMW A picket shack.
"If the leadership of the United
Mine Workers truly regrets this ·
tragedy, than (UMW President)
. Richard Trumka will isSue: a state·
ment immediately, and in blunt and
unmistakable langmlge that violence will not be tolcraJe&lt;l. regard·less of its form." .
State Medical Examiner Irvin
Sopher said York died from a gunshot wound to the back of lbe head.
He said York died at the seene....
State police said York was an
employee of Deskins Contracting,
of Holden, Logan County, which
was cleaning a sludge pond at the
mine. Calls to Deskins on Thursday
night went unanswered.
Thursday was York's ftrst day
on the job, police said. ·,
· York was riding in a convoy of
four vehicles leaving the mi!le.
Robinson said.
· As the convoy passed the picket
line, about 15 miners began lbrowing rocks, he said. Shots were ftred
shortly later from a wooded area
about 500 feet from the picket
shack, Robinson said.
Company seeurity guards in the
first vehicle also were shot at but
none were hit, Robinson said.
·York was the sole occupant of
the third vehicle, he·said.
Pickets told police they saw
nothing. he said.

~-Local

briefs----,

Charges to be filed

.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that charges of
burglarY and felony theft will be filed against a 16-year-old Portland
youth following the theft of some $1,200 from the ferry and Pam
Proffitt residence on Route 124 at Portland on Thursday.
According to the report, the sheriffs office was notifi.ed of the
theft· of the money and a suspect was named. Depuues spent
. approximately four hours trying to locate the suspect. Around 9:30
p.m. the suspect aitd his father returned most of the cash to the Proffins.
An investigation is continuing.

problems. ·
One of the concerns he said is
that the waier may be "heavy with
iron" and if that is the case how
those high levels of iron might
impact fish and aquatic inseets of
the water of those three streams,
both short term and long tenn.
He said that not only is the
agency concerned about the effect
on the streams but also lbe Ohio
River into which they empty. He
said that the EPA does not believe
at this point that there is "anr
impact on drinking water supplies' .
Berger said that it has been esti·
mated that pumping out 50 million
gallons of water a day will take
about 60 days.
Thursday Athens Attorney
Robert Shostak filed a notice of
in lent to sue wilb the Office of Surface Mining, Washington D. C.; the
Ohio Division of Reclamation,
Columbus; the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency, Columbus;
American Electric Power, Lancast·

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News. Starr
Officials of Southern Ohio Coal
Co., American Electric Power, and
the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency are scheduled to meet in
Columbus today to discuss water
removal from Meigs Mine 31
which flOoded on 1uly ll and put
230 underground miners out of
work.
EPA spokesman Rob Berger
said this morning that there are
conccrns 'about what ·the proposed
50 million gallons of water a day to
be pumped from the mine will. do
to the three streams, Leadmg ·
Creek, Raccoon and Campaign,
into which it is emptied.
Those environmental concerns
will be discussed at the meeting
today, he said, along with the possibilil)' of treating lbe water before
it goes into the streams.
Berger said the Ohio EPA~­
tor wants· to be sure that pumptng
the water out of the mine does not
pose any long term environmental

er; and the U. S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Washington D.
C. specifying that a suit will ~e
filed if untreated mine water IS
pumped from the mine into the
creeks "without an appro~ed properly issued NPDES permit".
The notice was filed on behalf
of William Beard and others who
own property, reside, use and
recreate in lbe affected walershed.
In the notice, Shostak says it is
based "upon information that
American Electric Power.... .inlends
to pump untreated !Dine water from
its flooded Me•gs mtne mto
Racoon Creek or Leading Creek
waterSheds."
"Available information indicates
that the mine water fails. to meet
federal and state effluent limitations including, but not limited to,
total iron,"lbe notice claims.
In lbe notice Shostak says "that
pumping untreated mine water
without an approved properly
issued Nli'DES permit into waters
of the United Sillies constitutes an

Accident reported

•

.-1-·

,.

..

~

~

'1;:

-

.. ..

· Mary L. Hudson, Ball Run Road, and Jeff Ohlinger, Carmen
Road were involved in an accident on Ball Run Road on Thursday
according to lbe Meigs Counl)' ~heriff's Deparunent . .
Accprding to lbe.repon, Oltlmger was left of cenler m h1s 1982
Ford and collided with a 1989 Ford van operated by Hudson. The
accident occurred in a curve.
'
· ·
Heavy damage was. listed to both vehicles.
No injuries were reported. ·

~

1989 CHEVROLET CORSICA 4 DR.
4 cyl., a~to., air cond., delay Wipers; tilt, cruln,
· low mileage.

$5495"

.

'

EMS responds to seven calls

·units of the Meiss County Emergency Medical Scrvi~ responded to ~~even calls for assistance overnight. Units responding include:
Thursday - 7:38 p.m. Middleport to Powell Street for a brush
fi.!C' 7:S8 p.m. Rutland to North Main Streei for Frank and Macie
~ney who were trantportcd 1Q Veterans Memorial Hospital; 8:38
p.m. Racine to Stale Route 124 for 1im MeHaffey who was l!BRS·
ported to VMH;, 8:50 p.m. Pomeroy to Nye Avenue for Whttney
Retmire who was tranSported to HMC; 11:28 p.m. Rutland to Titus
Road for Adrian Cars01rwho was transported to VMH.
.
Friday - 1:21 a.m. Racine to Yelfowbush Rllll4 for Edna Nei~ler who was uansportcd to HMC; 2:SS a.m. Racine to Page Sll'Cet
m Middlcpon for Guy Priddy who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospiial.
·
.
..

,

,.,

-"

.'.'

\~

'

imminent threat to the health, safety, and other interests of adjacent
and nearby property o~n~rs and
users of these waters rehevmg my
clients of waiting 60 days before.
filing suit".
. .
"I'm not opposed to pumpmg
the mine water out so that those
men can (!CI back ~o work," said
Stostak Fnday mornm~.
"But I'm not tn favor of
destroying two wonderful creeks
because AEP feels like it wants to
put the water into lbe ~s without treating it," he·conunued.
"AEP is a big company and they
can spend a few th_ouSII!'d dollars
treating lbe water, JUS! like everyone else would have to," said the
attorney.
.
Stostalc indicated that tt would
riot be a complicated chemical pro·
cedure to treat the waler. He said
that Southern Ohio Coal Co. has a
large pond there which the water
could be pumped into, treBled, and
then pumped into the creeks.

Cleland resi,... s mayor's post
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slllff
Frank Cleland has submitted his
resignation as mayor of Racine,
effective July 31.
Cleland who has served in that
capacity for the past five and o~e~
half years did not seek re-eleetion
in 1992. However, since there were
no mayoral candi~tes on lbe. bal·
lot he continued tn that pos1tton
for the current term which expites
in 1995. '
When Mayor Cleland's resignation becomes effective, lben Jeff
Thornton as president of Racine
Village Council will ftll the vacan·
cy until a mayor can ~ eleele&lt;! at
the itext regular election, whtch
will take place on Nov. 2.
Candidates have until Aug. 19 at
4 p.m. to file their petitions for the
unexpired mayor's ~- .
.
In talking about hts restgnation,
Mayor Cleland said .that it takes a
lot of effort to keep up on things
happening in the village.
"I've been retired for a lot of

FRANK CLELAND
years, but I haven't really been
'retired', said Cleland, who was
Racine's postmaster until 1980
when he retired after 30 years ser·
vice.
He went on to say that "the

town is doing O.K., we' ve got a lot
of things done, and everything is
going along fine now".
"I think it's just time for me to
set back, pet the dog and maybe
curry the cow," commented the
jovial lifelong resident of Racine. ·
Cleland has been involved in
village government since soon after
. World War ll when he was elected
for a term on Council. After that he
served as clerk for several years as
well as additional terms on council.
During his !enure as mayor, lbe
village has seen many improvements. Extensive street paving has
taken place and the water system
has been improved.
The latest project of the mayor
and Council has been to seeure a
$37,000 grant f~mthe Ohio Public
Works Commisston (Issue 2 emergency money) \O tie th~ ~upl?Crs
· Plains-Chester Water D1stnct mto
the Racine water system.
An eight inch line will run
along Route 124 up to the water
tower on Wingett's hill. This

Overnight downpours
aggravate midwest woes·
"The air over the Midwest right
now is like a giant sponge, just
dripping wet."
Thunderstorms hit parts of
Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri
and the Dalcotas overnight. With
more waler keeping rivers at record
levels, engineers worried that hun·
dreds of miles of soggy levees
could collapse.
•'The heaviest rains ovemigh.t
occurred in eastern Nebraska,
northwest Missouri and southwest
and southern Iowa," weather ser•
vice meteorologist Bruce Terry

By STEVEN P. ROSENFELD
Associated Press Wriler
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) Overnight downpours worsened
nooding an&gt;&lt;iety in the waterlogged
Midwest, tempering joy here over
being able to wash dishes, take
showers and flush toilets after 12
days without running water. ·
"I'm lbe guy wearing the black
hat today . I can't tell ~ou ev.erythi.ng is going to be betler," forecaster Joe Sullivan of the National
Weather Service said Thursday.

said today in Camp Springs, Md. ·
"We have sa1elli1e estimales of
up to almost 10 inches of rain that
occurred in these areas and we' ve
actually got conrlfl!led reports that
some spots received as much as six
or seven inches overnight"
Hard rains continued this mom. ing, bringing flash flood w~ings
in three norlbwcst Missoun counties and one county in southwest
low~. People living along the Plaue
River lowlands in pans of Nebras·
lea were urged to seek higher
ground.

•

r,

j

1-7-15-22-24

Page3

Museum protects Revolutionary War treasures
By MEG DENNISON
Associated Press Writer
FERRISBURGH, Vt. (AP) - It
isn't the water that poses the
biggest threat to the 18th century
rreasure trove linin~ the bottom of
Lake Champlain. It s vandals.
Vandalism prompted Art Cohn
reecntly to do what ~ has so stren·
uously argued agamst: Remove
from the lake some of the Revolu·
~ War artifacts.
·
Shtps, cannons and tools can
easily turn to dust when brought to
the surface said Cohn, dirccJor of
the Lake Champlain Maritime
Museum. He has long advocated
studying the wrecks underwater
and then replicating them - so that
· everyone can get cl~ser to histO!}'
while the actual artifacts remam
undisturbed and available.
"!think we have the best pres~rved
submerged cuiJural ·

BuckeyeS:

stteel. ••

Big is the only size for a white shirt
By FRANCINE PARNES
For AP Special Features
The white cotton shirt of the
moment is not your basic oxford
cloth button-down. Rather, soft,
cascadins ruffles, knotted waists
and bell sleeves are some of the
novel twists on the current shirt
tale.
Even the classic white men 's
dress shirt is being revitalized by
designers in the United States and
abroad. Oversized and undone are
lbe operative words. Dre!&gt;s·length
shirttails are meant to flow, bearing
an uncanny resemblance to nightshins. French cuffs, unbuttoned,
fall over the knuckles. If they're
perilously close to swimming in
your soup, you've ~-the _look.
•
"The white sh.n ts btgger and
longer than it's ever been- some
even go down as ~ar as th_e cal~. "
·says Wilmer Wetss, semor vtce
president for fashion at I. Magnin
tn San Francisco.
"The whole idea is to wear it on
the outside of your arousers or leg·
gings, not tucked in," he says.

945
Pick 4:
1248

0

Adventurers swim Bering Strait

By ROSANNE PAGANO
Associated Press Writer
ANCHORAGE, Alaska.(AP) The water was cold enough . to
make them lose mental sharpness,
but two men swam ·the Bering
Strait, from Asia to North America
Ted ·Epstc:in, a J?enver l~wyer,
said from Little Dmmede tsland
that the two-hour crossing from
Big Diomede in 40-degree water
left his legs shaky dest&gt;ite two wet·
suits and a layer ot insulating

Pick 3:

f:&amp;t:l.

Protection Agency, and •
go¥· ' others, COllie$ back into our own".
MarjOrie Malone led in group
emment regulatory ~cncieS.
The Indepe!tdence and democra- sinJins of patriotic sons and cheer
cy celebralicn emphasiw the need plates and cards were sent to shutin

filf communities to proleet their
foihts. ftclds. wetlands llld WIUCr·
ways as habillt for wildlife and for
the en_.io&gt;'mc!lt and survival of citi·
zcns tn an increasingly crowded
and polltlled world.
The Woodmen's CReel service
by lc8dm, Ralph Henderson, Milford Griffia, and Warren Elllou,
Coolville centered ~ the lhilught
''There is a cSeatiny that . . _ us
brothm, none gees his WI)' tilonc,
all that we send into' the lives of

Rockies,
Kyger Creek

UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif.
Loni Anderson says she
hun 't read a thin• that '1 bun
printed in the tablotda about her
b = · with huabaad Bart
R
but it's all~.. An~in&amp; you've read that's
been pu . llun 'I becu II'IIC,'' the
former "WKRP in Cincinnlli" aar
told TV 1ep01ters Wednesday.
The actrell uid &amp;he i&amp;
wilb dill t;a UJ•, but she p
"1uat imapne all of yourselves
being in dlll-lintadon.''
·
- Miss An4erson. also said her
fans have been sym~thctic, with
"wonderfull!lllllrs' and "lovely
r.esponse from people on· the
(AP) -

Modern ..Woodmen discuss · incinerator

An eeolosical program centering on tbc impact of a medical
wasJe inc:inaator on Coolville and
lbe surroimding area, highlighted a
recent meeting of the Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp
10900,11 the Hocking River Camp-

Ohio Lottery

Two more arrested in alleged terror plot
NEWARK, N.1. (AP)- The
FBI tracked dowa a man wanted in
conneetion with an aile~ plot to
blow up lbe United Nauons build·
ing and busy New York City commuter tunnels.
Agents arrested the Egyptian
man at a seaside motel Thursday
night in southern New 1ersey.
Another Egyptian was jailed for
allegedly harboring the wanted
man.
The arrest brought the number
of alleged bombing riot conspira·
tors in custody to 1 . Prosecutors
say they have hours of surveillance
tapes with plouers discussing
bombing targets and explosives·
making efforts.
A lonlltime informant helped
authoriues break up what they
called a ring of fundamentalist
\.I

Muslim terrorists with international
connections.
Matarawi Mohammed Saleh ;
· 44; also known as Wahid, was
arrested at a motel in North Wild·
wOod, FBI agent I ames C. Esposito
said today. Ashraf Mohammed, 31;
was arresled for allegedly harbor·
ing Saleh. They faced arraignment
today.
• ..
.
Saleh has been a .ugtllve smce
he was charged along with eight
others in the terrorist conspiracy,
the FBI said in a statement. Hts
alleged role in lbe plot was not dis·
closed.
·Eight Muslim fundamentalists
were arrested June 24 after federal
agents raided.a New York City
house where five men allegedly
were mixing explosives. They were
.accused of plotting to bomb the
United Nations, the Holland and

Lincoln tunnels under the Hudson
River and a federal building housing the FBI.
Wahid was indicted but had
remained at large. Another man
was arresled June 30 in Philadel·
phia. And a new indictment July 14
added one of the men already under
arrest in the Feb. 26 W.orld Trade
Center born bing to the hst
The bombing killed six people
and injured more than I ,000.
Many of the accused in both
cases have been li~ed to J!IOSQU';ll
where radical Egyptian clenc Sheik
Omar Abdel-Rahman preached.
Abdel-Rahman, wanted in Egypt
for allegedly fomenting rebellion,
has not been charJ.ed in eith.er U.~.
case, but was.jatled pcndmg _hts
appeal of federal deporauon
effons.

means that Racine will have a
source of water in .an emergenc:y.
The viUage will use water from its
own two wells except in an emergency at which time valves at lbe
tower can be opened and the .communi!)' can draw from lbc Tuppers
Plains-Chester sys1em.
A change of mayor is not the
only change on Racine Village
Council. On 1uly 5, Carroll Teaford
resigned due to ill health and Judy
Randolph was appointed to fill the
unexpired term of Teaford. That
tenn expires on Dec. 31.
Four seats will be open on
Racine Village Council this year.
Besides the one to which Randolph was al?pointed. other terms
expiring are those of Ronald Qark,
Roben Beegle, and Jeff Thorn!CJ!I.
Petitions for mayor or a seat on
village council can be seeured from
the Meigs County Board of Eleetions, Mul!)erry Avenue, PoJ!Ieroy.
The deadline for all candtdates
wanting to get their names on lbe
November ballot is Aug. 19.

Des Moines
gets water
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) People in Des Moines delighted in ·
the simple pleasures of washing
dishes, taking a shower and flushing lbe toilet afler 12 days without
running water. But the threat of
flooding heightened as anoth.e r
series of storms moved through lbe
Midwest.
"I'm the guy wearing lbe black
hat today. I can't !ell you everylbing is going to be better," forecaster Joe Sullivan of the National
Weather Service said Thursday.
"The air over the Midwest right
now is like a giant sponge, just
dripping wet."
.
Thunderstorms h1! parts of
_Nebraska, Iowa. Kansas, Missouri
and the Dakotas overnight. With
more water keeping the rivers at
record levels, engineers worried
that hundreds of miles of soggy
levees could collapse.
Still, the mood was high among
some 250,000 people in Des
Moines and its suburbs, where running water was fully restored by
Thursday night. Floodwaters
knocked out the city's water plant
on 1uly 11. It was the longest such
ordeal for so big a U.S. city.
"Dishes. That will be the first
thing I do," ~aid Debbie Dodge,
who had a stack awaiting in the
·kitchen.
.
Suzann Reynolds planned to
stan potty training for her 2-yearold daughter, 'l\shley, who decided
in the past week she no longer
wanted to wear diapers. "Now
we'llleam how to nush the toilet,"
she said.
"It's going to ta,ke some doing
to get me out of the tub," beamed
Michael Ballentine.

.

(

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